Chapter Text
The Rift brought all kinds of weird and wonderful objects and creatures to Cardiff from elsewhere in the universe; that was its only purpose, its reason for existence, and though Jack insisted it wasn’t sentient in any way, shape, or form, Ianto had long had his doubts. He also suspected that it didn’t merely bring things from other times and other planets, but dredged some of the more outlandish ones up from other dimensions, alternate universes, and in some cases, he wouldn’t be surprised if they’d been dragged from the depths of Hell.
That was what he was thinking this time, because Halloween was only a few days away, and he remembered only too clearly a few other instances around this time of year when he and Jack had found themselves dealing with what could only be described as monsters. Not that there was a monster this time, but if one happened to show up? Well, the way things stood, he wasn’t discounting that possibility.
On the face of it, the large, black birds weren’t anything to be concerned about. Ianto himself could be a large, black bird when he chose to be, although he was a crow, and familiarity with the entire genus told him these glossy, blue-black corvids were ravens. There were three of them, and unlike other ravens he’d encountered, the eyes of these were… unusual. Adult ravens, which these appeared to be, judging by their size, typically had black eyes, but of this trio, two had eyes that seemed to glow a faint icy blue in the fading daylight, and the third one’s eyes were green as apples.
There was something about them that made Ianto feel… unsettled, on edge, like they weren’t entirely natural, which, come to think of it, neither was he. Were-Crows weren’t exactly commonplace, on earth or anywhere else in the known universe. But despite his unique nature, the result of a run-in with alien technology, Ianto belonged in this time and place, in this world; it was his home, even now he was no longer entirely human, and every sense he had was screaming that these ravens were somehow wrong, even though he couldn’t put his finger on exactly why. It was more than just their eyes.
Ianto was starting to wish he hadn’t chosen to handle this retrieval on his own. Then again, the rest of the team were being kept busy dealing with other issues, and when the Rift alert had sounded, no one had been available to accompany him. Besides, it wasn’t as if he’d never handled a Rift retrieval alone. He did it all the time; it was part of the job, and he was a perfectly capable, not to mention experienced, field agent.
According to the data provided by Tosh’s Rift monitor programme, what had come through was inanimate but mostly organic in nature, and he’d found it easily enough: it was a tall, wooden staff made from what looked like a remarkably straight branch. Part of its length was bound in a strip of leather, and there was a bunch of glossy black raven feathers tied just below an ornate metal spear blade that appeared more decorative than functional, going by all the engraving on it.
There was a strange kind of beauty to the spear; obviously a great deal of care had gone into its making, although it was clearly old and much used. The wood of the shaft was smooth from frequent handling, the leather bindings stained in places, and coming unravelled a bit from the lower half. Under normal circumstances, Ianto would have simply donned a pair of gloves and picked the spear up, carrying it to the SUV to take it back to the Hub, where it would be catalogued and stored, but…
Well, there were a trio of ravens in the way, one perched on a crumbling headstone in this marshy corner of the mostly abandoned cemetery, one on the ground between him and the spear, its head cocked to one side, peering at him speculatively from one bluish eye, and the third perched on the spear’s shaft, where it lay at an angle, propped blade upwards against another headstone.
The raven on the headstone opened its beak wide, croaking almost eerily in the gloaming as the sun, hidden as it so often was by heavy clouds, slowly sank below the horizon, somewhere out of view. Ianto blinked, wondering how long he’d been standing there, trying to decide on his next move. Ravens lurking in an old cemetery was hardly unheard of, and under normal circumstances, he should have been able to scare them off, but these three weren’t at all alarmed by his proximity. They seemed almost to be waiting for something, and Ianto wasn’t at all sure he wanted to know what.
He couldn’t leave without what he’d come for though, couldn’t abandon the spear for someone else to find and claim, possibly an adventurous child or a reckless teenager. It didn’t belong on earth, that much Ianto was sure of; if it fell into the wrong hands, which basically meant any hands that didn’t belong to Torchwood, that could be a serious problem. There were very good reasons for Torchwood taking charge of anything that fell through the Rift; they were better equipped to deal with things that didn’t belong in this time and place, especially mysterious weapons of unknown provenance.
