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**Elsewhere, near the tower**

Cedar thanked the crows, then collected himself and his tools, before heading back out over the marsh back toward the lake. The horses were still milling about, nibbling on grass, and being generally ornery about his approaching them. They still did not appreciate his being half bear, despite fully knowing he was not going to eat them. If they had been humans, he would have considered bigotry, but as it was, he knew it was just nature forcing its way to the top. It was a good, natural, and reasonable instinct to have, given how his mom would have handled this.

He chuckled to himself. The idea of his mom deciding that she had had enough of their bullshit, and just eating one of them to make the point, brought a smile to the corners of his face. Despite the wry humor of the situation, it was still an annoyance, as he herded them back toward the tower and into the "stable", where he unsaddled and brushed them down-- wide-eyes and snorts be damned.

Some of them had saddle and strap galds from having their gear on for too long. Absently, he used the modest healing magic he knew to correct it, as he did the brushing. They still distrusted him, but slowly the nags started getting the hint more clearly.

He was climbing up the stairs with a saddle over each shoulder, (the first of several planned trips) when a small grey and black bird noisly landed in front of him and started cooing, walking back and forth, blocking his path.

"What'ya want, lil bird? Ya in the way!"

It just continued moving back and forth on the stair, blocking his ingress, cooing at him.

Irritably, he put down the saddles on the stairs, then crouched down to look at the silly thing more clearly. There was a tiny capsule on its leg, which it was earnestly trying to make conspicuous with its repeated movements on the stair.

A sudden spark of cognition hit him, and he realized it was a messenger pigeon. Carefully, he teased the extremely tiny capsule open and extracted the thin, light bit of folded paper inside.

Reading was not his strong suit-- he had quite a bit of difficulty with it at times. His dad told him it was not really that important, except when dealing with dishonest merchants, tax collectors, auditors, and other "official" humans-- For the most part, if he could muddle through reading the signs outside shops to know what they sold, it was likely good enough, and better than a lot of peasants could do.

He squinted at the tiny text...

--------
Madame Matilda,
It pains me to inform you that I cannot regroup with your party at Hdur at the scheduled time. We had a situation with the city Constable, and the uncooperativeness he and his men displayed cost us valuable hours. Fortunately, we managed to secure crucial information regarding His Highness' assassination plan, and it involved a local group with extensive knowledge of the city's underground tunnels. We will work on this clue and see if we can regroup with you tomorrow.

PS: the pigeon is trained to not leave your side immediately in case you wanted to reply to this letter. If you wished to do so, the password to send him home will be márnanwen, meldë

--------

He looked down at the bird, which looked up at him expectantly, before fluttering its wings. He sighed, nodded at the bird, then picked up the saddles again. The pigeon fluttered up and landed on his shoulder, continuing to coo expectantly at him.

'The things humans trained animals to do', he thought to himself.

He would give the note to its intended recipient, Miss Matilda. HOPEFULLY she was done with, and had dispatched, that shuffling horror Solomon had conjured.

Cedar was taken aback by the 'resurrection' of the corpse. He could tell from the lingering odor that it was NOT true resurrection, and the implication that .. it .. could not meaningfully lie, meant its mind was not its own. Things that troubled and upset him in a visceral way he couldn't put into words.

He quietly collected the leather working tool roll, and left, asserting he was going to go bring the horses up.

Anderson asked if that meant that he had been successful, while matilda commenced her 'interrogation'. This was something he did not have much stomach for. He responded the affirmative at Anderson, then shot a glance up at the angry cawing crows, before making contact.

The birds cawed even angrier at him at first, torn between peevish umbrage of being forced off of their meal, and severe vexation at his unwanted presence in their heads. They seemed somewhat comforted that the bearman shared at least some of their displeasure over 'dinner' getting up and moving again, at least.

Cedar offered them a 'consolation prize' if they would follow him outside and answer a few questions.

At first they did not seem interested, but his mind wandered to the taste of the exotic fruit with the gelatinous seed pulp again, with its lovely sweet and floral flavor. They were more interested in it being soft, and easily eaten by beaks, and by the implication that this bear could just make some grow on demand. They'd be interested in seeing that latter trick, before accepting any such exchange.

Cedar huffed without saying anything aloud, and just let them know to meet him outside, near the ruined wall. They cawed at him some more, then took off to witness the promised spectacle.

Not missing another beat, he headed downstairs then back outside through the way he had come in. The crows had perched at safe locations on the sides of the tumbling wall, and were looking up at him expectantly.

He looked at the wall, looking for the right combination of 'intactness' and 'well fertilized' that the makeshift stable afforded, then planted and guided the growth of another of the lovely vines that produced the soft yellow spheres, guiding it up the wall along the more sturdy of its masonry as its terrace.

