Two horsemen were coming on the snowy forest road. Although spring had already come, the snow had not yet melted. The wind was blowing like ice. The breeze had glued the fur of one of the horsemen further into his back. The wind seemed to howl for a moment. There was an unusually heavy silence around. Despite the arrival of spring, there was not a single greenery except for the trees that did not shed their leaves during the winter. Where the trees were thicker, puddles of snow covered the ground. Igan touched his arrow, thinking he heard a little stir in the silence. This was the hardest winter, according to the elders.Even wolves in the mountains were beginning to appear on the plains by the riverbanks. Judging by the deer carcasses along the way, the wolves had already spotted the stray deer. A few people they met on the way said that wolves even attacked herds of horses from hunger and warned them to be careful. The horsemen crossed the snowy roads at full speed. They had been on the road for days. Homar made a hand gesture to Igan. They were to rest for a while on the thawed part of the river.
They both stopped their horses and tied their horses to the trunk of a tree near the river. The horses were panting from their rumps, and smoke was coming from them. After tying their horses, Igan and Homar went down to the riverside. Thinking that he heard a voice again, Igan put his arrow into the bow. He pulled it up to his cheek in one motion. Homar was ready to throw his spear, which he used like a cane, at any moment. Again, a freezing wind blew Homar's white cloak waving like a flag. Ignoring the wind, he walked uneasily in the direction Igan was looking at. Homar walked unhurriedly along the frosty lines on his cheeks, with a lock of long hair on his head, his feet firmly on the ground, along the river's edge, which had just melted into a small path. Homar's calmness dampened Igor's excitement a little bit.
He kept his eyes on the direction the sound came from. Although Igan was a head taller than Homar, his shoulders were not as broad as Homar. Igan had straw-blond hair and slightly slanted gray eyes, which were unusually white for the area. Homar always said that he resembled his estranged mother more than his father. Igan had no recollection of anything other than what had been said about his mother. As he watched the direction the sound came from, he had a feeling that he was being watched. Across the river, thick clumps of trees and bushes were moving by the force of the wind. There was no other movement; but the emotion Igan felt was growing inside him as the seconds passed. Igan reminded himself not to be delusion.On the falling side of the road, there was nothing among the trees opposite. If anything had happened on the other side, Homar would have thrown his spear already. Igan had never met anyone around here with a better spear wielder than him. Just as he was about to turn around and tell Homar to they leave there, he heard a voice from the bushes again. He looked over his shoulder in that direction. He saw a shadow among the trees. He blinked and looked in that direction again. Across the river, among the shadows of the trees, someone was looking at them. Igan took another step or two closer to the river's edge, his arrow stretched out to see more clearly the person in the shadows. The person in the shadows was also approaching him. The shadow had come closer, but it was completely white, so it was nowhere to be seen.
A stone suddenly caught Igan 's foot and he stumbled. Homar was only twenty paces away from him, looking over his spear at him, “Are you okay? " said. “ There is someone,” Igan said, panting, trying to regain his balance, pointing in the direction of the stranger in white. “Someone is watching us.” “ Where? ” Homar raised his spear and pointed it in the direction he was pointing. He looked at the wooded areas. There was no one where Igan pointed. Homar lowered his spear. “ There is no one” “It was there, I saw it." said Homer. “Even if you did, it might be hidden in the trees. Let's go." he said, heading towards the horses. Igan followed him. His horses had enough rest. They jumped on their backs and continued on their way. Igan couldn't get the silhouette he saw along the way out of his mind.
The two horsemen finally approached the area where the Kutsk people lived. The area was close to what was called the Black Forest. Large tents lined the edge of the forest. The river just beyond the tents split into many branches. From the hill they were on, Igan and Homar could see people fishing at intervals on the icy river. The passengers rode their horses one last time. Where the black forest ended, the dark mountains began. No one other than the people of Kutsk could enter this forest and approach the mountains. Everyone was afraid of monsters living in the dark forest. They said they couldn't live this close to the dark forest without their witch, Tonka. The people of Kutsk feared Tonka and always excluded her. Tonka's tent was 1,000 paces from theirs. Only the bravest would dare to approach her tent.
