73rd of summer
It is in the bating of the world’s breath that the storm rings loudest.
Each breath was so shallow that his shoulders were almost still. Each blink was little more than a flicker, something that would be missed if not seen at just the right moment. His frame was coiled, like a snake preparing to strike, and yet he could have been set in stone for the motionlessness that had taken him.
He crouched upon a rise ten or so yards away from the last pavilion of Endrykas, gazing into the west. He hadn’t set up camp today. The tents had been loosened from the travois, but he made no move to raise them. No pit had been dug for fire, no space cleared for comfort.
His Strider stood a little ways off, watching the sunset with as still of a manner as his rider. Akaidras had first begun watching the horizon two days ago. Shahar knew better than to question the animal. The animals always knew first. But today… today, he could feel it. Something deep that made his breath light and quick. Something that ached through his bones and grew a lump in his throat that refused to be swallowed. It vibrated through the bond to she who shared his heart, filling every fiber of his being with the agonizing feel of waiting.
The wind had died.
Something was coming.
Each breath was so shallow that his shoulders were almost still. Each blink was little more than a flicker, something that would be missed if not seen at just the right moment. His frame was coiled, like a snake preparing to strike, and yet he could have been set in stone for the motionlessness that had taken him.
He crouched upon a rise ten or so yards away from the last pavilion of Endrykas, gazing into the west. He hadn’t set up camp today. The tents had been loosened from the travois, but he made no move to raise them. No pit had been dug for fire, no space cleared for comfort.
His Strider stood a little ways off, watching the sunset with as still of a manner as his rider. Akaidras had first begun watching the horizon two days ago. Shahar knew better than to question the animal. The animals always knew first. But today… today, he could feel it. Something deep that made his breath light and quick. Something that ached through his bones and grew a lump in his throat that refused to be swallowed. It vibrated through the bond to she who shared his heart, filling every fiber of his being with the agonizing feel of waiting.
The wind had died.
Something was coming.