77th of Spring, 510 AV – The Barracks – Mid-afternoon
Siiri’s estimate had been close. At Kreesha’s insistence, they rode as hard and as fast as they could, their party reaching Taloba in just seven days. Everyone was tired and sore from the journey, moreso those who had no experience in riding. The two scouts, Onna and Kai, alighted the horses stiffly and walked to their quarters as if they were hamstrung. Miharu looked even worse.
Siiri herself felt like she’d been trampled by a herd of stampeding tskannas but she was too proud to show how sore her body was by limping. She stood at the edge of the training grounds, waiting for her muscles to still their twitching as she watched Garou and Amir lead the slavers’ horses to the army stables. She did not know their breed but most likely they would be trained and used the same way leopardbreds were.
Kreesha, still astride her tiger and looking as if she had not spent the last seven days rushing to Taloba, drew close to Siiri, her eyes not leaving the other warrior. Her own men had already left to deliver the prisoners to the temple.
“What do you intend to do with the deyhan?” she asked bluntly. “I do not understand why you bothered to take her with us. You should have left her where you found her.”
The woman was Siiri’s superior in both rank and martial prowess. She wielded her twin-headed battleaxe with great skill but more often than not she used her massive fists to destroy her enemies. She had been the one to wrestle and kill the saltwater crocodile served in last season’s Day of the Dead festival. Completely merciless, had Kreesha been the one to run across the slavers, there would not have been any prisoners to bring back to the city for sacrifice. No escaped slaves would have run out of Falyndar as well. Certainly no Kelvic would have accompanied them on the way back to Taloba. Siiri knew she had to present her case to the woman logically if she wanted her to see reason for bringing Miharu.
“She is Kelvic. She will have her uses,” Siiri began, laying her argument down in a format the other woman could understand. “Properly trained, she could serve as an effective scout in mapping out enemy camps, unlike the dogs we use. Some of our warriors who have bonded with others of her kind have successfully employed such tactics before. Nothing against the beasts we use, but we could not communicate with them as well as we could with a Kelvic.”
“Perhaps. But I do not need to know where the enemy goes to take a shit when I storm a place, warrior.”
Siiri nodded, not wanting to disagree. She knew it was easier to convince Kreesha if the woman thought she was on her side. “Of course not. But knowing the layout of an enemy camp means we reduce the risk of losing men from ambushes by having them explore areas we know nothing about. She can also help in sniffing out Dhani. She can play a part in setting up elaborate traps by acting as bait for the enemy. Or she can –”
Kreesha held up a hand, interrupting her recitation. “Very well, Siiri. You have obviously thought this out. I will leave the girl – Kelvic – as your responsibility. Any mischief from her and it’s your skin!” Without another word, the woman pounced off.
“As you will,” Siiri muttered. She turned to Miharu then, jerking her thumb at the retreating Kreesha, a faint half smile on her lips. “Wanted to know where I’d put you for the night,” she said in Common. “Follow me, let's find you a bed.”