The crows seemed to laugh in delight at this development, before fluttering onto the vine near some of the fruit to sample the wares. Excited cawings rang kut as the discovered the bear was not full of it, and had recalled accurately.

He smirked.

The stupid louts, and their choice of stables has tainted the water here, making it unsafe to drink. He made contact again with the crows, who were once again put off by having meal time interrupted, before bemusedly telling them he intended to plant grapes too, for his own reasons. He was interested in clean water, not fruit at this time. Despite feeling like he was a bottomless hole inside, he had been seriously put off the idea if eating by the reanimation of the human corpse. The crows laughed, and extended their own vexations about it, but felt his loss of appetite to be their gain-- if he didn't want the grapes either, they would happily eat them for him.

He looked further along the wall for a suitable place to grow them, with a fairly dry patch nearby that could safely hold a drip catch container, then planted a few grape pits and set to work while the crows ravaged the lovely yellow spheres adorning the wall. A lovely table grape cultivar revealed its identity, with large purple grapes maturing under his care in the waning afternoon sun. Gingerly, he plucked one, and sampled it. It was lovely, but that strange feeling of mingled disgust, unease, and hunger was all that really met his effort.

The crows, having gorged on fruit, eyed the grapes appraisingly before flapping down near him making short calls, apparently satisfied with the peace offering and considering him 'all right' after all, unlike the meal thieves.

He sat down beside the wall to ask them his own questions...
Cedar gladly reclaimed his clothes and boots-- then set about washing the remaining bits of muck (and filth, from the way he came in) from his extremities before re-clothing himself.

"Nice ta get my clothes back on--" he murmured. "Nasty way in though-- an' I JUST had a bath!" He frowned in that inscrutable way he did when displeased.

He turned to face Matilda.

"Looks like 'is place is all cleared out a'eady. Shame-- I werent none too sure if'n there was bastards in 'ere stills er not-- Spent a good hour planting surprises for em, if'n they was... Had jus' gotten all clean from walkin' the marsh all in muf fur for disguise reasons, when Henri said ya was in here aready. Glad ta see ain't no harm done... Lesee what the dumbshits lef' fer us."

Reclaiming his walking stick and leaning on it in his usual manner, he began his own inspection of the room he and Matilda were in.
Shaking off the last bits of muck before heading through the widened wall opening, cedar wished he hadn't. The interior was rank with the stink of horse manure and urine. In the foul deposits on the floor, he spotted the recent footprints of who was most certainly Matilda, if Henri's report was accurate.

He traced them deeper into the compound and found his mark.

She was quite edgy, and rounded on him before scowling and hissing under her breath not to sneak up on her like that. He just dropped his ears a little and frowned at her, but got the hint about staying quiet for the moment, instead just shadowing her discretely. If there WERE any assholes in here, he would back her up with the little surprises he had sewn all over outside.

In fact, he paused a moment to help grow the root system deeper inside, through the gap in the wall, just to be on the safe side.

So far though, the search had turned up no sign of recent habitation besides their own presence there.
Cedar's ears popped up with alarm and his bright brown eyes sparkled with bits of white surrounding them. He shot a glance at Henri, blinked, then tore up the ground on a mad-dash sprint toward the ruins, sticking to areas he was certain were free of hazards, leaving the the odd man behind in a flurry of flying mud chunks.

Henri caught up shortly after, as Cedar was shaking off the last of the mud chunks from his feet. The man seemed eager to get the gunk off the boots he had borrowed as well, as he kicked it off, then scraped it on the few exposed paving stones of the ruins, before the two of them searched for the entrance.
Placidly padding along, the big lumbering form of the bear-man slowly made its leisurely way first up along the edge of the lake, to collect the tiny shriveled black berries that had been overlooked by the birds last winter from amidst the dangerous coils of prickles that were known as "GreenBriar." Birds and deer subsisted on the things during the winter months, as the perennial vine was semi-evergreen, and kept foliage on even in the winter-- or so his dad told him. He had never seen it himself. Whenever the weather started getting cold, the urge to go to sleep became overwhelming, and without even realizing it, he would just wake up several months later in time for spring.

The nasty little vines would serve their purpose quite well here, and would be a buffet for the birds this winter. Deer did not really like wading through the marshes, though he supposed the ice and snow would harden it up well enough for them to consider foraging among the ruins this winter.

