Summer 45th, 515AV - Mithryn Outpost Devi winced again as the aching sensation in her thighs became a rather unpleasant jolt of pain. She shifted herself in the saddle a little, much to the dismay of the brown-coated horse beneath her. Bay. She reminded herself internally, the stable-hand had called it a bay. The young woman found herself stilling at once, forcing herself to relax one muscle at a time. The horse went back to its regular rhythms and she found herself letting out a deep breath in relief. A quiet chuckle to her side drew her eyes away from the creature and she turned to the side slightly to find one of her escorts grinning, though his gaze was still focused on the road ahead of them. Devi found her cheeks colouring a little and an uncomfortable feeling settled in her stomach. Knights left her ill at ease at the best of times. Being flanked either side by knights as well showing her complete ineptitude at horse riding was just plain embarrassing. It somewhat overwhelmed her usual thrill at getting to try out a new skill. Horse-riding was a thought that had been swirling through her mind since she had started practicing with a longbow last season. Thinking on it and accomplishing it however were two vastly different tasks. The knight to her right side straightened in his seat, appearing to exaggerate the motion slightly. She frowned a little at it but then remembered she had been told to do the same as they rode and she tried straightening her back and neck once more. They had left the city in the dark, early hours of the morning, intending to reach the Outpost by the midday bell. The Knighthood, it seemed, had taken note of her assistance in the Syliras Orphanage over the last winter and had seen fit to hold her in mind for other shortfalls in medical assistance. The Mithryn Outpost had an abundance of herbalists and basic, common medical knowledge amongst its hardy residents but no healers or doctors of her skill. There was rarely call for such that doctors rarely settled, the Knighthood instead bringing such individuals from the city as and when required. The few escorting her at the moment were from Green Company. They looked a little different to those knights she had met in the city, their armour more worn and in earthier colours. They were less ‘polished’ somehow, though they seemed just as vigilant about their surroundings. More than once she wondered how they didn’t get bored of the endless fields they passed through. Devi enjoyed being out beneath an open sky and delighted in green surroundings (and the much more pleasant aromas they tended to exhume). Still, after an entire morning riding through crop fields, even she began to miss the more diverse scenery of the Bronze Woods beyond the city’s eastern reaches. She was watching the knight to her right, since his attention seemed so focused elsewhere and watched his expression shift. Devi looked ahead to seek what had caused the change and then smiled. Over the rise of the light incline of the road she finally saw their destination. Her mood instantly brightened, Devi reached carefully for her smaller water-flask. Whilst the larger contained only water, this one she had infused with Tolm in anticipation of the day’s strain. She drank a few swigs, knowing that the relief would not be instantaneous or comprehensive but welcoming it nonetheless. Her escort left her at the gates and turned to return into the maze of fields that spanned the horizon. Devi was left in the hands of the Knights whose responsibility it was to safeguard the Outpost itself. They passed beyond the walls and into the Commons, where the majority of the populace lived. The young doctor lamented, not for the first time, that she had no infirmary. Stretching out her aching muscles she pondered that it would be nice if the patients were required to come to her for once. |