《Mirefall》Chapter 32 - Parting Ways
Advertisement
A sliver of waning moon hangs low in the sky, its meager light darkened by passing clouds. I pull my patchwork cloak tighter about me, grateful for the layers of warm and water-resistant clothes gifted us by the captain and crew of the VyoSkura. None of it new, but all better suited to our journey than what we came with.
Firstborn be as good to them as they were to us.
"Just remember—we're never truly separated. Not with the Link and Puka between us," says Rhetrien, eyeing me. I turn from the window to look at them, but only shiver harder. My cheeks burn in some combination of shame and embarrassment, and I just swallow and nod. We haven't known each other long, didn't even choose each other—and yet, my Khajra and Puka are all I have left.
But I know that Rhetrien is right. That this is the best course.
Thrall and I hug each of them in turn, Howla and Rhetrien and Saffryn, and it occurs to me that it's the first time I've embraced any of them...aside from the time we huddled together to throw ourselves to freedom. Tears prick the corners of my eyes, but I fight them back. I linger the longest with Rhetrien, though I don't know exactly why. There's something about the way they smell—of storms and peppermint and cloves—that I find comforting, I think.
Then Thrall and I take up our packs and Puka canters up to my side. I drop to my knees and wrap my arms about his little body. Squeeze him up off his feet and bundle him against my chest and hold him for as long as I can get away with before finally, carefully, setting him back to his feet.
I know he understands why I have to part with him for now. I know he knows that we'll be back together as soon as we can be. I even know it's for the best. That he'll be safer on the ship. That he'd give me away for who I am if I brought him with us. That through him, I'll have a window to the others at all times.
But none of that makes it any easier. I hate leaving him behind. It might even be the hardest thing I've ever had to do.
The captain opens the door for us, accompanying Thrall and me off the ship as we thank her over and over again for everything.
"We shall keep your Khajra and Akhana well, my Rhajia," says Captain Cossta. "And together we'll weather this storm to better waters."
"We won't forget this, ever," I promise her as Thrall performs a complex hand signal that I don't recognize. She returns it with gusto, then bows to the both of us before leaving us behind on the dark river docks of Mud Turtle Bend.
We stand there for a few heartbeats, watching as the VyoSkura carries on without us. Bound for the Wild Sea and the Sentinal Rhetrien says might—if the old Kolikai legends hold true—slumber beneath its waves. If all goes well, they'll never have to leave the safety of the ship. At least not until the time comes to make the dive, and even that they'll do shielded by stallawood. They'll be safe from the senses of the Gray Guard, from the eyes of the Puppeteer.
Advertisement
To Thrall and I falls the greater risk and challenge. To pray that Pash truly is dead or escaped, leaving the Puppeteer blind to our whereabouts. To chart the least predictable path down to the chasms of Solrath and their buried Sentinels, to the dig site I'd given up on ever seeing.
Then we'll just have to find a way through whatever trap the Puppeteer will no doubt have set up for us there. Where they may themselves be waiting for us.
The Bend is crowded, exactly as we'd hoped. I pull my hood up to hide my eyes and shield my face from the drizzling rain. My iridescent lock has been clipped away, and the bottom half of my face is decorated by twisting, antler-like designs at either side of my jaw—a distinctly Falruni style. Thrall's antlers, on the other hand, are raw and wrapped at the nubs where he sawed them off with Howla's blade. Too distinguishing a feature for a pair on the run.
We can't linger here long. Right now, the whole of the Mirelands are dangling under string-after-string of lies. The biggest of which being that the Kolikai are the ones who sabotaged the Revelry. That they're to blame for the tragic Miretouch of every single Heir and the deaths of all standing Rhaj but one—Fabienne of Morovin. That the Artifacts never got to choose their successors, forcing her to take up the mantle of sole ruler until order can be restored. All under the advisory of the nation's chieftains, of course. It's only a matter of time before they put out the word that some of the would-be Heirs have run away, along with promises of rewards for our return.
But already the nations are stirring to chaos. Our Skoli saviors didn't believe that story even before they dredged us out of the lake, and according to them neither does the better half of the continent.
A warm shock runs up my arm as Thrall reaches out to take my hand. He squeezes it, and together we turn away and become part of the chaos of the crowd.
Thrall's been here before, so he takes the lead. But there's no risk of anyone recognizing him—he'd had a different face back then.
Though I'd known to expect it, I'm still surprised by the number of beast-eaters and Mirefallen moving through the crowd. Of course, that's why we chose to disembark here. A backwater village, but a populous one. A place to which people too visibly different or radically changed drift off and stick when their homewaters grow hostile. A place where we blend right in.
