EPILOGUE
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Ember scraped a sharp stone across the branch, another piece of wood curling away beneath his hands. It fell to the mossy dirt amid a pile of shavings, slling of newly cut timber and pleasant mories. He didn't need to use the chipped stone, having acquired a knife and various other implents along his travels, but it was a sacred experience which held mories of the first wooden weapon he had carved many sumrs past. Pitch clung to his roughened fingers, but it didn't bother him.
He enjoyed working with his hands.
A tendril of smoke wafted up toward the roof of tangled boughs overhead, remnants from their fire of the night before; it had almost burnt out, and only a few smouldering coals remained. He would kick dirt over it before they left.
He flexed his wrist, admiring the sturdy branch. It would make a fine spear when he was through, and already the end was quite sharp. He would be grateful to be ard with a familiar weapon again, especially in these strange lands. Strange, and stranger still. Each footstep carried him farther away from Sisters Mountain, until not even Ky knew what lay between them and the nearest town…
Ember took a deep breath and closed his eyes, resting the sharpened stick against a bent knee. The air was cooler here, and sweet, the way it often slled after a rainfall—but there was another scent which mingled with the trees and loamy earth, sothing fresh and clean.
The ocean, Ky said. When you sll it, you will rember it always, and ever it will be beckoning you to return to those shores.
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He glanced across the smouldering coals and circle of stones, where she lay curled into herself, her chin resting on her hands. He no longer blushed after her from afar, resigned to fleeting touches, but quiet monts like these reminded him of those days of eternal night. Her lashes twitched in visions he knew not, a sight which usually compelled him to brush his fingers over her dreaming eyes when they lay tangled together beneath the moon; their closeness still seed a foolish fancy at tis.
When a faint light twinkled through the branches above him, he glanced up, expecting to see the last of a glimring star.
Instead, a luminous orb drifted overhead. It bobbed among the branches like an errant dandelion puff blown on the wind, though the forest was calm. As if attracted to the warmth, the bubble of bluish green light floated toward the fire, leisurely drifting down through the boughs. Then it lofted above Ky's chosen nest. Ember tensed, his hand tightening on the spear, but the little wisp only brushed across her face. She sighed as the glow washed over her shimring cheek, but did not wake.
It wandered across the clearing in his direction.
Ember loosened his grasp on the spear and watched it silently, relaxed but cautious. It flickered, and he reached out, drawn by so innate curiosity. A thrum of energy rippled through his fingertips as his hand passed through the orb, and he took a breath, blinking quietly.
The wisp bobbed gently before his face several tis, and he found himself wondering if it was the sa orb which had co to hear Ky speak and warned him away from the mountain path, what seed so long ago. Then it drifted up and away through the sparkling branches of the trees and out of sight, fading into the early glow of dawn.
A few birds twittered in the branches, beginning their morning chorale, and the world was touched with gold and silver dew.
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