Rehtul Orlouge
09-03-15, 04:11 AM
Cold air whipped through the young mage’s hair as he looked out over the edge of the ox-hauled cart he had hitched a ride in. Hundreds of animal pelts, fashioned into beautiful fur blankets lined the floor of the cart and even stretched out in a makeshift cover for the occupants. The only other people with him on this trip, a merchant making his semi-annual rounds to the natives of Berevar and his family, seemed extremely uncomfortable with the wind.
The young elementalist did not share their discomfort. He watched with pity as they attempted their best to remain warm, cold puffs of mist issuing forth from between their lips as the huddled together in the corner while the merchant himself drove the oxen along from the wooden bench just behind them. Rehtul shook his head and removed his own blanket, a large and exceedingly warm number made of black bear fur, and tossed it on top of the family.
“But you’ll freeze,” the merchant’s wife, Sydna, said. She tried to give him back the blanket, but he merely held up his hand and shook his head with a halfhearted smile.
“The day I’m done in by cold weather will be the day that Berevar melts,” Rehtul said simply as he turned his back on the family and peered out the flaps on the back of the cart. He had heard of the severe weather of Berevar, but could scarcely believe that the stories were true, that it would even remain cold as ice during the hottest months of the years in other places. It was early spring, and the roads, if these small forest and mountain paths could indeed be called that, were still frozen over until very late in the day.
A stray thought entered his head as he considered his next move. He’d be moving further north and into the mountains. It’d be frozen all day up there, if what he’d seen so far was any indication. The low-lying forests were beginning to thaw. He could see the water dripping off of the pine needles and pooling on the ground. He’d never seen so many evergreens in his entire life, but he supposed it fit in a realm where it was cold year round, save for a few weeks during the height of summer.
He drew his cloak around himself a little tighter, more to get the loose clothing from allowing the wind to tickle his skin than to keep out the cold. With a smile, he turned back to the people who’d been kind enough to give him a ride this far north.
“I’m glad I didn’t have to hike this far up,” he said. “Thank you again for letting me ride along.”
“Still don’t know what yer thinkin’ you’ll be doing up here in the frozen north,” the merchant said from beyond the woman and child curled up beneath the blankets. “Nothin’ up this far except for tribes of natives and the northern mountain ranges. Whatch’a lookin’ fer?”
“I’m heading toward the mountains. There are some local legends that have been passed around about those peaks, and I’m curious... Let’s leave it at that,” the Mystic responded. A grunt from the front was his only answer.
A few hours later, passing through the thawing forests of the Berevar morning, Rehtul stood before the assembled family. He thanked them for their assistance in getting that far and pulled out a pouch of gold. He released a few of the gold into the man’s hand, double the market value of one of the thicker blankets, and rolled it up. He put it up in his bag and stood back up before looking up the mountain trail toward the tallest peak.
“That’s Snow Wing’s territory,” the merchant began before Rehtul held up a single hand.
“I’d really rather not talk about it in front of the child if that’s all the same to you,” he said. The merchant nodded and climbed back aboard his cart. With a flick of his wrist, the trio was off, leaving the young Orlouge to fend for himself in the Berevaran cold.
“So that’s what they call it around these parts. Thanks, Fellam. It was good getting to know your wife and kid during the trip. Hope I see you around,” he said to the thin air as he hiked his bag onto his shoulders and plodded up the worn dirt trail up toward the peaks. The unspoken words hung between the two men as they looked one another in the eyes.
Don’t die.
With a final look back at the evergreen forest, he whispered, “Thaynespeed,” to the disappearing dot at the edge of his vision. The time to meet the legendary creature was nigh, and the young Mystic was determined that he would either find this “Snow Wing” or perish in the attempt.
The young elementalist did not share their discomfort. He watched with pity as they attempted their best to remain warm, cold puffs of mist issuing forth from between their lips as the huddled together in the corner while the merchant himself drove the oxen along from the wooden bench just behind them. Rehtul shook his head and removed his own blanket, a large and exceedingly warm number made of black bear fur, and tossed it on top of the family.
“But you’ll freeze,” the merchant’s wife, Sydna, said. She tried to give him back the blanket, but he merely held up his hand and shook his head with a halfhearted smile.
“The day I’m done in by cold weather will be the day that Berevar melts,” Rehtul said simply as he turned his back on the family and peered out the flaps on the back of the cart. He had heard of the severe weather of Berevar, but could scarcely believe that the stories were true, that it would even remain cold as ice during the hottest months of the years in other places. It was early spring, and the roads, if these small forest and mountain paths could indeed be called that, were still frozen over until very late in the day.
A stray thought entered his head as he considered his next move. He’d be moving further north and into the mountains. It’d be frozen all day up there, if what he’d seen so far was any indication. The low-lying forests were beginning to thaw. He could see the water dripping off of the pine needles and pooling on the ground. He’d never seen so many evergreens in his entire life, but he supposed it fit in a realm where it was cold year round, save for a few weeks during the height of summer.
He drew his cloak around himself a little tighter, more to get the loose clothing from allowing the wind to tickle his skin than to keep out the cold. With a smile, he turned back to the people who’d been kind enough to give him a ride this far north.
“I’m glad I didn’t have to hike this far up,” he said. “Thank you again for letting me ride along.”
“Still don’t know what yer thinkin’ you’ll be doing up here in the frozen north,” the merchant said from beyond the woman and child curled up beneath the blankets. “Nothin’ up this far except for tribes of natives and the northern mountain ranges. Whatch’a lookin’ fer?”
“I’m heading toward the mountains. There are some local legends that have been passed around about those peaks, and I’m curious... Let’s leave it at that,” the Mystic responded. A grunt from the front was his only answer.
A few hours later, passing through the thawing forests of the Berevar morning, Rehtul stood before the assembled family. He thanked them for their assistance in getting that far and pulled out a pouch of gold. He released a few of the gold into the man’s hand, double the market value of one of the thicker blankets, and rolled it up. He put it up in his bag and stood back up before looking up the mountain trail toward the tallest peak.
“That’s Snow Wing’s territory,” the merchant began before Rehtul held up a single hand.
“I’d really rather not talk about it in front of the child if that’s all the same to you,” he said. The merchant nodded and climbed back aboard his cart. With a flick of his wrist, the trio was off, leaving the young Orlouge to fend for himself in the Berevaran cold.
“So that’s what they call it around these parts. Thanks, Fellam. It was good getting to know your wife and kid during the trip. Hope I see you around,” he said to the thin air as he hiked his bag onto his shoulders and plodded up the worn dirt trail up toward the peaks. The unspoken words hung between the two men as they looked one another in the eyes.
Don’t die.
With a final look back at the evergreen forest, he whispered, “Thaynespeed,” to the disappearing dot at the edge of his vision. The time to meet the legendary creature was nigh, and the young Mystic was determined that he would either find this “Snow Wing” or perish in the attempt.