We’re good shots, Mercer and I. We hunt clean. It doesn’t take longer than it has to.
But a moment later, it’s our own soldiers in the village square who begin to shout, in panic and in anger, because the old priest has somehow scampered back into the safety of his church in all the confusion - locking himself in from the inside.
They begin hammering on the doors with their boot-heels and the butts of their rifles, because whatever he’s gone in there to do, it’d be in all of our interests to stop him before it’s too late.
When the mire-priest comes out, he comes out changed. Bursting out through the church doors, shattering the wood to smithereens. Stooping through the threshold, a vast and cumbersome shape: his skin darkening and rippling like ancient peat bursting forth beneath a cutter’s turskill, veins of rancid sphagnum moss pulsing about his bulging arms. A human face still visible, wide-eyed and no longer in control, from deep within his chest.
As the Peat-Saint walks, its footsteps shed dirt. It picks up one soldier in a colossal hand - Timps, his name was. He struggles, briefly - a few gasps, a couple of feeble kicks - as the molten peat flows outwards, oozing over his skin, searing and burning as it goes. He dies quickly.
But when the body falls, it’s as wrinkled and tanned and haggard as any corpse that’s lain beneath a bog for a thousand years. The Peat-Saint marches on.
Mercer and I reach for our satchels. We find the bottle-grenades, slopping with thick liquid. Another man is already screaming and writhing beneath the beast’s embrace.
Our anniversary lighters come alive with flame. We light the stuffed rags. And we charge.
The Peat-Saint flails, and stampedes, and burns. Our soldiers scurry back and forth to places of safety in the village square, avoiding its increasingly clumsy and desperate movements.
We circle it, and light our bottles, and we torch it again. Eventually it falls, still blazing. Its vast form crumbles, losing its shape, collapsing into earth.
After that, there’s nobody left to stop us - and we can begin the work at our leisure.
— Chapter 16: And the Current Flows On Without End.