Time: a couple bells after dark, on the 25th of Spring, 513 (immediately following these events)
When Alea first slipped back into consciousness, it was to the unfamiliar sensation of galloping without falling off of the glowing horse underneath her. Her first memory was of the dead foal, and her first instinct was to wonder why she wasn't guarding its body. She only realized there was someone else on the horse with her when her panicked arm-flailing to gain control of her horse was quickly repressed by the strong arms of Jakobi, the man she worked for.
The blood-loss from the deep gashes in her thighs might have been affecting her lucidity, but she still had enough adrenaline to sound determined when she told him to turn around. When he didn't answer, she struggled to look up into his stony face. "We have to get him back. We can't let that thing have him." Speaking the words made it more real, and she choked up as she forced more words out. "I have to recover the body...give him a proper funeral..." A wave of dizziness threatened to drag her back into unconsciousness, but she held on to demand desperately, "What are the funeral rites for a horse?"
There was a hard edge to Jakobi's voice when he answered. "There are none. That foal's spirit has departed; recovering the body is meaningless. Now it is merely meat and bones for Caiyha's creatures to feast on."
A sob caught in Alea's throat at his answer. Sloppy tears began falling down her face as she tried to explain. "I thought I could find him in time! I didn't know...I didn't think it would be this dangerous. I'm sorry!" she wailed. Then she returned to the desperation and anger she'd felt earlier. It didn't exactly make her feel...better, but it hurt slightly less than the helplessness. "I'll find that Zith. I'll find it and make it pay."
"No," Jakobi said with a harshness that surprised Alea into silence. "The Zith did nothing wrong. They do not hunt in the Spires, and in return they are not hunted. You let the young Gilding escape into their domain. Because of you a Gilding is dead!"
Alea had nothing to say to that. On some level, she had known that it was her fault. But she'd always assumed she could fix it, that even if she did something wrong, there was a way to set it right. But from the moment she saw that creature descend on the foal, she knew her mistake had cost more than she could ever pay. And so she had reacted the only way she knew how, with violence. But violence hadn't helped. Nothing would ever help...
~*~*~
Alea had drifted off without noticing, and the next time she woke up, she was in an unfamiliar bed. By the light of the firefly lantern she could tell there was someone else in the room, but she could not make out who it was before the pain of her injuries overcame her. A strained noise of discomfort escaped her throat as she tried to sit up and determine where she was.