T I M E L E S S
Yeva did not know what to make of their reactions. To see an Orkhan chieftain so dismayed was unusual, even more so from a woman Yeva had known personally, whom she had witnessed in visions as being fearless and unshakeable. Even in the face of her own death's prediction, Boraba had stood tall, proud, perhaps not always, but she held a strength uncommon for one her age and had earned her relic with a doubtless resolve. Ounokt Nora's fiercest warrior.
Now? Boraba Ohadok'uvi was unsure, and it was in that moment, when the warrior peered into the vast jungle once more, that Yeva saw more than just a leader. She saw a woman, barely older than even herself, who fought for her people, and what she believed in. She saw doubt. The reflection of lightning flashed along the broken blade and the warmth of Vuka's hand cupped her own as a bandage was unrolled, twisting in the wind.
"No," Yeva pulled back, hand throbbing painfully as she clutched the broken weapon tighter still. The Seer had made no move to take it, but still, she recoiled, confused by her own actions. Her palm was hot with a biting pain, and her blood dripped quicker now, overflowing the puddle below. She shook her head in silent apology, a lie poised on the end of her tongue as she tried to close her fist while still holding the weapon shard in her other, "I'm fine. Please-"
The sun-kissed elf exhaled sharply and used the back of her hand to wipe at her damp cheeks, "Save it for later. Just... just in case."
Vuka frowned, sharing a look with Boraba who still held a furrowed brow. They didn't believe her, "I'm fine," she repeated, "I need to find the star. Look-" Unsettling, and strangely beautiful, her spilled blood joined the dark water and moved forward. Nothing about this made any sense. A sense of urgency traced the curve of her spine like an idle lover, as the feeling of unknown eyes fell upon her. She searched the shadows of the treetops nervously, taking a step towards the chaos with reluctant insistence.
A figure then moved in front of her, voice firm but agreeable, "We should move in line. I should take the lead, I can respond to danger fastest there."
Boraba nodded, motioning towards the other Orkhan, "Vuka should bring up the rear, able to support and protect you as we go. You will need to guide us. This jungle is just as vast as the lands we control in the north, to be lost is to die."
Yeva nodded, and she felt the Seer get into position behind her, "We will be careful," she whispered, nodding as she pointed in the direction of the flowing blood. Again, she wiped at her tears. No going back now. With her guidance, they began to follow the rivet, the storm coiling in anger above them as the rain began to fall, muddling the path. The ground grew steeper, and her injury did not cease in its incessant nagging. The clouds were a rich and threatening red now, her hair clung to her scalp in icy tendrils. Her clothes, which had consisted of a plain white chest wrap and double-slitted skirt, were now a dull grey, transparent where it drew tightest across her body, creating a dramatic contrast to the splashes of bright red from her palms. The path began to diverge, rocky, in some places and thorned in another. Yeva's dainty feet inched forward, her steps less practiced in the thick underbrush of jungle as her companions, but they remained by her side faithfully.
Darkness pooled beneath the leaves, many of them as large as herself, and waited expectantly. The shadows whispered, drawing her eye, even as she turned to the path leading to the great tree. She stilled. In response the leaves jostled by the storm, less thrown about like their smaller cousins. Intentional. Waving. Beckoning like a finger. Yeva shook her head. It nodded. She could not explain the phenomena if she tried, it was something she felt more than what she saw. To some, it was merely nature shifted in the wind. To Yeva, it was a conversation... and it terrified her.
Yet...
She could not shake the sense of lure. Had her journey not been filled with fear from its very conception? Every step of the way, she burned bright and the shadows nipped at her heels, never far behind. A great eclipse, unknown to her, engulfed the world as she stepped into her quest of Seer, and again, when monstrous darkness clawed its way up the Astral Sea and threatened to consume her. This path, she realized, was not unknown. It was perhaps the most familiar of them all and one she knew well. It sparked fear, yes. But there was a greater fear - the fear of losing those whom she loved - and to follow love meant she would be doing many things that scared her. Things that may even hurt her.
This was simply the way.
"It is too dark." Boraba and Vuka had been watching the Elven girl's fixation, shifting to maintain the promised formation. The leaves seemed to open like a smile, as the Mystic dipped her head beneath its shade. Yeva thought she heard a low laugh, deep and formal. The Seer slipped further into the void without warning. She could not see more than a few feet in front of her, so quickly had the lighting changed, it was akin to stepping into a tunnel. Deeper within, there was the sound of whistling.
"Wait!" Vuka's voice snapped her out of a reverie, the young girl looking up and into a bright flame. She faltered, blinded, and returned to her senses. She had moved on without them, while they had lit their torches, and now the Seer's grip was like a vice around her upper arm, "This place is..."
