Spring 1, 512 AV to Spring 32, AV “No!” Sian’s voice was terse. The strain of too many days spent on constant high alert and nights passed with eyes open and little to no sleep was taking its toll on him. They say that adversity brings out the best, or the worst, in a man. For Sian, his instinct for survival was foremost in his every thought and action – for on his survival depended any chance for another’s – one more precious to him than his own life. At this point in the nightmare that had become his waking life, Sian could have cared less whose toes he was stepping on. Falla was leading them, but he seemed disoriented since he had been bitten by that plant several days back. The guard’s confusion seemed to be growing with each passing hour, and Sian knew – they could not go down. Hadn’t that been clear from the first few days after they left the shelter of the cave? How many more men need die in that . . . horrible . . . Sian pushed the thought away – he couldn’t stomach seeing that mental image of the ones who had stumbled into some sort of misty murk that clung to the ground, and . . . Zintilla, my lady . . . he prayed fervently, his mouth moving silently. You have preserved us for so long now – we have come so far, we must be close, we MUST be . . . . His prayer ended in a almost silent sob, half formed and amorphous, floating up through the darkening skies to the lady of the stars, far away now in the town that seemed to exist only in his memory – on a different planet, in a different world . . . A vastly different world from the one that now surrounded the little party of survivors. ***** They had been fifty-five setting out – fifty-six if you counted the boy who tended the caravan master’s dogs. They were four now – Falla, Gordon, Sian and Liet. Ffity-five and a long string of small mules – animals that could just negotiate the mountain passes they must cross in order to reach the city of the widows. The merchant who had pulled together two of his own kind and then all the men they’d need to make the rigorous journey had been careful, weighing each man’s worth against the pay he’d have to shell out for his services. There were the mule handlers, two cooks, guards, and then the extra men who would be needed to pack the trade goods on their own backs, along with every other available back, when they reached the places where the mules would have to be unloaded for a distance in order to negotiate some particularly high, twisting, narrow track. These men also had to be skilled hunters, to provide meat on the trail, for they could never hope to carry all their food with them. Sian had signed on as a guard, waiting with inheld breath after he had talked to the main man who would direct and lead the men who would provide security on the trek. He had argued with his superiors in the Shinya, but to no avail. So he was pursuing the only other option he could come up with, to get to Kalinor. He had lied, all the time praying to his lady to forgive his dishonorable deceit. He gave false references that would never check out. He made no allusion to the past nine years of training he’d been through. He wore old clothes that he had traded in his acolyte’s garb for. He held his breath until the grizzled older man – Falla – had nodded curtly and grunted, accepting Sain onto the roster. They had set out the next morning, as Sina graced the sky with her beauty and what warmth there would be on a late winter day in the early hours of frost. Sian hadn’t smiled, but he at least felt like he was making progress. He had delayed too long, already. If Jael had been touched . . . No! He could not think of that possibility. With a grim face, he had set off with the trade caravan, iron staff in hand, with no exact plan but a very specific goal – to rescue his sister from the widows. For three weeks they walked, and climbed and slid – up a mountain and down the other side, up another mountain and then around and down and up and around again. Fording rivers, pushing their way through dense forested valleys, and always, more mountains. The Unforgiving did not get its name as a joke. There was nothing at all humorous about this vast expanse of dangerous and rugged terrain. If they made twenty miles in a day they were doing exceptionally well. Some days saw them only progressing ten or so. But this was to be expected, and they were, for the most part, on track for what the head merchant was aiming for. Six hundred miles give or take – it would be a journey of forty-five days or so. What Sian would not have given for a pair of wings? Not that he begrudged the arduous nature of the travel – he only writhed with impatience to get to their destination, for with each passing day, he knew the chances that – even if he was able somehow to find and retrieve Jael – it might be too late. If she had already been impregnated with that poisonous seed . . . Each time Sian began to think along those lines, he tried as best he could to refocus on whatever task he was doing. It would serve no purpose to worry. He could not move any faster than the steady pace of the caravan. And alone, he would not have lasted two days in this wilderness. Sian had training, of course, as an initiate and then as an acolyte, in mountaineering and survival in many different environments that one would encounter in the mountains and valleys of the area around Lhavit. But no man could make it out here on his own, unless the gods walked at his shoulder. Each day, Sian was picking up more and more of the skills that he had missed out on or that were weak. He took his turn with the cooks, helping to prepare the game that the hunters brought in, and becoming quite adept at starting a fire within just a few minutes, even when