Tranquil Fury (10 page)

Read Tranquil Fury Online

Authors: P.G. Thomas

Zack turned to Ryan, “Dude, did I just see somebody die?” Ryan nodded. Zack nodded his head towards the elves, “The little Indians with the bows and arrows, what are they wearing on the side of their heads?”

Ryan whispered to Zack, “I think they are elves, not Indians. And those are their ears.”

“So the cavalry Dudes aren’t going to rush in then?” Ryan shook his head. “Good, I always hated how they killed the Indians.” Zack pointed to the two black-clad figures that Alron was examining, “Twiddle Dee and Twiddle Dead, lying on the ground over there. Have you seen them before in this wonderland?” Ryan shook his head.

Logan looked at the pool of blood forming around the two black-clad bodies, “This is getting way too real.”

Lauren interrupted their conversation when she returned several minutes later with the elves and two full water skins. At the same time, Panry Moonshadow emerged from the woods with six large male deer, which had saddles, and packs on their backs, each with a huge rack of impressive antlers. Lauren jumped onto the wagon seat beside Mirtza and Eric, “Please, let us continue.”

Cethail Highbreeze and Erust Huntinghawk leaped onto the back of their stags, and started back down the path. Alron Icefeather looked at Babartin and Careel Dawnfalcon, who nodded. Then Alron Icefeather and Panry Moonshadow rode beside the wagon, and before anybody could ask, Alron said, “Shortly Dawnfalcons does follow.”

As they were riding along John asked Lauren, “Is it alright if I examine your arm? I want to make sure you are not injured.”

“I am fine,” she replied.

 “Please? I would feel better if I could see it for myself.”

 “Fine, have a look.” John moved to the other side of the wagon, where she had her arm outstretched. There was no blood, yet her jacket had received a clean cut, and as he was feeling where the injury should have been, he felt strange leaves under the outer fabric of her jacket.

She pulled her arm back, “Satisfied?”

John just nodded his head, and then noticed that the elf clothes were no longer the multi-camouflaged color, and instead they were now a solid deep green. 

They travelled along the forest paths and roads for many hours, and when they stopped to make camp, Lauren handed Ryan and Zack each a water skin. “Drink half, and use the other half to wash your wounds.” Lauren once again, did not join them for their meal, nor did she say anything else that night. She took a blanket, made her bed at the end of the wagon, and the elves made their own camp, avoiding the others.

The odd behavior and distance that Lauren had created, coupled with the secrecy of the elves, had put the others on edge. Mirtza went up to tend the oxen, while Eric retrieved the chests, and John laid out the bedrolls. Logan began gathering firewood, and Zack and Ryan moved up to the front seat of the wagon, as far away from Lauren as possible. As he worked, Logan kept thinking about the covered forest, and the weird stone benches. A dozen times that day, he had checked his arms for the strange tattoos, but found nothing. As he finished stacking the firewood, he checked his arms again, and as he stood, he did not see the kindling begin to smoke. By the time Mirtza went to pull out the pots and pans from the chest, a fire was already blazing, and he thought Logan had used Zack’s lighter. Mirtza prepared the meal in quiet, not because he asked for it, but because everybody was trying to figure out what was happening. 

After they ate, Eric spoke first, “Mirtza, what is happening? What is up with Lauren? The elves? Who were those two that tried to kill Lauren?”

Mirtza held up his hand, “Those are easy questions to answer.” He reached into his pocket, mimicked pulling something out. “What I hold in my hand is a very special book, as it has all of the answers to every question in the universe. I will give it to you so you can look up the answers yourself.” He leaned over to Eric with his hand outstretched.

Eric tried to grab the book, but there was nothing there, and gave Mirtza a dirty look, “What's wrong with you?”

