Summer 5th 511 It was unusual for Zlynge to make such a fuss about anything out in the wilds. He knew better than to bark at passing gulls and skittering lizards. It would scare off the larger game, like hares and goats. Silent obedience was paramount behavior if he was going to perform as a hunting dog. So when Zlynge began howling and barking at the top of his healthy, canine lungs, it had made Navisya strongly irritable and put her on edge. Zlynge only barked at two things—wolves and people. She was in no mood for either. Wolves meant danger, and people could mean marauders. More likely, other Symenestra hunters, but they usually kept a respectfully wide berth around each other. The Symenestra nimbly made her way across slanted crags and boulders, her hunting gear and quiver full of arrows rattling whenever she hopped across narrow crevices and skittered over steep bluffs. Making so much noise was usually counterproductive to hunting, but if Zlynge was barking at danger, it might serve them both well to make her approach known. Her dog was somewhere closer to the beach, having quickly run off earlier when he'd caught a scent. There was his large, stocky shape, standing on the precipice of a steep embankment. The bay was laid out beyond him, a flat ocean serving as a pedestal for the indigo night sky, speckled with bright stars. Zlynge had taken a different route to arrive here, not nearly as capable at climbing or sticking to cliff walls as his master. Now a sheer drop separated him from whatever was inspiring him to bark so endlessly. Finally Navisya came jogging up to her companion, putting a steadying hand at his neck as she came along beside him, then looked down to see what all the fuss was about. "…Hn." It was a body! Humanoid, but clearly not Symenestra. Its motionless, nude shape was sprawled atop the sandy beach, where the water lapped at the shoreline mere yards away. By the looks of things, it had washed ashore like a piece of driftwood, but there weren't any settlements close enough to Kalinor to explain it. Possibly a passing ship had tossed it overboard, the ocean being a convenient way to dispose of the dead. The skin was pale, pinkish, so… human? "Hush now," Navisya hissed, squeezing at her dog's flesh. Hesitantly, Zlynge gradually stopped his barking and sat in uneasy silence, shifting and groaning excitedly. The Symenestra looked down at her companion, who looked back up at her, licked his jowls, and then opened into a wide, panting smile. His large, brown eyes searched hers eagerly. "What do you look so proud for? That isn't food." She turned back to the body, tilting her head. Though it was some distance to the ground below, she could tell it was male, and either very young or very scrawny, or both. The fact that he was completely naked was befuddling as well as reassuring—he had no weapons on him, so he was likely not a thief or raider. It also meant there was nothing of value to be looted, no coin or trinkets. "Do you think it's alive?" Navisya asked Zlynge, who of course was useless. The question hung in the air for only a moment until the Symenestra seemed to arrive at a decision. "One way to find out, I suppose." Zlynge barked once desperately as Navisya disappeared over the edge of the cliff. Her slender frame descended the rockface easily, wiry limbs finding easy purchase through her thin sleeves and bare palms. The earth was too rough for bare feet, but the calves and shins of her legs could adhere to rock through her black leggings. The Summer weather provided adequate warmth, so the hunter didn't have to dress thickly. To see Navisya's long, flexible form climbing down the cliff wall, it was easy to intuit why the Symenestra were often called "spiders". Up above there was the sound of claws scampering against rock as Zlynge began to find some other way down. Arriving at the bottom, Navisya cautiously began to approach the body lying in the sand. She was right—it was human, and he was younger than she first thought. He was on the cusp of manhood, perhaps 13 or 14 if human ages were anything like Symenestra. It was then that she felt her first wave of pity for the unfortunate creature; he wasn't much younger than Navisya's baby sister. Although he hadn't yet moved, or shown any signs that he was even alive, Navisya reached over her shoulder and unfastened the flap of her quiver. She drew out an arrow, then held it fast in one hand. It was best to be cautious. If, all of a sudden, he shot up and tried to attack her, then she would be prepared to shove an arrow into his neck. Navisya knelt down next to the boy's head. One of her clawed hands reached out, hesitated, then swept away locks of hair from his forehead so she could feel at his skin. It was warm, without the sickly chill of death. She quickly withdrew her hand, then wetted her fingertips on her tongue. Reaching down to his face again, her fingertips hovered near his dry, saltwater-chapped lips. The passing of air cooled her skin. "Well, you're breathing," she told him pointedly, with a touch of amusement. For a brief while, Navisya simply sat next to him, staring searchingly at the cryptic, silent ocean, as if it could answer her questions. If her father were here, he would have told her to leave the body for the gulls and buzzards. Although he was much wiser than she was, Navisya simply couldn't sit comfortably with leaving a child to die in the wilds. She sighed. "You're fortunate my father's not here, or I'd listen to him." Reaching down to her belt, she unclipped her waterskin. She had to set momentarily down her arrow so she could lift the boy's head, which was gently set into her lap. "Don't get any ideas," she reminded the stranger, then carefully began to trickle water against his mouth. "I just need my hand free, so that I can stick you if you decide to be my enemy." Hopefully, if there was any life left in the poor lad, he would begin to drink. Somewhere nearby, Navisya could hear rocks overturning. Zlynge was getting closer. "Hello? Can you hear me? Can you move at all?" With her arrow hand, Navisya again swept up the boy's hair with ebony claws so she could see his eyes clearly. Her gold irises were merely gilded rims on eerily large black pupils. Her cobweb-colored hair was pulled back into a tight, braided weave, accenting her long, thin neck. "I'm hoping you know Common tongue, azo, because it's the only other language I know." |