((I'm ba-ack! And loaded with ideas!))
Ilmena rubbed her wrists together slightly, trying to get some feeling back into her hands. The soldiers had twisted the chains around her wrists far too tightly than was necessary, and now it seemed that the blood flow was cut off. Wonderful.
She could faintly see a lake ahead of them, though the water seemed to be draining swiftly, as if the bottom was a giant sponge. Shaking this thought off, thinking she must be seeing a mirage of some sort- she <i>was</i> incredibly tired, after all- Ilmena looked up at the branches of a giant tree, looking at random birds as she returned to her thoughts.
The gypsies were far behind them now; their campfire a mere dot of light in the distance. Or so she assumed, anyway: the last time she'd tried to turn her head back to see, one of the guards had grabbed her by the hair and yanked her back into position.
At first, the girl had thought she might tell them who she was, hopefully getting them to leave her alone, but then she realized that they probably wouldn't know who she was- the blocky, abstract-looking design on the front of the tunics they wore over their chainmail wasn't one she knew, so they couldn't be from Imorna. Even if they were, the servants of some new noble (or someone who'd had their sign changed recently- very recently), for all she knew, they weren't on the side of the Melyanis- after all, they didn't really seem to hold any amount of fondness for humans, did they?
Then she'd thought to get Celeste to knock her out, so that her magic would be unleashed and hopefully get rid of the guards, but as soon as she came up with this plan, she discarded it, knowing that even if the two of them were able to so much as move anything but their feet and eyes- and the feet only forward- it would be far too uncertain what would happen. For all she knew, her magic could burn down the entire forest, or harm Celeste, or- well, enough of the worrying, it was of no use now.
Giving up momentarily, Ilmena sighed and shut out everything outside of her mind- the noise of the two guards behind her talking about the women of the village their formation had passed through last week, the determined look on the soldier next to her, everything.
The water faeries of Imorna were able to harness a sort of scrying magic through meditation and trances. Most prefered to use water, but those whose connections to water were weak- such as Ilmena- prefered to simply use their mind. The most experienced of Seers could see things happening thousands of miles away- it was rumored that some could even see through the veil, into Earth. Ilmena, having been heavily surrounded by Imorna's magic most of her life, had slowly developed the very basic scrying skills-
very basic. She could only detect life around her for about ten meters- as a human with magic, her magical skills were more than humans without, obviously, but she wasn't a magical creature, and as such, she struggled with much of the magic that came freely or without much trouble to faeries.
Straining to concentrate, to ignore her aching wrists, Ilmena reached deep within her mind and imagined herself pulling a thin wire of silvery-gold magic out from the tangled mess in some abyss of her brain. Holding it firmly, she let the magic course through her, waiting until she felt her eyes begin to itch slightly. With that, she let go of the magic and squeezed her eyes tightly shut.
There! Slowly, but surely, oblong dots of light lit up around her. It was as if she had a bird's-eye view, seeing every living being within her Sight's short range.
There she was, trudging along clumsily, eyes closed. The guards behind her were still looking quite bored, a family of foxes was curled up, sleeping, in their den, off to the side and someone up in a tree next to them was carefully aiming an arrow at the group while another someone sat next to them, blazing with blue-green water magic that was about to be released in one fast burst.
Ilmena's eyes shot open as she swore loudly. Ignoring the soldier in front of her as he tried to slap her, she ducked under his hand and grabbed Celeste's sleeve as she threw herself to the side- under the tree, which, though she knew wasn't the brightest idea, seemed to be a good plan, as the other side of the trail she couldn't get to; two of the guards were standing there, holding very, very sharp swords. And she couldn't actually run; her ankles were chained together, as well.
Praying silently to all the magical Gods she could think of, the redhead huddled under the tree, hoping against hope that these attackers were friendly towards humans.
((Well, I had to move the plot along somehow. Having your character walk along a road in silence while contemplating how much her wrists hurt becomes quite boring. And my head is about to explode with plot bunnies, so I needed to set some free.
Free the bunnies!))
can't find the sig from this set, so instead, you get a
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