67th of Frost, 4621
Nomads. Of all things, why did the bandits have to be nomads? It made sense, he supposed. Especially when he considered that they were constantly on the run from the Halamire. Any group of bandits would have to be mobile to survive the long arm of the law, such was obvious when Arkash looked to the Badlands.
It was good, in a sense. It meant that the group he was hunting wasn't strong enough to stand against the Halamire, but in the same breath, it was unfortunate. It was the strength of the individual that aided Arkash in his evolution, so the fact that they weren't strong enough to stand their ground wasn't a good outlook for his prospective meal. He supposed they were mages, according to the bounty posted, but that didn't mean they were strong. Hell, it could have meant that they were ridden with mageblight, which would mean he was out of luck.
Part of the problem with looking for a group of nomads was that they were never in the same place for too long, they couldn't build up any sort of mark on the land or indication that they were there at all. So, Arkash was hard-pressed in search of tracks, any culmination of signs that would point him in the right direction. He'd been out there for hours, just walking around, examining the ground, looking for footprints in the dried earth, or any sort of indication on where he should head next.
Night eventually began to fall, and with limited light to aid his search, Arkash eventually found the signs he was looking for. His sense of smell was stronger than his limited eyes, and the scent of ash mixed in earth took his focus as a red flag. Further examination of the scene indicated that some sort of camp had once been set up in the dryland, as he found the workings of old peg holes in the hard ground. People had set up tents where he was searching.
That alone was a stretch to follow, but the presence of a lightly-buried cadaver nearby and old blood on the road not far from the site, Arkash began to think of how such a thing could be justified, and given how fresh the body was, still drippy and red on the inside, Arkash couldn't reason that the last people to camp at the site weren't involved with that woman's death. If she'd been in the ground for a while, there was a chance that the last campers might not have noticed the smell of her rotting or the odd lump of a grave in the hard earth.
Decidedly, he pursued the tracks from that site. It took some time to figure out where he was going by the direction of the resulting footprints, especially given that the earth was so hard that little impression was made in their steps. But because he'd found some trampled foliage in one direction from the site, he imagined the group was headed that way, closer to the river. Wasn't that a risk, moving closer to greater Daravin? Arkash shrugged to himself. Who was he to look a gift horse in the mouth?
On his journey to the next site, Arkash's thoughts circled around the woman in the ground, the nature of her wounds, and the specific rips and tears in her clothes. It was obvious what had happened to her; so obvious in fact that Arkash had opted not to eat the tainted parts.
He wasn't one to uphold the law by any stretch of the imagination, but that murder didn't sit well with him. Strength, in his own eyes, was meant to be the sole defining factor of a hierarchy, so why did the scene he'd found weigh heavy on his mind? The nature of the kill, he supposed. There was no test of strength between the victim and the attacker, just the strength of numbers. In a sense, it wasn't much different from a monarchy, forcing its will over the peasant. A larger, stronger entity had decided the fate of the individual based on its own moral values.
To that end, they were tyrants. The oppressors he'd been trained to hunt for his food, no better than guards or nobles. The more he invested his thoughts in the circumstance, the angrier he became. As the basalt tone of his scales lightened with the squeeze of his fists, he found the taste of blood on the wind.
Every one of those mages would die by his blade, and feed his evolution to Cardinal.
Sometime later, he came upon the site. A series of tents had been erected around a medium-sized firepit; all the pale fabrics were dimly illuminated by the amber glow of the open flame, and walking between the lights and casting tall shadows on the surrounding wilderness was a small band of Druskai, fitting the description of the band. Arkash waited at the ridge beyond the camp's light, sniffing through the accumulated scents ahead of him.
Piss, shit, blood, booze, tobacco, old sweat... And then a Sil'Norai. Their leader, described as a tall Sil'Norai with blood-red cracks in their glossy skin, had just stepped from the largest tent. It was hard for his reptilian eyes to see so far, but he knew the smell of Sil'Norai well, and the colors looked about right. He must have been in the right place, he determined.
With the Sil'Norai's appearance, came a series of joyous, boastful laughs, and the rich stink of narcotics.
