”It’s for you,” Caelum offered the cheese back to his companion as he rose. A queer smile quirked his mouth and sun-struck eyes turned upwards towards the lighted boughs of the forest. “Syna still deigns to sustain me.”
On that caustic note, he ducked his head back over the illustrated book. “Leaves and petals only,” he muttered after Sama’el. Pages were flipped until he located the diagram for orangeroot. It was frowned at for a long minute, the description and uses memorized before he closed the book with a rather fatalistic thud and returned it to the saddlebag.
The name Aingeru continued to circulate through his mind as he side stepped a yawning silver birch and disappeared into the cooler dim of the forest. Horned and elegant, sure footed and loose hipped, he was easily one of the earth’s creatures foraging in the hopeful cruelty of spring.
Aingeru. Aingeru. Aingeru. Leaves crunched as he stepped over dead fall, mentally marking the spot so would think to haul it back for use as fuel.
Aingeru. Kasb’el. Aingeru. A common thrush landed with a low beat of speckled wings on a maple branch, bringing the ethaefal’s eyes from their ground level search briefly up.
Aingeru, Sunsinger. Aingeru. A slow spin around a prickly blackberry bush, its fruits still but tiny green buds and pale, delicate flowers. Sinking down, he brushed his fingers through the grass, pulling pine needles out to reveal his prey.
The orangeroot sat sharp leaved and unassuming, its pair of palmate leaves cradling quiet, little flowers with stamens a shade of celadon. It would purify, according to the herbalism book and a half recollected lesson from a Zeltivan botanist; and so the reason Caelum sought it in this place. A patched knee touched the dirt and with careful movements, he dug long fingers into the loose soil surrounding the plant to raise it up until the twilight colored stem bled into seasonal yellow and, from there, into the twisted, knotted tarnish of the potent root.
Drawing a worn-handled dagger from his boot, he carved out thin strips and curling ribbons from the herb’s root until he had enough to fill his palm. That accomplished, the plant was resettled back into the ground, soil patted gently back around the base with a half-mouthed orison of gratitude tossed Caiyha’s way. Years ago he had watched a worshipper of Leth restore a rose bush with a touch. That ability had never been his.
Sunsinger. Aingeru. Sunsinger. He moved more quickly now, root scrapings wrapped in a bit of cloth and stuck into his jacket pocket for safe keeping. The names of an ancient Strider and it’s equally as ancient rider kept galloping through his mind, but they had died, hadn’t they? Died like stars, they had, that many times; and the rider had fallen like one too. Following the sound of the stream, he began pacing the bank back in the direction of the clearing, seeking the young, pale shoots of cattails that would be not yet tall this early in the season.
Aingeru. Aingeru.“Damnit,” he swore, hands rising to rub the heels of his palms into his eyes, bruise the stardust out. Shaking himself like a solitary leaf left quivering on the branch, he blinked his eyes back open only to narrow them upon the cattails he sought. Soil squelched into mud as he stepped into it, unsheathing his dagger again to snip off the tips of the soft shoots rather than pulling them completely clear of the mud and water. This way, it would continue to grow. Once he had harvested enough for Sama’el’s dinner and his breakfast, filling up another pocket, he reoriented himself by the swiftly sinking light and went back the way of where he had earlier marked deadfall.
By the time he returned to the clearing, Syna’s sign was gasping in the west and Caelum was going to be the long dead rider again whether he liked it or not.