17th Bell - 90th Day of Winter, 515AV - Near the Saer Ruins, Sea of Grass
They were lost when they found them. If he'd known what "irony" was, Konrad might have appreciated it.
"I thought youse bastards couldn't get lost inna Sea?"
"First time for everything."
"Not fucking fu-"
The Elder hissed and Konrad's mouth clicked shut immediately. He knew better than to disobey the older Drykas: the man had seen more in these swaying veils of vegetation and barren steppes than he could imagine. When he made a motion for quiet, you followed his lead.
The Younger was at a crouch next to him in a tick, both of them flanking the older hunter, bow raised to complement Konrad's heavy crossbow. The Sunberthian's eyes and aim scanned left and right, but saw nothing save shivering stalks and heard little save distant bird calls.
Hawks. Yes. I remember him telling-
The Elder held up a finger and for a moment Konrad was sure the old fuck could hear his thoughts. After the last dozen days in the Wilds, going hunting and trapping with the pair whenever the caravan was bedded down, he would not be surprised. The Younger was skilled, yes, as befit all his people... but the Elder? Konrad didn't think he could be honestly amazed by someone anymore, but his abilities were...
Useful. Really useful. So he'd watched, and learned, and agreed to come on this hunt. Which turned out to be something of a mistake.
He licked his lips and tried to crane his head over the grass, spy the jutting, jagged fingers of the ruins to the east. The Drykas' had told him they were just known as "the Saer", but who built them and when, they had no idea. The sellsword assumed they were yet another mysterious legacy from the Valterrian and left it at that. What was he, after all? A petching scholar?
"Camp fire. Game. Still burning..."
The finger slowly lowered, until it was pointing horizontally at a faceless stretch of the grass.
Konrad wasn't stupid enough to ask if he was sure; the Younger was probably too respectful. Instead the scarred mercenary wiped his sweaty brow with the back of his hand, cold wind tickling his scalp for the brief tick his hate was off his head, then set it square back in position.
"Let's have a look..."
The three men moved slowly, and thus quietly, and Konrad didn't have to be told their mood had changed. This was still a hunt, of sorts, but not for rabbits of deer anymore. Here in the Sea of Grass, the Drykas ruled supreme, and the horsemen weren't fond of negotiation when it came to "trespassers". They barely tolerated the Kabrin Road, and if not for the threat of the Knights should too many good, clean Sylirans die, they would probably have struck the caravans on it so often that only the mad, foolish or terminally stupid would attempt it.
So, it could be them. But Konrad didn't see... what was the word...?
They're not afraid enough, he whispered inside his own mind, following the hunters, aping their footfalls as best he could, avoiding any ground that would crunch or snap or squelch. They left their people, they never went back. Got to be a reason for that. If it was the Drykas, we wouldn't be closing in. We'd be running back.
And to where, exactly?
Konrad's teeth ground briefly like slamming stone doors as he remembered why they were so far abroad: they'd gotten petching lost. The Saer had been their anchor, their guiding mountain, but the Elder had made a rare mistake. He'd forgotten how fast the grass could grow around these parts, the Younger had told him, and spent half a bell scolding himself in lilting, chiding Pavi while running them in circles.
Now Konrad was casting wry glances upward and trying to will Syna not to lower, to give them more time, more light, more room and window to dive through the grasses and blunder back to Fangor, Three Eyes, Stash and all the rest.
He didn't need the Drykas to mentor him in how deadly it was out here past nightfall.
"Could it be ours?"
"Eh?"
The Younger twisted his head around a little bit to hear the question again.
"Our camp. Could we have come around on it the wrong way?"
"Nah... Nah, I don't think so."
"Why'd'ja say that?"
"Just feels... wrong."
"'Wrong'?"
"Look, I dunno, the grass is wrong-"
"That's what got us stuck out here in the first-"
Another hiss. Accompanied by a look wizened by time and innate meanness that all old and bitter men that survived the killing business for long enough seemed to possess. Konrad blinked at him and, that time, didn't shy away like a whipped dog
"Innate meanness" was something he knew a little about.
Whatever the tension of that moment could have birthed, whether snarls or challenges or simple, unthinking violence, the trio were never to find out. A peal of laughter split the natural silence of the Sea like the first blast of thunder of a storm. All three heads snapped towards the sound, and Konrad was pleased to find out he got the direction right.
Which is fucking well saying something. Sound never travels right out here.
"Stay low," the Younger whispered, keeping his crouch and moving forward again, the Elder at his side. "Weapons ready, but be ready to run, too."
Their eyes ate up the grass as they moved. Soon Konrad could see the countless layers of grass and scrub and hedge and leaf start to thin. He wasn't sure how, but he could tell the vegetation was... lessening, as if they were approaching the edge of a mad and massive stretch of hair on an impossible head. He could see shapes and space through the gaps in the grass.
Sky. Snow. Dirt.
Wagons. Horses. Figures moving at a speed best described as "walking", and other figures seated.
The two Drykas and the Sunberth sellsword crouched in a rough line with their weapons poised. There was a thick rank of grass masking them, but still they near-hugged the ground with their caution, Konrad taking off his stark, black hat and putting it on the ground next to him.
He licked his lips, from one unmarred corner to the other that forever felt and tasted like rancid, butchered meat, and started to observe their new... neighbors, bustling around a roaring fire, far off from the Kabrin Road.