The river was a sleeping cobra. It lied across the land in smooth seductive curves, beautiful in the morning light, cool and innocuous. Yet it hid a myriad of dangers, its swift undertow being the least of Faust's concerns. Just yards around the next bend was the largest waterfall in the region; if he survived the fall he could enjoy drowning in the plunge pool as he circulated like laundry in a machine - round and round until one deteriorated. The water was icy even at this time of year since the water comes from the alpine melts as much as from the rain. Being the eldest and heaviest of the group of travelers would have to go first to secure a rope on the other side, then the others could follow knowing that if they lose their footing at least there was something to hold on to until help arrives...in the form of Faust, a dark mage. He couldn't wait. The mountains clustered together like they were cold, and under all that snow he didn't doubt they were. He imagined them to shiver under their white coats, the real cause of the avalanches perhaps. Perhaps in that rock they think in the way timeless creatures must, with no regard for time, no concept of what it must be to hurry, be anxious or sad. He'd like to think that deep in the tonnes of granite is a spirit of the earth, slumbering since the time of the dinosaurs or before. At this point he couldn't tell which of them the road will take me to, it disappears in the forest only fifty meters or so ahead. Faust only hoped that it passes though a valley between two of them rather than having to scale a peak. The journey that lay before them would be peril on peril. There was no safe way through the badlands and even if they made it through they would have to sail around the peninsula and through the hangman straights. After that the seas were poorly charted, almost no-one ever made it that far and even fewer came back. Spooky doesn't quite cover it and eerie is an understatement. In the shadow, cast by castle walls thicker than his arm was long, a chill creeps over the uncut grass. The scent of late fall is laden into those gusts that push impetuously against the sentinel stone. Every flutter of a leave catches our attention, sparks our minds to turn faster, loosening their tenuous grip to the agreed upon version of “reality.” Before we leave for the cover of the forest tree-line, walking with purpose through the dwindling light that remains, we bury a GPS chip. The radius is pitiful, but if we lay them like electronic breadcrumbs the other runaways will come, follow us to whatever is at the end of this journey. The thin ice on top of the puddles cracks under boot and the loamy scent of the air is gone. Old man winter has robbed the woods of its usual charm and replaced it with a barren beauty. The path halts at a river, each side lined with denuded trees. Their branches are whitened by last nights snowfall and reach starkly against the blue-white skyline. Frigid water tumbles over the rocky bed, briefly turning white. He trained his eyes right and left for a bridge, there is none.
Alas Faust arrived in Baska Town. After traversing many moons, he made it to the town that hosted the wondrous tournament everyone talked about and miniature fights on a daily basis. What a town.