Aranthir III
When at last the sandstorm settled, they were well and truly lost. Aranthir looked around at the few companions still left to him and saw that they were few in number. To every side of him, the Dry Wastes stretched off toward the horizon, featureless and utterly barren.
"Well damn it all," Lutharis roared, rising from where he had sheltered against his horse and disturbing a layer of sand and dust as he did. "Where has the army gone?"
Shading his eyes, the black-haired man studied the horizon as he brushed sand from his beard. Aranthir cleaned himself off more calmly and checked his horse. Behind him, the rest of their little company was stirring from their shelter.
"They kept riding through the storm," Rora sneered as she shook sand from her boots. "They will be scattered to the four winds by now. Easy prey for the raiders."
"Should we turn back?" asked Aigon, the group's youngest member. He was peering at the horizon through his spyglass, though with no more luck than the others.
"Which way even is back?" Lutharis grumbled.
"The storm was enough to obliterate the tracks of the army," Aranthir mused, studying the ground all around them. "We will have to follow the setting sun until we reach the green lands again."
"Hold on," said Pairas, sliding off his horse to plant his armored feet in the sand. "Deserting the army means we forfeit our pay. The paymaster owes me three weeks' pay already and I won't let him discharge his debt to me so easily."
"You're welcome to take up his debt with him as soon as you find him." Aranthir waved a hand at the empty desert that surrounded them. "Until then, we should return to the town where we mustered and wait for word of the army."
"If it still exists," Rora groused. "The Sardmen won't give them much time to regroup. That's why they wouldn't give battle, they knew it was only a matter of time before a storm destroyed the army for them."
Pairas scowled and kicked the dirt. His other riders looked around uncertainly. At last, Pairas ground his teeth and spat. "Very well. We will return to the town." He looked around him. "Which way is it?"
Aranthir pointed his finger skyward. "Follow the setting sun. With luck, we will soon enough reach the settled lands where someone can give us instructions."
None of them presented a better idea, so soon enough they fell in behind Aranthir. The day was long and hot, but the desert was devoid of shade and so they struggled on. As they crawled west, the desert began to change. It grew rockier and they began to see the occasional bit of brush. Twice they spotted rabbits darting from rock to rock. But everywhere they looked, it was flat, dusty, and barren.
As the sun dropped ever lower, they began to lose pace. The cooling night air was a welcome change from the murderous heat, but they were tired, hungry, and thirsty. Rora called a halt.
"We should rest here," she said, panting with exhaustion. "We can make some attempt at erecting shelter and wait out the day, then continue tomorrow night."
"We're running low on water," Aranthir objected. "We won't last another day and night."
"We won't last much longer anyway," Rora replied.
"Where are we going to find water?" Cuthas, one of her sharpshooters, demanded. "This whole damned place is drier than a blacksmith's forge."
Aranthir scanned the horizon and smiled.
"There," he pointed to a distant spot on the horizon, dimly visible in the waning light of the sun. "An oasis," he declared.
"It's a mirage," complain Pairas. "Just another cruel trick of the desert."
Aranthir merely smiled and spurred his horse in the direction of the oasis. "Come on, it's not too much further." The others stared after him in a combination of confusion and exhausted frustration. Lutharis simply nodded and followed Aranthir without question.
"He's never led us wrong before," Aigon said as he followed Lutharis. "If we had listened to him, we would be in Cimbra instead of lost in the desert."
Grudgingly, Rora and Pairas led their respective contingents forward. The ground grew rockier and harder, leading up a slight incline. They wound their way over harder ground as the night wore on. Pairas' grumbling grew louder and louder until at last Aranthir stopped. Pairas angrily made his way up to where the half-elf stood and harrumphed loudly behind him. Aranthir casually picked up a stone from the ground.
"And how much further are you going to lead us tonight, elf?" Pairas demanded.
"Just a stone's throw," Aranthir replied and flung the stone from his hand. Before Pairas could reply, they all heard the splash.
Quarrels forgotten, they rushed forward. Falling their knees at the edge of the oasis, they drank its cold, clear water from their hands.
"Erchasos be praised!" Rora cried as she thrust her head into the water in relief. The party drank their fill and refilled their waterskins. Date palms growing over the water provided them much needed succor, and Lutharis even conspired to catch a pair of nesting birds taken unaware.
They tiredly assembled a makeshift camp in the shadow of a tall rock and soon enough were fast asleep.
Aranthir awoke in the mid-morning and made a circuit of the oasis. The pool of water was narrow and crooked, winding its way through the tall, red rocks for perhaps four hundred paces. All along its edge grew palms, berry bushes, and strange flowers with small, bitter seeds that could easily be plucked and eaten. No fish made their home in the pool, but Aranthir glimpsed frogs hopping along the edge and birds nesting in the rocks above.
Climbing the rocks, he looked around. To the south, the barren and featureless desert stretched far away toward the horizon, while the rocky plains continued in the other directions. In the distant northern sky, he thought he could make out rain clouds. That would be where the green settled lands lay, he knew. He sat for a time, trying to spy a clear path through the maze of boulders, until he grew thirsty again.