Finally! I hope the long wait is worth it with this one. Any kind of comments and any kind of rating is welcome. Or more like...
Please comment, please rate. It's a very potent motivator. Your feedback is the water that nourishes the small, parched sapling that is my writing skill.
Also, thank you so much once again Janet, for the editing help. I hope you guys like it. Enjoy!
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Early morning mist still blanketed the ancient forest as Aaron huddled over the remains of last night's fire. He'd arranged kindling and twigs above the struggling embers, and was in the process of coaxing them back into a hearty blaze by carefully blowing on them. He was hunched over, his hands to the earth, his body close to the ground and his lungs heaving in measured breaths as the hot glow of the remaining embers bloomed and caught the dry fuel around them. The fire took readily, and after a few moments his cold skin was already tingling with the expectation of warmth. The young man sat back up, satisfied with his efforts.
Aaron positioned himself cross-legged by the blaze, and lazily soaked in the nourishing heat. His eyes stung slightly from the vague remembrance of sleep. His stomach growled loudly. He had to smile at the sensation.
He'd been taking being alive a little bit more graciously, ever since the run'an.
It's been three days since Aaron and his little group shivered an inch away from death on the shore of a deadly river, spat out from a legendary wall of plants after being terrorized by evil, unknown creatures of a deep, dark hole on the ground. The young man had thought about the recent events quite a lot. It had been so easy to die. If he'd put his foot wrong at the right moment, or if he tripped on something, slid on something, fallen at the wrong angle while they were being power-tumbled away by the plants, then it could have resulted in his death. Just like
that
. A snap of the fingers. Like snuffing out a candle. He was only alive because of an incredible string of luck.
Aaron shivered despite being warm.
Not only has he been unnaturally lucky, but he has also been blessed with companions that were astonishingly capable. Serche with her versatile magic, Trasnu with his knowledge and instinct of the woods, even Lydia's simple strokes of brilliance; they all had something to contribute in keeping their skins alive. Aaron couldn't help but feel like a burden to everyone, despite supposedly being 'master' of at least two of them. Even Lydia seemed to look to him for guidance, even though the only thing he could do is stand around and follow someone else's lead.
The one thing he could feel better about was saving Serche when she fell into that huge hole. And even
that
hadn't been possible without Trasnu's help. If the stronger Rakan hunter hadn't come to his aid when he did...
Aaron shook his head. But overthinking wouldn't help anyone right now.
"Smell something bad, Master?" Aaron jumped. Trasnu was right behind him. How the old beastman moved through the forest floor without making a single sound boggles the mind. "You have that look."
He wrinkled his nose as Trasnu came to sit beside him by the fire. The old hunter brought the day's fare with him dressed and already speared with smooth, sharp sticks. It looked to be pheasant and rabbit meat yet again. Apparently, they were incredibly abundant in this forest, even though he's never seen one himself. And besides, how could these creatures even move through such dense underbrush? He tried asking Trasnu once, but the old man looked so surprised, as if the question was so obviously stupid that nobody in living history has ever asked it before. Aaron felt that the old man's view of him lessened quite a bit after that. Anyway, he just chalked all of the mystery up to the Hunter's instinct and skills - which must be really incredible, since he's been hunting with
rocks
all these time.
"You say the strangest things, sometimes."
"Hah, coming from you!" Trasnu punctuated his words with a flick of his hand, launching a circular object into the air. It caught the light of the fire and gleamed crazily. Trasnu sat down and
then
snatched the spinning object out of the air. He nonchalantly began positioning the meat close to the fire.
Aaron rolled his eyes at the display, but couldn't resist the obvious ploy to gain his attention. "Show off. What's that?"
"Which one?" Trasnu tried to act ignorant, but chuckled when he saw the boy look at him with a longsuffering expression. "
This
," He deftly rolled the object with his knuckles, and presented it in his open palm with a flourish, "Is something that we completely and absolutely forgot about. Take a look!"
With that, Trasnu tossed the object towards him, the large, flat object spinning as it arced gracefully in the air. Not quite as skillful as the Rakan beastman, he fumbled with his two hands before he managed to secure it. "
Thank
you," He glared at the grinning Trasnu.
The object was a perfectly-cut, flat circle, about an inch thick. It was unnaturally light for what should be quite hefty. The smooth edges fit perfectly within his palm. What amazed him the moment he laid his hands on it was the recognition that the object was made of - or at least incased in - glass. It glinted in the early morning sunlight, the complete reflection of the light bouncing off its surface immediately giving Aaron a nostalgic feeling. It occurred to him that it was something that he wouldn't find out of place in the modern world.
He turned it this way and that, examining the strange trinket. It looked to simply be a black circle, encased in glass.
"Turn it around." Trasnu instructed him. He flipped it.
His brain took several moments to process what he was seeing. And then he was instinctively throwing the object to the ground in surprise. It fell straight into the unsuspecting campfire, throwing up an explosion of cinders at the impact. Not even an instant later, Trasnu's inhumanly fast hand blurred towards the fire, and then the thing was back in his hands like magic.
Aaron couldn't decide on which he should be more surprised about; how Trasnu casually
snatched
the object out of its fiery resting place, or the fact that there was an honest-to-goodness