36th day of Winter, 515 AV
Before dawn
Just outside of Endrykas
Three days had passed in a blur of misery, three days that she had given herself to mourn. This morning she had awoken before dawn, as she always did, always had, with Shahar. Rather than sharing a greeting, a kiss, and beginning a leisurely morning of grooming and tending to the herd, she had dressed herself quickly and struck out into the grasses in hopes of finding some sort of creature to bring home, something to feed her family so that they would not have to break into their winter stores.
She had donned her cloak in its fullest, hood, gloves and all, it was not nearly warm enough, but she knew that her best chance was to remain unseen, unheard. Her bow was strung, held beneath her cape, and her arrows strapped to her leg rather than her back so that she might reach them.
She walked unhindered through the darkness, her eyes cast to the ground, searching for tracks, or for the holes in the brush that decried their passage. There had been rabbits, not so many days ago, and she hoped to find one of those. So far she'd had no luck, her feet moving lightly through the mud. Water would attract animals, not the sea, but rivers, lakes, they would bring creatures to them. Naiya followed the curve of the Arale river, Banti hunting beside her somewhere in the grass.
Tracks, droppings, burrows, she sought them all, crouched close to better see. She was no hunter, though, and all but the most obvious signs escaped her notice. She had no real understanding, just bits and pieces of things from her husband. She touched the mark on her neck, a reminder that Shahar was alive yet, and forged onward, leaving that path of thought behind.
Without any better plans, she resorted to the rope in her bag, she would set traps, or were the ropes called snares? She wasn't sure. All the same, she unstrung her bow, sliding the bone into the quiver and tucking the string into her boot. Next she made a noose of rope, tying the knot loosely around one end. It had to tighten around the animal to capture it. The other end needed to be stuck somewhere, tied or weighed down. She slid the rope up and down its length while she searched for a spot. A rock proved a likely spot, it would weigh the end down. She tied the loose end around the rock, and propped the noose up just enough that she thought it might catch the foot of anything that might step near it.
She tied the sliding knot around two more segments of rope all marked with the golden thread, seeking two more spots to set the snares. She placed the second on another rock, this one near spore she had found. The final one she hung from the branch of a shrub, low to the ground but not quite laying down.
As the sky began to lighten she had to pause, wondering how much longer she might move unhindered. She began to take more care, staying low, stepping with extra attention to what she might be stepping on. Still she sought prey, hoping to stumble across something.
.
.
.
Before dawn
Just outside of Endrykas
Three days had passed in a blur of misery, three days that she had given herself to mourn. This morning she had awoken before dawn, as she always did, always had, with Shahar. Rather than sharing a greeting, a kiss, and beginning a leisurely morning of grooming and tending to the herd, she had dressed herself quickly and struck out into the grasses in hopes of finding some sort of creature to bring home, something to feed her family so that they would not have to break into their winter stores.
She had donned her cloak in its fullest, hood, gloves and all, it was not nearly warm enough, but she knew that her best chance was to remain unseen, unheard. Her bow was strung, held beneath her cape, and her arrows strapped to her leg rather than her back so that she might reach them.
She walked unhindered through the darkness, her eyes cast to the ground, searching for tracks, or for the holes in the brush that decried their passage. There had been rabbits, not so many days ago, and she hoped to find one of those. So far she'd had no luck, her feet moving lightly through the mud. Water would attract animals, not the sea, but rivers, lakes, they would bring creatures to them. Naiya followed the curve of the Arale river, Banti hunting beside her somewhere in the grass.
Tracks, droppings, burrows, she sought them all, crouched close to better see. She was no hunter, though, and all but the most obvious signs escaped her notice. She had no real understanding, just bits and pieces of things from her husband. She touched the mark on her neck, a reminder that Shahar was alive yet, and forged onward, leaving that path of thought behind.
Without any better plans, she resorted to the rope in her bag, she would set traps, or were the ropes called snares? She wasn't sure. All the same, she unstrung her bow, sliding the bone into the quiver and tucking the string into her boot. Next she made a noose of rope, tying the knot loosely around one end. It had to tighten around the animal to capture it. The other end needed to be stuck somewhere, tied or weighed down. She slid the rope up and down its length while she searched for a spot. A rock proved a likely spot, it would weigh the end down. She tied the loose end around the rock, and propped the noose up just enough that she thought it might catch the foot of anything that might step near it.
She tied the sliding knot around two more segments of rope all marked with the golden thread, seeking two more spots to set the snares. She placed the second on another rock, this one near spore she had found. The final one she hung from the branch of a shrub, low to the ground but not quite laying down.
As the sky began to lighten she had to pause, wondering how much longer she might move unhindered. She began to take more care, staying low, stepping with extra attention to what she might be stepping on. Still she sought prey, hoping to stumble across something.
.
.
.