《Moonblood》Meetings 6
Advertisement
“Tyrel,” Kaveri murmured. “Wake up.”
Tyrel woke groggily, disoriented and confused. He blinked and focused on Kaveri, kneeling beside him with a bowl of thin hammered bronze in one hand, a matching cup in the other.
“What?”
“Wake up. Breakfast.” She waited while he sat up, then handed him the bowl, which held a liberal quantity of thick porridge with chunks of fruit stewed into it, and the cup, which turned out to be hot sweet tea.
“We should get deeper after you eat,” Madoc said. “I did some scouting. We do have a few on our trail, although they aren't close. We don't need to run, but we should keep moving. How are you feeling?”
“Better. And I think I'll be just fine once I get a good meal in me. Where'd the fruit come from?”
“Kaveri found an apple tree.”
Feeling both satisfied and rested for the first time in days, Tyrel felt distinctly more cheerful as they packed up, did their best to disguise the fact that anyone had camped here, and got moving again.
His mood wavered when he realized that Madoc was steering them directly towards the true Forest.
“Where are we going, exactly?”
“Where they won't be able to track us,” Madoc said calmly, glancing in his direction.
“Right into the Forest?”
“Closer to it, anyway. Where's the problem?”
“They won't come too far in because they won't want to get lost.”
“Exactly. That's the whole idea.”
“And what exactly keeps us from getting lost?”
“I do,” Kaveri said quietly. “I was seventeen when you caught me. Two years isn't so long that I've forgotten everything I've known all the rest of my life. I can navigate in the very heart of the Forest, and I can keep us fed.” She looked up from watching the ground around her, and smiled, the gold and lapis lazuli slave chains gleaming in the sunlight. “You look uneasy. You two protected me. Very likely you saved my life. Do you think I'd do anything that could bring you harm?”
“No,” Tyrel said slowly, wishing this sense of having no control over what was going on would pass. Then again, maybe it was something he should get used to, since he was no longer even presumptive heir to anything. “I don't know how long you'll choose to stay with us, though.”
“As long as you need me. I won't abandon you in the depths of the Forest.”
“Our other option,” Madoc said, “is to stay on open ground and hope we can outrun whoever's behind us—they'll likely give up the hunt eventually. Do you have another plan in mind?”
Tyrel pondered that for a while. “No other plans,” he finally conceded. “Forest it is.”
“It might be best to find a place we can camp for at least a couple of days,” Kaveri said. “I think it will rain, probably overnight. I can make us a shelter, but it will take a little time.”
“If they get drenched tonight, it'll either send them home, or make them all the more determined to catch us,” Madoc reflected. “It'll certainly make sure they can't use hounds to track us. What do you need for a shelter?”
Advertisement
“I'll tell you when I see it.”
“That isn't very informative.”
Kaveri stifled a sigh. “In the forts and the towns, you make lists of what you want, and then go to whatever lengths you need to obtain those things,” she said patiently. “In the Forest, we look at what's around us and create what we need from what's available. When I find a site that has the potential to be turned into a shelter, with materials nearby that will work, I will tell you. I truly can't give you a more precise reply than that. I hope to find a place early in the afternoon, so there will be enough time to build the shelter to be waterproof.”
There wasn't really much of a reply one could give to that. Tyrel shifted the weight of his pack a bit, and concentrated on his footing.
Kaveri, somehow, eventually found a small stream; it led them to its source, a shallow basin filled with leaves. She scooped the leaves out of the way, exposing a crack in the rock where the water bubbled up, and once the debris cleared, it turned out to be fresh and cool and sweet.
“I can build a shelter here,” she said thoughtfully. She pointed to a tree with a deep fork some five feet above the ground, and one about eight feet from it with a fork a bit higher. “The ground between these is flat enough. We need a small tree, long enough to reach from one to the other, to start with. We need to strip all branches from it but keep them.”
Packs left there, they scouted the area. Kaveri tapped on a scraggly sapling.
“That one won't live, there's not enough light for it here. It will work for us.”
Tyrel and Madoc chopped the tree down in short order with their hatchets, hacked off the branches, and dragged the trunk back to the spring. Kaveri measured out the length between the trees, had them cut the top off the tree, and then helped to wedge the remainder of the trunk into the two forks.
Then, under her direction, they cut enough long branches and spindly trees, each somewhat taller than Madoc, to lean them against the cross-bar. She adjusted them so they were all at some angle only she knew, grounded in an even line on each side, with two at each end to arc in towards the trees, and had them drive the ends into the ground securely; a few, she added rocks to for additional bracing. The next stage turned out to be weaving finer branches through the leaning branches for support, then layering the entire structure with branches of large flat leaves, from the bottom up. The only opening was two-thirds the height of the side, near one end.