Tucking quite a number of the shriveled little black bastards into the small pouch he had retained, and laced to the inside of his right arm, he had long since begun his long, shuffling and investigatory plod all around the ruins. There WERE a few edible roots and small fish hidden among the muck, and he was still very famished from his stay in the dungeon. It didn't hurt any to actually play the part he was 'pretending' to be-- especially since he knew how to do it, and it would serve several roles at once. It was a good hour or more before he was satisfied with having seeded the area with the vicious little horrors he had 'just so happened' to drop into the foraging holes he had been digging, while discretely prompting them to germinate, and greet the summer sun. He had continued 'subtly' coaxing their growth, while doing his lumbering "bear shuffle" amongst the muck and puddles, urging their roots to go deep and wide into the surrounding environs. The whole damn ruin site was now ringed in, like one giant bear trap, ready to be sprung.

Lazily, he waddled back up to the lake, carefully removed the small sack, then took a nice refreshing dip in the water to get all the mud (and old dungeon stench) off.

"Are you done yet?" was the complaint he was greeted with when he returned to Henri, who was wearing his clothes in a most peculiar manner. Almost comical.

"Yup. I thinks so. I'm ready when you is."
Cedar looked through the misc kit that had been pulled from the bags.

Most were sadly quite empty, aside from the nose destroying powder. Some additional rope, a knife, handaxe, a small shovel, knapping tools, and some sack cloth. A bit spartan, but for a moment it made Cedar nostalgic. It's the sort of stuff his dad kept in his 'day kit'. Well, aside from the sack cloth and nose destroying powder, anyway. He couldn't help but wonder if he was up against another woodland hermit...

"I'll takes that rope an' the shovel-- Already gots an axe an' knife. Knappin' tool's handy, but already gots muh own. Ain't got no need ta be gunnysackin' nobody, so dun need the cloth. Might make an OK blanket though... That is-- unless ya wants the shovel an' rope for summat?"

Henri asserted he did not, but seemed amused by the axe for some reason. Humans never ceased to bewilder him-- assuming Henri was a human. He sure didn't smell like one. Didn't smell like anything, except maybe something greasy and unappealing.

He leaned on his staff, looking over Henri's shoulder at the map, before looking up and around at the lake.

"'dese mo-rons packed too lightly fer a long trip. Ya s'pose they still in 'ere?"

"What do you mean?" asked Henri, turning to look up at Cedar.

"Ain't no food, no means ta cook food, no canteens, nothin'. Ain't even got stuff ta fix their damn saddles in' the has an accident. Either these guys is total mo-rons, ors they not ridin' far-- an' we gots a map showin' us a spot they's int'rested in, as just a stone's throw 'atta way." Cedar frowned, though it would take an expert to notice, aside from the posture of his ears. "Wouldn't do ta just 'walk righ' in'..."

"Do you have a better idea?" asked Henri, equal parts interest and boredom. The strange man must have felt just walking in was an obvious tactic. Cedar knew better-- Loggers had sometimes taken to leaving nasty things in places they did not want him-- like animal traps. He looked up again, and to the south, seeing the sheen of the boggy landscape glittering in the sun, with the tumbling stones of the ruins sticking out, partially obscured by overgrown vegetation. There would be plenty of places to conceal such nastiness, if one was not very careful.

He looked back at the lake edge. His thoughts wandered, and he wished he could go fishing and get a bath. It was a lovely daydream, where he wandered the edge, scooping out unexpecting fish, getting clean after, and then avoiding the greenbriar...

He smiled, big and toothy.

"I Gots an idear..."

-------
Sometime later
-------

Henri was not terribly amused by Cedar's sudden change in behavior, especially given how he suddenly took everything he had off, disrobing completely down to just his fur, while smirking mischievously.

"Should I be worried about this 'idea' of yours? And WHY does it involve your getting NAKED?"

"Ain't nobody gun' suspect a wild bear as about ta fuck 'em--" he grinned before making a cruel chuckle. Henri was once more taken aback by the sudden and profound change in the mannerisms of his travel partner.

"No' you, dummy--- Em bastards o'r yonder. As assumes they still there. 'At elf girl as said I was 'sposed ta "Prepare da Venue"-- and I thinks I knows JUST how..."

"And it involves your being naked, how exactly?"

Cedar shook his head and gruffed at the cluelessness of the question. It made absolute perfect sense to him.

"Look, when I's is down on all fours-- like is..."

The bear man levered himself down, and plopped down on his now gloveless "hands", in addition to his feet, standing up on all fours like it was nothing at all. His bodily proportions made it effortless to keep both his arms and his legs perfectly straight that way with a level back, like he was made to walk that way.

"I's looks for all da worl' likes an ordin'ry bear. Ain't nobody gunna suspect a wil' bear nosin' about-- I's can wander all o'er in dere, plantin muh lil' beauties all o'er..."

He grinned again, showing those ghastly teeth.

