The next day he began his adventure with a giddy lack
of hesitation. He arranged for a seat in a caravan bound
for Valenwood, the single escorted conveyance to the
southeast leaving the Imperial City that week. He had
scarcely hours to pack, but he remembered to purchase
a wagonload of timber.
"It will be extra gold to pay for a horse to pull
that," frowned the convoy head.
"So I anticipated," smiled Scotti with his
best Imbrallius grin.
Ten wagons in all set off that afternoon through the
familiar Cyrodilic countryside. Past fields of wildflowers,
gently rolling woodlands, friendly hamlets. The clop
of the horses' hooves against the sound stone road reminded
Scotti that the Atrius Building Commission constructed
it. Five of the eighteen necessary contracts for its
completion were drafted by his own hand.
"Very smart of you to bring that wood along,"
said a gray-whiskered Breton man next to him on his
wagon. "You must be in Commerce."
"Of a sort," said Scotti, in a way he hoped
was mysterious, before introducing himself: "Decumus
Scotti."
"Gryf Mallon," said the man. "I'm a
poet, actually a translator of old Bosmer literature.
I was researching some newly discovered tracts of the
Mnoriad Pley Bar two years ago when the war broke out
and I had to leave. You are no doubt familiar with the
Mnoriad, if you're aware of the Green Pact."
Scotti thought the man might be speaking perfect gibberish,
but he nodded his head.
"Naturally, I don't pretend that the Mnoriad is
as renowned as the Meh Ayleidion, or as ancient as the
Dansir Gol, but I think it has a remarkable significance
to understanding the nature of the merelithic Bosmer
mind. The origin of the Wood Elf aversion to cutting
their own wood or eating any plant material at all,
yet paradoxically their willingness to import plantstuff
from other cultures, I feel can be linked to a passage
in the Mnoriad," Mallon shuffled through some of
his papers, searching for the appropriate text.
To Scotti's vast relief, the carriage soon stopped
to camp for the night. They were high on a bluff over
a gray stream, and before them was the great valley
of Valenwood. Only the cry of seabirds declared the
presence of the ocean to the bay to the west: here the
timber was so tall and wide, twisting around itself
like an impossible knot begun eons ago, to be impenetrable.
A few more modest trees, only fifty feet to the lowest
branches, stood on the cliff at the edge of camp. The
sight was so alien to Scotti and he found himself so
anxious about the proposition of entering the wilderness
that he could not imagine sleeping.
Fortunately, Mallon had supposed he had found another
academic with a passion for the riddles of ancient cultures.
Long into the night, he recited Bosmer verse in the
original and in his own translation, sobbing and bellowing
and whispering wherever appropriate. Gradually, Scotti
began to feel drowsy, but a sudden crack of wood snapping
made him sit straight up.
"What was that?"
Mallon smiled: "I like it too. 'Convocation in
the malignity of the moonless speculum, a dance of fire
--'"
"There are some enormous birds up in the trees
moving around," whispered Scotti, pointing in the
direction of the dark shapes above.
"I wouldn't worry about that," said Mallon,
irritated with his audience. "Now listen to how
the poet characterizes Herma-Mora's invocation in the
eighteenth stanza of the fourth book."
The dark shapes in the trees were some of them perched
like birds, others slithered like snakes, and still
others stood up straight like men. As Mallon recited
his verse, Scotti watched the figures softly leap from
branch to branch, half-gliding across impossible distances
for anything without wings. They gathered in groups
and then reorganized until they had spread to every
tree around the camp. Suddenly they plummeted from the
heights.
"Mara!" cried Scotti. "They're falling
like rain!"
"Probably seed pods," Mallon shrugged, not
turning around. "Some of the trees have remarkable
--"
The camp erupted into chaos. Fires burst out in the
wagons, the horses wailed from mortal blows, casks of
wine, fresh water, and liquor gushed their contents
to the ground. A nimble shadow dashed past Scotti and
Mallon, gathering sacks of grain and gold with impossible
agility and grace. Scotti had only one glance at it,
lit up by a sudden nearby burst of flame. It was a sleek
creature with pointed ears, wide yellow eyes, mottled
pied fur and a tail like a whip.
"Werewolf," he whimpered, shrinking back.
"Cathay-raht," groaned Mallon. "Much
worse. Khajiti cousins or some such thing, come to plunder."
"Are you sure?"
As quickly as they struck, the creatures retreated,
diving off the bluff before the battlemage and knight,
the caravan's escorts, had fully opened their eyes.
Mallon and Scotti ran to the precipice and saw a hundred
feet below the tiny figures dash out of the water, shake
themselves, and disappear into the wood.
"Werewolves aren't acrobats like that," said
Mallon. "They were definitely Cathay-raht. Bastard
thieves. Thank Stendarr they didn't realize the value
of my notebooks. It wasn't a complete loss." |