For detail and specific story statuses, click through.
Assembly
I don't usually have the energy to write these days, and most of my creative drive is going into art instead, which requires less mental energy from me.
2026 update: I am writing daily, but very small word counts, in a yet unpublished fanfic. I don't anticipate changing this any time soon.
If I have writing spoons, this is one of the stories they're likely to go into. Can't promise more than that.
The Ceracurist
If I have writing spoons, this is one of the stories they're likely to go into. Can't promise more than that.
Peace Is A Journey
On hiatus, until the time comes that I watch the rest of tdp, catch up on lore, and have the brain to make decisions about my worldbuilding. Also this is an incredibly high investment story to write in general, needs immense energy to juggle logistics, and I may not have that kind of energy again for a long while.
Paper Cranes
Not abandoned, but also not likely to update any time soon. On the order of ten years is more likely than on the order of one.
Any other story not on this list:
Please assume I don't care about it very much. If it gets updated, it'll be on some freak chance of me being in the mood for that story and actually following through on it. The longer it's been since it was posted/updated, the smaller the chance of that is. Do not have hope.
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are you planning on finishing Peace is a Journey? i was binging it recently and its really good, but i noticed it hadnt been updated in like 6 months
You have very interesting timing, my good fellow!
As it happens, I've had a lot of shit on and have barely written for like five months, and ngl I am bigtime not enjoying it. So actually these last few days I was finally able to sit down and force myself back into the tdp fandom by binge watching reaction videos for three days and then finally by watching season 3 again and reading ttm, the art book, etc. I finished doing that today! And now:
Over the next....probably weeks, I'll be honest, I'll be starting the Grand PIAJ Edit of 2022. It's been a long time coming, and I put it off for a long time because I hadn't caught up with ttm or this or that, and then life just sort of,,, happened, and it got put off even longer. But yeah, now's time to start, finally.
I've got a lot to do, so I expect it's going to take a while. I've got bits to add, bits to tweak, grammar to edit, and on top of that....I've got to start seriously keeping track of a lot of running details in order to be able to do my consistency checks effectively in such an enormous story. For an idea, these are some of the things I've noted to myself I'll need to take notes down about during the next grand edit in order to track:
Clothing state and quantity; damage, discoloration, wash status
Food quantity and use
General supplies quantity and use
Rayla injury progression and healing
Sketchbook drawings progression
Campsites by day and description
Noteworthy scenes and conversations and exposition by day
....and some more stuff that's more spoilery. Point is I have a good amount to do, and piaj is so massive and so logistics heavy that I really need to keep easily searchable records of things like this so I don't trip up. In a recent chapter I almost rewrote a scene that already existed in another chapter because I couldn't tell the difference between 'I remember it vividly because I've thought about it a lot' and 'I remember it vividly because I've already written it.' I caught it in time but I don't want that to happen more often in a story as detail-oriented as this, which it will, if I don't take careful notes on my next grand edit. Which will start today or tomorrow.
I won't edit any public chapters until I've finished all the extant chapters on my computer, so you've got plenty of time to download the current version if you want to preserve it. I'll also make sure to preserve a copy myself and make it available for download. There will also be change notes added to the change logs of every chapter so you can get an idea of whether anything interesting was added or changed, or if it was just basic grammar or style edits.
In general, rest assured that my plans for piaj are too cool for me to leave it here!
In which Callum and Ezran finally confront an awful truth.
(Chapter length: 15k. Ao3 link)
Preword: this chapter begins immediately after the end of the Callum, Ezran, and Rayla scene of chapter 19, and builds on mood and context cues from it. If youâve not reread that scene recently Iâd recommend at least scanning its tail end before reading this chapter.
Warnings: Grief, heaviness of mood and theme, general sadness.
---
âSomethingâs wrongâ, Ezran had said, and: âSomethingâs been wrong a whileâ. And for all that it was true, Callum couldnât bring himself to think about what that surely meant. He couldnât bring himself to talk. So he didnât. Ezran didnât, either.
They lingered wordless for all the time that Rayla was gone. It would have been silent if not for the shriek and violence of the winds. Callum stared out into the blizzard and felt strangely dizzy as he watched the snow, tracking the twists and spirals of its motion until the brightness of its white burned behind his eyes.
It was less bright now than it had been. Evening was coming, and the sun was starting to go down. His gut twisted as he thought of that, thought of Rayla, out in the storm and the ever-encroaching cold. For once, he didnât try to tamp down on the worry. He didnât even try to soothe the anxiety quivering in his fingers. It was better than the alternative.
Ezran was too quiet. Not in a dragon-dazed way â not anymore. He was too alert for that, even clutching the egg to his chest. His eyes were hooded, brows drawn together into a tight furrow. He looked thoughtful, but not in any sort of happy way. His fingers were tight on the shining eggshell of the Dragon Prince, and they trembled.
Callum was aware of the tension building bit-by-bit in his brotherâs frame. He knew the signs of Ezran getting worked up about something, getting upset by something. He should have asked. He should have asked, but â he couldnât. It was like a vice clamped around his throat whenever he so much as considered it. So he sat there in ever-more painful silence, not asking, and not thinking.
He didnât think about the flags lowered on their posts atop Verdorn, surrounded by the flickering of countless ceremonial flames. He didnât think about what Rayla had said, before she left. He just considered the state of the fire, and tersely added a few sticks to it, and deliberately did nothing more than worry about how long sheâd take to return.
He didnât ask, and he didnât speak, and he tried not to think. But even that wasnât enough, in the end.
Eventually, Ezranâs head jerked up towards the storm, uncanny-bright eyes fixed unerringly in the direction of the ledge. Callumâs stomach churned, torn between relief and unease at the sign, and he stared as well. He stared for a good few minutes before Rayla appeared, a shadow darkening upon the face of the blizzard, cloak and scarves whipping behind her in formless silhouettes of grey. And then she was close enough, stepping away from the ledge, that he saw her in full: shoulders dusted with snow, face wreathed in cloth, and shivering.
He was on his feet and scrambling out of the covers in a second, heart beating shallowly in his throat. His pulse felt thin and thready as he approached her, fearful in some way he didnât want to put thought to. Instead he rushed to her, tugging on her cloak, leading her stumbling into the conjoined lights of the fire and the egg. âYouâre back,â he murmured to her, instead of thinking about what had put the tremor into his fingers, or the look of dread into her eyes. He opened his mouth to say something else, but the words wouldnât come. It was all too senseless.
ââŠIâm back.â She repeated, and her voice was very quiet. She wouldnât quite meet his eyes. Her shoulders, when he went to lift the snow-strewn cloak from them, were hunched and tense. Whatever sheâd hoped to escape with her reckless trip out had evidently followed her back. Callum swallowed, and set the cloak aside by the fire, and reached out to pull the scarf down from her face, to tug the wood-harness from her shoulder, to busy himself with anything and everything he couldâŠ
Ezran hadnât spoken. Hadnât greeted her, or stood, or done anything but stare at her silently, hands still bracketed around a stolen Princeâs egg. That silence was a chill, like an encroaching frost at Callumâs back. The hairs at the back of his neck rose, but he ignored that too. His fingers shook as he put the new firewood aside, and the snow-sodden outer scarf, and then, then-
âCallum,â Rayla murmured to him, still quiet. It was almost chiding, in a gentle way. An admonishment. As though she knew as well as he did that he was prevaricating. As though she knew exactly what he wasnât thinking of, and was too tired to do the same.
She looked tired. She looked defeated. Slowly, with a cold and breathless dread, Callum let his hands fall away from her scarf, hanging uselessly by his sides. He looked at her, and saw the way she looked back at him. He opened his mouth, but couldnât say anything. Without quite meaning to, he stepped away, fingers trembling on empty air.
It was only then, in that fraught silence and space, that Ezran finally moved. He straightened â not all at once, but slowly, like it was something he had to work himself up to. When he finally looked up at her, there was something frighteningly decisive about it. Something irrevocable. Looking at him then was like watching the thud of a coffin set down upon its pyre, with nothing left but to wait for the flame. His eyes settled upon her with such a weight that she flinched as though struck.
She met Ezranâs gaze, just for a second. Then she looked away. Her eyes closed, and her hands curled into fists at her sides. When she glanced across at his brother again, there was a resignation to her expression. Dread, too, and a guilt grievous enough it made his breath freeze just to look at her. âEz?â She voiced, finally, so quietly he almost didnât hear it.
âRayla.â His voice trembled around her name. Callum watched, frozen in place, as his brother stared up at her, taking in a long shaky breath as though to brace himself. Finally, unsteadily, he said âI â Iâm pretty sure â I think youâve got something you need to say. Something youâve needed to say for â maybe a long time.â His eyes, too blue, fixed on hers. He almost seemed to be daring her to deny it. Pleading, even. âDonât you?â
Her breath shuddered, and he was close enough to hear it. She looked stricken, and couldnât quite seem to manage to speak. Instead, she nodded, expression tight.
A thread of panic wove its way into Callumâs heart, just enough to thaw his tongue. âI â shouldnât you be resting?â He asked, a little desperately. It sounded like a plea, even to his own ears. âYou just â you just got in from the blizzard. You should sit down, warm up-â
Her hand settled on his shoulder, and his words froze on his breath. She didnât say anything, just looked at him, but that was enough. He went still again, and the pain in her eyes became just that little bit more terrible. âIâm sorry,â she said, lowly, face drawn like the words hurt her. âIâŠI kept trying, butâŠâ
Ezran stared up at them, jaw set, skin tinted blue and pale in the dragonlight, the colour making him look starkly ill. It put an unsettling cast on his expression now, wan and full of dread. His eyes were too wide. âIâm right, arenât I.â He said, and it wasnât a question. Rayla watched him, painfully resigned, and Callum was still frozen. âYouâve been hiding something. Something important. I just â I keep feeling it, all the time, like youâre guilty, and itâs-â he stopped, and swallowed, and took a fortifying breath. âYou keep feeling like youâre doing something wrong. And what you were saying, earlier-â
âEz,â Rayla started, but Ezran was talking now, his amassed tension and fear bubbling out of him, like he was afraid to stop now that heâd started. Callumâs eyes flickered unwillingly between them, heart beating sick and fearful, knowing he had to stop them somehow; but he couldnât move, couldnât speak, like some dark shade had stolen his voice again.
âYou keep feeling guilty,â His breath hitched, half way through the words. âA-and â and Iâve been trying not to think about it, but â itâs always, always whenever â itâs about dad,â She flinched, stricken, and he gestured at her as if sheâd made some very telling point- âSee? Itâs â whenever we talk about him, or â or you see him in Callum's book, or anything â you flinch, or you go quiet, and â and you feel so horrible and guilty and Iâve been trying not to think about it but-â
âEz,â Callum croaked out, finally, almost desperate to â to stop him talking, to make him stop, to take that awful expression off of Raylaâs face and the shaking from his brotherâs shoulders and the tight, terrible pit of certainty from his belly.
Ezran trembled, but he didnât stop. There were tears pooling at the corners of his eyes, but he didnât stop. Instead, he looked straight ahead at Rayla and- âIâve been trying not to think about it,â he repeated, slower, and halting, the words thick with half-shed tears. âBut it keeps â and you're not saying anything,  and I know youâre hiding something from us, and earlier you said âmy parents might be deadâ, just like that, like ours are - are ââ He trembled, white-lipped. ââŠAnd while you were gone I just kept thinking, and â I. I justâŠ" he wiped his eyes on his sleeve, and looked at her. Finally, waveringly, he asked âRayla? What happened to your other wrist binding?â
She went still. Her eyes closed, almost in time with the harsh rasp of Callumâs breath as he inhaled, because â he remembered that sheâd had two at first, of course he did, he didnât forget details like that. But he hadnât thought of it, not since he learned what the bindings meant, and that â that was a little too much. Too much to avoid, too much for him to push down with all the other things heâd been trying so hard to ignore, just â too much.
He found himself staring at her, heart in his throat, utterly desperate for any sign, anything, anything at all that would put this horrible thought away, anything that would mean he wouldnât have to think about it, it wouldnât be happening, it wouldnât be realâŠ
Instead, she opened her eyes, and as she looked at them, he saw that they were bright with tears. âIâm sorry.â She whispered, voice choked, and â he was shaking his head, slowly, as if it would change anything- âIâm so sorry.â
âNo,â he said, unbidden, the word slipping numbly from his lips as Ezran's expression crumpled. âNo, no, Rayla, you canât â youâre not saying-"
His brotherâs arms closed so tightly around the egg that his hands overlapped each other, fingers curling into his sleeves tight and shaking. âRayla,â his voice was barely a whisper, until it wasnât. His face contorted with despair. âJust say it. Tell me!â
Her breath shuddered out. When her mouth opened, Callum felt some abortive impulse to stop her, to halt her, but- âIâm sorry.â She said again, utterly miserable and utterly defeated. âHe â King Harrow-"
âYou can't, â he repeated, numbly, and her shoulders shook.
âHeâs dead.â She forced out, all at once, and then there was no taking the words back. Callum froze, motionless, as Ezran went still with him. For that first, terrible second, it was like the world had halted around them. And then-
Ezran hunched over the egg and wailed. The sound of it was terrible, thin and choked with anguish, and it spun around and around and around in Callumâs head until he was dizzy with it, until his heart was pounding and his vision swimming â he stumbled backwards, and fell, and wasnât nearly coherent enough to be thankful heâd missed the fire. He just fell, and it was the tears stuttering loose on impact that made him realise he was crying.
âCallum-â Rayla was saying, voice choked, but he could barely hear her, and his eyes were too full of tears to see much of anything.
He didnât mean to do it; there suddenly wasnât enough room in his mind for anything so coherent as intention. But he did it anyway: he pulled himself unsteadily to the side, over the cold stone, reaching out blindly until his fingers hooked in the fabric of his brotherâs jacket and pulled him close. Ezran was crying, and Callum had never heard him sob like that, not once, not ever.
A second later, he processed what heâd done, and tugged all the tighter. It returned some sense to his head, if only a little, to blink until his eyes were clear enough to see, to pull his brother closer until the two of them were braced and shaking around the shape of the dragon egg between them. Its light was flickering and stuttering now in time with Ezranâs sobs, as if it was crying with him. Maybe it was, with that connection it had to him. The unborn dragon whose mother had â had ordered it, and he might be crying too.
It hit him then, really hit him, staring through wet eyelashes at the egg of the Dragon Prince. A thin, wounded sound rose and shuddered from his throat, and he hardly noticed Ezran shifting to bury his face in his chest. He was too busy lifting a hand to his face, trembling horribly, and trying to wipe away enough tears that the world might make sense again. Heâs dead, Callum thought to himself, numbly. There was no chasing that thought away now. No denying it. If thereâd been any hope of denying it, it had passed as soon as he remembered the binding that wasnât there.
Remembering the binding made him remember Rayla, just enough for him to lift his head, to start noticing things outside himself and his brother and the sobs that passed between them. Sheâd fallen to her knees, crumpled in on herself, and she was saying something. It was hard to focus past the numb shock, but a few seconds later, he managed: she was saying âIâm sorry, Iâm sorry, Iâm so sorry,â over and over again.
Callum wiped his eyes, but a moment later they were full of tears again. He couldnât seem to stop it. His shoulders hitched and his breath shuddered, and there werenât any words in the world fit to respond to that senseless apology. What was she saying sorry for? He couldnât find any sense in it. Through the haze of his thoughts, it seemed more like noise than speech, as meaningless as the ceaseless shriek of the gale.
He stared dully at the blurry ground, feeling his shoulders hitch with his uneven breaths. Ezran curled into his side, and Callum clutched back almost reflexively, mind spinning around half-coherent thoughts. I didnât want it to be true, he thought, a little senselessly, a little despairingly. Heâd thought about the chilling skill of Moonshadow elves at Full Moon, hadnât he? When she told him about Viatori, and how an entire team had slipped seamlessly through one of the greatest strongholds in the kingdom, heâd thought about it.
The memories just kept chasing themselves around in his head. When heâd tried to reach â reach his dad, when Viren had stolen his voice, the assassins were already there. Too powerful, too ruthless. The Crownguard were supposed to be the most elite warriors the Kingdom had to offer. The Crownguard had foiled countless assassination attempts in the past. The Crownguard were supposed to protect them.
The Crownguardâs bodies had littered the tower floor.
Even then. Even before Callum fled, theyâd been strewn everywhere, crumpled and lifeless, right outside the final sanctum of King Harrow. Even without seeing the memorial flames, or the flags lowered for a kingdomâs griefâŠthat had been enough. That had been enough, deep down, for Callum to know how that night had ended. Heâd justâŠ
He hadnât wanted to believe it.
His fingers tightened around Ezranâs shoulder, crumpling the fabric. He could feel the wet of tears where his brotherâs face was pressed into his chest, beginning to soak through all the layers of cloth. ââŠHow did it happen?â He found himself asking, hollowly, the words not even feeling like his own. Raylaâs head lifted, though, so he supposed he must have spoken them. She was curled in on herself, miserable, looking so guilty he didnât know how to respond to it. Emotion churned and twisted in his chest, thick and choking. ââŠDo you know?â He wondered, then, the taste of the words unbearably bitter. âDo you know how it happened?â
Her mouth opened and closed once, helplessly. Ezranâs head lifted just enough to regard her out of one bleary eye, watching. Listening. ââŠI,â she tried, and then shook her head. âIâm sorry. I donât â I wasnât there. I justâŠâ She clutched around her right wrist, fingers visibly trembling. âWe were just out of the city, when thisâŠâ
âIt came off.â He guessed, dully, and her chin jerked down in an aborted nod. âAnd you knew. Right from the start, you knew.â
She looked away. âI kept trying to find a way to tell you.â Her voice was quiet. âI justâŠcouldnât.â
There was another twist in his gut, then. It felt almost angry. What gave her the right to be so miserable, when it wasnât her dad? What business did she have being so guilty, when it wasnât even her fault? The bitterness of it rose in his throat, sharp and acidic, and for a second â for a second, he wanted to be furious with her for being â for not â he wasnât sure. ButâŠit didnât happen. Not really. Something burned acrid in his chest, but it wasnât quite anger. He wasnât sure what it was.
ââŠWhy not?â Ezran asked, in the first words heâd spoken since â since sheâd said it. There was an edge to them. Like he, maybe, had managed a little more anger than Callum had.
âI-â She hesitated, so miserable, and shook her head again. âI donât know.â
âYou âdonât know.ââ Ezran repeated, quiet and bitter. âItâs been over a week, Rayla. There were so many times you could have said something.â
âI know.â Her expression crumpled.
âYou could have told us. You should have told us!â Ezranâs shoulders heaved with the weight of the breath that shuddered through him, close enough that Callum felt every second of it.
Again, with a choking edge of shame: âI know.â
Ezranâs breath hitched then. âHeâs our dad, Rayla,â He said, and his eyes were welling up again with tears. âAnd heâs dead. Donât â didnât we deserve to know that?â
She shook as if every word were an actual physical blow, and â Callum could see, just looking at her, how much she was castigating herself. How much self-loathing she was tearing at herself with. He understood her too deeply to bear, and had to look away. He clutched tightly at his brother and said nothing. âYou did,â She managed, and he could hear the sickening guilt in her voice. He shuddered. âIâm sorry. You deserved to know the truth. ButâŠâ
âBut what, Rayla?â Ezran demanded, with a little more of that anger, and Callum couldnât help but see the tears falling thickly down his face.
She didnât try to defend herself. Just hunched in miserably, andâŠand that, he thought, was enough of that.
âEz.â Callum murmured, close above his brotherâs head, and felt the shudder under his hands. It hadnât quite been a chide, justâŠa reminder, maybe. Of what, he wasnât entirely sure. But it quieted him anyway, and he turned his face away from Rayla again.
âHeâs dead, Callum.â Ezran mumbled brokenly, straight into the wool of Callumâs sweater. âDadâs dead.â
It hurt to hear. It hurt so much. It probably always would. Thinking about mom had never really stopped hurting, after all. And â that was what had happened, wasnât it? It had happened again. Heâd lost another parent. Heâd lost another beloved part of his increasingly broken family. Callum closed his eyes, and leaned forwards to press his face into his brotherâs hair. The pain in his chest was sharp-edged and cutting, like breathing around broken glass.
He exhaled a shaky, shuddering breath there, feeling Ez tremble against him, and when he looked up again he saw that Rayla had a hand half-lifted towards them, as if she wanted to reach out, but didnât know if she could. Part of him, very quietly, wanted to be angry with her. The rest of him recognised that there was no point, and just felt tired instead. It wasnât her fault in any way that mattered, and she was already mad enough at herself for all three of them.
He regarded her wearily for a second, then jerked his chin in a vague sort of âcome hereâ gesture, uncertain he had the energy for anything more. She met his eyes, uncertain until he nodded at her again, and then she crept hesitantly forward. She was reaching out to Ezranâs shoulder when he lifted his head to look at her, as if heâd seen her coming even with his eyes covered.
Ezran looked at her, bleary-eyed through tears, and for a second looked wary and closed-off. Like he didnât want her to touch him, and might push her away. But then he sighed, and shifted very slightly towards her, and she put her hand down on his shoulder.
That very instant, his expression crumpled. He sobbed, breath hitching into it alarmingly fast. Rayla flinched and seemed about to pull back when Ez turned and hooked the fingers of one hand into her sleeve, tugging at it until she stumbled closer. âEzran-â She tried, but he was shaking his head, tears welling so thickly in his eyes that their faint glow refracted through the water, bright and glittering and pale.
âI know,â The words tumbled from his lips, like he couldnât help it, like he was answering some desperate plea sheâd never spoken. âI know, I know why you couldnât tell us, I â I knew even before you â I justâŠâ He pulled at her sleeve, again, until she shifted closely enough to press a little against his side. A little against Callumâs, too. âItâs not your fault. Iâm justâŠâ He shuddered, and then turned fully away from Callum to embrace her this time. âIâm justâŠit really hurts.â
Her expression as she looked down at Ez had gone so open and vulnerable it hurt to look at. âEzâŠâ Her voice was thick, and the next time she blinked, it shook tears loose. One of them ran so closely along the outward edge of her pigment it seemed almost to frame it.
âYou didnât want to hurt us.â Ezran mumbled into her shoulder, and a strange spasm of emotion shook over her as Callum watched. Her expression wavered. âYou knew it would. You knew itâd have to happen sometime. ButâŠyou just â you couldnât.â
Her shoulders trembled. âYou deserved to know.â She said, quiet, still with that edge of shame. âI should have told you.â
âYou didnât want to hurt us.â Callum repeated his brotherâs words, quiet, and her head jerked up to look at him. That open, terrible vulnerability was hard to see on her. She always tried so hard to stay composed, and now⊠âIâŠunderstand that.â
He did understand, was the thing. He understood too well. He understood that she cared about them, and knew this would hurt them, and hadnât been able to bear being the one to hurt them like that. Not until it had been too long, and too late, to avoid any longer. Heâd been avoiding it too, after all. Of course he understood.
âI should have told you,â she said again, like she couldnât get away from it, and he shook his head slowly.
âWe already knew.â He admitted aloud, for the first time. âWe justâŠdidnât want to face it, any more than you did.â How many times had he avoided asking? How many times had he deliberately not thought about it? How many times had Ezran deliberately not thought about it, after catching that spark of guilt through Raylaâs skin?
She closed her eyes for a moment, displacing more tears. âIâm sorry.â She said then, instead of I should have told you. âIâm so, so sorryâŠâ Ez burrowed a little more tightly into her sweater, and said nothing.
Callum looked at her, expression so full of shame, the tear-trails on her cheeks glittering in the dragonlight, and his chest hurt somehow even more than it already did. It felt like it would choke him, it hurt so much. He leaned against her, breath trembling, and felt the silent hitch and shake of her shoulders against him. âFor what?â He asked quietly, helplessly, when he could finally muster the words. âRayla, none of this was your fault.â
âI should have told you.â She said, yet again, and when he shook his head at her, âI should have done something.â
That lifted his head further, to look at her better. To see the guilt in her eyes as she averted them from him. âDone what?â For a moment, he had no idea what she could be talking about. But then-
âI should have stopped it.â Her voice was quiet, and it trembled.
âŠOh.
Callum looked away, down at the egg bracketed now between all three of them. âYou tried.â He said in the end, very softly. âYou tried, Rayla.â
She shook her head, violently. âI didnât-â
âWe were there. You tried.â The last word caught in his throat, and then he was crying again, the tears hot on his cheeks in the moment before the storm chilled them. âOn that roof, you tried â you told him to stop, to call off the mission. We told him about Zym, but he justâŠâ He shook his head as if in an echo of hers, more slowly. That had been âRunaanâ, right? Someone who was basically family to her? And sheâd fought him. âHe didnât listen.â
Rayla was silent, then. When he looked at her, she seemed struck, eyes wide. She was so pale as to look a little ill.
âHe didnât listen.â Callum repeated, heart hurting. âYou had to fight him, Rayla, so he wouldnât come after us. You tried. You really, really tried, and-â She was shaking her head again, as if she wanted to interrupt him, as if she wanted to deny it, so he spoke a little louder and a little faster- âAnd you said! You offered, when I came back from the tower, to â go up there with me, and try again, but-â He shook, distress making him dizzy, making his throat tighten with nausea. âI said no.â
Maybe heâd already known then that it was too late. After seeing the fallen Crownguard strewn across the stone, after seeing the assault at the towerâs innermost sanctumâŠmaybe heâd known there was no sense in going back. No matter how much he wanted to. But most of allâŠ
âI said no.â He repeated, quiet, and looked down at the egg. Rayla seemed shocked silent, watching him as he spoke, and Ezran had lifted his head to stare across as well. âI said â I donât remember what I said. But Zym was what mattered the most, and I knew it, and you knew it, and-â His voice broke. â-And I said no.â
She flinched at that, as if heâd found some way to take the pain of that knowledge and cut her with it, as if she were like Ezran, and could feel it keen as a knife through her skin. As though heâd heard the thought, his brother shifted, blinking miserably up at him. He reached out, and the fingers of one hand hooked into Callumâs sleeve.
âYou were right.â He said, quiet and unhappy. Another tear slipped from the corner of his eye. âIf we get Zym home, we â we could stop this, for everyone. ButâŠâ
Callum reached back, clasping his brotherâs hand. âEzâŠâ
âI wish it hadnât happened. I wish it â didnât have to be like this.â His voice twisted into something thick and tearstained, and Callum had a moment to feel ever-more terrible at the sight of the misery on Ezranâs face before he turned his face back into Raylaâs sweater. She hardly seemed to know what to do about it, which would have maybe been funny under literally any other circumstance. Eventually, after some hovering, she curled one arm around his brotherâs shoulders, squeezing gently. Her right hand; bereft of any and all assassinsâ binds.
âMe too.â She said to him, very quietly, eyes shadowed with pain. He wondered if she was maybe thinking about her parents, too. How they might be dead after all, and in such a terrible way, with no way of her knowing for certain what had become of them. The only way to find out now would be to tear the words from Lord Viren himself, and that-
Callumâs throat tightened, and he shuddered. Discomfort and unease joined the churn of emotion in his stomach, and he felt ill.
He couldnât help but remember some of the things that Harrow â dad â had said to him, in that last meeting. Iâve done terrible things, and I am responsible for some of those wrongs, and whatâs done cannot be undone.
Dad had died full of regret, but determined to face the consequences for the choices heâd made. Heâd been so convinced that his death was the only way forwards. He hadnât even tried to leave, despite knowing full well that the assassins were coming for him. He hadnât even tried.
Callum had tried. Heâd tried to convince him. Tried to reach him, to tell him the truth about the egg so maybe that would change his mind. But it hadnât been enough, with Viren in the way. And heâd said no when Rayla offered to go with him back into the tower. And nowâŠHarrow was dead.
What else was it heâd said? Take care of your brother? Callum sniffed, and shuffled closer until he could hug Ezran too, squashed against Raylaâs side and the shell of the dragon egg.
âI wonder if he knew.â Ezran said, then, very quietly. The words were still muffled by fabric.
Startled out of his thoughts, Callum looked down at him. ââŠWhat?â He asked, bewildered.
âI wonder if dad knew,â Ezran clarified, head lifting a little. The rims of his eyes were ruddy from crying. âAbout Zymâs egg.â
âWhat makes you think he doesnât already know?â He remembered, and felt the taste of bile rising in his throat. He shook his head, violently. âHe couldnât.â Callum denied, helplessly. He wanted to say that Harrow wouldnât have let that happen, but â at the very least, heâd thought Viren had killed the Dragon Prince, right? And heâd let that happen. Throat tight, he went on âIf heâd known, he would have â heâd have done something. He could have stopped the attack.â
Ezran didnât say anything, just blinked at him, slow and unhappy. Eventually: âI hope youâre right.â
He wished he could just ask him, find out the truth â but that was one of the terrible things about this, wasnât it? He couldnât, because Harrow was dead. Thereâd never be any talking to him again. Thereâd never be any words, or answers, or anything from him again.
Callumâs breath hitched, and then â a second later, he felt a memory hit so hard it was almost like a body-blow. On reflex, he scrambled to check his belt, even knowing there was no sense in it at all, not ten days and however-many changes of clothing too late. A small, wounded noise emerged from his throat, high and upset.
They were looking at him immediately, both reflexively concerned. âCallum?â Rayla spoke, worried, and he squeezed his eyes shut, breaths coming fast with distress.
