The seventy-third day of fall, 515 AV
It began with a tingle, just at the tip of his ears and nape of his neck. The bed was, by far, the most comfortable he'd slept on since he could remember, but the press of the city's ever looming presence, like a heavy handed, squeezing grip of sweat and noise, allowed his mind little rest. While his body rested and mind wandered, long after the smoke from the extinguished candle had dissipated into the air with nothing but the twisted, blackened wick to remember its passing, the feeling that something was coming took hold of him. It wasn't an all consuming presence, hardly more than a slight shiver of anticipation, but it was enough to take hold of his curiosity.
So early in the morning, there were few people about. Light had yet to break through the inky curtain of darkness that presided over quivering skies, but there were torches that glared with hazy gazes, illuminating the world in flickering shadows that danced on the anticipation of the winds. He followed them, the breezes that were usually barred by the never ending conglomeration of flesh and sound, taking careful, quiet steps to keep his movements from disturbing the quiet, ethereal whispers of excitement.
A storm was coming.
The city was not entirely empty, but Keene had room enough to avoid each and every person he came across without needing to shove his way past them - something he'd never expected to experience while in the restrictive stone walls. There were knights, mostly, that watched the young man with suspicious glares, all of which fell unnoticed against the cloaked shoulders of the young man who moved with such steady purpose. He'd been searching for peace and quiet since his arrival, but he had not thought to find it in so natural an event. Quiet was not synonymous with the distant, rolling rumble of the thunder's declarations, nor was peace with the rising currents of the winds as he made his way out into the city's gate yard. Though not a conventional solace, it was not without precedent. The power and wonder of storms had always soothed him, put his mind at ease, allowing it to focus on what was in front of him rather that behind and ahead as well.
Guards barred his exit, asking what his business was to which Keene replied in his quiet and reserved manner, "To go outside." Though not necessarily what the guards had requested, they let him pass, one of them making a gruff suggestion that drunks should be locked up at night.
Once he was only a few feet from the city's entrance, the winds met him like a rolling rush of refreshing water, cascading over him with force enough that he had to brace himself to continue. The dervish moved with the rolling heat of the air, sometimes wrapping around him, tearing at his clothes with a powerful curiosity, while other times drifting over the open landscape with a languid, lazy drawl. In the darkness, Keene moved slowly, letting the winds guide him as they would, following the ever-nearing grumble of the thunder overhead. The air itself felt dry, the heavy moisture having been pulled up into the rolling clouds that, as the sun slowly began to creep over the horizon's edge, hung low and dark. He watched them, eyes searching the billowing grey sea for the small flashes of glaring white and soft lavender that preceded the clash of thunder that boomed above him.
He realized, as his sylph guided steps led him into a barren grove of leafless trees, he had been expecting rain. In Sahova, when storms had rolled in from the east or west, there had always been the hiss of moisture tumbling from the weighty, ever present mass of ice and water in the sky. It wasn't disappointing so much as a curiosity, and Keene paused, slipping his hand from the confines of his glove to test the air, fingers moving through the empty space with a gentle, fluid motion. Light crackled across the sky, illuminating the pale skin of his palm, marred by the scars from so long ago. He stared at them, the image a fading ghost as the light was swallowed up by the roar of the storm's voice, the "x" that marked his initiation into the elemental magic of reimancy once more a secret to keep hidden than a qualification of skill.
Another gust of wind pressed against his back, flowing over and around him, beckoning him ever forward. He followed, steps slow and steady, eyes turning once more the growing gradient of monochromatic greys as the sun finally found its momentum. Light filtered through the storm clouds, the heat only lending to more frequent exclamations of power that shuddered across the sky. In the distance, there were the cries of birds, signaling that day had finally broken over what Keene had come to realize was the forest he had wandered into. Taking stock of his surroundings, Keene's pace became only slightly more purposeful than a static linger, fingers tracing the weather-worn bark of the trees, eyes calmly gauging the distance he had come and how much father he might go.
In the quiet of the weather's steady beat of light and sound, the winds whispered to him, fragmented thoughts that drifted just on the edge of perception. The city had all but obliterated the ethereal language of the sylphs, but beneath the sprawling branches of the wood, he could hear their breezy voices with as much clarity as he might his own. For a tick, Keene wondered if it were merely a language he did not know until there was a very clear, very Common sort of voice that rose up out of the shadowy choir with a breathy, distant, but definitive greeting. It brought him to a stop, eyes having no target to find as his mind knew full well the source of the words. He let his fingers trail through the tails of the flurries that snaked through the wooden trunks, searching their voices for a hint as to where the singularity had spoken with such clarity. A snapping split of a fallen twig pulled his attention to his left, a flicker of movement catching at the corner of his eyes. It seemed he had not been the only one to venture into the woods.