Ianto looked at the ravens, and they looked back at him. The nearest one clacked its beak. Their eyes seemed to be getting brighter as the waning daylight grew dimmer. Ianto dipped into his near photographic memory for what he knew about these birds. In mythology, ravens were considered variously as messengers, harbingers of death and destruction, even as tricksters. In Native American lore, they were also viewed as symbols of transformation… Well, anyone working for Torchwood Three for any length of time was intimately familiar with transformations, Ianto more so than most. He'd been a lot of different things over the years, everything from a tree to a fluffy pink duck, and, of course, a crow.
He took a cautious step forward, vaguely hoping that the ravens would move aside and allow him to retrieve the spear, but no such luck. The nearest one spread its wings and uttered a series of shrill warning calls before snapping its beak at him with an audible clack.
Okay, that wasn’t going to work. If the ravens were unwilling to give up the spear to a person, maybe he’d have a better chance of reasoning with them bird to bird, as it were. Despite being smaller than the ravens in his crow form, Ianto knew from prior experience that when faced with a crow, the larger birds would usually back down. He didn’t enjoy being a bully, but if that was what it would take…
He didn’t particularly relish stripping off in the current somewhat chilly temperatures either, but needs must. He would have preferred to retreat to the SUV and change there, but that would take too long and he didn’t want to leave the spear unattended, so he moved back to where a gnarled old half-dead and mostly leafless tree overhung the cemetery wall and dug a couple of plastic carrier bags out of his coat pocket. These days, he made sure to be prepared for the kind of situation where he had to take his clothes off. Such was his life.
Stripping off, carefully folding his clothes and placing them in the bags, which he hung safely from a convenient tree branch, he stood on the wall, wincing at the coldness of the stone against his bare feet, and quickly changed form, thankful there was no one else fool enough to be out here. The last thing he needed was an audience. At least as a crow he no longer felt the cold, but he was keenly aware of the encroaching darkness, and he grumbled to himself under his breath about the inadvisability of being in a rundown cemetery behind a disused church, in the dark, less than a week before Halloween.
“Must be out of my mind,” he muttered. “CAW!”
Taking to the air, he glided to the ground a few feet from the nearest raven and spread his wings, ruffling his feathers to make himself seem bigger than he really was. It was a tactic he’d successfully used before. Glaring at the raven in front of him, he clacked his beak and hissed.
The raven hissed back, standing its ground, although it eyed him warily. Ianto hopped closer, hissing again, stretching his neck out, wings raised, and the raven shuffled backwards an inch or two. It wasn’t much progress, but it was something, so Ianto pressed his advantage, snapping his beak, cawing, hissing, using every bullying tactic he could think of, and managed to drive the nearest raven backwards a few more inches, but then…
Night fell like a curtain, and while Ianto, from his research into Corvidae, knew that ravens had some degree of night vision, crows, even were-crows, unfortunately did not. True, his eyes were better adapted to low light than a human’s, but out here, with no streetlights and the moon yet to rise, if it would even be visible through the clouds, he was now at a disadvantage. He could see the glow from the ravens’ eyes though, shining like sapphire and emerald stars in the rapidly deepening darkness.
He could see something else as well, flickers of blue fire rippling along the shaft of the spear, making a muted snapping and crackling sound, and much as he might have liked to take wing and make himself scarce, he found himself transfixed waiting with bated breath to see what would happen next. Maybe, in fact probably, that was unwise, but he was here, and dealing with whatever this new threat might be was his responsibility. As a Torchwood agent, running away was seldom an option.
The three ravens had lost interest in him, their attention drawn, just as his was, by the flickering blue flames illuminating the spear’s shaft, and the hand that now gripped it perhaps twelve inches below the blade. Even as Ianto watched, shadows seemed to congeal, forming a tall figure, clad in a cloak, leather armour, and a wide-brimmed hat. Leather gauntlets covered the hands, leaving the fingers bare, each gauntlet encircled with a metal band from which extended three savage metal claws…
All of that might have been bad enough, but the face below the hat’s brim was not that of a human, and from what Ianto could see in the flickering blue light, the person, alien, supernatural being, however it might be described, wasn’t wearing a mask. Two large, round, sapphire blue eyes shone brightly above the savage beak that dominated the unearthly visage.