âI â I had a letter,â He managed, throat so tight he was surprised he could breathe at all. He could feel tears rising in his eyes again, hot and stinging, a pit of anguish taking root in the middle of his chest. âI had a letter, from him, he gave it to me before â the last time I saw him. I was â he said to read it, when he was-â He stopped, and couldnât finish, a sound like a gasp choking its way out of him. âYouâll know when', he remembered, and â it hurt like a hand had clasped around his heart and twisted-
Ezranâs voice was tentative. ââŠA letter?â
âIt was important.â He recalled, heartbroken, breaths coming too-fast. âIt was important, it was â it was supposed to be his last letter to me, but I â I must have dropped it, I donât-â He stopped, and tried to think. Heâd not had it when they left the castle, or surely theyâd have noticed it when they were taking stock of what they had. So, sometime before that⊠âI must have lost it in the castle.â He recognised, numbly. âWhen we were running from Claudia, or-â His eyes flickered across at Rayla.
âOr when you were running from me.â She recognised, with a flash of regret over her face.
He buried his face in his hands, the fabric of the gloves too scratchy on his salt-scoured skin. âI canât believe it.â He muttered brokenly. âI lost it. His last letter, and â and I lost it.â
Ezran couldnât seem to find the words to respond to that; there was nothing from his direction but silence. Rayla, though â âIâm sorry, Callum.â She said quietly, and he felt a hand settle on his shoulder. âThatâs awful.â
He lowered his hands, just enough to look at her. âI lost it.â He repeated, quieter, andâŠabruptly, felt so overdrawn with misery that something in him crumpled into silence. His tears stopped, as though some deep well within him had suddenly, finally run dry.
âMaybe someone picked it up.â Ezran said, then, but his voice was very distant. Callum looked at him, and found him blank-faced and numb. Hollow-eyed, like this had been the last straw for him too. One final tragedy, to make things just that little bit too terrible to bear. âMaybe one day weâll be able to read it.â Despite the words, there was no hint of optimism or hope in his voice. It rang too hollow for that.
Callum shook his head, just a little, and didnât speak. It was possible, he supposed, butâŠnot terribly likely. And after everythingâŠ
He didnât say anything, the hollowness in his chest expanding until it seemed to steal the voice from him. Ezran didnât speak either, and didnât move, still pressed half-into Raylaâs side. She abided by their empty silence, and sat with them, shoulder-to-shoulder, while the fire crackled and the eggâs light flickered and the storm tore around the mountainside. The quiet that held between them was heavy with a bleak, oppressive sort of lethargy.
Eventually, Ezran drew back away from Rayla, and back from Callum as well, until he was sitting up with their hands still trailing back from his shoulders. He hefted the egg fully into his lap again, fingers tightening around the bright shell. His eyelids fluttered, in that familiar way, and his expression twisted as though listening to something painful.
Callum looked at him, and managed to find the energy to speak. ââŠIs he alright?â
Ez exhaled quietly. âHeâs upset.â He admitted. âBecause weâre all upset, and I canâtâŠI canât stop it from going through me to him. Iâm feeling me being unhappy, and you two being unhappy, so heâs feeling it too. Heâs so young. He doesnât know what to do with it all.â
His chest hurt, thinking of Ez having to deal with the grief and turmoil of two other people on top of his own. It wasnât fair. But he wasnât sure there was anything to do about it.
âI donât even know what to do now.â Ezran voiced, soft. âWhat are we supposed to do, Callum?â
He looked at the egg. âWell,â He started, then trailed off. He shook his head. âIâŠguess nothing has really changed.â His voice sounded empty even to his own ears. âWeâve got to stop the war. Weâve got to get the Dragon Prince home.â Home, to the Dragon Queen whoâd ordered Harrow and Ezran be killed.
Ezranâs eyes returned to the eggshell, reflecting its searing light. ââŠYeah.â He said, in the end. âI guess so.â
If he thought anything else, he didnât say it. Just pulled the egg closer, and leaned in against Callumâs side. He looked exhausted. Drawn-out and weary, like the day and its toil and its grief had taken too heavy a toll on him. It wasnât a surprise, really. Thereâd been the storm, and the sheer turmoil of the overburdened dragon egg, and then the talk about Raylaâs parents, and then this. Of course he was tired. Of course he was at the end of his rope. Callum didnât feel much better off; he could feel the stress and exhaustion burning behind his eyes, until he felt a hairâs breadth from new tears at any given second. He thought heâd still be crying, if he wasnât so tired.
As if to corroborate Callumâs thoughts, Ez settled in, and his eyes slipped half-closed. âIâm really tired, Callum.â He murmured, shuttered eyes as blank and distant as Callumâs own. âI just want this to stop.â
He didnât elaborate on what exactly he meant by âthisâ, but he didnât really need to. Callum exhaled, heavy and slow, and wound an arm around Ezranâs middle to tuck him closer in to his side. âI think we all just need a rest, now.â He said, quiet. âMaybe things will seem better later. OrâŠat least maybe a bit less terrible.â
Ezran blinked up at him, so slow as to seem lethargic. âDid it get better, before?â He asked, and for a moment, Callum didnât know what he was talking about. But then- âAfter mom died?â
Pain stole his breath away. The next moment, he inhaled again, seeing by the minute flinch of his brotherâs face that his grief had been marked. ââŠIn a way.â He answered, in the end, and felt all-too-exhausted at the thought of doing it again. Of passing days, and weeks, and months, and enduring the ache of loss until it no longer clawed so incessantly at the insides of his chest. âIt does get better. It just...it takes time.â
Ez sighed, as if heâd expected that answer. His eyes, already half-shut, closed all the way. ââŠIâm glad youâre here, Callum.â He said eventually, head leaning into his shoulder. After that, he didnât say anything else. He just sat there, a silent huddled form, illuminated by the shine of the egg he still held.
Raylaâs shoulder shuddered briefly against his own. When he looked at her, she seemed to be fighting a losing battle with some nameless agitation. Her expression when she looked at Ezran was pained, and â when he looked across at her, she flinched when he met her eyes. Still guilty, maybe. She opened her mouth as if to speak, hesitated, and after another glance at Ezran shook her head and closed it. In the end she stared over into the fire, shoulders tense and hunched.
He wondered what was wrong with her. What was bothering her now. The intention rose in his chest to ask, but it couldnât seem to make it all the way. He was abruptly too tired.
The quiet that settled among them then wasnât a comfortable one. Callum stared into the fire and felt numb, as if the cold of the blizzard were seeping into his ribcage and clutching at his heart. He remembered being out there in the snow, until the chill stole into his limbs and made it harder and harder to move. He felt like that now, even despite the heat of the fire so close by. Like the chill was in his flesh, in his bones, and heâd never move again. If there was any mercy to that cold, it was that it numbed his thoughts too, until his mind ran slow and heavy with apathy.
After a while, though⊠âIs he asleep?â Raylaâs voice sounded beside him, quiet and just a little surprised. Callum lifted his head to look at her, and then at his brother, whose eyes were closed. His expression remained tight, brows drawn, but there was something about the looseness of his posture and the rhythm of his breathing that Callum recognised.
After a moment, he managed to speak. âThink so.â All things considered, if Ezran had managed to fall asleep now, it would probably be a challenge to wake him up again. Callum nudged him, just a little, and produced no wakeful response whatsoever. ââŠI guess he crashed.â He reflected on how tired Ez had been even before the dayâs troubles got started in earnest. Heâd barely slept, hadnât he? âAfter everything, Iâm really not surprised.â
When he looked over at her, Raylaâs eyes were on Ez, shaded with regret. âI am, a little.â She admitted, still keeping her voice low. âI couldnât imagine sleeping after all this.â
Slowly, Callum lifted a hand and smoothed it over the back of Ezranâs neck. âHeâs just a kid.â His voice came out softer than he expected. âHeâs ten. He hardly slept at all last night, and thenâŠâ He shook his head, rather than attempt to sum up the day aloud. âHe was bound to fall asleep like this at some point. Kids are like that, you know. They keep going and going and then, suddenlyâŠâ He nodded demonstratively at his brother.
The face Rayla made conveyed, quite expressively, âIâll take your word for itâ. What she actually said was âMakes sense, I suppose.â She watched Ezranâs sleeping face for a few more moments, before her eyes flicked up to his. âThink heâll wake up if we move him?â
Callum assessed him. âNah. Heâs out.â He eyed Rayla, the barest flicker of interest pushing through the shroud of exhaustion that had settled on him. âWhat were you thinking?â
âGet him tucked into the covers, with the egg?â She suggested. âMake sure heâs comfy.â
He hummed, and nodded. âYeah. Sounds good.â He had to work his way up to it. His limbs felt like they were made of lead. But, after some effort, he made himself move, shifting around to support Ezran under his arms. Rayla shuffled over to help, keeping the egg from falling out of his lap as they moved him. In the end they got him tucked into the tent-covers close to the fire with only minor shifts and murmurs on Ezranâs part, the eggâs shine half-blocked by the thick fabric.
Even in sleep, though, Ezran didnât look relaxed. There was still that fraught tension furrowing his brow, as though heartbreak had followed him into unconsciousness. It hurt to see, but there was nothing Callum could do about it. So he lifted the covers to let Bait go in as well, and then sat back down by the campfire. It felt more like collapsing, really; his body felt so heavy.
Rayla took the opportunity to throw some branches into the fire before she followed suit, shooting him a few hesitant looks before she spoke, as if she wasnât sure she should be saying anything. ââŠHowâre you feeling?â She asked, looking as though she regretted the words as soon as she spoke them. Sure enough, she shook her head quickly, and muttered âStupid question, I guess. You donât have to answer that.â
He lifted his head to look at her, andâŠdespite everything, for whatever reason, he appreciated that sheâd asked. It settled something bereft in him; some part of him that was hurting, and lonely, and desperate for comfort. ââŠWell, Iâve been better.â He said, finally, voice sounding worn even to his own ears.
She glanced side-long at him, looking uncomfortable, and fed another stick into the crackling flames.
Callum watched the fire part and spit around the new fuel, his thoughts flickering in and out of sight like the embers in the ash. âI feel kind of stupid, for how long I was ignoring this.â He said, softly. âThere were so many signs. I justâŠâ He sighed, and wiped a hand over his face as if it would help anything. It didnât, of course. He felt as unhappy and lethargic as before. âI really wish this didnât have to be real.â He murmured it to himself more than to her, but saw her flinch anyway.
She fidgeted in place, shoulders tense, and then tenser yet when she stole a glance at him. There was an agitated jitter to her fingers when she broke a branch in half, crack, and cast both parts into the flame. He was starting to work his way up to asking her what was wrong, or what was bothering her, when- âI should go.â She muttered tersely, eyes flicking out to the ledge, and he froze.
âWhat?â He managed, a second later, voice croaking. His heart thudded dully in his chest, too exhausted for any true panic, but awake enough for reflexive fear to move it.
âI should justâŠgo. Give you some space.â She was saying, not even looking at him, leaning back from the fire with the intention of movement written in her every limb, like she was about to spring up at any moment, like she was about to get up and leave. âI shouldnât â you deserve to have some time alone, right now. And more firewood is always a good thing.â
Terror stuttered into his bloodstream, choking his heart with thorns. âRayla-â
âIâll just pop out for a bit. I wonât be long.â Still avoiding his eyes, she pushed herself up, rising to her feet, andâŠ
Callum wasnât surprised. Not really. Now that he was looking at her, he recognised the tension she was wearing; she wanted to get away. There seemed to be some reflex in her that drove her to hide away whenever she felt vulnerable, or upset, or â any number of things. It was her that wanted to get some space, and maybe she thought he wanted that too, but-
But he didnât. He didnât want her to go. He didnât want her to leave him alone. He never wanted to be alone at times like this. But, sometimes, it happened anyway.
He still remembered the day heâd learnt his mom was dead. Remembered waiting for Harrow in the throne room heâd been led to, uneasy, certain that something was wrong. He remembered every word of what Harrow had told him, like it was burned into his mind by the weight of its pain. He remembered, too, how Harrow had behaved afterwards. Hesitant, and halting, like he wanted to stay but didnât feel it was his right. Heâd comforted Callum for a while, and then left. To allow him some âspaceâ.
He hadnât wanted space. Heâd wanted Harrow to stay with him. But heâd not been able to find the words for it then, and so heâd been left alone.
The breath shuddered thickly in his throat, and his hand was trembling horribly when he reached out and clasped it around Raylaâs wrist. âPlease,â He managed, the word half-choked with emotion. âDonât leave.â Then, when she didnât move: âPleaseâ, again, more desperately.
She stared back at him, looking almost bewildered. A second later, her expression trembled, and for a second, it looked like she might cry. And then-
She sat back down.
She didnât leave.
The relief was so powerful he could hardly breathe through it. Instead of speaking he closed his eyes, and trembled, and felt his fingers move around Raylaâs wrist as she settled beside him. He could almost feel her hesitance in how she wavered there, shoulder barely brushing his. Uncertain of her welcome, maybe, or uncertain of why heâd been so desperate for her to stay. He wasnât sure until he opened his eyes and looked at her, andâŠthen, seeing her expression, he thought it was probably both.
ââŠThank you.â He mumbled to her, the words sounding almost embarrassingly heartfelt. Her eyes looked just a little wide, as if she was startled.
She studied him uncertainly for a few long seconds, like she had no idea why heâd be thanking her. Like she had no idea why heâd wanted her to stay. HeâŠthought he should feel guilty, for not letting her leave and get some space to clear her own head, even if going into the storm would have been a fairly bad idea. The relief turned a little sour as he thought of that, gut twisting unpleasantly.
ââŠSorry.â He offered, eventually, when she hadnât seemed to manage to find anything to say. Anxiety prickled at the back of his neck as he remembered that â really, they hadnât known each other that long, it was maybe a bit weird to have begged her not to leave like that, especially when sheâd wanted to get away- âI justâŠreally donât want to be alone, right now.â He excused lamely, feeling abruptly very stupid and very tired. He let go of her wrist and wrung his fingers together, shoulders hunching just a little.
Heâd looked away from her, not wanting to see her expression; so the touch at his hand surprised him. He glanced down, startled. Sheâd reached out, however hesitantly, to put her hand over his own. When he looked upâŠthere wasnât any of the closed-in tension heâd feared. Instead, she just seemed sad, and there was nothing closed about it. He looked at her and, within moments, felt the anxious twist in his gut ease. ââS alright.â She said, and he was almost too disorientated by emotion to hear her. âDonât you worry.â Her voice quieted, then. Went gentler, and a little more solemn. âIâll stay.â
A shudder ran over his shoulders, utterly involuntary. He couldnât help the depth of the gratitude that shook through him at the words. She was here. She cared. She wasnât leaving.
Tentatively, and stealing glances at her all the while, he shifted his hand to clasp the one sheâd laid upon it. When she made no objection, he settled his fingers solidly between hers and nearly shook with the relief of the contact. Even with the layers of gloves in the way, the solidity of her hand in his own was unimaginably reassuring. ââŠThanks.â He mumbled again, and thought heâd have been more self-conscious if he wasnât so tired. As it wasâŠ
The exhausted, numb shroud hadnât left him. Misery hung over the edges of everything like a stain, and everything left around the borders of the apathy ached with grief. He wasnât sure that was going to go away any time soon. But even so â it helped, to have her here. It really, really helped.
Her ears were back a bit, as if she were abashed. He wondered, very distantly, when heâd started to understand what elf ear movements meant. Whatever she was feeling, though, the gentle caring in the way she looked at him hadnât changed. She squeezed his fingers, even, as if to reassure him. âLeast I can do.â Her voice was quiet, and maybe just a little guilty.
He didnât think he had it in him to address that guilt right now, so he justâŠexhaled, very slowly, and shifted his hand more comfortably around hers. She hadnât minded the hands, so he thought she wouldnât mind him leaning on her either. So he did, settling a little against her side, and felt some nameless tension in the back of his head ease a little. He stared into the fire and breathed a little easier.
She didnât make any move to shift or get up for a long time. She just sat with him. It helped.
It did help. But in the end, it helped in a way that thawed the edges off of some of the numbness, some of the shock. A few times, he found himself trembling as the grief moved through him like melt-water under a glacier. Once, his breath shuddered and his eyes welled with tears again, as if finding new reservoirs to weep from.
Rayla made concerned murmurs at him until he shook his head. âIâm okay. Itâs justâŠâ He looked down at their hands. It was her right hand he was holding; the hand that had never been bound long enough to hurt.
Her expression softened into now-familiar sorrow, and she sighed. âIâm sorry, Callum.â She said it in the tones of Iâm sorry for your loss, of Iâm sorry this happened, and that honest sympathy was what set him off into a true bout of crying again.
His shoulders shook, and his breath hitched, and tears did fall, but it all felt so much more subdued than before. Quiet, even. It was a resigned sort of grief, he thought. Defeated, maybe. As though heâd burned through the powerful, convulsive sobs of before and left only this behind. Whatever it was, it blurred his eyes with tears, and every time he trembled he felt Rayla close by his side.
She didnât try to stop him, though seeing him cry plainly made her feel awful. She didnât try to talk to him, either. Maybe she recognised that this was justâŠcrying. Just grief, and it had to spill out somehow. After a few moments of watching him, she shuffled a little closer until she was more solidly braced against his side, and then slipped an arm around his back, pulling him into a silent embrace. He shuddered and let his face fall onto her shoulder, appreciating it more than he could say. She didnât try to move him, even when he must have been getting her sweater damp, and justâŠstayed there.
After a while, he pulled back, and just leaned against her side, tiredly displacing a new tear from his eyes every minute or so when he blinked. Those tears stopped eventually, too. In their aftermath he felt even more tired and drained than before. After a long interval of silence, Rayla started glancing between him and the fire. Eventually, she asked âYou alright if I go over and tend the fire a bit?â
It shook him out of his exhausted stupor, a little. He glanced at her, and their hands, and though he regretted it even as he spoke, he nodded and said âYeah, sure.â
She squeezed his hand once more, then let it go. In a second sheâd moved away and to the fireside, leaving the space beside him empty. He watched her work to settle that feeling of absence, blinking slowly as she fed twigs and bits of branch into the flames. She got up to get the pot and fill it with the snow piling thickly at the less-sheltered part of their alcove, and he watched the winds pull at her hair and scarf upon the stormâs edge. He watched as she set the pot on the fire, and waited for such a time that she might come and sit beside him again.
âThink Ez is waking up any time soon?â She asked, when the snow had gotten around to melting, and he glanced back at the tent layers. They were still glowing, cyan light filtering out around the seams, and Ezranâs face only partially-visible where heâd burrowed into the covers.
âHeâll either be sleeping another couple hours or another eight.â He answered, after a moment. âThereâs not really any in-between with him, once he crashes like that.â
Rayla hummed at that, just a little rueful. âWell, suppose it means heâll be fresh and ready for if he needs to take a watch shift tonight.â
Abruptly, Callum remembered the concept of fire-watch. Of camp-things, like food and drink and taking care of the fire that kept them alive. Of the fact that it was evening now, andâŠtechnically, it was approaching bedtime. After all this, after everythingâŠsome things were still the same.
It was a little jarring. It was a little reassuring in a way, too. The thought of routine, as new as that routine might be, was just enough comfort to be worth the effort of following it. Plus, well â some of it just plain needed doing, no matter how exhausted and threadbare and grieving he was. âNeed to change your bandages.â He recognised, tiredly, and his eyes slid to her left arm. âDo your hand, too.â
She glanced back at him. âWe can leave it tonight, if youâre not up for it.â She offered, quietly. âI can probably manage myself.â
Despite everything, he managed a flicker of indignation. âNo need for that.â He muttered at her, annoyed at the thought of her trying to sort her bandages alone, one-handed, because she thought he might be too haggard and downtrodden to help her. âIâll do it. Just â wheneverâs good.â
The barest, faintest hint of a smile twitched at the edges of her lips. âWell. I donât know. Iâll have to check my schedule.â She said, plainly too tired to make the words sound dry, but the sentiment was there. He sighed quietly, his lips offering the same tiny reciprocal twitch, too tired and too unhappy for humour, but appreciating the gesture nonetheless.
âOnce youâre done with that water, then.â He decided, and she glanced at him for a moment before inclining her head. The water was bubbling gently by now; she took the pot from the fire with her hands comprehensively gloved, then refilled all of their jars with it. She left him with a smaller jar while she went and rummaged in the bags â after a minute or so of watching her, he realised she was fetching the scissors and bandages and disinfectant. He wanted to protest that he could get those, butâŠby then, there wasnât any point. He was too tired anyway.
The water was warm, and felt good to drink. The heat of it spread through his body from the inside-out, unexpectedly lulling after the dayâs trials. When he was done he set the jar aside, pulled his gloves off, shuffled over to where Rayla was waiting, and wordlessly reached to help her out of her layers.
There were quite a few. Heâd lost track of how many extra layers theyâd all been throwing on in the midst of the storm, and it took a while to get them off without hurting her. Drawing each sleeve over her injured arm required a delicacy and focus that heâd thought was beyond him, in this depth of exhaustionâŠbut somehow, he managed it, and piled each article one-by-one beside the fire. She shuddered as the sweaters came off, and started hunching her shoulders when her arms were finally bared, goosebumps raising over her skin. Even directly beside the fire, it was so cold that she was shivering in earnest by the time he peeled the bandages off.
It was growing dark enough now that he mostly had to depend on the firelight to check on the savage wounds over her upper arm. If there was any mercy, it was that he was still too emotionally exhausted to feel as terrible as he usually did when he looked at them.
Silent, he pressed carefully around the edges, trying to feel at the state of the developing scabs. âBetter.â He said at last, quiet, and reached for the disinfectant to wash the area. âFeels more solid now. These probably wonât open up again if youâre careful.â
âMm.â She watched him, still shivering, as he re-bandaged her arm and then carefully pulled back her collar to check on the shoulder wound. It had never been as bad as the rest, and was doing fine. He replaced the bandage pad that theyâd tied onto it, and then sighed.
âAlright, we can get your layers back on now.â He attempted a smile, tired, as she exhaled with relief.
âOh good.â She grumbled, already snatching at the first item of clothing heâd left by the fire. âI donât have the energy to be shivering like this. Itâs too bloody cold.â
He wondered, for a brief dizzy second, how terrible the cold would be without the fire. With night nearly upon them, and their mountain almost in the middle of the stormâŠwell, there was a reason theyâd needed a fire-watch, wasnât there? Without the fireâŠtheyâd probably be dead by now. He reflected on this almost emotionlessly, then moved to help Rayla with her clothes.
A few careful minutes later she was bundled up again, clad in so many layers that her torso seemed a solid mass of cable-knit sweater. Her neck disappeared behind the scarves, and then when her hat returned, her ears mostly vanished too.
He stopped her before she went to re-glove her hands, though, reaching out to touch gingerly at the back of her wrist. âThis still needs doing.â He reminded her, exhausted enough that his voice sounded strange and flat to his ears. She glanced at him, frowning.
ââŠNormally Iâd say to leave it, today.â She said, eventually. âButâŠâ
âEz and Zym loosened your binding a lot earlier.â He guessed, and she nodded. âYeah, I think thatâsâŠprobably the most important time for it.â Briefly, exhaustedly, he closed his eyes. It was more effort to speak than it should have been. âMake sure itâŠrecirculates right, or whatever.â He glanced at her bare hand, now almost entirely a normal colour, and blinked at it tiredly. âAt least it should hurt less now.â
She flexed the fingers carefully, and then shifted a little to offer the hand to him. âFeels okay, yeah. Cold, kind of numb. Stiff, butâŠnot really sore.â She offered quietly as his hands settled around hers. Despite everything, her hand actually felt a little warmer than his at the moment â heâd taken his gloves off to help her with her clothes and bandages, and that much time in the open air had chilled them considerably. He hesitated, then shuffled them closer to the heat of the fire.
He checked the bandage around her binding, first. The binding itself was surprisingly loose; while some magical force seemed to prevent it from being moved from its exact spot on her wrist, there was enough room in it now that he thought he could actually slip a finger under it if he tried. It wasnât visibly squeezing at her wrist at all, and the bruise-dark hue it had left on her hand and arm was gone like it had never existed. The scabs of the sores were healing well. They were still hard and thick-feeling, but he could see the hints of new pink skin starting to grow in from their edges. âIâŠthink you can go without bandages on here, now.â He decided, slowly, and set the bandage aside. âJust be careful not to catch the scabs on anything, I guess.â
She made a face at her wrist, like she found it offensive to look at, and â after a moment, Callum found himself staring too. His eyes fixed unerringly on the strange clasp, and then the silver of the ribbon itself, all-too-aware of what it represented. His breath stuttered for a second, and he closed his eyes, suddenly struggling to breathe around the sharp-edged pain in his chest.
He panted a few times in distress, eyes tightly closed, and didnât quite manage to move until Raylaâs hand twitched between his own, fingers squeezing gently at his. He exhaled slowly, blinked his eyes open, then turned to wipe his face on his scarf. âSorry.â He muttered, disoriented by grief, and couldnât make himself meet her eyes. He was sure of the way sheâd be looking at him â guilty, and pained, and sad â and didnât know if he could handle that right now.
She seemed to hesitate. âCallumâŠâ
âItâs fine.â He said, softly, and repositioned her hand in his, turning it palm-up for him to work. âIâll justâŠget this done, and thenâŠâ He closed his eyes again, very briefly. âThen, I guess weâŠwait out the night. Rest, maybe. Somehow.â
It was strange; he was tired enough that the task ahead seemed more exhausting a prospect than it ever had. He wished he could leave it, and just rest. ButâŠat the same time, he was dreading what would come once there was nothing left to do. At least now he had some distraction. Afterwards...thereâd be nothing but his grief, and his thoughts, and the bleak prospect of the monumental journey ahead of them. He wasnât looking forward to it.
ââŠSomehow.â She echoed lowly, like she felt the impossibility of that as much as he did. She fell quiet, watching with shuttered eyes as he finally started pressing his fingers into her palm. Together, they sat in a silence swallowed by the howl of the wind, and did not speak again.
 ---
 Rayla sat wordless and unmoving for all the time it took Callum to massage some circulation back into her bound hand. It took longer than usual, and she could practically feel the exhaustion dragging at his every motion. She kept wanting to suggest that he stop, and let her handle it, butâŠsomehow, she thought he wouldnât appreciate that now. So she stayed silent, and watched him, and felt guilt drag its claws viciously through the insides of her chest.
The flesh of her hand ached a bit where he pressed at it. There was a low-level sear to it, a gentle burning soreness, like someone had planted the suggestion of acid within her blood. Compared to the pulsing agony of her upper arm, it was almost pleasant. Finally, he finished, and remanded her hand back to her, and thenâŠshuddered, a little, as he drew his own hands back to his lap and huddled down beside the fire, staring bleakly into its flickering light. He didnât say anything.
She watched him through the corners of her eyes, heart hurting, throat choked with shame.
Again, as earlier, she felt the urge to â get away, somehow. To go out into the storm again, and give him some room to breathe. But that wasnât an option, not with the fatal chill of a night-time blizzard waiting for her beyond their shelter. And, besidesâŠ
Rayla glanced at him, uneasily, and completed the thought: if earlier had been any indication, he didnât want that room to breathe. He didnât want to be left alone. He didnât want her to leave.
She couldnât quite wrap her head around it. Any Moonshadow elf would have wanted the solitude. Pain was a private thing; something to be held close and hidden away. Wanting someone with you during a time this terribleâŠthat was shockingly personal. And for all that she knew he was a human, and had different cultural attitudes surrounding this sort of thingâŠshe couldnât help but feel bewildered, and strangely touched, by the memory of him pleading for her to stay.
She shifted in place, uncomfortable, but held that memory in place to force herself still. Heâd asked her to stay, so she would. She owed it to him. It wasnât as if there was anywhere to go anyway. ButâŠ
She had no idea what to do.
Rayla looked at him again, huddling by the fire with his knees up to his chest, eyes downcast, face oddly blank. It hurt, to see him like this. Hurt more to remember her role in doing this to him. She gritted her teeth and closed her eyes, and suppressed the agitated reflex in her body that wanted to send her to her feet, to turn her face away, to escape this space full of guilt and shame and other peopleâs grief. Â
Silently, she reflected on that impulse, exhaling almost silently. The sound of the wind drowned it out, and she had no doubt that Callum heard nothing. She opened her eyes and stared at the fire, and acknowledged to herself what was really motivating this ongoing desire to flee: it hurt to be here. It hurt to see him hurt, and to deal with her own shame. Leaving would be easier â if not for the storm â but it would also be cowardice. Sheâd done enough to hurt him already. Leaving when heâd begged her to stay would be too cruel.
But she didnât know what to do.
Thereâd been times in the past where Runaan or Ethari had been having a hard time with something, but they always helped each other through that in private. It had been the same with her parents, though sheâd been much younger then. Sheâd never been the person anyone turned to for comfort before. Sheâd certainly never had to help anyone through something like this, and â what was she supposed to do? How could she possibly make something like this better?
He wasnât crying now, maybe, but this almost seemed worse. He was justâŠsilent, and small-looking, and empty-eyed. It was terrible to look at. She wanted to help, butâŠwhat could she do? Talking wouldnât solve this. Heâd lost his dad.
Rayla hesitated, gut churning, and reached for one of the jars of water to take a sip while she thought. Callumâs silent form lingered in her peripheral vision, looking painfully lonely in the firelight. She wished she could reach out to him. A second later, startled, she wondered why she thought she couldnât.
