Quarry slain, the hunter turned to watch the rest of the covey, and within heartbeats a dark streak sliced the sky and struck down one of the fowl. With a puff of feathers the thing was silence forever, and the previously soaring body fell to the earth like a stone.
She flared her wings and pulled from her descent, opting to let the pheasant fall unattended. The hunter tilted his head. She would prefer to eat later, it seemed, and she returned to the air though continued to remain in her kill’s immediate vicinity. Perhaps she would dine at camp, where predators dared not tread.
He slipped through the grass to the second pheasant and scooped it up. It seemed that the time away had not rusted their ability to cooperate, and both of them would eat well tonight. He turned and set off at a healthy jog in the direction of Endrykas, not at all interested in being caught in the grass after dark. This far away from the tents, predators would have no qualms about claiming his and her prizes for their own.
Akaidras was standing where he’d left him, and the hunter clambered onto the stallion’s back. This,
this was what he wanted. Not a pavilion, not mizas, not the cacophony of Endrykas, but this world of simplicity.
Akaidras kept to the outskirts, as eager as his rider to preserve this moment for as long as possible before the sounds and smells of civilized life crushed in on them once again. The hunter looked up at she she-falcon, and for a moment he could forget that it even existed. For a moment, he could pretend they were back in the crater.
And for a moment, just a moment, he could pretend to be at peace.
-End-