Tyrel regarded the shelter doubtfully. “This will keep us dry?”
“It's made somewhat more hastily than one we might plan to keep longer, and won't have some of the comforts, but yes, it will,” Kaveri said. “With a firepit and a windwall, we'll be more comfortable than you think.”
So they cleared the area she marked, not far in front of the door though back enough that they could get past it, and ringed it with stones for a fire. Kaveri built a V-shaped wall of green wood, shoulder-high, on the outer side of it, and then added a kind of roof for it out of green leafy branches. She made a similar kind of canopy over the shelter doorway, presumably to deflect rain from coming in.
Advertisement
“Even if anyone passes near, they won't see the fire,” she said in satisfaction. “And we can have a fire even in moderate rain, and hot food.”
“That's a lot of work for a shelter,” Madoc observed, arranging twigs in the firepit.
“How so?” Kaveri asked. “Because we made it all ourselves, unlike a tent, where someone else did all the work of weaving and cutting and sewing and all before you ever saw it? That takes much longer to make, ultimately, and you have to carry it with you to get it there, and take it down afterwards. This was created from nothing beyond what the Forest provides, right now, from beginning to end. We can simply walk away from it when we're done with it, and it will be used by animals while it gradually becomes just part of the Forest again. The next time we expect rain, we can build another from whatever is available then.”
Kaveri was definitely more talkative now they were out of the fort, Tyrel observed. More assertive, as well.
“If it keeps us dry, it's worth it,” he said. “What can we do for a hot supper?”
“I'll take care of it.”
“Only for two,” Madoc said quietly. “I'm not hungry, no point wasting food.”
Kaveri paused with her hand on one of the sacks of food and gave him a puzzled look. “You didn't eat yesterday either.”
Madoc just shrugged and went on building the fire.
Tyrel dragged the packs into the shelter. It was too low to stand up, but more than high enough for sitting upright, and there would be enough floor space for the three of them and all their gear without being uncomfortably cramped, although not much more.
With the spring nearby, the fire right outside, a roof overhead that, well, had a chance of keeping them dry, and the whole thing probably invisible to any hunters from the fort... he'd spent worse nights. Some of them very recently.
He unstrapped cloaks and blankets, then extricated everything food-related, piling it right inside the door. Given the proximity of the spring and its stream, he dug out his soap and shaving gear and a clean shirt and loincloth, and ventured back outside.
“Back shortly,” he said. Madoc only nodded, carefully feeding small pieces of wood to the infant fire without looking up. Whatever change he had undergone, as far as Tyrel could detect he was no longer sweating, and the sparse facial hair he'd inherited from his mother's side had simply halted.
Kaveri concocted quite a pleasant meal out of jerky stewed with lentils and assorted green things and bits of roots that Tyrel didn't recognize at all. Even the rye bread tasted surprisingly good when soaked in the juices.
“I could start to enjoy meals like this,” he chuckled, relaxing with Kaveri next to the fire. Tyrel hoped Madoc would hurry back from scouting their backtrail: the sky was clouding over, hiding the early stars, suggesting that Kaveri's prediction would be proven correct.
She smiled. “Living only to eat is a sad thing, but where's the harm in finding pleasure in what you need to eat to survive? It doesn't take much to add some flavour.”
“How far will the food we have go?”
“On it alone, four, perhaps five days. If I forage to supplement it with fresh food, we can extend it until the beer and cheese go bad, and still should have jerky and tea and lentils and possibly honey. The oats will run out before then.”
“I've never been in this direction, and never known anyone who has,” Tyrel mused. “It isn't even on any maps. I wonder how long it'll take us to get anywhere.”
Silence fell, while they finished eating.
Kaveri gathered the dishes together and took them to the stream. Tyrel banked wood carefully around and over the remains of the fire.
“I wonder if it'll last the night,” Madoc said.
Tyrel stifled a yelp and looked up in shock. “How the hell did you get that close to me without me hearing you?”
“Because you're losing your touch?” Madoc shrugged. “Or because I can see where I'm putting my feet. Take your pick. There's a fire some way back, I didn't get close enough to count people, but I think it's reasonable to assume we're being tracked. I have some doubts they'll come this close to the Forest, and from any distance at all, they'll never see us. Especially if it rains and visibility is poor. This shelter blends right into the background and you have to be nearly on it to see it.”
“Well, that's reassuring.” Tyrel added a last piece of wood and went inside the shelter. Madoc followed. “Are you going to sleep?”
“I'm not tired. Seriously, 'Rel, I feel like I could keep going for days. And even with the clouds, I could point out exactly where Sanur is in the sky right now. I wish we had someone to ask about all this.”
