16th Bell - 66th Day of Winter, 516AV - Outside Endrykas
The girl didn't have a face anymore, and the beast was nowhere to be found, so that was the reason.
The pavilion mourned as if there had been a death, and he supposed that was right enough. The girl had barely seen a dozen Summers: she would grow into womanhood with those scared gouged into her face. Flaps of skin torn away, never healing properly. Stretching and contorting the first thing the world would see of her.
He had not met her, or seen her, nor was he likely to. But he knew what she must be feeling. Some ember of pity stirred in him, and then was quickly buried when the rest of the story was told.
Reward. Bounty. Menace to the city. Wild, dangerous, and trained. So that was their reason, but the first two words... they were Konrad's need.
Tired of being petching broke, too.
It was a familiar feeling, in a setting anything but. Konrad had stalked before; men and beasts. He'd chased down rats in the Sunberth sewers, when garbage pails did not provide enough. He'd hunted men and women and occasionally children through the alleys and derelicts, sometimes to return them to bondage, most times to end their lives. But to be a true hunter, pitting himself against the beast and predators of Caiyha's realm... that was a recent pursuit.
One that he knew he needed to master, if he wished to survive out there in the Sea of Grass.
And do you? Want to stay out here? With the endless moving and the constant stink of horseshyke and these damned, arrogant horse-petchers? Is that your future
There was no growl or sigh or huff; he knew better, now. Instead his crushed his lips together into a hard, angry line and kept walking. Knees bent, every footfall considered and calculated. Soft, wet ground was better. It muffled noise. He walked heel-to-toe, adding to the effect. His hands were filled with bow and arrow, nocked and half-drawn.
Not that it would bother a hunting cat, much. All it needed was enough to hide it, until something chose to wander within range.
Which, in this case, would be me.
He wondered why he hadn't seen any other Drykas around. Probably because they were following a more lively trail. He'd only found scrapings, scratching, the suggestion of a pawprint that looked like a house cat, if a house cat had been pumped full of steroids and stretched on a rack. Outside the pavilion where the girl had been mauled. Heading out the only place it could be safe.
The Sea of Grass. Such as it was.
More and more of the grass, now, as it turned out. Endrykas had been swinging up on The Run, coming up from the south, veering west and north, almost running parallel to the coast, or so he'd heard. The liquid bounty of Lake Lari had filtered into the ground and spread, demented, scorching "Winter" or not. There were rivers and streams, too, that hadn't been dried up by the drought. Animals were almost as scarse, but the vegetation was surviving. Even thriving.
Steppe and scrub and heather was giving way to grasslands. Tall and deep and swaying like endless fields of corn. Ordinarily, Konrad would have been heartened by that. It meant more animals, more prey, more fodder for his traps and snares and hunts.
Not that day. Something was out there that wasn't just designed by Caiyha to stalk and kill with inhuman efficiency... but had been taught other tricks by humans. That made it especially dangerous.
He paused by the latest paw print that he'd found. Same size, but even older. Either he was going in circles, this was a different cat, or... it was a different trail. Older, probably, but either way-
Grass rustled. Too fast and close together to be just the wind. His bow was up as fast as his gaze, and he pulled back-
Cursed. Sighed. Lowered his bow, but only a fraction. Something was walking out of the grass, without shred of fear in it's tread, and he could tell it wasn't a sodding hunting cat.
"Take a care," Konrad said in his pidgin Pavi, looking back down to try and discern a direction from the prints. "I may shot you."
When the figure got close enough, Konrad would look up. A glance, really. Casual and vaguely interested, just wanting to put a face to the feet and the figure. Then he'd take in that face, and for the first time in decades, the thought would wander idly across his mind-
Petch. And I thought I had it bad.
The pavilion mourned as if there had been a death, and he supposed that was right enough. The girl had barely seen a dozen Summers: she would grow into womanhood with those scared gouged into her face. Flaps of skin torn away, never healing properly. Stretching and contorting the first thing the world would see of her.
He had not met her, or seen her, nor was he likely to. But he knew what she must be feeling. Some ember of pity stirred in him, and then was quickly buried when the rest of the story was told.
Reward. Bounty. Menace to the city. Wild, dangerous, and trained. So that was their reason, but the first two words... they were Konrad's need.
Tired of being petching broke, too.
It was a familiar feeling, in a setting anything but. Konrad had stalked before; men and beasts. He'd chased down rats in the Sunberth sewers, when garbage pails did not provide enough. He'd hunted men and women and occasionally children through the alleys and derelicts, sometimes to return them to bondage, most times to end their lives. But to be a true hunter, pitting himself against the beast and predators of Caiyha's realm... that was a recent pursuit.
One that he knew he needed to master, if he wished to survive out there in the Sea of Grass.
And do you? Want to stay out here? With the endless moving and the constant stink of horseshyke and these damned, arrogant horse-petchers? Is that your future
There was no growl or sigh or huff; he knew better, now. Instead his crushed his lips together into a hard, angry line and kept walking. Knees bent, every footfall considered and calculated. Soft, wet ground was better. It muffled noise. He walked heel-to-toe, adding to the effect. His hands were filled with bow and arrow, nocked and half-drawn.
Not that it would bother a hunting cat, much. All it needed was enough to hide it, until something chose to wander within range.
Which, in this case, would be me.
He wondered why he hadn't seen any other Drykas around. Probably because they were following a more lively trail. He'd only found scrapings, scratching, the suggestion of a pawprint that looked like a house cat, if a house cat had been pumped full of steroids and stretched on a rack. Outside the pavilion where the girl had been mauled. Heading out the only place it could be safe.
The Sea of Grass. Such as it was.
More and more of the grass, now, as it turned out. Endrykas had been swinging up on The Run, coming up from the south, veering west and north, almost running parallel to the coast, or so he'd heard. The liquid bounty of Lake Lari had filtered into the ground and spread, demented, scorching "Winter" or not. There were rivers and streams, too, that hadn't been dried up by the drought. Animals were almost as scarse, but the vegetation was surviving. Even thriving.
Steppe and scrub and heather was giving way to grasslands. Tall and deep and swaying like endless fields of corn. Ordinarily, Konrad would have been heartened by that. It meant more animals, more prey, more fodder for his traps and snares and hunts.
Not that day. Something was out there that wasn't just designed by Caiyha to stalk and kill with inhuman efficiency... but had been taught other tricks by humans. That made it especially dangerous.
He paused by the latest paw print that he'd found. Same size, but even older. Either he was going in circles, this was a different cat, or... it was a different trail. Older, probably, but either way-
Grass rustled. Too fast and close together to be just the wind. His bow was up as fast as his gaze, and he pulled back-
Cursed. Sighed. Lowered his bow, but only a fraction. Something was walking out of the grass, without shred of fear in it's tread, and he could tell it wasn't a sodding hunting cat.
"Take a care," Konrad said in his pidgin Pavi, looking back down to try and discern a direction from the prints. "I may shot you."
When the figure got close enough, Konrad would look up. A glance, really. Casual and vaguely interested, just wanting to put a face to the feet and the figure. Then he'd take in that face, and for the first time in decades, the thought would wander idly across his mind-
Petch. And I thought I had it bad.