Chapter Nineteen
The western edge of the Terril Forest ended abruptly, the lands beyond having once been cleared for farming. Those fields were overgrown now, with weeds, brush, and small trees that had sprung up after the humans abandoned the area over fifty years earlier, but there was still a stark divide between the former crop lands and the tall
tershaya
lining the border.
Shavala peered up at the sky through the spyglass she'd taken from a dead mercenary at Tir Yadar. The tiny dot above her was certainly no bird, but it was difficult to track a moving target with the glass while simultaneously adjusting the lenses.
There was a faint brush of a footstep behind her, and she turned to find Dalanis, leader of one of the ranger patrols based at the western border camp.
"Is that it?" she asked him, pointing.
He glanced up. "Yes, it flies this way a few times each week. Meritia asked me to find you. The group that visited the human village has returned, so the elders are calling everyone together."
Shavala nodded and followed him back to the large temporary camp that had been assembled under cover of the forest. The conclave had been gathering for two weeks, scouting the western border and discussing the problem in small groups, but this would be the first time they all met together.
Shavala herself had only been there for a day. She and Meritia had stopped in Terrillia along the way and waited to escort the final group of druid elders on the journey.
From Terrillia, they'd headed west, passing through the western border camp, then continuing on to the border itself. Now, eighty druids had gathered together in one location, including all of the elders who were capable of traveling. Over two hundred rangers had accompanied them, though most had been deployed along the border to watch for the dragon.
Back at the temporary camp, the elders had arranged themselves cross-legged on the ground in a loose circle. Younger druids were farther out and higher up, standing or sitting on rocks or fallen tree trunks so they could see what was happening.
Shavala joined them, climbing a tree and sitting on a low branch next to a young man whose name she didn't know. She gave him a quick smile, but before she could introduce herself, Gylvaren started speaking. He wasn't the most senior of the elders, but as the leader of the western border camp, he was the one who'd called the conclave.
"We all know why we've come together," he started. "Some of you have had the opportunity to view the burned remains of the nearest human settlements. Others have seen the dragon with your own eyes. A threat has come to the Terril Forest, of a sort we haven't seen in many years. The danger is only potential, not yet realized, but the dragon is now flying nearly a hundred miles into our borders on a regular basis. We must decide whether we will take action."
"Has it made any move against the forest?" Elder Nariela asked, her graying hair tied in dozens of youthful braids.
"It sometimes lands in a clearing, and twice it's been observed to take an unlucky deer. Usually, it just flies over. The tree canopy seems to prevent further incursion."
"It's a living creature. It's not our place to stop it if it chooses to hunt a few deer. Even humans are allowed to hunt here as long as they stay beyond the outposts."
"The dragon's behavior suggest it's seeking to expand its territory," Gylvaren said. "What if it decides the western forest belongs to it? Already our rangers must keep a careful watch at all times in case it flies overhead. The next time it hunts, it may not be a deer that it takes."
"In Cetos, the people live in balance with dragons," said Zhailai, one of the more well-traveled druids, speaking out even though she wasn't an elder. "Can we not do that here?"
Old Arvillin, who'd taught Shavala to call fire, made a curt chopping motion with his hand. "Cetos has beasts of great size for the dragons to hunt," he said. "The dragons are drawn to the regions where those creatures make their homes. The people who live in that area understand the risks."
"We've not all come together to fight back an intruder for hundreds of years," said an elder Shavala didn't recognize. "Not since the last time the humans tried to invade the forest. What we did then, I will always regret. I advise caution in our approach. A measured response."
"But what if it sets fires?" someone called from the outermost circle, causing a discordant sensation within the tree bond. Up until that point, only the elders and the most senior of druids had spoken. "We can't allow it to burn the forest."
"It's winter," Meritia replied from where she was sitting with several other senior druids just outside the circle of elders. "The woods are too wet to burn, and we can summon more rain if we need to."
"Can we convince it to leave the area?" asked another of the elders. "Or at least return to its original territory?"
"We can't speak to dragons," Gylvaren reminded the man.
"No, but perhaps someone from Cetos knows another way to communicate with it. Luring it away, perhaps?"
"I doubt luring it away will work if it's expanding its range," Gylvaren said. "It already returns regularly to its lair at the human's trade keep. Where else could we convince it to go?"
The elder who'd pushed for caution spoke up again. "The dragon hasn't attempted to harm the forest or our people. We must allow it to follow its natural law."
"Natural law applies if it's not harming thinking beings or unbalancing an ecosystem," one of the senior druids protested. "What about the humans it's killed in the free lands?"
"It's neither our place nor our duty to protect the humans."
The man sitting next to Shavala spoke up. "What about the elven villages in the free lands?" he called out. "Shouldn't we protect
them
?"
Shavala had learned of the
dorvasta
settlements outside the forest from a leatherworker in Tyrsall, but judging by the quiet murmuring throughout the younger members of the crowd, it seemed not everyone knew. The elders went stone-faced.
"They chose to leave the safety of the forest," Nariela said. "They've made it clear they don't