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..61st Spring, 515
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..61st Spring, 515
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"I miss her already."
There was something weak and dejected in Zhol's voice as he admitted that; and yet it was undeniably true. It had been less than half a bell since he had walked Khara to the Sanikas Gates, wished her well on her day's scouting, and kissed her goodbye; and yet it already felt as if she had been gone for a thousand years. He always missed her, but lately it had grown worse: he missed her like an absent limb; he missed her like a gaping hole in his chest where his heart was meant to be. When he was with her, he felt whole; but every time she left it felt as if part of him went with her, and as if some thread of connection and union between them was being stretched to the absolute limit.
A sputter of noise escaped from Solo. "Yeah, yeah," he muttered, fumbling with the buckle that would adjust the bridle's throat latch to fit Solo more comfortably. "I know, friend. You don't really give a shyke."
An indignant whinny and a stamp of Solo's foot came in reply, as if the horse was somehow outraged by Zhol's assertion. The horse boy chuckled to himself, rubbing a soothing hand up and down the side of Solo's neck. "Oh, I'm sorry. I forgot that the prospect of becoming a big brother had made you sappy and sensitive."
Solo seemed to agree with that, at least, more snorted breaths blown between his lips as he stood still enough for Zhol to continue with his work. Zhol's attention shifted to the saddle, heaving it up from the edge of the stall and carefully positioning it on top of the saddle blanket that he had already put in place. A few wriggles of the reinforced leather construct and it settled into place; he ducked, reaching through Solo's stride for the girth straps, carefully securing the saddle in place.
"She's fine, by the way," he added, referring to Solo's pregnant mother. "She won't start to show for a while longer yet; her appetite is a little bigger than usual, but that's to be expected. She's in good health, and that means your little brother or sister probably will be too."
To an outsider, it probably seemed odd that Zhol was talking to a horse; possibly borderline insane. Zhol didn't care. Back in Endrykas, horses had been afforded a certain level of respect and kinship. Striders were part of the family; and you didn't ignore family, didn't treat it like some lowly farm animal. True, the horses in Wind Reach weren't quite as intelligent and special as Striders; but Zhol treated them as if they were. The Inarta treated anything without feathers with more or less the same disdain; Zhol refused to endorse any kind of mentality that insisted he think of horses as being equal to a goat or a llama. The Inarta might have thought of wind eagles as Endals, and other birds as Avora; but Zhol was determined to see his horses - his friends - treated as Chiet rather than Dek. A futile ambition perhaps; but in all other ways his life in Wind Reach was pretty much perfect, and right now that ambition was one of the only things that stopped him from remaining in bed each morning, and refusing to let Khara leave either.
Zhol unbuckled the stirrup strap, and used his fingers to measure out how long to let them extend before he secured them back in place. It wasn't a precise system, but it was precise enough; Zhol had grown comfortable enough with riding using a saddle that he knew more or less exactly what lengths of rein and height of stirrup was most comfortable for him. Satisfied with his efforts on both sides of Solo, he set about tugging gently but insistently on each strap and fitting, making sure the tack was firm and secure. His thoughts strayed to the riding mishap of the summer before, when his over-eager efforts had dislodged him from the saddle completely; his shoulder let out a twinge of pain to remind him that it had no desire to incur such injuries again.
"Come on, friend," he muttered, swinging open the gate of Solo's stall, and leading the colt - no, stallion; this was Solo's fourth year now, which warranted the more adult affectation - out into the stables. A practised nudge, and the gate swung closed with a satisfying clunk. Zhol glanced in the direction of the entrance, and the sunlight beyond; it was hardly far, he could easily walk that distance with Solo in tow, and yet his body protested - too many aches from his encounters with Endals and beasts and all manner of things these past days. With a glance around to be sure that no one was watching, he slid a foot into the stirrup and vaulted, swinging his leg over Solo's body with so much ease that it seemed effortless. It took a moment for his other foot to find it's place in the other stirrup, and with a gentle kick he spurred Solo into motion, a casual strolling pace towards the looming day.
As Zhol and Solo reached the open doors that led from the stables to the outside, Zhol leaned over just enough to retrieve his hat, hung from a convenient protrusion on the sturdy doors. While Zhol had bought it with the intent of shielding himself from the rain and the wind - hats were far less inclined to billow and blow backwards than cloak hoods were - he'd learned that the wide brim could prove quite useful in defending his eyes against Syna's piercing early morning rays. His hand tugged at the chord that slung a strangely bundled rolled-up blanket across his back, checking that the weight was still there and, with a reflexive touch of his hip that confirmed his sword was still hung at his waist as well, he tugged gently on Solo's reins, steered him in the right direction, and with a kick of his heels and a jeer of encouragement, spurred Solo into swift motion down the Sanikas Road.
"I miss her already."
