Timshel continued staring down along the small path in front of him. Little heaps of dirt had matted the grass, dry and old. He squatted down and picked up one clod, breaking it between his fingers. The broken dirt felt cool and moist in his hands. No wonder the grass grew so thick here.
Ahead of him, the path disappeared into a thicket. He had yet to see any sign of an animal. Not even the caw of a crow or snap of a twig. Yet Timshel had seen the Drykas walk into camp with lines of rabbits lashed to stakes. His stomach growled. How did they do it? He broke another earth-clod in his hand, smelling it. Slowly, he stuck out the tip of his tongue out-- and licked it.
Gross! He spat the dirt out. He hadn't learned anything.
...
“Hey there! You out here to hunt too?”
Timshel shot up, wiping dirt from his mouth and waving, “Aha! Yes, yes... hunting,” Timshel said, rubbing the back of his neck and laughing, “I'm here to hunt.”
In front of him and out of the grass, a man had popped out. He was tall, about Timshel's height. Skinny, with a short-cropped amber beard to match his darker hair and eyes. He was wearing a simple cloak and pants, and carrying a bow in his right hand. Timshel eyed it.
Suddenly, between the bow and it's string, Timshel saw the grass move. A rabbit sprung out from beneath the grass blades, hopped a small runoff from the stream behind them and kept on going.
“There!” Timshel immediately ran past the man in front of him and took off. He reached for one of the stones in his pouch, fumbling it as he ran. The rabbit was farther now, heading towards a taller patch of grass. Eyes on the animal, Timshel misplaced the stone in the pocket of his sling. It slipped out, and Timshel had to reach into his pouch for another one. He stopped, carefully loading it this time in the center. When he looked up, the rabbit was gone.
Spinning his sling, Timshel watched the grass in front of him. He was breathing heavy now and he could feel the cord in his hand ripple with each heart-beat. The tips of the grass gently bent in the breeze. All except one patch, which defied the others and shook, as if tickled by some inside joke. Timshel let his stone fly, soaring past and wholly missing the tickled clump of grass. Timshel cursed and spat before hearing the CRACK of rock-on-rock. The rabbit shot out again, heading back towards the stream. Timshel looked back at the man from before. He pointed.
“There, man! Shoot it!” he said.