Fall 90, 509 AV
A deep huff, built up from holding his breath, flopped free and twirled with the winter-born atmosphere fashioning silver smoke that spun before his nose. The pending season greeted him with open arms as he trampled across thickly assembled snow. Avanthal always seemed to gain height at the arrival of multilayered slush, and her people adopted it as new roads and knolls in their topography. The bleached mat was as much a part of the city as it was when it would wane into a fine powder, only sugar-coating the turf. Citizens were lively, Vantha or otherwise, slipping in and out of their holds and locales of work to gulp in the harsh air. Candle flames flickered along the frames of each window and along the street’s verge. As solemn and lovely to outsiders as it was bleak to any who knew it meant the departure of their fair goddess was approaching.
Festivities were prepared, meats cured and salted and cold sweets churned and sealed in decorative designs with a flick of ice reaving fingers. Sleds skidded between paths littered with children's laughter and shouting mutts threatening to run over any who were unobservant to their course. Snow whirled clouds stirred about the peaks of buildings and sat too perfectly over the city. It was the depiction of a city turned snow globe.
Work was slackened; it usually was around this time. People were too invested in the season and spending their last moments with Morwen before she swanned her dresses chilly hem across the continent. It was an unusually calamitous time for Mara in past seasons. No work was as miserable as seeing Morwen off, and a forthcoming personal holiday in his family had always harbored its own dusky clouds. He was never offered reasoning as to why, and he had stopped asking about the veiled tears shed on the day of his birth.
His trodden path stopped at the Skyglow hold. Air plucked at his color flecked cords and the tongue of a cerise knit scarf flailed at his side. He followed the structures edge to the upper levels of the most charmingly decorated hold in the city. Ice sculptures hugged the building beams and crowned it with flawless and unwavering portraits. The windows were fogged with designs spun across the glass and candles floated in crystal bowls resting on unmanageable niches. Light danced across the bloodied halos of the attentive half blood.
He skimmed down to the sack dangling from his partially sleeve sheathed hand. Those that worked at the Whitevine hold occasionally were treated to an appreciation gift around the time of the festivals. This year it was a classic frozen treat, arranged with engraved designs of snowflakes on it's creamy face. Besides not possessing a particularly sweet tooth, the confection contained a conglomerate of berries and nuts. The cream and berries he would have possible been able to stomach with large aggregates of misused time chewing, but the nuts would never process well enough for him to digest. So he had brought them with him instead of tossing them away or allowing them to pile on extra layers of frost in their icebox.
The day was less than half-past. Mara tried to recall what he had agreed to partaking in for the day. It seemed like a dirty trick to ask him to agree to something when lying in bed in a blissful hypnotism. Still, Mara did not mind Syllke's family and their company, he was less than elegant, but they never seemed to mind his lack of input or social adept or at least it was never commented on within earshot.
He made his way inside and up to where the Vantha and his family lived. He paced to the door and rapped his ink lined knuckles over the woody frame, careful not to jostle the decorations that draped in branches about the entrance. It was so suitable Syllke was a Skyglow. They seemed to share his over the top but attractive nature.
The opening of the door, with a hurried swing, tossed his hair and chubby drops of frozen water toward the beaming smile that greeted him. Looking past the boy he could spot his family walking between the open areas, or else he may have planted a kiss upon the parted soil of his grin. He held up the bag swinging from a thumb wrapped in a mending vine. "Hey." the words were airy and soft the warmer air still thawing his vocal cords. "I brought you something." A transitory smirk stretched over his colorless lips as he handed him the bag. “It’s nothing extraordinary, I just can’t eat it.”