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Life Goes On in Fall 515 AV
Timestamp: During Fall 515 AV
Location: Wind Reach
DAY 17, SNOWRACER
The children had red hair like herself and all other Inarta, and they shared the other typical looks of the people as well. To a stranger visiting the city they would most likely come off as impossible to see anything unique in. But to Ornea they were her two only children, and the most unique people in the whole world.
When they were of age, she had left them to be taken care of by others and trained by strangers, like all other Inarta children when they came of age and became yasi. This didn’t mean she had forgotten them. But now when she stood here in the snow with the wooden sledge they had pulled up to the top of the snowy slope, she watched them with a sinking feeling in her chest. They were laughing expectantly, and they were having fun on this rare family outing with their mother. Everything was just fine, except for her feeling that something invisible had been lost.
They had told her about the things they had accomplished while she was away in Lhavit. They were full of stories about all sorts of things and seemed perfectly happy. And she listened and she smiled and praised them. But she knew, deep inside, that she had missed out on all those small daily things that was their life. She hadn’t shared it, and they were slowly drifting apart, which Ornea noticed although her daughter and son might not be aware of it yet.
It had snowed. Those who had time and found it fun had went out to play. She could see people on their way down the snowy slopes that were perfect for sledging. There were laughs, some screams, sprays of snow in the fresh air. Everything looked so calm and beautiful and it seemed nearly surreal that the earth was still alive and upset under it’s pale, cold cover. Ornea watched all this, and then she shot a glance at Mount Skyinarta. Their home, their city, seemed built on top of an impending disaster. It was insane to stay there. But it was as it always is with people, they suppressed this insight and they stayed, dancing on the edge of danger despite knowing the threat.
“What is it mom?” said her son, noticing her serious facial expression, the visible consequence of the worry that had seized her. “Aren’t you coming?”
His voice was eager, and the girl joined in; they had pulled the sleigh to the right position and were ready to go. Their cheeks were red due to a combination of cold and physical effort. Ornea dismissed the thoughts of magma and landslides, smiled and nodded, and joined them on the sledge. She sat at the back, the children in front of her. As soon as she had jumped on, the children kicked the sledge into motion and they went down the slope.
It wasn’t super steep, but it was steeper than she recalled from other winters with the children. They were a little bit bigger and braver now, her kids, and they had wanted a more advanced slope than before. Yet another sign of the change. She had obliged as she didn’t want them to find it boring to be with her.
The sleigh gained speed. It was steered in a meandering way for added fun and it rocked more and more violently, while the children laughed and screamed. Ornea held on and moved her body in accord with the movements of the sleigh. Snow sprayed up into her face. The speed kept increasing all the time, and the movements of the sledge felt increasingly dangerous and exiting, in particular when it turned. She noticed that they were going at relatively higher speed than the other people, as the passed by several other sledges, nearly crushing into them.
This started to worry her. Things she had heard Edward Lucis speak about back in Lhavit came to her mind. Something about the laws of movement, weight, and speed. There had been a lot of gadgeteering talk in the time when she had worked for the old man. She had understood only parts and snippets, but some of where things she remembered. Now when she was on the sledge and she had practice to relate to, she finally understood what Edward had meant when he had said that the power of speed would increase with the weight.
Always these “powers” these abstract and intangible, invisible powers. In her opinion gadgeteering was as mysterious as magic, sometimes. Now she could feel these mysterious invisible powers with her body, pulling the sledge downwards, tearig at her in the bends of their course like they wanted to fling her away to the side.
Wilder and wilder it went, and the screams became more than the laughs. They were going too fast, faster than the children had expected, faster than she had understood it would be. And the weight that increased the speed was herself. It took only fraction of a tick from this thought to the moment when she let go of the child in front of her and allowed the invisible “powers” to toss her to the side, off of the sleigh. They sent her rolling in the snow, while the sleigh continued downwards without her. She tumbled down the slope, like in short series of loopsided awkward somersaults that covered her in snow from head to foot. But soon she managed to stop and sit up. Wiping her face and brushing off some of the snow from her katinu, she looked after the sledge with her children as it continued downwards, hopefully somewhat slower and safer now, freed from her own weight.
Silently she watched and hoped for the best. She listened to their laughs and shouts, continuing without her now, until the sleigh went around a bend of the white slope, disappeared out of sight and was gone.
