
very early morning
Every morning was the same. It was easier in the apartments, where he could feel immediately that he was not where he was supposed to be, but out here, in the wilderness… it was harder. He could feel the ground through the bedroll, just like he had all his life, and he would drift immediately to thoughts of traps and sunrise. Khida would be awake, surely; he couldn’t seem to remember where he’d set his traps, but perhaps she would. Tuka would start to fuss if he was late.
Then he would roll over to reach for Naiya. And then he would remember. Every morning he would have to relive the reason they were all gone, and it was like losing them all over again.
Snow was curled up on top of his feet, and she perked up when he moved. As he did every morning, Colt sat up, pulled her close and buried his face in her white fur. The world was an endless storm of misery, and she was the rock that kept him stable.
Larry was a late riser, but Colt didn’t much care. He would rely more on Snow anyway.
Fog was new. He had seen fog before, of course, but fog in the Sea of Grass was a short pre-dawn occurrence; the arid land couldn’t protect it once Syna arose. The mountains of Kalea, though, provided plenty of shelter from the rising sun, and the fog was allowed to thicken freely––nevermind the fact that they were camped at the bottom of a valley, where the fog was funneled on top of itself until Colt could barely see five feet in front of his nose.
Whether or not she was as affected by the veil, Snow stuck close to her partner’s side. Colt ran a hand through the fur of her neck, narrowing his eyes in contemplation. He couldn’t hunt in this, not when he couldn’t see anything. He knew where he was and he knew where the Amaranthine was––at least to the point that he could find his way there if he tried––but if he couldn’t see the animals he was hunting, there was no point. Ears were not enough.
Not unless… Colt frowned, thinking. Could magic work where eyes failed?
He picked up the rough-hewn stick he’d fashioned into a spear some days earlier, gesturing for Snow to stay close and let’s move. Not bothering to wake Larry, the two of them crept their way through the forest towards the river. The sound of the water was a beacon that kept them on point, at least until Snow whuffed, stopped suddenly and lowered her nose to the ground.
Colt stopped with her, taking a breath and reaching inside himself for the magic. His eyes prickled and the magenta rings in his eyes began to glow, lighting up the world in a web of criss-crossed trails left by moving creatures.
On the ground, right where Snow had stopped, was a thick, bright rope of djed. They had found something.