Ghosts That We Knew Timestamp: 03 Fall 513 The wind gusted through the main courtyard of the Sanctuary, bringing with it the crisp, earthy scent of infant autumn. Caelum could have sworn he heard it while lying in bed, unable to sleep despite the day’s industry. He had spent too long gazing at the ceiling, dreaming of the wind and what half gone songs it attempted to return to him. His mind raced too fast to tumble into sleep, sweeping back through the hours of his time on Mizahar both as Syna’s beloved and as a fate ridden Ankal in the age of the Valterrian. Since his weak memory of his last past life had been strengthened to full capacity during the cataclysmic events of his time in Denval, he had found himself with a great many new minutes to sift through, secrets and dreams to rediscover. Dreams, perhaps, most especially. Nysel had neglected to mark him thus far in this life, but Caelum knew now that he was of a dangerous and mysterious order of dreamwalkers known as the Cytali. It was these thoughts that ultimately drove him from his bed while the wind whipped the sea below into frothing white caps. He ended up in the courtyard, dressed in leather riding breeches and his tall boots ringing against the cobbles, throwing back echoes at the night. Initially he thought to rouse his Windrunner and take to the air, a long habit of his to chase and to run horse back when the pressure inside of him readied to burst. Fortunately, sense caught up with him while he wandered down the cozy, dim interior of the boarding stables, listening to sleepy shifts and whispers of the horses in their stalls. It was madness to go riding past the safety of the Sanctuary in the middle of the night, alone with little more than his wits to defend him. Returning to the courtyard, he stood awhile in the wind, head thrown back and the thick, heavy knot of his braids sagging against the nape of his neck. He studied the stars, tracing their familiar patterns, and gave Leth’s shining face a wry, familiar smile of acknowledgement. Even that failed to ease the tension spiking in his blood, however, and before long he was shedding his coat to leave him in shirtsleeves, baring heavily inked arms. In this form, his windmarks and scars told an ancient story, one nearly equal in mystery to his sun washed, day form. One memory gained a little ground over the others -- a sea cliff at the feet of mountains, snow blanketing the wolf’s hour before dawn, and a lesson learned in self-defense and how to read the maps of souls. This held carefully in his mind, he fell into a defensive stance, aligning his bones for greater equilibrium, and began to move through the forms of punch and deflect, kick and guard. He held his muscles tight, dark eyes straight ahead, and tried very hard not to dream. |