10th Fall, 512 A.V Riverfall was a strange place – too crowded, too smelly, too full of people she did not know and had not seen before. It was overwhelming, and so very different to the tent city of Endrykas and the pavilions that moved across the Sea of Grass, that Mealla had fled as soon as she was able, excusing herself from Sama’el’s presence. She needed the space, needed to be alone to collect her thoughts, and, most of all, she needed to feel close to Zulrav. It was harder to feel his presence among all the walls and the stone. Oh, people called Riverfall a paradise, but she did not think so. Stones were not beautiful. They were too harsh, too inflexible, and utterly devoid of life. Not like the Sea of Grass, where life flared every day. Mealla gripped her bow as she urged Andraste forward, enjoying the feel of the wind in her hair. It was the first time that she had had a chance to hunt in what seemed like forever, though - Sama'el would be pleased to know - she was close enough to Riverfall to not be in any danger of being eaten or maimed by a hungry predator, although she sometimes wondered if he secretly hoped that she would fall. She had not been easy. Pushing the thoughts aside, she smiled and let out a laugh as she stretched out her arms to the sides and tilted back, not needing to grip the yvas with her hands for balance. She rode like this for some time before slowing, becoming alert, and drawing Andraste to a halt. Time to hunt. She slid from the Strider’s back, grabbing a few arrows from where they were tied to the yvas, and crept forward. She crouched low, her entire body tense, as her eyes flicked this way and that. She wasn’t the best of hunters – her father had always told her that she was far too loud and could wake a sleeping lion -, but improvement did not come without practice, or so she had always heard. It didn’t matter if she didn’t catch anything; she was just happy to be away from Riverfall for just a little while. There was sudden sound in the long grasses to her right, and she spun, lifting her bow and nocking an arrow to the string. She drew the string back, back, and back, her arm shaking slightly with the effort, and sighted towards the sound. She bit her lip in concentration, and finally let go. The arrow shot off into the grasses, and Mealla braced herself, hoping to hear the sound of it thudding against flesh. But there was no sound. Silence. |