35th Day of Summer
Outskirts of Taloba
23rd Bell
Outskirts of Taloba
23rd Bell
He slunk through the shadows like some guilt-wracked thief, and yet his feet carried him onward without looking back. No pilfered items were in his hands; there was no blood on them, no muted shouts and pounding feet as a patrol of guards pursued him. But still, he stayed in the shadows, and felt sweat drip down his bare back. Every step, every street, he waited for her voice like an arrow in his back.
Because he would turn, and see the question in her eyes... she would know the direction he was heading, and why...
You would destroy everything. Ruin her heart for every other, worthier male that would come after... but still, here you are.
"Yes." Razkar snarled to himself, and straightened up as he got to the perpetually-manned Main Gate. "I go."
He knew the men on guard that night, if only by repeated nods as he went back and forth through the gates. One of them frowned in confusion, probably wondering-
"What brings you out at this late hour, brother?"
Betrayal? Deception? Infidelity? Take your pick...
"Visiting a friend." He answered honestly, biting out the words as he clamped on his back molars, grinding down the whispering, insulting voice in his head. "She lives just beyond the walls."
The Fang Leader regarded him with eyes as cold as the iron portcullis. Like all the guards on rotation on the gate, her loyalty to her duty was beyond question. Every one of the dozen Myrians behind her would happily slit their own children before opening that gate to an enemy. Fanaticism may be an extreme thing, but it has its uses... and now, it was questioning why a male, sweating a little too much, would be leaving the city, ringed by the dark and chittering jungle, at so late an hour.
"Friend?"
The question was like a slap across his face. So much could be crammed into an explanation mark. Inquiry, accusation, disbelief... insult? Razkar did his best to keep his face immobile by the light of the burning torches. Stick to the truth, he told himself, or the parts of it she needs to hear...
"She lives in a shack beyond the walls, at the rim of the jungle. I leave tomorrow, and will not return for seasons, I think. Before I left, I-"
"Ahhh..." Gods, he could have gutted her for that expression on her face, the one that was mirrored by her grinning, elbow-in-the-ribs gesturing comrades. "I think I understand you, male. Be careful out there. You know we won't leave the gate to hep you."
"I understand, Fang Leader."
"Raise it!"
Unseen hands strained and grunted and heaved the two-ton barrier, bristling with poison-soaked spikes, out of his way with the screech of a dying titan. Razkar waited until he heard the telltale "click!" of the chain mechanism being held in place... and then waited a little longer...
Old chain. Well-oiled, but old. Best to give it a tick... now!
The male moved swiftly through the Main Gate, forcing himself not to look up at the thick iron latticework that could crush him like a skeeter without effort. He grabbed a dead torch from the wall and sparked his sword against a chunk of flint until-
-fire caught and smoldering in the faggot, spreading slowly but inexorably, turning linen and tar-rubbed plant matter into smoking, glowing flame... until it was bright enough to light his way.
The Gate slammed shut behind him, and Razkar began to move towards the tangle of fresh jungle beyond the walls. He sighed, shaking his head. A season ago, he would be walking a straight, easy line across grass cut very short, hundred of yards wide, a perfect killing ground with nary even a rock for an attacking army to hide behind. But now?
He got ten yards and then the nettles began to bite at his fate. Goddess, your Sister really needs to extend some boons to your Children...
Razkar regretted the thoughts immediately, of course, considering whom he was going to see. One marked by the Green Goddess, able to commune with animals and plants in a way not even a lifelong beastmaster could hope to achieve. He'd seen it, after all.
Seen a pack of slathering Akila Hounds rendered into puppies by her patience and compassion. Seen her speak to trees and plants and track down a monstrous thing that used to be a Dhani.
Razkar had seen all these things, and the mere thought of her eyes, yellow and hardened by years of persecution, sent his heart spiraling into his guts again. He gritted his teeth, concentrating on the endless tangle of vines and shrubbery he had to navigate. The torch was already blinding him, the light destroying his fragile night vision, but... you needed it out here. Fire was one of the few things the predators of the night feared... at least the ones on four legs.
He stamped and cursed and thorns ripped his flesh and he thought, Fucking gods, if she doesn't hear me coming, she's bloody deaf. Then he blinked at a spot in front of his eyes, something he assumed was the torch playing tricks... but it stayed... and he stomped out his own flame into dark death at in the rich soil...
Not a spot. A light. Hidden and faint but there, burning brightly... through a window.
Razkar's lips did a quick dance, flickering from grin to grimace to snarl to a final, tense, white line. He had come this far. When Syna still shone he had said his final goodbyes and promised himself that was what it had been... but the thought... the sight he did not see but his mind had made... it haunted him...
Tinnok, Wolf, alone. No friends, no compatriots... no-one like he or Aya to tell her the truth: that she was loved, that she was appreciated. But without being told such things, how could anyone hope to believe them? Faith only went so far, and then cruel reality told a very different tale... that was why he was here. Yes. That was why.
Lie to yourself if you dare, but-
"Gods, leave me-!"
The growl froze him like an ant hit by an ice age. Limbs stilled and his breathing stopped as if his head had been cut off. Deep, rolling, warning anger, territorial and indignant... then snuffling... and a low whine that came with softly padding feet and a tongue that-
"Godsdamnit, Dog," Razkar muttered, scratching the mutt behind ears he couldn't quite see, "Scared the petch out of me... hey, she's still up, right?"