the trees were dripping with rain. He took his turn hunting, though he was not great with a bow. But several of the men took the time to give him tips and correct his mistakes so that he did manage to bring down his own buck. The every day travel was full of many instances of learning better techniques for climbing – up or down – the use of ropes and knots for getting packs and people across ice covered streams just beginning to thaw – avoiding dangers such as potential rock slides, or even the possibility of avalanches in a few of the snow packed passes, and just generally finding the best path to travel, though the merchant was the one who kept them on course. The man had travelled this route at least once a year for several decades, and had a homing instinct of a migratory bird. There were others in the party who had travelled with him, year after year, which in the end would turn out to be the salvation of the one and only member that was fated to make it to Kalinor. But in these first weeks, any thought of the terror, horror and mass catastrophe that was to see the rest of them die – sooner, or later – could not have entered their minds, and the rigors of the journey seemed acceptable. **** Falla shot Sian an owlish look, beads of sweat dotting his damp brow. “I said yes,” he growled, his words slurred slightly. “It’s the way to the river, and the river takes us to Kal-kalinor.” His eyelids fluttered as if they would close, but they stayed open, and he turned, his feet stumbling a bit, as he walked to the edge of the ridge upon which they had stopped. Gordon looked at Sian, and Liet looked at Falla’s retreating back. Liet took one step towards the ridge too. “No!” Sian hissed. “Don’t follow him! You know what might be down there!” Liet had stopped, and looked after Falla. Then he looked back at the other two. He hesitated, then resumed his path. Sian felt like screaming, cursing – he wanted to run after Liet and grab him and pull him back. But he didn’t. He was too tired, too scared, too unsure. He knew that down would lead them to more of the swirling, glowing evil pools of death – horrible death. Even if they avoided such pools, there were more of . . . them . . . in the valleys – the monsters. That seemed a melodramatic term, but there was no other, for the things they had seen, and encountered since the storm. On the ridge, heading for the high pass, they stood a better chance. It was harder, to go over the mountain. But it was safer. He hoped. Sian drew in a deep breath, watching Falla and Liet disappear. He looked at Gordon, who shrugged. “Let’s go,” the older man said. He was one of the hunters – another reason they had survived so long. Biting down on his lip, Sian nodded. The two turned their steps to the game trail they had been following and began the long, slow haul up to the pass. **** Sian had been one of the lucky ones, obviously. And luck had more to do with survival then any innate skill in the days, and then weeks, after the storm. Of course, knowing how to use a weapon, and knowing how to hunt, had been imperative. But skill alone wasn’t enough to ward off the beasts that came out, after they had made the difficult decision to leave the cave. There had been no other option, of course. They couldn’t very well stay holed up in there forever, even if there had been water. They had to move – to either go back, or forward, and it had not been their decision to make in the end. Within only a few hours march of the cave that had proven their initial salvation, they had seen the damage the storm had wreaked reached the pass that led back over the last series of mountains they had crossed – and had tumbled castle sized chunks of mountain down onto it. It was no longer a pass. Scouts had been sent out, in parties of two, to see if there was any other way that looked likely. They never returned. After a day and a night, the merchant who was in charge, had decided not to wait longer. And so, they began what remained of their journey to Kalinor. An estimated three weeks, before the storm – but there was no way to know what lay ahead, or how long it would take. They traveled much quicker, actually, for every one of the mules had been lost to the storm. When the weather had first turned, the caravan members hadn’t thought too much about it, though if a regular storm was getting ready to blow in, they would need to make camp, preferably in a sheltered place. It hit them so quickly, though, and with such ferocious hostility, that they basically broke and ran. Mules were of no consideration whatsoever. The supplies they carried, and the wares for trade, were forgotten, in a mad scramble for survival. Was it luck, fate, or just coincident that no more than halfway down the slope they slid and scrambled down was an orifice into the mountain? The mules would never have been able to clamber down the almost vertical descent, into the first passage of the cave. There were a few men who didn’t make it. No-one went back out to call after them. Fifty-three of them there were, when Falla took a head count. Some carried packs that held some small amounts of food. Most of them had a water container of some sort, for personal use. As the storm broke in full over them, they wound down and down, deeper into the belly of the cave. And there they sat, for three days. For a day they listened, straining their ears for signs of what was going on in the outside world. For a day they watched, or tried too. One of the muleteers had been packing a load of kindling, something to have handy in case of rain drenching the woods when they came to a halt each night. Sparingly, they burned a bit here and a bit there, though there was never anything to see – just a very small circle of