A blade whizzed by her, sinking into the dirt. Was somebody trying to fight the werewolf, or did they just miss? There wasn't any time to spare a thought. Taking her arrow, she liberally coated it in as many poisons she had on her person–cantarella, belladonna, hemlock, wolfsbane. But before she could notch it to her bow the rabid monster was already free. As it was lunging at her, Liselotte forced thorny brambles to rapidly grow form the ground to shield herself. Even then, it knocked her to the ground with a swipe and snapped its fangs trying to get at her. The brambles tore into it, but the furred hide offset their damage. Finally, at her wits' end she grabbed one of her poison vials and threw it into the beast's eyes. A bloodcurdling screech pierced the cool Venti air as the liquid did its trick, but that only served to enrage it more. In its unfocused frenzy, the alchemist quickly regained control over the battle. With a word a wall of earth rose and slammed up into the werewolf's jaw, then she sent the raised earth hurtling at it. While it was disoriented she pulled back her bowstring and simultaneously commanded the surviving brambles to hold its limbs fast. A twang was heard, and a yowl of pain.
It didn't matter if the wound was in a vital area. That singular arrow had enough toxins loaded on the tip to kill five grown men in a matter of minutes. But werewolves were abnormally hardy creatures, so that wouldn't be enough to kill it. She was out of hemlock, having thrown it into the beast's face earlier. Adding another dose of poison through a spell, she was trying to whittle it down as fast as possible. The brambles snapped again, and the werewolf was in a blind rage. Smashing whatever it could, whatever focus it had was gone. Since Liselotte was the closest person out in the open, it charged at her again when something flew through the air and landed squarely in the monster's skull with a loud crack!
The werewolf froze, standing still. Then, succumbing to the accumulated poison and injuries it fell to the ground with a shuddering thud. An axe was now embedded in the top of the creature's cranium and dark blood began pooling beneath its head. Turning to see where the axe had come from, she saw the hunter she had purchased the bones from earlier. "…Good riddance. To th' Circles with ye, skin-walking mongrel!" The man walked from behind a stack of crates, retrieving his weapon from the corpse. Cleaning the blade, the light of the moon reflected off the metal. There were strange runic patterns on it, and the material certainly wasn't iron. Taking out a flask of alcohol, he poured it over the dead werewolf and struck two pieces of flint for a spark. The spark landed, and began to greedily burn up the fur on the beast. Once it hit the portions soaked by alcohol it burned brighter. Soon it was up in flames, and the man stood watching it turn to ash. "Tis the third beast in th' past two moons. More 'n more of them have come crawlin' out of th' wood. Must be those witches there, bewitching the wolves out 'n the fields." Turning to Liselotte, he gave a nod. "Ye got a scratch on ye, lass? Th' beast there was bearin' down on ye somethin' awful." Catching her breath, she shook her head. "No…I'm fine. Thank you. What–what was that thing?"
"A skin-walker, if ye never heard of them. They're beasts that become bewitched into monsters that change shape under th' moons. Sometimes 'tis a man that becomes a beast, but 'tis always due to a curse." The hunter explained. "I see… So which was it this time; a man or an animal?" She asked, looking at the burning pile. The smell of charred flesh and singed fur was strong, followed by the scent of smoldering ash.