"We move together," Boraba had her chakram ready, and in the firelight, Yeva saw her face twisted into a scolding frown, "You guide us, but you speak. Do not wander off again."
"I will hold on to you," Vuka offered, firm, but softer. She appeared to understand a bit more how easy it was to get lost in the signs.
"I-" didn't mean to. She hardly remembered stepping into the darkness, but with an apology on her lips, a distant wailing stole her breath.
The others stepped closer. This time, it was heard by all.
Boraba stepped quickly in front of Yeva, crouching like a tiger. She waited. The crying grew louder and died off suddenly. A beat of silence. The sounds of footprints running.
What was that? "We need to move," Yeva noticed the ground was dry, and it gave her courage, "Forward."
They moved quickly. A shrill cry of laughter chased after them, and Yeva was close to running to keep up with her long-limbed companions, her heart pounding in her chest. There was a growl, the darkness pushing back against the light until eventually, all sound stopped. No more claps groans, laughs, or chasing footsteps. It was just them, standing in the dark.
Yeva was breathless when she slowed, turning to look back at the nothingness and swallowed.
"Where now?" Vuka whispered, giving her arm a gentle tug. Vuka was the Seer, and yet she referred to the younger woman's counsel.
"We're almost there."
They did not doubt her like Yeva was tempted to. She did not even know where she was going. Only that something would reveal itself soon. This was an example of Ecithean trust in those who could read the signs, and she was the one reading them. Keep going, she thought. She would not even be able to see her hand in front of her own face had it not been for the torches the others had brought, and she knew that this journey would have been an impossible one without them. It was not good to be alone in Ecith.
It held too many secrets.
Yeva, still holding the broken blade in her bloody hands, motioned them onward, and within three steps, they gasped and stood in sudden civilization.
Goblins of all shapes and sizes stared back at them, from dwellings carved into a great tree. Grackles scurried skyward, flying away with a screech, fuzzy bat wings carrying their bodies into the branches. Yeva looked on in shock, and the locals returned the look in kind. It was as if everyone was surprised, although there was a great fear in the eyes of those around them. Three women, all strangers, now stood in their home. A home, Yeva suspected, did not often get visitors.
Boraba sensed it first, her nostrils flaring. Vuka's grip fell. Something shimmered to Yeva's right and before the injured elf could react, a spear tip was poised before her throat.
Yeva did not know what to make of their reactions. To see an Orkhan chieftain so dismayed was unusual, even more so from a woman Yeva had known personally, whom she had witnessed in visions as being fearless and unshakeable. Even in the face of her own death's prediction, Boraba had stood tall, proud, perhaps not always, but she held a strength uncommon for one her age and had earned her relic with a doubtless resolve. Ounokt Nora's fiercest warrior.
Now? Boraba Ohadok'uvi was unsure, and it was in that moment, when the warrior peered into the vast jungle once more, that Yeva saw more than just a leader. She saw a woman, barely older than even herself, who fought for her people, and what she believed in. She saw doubt. The reflection of lightning flashed along the broken blade and the warmth of Vuka's hand cupped her own as a bandage was unrolled, twisting in the wind.
"No," Yeva pulled back, hand throbbing painfully as she clutched the broken weapon tighter still. The Seer had made no move to take it, but still, she recoiled, confused by her own actions. Her palm was hot with a biting pain, and her blood dripped quicker now, overflowing the puddle below. She shook her head in silent apology, a lie poised on the end of her tongue as she tried to close her fist while still holding the weapon shard in her other, "I'm fine. Please-"
The sun-kissed elf exhaled sharply and used the back of her hand to wipe at her damp cheeks, "Save it for later. Just... just in case."
Vuka frowned, sharing a look with Boraba who still held a furrowed brow. They didn't believe her, "I'm fine," she repeated, "I need to find the star. Look-" Unsettling, and strangely beautiful, her spilled blood joined the dark water and moved forward. Nothing about this made any sense. A sense of urgency traced the curve of her spine like an idle lover, as the feeling of unknown eyes fell upon her. She searched the shadows of the treetops nervously, taking a step towards the chaos with reluctant insistence.
A figure then moved in front of her, voice firm but agreeable, "We should move in line. I should take the lead, I can respond to danger fastest there."
Boraba nodded, motioning towards the other Orkhan, "Vuka should bring up the rear, able to support and protect you as we go. You will need to guide us. This jungle is just as vast as the lands we control in the north, to be lost is to die."
