Snow fell at a steady pace, having long coated him in a damp chill that couldn't quite quell the burning desire at the pit of his soul. Having traveled through a fair portion of the winter season, there was a weary sort of feeling lingering in his bones, but it was not enough to deter him in his path. All he had was a bit of information to go on — a direction — and it had finally paid off. Where days old scents had been nothing more than a trace, they had finally began to pick up steadily. She was here, somewhere. While his allegiance was perhaps to many stakes in his Issumatar's claim, truthfully he had aligned himself with her. But she was a flighty thing, but never quite alone.Against the dark wood, he stood out in sharp contrast despite the snowfall. It was early morning, but even there it seemed the twilight clung onto every little recess and crevasse. It drew it out in long shadows that blended with rich hardwood limbs; at times for untrained eyes it would have been perceptible to suggest there became a definite difficulty in determining where land started and tree ended. But Mezzo had seen dark woods such as those before, many times over. Trailing an equally dark beast through them was no particular obstacle. But the trees may as well have had eyes, knowing full and well they were far from empty.Quiet beneath snowfall, he meandered in wait to be discovered, his thoughts dissolved from from one native tongue to another. He longed to address her in their common tongue, a tongue that stemmed so dearly from his long buried maternal family. But he would not call for her, feeling (perhaps arrogantly, he had pondered) she would know all along he had been following just beyond arm's length.
(as soon as they learned to speak we would be suffering)