He feltâŠoff-limits, in a way, in the grips of grief like this. It felt private, like something she shouldnât be seeing, shouldnât be witness to. It seemed an imposition to so much as be here, let alone reach for him when heâd not asked.
But he had asked for her to stay, hadnât he? Heâd reached for her then. He wasnât reaching now, but maybe that didnât necessarily mean he didnât want contact, or that it wouldnât help, orâŠoh, stars, she didnât know. She exhaled into the warm water of her jar, then set it down. Finally, tentative, she shuffled a short way around the fireside towards him.
Callumâs head jerked up, just a little, at the sight of her approach. It was a faltering motion, as though he were struggling against some terrible weight to so much as move. Hesitantly, she reached out for his shoulder. Slowly, but â he watched her hand with that same blank, exhausted expression, up until it actually touched him, and then something in his face seemed to crumple. He shook all-over, and made a tiny miserable noise, and reached up to clutch at her hand so tightly it almost hurt.
Carefully, she tugged on it, a wordless offer to come closer if he wanted. Expression still trembling like he was somewhere on the verge of tears, he did shuffle over, huddling into her side closely enough he inadvertently elbowed her in the bands of bruising around her waist. She suppressed a wince, shifting to accommodate him more easily, and he took the opportunity to turn his face into her shoulder. His shoulders trembled.
He didnât make any sound, but she could hear the way his breath was stuttering. He seemed a half-step from crying; too exhausted for actual tears, but upset enough that the motions of sobbing kept moving him anyway. A little awkwardly, she patted him on the shoulder with the hand that wasnât still gripped in his, feeling very stupid for not realising earlier that this was what she should have been doing all along.
ââŠSorry.â He mumbled thickly, and she wondered what he felt he had to keep apologising for. She was the one who should be apologising, butâŠ
âShush.â She told him, quiet and firm despite the aching of her heart. âNothing to be sorry for.â
He shuddered again, and huddled a little closer. Tentatively, she put her arm around his back.
Callum spent the better part of the next ten minutes like that, breath hitching unevenly and his shoulders shaking. He never got quite as far as actual crying, but seemed gripped by its surrogate motions anyway. Steadily the shudders grew slower, and weaker, as if he was losing the energy for even that. After a while, he seemed to remember himself, and lifted his head for a moment. In his eyes she saw a faint, tired inkling of self-consciousness as he glanced between her face and her shoulder. ââŠâS okay?â He questioned.
Slowly, she reached out and smoothed her hand down the hair at the back of his neck. âItâs fine.â She murmured, and he took her at her word. His head lowered.
He still shook against her in stops and starts. It was slow, and faltering, and almost entirely soundless. He looked so terribly exhausted then, shadows dark beneath his eyes, that she thought it was more the tiredness than anything else that finally let him stop. He gradually went still, blinking blearily at the fire, and sighed quietly. Slowly, his eyelids began to flutter closed.
Ten minutes later, Rayla was almost completely certain heâd fallen asleep on her, somehow. It had to be the exhaustion to blame. She couldnât imagine him managing it otherwise. Heart hurting for him, she made no attempt to move or dislodge him, and sat watching the fire for a long while.
She managed to avoid waking him for the next hour or so, even when taking a drink or tossing sticks into the flames. It felt like it was maybe eight at night by the time she heard movement from the direction of Ezran in the tent-layers, and turned her head to look over her shoulder.
The covers shifted. A low, unhappy sound emanated from within, followed shortly by quiet, broken whimpering. Crying in his sleep, Rayla guessed, and felt choked again with the weight of the guilt.
And then-
Callum, whoâd not shifted or woken through a half-dozen incidents of her moving about, blinked his eyes open and lifted his head from her shoulder. âEz?â He murmured, plainly disorientated, and in his uncoordinated attempt to look around ended up smacking his face straight into the scarves piled around her neck. âMmph,â He expressed, surprised, and then he straightened up properly and squinted at her. âRayla?â He questioned, plainly not really awake enough to have his wits about him.
ââŠYou kind of fell asleep on me, for a bit.â She told him, voice quiet a low, her ear twitching in the direction of Ezran and his restless sleep. âThink you only woke up because-â She hesitated, and glanced over.
âEzran.â Callum processed, aloud, and struggled and stumbled his way through trying to get to his feet. âYeah, I â I always wake up if he has bad dreams, I-â He shook his head, and cut off the words. âI need to go to him.â He said instead, and finally managed to stand up. Heâd taken a few wavering steps towards the covers when Ezran surprised them both by shooting upright, breath uneven, a few stray tears bright at the corners of his wide eyes. He stared uncomprehendingly ahead, too recently awoken at first to see them, and then finally his eyes seemed to focus on the shapes by the fire.
ââŠCallum?â He mumbled, voice strangely shaky. âRayla? WhatâŠâ He blinked at them, and then again more slowly as Callum lowered himself down at his side. He looked between her and his brother with a look of slow, terrible understanding. His eyes shuttered, and he lifted his hands up to his face.
âYou sounded like you were having a bad dream.â Callum said, tentative, shifting over until he and his brother were side-by-side, pressed close against each other. ââŠAre you okay?â
Ezran didnât answer for a long moment. His shoulders hunched and then shook, and he exhaled a thick-sounding breath. âI was dreaming.â He said in the end, almost listlessly, and lowered his hands from his face. âAnd thenâŠI justâŠremembered, in the dream, that dad was dead. And it felt like a nightmare, so â I tried to wake up, but-â He sniffed, and wiped his face on his sleeve. His breath shuddered again, his shoulders heavedâŠbut then, instead of crying, he took a deep breath and seemed to force himself to steadiness. Finally, quiet, he finished the sentence: âBut I woke up, andâŠitâs still real.â
Callum inhaled, a sort of pained breathy gasp, a flinch stuttering over his face. He breathed out shakily, then reached out to his brother on what seemed like reflex, pulling him close.
Ezran didnât protest, but he did shudder at the contact, turning his face into Callumâs chest and sighing. âThis is awful.â He said, very quietly. âIâŠdonât know what to do. I donât know how Iâm supposed toâŠI donât know. I donât know. I just..â His eyes slipped closed, and most of his face disappeared into his brotherâs sweater. His next words were muffled in the fabric. âIâm so tired.â
ââŠYou could go back to sleep?â Callum suggested, soft and unhappy, like he knew how inadequate a comfort that was for something like this. Ezran lifted his head, just enough to look up. Rayla saw the glitter of his eyes brightly in the gloom, too bright by far for how tired they were.
âSo could you.â Ez said, plainly. His voice was strangely emotionless. âWould it make anything better?â
Callum flinched again. ââŠIt might.â He said at last, after a long silence. âSometimes, when things are awfulâŠif you go to sleep, it can feel a bit less terrible in the morning.â Rayla looked at him, and remembered all over again that heâd already gone through something like this before. Years ago heâd lost his mother, and somehow had to live through the pain of that to a time where it started to get better. Heâd had to suffer through that, just like he had to suffer through this now.
Rayla shivered, and thought of her own parents, and wondered if sheâd have to do the same. She wondered if she, like them, was an orphan of this terrible war. She wondered if she should be mourning.
Ezran glanced out at the sky, dark and snow-torn, and then at the fire. âMorningâs a long way off.â He pointed out, in that same empty voice. âAnd thereâs the fire-watch too.â
âYou donât need to be on the first watch, though.â Callum told him, leaning forwards just enough to rest his chin into his brotherâs hair. âYou could sleep a good while longer.â
Rayla expected him to shake his head, or disagree, or something. Instead he just blinked, tired and empty-eyed, and said âOkay.â
There was something horribly painful about that acquiescence. Callum seemed to feel it too. He closed his eyes, and pressed a kiss into Ezranâs hair.
Ezran didnât move or speak as he was lowered back down and tucked into the makeshift bedding. He did reach for the egg, and Bait, pulling both of them against his chest. He laid open-eyed on his side for a minute or so, blinking slowly, then finally let his eyelids shut.
It was a while before he actually fell asleep. Fifteen minutes or more. Rayla sat silent, throat tight, and tended to the fire between glances back at them. Callum stayed beside his brother the whole time, near but not touching, a quiet weary presence in the dark beyond the fire. He was shivering a little by the time he returned, having waited long enough past Ezranâs sleeping that the air had chilled him through. He huddled by the fire and stared empty-eyed at the flames.
Rayla eyed him, and couldnât think of anything to say. She didnât think there was anything to say. So instead, she drew on her experience from earlier, and justâŠshuffled over to him, pressing in until their shoulders butted together. He glanced at her, exhaling slowly, and leaned back. He didnât speak.
Time passed like that, with little interruption or change. She murmured to him at one point to suggest he go join his brother and sleep, but he just shook his head. So they remained there in silence and watched the fire together through the opening hours of the night. She warmed water periodically and got him to drink, and presented him with pieces of meat, and after a while even went to get some more to cook. It was something to do, after all.
A few times, Callum dozed off on her shoulder again. Never for long, but when she eventually did the same it was another matter entirely. She neither stirred nor dreamed, and woke a long while later to find herself covered in her cloak and curled beside the fire, a bag propped under her head as a pillow. Her body ached terribly as she finally moved, numb with cold and heavy with the pain of her bruises. Disoriented, she pulled on her sense of the Moon to figure out how long it had been. A little more than five hours, apparently.
She sat up, the cloak falling from her shoulders, and found Callum and Ezran sat together by the fire, very close by, the layers of the tent laid over their laps like unusually stiff blankets. They glanced over at her as she blinked at them, frowning. âIâŠfell asleep?â She concluded, bewildered that sheâd not woken. They â or at least Callum â must have laid her down close to the heat of the flames, and put the cloak over her, and fed the fire through those hoursâŠbut sheâd not stirred. It was unlike her.
âA good while back, yeah.â Callum agreed, voice a low hush, like he was still trying to avoid waking her. He nodded to the now-bare part of their shelter that had previously held the tent-layers. âItâs too cold back there now, soâŠI thought itâd be better to just let you rest here.â
âItâs too cold anywhere except right next to the fire.â Ezran said, and she saw that the egg was in his lap. That disconcerted her, but she supposed if Callum hadnât complained it probably wasnât affecting him too badly. âIt woke me up. It was justâŠtoo cold to sleep. And then once I was here, Zym was too awake for me to sleep through.â
âYou could try again now, though.â Callum pointed out, and received a very level stare for his troubles.
âNo.â He said, very simply, like it was so irrefutable a decision it didnât need to be reinforced with further words. There was that same blank apathy from before in his eyes, but with a little more animus now. He seemed vaguely unimpressed with his brother. âBut you should.â He glanced sidelong at Rayla suddenly, and addressed her, saying âHeâs not going to sleep, because he doesnât want me to be awake alone. But youâre awake now. You can tell him to rest, finally.â There was a hint of asperity there, like heâd been trying for hours to change Callumâs mind without success.
She blinked several times to clear her eyes, then pushed herself all the way up, staring across at Callum, who was sat close enough that the bag sheâd been sleeping on was against his side. He stared tiredly back, looking appallingly exhausted, with a resigned sort of expression that suggested he knew exactly how this was going to go. âGo to sleep, you dummy.â She told him, exasperated. âThe idea of a watch is everyone gets some sleep, you know.â
He sighed. âIâm not sorry.â He said, a little indistinct, like he was exhausted enough to slur the words a little. âWasnât gonna leave Ez alone like that. Wouldnât be right.â
Privately, she agreed with him. Leaving Ez awake alone would have been terrible, so she understood perfectly. But now⊠âIâll take care of him.â She promised, phrasing it a little more directly than she might have if sheâd been more awake. âSo you can sleep. Itâs fine.â
He blinked at her, looking painfully relieved. ââŠGood.â He mumbled, and slid his eyes sideways to the tent-layers, and then the fire. âShould IâŠ?â
She nudged him aside and then pulled the cloak over. Ezran helpfully shoved the tent layers towards her, so she arranged those by the fire and then prodded Callum into place. âDown,â she ordered, and looking a little bewildered, he went. Soon he was curled by the fire in the spot sheâd vacated, and she put her own cloak over him. He stared up at her with bleary eyes as she nudged the bag under his head. âComfy?â
Somehow, he managed something close to a smile, face drawn and wan with exhaustion. âMm. Very.â He sighed, eyelids fluttering closed. Then, by all appearances, he passed out within a few seconds.
ââŠHe was so stubborn.â Ezran said, into the quiet left by Callumâs abrupt exit from consciousness. âI kept trying to get him to sleep, but he justâŠwouldnât.â
Rayla glanced his way, then picked her way over to sit herself by his side. âApparently youâre not the only one who can be stubborn when you want to be.â She said, a little dryly. She wasnât sure if it was appropriate to tease him now, after â after heâd learned the truth sheâd been hiding, and been hit by the grief of it, butâŠ
He eyed her a little grumpily, but didnât seem particularly bothered. âI guess.â He looked over at his sleeping brother, and his gaze gentled into something softer. Sadder, too. ââŠHe didnât have to do that, though. I was fine.â
Her brow furrowed. Slowly, she shook her head. âNo, Ez.â She said at last. âIt was the right thing to do. YouâŠshouldnât be alone right now.â
Ezran looked startled at that, eyes flying quickly back to her. He didnât seem to know what to say for a few seconds, but thenâŠquietly, he reached out to her, waiting until she consented to take his hand. He sighed, looking at their joined hands for a moment. She wondered what he was picking up from her now. Then, finally, his eyes slid up to hers again. ââŠYouâre gonna take care of me, huh.â He said, subdued.
For a second, she didnât know what he meant â then she remembered what sheâd just said to Callum. Her shoulders stiffened a little, uncertainty gripping at her gut. She didnât know what he thought of her now. Didnât know what heâd accept from her. But⊠âReckon I will, yeah.â She agreed, quietly. âIf thatâs okay.â
He watched her, silent and almost expressionless, then exhaled minutely. He shuffled into her side and looked away. âYou said youâd be my sister, before.â He said finally, and let half-lidded eyes settle on the fire. âSo I guess thatâs fine.â
The words hurt in a way she somehow hadnât anticipated. It felt like a stab through her chest; she inhaled sharply around it, touched and guilty and thankful at once. If Ezran felt any echo of it, he didnât react. He just sighed, huddling against her, and watched the flames.
Full of enough nameless emotion that she couldnât speak around it, that it choked her, Rayla stayed silent as well. The trust felt like more than she deserved. First Callum, and now Ezran â both of them had, despite everything, reached out to her for comfort. Like they wanted her. Like they needed her, somehow. Even knowing what sheâd kept from them, and the role sheâd played in their pain, they trusted her like this. It wasâŠhumbling. It made her heart clench with shame.
Deliberately â because she didnât know how much of that Ez would pick up on, and he didnât need that right now â she turned her thoughts aside and looked out at the storm.
As if reacting to her attention, the clouds flashed in the dark. The thunder that followed was faraway, five seconds removed from the light; the rumble was quiet. Already the storm was passing by. For all its noise and vicious cold, she didnât think itâd hold them too much longer. Sometime soon, theyâd have to leave this place, and deal with whatever waited beyond the blizzard. It was a relief, in a way. This was a place of grief and pain, and she wanted to be free of it. But, at the same timeâŠthey had so far to go. The mere thought was wearying.
Rayla closed her eyes for a moment, drawing on what resolve she could muster. It would be fine. Somehow. Within a day theyâd have left hereâŠand however long the journey to come really was, theyâd take it one step at a time. It wouldnât always feel like this. It would be okay.
Clinging to that thought, she wound an arm around Ezranâs back, drawing him closer in to her side. He went gladly, turning his face into the knit of her jumper and sighing softly.
Beyond their shelter, the thunder echoed further and further away, but the wind was as harsh a shriek as it had ever been. Its howl followed their vigil through the rest of the night.
Link to PIAJ chapter notes folder (Google Drive folder including worldbuilding, commentary, medical notes, research notes, and misc notes for all applicable chapters within this section)
This chapter's notes cover: No new worldbuilding notes this chapter. However, there are authorâs notes on this chapterâs characterisation, development, and some of the work that went into it.
Timeline: https://docs.google.com/document/d/107eD8zmLAAFBWSOgsLyl8g4pAdQF4EgMh4rpN_m91U4/edit?usp=sharing Link to PIAJ Timeline Google doc ( to be updated as story progresses)
PIAJ Masterpage: https://tenspontaneite.tumblr.com/piaj Link to PIAJ Masterpage on tumblr (containing links to chapters, meta, art, Q&As, and resources) (Link may not work properly on mobile/app)
Author Notes:Â
Happy 2021 everyone. Weâve not had the best start to the year, but with luck itâll be less atrocious than 2020 overall.
Long chapter break again, as you may have noticed. If you donât check my tumblr and therefore havenât seen my various personal updates on there â since the last update, I started playing a new instrument, broke several personal writing records, and took around a 15ish day break from writing before Christmas. I had an extremely powerful writing hyperfocus across a good portion of October and November, and churned out a Large Quantity of writing in a different rayllum fanfiction that will not be published.
Personal records broken
Most written in one day: Previously 8200 words, now 9150
Fastest 50k: Previously 11 days, now 9 days
Fastest 100k: Previously unknown*, now 23 days
Most written in one month: Previously 88k, now 120k
*The previous record for fastest 100k would have been when I first started writing this story, but I wasnât keeping detailed records at the time so Iâm not sure of the exact date I started writing. Iâm relatively certain 23 days breaks it though.
This chapter was kind of a lot of emotional effort to write, not to mention representing the execution of some seriously painful story arrangement logistics, so comments are very much appreciated.
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In which Callum and Ezran adapt, a Healer goes to meet with Opeli, and two beleaguered siblings arrive at last in civilisation.
(Chapter length: 12k. Ao3 link)
---
  At dawn, Cairon pulled the buffers out from around the windows and beneath the door, packed up his bedroll, and let himself silently out of the room to slip downstairs. Sarli had stirred at the quiet sounds, waking slowly. It took her a moment to remember why her apprentice had bunked down in her room overnight, and then she felt so tired it was as though she had not slept at all. What sense was there in a world where a Healer need fear those she served?
She sighed to herself, pulled herself from bed, and attended to her morning ablutions while Cairon was busy with tea and breakfast. He had a plate and a cup ready for her by the time she arrived at the table, and his eyes flickered to hers as she settled. âI assume we will be keeping to our early appointment this morning?â He spoke quietly, and Sarli watched him.
An early appointment was one before seven. They had none such this morning, as well he knew. He was referring to something else, coached in caution, against the risk of someone listening. âYes.â Was all Sarli said, and she nursed her tea in silence. She felt that silence as cold and choking as a chain around her neck. When they were done with the food, they gathered a pittance of supplies and left the house, beginning the long walk to the castle proper. She spent its entirety quashing the tension from herself, allowing no trace of it to show in her bearing. She was uneasy at the idea that they might be silenced before reaching their destination.
If Lord Viren were minded to such direct and extreme measures, though, there was no sign of it that morning. She and Cairon travelled down well-populated roads all the way to the castle, and were not troubled along the way.
In the end, it was remarkably easy to convince Lady Opeli of the Lord Protectorâs crimes. Sarli had scarce managed to put voice to the words âLord Viren is in violation of the Millennium War Crimes Accordsâ before the Priestess of Paragons had pulled her and Cairon aside for an audience.
She asked clarifying questions throughout the account. She asked for descriptions of the guards, for details of the secret passages that had been used. She listened avidly, and after a while fetched a scroll to start noting down the particulars. But never once did she doubt Sarliâs word, or seem the least part dubious of the tale. It might have surprised Sarli, if not for her own experience of the Lord Protector. As it was, she could understand that a woman like this might well have had time to grow wary to his ways.
So, Sarli laid out the matter in precise and exacting detail. She described the conditions the elf had been kept in. The secrecy that had surrounded the entirety of the affair. The surgery sheâd performed.
And, eventually, the unnatural fly that Cairon had found in their home.
âDark magic?â Opeli questioned, sharply, and Sarliâs nod was curt.
âIf it wasnât, Iâve no idea what else it might be.â She said. âIt was very small, and not particularly durable. But it appeared a small insect, the size of a house-fly, and seemed made of unusually dense black smoke. Its eyes were small pinpricks of light. I imagine that description will be of more use to you than it is to me.â
âIâve seen dark magic constructs before. That sounds very similar.â The Priestess of Paragons sounded grim. âI suppose we have no way of knowing what its purpose was, but there is only one dark mage present in the city at the moment, and you are a Healer. To thinkâŠâ She shook her head, and looked briefly shaken. Not afraid, though. Instead she trembled with a quiet fury. To one so devout as her, even an indirect threat against a Healer would be well understood as unspeakable.
âIt is the opinion of myself, and my apprentice, that the elf will not survive captivity in his conditions for long. Particularly without the attendance of a Healer.â Sarli said, in the end. âIf you wish to address this crime while the prisoner yet lives, I would suggest it be soon.â
âOh, I intend to.â Lady Opeli said, voice very dark. Her face was cold and grim, butâŠsatisfied, in its own way. She seemed a predator on a long and wearying hunt, whose prey had finally deigned to let down its guard. âThe Lord Protector has gone too far. He has broken laws he swore to uphold, and must be held accountable.â Her focus shifted, settling on Sarli. âYouâve done well to bring this to me, Healer. You are a credit to your vows.â
âI do as I must.â Sarli said, impassive, head tilted to inspect the Priestess. âAnd you, Cleric? What duty is yours, now?â The choice of title was deliberate. As Priestess of Paragons, Opeli had certain responsibilities. As High Cleric, though, she had duties too. There was some overlap, of course, but hereâŠ
Opeli did not disappoint her. âI will call a meeting of the Council to address the breach of Law.â She said, at once, with an ironwrought conviction that Sarli could do nothing but admire. âAt the very least, Lord Virenâs prisoner must be confiscated, and remanded to the proper authorities. Under Law, no less is acceptable.â
âI approve.â She said after a moment. Sheâd had cause to speak with the Priestess on several occasions before, but never on such a matter as this. It was pleasing to see that the head of the faith was as reliable here as she was in her more common duties. âYouâll be needing us for witnesses, I assume.â
Opeli inspected her, her eyes slipping briefly sideways to Cairon. He was quiet, head gently bowed, as any Acolyte should be in the presence of the highest religious authority in the kingdom. âIf you prefer otherwise, I can take your oathbound testimony now.â She said, watching him, mild curiosity in her eyes. ââŠYou are Cairon, are you not?â She asked, after a second, and he raised his head to behold her with startled eyes. âThe boy who moved to the temple here some time ago. Youâve been an Acolyte of Mercy for a number of years now, no?â
He stilled, ever-so-briefly, under her stare. The question seemed to intimidate him, and true enough, Sarli had never managed to get him to speak long on his childhood. It seemed a difficult topic. In recent times, she had begun to suspect more specific reasons for that reticence. ââŠYes, Cleric.â He said, in near to a whisper.
âI took him up as apprentice when his talent in herbalism came clear.â Sarli offered, with a brief sideways glance at the boy. âHe works well. He has taken no vows, but I would vouch for his integrity in any matter of Mercy.â She chose her words carefully, there. Very carefully indeed.
The High Cleric considered it. âVery well, then. Would the two of you prefer to give testimony now, or before the Council?â
âIt is immaterial.â Sarli said.
âBefore the Council, then.â
She inclined her head. âAs you will. When should we expect our attendance?â
âThe afternoon, in likelihood.â Opeli answered. âIâll send a runner to fetch you.â
Sarli started. âSo soon?â
âAs you said, Healer, this is a matter of urgency. That prisoner cannot be allowed to die, and the Lord Protector cannot be allowed to threaten you.â She decreed, and eyed them speculatively. âIt might be sensible to have the two of you guarded until the Council meets. If he catches wind of thisâŠâ
She considered it, narrow-eyed. âThere are patients to be seen this morning.â She said, slowly.
âAnything urgent?â
âNot particularly. But it occurs to me that, should we fail to make those appointments, any who might be watching us would have something of interest to report.â A Healer did not miss appointments for anything but the direst of causes. If the Lord Protector had stationed human spies to watch herâŠ
Opeli frowned. âA good point.â
Cairon shifted subtly beside her. âIf I may, Lady Opeli,â he spoke, softly, and drew their attention his way. âI have some experience with combat. If I stay alert, and do not leave my masterâs side, it should suffice for a few hours.â
Sarli very carefully did not react. Opeli had no background to understand why that was a remarkable claim, and sheâd not be the one to give it away. Never once had Cairon mentioned such a thing before, though it could slot easily into what little she had been told of his childhood. But even soâŠ
âIf youâre confident.â Opeli accepted, after a moment, though she seemed a little dubious. âPlease be careful, though. Donât take risks. Your testimony may be critical, depending on what my investigation finds.â
âWe will take all due caution.â Sarli said. âEven so, I must not shirk my duty. It would be well for the two of us to leave now, if you have no more questions for us.â
âI have enough to use.â That steely focus tightened her face again. âThank you, Healer. You may go. Expect to be called upon soon.â
âWe wait upon your word, Cleric.â She said instead, and with the dispersal of a few more pleasantries, she and Cairon were on their way.
âThat wasâŠinteresting.â Her apprentice said, very tactfully, when they had concluded the walk home in silence and remanded themselves to the security of their walls. Still, the boy had taken five minutes in silence to stalk the halls and peer into every shadow in search of another spy. If he was speaking now, evidently he had found nothing.
âYou may be less circumspect in your wording than that, Cairon.â She said, a touch amused, as she hooked her cloak at the wall. âWe are not in public.â
âAlright, then.â He accepted, without hesitation, and said âthat was shockingly easy, then, if thatâs blunt enough for you.â
âIt will do.â Her lips twitched. âAnd yes, it was rather, wasnât it?â
âWe accused the Lord Protector of law-breaking a hairâs breadth from treason, and she justâŠâ he waved, baffled. âaccepted it. Without any doubt or reservations at all.â
âI think the Lady Opeli has been looking for something to use against our illustrious Lord Protector for a while, if I judge her correctly.â Sarli said wryly, and set herself down in her chair. âPerhaps the Council is no happier with its new liege than the Kingdom is.â For a moment, heaviness settled upon her; the weight of a nationâs grief. It hurt, to lose the royal family so suddenly, particularly when the princes had been so young and so beloved.
Cairon hesitated, eyeing her warily. He always seemed cautious when the topic of politics arose, as if he were concerned heâd overstep. ââŠYou think Lady Opeli is using this as an excuse to undermine the Lord Protector?â he asked after a moment, and the prospect seemed to make him uneasy.
She considered it. âI think that the Lady Opeli wants to do her duty. And I think that she would be pleased to undermine Lord Viren. We have offered her the opportunity for both, on the back of a breach of Law. Law, Cairon, and you know who she is.â
He nodded mechanically. He knew as well as any Acolyte the origins of Lady Opeli, after all; High Priestess she might be, and High Cleric too, but in an older time she had always belonged to Justice. There could be little more sacred to her than Law. âItâs strange to think of it from Justiceâs side.â He mused, after a moment.
âWithout Justiceâs side, as you put it, weâd have no recourse for our Mercy at all.â She reminded, and a flicker of something strange passed his eyes, as though he disagreed. Sarli watched him, and deliberately did not ask. âIn any case, I expect the matter will be resolved soon. Lady Opeli will not suffer it otherwise.â A breath, almost relieved. âMy duty will be satisfied.â
Cairon looked away, the line of his shoulders just slightly too tense for her to overlook it. ââŠIf all goes well.â Was all he said, voice as strange as the furtive note in his eyes, and again Sarli did not ask. There was a great deal she did not ask of her apprentice.
âHave faith in the High Cleric.â Was all she said, in the end, and he nodded, and then there was nothing to do but prepare for their patients. Here, too, there was duty to be served.
 ---
 âIs that a town?â Soren demanded, squinting over her head as though that would help him see through the snow any better. âPlease tell me thatâs a town. I never want to see another tree in my life.â
Claudia peered, and sure enough, saw the blocky shapes of what were almost certainly distant houses through the haze. âYou know what, Soren, I think it is.â A rush of relief swept through her, and she grinned. âFinally. This two-people-on-one-horse thing was really starting to get old.â Sorenâs horse had managed to get a stone lodged in his hoof a couple days back. By the time they noticed her limping, it had been too late. Heâd had to join her on her horse to let the lame mare follow along behind themâŠ.and needless to say, horses that were already armoured didnât have a great time carrying two people.
Sheâd tried to convince Soren to leave his armour on the mare, but heâd refused to take it off.
âNo kidding.â Her brother muttered, still contorting himself into inadvisable horseback positions to try to see the settlement better past her head. âWhere is that?â
Snorting, Claudia shrugged. âWell, if weâd used your map skills, it could be anywhere.â She said, almost cheerfully.
âMy map skills are fine.â
She ignored him. âBut, unless we got really off-course, thatâs probably Verdorn. Which is what we were aiming for. Good.â She sighed, a little gustily, and brushed more snow out of her hair. Her fingers were numb with the cold. âI want to find a nice warm inn and then not come out for a week.â
âMission.â Soren reminded her sourly, and she sighed again.
âYeah, the mission.â She acknowledged, tired at the mere thought. But despite how annoying the last few days of travel had been, they werenât exactly here for a vacation. There was a job to do. âAt least the elf probably isnât travelling any faster in this storm than we are.â Especially not if she had Callum and Ez with her. Claudiaâs gut tightened at the thought that she might not.
