“Swap watches and start preparing camp, we’re going to want a perimeter set up in case we get any guests, alright?”
The words were ones that Ayatah had been waiting all day for, and as soon as Imalla had walked away, she slung her long bow off her shoulder and sighed deeply. Her back ached, her shoulders ached… It had been a month since Ayatah had stood within the army ranks, and the tenderness in her muscles showed it. After cracking her neck and stretching her long arms and legs, she turned to the next task.
It didn’t take long to get a fire going, and soon thick grey smoke was billowing upwards and beyond the jungle canopy. Ayatah sat beside the fire, appreciating the dry heat the flames threw out. The sky was darkening, and with it would come the nightlife of the Falynder Jungle… And perhaps a Dhani ambush.
The sound of people approaching made the patrolling Myrians turn around in unison, like one body of at-the-ready machines. Ayatah was on her feet before she had truly realised why, dagger in hand and eyes wary. Two bodies were making their way through the murky greens, and it was not until they had come into clear view that the patrollers lowered their weapons.
Tinnok and Bennik.
There was a unanimous, disappointed sigh from the rest of the Myrians; they had been eager and readying themselves for a fight. People are always too quick to lust for blood, Ayatah thought as she noticed numerous eye rolls from her comrades, they forget that death can effect us as much as the enemy. Ayatah had never lost a close friend or relative in battle, but she had seen some of her fellow recruits die during her own service in the army. There was something entirely different in seeing an acquaintance die, as opposed to an animal or foe. Myrians were fierce and talented in battle, but they were not invincible; and the thought very often played on Ayatah’s mind before she leapt into combat.
The tense atmosphere returned as quickly as it had disappeared, with people stopping to listen for sounds of more people closing in on them.
“So what’s all the fuss about?”
”We found an arrow in a pig - and not one of ours.” Her voice was low and quiet. Even though they were now off duty, loud chatter and laughter would not be tolerated. Especially with the risk of a Dhani ambush. ”Did you see anything on your scout?”
Bennik had joined the women by now, and sat on the other side of Ayatah. He too began to skin his kills, and handed his cousin a small feathered body. She began plucking it instantly before she had even investigated what exactly he had killed. Her hands worked methodically and quickly, pulling the downy feathers away from the bird’s pasty white skin. It did not take long before the creature was plucked and naked on her lap, at which pointed Ayatah took the bird’s neck in her hands and twisted it. There was a gruesome crack, and the head flopped sideways unnaturally.
There was something sickeningly rewarding about preparing poultry….
The words were ones that Ayatah had been waiting all day for, and as soon as Imalla had walked away, she slung her long bow off her shoulder and sighed deeply. Her back ached, her shoulders ached… It had been a month since Ayatah had stood within the army ranks, and the tenderness in her muscles showed it. After cracking her neck and stretching her long arms and legs, she turned to the next task.
It didn’t take long to get a fire going, and soon thick grey smoke was billowing upwards and beyond the jungle canopy. Ayatah sat beside the fire, appreciating the dry heat the flames threw out. The sky was darkening, and with it would come the nightlife of the Falynder Jungle… And perhaps a Dhani ambush.
The sound of people approaching made the patrolling Myrians turn around in unison, like one body of at-the-ready machines. Ayatah was on her feet before she had truly realised why, dagger in hand and eyes wary. Two bodies were making their way through the murky greens, and it was not until they had come into clear view that the patrollers lowered their weapons.
Tinnok and Bennik.
There was a unanimous, disappointed sigh from the rest of the Myrians; they had been eager and readying themselves for a fight. People are always too quick to lust for blood, Ayatah thought as she noticed numerous eye rolls from her comrades, they forget that death can effect us as much as the enemy. Ayatah had never lost a close friend or relative in battle, but she had seen some of her fellow recruits die during her own service in the army. There was something entirely different in seeing an acquaintance die, as opposed to an animal or foe. Myrians were fierce and talented in battle, but they were not invincible; and the thought very often played on Ayatah’s mind before she leapt into combat.
The tense atmosphere returned as quickly as it had disappeared, with people stopping to listen for sounds of more people closing in on them.
“So what’s all the fuss about?”
”We found an arrow in a pig - and not one of ours.” Her voice was low and quiet. Even though they were now off duty, loud chatter and laughter would not be tolerated. Especially with the risk of a Dhani ambush. ”Did you see anything on your scout?”
Bennik had joined the women by now, and sat on the other side of Ayatah. He too began to skin his kills, and handed his cousin a small feathered body. She began plucking it instantly before she had even investigated what exactly he had killed. Her hands worked methodically and quickly, pulling the downy feathers away from the bird’s pasty white skin. It did not take long before the creature was plucked and naked on her lap, at which pointed Ayatah took the bird’s neck in her hands and twisted it. There was a gruesome crack, and the head flopped sideways unnaturally.
There was something sickeningly rewarding about preparing poultry….
|| Ayatah's speech || Ayatah's thoughts || Others' speech ||