There were many types, so many that it would be impossible to list them all. The secondary part of Shea's position was to catalogue beast habits, territory and hunting patterns and give settlers advice on the safest ways to deal with them.
Too often people didn't listen.
That's when they died.
Shea looked at the sun, judging it to be near midafternoon. Time to call a halt. She'd timed it so their journey put them next to a small mountain spring. Since they weren't carrying a lot of water, they needed to replenish at every opportunity. And, they could use a short break.
Witt nodded willingly enough and dropped his pack. Dane looked like he might argue, but in the end kept his opinion to himself. He must have been more ready for a break than she'd thought.
As the others caught their breath and refilled their canteens, she pulled out her map, comparing the scribbles on it to the surrounding land.
She gazed out at the landscape sprawled below her. No matter how many times she saw it, the lonely beauty of the wild back-country always managed to rip her breath away. It made her pause for a moment, secure in the knowledge that she was just a tiny piece of a greater whole.
It was the sort of view that gripped the soul and said ‘see? This is what it's all about.' Moments like these made dealing with the land's hardheaded inhabitants bearable. Most of the time.
"We're making good time."
They were, in fact. Much better than she had anticipated. For all that Dane was a peacock, he had stamina. Though the question remained: could the group hold this pace? Should she start looking for a place to make camp or push on and see if they could make it to Bearan's Fault by nightfall?
Continuing after dark increased the chance of someone falling and breaking something, further slowing them down, or they could disturb one of the red backs. Shea wouldn't be able to see well enough to know if they were straying too close to their den.
It was tempting to push hard to make the Lowlands by nightfall and Edgecomb within the next two days.
Shea worried about James and Cam's condition. Lowland villages could be very insular. They didn't take kindly to strangers. That was especially the case for villages bordering the Highlands. Too many strange things crawled down from those cliffs to make any on the border friendly.
Expending all of their energy reaching the village might mean they'd be too exhausted to rescue James and Cam should they need it. On the other hand, James and Cam might be dead before they even made it to Edgecomb if they didn't push hard enough.
"How are you holding up?" Shea asked over her shoulder.
"I can hold any pace you set, woman." Dane took a bite from one of his loaves of bread. "I'm just waiting on you two."
Sweat dripped down Dane's temple, and his blue chambray shirt was about two shades darker than it had been that morning.
Shea dismissed his comment. His pride wouldn't allow him to show that a woman had more endurance than him. It was unlikely he'd be truthful about his condition.
"And you?"
Witt glanced up from where he sat changing out his socks. "I'll last."
They weren't the only ones feeling the journey. Shea was starting to feel a little fatigue herself. A deep burn had taken up residence in her thighs, and her shirt stuck to her skin under her jacket. Her pack's straps had made her shoulders one throbbing ache, and her upper back was tight. The pace would fall a little as the afternoon deepened and exhaustion took hold. They would be more prone to accidents.
"We're approaching where I saw red back activity a few weeks ago. I don't want to take a detour, but if I think we're getting too close, we will. I want as much land between us and them by nightfall. If we're lucky and don't have to veer too far from this path, we'll be close to the Lowlands when we stop for the night."
"Typical woman. Afraid of the dark? Every moment we have is precious. We should keep going even after dark." Dane said, shrugging into his pack. "If time's as tight as you say, we can't stop for beauty sleep."
"Can you see in the dark? Because I can't. If we try, we risk someone getting hurt or killed in a fall. Reaching Cam and James would be impossible then. Taking the night to rest also means we can recoup some energy before reaching the village."
Holding Dane's gaze with her own, Shea waited until he nodded grudgingly before she turned her back and set out.
Witt paused by Dane as he followed her down the hill. "Perhaps you shouldn't do any more thinking. It really doesn't suit you."
"Everyone know the plan?" Shea asked.
The three of them crouched between two buildings on Edgecomb's perimeter.
Aside from the unrelenting pace they'd adopted to reach the village, the journey so far had been unremarkable. They'd sailed through red back territory with no problem and made camp at the top of the Bearan cliffs, then descended before dawn the next morning.
Some scouting had confirmed the villagers held James and Cam. They were to be executed that afternoon, which was why Shea and the other two were huddled close, hoping to avoid notice as they plotted their next move.
Like Birdon Leaf, the buildings in Edgecomb were built from wood. Unlike their village, no outer wall protected Edgecomb's inhabitants, forcing the villagers to rely on the natural landscape to deter would be intruders.
A large herd of cattle were kept for trade and as food supply. As a result, a large number of horses were stabled in a fenced field right outside of town. Shea couldn't help being a bit envious of the ease of transportation the horses represented. They were a scarce resource in the Highlands as they were next to useless in the gorges or on the mountain passes.
"Dane, I want you on one of the roofs overlooking the town square." Shea turned to Witt. "Do you think you can create a large enough distraction so I can get them free?"
He nodded.
"Good, I'll leave that to you then."
"What about you?" Dane asked. "Where will you be?"
Shea brushed her hands down her pants. "Someone has to cut those two idiots loose."
Dane frowned and looked down. "Perhaps you should be on the roof then."
"Can't. My aim's not as good as yours." Shea busied herself adjusting a cloak she'd stolen from one of the houses. She pulled the hood over her head. Hopefully, the cloak's anonymity would get her close to the execution platform without drawing notice from the inhabitants. "Once things get started just make sure you pick off anybody between me and the platform with your boomer. I'm not going to have time to wrestle my way up there. Oh, and don't shoot me in the confusion. When I get James and Cam loose, get off the roof. They'll come after you pretty quick once things start happening. If we get separated for any reason, meet back at the rendezvous point."
The three gave each other a long look. It surprised Shea when neither argued with her. She'd expected them to protest much more than they had.
Without another word, the two set off on their tasks. Shea watched them go.
Please don't let them get cold feet. The plan required each of them to do their part. She took a deep breath, releasing it slowly. She would need a miracle to pull this off. She still couldn't believe she'd agreed to this. Why had she decided to stick her neck out? Especially since they'd blame her if anything went wrong. If things did go right, everybody else would take the credit. She couldn't win. She knew that, but she couldn't stop herself from trying. It wasn't in her to walk away. She didn't want any more deaths on her conscience.
Shea walked to the edge of the building and peeked around the corner. She was counting on the locals being so excited about the impending bloodshed that they wouldn't notice an extra body among them.
She sauntered confidently past house after house, trying to look like she belonged. People had a tendency to see what they expected. A stranger walking through town while they prepared to execute two outsiders would fall under the realm of unexpected. After all, nobody was that crazy.
With her hood up, she hoped the villagers would simply assume she was one of the herders just in from the field for the execution.
As she moved towards the center of the village, butterflies took wing in her stomach. They'd never covered last ditch rescues in pathfinder training.
A man exited a building in front of her, pausing at the sight of her.
She froze and sucked in a sharp breath. Please. Just keep moving. No need to start a conversation.
It took effort to appear casual. Like she belonged. He nodded a greeting and continued in the same direction as Shea.
She followed him at a distance, not daring to duck away, afraid that would arouse suspicions.
He wasn't the only one moving around. Shea had several similar experiences as she moved closer to the village's center. Each encounter got a little easier, though her heart never seemed to settle back into her chest. It remained lodged in her throat as she followed the crowd.