NoteSome details changed with Sophia's permission.At the first sight of the dogs, Victor ducked. No matter how much he hated it, he knew he had to sacrifice his view of the encounter in order to remain completely hidden. He pressed his back to the giant rock as if he could melt into it through sheer force of will, trying his hardest not to make a sound. He heard growls grow and culminate into bestial shrieks of attack. How he ached to know what was happening! How he wished he could join her! There was the scraping of claws against the thin gravel road, and between the rocks he could see the animals pursue his pet out of sight. Somehow, his heart was steady even as his breath came short.
“Well,
go.” A human voice sounded; Victor’s hesitantly rising body dropped again. The man’s reluctant trot crunched after the animals as his friend lingered a moment, then departed in the opposite direction. He found himself more concerned with the peculiar new face than with Sophia’s plight, so he followed him. His own progress lagged behind the stranger’s, for he held his breath as often as he could and he had to be more than careful not to step on any loose rocks. Between the shrinking rocks that shielded him from discovery, he tried to get a good look at the man. He wore all black, though the cloth was dusted with travel, and a long sword hung at his side. Rhysol’s symbol was emblazoned on the shoulder of his tunic, and Victor’s suspicions were soon confirmed as he watched him reach a clearing with too few stones to hide behind.
He remained watching from afar, heard the man mumble something about dogs to another brute, who sat on the ledge between a small wagon and a pair of horses. A single girl moped through the wagon’s window-hole, twitching like a squirrel. The whole structure could only belong to slavers, he realized, ironically enough. And if the optimistic spy was any judge, they were not very good at their profession.
Quietly, slowly, warily, he moved backwards from where he had stopped, hoping to be rid of the lot before they knew he was there. But he was not looking at the ground, as he had before: the heel of his shoe collided loudly with an unseen stone and, when he dropped the step in surprise, he stirred a few noisy pebbles. All three faces turned to him instantly, and he had no choice but to run.
He scrambled away from the beaten path, hoping that his pursuers might be clumsy enough that the rocky hillsides could be used to his advantage. As he weaved between the thick stalagmites and stumbled through tall grasses, he still kept to his toes. Where the dirt was loose, quick feet sounded like the ticks of a clock; where the earth held firm, he liked to think the thump of his step was only a whisper. He could hear them behind him, deliberate and persistent, though he could not yet see them whenever he turned to look. All the while he searched for a place to stop and hide, in case of the very real possibility that they could outrun him.
There. A hole between the hard black rock and the soft earth. It might have been too small, but his heart pained his chest and he began to think he had no other option. It was as tight a fit as he expected, leaving his pelvis sore from the squeeze. He clutched one of his shoes where it had been pulled from his foot in the haste. Though he was small enough to contort his body into the small hole, it still pained him to remain, both for the awkward twist in his joints and the anxiety of the slaver’s chase. He hated his inability to see
anything. If only he could just get a look, just rise into the sky and know where everyone was and what they were doing. He needed to know, to make a decent judgment of the situation. But he could not.
Victor could not guess how long he waited. Perhaps too long and perhaps not long enough. By the time he dared to emerge from that tiny gash in the earth, there were no men wandering around in confusion, no barking dogs, no rumble of a rolling wagon. He kept low as he crept towards the path, and only neared it to find it, not to use it. He followed it as best he could from afar, in the direction he thought his kelvic had fled. He picked up her pile of clothes as he encountered them.
Two dead canids littered the trail, one with missing eyes and a throat cut by a pitying dagger, the other with its neck mangled. Then he found her, naked and bloody, a pile of limbs that still pulsed with a slow breath. There was a smile in that pitiful heap, and with an incredulous chuckle, he returned it.
He looked around before he approached her, his head whirling in an almost paranoid display of caution. He whispered, “We need to go back. Quickly. Before they catch you. There are more of them, and I don’t know where they are. Come on.” As he helped her to her feet, his hand was instantly stained with blood. He could not tell whose, but he tried not to care. His heart still drummed heavily, and no longer for the adrenaline that had begun to fade in his veins. Even he could not tell why he still felt excited. It was as if his blood had forgotten how to move slowly again. He tried in vain to twist his face into something calmer as he led her to their secret cave.
“We’ll get you cleaned up,” he said finally, when he was almost certain that they would not be caught for the breach of sound. “Are you hurt?”