Even arriving at the town was slower than she would have liked. She wished sheâd have left the ingredient-hunting for later. Then maybe theyâd have arrived here before the storm set in, horse problems or no. In the end though, she and Soren and two horses and three hungry dogs arrived at the cobbled streets of a small town that was â probably â the one theyâd been aiming for.
Not many people were out in the streets. They knew better, she supposed, than to be out in the snow and wind. It didnât take too much looking to find an inn and get the animals stowed in its stables, and then, finally, they were indoors.
Soren made a pitiful groaning noise at finally entering a warm building, and she couldnât blame him. They had not packed particularly comprehensively, and hadnât had even a single glove to stave off the cold. The last day or so had involved thrice-daily stops to build a fire and warm up enough to keep going.
Both of them headed straight for the tavern part of the room, of course. Not only was that probably the best place to look into getting a room for the night, but theyâd almost certainly have warm food available. It was surprisingly crowded, though. The tables were packed with disgruntled-looking people in heavy wools and furs, nursing their drinks while they muttered darkly to each other. There was a good bit of eyebrow-raising and blatant staring as Claudia and Soren walked through.
The woman behind the counter looked them up and down as they approached, raising an eyebrow. âNow arenât you two a sorry sight.â she greeted, looking extremely unimpressed. âWhat, do you not know what a coat is?â
Sorenâs eyebrow twitched. âYes I know what a coat is.â He snapped, folding his arms with a clink of metal.
âCouldâve fooled me. What do you want?â The woman didnât seem in any better cheer than her customers, regarding them impatiently, her tone brusque.
âArenât barmaids supposed to be polite â ow, Claudia!â
It wasnât easy to elbow someone in armour in a way that counted, but sheâd had practice. âSorry about my brother.â She said to the tavern-keeper, trying for a conciliatory tone. âHeâs an idiot and weâve had a long few days.â
âI donât give a fuck, girl.â The woman informed her flatly. âIâve got three dozen miners here who canât work because of the damn thundersnow on the mountain, and my husbandâs one of them. Iâm up to here-â she indicated a point approximately level with her eyes. â-in cranky, bellyaching bastards. Tell me what you want or get out of my inn.â
Nonplussed, Claudia tried not to scowl at the woman. That probably wouldnât help. âWe want a room and we want food.â She said instead, and finally the tavern-keeper settled.
âAbout time.â She grumbled, and after a very rapid exchange of words and currency, Claudia and Soren were heading to a table with a platter each of meat stew with bread. Finding somewhere to sit that had room for both of them wasnât exactly easy, so they ended up squashing in at the end of a table overburdened with irate miners.
Neither of them spoke for a while. They were too occupied with the food. Days without any meal other than travel rations would do that to you. When finally one of them spoke, it was Soren, putting down the hard end on his bread with a sigh. âSo, now what?â He asked her, and she frowned into her bowl.
Now what, indeed.
âMostly we just need to supply.â She admitted, sighing. âMaybe trade in your horse, since sheâs not going to be up for carrying you any time soon. I mean, weâd better arrange some sort of transport for the dogs tooâŠâ
âThat â well, I guess, whatever, but thatâs not what I meant.â Soren frowned at her. âI meant, now what do we do about the elf?â
Both miners immediately beside them on the table straightened and stared. So did the next four down the benches, to varying extents. âThe what?â The biggest of the men demanded, incredulous.
âSoren!â Claudia hissed at him, in an undertone, then louder: âHe said âshelfâ! He said âshelfâ!â
None of them seemed convinced by this. By now, the miners further away were responding to the excitement, and there were mutters passing down-table of âwhat did they say?â and âthey said thereâs an elf!â and âoh bloody Mercy, not againâ. That last one was particularly interesting, but Claudia didnât have any time to wonder about it, because an exceptionally brawny miner woman nearby leaned in aggressively towards them and said, loudly, âDonât you try that on me, girl! if thereâs another fucking elf around we damn well need to know about it!â
âThereâs no-â Claudia froze mid-protest, mind latching onto the words. âWait. Another elf? An elf actually â do you mean an elf actually came through here?â Sheâd never thought an elf would be stupid enough to walk through a human town, but- âWhat did she look like? They, I mean, they.â She corrected herself quickly.
The closest miners had subsided a little to stare at them suspiciously. Further afield, the word was still spreading, and the entire tavern was rousing gradually into uproar. âYouâre not happening to be tracking the same elf, are you?â The woman miner asked shrewdly, leaning in uncomfortably close. âGirl one, travelling with a couple of kids?â
A couple of kids? She took the meaning instantly, and slumped a little with relief. Soren didnât quite seem to get the implication right away, but that was alright. Sheâd explain it to him later. âI â actually, yes.â She admitted, gut twisting a little at the admission. Strictly speaking, she wasnât supposed to be talking to anyone else about the mission, but⊠âWeâve been following her for a while now. We thought sheâd come past here, just â not actually through the town.â
Interested murmurs and a few head-scratches went around the table. The enormous miner man spoke up next, saying âWell, I donât know, I heard she disguised herself when she was actually in Verdorn proper. Mostly we just know about how she attacked a couple of our hunters up by the river, some days ago.â
âWe wanted to send a pursuit, but then the fucking storm came in.â Added the woman, sourly. âAnd besides, the pursuit thing didnât seem to work out too well for the other guy, so maybe that was for the best.â
Claudia and Soren exchanged a glance.
Slowly, he spoke. âThe other guy?â He questioned, staring. âWhat other guy?â
âThe man from the Standing Battalion, of course.â She said, exasperated. âHavenât you heard anything?â
ââŠWe only just got into town.â Claudia managed. She inhaled, taking a moment to compose herself, and closed her eyes. When she opened them, she was all-business. The woman eyed her warily, as if noticing the change. âI need you,â she began, slow and precise, âto tell me everything you know about what happened with that elf.â A breath. âAnd about the man from the Battalion.â
Dad didnât mention this, she thought to herself grimly. Dad didnât know about this. That means weâre on our own here. If someone else is after the eggâŠor no, they wouldnât know about the egg, itâs probably just Callum and Ezran theyâre after â but wasnât dad going to pretend they were dead so he could be Lord Protector until we got them back? Iâm so confusedâŠ
But the woman had started talking now, so Claudia cut off her thoughts and listened.
Everything could wait until she had more information.
 ---
 When Callum woke, the cold was aching bitterly in his limbs. He had a terrible headache, and it took a long few moments for consciousness to begin to push its way through the murk of it for him to remember. There was a sensation like his stomach dropping, and then his breath hitched; in the next second, a thread of exhausted despair stitched itself into his heart. I donât want to have to do this again, he thought incoherently, not all the way awake, but enough so to hurt. He curled a little tighter in on himself. Please, please donât make me have to go through this againâŠ
Distantly, some still-dreaming part of him was hoping that it wasnât real. That he could wake, and then wake again, and emerge through the layers of a nightmare into a kinder reality. But instead he pushed himself half-way up, and blinked his eyes open, and saw Rayla and Ezran sitting around the same fire heâd spent hours staring at in hollow-eyed grief. They turned to look at him, and there wasnât really any mistaking the looks in their eyes.
âMorning.â Rayla offered, after a moment. She extended a hand, and he took it without thinking, letting her help him all the way up.
He mumbled something vague and wordless, reflexively looking away from the uncertainty and sadness on her face. As a result, he ended up squinting out at the storm. It seemed considerably less opaque, now. He could actually see the shapes of the mountains through it. ââŠWhat time is it?â He managed, after a moment or two, blinking snow-brightness out of his eyes.
ââBout eight. You slept a decent amount.â She hesitated. âYou can sleep longer, though. Stormâs passing, but we still have a while to go.â
Callum shook his head. âIâm awake now.â He glanced across at Ezran, whoâd not said a word yet. He was holding the egg, gloved fingers smoothing over the shell. ââŠHow are you doing, Ez?â He asked finally, and shifted a little closer to Rayla, who was sat directly beside his brother.
I blinked at him slowly, then shrugged tiredly. âOkay.â He answered, eventually, and seemed to have very little else to say. There was an almost visible weight on him, thick and oppressive. There were heavy bags under his eyes, and he plainly hadnât slept much. Maybe heâd stayed awake ever since Callum went to sleep.
His gut twisted, but he couldnât think of what to say. It was all too awful, too senseless. He looked away again, and didnât remember that he was still holding Raylaâs hand until she squeezed at his fingers. He looked over, and saw her watching him with a soft, sad concern. âEat something.â She told him, sympathetic but firm, and nudged him in the direction of a selection of cooked meats sheâd apparently been working on during the night. âAnd drink something. Weâll have to start moving again later, so best get our energy up.â
He stared at her with blank incomprehension for a moment, then glanced at the storm again, processing for the first time what it meant that it seemed clearer now. No longer an all-consuming shroud of wind and snow. Still bitterly cold, and still uncomfortably gusty, but⊠âMoving,â he repeated, mind still not quite caught up with the idea. âYou mean weâll â weâll be leaving today?â
âUnless it gets worse again, yeah. I think so.â Rayla followed his eyes to the blizzard. âItâs been clearing pretty fast. I reckon itâll be mild enough to travel in by early afternoon. Itâll be hard going, butâŠâ She shrugged, looking uncomfortable. âWe need to get travelling again as soon as possible.â
Callum absorbed that, then lifted a hand to his face, closing his eyes for a moment. Some nameless emotion rose in the back of his throat, threatening to choke his breath away. âGet back on the horse, huh.â He murmured, mostly to himself, and found her blinking confusedly when he opened his eyes again.
âWhatâve horses got to do with anything?â
He shook his head. âJust a saying.â He didnât elaborate, though, and saw Ezran clutching a little more tightly at the egg beside her. Like the words had hit home for him in the same way they had for Callum.
No matter how much they were hurtingâŠthey still had a job to do. The only time there was for grief was within whatever liberty existed around the demands of their mission. There wasnât time to hole up in a cave and cry for days.
Over the next hour or so, Callum actually became somewhat thankful for that fact. He grew restless, pacing around the narrow confines of their shelter while Rayla went on a final trip for firewood. Intermittently, distress rose in his throat and frothed behind his eyes, threatening tears. Other times it felt more like frustration, bitter and choking and full of helplessness. His thoughts spiralled in and around his decisions and the memorial flames and the letter until he could almost feel the turmoil crawling beneath his skin. There was no escaping the awfulness of it, and eventually the prospect of travelling out into the storm almost seemed pleasant. At least that way, maybe heâd be too tired and cold to think.
Ez stayed quiet the whole time. Callum tried to nudge him to speak a few times, but didnât manage to get anything more than a few apathetic shrugs from him. He took the hint and left his brother mostly alone, sitting down close to him and tearing up pine needles to throw into the pot. The silence ate at him in a way he couldnât quite put words to, not even to himself. His head was full of a noise and agitation too senseless to name.
It was a relief when Rayla returned, bearing a small load of firewood plus a few sticks quite unlike the rest. Sheâd gone out of her way to preserve a bundle of long, thin, flexible rods of wood, and set those separate to the small stack sheâd gathered to keep the fire burning. After checking in with the rest of them and prodding them (once again) to eat, she sat down with these and started twisting them into a deliberate shape. Ez actually managed to emerge from his silence enough at that to ask, with dim curiosity, âWhatâre you doing?â
âMaking snowshoes. Improvised ones, anyway.â She answered, and Callum sat down with a blink to inspect her work. âTheyâll go around our shoes. The snowâs pretty deep out there. If we try to shove through it, weâll be working way harder than we need to. Theseâll help us just walk on top of it instead of sinking in too much.â
âHow does that work?â Callum asked, interested despite everything. He could feel his curiosity prodding at him from behind the thick haze of frustrated misery.
Rayla shrugged, bending sticks into place. âDunno. Something to do with spreading weight out, but I donât remember much about that. It works â donât ask me why.â
âThereâs birds with really long toes that donât sink in through snow.â Ez said after a moment. âMaybe thatâs the same thing.â
âProbably.â She agreed, without much interest, and returned to work. She made a set for each of them and tested the fit briefly, Callum and Ezran each volunteering a boot to the cause, then took them off. After that was done she decreed âWeâll put these on when weâre past the ledge and leaving. Before that, theyâll just get in the way.â
She seemed to notice his agitation sometime afterwards, no matter how hard he was trying to quash it down, to conceal the way it jittered in his fingers and frothed under his skin. Maybe she misinterpreted it, because she offered to take him past the ledge. He was almost too distracted for embarrassmentâŠbut, in fairness, he did need to go. Quite badly. So he went with her, then headed off alone, and when he was done came back with every expectation of her promptly escorting him back into shelter again.
Instead, she put her hand on his shoulder and said âYou alright, Callum?â He stared at her, thrown, and after a moment she elaborated. âYouâre acting a bit twitchy. Didnât know ifâŠâ She trailed off, looking uncertain, then shrugged uncomfortably. She didnât seem to know what to say. But she was trying, very plainly, toâŠhelp him. Comfort him, maybe. Even if she wasnât sure how.
Callum stared at her for a few moments, then exhaled heavily, looking away. His fingers were shaking, but his emotions and thoughts were too much of a mess to know what was moving them. The problem was, heâd not been talking. Not since he woke. It hadnât seemed right, with Ez already struck silent with misery. Heâd spent a good two hours stewing in that silence, and now...
âIâŠâ he tried, head almost too muddled for putting any coherent words to anything. âIâŠdonât do great when I donât talk about things.â He settled on eventually, and after a moment turned around a little so his face was at least not directly into the wind. She shifted around with him, watching, listening carefully. âMy head gets allâŠtangled up, and I justâŠâ He shook his head, unable to find the words. He had a very hard time thinking things through inside his own head. Always had. And if he left it, it became just this kind of mess, where he had no idea how to make heads or tails of what was bothering him, or panicking him, or anything. âI get messed up.â
Her hand, wreathed in at least two gloves, drifted from his shoulder to his upper arm. He felt it there, a trace of grounding contact even through all the layers he wore. âYou could talk now.â She offered, quietly, just about loud enough for him to hear over the wind in his ears. âIf you want. If it wouldâŠhelp.â
He looked at her, then. There were shadows under her eyes as well, as much as beneath his own, or Ezranâs. Sheâd shared in their exhaustion, shared in their grief. Sheâd been there. Something about that settled him, just the tiniest bit, soothing the edge of the nameless tension beneath his skin. âI would,â he admitted, and shivered as the wind delivered a puff of snowflakes around the edges of his scarf. âIf I â if I could tell what to talk about. I justâŠâ He exhaled again. âI donât know. Itâs justâŠsuch a mess.â
Rayla visibly paused at that, perhaps trying to figure out how to respond. Sheâd been so hesitant about almost every gesture of comfort sheâd offered, since the start of all this. He wasnât sure why. The best he could figure was that she was self-conscious, or didnât know what to do, orâŠmaybe she was still guilty. But she was still here, trying to help. Sheâd brought him out here in the first place to help, probably. In case he didnât want to bother Ez with whatever needed saying. HeâŠappreciated that, actually. It was hard to make sense of any of his feelings right now, but he could tell that much.
Finally, she asked âAnything I can do?â She sounded a little helpless. He felt some of that himself.
âI donât know.â He said again, and this time felt a hot froth of misery surge up behind it, acidic with the burn of stress. He blinked rapidly, and displaced a few stray tears he hadnât even known were there. He shuddered and looked away. âI justâŠfeel really terrible.â He admitted, not looking at her, shoulders hunching up. âI donât know what to do. I feel soâŠâ It took a few long seconds of struggling, of testing, to dislodge a word from the mess inside his head. âLost.â He settled on, eyes shuttering. âAnd confused. AndâŠI donât know.â He brought his hands up to his face, overcome for a moment.
ââŠThatâs normal, I think.â He heard her words, felt her hand still steady at his arm. âItâsâŠbeen a hard few days. And yesterdayâŠâ She trailed off.
He uttered a short, unhappy laugh. âYeah. Itâs a lot.â He breathed into his gloves. âI donât really know â I donât know. What Iâm thinking. Or feeling. Itâs justâŠreally not easy.â A flash of searing memory: Harrow struggling for the last words heâd ever say to him, âthis isnât easyââŠhe remembered the letter again, and his throat went tight.
Her hand shifted on his arm. A moment later, it lifted. Before he could feel bereft, it was tugging at one of the hands heâd buried his face in. He blinked up at her, let her tentatively draw that hand away, then the other. She held his hands lightly, as though she might drop them at any moment, inspecting his face carefully. ââŠDo you want to go back in?â She asked, eventually. âOrâŠâ
Did he? âI donât know.â He said, helplessly.
âSit down?â She suggested next, and his brow furrowed.
âKind of cold for that. And snowy.â It wasnât necessarily an objection. Sitting might be nice. But then again, the wind and the snow remained. Standing still like this in the middle of itâŠthe chill was already starting to seep through.
ââŠGo for a walk?â Was her final, half-hearted offer. âCould clear your head a little.â
âNot sure I want to leave Ez for that long.â He admitted, shoulders hunching. ââŠSorry. I know Iâm not making this easy.â
She considered it, then shook her head. âItâs fine.â After a moment of deliberation, she tugged a little more firmly at his hands, turning as if to lead him onwards. âCome on. Doesnât have to be a long walk, but wonât hurt. Usually helps me, so.â She shrugged, letting one hand fall, leading him along by the other.
He blinked, then obediently stumbled along after her, boots dragging a little through the snow. It was deep here, and he didnât quite have the hang of how high he needed to lift his feet to get them clear of it. It was half-way up his thighs, for Mercyâs sake. ââŠYou usually take your thinking-walks alone, though.â He pointed out, after a moment.
She glanced back at him, and for a moment looked a little rueful. Perhaps at how heâd seen her go off alone on walks enough times to have an idea of how they worked for her. âTrue. But I clear my head best when Iâm alone for a bit.â Her eyes met his for a moment. âPretty sure itâs the opposite, for you.â
He swallowed past the lump in his throat, bizarrely touched. ââŠIâŠyeah, thatâs about right.â He admitted, and finally adjusted to walk directly in Raylaâs wake. She wasnât bothering to lift her feet over the level of the snow, and was just pushing through. If he walked behind her, it was easier. ââŠWhere are we going?â He asked after a moment, recognising that Rayla actually seemed to be walking in an existing trail herself. It looked quite snowed-in, so wasnât terribly fresh, but he thought she must have gone this way before at some point over the last couple days.
Raylaâs eyes darted briefly back, just for a second. âYouâll see. Just give it a minute.â A moment later, a little cryptically: âShould look better now the storm is clearing, too.â He opened his mouth to question her, but then the next stretch turned out to involve a slight climb; he almost slipped on the icy rocks, not quite able to see them under the snow, and she had to steady him.
Then, finally:
He stepped up, about to speak, then found his breath catching. They stood on a cliff edge. Beyond it, the vast ghostly shape of the mountain range loomed in the haze of the storm. Overlapping silhouettes, tinged pink by the rosy light of the morning sun through the snow. It was hard to tell how far those mountains stretched, with the visibility so poor. ButâŠ
The light glimmered. Glittered on the snowflakes falling closest to them, lighting them up like the embers of a fire. Beyond them, in the distance, the storm-haze twisted on its own winds, set aglow by sunlight until it seemed like living, breathing radiance. It was wholly beautiful, and somehow he hadnât expected that. At some point, without his realising it, the misery of the storm had closed his artistâs mind, turned his eyes away. Heâd stopped noticing the ethereal beauty of light and snow somewhere between the first night and the second, and nowâŠ
Beside him, Rayla was glancing at him, looking suddenly self-conscious. âYou like pretty things, right?â She offered uncertainly. âIâŠsaw this yesterday morning. Could see the light a bit, even through the snow clouds. Thought you might like it.â She shrugged as if to affect ambivalence. Her hand twitched in his, like she might drop it.
He clutched back tightly to forestall any such possibility; abruptly, he felt choked with emotion. Tears were suddenly welling in his eyes for more reasons than the sear of the wind on his cheeks. Partly because of her, maybe, because sheâd seen this and thought of him and brought him here to try to cheer him up â but partly at the sight itself. The shadows of the mountains, glowing, wreathed in the haze of a dying storm. It shook something loose in him. Like ice breaking from a frozen stream, maybe. Or the lancing of a wound.
âCallum?â She sounded a little alarmed, and turned to face him more fully. She looked at him for a moment, expression tightening. âOh, this was a bad ideaâŠâ She muttered to herself, with an edge of self-remonstration.
He shook his head furiously. âNo. No, it was a good idea. I justâŠâ He lifted a sleeve to wipe at his face, but there were already more tears flowing. âI justâŠI think maybe Iâm not done crying yet.â
Rayla eyed him uncertainly, but did settle a little, watching him a little more carefully. âYou okay?â She asked, at last, like she wanted to make sure.
There was so much inside his head, tangled up, twisting in on itself. But maybe a little less now, like some of it had been allowed to spill free, to run clear. The pain in his chest was sharp and aching, but felt cleaner. Less complicated. Already the tears were beginning to stop. He produced a slightly wet-sounding laugh in response to her question, and said âOkay-ish, I guess.â
He hurt. The ache of loss wasnât any less awful. ButâŠ
ââŠWhat set this off?â Rayla questioned, looking between him and the scenery. The morning sun glowed at the edge of her face, shone through what little hair still showed. It glittered the same way the snow did. âI donât get it.â
âItâsâŠâ he started, then trailed off. He stared out at the mountains, shaded in pink.
What had set him off?
âItâs that itâs beautiful.â He said at last, not really understanding it himself, but knowing it was true. âJustâŠdespiteâŠI guess, despite everything, itâs stillâŠâ He gestured out at it with his free hand. âItâs still here.â
It didnât really make a lot of sense when he said it out loud. But he felt it, regardless.
There were still beautiful things. That mattered.
She was watching him when he looked up. Slowly, she lifted a hand. Wiped a tear from his cheek. âCome on.â She said, gently, and tugged at his fingers. âWeâd best be getting back.â
 ---
 Theyâd not been gone for longer than maybe twenty minutes, but Callum was already feeling anxious about Ez by the time Rayla led him back over the precipitous ledge to their shelter. The first thing he looked for when he turned the corner was his brother â and then he stopped short. Blinked.
Beside the fire, arms bracketed around the dragon egg, Ezran was sleeping. Heâd slumped forward enough for his cheek to rest on the glowing shell, but had at least stayed upright enough to avoid falling into the fire. It looked horrendously uncomfortable, like heâd pretty much passed out in place, finally drawn beyond the surmountable bounds of exhaustion. Bait was sat at his side, awake and as grumpy-looking as ever.
Callum hesitated at the sight, unexpectedly stricken, then finally drifted forwards to arrange his brother until he was laying on his side instead. Ezran didnât stir, even when Bait rearranged himself by his head and croaked disagreeably at his sleeping face. He was out. âDamn it, Ez.â He muttered, unhappily, and was very careful not to make contact with his skin. For all he knew, the empathy effect would be enough to wake him.
Behind him, Rayla lingered on her feet, watching. âSomething wrong?â
Besides Ez falling asleep and leaving the fire unwatched? Only for a little while, maybe, but⊠âHeâs being like you, kinda. I think.â Callum said at last, lips downturned as he backed away. Rayla shot him a look as she sat down beside him, so he elaborated. âTrying not to worry us. OrâŠnot relaxing until heâs alone, anyway.â He shook his head. âHe was so tired, but he didnât go to sleep until we were both gone? I justâŠthat feels to me likeâŠI donât know, he was too â bothered? Distracted? By us. Somehow.â He rubbed a hand over his face, the wool rough on the wind-scoured skin of his cheeks. âIâmâŠreally worried about him.â
Rayla looked at him for a moment, and then over at Ezâs sleeping face. Her brow furrowed. âHe seems to keep a lot to himself.â She observed, after a while. âBit more like me than you, true. ButâŠâ Her eyes stayed settled on Ez, and he wondered what she was looking at. The bags under his eyes, maybe? The slight unhealthy pallor to his dark skin? âYouâre maybe right, in a way.â She settled on eventually. âHeâs been trying to take care of us, I think. Or at least keep an eye on us.â
âWhat?â Callum stared around at her. âWhat do you mean?â
âHeâs been sort ofâŠmanaging us. Not just today, either. Watching us, keeping what he notices quiet, thenâŠâ She gestured vaguely in the air, looking grim. âStepping in. Sorting us out. Or just â acting like itâs his job to fix everything.â She glanced down at her wrist, frown deepening. âLike how he was so stubborn about holding my hand when I was in pain. Or trying to helpâŠAzymondiasâŠduring the storm yesterday.â
His gut twisted. âIâŠâ he trailed off, thinking. Remembered any number of little instances where I had stepped in to manage his anxiety, or Raylaâs pain, or otherwise had to take it on himself to get them to deal with something. Even â even their dad. Heâd been the one to finally work up the courage to stop pretending and confront Rayla about what sheâd been failing to tell them. âIâŠyeah, I can see that.â He agreed in the end, unhappily, and clenched his fists in his lap.
âHis whole emotion-sensing deal probably isnât helping there.â She noted shrewdly, looking pretty displeased about the situation herself. âHe feels what weâre feeling, and then he thinks he has to do something about it.â
âHe shouldnât.â It slipped out before he even thought of it, words fast and a little distressed. âHe should be focusing on his own feelings. Especially now. I â I donât want him dealing with our problems on top of everything else. Heâs just a kid.â
âMm.â Raylaâs eyes were shadowed, still lingering on his sleeping brother. âNot sure how weâre supposed to stop him, though. Heâs a stubborn little bugger.â
Callum almost snorted at that, but was a little too agitated for the humour to penetrate. âYeah, well, I can be pretty stubborn too if I put my mind to it.â He muttered, a thin froth of protective anger starting to simmer in his gut.
She glanced up at him with a wry twist to her lips. âYeah.â She agreed, like it was something sheâd noticed herself. He might have been amused at that any other time, butâŠnot now.
âWe need to do better.â Callum spoke, quiet and grim. âHe â he shouldnât be having to step up and make us â face things, or deal with stuff. Itâs not right. Heâs just a kid, and â and he just lost his dadâŠâ A thickness rose in the back of his throat, prickling at his eyes, threatening tears. He buried his face in his hands, falling mute as emotion choked the words from him.
A hand settled on his shoulder. ââŠYou just lost your dad, too.â She said quietly, and it felt like a stab through the heart.
âI know.â His breath shuddered; his hands lowered. âButâŠheâs my little brother. He shouldnât be dealing with this. Itâs not fair. And â I donât want to make that any worse for him than it already is.â Rayla didnât answer for a long while, so finally, he looked across at her. He found her watching him, expression laced with something he couldnât quite name.
ââŠYouâre a good brother.â She told him then, and suddenly he could name what he heard in her voice, what he saw in the way she was looking at him. Respect, he thought. Or something alike it.
Strangely flustered, he averted his eyes. âNot good enough, apparently.â He muttered, and jerked with surprise when she flicked him lightly on the arm.
âNone of that.â She chided him, with the slightest flutter of a smile at one corner of her lips. âWe had a deal, didnât we?â
He blinked, nonplussed. It took him a few moments of mental scrambling to call it to mind. âThe deal was for me to try not to feel bad about being a fully-trained Healer. Not about being a useless brother.â His tone was a little wry.
ââŠSuppose.â She thought for a moment, then nudged him. Her voice almost sounded teasing, plainly trying to inject humour into the situation. âWe could renegotiate, though. Your terms can be ânot feeling bad about doing the best you canâ. You know, as a general thing.â
Callum eyed her and snorted. âOnly if youâre willing to put ânot feeling guilty about stuff outside your controlâ on the negotiating table.â She grimaced a little, and his lips twitched. âYeah, not so easy, huh?â
She glanced quickly at him, a flash of something passing through her eyes. Apparently sheâd taken that as a challenge. âConsider it a deal, Prince Callum.â She told him, firmly. She even offered her hand, which he eyed with consternation. He wondered where sheâd learned that. Clasping hands to seal a deal wasnât common everywhere in the Pentarchy, after all.
Still, he carefully took her hand and shook it. âDeal.â He repeated, feeling the echo of a laugh lingering in his throat, not quite able to emerge. It was all so surreal. Apparently she agreed, because she met his eyes for a second, then began to laugh quietly, drawing back her hand. Â
He smiled, faint and rueful, becauseâŠat times like this, it really did feel like they knew each other too well for just ten daysâ acquaintance. It got him thinking about Aunt Amayaâs stories of the Standing Battalion, and the fast bonds that the soldiers all formed amongst themselves. Adversity can forge some of the strongest, fastest bonds in the world, sheâd said once. He wondered what sheâd think of all this.
The quiet that fell between them was almost comfortable after that, albeit still weighted with pervasive sorrow. He felt that weight, looking at his brother. More so, when something occurred to him after a minute of staring. ââŠHeâs the King now.â He said, softly, and Rayla blinked at him. âOrâŠking-in-waiting, technically, since heâs the heir, andâŠand King Harrow is dead, and thereâs not been a coronation yet.â He frowned. âProbably not, anyway.â
Raylaâs brow furrowed as she looked at him, side-long. âWho else could they have crowned, if not Ez? OrâŠyou, I guess?â She made a face at that, as though it weirded her out to think that he might well be in the line of succession for an entire kingdom. Which, in fact, he was.
