Did you know that the milky-way star system shines so brightly that you can see even on a moonless night? Though on a cloudy night in the Australian desert away from human civilization it is almost impossible to see your hand in front of your face!
Hunting the Hunters
The following day the weather had lifted somewhat, though the wind was still blustery, ensuring it would be a hard, cold ride; but Aurianne impatient to locate her enemies' whereabouts was up early saddling her horse.
The hoarfrost crunched under Isabou's sturdy hooves, her eager chestnut mare covering the arid desert easily. The signs of the climatic turmoil lay everywhere to be witnessed. The frozen dead littered the frigid earth, beast and plant alike. Leafless trees and shrubs dotted the stark landscape, their twisted interlaced branches devoid of the birds and reptiles that had once called them home.
That first excursion yielded little clue as to the location of those she sought, and Aurianne was deeply disappointed. Returning as the evening drew in to her modest shelter and the comfort of the fire. Aurianne was weary, but she had no desire to sleep, her dreams of recent evenings making rest seem an unpalatable option. She sat looking into the depths of the burning wood dying to embers until she could keep her heavy lidded eyes open no longer.
*****
The next day the wind had died completely, the plains above lifeless, silent and still. The young woman had never explored the terrain this far from her village, she noted every landmark no matter how subtle judiciously, lest she lose her way. Aurianne gazed up at the sunless sky, the heavy gray cloud cover still held sway, it had seemed forever since she had seen sun, moon, or stars, and she missed them.
It was nearing midday when she rode through the ruins of a ransacked village. The settlement had not seen signs of life for a very long time, the blackened timbers and twisted iron silent sentinels to those who were long gone.
She halted her horse, and slid from the saddle, this would be a good moment to rest her ever eager mare and maybe explore a little. Isabou's breath pluming in the cold as the statuesque woman gazed about her. Nothing moved, rusted car bodies and old appliances dotted the surrounding landscape, the central well had been pushed in and now appeared unusable. A pity she thought, her mare could have done with a refreshing drink before they moved on.
Aurianne meandered through the twisted and burned wreckage deftly, avoiding sharp metal, twisted wire, and broken glass. A faded child's doll sat on one of the broken buildings' doorstep, and further away a beloved pink teddy bear lie half buried amongst shattered bricks from a collapsed wall. The shine of brass of a bullet casing caught her eye, a 30.30 caliber. Shreds of torn clothing and household items scattered willy nilly in the streets; in between the buildings, and spilling from the broken windows. Much violence had occurred here, and Aurianne inadvertently shivered.
Other signs of the long ago slaughter were still apparent. Stark white bones littered the ground, some charred, most broken and scattered by wild beasts. Aurianne did not have to look too closely to see the majority of the remains were human. Though a dog skull and what looked like horse bones were laying there as well.
Her mare stamped restlessly tossing her noble head, eager to be on the move, pulling impatiently on the bit. She remounted and let her horse have her wish, the great mare stepped forward deftly avoiding the sharp twisted iron and the charred wood with her immense hooves.
Aurianne was about to ride away when she sighted a disturbance in the cold earth, she reigned her horse about, the mare pirouetting on her hind legs as she turned.
Riding over to investigate further she could discern great scrapes in the earth where it would appear some of the heavy wooden beams had been dragged out and loaded on to a waiting cart. The tracks, deep furrows in the soft sand were still very evident, disappearing further to the south. Aurianne remounted and urged Isabou forward, the mare as always needed little coaxing.
Aurianne was baffled, the plains stretched before her broken only by the dark iron stone outcrops, there were no tell tale plumes of smoke, or huddles of habitation anywhere to be seen. As she entered the realm of the softer, shifting sands, the tracks evaporated, all she could hope was if she pushed further south they would either resume, or the habitation of her enemies would appear.
*****
The afternoon was fast passing by, it would be night soon, and inadvisable to be stranded out here on the flats in the cold. Yet she had no desire to turn back as she felt she was close to her enemy.
As Aurianne was thinking this she spied the hulking shapes of two wooden carts; sure enough they were recognizable as the ones from her village, their traces empty, piled high with charred beams. Yet there was no sign of a settlement anywhere.
The young woman drew closer to the ox carts, her usually smooth brow furrowed in bafflement, exercising great caution. There was most certainly no one about so she took a few more steps gingerly forward on her solid mare. She gasped as she suddenly registered the secluded valley, its walls plunging downward, cradling the traces of habitation far below.
Swiftly drawing Isabou away from the sides of the sheer incline lest she be seen, Aurianne secluded the great mare as best she might behind a rocky outcrop some distance from the fissure. She had to hope that none of the savages were up top and would chance to sight her mount. She may have already been spotted, though she doubted this as no cries of alarm carried to her ears; besides it was bitterly cold, they would not be expecting an attack surely in this kind of weather.
Emboldened by this, she took the risk to wriggle on her belly toward the side of the cliff face. The valley was deep, much deeper than she had surmised from her first careful glances. There appeared to only be one path down, it was steep and narrow, the upper portion very exposed, she could not hope to descend it in broad daylight.
She took in the circular collection of huts made from shipping containers with tarpaulins for shelters stretched between them and the inviting bonfire fire glowing in the large caves' mouth. Aurianne had to admit this place had been chosen well, and it would be difficult to gain access. She would have to retreat and think this out with care and precision.
To occupy her remaining time until nightfall the woman edged close to the fall away, careful not to send any tell tale stones clattering down below. She lay low hugging the cold earth, feeling the chill cooling her even now. Night promised to be even colder, but she needed to stay and brave its hazards, and in the fast dimming light she could make out the well and noticed a woman drawing water.