The light was dying even faster
than usual. The grass fires sent up billows of smoke that turned the sun into a
small bright dot, tinted by the ash. This would be to our advantage.
I
slowed Nieku and dismounted before he came to a complete stop. Holding
the reigns tight so they wouldn’t jingle, I guided him into what was left of a
merchant shop, a boulder having been thrown through the roof, one wall leaning
over so far, we had to stoop to walk under it.
I quieted my breathing and spoke
softly to Nieku to calm him. He would be still and quiet. This was how we
survived.
Keja’s call pierced the silence
once more. She would stay with whatever she had found until I came to her,
continuing to call so I could locate her.
I gritted my teeth. I did not want
whoever was following me to find her first. They may not go looking for her.
But they may.
For nearly ten minutes, I waited,
crouched and cramped in the building. No one came. I heard no footfalls, no
chain mail jangling. Was it just a warning shot? Or were they waiting until I
came back out. That would be foolish. Though Myndunes were not known for their
common sense.
Leaving Nieku, I peered around the
door frame. I still saw nothing.
The light was getting very low. If
we did not go now, we would not be able to see to find Keja.
I slowly backed Nieku out, deciding
to walk him. I would be able to see the ground better if I was closer to it.
Speed would not be an advantage now.
Keja called again and I adjusted
our course, ears tuned to any small sound.
Finding the hawk was more difficult
than I anticipated. It sounded like Keja was near, but with the stone walls of
wrecked buildings tumbling all around us, sounds could not always be trusted.
Her call could be echoing or bouncing off
the stone any number of ways confusing my senses. We could be traveling in
circles and I would never know. There was not enough light to tell anything
apart and I dared not light a torch.
Nieku stumbled, his hoof catching on something.
Sighing, I stopped. There was a way I
could find Keja, but I promised myself I would not use that power again. The
moment I thought of it, the ache to use it pulled at my gut. I pushed the
desire aside.
No.
I would not do it. We could find her without giving in.
A screech cut through the air. She
was on the other side of this square. I could barely make out the rustling of
her white underfeathers.
Nieku and I moved quickly toward
her, glad to have found her, glad I did not give in.
As we neared, I could tell that
whatever she had found was small. It moved when it heard us.
A small voice rang out. “Hi!”
I nearly stumbled. A tuft of blond
hair bobbed as the child stood up and toddled toward me. “Hi!” it said again, a
smile spread across its face.
A child? No. A babe. This was not
the help I had hoped for.
Deciding what to do, I raised my
arm to call Keja, when another voice rang out.
“Don’t go any closer!”
My head snapped in the direction of
the sound.
Just beyond the closest building,
stood a boy holding a bow, an arrow knocked and aimed at my heart.
Woah! And then.... WHAT HAPPENS? Love the hint of the character fighting against something. Love that it's kids that are running the city. More, please.
ReplyDelete