© Antidarius 2021
Aran stared up at the timber beams above the bed where he lay. They looked like spokes on a wagon wheel, all pointing to the centre of the circular house's ceiling. There was a hole in the dense thatch there, where the beams met, to let out the smoke from the fire pit directly beneath. When rain came, the hole could be covered by a canvas flap attached to a nearby dangling rope. Simple, but effective. It was early morning, judging by the ring of sky visible through the hole.
Fingers laced across his chest, Aran wondered if he would be spending yet another day in bed. If Evoni and Masha had anything to say about it, he likely would. Not that he had not found ways to enjoy himself, even injured as he was. Evoni was always happy to make sure of that, and there was a slim, pretty Orc - she often came to tidy the hut - that had ended up in the bed with he and Evoni on more than one occasion.
Still, he should have been up and about by now. Why his hurts taken in the visions had not healed as they should, he did not know. When asked, Masha simply said that things worked differently under the effects of
gar'ji
.
Frustratingly, these lingering effects had also prevented him from accessing
amathani
, which meant he had no clue what was happening elsewhere in the world, nor how his friends were faring.
Elaina
. Whatever was suppressing his
vala
was also hindering his ability to sense his
meldin
, with the exception of Evoni; he could still feel her presence inside him. It was a little lonely, with only
melda
in his head, as if there was a vacuum of empty space.
Sighing, he sat up with only minor difficulty - a marked improvement over recent days - and swung his feet off the bed, planting them on the floor. He flexed his toes on the woven mat there while slowly working his left shoulder. It was still stiff, but looser today than it had been. With luck, he would regain full movement soon.
At that moment, the cloth flap hanging across the hut's only entrance was pushed aside, and Evoni strode in. She smiled at him first, but then her expression darkened. "You should not be sitting up!" she chided in her thick,
Oron'noroth
accent. A foot taller than he and strikingly beautiful, with shimmering cobalt hair and skin of creamy granite that sparkled in sunlight - not that it felt like granite to touch; more like the softest silk - she folded her arms beneath a resplendent pair of breasts and frowned at him.
"I'm just restless," he assured her as he kept working his shoulder. "I wasn't going to leave, I swear." Evoni made a noise that could have meant anything. Aran nodded to the patterns painted on her bare skin. They hadn't been there, yesterday. "I see the Orcs have embraced you. I am glad." It was true; he was glad for her. She'd been fascinated by the Orcs, wanting to know everything about them almost from the moment they'd arrived in Sen'dara. For them to adorn her with their paints meant she was one of them, now. And if him bringing it up meant the subject digressed from him trying to get out of bed, well, all the better.
It worked. Evoni was suddenly beaming with excitement. "Most of them have accepted me, finally. And Masha says I can become a healer!" She sat on the bed next to him. "She says I have the gift, whatever that means."
Aran smiled back at her, genuinely glad. "That is wonderful, my love. I am happy for you." He put a hand on her knee and squeezed gently. "So, then what is worrying you?" Beneath her happiness, he could sense there was more.
"I do not think we will be here long enough for me to learn Masha's ways," Evoni said, her brightness diminishing somewhat. "As soon as you are well, we will be leaving, will we not?"
Aran nodded, sharing her regret. "Yes, but do not despair just yet."
She met his gaze for a long moment, her eyes large, deep and enchanting, like two mountain pools, shimmering blue-black. "Of what do you speak?" she asked him softly. Then her brow drew down slightly, crinkling the skin between her eyes. "What are you planning, Aran Sunblade?"
"I'm not sure yet," he told her truthfully. "But spending another day in bed will not help me to find out. Will you help me? I need some air." As much as it grated at him, he did not trust his legs to carry him around yet.
"I will," she said at once, taking his right arm and putting it over her shoulders. She rose easily, as if his weight was nothing at all. It was probably true;
Oron'noroth
were the strongest of all the Giants. She held him upright while he pulled on his breeches and boots. He didn't bother with a shirt; the weather was warm, and Orcs were not concerned with coverings, unless it was for battle or ritual, and even then, they were minimalistic.
Evoni asked him again what he was planning, but truthfully, he had no answer for her, yet. All the bed rest had given him much time to think, however.
Time is the problem,
he thought grimly as she helped him from the hut and out into the morning sun. The hard-packed dirt streets of Sen'dar were not precisely bustling, but there were some Orcs in sight, going about their business.
