She appears frail. Lyrical limbs and delicately turned
features peek from under a shrouding cloak of strangely glimmering cloth, which
hangs heavily to the top of her soft grey leather boots. Her platinum hair
cascades around a gently pointed face and completely down her back in an
ethereal nimbus. When they are open, her eyes are like quicksilver and flit
about, easily distracted. Floating along on choreographed movements, she takes
no prolonged notice of the forest in which she travels. Or so it seems.
It is
all masterfully crafted illusion. Her strength and grace are that of a hunter
rather than a dancer. And as a hunter she moves lithely on silent feet, her
athletic body along with a large quiver of arrows hidden beneath the strange
cloak. The silvery curtain of waist length hair camouflages the most obvious
signs of her heritage: softly pointed ears and a burled wooden bow. Her eyes
dart from shadow to shadow, moving on so quickly it appears that she could not
possibly notice much. They are the trained eyes of a Tracer, however, and she
notices everything in minute detail. Indeed, she spies something and her airy
footsteps pause. A dark figure hulks out of a copse of trees. In one fluid
motion, she reaches across her back for her bow and to her hip to part a slit
in her cloak. Again, liquid movement as she grabs an arrow from a quiver
hanging at her thigh, strings it, and lets it fly with perfect aim into the
throat of the man sized wolf that is her target.
She
moves purposefully forward, her leather clad legs visible in the side vents of
her cloak now that she has lengthened her strides. And although she still
maintains the silent glide that is peculiar to her race, her knee high boots
scrape along the twigs and needles on the forest floor as she crouches next to
the mangy corpse.
Her
voice is unexpectedly sultry and resonant as she cracks the silence with one
word, "Lupen."
It is
as if the forest hears her: birds panic into the skies, squirrels chitter into
their nests, the very trees seem to curl up, drawing in their branches.
She
stands and grips the silver shaft of the spent arrow. Twisting, she violently
yanks it out of the crumpled creature and brazenly wipes the remaining traces
of vile juices on its own matted fur. She looks over her shoulder as she
returns the arrow to the blue leather quiver.
"Are
there more?" This is spoken to the large grey tiger as it pads from
between two trees and over to the lupen, sniffing at the oozing wound in its
throat. Slanted green eyes make contact with round lavender ones before the cat
lopes back into the trees with the huntress bounding behind.
They do
not run far. The cat stops abruptly at the edge of a clearing and growls a
complaint into the air. The girl can smell it too. The metallic stench of many
dead bodies wafts around the clearing as if confined by the ring of trees
encircling the meadow. It is colder inside the ring, and even though there are
no trees to shade the sun, it appears darker and more dismal than it should. This
is what she has been tracking for three days. This eerie coldness. Five times
she has crossed its trail. Each time a small collective of one of the lesser
races was butchered, the gruesome pieces left strewn about a confined area:
twice a gully and three times now a meadow. Since the Lupen live in the forest
and the Orcan live in the hills, the gullies and meadows are the ideal places
in those habitats to stage an ambush. But what could butcher these creatures
like this, using no apparent weapon? The
bodies appear to be torn apart. The only race large enough and smart enough to
stage the ambush and carry out the violent rage would carry off the bodies for
feasting, not leave them lying to rot. And she has not heard any of the drunken
rioting that heralds a Grogan war party.
The
hairs prickle at the back of her neck. Icy fingers weave down her spine. The
cat can feel it, too. Fear has become foreign to this pair, yet she sees it
mirrored in the green eyes of her companion. It heightens all of her senses and
what she hears weakens her knees just as the cat crouches to the grass.
"Dor
landa, Nightfang! Dor landa, et sirda vandadas!"
Never
before has she uttered that command. But what she feels has her screaming it at
the cat. "Run, Nightfang. Run and
do not come back."
Years
of training have given them the focus to think under pressure. Years of
conditioning have given them the strength and agility to accomplish whatever
feat they must to survive. Years of drilling have honed the skills that are now
instinctive. They do not worry or hesitate. They act.
