The Sea of Grass, North of Riverfall
Spring 53, 513AV
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Ara felt Canter's gait slow before she coudl sense any change in speed. The horse quivered slightly underneath her, and almost shook its head. Ara frowned. Canter was not one to startle in the worst of times, usually, and this was strange. The grasslands looked empty. but for, far off, the faint smear of misty air and hills, that was Riverfall - Ara had never been there, and had recognized it that morning only when it was pointed out to her.
ARa leaned close to the Strider's ear, "What is it, Canter? You smell something?"
She had visions of terrible things. Glassbeaks? But Canter was too smart for that. The worst thing to do if he smelled a glassbeak would be to slow down, after all. And now, the horse stopped, snuffled, and shook her neck, batting her mane against Ara's face. ARa frowned, and laced her fingers into the mane, thick strands of horsehair, like the web. The web? Perhaps. She closed her eyes. The knots and cords of it were torn and trembling here, still waiting her team to repair them, but perhaps. She closed tight, and found the immediate rushing fullness of being in the Web.
The song here was broken, very broken. This land had been torn by the great Storm, and the sound of it was a sound of broken things, of melodies that half played, then loft off in ragged, flapping cords. Of memes, of knots half-unravelled. Of little energies trapped, and seeking outlet. She resisted the urge to start fixing - much of this work, she knew, she ought to be with a wiser webber than her to do anything to these grand, ancient cords, after all. But the chattering snapping of the threads grated on her. She hummed softly, a queer, discordant tune, trying to make a sense of the inbetween, and gently ran her fingers along the fabric of her surroundings.
Drykas. Well. That was something. Perhaps? And underneath her own song she coudl feel the strange unfathomable chanting of the Strider's soul, and feel, perhaps, the shadow of it reaching in this same direction. A Drykas. Very close he was, too. She gently reached out the shadow of herself towards the knot of the man - a man, yes. Not webbing, not that she could tell, not actively. But the echo of importance about him, perhaps. He too needed a bit of webwork, hard to read, but she teased out a few things. Vanator of the Denusk Pavilion. She did not know the name, though the memory of it teased at her brain, echoing down the cords in her fingers. She breathed deeply. A man, simply, a Drykas, windmarked, that much was true. She pulled back, gently, then, pulled back into herself, and Canter sat still underneath her, and the sky was the sky again, the earth the earth, and she, herself. Seh always knew the feeling, with eh quiet regret that always came with a return from the web - for she felt her voice dissolve from her.
But now, she opened her eyes, and frowned. She nodded soft, and whispered to Canter, softly, squeezing her knees against the STrider's flanks, "Good work, sister, you're right. I don't know the fellow either. We should find out about him."
She pulled gently on the horse's mane, no longer at the scout's gallop she had ridden before. She had been sent to scout the area around the Webbing camp. This was business. They made a quiet trot, a trick Ara had learrned in the long summer-grasses, of pulling herself low to horse's body, gripping with her knees, to be less visible. They rode then, quietly, toward the place she had felt the knot of a man, of one of the rising hills that led to Riverfall. She sniffed gently at the air, to see if the smell of a camp met her nostrils.
x
Spring 53, 513AV
--------------------------------------------
Ara felt Canter's gait slow before she coudl sense any change in speed. The horse quivered slightly underneath her, and almost shook its head. Ara frowned. Canter was not one to startle in the worst of times, usually, and this was strange. The grasslands looked empty. but for, far off, the faint smear of misty air and hills, that was Riverfall - Ara had never been there, and had recognized it that morning only when it was pointed out to her.
ARa leaned close to the Strider's ear, "What is it, Canter? You smell something?"
She had visions of terrible things. Glassbeaks? But Canter was too smart for that. The worst thing to do if he smelled a glassbeak would be to slow down, after all. And now, the horse stopped, snuffled, and shook her neck, batting her mane against Ara's face. ARa frowned, and laced her fingers into the mane, thick strands of horsehair, like the web. The web? Perhaps. She closed her eyes. The knots and cords of it were torn and trembling here, still waiting her team to repair them, but perhaps. She closed tight, and found the immediate rushing fullness of being in the Web.
The song here was broken, very broken. This land had been torn by the great Storm, and the sound of it was a sound of broken things, of melodies that half played, then loft off in ragged, flapping cords. Of memes, of knots half-unravelled. Of little energies trapped, and seeking outlet. She resisted the urge to start fixing - much of this work, she knew, she ought to be with a wiser webber than her to do anything to these grand, ancient cords, after all. But the chattering snapping of the threads grated on her. She hummed softly, a queer, discordant tune, trying to make a sense of the inbetween, and gently ran her fingers along the fabric of her surroundings.
Drykas. Well. That was something. Perhaps? And underneath her own song she coudl feel the strange unfathomable chanting of the Strider's soul, and feel, perhaps, the shadow of it reaching in this same direction. A Drykas. Very close he was, too. She gently reached out the shadow of herself towards the knot of the man - a man, yes. Not webbing, not that she could tell, not actively. But the echo of importance about him, perhaps. He too needed a bit of webwork, hard to read, but she teased out a few things. Vanator of the Denusk Pavilion. She did not know the name, though the memory of it teased at her brain, echoing down the cords in her fingers. She breathed deeply. A man, simply, a Drykas, windmarked, that much was true. She pulled back, gently, then, pulled back into herself, and Canter sat still underneath her, and the sky was the sky again, the earth the earth, and she, herself. Seh always knew the feeling, with eh quiet regret that always came with a return from the web - for she felt her voice dissolve from her.
But now, she opened her eyes, and frowned. She nodded soft, and whispered to Canter, softly, squeezing her knees against the STrider's flanks, "Good work, sister, you're right. I don't know the fellow either. We should find out about him."
She pulled gently on the horse's mane, no longer at the scout's gallop she had ridden before. She had been sent to scout the area around the Webbing camp. This was business. They made a quiet trot, a trick Ara had learrned in the long summer-grasses, of pulling herself low to horse's body, gripping with her knees, to be less visible. They rode then, quietly, toward the place she had felt the knot of a man, of one of the rising hills that led to Riverfall. She sniffed gently at the air, to see if the smell of a camp met her nostrils.
x