Outbreak (Open) Location: Zinrah tunnels and ruins, although a majority of the thread will take the plot into the Wilds TS: 1 Spring 512 A.V.; Some hours after the djed storm subsides, twilight Would you believe it, the Myrians vanished? Two hundred years… Saxani thought to herself, still unable to properly give meaning to the idea. Most of her life had been spent in the caverns of Zinrah. It was a part of her life, hiding in a hole and snatching up food when she could, living in fear of the day light. The cloak of night had been her friends for many years, and the darkness her keeper in and out of Zinrah. She was at the tunnel amongst the others peering out into the ruins as Syna gracefully descended below the horizon. The wave of the djed storm had long passed over the Falyndar wild lands, only now leaving the deceptively calm sky. It was too good to be true, but it was so good now, wasn’t it? Saxani held herself tight to the east tunnel wall, her mind in disarray. It can’t be… But it was, at least for now. There was a sensation of peace and freedom that spread over all Zinrah. The jungle didn’t seem to be staring back at them when they peeked their heads from the ruins. The Myrians were gone, the blockade an extension of Zinrah’s ruins, and the remnant forces without formal order. It was safe, for once in two-hundred years it was – relatively – safe. So many Dhani were blind to the power and change the djed energies had brought to Falyndar, awe struck by the stillness of the surrounding wild lands. A young Dhani slithered from the tunnel and out to the ruins, his tones a worthy disguise in the dying bells when the light was low, and the shadows stretched long. Further and further he went, until that moment when he slipped away into the brush. The Dhani were still. A rustle in the brush… The young Dhani had returned. A most vicious and gleeful grin ripped across his face, and fangs bared he plunged back into the wilds. Their suspicions had been confirmed, the Myrians were missing; no, they were gone, gone forever? Unlikely… Years under the oppression of the Myrian had taught her a number of things, one of them being quite clear and obvious, even now: the Myrians were relentless. The apparent cease fire was either a trick or omen to the ever faithful Saxani. There was no way the Myrians would leave their posts unless something much larger than them had actually moved inward towards Taloba, much, much larger… Against her skepticism, the large number of her fleeting brothers bad stirred doubt in her. She had to see this for herself. She had her short bow, quiver, and twenty arrows ready. She had planned on hunting this evening, but the storm had changed her plans, and this news could change everything. Saxani had decided to approach in the greatest caution, although her brothers rushed past her and sisters possibly as well. For some it might have been their first look at the wilds. Saxani knew something wasn’t right though. In all the stillness, it was too calm. The birds were not singing, she observed, and peered up to the canopy for the nightmare that had driven the Myrians away. She found nothing. Saxani heard the tiger roar in the distance, somewhere further to the south and the coos of other animals in the wilds. As she suspected, they were not alone, but this was still strange and dangerous. Perhaps a few of her siblings would find reason in her caution and join her. They could rush to their deaths for all she cared, although they were definitely of greater use to her alive. Tigers fall swiftly on their prey, and with unstoppable force, especially the Myrian breed. Saxani drew an arrow from her quiver and hung it loosely on her bow string. Her finger was ready to point and shoot at anything that moved the wrong way. Ironic, I feel like a Myrian. Perhaps after those two hundred years the tides had turned? Saxani began a steady morph on the move, pausing as her legs needed the time to properly divide. She pulled a band from her wrist and tied her hair back up. Given the necklace and look, she just needed some mud and extreme conscious focus to fight her inborn accent. To run into a Myrian in the wilds this time was still dangerous. She just needed the second of doubt in the savage heart to plunge the arrow in one of their hearts. It was a misfortune her harness did so little to cover her appropriately. Saxani knelt down and scrapped what she thought was clay or mud. Its thin consistency proved otherwise, and she rubbed the dark substance between her fingers. She lifted it to her nose and took a whiff. It smelled of bile. Something had been sick. Saxani wiped her fingers and reached back down for some real ud and marked her face, crude war paint for disguise. She caught sight of light prints. It was headed away from the bile in an apparent hurry. Saxani turned back toward the bile and peered through