We stop at a few places for what supplies the crew couldn't provide—including extra food, a small emberstone lantern, and a large swath of rainsap-treated fabric for fashioning a tent when necessary. All of it paid for from our shared pouch of bonechrys chips, another gift from the captain. Then we leave Mud Turtle Bend behind us, a chaotic smudge of hazy lights and dark silhouettes receding beyond a curtain of building rain.
Advertisement
Eventually the moon disappears behind the tree-line as we make our way south along a little-known hunter's path through the thick, swamp-pitted wood. When the canopy overhead grows thick enough to conceal it, I take up the lantern and turn its knob a hair's breath. The emberstone glows faintly, just enough to keep me from tripping over every root in my path. But with the rain picking up and everything so slick and muddy, I stumble constantly anyway. My Skoli clothes keep me fairly dry, but it's a miserable slog even so.
The longer our trek drags on, the more I dip into Puka's senses. He's warm and well-fed in the hold of the ship, with Howla and Saffryn usually arguing amiably in the background and Rhetrien brooding off to the side. It makes me smile, but it comes with a pang. I miss them all. But more than myself, I wish Kaidin were with them. Safe and well and deep in debate over something ridiculous. And every few hours or so, one of them—usually Rhetrien—reaches out across the Link to check on us in turn.
After a while I have to force myself to stop slipping out of my own senses, focusing exclusively on the Web and the path ahead. Driving away the few threatening beasts that near our path and keeping watch for other travelers in the dark. Scanning the skies for Oz's Sentinal. We pause occasionally for breaks—to relieve ourselves, to eat, to adjust our packs. I begin to hope with each stop that it'll be the last for the night and that we'll finally make camp. But Thrall keeps urging us on and on. And all the while, my moon blood flows into the wad of rags that's all I have left to staunch them with. My feet ache and blister, and a dull pain begins to grow and throb in the pit of my abdomen.
The sun is still far from rising by the time my power begins to wane, dragging at my consciousness.
"Thrall. Thrall?" I call ahead to him, my breath coming heavy and ragged. "I have to stop. My power's fading, I won't be able to protect us for much longer."
He turns to me, considering as his eyes travel over my face, my free arm curled over my stomach.
"We need to make use of night's cover," he signs, though there's sympathy in his eyes. "But you can still rest." Then he kneels and lifts me up, pack and all, as easily as if I were Puka.
"But, the beasts—"
"Don't forget what I am," he says into the Link, and I have the distinct sense that it's only I who heard him. None of the others pipe up. "I have hearing better than the best you've known. A stronger sense of smell than any hound. And I don't tire easily, I promise you. Now rest. Please."
I don't know if I'm too surprised or too tired to argue. Either way, I fall asleep not long after.
When I come to, I'm nestled amongst the mossy roots of an enormous tree. Thrall's back is to me as he shrugs off his pack, loosening the straps at the top to free the roll of tent fabric. Overhead, a narrow strip of pinkish-gray light breaks through the sparser parts of the canopy, framed to either side by cliff-faces of dark, lichen-strewn stone.
Across from my spot in the narrow gorge, the stone juts outward over a sunken space beneath—almost-but-not-quite a cave. Struggling against the cocoon-like wrapping of my cloak, I get up and pad over to Thrall as he supplements the shelter of the overhang with our tent material. We fall into working side-by-side, almost silent save the occasional word or two over the Link.
When our makeshift shelter is finished, we set about concealing it with fallen branches and moss. Then Thrall leads me to the perfect spot at the nearby creek for refilling our water-pouches. It's reassuring, to see how well he knows the land—navigating the forest with the same fluid surety as the native beasts I've been forced to keep at bay.
After a few bites of salted fish and dried fruit, I curl up inside our shelter to finish sleeping as Thrall takes first watch. By now the dull ache in my lower body has intensified into the deep, throbbing pain I've come to dread every month. And out here, without the remedies and comforts I'm used to, it's about twenty times more miserable.
I try to escape into Puka's senses again, but the pain holds me hostage, drawing me ever back into myself. I moan and twist, trying to get more comfortable. And as I do, I feel Thrall's agitation growing in the erratic, spiky outbursts of his Ember. Even I can smell my own blood now, so it's not hard to guess what's troubling him.
At the entrance of our shelter, he shifts position—turning to face into the wind. I recognize the undertone to his agitation all too well, having felt similar in my own and other's Embers. The pulsing, ever-expending thrum of hunger—but shot through with hot spikes of craving. The agitated writhing of addiction. The medicine he'd been forced to take when we were imprisoned must be starting to wear off.