Ianto-crow felt a chill of horror go through him, like ice water down his spine; whatever this creature was, it exuded a powerful sense of menace, practically reeked of malevolence! But he was Torchwood, and so he stood firm, even as the tall figure straightened up, the spear gripped tightly in its left hand.
One of the ravens, the one that had been perched on the spear, fluttered up to land on the figure’s right wrist, its eyes glowing as brightly as the apparition’s. It croaked at its master, who croaked back, voice deep and resonant, before turning its gaze on Ianto-crow.
He’d seen and fought more imposing monsters, Ianto told himself. There was that tentacled creature a few years back, and that had been so much taller and more impressive than a humanoid raven. Besides, for all the mythology about them, compared to crows, ravens were wimps! He wasn’t going to be afraid of this one, no matter what it might think. He cawed defiance at it. Just because it had a fancy spear didn’t make it special.
Blue fire flickered in the bare branches of a dead tree behind the imposing form, etching glowing runes into the bark and illuminating the surroundings to a level bright enough for Ianto to work with. Any light in the ultraviolent range was his friend; his crow vision allowed him to see far more of the visual spectrum than he could as a human, and now that he was able to see more clearly, he no longer felt at such a disadvantage. Whatever this being was, he felt confident he could deal with it. He hadn’t quite worked out how, but he was sure something would come to him.
“Nice outfit! CAW! Going to a fancy dress party?” he taunted.
The raven man hissed at him. Ianto clacked his beak, hopping closer.
“CAW! What are ya anyway? Wizard of the Ravens?” Ianto cackled. “They your familiars? CAW! Poor choice. Should’ve chosen crows instead!”
Raven man croaked and hissed angrily, brandishing the spear, pointing the blade at Ianto, jabbing it towards him, but Ianto-crow merely fluttered out of range.
“Missed me! CAW! That the best you can do?”
Perhaps goading the stranger wasn’t the best course of action, but Ianto needed to get some idea of his opponent’s abilities. Know your enemy: that was the first step in any battle. He needed to gauge the strengths of this potential threat before he could decide on a suitable strategy to deal with it.
Swinging the spear towards Ianto again, the raven man croaked angrily, a stream of blue fire shooting from the blade, setting the marshy ground sizzling and hissing, steam rising in a cloud right where Ianto-crow had been standing. His opponent was on the slow and clumsy side, perhaps not yet accustomed to his current form, or to earth’s gravity. That didn’t mean his movements wouldn’t speed up as he adjusted, or that his aim wouldn’t improve, so Ianto-crow knew he couldn’t afford to get overconfident, but at present he could dodge the fire easily enough.
So far, the outlandish figure was telegraphing his movements well in advance, meaning that Ianto-crow was able to take evasive action before he was in any serious danger. He fluttered up onto one of the crumbling headstones.
“Too slow! Caw! Neat trick, though; what d’ya do for an encore?”
Raven man swung the spear at his tormentor again, but Ianto-crow was airborne with a single powerful flap of his wings, landing in a nearby tree in time to watch the ornate spear blade slash through the air a few inches above the headstone, before cleaving the next stone in half, slicing through the weathered limestone as easily as a hot knife through butter.
Ianto bobbed his head, eyeing the destruction. The spear’s blade was clearly a lot sharper than it looked, which was valuable information. Nothing natural could slice through stone, even something as worn as an old grave marker, in a fraction of a second. Well, maybe a laser could, so maybe the spear itself was a form of laser, or at least possessed similar qualities… That was worth knowing.
Aside from the metal claws that were attached to his gloves, and the sharply pointed beak, it looked as if the spear was this being’s only weapon. Ianto didn’t see the trio of ravens as any threat, despite their earlier defiance of him. They were bigger, and less agile than he was, and despite there being three of them, if they tried to mob him, all they’d succeed in doing would be to get in each other’s way. Their wingspan was greater than his, but the way he saw it, that put them at a disadvantage. He needed less room to manoeuvre than they did.
