Ears forward and high, eyes wide but unseeing, her heart beat quickly, fluttered by the soft notes from the unseen singer. It was a wonder in a land full of them, and it was not the first one to welcome her back. The first one had been that glimpse of a mountain peak, a sight she had only seen once at that distance. She had been leaving it behind, then, running from a broken and confused home towards another one. She could clearly remember the feeling in her chest when she had turned and there it was, her home poking above the low-flying clouds. It had taken a while before she learned how to breathe again, though that lungful of air which she had inhaled on seeing the Mountain of Dire again had been the sweetest in months. She had stopped in her tracks, to the annoyance and curiosity of her children travelling with her, and she had explained, with a smile, that their destination was close.
She was going to reclaim that piece of her heart she had left behind two years ago.
The song swelled, its story reaching its crescendo, and Bella let it consume her entirely. The thicket was oppressive and dense, protective and warm, and in its closeness the rich sound was everywhere. There was a smell, too, an underlying scent which was unique to this part of the world, which distinguished it from Lacerta and all the other territories she had visited. It would linger until she reached her mountain, she knew. Until she reached her childhood lake. It was a scent which had faded as she had walked through this very forest, and one she had struggled not to forget for two years.
Crowfoot, Snakeroot and Foxglove had all pushed on ahead, emboldened by the sight of the mountain's peak. Aware of their impatience and pent up energies, Bella had consented to them separating, promising to regroup by her lake. They were all sharp, all independent even at their young age. No younger than she had been, though, she mused, when she had left with Wolesh, and she had to admit that they were more capable than her at a year old. At least they all had each other to rely on.
It would be surreal to have the two sets of memories collide. The Lost Lake had achieved a mythic status in her mind, as if her childhood had only been a dream. Would Crystherium Lake, the place she had chosen rather than the place she had been born, take on the same qualities as time went by? She could never return, just as she had once believed that this very journey was impossible. But here she was, on that impossible path. So perhaps, one day...