"an when is' time,-- BAM-- Heheheheheeh." He laughed mischievously. "Nasty, prickle-vines up e'ry arsehole.-- So ya see-- they gun' get fucked-- by your's truly."

The smile momentarily vanished, and the bear man turned his head in confusion.

"why, what you think I's gunna do?"

Henri looked at cedar with his own head tilted. "I would rather not say."
Cedar let out a roaring laugh, before bowing his big head and snorting. "GWAA HAHAHAH! *SNORT*-- Ya ain't muh type!"

"So, what do you want me to do?" asked Henri, only somewhat relieved.

"Ifn' yas gots any a yer own tricks up ya sleeve-- try em out-- Dunno what ya's good at, so caint tell ya. Ya knows better'n I does. What I's gunna be doin' gun take awhile though- so, takes ya time, un'erstand?"

"I'll figure something out." said Henri, returning his attention back to the map.

"Good-- I'll be needin ta go scope out the lake right quick. I cain't imagine it not growin' 'dere--- Shit grows all o'er the damn place. Birds, rabbit, and deer loves the shit, but I ain't normally a fan."

"Poison ivy?"

"Now ere's an idear-- but no-- Greenbriar. Lots a lil' prickles, an' spreadin roots. Three uses for the price a one-- Tough as nails, weedy an' viney--- Co'ered in narsty lil' prickles as breaks of inna skin and makes ya itch fer days-- and--- mos' important a all--- It spreads all unner da groun like creepin' lil' fingers, lookin for trees ta pop up nexta. I keen us' it ta firm up the groun' a bit, wrap up any 'unwan'ed surprises' as them barstards may a lef' me, an-- most important a all-- with em roots alls a spread out in ere, aint noplace I cain't fuck em by su'prise. If they still in there, they gun' be right unhappy fellars soon 'nuff-- hehehe."

And with that, the bear man waddled off toward the lake edge, leaving Henri to his own devices.
"I dun' need anythung as smells like em' dipshits-- i's the dogs as needs at--- Yas can fin' a splotch er two o'er yonder... Not that yas can see it 'spose... If'n ya wants ta track the idjiots as napped the boy, I keen help with tellin' the dogs-- but I's agrees with the funny white man on thisa one." Cedar rumbled. "If'n we split up, we's can cover more ground. Miss Matilda keen take the doctor an' Mr Anderson an his dogs to chase down the idjiots-- This feller an' me can go track down the missin' horses. We kin catch up la'er."

Cedar paused for a moment, as if contemplating an impossible task, before attempting to emulate Anderson's whistle, and failing miserably. He tried again several times.

"Gull-darnit-- Mr Anderson, kin ya call the boys o'er agin? I ain't ne'er been able ta do 'at... --On accounta muh mouth looks like 'is-"

Cedar pointed to his face then opened his mouth wide, revealing a rather frightening compliment of very sharp, meat tearing teeth with gaps between them where they would meet when closed. There were differences with what a keen observer would identify as being 'properly bear'-- false molar surfaces lined the insides of the last 4 incisors, before the real molars, indicating his human parentage-- but in all other ways, that mouth was "Decidedly Bear", with a dark colored and corrugated roof, a long and slightly purple tongue, and a long narrow shape. It was decidedly not suited to whistling in any capacity.

Anderson made a bemused wince and shook his head, then put his fingers in his mouth and whistled. Once more the dogs bounded up in a jumble of excited bawling, drooling, and tail wagging.

"Your show Master Cedrick" chuckled the man with a smirk.

"Thank'ya kindly Mr Anderson" retorted Cedar with his own.

After a few minutes with the dogs looking between Cedar and Anderson confusedly, he led them off to various parts of the scene, pointing out the particular scent they should be tracking. Anderson knew they had picked it up when they made their characteristic 'alert bawling' and animated pouncing with false starts down the trail. They were indeed good boys, and had not been given the signal to track, but eagerly wanted to.

Satisfied that the dogs knew what to hunt down, Cedar walked back up to the congregation in that lumbering shuffle of his, with the dogs trotting behind. As he reached where Anderson and the others were standing, they made furtive looks and whimpers between Anderson and the area Cedar had indicated, amid tail wags and excited eyes.

"'ere-- At'll do it. I got's muh own trail ta follow, ifn' we gunna fin' dem horses."

Cedar smiled, and probably shouldn't have. It looked more like an aggressive display than a grin. Only the alert posture of his ears gave it away as something different, besides his body posture and chuckling.

" 'is Way Mister Henri!" he chuckled, swinging his big head in the direction of preferred travel. He had already scoped out a good portion of the scene, and between it and what he remembered of his interview with the bird, he had a good idea which way to go. The horse tracks would almost assuredly all re-converge into a single path at some point, but it would save time to take the most likely and most direct set of tracks, which headed West.