This part of Sen'dara seemed to be for living, with clusters of smaller dwellings similar to his own accommodations everywhere he looked. Orc children dashed about, laughing and playing in the street. They seemed to favour rough games with lots of tackling and wrestling and rolling in the dust. He smiled as he watched them play.
They don't know what's coming. They don't need to, either. Not yet. Hopefully there is still some time.
His legs firmed up some as Evoni half-carried him along, and he was even able to take most of his own weight after a few minutes. "There, you see?" He said to her as they left the house huts and moved onto a broader avenue. "All I needed was some fresh air and a walk."
Evoni eyed him sideways, but her lips quirked. "You are ever the optimist, my love. I am glad you feel better."
"I could fight a whole band of Trolls," Aran told her. "With my bare hands."
"I believe you could," she replied far too smoothly.
"Well, maybe not a whole
band
," Aran confessed, trying to get a reaction out of her. "But two or three, no doubt."
Evoni didn't appear to hear his attempt to make her laugh. She was looking at something up ahead, concern painting her features. She stopped, forcing him to do the same. "Aran, look."
His eyes followed her gaze up the avenue, to where a large collection of Orcs was approaching, a mix of males and females who carried themselves like warriors, hung about with instruments of death. Axes, hammers and spears and more. Hard faces above huge, tough bodies, scarred from years of fighting.
"I wonder what they want," he mused as the group closed in. All other Orcs on the avenue parted around the warriors, pressing themselves to the sides of the street or finding somewhere else to be entirely.
"Masha said this might happen," Evoni whispered.
Aran turned to her. "What might?"
"Reikar. He's the one in the middle."
Aran noted the biggest of the oncoming Orcs leading the pack, a hulking brute a foot taller than Evoni, forest-green skin painted in sharp, angular runes of a shade that resembled dried blood. Going by his grim face, it might very well
be
blood. His black hair was long and banded in two thick cords that hung down over his massive chest, almost to his waist. There was a huge hammer strapped to his back, the hilt sticking up over his shoulder, the flat head and the spike visible on either side of his torso. Aran thought it might weigh as much as himself.
"He's claimed leadership over Sen'dar," Evoni went on hurriedly. "Against Masha's guidance."
That was interesting; Aran had learned much of the Ash'goth while bedridden, and the Orcs here seemed to pride themselves on the fact they needed no leader. Even Masha was really only a guide, or seer. They all respected her, but she did not give orders. The Ash'goth worked together to achieve common goals for the good of their people. From what he'd heard, the system had worked well, at least until now.
"He doesn't want us here, but hasn't openly done anything about it yet," Evoni continued. Reikar and his retinue were only thirty paces away, now.
So, this was why I felt so compelled to get out of bed today. At least my
vala
is working that much
. Gently removing Evoni's hand from his waist, Aran unhooked his arm from around her shoulder and stood on his own to face them. When Evoni protested, he hushed her gently. "It's alright. I can manage." Nervousness spiked in her, slashed with fear. He gave her hand a squeeze for reassurance, but the flitting, tremulous sense remained.
Instinctively, he tried to access his
vala
, but found nothing beyond a whisper of a sense that it was there at all. Strangely, this did not scare him as it once would have. Instead of fear there was merely... nothing, a peaceful emptiness. The outcome of this meeting would be what it was, and that's all there was to it.
Reikar stopped ten paces away. "You," he boomed in a voice like crumbling rocks as he pointed at Aran and then Evoni. "Have been in Sen'dar long enough. Leave, or you will be removed."
Aran blinked at the Orc's abruptness. Once, such a thing would have frustrated him, even angered him, but now... "Forgive me," he said politely. "I was unconscious for many days and under the Masha's care. I am Aran Sunblade." He bowed respectfully.
Some of the Orcs behind Reikar scoffed, others grunted. Reikar sneered. "You bring ill times with you, Human, as well as
her
." His head jerked in Evoni's direction, though he didn't look at her directly. "The runes on her skin are for Orcs only. She is an affront to any who are true Ash'goth! The only reason you are not dead is because of Masha's insistence you both be spared."
Evoni shifted uneasily and covered herself with her arms. Aran's calm wavered a little at seeing her this way. His desire to protect her was strong. He racked his brain for a solution to Reikar; he needed the Orcs - preferably all of them - but in his current state, he could not overpower even one of them, if it came to blows. Taking a deep breath, he relaxed.
Trust yourself,
a small voice said inside him.
"We do not abide weakness," Reikar went on to approving mutters from his band of followers. "And you reek of it, Human, as does the