Part the One-Hundred Sixth
In which: the party talks with the animals, walks with the animals…
It’s four days travel to the bottom of the valley. Well, four days travel if you travel with people who have to move on foot.
Kirara, in swallow form, soars.
The conifers are green, the other birds are friendly, and every moment she’s filled with… a sense of well-being that she can’t quite explain, not even to Annika. Is it her fault if she sometimes goes out of range of their empathic link? No. Besides…
“Nothing’s going to happen! It’s safe here…”
“You don’t know that, the other birds—”
“Are friendly. I told you.”
“But they could be big birds, and you’re small. We talked about this. I want you to tell me when you’re going far away…”
Lira listens to Kiara and Annika having another one of their “discussions” and absently pats Euro on the head.
Heh, birds. You know why they call them “bird brains,” right Boss?
However, in spite of Kiara’s extensive aerial reconnaissance, she is unable to locate any sign of human habitation anywhere in the Valley.
After the party’s third day tamping aimlessly down towards the river, Anvil decides to ask one of the locals they have encountered.
###
“Good squirrel,” Anvil begins, having just finished casting speak with animals, “do you know where we can find the archmage of this valley?”
The squirrel he finds—lately in the midst of scampering up a tree—seems rather surprised to be addressed.
It blinks several times. “Me?” it asks.
“No,” says Anvil, “not you. It would be a person, like one of us, but who lives in this valley.”
“People animals,” the squirrel says, perhaps for clarification.
“If you like,” Anvil agrees, rather magnanimously.
“I’ve seen people animals near my tree.”
“When?” Anvil asks, “recently?”
The squirrel stops to think about it for a minute. “It was during nut season.”
“Is it nut season now?”
Squirrel facial expressions are very difficult to read, if one is not a squirrel, but it seems pretty clear that this squirrel is wondering if Anvil is a little dense. “No.”
Anvil shrugs. “Can you take us to your tree anyway?”
The squirrel squints at him. “How do I know you won’t steal my nuts?”
“I have no interest in your nuts,” Anvil assures the squirrel solemnly.
The squirrel does not seem completely satisfied. “I will take you near my tree,” he agrees finally.
“Thank you.”
It is several more hours of walking to reach the vicinity of the squirrel’s tree, during which time (naturally) the duration on Anvil’s spell expires. When the squirrel stops and chitters at them, Anvil takes it to mean that they have arrived. Unable to thank the squirrel properly, Anvil attempts to explain slowly and loudly in common that the squirrel should return the following day, when he will be able to speak to it again.
The squirrel goes off. Although Eva is still by no means a wilderness expert, she somehow doesn’t think it will take Anvil up on his offer.
After looking around the grove of oak trees and finding no signs of recent human presence, Lira asks the obvious question:
“So, what do we do now?”
“We must wait until tomorrow, at which time I will again consult with the squirrel,” Anvil replies.
Kiara tugs urgently on Annika’s sleeve. “…but it’s a good idea. I’ll find a bird, and ask it where the people animals are.”
Annika rolls her eyes, “I thought we talked about this—“
“I won’t have to go far. Look, there’s a sparrow right there.” Kiara points to a small bird perched far above their heads. “See? And it’s little.”
Annika eventually relents, and Kiara shifts to swallow form and takes wing.
Once in the air, Kiara sees that there are in fact several birds that easily fall into even Annika’s definition of “close by.” However, the sparrow does seem the most gregarious-looking, and Kiara flutters down beside him. “Hello,” she says in bird.
“Hello,” the sparrow twitters back.
“Are there any people in this valley?” she asks.
“Sure,” the sparrow replies, nodding to the party.
“Yeah… I mean, besides them. A squirrel told Anvil that there were people animals that lived here, but it only knew it had seen them around his tree during nut season, and this isn’t nut season, so we kind of need to know where they are now.”
“Squirrels are dumb,” the sparrow opines.
“Yeah,” Kiara sighs in the way that only a swallow who is sometimes a human can. “Can you help me?”
The sparrow hops a bit, “Oh sure. I can take you to where the people animals live right now.” And he flies off.
With a quick thought to Annika, Kiara takes to the air and follows, a shouted, “Be careful!” floating behind her on the breeze.
###
After flying for a bit, and crossing the river that runs through the center of the valley, the sparrow stops on the top of a tall tree. Kiara settles beside him. “Why are we stopping?” she asks, “There are no people animals here.”
“Wait here,” he tells her. “I need to ask if the people animals want me to bring you the rest of the way.”
“Okay,” Kiara replies. “Tell them that it’s really important and we need to talk to them.”
The sparrow nods and takes off again. Kiara stays in swallow form, eating a few mosquitoes while she waits. Presently, the sparrow returns.
“You need to go back to your people animals now. The Mistress of the Valley doesn’t want to see them.”
“But she has to!” Kiara protests, her words nearly tumbling over each other in their rush to get out of her beak. “We’ve come a long way to see her, and we have an invitation to deliver, and a big rock, and even though Anvil says it’s not evil, it’s magic and weird and Annika has never seen anything like it and she knows about all kinds of magic stuff, and it’s dangerous because it made spines grow out of Anvil’s back, so she has to see us. Go back and tell her that!”
The sparrow blinks rapidly.
“I will tell her about your dangerous rock,” he says at last, slowly.
“The invitation too!” she calls after him. “The invitation is really the important part…”
###
Near sunset, the party is pitching their tents when Kiara and a sparrow come swooping into camp. Kiara twitters at the sparrow for a few moments, and then, once he has left, shifts back into her human form.
“We don’t have to look anymore! The sparrow said someone would find us.”
However, by morning, nothing has happened.
Following discussion over breakfast, the party decides to find a ford and cross the river to wait by the tree where Kiara waited the day before, to save time on the journey and in case there has been any confusion.
The morning is spent backtracking upstream to a passable ford, then heading back downstream to the tree. They make camp again in the afternoon, and settle in to wait.
The day passes uneventfully. So does the night. So does the next morning.
###
Lira is just prestidigitating the last of the breakfast dishes when a woman emerges from the woods.
She is tall, with long, curling dark hair that falls around her shoulders, and she walks with a sensuous grace. Her dress is clearly not of the Sovereign style, nor of any other style the party members are familiar with. Although Thatch notes that he wouldn’t mind traveling someplace where all the women dressed like that.
She takes in the group with an ironic smile and the barest disapproving click of her tongue.
“You were told to stay where you were, and someone would come to escort you. It really isn’t polite to intrude where you’re not wanted.”