Taking
off in a dead sprint in opposite directions, weaving high and low through the
trees and brush, they flee. As long as that icy keening can be heard, they will
run. It grows louder and seems to follow in the two directions that the girl
and cat choose, north and south.
Her breath
is heavy, but not ragged. She is terrified, but in control. She does not see
the ravine in time to alter her course, so she tucks her legs up and rolls down
the rocky face gathering bruises and cuts with every bump, but as soon as she
slows, she gathers her feet back under her and continues running. She is well
past the ravine when she realizes that she is not being followed. The keening
has stopped and so does she, with her hands on her knees, examining her
battered arms as she settles her breathing. She begins walking, taking note of
the sun filtering through the treetops. The chill is gone. The smell of fear
that seemed to seep from the forest floor is gone, too.
She
makes her way to a stream. Examining her tattered cloak, she locates a portion
that doesn't appear quite as filth riddled as the rest and tears it free. Crouching,
she soaks it in the cool water and then begins tending to her numerous wounds. It
isn't long before she needs to tear another piece from her cloak, and then
another after that. By the time she is clean and the oozing from her injuries
has stopped, the sun is falling from the sky. Pushing the remnants of her cloak
under a bush, she resumes her trek. This time, she heads east. The cat will
also return to the village.
As she
jogs, her tired mind returns to the scene in the meadow. The chill. The bodies.
The keening. She has never come across anything like this before. It seems as
if she was chased away. The pursuit did not last long., just long enough to put
distance between her and the clearing. She has been confronted by many angry
mother bears and that is what this feels like. Something was protecting that
clearing.
The
daylight ebbs and her curious purple eyes can be seen glowing in the dusk. Night
vision is unique to the Elvan. It allows her to continue her fast pace and she
reaches the village before the third moon makes its appearance.
Nightfang
is crouching by the gates as she approaches the settlement. He trots to her and
brushes against her smooth leather leggings. Smiling, she bends to rub one hand
between his ears and the other under his chin.
"I
am glad to meet you again, as well, ma fal'onda." And she climbs the ramp to the village in the
trees.
* * *
"I
am telling you, Falon, we were chased."
"Lyrrica,
sister, I think this comes from too much time spent cavorting with that cat in
the wilds. It is very understandable
that you panicked. A scene that gruesome would instill fear and paranoia in the
most seasoned tracker. You need a warm bath and a heavy meal and a night under
a roof. Then, tomorrow you can take Jalyth and his Band out to investigate with
a clear mind."
Falon
never gave his sister credit. She was his younger sister. But she had
seen 14 cycles since she was inducted into the elite group known as Tracers. And
like all Tracers, she had been a village tracker for 10 before that. She had shown such talent, the village had
nominated her for the position of village tracer, and she had traveled to
Dorvaan for five years of extensive training. There were only three tracers per
village at any time, and she was the youngest. She was also the best. It was a
distinction Falon chose to overlook when dealing with her. In his eyes, she would always be the skinny,
accident prone younger sister in constant need of guidance.
"Falon,
I am hungry. I am tired. I have spent 12 moons 'cavorting with that cat in the
wilds', as you put it. I would like nothing more than to push this off on all
of that. But I know what I felt. I had been tracking this…whatever it is. The
scene was not new to me. And yes, tomorrow I will take Jalyth and the Band out
to see what they can make of it. And
most likely the thing will be absent as it has been the four times previous. But
that doesn't undo the fact that I was pursued. Nightfang, too. He was as scared
as I. You mark my words, there is
something in the woods the likes we have not seen before. And since it is
attacking and butchering the creatures that live here, we should take it seriously.
And that is my professional opinion."
She couldn't
resist reminding him. It always made his eyes go wide and sometimes he even
turned a mild shade of pink at the reproach. But even at this grave time, she
said the words with a gentle light in her eye and a delicate half smile on her
lips. For all his bossiness and presumption, he loved her and she treasured
that. It was a tough world and had been
for as long as she could remember, so it was nice to be looked after and fussed
over every once in a while.She wouldn't change her brother for anything in the
world. She just needed him to take her seriously from time to time.
