The thing about this situation was that Steph didn’t think it was really happening, not until she saw the flash of the knife in one of the hooded figures’ hands and even then, her brain could hardly comprehend what was happening. This was Port Vale. This didn’t happen in Port Vale.
The last openly, outrageously violent act in town was when two teenagers ended up in a fight and both of them got a couple of kicks to the others in and ended up bruised up badly, but even that wasn’t actually dangerous. It was two people getting into a tiff and jumping each other for it. She did hear that Isidore punched a couple of people recently, and she punched Tayden, but those situations weren’t like this one either.
No, this only happened in movies and books and dingy parts of big cities, not in Port Vale. Not in this town and certainly not to Stephanie Anand. And yet, here she was and apparently it wasn’t even something completely random, these people, whoever they were, seemed to have been looking for her. Or at least somebody like her, who knew about the sea people, it seemed.
She pulled away, jumped back, everything leaving her mind and all she wanted to do was scream, but it wasn’t enough, it wouldn’t save her, it only resulted in her backing against the wall, and then more showed up and Steph was terrified except–
The new person showing up wasn’t one of the hooded figures, no, it was Gabi, and Steph could have burst into tears from joy, but she was just frozen on the spot at that point, as Gabi moved and punched and gotten in front of her, standing between her and the attackers now.
One of them surged forward, clearly not bothered by one more person - they were still very much outnumbering them -, and even though there was something weird, something clumsy about their movement, they attacked Gabifrom the left, while another one moved in from the right, trying to gain an upper hand, while Steph could hear one of them bark, “What are you doing? Protecting one of them? Protecting this one in particular? She could ruin us all.”
Oh no. Oh no! Ohnononononono. Suddenly it all hit Steph and she wanted to cry even more and finally she could move which meant she dumbly moved forwards too, “No, please, I am not going to hurt you, I swear, I am not going to hurt any of you,” she said desperately, her hands up in a defensive position, trying to convince them, and only realizing the last second that one of those who was staying back from Gabi moved in on her, and Steph was only able to jump out of the way of the knife the last moment, the tilt of it scraping against her coat. She hit without thinking, without intentionally doing anything Gabi tried to teach her, and it connected, but it was barely enough, probably, but at least it was enough to give her a chance to move back.
“Gabi. Gabi, what is– how is– are you okay?” Please help me get out of this.
Gabi was working off of a combination of experience and adrenaline at the moment. She clenched her jaw. Human teeth didn’t work in quite the same way as her teeth as a siren, so she had practiced this while training on land. She would have cursed about being irritated for being found out. They might or might know exactly who she was, but her top guess was rogue sirens at this point. Whoever it was, they were fools that didn’t understand consequences. If the last Port Vale mayor’s death was being investigated, this might make even more leads. She would have to deal with these idiots one way or another. Maybe see if someone had a basement that she could lock these all into and do some nice interrogation.
The attackers’ movements were awkward, which indicated to her that they did not have ample experience on land. If they had resided on land at all, it wasn’t among humans, and probably not spent much time in shoes. Perfect- she could work with that. She hadn’t had the opportunity to practice her kicks on people, but she had an idea of what to do with this knowledge. Leveraging how sturdy her boots were, she aimed for the lower legs. She got one of the knuckleheads felled in a way that looked like they wouldn’t be able to walk, but there were so many. She’d taken a few hits for herself, even if she was giving more than she took. But she’d gotten through decades of war before, and she wasn’t going to go down against some Assyrians playing games at having legs.
Gabi knew that each word was a risk, so she ignored responding to the Assyrians. They could insult her all they wanted for protecting the somehow less-foolish human, but she wasn’t completely blowing her cover in public. Dodging a grapple, while slicing at another opponent’s arm and kicking at yet another enemy’s leg, she snarled at Steph, “I’m fine. Move away fast. Go for the calves if they get too close.” If Steph was the target, they might all try to go after the human. If she could predict their movement on those baby deer legs, then Gabi just might be able to divide and conquer. Between having knives and her legs to work with, she could try to go after them one by one instead of trying to create a one-woman shield wall. She’d take fewer hits if she didn’t have to play traditional defense. It had never been her style for good reason.