Yeva nodded, and she felt the Seer get into position behind her, "We will be careful," she whispered, nodding as she pointed in the direction of the flowing blood. Again, she wiped at her tears. No going back now. With her guidance, they began to follow the rivet, the storm coiling in anger above them as the rain began to fall, muddling the path. The ground grew steeper, and her injury did not cease in its incessant nagging. The clouds were a rich and threatening red now, her hair clung to her scalp in icy tendrils. Her clothes, which had consisted of a plain white chest wrap and double-slitted skirt, were now a dull grey, transparent where it drew tightest across her body, creating a dramatic contrast to the splashes of bright red from her palms. The path began to diverge, rocky, in some places and thorned in another. Yeva's dainty feet inched forward, her steps less practiced in the thick underbrush of jungle as her companions, but they remained by her side faithfully.
Darkness pooled beneath the leaves, many of them as large as herself, and waited expectantly. The shadows whispered, drawing her eye, even as she turned to the path leading to the great tree. She stilled. In response the leaves jostled by the storm, less thrown about like their smaller cousins. Intentional. Waving. Beckoning like a finger. Yeva shook her head. It nodded. She could not explain the phenomena if she tried, it was something she felt more than what she saw. To some, it was merely nature shifted in the wind. To Yeva, it was a conversation... and it terrified her.
Yet...
She could not shake the sense of lure. Had her journey not been filled with fear from its very conception? Every step of the way, she burned bright and the shadows nipped at her heels, never far behind. A great eclipse, unknown to her, engulfed the world as she stepped into her quest of Seer, and again, when monstrous darkness clawed its way up the Astral Sea and threatened to consume her. This path, she realized, was not unknown. It was perhaps the most familiar of them all and one she knew well. It sparked fear, yes. But there was a greater fear - the fear of losing those whom she loved - and to follow love meant she would be doing many things that scared her. Things that may even hurt her.
This was simply the way.
"It is too dark." Boraba and Vuka had been watching the Elven girl's fixation, shifting to maintain the promised formation. The leaves seemed to open like a smile, as the Mystic dipped her head beneath its shade. Yeva thought she heard a low laugh, deep and formal. The Seer slipped further into the void without warning. She could not see more than a few feet in front of her, so quickly had the lighting changed, it was akin to stepping into a tunnel. Deeper within, there was the sound of whistling.
"Wait!" Vuka's voice snapped her out of a reverie, the young girl looking up and into a bright flame. She faltered, blinded, and returned to her senses. She had moved on without them, while they had lit their torches, and now the Seer's grip was like a vice around her upper arm, "This place is..."
"We move together," Boraba had her chakram ready, and in the firelight, Yeva saw her face twisted into a scolding frown, "You guide us, but you speak. Do not wander off again."
"I will hold on to you," Vuka offered, firm, but softer. She appeared to understand a bit more how easy it was to get lost in the signs.
"I-" didn't mean to. She hardly remembered stepping into the darkness, but with an apology on her lips, a distant wailing stole her breath.
The others stepped closer. This time, it was heard by all.
Boraba stepped quickly in front of Yeva, crouching like a tiger. She waited. The crying grew louder and died off suddenly. A beat of silence. The sounds of footprints running.
What was that? "We need to move," Yeva noticed the ground was dry, and it gave her courage, "Forward."
They moved quickly. A shrill cry of laughter chased after them, and Yeva was close to running to keep up with her long-limbed companions, her heart pounding in her chest. There was a growl, the darkness pushing back against the light until eventually, all sound stopped. No more claps groans, laughs, or chasing footsteps. It was just them, standing in the dark.
Yeva was breathless when she slowed, turning to look back at the nothingness and swallowed.
"Where now?" Vuka whispered, giving her arm a gentle tug. Vuka was the Seer, and yet she referred to the younger woman's counsel.
"We're almost there."
They did not doubt her like Yeva was tempted to. She did not even know where she was going. Only that something would reveal itself soon. This was an example of Ecithean trust in those who could read the signs, and she was the one reading them. Keep going, she thought. She would not even be able to see her hand in front of her own face had it not been for the torches the others had brought, and she knew that this journey would have been an impossible one without them. It was not good to be alone in Ecith.
It held too many secrets.
Yeva, still holding the broken blade in her bloody hands, motioned them onward, and within three steps, they gasped and stood in sudden civilization.
Goblins of all shapes and sizes stared back at them, from dwellings carved into a great tree. Grackles scurried skyward, flying away with a screech, fuzzy bat wings carrying their bodies into the branches. Yeva looked on in shock, and the locals returned the look in kind. It was as if everyone was surprised, although there was a great fear in the eyes of those around them. Three women, all strangers, now stood in their home. A home, Yeva suspected, did not often get visitors.
Boraba sensed it first, her nostrils flaring. Vuka's grip fell. Something shimmered to Yeva's right and before the injured elf could react, a spear tip was poised before her throat.