Callum grimaced and shrugged. âWhoever has the rank and the support, I guess. Ezâs the only one who can actually be crowned King. If â if he was dead, I couldâŠtechnicallyâŠbe crowned King. Iâm next in line after him. But unless both of us died and someone else did a rite of ascension, the most you can do is get crowned Lord Protector. Which is kind of a step above Regent, but isnât the same thing as King. SoâŠanyone whoâd be a choice for Regent, pretty much.â He shook his head. âIâŠdonât really want to think about that right now, though.â
She nodded, as if to accept that, and fell quiet again. She seemed to want to ask something, though, and kept sneaking glances back his way. Eventually he just looked at her, not really in the mood for the dancing around, and she came out and admitted âThere is something Iâm wondering now, though.â She waited for his nod before actually asking. âWhy is it that Ezranâs first in line? I thought the older oneâs supposed to inherit. Is it because heâs the blood heir?â
Callum grimaced, and looked away. He opened his mouth, then closed it. The memories were painful now, and he had to shut his eyes for a few moments to breathe through them. ââŠMostly, itâs because I said no.â He said in the end, softly, and felt her eyes on him. âHeâŠdadâŠhe offered. To make me his first heir, I mean. He-â His breath shuddered. âHeâŠalways considered me his real son, I â I know that. I justâŠâ He buried his face in his hands again, inhaling shakily. His shoulders shook.
Carefully, Rayla shifted up next to him, close enough to brush against his side. It helped. When he lowered his hands, she was offering him one of hers. He took it silently, and breathed for a while. His eyes felt wet, though he wasnât crying.
âI was just a kid.â He continued finally, quiet. âI was already so freaked out just from being a prince, and moving to the castleâŠI didnât want the pressure of being the heir to the throne too. And Ez was already on the way, soâŠâ He shrugged tiredly. âHe put me in the line of succession, but after Ezran. ThatâsâŠpretty much it.â
She was quiet for a moment, thinking. âItâs good that he gave you the choice.â She said finally, a little subdued. âThat wasâŠkind.â
âA lot of royalty wouldnât put adopted kids in the line of succession at all. I know some of his advisors thought it was a bad move, but he did it anyway.â Callum said, eyes moving slowly towards their pile of bags. âAnd letting a kid like I was make a choice about something like thatâŠyeah.â Slowly, he reached out and pulled his sketchbook towards him by the strap, settling it in his lap. He stared at its time-worn cover, smoothing gloved fingertips over the leather. âHe was a good king.â He said in the end, soft with heartbreak. âA â good dad.â
She followed his eyes to the sketchbook, then squeezed his hand. Heâd half forgotten she was holding it, and blinked, looking down. It was the bound one, but it seemed to be bothering her a lot less now. He tightened his fingers around hers, the layers of wool creasing between them, and sighed.
Someday, heâd have to look through this book again, and every picture heâd drawn of Harrow would cut like a knife. Just like when his mom had died. He glanced sidelong at Rayla, quietly thoughtful, then across at Ezranâs sleeping form. In the end his eyes settled on his hand held in hers, very aware of the wordless reassurance of it. It was settling. Comforting, too.
Last time heâd lost a parent, heâd been horribly, sickeningly alone. Thereâd been no one to help him through that grief, not in the way heâd needed. Those first months lingered in his mind like a bleak shadow even now, warped and strange and disconnected from any coherent concept of the passage of time. He didnât remember it well at all. It was just a blurring mess, coloured by scattered fragments of loss, and loneliness, and the new aching void in his heart. The greatest constant in his life had been the panics he spent alone, hidden away gasping for breath in his room, all the worse for that his mother hadnât been there to help him through them. The clearest memories he had were of that; suffocation as thread to stitch the days together.
It had only started to get better when he really began spending time with teeny, tiny little Ez. He remembered the first time it happened, even. In retrospect, he thought Harrow had been trying to find something to help him. To cheer him up, maybe. Heâd summoned him to the nursery, told him to hold his brother, and Ezranâs tiny hands had reached out to grab at his collar before he was even fully settled in his arms. Heâd looked up with his wide, pale blue eyes and a toothless grin and â Callum didnât really remember what heâd felt at the time, not really. But that was when the memories started to feel a little less terrible, so he knew itâd made a difference.
Ez had been a ray of sunshine even then. The first glimmer of light returning to Callumâs life.
He reached out and smoothed a thumb over his brotherâs cheek, silent.
âI never really did great when I was alone, did I.â He said, more to himself than anyone else. Rayla glanced at him for it anyway, waiting to see if heâd elaborate. He didnât, though. It was something of a quiet, personal revelation: even back then, heâd needed people. Heâd needed them desperately.
Heâd not had anyone. Not then. Now, thoughâŠ
He held onto Raylaâs hand, watched Ezranâs face twitch in his sleep. In that moment, he was more grateful for their presence than words could ever express.
 ---
Over the next few hours, the storm-winds ebbed, and the snow eased, and the possibility of resuming travel that day coalesced into a certainty. As gently as she could, Rayla recruited Callum to start packing and organising their things with her, and then packing and organising the remaining meat. Of which there was a lot.
âGood news is, itâll stay cold enough that this should keep a long time.â She said, bunding the frozen slabs of meat into whatever spare cloth she could find. Stained-but-clean bandages, ripped clothing, towels, anything. The cooked meat she stuffed into their extant jars. âSo we wonât need to worry about meat again for a while.â
âAnd the bad news?â Callum asked, passing her another stack of slabs. Theyâd frozen together, bloody-red ice binding them, a coating of frost settled about the rest. She grimaced at the unhelpfully long shape, and after a moment braced it against the stone floor to break it into two more manageable stacks.
âThe bad news is that itâs cold enough for our food to freeze.â She offered, dry. âWhich means weâll be pretty chilly ourselves. But after the last few daysâŠâ She shook her head.
âWe wonât need to keep doing fire-watches, will we?â He looked wary, which she could understand. The broken sleep wasnât good for anyoneâs morale or energy, and would be rather worse if it followed a day of intensive mountain-crossing instead of a day of sitting around.
âNah. As long as we can put the tent up, weâll probably manage.â
He sighed at that, quietly relieved, and she patted him on the shoulder before returning to work. She had to try to shear the remaining meat off of a frozen deer leg, now, which was a lot harder than it should have been. New Moon was drawing closer, and she felt noticeably weaker already. The drop-off in strength was a lot more dramatic than she was used to, and on top of thatâŠ
She gritted her teeth as, yet again, the grip of her left hand stuttered and failed. Sheâd not even attempted to use that hand for wielding the blade, not wanting to risk it when it was still infirm, butâŠit was weak. The fingers felt stiff, wouldnât grip properly â to the extent where theyâd wavered and slipped around the bone she was trying to hold in place. She couldnât hold it securely enough to risk the cut.
Rayla exhaled, frustrated, and braced it flat against the stone floor instead. That, at least, she could lean her weight into, and keep it still enough to work. Hopefully, with a little more time, sheâd be able to work strength back into the hand. For nowâŠsheâd just have to improvise.
In the end, she packaged away all the meat and useful offal, and also some of the more easily-cut bones. Theyâd be useful boiled out in water â the marrow and calcium would do them good. Getting everything into the bags was a sincere challenge though, and in the end she had to roll up a bundle inside her ruined shirt, tying it with rope and affixing it to a bag like she would a sleeping mat. âTimes like this I really wish we could hatch that dragon somehow,â she muttered to Callum, her left-handâs fingers shaking and stumbling as she tied the knots. âThen weâd have almost an entire bagâs extra space to use.â
âThat would be pretty useful.â He agreed, watching her with a light frown. ââŠIs your hand okay, though? Seems like youâre having trouble with it.â
Of course heâd noticed. Rayla sighed, then shook her head, leaning back from the bags. âItâs weak.â She said, shortly. âKind of stiff-feeling, wonât grip anything right.â She thought for a moment. âNumb, too. I thought that was just the cold, before, but now Iâm not so sure.â
He looked unnerved for a moment, then visibly affected some confidence. âWell, it has barely had proper blood flow for days.â He reasoned. âMight take some time for it toâŠheal up, I guess. Get strength back.â
âMm.â She didnât really want to think about it, honestly.
She was also very aware that the binding had already started tightening again. It only felt uncomfortable for now, rather than painful, but that probably wouldnât last. She knew that the life of her hand was still wholly dependent on Ezran and Azymondias being able to do their weird magic thing. If, at any point, that stopped being an optionâŠit would be back to the prospect of amputating the thing. For all that it barely hurt now, it wasnât safe. It was unsettling to remember, soâŠshe did her best not to think about it at all.
It was somewhat past midday when they finally finished making all the preparations she wanted. She boiled them some water to fill the waterskins, then handed one off to Callum, advising he fasten it under his clothes somewhere. âItâll freeze if we donât keep it warm,â she said to him, already in the process of stuffing the other one beneath her voluminous layers of clothing. âAnd defrosting water thatâs in a waterskin is really hard to do in anything but the slow way.â She was so laden with shirts and jackets and jumpers that the lump it made didnât even show, which was vaguely amusing.
Callumâs waterskin ended up falling out of his shirt a few times before he finally stuffed his various layers past his belt to keep them in place, his waterskin similarly invisible beneath all the wool. âFinally.â He sighed, then looked at her. âNow what?â
Rayla glanced across their things, evaluating, then out at the storm. The wind had slowed enough now that it would probably be merely unpleasant and hazardous to walk though, rather than actively deadly. âNow, we wake Ez up, and get ready to go.â She said, and knelt down to do exactly that.
Ezran was hard to wake from the depths of his exhaustion. He rose groggy and bleary-eyed, and just nodded uncomprehendingly when she told him they had to head out. He rose stumbling to his feet when prompted, and sat blinking some measure of wakefulness into his eyes while Rayla fastened his cloak. ââŠHow long was I asleep?â Was the first thing he said, when he finally woke enough to ask it.
âFew hours. Weâve been preparing to head out.â She tried, fruitlessly, to tug his hat down further. As ever, his hair made it bounce straight back up again. She sighed. âWe wanted to let you sleep as long as possible.â
âHuh.â Was his answer to that, still groggy.
Rayla ended up engaging Callum in a brief argument before they actually left. âAs long as I keep it to the shoulder without the stab in it, itâs fine.â She insisted, arms crossed, resolute. âI can take your bag with its stupid one-shoulder strap and the tent pack and itâll be fine.â
âYouâre still injured, though!â He protested, doing his stubborn best to negotiate for a burden heâd damn near collapsed under the last time. âYou can let me carry the tent pack for now, I did it last time.â
âLast time you nearly passed out from the effort, and that was before we had to walk through hip-deep snow.â She reminded him flatly. âItâs not happening, Callum. Iâm strongest, I can carry the things without messing with my scabs, whatâs even the problem? The injuries arenât so fragile theyâll open back up if I look at them the wrong way.â They had been, when theyâd last been moving. But that wasnât the case now at all.
ââŠI just donât want you to strain yourself.â He said, a little helplessly.
âWe maybe had to worry about that when I was still bleeding, and blood loss was a concern.â She allowed. âBut itâs been days and Iâve been eating red meat almost the whole time.â Offal, too, which she hadnât enjoyed. But it was important for her healing, so sheâd forced it down anyway. âItâs really not a problem anymore. We wonât even be walking for that long today. Just a few hours.â
Callum sighed, shoulders slumping, and thus she won that dispute. Ezran had been watching the whole thing silently, and at least looked more awake now, so in the end he picked up Bait and let her tie them into the safety-ropes and â finally â Rayla led all of them over the ledge.
It was a relief to finally leave that shelter for good. Soothed some part of her that felt, however falsely, that it could escape the grief spilled there by walking far enough. More than anything though, it just felt good to be about to get moving again. She was used to a lot more daily physical activity than sporadic firewood trips, after all.
Once past the ledge she helped the boys get their snowshoes on, and then fastened her own, and then they were off.
 ---
 Ezran liked the snowshoes.
It was a greater relief than Callum could express to watch the smile struggle onto his brotherâs face: first a twitch at the corner of his lips, then a curve at their shape, and finally a true smile that broke into giggling as he waddled like some sort of ungainly snow-duck across the slope. He laughed even harder to watch the two of them at it, Rayla looking distinctly less graceful than usual and him falling over every other second.
Callum was somewhat clumsy even on the best of days. This was far from the best of days, and he was distinctly unused to trying to conduct himself over the top of a hip-deep layer of powder. He kept driving the front of the snowshoe into the snow, getting them stuck when he tried to pull them up again, and then promptly falling over to plant face-first into the snow. And, considering its depthâŠ
âIs this really easier than walking?â Callum complained, reaching out for Raylaâs helping hand yet again as she pulled him up and out from the snow. It was hard to climb out again, and for all that sheâd offered to bodily lift him out, heâd refused to have her strain her injured arm that way.
Rayla smirked at him, and as she let go of his hand, reached out to flick a clump of snow out of his hair. âIf you want to try digging through the snow instead, be my guest.â She said generously, standing aside as if to let him take the lead. âWe probably wonât get anywhere fast, but itâll at least be pretty entertaining.â
He grumbled at her, then rolled his eyes at Ezran, whoâd started laughing hysterically around the time Callum had lost his balance, arms pinwheeling madly, and fallen into the snow with an expressive whomph. Heâd not stopped yet, and was going a little pink in the cheeks from it, like heâd started to laugh his face red. âItâs not that funny,â He said, pretending disgruntlement, but really he was so glad to see Ezran smiling that he couldnât be even vaguely bothered.
âYour arms,â his brother managed, âwhen you were trying not to fall over, and â and you made a person shaped hole in the snow, with arms and everything, where you fell in-â He seemed to lose the ability to speak then, laughing too hard to sustain words.
âIt was surprisingly comfortable, actually.â Callum said, with great dignity, folding his arms. âThat much snow makes a pretty good cushion.â Bait, finally growing displeased from all the noise, hopped out of Ezranâs armsâŠand fell directly through three feet of snow. This, predictably, did not help him to stop laughing.
âYou can dig shelters in snow this deep.â Rayla offered, amidst snickering. âItâs good in a pinch, if you canât find any other shelter and thereâs a blizzard on, or whatever. But if you let it melt itâs not going to stay comfy for long.â
âNicer to fall into than mud, though.â He said that with the express intention of reminding Ez of one particular incident he surely remembered, involving a muddy former-pond and an unsuccessful attempt to retrieve Bait from it. Judging by the way Ezran nearly cried with laughter, heâd succeeded.
Ez took a deep breath as though to attempt to speak, lost it to giggling, and then lifted his hands to his face. His shoulders quaked with laughter, and then â deliberately â he took his bag off and fell backwards into the snow. He whomped through it and clear out of sight, a puff of powder rising in his wake. The sound of him laughing emerged muffled from the hole.
Callum waddled over to peer in, Rayla following with considerably greater facility. âYou okay down there?â He asked his brother, smiling helplessly as he looked down at him. He really was surprisingly far down. He couldnât get used to how deep the snow was.
Ezran laughed, a few more times, tired in the way of people whoâd laughed hard enough for it to start hurting. Finally, he said âyeah,â and for the first time, Callum saw that there were a few tears on his cheeks. From laughing, probably, butâŠEz sat up in the snow, shoulders shaking, and for a second it was hard to tell if he was crying or not. And then he exhaled, in a big gusty rush, and added âThis isâŠfun.â His voice was hushed, almost. Like he was telling a secret. His expression trembled weirdly, not laughing, not crying.
Callum looked down at him, and thought he understood that feeling. Heâd had it himself earlier, looking out at the mountain vista glowing in the sun: a feeling of something breaking loose in him. Painful, but cleansing. Letting emotion run clear where it had been frozen solid by grief. âMore interesting than walking, huh?â he offered, soft, and reached down to help him up.
Of course, Callum was not the steadiest shoeshoer in the world, so this just led to him falling in as well. Rayla was rolling her eyes when she hauled them out. In the end they were all upright, mostly stable, and varyingly coated in powder; Ezran finally stopped shaking with the eddies of his laughter, and stared out behind them.
They were working up-slope, for the moment, and the going was steep enough that there really wasnât much to see when they were facing ahead. Just featureless white, blurring indistinctly with the still-falling snow. But behind themâŠCallum followed his brotherâs eyes, and looked out on the way theyâd come. The tracks in the snow, the furrows where heâd fallen in. And past it, the placid beauty of the mountainside stretching downwards, and the silhouettes of faraway peaks shaded blue-grey through the lingering storm.
âYou okay?â He asked Ezran, finally, when heâd been watching wordlessly for long enough.
âFeels kinda weird, to be laughing right now.â He answered, after a moment, a little subdued. âFor something to be fun. Wrong, almost. ButâŠâ he sighed. âItâd make him happier, wouldnât it.â It wasnât a question. It emerged quietly, and just a little sad.
Callum reached out for his hand. After a second, Ez took it. âHe would.â He agreed, with a little spark of pain blooming outwards in his chest. âIf heâs watching, right nowâŠI bet heâd be as glad to see you smiling as I am.â
The smile in question twitched outwards on Ezranâs lips, weakly. âYeah.â He exhaled again, clutched Callumâs hand more tightly. Then, softly: âThanks.â
Rayla watched the two of them, and though he couldnât tell what she was thinking, he thought she seemed a little relieved. She stepped forward, resting a hand on Ezranâs shoulder for a moment. âReady to keep going?â She asked, eyes soft with understanding.
His brother looked up at her, expression still a little raw with emotion. ââŠYeah.â He said, in the end. His voice was quiet, but there was a strange weight to it. A sense of finality. âI think I am.â
---
End chapter.
Chapter Notes: Â https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1OGBo7nKVDIfWjhxGe90fwaS3lP0IfQJ3?usp=sharing
Link to PIAJ chapter notes folder (Google Drive folder including worldbuilding, commentary, medical notes, research notes, and misc notes for all applicable chapters within this section)
 This chapter's notes cover: distinction between High Cleric and Priest/ess of Paragons, Katolis royal succession, adoption in royal succession, and the current Katolis succession situation.
 Timeline: https://docs.google.com/document/d/107eD8zmLAAFBWSOgsLyl8g4pAdQF4EgMh4rpN_m91U4/edit?usp=sharing Link to PIAJ Timeline Google doc ( to be updated as story progresses)
 PIAJ Masterpage: https://tenspontaneite.tumblr.com/piaj Link to PIAJ Masterpage on tumblr (containing links to chapters, meta, art, Q&As, and resources) (Link may not work properly on mobile/app)
  Author Notes: Â
 This is one of those chapters where, main plotline wise, not a great deal happens â but itâs highly thematically and narratively important anyway. The kidsâ scenes in this one touched me quite a bit, and it started to hit me most of the way through the last scene how important this chapter really was. Itâs highly significant for the character development, the narrative, and the main themes of the story. So Iâm actually really pleased with it, all told.
That said, the bit with Callum remembering his childhood made me Really Sad, which I then intelligently compounded by going off to write something Even Sadder, at which point I had to start writing a very indulgent time-travel fix-it to cope. You can find that story under the name of âWish Fulfilmentâ on my tumblr or ao3.
As far as this chapter is concerned, we also have our first Claudia and Soren scene in a while, and things are picking up in the Runaan plotline. Really excited to share the scenes due for it over the next few chapters; one of my favourite scenes of all the currently written 500k of piaj is coming up within probably three chapters. Iâm very hyped.
Chapters may be shorter for a while now that twenty different things arenât fighting to happen in the same day, which is a relief for me. Iâm not optimistic for it lasting long, but itâll be nice while it does.
If you could rename PIAJ, what would you call it? (Also, whatâs stopping you shdkshsj)
I legit have no idea hahaha that's why it ended up being called what it's called. It's one of those bitches that just doesn't want to be named. So I went with an appropriate quote that, despite being appropriate, I viciously viciously hate as the story name. I hate it more and more every day.
There's a lot of problems with renaming the story though:
1. It's established enough that I'd need to like, edit a whole lot of mentions of the name in a whole lot of places
2. This is the name people know the story by now
3. All the existing rec posts people have made reference the story under this name, and also iirc dragons mentioned piaj in one of their podcasts by that name too
4. It's too late. It's just too late, guys. I am in blood stepped so far that to return would be as tedious as to go o'er. It's too late. I have to live with this stupid title forevermore.
In which a particularly unpleasant mountain storm offers new and distinctly unwanted challenges. Elsewhere, a Healer and her apprentice do their jobs.
(Chapter length: 19.5k. ao3 link)
Warnings: Warning for respiratory illness and mentions of amputation, and non-consensual administration of sedative/analgesic. Later, comprehensive and graphic depictions of preparation of hunted animals. Read with caution. Also, emetophobia warning.
---
 The morning dawned bright and remorseless upon Katolis proper, the light casting dramatic shadows from the walls of the Valley of Graves. Sarli looked outside her window to the Hall of Paragons carved within the stone, and could not help but feel the weight of it. The weight of Mercy. The weight of Justice, too.
When the time came, she fetched Cairon and the bag, and set them upon their walk. âCome then,â She said, more than a little grimly, while the door closed behind them. âLet us see about this business. And pray that the Lord Protector has the sense to allow a Healerâs apprentice within his castleâs walls.â
He very nearly didnât. It was plain to see on the very, very careful blankness of Lord Virenâs face, when he was confronted at his office with one more party than he had expected. He inhaled too-sharply through his nose, as though he were like to lose his temper without a steadying breath. Then he said âI hardly think itâs appropriate, Healer. You are bound by confidentiality. Your apprentice is not.â
âHe is mine, Lord Viren.â She answered to that, flatly. âThough he lacks his holy vows, he is beholden to mine. He knows my honour rests upon his own. I would not allow him to shame me.â
Another careful, audible inhalation. There was a switch, barely-suppressed, at the Lord Protectorâs brow. âYou must understand, as the protector of this kingdom, I have to be exceptionally careful with how far I stretch my trust.â He said, delicately.
âYes.â Sarli agreed, because it was true, and said nothing more. She met Lord Virenâs gaze unflinching, and waited.
ââŠVery well.â He conceded, in the end, with a tightness around his eyes that spoke well of his displeasure. Even so, something bothered her about how quickly heâd acquiesced. It was too easy a victory, for how displeased he was. It set a twist of unease to her gut. âBut while your integrity is beyond reproach, Healer, I must take precautions for your apprentice. He will be blindfolded on his way to our destination.â
Cairon blinked once at this and didnât object, apparently entirely unbothered. It still stuck in Sarliâs craw. âI do expect that you mean to allow him the use of his eyes for the treatment, Lord Viren.â She said, dryly, showing none of her unease at all. âHe would be of considerably lesser use, otherwise.â
He smiled thinly. âIf you are so convinced that he is trustworthy, I suppose I must.â
The response bothered her, too. Perhaps it was in that all signs of his frustration seemed to be slipping away, as if he had never been annoyed at all. She had not spent so many years in service to Mercy without developing a fine sense of people, and that sense was ringing alarum now. Nonetheless, she held fast, and stood by impassively while her apprentice presented himself for blindfolding, and the two of them were led down the secret passages with a two-guard escort. Sarli noted, very carefully, the faces of those guards. Soldiers, after all, were as beholden to the Accords as the Lord Protector himself, and their participation in this travesty meant that she must surely report their conduct as well. She would need to remember their faces.
She kept a hand at Caironâs elbow to guide him all the way, but found that he didnât especially need it. He was very sure-footed, and seemed to orient himself in the direction of the footsteps ahead of him with ease. Not even on the stairs did he stumble, but even so, she held his arm all the way down.
At last they came to that Mercy-forsaken dungeon, which at least smelled less repellent this time. The patient had been moved; the cell she was led to was a different one to the day before, and was clean and well-lit. She noted this with a bare flicker of attention as she levelled all of her focus upon the elf she was to treat. He did not look well. He hadnât looked well before, but he was worse today. Though his eyes were open and turned her way, there was something entirely too vague and unfocused about them, and there was an unhealthy waxy pallor to his skin. Her expression tightened at the sight of him, but she allowed no further reaction upon her.
âThe blindfold, Lord Protector.â She said, as Lord Viren filtered into the room with his escort, and settled himself in a chair nearby to observe. How repellent.
âYou may remove it.â He allowed, and she carefully did not sneer.
Instead, she turned, and pulled the cover from her apprenticeâs eyes. She watched as he blinked, pupils contracting in the firelight, and then-
The moment he saw the elf was very obvious. There was a sharp inhalation, a widening of the eyes. A brief tremble, quickly-suppressed, at his fingertips. Other than that, he did not react. âAn elf, master.â He said, levelly, because according to Lord Virenâs misapprehensions, he was not supposed to know about the elf. She spared an approving thought for his acting skills.
âYes. I assume it will not be a problem.â
He closed his eyes for a second, and she could not tell whether it was part of the act, or something more genuine. âNo, master.â He answered, and his eyes opened. He fixed them seriously upon their patient, gaze analytic and tightly controlled. The patient himself opened his eyes a little further, though they grew no less hazy. There seemed a lesser luminosity to them, now.
She nodded, and strode forwards. She knelt before the elf, though it hurt her knees. She said, âI do not know your name, but you are my patient, and I am your Healer Sarli. With me is my apprentice, Cairon, whose hands are mine. Let it be known that your health is now within my care.â The elf watched her, almost lucid, but did not respond. His attention was perfectly evident, though. âYour arm must be amputated today. You will be administered a painkiller for the procedure. Will you take it of your own will?â She waited, very calmly, for long enough to make it plain that she expected an answer.
His eyes lowered, just for a moment. Then he looked up, and spoke the first words she had heard from him. They rasped. Something ill rattled in his lungs. âI will not.â He said, in that terrible voice, and Sarli rapidly reassessed the likelihood of his ultimate survival. She tilted her head sharply, and watched as the elfâs words were followed by a distinct wet cough.
âThen it will be administered to you via a needle.â She said. âCairon. Make the preparation. And pass me the stethoscope.â
He obeyed with silent efficiency, setting to work with the lilium and the needle reservoir even as she took the long tube of the stethoscope, pressing one end to the patientâs chest and the other to her left ear. She leaned into it and listened as the elf breathed, then moved it over to the other side. She had the fortune to still be listening when he coughed again, which was very illuminating. She receded and put the stethoscope aside.
âCairon, take note. Beginnings of respiratory infection observed. Both lungs affected, with the state of the right lung more advanced.â She waited for his murmur of assent before she rose to inspect the elf more thoroughly. Infection wasnât surprising, given the conditions heâd been kept in, but sheâd have expected blood or wound infections first. UnlessâŠ
She leaned over and inspected the broken horn, frowning at what was very plainly an open cavity, with living tissue inside. Not only bone and marrow, either, but what had evidently once been pink pneumatised space. The look of it was very familiar from her studies, though sheâd never seen a sinus so large. She had never guessed that elves might have respiratory cavities within their horns. But it made the aetiology of the infection very clear, and indeed, seemed visibly inflamed to the naked eye. No wonder the elf had developed such a sickness, with that open channel into his system.
âInfected sinus in the broken horn.â She observed aloud. âIt will need to be carefully irrigated and then bandaged as part of treatment today.â She would need to be careful to avoid allowing water further into the sinus cavities. But irrigation of the infected tissue â and perhaps even debridement â only seemed sensible. She stayed by the sinus for a few moments, listening, and discerned from the lack of hissing air that the internal pathways to the rest of the skull cavities had likely all closed, or otherwise been blocked. Yes, then; debridement would be warranted. It wasnât as though this sinus would ever function properly again.
âThe needle is ready, master.â Cairon reported, quietly, and she glanced sidelong at him.
âGood.â She said, and knelt by the elf again. âYou will be administered a high dose of the drug known as lilium. Due to its pronounced soporific properties, you are likely to fall unconscious during the procedure. It takes effect very rapidly once introduced to the bloodstream; I expect you will feel it within the minute. You will likely experience residual euphoria and feelings of wellness as a side effect for up to eighteen hours following the dosage.â She paused, watching his eyes to be sure that he was listening, and added âWhen you awake, your arm will be gone. If you havenât already, I advise you to make your peace with that now.â
For a moment, just for a moment, the elfâs eyes moved sideways to behold his doomed arm. He let out the quietest, faintest exhalation. He didnât speak, but there was something about the minute movement of his head as he looked at her that felt like a nod.
âCairon.â She said, and her apprentice moved up to find a vein in the healthy arm. He administered the lilium with practiced skill, and the effect was nearly instant; the awful tension in the elfâs body fled him, he went lax, he went placid. She could see the Lord Viren shifting out of the corner of her eye, for whatever reason interested by what he saw.
The elfâs eyes slipped closed within the minute. She monitored his breathing through the process, two fingers resting at his pulse, and found that it slowed to well within normal parameters. When she was relatively sure there was no bad reaction to the lilium, she sighed and leaned back.
âCome now, boy.â She said to her apprentice, finding that he was already laying out the necessary tools. âItâs time we began.â
 ---
 It was weird to sit around awake while the others fell asleep. Not as weird as it could have been, but still pretty weird.
Back home, it was relatively familiar. Callum and Ezran shared adjoining rooms, after all, and Ezranâs bedtime was earlier than his. He was perfectly used to his brother falling asleep in his own bedchamber while he did something (relatively) quiet and inconspicuous, such as reading or drawing. ButâŠwell. A pseudo-cave whose accommodations were limited to a campfire and a huddle of tent-layers was decidedly not âback homeâ, and there wasnât the benefit of walls and doors here. Rayla and Ezran were right there, close by the fire, and all he had to do to see them was glance a little to the side.
