A buck.
Just the word got his heart to speed up, his tongue wetting his lips. It had never riled him much to see a doe, killing a doe was a thing done for meat. There were so many of them that it was no special feat. A buck, however, with it's mighty horns was a different matter. The first time your eyes set down on a rack of ivory horns, your hands began to tremble and your breathing became erratic. It was a symbol, trophy and meat as one, that sang to the skill of the hunter.
In a clump of tall grass on the edge of a trail, the grass parted and beaten down with the constant trod of deer hooves, Jarhal Treeshadow had sat waiting for maybe an hour. It was very difficult to tell the passage of time, out in the wilds. For what he was calling an hour, he had watched a gaggle of doe and baby deer poke about their clearing. He had never considered loosing an arrow at any of them, they were as much a vital part of the trap as anything.
For every buck, there were many doe. A harem, in reality. The bigger the buck, the more points of his horns, usually the older and smarter he was. Only the smart survived so long, out here. And so the smart ones used their harem of doe as a shield, sending them in first to make sure an area was safe. Only after the buck was satisfied did he follow after, and the longer he took to be satisfied usually meant the smarter he was as well.
After a hellish hour, sitting in the tall grass with the sun beating down upon him, finally the buck had made his appearance. Jarhal had tried sending his hound, Chural, back to Endrykas to save the dog from the baking of the sun and irritation of the bugs, but Chural had had none of it. Now he was glad to have the dog's companionship beside him, something to share the excitement with and thereby control it.
The Buck was confident now, strutting his way into the center of his family. Rubbing sweat off his fingers on his green cloak, slowly straightening the green and brown-stitched cloth mask hanging about his nose and mouth, he began to draw his bow slowly and fluidly. The nocked arrow slid back and then stopped, ready to release. The world seemed to move in slow motion, for Jarhal at least, as he waited the perfect moment to fire and take his trophy. He could feel Chural beside him, tensing as he knew the moment was coming.