Lowborn's Rise
Chapter 5
By Noobwriter96
***(Author's Note): Hello again and thank you for taking the time to read my work. This hobby of mine is something I do after I get home from work. This is just to inform you of a few stuff, just a heads up. This chapter is 3,200 words long. And formally introduces two female characters that appeared somewhat briefly in the previous chapter. No sex scene just yet. I think I've mentioned before that this is a story with sex rather than a sex story. Anyway, enjoy and take care.*-*-*
Maden was awoken by the piercing light of dawn, snuck through the small number of holes that littered the walls of her home, smacking her across her face. The young woman blurted her eyes open, drool dripped at a corner of her lips, still gripping wood-chopper in one hand. Leaf-green eyes darted this way and that, realizing that dawn had finally come. Her back ached, sleeping upright in a sitting position wasn't doing her any favors either, followed by a day of toiling in their field.
The redlocks of her sister Maelle, lay in a red cascade not far from her, sleeping well enshrouded by her goat-wool blanket.
Maden was still annoyed at the brazen stupidity of her sister, peeking her head out like that in the middle of the night. What with the sounds of beasts and the men fighting in the dark, it should have put some sense on the younger woman to take cover. Maden pinched the bridge of her nose and took a deep breathe, it was far too early to be in a sour mood.
Maden planned to pour her frustration on her sister with chores later on. For now, she must assess the damage done on the fields. She strode over to where Maelle was, still sleeping, an angel without a worry in the world. Her near pale complexion without a trace of worries for the world as she slept well at ease.
She kicked her to wake.
"Sun's up and so should you," Maden declared, not looking to see if her sister rose from her slumber. If she hadn't, then Maelle would be getting more than her foot.
Maelle need no further encouragement, her body reacting in automated response after years of her sister's near-tyrinnical rule since both her parents had passed. Eyes still strongly shut with crusts from her sleep. They were still closed as she rose up and got down towards the brief landing steps to the indoor well her grandfather had dug six decades ago. She scratched her bum, having not the will to open her eyes yet. Still trying to squeeze in some extra seconds nestled in sleepy darkness. Maelle would just stand there in front of the small well, working up the will to start her day.
Outside, Maden tried not to shiver as the highland breeze swooned past her, eyes assessing the damage to their plot of land. Fortunately, the beasts did not concern themselves on ruining her day this time round. Only brushed past and shattered the fence she and Maelle had erected.
Aside from the fences there seemed little to no damage to their crops. Her face remained stoic at that. but she was set at ease. She saw tot eh side and see how well her neighbors fared. She blanched at what he saw. Three times the size of their little land was the damage to their neighbors' but that was actually quite small damage to the overall five hectares of land that they owned. With that kind of yield, Maden and Maelle would be set for two winters with aplenty of spare.
Plenty enough to finance a pilgrimage to the flat lands and resettle there.
They were destitute even by these standards of the reclusive highland folks.
Maden wished to bring her sister to the buster and progress of the lowlands. She had wished to be done so for so long now. Her parents, Gods and goddesses rest their soul, had lived and died tilling this very earth, as poor as the dirt they tilled, to the day each dropped dead on the very field Maden stood on.
She feared of suffering such a fate, having heard of tales of far prosperous places, places which suffered no nightly onslaught of beasts and monsters. Of rich and fertile soil that need no constant backbreaking toil.
And yet she had never made it out of the village in hundred strides elsewhere. Travelling on foot alone was difficult and dangerous. The realm was in turmoil as war was waged from the lowest fiends to the mightiest of lords.
The best thing for common folk like her to do was stay still and wait for things to settle. But for how long she wonders?
They weren't getting any younger. She was to be twenty-eight this year. While her sister was in her twenty fourth summer. No man in the village would ever ask their hand in marriage. Who would do so in the right mind? They were among the poorest in the entire village, surviving only on their meager crops and the generosity of their neighbors. To start a family with such conditions was an absolute nightmare.
Maden shook her self away from her thoughts, took a deep breath, and start working.
Won't be long now, she'd have a fortune enough to buy her and Maelle out of this backwater. Their land might have been small and not as fertile as the rest but in these difficult conditions her family had strived to survive, pursuing different crops and livestock.
Her first and foremost were the hens. So long as the hens could make it, all would be well.
She strode to the makeshift coop; it was a crude contraption but strong enough not to be destroyed by the larger beasts.
It was the putrid stench that caught her attention first. Every native of the highlands knows of that accursed smell. Her blood boiled at scent. Her dreams would not be dashed by some rabid cat from hell!
Maden drew her woodchopper from its wood sheath. First, she checked if the hens were okay, she peeked through the holes. The subdued clucking of the hens and the bobbing of their heads proved they are still alive, afraid but alive.
She checked the dark space beneath the coop and was beholden by the sight of the hellcat's orbs.
Maden threw rocks, pouring her rage into each throw. The coop rumbled beneath but the hellcat did not move.
She'd be damned if she let the damn feline live! If only she had a spear or - -
A spear! She was going to give those soldiers a piece of her mind!
*-*-*
Sixty beats of the heart.
That was all it ever took, thought Will.
Felt almost a lifetime in those sixty beats.