Garrick was starting to get a little frustrated; often he came to the woods outside his village to forage for truffles. They were worth a lot, and tasty to boot, the few he kept for himself a perfect treat.
But lately, it seemed like somebody had been tearing up the areas truffles liked to grow. They were almost like animals with how rough they were, but he found tracks in the area and tool marks on the bark of trees and stones.
He wasn't sure if it was deliberate sabotage, they didn't know what truffles were, or they did know, but had absolutely no idea how to collect them and not mess up the places they grew.
Pigs were better at it, and he had heard of some truffle hunters using them to sniff out the delectable treasures.
He considered the possibility of bandits, which did make him shiver; crude methods to acquire what they know is valuable without any care for the regrowth or sustainability fit such people.
Yet, there was something odd about it; the tracks were messy, and he was no forester or tracker, his skills weren't that refined, but he thought the prints were oddly small.
Almost like children, but the local kids never ventured deep into the woods. They were too scared. And if they were found out, their parents would tan their hides. Truffles weren't a major product of the village, he was really the only one who seriously sought them out, but there was a healthy respect for anyone who earned a living off the land, multiple major farms not far off in the fields to the north.
He sighed, and decided to abandon his efforts for the day with only three truffles in his basket, making his way to a nearby stream. It ran through the forest north to south, running alongside the village on the north-western side of the woods, and splitting the forest in two. He was quite familiar with the west side, but the east side, he'd only ventured into a few times.
He came to the clear stream as it burbled, the current taking the water south. It wasn't very deep, though it was a surprisingly fast stream, enough that the village was able to run a small wheel for a grinding mill.
For him, it was perfect to sit by the edge, take off his leather boots, the rich brown colour dulled over the years with use and greyed with caked mud and dirt, and put his feet in.
He sighed as he set his feet on a large rounded stone near the edge of the bank, feeling the water rush around his legs halfway up his calves.
His frustrations were eased, and he wiggled his toes to loosen up the tension just beginning to form in his feet.
It was good to rest, though he was still grumpy from his lack of results this day; it was only just approaching noon, and normally he had a few more truffles than just three.
He mumbled under his breath and leaned forward, sunlight filtering through the trees shining off the water and letting him see his reflection; he was a bit surprised to see how grumpy he looked, his normally cheerful features scrunched into a scowl, darkening his bright green eyes. Even his dark hair seemed messier than usual, though it still did not reach his eyes.
Even the sprinkling of freckles, a lingering holdover from his adolescent years, seemed to disappear in the shallow creases of his face.
He rubbed his countenance, hoping to loosening up his expression and ease his mind; there was always tomorrow, and he could always check the eastern side of the woods, as long as he was careful.
He may have only had two dozen winters behind him, but he was more than experienced enough to roam the woods. Even if he only had a small knife for cutting truffles.
He sat by the edge of the stream for a good fifteen minutes before deciding it was time to move on, lifting his feet out of the water and drying them off with a cloth from his little brown backpack. He donned his boots and dusted down his dark black pants and his tanned shirt, stretching and finally looking for a place to cross.
He wasn't keen on wading knee deep through a stream that ran as fast as it did; he learned the hard way long ago after trying to cross just outside the village mill - south of it, he wasn't
that
foolish - and losing his footing. He was swept down a good dozen feet before his shirt snagged on a root sticking out just above the water line, giving him a painful jab in the process, though nothing compared to the humiliation of being stuck in the stream in a position that left him at no immediate risk of drowning and further injury.
He swore the other villagers were just slightly slower than normal to rescue him. They were laughing plenty hard.
Eventually, he found a fallen tree bridging the river; the roots at one end and the boughs at the other had been cut down, and old, rusty chains lashed the trunk down to the banks for support.
He'd never used this crossing, but it sounded like the log the hunters used.
He crawled across it, as was the safe thing to do, and continued his search.
There wasn't much difference on the other side of the stream, the trees and the bushes and the birdsong all the same. But he couldn't shake a sense of foreboding. He attributed that to his lack of knowledge on this side of the forest, but he was confident he could make his way back to the stream if he got lost. He'd done it before.
He passed through the trees, checking around their roots, investigating any fallen log.
He knew what to look for, but he frowned when he came upon another site that looked like it'd been torn up.
"Ridiculous," he muttered. He investigated closely, and found what looked like torn bits of truffle, the remnants of a messy collection.
He shook his head, and continued deeper into the forest, wondering just
who
was doing this; travellers who knew about truffles but nothing about best practises when collecting them? Bandits as he considered before?
He didn't think it was anyone in the village, he didn't have any enemies, or close friends for that matter.
He then came to a clearing, sun shining down overhead. That's when he saw something unusual; a bark mask sticking out of a shrub.
He frowned, curious at such an odd find, looking as if it'd been discarded accidentally.
He crossed the clearing, but before he could close on the mask, he heard a quiet crack as he stepped on a layer of leaves, his foot giving way about an inch into a hidden depression.
He froze, looked up in embarrassed realisation, as he heard whipping, whooshing, and the snapping of a rope.
Without further warning, a noose constricted around his ankles, and he was pulled into the air, body snapping around with the sudden inversion. He was barely lucky not to smack his head on the ground, but the lancing pain through his legs from the sudden pull was bad enough, not sure if he broke anything.