light that lasted only a few minutes – and beyond the circle, who knew? If there were creatures who shared their sanctuary, they went undetected. After a few hours of waiting, Falla would send a man up, or go himself, as far as they dared, to check on what was going on. But the lights bouncing off the walls of the cave, even deep down in the passage – reflections of what was going on above – kept them from going all the way to the mouth, or even close to it. But after an untold number of chimes, there came a time when Falla returned with the news that the lights and the noise had stopped. He and the man who had accompanied him had gone all the way, to the opening, and looked out, on a world gone still. It was morning already he said. They had been down in the belly for most of a day and the night. Cautiously, the rest of them made their way to the mouth of the cave. The forest was silent, in a very unnatural way. The slope had changed configuration dramatically. The lip of the cave now gave onto a sheer drop of at least five hundred feet. The face above them was little better. But looking down, they saw a new and ominous sight – a thick glowing, mist tangled all about the trees and boulders now crumpled below them. After almost an entire day, the best mountaineers amongst them had made it to the top of the cliff face, and secured ropes for the other to follow. But as each man waited his turn to climb up, there came a moment when the screams of the others who had gone before them were heard echoing and reverberating across the newly enlarged valley. About eight men or so had gone up. The others waited, a few minutes, a half hour, an hour. No more screams, and no-one coming back down. No response to the calls of those left waiting below, either. The party withdrew, back into the cave, and passed the night in anxious, muttered conversations. Some were for going down, others for trying their luck going up – but armed and prepared for . . . whatever it was that awaited them. Still others advocated waiting – but their water was running precariously low. The night blended into the new dawn, and still no firm decision had been reached. The merchant in charge was one that had pushed for trying the downward route. Falla argued against it. In the end, several men volunteered to try the upward route again. Sian The was one of them. Hand over careful hand – toes clinging to the rocks, agonizingly slowly, and with no way to be ‘armed’ when they reached the top, up they went. He was third of the party of five. Seeing the first, some thirty feet above him, reaching the edge and pulling himself over, Sian held his breath. He heard nothing. The man above him clambered on, and so did Sian. They reached the top to join the first and they saw – nothing. No sign of their companions. Nothing untoward. Slowly, taking the better part of that day, the rest of the party climbed up. Late in the afternoon they set out. Within the hour they had discovered that their way back, to Lhavit, was not an option. The scouts were sent out. Another night passed, anxious but in the end uneventful. The scouts did not return. The decision was made. South they went. **** That had been four weeks earlier. In ones and twos, sometimes as many as ten at a time, Sian’s comrades fell. It had begun that first night, a guard picked off by something unseen, his grisly remains found hanging in a tree under which he had been posted. Anytime they descended into a valley, the mist was there, and though they had a natural abhorrence for it and avoided it when they could, sometimes it seemed to have some malicious life all its own, following them and curling about, to cut off their escape backwards, and pushing them forward, until they met a cul de sac, with tendrils reaching out to strike in the most horrible of ways. They learned to stick to the high ground. But the monsters that they began to see more and more frequently had taken to the ridges and passes too, and slowly, despite attempts to stick together, any individual or small group that straggled behind – or forged ahead – was lost. At one point, a flock of mutant flying rat like creatures attacked them and left several maimed and wounded. Within a day, the wounds were a hideous, seething, mess of rotting flesh and those bitten or scratched died slowly at first, the last two were dispatched as an act of mercy, at their own request. It was mind numbing and appalling and there was nothing to be done but keep moving forward. The merchant had been one of the ones to fall prey to the flying demons, but Falla knew where they needed to head. And so they slogged onwards, their numbers dwindling with each passing day. Four weeks of pushing themselves as hard as they dared. Four weeks of too little rest – for who would dare sleep soundly when the night held such terrors. Four weeks of scant food, as the hunters often found themselves the hunted, and had to give up the chase in order to save their own skins. Four weeks of pure hell, with Kalinor looming as the hoped for locus of their salvation. The thought that the city might itself had been damaged or destroyed somehow by the storm – the origins of which the beleaguered travelers had no about – was one they dared not even consider. Reaching Kalinor, this had become their mantra. If they could only reach it, if the Symenestra would let them in, if they could regroup and recuperate . . . if, if, if. Even the plants and the water became their enemy, and when a man took a drink from a stream, he took his life in his hands. But what choice did they have? Four weeks, and on this day, only the four remained, and now it was just the two, as Sian and Gordon kept putting one foot in front of the other, heading up the mountain. |