1 Spring, 512 AV Like ants swarming a garden, Endal raced through a labyrinth of statuesque Wind Eagles. The silent birds, with heads tilted just so, and minds flung far beyond their own bodies, paid no mind to the raging Inarta. All activity at the lakes ceased when they’d descended, but once their Riders stumbled out to search the forest of feathers for their own particular bird, an alien experience that set their teeth on edge. Small angry and frightened voices clamored to reach the protectors. To plea, insult, or coax a response from the mute creatures, it was all the panicked Endal could do. Sai jostled through a tunnel and rushed out into Syna’s fresh freedom with the rest of her caste. A man stumbled into a woman before her, and Sai’s boot dug into his back as she moved beyond them in search. Faces lost distinction, pale features and red hair, a mass of faceless bodies. The hair on the back of her neck quivered. Realizing the hopeless nature of their method, she struggled to the edge of shoving bodies. A snarl twisted her face into familiar disgruntlement as sharp hues cut through the stream of people. “Jerle, Horpie, Trelka!” the flightleader snapped, and three heads whirled around, their single minded focus interrupted by the ruthless woman in charge of their wing. Iron determination reached into the throng and fished this man and women out. “Stay here, if you see anyone else grab them.” Before she’d finished the order, the little bundle of mettle and muscle hefted herself up the side of the mountain. She scrambled up a scree field first and finally hoisted up the face itself. Fingers turning into tempered hooks, latching onto stone lips and bubbles with a strength never before displayed. Her feet found holds without her guidance, and when she was about fifteen feet off the ground, she found her first good jug hold. Able to hang off this like a monkey, her body rotated out and frozen hues scoured the field of feathered statues. “Jerle, east side, perched on the booby boulders! Horpie, with Jerle, at the lake edge in front of the boobies.” A cacophony of voices suddenly lifted up to her in demand, and people swarmed for high ground to gain similar perspective. Dangling, the unexpected hand that latched onto her foot for purchase rotated her beyond the ability of her shoulder and tore her off the rocks. Tumbling down the scree field, dazed, bruised, but oblivious to injuries, two more members of her wing collected and hovered with impatient and hopeful faces. “I didn’t see anything else. I bet our entire wing is on the east side.” No one seemed to have a better idea, so the group fought their way in Jerle and Horpie’s footsteps. These Eagles spent the most time together, a good sixty percent of their time was devoted to hunting and working with their wingmates. It made sense to her that they’d seek one another out during whatever this was. As people let out cries of discovery, Sai burst through two Eagles, eyes lifting to Catabasis’ favorite lake perch. The grizzled creature molting there was a sight to smart sore eyes. Cursing, Sai shoved aside a dazed woman and darted further down the shore. They’d been preparing to go for a flight, and it was only by pure chance that Sai had realized that Catabasis had fled the aerie where he’d been waiting. When she heard the sound, feathers rustling, feet shifting to test purchase, panic raised acrid in her throat. She wasn’t about to lose this chance. A man swung onto the back of his own bonded, but he quickly found himself used as a ladder to help her reach a seat, as well. He protested and would have knocked her off, but the Eagle hopped and he scrambled for a grip, Sai glared, daring him to say anything as the creature took off. As one, the great birds blacked out the sun, sweeping low over waters and pounded wind to gain altitude. A black stream of writhing feathers spiraling toward one particular vent. A cry deafened her, but it was one of many, as the Eagles gave voice to whatever it was they battled with. Jerle and Horpie had found their Eagles, and clung to their backs just below Sai and her mysterious savior. Later, she would realize it was a fellow flightleader. Without thinking, Sai rolled from her perch, sliding over grease feathers, catching the wing to adjust projection, and fell the short distance to Jerle. He shouted, elbowing her in the nose, but just as quickly secured both himself and his assailant. Just as she about gave up on making either a mental or visual connection with Catabasis, she felt his attention slide over her. A mere caress, only the smallest bit of focus given to her, but it was enough. His preoccupation allowed her to pin point him as well as any devoted conversation. Repeating her first aerial maneuver, the little woman soon toppled onto the familiar leather of his gear. Ass in the air, feet flailing and hands scrambling to get resituated, Catabasis’ full focus abruptly assaulted her. As he opened her up to the situation, her small mind sifting through information much slower than he offered it, the entire wing broke off from the main mass. The Eagles of Wind Reach continued on, some with riders, most without, paying no mind to their fleeing brethren. Without a man there to break her fall and keep her mounted, Sai struggled to stay astride the furiously flapping Eagle. In the daze of Ivak, and prison, and magic wall, and breach, she never would know how she managed to form a plan and relay it. Before long her wingmates, and a few random faces that came to names only with difficulty, devolved to mere dots on the horizon and she turned her attention to Alvadas. They would warn the cities of Kalea that Ivak…who the petch was Ivak…was breaking free. Besides the obvious parameters—Ivak was in prison, therefore he must not be good—Sai had no clue why they needed to warn people. But still, one rider to Avanthal. Two riders to the spires. One rider to Denval. One rider to Sultros. Two rider’s to Kalinor. One rider to Lhavit. Sai to Alvadas. |