Fall 81, 509AV
The night had been a torrent, not because of the tempest that had waved over an icy hand, but instead because Dra-Marvasa had spent his hours finding his way through a bottle of his father's whiskey in such a gale. In the wake of a storm that had hit like an emotional typhoon and flooded all soldiers of rational thinking, he had runaway through his window, uncolored into the breeze.
He had traveled nowhere that he could remember; he tried not to think of where he was, where he was going, or why he was there. So much so, he would have had no answer had someone stopped him to ask for his name or hold. He wanted nothing to do with such associations as titles and companies. He was content to wander namelessly for the entirety of the night. So he did until his mind was an impassive schmaltz of incomplete thoughts and repetition of one foot falling heavily before the other.
He had eventually found the punt of the glass bottle and his numb extremities began to ach and moan despite feeling no arctic bite, his body trembled but his face remained stagnant and flushed. Bloodshot whites found their way to a large wooden structure just before the light of day, sloshing the last of the backwash of the bottle in his swinging grasp. Mara could feel the heavy helpings of liquor piling into his esophagus and laboring to scale its way out in acidic mounds of bile. Each deep breath he took to silence their pommelling was met with a new upsurge of nausea.
Before stumbling to the entrance with a doleful yelp of a chuckle he leaned over by the side way and heaved out his stomach contents in wrenching coughs. Liquid swirled brown and red slid in artistic strokes across its sparkling canvas before the last of his sickness was expelled. The gradual sobriety that began to seep into his hazy mind was dire and he squinted his eyes while a hand buffed away the thread of saliva dripping from his gaping gateway.
Scooping some snow into the bottles chambers he rapped at his forearm and melted it into slushed water. He sloshed it about and then swigged it in its entirety.
A black boot scrapped snow over his excreted vomit and he slipped inside the tepid barn building greeted with the aroma that could only be described as the smell of beasts and manure. He walked his way to the back, assuming it would be a few hours before any handlers entered The White Elk Stables. Near the back he found the only thing that seemed familiar, a curled and downed body of a black and white sled dog. He only recognized this one by the markings imitating a war helmet crowning his white face. His chest felt heavy looking at him for he could only be reminded of one thing upon the sight of him...Syllke. It was one of the dogs that had been so vigilantly at Syllke's side the day he had crashed, or more accurately the day they had met.
He shuttered his dizzy lids to settle the room and entered the stall. It took little effort to stoop beside the warm bodies that were curled about the hay laden area. They stirred to look at him and recall his scent with pointed snouts, but seemed unthreatened and so they allowed him to stay. He lay beside the familiar canine and basked in his heat. Dark hair slipped over his eyes and his fingers intertwined in the grey fur, before sleep took him. Too drunk and too tired to return home through the open window he had left for himself.
Cloudless skies blushed as the sun peeked over its naked form, and the night fled like an adulterous stranger. The buildings horizon gave shadows that cast their coattails over the west and shrouded those still straggling inside from the shame of the morning's light. The snow had slowed hours ago its foggy breath still swirling in heavy gust of wind that tossed about untrammeled piles of ice like lace. Unaware and undisturbed Avanthal endured on, beginning anew with freshly paved ice ways.