But I trust him.
After struggling toward it for what feels like hours, I stumble back into sleep at last.
An unknowable amount of time later, I'm wrenched awake by a blood-curdling shriek overlaid with savage snarling...immediately followed by the sounds of ripping flesh.
Advertisement
- In Serial106 Chapters
Jack and Jill Conquer the Shattered World
There are our bad friends. Friends who serve to bring the worst out of us. There are our good friends. Friends who inspire us to greater heights, support us, and sometimes act as an example for us. Then there are our good, bad, friends. The ones who get us out of trouble as often as they get us into it. The ones who are with you when you accumulate those stories that you’re probably better off never telling in public...for legal reasons. For Jilbert Sebastian, Jacqueline Marrow was all three at once. Kind, Brave, Hardworking, Loyal, Arrogant, Selfish, Impetuous, Glory Hungry, and the farthest thing in the world from risk-averse, Jack Marrow seemed bound to either be the hero or villain, or her own legend. Now it seems that young “Jill” is fated to be along for the ride. Bound to look after, and act as an accomplice to, the young runaway heiress as she sets off to find her fortunes and make her mark in the world. Fortunately, or unfortunately, it’s looking like he might not mind the situation as much as he claims. They’re best friends after all...and maybe a little bit more. Thus begins the tale of the legendary Empty Archivist Society. *Posted Weekly On Scribblehub, Royalroad, and My Patreon*
8 585 - In Serial85 Chapters
Beast Cultivating System
A woman felt her life didn't have meaning and was missing something, she envisioned a more exciting future in which she had a goal to achieve.Coincidentally, this came in the form a bolt of lighting which sent her into the newborn body of a spirit beast with True Dragon heritage, into the world of cultivation where the strong eats the weak. Whilst awakening inside an unfamiliar world and body, she was pondering her newfound situation a robotic noise interrupted her thoughts indicating that the beast cultivating system has activated.Bloodline purity? Legendary bloodlines? Talent?Her system can provide it all.Armed with the knowledge of being a race in which is hunted by other beasts for its bloodline or enslaved by other cultivators, she knew the only way to keep safe in this chaotic world is getting stronger.Dragon pic: https://lawrencemann.co.uk/portfolio_page/spitfyah/ I have posted this on web novel; https://www.webnovel.com/book/12432453405442605/Beast-Cultivating-System
8 255 - In Serial11 Chapters
A bored boy looking for reason
A boy or a young man looking for a reason. He has come to the conclusion that there is no reason to do anything since there simply is no point in it. While going by his boring normal day as usual reading his novels, he is suddenly enveloped in a white light. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is my first story that I write if you don't count school and such. The grammar should not be too bad but English is not my main language so no haters pls.
8 64 - In Serial10 Chapters
A Trial of Time- India/US Transference.
People, who can't throw something important away, can never hope to change anything. A Trial of Time : A novel loosely based on 2002, USA in 1942. In another world familiar yet different from ours, there exists the tale of an eagle and a tiger. Their power unmatched, their authority unquestioned, the two sought to right a wrong that had been brought onto this world. No fortress can withstand their power, no mountains or oceans can impede their path. Nations would fall and a new world, one of the free and just, shall rise. This is their story. Co-Authored with Marine325, Author of "War of the World", Ying-yang-ding-dang, Author of "Titanfall: War of the Gate", CallMePlez and PWOFalcon, Author of "GATE - War of Two Worlds". Cover Art: CallMePlez (Daichi)
8 138 - In Serial24 Chapters
Ku Terluka Saat Kau Senang
Micha Ostor, a godling, was cast out by his parents for failing to live up to their expectations. They threw him down to the Retribution Fields, where the playthings and failures of deities inevitably find themselves in sooner or later. In the pits of despair, he finds himself drawn to a conflict between the rulers of this hell, where the line between friend and foe are blurry at best.
8 135 - In Serial12 Chapters
The Unexpected Heroes
In a world where gaining super powers is a common occurrence and heroes are real, Luke is just living his ordinary life as an ordinary guy with powers. That is until a girl bursts from his floorboards and punches him in the gut. Suddenly Luke is brought into the world of heroes and villains he has always tried to avoid and fighting to stay alive as a criminal organisation tries to hunt him down and kill him.Any and all side stories posted are to be considered canon.PS: Find the song lyrics hidden in every chapter ~ Yay!The first arc is an introduction arc.
8 86