--------

(some time later)

--------

Cedar's tracking of the animals took a meandering path through the trees, then over a clearing beside a rather lovely lake. The horses were together, but spread out just enough to be little shits about being caught, grazing on the grass leisurely. They did not really seem to appreciate Cedar initially either, acting spooky and stupid-- taking off with snorts, flagged tails, and farts amid squealing neighs to trot away from him repeatedly before he managed to finally get though their thick dumb heads that he wasn't there to eat them. They were robust, if squat little animals (to his perspective anyway), between 1.1 and 1.6 meters to the tops of their backs. Far too small for somebody like him to ride-- but maybe Henri could use one.

Some of the animals had managed to get their saddles and other tack free of themselves-- tearing the straps that had held them on, via aggressive rubbing and 'clever' use of low lying tree limbs. Thankfully it was fairly conspicuous and easily located in or near the offending foliage. The saddles and gear that were still in place were encrusted in dried grass and mud, from where the animals had tried to roll in the soft earth near the lake. It would take a whole day for each saddle to get them clean again.

One of the horses was clearly the Venerer's, given its very different livery. Cedar was glad it had made it, and the horse itself was surprisingly happy that its 'person' had survived the frightening encounter. Cedar liked 'happy endings.'

It took a reasonably long time to rifle through the contents of 6 horses worth of saddle bags. Most of the contents were camping supplies and 'abduction kit'-- Ropes, cloth gags, and small bottles of a curious powder that made Cedar's nose tickle, before making him go nose-blind. Lots of sneezing and boogery snorts later, it slowly started to return, but the momentary disability worried and troubled him-- He worried that the dogs might run into such an obstacle. Perhaps it was for the best that the abductors had been cut off from their supply. Henri did not act like he found the sight of Cedar having a snotty sneeze attack at all amusing. If anything, he looked rather put off by it, and recoiled a bit when Cedar located, then proceeded to try and offer the last item he dug out of this latest bag.

Among the miscellaneous odds and ends of camping and abduction kit, there was a curious bit of parchment, emblazoned with a map with a curious X on it. The map depicted a lake, not unlike the one they were currently next to, with what looked like some ruins in a marsh to the south, with the ruins clearly indicated.

" 'ere-- *(SNORT)* -- 'Ave a look at 'is--"

"Wai' whut? Revive?... " Cedar boggled. The idea of bringing ANYTHING back from being actually DEAD-DEAD was... He could not wrap his head around it. He could not wrap his head around doing that to some poor critter that already had a terrible death to begin with- The idea was just flooring to him.

"I thought ya was gunna track down the ones as survived or summat-- They won' be 'at far off-- Prolly all tagether 'nyhow-- Horses likes to pal around ya know. Safety in numbers."

Then more earnestly--

".... How you gunna talk ta a DEAD horse inna firs' place? -- Secon' thought, I dun wanna know...(only thing a dead horse 'good for is eatin'..)"

He pushed the repulsive thought from his mind. He would DEFINITELY have to talk to his dad about this when he got back...

"I thinks its a good idear ta be trackin that dumb shit as likely got a arrow stuck in 'im, afore it rains or sommat, and we lose the scent. The horses as run off might be able ta tell yas where they was stabled at afore they got rode here. Worth a shot-- I CAINT be the ONLY one as can ask em a simple 'nuff question, can I?"
Cedar looked at the notebook, then crouched down and bent over slightly (He dared not simply bend over with the barrel on his back; doing so would have likely made him come all the way forward on top of the poor man) while gripping his staff for support, then snuffed in several long, slow drags through his nose.

The prince was a cleanly sort; traces of a quality soap were present where the prince's clothing had come into contact with the book. Hints of oak gall ink.. old food and beverage spills on the binder... but the scent of the prince was apparent. Young. Not yet into manhood.

Holding that scent in his mind, he surveyed the scene.

There were bootprints and horse hoof marks all over the place, along with several sets of old wagon tracks. The boot prints were a motley assortment of styles, shapes, and sizes, indicating a diverse group of people had been there. Some were heavily indented, suggesting they had been moving a heavy burden. The grass was flattened in some places, indicative of a large body being there, then drug. The blood in the grass suggested "horses".

There were dog tracks as well-- Not surprising that they had used dogs.

"Can I sees the dogs a minute?" he asked the man who had been identified as "Anderson". Cedar wasn't sure if that was his first name, or his last name. Not that it mattered-- He didn't have a last name himself, or at least, his dad insisted it was not important-- that was a thing that people living in towns and cities used to not end up marrying their cousins. Cedar didn't really need one-- everyone already KNEW who's kid he was. He just wasn't entirely sure if he should just call the man "Anderson", or "Mister Anderson"-- He pushed the foible aside.

