28 Summer, 515 AV
Morning, 8th Bell
Morning, 8th Bell
Atticus had sold him a fine Coloursplash Mare with a deep red coat and white splotches of colour, like snow smattered across her body. The mare had four white socks and a full facial mask that made her look as if she had dipped her head in a bucket of white paint. Dravite had called her bones, blues eyes set behind the white skull of her markings. Bones, yes, she would be perfect for her intended task, if only, Dravite thought, she would let him approach her.
The mare was skittish, highly strung, and sensitive to movement. They had managed to get a halter on her and Dravite had only been able to lead her home with Cree's help; another horse to disguise that she was doing as the man bid, not as she pleased. Her spirited temperament and unapproachable demeanour were both reflected in the price he had managed to pick her up for. A bit of hard work, the horse lord told himself, would pay off in the long run; though it seemed his wife did not feel the same way.
"If that horse breaks your legs what use will you be to this family?" Belkaia scolded.
"She isn't going to break anything," Dravite assured the woman, "I won't let her."
"What if she bites Kyanite?"
"She doesn't bite, she's just afraid. She obviously hasn't had much human contact. You know how the foreigners are, they don't breed horses to ride them; they breed them for profit and send them from one corner of the realm to the next for gold."
"Exactly," Belkaia spat, "they don't care if she breaks your neck as long as they have their gold."
"Kaia," the horse lord cooed softly, trying to calm his wife, "trust me, I won't do anything stupid."
Belkaia moved away when Dravite reached out to her, folding her arms so that he could not take her hand. "You spend more on your precious animals than you do on your own wife and son!"
"Could you speak up?" He growled, "I don't think the Ruby Clan on the other side of the city quite heard you!"
Dravite left the tent like a whirlwind, the door flaps flying out of his way as he stepped out from the folds. He was angry, why didn't Belkaia ever see the bigger picture? Bones would make travel a lot easier of all of them as they could load her saddlebags up and ride freely on their own horses from one camp-site to the next across the Sea of Grass. "I will rule you," he promised the horse, who looked at him with wild, blue eyes.
Carefully he took hold of the rope that hung from the underside of her halter and mounted his Strider, leading the Coloursplash mare out into the open. They raced across the plain towards the Uvic Lake, half a bell from the summer grounds of Endrykas. There, Dravite led his horses into the lake. Bones resisted at first, throwing her head up high. It was Cree who managed to calm her down, calling from the shallows of the lake before ducking his head to drink, thirsty after the ride. Bones waded into the water slowly and drank alongside the placid stallion. Dravite watched her from the saddle of Cree's back, talking too her in a calm tone of voice. "There we go, not so bad," he smiled, leading them deeper.
Horses are fine swimmers and it seemed Bones was no exception to the rule. Her nostrils and eyes were wide, head lifted high, if only she would relax, Dravite thought, then she might swim better. Cree loved the water, but he found it harder to stay afloat with Dravite on his back. The stallion protested with a shake of his head, throwing water left and right. Not a keen swimmer, Dravite was careful when he slipped from the stallion's back, making sure he had a good grip on the yvas as he swam alongside his mount, kicking his legs out slowly behind him as he was more or less dragged about the lake by the large stallion.
The sun was warm on his bare shoulders, the birds were chirping away in the trees, and the sky didn't seem to have a single cloud in it. This season’s weather had been better than Dravite could remember, but was it just the calm before the storm? He reached out to Bones, stroking her neck to try and get her used to the caress of a human hand, and being that they were up to their necks in water, the mare would find it too hard to resist without losing concentration. Treading water was a very tiring exercise, and soon all three of them had experienced enough swimming for one day.
The mare was skittish, highly strung, and sensitive to movement. They had managed to get a halter on her and Dravite had only been able to lead her home with Cree's help; another horse to disguise that she was doing as the man bid, not as she pleased. Her spirited temperament and unapproachable demeanour were both reflected in the price he had managed to pick her up for. A bit of hard work, the horse lord told himself, would pay off in the long run; though it seemed his wife did not feel the same way.
"If that horse breaks your legs what use will you be to this family?" Belkaia scolded.
"She isn't going to break anything," Dravite assured the woman, "I won't let her."
"What if she bites Kyanite?"
"She doesn't bite, she's just afraid. She obviously hasn't had much human contact. You know how the foreigners are, they don't breed horses to ride them; they breed them for profit and send them from one corner of the realm to the next for gold."
"Exactly," Belkaia spat, "they don't care if she breaks your neck as long as they have their gold."
"Kaia," the horse lord cooed softly, trying to calm his wife, "trust me, I won't do anything stupid."
Belkaia moved away when Dravite reached out to her, folding her arms so that he could not take her hand. "You spend more on your precious animals than you do on your own wife and son!"
"Could you speak up?" He growled, "I don't think the Ruby Clan on the other side of the city quite heard you!"
Dravite left the tent like a whirlwind, the door flaps flying out of his way as he stepped out from the folds. He was angry, why didn't Belkaia ever see the bigger picture? Bones would make travel a lot easier of all of them as they could load her saddlebags up and ride freely on their own horses from one camp-site to the next across the Sea of Grass. "I will rule you," he promised the horse, who looked at him with wild, blue eyes.
Carefully he took hold of the rope that hung from the underside of her halter and mounted his Strider, leading the Coloursplash mare out into the open. They raced across the plain towards the Uvic Lake, half a bell from the summer grounds of Endrykas. There, Dravite led his horses into the lake. Bones resisted at first, throwing her head up high. It was Cree who managed to calm her down, calling from the shallows of the lake before ducking his head to drink, thirsty after the ride. Bones waded into the water slowly and drank alongside the placid stallion. Dravite watched her from the saddle of Cree's back, talking too her in a calm tone of voice. "There we go, not so bad," he smiled, leading them deeper.
Horses are fine swimmers and it seemed Bones was no exception to the rule. Her nostrils and eyes were wide, head lifted high, if only she would relax, Dravite thought, then she might swim better. Cree loved the water, but he found it harder to stay afloat with Dravite on his back. The stallion protested with a shake of his head, throwing water left and right. Not a keen swimmer, Dravite was careful when he slipped from the stallion's back, making sure he had a good grip on the yvas as he swam alongside his mount, kicking his legs out slowly behind him as he was more or less dragged about the lake by the large stallion.
The sun was warm on his bare shoulders, the birds were chirping away in the trees, and the sky didn't seem to have a single cloud in it. This season’s weather had been better than Dravite could remember, but was it just the calm before the storm? He reached out to Bones, stroking her neck to try and get her used to the caress of a human hand, and being that they were up to their necks in water, the mare would find it too hard to resist without losing concentration. Treading water was a very tiring exercise, and soon all three of them had experienced enough swimming for one day.