"Get your fucking hands off me!"
The dryads giggled. It was a bit hard to intimidate someone who'd gotten the drop on you, anyways.
Truth be told, Mio would not have normally been caught like this, but she had been concentrating quite hard and was taken completely by surprise. She was out of her element, this deep in the Ever Forest. Where the branches tangled overhead and the light shone dimly through the leaves, few could fly. She was meant to be soaring through the clouds. It was a mistake to accept this job, the mercenary thought to herself. Harpies were not meant to scramble through the underbrush.
She flinched. The dryads were doing a pretty good job of holding her down, and one of them was beginning to stroke a hand through her lustrous pink feathers.
"So." This looked like the leader of the group, a tall dryad with blossoms in her hair and lips so cherry-red. "What, exactly, is a harpy girl doing in our neck of the woods?"
One of the other dryads giggled at the joke. Mio just glared.
"You'd be of the carakarr variety – no, tsumi, unless I miss my mark." The dryad looked her up and down. "From the nesting sites on the north-eastern face of the mountains. I've seen your kind. Coming down to the cities, looking for a mate, or something less permanent. And now you've taken up such very interesting blades." Mio had dropped her twin swords in the struggle. The dryad bent down to pick one up.
"Excellent craftsmanship," the dryad mused. "Not the usual harpy fare. Well-suited for cutting."
A shadow seemed to pass over the wood spirit's face.
"There's no goblins in this stretch of the forest." She waved the sword expansively. "No elves, for that matter, nor humans. Hardly anyone lives around here. None but me and my sisters." The dryad stepped close. "So why, little bird, have you come into my home?"
Mio wanted to spit in her face. Nobody talked to her like that. Then again, there was no way that she could grab her blades and wreak bloody vengeance. Not with a second dryad's hand joining the first, ruffling through her feathers.
"I'm not here for you," she growled.
"Then who," the dryad asked, voice sweet like honeyed venom, "are you here for? Especially," she paused for effect, "with such terribly sharp blades as these."
Mio took a second to catch her breath. Having someone intimidate her with her own weapons was one thing, but those hands which roamed her body were now getting seriously distracting. "From the city," she managed, tossing her head towards the barely-visible trail. "Just before sunset. There's a messenger who's supposed to be coming this way. Don't know who they work for. Don't know where they're going. All I've been told," she gasped as a hand trailed from her feathered wings over her bare shoulder, "is that they're carrying a queen's ransom in newly-minted coins. That's why I'm here."
The dryad thought it over. "Plausible enough," she admitted. "And something we can test. Amarelle," she called to one of the other wood spirits, "go up the road a little in that direction. Keep an eye out. We could use a bit of gold."
Mio squirmed, trying to get a look at the wordlessly departing dryad. She caught a brief glimpse of a loping figure of towering height. That wasn't the only reason why she was wriggling around, though. One of the dryads that had been groping her was now running slender fingers along her neck and ears.
"Thank you for that, little bird." The dryad set Mio's weapons down and stepped close. "If you're telling the truth, we'll handle your task for you. We're very good at forest ambushes, after all."
After all, they'd managed to catch her. A slightly cloying scent was in the air, Mio thought, wafting from the blossoms that seemed to drape around the dryad's body. From her hair, from the acres of bare skin which Mio was very scrupulously avoiding with her eyes. The closer the dryad drew to her, the more difficult it became to look away.
"But that will take awhile." The dryad tilted her head, thinking. "Just before sunset, you said? Then we have several hours yet."
Mio swallowed. The shade of the ancient trees didn't prevent her from feeling a rush of warmth at those words.
"You see," the dryad said, "we don't get many visitors. Except an elf, now and then. We've had some good times with those, right girls?"