Sands slip through my fingers, sun scorched with dried blood staining the palm where I wiped the blade.
I did not bleed. I did not bat my eyes when his severed limb flew past my face. My eyes opened wider and tasted victory more intently than my screams vanquished his memory.
I thought it was but an apparition on the sands miles past; a haunting, a demon, a scorned lover back for revenge now that I made off with valuables: the fastest steed, the cave within me where he stored his treasure when he pleased.
Thus when he appeared, when he charged by foot and outstretched his arms (much smaller from my new height) feebly, weakly to end me first, so he could brag to the village, "She is like the women who believe they can fly."
I do fly to my sword, my hand unsheathes the blazing boiling metal. With one sharp ting I watch his arm and the tiny dagger sail across the desert and settle atop the sand, gently gracefully, unlike his living, boasting words would have wanted.
To the man who brought destruction in the depths, where coolness and faithful waters dripped down the walls; where no one dared near for fear of the One who is near me.
They will say warrior was born of ruins. If they ask me, I will say, "Warrior is born of defeat no more."