81 Fall, 511
A pair of Icewatch mages had quarreled. Every bear could smell the remnants of res and shields all the way from the Barracks, hanging on the air like a sticky mist or a sour flame. Most did not care; it was the inevitable consequence of a long-brewing rivalry. Those that did only sneezed with passive resentment. When asked to clear the path and help the land recover, all of them quickly mumbled about their training and resumed it. The members of the Guard were not janitors, they said, let the perpetrators clean up their own mess. But the perpetrators would be in Whitevine for days.
Belgar took up the task because he had trained long enough, and he was tired of thinking. A little mindless labor would be good for his head. He donned his coat and gloves and walked the path from his home until he found the carnage: blackened splinters of trees strewn over the path so that no human foot could safely cross it. Beneath the wooden wreckage, the snow had been stirred up and used, leaving him a rare view of the gray-brown dirt beneath. And the blood. There was not a lot, only enough to smell and barely enough to see, but its mere presence was enough. Belgar lifted the back of his wrist to massage his wrinkled nose. As he dropped his hand his sigh bloomed white on the cold air. He could not fathom the sadness in it, but it still felt odd to see so much destruction and chaos in a place that had so recently been so clean.
The job would be a long one, but not difficult. Most of it could be moved with his human hands and muscles; there was no need to soil his tongue and teeth with the stench of magic. When he had accepted it, though, he had forgotten how he detested that smell, how it reminded him of a time he hated and yet would never forget... No one was dead, at least. The two guards were both older than he, and yet they were as reckless and volatile as bear cubs. Such was the way of humans.
He stepped close enough to the roadblock and wrapped his hand around one of the larger branches, its bark gnarled and curling. Its needles were long since stirred off, now a half-melted residue on the lowermost pieces. He tugged it from the pile and tossed it to the side of the path. By the time it had cracked loudly against the ground, another of its brothers was already in the air.