Mara supported the heft of his transgressions squarely upon his shoulders. Each step would mine him knee deep into the tundra had it been a perceptible burden. He had adjourned summoning as repeatedly, his esophagus was inflamed with a thorny bite. His small hand shot up to his orifice to cover a hoarse cough, and a retch skirted its way up his windpipe only to be gulped down in one trying mouthful.
He was shattered already having departed the city, and with the recently laden sleet erasing all emblems that pointed to any unambiguous target. His hair freckled with snow-white embellishment, hanging from contrasting strands to slide stick, or slide downhill along the glossed drop onto his cheek. He was not rational any more just fool-heartily hiking, trusting to stumble into something or get lost in nothing.
It took what gave the impression of several bells of feasibly slogging in rings with the resolved of going only headlong, but there at the forefront of his red-hot extremities and numb lips was a lump in the open briny of ivory. He squinted his eyes between the fog of whirling rime and held his hand to shield the snow from his irritated eyes. He traipsed toward the plump bantam alp, a blanket of slush frosting its dusty peak.
His feet paused just out of arm's length before it, the wind howling in his ears, he exposed it to be what he sought for. "Syllke..." it was a lament of relief echoed from the painful sobs that had been wrenched out of him. He stooped before him in more of a collapse than an intended act. He puffed before him kneeling on all four limbs like a beast, and had the entire vapor not been sapped from his now discolored creamy whites, he would have discharged a new current.
"You-" his words opened accusatory and breathless, projecting a subliminal finger at the newly found figure. "-idiot." his voice dropped as he scrapped his knees through the turf to grasp the boy and wrap his arms around his depressed form, cradling his head against his trunk and his own cheek against his crown.
No longer did he have it in him to plead with him, he just desired to melt into one compacted form with the article of his one man search party. He enfolded him forcefully. "What if I couldn't find you? Were you just going to sit out here and freeze?" turmoil was escalating in his voice again his lids padlocked shut so that they formed deep ridges along the thin membrane. His arguments were hypocritical having thought the same thing not far into his grief-stricken trek into the storm. "Don't do that." he pulled him from him to look into his face with a face full of worry and fear. "Don't you ever do that." He squeezed at the artists upper limb assertively, his own face warped into a crease that was rebelliously struggling to exorcise the constructing whimpers and curved from him. The consideration of finding Syllke unresponsive, concealed beneath the snow like he had once imagined his own corpse, stabbed him jaggedly in the chest.
He reflected on the spectacle of his childhood friend plummeting to the bottom of the lake, as he stood and watched stationary by his own fear, and the sight of his mother's stock-still body haunting the bedroom she had always been little more than an empty vessel to begin with, but was now accurately hollow. "I could never forgive you, not ever." his voice crawled out of the desolate cavern of grinding jaws, in a pained sob.
Had he located him right off or even in less of a fear-provoking state, he would have clarified his conducts briefly, shed some light to his behavior and asked for forgiveness, nursed him and gone back exactly as they had come. He was submerged by the reactions he'd been wrestling down with the full realization that he really cared for Syllke, and even in his own phobia of death would have held him captive, it hurt so much more to think of it being Syllke's body brought in to be prepared for burial.
He slackened his grip and brought a hand to his watering eyes and covered them, his body shaking in a kneeling curled heap before the other, this person that had wrapped himself so tightly around his chest with so little effort.