Early Evening, Spring 53, 513 AV
The Sea of Grass, Northeast of Riverfall
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She rolled the name around her mind as she rode. Vanator Denusk. Vanator Denusk. She felt the name on her tongue. A strange name to her, the rough burr of the 'R', the smooth, vibrational cicada leg of the 'V'. She mouthed the word, in the absent way of a tired child. She was not in love with him, she was old enough to know that. Just the sort of glow of being very close to someone far one's superior, it was the sort of absent awe that was easy to confuse for desire, no different when she'd watched an Ankal wedding once, and wished she were the bride.
Syna rested heavily on the far, green, horizon, plump and rich and red-beautiful. And Ara, looking across the grass toward it, felt a gnawing enter her heart. It was getting late. She should be back soon. She should not be here alone. She frowned, and peered about her. She felt a thirst in her to close her eyes and feel the web, tug gently on the tattered weave work here, and feel how close she was to the camp. She should not have accepted when they offered to let her scout. She was not ready for this.
She squeezed her knees on Canter's flanks gently, and the horse snorted and sped up into a trot. Minnie, looked about her. The grass… she had grown up in it. It was home to her. And yet, it had never looked so threatening as it did now. Syna seemed to be calling to her, urging her forward, but she could not touch her. Semele, beneath her, pressed against her strider's feet, and yet even that force felt distant. Broken to her, for the moment. She had made a mistake. The universe would not forgive that easily. She should not have agreed.
She heard the hiss of the grass behind her and turned with a start - no. It was not a living thing, just the wind, the wind coming, urging her on as well. Go home, quickly, girl, the world cried to her. She worried... and yet! That one voice had called so hard to her, to go out, to serve, to be the tool of her people. To please the webbing master. To serve. To give. And still it murmured in her head. You have done right. You have done well. She had not felt arrogant, she had not... felt like herself at all, but felt simply, in that moment when she set out to scout in the morning, as if she were not a person, but simply a piece of a greater body. A member of the team.
She leaned in close to Canter's ears, "You smell something, Sister? Feel anything?"
Canter sniffed, nervously. Canter could not feel much better than her, now, for the webbing here was torn and frayed, so lose that even Canter's gate was muffled and slowed. If she only knew how far it was!
And at last, terrified, she closed her eyes, and fell into the web, laying her body limp and helpless against her Strider's neck. And with frightened lips, her web song sang out from her into the invisible, her fingers driving quick and deep into the wind-whipped strands of Djed.
But in the world, none of this, in the world, only a girl, very small, very alone, lying across her horse's neck, prone and slack, Her windmark peeking up above the collar of her shirt, licking black flames...x
The Sea of Grass, Northeast of Riverfall
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She rolled the name around her mind as she rode. Vanator Denusk. Vanator Denusk. She felt the name on her tongue. A strange name to her, the rough burr of the 'R', the smooth, vibrational cicada leg of the 'V'. She mouthed the word, in the absent way of a tired child. She was not in love with him, she was old enough to know that. Just the sort of glow of being very close to someone far one's superior, it was the sort of absent awe that was easy to confuse for desire, no different when she'd watched an Ankal wedding once, and wished she were the bride.
Syna rested heavily on the far, green, horizon, plump and rich and red-beautiful. And Ara, looking across the grass toward it, felt a gnawing enter her heart. It was getting late. She should be back soon. She should not be here alone. She frowned, and peered about her. She felt a thirst in her to close her eyes and feel the web, tug gently on the tattered weave work here, and feel how close she was to the camp. She should not have accepted when they offered to let her scout. She was not ready for this.
She squeezed her knees on Canter's flanks gently, and the horse snorted and sped up into a trot. Minnie, looked about her. The grass… she had grown up in it. It was home to her. And yet, it had never looked so threatening as it did now. Syna seemed to be calling to her, urging her forward, but she could not touch her. Semele, beneath her, pressed against her strider's feet, and yet even that force felt distant. Broken to her, for the moment. She had made a mistake. The universe would not forgive that easily. She should not have agreed.
She heard the hiss of the grass behind her and turned with a start - no. It was not a living thing, just the wind, the wind coming, urging her on as well. Go home, quickly, girl, the world cried to her. She worried... and yet! That one voice had called so hard to her, to go out, to serve, to be the tool of her people. To please the webbing master. To serve. To give. And still it murmured in her head. You have done right. You have done well. She had not felt arrogant, she had not... felt like herself at all, but felt simply, in that moment when she set out to scout in the morning, as if she were not a person, but simply a piece of a greater body. A member of the team.
She leaned in close to Canter's ears, "You smell something, Sister? Feel anything?"
Canter sniffed, nervously. Canter could not feel much better than her, now, for the webbing here was torn and frayed, so lose that even Canter's gate was muffled and slowed. If she only knew how far it was!
And at last, terrified, she closed her eyes, and fell into the web, laying her body limp and helpless against her Strider's neck. And with frightened lips, her web song sang out from her into the invisible, her fingers driving quick and deep into the wind-whipped strands of Djed.
But in the world, none of this, in the world, only a girl, very small, very alone, lying across her horse's neck, prone and slack, Her windmark peeking up above the collar of her shirt, licking black flames...x