 “Eric, I wish it were that simple. It appears that Lauren is receiving guidance from an unknown force, and I have heard her speak, as you have. It is not the distrusting little girl, with the timid voice that I met a few days ago. I have looked into those eyes, and they are not the eyes of a little girl. That staff she holds, there is something special about it. There is an order or sect here, they really do not have a name, and I do not know much about them, but they get direction from one called Mother.” Mirtza picked up a handful of earth and let it fall back to the ground, “As I understand it, this is Mother, but Mother is more than the ground you walk upon. She is some sort of divine knowledge or presence. Those who receive the gift from Mother, they are known as Earth Daughters and Earth Mothers. Maybe this is how Mother talks to those chosen, but in truth, I do not know how this communication works, have never met one, and have only heard about them in school. My best guess, that strange staff is somehow connecting young Lauren to Mother. Mother, in turn, is guiding her, and giving her knowledge that is beyond Lauren. That staff is three different trees, but I think one is Ironwood. That sword strike should have broken the staff in two, and she should be dead. When she used it as a weapon and hit her assailant, it should have broken, but she broke her opponent in two.”

John spoke up, “Inside her jacket, where the sword hit her, there were leaves. How could leafs stop a sword?”

“I do not need the book Eric ignores to answer that one, as they would have been Ironwood leaves. There was one back at the covered forest, where I found her, but I did not think it was possible to pick those leaves.” He then went on to tell them about the rip in the tarp, how the forest was growing at her little camp. How he thought the tarp was magic, and that when she caused it to rip with her strange staff, it reacted like the magic spell he had heard. He also proposed that was the reason for the riders, “As for the well, the song she sang, her eyes, the strange voice that she speaks. I think it all comes from the staff, though I do not know how. I don’t know why the riders stopped chasing us, and I have no idea what will happen next.” Mirtza went over and offered to help Ryan wash his wounds, who gladly accepted. Mirtza smelled the water and poured some into his hand, “It looks like water.” He then gave Ryan and Zack a mug, “Drink up boys.”

Ryan pulled his shirt and pants off, and Mirtza looked at all of the scars, old and new, “Is this customary in your culture?”

“No, I was involved in a bad accident. It seems that they were able to put me back together, after I fell off the wall.”

 “If I were you, I would avoid walls.”

John noticed that Ryan was healing extremely fast, as seven days ago he could only walk a few feet. Two days ago, he could stand on his own, but not walk any distances unassisted. Today you would never know he once relied on a wheelchair. The same with Zack, two days ago, extensive burns caused him great discomfort every time he moved, but now he was walking without any pain. John was confused about all of this, but he was more concerned about what was happening with Lauren. As for the elves, that completely corrupted any logical explanation he could think of.

As Ryan got dressed, Mirtza asked Zack if he would like some help, but Zack declined, as he did not want anybody to see the hairy growths that were spreading over his body. As they had been riding along in the wagon, he had continued to pick at the plastic, and the last of it had all fallen off the day before. Zack slipped away into the forest when nobody was looking, and found a private spot to remove his clothes. While the open wounds had scabbed over, furs covered almost his entire abdomen now, and the feathers on his back were a real, well a real pain in the back. He tried to pull them out again, but they would not let go of their grip. As he washed the furs, feathers, and snake-skin on his shoulder, he hoped the water was truly ‘magic,’ and that he would soon be able to pick the strange skins off, as easily as he had picked off the melted plastic. And as he drank the water, he hoped it would drown the strange dreams he was now experiencing.

Alron came over after they were done their meal, and advised they would stand guard, so the six found a spot to sleep, and went to bed, as Lauren was already fast asleep.

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Morning came and both camps prepared and consumed a meal in quiet. Alron came over to them, “Henceforth, mine men shalt take front guard, and two will follow behind as rear guard. Thou shalt travel with us to our home, five days from here.” Throughout the days travel each one would cast a glance at Lauren, hoping she would acknowledge them, tell them what she knew. But the entire trip Lauren just stared into the forest, never once looking at her traveling companions. The silence was driving the six of them crazy, but between Lauren and the elves, silence seemed to be the best course.

That night, Logan once again gathered the firewood. His forearms had been sore all day, and gathering the wood gave him purpose. Once again, everyone was preoccupied when Logan was stacking the wood, and nobody realized that as he turned his back, that the embers where smoldering, quickly igniting into a blazing fire.

