Oh, so we're posting our own work, then? Ok here's my fight scene:
We all crouched low in the darkness with bows out and arrows nocked, looking out.
All around us, thick vines and ferns filled the ground like a sea of green with islands of groves like the one we hid beneath as far as we could see—as much as forty yards in some angles.
Borel hid beneath a dense cluster of grass. He turned to look at Miyani, then looked around at the rest of our unit, only to look at Miyani again and swallow his breath.
She hunched low and lay her body over Blue's back, reaching her hand out towards us as she looked to our left. Makchuk wiggled his finger around the bowstring where his arrow waited to be drawn. Sweat dripped down our faces, and we all looked in that direction.
An enemy sekiwa raced through the vines between tree-islands and stopped twenty feet from us. I couldn't hear the whistles and chirps of the jungle over my thundering heartbeat.
The vita'o was a female, beige-green with a cute-ish look to her lizard face, and swished her tail left and right over the leaves behind her. The woman riding her was older, perhaps Ahmi's age, petite and muscular as they all were, same dark-green skin with white hair and yellow eyes. She had an arc of a scar like an old bite wound on her elbow and a white tattoo on her shoulder in the shape of a jaguar with its jaws open.
The cute-faced lizard raised her nose to the air and sniffed.
I felt like I was frozen in time. Every muscle in my body was tense. My fingers trembled around the nock where my arrow clung to its string.
The woman looked left and right, then urged her mount forward. They continued along their way and disappeared into the forest to our right.
Blue rose up, lifting Miyani high enough to look over each of us as she counted with her chin. In this darkness, my eyes had adjusted enough for me to see the silhouette of her gorgeous legs. He then croaked low and gave out a string of clicks. Miyani narrowed her eyes at me, pursed her lips, and shook her head. I had to look away in embarrassment.
She turned to our captain and pointed towards the direction the woman had come from, “first they come, then you shoot. OK?”
We all nodded. Borel did as well, “alright.”
With that, Miyani darted off and vanished into the woods.
I wiped the sweat from my brow and tried to settle my heart. This was real. This was happening.
Then, our captain belched out, “I don't like it. I think we should split up. Come, Jame, Jezi, Trey, Filau…”
Ales shot his hands up, “what the hell are you doing, man?”
Borel lurched at him, “I'm splitting us in two. Half of us stay here, half…”
Geraln scowled at him, “you're going to get us all killed!”
“HUSH!” The whisper-scream came from our right.
We all looked, and that sekiwa came back. The lizard stopped at the exact same spot as it had before, and the woman looked right at us. She leaned in and furrowed her brow, and an arrowhead punched through her skull and stuck out through the bridge of her nose.
As blood trickled down her face, the lizard reached her head up to look, then opened her jagged teeth and hissed hard. Not a second later, we pin-cushioned her. Poor thing had no fewer than eight arrows thrust into her at once. And those eupin bows, we got a good three-hundred-fifty yards with those things—imagine what that much power can do at close range.
They went down.
Miyani appeared from behind her and came up to investigate. She looked to our left once more, then gestured for us all to come out. “We need go. Now.”
We all stepped out and came up to her, close enough to get a good look at the lizard with numerous arrows in her body, including two in her skull and one that buried itself in the center of her chest all the way to the fletching. The mangled mess of the woman who rode her was forever trapped beneath, and Blue reached down to rip a snack from her side.
Miyani pointed off in the other direction. “We go. We go now!”
Borel crossed his arms and lifted his big chin to her. “Why?”
Geraln lifted his hands, “bloody hell, man!”
Ales shook his head in frustration, but Miyani lifted her hand to calm them. Then she looked around, “Jezi, translate for me please…”
As she spoke, my eyes accidentally found her hard tummy and followed the curve of her hips. God, she was gorgeous.
Blue tilted his eye at me. I grinned.
Jezi explained, “this was not part of the plan. Our cover is blown. We must hurry!”