There was something weak and dejected in Zhol's voice as he admitted that; and yet it was undeniably true. It had been less than half a bell since he had walked Khara to the Sanikas Gates, wished her well on her day's scouting, and kissed her goodbye; and yet it already felt as if she had been gone for a thousand years. He always missed her, but lately it had grown worse: he missed her like an absent limb; he missed her like a gaping hole in his chest where his heart was meant to be. When he was with her, he felt whole; but every time she left it felt as if part of him went with her, and as if some thread of connection and union between them was being stretched to the absolute limit.
A sputter of noise escaped from Solo. "Yeah, yeah," he muttered, fumbling with the buckle that would adjust the bridle's throat latch to fit Solo more comfortably. "I know, friend. You don't really give a shyke."
An indignant whinny and a stamp of Solo's foot came in reply, as if the horse was somehow outraged by Zhol's assertion. The horse boy chuckled to himself, rubbing a soothing hand up and down the side of Solo's neck. "Oh, I'm sorry. I forgot that the prospect of becoming a big brother had made you sappy and sensitive."
Solo seemed to agree with that, at least, more snorted breaths blown between his lips as he stood still enough for Zhol to continue with his work. Zhol's attention shifted to the saddle, heaving it up from the edge of the stall and carefully positioning it on top of the saddle blanket that he had already put in place. A few wriggles of the reinforced leather construct and it settled into place; he ducked, reaching through Solo's stride for the girth straps, carefully securing the saddle in place.
"She's fine, by the way," he added, referring to Solo's pregnant mother. "She won't start to show for a while longer yet; her appetite is a little bigger than usual, but that's to be expected. She's in good health, and that means your little brother or sister probably will be too."
To an outsider, it probably seemed odd that Zhol was talking to a horse; possibly borderline insane. Zhol didn't care. Back in Endrykas, horses had been afforded a certain level of respect and kinship. Striders were part of the family; and you didn't ignore family, didn't treat it like some lowly farm animal. True, the horses in Wind Reach weren't quite as intelligent and special as Striders; but Zhol treated them as if they were. The Inarta treated anything without feathers with more or less the same disdain; Zhol refused to endorse any kind of mentality that insisted he think of horses as being equal to a goat or a llama. The Inarta might have thought of wind eagles as Endals, and other birds as Avora; but Zhol was determined to see his horses - his friends - treated as Chiet rather than Dek. A futile ambition perhaps; but in all other ways his life in Wind Reach was pretty much perfect, and right now that ambition was one of the only things that stopped him from remaining in bed each morning, and refusing to let Khara leave either.
Zhol unbuckled the stirrup strap, and used his fingers to measure out how long to let them extend before he secured them back in place. It wasn't a precise system, but it was precise enough; Zhol had grown comfortable enough with riding using a saddle that he knew more or less exactly what lengths of rein and height of stirrup was most comfortable for him. Satisfied with his efforts on both sides of Solo, he set about tugging gently but insistently on each strap and fitting, making sure the tack was firm and secure. His thoughts strayed to the riding mishap of the summer before, when his over-eager efforts had dislodged him from the saddle completely; his shoulder let out a twinge of pain to remind him that it had no desire to incur such injuries again.
"Come on, friend," he muttered, swinging open the gate of Solo's stall, and leading the colt - no, stallion; this was Solo's fourth year now, which warranted the more adult affectation - out into the stables. A practised nudge, and the gate swung closed with a satisfying clunk. Zhol glanced in the direction of the entrance, and the sunlight beyond; it was hardly far, he could easily walk that distance with Solo in tow, and yet his body protested - too many aches from his encounters with Endals and beasts and all manner of things these past days. With a glance around to be sure that no one was watching, he slid a foot into the stirrup and vaulted, swinging his leg over Solo's body with so much ease that it seemed effortless. It took a moment for his other foot to find it's place in the other stirrup, and with a gentle kick he spurred Solo into motion, a casual strolling pace towards the looming day.
As Zhol and Solo reached the open doors that led from the stables to the outside, Zhol leaned over just enough to retrieve his hat, hung from a convenient protrusion on the sturdy doors. While Zhol had bought it with the intent of shielding himself from the rain and the wind - hats were far less inclined to billow and blow backwards than cloak hoods were - he'd learned that the wide brim could prove quite useful in defending his eyes against Syna's piercing early morning rays. His hand tugged at the chord that slung a strangely bundled rolled-up blanket across his back, checking that the weight was still there and, with a reflexive touch of his hip that confirmed his sword was still hung at his waist as well, he tugged gently on Solo's reins, steered him in the right direction, and with a kick of his heels and a jeer of encouragement, spurred Solo into swift motion down the Sanikas Road.
"Pavi" | "Common" | "Nari" | "Symenos"
Dad Thoughts | Dinah Thoughts | Khara Thoughts
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