Rain had turned to sleet and had Larkspur thought of the gods in the way others did — that they were closely involved in the lives of mortals — he would have thought that they'd be damning him. The weather continued to be terrible, which only had him thinking that it could get worse. With how his luck was going, maybe a all-out storm could hit and sweep him off of Riddle Heights' rocky slopes. The recent rainfall had everything wet and the sleet had everything cold, then being on top of a mountain made for a particularly precarious situation. Larkspur was more at home in the mountain than he was in an aspen forest, but he wasn't foreign to the dangers of mountain climbing.
It had been a few days since his departure from Quaking Vale, and he knew if he crossed the mountain and headed north then he'd be where he was supposed to be. Instead, for now he planned to continue east and explore the other side of the mountain. Sahalie hadn't seen much of it and it didn't exactly feel right for a big part of Relic Lore to go unexplored by him. He was enjoying his alone time, and besides the weather, found the beginnings of his trek to be comfortable. He'd gorged on a deer a few days ago and although knew he'd need to hunt soon, figured he might do better to make it off of the mountain first. The wind whipped back and forth, sleet and rain making it hard to see and harder to concentrate. He supposed it was inevitable that he'd fall, because after so long on a mountain it was easy to get comfortable. His paw slipped out from under him and sent the pale man tumbling, with only a fallen tree to stop him from falling down any more.
Larkspur groaned and growled, but decided to lay in a heap and suffer for a moment.