Borel stood with his feet planted and arms crossed, looking around. “We came here to shoot these guys, we can still shoot them.”
Jezi relayed the message along with her response, “she says there are twenty of them.”
Faren furrowed his brow. “There's only thirteen of us!”
Borel looked at the dead sekiwa, then glanced around at the numerous tree islands that surrounded us. “No. If we run, they track us, and we lose the advantage.”
Jezi didn’t bother to translate before answering, “we still have our sekiwa, that’s our advantage.”
Borel was resolute. “We make our ambush here.”
Ales threw his hands up and nearly shouted, “you’re going to get us all killed, man!”
Gino grabbed my arm and spoke to her, “which way do we go?”
Borel looked at Jame. He still held his arms crossed and wouldn’t move, but I could see a trembling in his eyes. Jame looked down and took a deep breath. Borel bit his lips.
I had to think of something. I stepped up and asked Miyani, “how much time do we have? Uh, pozʊ… ŋewe…”
She nodded, “I come back,” and vanished between two giant palm shrubs.
Borel looked at me with his eyes wide and his jaw locked. I stepped up to him. “We have until she gets back. What's your plan?”
Borel looked around. He glanced at Jame, then back to me. One of the twins pointed out, “look how she shredded those leaves as she went through, there and there; she was making a trail for them to follow. They’re going to come straight through this way.”
Ales shook his head. “Yeah, then they’re going to stop and see this, and we’re dead.”
“Wait,” Gino offered up, looking at the carcass. “She’s our timer. Instead of wondering when's the right time to shoot, as soon as they see her, we all draw. Then, when they try to communicate with the others, we let ‘em have it.”
Rock stood in the trail, tilting his head to see the bodies lying amid the ferns. He pointed out two tree-islands at a right angle from where he stood. “Half there, half there. We make crossfire.”
He turned to Northstar, pointing at some dead branches nearby, “toma-to ayi sa gaw’me.”
Northstar grabbed a few dead palm leaves and tossed them over the body.
Malchuk scratched at the scar that cut across his nose. “Listen up. We’re up against five-to-three. Take them out of the fight. Shoot to kill. Hit him in the leg, he can still shoot back. Also, if we all shoot the same man, that won't work. We need a way to call targets that won't give us away.”
Geraln raised a hand to that. “Everyone pick the guy who most looks like you. If you're tall, take the tall one. If you're short…”
I nodded, “I’ve got the good-looking one. Let’s go.”
Faren shook his head, “no, the good-looking one is mine.”
Jame echoed, “you can relax, I'll take the good-looking one.”
Miyani and Blue raced back and stopped before us. “They come now.”
While everyone else scattered to our positions, Borel stepped up to her, articulating with his hands. “yʊpi keʃo'ibi-ʒi ʃa tizo-ði.”
She nodded and swallowed her breath. “OK.”
She began to turn, and I stepped close to her, rolling my arm in a circle towards the ground. “pʊ kedase ‘æki. ‘uŋi koðuʒi ʃa xewekʊse.”
She looked at me and smiled, “OK,” then darted off.
Borel turned to me and sneered, “let them escape?”
I shrugged. “If they run, they're out of the fight.”
He grinned, “good point!”
And we took our positions.
I found myself in the same tree island I’d been beneath before with Jame, one of the twins, Faren, Rock, and Jezi while Borel stayed with Ales, Northstar, Geraln, Malchuk, Gino, and the other one of the twins in the tree-island directly across from us.
We hunched down low and nocked arrows.
Miyani was right. Within a minute of us taking our positions, a line of warriors emerged single-file between tree islands following the exact trail their sekiwa had made for them, stepping carefully so as to not disturb any extra twigs or branches.
All of them were pure-blooded Na’uhui, with long white hair and dark-green skin wearing nothing but a loincloth and some straps. Half of them had that same jaguar tattoo as their sekiwa and half of them wore no ink, and they all carried their bows in one hand with an arrow nocked.
I had to pick out my target. I was tall and lean, fairly muscular I suppose, and so I sought that amid our enemy.
