As though on cue, the forest itself seemed to come alive around them. The grass and the twining berry vines that trailed along the ground reached up to grab his boots, and the bushes and brambles around the clearing began to visibly grow into a wall. So much for not attracting attention.
“Run!” Einarr suited words to action and sprinted for the far edge, around the bear, hoping the others would be quick enough to outpace the rapidly coiling plant matter. Runa he had no fear for, as she still sat on his shoulders.
Erik practically stepped on his heels, he was so close, and Jorir was right behind him. There came a crash of breaking branches and a curse from Irding. Einarr turned in time to see the man’s axe raised high.
“Irding, no!”
It was too late. The iron axe blade chopped down into the vegetation and Irding, his breathing heavy, surged forward.
The branches redoubled their growth, seeming to reach after him like grasping claws. Einarr had not been certain until that moment that using a weapon would draw any more attention than wrestling the bear-creature had, but here was the proof. The forest around them erupted into raucous chaos. Crows cawed from all around. Wolves howled. Bears roared - although not from just behind them, thankfully. And even over all of that, Einarr would swear he could hear the plants that hindered them growing.
Irding’s face was pale and pained, and his breath came heavy. Einarr frowned.
“Erik. Carry him.”
The big man grunted, and without waiting for Irding’s inevitable refusal scooped his son up over his shoulder like a sack of cabbages.
Irding gasped in pain, but they had no time to resettle. “Bear with it,” Erik grumbled, and they were off again.
Einarr had no idea how long they’d run before the grasping vines slackened their pace, as though unsure of where their quarry had gone after such a long chase. Einarr had no doubt the plants had been hunting them. Had anything else? He shook his head as he slowed to a jog, and then a stop. “I think we’re clear.”
“For now, maybe,” Runa said. “Are you ever going to put me down?”
Einarr dropped to one knee and unwrapped his arm from around her legs. It wasn’t that he’d forgotten he was carrying her - the weight of another human on his shoulder was not something he could forget while running - but this was the first moment they’d had to pause and catch their breath. Runa trailed her fingers along the line of his jaw as she slipped gracefully down. It was thanks enough, so far as he was concerned.
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Erik raised a hand to his forehead and looked around. Irding appeared to have passed out during the run. “Does anyone happen to know if we were even running in the right direction?”
Einarr was reasonably certain they had started out in the right direction, at least, but once they were moving his biggest concern had been keeping them out of the clutches of the forest. He shook his head. “I lost track.”
“I couldn’t tell you if we’re any closer to the lair or nay,” Jorir said, pointing off to their right. “But I’m pretty sure we need to head that way.”
Einarr raised an eyebrow before turning to look. “You mean because it looks the darkest and most impassable?”
Jorir nodded. “It would fit with what we’ve seen so far, wouldn’t it?”
Erik hummed, stepping over to a moderately clear space on the forest floor. “Maybe so. But there’s something else we need to take care of first.”
Kneeling, Erik slung his unconscious son down as gently as he could. “Going to need all of us to keep the lady safe, I think.”
Einarr felt an irrational stab of annoyance. If Irding hadn’t drawn his axe, they would not have been put to flight, and he had only been slowed because he had fought poorly, earlier. Frowning, he shook off such dark thoughts. “Not like none of us have ever been reckless before, right? Runa, will you see what you can do for him?”
She hummed and moved to kneel beside the injured man. With practiced motions - more practiced than he had expected, honestly - she examined his chest under the battered maille. A few minutes later, she shook her head.
“You were right. He broke a rib when the bear was tossing him around like a rag doll.” She cast an accusatory look at Erik. “If you’d been able to carry him more gently, I might be able to Sing him back into the fight, but its aggravated now. We’ll need to set it, and if we cannot let it heal naturally it will weaken him.”
Erik shook his head. “Now look what you’ve done to yourself, my boy.”
Einarr raised an eyebrow. “How’s your leg?”
Erik harrumphed but said nothing. He was spared further commentary when Irding awakened with a gasp and a groan.
“Good. Ye’re awake,” Jorir grumbled. “At least now you can look after yerself.”
“Can you set the break?” Einarr thought the chances were good Irding would have to do a fair bit more than hide in a tree to look after himself once Runa began her part. Runa and Jorir both shook their heads.
“Not without bringing the wrath o’ the wood back down on our heads, I think.”
Irding sat up with a grimace and frowned down at the maille now laying on the forest floor beside him. “Surely there must be some way. A sore chest never stopped me before…”
An idea struck Einarr. “Belts. Rethread your weapons on your belts, and we’ll use our baldrics. That should help, shouldn’t it?”
Runa hesitated, thinking it over, before nodding. “It should work. Take off your shirt, Irding.”
“Quickly now. If there were wolves on our trail, we won’t know it until we’re surrounded. The sooner we’re moving, the better.”