26th of Winter, 510AV
Wilamar had been to the jungle before, and his hate for it had not lessened one iota. It was dense and impossible to navigate, treacherous and filled with predators and, worst of all, the heat never eased up. Even now, when there should be an honest chill in the air so early in the morning, it was so humid that his skin undulated with sweat under his chainmail.
He cursed himself anew for accepting this contract and, once again, corrected himself.
He cursed the contract, but not the money. That was all well and good, not to mention reassuringly regular.
"Anything out there?"
The younger sellsword, Markus, shook his head without taking his eyes off the treeline two hundred paces away. The torches lining the perimeter illuminated it well enough, but anything more than fifty paces away and... nothing. Without the moon above them, fat and happy and bright, they might not even be able to see the trees.
"Not a thing, sir."
"Yeah, well, keep 'em open. Never know out here."
Markus snorted, earning him a sideways glance. He'd only been with Wilamar's company for a few months, signing on with them not long after they got this contract. A caravan of merchants and prospectors, seeking to avoid some... troublesome taxation questions by taking a long-forgotten route skirting the very edge of the Falyndar jungles.
But they were not so clueless as to think they wouldn't need protection. Hence Wilamar and his band.
Behind him, inside the perimeter of the camp, a hundred souls slept like the dead. Horses and donkeys snored softly and whinned in their sleep, as exhausted as their biped owners. Spices, fabrics, metal works and luxuries from Kalea and beyond were packed inside bags, sacks and crates, piled up and ready for loading tomorrow morning.
A breeze, thank the gods! Wilamar tilted his chin so it kissed his face. Any scrap of comfort is was welcome there. He longed to return to Kalea, where they actually had seasons, not just this endless, stifling humidity interrupted only by blazing sun and tepid torrents of rain. And booze? Huh. Not unless it was moonshine distilled from bananas...
"Keep watch." He said to the younger man. "Anything bigger than a deer moves out there, you raise the alarm. Understand?"
"Yes, sir."
Wilamar continued his rounds, as he had done every night for two months and more. There were five men on every side of the perimeter, half of his company, pretty much. Some of the younger ones had queried the wisdom of having a man for every ten feet, as if it was excessive. The older veterans had not argued.
Many of them knew Faylndar. Knew its dangers.
Knew its people. And rightly respected their abilities.
Wilamar smiled thinly to himself as he patrolled. Oh, they would never say they feared them. They would never admit that weakness. But when he'd told them that a party of pilgrims had offered them a thousand mizas a season to guard their venture just within the borders of Falyndar, he'd seen faces pale, features twitch, eyes glaze over with horrific recollections.
Gods knew he'd had his share. But such a generous contract...
The sentries all reported the same thing, and he spoke the same words, more or less: "Good, but keep looking." Then he walked to his tent. There were a dozen of them, most of them large enough for ten people, and three of them were occupied with his band of freebooters. They'd been quick and careful in their journey, not slowing or stopping and trying to avoid any attention.
But within a month of setting out, they had seen their first Myrian.
Wilamar lit his pipe from a torch and sucked it thoughtfully. They would come. He knew they would never allow any intrusion into their lands. But he had forty swords that were well-armed, well-provisioned and well-trained. Not to mention equipped with three dozen crossbows.
Let them come, if they dared. They'd die in droves.
The mercenary leader continued into his tent, a good night's sleep decided on.
Eyes watched him from a tall tree in the jungle. He was an ant to those eyes, literally because of distance and creed and race. Those eyes burned with cold but indignant hatred. Weapons slung below it ached and pleaded desperately to be unleashed.
The mouth below it whistled lowly, imitating a local bird perfectly. But one that did not call at night.
It was answered from the darkness below. Dozens more eyes were fixed on the encampment, the fiery mass of torches and tents that were defiling their sacred land with their very existence.
The mouth smiled, revealing sharp white teeth. Long enough they had flaunted themselves. Long enough had they been allowed their desecration. They were a long way from their gods. Here, in Falyndar, only one reigned supreme.
And those who followed her would wreak her vengeance this night.