John stayed up late that night, his mind racing with all of the assorted puzzle pieces: the strange forest, magic, the healing, elves, Lauren’s peculiar behavior, and there did not seem to be any logical connection between them. It was as if somebody had put an assortment of puzzle pieces into one box, and had given it to him. As he tried to link the fragments, he gazed at the stars above, seeing a large, bright half-moon in the dark overhead skies. As he watched it, he was surprised to see a meteorite was orbiting it, actually three. Over the hour as he glanced at it, he saw three large, elongated asteroids leave the dark shadow, and traverse across the reflected light from the three suns, and as it got later, a display similar to the Earth’s Northern Lights began to put on a show. It grew in intensity and brightness, greatly exceeding anything he had watched on his computer at home, and eventually, his eyes closed and sleep calmed his racing mind.

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The next three days were the same. Breakfast, travel, lunch, more travel, supper, sleep. By the fourth night, everybody had fallen into the same routine, except tonight, Mirtza saw Logan place the last of the wood above the kindling, but before Logan stood up, Mirtza saw the freshly kindled flames start to lick the dry sticks above it. He was just about to approach Logan, to find out where he had gathered the wood, thinking it had some sort of magical property, when Lauren tapped him on the shoulder.

 “Mirtza, I owe you an apology. I have not been myself lately, and if it were not for your help, we would surely be dead by now. You have been a great assistance to us, and I would like to thank you for all that you have done. I really don’t know what is happening, but I have a feeling, that for now everything is going to be fine.”

He looked at her, “No apology is required, but thank you all the same.” W
hat have I gotten myself mixed into?

That night, Mirtza was able to coax Lauren to join them for the meal by making two pots of tea. In the first, he placed a large quantity of tea, hoping that the exaggerated aroma would get Lauren’s attention, while the second contained the proper amount of tea. As the uneasy quiet began to creep up on them, Mirtza regaled his new friends with stories about growing roots and raising pigs. While the conversation was not as brilliant as the stars above, it was better than the deafening silence, and it almost seemed like a regular night of camping, except for everyone’s overall confusion.

It was late into the night, and John was lying awake still looking at the light show in the sky, when Lauren walked over, and kneeled beside him, “John, what is happening?”

John was surprised at both Lauren’s appearance and her question, “What do you mean?”

 “Don’t play stupid with me, crap is happening. Crap that seems to have me stuck in the middle. One day I am a simple schoolgirl, and the next, I wake up in a strange freaking world. Some stranger picks us up, drops us off in a dying forest, and then I am healing Ryan and Zack. I know things, things that I shouldn’t know. And there are times where it feels like I am looking through somebody else’s eyes.”

Lauren’s distress managed to push the sleep to the back of John’s mind, “Let’s walk. It helps me think.” They started walking down the road when Alron Icefeather, dressed in black, stepped out from behind a tree. While John stopped, Lauren kept walking, but as John passed Alron, he heard a whistle, and had a strange sensation that Alron followed them. Lauren reached into her coat pocket, pulled out a berry, which she crushed onto the head of her staff, creating a soft blue light that led their way.

 “John, I have killed.”

“I know. I was there.”

 “There were others. That dust cloud that followed us from the covered forest. I asked the forest to kill them.”

 “What do you mean?”

 “I don’t know why, but that song. I asked the trees to stop those that followed us. Somehow, the trees set a trap for them, and I am pretty sure they killed them.”

 “How do you know that?”

 “Haven’t you been listening, I don’t know how I know these things, I just do. John, am I evil? Is that why those men were trying to kill me?”

 “Lauren, I have only known you for three years. I don’t think you have an evil bone in your body. They attacked you, and you simply defended yourself. Those elves killed the second.”

 “What about those that chased us, they could have been sent to help us? Or to kill me?”

 “There is a lot of strange events happening, much of it I cannot explain. Actually, there is nothing that I can. How do you feel inside, deep in your heart? Or gut?”

 “I think we are supposed to be here John. I don’t think our arrival was an accident.” In the dark, John never saw her pupils dilate into large dark circles, only heard the change in her voice, “Now I hath bothered thou enough for one night. Let us return from where we came. Morrow shalt be a long day, much sleep thou wilt need.” With that, Lauren turned on her heels, headed back to the camp, moving so quickly, she caught John unprepared, and left him standing alone in the dark.

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