Sorry for the double post; I'm doing it this way so as to avoid running into the character limit, which I do not know. I'm probably being overly generous, but better safe than sorry, right?
The air was still as Keth left the roughly cobbled street behind and trudged through the tall grasses toward the woods. He cursed himself with every foul word he knew in Elven - which, given that his hometown had been on relatively good terms with the Elves since the last war, was a fair number of words - and muttered to himself about his foolishness. Take on an ettin, sure! Be eaten while being taunted! Every bad quality of an ogre or a troll, multiplied by two.
"Perhaps I'll just leave, and never return here," he murmured. "If I go back without the ettin's head-" heads, he thought, what a fool he must have sounded! "-they will surely ridicule me and call me coward." Keth stopped, and looked up through the twisted branches above him at the stars beyond. "And I would be a coward. A coward, thief, and closer than ever to my father." He stood there a moment more, then lowered his head. Just in time to see a flash of white dart between two trees. Instantly on guard, Keth drew his sword and hoisted his shield from his shoulders. He could hear them, now, all around him. Circling him - waiting for him to run.
Keth did not run. "Come on, then, either attack me or find an Elf to fu-" The first wolf took him by surprise, barreling into his side, but caught only the man's armour in its jaws. Keth rolled, gripping the torso of the wolf tightly to ensure it didn't recover before him. Ending up on top, he pushed himself back enough to thrust his shortsword down, skewering the wolf's neck. Propping himself up on his sword he used the thrust to get to his feet, just in time to bash a charging wolf to the side. Another attacked him from behind, tearing into his leg painfully. Twisting around, he hacked into the wolf's shoulder, cursed his inaccuracy, and had to turn back to fend off a third attacker with his shield. Suddenly dots flashed across his eyes as he felt flesh being torn away from his leg, and he fell forward, onto the dead wolf. Stunned, it was all he could do to block the two wolves near his head as the one near his legs pounced.
Too late, Keth raised his sword to impale the wolf, but was bowled over. His sword cut into the wolf's upper body, but while it yelped in pain, it did not get off of him. Rage and pain swept in to cloud Keth's mind. Without knowing what he was doing, he let go of his sword and grabbed the wolf by the scruff of its neck. With a violent surge, he threw it down onto the ground beside him and rolled to his feet, just barely managing to block the descending muzzles of the other two wolves. Letting out a war cry, Keth drew back his shield arm and slammed it into the side of one wolf's head, knocking it away with the force of his blow and stunning it. As the largest wolf stood up, Keth grabbed his sword and stared into its eyes.
Hackles raised, the two wolves left standing lowered themselves to pounce. Keth drew back his sword arm, waiting. The scent of blood spurred the smaller of the two wolves on first, and it launched itself at Keth with a ferocious snarl. With a loud yell, Keth brought his sword down on the charging wolf's head, splitting its skull in twain, and followed it with a crushing slam from his shield. The larger wolf hardly had time to react as Keth rounded on it, wildly swinging his blade. It dodged to the side of the crazed swings twice and charged, knocking Keth flat again. This time the man knew no fear or mercy - he released his sword, wrapped his shield arm around the wolf's throat, and strangled it against his chest. As the wolf valiantly struggled against his grip, he buried his fingers in its eye sockets, gouging out both eyes, and braced his shield arm with his free hand. The wolf who had been stunned chose this inopportune time to rise again, and leapt in to its brother's assistance, latching onto Keth's bare arm. But he ignored the pain, squeezing ever tighter as the large wolf's struggling subsided. Only when it had sagged against him did he take sword in hand and deal with the last wolf, still somewhat weakened from the previous blow to its head.
There he sat for the better part of an hour, too exhausted to move the dead wolf's head from his lap or even wipe clean his blade. When he did finally regain the energy to stand, he stumbled on his wounded leg. "Damn it," he whispered. Using a nearby fallen branch to support his partially lame leg, Keth slowly hobbled away from the bloody scene, memories of the vicious slaughter already fading from his numbed mind.