10/9/13

The Unlucky Traveler Part 1 - A Nocture Short Story

The Unlucky Traveler 
Part 1


The road ended several feet ahead, just before the towering trees of the Silent Woods. A sign stood where the road faded from dirt to grass, warning away travelers with a skull. There were words on the sign as well, but Hodge could not read them.

Hodge was breathing heavily from all the running. He wet his lips with his tongue and stared deep into the shadows under the trees. It was mad, he knew, but with the King's men not far behind him Hodge would far rather risk what doom awaited him in the woods.

The world knew that few returned from the Silent Woods, and those that did came away from their journey's with broken minds or missing their memories. But the life of a thief was not an easy one, and Hodge fancied himself up to the challenge. He knew that on the other side of the woods and up the west side of the valley sat the border to the merchant's republic and all of its riches.

He hardly had time to catch his breath when the sounds of hooves and shouts echoed down the hill behind him. Hodge ran a bony hand through his midnight hair and tied his belt tighter around his waist. Then he sprinted into the shadows and away from certain death by the headsman's ax. He did not stop again until the sun had set and the moon shone full and bright in the sky.

Hodge nearly collapsed between the roots of an ancient tree and rested, his long legs burning and his breath short once more. Once his breathing slowed to normal he pulled a ration of salt pork from his pouch and ate. As he chewed his ill gotten dinner he began to take in the environment around him.

These woods had earned the name well, for Hodge could hear nothing but the sounds of his own making. The moon's light seemed to drain the world of color wherever it fell and the shadows became all the darker for it. The silence too made Hodge uneasy. He felt as though he were sitting amongst the scenery of a charcoal drawing. He finished his ration and felt the hair on the back of his neck stand on end, and for a moment he sat stock still.

Out of the corner of his eye Hodge could see movement, but when he turned slowly to look nothing appeared. A feeling of dread came over him and he stood cautiously, trying in vain to shake off the wave of gooseflesh that prickled his skin.

He decided to start moving again, hoping that the more ground he put behind him the better he would feel. He felt no fear of pursuit by the King's men as they would presume him dead by now, or worse. The thought did little to comfort him as he pressed onward.

He tried his best to stay out of the deep shadows, fearful of what may lurk there unseen. Perhaps if he had not needed to flee the kingdom so hastily he could have pilfered a lantern to light his way. His course meandered back and forth through the trees and made for slow progress. Hodge prided himself on his sense of direction, but even so it was difficult to keep his bearings straight here in the woods and he struggled to stay westward.

Ahead of him he began to see flashes of light through the trees and at first he thought the King might have ordered his men into the forest after him. He shook his head – if that were the case he would hear the sounds of men shouting, but the woods were silent as ever. Hodge also knew that he would not make the other edge of the woods before dawn and the nearest town was nearly another day's walk from there.

As he navigated around a steep drop in the terrain he began to remember the stories he would hear about the woods. Some said that fearsome and terrible creatures roamed the woods by night seeking unwary travelers for their supper. Others would tell that people would enter the woods despite warnings and disappear forever, and those that did return would have no memory of their time there or worse have gone completely out of their heads.

Hodge gripped his tattered cloak a bit tighter at that thought. Could a forest truly drive a man crazy? He didn't know and hoped he would not have to find out. Even if he was confident in his abilities, could he really avoid such a fate?

He shook his head to clear it of such rubbish and focused again on the rough terrain ahead, stopping to get his bearings. Looking around he found himself standing across a small path of sorts that lead northward. He pondered the track wondering if it were a game trail or such. Surely it couldn't be a hunter's track, could it?

After a moment Hodge decided to follow it and see. He suspected it would lead to nothing and he could simply reorient himself west then. To his surprise the track began to widen as he followed it, with the trees becoming more sparse as he went. Not much later a steep hill loomed over him and it took him a few moments to crest it. He stopped to take a few more breaths before continuing, but his breath hitched in his throat when he saw what lie down the other side.

Below lay a town of middling size sitting at the foot of the mountains. In the town there was movement like that of any large town he had ever been to. The town was lit with an eerie pale blue-white light that put Hodge in mind of specters and ghouls.

Copyright Kevin Franks 2013