20th WINTER 516av
the sea of grass, 12 bells
the sea of grass, 12 bells
Haze drifted lazily, shrouding the grassland. Rufio could taste the dew in the mist about her, enveloping her in its softness, closing her off from the world beyond, dampening sound and sight and making shadows out of the grasses and clumps of shrubs. Loha, her red-dun stallion, stood behind her, a comforting solidness in a land the mist had made unfamiliar.
His breath huffed and whuffed into the din. Rufio’s hemp sack rustled against her hide leggings as she brushed between the grasses that reached her hips. Dew drops seeped into the mustard dyed wool of her crocheted vest, and she was glad she wore her low, slouching leather boots for her forage. Chilly fingertips brushed at the evergreen leaves of a bramble bush, seeking juicy, ripe berries.
Finding the black fruit, the drykas woman plucked bunches as best she could without getting scratched by the prickly bramble thorns. Every now and then she’d hiss, and find a scratch etched into her soft, caramel skin. As she plucked and stowed the berries, her shaggy black hair fell into her freckled face, making her brow furrow. Loha’s black tail swished contentedly as he grazed.
Her strider’s contentment seeped into her through their shared bond, that spiritual connection forged between woman and beast, and the story of their meeting etched into her arm in black ink markings. Rufio was not bothered by the fog. As she finished gathering her berries, she looked all around and saw the blurry shapes of shrubs and grass-tips ahead. “C’mon, Loha.” Her pavi called, and the stallion perked up his ears and head, nodding. He was ready to move on.
Settling her hemp sack a little farther along on her hip, adjusting the long strap that slung it over her shoulder, Rufio moved to the strider’s side, and laid her hands on his hide. With a smile, she felt the softness there, he had grown in his thick, red winter coat. Crouching at the knees, and arching her back, Rufio bore her weight downward into her core, before, with a heave, throwing herself upward and over Loha’s high back. Swinging a leg quite ungraciously over his rump, it took a tick for the drykas to find purchase and wriggle into the comfortable nook behind his withers.
The stallion stomped and snorted, and Rufio narrowed her eyes at the spot between his ears. Loha was always urging her to ride better. The drykas couldn’t blame the horse, she was sloppy. Pulling in her stomach, and lengthening her spine, the drykas elongated her legs down his flanks and raised her seat. Ready, listen it conveyed, and the stallion’s ears flicked back, listening.
“How do we pick our way through this?...” Rufio wondered aloud, a tinge of concern filtering into her calm mood. “Let’s go.” Her heels pressed into Loha’s flank, and the strider started off back the way she knew for certain they had come, her thighs squeezed gently for balance. Rufio was not worried, yet. The fog was thick, they could not see tent feet in front of them, and it was odd, but they would go slow, and find Endrykas soon if they stayed their course. They had not come far to forage.
So she thought...
As the chimes dragged on, and, drykas and strider waded through the mist, worry began to seep in. It was quiet, so quiet. Not a breath from her patron god of storms. Not even Syna’s glorious light could filter in through the thick fog. Shapes loomed, unexpectedly, startling Rufio. A bush here, a lonely, stunted tree there. Twice Loha half-stumbled on a rock, or abruptly halted with ears pinned back, uncertain. “It’s just a fog, it will pass.” Rufio urged him on with a rock of her hips and a squeeze of her heels. The stallion snorted his disagreement as his hooves clomped.
As the chimes swung into a bell, Rufio began to resent the quiet. The mist seemed to congeal and thicken, muffling everything. Was it getting thicker? She couldn’t tell. A frown had settled within her freckles. Her lids grew heavy in the din, her gaze unfocused. It was hard to look, unable to see. The mist curled like smoke, swirling about Loha’s legs. Tendrils clung to Rufio’s thighs, her bag of berries, as if it was hungry, or curious of them.
Hazy fingers grasped at her bare arms, and a tendril of white mist brushed up her shoulder towards her face—it was the last straw. Rufio’s breath hitched and she twisted away from the touch. Pitter-patter-pitter-patter—her heart skittered against her ribs. Was she seeing things? The drykas put the disquieting paranoia away and bit back her anxiety and echoed herself “’s okay, Loha, it’s just fog.”