“We'll find someone. What are you going to do, then?”
“If it rains, I suppose I'll try to sleep. Otherwise, I'll be outside and nearby.”
Something in his voice, vaguely distant, almost sad, made Tyrel reach out and lay a hand on his shoulder, but he had no idea what to say. Complex feelings weren't a big part of life in the forts, and trying to express them even less so.
“I'm not going anywhere,” Madoc said. “You wouldn't know what to do with yourself.” He ducked out of the shelter.
Lost in thought, Tyrel unrolled the blankets. His hands automatically began to set them up into two beds, then he hesitated.
He heard Kaveri greet Madoc, then she came inside.
“I can share,” she said, presumably picking up on his uncertainty. “It will be cooler tonight, once the rain begins.”
She was right: it rained, and the temperature dropped, and her warmth beside him felt good. Madoc came inside, and Kaveri urged him to lie down on her other side. Dry and warm and safe, Tyrel let himself drift back to sleep.
Advertisement
- In Serial317 Chapters
Infinite Realm: Monsters & Legends
The world has ended, and those worthy of it have received the chance for a new life in a new reality. Zach grew in power and thrived in the post-Framework world. He became a respected leader, a shining example of what it meant to be good. But as the world ended, he had only one thought: to punish the monster that had killed the world long before the Framework ended it. Yet not even with his incredible power was he able to stand against the World Ender. His arrival in the new realty, the Infinite Realm, gives him the chance to grow stronger, to find the monster again—and make it pay. Ryun survived the chaos after the arrival of the Framework by pushing harder than anyone else. He grew in power until he became the most powerful being that had ever walked the planet; but he is hated by the world, called a monster by all others, the World Ender. As the world ends and he steps into a new one, where people stronger than him have lived for centuries, he finds himself lost and without purpose. The only thing that had mattered to him had been lost to him long ago. He truly was the monster that people considered him to be, and he now finds himself wondering if this new reality has a place for someone like him—but he had never been one for lying down and dying without a fight. One world fell to his power, and another might follow. Current schedule: Monday/Wednesday/Friday Join the Discord: https://discord.gg/ncC5Q7H A polished and edited versions of volume 1, 2, and 3 is avaliable on Amazon. Current Volume: 4 Infinite Realm is a story that will follow two main characters at the start, with a few more joining the cast a bit later. The story will be told in two different time periods: past and present up until volume 3. Past chapters take place in the past on Earth, and take form of flashbacks that follow the two as they struggle to survive and grow their powers in the world changed by the Framework. The main story is in the present. This story is a mix of LitRPG and Xianxia, and it will have Classes as well as Cultivation systems. There are two main characters, and a few others that are introduced later. The MC focus will change from volume to volume, with the first being focused on Ryun, and the second on Zach (we are currently in Volume 4). Other MCs will still have chapters dedicated to them, but the focus will be on the main volume MC.
8 720 - In Serial26 Chapters
Ascendant Legacy
[Participant in the Royal Road Writathon challenge] Saul Andrews is just an average guy. He works, plays sports, he goes out with his friends. He doesn't do anything that would leave him prepared for a life of dungeon delving and adventuring in a foreign world apart from the occasional DnD session. His whole life changes when the gates to the Dungeon appear. He falls through the doorway to a new world and becomes trapped within! Now, he is trapped in a wonderous and perilous world full of creatures that only existed in his imagination. Trapped in a world where to survive is to fight, to learn, to grow. What starts out as a journey to get home develops into a determination to become the most powerful Dungeon Delver. His goal: to discover all the secrets held within that strange world! Isekai Lit RPG with Cultivation elements.
8 201 - In Serial7 Chapters
Misfortune Night House
In the future of XX42 the world is now over populated and somehow the world adapts itself towards this problem by creating a new phenomenon to secure itself and that is the MNH or """"Misfortune Night House"""". Follow our protagonists in solving the cause of the phenomenon and survive the chaotic night.
8 142 - In Serial17 Chapters
Ruby and Yang's untold Backstory
You seen them at Beacon and Afterwards but never has Thier Childhood been shown well this is that story.
8 148 - In Serial16 Chapters
One Life
With everything in tatters, Jason jumps on the bandwagon of One Life: Virtual Vacations and Adventures. Giving up everything he knows, he logs in to the game, hoping to find a purpose beyond the rut he had found himself in, in the real world. Lucking out early, Jason discovers a questline no one had managed to find, the now Deran finds himself in a sticky situation, relying on his new friends to help him stay alive. Especially since in this game, you only get one life.
8 131 - In Serial87 Chapters
Writing POC 101
An advice book on how to successfully write POC characters by Wattpad authors.[Highest rank: #1 in Non-Fiction]
8 193

