Subterritory Discovery—Rissa's Rest
Just a couple hours walk from the base of the Mountain of Dire lies a peaceful glen nestled among the red ferns. It is here that young Rissa lost her life to the Aniwayans. In the glade itself, the ferns have given way to a carpet of wildflowers and taller rhododendron bushes. In the summer they sport a multitude of pristine white flowers, and the glade attracts a surprising amount of colorful butterflies. During the winter months it is an oddly quiet place where all sounds are muffled, as it is usually covered in a thick blanket of snow.
Just a couple hours walk from the base of the Mountain of Dire lies a peaceful glen nestled among the red ferns. It is here that young Rissa lost her life to the Aniwayans. In the glade itself, the ferns have given way to a carpet of wildflowers and taller rhododendron bushes. In the summer they sport a multitude of pristine white flowers, and the glade attracts a surprising amount of colorful butterflies. During the winter months it is an oddly quiet place where all sounds are muffled, as it is usually covered in a thick blanket of snow.
you do not know who is your friend
and who is your enemy
(Life is a blur and you're nothing but one streak of color in it—)
Forget, forget, forget, his mind kept repeating in the darkness, a mantra devised to prevent exactly what it spelled out: forget, forget, forget, bury your thoughts in five thousand feet of sand and gravel and bones. The mountain's spine loomed to his right, a tall, black, bony ridge where each vertebra jutted out like the back of some slumbering dragon. Beyond its jagged peaks glittered stars, so distant, so beautiful, cold and legion and never alone. Their fallen kin, the thin layer of snow crisp under his paws, did its best to glitter, too, as if the world had reversed and the stars were fallen to the ground.
And maybe they were, Ice thought as he jogged on through the murky predawn light, for what did wolves truly know of stars? His silver eyes glanced upwards again, at the lone arc of a moon, forget, forget, forget.
He didn't want to forget, not even as his paws slowed their motion to a tentative halt upon the slopes of the mountain; he said it only because it was easier, a single word to repeat like a prayer. What it meant was 'don't think because it'll hurt'. He didn't have the resources to waste on a frantic, anxious heartbeat when he still had so many miles to travel, so much ground to cover, so many fears to bury and hopes to cage.
Ice couldn't afford to hope. Ice wouldn't have forgiven Indru had he returned. Ice wouldn't have forgiven himself—hadn't, no matter how intimately he knew the circumstances of his own disappearance. Hope, for Oak Tree Bend to still prosper, for their forgiveness, for Corinna's forgiveness—it was all a lie, a fairytale, a soft cushion around a fragile glass heart, but it would still break when dropped. He would rather be prepared for rejection. Death. He knew, after all, how brief and brittle life could be, and it brought a bitter exhale from his dark mouth. It came out like a white cloud, star-illuminated smoke rising towards the distant navy sky. "Forget," he whispered in the same bitter voice, deep in the darkness, as his aching paws shuffled along the snow-covered rocks, but still he didn't move. He knew how easy it was to forget, too; all you needed was a blow to the head.
His heart ached. His heart was shut, too full of pain to open up and risk more. Ice blinked in the pallid light, and glanced up at the mountain peak. For so long it had lain like a bulwark against evil, a steady, comforting presence to lean back against—it had cradled the Grove, but on the other side. On this side.. here, they had fled to forget Indru, and to chase the ghost of Rissa.
An owl swept past on silent wings. Thin blades of browned, dry grass waved in the night wind.
Ice caved in and turned ninety degrees to the east, going where he hadn't dared to go before.
Early sunlight filtered down through mostly naked branches, and fell upon his pale, broad back. The sky was devoid of clouds, nothing but a pastel blue cover drawn across the world, and the first rays of sun hadn't fallen past the Dire's shadow for more than fifteen minutes—it was cold, winter was well on its way, and just like the last time he had followed this exact path, he was tired and hungry. The void in his gut gnawed at him, but desperation and determination drove him forward. That tree there, that bush, this turn, a little further, here's where Fenru spiraled off in another direction, those rocks really don't look like I thought they did, Jessie's howl caught me here— (All he does is forget what he's afraid of.)
And all of a sudden, with the sun warming his back, he found himself where he had found himself then, in a small clearing in a red forest. Bare trees stretched their twisted hands to the cloudless sky, but it looked so different in the daylight—harmless, even, not at all the scene of grisly murder of someone way too young.
Ice's heart stumbled in his chest. Here, now, the memories couldn't overlap—they just weren't the same. He wasn't the same. The only thing he could conjure was Fenru and Rissa playing here, which they had never done, but he could still see it. The snow hadn't yet fallen thick enough to obscure the features of the place—had barely fallen at all. Dark leaves clung to tall bushes, and a few, white flowers still sat upon their branches. Sunlight glittered along their frosty edges, and Ice's breath pooled into the reverent silent. Once, twice, thrice—five minutes, ten, as he simply stood there and let the old pain wash through him.
One smoky breath came out different.
"Rissa."
until the ice breaks.
@Neha <3
(This post was last modified: Feb 28, 2017, 04:29 PM by Sahalie.)