Raven man was the real danger, and most specifically, his spear. Without that, Ianto-crow’s opponent would have nothing but his hands and beak to fight with. But how could he be disarmed? Using his sharp crow eyesight, Ianto studied the weapon. Leather thongs bound the head of the spear to the shaft. If they could be loosened, cut through, or torn away, the blade might come loose. Getting close enough to try would be the trick, however, especially since it would mean putting himself in the line of fire, possibly in a literal sense. He would need to be very careful.
Taking flight again, while the spear blade was pointed away from him, Ianto-crow soared skywards, then dropped, lunging at the birdman’s head, snatching at the wide brimmed hat, his claws snagging in the suede-like fabric. From the texture, he had an unpleasant suspicion that it might be skin, possibly even the skin of some sentient being… Nevertheless, he dug his talons into it and flapped upwards once more, ripping the hat from the raven man’s head, revealing a cap of slick black feathers in place of hair.
His enemy lashed out with its right hand, the fingers curled into a fist so that the fake claws jutted out, unhindered. The raven still perched there flapped its wings madly to keep its balance, snapping with its beak, but Ianto-crow was already well out of reach, dropping the loathsome hat to the swampy ground even as raven man swung the spear towards him once more.
Blue fire lashed out, missing Ianto-crow by several feet as he dropped low, then soared upwards, circling around to dive on his opponent again, raking his talons across the bared head, ripping out a clump of feathers, and causing the creature to screech in pain and anger. It was a surprisingly un-ravenlike sound. Ianto-crow chortled to himself; he’d done some damage, drawn first blood. Score one for the crow, zero for the raven! Hah!
“Take that! Crow Power Rules! CAW!”
Maybe this fight might even be fun, a chance to test out his crow abilities in a battle situation. After all, you never knew what you could do until you tried…
TBC
Chapter 2
Summary:
Ianto-Crow must use all of his crow manoeuvrability to deal with this uncanny threat.
Chapter Text
Having scored the first points in the battle by drawing first blood, it would have been easy for Ianto to get a bit carried away celebrating what was in reality a very minor victory over the current threat. Thankfully, Ianto-crow’s human side urged caution, overriding his crow half’s natural exuberance. The raven man was angry now, which was good in one respect, since in meant he might grow careless, but it also increased Ianto-crow’s danger. A wounded opponent could be unpredictable, anger overcoming sense.
Ianto backed off for a moment to consider his options. There was nothing to be gained by changing back into a human; that would only make him a bigger target, more easily seen in the dimness, and far less agile. Not to mention he’d be naked and cold, since the fight wasn’t likely to pause so he could get dressed.
True, in a fight his human form was better than his crow form at a lot of things, but right now, even though he would have liked to see what effect his Torchwood special automatic might have on this monster, his wings, beak, and claws would be a lot more use to him than bare feet and hands. That being the case, it looked like defeating this creature would have to be the responsibility of Super Crow!
Well, okay, Ianto-crow didn’t have any special superpowers, if you didn’t count his combined human and crow intellect and his Torchwood training, but raven man didn’t know that, and neither did his raven familiars. They were mostly bluster though, a lot of croaking and hissing, but little else. Ianto wasn’t discounting them, not entirely; he’d keep half an eye on them, just in case they decided to join the fray, but their master had to be the main focus of his attention.
He circled slowly, high enough that he wasn’t easy to spot, a black bird against a black sky, his wings making barely a whisper of sound in the still night air as he glided with only the occasional flap in order to remain airborne. Watching and waiting, Ianto picked his moment, then dived, coming at the creature from above and behind, reaching out, the claws of one foot snatching for the leather thongs tying the spear blade to the shaft, getting a firm grip, and tugging hard…
It was like grabbing a live wire; a tingling shock went through Ianto’s body, and he let go, twisting convulsively in the air, wings beating powerfully to gain altitude. Behind him, he heard the crackle that signified another gout of blue fire being unleashed, and he felt an icy sensation that chilled his left wing to the bone as the flame missed him by no more than an inch, striking a nearby branch and shattering it. Ianto-crow banked right at a steep angle. That was too close!
