[Realms #264] The Wandering Trees
The half-orc peered into the branches above but could see nothing of his opponent. He listened and heard the clear sound of sharp claws scrabbling along rough bark. The noise came from his left and Feln was able to turn just in time to spot the creature as it ejected another ball of webbing at him from its position in the tree on his flank. The martial artist spun and dodged by instinct, but it wasn't enough, and the web fell over him like a net.
Or a shroud.
Thankfully, he had his quarterstaff in hand and the weapon acted almost like a tent pole, keeping the worst of the sticky mess off of him. He managed to toss off the web and turned to face the spider-thing just as it jumped down upon him. Bracing on his staff, Feln kicked his opponent solidly in the thigh, eliciting a yelp of pain and foiling its attempt to grapple him. It seemed to land awkwardly, but the half-orc's attempt to attack it with his staff was met with an elegant dodge, and his weapon whistled through the air without effect, over-extending him in the process.
The spider-thing seized the opportunity to slam into Feln, clearly trying to force the half-orc back into the strands of the web strung across the path. Feln tried to bring his elbow around into the creature's right eye, but the blow was too high and Feln was too off-balance to prevent the inevitable. He sagged backward into the web with the full weight of the spider-thing pressing against his chest.
Fortunately, his shirt was just loose enough that he was able to shed it with ease and slide free of the pin. He dropped down beneath the snapping bite of the creature's mandibles and rolled up behind it. His staff cracked loudly against the thing's spindly left leg and it shrieked again in pain. It scurried back up the web so quickly that Feln couldn't react, and vanished once more into the canopy above.
Once again, Feln listened and watched, but this time he neither heard nor saw anything. Hesitantly, his body quivering with anticipation of an attack, the half-orc reached out and plucked his Hat of Disguise, his shirt and the torn bit of his jacket from the sticky net. He then backed away from the water's edge, his eyes and ears alert for any sign of his foe.
There was none, however, and after he'd moved sixty or so feet from the ambush site, he turned around and resumed his course at an easy jog. He kept alert for any more webs strewn across his path.
"It certainly doesn't take us long to land ourselves in a predicament!" Ledare grumbled as she cleaned the fresh scratches to Morier's face with water from her drinking skin. "We've been here, what? An hour? And already we've been subjected to spells, random attacks from wildlife and lost one of our own."
"Yeah...," Ixin said with a look of embarrassment on her face. "About that owl attack... I think that Martivir may have suffered the effects of the same spell that got me."
"That was your familiar?" Morier asked, incredulous. Ixin nodded and the albino touched his cheek where the bird's talon had opened his flesh.
"Your owl's a feisty one, and brave to have selected Morier as his target," Ledare told Ixin with a smirk on her lips. "Let's hope we don't have to shield ourselves from him again."
"Oh, you won't. He feels just awful about doing it the first time," Ixin told the eldritch warrior and once again, Morier found himself happy that he had performed the Ritual of Independence rather than bond himself to an animal. When he'd done it, the decision was based more on defiance of his father than on careful planning, but he had yet to regret the choice. Why mages sought to dilute their personal power with what amounted in many ways to a magical parasite was beyond him.
"I hope that the owl was not hurt too badly by my Electric Jolt," Morier said.
"Just his pride, mostly," Ixin assured the elf and raised her arm above her head. Her familiar dropped noiselessly out of the sky and landed on her fist. "And Karak, you have my sincerest apologies for what happened between you and I."
The dwarf harrumphed and waved off her apology. "Regrets dwell in a candle's flicker, lassie," he said. "But I will be watchin' me back."
"I've heard of such spells before and I don't think you'll have anything more to fear from Ixin," Ledare said. "But let's be wary of these statues just the same. They may reset themselves and be capable of more mischief."
"What do we do now, Ledare?" Ixin asked as she carefully checked the burned spot on Martivir's shoulder where Morier's spell had struck him.
"We need to find my friend Feln!" Vade asserted. "Let's go back and look for him!" Ledare sighed expansively and turned to look at the halfling.
"No, we're not going to look for him!" she said sternly. "That makes no sense."
"I am not going to lose another friend!" Vade whined, stamping his little foot. Thinking of Ruze, the halfling began to cry. "I will go by myself to find him if I have to," he sniffed.
"Let's remain here a while longer, Vade," Ledare said in a softer tone. The rogue's emotional display touched her; she had lost the same friends that he had - and several more that he'd never known - and she could well understand his desire to not lose another.
"You don't find gold by licking the rock," Karak stated suddenly and everyone turned to look at him, their faces knotted in confusion.
"What?" Ledare asked in an exasperated tone.
"Ye shouldna be too hasty to dismiss the wee one, lassie. Perhaps he's right," Karak offered sagely. "In any case, I do believe we should be makin' up our minds as these statues seem to be ensorcelled. We should either go down below in the tunnel I found or go fetch your orc."
"We can't follow the secret tunnel without Feln. It would be foolish of us to follow it without somehow telling him," Ledare said flatly and Karak nodded again and stroked his voluminous beard.
"I do say, we of the dwarf clans never leave a clan brother alone," he said. "Although I also have to admit, Feln, be no dwarf. So why should I care?"
"Feln is a good person!" Vade told the dwarf, wiping tears off his cheeks with his sleeve.
"So ye say," Karak replied, hefting his axe up onto his shoulder. "And he did fight me good in hand to hand combat. I thought him a tough fighter then. I would hate to think he be outnumbered in a fight or down in a pit somewhere out there and be needin' our help."
