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Dewdrops gleamed in the early morning sunlight, evanescent as dreams. Elinyra watched and listened to the unfolding symphony of a new day; insects stirring from plants in search of nectar, birds stirring from the trees in search of insects. A snuffling hedgehog was returning to its den, late for its daytime slumber. The druidess smiled sadly, warmed by her affection for the creatures of her beloved forest, but numbed by the beginnings of grief and a name that lingered like a thorn in her flesh.
She stood from the bed she’d made from leaf litter and stretched as if to dispel the melancholy. Today she’d return to the rough, rarely-used road that would leave Falwood on its way to the city of Alliria. It would be a long path across lands she’d never seen before. Beyond the forest. That was a disheartening thought, indeed.
“Je'ti attolre fon iach fy absendien.” I pray thee, be well in my absence, she spoke reverently and touched the rough bark of a nearby oak with her left hand. She glanced up, green eyes brimming with tears, into the strong, twisting branches of the old tree.
“Stay vigilant, guardian.”
Tearing herself away, she gathered up her few supplies; the food she had gathered over the last few days, an acorn that she resolved to keep as a reminder of home, her bow, and her strength.
As much as she wanted to hope, she knew in her heart that she’d never see the Falwood again.
It was a cold, windy day when she arrived at the first of the settlements that dotted the coast of the Akiva Sea; A little over a ten-day since she left the Falwood behind. Ragged clouds hung ominously over the sea and frothy waves lapped at the shore. Not a good day for seafaring – in fact there was not a fisherman to be seen on the rough water. That was unfortunate, because a good ship was the fastest way to get to Epressa barring a very long land voyage to a portal stone and it was unlikely any captain was daft enough to put a ship out in this weather.
Elinyra wasn’t sure if she was more relieved or concerned that Captain Eghrak of the Sea Demon was just that daft. The oddly cheerful dwarf wanted to barter the cost of her passage, which annoyed her greatly, but eventually they settled on what she presumed was a fair price. She took a restless post on the deck, tasting the salty wind blowing in from the sea, and watched some other passengers file onto the ship. Among them...
She stood from the bed she’d made from leaf litter and stretched as if to dispel the melancholy. Today she’d return to the rough, rarely-used road that would leave Falwood on its way to the city of Alliria. It would be a long path across lands she’d never seen before. Beyond the forest. That was a disheartening thought, indeed.
“Je'ti attolre fon iach fy absendien.” I pray thee, be well in my absence, she spoke reverently and touched the rough bark of a nearby oak with her left hand. She glanced up, green eyes brimming with tears, into the strong, twisting branches of the old tree.
“Stay vigilant, guardian.”
Tearing herself away, she gathered up her few supplies; the food she had gathered over the last few days, an acorn that she resolved to keep as a reminder of home, her bow, and her strength.
As much as she wanted to hope, she knew in her heart that she’d never see the Falwood again.
It was a cold, windy day when she arrived at the first of the settlements that dotted the coast of the Akiva Sea; A little over a ten-day since she left the Falwood behind. Ragged clouds hung ominously over the sea and frothy waves lapped at the shore. Not a good day for seafaring – in fact there was not a fisherman to be seen on the rough water. That was unfortunate, because a good ship was the fastest way to get to Epressa barring a very long land voyage to a portal stone and it was unlikely any captain was daft enough to put a ship out in this weather.
Elinyra wasn’t sure if she was more relieved or concerned that Captain Eghrak of the Sea Demon was just that daft. The oddly cheerful dwarf wanted to barter the cost of her passage, which annoyed her greatly, but eventually they settled on what she presumed was a fair price. She took a restless post on the deck, tasting the salty wind blowing in from the sea, and watched some other passengers file onto the ship. Among them...