He flapped his wings hard, forcing sensation back into the chilled one, pushing aside the dull ache in the fragile bones. Fire that could burn both hot and cold; that was unexpected. So was the power in the spear itself, like electricity flowing through it. He needed to re-think his strategy, and fast!
The key was still the spear, he felt even more certain about that, but if ripping away the leather thongs securing the blade to the shaft wasn’t an option, what did that leave? Maybe he could force the raven man to let go of the spear. The mysterious being had those sharp metal talons attached to his gauntlets, but his fingers were bare, and crow beaks were both strong and sharp. He didn’t relish the idea of trying to snap his opponent’s fingers off; getting a beakful of the entity’s blood wasn’t an appealing thought, but if it came down to that, he’d give it a go. As crow or human, he wasn’t especially squeamish; working for Torchwood tended to cure people of that tendency, which was fortunate.
First, though, perhaps he should go for the eyes. Those baleful blue orbs were casting about, trying to locate him, and he had no way of knowing how good his opponent’s night vision might be. He’d have to watch out for the beak, but if he came in at an angle, from behind, above, and to the right, the side away from the spear… It would take some fancy flying, but it was worth a try.
Circling one more time, as the raven man turned his head back and forth, trying to pick out the shadowy form of a crow amidst the deeper shadows beneath the trees, Ianto waited patiently until his opponent turned his head away, then dived steeply to pick up momentum, swerving at the last moment, raking his outstretched talons across the creature’s face in a vicious downward slash… He felt the sharp claw tips penetrate flesh, so deeply they scraped against bone, and then Ianto-crow was away again, gaining altitude, striving to get out of range.
An almost ear-splitting screech erupted from the raven man, who swung the spear at the retreating crow in a savage arc. Ianto-crow felt the breeze from the blade and for a split-second thought it had missed him entirely, until he felt it snag against his tail, severing the very tips of two or three feathers…
It stung a little, not really a physical pain, although perhaps a small amount of the spear’s energy was transmitted through his feathers. Mostly, Ianto-crow felt peeved at having any part of his glossy plumage marred by this monster. He was proud of his feathers; they were an important part of his identity as a crow, just as his tailored suits were an important part of his human identity. He was who he was, in either form.
Still, as he alighted on a high branch, looking down at the enemy, he saw that his latest assault on the raven man had been a success. Now there was only one glowing blue eye where before there had been two. He scraped his claws clean on the rough bark, studying the scene below as the one-eyed monster stooped to pick up his hat from the ground, replacing it on his head.
The hat would get in the way of any attempt at the other eye, which was unfortunate; Ianto-crow would first have to rip it off a second time, which would alert his opponent to what he was planning. So, clearly, he wouldn’t gain anything by repeating the same tactic. Raven man was now blind in his right eye, however. Could Ianto use that to his advantage?
Sadly, since this being held the spear in his left hand, the lack of his right eye probably wouldn’t hamper him much. Depth perception would hopefully be affected, and perhaps that would result in poor aim, but Ianto-crow still needed to disarm this threat, and the sooner the better. He couldn’t keep fighting all night. It looked like he would have to take a risk, strike at the creature’s left hand, try to cause enough damage that he would have to switch the spear to his blind side.
The raven familiars had so far stayed out of the fight, but as Ianto-crow took to the air this time, so did they, flapping towards him, croaking loudly. As the first two neared him, coming from opposite directions, hoping to catch him between them, he folded his wings and dropped like a stone, causing his attackers to collide in a tangle of flailing wings and slashing claws, feathers flying. Spreading his wings, he soared upwards again, laughing at the birds’ predicament.
“Caw! Clumsy oafs! You need flying lessons! Caw!”
The third raven dived for him, but Ianto-crow went into a steep climb, twisted in the air as his attacker followed him, turned upside down for a moment, and closed his claws tightly around the raven’s leg. Righting himself and flipping the raven beneath him, upside down and helpless, he dived for the ground again, slamming the hapless bird into a marshy pool, releasing its leg, and shooting upwards once more at an angle.