Wilamar had been to the jungle before, and his hate for it had not lessened one iota. It was dense and impossible to navigate, treacherous and filled with predators and, worst of all, the heat never eased up. Even now, when there should be an honest chill in the air so early in the morning, it was so humid that his skin undulated with sweat under his chainmail.
He cursed himself anew for accepting this contract and, once again, corrected himself.
He cursed the contract, but not the money. That was all well and good, not to mention reassuringly regular.
"Anything out there?"
The younger sellsword, Markus, shook his head without taking his eyes off the treeline two hundred paces away. The torches lining the perimeter illuminated it well enough, but anything more than fifty paces away and... nothing. Without the moon above them, fat and happy and bright, they might not even be able to see the trees.
"Not a thing, sir."
"Yeah, well, keep 'em open. Never know out here."
Markus snorted, earning him a sideways glance. He'd only been with Wilamar's company for a few months, signing on with them not long after they got this contract. A caravan of merchants and prospectors, seeking to avoid some... troublesome taxation questions by taking a long-forgotten route skirting the very edge of the Falyndar jungles.
But they were not so clueless as to think they wouldn't need protection. Hence Wilamar and his band.
Behind him, inside the perimeter of the camp, a hundred souls slept like the dead. Horses and donkeys snored softly and whinned in their sleep, as exhausted as their biped owners. Spices, fabrics, metal works and luxuries from Kalea and beyond were packed inside bags, sacks and crates, piled up and ready for loading tomorrow morning.
A breeze, thank the gods! Wilamar tilted his chin so it kissed his face. Any scrap of comfort is was welcome there. He longed to return to Kalea, where they actually had seasons, not just this endless, stifling humidity interrupted only by blazing sun and tepid torrents of rain. And booze? Huh. Not unless it was moonshine distilled from bananas...
"Keep watch." He said to the younger man. "Anything bigger than a deer moves out there, you raise the alarm. Understand?"
"Yes, sir."
Wilamar continued his rounds, as he had done every night for two months and more. There were five men on every side of the perimeter, half of his company, pretty much. Some of the younger ones had queried the wisdom of having a man for every ten feet, as if it was excessive. The older veterans had not argued.
Many of them knew Faylndar. Knew its dangers.
Knew its people. And rightly respected their abilities.
Wilamar smiled thinly to himself as he patrolled. Oh, they would never say they feared them. They would never admit that weakness. But when he'd told them that a party of pilgrims had offered them a thousand mizas a season to guard their venture just within the borders of Falyndar, he'd seen faces pale, features twitch, eyes glaze over with horrific recollections.
Gods knew he'd had his share. But such a generous contract...
The sentries all reported the same thing, and he spoke the same words, more or less: "Good, but keep looking." Then he walked to his tent. There were a dozen of them, most of them large enough for ten people, and three of them were occupied with his band of freebooters. They'd been quick and careful in their journey, not slowing or stopping and trying to avoid any attention.
But within a month of setting out, they had seen their first Myrian.
Wilamar lit his pipe from a torch and sucked it thoughtfully. They would come. He knew they would never allow any intrusion into their lands. But he had forty swords that were well-armed, well-provisioned and well-trained. Not to mention equipped with three dozen crossbows.
Let them come, if they dared. They'd die in droves.
The mercenary leader continued into his tent, a good night's sleep decided on.
Eyes watched him from a tall tree in the jungle. He was an ant to those eyes, literally because of distance and creed and race. Those eyes burned with cold but indignant hatred. Weapons slung below it ached and pleaded desperately to be unleashed.
The mouth below it whistled lowly, imitating a local bird perfectly. But one that did not call at night.
It was answered from the darkness below. Dozens more eyes were fixed on the encampment, the fiery mass of torches and tents that were defiling their sacred land with their very existence.
The mouth smiled, revealing sharp white teeth. Long enough they had flaunted themselves. Long enough had they been allowed their desecration. They were a long way from their gods. Here, in Falyndar, only one reigned supreme.
And those who followed her would wreak her vengeance this night.