Nomads. Of all things, why did the bandits have to be nomads? It made sense, he supposed. Especially when he considered that they were constantly on the run from the Halamire. Any group of bandits would have to be mobile to survive the long arm of the law, such was obvious when Arkash looked to the Badlands.
It was good, in a sense. It meant that the group he was hunting wasn't strong enough to stand against the Halamire, but in the same breath, it was unfortunate. It was the strength of the individual that aided Arkash in his evolution, so the fact that they weren't strong enough to stand their ground wasn't a good outlook for his prospective meal. He supposed they were mages, according to the bounty posted, but that didn't mean they were strong. Hell, it could have meant that they were ridden with mageblight, which would mean he was out of luck.
Part of the problem with looking for a group of nomads was that they were never in the same place for too long, they couldn't build up any sort of mark on the land or indication that they were there at all. So, Arkash was hard-pressed in search of tracks, any culmination of signs that would point him in the right direction. He'd been out there for hours, just walking around, examining the ground, looking for footprints in the dried earth, or any sort of indication on where he should head next.
Night eventually began to fall, and with limited light to aid his search, Arkash eventually found the signs he was looking for. His sense of smell was stronger than his limited eyes, and the scent of ash mixed in earth took his focus as a red flag. Further examination of the scene indicated that some sort of camp had once been set up in the dryland, as he found the workings of old peg holes in the hard ground. People had set up tents where he was searching.
That alone was a stretch to follow, but the presence of a lightly-buried cadaver nearby and old blood on the road not far from the site, Arkash began to think of how such a thing could be justified, and given how fresh the body was, still drippy and red on the inside, Arkash couldn't reason that the last people to camp at the site weren't involved with that woman's death. If she'd been in the ground for a while, there was a chance that the last campers might not have noticed the smell of her rotting or the odd lump of a grave in the hard earth.
Decidedly, he pursued the tracks from that site. It took some time to figure out where he was going by the direction of the resulting footprints, especially given that the earth was so hard that little impression was made in their steps. But because he'd found some trampled foliage in one direction from the site, he imagined the group was headed that way, closer to the river. Wasn't that a risk, moving closer to greater Daravin? Arkash shrugged to himself. Who was he to look a gift horse in the mouth?
On his journey to the next site, Arkash's thoughts circled around the woman in the ground, the nature of her wounds, and the specific rips and tears in her clothes. It was obvious what had happened to her; so obvious in fact that Arkash had opted not to eat the tainted parts.
He wasn't one to uphold the law by any stretch of the imagination, but that murder didn't sit well with him. Strength, in his own eyes, was meant to be the sole defining factor of a hierarchy, so why did the scene he'd found weigh heavy on his mind? The nature of the kill, he supposed. There was no test of strength between the victim and the attacker, just the strength of numbers. In a sense, it wasn't much different from a monarchy, forcing its will over the peasant. A larger, stronger entity had decided the fate of the individual based on its own moral values.
To that end, they were tyrants. The oppressors he'd been trained to hunt for his food, no better than guards or nobles. The more he invested his thoughts in the circumstance, the angrier he became. As the basalt tone of his scales lightened with the squeeze of his fists, he found the taste of blood on the wind.
Every one of those mages would die by his blade, and feed his evolution to Cardinal.
Sometime later, he came upon the site. A series of tents had been erected around a medium-sized firepit; all the pale fabrics were dimly illuminated by the amber glow of the open flame, and walking between the lights and casting tall shadows on the surrounding wilderness was a small band of Druskai, fitting the description of the band. Arkash waited at the ridge beyond the camp's light, sniffing through the accumulated scents ahead of him.
Piss, shit, blood, booze, tobacco, old sweat... And then a Sil'Norai. Their leader, described as a tall Sil'Norai with blood-red cracks in their glossy skin, had just stepped from the largest tent. It was hard for his reptilian eyes to see so far, but he knew the smell of Sil'Norai well, and the colors looked about right. He must have been in the right place, he determined.
With the Sil'Norai's appearance, came a series of joyous, boastful laughs, and the rich stink of narcotics.