I found him.
Two of them were taller than the others, one wore the jaguar tattoo and the other did not. I figured that Borel, who wore the Falcon on his right shoulder, would pick the guy with the ink so I chose the one without.
He had an easy air about him. He turned briefly and said something to the man behind him, who gave off a light laugh in reply, then looked around smiling at the high trees that made the upper canopy.
The lead man stopped ten feet from their dead scout and jumped back.
I drew my bow. I struggled to control my breath.
The man behind the lead turned around and raised his hands to the others. My man looked up and stepped to the side a little.
I loosed.
A flurry of wood cutting through the air came at them from both sides all at once. My arrow rammed through my man's jaw and punched through the back of his neck.
He went down.
He went straight down and did not move.
A shout. A scream.
Na’uhui men scattered to the bushes. One of them drew and loosed an arrow somewhere.
More arrows came from our unit, but I couldn’t move. My fingers trembled.
A man crouched behind a small shrub and looked at the island across from us, tracing arrows coming out at him. Jame shot him in the back. He arched his whole body from the shock of it, and another arrow came from the island across to punch clean through his neck.
My man did not move.
At all.
Others twitched. One crawled along the forest floor with blood pouring out from his side where an arrow had buried the broadhead into his gut. The shaft banged against a fern as he tried to crawl past, and another arrow nailed his arm to his side and buried into his ribcage.
My man lay still in a patch of ferns growing out of some brown, broken palm branches, and didn’t so much as wiggle a toe. His chest didn’t lift up for any breath, either.
Two of them rushed at the island opposite us with knives fixed to the brackets in their bows. The one on the left caught two arrows in the chest, one for each lung while from our side Jezi put one in his spine below his shoulder blades. For the other, Borel jumped out and rushed at him, swinging his sword like it was a baton. He hacked at the man, who pulled back and swung his blade at him. Borel dodged that, and the man tried to thrust at him until an arrowhead stuck out from the center of his back with a red glob dangling down. Borel then shoved his sword into the man and forced him to the ground, then stepped on him to pull his blade free.
He looked at the carnage we’d caused.
My man still did not move.
There was one man lying prone amid the ferns with an arrow buried into his ribcage just beneath his arm. He heaved and coughed up blood onto the ground. Another one squirmed slowly; he had one arrow shaft in his gut and another in the center of his chest had pinned him to a lot behind him.
Borel turned around and grinned at us. “We got ‘em! Look!”
Jame fired an arrow off to my left—another man had crept among the vines. Now he screamed in agony and held his neck where the arrow had pierced him, while blood gushed out and poured down his arm.
While Borel jumped in shock, I took up my replacement medical kit and headed out to the man with the broadhead in his lung. He heaved hard and coughed up more blood, writhing in agony every time his body winced. He looked at his trembling fingers for a moment and tried to breathe, only to cough out more blood onto the bright-green leaves of a vine nearby.
I knelt next to him. “vʌ ɣaŋo. bomeŋɪsedu.”
Slowly, he turned his head upwards to put yellow eyes on me for a moment, only to heave once more in a fit of coughing. I opened the medical kit, and the arrow-puller was the first thing I saw, tucked away in its own pocket.
He shivered and he writhed, then winced hard, his muscles tense all over. Then he scrunched up and coughed, spraying more blood onto the ground.
I put my hand on his back to steady him. “ʃʊsi. kupade. ko’o ɣemaða toto. toto toto. toto toto toto.”
I wasn’t sure if that was the correct way to say that this was going to hurt a quadzillion, but Borel stepped up and shoved his sword into the man’s back.
The man stretched out his body and groaned. Borel pulled his sword from him and stabbed him a second time.
My eyes pleaded up at him. Had I the courage for words, I'd have said something.
“We don’t have time. We have to move. NOW.”
Miyani sat atop Blue, who had his head turned to one side to fix one blue-striped eye on me. A few of our men crowded around her, and she stared at me with deep worry on her face.