82 Spring, 515 AV
Morning
Morning
The Serenity Tree loomed up ahead like a mute skeleton, its enormous trunk twisted and windswept. Reaching branches spread out like distorted limbs floating above the ground where its giant root system danced in and out of the rich Cyphrus soil like serpents bathing in Syna's light.
Dravite didn't dare touch the sacred tree lost under moss but noticed on closer inspection the cryptic patterns of the bark, lifted and chipped like a painted wall forced to withstand a thousand summers. The finger ends of its branches were lush and riddled with small green shoots and tight buds that had cracked open to reveal soft, papery leaves.
The closest river was the Itrod, at least a four day ride west the way the crow flies which meant the water-table must not be buried too deep on this part of the plain, closer than most to the swamps of Kenash. There was something noble about the way it stood alone unmoving like the rest of the golden tide, its strength tried and tested by the gods; weathered and weary, yet still The Serenity Tree thrived.
“Here,” the team leader from The Watch said, pointing to the base of the tree and the dried earth that surrounded it.
The handful of recruits that had come along dismounted and let their striders mosey about the plain. This was merely a scouting mission and no recovery work would be done today. “Stick together, don’t go too far, respect the traditions of this place, and above all, stay alert.”
Dravite combed his fingers through Cree’s mane and watched the sky for a time, cloudless, blue; it stretched out for miles into a hazy, white mist where it was impossible to differentiate between sky and earth far off in the distance. He sat down in the shade of the tree, watching the patterns of dappled light dance back and forth with the breeze against the ground.
The man felt a surreal sense of peace wash over him as if lulled into a dreamlike state by the warmer weather and tranquillity of what he considered a holy place. Slipping into a trance came easy here where there were so few distractions. The blue tentacles of the broken web spread out around the man; still damaged and isolated from the rest of the line after the Djed storm in the spring of 512 AV. The Watch had been a part of rebuilding the line and though this spring they had celebrated the final replacement of the damaged web, there would always be remote areas in need of upkeep and attention.
Being a part of the web felt like sitting in the rolling waves of a shallow tide, every creature made its own ripples felt across the surface of silky blue. Dravite could sense Cree near him though he did not see with his own eyes; he felt the animal’s foot-falls just as he did those of his peers, the small game animals spread out beyond them and something bigger moving slowly across-country further still. His reach was limited only by his lack of skill in webbing and the broken threads that drifted like seaweed that had lost its hold on the sand.
For now the man was content to sit and listen out for the voices that could usually be heard on the Drykas web. .
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