"I
still think you are looking at this with weary eyes. And that is my
professional opinion."
"Yes,
Dr. Falon." She stretches on her toes to gently brush a sisterly
kiss on his smooth cheek. And he
grudgingly reaches over and ruffles a hand against her silvery hair.
Grabbing
an apple from a nearby bowl, she leaves the room on tired legs.
* * *
The man
draws the stump of arm closer to his nose. Or maybe it is his eyes. It is
difficult to tell exactly what sense he is using to examine the macabre
evidence. He seems to hold the hunk of decaying flesh close and scan it with
his whole body before abruptly standing and dropping it to the ground with a
dull thud. Clearly it has told him as
much of the tale as it is going to and serves no further purpose to him.
"I
see no sign of a weapon, either crafted or natural. There is minimal bruising
which points to a death before the bodies were sundered, however there is no
sign of what actually killed them. Strangely, nothing has entered this meadow since
you were here, Lyrrica. The dry season has resulted in many hungry predators
willing to eat anything to survive, yet nothing has attempted to feast on these
remains even when the stench of death can be smelled almost to the edge of the
streams."
"Also…"
and here his brusque voice wavers. He becomes visibly uncomfortable. For Jalyth
to be uncomfortable is unheard
of. He clears his throat and begins
again.
"I
must mention that I feel something…cold. Unnatural? Yes, distinctly unnatural."
He
again falls into the act of speaking and regains his confidence, peering
through his thick ebony eyebrows at Lyrrica, "And that is impossible
here."
The
enormous forest and all of the surrounding border are naturally blessed. One
might even say enchanted. It has been
this way since the beginning of time. Well, at least since the Greenfather
declared the Elvan the most treasured of his children and rewarded them with
the Six Cities. Each one of the Six Cities is buried deep in the center of a
forest that holds anything unnatural or potentially threatening at its border. It
is futile to attempt to journey into such a place, for the paths will
mysteriously dump the trespasser out again at the entry point. To be accepted
into the forest, the traveler must be native, marked, or escorted.
Lyrrica
looks deeply into the trackers green eyes and nods. Her lips firm at the memory
of those icy fingers of fear clawing at her spine.
"The
noise was one I have never before heard, Tracker. And I was
overcome."
There
is a shameful pause at the words. For a Tracer to be fearful is as unheard of
as Jalyth's discomfort.
"You
are humbled, but do not feel ashamed, Lyrrica. I feel the source of your fear. It
has unnerved me as well."
Scanning
the collected group of leather clad Elvan he continues further, "I am even
willing to be as presumptuous as to speak for this group. There is something
here that we all sense should not have been capable of entering. And whatever it is disturbs us monumentally
even in its absence. I cannot imagine
what it would be like to encounter it directly."
Each
member of the tracking party does indeed look nervous. This is yet another
unheard of condition since the Elvan are an arrogant, self assured race, seldom
afflicted with nervousness or a wavering countenance. The day seems to be
filling up with exceptional situations and everyone is unsettled.
"You
say you have been tracking this for twelve moons?"
"Yes,
Tracker. And each scene is similar to this: bodies torn and left untouched by
even the carrion eaters, all occurred in either a meadow or gully,and each time
I could make out no mark left by a weapon, crated or otherwise. It is just as
you determined."
"The
only victims are the lesser races?"
"Yes."
A single, sharp nod sets her unbound silver hair bouncing.
"And
they all occurred far from the outlying villages?"
"The
closest is this one, Tracker." Quicksilver eyes sweep the meadow.
"So
there is no apparent purpose. These creatures have no wealth or cultivated land
to fight over. And although predatory,
they simply act as predators, only attacking to protect their territory or to eat."
Jalyth
dips his head in thought. After a moment he tilts it back up enough to look
into Lyrrica's childlike face.
"Pack
your weapons and enough food to last until we reach Saadra'naar."
* * *

