Excited by the prospect of what the night could hold, Maro quickly packed everything he thought he could possibly need. He had some firewood that had been brought over from the mainland and that he had kept stored indoors to keep dry. Also in the pack was flint and steel, a lantern, a few vials, and a jar of premade dough of water, egg, flour, and honey. A few personal items were in there as well, including a book of fairytales and a bell gifted by Dira to Autumn. On his person, Maro was carrying his two bolas, his obsidian knife, and his coat. He had bought a tent and tied it to his backpack. Picking up his fishing pole, he opened the door for Autumn.
She waited just inside the doorframe, nowhere near as excited as he was about this outing. “Are you sure this is a good idea, Maro? It’s raining. You’ll get soaked.”
“That’s what the coat and the tent are for. Besides, it’s barely raining. You could barely even call this a drizzle.”
Autumn poked her head out the door and looked around. She didn’t like leaving the house. “We’ve never spent a full night in the wild. Are you sure this is wise?”
“No. I’m not, but this isn’t about wisdom. This is about something more. This is about us. This is about living and discovery. Besides, I have a surprise for you.”
This caught Autumn’s attention. Normally, she knew of most surprises before he revealed them, because he had to bring them home. As stealthy as he tried to be, she was a ghost, and she never slept, making sneaking about in the house nearly impossible. Whatever surprise he had, he had not brought it home. Curious, she stepped through the door, waited for him to close and lock it, and followed him as he made his way through the streets of Black Rock. They threaded their way through town, ignoring the few late evening walkers and nodding a greeting to the pair of Omens they passed on the way.
The sun was still up but was quickly sinking toward the horizon as Maro and Autumn came to the archway. They crossed over, moving from the rock solidity of the portion of the island that housed the city to the wet marshland that dominated the rest of the island. He loved the way the ground felt as it squelched up between his toes. Stopping for a moment, he reveled in the way the soggy earth felt on the soles of his bare feet. Tonight was going to be perfect.
“Is this where we’re stopping?” Autumn asked, unimpressed by the surroundings.
“No. I was just taking a moment to get oriented.”
As soon as he headed off again, Autumn was right at his side, tagging along with bodiless steps. Out here where there was no one to watch her, where Maro was her only companion, she relaxed and began to skip along and finally to dance to some song in her head. Maro could only wonder at what it was. She refused to sing, even for him. In his mind, he imagined it was a song she had learned in a time before she had died, a time before she had met her fiancé, a time when she was happy.
They were wandering on a path that would seem aimless to Autumn, but the truth was Maro was lost. He was so certain he had remembered the right way to go, but nothing was looking familiar, or rather, everything looked familiar. Marshes had a way of looking the same everywhere one went in them. Crossing through a waist-deep section, he came up on the other side and watched as Autumn danced over the surface of the water and twirled in a lazy circle while she watched the sky.
“It’s gonna rain again soon, Maro, and dusk is coming. Are we almost there? You need to set up camp.”
“Almost.”
He was going to hate himself if he couldn’t find what he was looking for. The surprise would be ruined. He crossed back over and walked back the way he had come. Then, he smelled it. Mint.
“Are you lost?” Autumn asked, realizing they were backtracking.
“No. I just found where we were supposed to be. Take a deep breath.”
“Maro, breathing is kind of pointless for me.”
“Just try.”
Autumn rolled her eyes but did as he asked. Taking a deep breath through her mouth, she sighed, just for effect.
“Try it through your nose.”
Autumn sighed again in annoyance but obeyed. She looked at Maro unimpressed with the little exercise until finally she sensed it. Her eyes widened.
“Wraith mint! Where is it?”
“Right underneath us. I just stepped in it.”
Sure enough, the small plant was right at their feet, its transparent leaves nearly invisible in the rest of the surroundings. It had taken Maro several weeks of searching to find this large patch. He had heard some of the ghosts around town talking about the plant and how it made them feel as if they had sensations once again. Autumn had experienced the mint’s effects before, but it had been quite some time. The look on her face was already worth all the time he had spent. |
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