15th Summer, 512 A.V. Sama'el's wife had spent the bulk of her pregnancy in various states of despondency. This had weighed heavily upon him, for he had tried everything he could think of to cheer her, knowing that such melancholia might harm the unborn child, or the unborn cub, the which they must protect both as penance to Oriana and because, bear or human, it would be their child. They all watched her, none quite sure how her inner pain might drive her to act. Even Sama'el, who knew her best, did not know her as well as he expected to when they had lived together for years. They kept their eyes on her, but she was not imprisoned among them. That, one might suppose, was how she managed to escape. Some animals, wild or domesticated, would flee the society of their families to die alone. Perhaps that was what had gotten into her head, but when she was nowhere to be seen for the noontide meal, Sama'el began to ask questions. When nobody had seen her, he set his empty plate aside and vaulted out of his body to race around their camp in an outward spanning spiral upon the Web that had become much more robust since he and Kavala had laid an Origin in the Sanctuary's temple. From the low-lying Web, his spirit would leap above like a fish to look down from Syna's eye until he found her. She was about a mile off, in a secluded copse of trees, but open to the sky. Her skirts were open, hiked up, her pale skin revealed, her body in distress. Sama'el was white as a ghost when he returned to his body, up and moving before he could even register the tingling of his fingers and toes as his spirit knit itself back into the entirety of his body. He grabbed Denen, more forcefully than he ought, and dragged him toward their horses. At Denen's tent, he spun the healer around, holding him by the shoulders and over-enunciating, "Get your kit." To the others, he warned, "Stay here." While Denen got his things, Sama'el called Dohaina, Aponi, and Durno. Issima's Strider seemed somehow aware of what was going on, and deigned to submit to her rider's husband's will, and Sama'el had ridden Durno in search of Denen, and trusted him as well. He didn't bother with yvas. They were Drykas, all of them. Once Denen was astride his stallion, they rode. Though Sama'el had ridden the Web while his body rode horseback before, it was unnecessary now. He knew where she was, and had followed the easiest route back. Now he was following his own spirit's trail back to her, and Denen, a horseman too, kept pace. When they came to her, Sama'el flipped off of Dohaina's back before she had come to a stop, so in sync with her that such acrobatics were safe. The Striders formed a circle around her body as if protecting her from the dangers of the Sea of Grass. Sama'el came down hard on his knees beside her, but her skin had an unhealthy pallor, her eyes were rolled back in her head, and she did not respond to him. There was blood coming out of her, too much blood, and a confused, blind little bear cub moving around before her, trying, perhaps to find her. With a choked sob, he gathered the cub to him, paying no heed to the blood and the other fluids associated with mammalian birth, getting him out of the way so Denen could save her. "Save her," he croaked, not knowing if Denen would hear him. "Save her, please. Please, Mother..." But it was anyone's guess if Oriana heard, or cared. She might even be watching with glee at the dying mother, the aggrieved father, and the helpless, hapless cub that somehow knew the hard planes of Sama'el's stomach was not the same as the welcoming curves of his mother. |