The throw was off, Shahar may have been well versed in his weapon of choice but he was no expert; especially when it came to an offhand throw. The javelin, however, clipped Clive's side and cut into Valen's arm, weakening him just enough for the woman to deal a devastating blow. Wounded and with the cabin filling up fast with black smoke, Clive struggled to her feet and coughed, fanning a hand back and forth in front of her face, "animals!" She hissed and held up the key, making sure Shahar got a good look at it before she tossed it into the fireplace, looked him in the eye and then left, limping out the door to safety.
Clive would take what she could carry; tearing pelts down from the drying racks outside before the fire spread too far and loaded up the two horses with any survival gear she could find before fetching the hunting dogs. There was no telling how far she would get before her wounds or the grasslands took her life; perhaps by some miracle she would make it back to the city of stone, she had made the journey twice before after all, and nothing was impossible.
Inside the cabin the fire was now climbing the walls and thick, dangerous smoke wafted out through the door. Valen lay dead on the floor with a dagger in his heart and an iron sword across his middle. Snow was panicked by the smoke but refused to leave Shahar's side, scratching at the bolt that pinned the chain to the wall of the cabin, even as her eyes began to sting and the smoke inhalation caused her to snort and shake her head. Desperation and adrenaline seemed to drive the man's actions, and soon his persistence paid off, with the wood around the bolt finally giving way to his tools.
By the time Shahar managed to escape the cabin with whatever he chose to take, the roof was caving in and the small glass jars of snake venom lined up along the shelves were starting to shatter and explode. The fire had spread outside to the pelts, and line by line it slowly consumed all. The hunting dogs were gone, as were the horses and any sign of Clive. In their place, the lone doe stood at the edge of the woods, watching as two season’s worth of hunting and hiding went up in flames.
"I make no distinction between good and evil, but this world must have balance," a woman's voice spoke gently, a close presence even if for now she remained unseen by Shahar and unheard by Snow, "with every end, a new beginning; just as the sun sets to rise, so too will the ideas of men once again find fruition. What say you silent one," for she knew him to be a man of few words, "what end do you seek here with your actions this day?"
Clive would take what she could carry; tearing pelts down from the drying racks outside before the fire spread too far and loaded up the two horses with any survival gear she could find before fetching the hunting dogs. There was no telling how far she would get before her wounds or the grasslands took her life; perhaps by some miracle she would make it back to the city of stone, she had made the journey twice before after all, and nothing was impossible.
Inside the cabin the fire was now climbing the walls and thick, dangerous smoke wafted out through the door. Valen lay dead on the floor with a dagger in his heart and an iron sword across his middle. Snow was panicked by the smoke but refused to leave Shahar's side, scratching at the bolt that pinned the chain to the wall of the cabin, even as her eyes began to sting and the smoke inhalation caused her to snort and shake her head. Desperation and adrenaline seemed to drive the man's actions, and soon his persistence paid off, with the wood around the bolt finally giving way to his tools.
By the time Shahar managed to escape the cabin with whatever he chose to take, the roof was caving in and the small glass jars of snake venom lined up along the shelves were starting to shatter and explode. The fire had spread outside to the pelts, and line by line it slowly consumed all. The hunting dogs were gone, as were the horses and any sign of Clive. In their place, the lone doe stood at the edge of the woods, watching as two season’s worth of hunting and hiding went up in flames.
"I make no distinction between good and evil, but this world must have balance," a woman's voice spoke gently, a close presence even if for now she remained unseen by Shahar and unheard by Snow, "with every end, a new beginning; just as the sun sets to rise, so too will the ideas of men once again find fruition. What say you silent one," for she knew him to be a man of few words, "what end do you seek here with your actions this day?"