Two girls.
Seventy-five feet up.
They aren't supposed to be on the mountain.
Any other day, he would have sent a patrol to observe them from afar. Once they were determined not to be a threat--and the islanders are never a threat--he would order that they be left alone.
Today, he went himself, bringing Rader with him. He intended to survey the situation, to determine whether he would be forced to rearrange outdoor training exercises to account for the intrusion.
He left his troops with orders to wait and walked with Rader to a part of the hill where they could see the trespassers without being seen themselves.
There
.
Two girls. One light, one dark. Their dresses too short and they seemed to hang on their thin frames.
Like many islanders, they were much too thin.
Of course, it was strategy that his people provided the islanders with enough food to live, but not to thrive. They were, after all, essentially prisoners.
The girls were nervous, jumping at the sound of rocks disturbed under their own feet. But they were smiling. Laughing softly at their fear and then urging each other to be quiet.
He was about to give the command, telling Rader that they would leave them in peace. Then, the wind shifted. He could smell them. In an instant, his attention centered on the dark-haired girl. She caught at her hair as it blew in the wind, unaware that she had been scented.
Marked.
He stepped out into the sunlight. Rader was surprised, but obedient. He followed him into the light.
#
He had them cornered before they even saw him. He was not wearing armor, but it was clear he was a warrior. He was impossibly large, his arms scarred, his long hair tied back with a leather cord.
She only became aware of him when his body blocked the sun. Despite his size, his approach had been silent. She stared at him for a moment, blinking in dumb surprise. Over and over, she had imagined a moment like this, steeling herself for the possibility that they might encounter the mountain dwellers, reasoning through a daring escape. Now, she couldn't even run. Everything--the wind, the mountain, the tiny lizards running over the rocks--seemed to stand still as he looked at her, at Sheera, taking everything in.
Sheera's father had warned them--if they ventured onto the mountain, they might be caught. Even if no one had been taken in at least ten years. Even if the daylight hours were usually safe.
#
Unfortunate that the girls were on the mountain. Any other day, it might not have mattered.
It was his order, in fact, that had led to the breach in the fence.
The berries grew thick on the sunny side of the mountain and the people in the lowlands were often hungry.
If some of them are brave, he would have them eat--more than the meagre rations that his people sent down monthly, as a sign of "peace." And a reminder of their dominance.
Perhaps he always intended to punish the islander if they did grow bold.
Depending on the day.
His mood.
Fortune.
He had always been interested in fortune. Luck. It was luck that he was born as he was. Luck if someone else was born below the mountain. It was luck that the dark haired girl, still frozen under his gaze, was born as she was.