A grown man had made him cry here, once.
Datura himself had been half a man. Must have been sometime before his first birthday. The mountain was covered in snow. It was something about the sky, something about the way the light lay across the snow so early in the morning. Or at least, that was what he had been told. Now there was no snow to worry about. And the sky, so grey and cloudless, could hardly concern him either. He was safe. He exhaled. Somehow he still feared the ghost of this memory, as if he half expected the steel-white man to be here again to extract from him all his weaknesses. But he was alone. There would be no one to watch him now as his eyes carefully traveled the now long-abandoned territory of Midnight Plateau.
He wasn't quite sure why he had chosen to come here rather than return to where he had known Nomad's Pass to be. Perhaps because he was afraid, truly afraid, that he would find the more of the same in that narrow gorge he had once called home. More windswept, forgotten crevices; wind beaten footfalls of long gone wolves. He knew he could not hope for Nomad's Pass, for this mother to still be there. She was resilient, but he was also learned now. The world was a cruel place that took and took. It would take from his mother, it would take from him. He did not wish to look upon yet another broken dream.
The golden man inhaled sharply. He had told Gilligan to meet him here, at the plateau. He hoped he was not still holding on to his childish pride. He was too young to be on his own, much more naive and foolish than he himself at been at that tender age. He suppressed the thoughts of Taima. No, he had been a smart boy. A good boy.
His tuneless voice rose into the sky, hoping that his son would come.