Winter 45, 509 AV
Bonewhite, Blindfall, frost curled on the cusp of breath and traced a finger along lips bright with fire. Slanting eyes, the sky too rich with wind and frost to gaze upon Zulrav openly. One hand curled along a tough length of leather, pulling a tired horse up steep divides and scattered stones toward the yawning maw of stillness just beyond the storm. Wrenmae was covered in fur, Djed sparking along his skin and face and spinning locks of thick hair to sprout from his skin and rage across his face like leaf-less trees. He strained, stressing his muscles to drag his horse toward the cave he’d spotted before the skies had bled their frozen tears. He wasn’t strong, a slight man with a narrow chest and narrow shoulders. Still, he pulled the beast with him. To stay in the heart of the blizzard would be to invite death. Easier to hunker in a cave and carefully burn the scattered wood he’d gathered on the way up. In the morning he could return to Alvadas, cursing aching bones and frozen blood.
It had been curiosity which brought him out here, the rumor of a flower that bloomed only once before a snowstorm, lost in the white that followed. In retrospect, it had been a wild tale, even measured against the stories Wrenmae had been told before. Now he was the fool, caught in Kalea’s wrath as Zulrav howled wild abandon across the sky. Pushing his horse, Weaver, Wrenmae entered the tiny abyss cut into the mountain, leaving the worst of the storm behind.
He could feel the cold, a gnawing certainty along his bones but the fur he’d conjured up kept the fatal edge of it away. Wrenmae chuckled suddenly, imagining how frightening he might look to an outsider. A hairy beast hiding in a cave, a monster seeking fire and the comforts of civilization.
Wrenmae gathered the wood from Weaver’s back and set to work. Stripping the wood with one of his daggers, gathering piles of loose tinder and larger branches, Wrenmae constructed the skeleton of a blaze that would hopefully last the evening. Flint, tinder, tools of nature and man spitting shattered sunlight into the cave, catching the curled edges of the tinder and gnawing farther, growing like a child.
Sitting back, kicking at the jagged ends of wood deeper into flame’s embrace, Wrenmae sighed. He had not banished his fur yet, comforted in the extra cushion it provided him. Weaver snorted, sneezing with miserable displeasure. Wrenmae patted the horse, comforted that the creature would survive the night with him. It wasn’t his horse, borrowed from his adopted father. It wouldn’t do to leave a corpse out here, especially such an undeserving steed. The fire faltered suddenly, cold winds entering the cave and scuttling around the blaze. Wrenmae closed his eyes, tired and afraid. The darkness could easily claim him here, a stupid decision prompting his possible demise out here.
It wasn’t in his hands any longer and higher powers held his fate.
Given what he’d been through, it wasn’t a thought that inspired much confidence.