Wrenmae hissed in pain as the bird buried its beak into his calf, swiftly descending toward the forest floor. The key in his hand pulsed ahead, but the weight of the bird made flying all but impossible, and the wound in his wing would only grow the longer he let it bleed.
So they spiraled toward the trees and as they did, Wrenmae pushed a ripple of djed into his leg and around the wound, withdrawing folds of skin and flesh till the bird tumbled out of him of its own accord. Of course, his leg still bled and he found himself catching at branches to slow his fall, finally snapping one and tumbling to the ground. He landed on both arms in the soft loam beneath the trees, bruising them before pulling his wings tight around him, withdrawing them into his skin. A wound remained on his back, small, but annoying, forcing the mage to strongly consider making his way by foot.
Zan said nothing, most likely enjoying the little jaunt they were now facing. The wound in his leg made the progress slow, proceeding at a limp.
Pausing, the mage rested against the trunk of a tree, looking down at his wounded leg as though willing it to simply repair and keep moving. He'd never taken the time to learn the finer arts of medicine and so besides not bothering to worry about infection, he could only glare at it in impotent fury before taking a few more steps through the maze of trunks and branches. As always, the key tantalizingly, mockingly, led him onward.
For a moment, Wrenmae considered the implications of a trap...if this key was only taking him to some dark pit to be deposited in, to rot for eternity beneath the ground.
No. No, that would not be him.
Snapping a branch above him, he fashioned himself a makeshift walking stick. The blood on his arms had become a glossy black, still sticky to the touch and more a reminder to any other bird the dangers of tampering with Wrenmae than it was to Wrenmae.
So. He limped forward.
Always moving.
The key called him forward.
It was another bell before his eyes shifted to accommodate the darkness. Blinking the brilliant yellow orbs, he noted the shift had been more instinctual...he barely had to think about doing it. It gave him something to think about as he morphed wings a half inch above where he had morphed them last and crawled up the trees. Devouring the last of his rations, he took to the sky again, winging low and fast over the trees. His foot was going to be a problem, and perhaps he could return to Sahova.
But what kind of medical attention could he expect from the dead? Stitched, just the same black lace stitches they used to patch up nuit bodies.
He shuddered. Best follow the key and worry about it later.
So they spiraled toward the trees and as they did, Wrenmae pushed a ripple of djed into his leg and around the wound, withdrawing folds of skin and flesh till the bird tumbled out of him of its own accord. Of course, his leg still bled and he found himself catching at branches to slow his fall, finally snapping one and tumbling to the ground. He landed on both arms in the soft loam beneath the trees, bruising them before pulling his wings tight around him, withdrawing them into his skin. A wound remained on his back, small, but annoying, forcing the mage to strongly consider making his way by foot.
Zan said nothing, most likely enjoying the little jaunt they were now facing. The wound in his leg made the progress slow, proceeding at a limp.
Pausing, the mage rested against the trunk of a tree, looking down at his wounded leg as though willing it to simply repair and keep moving. He'd never taken the time to learn the finer arts of medicine and so besides not bothering to worry about infection, he could only glare at it in impotent fury before taking a few more steps through the maze of trunks and branches. As always, the key tantalizingly, mockingly, led him onward.
For a moment, Wrenmae considered the implications of a trap...if this key was only taking him to some dark pit to be deposited in, to rot for eternity beneath the ground.
No. No, that would not be him.
Snapping a branch above him, he fashioned himself a makeshift walking stick. The blood on his arms had become a glossy black, still sticky to the touch and more a reminder to any other bird the dangers of tampering with Wrenmae than it was to Wrenmae.
So. He limped forward.
Always moving.
The key called him forward.
It was another bell before his eyes shifted to accommodate the darkness. Blinking the brilliant yellow orbs, he noted the shift had been more instinctual...he barely had to think about doing it. It gave him something to think about as he morphed wings a half inch above where he had morphed them last and crawled up the trees. Devouring the last of his rations, he took to the sky again, winging low and fast over the trees. His foot was going to be a problem, and perhaps he could return to Sahova.
But what kind of medical attention could he expect from the dead? Stitched, just the same black lace stitches they used to patch up nuit bodies.
He shuddered. Best follow the key and worry about it later.