So, it was weird. He felt self-conscious every time he poked the fire with one of Raylaâs swords, or fed another branch or disc of wood to the flames. He felt weird seeing Rayla twitch, and sigh, and shift, and know full well that she wasnât actually asleep yet. He wondered if she usually took this long to fall asleep, or if her bruising and pain was justâŠaggravating everything. Ordinarily, heâd ask, butâŠwell, she was trying to fall asleep. He couldnât disturb her. It was just weird.
Ezran took longer than usual falling asleep himself, brows furrowing as the dragon-light flickered out from the shell in his arms. But his breathing did ease off eventually, and after that, Callum breathed a little easier. His brother could generally be relied upon to be a heavy sleeper. He could draw, and talk to himself while drawing, and move about, and clatter his art supplies all without waking him.
Rayla, of course, was another matter entirely. His self-consciousness over stoking the fire turned out to be entirely warranted, because when he watched, he could see her twitch at every sound he made â the spitting of the fire as it crackled around new wood, the small shifts and sounds of him moving the wood, everything. He couldnât help but wonder how she ever managed to get to sleep, if she was that sensitive to the sounds around her.
He thought, guiltily, of his alleged tendency to shift about and occasionally talk in his sleep, and understood a little better her tired eyes on some of their mornings.
Callum kept as quiet as he could, and watched the fire, and listened to the wind howl, and waited. He didnât dare do anything noisier, while she was still trying to fall asleep. He looked out past the cliff to the storm, and justâŠstared, silently, for what felt like hours. It wasnât, of course. The light was still fading, so it couldnât be that long. But it felt like it, watching the endless flurry of the blizzard. It was hypnotic, in a way. Disorientating, in another. Every now and then lightning flashed, thunder following some time after, and there was nothing he could do to control that sound. Rayla twitched at it every time.
It seemed like it had been at least an hour by the time Rayla finally managed to fall asleep, but it was honestly probably longer than that. He watched out of the corner of his eyes as the Rayla-shaped lump in the tent covers slumped into something more relaxed, as some of the tension eased from her face, and felt quietly relieved. She really did need her rest, and he wasnât looking forward to having to wake her up again in a few hours. Sheâd probably be so tired.
Still. If it came down to it, they could probably all take turns napping during the day. As long as the storm was still going, it wasnât like they had anywhere else to go.
After a while, very carefully, he dared to get out his sketchbook and start quietly on a new drawing. The storm looked different in the dark; the white of it wasnât nearly so pronounced, and the layers of the blizzard fluttering off into the night were full of subtle gradations of pink-grey light. He did his best to render the effect in charcoal, all soft smudges and greys, and startled occasionally in the shock of a thunder-clap. Every one of those, of course, woke Rayla up. Sheâd jolt and grumble quietly and then, evidently, do her best to fall back asleep again. Generally, she seemed to manage it pretty fast.
Again, Callum wondered how much he tended to wake her, on a typical night. Heâd never met anyone who slept so ridiculously lightly.
Though, he wasnât certain heâd fare much better with the thunderclaps. They were loud, even muffled through the snow-clouds. Loud enough that they disturbed Ezran too, who shifted and murmured, the lights of egg and Bait shifting with him.
It was hard to judge the time passing. Weirdly enough, though, drawing helped. He was used to hours disappearing when he sat down to draw, and had developed something of a sense of roughly how much time he lost between one art-trance and the next. When a crack of snow-muffled thunder drew him out of a span of time that felt vaguely like it had been forty minutes, he considered the state of the dark. He considered how tired he felt. He decided, eventually, that it had probably been around four hours since the others went to bed. Maybe longer.
Still, he hesitated, watching Raylaâs sleeping form. It felt wrong to disturb her, after all sheâd been through lately, and after how long it had taken her to get to sleep. For a moment, he very seriously considered leaving her to sleep, and taking over her watch. ButâŠ
She woke up often enough throughout the night that sheâd probably eventually question why heâd not handed off watch to her. And then she would not be pleased with him.
Finally, reluctantly, he put his sketchbook away and went to nudge her quietly by the shoulder. She woke at once, eyes flying open, focusing blearily on him. She looked terribly groggy, and despite everything, it made guilt clench at his throat.
Her eyes were really, really bright in the dark. Heâd noticed it before, butâŠ
He didnât speak. Keeping hushed and quiet for so long alone made the thought of talking seem weird, especially with Ezran still asleep. But she understood the situation easily enough, and peeled herself silently from the tent covers, rubbing grit out of her eyes. She made a few quiet murmuring noises of what sounded like pain, wincing as she rolled stiff shoulders.
Looking half as though she were sleepwalking, she reached out and tapped on his arm in a strange, purposeful rhythm for a few seconds, before she stopped short and frowned and shook her head. âUgh.â She muttered, barely louder than a breath. Then she said something weird that sounded like âick tussâ, in a barely-audible mutter, and pushed herself out of bed. Eventually, she leaned over, and murmured quite close to his ear âThanks. Iâll take over now. Get some sleep.â Â
He opened his mouth to question her about what the weird tapping had been about, then closed it, looking at Ezran. Instead, he tapped questioningly on his own arm, plastering an exaggerated confused expression over his face.
She stared back, a little sourly, and murmured the same thing she had earlier, except this time it sounded more like âictusâ. Her breath was warm on his ear. Then she said ââs not important. Sleep.â And dragged herself staggering over to the fireside.
He hesitated. He hesitated for long enough that she turned back to him and started making aggressive pointing motions at the tent-covers, as plain and uncompromising a âgo to sleepâ as heâd ever seen. He relented, albeit reluctantly, and went.
The spot sheâd vacated was still warm. He eased himself in, sparing a few lingering glances for Rayla arranging herself at the campfire. In the end, though, he was so tired that he didnât even remember closing his eyes, and was asleep in seconds.
 ---
 As far as watches went, the only unremarkable thing about this one was that she was a fair bit more injured than typical for someone standing watch. And also perhaps that her âsquadmatesâ were directly beside her rather than ensconced in separate tents. And that there was a frankly intimidating storm raging close enough that she periodically had to shift her position to defend the campfire from winds. And â well, alright, maybe it was a pretty unusual watch, after all.
It wasnât a problem, though. A three-part watch certainly made for longer shifts than a six-part watch did. But, for the most part, the whole thing was comfortingly standard. Rayla settled into silent vigil by the fire, fed it wood occasionally, and that was all. Easy.
She did, after a furtive glance at Callumâs sleeping form, take a few moments to inspect her bad hand. Sheâd not wanted to investigate it in front of him, given how much and how conspicuously heâd been fretting lately, but it still feltâŠoff. She poked along her skin, and squeezed her fingers gently, and shifted uneasily at having her suspicions confirmed. The pins-and-needles hadnât completely gone, it seemed. Or, at least, some hint of it remained. The skin on the back of her hand, particularly on the thumb side, was a little more numb than it ought to be. In places it prickled strangely when she touched it. The hand itself, of course, remained irritatingly stiff. She hoped that would go away, with frequent enough loosening of the binding.
She spared a moment to wonder exactly how long they were going to keep this up for. It would have to be until Xadia at the very least, wouldnât it? It wasnât as though they were likely to find some way of removing the binding outside of Xadia. It seemed sheâd be dependent on Ezran and Azymondias for the continued life of her hand for a good long while.
Rayla pursed her lips at the thought, troubled, and spared a glance to the cyclical glow of the egg in Ezranâs arms.
Her watch passed uneventfully, except for the periodic fright of the thunder-claps resounding through the sky and waking everyone up. Ezran seemed to be waking unusually easily at those â almost more at the lightning-flash than the thunder. Callum was being his customary self and barely waking for a second, but EzâŠ
She had her suspicions. They were confirmed the instant she went to wake him for his watch, and he blinked awake and into alertness so quickly that he couldnât have been firmly asleep. Rayla spared a glance for Callum, and drew him out of bed towards the fire to murmur to him. He took the egg with him. âHave you been awake the whole night?â She asked, very lowly, and considered the look of him. He did have the customary exhausted stare of someone whoâd been up most of the night, butâŠ
Maybe it was only her imagination. But his eyes looked a little too bright for a humanâs. ââŠNot really.â He answered, after a moment, keeping his voice as quiet as hers. âI justâŠhavenât really been all-the-way asleep.â His fingers stroked absently over the shell, eyes distant. Sheâd have dismissed it for sleepiness, if not for how strange his countenance was. Something about the sight of him sent a shiver of unease down her spine.
She watched him for a moment. ââŠThe storm?â She guessed, quiet. âAzymondias?â
He closed his eyes and shuddered strangely as the lightning flashed. It lit the storm-haze, and cast a brief pallor on his dark skin. âYeah.â His voice was barely a whisper. He didnât elaborate.
Unease twisted in her gut again, this time with a healthy accompaniment of concern. âAre you alright?â She asked, brows creasing, because â because he didnât really seem alright. He seemedâŠoff. Distant. Hazy, in a way he oughtnât be.
âMm.â He said, a little vaguely. âItâll be better now Iâm awake. When I was sleepingâŠ.I was in Zymâs head a lot. And heâs really feeling the storm.â He shook his head. âItâs fine, Rayla. You can go to sleep.â
She didnât, not right away. She didnât like how he was acting. But over the minutes she stayed beside him, he did seem to get more lucid, soâŠeventually, when he started nudging her again, she went. A little reluctantly, she took herself and her full-body exhaustion into the tent layers, wincing as she settled onto the hard ground. Her bruises were absolute murder for sleeping on the floor. She thought wistfully of actual beds, and soft pillows, and duvets, and eventually shuffled into the warm spot that still vaguely remained from Ezran.
With the breadth of her tiredness, it didnât take all that long for her to start drowsing. And then, naturally, she was startled awake again by Calum rolling over with a murmur and pressing himself against her side. Because of course.
She sighed at him, but for once, didnât even contemplate pushing him away. In the cold of the storm, it wasâŠsensible. Sensible, to stick close to each other, and share body heat. That was all it was. Nothing more, nothing less.
Sheâd almost managed to convince herself of that by the time she fell asleep again.
  ---
  When Callum woke, it was to the steady numbing feeling of cold. His fingers and toes were so frigid they nearly ached, and a chill was seeping steadily into his skin. He murmured, still half asleep, and turned over, mindlessly searching forâŠsomething. Something warm? That seemed right, butâŠthere wasnât anything. He made a plaintive sound and shuffled further. He located something small that croaked at him when he touched it.
That woke him in a hurry. He opened his eyes, and found himself staring blearily at Bait. Bait stared back, unimpressed. âMorning, Bait.â Callum said to him, voice rough and croaking from sleep, and blinked a few more times to get his bearings. He was in something dark and leathery, likeâŠa blanket fort? No, that was right â theyâd not been able to put the tent up, because of the stormâŠ
The storm. Callum sat bolt-upright and had to flail a few times to disentangle his face from the tent-layers. Light abruptly assailed him, and he winced, rubbing his eyes. For a moment the whole spectacle was just blurs of variably-coloured light â but then it resolved into a flickering campfire, a glowing egg by the fireside, the shining white of a sunlit blizzardâŠ
Ezran was sitting by the fire, and had looked over at him. He offered a smile that looked tired and forced. âMorning, Callum.â He said, and his voice â he sounded exhausted. Callum straightened, staring at him more closely, and remembered the fire-watch, remembered that Ezran had had the last shift-
âAre you okay?â He asked at once, instantly worried. It took some tripping over himself, but he extricated himself from the tent and crawled over to the fire to inspect his brother. He looked a little paler than normal, and there were heavy bags under his eyes. Guilt churned in Callumâs gut. âWe should have taken your watch.â He muttered, still not entirely awake, as he glanced around on reflex to look for Rayla. Where was she?
âItâs fine, Callum.â Ez said, shaking his head. âI wasnât really sleeping anyway, soâŠâ
Callum half-registered the words, but had already found something else to worry about: Rayla wasnât here. He looked around a little more frantically, as if heâd find her hiding behind a backpack or something if he looked closely enough-
âRayla went out to get more wood. Actually, this is the second time â she already went on another firewood run earlier.â His brother told him, and Callumâs movement stalled. He looked over at the wood pile, and indeed found it looking more well-supplied than he remembered, even from his own shift of the watch. âThis time, well...â He pursed his lips. âSheâs getting food, too. I pointed her towards a few different places where animals were hiding, soâŠI guess weâll have a lot to eat, soon.â
ââŠOh.â Callum said, mind gone blank. He searched the campsite, a little anxiously, and noted by the absence of several articles some small sources of comfort. Rayla had taken her cloak, apparently dried out by now. The rope-harness was gone, too. And Callumâs one-shoulder bag had been emptied out and taken away. ââŠWhy didnât you wake me?â
âWe decided to let you sleep in. Itâs not like weâre in a hurry to go anywhere, after all.â Ezran shrugged, and after a moment, Callum finally shuffled over to sit beside him. The heat of the fire made his hands and feet ache uncomfortably as they warmed. âBesides, the last few days have been kind of tiring. If you can sleepâŠwell, I think you should.â
âKind of tiringâ. âSort of an understatement there, Ez.â He said, wryly, and tried not to squirm too conspicuously as he looked out over the ledge. The howl of the wind was vicious, even with them out of the worst of it. The scattered gusts that managed to reach him were uncomfortably chilly, even sitting directly beside the fire. Outside, in the blizzard itselfâŠhow much colder must it be? ââŠHow long ago did she leave?â
âNot long.â He shrugged. âMaybe fifteen minutes. We were up for a while before that. Made some hot water.â He nodded to the pot, which was no longer on the fire, but still had some gently steaming liquid in it. âI donât actually think itâs warm anymore, so if you want it, you should probably put it on the fire for a while first.â
He considered it. âIâll just make some tea, I think.â He decided, and stood to go off and collect snow. He grimaced uncomfortably at the state of his bladder as he moved, which was decidedly unhappy with him after having gone the majority of a day unanswered. He wondered, with a frown, exactly how Ezran had been managing that, given the current situation.
On the first day of their travel, Ezran had broached the question of how exactly people were to manage certain bathroom functions without the use of the luxuries of civilisation, such as buckets of water and toilet paper. Rayla had stared at him with a particular expression of dawning weariness, as if she were only now realising the sheer helplessness of her princely companions, and had taken a moment to rub at her temples before she took them aside.
Then she'd said "You'd better listen up, because I'm only saying this once." And sheâd given them a short primer on improvised wilderness cleaning options. These largely boiled down to 'leaves' and 'snow', and while she'd been very brief at the time, sheâd taken particular care to point out any poisonous or irritant plants in the following days as they travelled.
He and Ezran had put this instruction to daily use, obviously, but that didn't really help much in a situation where they couldn't go off behind a tree or rock to answer the call of nature. And this was, unfortunately, one of those situations. There was absolutely nowhere in their pseudo-cave that was appropriate, and the way out was, well. A narrow and precipitous ledge covered in ice.
And so: âDonât you need to go to the bathroom?â Callum asked his brother, when he returned with snow. âWeâve been cooped up here for probably most of a day by now.â
âI just asked Rayla to take me past the ledge for a bit, earlier.â Ez informed him, making a face as Callum dropped pine leaves into the snow in the pot. âI guess youâll have to wait till she gets back. Unless you want to try the ledge alone.â
Callum eyed the ledge in question. It lookedâŠprecipitous. He could hardly imagine the embarrassment of having to ask Rayla to escort him over it for a potty break, butâŠhe also did not particularly enjoy the idea of slipping and falling to his death. He grimaced. âUgh.â He expressed, and set the pot on the fire.
In the end, he didnât need to figure out a way to awkwardly fumble through the request. Rayla returned with a harness full of firewood not all that much later, spotted Callum sitting upright with his tea, and sighed with obvious relief. âCallum. Youâre awake. Good.â She headed over, peeling herself out of the now one-shouldered harness and setting the wood down. Ezran shuffled over, murmuring greetings, and set to work stacking her haul. âI got a lot of meat, and I need your help processing it.â
He blinked, startled, and looked up at her. âOh. Um. Okay?â He offered, giving her a quick look-over to appraise her state of health. She seemed perfectly alert and graceful, in sharp contrast to how sheâd returned from the second firewood trip yesterday. She was shivering, maybe, butâŠshe seemed fine. âNow?â He asked, a little dubiously, as he set his jar of tea down to rise to his feet and inspect her more closely. As before, she was so thoroughly wrapped up in layers that the only skin visible was the strip on level with her eyes.
She hesitated. âNo, I should probably warm up a bit first.â She admitted, a little reluctantly, and carefully sat herself down. After a moment, he followed suit. âI left all the meat out past the ledge. Normally Iâd be worried about scavengers finding it, butâŠâ She shrugged. âI donât suppose much is travelling in this storm.â
âThereâs not, no.â Ezran said, almost absent-mindedly. âThereâs a fox sort of that-way-ish,â He gestured with an idle flick of his hand, then went back to stacking wood. âBut sheâs staying put in a sort of snow-hole she dug.â
Callum eyed his brother cautiously. ââŠThe storm weirdness is still going, huh?â
There was something wrong with the look in his brotherâs eyes. Too distant. Too vague. He didnât seem entirely present, somehow, even though he was talking to them perfectly fine. âWorse.â He said, shortly. âThe sky-magic, itâsâŠâ He shook his head. âItâs so much thicker now. Zym is really â awake. Alert?â He looked side-ways at the egg heâd positioned beside the fire, hand twitching up briefly like he wanted to reach out and pull it closer. In the end, though, he stayed where he was, and sighed. ââŠSomething like that.â
Rayla pursed her lips, and exchanged a worried glance with Callum before she spoke. âWell, if itâs any comfort, the stormâs probably going to have started moving past us by the end of the day.â She said, looking briefly out to the blinding-white blizzard. ââŠItâll get closer first, though. Actually, judging by the thunder, itâs going to be really, really close in a couple of hours. Weâll have to put all the metal over by the ledge again.â
He paused, abruptly remembering his and Ezranâs conversation from the day before. âWeâre under shelter, though.â He pointed out. âLightning canât strike through rock, right?â
She snorted. âYes it can.â She informed him, and seemed to take some grim amusement from how both of them did a double-take as they stared at her. âIf lightning hits the ground above us, itâll zap through this empty air space on its way further down. And if weâre in its way, we get hit. So.â She gestured expressively to the partially-complete pile of metallics in the tent-pack. âI suppose the bright side is that lightning isnât likely to be attracted to the metal â if itâs attracted to anything, itâll beâŠtrees, or something, further up the mountain. But itâs not worth the risk.â
ââŠ.yeah, Iâd really prefer to avoid getting hit by lightning.â Callum decided, and spared a wary glance for the pot on the fire. He handled it perhaps more gingerly than necessary as he took it away from its re-heating to get Rayla some tea, and for a while they just sat around drinking while she restored some warmth to her body.
She didnât take all that long to warm up. Ordinarily, heâd have fretted about it, but he really needed to get over that ledge. She grabbed her spare sword from the iron pot, passed it to him, and then tied herself to him with rope for the trip out into the blizzard.
Somehow, in the time since theyâd reached shelter, heâd managed to forget how awful it was out there. Or maybe it was worse, now. That seemed likely, with the storm getting closer, but-
âHow have you been going out to collect firewood in this?â He demanded, practically having to shout to hear his voice over the howl of the frigid wind in his ears. He pulled his hat down and his scarf up, and while Rayla was similarly smothered in layers, he could practically see the sardonic humour in the way she looked at him.
âMainly because it was this or freezing to death.â She informed him, and pulled him by the rope over the final stretch. Callum looked around wild-eyed. The snow definitely hadnât been this thick yesterday. Raylaâs footsteps from her firewood trip were plainly visible in it, though the blizzard was already starting to fill them in. The visibility was so poor that he could only see a few metres of the deep footprints, disappearing out into blinding white. âItâs worse right now, though. The stormâs getting closer.â With excellent dramatic timing, lightning flashed and made the whole storm painfully bright; less than two seconds later, the snow-muffled whomp of thunder sounded.
âNo kidding.â Callum said, numbly, and tried to assess how deep the snow was. It was coming most of the way up his shins, for Mercyâs sake.
She tugged on the rope. âCome on. We shouldnât stay out in this longer than we need to.â
âEr.â He said, suddenly remembering why heâd been eager to get over the ledge in the first place, and shuffled awkwardly. âI mean, could I take a couple minutes first? Just toâŠâ He cleared his throat, and looked away.
She rolled her eyes at him and untied the rope around his waist. âDonât be long.â She ordered, and tucked her ungloved hands into her sleeves.
He hastily stumbled off, nearly falling over into the snow, and felt his way along a rock wall until the suddenly-convenient snow haze had obscured any hint of Raylaâs silhouette. Then, because he knew her eyes were better, he went a little further and tucked himself behind a rock. An extremely cold minute later, he was staggering back with his hands red and numb and aching from grasping snow. He understood why sheâd told him to leave his gloves behind, butâŠ
For a moment, he couldnât find Rayla where heâd left her, and panicked. But then he realised that the fresh footprints in the snow were actually good for something, and followed them through the vicious winds to find her.
The first thing he saw was the red. It was so bright, and there was so much of it, and â and he froze solid, dread and horror hitting him so hard he swayed in place, remembering that awful dream where sheâd bled and bled and bled until the tide was fit to drown them-
And then he breathed, and pulled himself shakily from that terrible moment, recognising the bodies of animals in the snow beside her. She wasnât the source of it. She was safe. She wasnât bleeding.
No matter his attempts to reassure himself, he was faltering and shaky when he finally stumbled over beside her. When she looked over at him she seemed perfectly fine, and entirely lucid. There was no sign of new pain, no sign of new bloodâŠ
âŠexcept on her hands. Her hands, holding a dead rabbit, its fur ruffled and wet from snow, and her sword cutting through its belly. His gut heaved, and his shakiness finally got the better of him. He fell backwards and collapsed heavily into the snow, feeling so terribly disorientated that for a bewildered second he wasnât even sure what was happening. Was she bleeding? Was it the animals bleeding? What was even going on?
âCallum?â her voice sounded worried, even half-stolen by the shriek of the winds. She turned and peered at him, and the shock of the snowâs cold numbed some of the reflexive panic out of his system. It was enough, just enough, to let him think.
ââŠSorry.â He croaked, and raised a cold hand shakily to his face. âI, er. I guess I just found you surrounded by blood and panicked a little, and-â He looked to the rabbit in her hand, and swallowed. âAnd also that thereâs kind of gross.â
Rayla looked taken-aback for a moment, and then glanced around her as if only now noticing the macabre spectacle she made. ââŠRight. Sorry.â She said, chagrined. âShouldâve warned you. I just didnât want to waste time out here.â She eyed him, sympathetic but assessing. âAre you alright to help?â
âYes.â He said, determinedly, though he wasnât at all certain. It was very early in the morning for this amount of gore, and his gag reflex was already feeling rebellious.
She looked at him dubiously, which was probably fair. âAlright.â She conceded, and gestured at the bloody pile beside her. âWeâve got a small deer and three rabbits, including this one. And they all need to be skinned and gutted. And in the deerâs case, cut up into smaller pieces.â She flexed the fingers of her left hand, carefully. It looked stiff, but whether that was from cold or infirmity was decidedly unclear. âMy handâs being a little easier to deal with, so I can demonstrate the rabbits. But the deerâŠâ She hesitated. âI can probably gut it. But I donât know about the skinning. Itâll probably be fine, butâŠ.â
ââŠCan you walk me through it?â he asked, tentative, and she nodded quickly.
âOf course.â She said instantly. âAnd weâre not planning on keeping the hide for anything, so you can be as messy as you like.â She grimaced at her sword. âThis isnât exactly a skinning knife, anyway.â
âAlright.â He wasnât sure what else to say. He really didnât want to be messing around in animal guts, or skinning things. But he didnât want to be shivering in the middle of a blizzard, either, or on the run from his own people, or worrying about his brother not having enough to eat. AndâŠhe wasnât going to make Rayla do this alone. How selfish would it be, to depend on her for everything to do with feeding them, and not even try to help? âWhat should I do?â
âJust watch.â She said, and pulled the rabbit over to show him. Sheâd not actually been gutting it, he realised. JustâŠcutting a line up its belly to the truncated neck. Sheâd cut its feet off, too, and there were lines cut on the underside of the limbs inwards to that line down the body.
She finished the cut on the rabbitâs belly, and put her sword down. It was then that Callum discovered, much to his horror, that skinning animals apparently involved just pulling the skin off. He heaved and gagged several times, watching her, watching the pale pink flesh of the rabbitâs muscle and sinew exposed, but managed to choke down the taste of acid and keep watching.
âThis is easiest when the killâs fresh.â She explained, shooting him an apologetic glance as he gagged again. âThe deerâs going to be hardest, because it was dead for at least an hour before I found it. Itâs part frozen. But the rabbits should skin easily enough.â
âGreat.â He managed, and held onto the contents of his stomach all through the demonstration. Soon, sheâd set aside a disturbingly neat-looking rabbit pelt that had been pulled off of the flesh like a gory sock. And then, a little questioningly, she passed the second rabbit and a sword to him. He stared at it. It wasâŠvery intact. ââŠDo I cut the head and feet off?â He asked, and she shrugged awkwardly at him.
âIf you can.â She agreed, and watched him with a vaguely conflicted expression. He wondered if she was reconsidering the wisdom of having him help her. That thought was enough to bring him some reserve of courage, and he took a long breath of the icy air. It was so cold it made his lungs burn. With some prescient inkling that his control over his stomach wouldnât hold forever, he pulled his scarf down from his face before he began.
He braced the rabbit against the icy ground beneath the snow, and pushed down with the sword. There was a gentle crunch, and the foot came off. He swallowed, and repeated the process for the other three, getting a little better with the leverage of the blade each time. The head gave him a little more trouble â in more than one sense. It was harder to cut off, and more disturbing. He breathed past the taste of acid and quietly called to mind the knife-sharp memory of the incisions Rayla had made in the first rabbit.
She reached out and patted him awkwardly on the shoulder as he hesitated. âYouâre doing fine.â She murmured to him, and he could hardly hear it over the wind in his ears. His hands were numb and aching now, and all the colder for the slippery blood on his fingers.
He closed his eyes for a moment, and then opened them. It wasâŠtoo easy, to make the cuts. The sword seemed unnaturally sharp. Drawing the blade-tip through the rabbitâs skin seemed as easy as stroking charcoal over paper.
Rayla said something encouraging to him, but this time the storm was entirely too loud for him to hear it properly. He appreciated it, anyway. And then, reluctantly, he set the sword down to mimic the next thing sheâd shown him.
There was some resistance, to pulling the rabbitâs pelt off. He had to adjust his grip to pull a little harder. But he pulled, and it went, and his head swam as the pelt inverted and the pink flesh of the inside of the skin peeled off where he tugged-
Nearly falling over in the process, Callum turned to the side and vomited a mouthful of acid into the snow. His fingers were slick with blood, and the too-smooth texture of skinned flesh. He wanted to wipe his face, but he also didnât want to get the blood on himself. He hunched there, trembling, so shaky that it had to be from more than just the coldâŠ
Rayla drew near, visible as a looming shape in his peripheral vision. She hesitated there for long enough that he almost looked up to see what she was doing, but then â her hand moved into his field of view, cupping snow. He made a small, startled noise as she wiped it over the lower part of his face, gentle and careful and sympathetic as she watched him. She discarded the handful of snow to the side while the cold was still stinging at his skin. âCan you finish?â She asked him, without any sort of judgement, as he stared at her and shook.
He swallowed. It still tasted of acid. âY-yeah.â He stumbled over the word, hazily determined not to disappoint her. He wouldnât make her finish his work. He wouldnât. He turned back to his grisly work and pulled the rabbitâs skin off with shaking hands. It was at least less nauseating, now that heâd already thrown up.
âWell done.â She murmured to him, when he was done, and had set the pelt aside with the other one. When he looked up at her, she looked almost guilty. ââŠIâll finish the rest of this, I think.â She said, finally, and his gut lurched with the sickening certainty that heâd disappointed her, that heâd not been good enough-
âNo, I can still help.â he insisted, hands still slick and bloody. His voice felt as wobbly as his fingers. âI wonât throw up the next time. I just â have to get used to it.â
She shook her head, firmly. Her eyes on his were gently understanding. âCallum, you did a good job. Itâs okay. ItâŠwasnât really fair of me to ask you to do this much on your first try. You can help again next time.â
âBut, your hand â your arm.â He scrambled to say, staring with a strange sense of loss as Rayla tugged the skinned rabbit from his hands. âYou â shouldnât be doing it, itâll hurt.â
âMy handâs doing better than I expected today.â She said determinedly, which wasnât especially convincing, given he was quite certain sheâd lie about how well she was doing under circumstances like these. âIâll be fine.â She hesitated for a moment. âIf it makes you feel better, youâll have to stay here âtill Iâm done anyway. I can show you how the gutting works.â
He paused, uncertain.
She took his silence as agreement. âWash your hands.â She instructed. âAnd just watch. Iâll try to be quick, and then we can both go back to camp and warm up.â
âŠIt was getting really cold. Sitting still in the middle of a blizzardâŠwell. It shouldnât be surprising. A little sluggishly, he finally nodded, and she sighed as though relieved.
âGood.â She said, and then proceeded to skin the third rabbit with clean, ruthless efficiency. Her left hand didnât seem to be gripping very strongly, so she periodically lost her hold and had to pick it up again, but even that was quick and efficient. She set that third pelt aside with the others, and then moved onto the deer. Apparently she wanted everything skinned before she gutted anything.