...Timestamp: During Fall 515 AV
Location: Wind Reach
DAY 17, SNOWRACER
The children had red hair like herself and all other Inarta, and they shared the other typical looks of the people as well. To a stranger visiting the city they would most likely come off as impossible to see anything unique in. But to Ornea they were her two only children, and the most unique people in the whole world.
When they were of age, she had left them to be taken care of by others and trained by strangers, like all other Inarta children when they came of age and became yasi. This didn’t mean she had forgotten them. But now when she stood here in the snow with the wooden sledge they had pulled up to the top of the snowy slope, she watched them with a sinking feeling in her chest. They were laughing expectantly, and they were having fun on this rare family outing with their mother. Everything was just fine, except for her feeling that something invisible had been lost.
They had told her about the things they had accomplished while she was away in Lhavit. They were full of stories about all sorts of things and seemed perfectly happy. And she listened and she smiled and praised them. But she knew, deep inside, that she had missed out on all those small daily things that was their life. She hadn’t shared it, and they were slowly drifting apart, which Ornea noticed although her daughter and son might not be aware of it yet.
It had snowed. Those who had time and found it fun had went out to play. She could see people on their way down the snowy slopes that were perfect for sledging. There were laughs, some screams, sprays of snow in the fresh air. Everything looked so calm and beautiful and it seemed nearly surreal that the earth was still alive and upset under it’s pale, cold cover. Ornea watched all this, and then she shot a glance at Mount Skyinarta. Their home, their city, seemed built on top of an impending disaster. It was insane to stay there. But it was as it always is with people, they suppressed this insight and they stayed, dancing on the edge of danger despite knowing the threat.
“What is it mom?” said her son, noticing her serious facial expression, the visible consequence of the worry that had seized her. “Aren’t you coming?”
His voice was eager, and the girl joined in; they had pulled the sleigh to the right position and were ready to go. Their cheeks were red due to a combination of cold and physical effort. Ornea dismissed the thoughts of magma and landslides, smiled and nodded, and joined them on the sledge. She sat at the back, the children in front of her. As soon as she had jumped on, the children kicked the sledge into motion and they went down the slope.
It wasn’t super steep, but it was steeper than she recalled from other winters with the children. They were a little bit bigger and braver now, her kids, and they had wanted a more advanced slope than before. Yet another sign of the change. She had obliged as she didn’t want them to find it boring to be with her.
The sleigh gained speed. It was steered in a meandering way for added fun and it rocked more and more violently, while the children laughed and screamed. Ornea held on and moved her body in accord with the movements of the sleigh. Snow sprayed up into her face. The speed kept increasing all the time, and the movements of the sledge felt increasingly dangerous and exiting, in particular when it turned. She noticed that they were going at relatively higher speed than the other people, as the passed by several other sledges, nearly crushing into them.
This started to worry her. Things she had heard Edward Lucis speak about back in Lhavit came to her mind. Something about the laws of movement, weight, and speed. There had been a lot of gadgeteering talk in the time when she had worked for the old man. She had understood only parts and snippets, but some of where things she remembered. Now when she was on the sledge and she had practice to relate to, she finally understood what Edward had meant when he had said that the power of speed would increase with the weight.
Always these “powers” these abstract and intangible, invisible powers. In her opinion gadgeteering was as mysterious as magic, sometimes. Now she could feel these mysterious invisible powers with her body, pulling the sledge downwards, tearig at her in the bends of their course like they wanted to fling her away to the side.
Wilder and wilder it went, and the screams became more than the laughs. They were going too fast, faster than the children had expected, faster than she had understood it would be. And the weight that increased the speed was herself. It took only fraction of a tick from this thought to the moment when she let go of the child in front of her and allowed the invisible “powers” to toss her to the side, off of the sleigh. They sent her rolling in the snow, while the sleigh continued downwards without her. She tumbled down the slope, like in short series of loopsided awkward somersaults that covered her in snow from head to foot. But soon she managed to stop and sit up. Wiping her face and brushing off some of the snow from her katinu, she looked after the sledge with her children as it continued downwards, hopefully somewhat slower and safer now, freed from her own weight.
Silently she watched and hoped for the best. She listened to their laughs and shouts, continuing without her now, until the sleigh went around a bend of the white slope, disappeared out of sight and was gone.