17th Day of Fall, 503 AV
"You're going to the wilds today. You need to learn how to catch something properly before we let you help us catch them."
As if she couldn't catch a proper barbarian captive already! She'd helped her parents countless times before. It was such an outrage! And if that wasn't bad enough, they expected her first catch to be a petching monkey.
Nyaela huffed as she pulled out a rope from her pack, winding it into a circle so the length would be easier to handle. Settling herself against a newer tree (its branches were just out of reach of her fingertips), she took the rope and started to form it into a trap.
First, a loop. She pulled apart the windings and created a loop big enough to encase a small human if she wanted to. Then, the knot; she wrapped the rope around itself and brought it back out in a typical knot, pulling both end apart to check if it would hold.
It did.
That was to be expected, though - this was the easy part of the trap. Standing, she stretched as far as her small body would allow, wrapping the rope across a tree branch so the knot she'd made lay on the ground with rope to spare, then proceeded to tie the rope in a similar manner, grunting with effort as her young legs began to shake with her weight unevenly distributed solely on her toes.
She finished the knot just as her legs gave way, throwing out a hand to keep from slamming her face into the tree. Nyaela looked up, her eyes shaded from the sun by the foliage, and inspected her knot. It looked good, but it was hard to tell from here. The basic idea of the trap was that it was made to yank the unsuspecting animal backward, pulling the knot closed around their foot as their weight pulled against it. At which point Nyaela, sitting up on a higher branch, would be able to jump down and catch the animal. It was why she'd chosen a smaller tree - she wouldn't be able to climb up otherwise.
So, really, if she just pulled the rope here - she grabbed a piece of rope hanging down - it shouldn't budge.
Her green eyes shone in elation as she tugged and the rope held ...
... for a split second before the entire knot slipped apart and the rope coiled around her feet.
Groaning aloud in frustration, she collapsed to the ground again, picked up the rope, and practised the knot sitting down a few more times before it worked. Standing up again, her legs more steady this time, she redid the knot. Correctly, this time -the rope didn't undo itself at her pull. Finally, to hide the rope from the notice of her prey, she took the length of the rope before the loop on the ground and slowly wound it around the tree, slipping it in between natural cracks in the bark so that it would hold in place. Then she left only a tiny bit of rope to snake forward on the ground before ending in the loop that would cause the demise of some creature today.
She stepped back to admire her handiwork, then reached into her bag and dropped a few berries she'd picked off a bush earlier around the end of the rope and turned to the tree.
She'd climbed trees before, but always with a boost from one of her parents. Her short stature didn't help much with trees. She walked around the trunk once more before choosing the partially broken stump of an old branch. She reached up to grab the branch she'd used earlier and pull herself up.
Just in time, too. The stump gave way beneath her and she would have fallen if her fingers hadn't wrapped tightly around the first branch. She lifted her feet higher as her arms started to ache, searching for some purchase in the trunk. Slowly but surely, she pulled herself onto the branch, turning herself over so that she was parallel to the ground and then branch. She slowly sat up, closing her eyes against a wave of nausea as her eyesight adjusted to the height and reached up for the top branch.
Her fingers missed since her eyes were closed and Nyaela almost fell off the first branch too. She immediately lay down on the branch she'd climbed onto, holding the wood tightly. The branch was too low and too new for it to support her weight as well as the weight of another creature, but Nyaela couldn't bring herself to move from the branch to a higher position either. Her fear of heights was always something that ashamed her, but she could never bring herself to find a way to stop being afraid. And telling someone she needed help to get over a fear would be worse than being eaten alive by a Dhani.
So she lay down and waited, finally gathering the courage to open up her eyes and wait for a monkey to chance upon her impromptu trap. The weight problem worried her a little, but she was only a sixteen year-old catching a small monkey. The weight difference couldn't be that much.