"See?!?" Vade said to Ledare while pointing at the dwarf. "He could need our help."
"I still think it is best to wait for a while longer," Ledare explained. "Let's give it another hour."
"No! We need to go now," Vade asserted. "I hate this place! Let's go! I do not need a Fear spell to convince me to run as fast as I can away from here." Karak walked over to the halfling and put a heavy hand on Vade's shoulder.
"Why not we have Vade, here, scout just a little ahead since he be so willin'. And we go down the path looking for him," the dwarf suggested. "In the state you all ran outta here, he should have left a trail even a blind wizard could follow."
"Vade can't see in the dark," Morier reminded and Karak put a hand on his chin as he pondered. At last he turned to Ixin.
"Maybe that owl of yours, lassie, could be our eyes in the sky," the dwarf began and then his own eyes grew wide as he thought of an even better plan. "As I think of it, could that owl of yours not just go look for Feln? Then we could know what is up. Maybe, if Feln is lost, the owl can lead him back."
"That plan makes the most sense, I think," Ixin admitted. "Let's get Feln first and if we can come back and search the tunnel when the party is all together, we will. I will use Marty to scout ahead as we go, if he's willing." She asked looked at the owl and Martivir tested his wings before hooting his agreement. With a soft flutter, the bird took again to the air.
"I am not sure how long we should stay in sight of these statues," Karak added as he started after the owl. "I'll be followin' the orc's trail by ground. You lot can do as ye please."
"Marty's not having any luck finding Feln," Ixin announced after she'd spoken briefly to the owl. "He does say that there's something strange about these woods, though. He says that the trees are moving."
"Moving?" Ledare asked, confused. "Like the wind is blowing them?"
"Or like something big is moving through them?" Vade added, gulping audibly with fear and clutching Ledare's shield arm tightly.
"No," Ixin asserted. "Like they're changing position."
"The Wandering Trees!" Vade said suddenly, his voice full of excitement. "I've heard of this place! We're not too far from Haddonshire, where I was born."
"I've heard of it too," Morier added. "It's supposedly sacred to the druidic cult of Dridanis. Malcolm mentioned it a time or two over the years, but he wouldn't speak of it further."
"Supposedly the trees move around of their own accord," Vade said in his best spooky voice. Then he choked and let out a little whimper. "People get lost and never make it out again."
"Well as foolish as that all sounds, I think it might be the way o' things," Karak grumbled and got up off his hands and knees where he'd been examining the ground. "According to these tracks, your orc ran smack into this 'ere tree. Course I can't find any other sign that he did. It's like he ran straight through it. Or like the tree moved across his path after he came through."
"We'll never find him," Vade whimpered, pressing his cheek against Ledare's thigh. "The trees won't let us."
"Well, Marty also says that there's another trail that runs at cross paths to this one a little ways ahead," Ixin offered. "If these trees indeed blocked Feln's return path after he came through, he may have made it as far as the connecting trail. Maybe we could find his tracks there."
"That be a mighty big 'if', lassie," Karak grumbled as he peered off into the thicket of trees ahead.
"Trouble is, I don't think we've got much of a choice," Ledare said. "Without a return path, there's little chnnce of Feln finding his way back to us without some help."
"We can't just leave him," Vade protested.
"Nae, lad. We can't just leave 'im," Karak agreed as he bent back a branch and ventured off the narrow path. "Stick close together like. I don't want anybody else gettin' lost."
"Fly ahead and wait for us at the other path," Ixin whispered to Martivir and tossed the bird high. She was confident that she'd be able to use her connection to the owl as a sort of compass to keep them from wandering off course as they trudged in the dark through the thick underbrush.
If moving along the path had been frightening for Vade, movement straight through the forest was even worse. The trees pressed in all around them. Branches seemed to claw at them as they passed. Exposed roots sought to trip the unwary. A pervasive rustling and creaking filled the otherwise still night air. At one point, a large branch dropped suddenly from above in such a way that it fell on everyone. Only Karak and Vade managed to avoid the deadwood timber, and the others cried out in alarm as the branch bore them all to the ground. The damage to each of them was minor, but unsettling, and in the case of Morier - who had suffered greatly at the jaws of the ant swarm - enough to bring him nearly to the point of unconsciousness.
"I get the feeling we are unwanted here," the albino mused as he got unsteadily to his feet.
"The feeling is mutual," Vade whispered under his breath, fearful that the trees might somehow hear him and understand his words.
"Martivir is just up ahead," Ixin encouraged and they plowed through the clutching branches and thorny nettles to reach the intersection path.
He heard them long before he saw them, and it was a simple matter for Feln to step into the shadows as Karak and the others clawed their way out of the underbrush. The dwarf looked both ways up the path and then bent to the ground.
"His tracks head off that way," Karak said after a moment's examination. He pointed in Feln's direction.
"West," Ledare asserted after she looked the opposite direction up the path and then at the patch of sky just visible through the dense foliage overhead.
"I think it's north," Morier countered and there was another heated debate over which direction was north - or more importantly, which direction was south. As they argued, Feln stepped out of the shadows and leaned against a tree in plain sight to watch them.
Even so, it was several moments before anyone saw him. And even then it was Ixin's owl that spied him first.
"My, but you're a stealthy bunch," Feln mused with a rueful shake of his head.