92th of Winter, 513 A.V.
He sits upon the peak of a cliff, his feet dangling precariously over the edge. It’s cold out – no, it’s freezing, but the man ignores the icy needles that pierce his skin. At this altitude, the wind is vicious upon his flesh, no trees or mountain crevices capable of protecting him. He doesn’t mind the cold, however; it reminds him that it is important to feel something, regardless of the bitterness that settles into his bones and thickens his blood. From this vantage point, he sees everything; or as far as his eyesight will allow him. Sprawling before him in a seemingly endless array of trees and cliffs is the Unforgiving; its ethereal beauty enhanced by the shimmering snow that has settled upon the barren branches. Whimsical in its illustration, Wingard silently appreciates the scene before him, his breath puffing out evenly.
He doesn’t dare to look downwards towards his homeland; considering what he just witnessed, he does not want to tarnish the beauty of the unknown before him. Where his home used to reside, blood was now its new occupant; a roommate that he never really wanted. He doesn’t need to see the mangled bodies of his people to remind him of the unfortunate facts of life that winter, a season so necessary for the regrowth of the earth, was no friend to the Inarta. He knows of the necessity of hibernation, but he wistfully wishes its time of recuperation was smaller so that his people wouldn’t indulge in such hopelessness and anguish. Yes, it was idealistic to hope that something so timeless like the seasons of the earth could reform to better suit a single race of humans, but whoever stated that he had to be rational all the time?
Beneath him lay countless amounts of bodies; be it friends, acquaintances or unknown people. The majority of those that were unmoving he didn’t know, and his apathetic nature really didn’t allow him to feel sorrow so uselessly, but to watch people of the same race slaughter one another with absolutely no reason disgusted the Avora. Regardless of class, they were the same person, starving and struggling to stay alive in a season that only promoted death. Death of foliage, death of fauna, the death of one’s soul.
Winter sucked the hope from those that needed it most, leaving them with nothing but a hollowed shell. This shell, so empty, did not even have enough food to comfort it; so it curled within the small confines of its body, the ridged ribs digging painfully into one’s flesh. The emptiness festered like a sickness there, sucking the life essence out of the body until it had nothing left to gnaw on but the cracked bones of starvation. It toiled within the confines of the body, cultivating bitterness while reaping its way towards the brain to strangle one's sanity. When that emptiness had nothing left to feast upon within its host, it divested itself and moved on, slaughtering another human because after all, misery loves company.
Wingard shakes his head at such imagery, clenching his blood stained fingers into the snow around him, silently begging for the liquid to melt and coat his hands, ridding him of the taint that creeps into his soul. He has never slaughtered one of his own before and now that he has, the Eagle cannot help but feel unclean. Like Lady Macbeth and her obsessive hand washing, Edric only wishes for solace; for peace of mind, for forgiveness.
Clenching his teeth at such an obvious show of weakness, the young Kelvic continues to stare out aimlessly at the open sky before him. Leth has already settled in for the night, the remnants of Syna’s reign long gone beneath the darkened sky. He watches as a white bird lifts off from a deadened tree below, its form cutting through the blackened background like a beacon of hope. It flies so beautifully that for a moment, Wingard yearns to join it, but instead, he watches as it distances itself from the slaughterhouse known as Wind Reach, its form disappearing over the horizon.
Traveling, to a place Wingard would never know.
He sits upon the peak of a cliff, his feet dangling precariously over the edge. It’s cold out – no, it’s freezing, but the man ignores the icy needles that pierce his skin. At this altitude, the wind is vicious upon his flesh, no trees or mountain crevices capable of protecting him. He doesn’t mind the cold, however; it reminds him that it is important to feel something, regardless of the bitterness that settles into his bones and thickens his blood. From this vantage point, he sees everything; or as far as his eyesight will allow him. Sprawling before him in a seemingly endless array of trees and cliffs is the Unforgiving; its ethereal beauty enhanced by the shimmering snow that has settled upon the barren branches. Whimsical in its illustration, Wingard silently appreciates the scene before him, his breath puffing out evenly.
He doesn’t dare to look downwards towards his homeland; considering what he just witnessed, he does not want to tarnish the beauty of the unknown before him. Where his home used to reside, blood was now its new occupant; a roommate that he never really wanted. He doesn’t need to see the mangled bodies of his people to remind him of the unfortunate facts of life that winter, a season so necessary for the regrowth of the earth, was no friend to the Inarta. He knows of the necessity of hibernation, but he wistfully wishes its time of recuperation was smaller so that his people wouldn’t indulge in such hopelessness and anguish. Yes, it was idealistic to hope that something so timeless like the seasons of the earth could reform to better suit a single race of humans, but whoever stated that he had to be rational all the time?
Beneath him lay countless amounts of bodies; be it friends, acquaintances or unknown people. The majority of those that were unmoving he didn’t know, and his apathetic nature really didn’t allow him to feel sorrow so uselessly, but to watch people of the same race slaughter one another with absolutely no reason disgusted the Avora. Regardless of class, they were the same person, starving and struggling to stay alive in a season that only promoted death. Death of foliage, death of fauna, the death of one’s soul.
Winter sucked the hope from those that needed it most, leaving them with nothing but a hollowed shell. This shell, so empty, did not even have enough food to comfort it; so it curled within the small confines of its body, the ridged ribs digging painfully into one’s flesh. The emptiness festered like a sickness there, sucking the life essence out of the body until it had nothing left to gnaw on but the cracked bones of starvation. It toiled within the confines of the body, cultivating bitterness while reaping its way towards the brain to strangle one's sanity. When that emptiness had nothing left to feast upon within its host, it divested itself and moved on, slaughtering another human because after all, misery loves company.
Wingard shakes his head at such imagery, clenching his blood stained fingers into the snow around him, silently begging for the liquid to melt and coat his hands, ridding him of the taint that creeps into his soul. He has never slaughtered one of his own before and now that he has, the Eagle cannot help but feel unclean. Like Lady Macbeth and her obsessive hand washing, Edric only wishes for solace; for peace of mind, for forgiveness.
Clenching his teeth at such an obvious show of weakness, the young Kelvic continues to stare out aimlessly at the open sky before him. Leth has already settled in for the night, the remnants of Syna’s reign long gone beneath the darkened sky. He watches as a white bird lifts off from a deadened tree below, its form cutting through the blackened background like a beacon of hope. It flies so beautifully that for a moment, Wingard yearns to join it, but instead, he watches as it distances itself from the slaughterhouse known as Wind Reach, its form disappearing over the horizon.
Traveling, to a place Wingard would never know.