The manoeuvre had taken him in a dangerous direction, however, straight towards the raven man’s upright spear! He back-winged desperately, claws stretched out ahead of him, hoping he could push off from the spear shaft without damaging himself. It was an awkward manoeuvre, but one foot caught against the spear, just below the blade, his leg bending to absorb the shock of impact, then straightening, driving him away again, his talons curling…
A scream of rage came from below, and it was only as Ianto-crow spiralled upwards, heart hammering and lungs labouring, that he realised there was something clutched in his foot: a ragged bunch of raven feathers, torn from the spear’s shaft. Even as that registered, two of the ravens, their eyes no longer glowing, flapped frantically away into the trees, making good their escape. The one he’d dunked into the marsh floundered its way to solid ground, shook itself, and with a distressed croak, flapped and hopped away across the cemetery.
Temporarily out of breath and needing to gather himself, Ianto-crow landed in a tree and stared at the feathers gripped in his claws. Huh! Looked like he may have just inadvertently broken the raven man’s control over his familiars! Okay, not exactly planned, but he’d take it. Whatever worked, right? At least now he might not need to worry about attacks from unexpected directions. A single opponent had to be better than four.
No longer lord of the ravens, the creature began to stalk ponderously across the marshy ground at this end of the old cemetery, heading for slightly dryer ground. Beyond that was the entrance to the cemetery, past the small, disused church, which Ianto thought he recalled had been abandoned due to subsidence in the area caused by the collapse of some old mining tunnels.
It made Ianto wonder whether a crack between dimensions had somehow developed in the shifting underground strata, allowing this malevolent creature to slip through, aided by the Rift. Or maybe it had been buried there sometime in the past, when the church and the cemetery had still been holy ground, trapped for what should have been eternity, unable to escape and wreak havoc, until a localised Rift event had released it. There was little chance he’d ever find out, though. Not that any of that mattered.
Whatever the case, obviously Ianto couldn’t let the creature make good its escape. If it got away from here, there was a possibility that it might be stronger away from an area that must still be sanctified, at least to a degree. He couldn’t risk that, so if he was going to defeat this menace, he would have to do it soon, before it managed to get out into the world.
At least here, his opponent seemed to be penned in. The walls surrounding the cemetery were not tall, and there were several places where they’d collapsed partway and could be easily stepped over, and yet raven man was making towards the only gate… There had to be a reason for that; maybe the wall, despite the damage to it, still formed a barrier that was impenetrable to a being that radiated such a pall of evil.
Taking to the air again, Ianto swept low over the raven man, snatching his hat once more, shuddering at the skin-like texture, then swerved away and dropped the ugly thing in the wettest part of the marsh he could see, just to annoy the enemy. Okay, it was petty, but so what? This was a battle against something otherworldly, something seething with malevolence, so underhand tactics were totally allowed. Ianto-crow passed over the cemetery wall, flew parallel to it for a few seconds, all the time watching the raven man as he turned slowly, trying to locate his antagonist, then as soon as the birdman’s back was towards him, he flew hard and fast towards the creature’s spear hand, aiming for a couple of inches of bare arm between the end of the leather gauntlet and the edge of the sleeve.
He clamped his claws into the arm, digging them in as deep as he could. From this position, the spear couldn’t be turned against him, and he took advantage of that fact by tearing with his beak at the fingers gripping the spear’s shaft, drawing foul black blood in the process, but breaking at least two of the digits. Raven man reacted quickly though, lashing out with his right hand, fist clenched, metal claws slashing… only to cut deep into his own left arm, because Ianto-crow was already gone, soaring skyward once more.
For his next attack, after dipping low enough over a puddle to rinse his beak out, Ianto landed briefly on the monster’s head, claws raking towards its face, but missing the single glowing eye because the angle was wrong. Still, he pulled out more feathers from his opponent’s scalp, so it wasn’t a complete failure. Anything that caused damage was good. It would hopefully help to wear the enemy down.
Ianto-crow was also growing weary though; it was night, and he’d had a long day even before the Rift alert that had brought him out here. He should be back at the Hub, relaxing, perhaps enjoying a late dinner with Jack, not playing tag with some entity from a Hell dimension. At this point, it was a race to see who would run out of steam first, and for the sake of Cardiff, not to mention the rest of the world, it had better not be a certain valiant were-crow. He couldn’t fail!