When Homar and Igan arrived at the camp, they were greeted by two young people with white fur, who had cut most of their hair, the traditional haircut of the Kutsk people, and only part of it remained long. One escorted them to the tent of the bey's tent, and the other took them to the stable to feed and water their horses. Igan and Homar opened the tent door and entered. There were five men cross-legged on the ground. Igan and Homar took turns greeting those in the tent with their palms in their hands and sat down in the place shown to them.They had come to ask the people of Kutsk for help regarding the wolves that had attacked the flock of the Igan and Homar people. A fire was burning loudly in the middle of the tent. As the people in the tent were talking about what to do to avoid the problem they encountered in the next winter, the noise of the children was suddenly heard from outside the tent.
The voices of the children were mixed with the voices of the women. The people in the tent did not become indifferent to these sounds any longer and went out one by one. The children had surrounded something in front of the tent. The ruler of the Kutsk people shouted to the children, “Scatter!” When the children heard this sound, they dispersed. “Vora,” said Bey. There was a moribund lynx on the ground in the snow. No one could get within ten feet of the lynx. Igan heard a footstep. The people of Kutsk slowly stepped aside to give way. Igan looked up at what had come.All the people of Kutsk gathered in the field, saying nothing, waiting for what their lord would say. There was a moribund lynx on the ground in the snow. No one could get within ten feet of the lynx. Igan heard a footstep. The people of Kutsk slowly stepped aside to give way. Igan looked up at what had come. It was the white silhouette he saw across the river. Red blood was smeared on the hem of his white fur. The people took a step or two away from lynx. Tonka came to the ear, which writhed in pain on the ground, sweeping the floor with her fur cloak. He picked it up from the ground and turned to Igan, lifting him into the air with one hand. In his hand was a “Vora” from the black forest. After Tonga ran his other hand over the lynx, the Lynx slowly lifted his head. The lynx became even more alive after Tonka whispered something in an unknown language. When Tonka dropped him to the ground, he ran and brushed himself against Igan's leg. Although Igan was afraid of the lynx and pushed it with his foot, the lynx would not leave him. Tonka made a whistling sound. When the lynx heard this sound, it tucked its tail and sank into Igan's boots. Tonka bowed her head lightly and said, "A gift for the traveller," and walked away, rubbing the hem of her fur.
The door to the room slammed shut behind the white-haired woman. The woman turned and stared at the door. Her slender shoulders made her appear taller than she was. On her dress, strange shapes of various sizes formed colorful piles on the floor. “Acuz,” Mayda whispered, looking excited. The white-haired woman turned quickly, her long skirts waving. There was not the slightest line on her face to indicate that he was having a hard time.She was holding a long pointed staff. Her tomato-colored eyes, which were just starting to mature, looked like they were piercing through. Her eyebrows, which stood like a puddle of white bushes just above her eyes, softened her lofty look a little. Tamir was stuck in her eyes after examining her from head to toe. Almost everyone in this country had dark eyes. Apart from Tamir, his family's eyes were also dark and slanted. With his straw-blond hair and ice-grey eyes, Tamir seemed to be shouting that he was a foreigner in this country. The woman said, "W
While Yelis and David were passing the first barrel through the middle of the bar, Rick was sipping one of David's wines in a glass. The bar's yellow cat, Moose, was slumped on the chair with his eyes closed and his tail wrapped around his feet. A man was standing in front of the big fireplace in the corner, looking across at Yelis and David, who were carrying barrels. The man touched a polished tin can he always carried. The bar was almost empty except for David, Yelis, the bartender, and the man by the fireplace.At that moment, two large men entered. They headed straight for the man in front of the fireplace. He glanced at the bartender as the men entered. But the man who had been standing by the fireplace from the very beginning did more than take a glance and caught David's arm, who had passed him and was heading for the door. A long black leather jacket he wore highlighted the heavy muscles in his arms. His head was covered with a hood, as if he wanted to hide his face. David fro
“We couldn't find them, we have to go back now,” Artam said, looking troubled as darkness began to fall on the mountain. “They must be dead already” “Does it scare you?” 'Tam asked. He had a vaguely mocking expression on his face. Artam gave him a murderous look. “He is weak, he is weak.” said. “We don't have anything to do with Gluttons or Wretches.” Artam looked quite nervous. "Did they really come?" she asked in a whisper. Artam must have felt what Tamir. felt.Tamir looked up at the sky as if the fog that had settled on the dark mountain was of no interest to him. Artam had already judged that the fog descending on the mountain was the cause of arrivals.It is as if Tamir had read Artam mind, "There's always fog on the mountain at this time of day." He could taste the tension in Artam's eyes, hidden under the hood of his black cloak. In fact, Tamir also shared Artam's uneasiness. He was in Kars for years. When he first came to Kars, all the stories he had heard about Tonka and the I
