8th Day of Winter, 512AV
One thing Razkar had learned since his arrival in Cyphrus was that the Sea of Grass was monumentally deceptive to look at from the walls of Riverfall. From those heights it looks the very picture of vast, unchanging tranquility. An endless field of swaying, dancing grass, split only by the wide caravan trail snaking towards the city. The wind blew intricate patterns in it hundreds of feet across, stretching outwards the the horizon. It looked peaceful, sedate and beautiful...
It was the last one. But not the first two.
Like any ocean, Razkar had learned, under the placid surface were monsters and beasts that could bring down Myrian Tigers. Patches of the world that mocked reality. Bands of raiders that even Myrians would call savages. Winged men, abominations that boiled from the very earth...
No. Very deceptive, and he remembered that every time he went hunting.
Oh, and he smelled like deer, too.
The vial of scent in his trapper kit had been pungent and perfect, just what he'd needed. He couldn't believe he'd been rubbing deer droppings on himself the whole time, when he had that stuff right there! Well... probably because he couldn't read Common that well back then. But that had changed, too.
Now he squatted under the camouflage tarp that covered his body and matched almost perfectly with the yellow and brown grass surrounding him. Maybe fifty yards away the grass was bent to the sides, as if animals had shouldered their way through. Upon closer inspection, he'd found that they had.
Just like when he was out with Saib: deer tracks. Back and forth, probably to a pond or stream and then back again to where they bedded down. Too long had he gone without fresh deer meat, and a good-sized buck or doe would give him food enough for weeks. So he had found his spot, set apart from the trail, and waited...
... and listened.
Things moved and slithered around him. His ax and gladius were stuck into the ground on either side of him, ready for use. An arrow was already notched in the bow resting in his still hands. He had barely moved, and now Razkar felt his breathing slow... his heartbeat slow... and steady...
Something moved along the path. Unseen but approaching under the waning sun. Something... large...
Slowly, moving as best he could as the grass did with every passing gust, he raised his bow... and aimed...
One thing Razkar had learned since his arrival in Cyphrus was that the Sea of Grass was monumentally deceptive to look at from the walls of Riverfall. From those heights it looks the very picture of vast, unchanging tranquility. An endless field of swaying, dancing grass, split only by the wide caravan trail snaking towards the city. The wind blew intricate patterns in it hundreds of feet across, stretching outwards the the horizon. It looked peaceful, sedate and beautiful...
It was the last one. But not the first two.
Like any ocean, Razkar had learned, under the placid surface were monsters and beasts that could bring down Myrian Tigers. Patches of the world that mocked reality. Bands of raiders that even Myrians would call savages. Winged men, abominations that boiled from the very earth...
No. Very deceptive, and he remembered that every time he went hunting.
Oh, and he smelled like deer, too.
The vial of scent in his trapper kit had been pungent and perfect, just what he'd needed. He couldn't believe he'd been rubbing deer droppings on himself the whole time, when he had that stuff right there! Well... probably because he couldn't read Common that well back then. But that had changed, too.
Now he squatted under the camouflage tarp that covered his body and matched almost perfectly with the yellow and brown grass surrounding him. Maybe fifty yards away the grass was bent to the sides, as if animals had shouldered their way through. Upon closer inspection, he'd found that they had.
Just like when he was out with Saib: deer tracks. Back and forth, probably to a pond or stream and then back again to where they bedded down. Too long had he gone without fresh deer meat, and a good-sized buck or doe would give him food enough for weeks. So he had found his spot, set apart from the trail, and waited...
... and listened.
Things moved and slithered around him. His ax and gladius were stuck into the ground on either side of him, ready for use. An arrow was already notched in the bow resting in his still hands. He had barely moved, and now Razkar felt his breathing slow... his heartbeat slow... and steady...
Something moved along the path. Unseen but approaching under the waning sun. Something... large...
Slowly, moving as best he could as the grass did with every passing gust, he raised his bow... and aimed...