Diving on the birdman again, Ianto-crow’s talons tore at the back of its neck, drawing more black blood, and ripping a hole in the already ragged black cloak the being wore. Soaring away before his opponent could retaliate, he gained altitude before stooping like a hawk, plunging straight at the raven man’s face. It was a risky move, and he had to pull out of the dive before he was close enough to strike as the enemy lashed out with those metal claws, but he turned sharply to come back, striking at the already injured arm, this time wrenching the being’s thumb from its socket.
The spear fell from the raven man’s broken hand, and he screamed, his form wavering, like smoke being torn apart by a wind, even though there wasn’t so much as a hint of a breeze, the air so still the world seemed to be holding its breath. Ianto dived again, driving the tattered creature backwards, deeper into the cemetery again, taking satisfaction from the way the monster floundered in the increasingly marshy ground.
Still, the spear seemed to be the source of this being’s power and strength, perhaps all that allowed it to take shape in this dimension, and Ianto remembered all too well how raven man had coalesced from shadows beginning with a hand gripping the spear’s shaft. Could that happen again? Could this creature form itself anew, begin the fight all over again? It was a chance Ianto couldn’t take, so he gave up his harrying pursuit and returned to the spear, landing beside it and tearing with his beak at the leather thongs securing the blade in place.
Blue fire flickered feebly, and Ianto-crow felt an occasional tingle of static electricity, but it was nothing compared to what he’d felt go through him earlier in the fight. He kept one eye on the raven man, abandoning his task to attack the menace whenever it tried to approach, then resuming pulling at the leather bindings until at last they gave way. As the intricately engraved spearhead at last came free, the former lord of the ravens gave one final furious screech of rage and was simply… gone.
Ianto-crow breathed a sigh of relief. “Caw! Good riddance to bad rubbish!” he muttered, before tackling the leather bindings along the length of the spear shaft, loosening them until the spear was nothing more than an old, worn wooden stick. Only then did he fly back to where he’d left his clothes and re-take human form, quickly re-dressing against the chill of an autumn night.
Returning to the spear, he pulled on a pair of gloves from his coat pocket, for whatever protection they might afford him, picked up the spear shaft, and broke it in half over his knee. Then he broke each of the halves into two by leaning them against a convenient grave marker and stamping on them. When he got back to the Hub, the pieces of wood and the leather thongs were going straight in the incinerator. The blade… Well, maybe that could be melted down somehow.
Fetching a couple of containment boxes from the SUV, Ianto dropped the leather and the broken shaft in one, and the blade into the other, then stalked across the cemetery to retrieve the hat, picking it up in one gloved hand, holding it out at arm’s length, gripping the very edge of the brim between thumb and forefinger. That could go in the incinerator too; he didn’t know exactly WHAT it was made from, and he really didn’t want to know. He could still remember what it had felt like, gripped in his claws.
As he loaded everything into the SUV’s boot, he wondered what exactly he should write in his report. Not that he didn’t think Jack would believe him, not after their other encounters with weird, possibly supernatural, beings, but future generations of Torchwood agents might raise their eyebrows at an epic battle between a raven man and a were-crow. Then again, that was Torchwood, wasn’t it? Weirdness was the name of the game.
Closing the boot, Ianto stared out across the abandoned cemetery; it looked still now, and perfectly normal, the shining blue runes that had been etched into the branches of the dying tree down the far end when the raven man first materialised were gone, or at least no longer shining. Perhaps tomorrow he’d come back and make sure they were really gone… Better safe than sorry.
He wondered if he should perhaps bring an axe…
The End

MizCindy on Chapter 1 Tue 04 Nov 2025 07:07PM UTC
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badly_knitted on Chapter 1 Tue 04 Nov 2025 08:24PM UTC
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FranArian on Chapter 2 Mon 27 Oct 2025 11:45PM UTC
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badly_knitted on Chapter 2 Tue 28 Oct 2025 11:15AM UTC
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MizCindy on Chapter 2 Tue 04 Nov 2025 07:20PM UTC
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badly_knitted on Chapter 2 Tue 04 Nov 2025 08:29PM UTC
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