the brush where her prey once stood. It was a clear sight of the ruins, cast in shadow and hidden away in the thickening brush. A break in the ruins gave the viewer sight from the east tunnel exit, and beyond Zinrah a view of the northern stars forming overhead. Saxani looks back at the bile spilled over the tree. It was projected over the branches facing this direction. Something was amiss. One doesn’t run toward Zinrah to be sick. It had an empty scent, the bile, thus it wasn’t something the prey had eaten. The thought of chucks coming up her own throat from fever gave her lip a twist. Where are you…Myrian? The prints had been deciphered, along with some logic of the blockade. Saxani, loosely joined by her brothers and sisters spread across the wilds as the Myrians did in their hunts, pressed forward into the jungle. Saxani stopped as the tigers roared again, louder. They might have been…one, maybe two. The pitch seemed different to her now human ears. Saxani saw the tracks growing heavier. She knelt down and measured with her hand, the arrow snug between her finger and bow. They were coming closer together. Wounded? Where did you bleed…? There was none, but it was slowing down, whatever it was or had been. Saxani pressed onward. The staggered steps began to sink heavily into the earth uncaring of what saw or followed its tracks. Saxani read it as scholars read their books and scrolls, clear and fluently with the distinction of the marks. The foliage itself was being broken all along the way now. You could not have gone much further… Saxani picked up her pace. The storm had struck hours ago. Deeper into the untamed wilds she went, finding herself caught in a hunt she had longed for. The tracks said it all, the coming to an end. There was no blood though, and this perplexed Saxani excessively. What can kill a man so slowly without making him bleed? She expected even drops of the heart water near the bile but had found none. An entry wound for poison even. It might have been something eaten poisonous, although Saxani knew Myrians were generally smarter than that, or were immune. Saxani knew only vaguely the power of such immunity. Siku’s mark began to twitch in excitement, as if it knew the kill were coming and its hunger would be sated. Her whole body truly quivered with excitement as she came closer yet to the kill. The footsteps stopped at last further ahead, and Saxani stopped moving forward. She crouched down at once and began to carefully scan the infinite jungle around her. It had been hours, the whole place could be trapped. Maybe that was the goal of the Myrians, and now the Dhani had been foolishly pulled from their nest. Right now, they descended from the trees and flanked them all. The Tigers would tear away the front lines, and the Myrians would catch anything that ran back toward Zinrah. Impossible, there was nothing there. The blockade had dissolved, for now. Sxani looked down and took a closer look at the nearest print. It was fairly deep. The mud that slid away meant he was dragging his feet, tired, sick or wounded. It must have been crippling based on the spacing. It was too good to be faked, to her knowledge. It was definitely a human though, and no human formed Dhani would flee from Zinrah. Southbound, it must have been a Myrian. Saxani cleared her throat and whispered gently into the silent jungle in Myrian tongue, “Brother? Brother…? Where are you?” It was risky. She played on the strength of her voice, and avoided her S’s. The Dhani, in their small and well known community, knew Saxani’s voice in any language and wouldn’t dare strike against her. In fact, they might have smirked and fought back laughter knowing well the façade she had put on. Saxani’s unknowing of the war calls could break her disguise if the prey was not desperate enough. She assumed anything in such a condition would be ready for any assistance. She tried louder, “Brother,” and hoped for the best. The cover of twilight allowed a seemingly believable disguise at glance. Her pale skin glowed in this light and looked darker, and her hair was worn as the Myrians did. The humanoid Dhani also shared the shape of ribs adorning her neck. Saxani kept her bow low, but ready to be drawn and shot at the next clear shot at a Myrian. “Brother?” There was a shift in the canopy. Of course, he’d gone upward. Saxani looked around her for her own brothers and sisters, her true siblings for backup, just in case the Myrians had hoodwinked them all. Power and numbers could permit some of them to make it back to Zinrah alive, at least, and that was hoping for the best of that scenario. Saxani checked back over her shoulders into the jungle for her brothers to give her a nod of affirmation, but to come no further. This one was hers. Saxani licked her lips and tried all her will to still her excitement and keep up her false guise. |