Gavin was a dark haired man of average height with long, thin limbs and a season’s worth of stubble on his face. He looked to be in his mid to late twenties, and barely strong enough to keep control of the Akinva Deerstalker at his command. The dogs, though strong, looked relatively thin; Clive believed that made them work harder. Shahar was smart to follow at a safe distance; the revered pit-fighters had powerful noses, but tended to rely on their sight more than anything, as likely to bark at a passing bird as they were the Drykas man that stalked them.
“Roland, I’ve got a bad feeling about this, that Drykas guide told us not to do too much travel, least we get caught.”
“Forget ‘em” the taller redhead waved, standing at five foot ten, Roland was somewhat taller than his comrade, but just as dim-witted. He had a beer belly and burly limbs, which made walking difficult in the too-tight leather armour he wore.
“But they winter just south of here.”
“But they winter just south of here!” Roland mocked, “Would you quit it, you’re starting to sound like my ex-wife. We have two seasons to go and in the summer we return to Syliras as rich men. If the Drykas want to pick a fight with us, we pay them off just like we did last summer and lay low for a while.”
Gavin stopped momentarily and wiped his brow, “This thing is heavy, what is it anyway?”
“No idea,” Roland shrugged, “But I’m sure Clive’s slave can tell us.” The two of them laughed and continued on foot towards the lake.
Half a bell had passed by the time they got back to camp and the sun was now high in the sky. Both men took their tool belts off, leaving their weapons strung up to the wall of a makeshift log cabin. The trees around the camp masked the building well, and the smoke that billowed from the chimney could be passed up as nothing more than a campfire in the woods to an untrained eye.
The dogs were hitched to a tree and seemed content to curl up in the shade. The trees used to build the cabin had been cut away from the hillside, taken sporadically as not to raise suspicion. There didn’t seem to be anything out of the ordinary on this side of the cabin but on closer inspection of the west side, one might see the upright wooden pillars, like washing lines, there for the sole purpose of drying out pelts. There the silver skins of the Metallic Asp snake were hung, not hundreds, but thousands, row upon row, thick enough to block out the view of the trees and lake beyond; more snake hides than the city of Endrykas might take from the land over ten summers.
It wasn’t just snakes, but boar, deer, horse hide, and wolves, all strung up, skinned, stretched, and tanned to dry in the sun. Perhaps then the hunter would realise the smell he had caught on the air this morning was indeed tannin, extracted from plant matter and bark, used by the Drykas and other races of men it seemed to tan hides. The trees around the campsite had been stripped of their bark and were slowly dying as a result.
Gavin tied the back legs of the Spearback and pulled on a rope to lift the animal up into the air so that it would be easier to work. He opened the animal’s throat effortlessly with his skinning blade and left the blood the drain away while he disappeared inside with Roland. The Spearback flinched and shook until its nerves too were dead.
“Roland, I’ve got a bad feeling about this, that Drykas guide told us not to do too much travel, least we get caught.”
“Forget ‘em” the taller redhead waved, standing at five foot ten, Roland was somewhat taller than his comrade, but just as dim-witted. He had a beer belly and burly limbs, which made walking difficult in the too-tight leather armour he wore.
“But they winter just south of here.”
“But they winter just south of here!” Roland mocked, “Would you quit it, you’re starting to sound like my ex-wife. We have two seasons to go and in the summer we return to Syliras as rich men. If the Drykas want to pick a fight with us, we pay them off just like we did last summer and lay low for a while.”
Gavin stopped momentarily and wiped his brow, “This thing is heavy, what is it anyway?”
“No idea,” Roland shrugged, “But I’m sure Clive’s slave can tell us.” The two of them laughed and continued on foot towards the lake.
Half a bell had passed by the time they got back to camp and the sun was now high in the sky. Both men took their tool belts off, leaving their weapons strung up to the wall of a makeshift log cabin. The trees around the camp masked the building well, and the smoke that billowed from the chimney could be passed up as nothing more than a campfire in the woods to an untrained eye.
The dogs were hitched to a tree and seemed content to curl up in the shade. The trees used to build the cabin had been cut away from the hillside, taken sporadically as not to raise suspicion. There didn’t seem to be anything out of the ordinary on this side of the cabin but on closer inspection of the west side, one might see the upright wooden pillars, like washing lines, there for the sole purpose of drying out pelts. There the silver skins of the Metallic Asp snake were hung, not hundreds, but thousands, row upon row, thick enough to block out the view of the trees and lake beyond; more snake hides than the city of Endrykas might take from the land over ten summers.
It wasn’t just snakes, but boar, deer, horse hide, and wolves, all strung up, skinned, stretched, and tanned to dry in the sun. Perhaps then the hunter would realise the smell he had caught on the air this morning was indeed tannin, extracted from plant matter and bark, used by the Drykas and other races of men it seemed to tan hides. The trees around the campsite had been stripped of their bark and were slowly dying as a result.
Gavin tied the back legs of the Spearback and pulled on a rope to lift the animal up into the air so that it would be easier to work. He opened the animal’s throat effortlessly with his skinning blade and left the blood the drain away while he disappeared inside with Roland. The Spearback flinched and shook until its nerves too were dead.