Watching the deerâs head get cut off was horrible. Watching something that big get skinned was horrible. Seeing the bright red of its flesh exposed â so much darker than the rabbits â and the paler lines of tendons and sinewâŠhe gagged a couple of times, even with nothing in his stomach to bring up. What little thereâd been for dinner was long since gone, and the tea had probably gone up with the acid earlier.
She seemed to have a harder time with the deerâs skin, as sheâd predicted, and needed to apply the tip of her sword to the situation a few times. He was horribly, guiltily glad that heâd not had to do that, and that made him feel even worse. He eyed her bloody fingers and wondered how much her hand was hurting. He watched miserably as she set the deer back and moved onto, presumably, the disembowelling stage of this whole ordeal.
Rayla did the deer first. She positioned the deer with its head and forelimbs back, and asked him to hold it in place. Wordlessly, he obliged, and then moved one hand over to hold one of the back legs up when she requested that too. She cut a line up its middle, deeper by far than sheâd done to skin it. The outer muscle gaped open and put all of the organs into full view, the white of bone bloody-yellow compared to the white of the snow, and as Callum watched it his mind went weirdly blank. It was as though heâd gone so far past nauseated and shaken that his head had decided it was too much effort to bother with, and had just shut off the feelings entirely. He kept watching, oddly numb.
She broke the ribcage open at the sternum, with a sickening crack of snapping bone. She cut some weird connective tissue, and some sort of fleshy tube he didnât know the name for, then grabbed said tube and pulled what seemed like all of the deerâs organs out at once. They all seemedâŠ.attached. That broke through his strange haze enough for him to gag again, watching with morbid horror as she dropped the innards into the snow.
Then, after some consideration, she reached into the mess and severed some pieces loose. âSome organs are good to eat.â She explained, awkwardly, as she set aside what he was pretty sure was a heart. âAnd they haveâŠnutrients, or something. We probably need that, right now.â She cut out some sort of big pale thing too, and two smaller dark-red things of the same shape and size. âHeart, liver, and kidneys.â She explained, when she saw him staring wordlessly at the items in question, which sheâd tucked back into the deerâs body cavity.
He knew, intellectually, about hearts and livers and kidneys, and what they were for, andâŠin as much as heâd seen medical diagrams, he knew approximately what they looked like. It was decidedly different to see them bloody and freshly-severed and steaming gently in the frigid air. âOh.â He said, faintly, and helped her turn the deer over to â ostensibly â drain excess blood out into the snow.
After the deer, the rabbits really werenât that shocking. He watched with distant, morbid curiosity as Rayla pulled the innards out of them one-by-one, piling them in a gory heap with the rest. She set the choicest offal out from those, too. They seemed almost comically tiny compared to the deerâs.
She didnât take any particular care with butchering the deer. She seemed increasingly impatient as she grew increasingly cold-looking, and just outright hacked slabs of meat off of the carcass, piling them in packed snow. She eyed the legs begrudgingly, admitting eventually âWeâll need to make some sort of spit or stake for those. Getting all of the meat off would take too long, and itâs not like theyâll fit in the pot.â
âAnd we need to have the pot with the other metal stuff soon, anyway.â Callum said, with a weird calm. She eyed him with plain concern, and then kept shooting worried glances at him all the way through the rest of her butchery. When at last she had a stack of bloody red meat and three clean rabbit corpses, sheâŠapparently decided to use the two halves of the deerâs ribcage and also its skin as carrying baskets, and piled it all in. It sort of overflowed. It was astonishingly macabre. She tied it all together with an extra piece of rope, in a giant parcel of meat, and then ushered him to his feet.
âCome on, you.â She said, a little gruffly. âTime to get you to the fire. Youâre looking allâŠshocky. The warmth will do you good.â
âUhuh.â He said, faintly, and wished there was a way to warn Ezran about the bloody spectacle of what they were bringing with them.
By some sort of mutual unspoken agreement, he and Rayla contrived to make sure the meat wasnât visible as they finally turned the corner of the ledge back into shelter, hiding it between them until they could pile it furtively behind all the metallics, where it might not be so terribly visible. This turned out to be a wise decision, because even the couple of deer legs that Rayla brought to the fireside were enough to make Ezran gag with a single glance.
âSorry, Ez.â Rayla said, apologetically, as she set the meat on a rag beside the fire. Her next priority seemed to be tugging Callum down until he fell clumsily on his backside beside Ezran, whereupon she inspected him for a moment and ordered âYou, sit. Warm up. Think happy, non-gory thoughts.â
This apparently got his brotherâs attention off of the grisly freshly-skinned and dismembered deer legs, and he turned to blink at Callum with dawning suspicion. âAre you okay?â He demanded. âYou donât feel okay.â He reached out and snatched his hand, his hand which had very recently been covered with rabbit blood, and his face scrunched up. âYouâre all shocky.â He said, almost accusatively.
âThatâs what I said.â Rayla contributed, from where she had started clattering about in the firewood pile. Ez shot her a frown, possibly for disrupting his lovingly-arranged stack.
âIâm fine, Ez.â Callum said, automatically, finally finding his voice. His brother ignored him entirely, and instead levelled an unimpressed look at Rayla.
âWhat did you do to him?â He demanded, albeit not with any true ire, fingers still gripping around Callumâs.
Rayla shrugged, looking uncomfortable. After a moment, she retreated from the firewood stack with what seemed like a highly specific selection of items, and said âAccidentally threw him in the meat-preparation deep end. Shouldâve let him get used to what raw prepared meat looks like first, I suppose.â
He managed to pick himself up out of his bizarre blankness at that. ââHeâ is right here.â
Ez pursed his lips, and glanced up at him. ââŠI guess it was worse than cut-up goose?â He ventured, and Callum thought blankly of pulling skin and fur off of flesh like a layer of sticky clothing. The disembowelling had been grisly, but somehowâŠheâd not been expecting skinning to work like that. It had been kind of shocking.
âYeah.â He agreed, after a moment, and finally gathered the presence of mind to look at Rayla and ask âwhat are you doing?â
She looked up from where she was poking the tip of her blade into a disc of tree-trunk, right in the middle. âTrying to improvise a cooking spit.â She answered, and twirled the sword around until it had made a hold in the middle of the thick circle of wood. She repeated this process for the other disc, and then started stripping bark off of the branches sheâd taken. Callum watched with quiet fascination as she cut the branchesâ ends until she had two sticks of roughly similar size, clean of bark and leaves, with a sort of V-shape in wood at their ends.
It took her a fair bit of looking between her constructions and the campfire, and making faces, and grabbing longer branches, but eventually she seemed satisfied. She stuck two branches in the holes in the discs, V-end up, and put one on either side of the fire. The final, longest branch sat tidily between them.
âWonât be too strong, so weâll have to cook one thing at a time.â She said, with plain satisfaction. âBut itâll do. And this will taste better than boiling things, too.â
âHuh.â Ez said, having been watching just as avidly as Callum. âDoes that mean we should put the pot over by the ledge now?â
Rayla considered it, and shook her head. âWe should melt enough snow to fill our waterskins first.â She decided, and so they did precisely that. Callum attempted to help with the snow-gathering, but both of the others heckled him down again, evidently very determined to keep him resting and recovering by the fireside. He sulked, stayed put beside the brightly-glowing egg, and wondered if this was how Rayla felt when they cossetted her too much.
Filling the waterskins didnât take too long, since Rayla didnât seem interested in bringing the water to the boil. The snow melted very fast, and before long they were pausing between each delivery of it to pour water messily into the waterskins. This accomplished, the pot was relegated to the confines of the weighed-down tent-pack at the edge of the campsite, and Rayla began the process of trying to spear a deer leg on the spit. After a great deal of muttering and cursing and trying very hard not to break the spit, she managed it, and set it cautiously over the fire.
âWe have to be careful with that.â She said, as she leaned back to inspect the arrangement. âItâs wood, after all, so it could catch fire if we let it too close to the flames. But for now, IâmâŠcautiously optimistic. In an hour or so, weâll probably have food.â
âRoasting meat for breakfast.â Callum said, wryly. âThatâs a new one.â
Her lips quirked, and she shrugged. âWell, weâre going to be living on a protein-only diet for the next however-long, so we only have so many options.â Before he could ask what protein was, she planted herself beside him and patted him hesitantly on the arm. âThanks for helping.â She told him, and his mind went blank. He looked down at her hand.
âWith what?â he wondered, stupidly.
âThe meat.â She elaborated. âDidnât realise how much of a shock it would be for you. SoâŠthanks.â
He stared at her for a few seconds, then cleared his throat and looked away. âI guess the two of us are pretty sheltered.â He shrugged, uncertain how he felt about being thanked for half-doing a job and then leaving his heavily injured friend to do everything.
âExtremely sheltered.â She corrected dryly, seeming more amused than anything. âBut thatâs alright. Youâre learning.â She patted his arm again, and he found himself weirdly encouraged by that small motion. His chin lifted, cautiously, and he watched her half out of the corners of his eyes as she receded and went to attend to the food.
âWe really have learned a lot since we left.â Ezran remarked, observing with interest as Rayla twisted the spit, the meat rotating with it. âItâs kinda cool. I never knew how to make a campfire before. Or put up a tent.â
Or be a field-healerâs assistant, Callum thought to himself, with a touch of gallows humour. âDidnât know how to talk to dragons with your mind, either.â He said, reaching over to ruffle his brotherâs hair. âBut look at you now.â
Ez giggled, and spared a glance to the egg. His expression went a little strange, and his eyes rested on the shell for a few heartbeats where he couldnât seem to look away. âIn fairness, itâs kind of harder not to talk to Zym than it is to talk to him.â He said, after a moment, and moved his eyes away with an odd sluggishness. âItâs like my mind is wide-open to him. I donât think I could block him out if I tried.â
Callum eyed him with interest. Rayla, beside the fire, looked up from her work with an eyebrow raised. âHave you tried?â She asked, and he blinked at her.
ââŠWell, yeah.â He admitted. âDuring the night, when I couldnât sleep, because he was being too awake in my head. Most people and animals I can shut out when I stop touching them, butâŠâ
âBut not the extra special baby dragon, huh.â Callum mused, uncertain whether or not to be worried. He should be worried, right? He was definitely worried. His brother rolled his eyes at him, apparently close enough to catch that wisp of concern.
âIâm fine, Callum.â He said, apparently exasperated, and nodded in the direction of their pile of things. âJust sit and draw for a bit or something, and stop worrying.â
âEr.â He said, because he had somehow managed to forget about the existence of his sketchbook. That was not something he had ever realised could happen, and was probably excellent evidence for how muddled all of their various problems had rendered him. His brow furrowed for a second, and then he did shuffle over to retrieve the book. As he leafed through it, even the most recent drawingsâŠit felt weirdly like heâd drawn them months ago, instead of merely days. There was a sense of separation from them that was hard to put into words.
âSomething wrong?â Rayla asked idly from over by the fire, and abruptly he realised heâd gone still with a page half-turned, eyes fixed on the drawing of Raylaâs bound hand. He jerked, turning the page away, and breaking from the strange disorientation of looking at objectively recent art.
ââŠI guess it just feels like I drew all of this a really long time ago.â He admitted, looking down at the sketches of Verdorn. He turned the page onto what heâd been drawing during his watch â the only thing that didnât feel absurdly distant. The storm. He flipped back again, looking through Verdorn, Raylaâs weapons, Raylaâs hand, the primal stone⊠âNormally a week doesnât feel all that long, butâŠâ He shook his head. âStuff that was just days ago feels like months ago.â
She appeared to consider that for a moment, perusing him from over the fire. âWell, thatâs perilous life-changing quests for you.â She said eventually.
âStress does weird things to people.â Was Ezranâs contribution, which wasnât exactly wrong.
âMmhm.â Callum agreed, only half paying attention, as he flipped back further, and further, until all of the drawings were from the time before any of this had started, before he and his brother had fled home with an elf assassin, before heâd ever cast a spell, just â before. He looked over the sketches of Katolis with an extremely strange feeling, half-homesickness and half-regret, twisting around in his belly. He remembered all of these drawings, of course he did, he didnât put anything in this book that wasnât carefully thought-out, butâŠ
It felt like they were almost from another world, now. Or another time.
âI remember that cliff.â Rayla said offhandedly, and he blinked to realise that he had the page open at a drawing of the Katolis castle from the forest below, looming far above the treetops upon its rocky perch. He looked between the sketchbook and her, vaguely impressed that sheâd managed to both see and identify the drawing from her current viewpoint. Then he processed what sheâd actually said.
âWhat do you mean, âI remember that cliffâ?â He asked, suspicious, and she shrugged.
âClimbed it.â She claimed, cheerfully nonchalant.
Both he and Ezran turned and stared. âWhat do you mean, âI climbed itâ?â Callum demanded, a little strident, looking between her and the drawing which very clearly showed how ridiculously sheer the cliff face was, and how high up the castle was, and-
âI climbed it.â She repeated, with a very small smirk twitching at the edge of her lips. He suspected she was starting to enjoy their reactions to her admitting to particularly impressive deeds. âTo break into your castle. Couldnât exactly go in through the front gate, you know.â
They goggled at her, momentarily flabbergasted. ââŠDid you stop at the bottom of the castle?â Ezran asked, after a moment, reluctantly fascinated. âI mean, Iâm pretty sure they built it so you canât get around the bottom parts easily?â
âThey definitely did.â Callum confirmed, who had been subjected to numerous lessons on the history and facility of Katolis castle over the years.
âNah, I just climbed the castle, too.â Rayla asserted, and still with that smirk, slunk around the fireside to point her finger to a particular part of the drawing. âAll the way up to the battlements.â
Callum stared at her fingertip, hovering over his drawing of the crenelated walls. ââŠ.How?â Was all he could ask, stunned yet again by the breadth of her strength and skill.
âWith difficulty.â She shrugged again. âAnd also my hook-blades.â
It took him several moments to speak again. âYou mean you chased me through the castle right after you climbed the castle?â A small part of his brain shrieked thatâs not even human, and then the rest of him realised, that, well. Yeah, it wasnât. It very much wasnât. It was, however, extremely impressive.
His brother blinked. âShe chased you through the castle?â
He turned and squinted. âYeah? Of course â oh, you werenât there for that part.â He remembered, suddenly. Yeah, that was right â Ezran had been in the secret passages at the time. âDidnât I say anything about it?â
âMaybe? Iâm not sure.â
Rayla rolled her eyes, and leaned back from the sketchbook. âWell, I did take a few minutes to collapse on the battlements breathing heavily first,â She said, dryly. âBut yes. Not sure Iâd have managed it if it wasnât so close to Full Moon, honestly.â
âThatâs crazy.â Callum said, admiringly. âIâd have fallen off the cliff about ten feet up.â
Her face scrunched up for a second. âTen feet.â She said, pensive. âThatâs not much, right? So I suppose if you fell you probably wouldnât hurt yourself all that much, at least.â He was blinking at her, contemplating asking about typical elf metric systems, when she tilted her head sideways to peer at his sketchbook and said âDo you have any others of the castle?â
He paused. âEr, yeah, a few.â He said, hesitantly, andâŠsuddenly remembered that heâd offered to show her through the sketchbook, sometime. It was still a little uncomfortably personal, butâŠmaybe not in a bad way? And it seemed as good a time as anyâŠso, after a moment, he cleared his throat and slowly offered âIf you want, you could have a look through the whole book?â
She paused, looking momentarily startled, and lifted her eyes to blink at him. ââŠWell, itâs a good time for it, I suppose.â She said, with a brief glance out at the storm stranding them in place. A small, genuine smile lifted the corners of her lips. âSounds good.â
He stared at that smile for longer than was strictly necessary, and wasnât certain why. In the end, a little awkwardly, he cleared his throat, and carefully handed the sketchbook over. âMy step-dad gave it to me.â He explained, and her hands faltered for a second as they settled around the thick-bound tome. âWhen I was pretty small. So the earliest drawings are kind ofâŠnot amazing. ButâŠâ he shrugged.
âTheyâre cute.â Ezran claimed, shuffling in closer to Rayla to watch. âI like them. Especially that one of Bait.â
âNo, yeah, that one is a masterpiece.â Callum agreed, lips twitching, and watched Rayla stare at the cover of the sketchbook with an odd, pensive expression. He was about to ask her if anything was wrong when she shook her head, a minute motion, and opened the book.
The first pages, predictably, were full of childish scrawl heâd been very proud of at the time. The odd expression on Raylaâs face was almost instantly replaced with a lopsided smile, as if she found the old drawings of Ez and Bait and Mom and Harrow particularly charming. The earliest portrait of Bait was just a grumpy looking circle with eyes, and despite everything, it still perfectly captured the spirit of him. âLooks just like him.â She said, lips twitching, as she inspected it.
âI know, right?â He grinned, and shuffled a little closer so as to see better. Her eyes glanced his way for a quick moment, then returned to the book. She turned the page to an amateurish rendering of Pip.
âI have to say, this is still lots better than anything I can draw.â She commented, and turned the page on again.
Page by page, she flipped through the book, lingering each time to inspect whatever was drawn there. For all that heâd made the offer, it still made him feel somewhat exposed, watching her uncover page after page of his life. It was his personal sketchbook, after all, with years of memories and emotion immortalised within it. He didnât draw anything in that book that he didnât put heart and soul into, and that meant it wasâŠwell. Important. And personal. Enough so that watching her leaf through it left him feeling strangely timid, as though he were worried she wouldnât approve.
She commented, here and there, because lots of the pictures were noteworthy and many had an explanation or story behind them that she wasnât privy to. He quietly identified his mother for her, on the first sketch skilled enough that she was recognisable, and repeated the process for Harrow, and Aunt Amaya, and Gren, and then-
âThatâs the girl that attacked us in the castle dungeons.â Rayla said, eyes sharp on a drawing of Claudia. âThe dark mage.â
He coughed, abruptly uncomfortable, and as he stared at the face drawn on the page, realised that he hadnât really thought about Claudia very much recently. âYeah, thatâs Claudia.â He explained, awkwardly, and wondered at the bizarre twist of emotion in his gut. He was guilty for attacking her, and stealing her primal stone, sureâŠbut⊠âSheâs one of the only friends I really had at the castle.â
It was a little strange to think of her. The days since theyâd left the castle had been so hectic, and so increasingly stressful, that heâd justâŠnot really had a chance to sit down and wonder how she was doing. Whether sheâd got in trouble for losing the egg. Whether she was mad at him or not. He hoped not. He hadnât really had much of a chance to miss her, maybe, but he did still like her, and it would be a bit of a punch in the gut to have her angry at him. Even if that liking felt vaguer and more distant than he remembered. Like almost everything from before the start of this journeyâŠshe felt almost like she belonged to another world, now.
Rayla glanced to the side to inspect his face for a moment, and while her expression didnât change, her ears twitched down a little. âHmm.â She offered, noncommittally, and returned to the book.
There was a lot in the book. A lot of stories, and a lot of memories. When she was around half-through, she started to send periodic glances towards the cooking meat, as though to ensure it hadnât burned while she wasnât looking. Ezran had helpfully taken it upon himself to twist the spit occasionally while she was looking at the book, but it had to be getting close to done, now. The smell of it was ridiculously appetising, and if it hadnât been for the distraction of his sketchbook, Callum might have had a hard time focusing on anything else but the hideous hunger twisting in his belly.
Still, it apparently wasnât done yet, so she returned her attention to the book.
âYouâve got a lot of variety in here.â She commented, after carefully turning the page again, this time onto a lovingly-rendered sketch of Harrow with Pip on his shoulder, offering the bird a treat. It was by far the most detailed and skilled drawing of the man sheâd seen yet; one heâd been very proud of. She was far enough into the book now that most of it was at least vaguely approaching his current skill level.
Her expression went strange and a little tight at the sight of it, whichâŠhe tried not to dwell on too much. Of course it would be awkward to see a drawing of the King youâd been sent to assassinate, particularly when that King was the father of your newest friends. That was all there was to it.
She swallowed, and turned the page over onto something more innocuous: the capital city of Katolis as seen from atop one of its towers. ââŠHow do you decide what to draw?â She asked, after a moment, eyes lingering on the sprawl of the city. He wondered how much sheâd seen of it, before theyâd fled the place.
He thought for a second. âI guess I just see stuff and want to draw it, mostly.â He said, honestly. âIt can be anything, and Iâll just look at it, and..â He waved to his head, then made a sort of mime of a drawing motion with his hand. ââŠI start thinking about how Iâd draw it. The lines Iâd use, the parts Iâd shadeâŠthat sort of thing.â
âIs that what youâre always spacing out about when youâre walking?â She questioned, dryly, giving the city-drawing one last look before turning the page. This featured a drawing of Fort Viatori, which she must surely recognise from experience. âHow you want to draw random rocks and trees you see?â
Callum laughed, a little abashed. âWell. Not only.â
âSometimes if you look at his hands when heâs daydreaming, you can see his fingers twitching.â Ezran said, helpfully, and they both glanced at him. âLike heâs imagining drawing something. Itâs funny.â He put his first two fingers and thumb together as if holding a stick of charcoal, then made a deliberate twitching motion of said fingers. âLike this.â
Rayla snorted, a smile slipping onto her lips, and she glanced at him side-long as if to slot that new detail in with the rest of what she knew about him. He felt his cheeks heat, just a little, and he ducked his head. âDo I really do that?â He asked, nonplussed, and received a very matter-of-fact nod from his brother.
âAll the time.â He claimed.
âIâll keep an eye out, then.â Rayla said, lips twitching, and inspected the drawing of the Fort for a moment of consideration, before she pointed out one section of the far end. âThis is where my team climbed up the walls.â Her finger shifted along a path. âWe sort ofâŠsnuck along the battlements here, and in the shadow of this tower hereâŠand then dropped down along this wall here until we got to the bridge. And then we waited for the guards to challenge someone and slipped across.â
To Callumâs memory, Viatori had been positively bristling with soldiers, easily the most well-guarded and well-defended checkpoint in the kingdom. They checked every trader, every caravan, every travellerâŠand given their fort occupied the only easy way through the mountains, not to mention a junction with the great Rhodane river, well. That was a lot of people. âThatâsâŠimpressive.â He said, at last, because it was. âAnd no one saw you?â
âNope. Full Moonâs good for that.â She answered, with a trace of a smile, and turned the page again. She blinked at the drawing on this one; a hand holding a knife, but neither of them typical. The knife was ornamented, and oddly curved, almost a crescent-shape. The hand was elaborately tattooed, with dark intricate designs rendered in careful lines on the charcoal of the dark skin. ââŠWhoâs this?â
He peered closer, although he remembered perfectly well. âEvenerian Priestess of Mercy.â He said, recalling the strange woman, and the fierceness of that knife held beneath the outward calm and solemnity. âI met her at Greatport, coming off the ships. Iâd never seen someone with tattoos like that before, so I kind of accidentally stared a bit.â
âI remember that.â Ezran reminisced, smiling. âShe asked you what you were staring at.â He paused, and added âI asked to see her knife.â
âPriests of Mercy in Katolis donât really have the knives so much these days, so Iâd never seen one outside of old paintings or history books.â Callum elaborated, looking down at the sharp curve of the blade and the marks on the hand that wielded it. That had been an interesting, and memorable, meeting. âIt was interesting.â
ââŠYou have priestesses that carry knives?â Rayla asked, a little dubiously, and in a rush of disorientation that felt oddly like vertigo, Callum realised thatâŠthat, well, Rayla probably didnât know anything about Mercy. OrâŠor Justice, or Valor, or Fortitude, or any of the Paragons. That wasâŠso weird. âWhat for? Fighting?â She squinted at the shape of the knife and suggested, cautiously, âRitual bloodletting?â
He mulled over the revelation for a few seconds, nonplussed, before he answered. A little haltingly, perhaps, freshly aware that he was speaking to someone who didnât know anything about Mercy. It was weirdly daunting, to be the voice representing the faith of most of an entire race. âEr, I mean, no? Not that I know of, unless thereâs some weird Evenerian thing Iâve not heard about, butâŠno.â He cleared his throat, and considered how to answer. âWellâŠMercy is aboutâŠuh, mercy, right? The stories say that she carried a knife like that, becauseâŠâ He hesitated. âBecause sometimes thereâs only one mercy left to give people.â
He saw the moment she understood, her brow furrowing. âThatâs kind of dark.â She said, eventually. âAnd, what, the priestesses carry them for the same reason?â
âIâm pretty sure itâs just ceremonial at this point. No one uses knives for Mercy-killing anymore.â He explained, awkwardly, feeling keenly that he was not representing one of the great Paragons very well.
âItâs some sort of flower now, right?â Ezran mused, a little pensively, as he stared at the page. âI mean, I never paid that much attention to the religion classes, but thatâs what Mercyâs always holding in the pictures, isnât it?â
âThe lotus of Evenere?â Callum ventured, thinking. A white lotus held in Mercyâs hands, the clusters of pollen at its centre a deep, bloody redâŠand there was something familiar about that⊠âI know the symbolism is all aboutâŠpeace, and falling asleep, andâŠâ he frowned. ââŠpainlessness.â He groaned, as finally his thoughts clicked into place. âI canât believe I never realised that.â
âWhat?â Ezran asked, interested.
Rayla seemed curious too, although a little nonplussed by the topic. âFigure something out?â
âThe lotus of Mercy.â He explained, a little distractedly, pulling his bag over to go rummaging through it⊠âThe lotus of Evenere, the marsh kingdom.â He found what he was looking for, and pulled it out: a little bottle full of sanguine fluid: lilium, a drug made from the pollen of a potent and dangerous flower.... âItâs the marsh-lotus. I canât believe I never made that connection before!â
Rayla stared. âSoâŠwhat youâre sayingâŠis that Iâve been taking a pain drug that humans use for mercy-killing.â She said, flatly, the fingers of her good hand settling over her opposite wrist.  âThatâsâŠdisturbing.â
ââŠWell, the Healer did say that overdose is dangerous.â Ez pointed out, and despite how lightly he said it, he looked a little disturbed too.
âMercy from pain.â Callum said, trying not to think about it too hard, and shrugged. âThatâs part of her thing. Itâs not just for death. But I guess the people in Evenere remember that more than most of us.â He saw Raylaâs eyes glancing curiously at him, and he added âIâve always heard they lead pretty hard lives there.â
ââŠMm.â She said, noncommittally, looking down at the page again. âWell, I guess it was nice of her to show you the knife.â She sounded dubious, even as she tilted her head. ââŠI didnât know humans put markings on their skin like that. âTattoosâ, you said?â
Callum looked up at her, curious at the implications. âYeah.â He confirmed, eyes settling with interest on the markings beneath her eyes, whichâŠheâd sort of unthinkingly assumed to be much the same thing. âSoâŠumâŠâ He fidgeted until she looked over at him, expectant, and finally said âThose marks on your face. Theyâre not tattoos? What are they?â
Rayla blinked, startled, and her fingers rose to one of them out of reflex. âTheyâreâŠpigment?â She offered, evidently confused by the question, and side-eyed him strangely.
âLike ink?â He pressed, and saw Ezran was looking interested too.
âPretty much.â She agreed, looking down at the drawing. âSo, what, theseâŠâtattoosââŠwhat are those supposed to be if theyâre not pigment?â
âEr. Well. Theyâre ink too, butâŠâ He hesitated, uncertain on how to proceed. Ezran, evidently, had no such difficulty.
âPeople put the ink under their skin with needles.â He said, cheerfully, and Rayla recoiled. âThe priestess lady said it takes a long time and hurts a lot.â
âThat was the day I learned about tattoos, and also the day I decided I didnât want one.â Callum reflected, and looked at the obvious astonishment on Raylaâs face. ââŠIâm guessing thatâs not how elves do it?â
âNo.â She said, stridently, then paused. âWell, I donât know about all elves. Maybe some of them do it like that. ButâŠâ She shook her head, stroking a finger down under her eye. âI got mine painted on with a brush, like a sane person.â
Callum perked up with interest. âAnd, what, it stays on?â He inspected her markings with a little more scrutiny than heâd dared before. Theyâd been travelling together for over a week now, and he didnât think the colour had faded at all⊠âIt doesnât wash out, or wear off?â
Rayla eyed him, as if uncertain whether he was serious. ââŠThey wear off eventually, but it takes a long time.â She said, finally. âA few months for the lighter colours, but you can get a good six to eight months out of dark pigments like mine. You just touch them up when you need to.â
âHuh.â Callum expressed, fascinated, and stared at her pigment until she started shifting uncomfortably and he realised he should probably maybe avert his eyes now.
âWhat happens if you mess up when youâre painting it on?â Ezran asked, just as interested. âDo you have to go around for months with like, a squiggle on your face where your hand slipped?â
Rayla snorted, surprised, then snickered. âNo, thereâs this pigment remover stuff you can use.â She said, lips twitching. âIt stinks, though, so no one likes to use it.â She smiled for a few moments, quiet, with a sort of reminiscent cast to her eyes that made Callum think she was recalling something both pleasant and relevant. After a few seconds, a little haltingly, she said âOne time when I was little, I snuck a bottle of pigment and a brush and snuck up onâŠâ She hesitated, then went on. ââŠon Runaan and Ethari, while they were sleeping, and painted over their faces.â Her smile went a little wider, butâŠsadder, too. âEthari sleeps pretty heavily, so he was fine. Runaan, thoughâŠâ She shook her head. âWoke up right away. I got caught and didnât even care, I thought it was so funny.â
RunaanâŠhadnât that been the assassin on the castle roof? The one whoâd pointed the bow at them? The one who Rayla had stayed behind to fight? Callum looked at her, torn between amusement at the story and concern for the almost bittersweet cast to her lips, and wasnât sure what to say.
