Gaspar stopped in his tracks, eyes darting across the path, twisting to look back behind them. His nerves had run high since those screams back at James’-- his heart hadn’t stopped racing, and he thought – he’d thought, moments ago, the night air was fine. Better than being cooped up, better than waiting. He’d wanted to get away from the noise, and the light, and the glazed-over eyes, the magic saturating the village. Barrelling into the woods, putting this to rest, it would be better.
He was wrong.
His skin was crawling, now, and the sounds of everything – Wyr’asa’s clothes, Bone Dog’s paws, Isaac’s grumbling – felt too loud, too close, too dangerous. His own breath, which he held down upon realizing it – would draw anything towards them, and within seconds of stepping into that fog – no, not even seconds – they weren’t alone.
He froze. He hadn’t even taken a step, but his body tensed further, he held himself stiller, and as the others walked ahead, unaware, he opened his mouth to call them back, and the words died in his throat, clamming up with fear – not fear. He wasn’t frightened, he was being careful. If they wanted to make noise, get themselves killed, then – then he couldn’t stop them.
They weren’t alone. Shapes danced on the edges of his vision, but they were only shadows. It didn’t matter. He knew they were there. Rustling. Steps. They were idiots. He swore, silently, again and again, as the others drew further and further away, unthinking, unhearing.
He couldn’t keep holding his breath, and the mist swirled around his nostrils, more like smoke, a fucking signal to anyone who’d come looking, and when he finally, finally peeled one foot off the ground, the dense fog shifted, clinging damp to his skin and clothes but leaving a tell-tale wake roiling behind. There was no way out.
Whispers began to fall. From a distance, the edge of the woods, then coupled with the rustling of leaves and branches, heavy weight of bodies who didn’t care to be stealthy. Not far. Not here, not on him, not yet, but soon. Inevitable.
“DeSaul, yeah, he came this way. Can’t hide those fuckin’ tracks.” Rough, blunt, drawling and familiar.
“You’ll spot him, un-fuckin’-mistakeable.” Soft hiss, punctuated consonants, no footsteps to match; uncannily silent.
“You think he knows where we left his ‘friend’? Come looking?” High, curious, playful rasp, loudest boots of all.
“As if he’ll be able to move a muscle. Like a rabbit, y’know. Just freezes. Rabbits aren’t near seven foot and orange, though, are they?” Sneering, slow, gait loping and uneven. He knew them all.
Isaac and Wyr’asa were almost distant enough to be lost in the trees, and it was a few seconds of staring after the shapes they left in the fog that he realized it. A few seconds later, they were lost, and so was he, forest and fog swallowing him up.
He could run after them. Try to keep them safe, try to outrun – them, who should be anywhere but here. They should be in Herringbone, or on the road, or– dead. Were they dead? He thought -and it was his fault – but he couldn’t be sure, and he couldn’t move. He’d bring them down on him, the second he moved, spoke, breathed.
There were more. All swarming, just out of sight. He knew them all. He knew they were there. No more voices, nothing but rustling, but footsteps and breathing and patterns he knew a million times over. Just beyond that tree, just ducked down behind the bushes, someone crouching in the leaf litter. Some waiting, some circling, some still searching.
He could draw his stolen glaive; he could drink a vial and tear into them, kill them- he wasn’t helpless. He patted at his coat, quietly, trembling.. He had his things, he hadn’t…dropped them, or forgotten them. But he couldn’t use them. All of it would just draw more. He didn’t know how many more. Anyone. Everyone. There wouldn’t be an end, not when there were too many with reason – and too many without. Just a glimpse was all they needed to make up their minds, to decide on their quarry.
It was always him, and he knew why; and they all would, too, even strangers, people he’d passed once on the street, shopkeepers he’d traded coin with, city guardsmen and farmers. Word spread fast, and where word didn’t spread, they’d see it plain on his face, make up their minds, remember him, chase him, find him.
He was crouching, and he didn’t know when he’d done that, hoping the fog would provide some cover; the mud seeping between his talons, coat dragging, heart itself betraying him to every soul in these woods with how loud it beat at his chest, almost tearing free entirely, when he looked up, and met directly a pair of blue glassy eyes on a face pallid and slack, heard wordless whispers of derision and rage. His name cutting through the murmur, and –
“Gaspar? Wyr’asa? What’d….what happened, did you guys see something?”
They were back, beside him. He was standing upright. Whispering died back, only to nag in the quietest corner of his mind.
The forest was still cold.