
Rak'kena was trailing behind the slaves as they trudged onward. The slaves, they moved so slowly that it made Rak'kena scowl underneath that large flowing cloak of his, which was expertly wrapped around himself to hide his face (a precaution so that no slave, if ever freed, would recognize him). "The Crimson Cloak", it was the name the other slavers had given Rak'kena, no more than an initiate into their little profession. For now, he was more of a watcher, what they called a "Seeker". One who sought that no slave wandered away from the pack, to ensure that any slave who tried to flee from them, never got far. If need be, he would execute them, but that was only if they could not be salvaged and kept alive until Ahnatep, his home.
Rak'kena, despite being the young blood at a mere twenty-four years old, disagreed heavily with several of the slavers' tactics. The beating of the slaves-to-be. They were not the masters, that was for the people who paid them gold-mizas. They were the transporters, the shepherds of property. Not assailants and rulers, at least not yet. As Selphi bit the sand, Rak'kena moved to pick her up and stand her once again on her feet, he and his four muscular arms would be able to perform this with ease had it not been for a more experienced, a veteran in the slaving profession that is, who moved to him and gave him a fierce shove backwards and scowled. "Watch yourself Crimson, we are not here to carry these rodents home. They walk. If they are not strong enough to do so, they aren't worth the profits." Rak'kena thought about protesting (actually he thought about outright killing the man in cold blood right there, but he was outnumbered roughly a dozen to one), but the man drew his whip. Rak'kena knew what was to happen, everyone did.
Minutes later, after Rak'kena watched the young girl get horribly beaten by that stretch of leather, they decided to move on. Selphi wasn't worth their time any longer. If they waited for her to recover, another slave might drop, and they were out even more time and greater profit. She had to be let go. If she survived, she was beyond lucky, if not, who would shed a tear? Rak'kena wasn't okay with this, and it wasn't because Selphi was a person in his eyes, but he was hurting for money, and she could bring him something. Still, he was forced to abandon her. If she would be there in two days, Rak'kena could hope to find her and reclaim her, but that was madness. Such survival was impossible for anyone but a true Ekytol-born Desert Dweller. Even Rak'kena wouldn't have survived in that state for that long. They had to move.
It was later that night when it was time to break. Tomorrow they would reach Ahnatep, but for tonight, it was time to eat, feed the slaves their meager morsels, and sleep. Rak'kena wasn't tired though, he still wanted to kill that man that dared to touch him, to shove him, to command him like peasant. He didn't know who it was he was dealing with. Rak'kena ate and drank with the rest of them then returned to his post of watching over the slaves. A head count, a simple yet effective way of telling who was still present, and Rak'kena found something out, there was one missing! It wasn't Selphi, he wasn't foolish enough to forget they lost her (she wasn't the first in this journey they abandoned for dead after all), but another had escaped.
Rak'kena glanced around the moonlit desert just in time to see a man in a turban limp-running across a dune and vanishing down the other side, back the way they came from. Rak'kena bit down on his lower lip as he turned to another slaver. "We lost one. Stay here and guard them, I'll bring him back." And with that, Rak'kena began to run across the sands, chasing down that one lost slave.
The climbing of that dune proved to be a hassle, the shifting sands knocked loose by his scrambling feet and the darkness ricocheting off the sands to make a beautiful silver hue, but Rak'kena didn't have time to waste marveling at the sands, he had a slave to punish.
The Descent wasn't nearly as difficult, a mix of running and sliding down those same sliding sands, and once he reached bottom he found him victim, laying face down in the sands, muttering in a hoarse dry voice. Something in that blasted Benshira Language. "Get up." Rak'kena kicked out wildly, hitting the man once considerably hard in the ribs, but there was no cry out for help or a yelp of pain, no. He was silent still. Rak'kena didn't feel like messing with this any longer, and drawing the gladius from the scabbard at his side, he took one last look at the man before plunging the blade through the Benshira's back, and extinguished his life. Rak'kena, however, remembered the girl that was left behind hours ago. He knew odds were slim she was alive, but if he just checked, no harm would be done, and if she was, he could sell her off himself, one-hundred percent profit. Rak'kena retraced his path.
As Rak'kena climbed the dune, he heard the sound, chiming music, a music box even. It was soft, distant, hidden almost entirely by the howling chilled wind, but it was there. Either the girl had a music box, which he knew wasn't the case since all the slaves were stripped of anything of value, or someone else was there.
Again the Gladius was draw as he finally hit the top of the dune, and without hesitation pointed the tip of his blade in Pwll's direction. "Move away from her. She has nothing to offer you, but I come offering death if dare to oppose me." Rak'kena growled faintly as he slowly stalked towards Selphi. He wasn't going to leave without her across his shoulder, or with her blood drenching his sword, he swore it. He hadn't come this far just to have some hero rescue his prize. |