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    1. Glaw 11 yrs ago

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Ahaha woo hoo! x3
August studied the girl a moment, stonily, if only to take his time with an answer. He wouldn't have answered at all, if his guards had been near him -- but while he was here alone there was no one to impress, no one to demand respect of, no one to take word back to the Queen. However Narissa hears of this, it will be grim.

"I had made it back to the Queen's hollow," he explained in a crisp voice. "The other two had ... already closed themselves in the dungeon." There was a twitch in his expression: despite his best efforts, those men were beyond hope of ever being more useful than common janitors. "I found a spirit bottle -- like the one that had broken when you arrived. I threw it into the Jockal's open mouth and it bit down. It's probably still snapping at ghosts. I think it'll forget about you before it's done, but I suggest you refrain from raising your voice."

He looked down at the cat, which remained silent. "I'll escort you back to the dungeon, where you are to await the Queen's further decision." He gestured with his head. "Walk in front. Both of you."

Dorothea paused awhile, but finally she stood up, and she turned around and padded back through the leaves toward the place they had just escaped from, her tail held high and dignified.

August glanced at the sky. It was getting darker, and he didn't have a light.
Dorothea didn't respond for awhile. She rushed ahead, almost violently tackling her way through sticks and leaves. She had to control herself. How was she to lead a country if she couldn't even lead one person -- if she broke down so completely under pressure, so that she was willing to leave an innocent life behind? What kind of a person did that make her -- how was she any better than the Marshal?

"I owe you an apology," she said quietly, even while she moved ahead. She suppressed a thousand buts -- but Sam was older than Dorothea was, but Dorothea was merely a cat, but she couldn't save someone six times her size -- because Dorothea was above criticism, because her father and Liam were counting on her to keep her head. "Please keep an eye out for danger. We need to find somewhere safe --"

She cut off when she noticed movement behind a tree just ahead. Dorothea's ears flattened, and she stopped suddenly in the leaves, but she didn't try to run away. It was clear -- painfully clear -- that running was and always had been the wrong answer. She sat down, and she raised her head high. She was royalty. She had to continue reminding herself of that.

The Marshal stepped out into their path. His armor was still gone, his sword was sheathed, his clothes were torn and spotted with blood -- he'd gotten a little too close to the Jockal's claws, but it was only a scrape. He stood quietly, and he first glared clear and steady at Sam, then lowered his eyes to the princess at his feet. He let out a breath, frowned, and shook his head. "Don't make me chase you. It's over."
"Why are you standing still!" Dorothea shrieked. She leaped off the lowest branch, sailed over Sam's shoulder and landed in a heap of dead leaves. She shuffled through them until she was able to clamber onto a fallen log, and she resisted the uncomfortable urge to lick her fur. "The Jockal or the Marshal will be back any moment, There's no time to be polite. RUN."

The princess chose the direction of the castle she'd seen from the top of the tree, and she bounded ahead, tail high. "If you are still when you should be moving as quickly as possible -- if you continue to do nothing unless you are told -- I promise I will yell until I am hoarse," she called, breathless, her voice bouncing every time her paws hit the ground. "I am in no position to help you otherwise. Yelling is the only thing I am currently capable of." She was very, very perturbed now. Not only was she a cat, far away from home, running from her own stepmother and a very dangerous man who had once been a friend, she had to somehow make sure this young woman didn't walk off a cliff. The gravity of her situation was crashing down on her, she'd nearly died several times, her friends didn't even know she was gone, her stepmother was even more horrid than she'd ever expected. She had no idea what to do or how to solve any of it, but she had to try, she had to keep going, no matter what. Dorothea needed help.

She didn't dare look behind her, even to see if Sam was following -- but the Marshal was on his way back toward the tree, making his slow way through the debris left by the Jockal.
Dorothea lighted on the branch that Sam was sitting on, and she paced urgently. "Come on, there's no time to be afraid -- you'll have plenty of time to worry once you've reached the ground." Her logic wasn't exactly flawless, but she wasn't sure what else to do. "That thing could be back any minute, and all you need to do is to get down, come on now, you can do it." Her tail swished uneasily. This was like babysitting her little cousins -- and Dorothea was never very good with children. She glanced out at the way the Jockal had gone, imagining that its toothy maw would reappear any second. She very suddenly had no desire to waste time coddling.

She stood rigid on the branch, glaring meaningfully up at Sam. "Keep your eyes open," she snapped. "Shift your weight completely onto the branch, grab it with your arms, and swing your legs down to the next one. Think of nothing but balance -- all you need to do is balance, and they're rather thick branches, you should have no trouble. Children do this several times a day without so much as a scrape, and I'm sure you can get out of a tree by yourself. Now Get. Down. Now! Or I will leave you behind to be eaten!"

