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Pathfinder's Way(4)

By:T.A. White


"What route are we taking?" Witt asked.

Shea pulled out her map and unrolled it carefully on the bucket Witt had  just vacated. It was made from a sturdy stock of paper and drawn with a  careful hand and an eye for detail. The geography of the land was done  in blue, red and black ink with several closely drawn lines signaling  elevation and further spaced lines meaning flatter land. It had been  treated with a kind of oil to ensure the marks didn't fade over time.  Shea could still make corrections, but the treatment meant those could  be erased with a bit of spit and elbow grease. It made it handy to make  notes on various trails without permanently damaging the integrity of  the map.

"This trail would get us to Edgecomb quickest," Shea said, running her  finger along the path in question. "But the last time I was up that way I  noticed some signs that beasts had settled close to there."

"What kind?"

"Red backs."

Witt nodded grimly without taking his eyes from the map.

Red backs were a beast that walked on all fours for the most part.  However, when killing, they rose onto their hind legs, and would tower  over the tallest man in Birdon Leaf by several arm lengths. There were  always two, usually mates, and they had claws that could cleave a man's  head clear off his shoulders. They were named for the red fur on their  backs. The fur on the rest of their body was usually grey. Once they  moved into a territory, they usually didn't travel out of it unless prey  became scarce.         

     



 

"Who cares if there are red backs?" Dane said with the food still in his  hands. "You just said we have to get to Edgecomb as fast as possible.  If we run into any problems, we'll just kill them. Their pelt fetches a  nice price in the Lowlands."

"Maybe you could flirt them to death, puppy," Witt drawled, giving Dane a  dismissive glance. Shea hid a grin. "Red backs are incredibly difficult  to kill. A boomer's lead won't penetrate their hide. You have to get  close, with knives or swords, and cut them open." Witt stood and mimed a  slash in demonstration. "They're bigger than us, faster than us and one  hit will crush your chest until you're exhaling blood."

Dane held Witt's gaze, his mouth set in a disgruntled line before  bending and picking up his pack. Shea kept her gaze focused on the map  while Dane busied himself fussing with its straps.

Witt squatted down next to her. "I'd like to say the boy is entirely  wrong, but if James and Cam were taken by Edgecomb, they don't have a  lot of time."

Shea nodded and rolled the map up before sticking it in her pack. "No, they don't. A day or two at most."

"How long would the detour take?"

Shea quirked her mouth and shook her head slightly. "Depending on the trail sign, anywhere from a couple hours to half a day."

"You're the pathfinder so we'll follow your lead."

Witt stood and walked to his pack where he finished arranging the last of his supplies.

"I am the pathfinder."

All that meant was that if she made the wrong decision, she would be the  one with blood on her hands. She scrubbed a hand over her face and  turned to the other two as they settled their packs on their backs. The  long barrel of a boomer stuck up over Dane's head from where it was  attached to his pack. Witt's weapons consisted of two short swords on  either hip.

Looked like everybody was ready.

"Pathfinder."

Shea turned to see Elder Zrakovi watching her sourly. Taller than her by  a few inches, he was a burly man whose muscle was just beginning to  turn to fat with age. She knew it must bother him to have his son's fate  resting in the hands of a woman he'd done his best to get rid of since  she arrived.

"I trust that, despite our differences, you'll do your job and bring my son back."

She nodded shortly. The gate was raised just high enough for her group to walk under it.

"Don't screw this up," Zrakovi said as she passed under the gate.

She raised a hand in acknowledgement and adjusted her pack one last time  before lengthening her stride to catch up with the other two.

There was one thing the elders had gotten right. Shea's presence here  was a punishment. But, it wasn't them who was being punished.





Chapter Two





Shea quickly took the lead and set a punishing pace as the other two  fell in single file behind her, Witt bringing up the rear. They had a  lot of ground to cover before nightfall. It would take the rest of the  day to reach the stretch of cliffs that marked the Highland border.

Reaching them would be a test of the group's stamina and endurance. In essence, it would be a gut check. Doable, but not fun.

The cliffs, often referred to as Bearan's Fault, spanned nearly the  entire border. Most of it so steep it was as if a god had lifted the  Highlands up onto a shelf, setting them above their neighbors. They were  the reason people called everything above the cliffs the Highlands.

Not exactly original, but descriptive.

Approaching them always felt like walking off the edge of the world.

Located on the most southwestern edge of the Highlands, Birdon Leaf  claimed some of the only habitable land in a mountainous territory  pitted with ravines, steep hills and granite monoliths. To live up here,  one had to be stubborn. And maybe a little crazy.

Not many had the sheer bone headedness to settle out here on the edge.

Food was scarce and company even more so. Unless you could do for  yourself, well, it didn't get done. People here were independent, hard  headed and convinced that the only way to do something was the way their  grandfather's grandfather had done it. As a result, they didn't welcome  strangers. Even ones they asked to be here, like Shea.

The first leg of the journey was easy enough. They were lucky Birdon  Leaf was situated on rolling hills. To the north was a pair of mountain  ranges so high that snow covered the tops nine out of the twelve months.  To the west, deep ravines bit into the land, creating a spidery network  of valleys and ridges throughout the Highlands.

One of the reasons pathfinders existed was because it was so easy to get  lost up here. It was as if the land itself didn't take kindly to  outsiders and tried to push out any it sensed didn't belong here.         

     



 

People's sense of direction tended to go screwy and the distances played  mean mind games. Sometimes you traveled further than you intended, and  other times it was as if you'd barely moved.

There was a crash, and Dane rocketed past Shea's narrow perch. He grunted as he caught himself on a particularly hard boulder.

"Is there no other way besides falling down these infernal hills?" he  growled. "No, you can't even call them that since they're nearly as  steep as the cliffs."

"Going down a cliff would be easier," Witt said as he slid past,  snagging an exposed tree root before he could careen out of control. "At  least then, we could simply secure a rope to something and slide down."

Shea stepped off her perch to slide to her next target.

"This is the path we're taking," she informed them once she had stopped.

"Even uphill would be better," Dane muttered. With a vexed groan, he  leapt, then slid, to his next tree. He crashed into it and nearly  bounced off before grabbing hold.

"If you have time to gripe, you have time to move faster," Shea returned.

Internally, she echoed their frustration and agreed, the only thing  worse than having to climb up a mountain was having to find the way down  it.

It would be all too easy to break something tumbling down the steep  terrain, and none of them needed the added challenge of an injured  companion.

She just hoped the mist held off until they were safely back in Birdon Leaf.

The mist was a bedtime story parents told their children to discourage  them from wandering off into the untamed expanse. Only, as any person  who'd spent time outside the well-crafted towns could tell you, it  wasn't a story. It was real and very dangerous.

Even Shea's parents had told her stories when she was young, though for  her, they'd been less of a tale and more of a cautionary warning of what  waited for her out here. Her parents had told her of brave pathfinders  and their charges who were swallowed by the mist, never to be seen  again. No one knew where they went or how it happened. One moment it  would be the sunniest of days and the next, the mist would have swept  every living thing from the area, wiping it clean.

Oh, the villagers dismissed such stories as superstition or a gambit to  squeeze more money out of them. They'd only ever felt the very edge of  its power. You could only experience the true horror of it in the depths  of the wilds.

Shea felt a slight shiver, thinking of the mist she'd experienced only a handful of times. That had been more than enough.

The other danger they faced were beasts, which were thick on the ground  up here. The Highlanders originally used the term to describe predatory  animals, but over time it had come to mean anything that didn't fit with  society's notion of natural.