The man looked at him very confused for a moment--

"Why do you want to see the dogs?" he asked, very confused.

It never ceased to amaze Cedar how it was that people always underestimated what animals knew or understood. They always seemed to think of animals as "mindless things" that you just cajole into doing stuff for you, and not as intelligent beings that have their own perspective of things that is just different from those of people-- and how people never seem to be bothered to find this out, even when its pointed out to them. Sometimes repeatedly.

Instead, he just gruffed out a weary sigh before answering.

"I want's ta ask em some questions-- I cain't ask em any questions, if'n I caint see em, now can I?" he responded matter-of-factly. It simply astounded him how completely clueless about this people tended to be. Well-- most people. His dad didn't seem to have this issue at all-- in fact, it's how him and his mom had gotten together---....

'enough of that' he thought to himself.

"Please, jus git em o'er here, and let me talks at em. Ya dont gotta understand how dis works-- and asides, I couldn't explain it if I tried-- just bear wit' me here, aright?"

This 'Anderson' fellow gave Cedar a cross between a "do you think I'm an idiot?", and a "what's your game, bear-man?" look, before putting his fingers slowly to his lips, then letting out a piercing whistle. In moments, several large hounds bounded up, slobbering and panting excitedly by the man's boots. His eyes never left Cedars.

"Thank ya kindly sir!" Cedar drawled amusedly, before patting the man on the shoulder, then sitting down on the ground with a thud near the dogs, who looked at him worriedly and incredulously.

"I's allright fellers-- I aint gunna bite ya..." he drawled, while doing the "trick" he had learned from his dad doing it with him, when he was a tiny cub. He made eye contact with the first of the dogs, and somewhere in the back of his mind, 'contact' was made. An awareness of the animal's thoughts, feelings, and sensory experience washed through that part of his mind, visceral and profound. Wariness tinged with excitement gave way to sudden panic and fear, at the returned sensations and feelings bleeding the other way, as the dog realized "it was not alone."

It was always this way, Cedar had come to learn, when making initial contact with an animal. Not having a conception of complex speech, above maybe associating certain sounds with certain actions-- like the man's whistle, which the dog had associated with praise, pets, or food--- they had no idea how to react, or comprehend the sudden realization that other beings had minds just like theirs, or even more complicated than theirs. That was a terrifying and alien experience for them, and it needed to be addressed gently and carefully.

Almost with practiced and effortless self control, the man-bear radiated a concept of being completely safe, harmless, and 'just different', and 'more like you than he is', but 'still friendly like him.'-- referring to the man named Anderson that the dog was now trying to hide behind.

The man seemed to react to the dog's sudden change in demeanor, ready to demand to know what Cedar was doing to his dog, but he raised a paw at the man, and gently gruffed--

"S'ok-- It's just scary for em the firs' time's all..."

"What's scary? What are you doing to Brutus?" the man insisted, sounding heated.

"Tryin' ta have a conversation with 'im-- Like I said, it's scary the firs' time havin' somembody in ya head as aint yaself-- he scared shitless-- but i's aright, I aint' gunna hurt im none..."

The other dogs looked at him and 'brutus' in confusion, continuing to pant and wag their tails at Anderson expectantly. The man calmed them by patting their heads, then rubbing Brutus behind his ears.

Cedar could feel the dog calming under his master's touch. The dog genuinely trusted the man implicitly, and he got the impression that the man was truly a good man to his animals-- even if he did not really understand them like he should. The dog's mind seemed to ease up from absolute terror to curiosity, as its head filled with all kinds of curious thoughts relating to its revelation-- could cedar understand it's master? What was that like? Were people good to him? and a raft of others.

He did his best to address them, and to interpret the exchange he and Anderson were having into the form of simplistic concepts that could be conveyed-- before conveying the reason he was there, and why he had asked his master to call him. Slowly, some conception of understanding clicked into place, and the dog recounted his experiences with sniffing out the trail.

His human had shown him an item-- like he always did when he wanted something that smelled like it found-- (which Cedar recognized as the same notebook-- with the same smell the dog was remembering, which the dog was excited to share a conception of experience about with him). He had sniffed around, and found lots of tracks where the scent had been drug through.

...

One by one, Cedar "Interviewed" the dogs, each reacting scared then looking at the others as it realized why the other dogs had been startled suddenly when it had been their turn before-- as the whole process was repeated-- Introductions-- attestations of non-hostility and friendliness-- attempts to convey conceptions of intent and meaning, and the profoundness of growing understanding and enlightenment glimmering behind otherwise innocent eyes, followed by recollections of the past day's events.

