Most people would never notice they were being watched by a spirit astrally projected and walking the Web; it was said some could, though, who were not initiated into its distinctive energies. Sama'el was there for a moment, the slightest brightening of the sunshower, hardly anything at all. But he was a man of the Watch, and he had found a Drykas. Then, quick as thought, he moved on. His soul could range for about five hundred miles from his body, about a full day's gallop away on a healthy Strider. Someday, perhaps, he would have the range of a Master, and would know what was happening halfway across the continent so long as the Web was intact...
But his ranging came to an end, and his body tingled with the sudden return of his soul. Dohaina was in Endrykas playing herd mother; today he rode Bigarren, training the big stallion to work with a Watchman. The smart beast stood still in the dappling shade of a tree as the man upon his back straightened. He whickered a greeting -- the Striders, walkers of the Web themselves -- always seemed to know when Sama'el was there or gone, whether by the movements of his body or a deeper sense of spirit.
"Good man," he said, patting the stallion's neck. He hadn't returned to his body face in the dirt in a while now. The beast was learning. But the easiest way for him to reclaim his body was to use it, and so they were quickly galloping toward the napping horseman. It was an easy ride, and his year or so on the Watch had made him more familiar with the entire region than many.
But the sunning rock was empty, and he turned his eyes hither and thither, autumnal breezes whipping his braided hair about. Nothing was necessarily wrong, but the Sea of Grass was a dangerous place, and it was his job to be paranoid. He found possible signs of passage at the edge of the rocks, and made an educated guess, murmuring a prayer to Syna as he invoked Her grace, launching his sight up toward the sun to stare down from above until he found the stalking hunter.
Inavalti was different from web-walking in many ways, and he rarely felt disoriented using it, perhaps due to the fact that it was a gift from a goddess. He quickly dismounted, gave Bigarren a more complex order: to guard the rocks, but should he be overwhelmed, make all due speed to Sama'el's side.
He checked his blades, loosed them in their sheaths and scabbard, but he prepared his shortbow, nocking an arrow even as he hurried after the Drykas. When he drew close enough, his speed slowed, and his stealth became more important. It was, perhaps, cheating the way he found the hunter, but once he found him, he gave a whistling birdcall that any Drykas would recognize as an annunciation of a Watchman.
He was not alone in this. |