Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 246
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Re: Time to Leave
Time to Leave
Part 3: The Journey
Rosilio:
The scent of morning hung thick in the air, pleasantly filling Valeriana's nose as a hand gently nudged her shoulder. Not wanting to wake yet, she kept her eyes closed and enjoyed the song of the birds and the warm sun which peaked through the window and streaked across her back. The hand nudged her shouder again, this time followed by a voice, breaking through the clouds in her mind, "Wake up little sis. There are some people I need you to meet today."
Valeriana cracked open the lids of an eye and peered around with blurred vision. She saw her pillow, her bed, her room. Things seemed intact and as they should be, but she had a burdening feeling that something had been forgotten. She closed her eyes and breathed in deep, trying to clear the fog webs of her mind. Suddenly, a brief flash of memory flared in her mind's eye. Her breath caught, as if a hand reached into her chest and tightened it's grip on her lungs. A glimpse of the dream shattered her peace. Through the haze of a dense memory fog, she remembered machines and metal encased bodies. She remembered a woman's face. Everything else was lost to the haze.
"Are you alright, Val?" Suibom said as he noticed her body tense.
Val sat up in her bed. She reached back in her mind trying to remember more of the dream that seemed so frighteningly real earlier that night but found nothing more than the gray fog. "I... I had a dream. A woman, a goddess... Jena. Homins... enslaved?... by machines, by metal. I can't remember the dream. It's more of a feelin at this point than a memory. I believe the goddess may be returnin to us, though."
"I would not doubt it." Suibom said as he sat on the bed next to Valeriana. He was looking out the window at the dense forest that extended beyond. Thoughts of the rumors and hearsay that had been whispered throughout the camps recently raced in his mind. Whispers of war, whispers of broken treaties, whispers of Matis destiny. There were more quiet whispers as well, whispers of an old guild that has long been forsaken. Suibom didn't know what to make of it all, though he did know to trust Valeriana's dreams. He also knew he had to get to Yrkanis to seek the truth behind several mysteries.
"For now, though,” he said as he stood up and began to walk to the door, "we have a long journey ahead of us. Wash and put on some traveling gear, we will be making our way to Borea."
“Borea,” Valeriana thougth to herself. She never traveled outside of Rosilio and did not have much in the way of traveling clothes. She led a mostly meek existence, farming and harvesting basic materials which she used to craft the basic necessities needed for the camp, as was the existence of most of the permanent members of the encampment. Her father, Petrov Azini, was one of the initial builders of the camps, created to help refugees integrate back into Matis life.
Her father... There was something about her father in the dream. She reached for it, but grasped little more than wisps of the fog around her mind's eye. She stood up and walked to the small wash basin on a table near the window, shaking her head to release the memory, not wanting to think about it any further. Her father died when she was only two and she didn't really have any memories of him. It didn't make sense to her to be dreaming of him now, but the fog lay heavy on her head. It was the type of dream that frightened her; the type of dream that she had more and more frequently as she grew older. These dreams were more than dreams, they were glimpses of reality. They were Glimpses of events that happened in the past, present and future. She shook her head again and this time splashed water on her face. “No time to be thinking these thoughts now,” she said to herself, quietly. The journey to Borea would not be an easy one.
* * *
Valeriana emerged from the small hut dressed in ragtag clothes that were more suited to farming than traveling through the forest. She expected Suibom to be dressed in a similar manner and was not at all prepared for what she found. He was outside finishing his travel preparations, but rather than wearing the basic clothes of a farmer, he was dressed in a suit of light armor as finely crafted as any she had ever seen.
"Where in the roots did you get that??" She said incredulously.
"It's pretty isn't it?" He said, moving his arms and torso about, settling the armor in. "One of the folks you'll meet today, Sinkelinke, made this suit. By Jena, she's talented! The other, Sophy, is equally as skilled."
"The Sophy?" Valeriana sounded surprised.
"You know her?" Suibom asked curiously.
"I've never met her, but I have heard her name. Sounds like she has quite the ability to turn boys into puppy dogs."
Suibom rolled his head back in laughter at the statement. "Indeed she does. I think you'll love her," he said with a broad smile.
The smile faded, though, as his jovial mood turned somber. He threw a travel pack over his shoulders and attached sword and dagger to his waist. "We must be leaving now," he said. "We need to make it to Borea before nightfall."
Valeriana understood why his mood went somber, and why he was equipped in such a way. The path between refugee camps was never completely safe, but one could generally travel the distance alone. Recently, however, something was stirring up the ragus and gingo into a constantly frenzied state. The same tension that seemed to be affecting everything. The dogs had become extremely aggressive and were ever-present in the forest. At night, there was no hiding from them, nowhere safe from their claws and fangs.
Slowly, the pair made their way thorough the forest. As Valeriana watched Suibom, she began to wonder how she had missed the shift in who her older brother had become. For some time now he had often been absent from the encampment. She had not given it too much thought as he continued to finish his duties and boys often seemed to become preoccupied with various shiny objects. But watching him now, as he guided her through the forest, pointing out the tracks of various animals and what activities they had been engaged in, and showing her the behavior patterns of the visible creatures, she realized that he had been spending his time growing up and training. He was preparing to follow a higher calling that he was not fully aware of yet. She had seen pieces of this in dreams, she now realized.
They continued through the forest on the way to Borea, Suibom showing Valeriana how to visualize where gingo and ragus were hiding based on the herding and clusters of the bodoc and capryni. She was amazed to see how accurately he could predict where the predators lay in wait. As the day began to wear away, they could see the tower of Borea looming in the distance.
“We're almost there!” Suibom shouted to Valeriana as he raced ahead to look over a ridge and stared down at the small village happily. He turned back to urge his sister on and noticed that she had fallen behind. Fear struck him when he saw that a ragus had caught sight of her and was preparing to pounce.
“Val! Run!” Suibom shouted.
Valeriana looked confused for a moment, then heard the unmistakable growls and bounding claws from behind, approaching swiftly. She screamed as she started to run as fast as she could force her weary legs to carry her, praying they would not trip on the underbrush. To be attacked by a ragus, unprepared as she was, was to die, rent limb from limb. Suibom, too far away to reach Valeriana before the ragus did, fumbled for a pair of ornate gloves from his backpack. Quickly, he put the gloves on as he watched the bare fangs of the dog get closer and closer to his sister. He placed his hands slightly apart from each other and began to concentrate. A small green ball of energy began to grow and crackle between his fingertips, letting off a bright yellow-green light. The energy-ball grew. The fangs got closer to skin. Suibom flung the energy-ball forward, releasing it's kinetic force in an acidic bolt that streaked at the beast as it jumped at Valeriana's legs, trying to bring her down. The bolt struck it's mark true, a large cloud of noxious acid bursting around the dog and knocking it off it's course. Valeriana continued to run, but was no longer pursued. Slightly dazed by the cloud, the ragus found a new target. Quickly it began another chase, bearing down on Suibom. He brought his hands together again. Valeriana watched as the ball began to grow. Suibom let loose another bolt which tore through the ragus' face. The dog slumped to the ground, lifeless.
Suibom and Valeriana stood there, breathing heavily, shaking with fear. “I didn't know if I could get to you in time,” he said, his voice calmer than he thought it would be. “I though I was going to lose you.”
Valeriana couldn't say anything. They stood for a while longer, until the shock wore off, then continued to Borea. Quietly they made their way into the village as night took over the sky.
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