Author's note: this chapter is one of a series, and does not contain erotic elements.
-rb
10.
Realized Dreams
The camp was on fire. Except it also wasn'tāMin knew she was dreaming as soon as the blackness of sleep melted away. From above, she could spy the tents of the tribe through the thick forest canopy. There was a sound of crackling flames and snapping branches. Shifting her view, Min saw fire racing through the trees, burning faster than any natural flame, while black, shadowy figures walked amongst them.
In the other direction, Min could see a huge stone like a beast's head rising out of a great pool. From that direction she heard the sound of bears roaring, wolves howling and the screams of the dying. They were running towards that pool, Min and the people with her, but the smoke made it too hard to see whether they ever managed to reach it.
Huge bestial shapes came towards her, attacking anything that moved, friends or foesāthey were immense, covered in weeping pustules and lesions, staining their fur brown and green, same as the beast who'd attacked Min. The wolves made their stand, but they were caught on both sides like fruit in a stone pressāblood and ruined flesh stained the grass amidst the shapes of ravaged wolves and dead men and women.
The children were the worst. She couldn't look at them for more than a second or two before turning away.
Min saw herself fighting someone in the flames, but the heat was so great she couldn't even see who she fought againstāeven in her own dream, it was too hard to look into the fire for more than a moment before turning away. She saw others standing with herāIlay, her mother, other women she didn't recognizeābut Sergen was nowhere to be seen. She felt alone, a sensation so overwhelming and oppressive that her heart nearly broke.
"Yasemin!"
Min woke up with a shout and choked breath in her throat. She saw Sergen kneeling on one side of her, his hard features softened for the moment with worry; on the other side was her mother, soft and beautiful, touching her face, calling her name. Behind them stood Sait and Ilay, both looking concerned but not speaking; in all, the small tent was quite cramped for space.
"Oh, Mother!" Min threw her arms around Erden's neck and began to sob, shaking from the force of hard, heavy tears that burned in her eyes.
"Shhh, hush, darling one," Erden said, stroking her hair. "You were having another dream."
Min nodded, hiccuping, feeling embarrassed and a little sheepish. She opened one arm and slid it around Sergen's neck, ignoring the man's soft grunt of surpriseāas the lingering sense of loneliness vanished, she sighed with relief.
"A dream?" Ilay said, some intellectual curiosity in her voice.
"Yasemin's been a Dreamer practically since I taught her to speak," Erden explained, still stroking her daughter's head.
"Is that significant, somehow?" Sait said.
Erden seemed to change when she answered her mate: her tone softened, and she gave a small, shy smile. "Well, it can be. It'...humans would call it 'foresight'ācatching glimpses of What Is and What May Be. She once dreamt about a bone hairpin I'd lost weeks before; she also dreamt about the bear that attacked her at our home."
"Which is why we're all here now, I suppose," Ilay added with a faint smile.
Erden swallowed and nodded. "Yes. Min is a witch of
akuā
I'm surprised she didn't tell you."
"Oh, she did," Ilay answered, "but we haven't had an
aku
witch in the tribe since Erkin claimed meābefore you even came to us, even."
Min's tears had dried, and she suddenly felt a cold chill rush over her skin. "The camp was under attack. We were
all
under attackāthe bears were here." Min released her hold on her loved ones, rubbed her face to banish her tears, and looked at Sait and Ilay. "Are the wol... Are
we
still sending out scouts?"
Mother and son looked at each other, then back to Min. Sait nodded. "My father's had scouts out to keep watch, no matter the hour. I just returned from duty myself."
"The bears are out there, and they're getting closer," Min said. "I saw a fire in the trees, and shadowy figures walking in the flames. On the other side was..." She frowned, concentrating. "It was a rock, a huge boulder standing in a large pool. I don't know what it means."
Sergen turned his head to look at her. "Large rock? What did it look like?"
"I... It seemed pointed or peaked, but wide and flat on the top. I remember it had spurs, tooāthick pieces on either side, like animal ears."
"That's Bhalot's Basin," Sergen said, standing up. "It has a huge stone at the peak of it, atop a waterfall; the bear-men worship it as an icon of the She-Bear. I remember seeing it while traveling with my motherābelow the falls are caves where they keep their dens." He offered Min a hand, which she took without hesitation; it felt good to hold his hand, to feel the strength in his grip as he helped her stand. Together, she and Sergen helped her mother up next, then he turned to his adoptive brother. "I remember these lands. We're heading towards the Basin, aren't we, Sait?"
The Speaker pressed his lips together for a moment, crossing his arms over his chest. "We are, but I advised the Chieftain to stay far away from it; I still hold to that. Better to run anywhere else then into your enemy's waiting jaws."
"No," Min said, shaking her head, "we need to keep moving
towards
it. The fire was everywhereāwater might protect us, if we can reach it."
Sait frowned. "I'm unsure as to how wise that course would be, Yasemin. A place
named
after the She-Bear is sure to be a stronghold of theirs."
"I understand." Min nodded, reluctantly. "It was only a dream, I suppose," she added, looking at her mother's face.
Erden compressed her lips together, looking up to her mate. "It might be worth bringing it to your father, at least."
The Speaker sighed. "Alright, I will mention it to him. We won't be anywhere near the Basin for another day or so." He looked to his mother. "Maybe you can help him to understandāmagic is hardly my expertise."
Everyone turned to Ilay, who raised her hands. "I can talk to the man, but you should all know by now that Erkin does what he thinks is bestāI share the man's bed, not his brain."
"Is there any danger now, Yasemin?" Erden asked, leaning in closer, resting her forehead at her daughter's temple.
"I don't know, Mother. We could be in danger, but it doesn't
feel
like it. Not yet. I knew the children of Bhalot was coming to our home, but it was half a day or more until it appeared."
"Is there any way to sense the danger coming, Yasemin?" Sait asked.
Min hesitated, but had to shake her head again.
"Unfortunate," he said, worrying at his lip. "As I said, I'll speak to the Chieftain on thisāwe're breaking camp soon, so, if you sense anything else, make sure to speak up."