There had been 3 paths that the attackers had taken, each with about 2 attackers each-- Cedar did his best to catalogue the wandering and disjointed recollection of the dogs with his own initial quick look of the scene. There had been horses in both groups, and the dogs had found several dead ones-- others had run off into the woods, and had not come back. The humans weren't interested in the strange men, or the horses-- only the smell on the notebook-- They had found a boot-- and had gotten a yummy slab of beef for it. They were very proud of themselves, and happy to have helped their human. He was very nice.

He broke contact with the last one, then stood up, as the dogs looked expectantly at Anderson.

"They says there was about 6 or so of em. An' horses. Said some o' em had run off, and not come back- other's 's dun been killed when they found em-- I sees ya's had people here cleanin up--- gunna make this harder. Thankya for yer time Mr Anderson. Ya got good boys there. They really like ya."

"Some of them had run off? Who do you mean?" asked the man, still incredulous of Cedar's supposed "interview".

"The horses silly!" gruffed Cedar incredulously, before shuffling over to the scene, and going his own sniffing. His nose was better than the dog's were, by a fair amount, but at least he had some idea now of what was new, and what was not, and what he should be smelling for.

The prince and 3 others were apparently initially on horseback, but were attacked...

He snuffed at the ground near the obvious horse prints coming from the direction of the city, tracing them to the first signs of boot prints beside them... An older man. A younger man... An older still and grizzled man (judging from the scent), who walked more lightly, even when hitting the ground... and the young prince, who had jumped down suddenly....

He kept sniffing and looking through the tracks.

The younger man had been the first to come off his horse, and it had not been gently. There was blood on the ground, near a body shaped imprint.

"Regulus was found there." Anderson quipped. Cedar nodded, then continued his sniffing and investigation of the site.

"Man got shot offn' 'is horse. Hit bad-- Neck I think. Lotsa blood. Poor fella."

Just a half pace ahead, the older gentlemen had reeled his horse around sharply. Cedar made note of the direction the horse had been turned. "Regulus"'s horse had bolted, and ran into the underbrush, but cedar was not certain if it had continued running or not.

The prince's horse, (as he surmised later), had reared a little, and dislodged the unwary and inexperienced prince. Cedar could smell him in the butt-shaped imprint in the grass of the clearing. There was no blood.

"Prince fell offn' 'is horse here..." cedar muttered, while continuing his investigations. "Landed square on 'is butt."

The horse's tracks suggested it had only sidestepped a bit, and in the general direction of the assailants. Blood and a horse shaped body print that somewhat overlapped the 'crawl marks' the prince had left, suggested the horse had been hit with arrows, and then fell over onto the prince, where he had been pinned. The prince must have had some scrapes, as the dirt smelled a bit too strongly of the prince than would otherwise be expected from that-- but no indication of serious injury. Probably scraped and bruised though.

"Horse got hit-- Prince was a crawlin' thisa way... Horse fell right on topa 'im...."

"And Gregor and Abbott?" asked Anderson, almost bemusedly-- clearly a question he already knew the answer to.

Cedar resumed his investigation, head down-- investigating the tracks of the older man's horse. It had about-turned hard after trying to rear, then taken several steps back.

"Ol' man rounded--- ... ... I think he may've made some shots? Horse steppin' funny..." He looked up and in the direction the man's horse had been facing. There were arrows lodged in a tree trunk a fair ways distant-- He looked back the other way, and saw several more, with different colored fletchings, lodged in the trees behind. "Yuupp... Pop shots at each 'oer.. Huh... Aint ne'er seen fletchin's that color afore..."

His dad had always used white goose quills to make fletchings, with dark tail or wing feathers for the cock feather. These were a strange shade of tawny brown, with a white cock feature. It probably meant nothing, but it did suggest somebody had sourced arrows from an unusual source of feathers. It probably meant nothing-- but it did serve to help identify who had been shooting and where at least.

"Get on with it bear---" grumbled Anderson.

"Aint no need ta be rude---" grumbled Cedar back at the man.

The old man's horse veered to the right sharply, then tore up the ground in an explosive start.

"Ol' man took off atta way--- Prolly tryin ta get a be'er angle..."

"Our trackers suggest the same event-- We found him about 20 paces further afield, full of those brown arrows."

He sat up on his heels, and leaned on his staff, snuffing at the air-- Yeah-- there was a pool of the old man's blood in that general direction.

".Yeah-- I's smells it.." While he was up like that, he snuffed for the last one-- this "abbot" or whoever. He caught the scent further into the tree line. The grizzled old one. He had dismounted quickly, then apparently slapped the horse on the ass to get it clear, judging from how its prints tore off into the underbush. He had taken refuge behind a tree for cover. Arrows studded it and the ground like quills. There was a bloody stain against the tree in the shape of a hand print. There was a trail leading into the brush deeper in. "Oldest feller went off in there-- Hit good."

