67th day of Winter, 509 AV
This had better be worth it!
Kell’s inner monolog had been alternating between elation that he had managed to follow the tracks for so long, and a growing despair that he was going to starve to death before he caught up with whatever dinner was making this trail, probably a deer if the hoof prints were any indication. Having been following the signs of his elusive prey’s passage for over a Bell now, Kell’s spirits were once again taking a turn for the worst. For the twentieth time he contemplated returning to the traveling rations tucked safely away in Stormrunner’s saddlebags. Oh I bet she’s having a lovely feast right about now, he moaned inwardly, thinking of the mare blissfully grazing in the clearing where he had left her. He had finally stomached the idea of settling for the rations, again, when movement in his peripheral vision tensed his whole body. He cautiously turned his head. Sure enough, there was definitely something moving between the barren branches. Had it not been winter he probably would have missed it. He slowly crept his way to a large oak, and stealthily peaked around it. What he saw took his breath away. Pawing at the ground just a hundred paces away was the biggest hart the Kell had ever seen. Muscles rippled as the beast casually grazed the forest floor, oblivious to Kell’s presence. Its rust colored hide almost shown as the rays of the setting sun pierced through the trees to land upon the hart. And atop its head, Kell counted a full fourteen points.
As slowly as he could, Kell drew an arrow from his quiver and fitted it to the bowstring of his Longbow. While not as practical for woods hunting as its shorter cousin, the bow had stood Kell in good stead for years on the Sea of Grass and he was loath to give it up. Silently, Kell offered up a prayer to Zulrav that the magnificent animal had appeared up wind of him and was thus unlikely to catch his sent. With practiced ease, he drew the fletching to his cheek in a single, fluid motion. Kell sighted down the shaft, aiming just behind the hart’s fore shoulder, at where he knew the heart to be. At a hundred paces, a longbow could pierce a steel breastplate, and Kell found solace in knowing that death would be nearly instantaneous for the wonderful creature. Offering a silent blessing for the hart’s soul, Kell loosed.
“SNAP!” Off in the distance a twig snapped or a branch fell or any other myriad of forest sounds. The Hart flinched from the noise
“TWANG!” The bowstring vibrated against Kell’s wrist as the arrow went speeding on its lethal course.
“THWACK!” The arrow soared over the flinching animal’s shoulder blades to bury itself in a birch tree. The hart, alerted that it was no longer alone tore off through the brush at a speed Kell could not even hope to match. With a sigh he walked over to the birch tree to retrieve his arrow. A close look revealed that the force of the impact had split the shaft almost its entire length. “Stravag!” he cursed. Good arrows were expensive and hard to come by. Beautiful or not, that hart had cost him one of his precious arrows, the least it could do was provide him with some dinner. Leaving the splintered shaft embedded in the tree, Kell resumed the hunt. At least the fleeing beast had left him an easy trail to follow.