With a little hiss she sat down and watched Sam menacingly, sometimes glancing away to check whether the beast was coming back.
Dorothea skittered along the branch, glancing hurriedly between Sam and the beast, impatient and terrified, occasionally screeching some encouraging words that she hoped didn't sound as desperate as she felt. She yowled in surprise when the beast's face suddenly appeared just below Sam, and its great teeth snapped at her feet, its hot breath damp on her ankles. The monster snorted and turned away, circling the tree with its red eyes upturned hungrily.

"It's a Jockal," Dorothea answered Sam's question, once she was sure her friend was mostly safe and her own heart had slowed down a bit. "They're sort of legendary for eating young maidens." She set her claws in the bark and climbed halfway toward Sam, purring in an attempt to soothe her eyes open. "I wish you'd climb up just one more." Their long necks and pliant bodies made them able to reach farther up a tree than they might seem to be able to. She looked out at the Jockal again, and she didn't say aloud that she knew it wouldn't leave them alone anytime soon. She fully expected to be trapped in that tree well after nightfall, if the monster didn't reach them before then.

August watched, infuriated, as his guards hightailed it back to the lair, not even looking back in their race for their own lives. It was just as well -- he knew he could never have trusted them to watch his back.

The Jockal continued circling the tree restlessly, occasionally digging its claws into the trunk and craning its neck to get a better whiff of Sam. It bared its teeth, set its paws down again and continued circling. It had no interest in anything else.

The Marshal, glaring hatefully at the creature, began shedding armor. His gauntlets hit the ground, then his chainmail, even his boots. The Jockal was big enough that it could finish him in two bites: armor meant nothing, and he needed all the speed he could get. When all his armor was piled shining in the leaves, he was still dressed in the Queen's violet and gold, still hateful and stone-eyed, but he appeared smaller than he had been before.

He stepped forward without a word, and he watched the beast circle round and round the tree; it was completely ignorant of him in favor of Sam. The third time it passed by him, August waited for its scaly tail to skid past in the leaves. He raised his sword high and swung it down like a guillotine -- he lopped off the very tip of the monster's tail.

While the Jockal screeched a blood-curdling cry, the Marshal shouldered his sword and ran, leaping over rocks and fallen logs, faster than he'd ever run before, back toward the Queen's hollow. The stories of knights that slayed dragons single-handedly were only stories. The truth of the matter was that the slowest got eaten and the quick got away. At the very least he could distract it while the princess escaped -- but he had no intention of being eaten, either.

The Jockal, mad with rage, abandoned Sam and the tree; with a snarl and a rush and a crash of leaves and branches it galloped after August's retreating form, its tail thrashing saplings from their roots, destruction in its wake.
"Quit your screeching!" The Marshal hissed, and he clamped a gloved hand over her mouth. The dagger was lowered for the moment, while his attention was on his unruly captive. "There are worse things than just me in these woods," he growled, "things that won't hesitate to rip us all apart, given the chance. Keep quiet!" He was hypocritical to talk, he realized, as he'd just been calling nearly as loudly only moments before -- but he knew there was a certain beast that lurked nearby -- nearer the swamps of the lowlands, not far from where they stood -- that preferred the blood of scared young virgins for its supper. Sam's voice was brass and fearful enough to summon a pack of them at once.

No sooner had the Marshal finished speaking, as if on cue, a deep mournful howl echoed throughout the bleak forest. The Marshal stiffened, his breathing quickened, and he sheathed his dagger in favor of his sword, which he yanked from its sheath one-handed, the other hand still clamped over Sam's mouth. The guards followed suit and stood back to back, their blades raised, and they scanned the trees for movement.

For a tense moment there was only blood-pumping silence. Even the wind was still. Waiting.

Dorothea's ears were perked, and she too watched the forest, forgetting even the Marshal in light of a new danger. She had the highest vantage point of them all, and she fixed her big eyes on the part of the forest where the howl seemed to have come from. She crept slowly forward, claws digging into the wood, careful.

Suddenly she spun around and screamed at Sam. "RUN."

A hideous, lizardy beast crashed through the trees like a freight train toward them, no longer silent now that it had been announced. It weaved snakelike between the trees, scraping with enormous claws, its red eyes glowing and rapier-sharp teeth bared and hissing. It was at least as big as a house, maybe more, though it was hard to tell while it was kicking up dead leaves and cracking tree limbs.

"No, you're too slow," August said to Sam urgently. He removed his hand from her mouth, cut the ropes from her wrists, and pushed her forcefully toward Dorothea. "Up the tree. NOW." He whirled toward his two guards. "Garrett! Minas! With me!" But the guards, terrified, seemed not to hear -- they were backing away from the oncoming beast, which appeared for all the world as if it would be the last thing they would ever see. "I said WITH ME!" the Marshal roared, to no effect.

The monster's eyes were focused ravenously on Sam.
Ah yea that does make sense. Right-o then! We'll assume it's under the hollow, back the way they came.
Hey, a question occurred to me: where is the Queen's dungeon that the guards are supposed to take Dorothea to? Is it at or near the castle?
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