Ezran looked at her a little too-thoughtfully as well, and Callum wondered what he was picking up on. In the end though, what he asked was âDid you get in trouble?â
She smiled. âNot much, actually. Runaan thought it was a good enough show of stealth to let me off most of the punishment. Not all of it, though. I was doing extra chores for a week.â Her eyes went distant and wistful, and Callum wondered if, maybe, it would be okay to askâŠ
In the end, he didnât have to. She looked back at him, and a flicker of understanding passed across her face as she saw him. She exhaled, very slightly.
ââŠRunaan and Ethari took me in after my parents left for the Dragonguard.â She explained, after a moment, not looking at them. âTheyâreâŠsort of my second set of parents, pretty much.â
Callum shifted, cautious, aware that this was a difficult subject. ââŠRunaan was that elf back at the castle, wasnât he?â He guessed, and Raylaâs expression twisted into a light grimace.
âLeader of the mission. Yeah.â She said, quietly. She hesitated, then closed the sketchbook, and held it out to him. âIâll finish looking through it later.â Her voice wasâŠvery normal, but in a somewhat forced way. Like she was having to work at it. âFor now, I think our weird breakfast is about done.â
âOh, um.â His hands closed automatically around the edges of the book as she proffered it. âYeah, sure. Good?â He tried to inspect her face for any signs of that quiet, sad wistfulnessâŠbut sheâd replaced it with a carefully neutral expression instead.
Her fingers brushed his as they receded from the book. âThanks for showing me.â She said, and his eyes flicked up automatically from her hands to her eyes. They were really very purple. He felt a little flustered, and didnât know why.
âNo problem?â He squeaked, and watched her as she flashed him a smile and retreated around the campfire. Ezran looked sideways at him and sighed, but Callum was still somewhat too distracted to ask him about it.
Rayla inspected the meat for a few seconds before, carefully, removing the spit from over the fire. âMight still be kind of bloody in the middle, but itâll probably taste better that way anyway.â She commented, and for a second, Callum remembered his erroneous impressions of elves as blood-drinkers and giggled to himself. She raised an eyebrow at him, but continued with her business of un-spearing the deer leg from the spit and bracing the end of it atop one of their rags to cut. She sheared off several large chunks of meat with effortless motions of her blade, proving that it was indeed still pretty bloody inside.
Callum might have assumed that being exposed to the animal in its extremely bloody skinned-and-gutted state would have made the sight of it less appealing. It didnât. He was so overwhelmingly hungry that in that moment it became nigh unbearable, and his eyes seemed fixed on the pile of food in a way that wouldnât be moved. He could feel the near-instant salivation in his mouth, hear the abrupt and beseeching rumble of his stomachâŠ
Rayla sat down beside him, moving the food over by dragging the edges of the rag, until it was sat on the ground in front of them. She was still holding the leg bone, which retained a fair amount of meat. âWill Bait be able to eat from the bone?â She asked Ezran, with a glance at it. âItâs good eating for any of us, if he canât.â
Ezran blinked, and turned to the side, where Bait had emerged from the tent-layers at once at the sound of his name. The glow-toad had started glowing very brightly indeed, apparently fully aware that food was imminent. âWell, heâll give it his best try.â He said, lips twitching, and Rayla obligingly laid the bone out. This, incidentally, was how Callum came by the somewhat disturbing knowledge that glow-toad tongues were a little bit barbed, and entirely capable of stripping meat from bones when applied to the task properly.
Fortunately, there was an extremely absorbing distraction at hand. He stared at the food, not wanting to fling himself at it like some sort of savage, but also entirely aware that this was probably the hungriest heâd ever been in his life.
Apparently entirely aware of his conundrum, Rayla rolled her eyes at him, grabbed a chunk of meat, and leaned back. She gestured expansively at the pile. âDig in.â She said, and neither of them needed any more prompting whatsoever.
The next ten or so minutes disappeared in a blissful haze of more-than-slightly frenzied eating, which of course they did with their hands, for lack of any actual cutlery or plates or bowls of any kind. Callum was aware of little more than the urgency of eating, of allaying that awful hunger, of the delicious taste of roasted meat still hot enough to sizzle and spit when he bit into it â he ate, and ate, and when he was done he stared at the empty rag with a strange sense of betrayal.
It was, he reflected, probably a good thing they still had so much meat left to cook. And plenty of time to cook it in. Because he was still hungry, somehow, even after gorging himself like a ravenous beast. A little self-consciously, he leaned back and reached for a separate rag to wipe his face and hands with, because the whole affair had been distinctly messy. He eyed it after he was done, wondering if theyâd have to try to do more laundry soon. If nothing else, they had a steady supply of bandages getting dirty, and probably a lot of the various rags and socks were getting pretty nasty.
His stomach rumbled, a little plaintively, as if disappointed heâd stopped eating. He made a face, caught between the conflicting sensations of satiation and hunger, feeling paradoxically as if heâd eaten too much and not nearly enough at the same time. Heâd eaten too quickly, maybe? But he was definitely still hungry. âI think that was the most satisfying thing I ever ate.â He concluded, after a moment, and Ezran made fervent sounds of agreement over his last remaining mouthful.
Rayla solicited the rag from him with a wordless gesture, and wiped her own face before she spoke. âIt gets like that when youâve not found good food for a while.â She agreed, letting out a small and satisfied sigh. âWeâll want to cook some more soon, though. We should honestly be stuffing ourselves with as much food as we can manage while weâre here.â
Ez swallowed his last bit of food, and thoughtfully, asked âWhy?â
She shrugged. âGot to fatten ourselves up.â She claimed, passing over the rag when Ez reached for it. Weâve been on short rations for a while, will probably be on short rations at some other point on this journey, and to top it offâŠbeing cold makes you hungrier. So.â
Callum blinked. He hadnât known that last part, but⊠âAlso, red meatâs supposed to be good when youâve been injured and bleeding a lot recently.â He added, and her lips twitched.
âThat, too.â She agreed, her hand moving momentarily in the direction of her mangled arm. He recalled he hadnât had a chance to check it yet today, and twitched all-over in discomfort, suppressing the urge to immediately demand a check-up. She inspected the fire and the spit pensively for a few moments, then said âI think Iâll put another leg on. Then I should probably go on another firewood run before the storm gets too close.â Her eyes moved to the side, focused on him. âThink you can handle the cooking while Iâm gone?â
âSure.â He said, automatically, before heâd really thought about it. Fortunately, when heâd actually thought about it, his conclusions werenât any different. Turning the spit didnât seem like a particularly intensive task. But⊠âEr. If the stormâs that close, is it safe to go out?â
âFor now, probably. But if I wait, no.â Rayla said succinctly, and stood. âWhich is why I should go soon.â
He turned to watch her, which also gave him the right angle to see that Bait was still thoroughly assailing his breakfast. He watched for a few seconds in somewhat horrified fascination, remembering the many, many times heâd let Bait tongue-tether some treat or other from his hand, when it could apparently strip flesh from bone just like that. It wasâŠimposing. âDid you know he could do that?â he asked Ezran, in an undertone, and received a sunny smile in return.
ââCourse.â He answered, shrugging. âHe prefers it when he can eat stuff thatâs small enough to just swallow, since he canât chew anything, butâŠâ âButâ, evidently, it was far from a necessity.
There was a sudden brightening of the storm out side the cave, all at once, in a very evident lightning-flash. What felt like barely a second or two later, the thunder rumbled its softened edges across the sky. Rayla looked at it and grimaced, then hurried for their food pile. She piked the second venison leg without ceremony, handing it to Callum to deal with, and set about pulling up her scarf and pulling down her hat with an impatience that heralded her swift departure.
âIâd best be going soon.â She said to them, picking up her rope harness and one blade. âThat lightning was too close.â
Ezran made a sound of glum agreement, and glanced back at the egg still sat beside the fire. âI can almost actually tell when thereâs about to be lightning, now.â He said, eyes still fixed on the glowing eggshell. âZym gets thisâŠanticipation, right before?â
Rayla visibly considered that for a second, while Callum tried to come to terms with yet another facet of the growing trend of his brotherâs dragon-connected empathy deal. ââŠWell, that would probably be super handy if we were travelling through the storm.â She said, dryly. âAs it isâŠnot so much.â
ââŠWell, weâve probably got plenty of weeks ahead of us to get caught in another storm.â Callum commented, sounding a fair bit more fatalistic to his own ears than he was used to. âSo.â
She sighed, a light grimace passing around what little remained visible of her face. âYouâre not wrong.â She admitted, hefting the rope harness into place. She glanced towards the ledge, and squared her shoulders. âWell, thatâs enough lollygagging. I donât want to spend any more time out there than I have to. Iâm off.â
Callumâs gut clenched. She might have already been out several times this morning, but⊠âCome back soonâ was all he said in the end, with an anxious glance out into the storm. The winds were awfully, viciously strong now, and the snowâŠ
She glanced his way, and if there was anything to be read from her expression, the scarf had covered it. âThat is the objective.â She said, dryly, and waved in brief farewell as she departed along the ledge again.
Ezran patted him on the arm. âDonât worry. Sheâs just gonna hack up a tree and then come back. She wonât be long.â
He made a vague hum of agreement, and when he finally managed to tear his eyes from the ledge, shuffled over to the cooking spit to supervise it with single-minded intensity. Maybe, if he focused enough on that, he could avoid worrying so much.
It didnât quite work. But it worked enough that it took him a good ten minutes to notice that Ezran had picked up Zymâs egg, only turning to see when he noticed the rhythmic ebb and flow of the blue light over the stone floor. He found his brother sat quietly with the dragon egg in his lap, eyes closed, fingers splayed over the shell. He was entirely still and silent but for the steady rise and fall of his shoulders, in time with the cyclical shine of the egg. A shiver of unease prickled at Callumâs skin at the sight of that stillness.
âYou okay there, Ez?â He prompted, after a moment, and suppressed another curl of anxiety at the strangely sluggish way his brother opened his eyes.
ââŠFine.â He said, after a moment, but his voice was strange. Callum sat up straighter, and looked at his brother more sharply.
Heâd been fine ten minutes ago, talking with Callum and Rayla. Heâd been fine for a while before that, too. But this? Did not seem âfineâ. âAre you sure itâs a good idea to be holding the egg like that right now?â He asked, and watched Ezranâs brow furrow uncomprehendingly. âWith the stormâŠ.maybe itâs a little too much dragon-empathy-magic.â
Ezran blinked, very slowly, and looked down at the egg with a strangely sluggish motion. He looked almost as if he were moving through water instead of air. ââŠWhat, youâre worried Iâm gonna overdo it on my weird empathy powers?â He asked, andâŠwhile it should have sounded joking, it didnât. There was a distance to his tone and expression that was profoundly unsettling.
âHonestly? Yeah, kinda.â Callum admitted, and abandoned the spit to shuffle closer, reaching out to turn his brotherâs chin up. He inspected his face. Was it just his imagination, or did the colour of his eyes seem brighter somehow? âItâs not like youâve been empathy-connected to a baby storm dragon in the middle of a storm before, you know. And you werenât acting like this before you picked the egg up.â
âActing like what?â Ezran wondered, voice still far-away and distant, his eyes staring in the direction of Callum without quite focusing on him.
He suppressed the urge to snatch the egg away. âLike youâre sleepwalking.â He said, tightly, more and more concerned by the second. Mercy, but heâd been talking and reacting completely normally just ten minutes ago, and now⊠âLike youâre not even really here. Ez, please â give me the egg, or put it down, or something. I donât think you should be touching it right now.â
His brother looked slowly down at the gleaming eggshell again. âI can still feel him when Iâm not touching him.â He pointed out, vaguely.
âMaybe. But you keep saying how your empathy deal always works better when youâre touching things.â He held out his hands. âPlease, Ezran.â
His brother watched the egg, brow furrowed, as if he were having trouble thinking his way through what Callum had said. Then, eventually, in a hesitant and halting motion, he drew his hands back from the shell. It seemed to be an effort. ââŠTake it, if you like.â He said, still distant, and Callum only hesitated a second.
Heâd not exactly had much contact with the egg. But his sudden urgent desire to get the thing away from his brother easily superseded any hesitance heâd have had on the matter. He closed his hands around the sides of the eggshell, skin tingling with static as he took it. He hefted it up and carefully away, watching his brother all the while.
It wasnât a pronounced shift. But it was noticeable, even so, how a touch of lucidity returned to Ezranâs eyes. âOh.â He said, softly, blinking a few times in a bleary sort of way, as if he were waking up. âThatâŠdoes feel different. IâŠdidnât realise.â
Callum held the egg carefully close, tense with anxiety. âI think,â He said, slowly, âyou shouldnât hold him unless you have to, until the stormâs gone.â
Ez opened his mouth as if to object, then hesitated. He looked at the egg, brow furrowed, and his shoulders slumped. ââŠYeah, maybe.â He admitted, and Callum thought it was starting to dawn on him, how unsettling it was for him to haveâŠgone blank, like that. âIâŠmaybe thatâs why I had so much trouble sleeping. Because I was holding him? So it made the connection so strongâŠâ He raised his hands and rubbed them slowly over his face. âI feel so weird. Like my head is full of wool.â
âSomeone else can hold him tonight.â Callum said firmly, fingers feeling a little jittery on the eggshell. âAnd for now we can put him next to the fire, or something, so heâs still warm. And you can justâŠabsolutely not touch him until the weird storm-magic-overflow thing isnât a problem anymore.â He forced his breath to stay even, and closed his eyes for a second, just a second, to try to grasp at calm. This was far too much anxiety for a single morning.
Ezran hesitated for a long moment, looking at the egg. His fingers twitched towards it, and then he pulled his hands forcefully down to his sides. ââŠYeah. Okay.â He said, and his voice was very quiet.
So Callum made a little nest out of rumpled clothing a short distance from the fire, and carefully set the egg there. All the while Ezran watched and shuffled and became a little more fidgety with every minute of lucidity. When they returned cautiously to just watching the cooking meat, and twisting the spit occasionally, Callum couldnât help but notice how often Ezranâs eyes returned to the egg. It was like he couldnât look away. Like he was drawn to it, again and again and again, even with that distance imposed between them.
He didnât need to point it out to him. Ezran seemed perfectly aware of it, forcing his eyes away every time as though it were a physical effort. His shoulders hunched with discomfort, and he huddled beside Callum with Bait held tightly in his arms. By the time Rayla returned, it was to a spectacle of uneasy silence, with the egg exiled to the other side of the fire and both Callum and Ezran so obviously tense that she stopped short to stare at them when she stepped past the ledge.
âOkay, whatâs happened now?â She demanded, with some asperity, stalking forwards and shrugging off her latest haul of wood. It made a noisome clatter on the stone floor, and both of them flinched. âI was only gone for twenty minutes.â
Callum exchanged an unhappy glance with his brother. Eventually, Ez spoke. ââŠTurns out Zym is kind of messing with my head more than I thought.â He admitted, unhappily. âI justâŠpicked him up, and then Callum noticed Iâd gone all weird, and I didnât even notice how much I couldnât think until I put him down again, and-â He shook his head, frustrated and anxious at once. â-and itâs. I donât know. Weird.â
Rayla looked between them, brow furrowing, and crept over to kneel beside them. âYou alright, Ez?â She asked, inspecting him seriously. She reached out and lifted his chin to look at him, just like Callum had earlier, and there was something almost comical about that. In a sort of horrible way.
Ez hesitated, looking up at her with such an expression of open vulnerability that Callum instantly wanted to pull him close and smother him in hugs until he felt better. He couldnât stand it. âMostly.â He said, in a small voice. âBut â weâre still connected, even if weâre not touching, and I just â itâs really â I donât know.â He sounded miserable. âI keep thinking that I want to pick him up, or go over to him, and heâs still in my head, and I dunno what to thinkâŠâ
She watched him, quiet, then said âItâs the storm, right? Making it like this. This wasnât happening before.â
âI â yeah. I guess.â Ezran looked over at the shining dragon egg again and flinched. âHeâs just â it â it feels like heâs absorbing it? The storm-magic. Itâs all around us and heâsâŠtaking it in, but Iâm connected to him soâŠâ
ââŠItâs spilling over, maybe?â Callum ventured, setting a steadying arm around his brotherâs middle. Ez shivered, and then pressed closer into his side.
âKinda.â He agreed. âAnd then I guessâŠI donât know. I think itâs the magic thatâs letting me feel so far out like this. I could never feel anything I wasnât touching, before, but nowâŠâ he shook his head. âItâs so much. And Zym â heâs feeling the magic and the storm so much and I canât-â he broke off, frustrated, and fell silent.
Raylaâs hand receded, and she stared at him quietly for a few short moments. âI didnât know if I was imagining it, before.â She said, after a pause. âBut Iâm pretty sure now. Your eyes are too bright, Ez. More than human-normal.â
Ez blinked, startled out of his anxiety, and his brow furrowed. âThey are?â He questioned, baffled.
Callum shifted uneasily. âI noticed that too.â He said, turning to Rayla. âWhat does that even mean?â
She shrugged minutely, and leaned back. âNo idea.â She admitted. âMy eyes glow when itâs dark, but thatâs just a Moonshadow elf thing. I think â Iâve heard other elvesâ eyes glow when theyâre in their primal magic states, or when thereâs a lot of magic around, butâŠâ
Ezran stilled, shoulders hunching inwards. âThis is weird.â He said, in a very small voice. âAnd kind of scary.â
Callumâs arm tightened around him. Heâd try to appear less worried, but considering he was currently in close contact with his empath brother, that was probably a lost cause.
Rayla reached out and laid a hand on Ezranâs shoulder, trying for a reassuring smile. âIf itâs the storm making it like this, it should get better soon.â She said, voice gentle. âThe stormâs almost as close as itâs going to get. In an hour or so, itâll start heading past us.â
He shivered. âYeah.â His voice was quiet. âI know. The middle of it is sort ofâŠâ He nodded in a specific direction. âThat way. And moving that way.â He jerked his chin to the side, as if to indicate the travel path of the storm.
âWeâre not going to be quite in the middle of it.â She agreed. âProbably a good thing, considering.â
âYeah.â Ezran turned and pressed his face into Callumâs shoulder, and said nothing more.
Callum pulled him close and sat there quietly, heart aching with worry, and hurting from the force of the protectiveness he had no way to act on. He wanted to do something â to protect Ezran from this, somehow. But what was there to be done, except wait?
Ezran stayed curled into his side, Bait half-squashed in his lap, as Rayla quietly went about stacking the wood and turning the spit. Callum felt it when Ez flinched, at nothing he could identify â and then, the very next second, lightning burned the sky white. The thunder followed, accompanied by searing blue light quivering over the camp from the intensity of the eggâs glow.
âClose,â Rayla noted, looking at the sky. Her brows were furrowed. âI got back just in time, I think. That was less than a kilometre away.â
âI can tell.â Ezran muttered, the words muffled by the fur of Callumâs cloak. Rayla still seemed to hear it well enough, though, and glanced his way with a light frown.
After a moment of hesitation, she came over and knelt beside them, resting a careful hand on Ezranâs shoulder. When he lifted his face up to peer out at her, her face wasâŠgentle. Warm, and plainly caring, and Callum throat went half-choked with gratitude and gladness to see it. He was just so thankful that she was here, that she cared about Ezran too, that she was helping⊠âThe next batch of foodâs about ready,â She told his brother, offering him a small smile. âMight do you some good, to eat a little more.â
Ezran exhaled, the slow sound of it more than close enough for Callum to hear, even despite the whistle and shriek of the winds at such close remove. ââŠI guess I am still pretty hungry.â He admitted, and slowly peeled himself from Callumâs side, sitting up and unfurling from the tight ball-shape heâd squashed himself into.
Their second meal of the day was a good sight less enthusiastic than the first. Rayla sliced the meat off the bone and passed it around, and they ate, but it was in a subdued silence. Even Bait wasnât as enthusiastic as usual, sticking close by Ezranâs feet and picking half-heartedly at his portion. Callum found himself shooting worried looks at his brother what felt like every minute, and all the more once the storm and its lightning drew perilously near.
The first time lightning flashed, perfectly in time with the thunder, Ezran paled and dropped his food, eyes moving unwillingly to the near-blinding light of the egg. The second time, he started trembling, and couldnât seem to stop, his arm shaking as he lifted his meal piece-by-piece to his mouth. The third time, he seemed to give up on the meal entirely, pushing it away and shuffling back to curl into Callumâs side. âSorry.â He whispered, huddling into a tiny and miserable-looking shape beside him. âI donât think I can eat any more, right now.â Bait, beside him, looked up and croaked worriedly.
Callum swallowed, then set his own food aside to turn and pull him into his chest. âThatâs okay, Ez.â He murmured, arms tightening around his brotherâs back. âYou justâŠrest. Until the storm passes a little.â His heart thudded heavy and sick with worry, and he shared a helpless look with Rayla over Ezranâs head.
After a moment, Rayla abandoned her meal as well, shifting around the campfire until she was beside them. âAnything we can do to help?â She asked, quietly.
Ez shifted in Callumâs arms. ââready doing it.â He mumbled, indistinct, but lifted his head just enough to peer out at her with half an eye. ââŠI canât block him out.â He explained, haltingly, and the half-visible shine of his pale blue eye blinked. âBut â it kind of helps. To have you guys in my head, too. Iâm trying toâŠâ He struggled for the right words. ââŠdistract myself? I guess.â
Callum considered it, fingers tightening at his brotherâs back. SoâŠif he couldnât shut off the too-intense draconian input, he could at least try to focus on whatever he got from them, instead? ââŠRayla?â He asked, a moment later, looking at her with open entreaty. Thankfully, she didnât hesitate, and moved over at once to settle herself at Ezranâs side.
She extended a hand, and slowly, Ez reached out to take it. He shivered, and his visible eye slipped closed. ââŠThanks.â He mumbled, still muffled in Callumâs clothing, and tugged her by the fingers until she was flush by their sides, all of them braced together in the middle of the storm. The wind howled outside their meagre shelter, eddies of it pulling at their hair, and the only thing louder was the thunder.
It wasnât the most intense thunderstorm Callum had ever seen, maybe. That honour went to a storm that had woken him up in the night a couple of years back, lightning shrieking through the sky almost every other second for what had seemed like an hour straight. Here, the lightning only seemed to flash once every minute or soâŠbut it was more than bad enough, what with how Ezran shuddered in his arms each and every time it happened, and the light of the Dragon Prince flared blue enough to colour the entire cave. He didnât know how long they sat there, how long Ezran trembled, before-
Light flared â and, even muffled by the snow-clouds, the crash of the thunder was so loud it hurt, a sound almost as potent as an explosion, right above them-
âThat was close,â Rayla uttered, in the ringing, howling strangeness of the moment after the thunderclap, where nothing sounded quite right- âThat was too close, I think that was-â
Ezran stiffened, abruptly, and cast a wild-eyed stare over to the egg, face pale and washed-out in the blue, and- âGuys,â he said, with a note of rising panic in his voice, âItâs gonna â I think â get back!â
There was a second of frantic scrambling, a second of confusion, a second of following the frantic movements of his brother-
Then the world went white with light and noise.
Callum didnât quite see it directly. But the searing white of the lightning, the detonation of sound â there could be no missing it. The smell of ozone was thick and stinking in the air, his ears were ringing and hurting, and he fell over into a tangle of limbs and scrambling bodies, half-insensate with shock-
When the world finally resolved enough for him to find sense in it again, it was too bright. Lightning had speared through the mountain, through their shelter of earth and stone, and hit the egg straight-on, and the shine of it-
In the seconds following that great shock of light and noise, the silence rang with a strange droning, like all the winds of the storm had collapsed their voices into a single awful note. Callum stared ahead, stunned wordless, at the incandescent spectacle of the dragon egg, shining in a thousand blinding blues, so bright that it hurt to look at it. He couldnât think what to say. He could barely do anything more than scramble up onto his hands from where heâd fallen, and stare.
âHeâs a lightning-rod.â Rayla said, shocked, into that painful silence. âA lightning-rod. Weâre in the middle of a storm and heâs a lightning-rod-â
It was then, slowly, that Callum noticed Ezran. Heâd fallen back too, was pushing himself up just the same, butâŠ
Something was wrong. Something was worse, worse than before, worse than the quiet and trembling, worse than the fear-
âEz?â He asked, tentative, and Raylaâs words cut off. She whirled around to follow his gaze, following it to Ezran, who was staring at the egg, whose distress was alive on his too-pale face. He was shaking terribly, skin pasty and washed queerly blue in the shining light, and his breath was coming in short, awful gasps.
He didnât answer. Instead, slowly, he curled up, knees to his chest, hands clamping up over his ears as though they could block out whatever he was feeling. His gaze ebbed into something distant and senseless, as though all the thoughts were going blank behind his eyes.
âEzran.â he said again, more sharply, throat going tight with anxiety as he scrambled over to his brother, fixing a hand on his shoulder. He shook him, but Ez justâŠmoved with the motion, limp, like a ragdoll. He didnât even look at him. âEz, whatâs wrong?â
Slowly, slowly, as if he had to force it, Ezran looked away from the egg. He looked away from the egg, and towards Callum, and â Callum flinched, because- âHe wants to hatch,â Ezran whispered, face too pale, eyes too bright-
It was on some strange reflex, but he instantly moved, situating himself between the egg and his brother, taking him by both shoulders this time. Bizarrely, it seemed to help, and a little coherence returned to his brotherâs too-bright eyes.
âHe wants to hatch,â Ezran repeated, face crumpling, half-way between pain and desperation-
He started crying before the next words even passed his lips-
âBut he canât.â
 ---
End chapter.
  Notes:
So actually I wrote the vast majority of this in the two weeks after posting ch17, after which my spoons vacated my body with a vengeance and didnât start to return until late last week. Iâve been making quota with like, editing, and worldbuilding, for half the month. Low inspiration is so much easier to work through than low spoons, my god.
Also I made a last minute decision to move a second Cairon and Sarli scene from the end of this chapter to next chapter, for pacing and tension build reasons. It made the chapter 2k shorter, which Iâm pleased about.
 Worldbuilding:
 Ictusian code
Rayla makes mention of something called âictusâ this chapter. This is to be elaborated on in the next chapter or two. I wonder if any of you can guess what it is.
 Skinning animals
It is indeed possible to skin animals by basically making a few cuts and pulling the skin off. It can be done before the animal is gutted, and is often preferred when you want an intact pelt out of the animal. In the absence of proper skinning knives and tools, itâs also probably the easiest method open to the kids. The rabbit skins could have been used later â but fleshing and tanning the skin on the pelts is decidedly beyond what the kids could manage on the move. The best they could do is to make sure the pelts stayed frozen solid until they had a chance to process them, which none of them reasonably expects would happen any time soon, so alas. Wasted fur.
 Callumâs sketchbook
If future canon shows us any significant old sketches in the book that I feel warrant mention, I might edit the relevant part of this chapter to include them. Examples from the actual book âCallumâs Sketchbookâ not included, because while that thing is full of cute character fluff and some fun context, I can in no way imagine it being a genuine in-universe thing.
On that note: I still donât have access to a copy of the s1 novelisation, but you can guarantee that Iâll include some new canon details and dismiss others. For instance, Iâm absolutely going to rename the Great Bay the Weeping Bay at some point, but I have no intention of making my elves vegetarian.
 Glow toads
I didnât plan the whole barbed-tongue thing, it just sort of happened, so I figure Iâm just gonna roll with it. Honestly making Baitâs biology a bit weirder is probably the only way I could actually develop interest in him, so why not.
 Some notes on strength
Callum thinks of Raylaâs past demonstrations of strength as âinhumanâ in this chapter. Iâd like to note that well-trained and well-prepared humans are fully capable of climbing a sheer cliff and sheer walls, but like. Without the right equipment, that shit is downright exceptional, and far from human norms. Itâs not something Callum expects from members of his species.
 Zym as a lightningrod
Azymondias is canonically a more potent lightningrod than an actual lightningrod, and Iâve applied that property to his egg too. This was foreshadowed earlier in the story when Callum casts lightning-magic and the egg seems to attract it. Chapter 5, maybe? Something like that.
 Dragon hatching conditions
Dragons as Iâve worldbuilt them have somewhat differing hatching requirements depending on whether theyâre a lesser dragon (aka wyvern) or an archdragon. Lesser dragons have a hatching condition, such as Sky dragons needing the eye of a storm to hatch. Archdragons have this hatching condition, but also a magical activation threshold that they need to reach before they can be born; basically, they need to absorb a lot of magic before theyâre ready to hatch. Theyâre born already obscenely magically powerful, whereas their lesser relatives are born quite weak, and only become terrifying forces of primal might as they mature.
Azymondias has been exposed to a great deal of Sky magic already from his years in his parentsâ care, and wasnât all that far from his activation threshold. Being in the middle of this storm, and then getting hit by lightning a couple of times, was plenty enough to bring him to that edge. He is now technically ready to hatchâŠbut he still needs his specific hatching condition met, i.e. a stormâs eye-structure. If he doesnât have that, heâs shit out of luck.