Tamir disappeared in a swim of blue light. When he opened his eyes, the forest around him and the cold that was burning him had disappeared. He was lying on the wooden floor of a house. A woman with her long braid on her right shoulder hurried to the door of the wooden house. As the woman walked, a sound came from the wooden floor. Tamir moved to stay off the ground, but failed to do so. As she made her way to the door, she looked back and said hesitantly to someone standing in the shadows, "One of the neighbors." “She might want to borrow some groceries…” A young girl with straw-blond hair reaching her waist gently placed the bowls on the table and slowly walked away. The residents of the house seemed unaware of Tamir's presence. “I don't think so—” another man in the room said to the woman heading for the door, and his hand touched the hilt of his sword. The figures of two white snakes entwined on the hilt glowed faintly. The woman approached the door when it exploded open, parts of
When the light disappeared, David and Ewin rushed over to Yelis, who was lying on the ground. David squatted down beside Yelis, who was lying on the ground, hastily searching her body for something bad, but all she could find was a slight cut on her forehead. While small, that single cut could have been serious enough. Yelis' body was warm. They took Yelis in their arms and left with Ewin.Aunt Abigial tried to be polite as she dressed Yelis, but soft groans interrupted Yelis's low mutter nonetheless. Yelis had been lying unconscious for days after that incident. He had a constant fever, the reason for which he did not understand on the third. Aunt Abigial looked at Yelis' fever again. Such a fire could easily kill a person, but Yelis was still struggling. After wetting a cloth again, he placed it on Yelis's forehead. A doorbell was heard. It was David and Ewin. David: “How is she doing?” ' asked Aunt Abigial. Abigial was unhappy. “Same,” he said.Ewin's spell would keep those men awa
Ewin gripped the hilt of the stick in his hand. Everyone concentrated on the direction the light was coming from. Shadows waving eastward were trying to break through the firewall. The shadows gradually transformed him into a horse and rider with tall bulky shapes behind him. Ewin knew what these shapes were. The moonlight had revealed the rider's hooded cloak. Between the Shadows and Ewin and the others was just a magical firewall. All the shapes were black in the night. The sound of a horse's hooves…. Ewin recognized that voice.Behind the black cavalry, the horned figures appeared in double rows, as if obeying the black cavalry. The sounds of boots hitting the ground sounded like a nightmare. Ewin counted nearly twenty horned shadows running left and right through the firewall. The black cavalry stood motionless, and suddenly raised his staff and attacked the firewall. Ewin could feel the pressure exerted on the wall. He lowered his cavalry staff to the ground, vanishing westward i
The road to the Black Lake was quite long. It felt like weeks had passed since dinner with David and Abigial, as if it had been days for Ewin since he had seen the black horseman. He could no longer feel anything but numbness on his shoulders carrying Yelis's stretcher. David had been quiet for a while. Ewin wasn't sure how long it had been since the murmurs had ceased. Reaching the black lake was their only hope. They tiredly tried to increase their speed, but their legs were moving slowly.Ewin finally fell to his knees. He checked Yelis' covers, tiredly. Yelis's breathing was regular. "What if they come back?" he said coldly."The wheel of fate turns as it pleases," said Aunt Abigial uneasily. “If they come back…We'll gather our strength and stop them,” he said, and sighed, his face loosening as he bent his back. Ewin realized for the first time that Abigial was as frightened as he was, if not more. Uras nodded and looked at the firewall. "We'll get over it," Ewin said, encouragingl
“It's a beautiful weapon you're wearing,” David asked Uras. Uras looked at David for a moment."I didn't think I'd find a brute-marked sword in a place like this," said David.“It belonged to my father.” Uras looked at his sword, the hilt visible at the end of his cloak; He turned his eyes to Bilge's house. “They took it a long time ago,” he said. "It's strange that they've been taking the Ice people for thousands of years, but they've never touched the Burkut bearers," David said.Uras avoided looking sideways from David. He didn't want to talk to a stranger about his sword. Still, he felt he had to say something. "It might not always work to carry a sword with the Bürküt mark. I didn't even know he had it until recently, anyway."David nodded to her. “It might work. It wasn't always like this.” David touched the symbol on the sword on Uras' waist. A two-headed eagle." Sacred once among the ice peoples of Bürkut. Another symbol of the Lakeside. This sword must have met your father by