"We found him, alive, but out cold and bleeding, a good ways in. Had crawled into the crotch of an old tree where the rain had washed it out some. We think the abductors left him for dead. He was hit in the thigh, but it had missed his vital."

"Good ta hear... Wiley ol' fart..." mused Cedar, moving from where the prince's party had been, to where the abductors had entered the fray. "I'll tell him you said that... When he recovers. He bled out a lot before we got to him."

The bandits had come straight in, stopped just short of the clearing, and had dismounted mostly together, then taken up positions around the clearing to set up a kill box. It was very much arranged-- groups of 2, with a 3 way pincer.

they had come in from the north east, circled around to the west, spreading out as they did so. They had NOT seen fit to tie their mounts though. Several horse tracks took off like bats out of hell in random directions. Boot prints had tried to follow, but given up pursuit, before converging on the prince's position.

There was human blood from at least 2 people that weren't in the prince's entourage-- One was just minor--Probably scratched up from tree limbs while trying to gain position after being shot at, the other maybe hit in a shoulder.

The trails diverged, some trying to seek after the spooked horses a ways, then giving up, but it was hard to be sure. It was a messed up scene with additional boot prints, and strangers that had been there to reclaim bodies, and drag them to where the carts had obviously been parked later.

"I needs ta ask the locals---" Cedar gruffed-- then just stood up and marched straight to the picket line where the guard's horses were tied, flipped open a saddle bag after snuffing at the air a moment, untieing the strap on one, rifling around inside with a displeased looking horse threatening to kick him for entering its personal space (and daring to smell like a bear) before extracting a handful of mixed grain intended for the guard's mounts.

The guards just looked at him with raised eyebrows, but didn't stop him, as he strode to the center of the clearing, before stopping, leaning on his staff, and then looking about in the trees.

After a moment's scrutiny, Cedar found what he was looking for. Usually, birds like to make their homes in 'forest edges' like this, because there was ready access to the insects and understory plants that grew there-- both important sources of food. High in the crook of a forked tree limb, he spotted the nest of a greater tit. A tiny little bird that would be dwarfed by just about anyone's hand, and would be tiny in comparison to one of his own, with yellow, black and white feathers, giving a splash of yellow over the breast, white along the chest and shoulder, and a black 'cap'. They liked to eat bugs and seeds, and would surely like what he had to offer, clutched in his hand. The female was sitting on her eggs, and was doing everything possible to evade being noticed by the highly disturbing assemblage of scary dogs and terrifying humans milling about. She almost bolted out of her nest in panic when the tall Man-Bear suddenly manifested his thoughts in her already fearful mind, but instinct had her just flatten down in her nest, and not move-- terrified in panic.

Cedar could feel her heart pounding in her breast, and the all consuming terror of having be discovered. Visions of being eaten, her eggs sucked empty, and other terrible things flashed through his mind, and it was all he could do to counter each one in turn-- leaving just him, and the frightened little bird alone, on a sunny summer afternoon amid the familiar forest gloom.

Minutes later, the bear waddled into the center of the clearing, scattered the seeds, then sat down cross legged--- before a menagerie of seed crops grew from the soil and welcomed the sun-- A motley assortment of grain ears sprouting, then turning color in the sun as they ripened, then bent over.

He stood up, and nodded silently at the tree, then returned to the group.

"The local o'r there says that the dumb-ass bandit's horses went thatta way--- Thatta way-- Thattaway-- and Thattay." Said Cedar, as he pointed in the directions he had gleaned from the 'witness'. "She REAL eager for us to git the hell outta her yard though. Lef' 'er a real nice gift though. She seems thankful-- but won' come down tills we all leaves. Says the dipshits went off on foot thatta way."

"I dont see any 'locals'... " gruffed Anderson.

"The bird silly! THE BIRD! She sawed everthung!" wheezed Cedar, pointing over his shoulder with his thumb.

".... and she saw the prince?" asked Anderson incredulously. "Is he alright?"

"Hell if she know--- SHE A BIRD!" retorted Cedar, as if the man had asked the stupidest question ever. "She ain't not human doctor!"

Cedar shook his head, and tried to brush aside the absurdity of the man's question while making a deep sigh.

"'At said, she seen'd em grab up the kid, and gunny sack im-- Left a boot in the mud there un'er is horse as they'd shot. Bonked 'im on the head, and trundled off atta way-- mores or less. They splitted up a bit as ta conceal their movements, but they's bled on stuffs. I kin smell em."
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