Xaine walked quietly through the mist. Every now and again he had to
stop to look for the faded tracks of the boar he had been hunting. The
tracks had led him far from the road. It didn’t bother him, as he knew
almost every tree in the surrounding forest. Still something unsettled him.
The trees seemed more malevolent than usual, as if they had a desire to
consume him. He shivered. The mist grew thicker as he neared the
mountains. By his calculations, it was midday, and he still hadn’t found
the boar’s more recent tracks. The tracks he was following were still over a day old.
Time seemed to drag on as he carefully maneuvered through the forest. The roots
were so twisted and gnarled, he imagined the trees were trying to
create a labyrinth. Still, he was making good time, as the tracks seemed to be
getting more fresh the further he walked. He determined he was less than an
hour from the boar’s current position. He quietly pulled an arrow from his quiver
and strung his bow.
Judging his steps more carefully, he tried to make the least amount of noise as
possible. The boar was near. His blood started to rush, his adrenaline pumping.
This was what he loved, hunting in a forbidden forest with predators all around.
Then it hit him. He hadn’t noticed any predators at all. Normally when he came
to the forest, he crossed paths with at least one. There was supposed to be an
unusual increase in predatory animals, but instead, there were none.
He stopped walking now. Standing still, he slowed his breathing until he could
barely hear himself. Then, he listened close to the surrounding forest. It was quiet.
Not even the insects made any noise. He realized his mistake, and bounded into a
bush, crouching as low as possible. He heard a creature, rasping in it’s breathing.
It’s breathing sounded like a rattle, and it was close. He moved his head as close
to the edge of the bush as he dared, and was startled to see the cloaked figure
he thought he had imagined before entering the forest.
It was in the clearing near him, which was still a few hundred feet from him, but
he could still smell the decay coming from it. It was hunched over a large mound.
Upon a longer inspection, he realized it was the boar he had been tracking. The
creature placed both it’s hands on the boar, and ripped the body in two. Xaine
watched in disgust as it started feeding on the corpse.
Xaine felt it now. A deep, ancient and powerful fear. Whatever this creature was, it
wasn’t anything he could handle. He started to back up, but stepped on a twig.
The snap echoed throughout the forest, like a drum in an empty room. The creature
stood up faster than he eyes could follow, and looked right at him. Fear held him in
place as the creature walked slowly at him. Xaine cried out in fear and with a strong
push of effort, threw himself out of the bush and ran as fast as he could.
He bounded through the forest, crashing through bushes and snapping sticks with
his face as he ran through the tree branches. He already had several cuts on his
face, one which hurt him terrible. He tripped over a rock, spraining his ankle and bruising
his elbow. He got back up continued his desperate effort to escape. Seconds seemed to
stretch into hours as his legs burned with frustration. As he entered a clearing, he
stopped to catch his breath. He turned around panting. It hadn’t followed him. When
he turned around, he was face to face with the cloaked figure. It was standing in the
center of the clearing, as silent as a tree. In one of it’s pale hands it had a sword.
The blade was black, and longer than Xaine’s arm. It was then that Xaine realized
the creature was smaller than him. It pierced his mind, it’s voice filling his every
thought and memory. It was ancient, and evil. He was frozen in place as it walked
closer to him
Xaine realized he was crying, the torment of the creature inside his mind piercing him like
a blade. Then the creature lunged, so quick, it seemed to teleport. It grabbed him by the
throat and slammed him into the ground, causing the ground nearby to explode with a
frenzy of stone and dirt. He heard the creature say something in a foul whisper, and
Xaine gasped as the sword was driven into his abdomen. He felt it slide through his
body and out his back. He heard the point pierce a stone and crack it in half as it
went into the ground below him.
The creature then stood, as if sensing something near it. Then it hissed and bounded
into the forest from which it came. Xaine’s breaths came in short bursts, and he felt
himself losing consciousness with every moment. He felt it then. Peace. An everlasting
sleep in which he could spend eternity, never to have another worry. He relaxed and
stared at the sky. The Mist had swirled around the clearing, like the inside of a hurricane.
The dirt from the ground hung in the air, creating a fog that hovered right above the ground.
As his eyes closed, he watched the trees close in around him, a faint whisper in his ear, and
then he knew no more.