28 Spring, 515 AV
Dusk
Dusk
Dravite made love to Belkaia under the stars. It was rare for the two of them to spend any time alone now that their son Kyanite had found his voice. He had learned to walk before a lot of the other children and his speech seemed far more advanced now that the Windborne pavilion was spending a lot more time in Endrykas. "Kiss me," he whispered against Belkaia's cheek when they were done but the young Drykas woman would not indulge her husband's wishes.
Belkaia rolled out from under Dravite and settled against him, her back pressed to his form so that not even a blade of grass might come between them. The pair often slept tucked together like this, especially on brisk spring nights. Dravite combed Belkaia's hair through his burly fingers and kissed the woman's temple before wrapping his arms about her middle to rest. "Did you hear that?" Belkaia mumbled.
Dravite merely smiled, it wasn't unlike his wife to try and distract him, especially when she sought an excuse to return to camp and be reunited with the only being in the world she cared for; her son. "Shhh," the man cooed, "we will go back soon."
He felt the tension in the woman's form melt away and soon her body grew heavy against his, the two of them content enough to sleep under the stars with just a single blanket to share. Dravite knew Belkaia cared for him, though she would never admit it. The woman was as stubborn as her father and twice as loyal. She wasn't very sentimental and didn't care for displays of affection in public or private. For her husband, she did her duty, she had given him a son, washed his clothes, tended his wounds, and made sure he always kept his wits about him; but she was not sentimental.
Dravite stroked his wife's collarbone with the pad of his thumb as if he were slowly strumming the strings of an exotic instrument. He closed his eyes and listened to the world breathe. Night birds called to each other in the distance and closer by a once roaring fire had been slowly reduced to a low crackling pit of embers. There was a cool breeze that seemed to pass over the pair who were relatively sheltered, lost in the long grass, entangled with one another as consciousness ebbed and gave way to sleep.
Thunder boomed overhead and lightened raced across the sky, waking up the world below abruptly, as if someone had switched on a light. The pair awoke to midnight blue, dark clouds threatening rain and raced back to camp half dressed. Not a second too late it would seem as the rain came down so thick and heavy that it was impossible to see more than a few feet in front of them.
Belkaia took her son from his bed and held him close, returning to Dravite's side as the rest of the Windborne pavilion sat up on their bedrolls and looked at one another in a daze. "What's going on?" One of the men called.
"A storm!" Another voice replied.
"Will the grass catch fire?" One of the children cried.
"No," Dravite assured the young girl, "the rain will leave the land too wet for fire to take."
"Flooding?" Dravite's mother asked him, setting her hand on his shoulder.
Dravite looked outside of the main pavilion tent and knitted his brow; flooding was a very real possibility if the rain continued like this for some time but it wasn't likely to happen in spring. "I hope not," came his gentle but concerned reply.
It rained and rained and rained for a good ten minutes. The herd was growing restless as too were the members of the Windborne pavilion and those camped close to them. Two of the hunters from the Swifthand pavilion ran through the rain to talk with some of the elders from Windborne. "The web won't pick them up if they come by air!" One of the strangers said hurriedly.
"If those monsters attack Endrykas the casualties could numbers in the hundreds if not thousands."
Dravite pressed a kiss to Kyanite's temple and let go of his wife's hand to move closer to the men from the Swifthand pavilion who looked as scared as trapped mice. Fear was a sickness Dravite had no room for in his mind or heart. "What monsters?" He growled, "it's just a bit of rain."
One of the Warriors looked up at Dravite and seemed to see right through him, petrified by whatever it was he saw now. Dravite looked to the man's companion and then some of the faces he recognised and knew well, all wearing the same terrified stare. Suddenly there came a loud, blood-curdling scream from behind and when Dravite turned to see who had made the noise and what had caused it, he almost cried out himself. Frozen where he stood, there was little that could be done as the winged creatures swooped down from the sky and tore away the cover of tents and wooden posts that held them in place as if they were no more than flimsy toothpicks.
People were plucked from their beds and eaten alive, whole families were ripped apart before his eyes and Dravite could do little but look on in horror. He felt someone put a weapon in hand, but even that was short lived as the sweep of a giant wing knocked him off his feet. He saw the short blade land a few feet in front of him and swiftly crawled forward on hands and knees to grab at the weapon and stand to defend his kin and pavilion.
One of the creatures took hold of Belkaia around her middle and as Dravite lunged towards the terrifying beast it drove its fist straight through his gut and clasped the man's very core. As the Drykas Man stared down at his own death wound to watch the life race out of him, he heard his wife cry his name. "Dravite!"
"Dravite, Dravite wake up. Wake up Dravite!"
Dravite opened his eyes to find Belkaia looming over him, her hand on his breast, "Wake up my love," she spoke softly.
He managed to say something intangible and slowly sat up. "Come on, you said we would go back to camp soon, we must have drifted off," Belkaia smiled. "Let's go see if that son of yours managed to get to sleep while we were gone."
OOCFeel free to join at any point. Just to clarify, yes, the story above was just a dream.