It began with a tingle, just at the tip of his ears and nape of his neck. The bed was, by far, the most comfortable he'd slept on since he could remember, but the press of the city's ever looming presence, like a heavy handed, squeezing grip of sweat and noise, allowed his mind little rest. While his body rested and mind wandered, long after the smoke from the extinguished candle had dissipated into the air with nothing but the twisted, blackened wick to remember its passing, the feeling that something was coming took hold of him. It wasn't an all consuming presence, hardly more than a slight shiver of anticipation, but it was enough to take hold of his curiosity.
So early in the morning, there were few people about. Light had yet to break through the inky curtain of darkness that presided over quivering skies, but there were torches that glared with hazy gazes, illuminating the world in flickering shadows that danced on the anticipation of the winds. He followed them, the breezes that were usually barred by the never ending conglomeration of flesh and sound, taking careful, quiet steps to keep his movements from disturbing the quiet, ethereal whispers of excitement.
A storm was coming.
The city was not entirely empty, but Keene had room enough to avoid each and every person he came across without needing to shove his way past them - something he'd never expected to experience while in the restrictive stone walls. There were knights, mostly, that watched the young man with suspicious glares, all of which fell unnoticed against the cloaked shoulders of the young man who moved with such steady purpose. He'd been searching for peace and quiet since his arrival, but he had not thought to find it in so natural an event. Quiet was not synonymous with the distant, rolling rumble of the thunder's declarations, nor was peace with the rising currents of the winds as he made his way out into the city's gate yard. Though not a conventional solace, it was not without precedent. The power and wonder of storms had always soothed him, put his mind at ease, allowing it to focus on what was in front of him rather that behind and ahead as well.
Guards barred his exit, asking what his business was to which Keene replied in his quiet and reserved manner, "To go outside." Though not necessarily what the guards had requested, they let him pass, one of them making a gruff suggestion that drunks should be locked up at night.
Once he was only a few feet from the city's entrance, the winds met him like a rolling rush of refreshing water, cascading over him with force enough that he had to brace himself to continue. The dervish moved with the rolling heat of the air, sometimes wrapping around him, tearing at his clothes with a powerful curiosity, while other times drifting over the open landscape with a languid, lazy drawl. In the darkness, Keene moved slowly, letting the winds guide him as they would, following the ever-nearing grumble of the thunder overhead. The air itself felt dry, the heavy moisture having been pulled up into the rolling clouds that, as the sun slowly began to creep over the horizon's edge, hung low and dark. He watched them, eyes searching the billowing grey sea for the small flashes of glaring white and soft lavender that preceded the clash of thunder that boomed above him.
He realized, as his sylph guided steps led him into a barren grove of leafless trees, he had been expecting rain. In Sahova, when storms had rolled in from the east or west, there had always been the hiss of moisture tumbling from the weighty, ever present mass of ice and water in the sky. It wasn't disappointing so much as a curiosity, and Keene paused, slipping his hand from the confines of his glove to test the air, fingers moving through the empty space with a gentle, fluid motion. Light crackled across the sky, illuminating the pale skin of his palm, marred by the scars from so long ago. He stared at them, the image a fading ghost as the light was swallowed up by the roar of the storm's voice, the "x" that marked his initiation into the elemental magic of reimancy once more a secret to keep hidden than a qualification of skill.
Another gust of wind pressed against his back, flowing over and around him, beckoning him ever forward. He followed, steps slow and steady, eyes turning once more the growing gradient of monochromatic greys as the sun finally found its momentum. Light filtered through the storm clouds, the heat only lending to more frequent exclamations of power that shuddered across the sky. In the distance, there were the cries of birds, signaling that day had finally broken over what Keene had come to realize was the forest he had wandered into. Taking stock of his surroundings, Keene's pace became only slightly more purposeful than a static linger, fingers tracing the weather-worn bark of the trees, eyes calmly gauging the distance he had come and how much father he might go.
In the quiet of the weather's steady beat of light and sound, the winds whispered to him, fragmented thoughts that drifted just on the edge of perception. The city had all but obliterated the ethereal language of the sylphs, but beneath the sprawling branches of the wood, he could hear their breezy voices with as much clarity as he might his own. For a tick, Keene wondered if it were merely a language he did not know until there was a very clear, very Common sort of voice that rose up out of the shadowy choir with a breathy, distant, but definitive greeting. It brought him to a stop, eyes having no target to find as his mind knew full well the source of the words. He let his fingers trail through the tails of the flurries that snaked through the wooden trunks, searching their voices for a hint as to where the singularity had spoken with such clarity. A snapping split of a fallen twig pulled his attention to his left, a flicker of movement catching at the corner of his eyes. It seemed he had not been the only one to venture into the woods.