74 Winter, 511
The docks were as they had been. Ice clung to the posts and dripped from the platforms, tore into the grains in the wood and settled there, awaiting the first thaw. The line between white frost and black water was too far to fathom, and the possibility of an approaching boat seemed too distant to consider. And yet they had come, had caused a stir, and left again. It was too little consolation, to know that they had probably died at sea soon after.
If anyone asked him why he had come, he would tell them it was to pay his respects. He knew the words were the right ones, but he did not understand why they were necessary. Belgar did not come to this place, on this day, out of obligation to the dead. Somehow, he thought there might be some way to regain a piece of what he had lost. He stayed for as long as he could, hoping, waiting, thinking.
The Queen herself had said he was not to blame. Then why did he suffer?
Before long, he realized that there was no use. Just like on any other day, there were no answers and no consolation. There was only the quiet of the world and the noise of his mind. The sun had moved, and its light was fleeting this time of year. With a decisive white huff, Belgar turned away from the empty ocean and walked. He walked where his instinct led him, and so he walked aimlessly; he walked for as long as he could stand it, and so he walked for hours. He focused on the ground, the way the fresh-fallen snow broke as he stepped through it, and sometimes the way she would tell him not to drag his feet...
He smelled her long before he saw her. It was not the woman who lived in his memories, but another. She stank of sweat, adrenaline, and the heated blood of exercise. He heard cries of effort and the sharp shuffle of snow and air. The rhythm of the footfalls was strange, but he could not say why.
It was uncommon to encounter another soul too far from the safety of the holds this time of year, but as he thought of it, he remembered how near Skyglow Hold stood. Even as the realization put thick cotton in his throat, still he trudged on, allowed curiosity full reign of his feet. The trees grew thicker around the pond here, he observed, allowing for a hasty retreat, if nothing else. With that cowardice in mind, he peered between the pines at the source of the commotion.
And he could not help but stare at what he saw.