40th of Spring, 514
Kandukta Basin
Kandukta Basin
The sun was just beginning to rise, warming up the jungle as Tazi moved from the brush towards the edge of the basin. She had set out very early that morning so as not to waste previous light when she arrived. Taloba did not seem to be stirring when she had left, so her exit went unnoticed except by the occasional soldier and guard that prowled the streets. With an empty backpack in hand, she had traveled west, following one of the trickling creeks to the basin. The jungle had slowly come alive with noise as the exotic birds began to sing and distant predators began their hunting calls.
Tazi needed some time out of Taloba. With her new job, she had responsibilities. With these new responsibilities, people were beginning to notice her. She was getting uncomfortable in the capital. The last thing she needed was word to get back to her mother that she had taken up residence in a tent and worked as an apprentice to the medicine workers. Although Traya and many of the others were revered, her Clan would see it as a dishonor. Blood ruled their minds, and was the preferred method of honor when it came down to hierarchy.
As she stepped forward, she reached down and took off her sandals so she could feel the sand between her toes. She laid her pack down and began to disrobe. As far as she was concerned, she was alone. Tazi pulled the leather strip that held her hair back, allowing her silky hair to drop to it’s full length, the tips ending just below her hips. Her white top fell first and her harem pants joined shortly. Naked except for some very simple underwear, she sighed. The first rays of sun kissed her skin as she placed one foot into the cool water. Without so much as a second thought, she slid further and further into the basin, her hair trailing behind her as she walked forward. Barely able to swim, she kept to the shallows, mostly using her hands to “walk” along the shallows.
While she enjoyed the cool waters, the jungle began to stir further. A few hundred feet from the basin banks, a body lay crumbled on the ground. A young Myrian male seemed to have been trapped by a large snare – most likely a Dhani trap. Having been previously hiked up on the air for birds to eat him, the branch had given way to a recent storm. His body was bloated from the rain, juices leaching into the earth. Necrosed and beyond recognition, his death gave birth to a new sort of terror. A flock of birds took to the skies as the ground cracked, leaving the corpse they were feeding. Mounds heaved and fell away as people – if they could be called that – crawled from the earth.
They looked like Myrians, but they were darker, the color of damp earth. Worms wiggled among their black locks as they clawed forward, yipping and yukking. The first few were female, stark naked. Their skin was cracked, rocks littered throughout their body. Once there were a few, they began to help one another out, but only the female. Men were obligated to scratch out of their graves for themselves, and once they got to their feet, were promptly jumped by two or three of the female. The female ripped and pulled, dismembering their male counterparts. Remains were thrown into the empty holes, inevitably leaving seven female Yukman. Although they all looked different, they had the same dark, cracked colored skin and wormy black hair. They were all naked and stood at various heights, all around 6 feet. The horde stared around with black eyes, unsure what to do next. Finally, one female began to twitch and turn, stumbling into the jungle. Like sheep, the others followed.
Tazi lay on her back, floating in the shallow waters. Sure, she had come out here on a mission to find herbs, but at the moment, she was allowed a free moment to enjoy the beauties that Falyndar provided. The cool water blocked the raucous noises of the jungle, and she closed her eyes to block the glaring sunlight. Peace. Was that so much to ask from her clan? Instead, she was the forsaken child, seen as a curse placed on her clan by Myri. Neither loved or welcomed, she was waiting for the day she could leave. All she needed was money and the courage to leave her home, everything she knew, and seek a better environment for a healer.