“I'll break the sky, for you and I are going nowhere;
Kiss goodbye a dozen times before we get there.
Why do I need anyone else
When I can break the sky myself?”
– The Hush Sound
90 Spring, 511
They had walked for many days.
For fear of slavers and worse, they tried to avoid the main road. But it had been too long since she had been outside of the forest, even though their destination was her first home. The only plan they knew was South; it was not a good means to travel any distance. A few days of virtually aimless wandering finally led them back to Kabrin, and so they opted to follow it at night instead of shunning it entirely. Her eyes were keen and their encounters were few, but the travel left him tired and irritable, even more so than usual. Ultimately they chose a safe daytime distance away from the road. They took turns checking their vicinity to it and usually only walked eight hours a day, else he complain.
In exchange for his human dexterity, which could adequately pitch a tent and cook a piece of meat, she hunted and usually carried his trunk. Both of them were convinced that the protection they offered one another was mutual, though in reality, she had more strength and prestige than he could ever dream.
While the road traversed through the outskirts of the Filrian Bog, one or the other had gotten too close to a giant pink plant in its lovely spring bloom. It reflexed with an almost animal flourish and spouted a thousand little spores at the pair. Within minutes, they were both consumed in profound hopelessness, their minds wrought with visions of death and despair. Lacking the sense to move away from the source of their sorrows, the irritated flower cursed them twice more with its peculiar depressant before they stumbled away by accident. As the toxic effect wore thin, they learned to be careful of the swamp’s creatures, but still they talked for days about the encounter as they walked on.
Miles outside of that wretchedness, he grew tired of raw and half-cooked meat. He had sampled a familiar-looking red berry growing between the tall grasses. (“Only a bit, to see if it’s good!”) Within hours he was retching and miserable, able to drink only water and eat little else. His moans rose into the sky like smoke from a campfire, broadcasting to the area their location. For two days, she ran to fill his waterskin when she was not circling their camp to ward off potential enemies. After the second day, he reluctantly packed up and, slowly, they walked on.
They had encountered a caravan heading north. It was a terrible idea, to attempt to intimidate an entire wagon of people for the sake of sport and perhaps a little food, but he convinced her it was worth it. She approached growling. Some fled to the safety of their giant wooden box, but others removed their stew from sight and pointed torches at her, yelling and grunting to shoo her away. He had been proud to watch her hold her ground even though she did not seem inclined to grant him the show of a fight. Then there was a peculiar noise and her roaring whimper, and one man lowered his bow. Luckily, the man had good aim and a kind heart; meaning only to scare an animal from attacking, the arrow barely scratched her shoulder. She had rightfully fled and he had tended her wound to the best of his abilities, wrapping dirty gauze around her arm and chastising her cowardice. So they walked on.
The aging Spring lead to warmer, longer days. Victor woke to every day assuming that the last had been the very worst, and anticipating the next would be better. He had no idea how close he was, or if they had already passed their destination. But through the trials and hunger and unrelenting irritation, he managed to maintain his confidence and optimism.
Though her vague stories and gradually returning memory began to bore him, he knew he needed her if he intended to eat. Perhaps it was that he could release his frustrations on his travelling partner that he retained some semblance of sanity. He did not seem to care how she felt about any situation, because she did not often object to his arbitrary decisions and tantrums. It was for that reason that they had delayed setting out for the morning. Dagger gripped in his right hand, the Ravokian had decided he should train. What better way than to train with a body?
Soft scars were still visible beneath the sheen of sweat on his bare chest, which had come to cling to his ribs for malnourishment. His condition did not seem to daunt him, however. His stance was wide, back bent in a ready crouch. He dance around Sophia in search of a blind spot or a weak area, bouncing with energy he should not have been spending. After a brief pause to feign one direction, he darted in the other and slashed the little blade sloppily at her shoulder.