Spring 50, 511
A set of neatly folded clothes hung from a support beam at the head of the smithy. They were too clean to belong to someone who had worked there for very long, and they seemed out of place among the old icestone and blackened tools. Otherwise, the place happened to be empty at this hour: while the sun still hung in the sky, it was perhaps it was too late to begin or finish any worthwhile task. For the giant white beast that had wandered into the forge-house yard, the late afternoon was usually a time for napping. Today, his paws padded the compacted snow with unmistakable restlessness.
On the outer wall, there was stacked a mound of scrap metal. Broken and bent pieces of weapons, armor, furniture and art-craft leaned gingerly against one another, waiting to be melted down and reborn. Maybe they should have piled the things inside, where the elements would not compromise them, but maybe there was no room inside. Maybe there was a big project in the works, and the first step was to transport the raw material to this very spot.
Belgar did not consider any of those things as he began to rummage through the pile like a nosy wolf. They were not his to take and yet he had convinced himself that the people would not mind a trash thief, so long as he did not leave things too disorganized. With his great maw, he pulled out a piece of scrap sheet, the size of four of his paws, made of iron or tin or some sort of silvery metal. Having only ever fought with his teeth and claws, the bear could not recognize it. Nonetheless, he dragged it into the yard for examination.
There he discovered that, with a little effort and noise, it folded over itself happily, bending between the ground and his paw. He picked up the same corner and doubled it over again and again until he had rolled it into a sort of lop-sided cylinder. He subsequently unrolled it, stomping it until it was sufficiently flat. Then he stared at it, curious. With a history in the Skyglow Hold, the bear’s bestial mind attempted to comprehend the art of it; while he could certainly appreciate the value of the creations of others, he was not familiar with the feat of creating.
He bent it at the middle, then in a mockery of the human form stood on his hind legs to prop the thing up on its edge. Falling to fours seemed to rock the earth around him, loosening the snow and sending his toy wriggling for balance. There he steadied it, circled it, and contemplated it. The black of his eyes churned blue with thought.