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Friendship is born at that mont when one person says to another: What! You too? I thought I was the only one.

C.S. Lewis

In the end, the giants did not return till the next morning. Still, it allowed us ti to process the bears carcass, preserve the at as best we could, cure the hide, and clean the fur to add another layer to our sledge. Magic made many impossibilities possible, and I couldnt quite imagine how challenging our stranding would have been without it. The main problem was carrying all that we had managed to acquire. The sledge was piled high.

We were awake and waiting when they finally crested the ridgeline and descended to where they had first t us. Treading with speed and purpose, their long strides soon ate up the distance, the snow no impedint to their progress. It was going to be a challenge to keep up if they kept up that speed all the way ho. It already took two steps to every one of Namirs. With their stride length, I would have to take at least four, maybe even five, to keep up. Namir would be pulling on the sledge sooner rather than later. I wondered whether they would be more anable than he was. I was all for training, but it was freezing and I could only run so fast for so long despite my excessive stats and traits.

Ver heill ok Saell. The leaders voice bood out as he approached once more. I apologise for the delay. There were unexpected delays due to unusual movents. He opened. Im glad to see that you waited for our return.

Unexpected movents? Namir quizzed.

Of so of the more stationary beasts. Their territories are shifting. He explained their delay.

Do you keep track of animals locations? I asked. That seed to be a little bit of an impossible task without modern technology and tracking devices.

Not the animals. They pass and move too quickly to keep more than a cursory note of their haunts and migrations. No, the ones we have to watch for are the magical beasts that have developed cores and abilities. They tend to stick to the locations that allowed them to rise to prominence, but so of them seem to be shifting. He comnted.

I worried that our arrival sohow triggered it, but he did not seem to think we were the cause of anything untoward. Or at least he did not ntion it.

Regardless. We are here now and keen to return ho after our patrol. This will have been a couple of weeks for us, and we are all missing our hearths. His voice bood. Are you ready to set forth? I hope that you can keep up. In fact, let us pull that contraption of yours. He said as he knelt down to the sledge, attaching a rope to the bone ring at the front of our sledge and fixing it to the back of his belt, without asking. There, that should help you keep up with us. He said almost patronisingly of our diminutive stature.

Yes. I grinned in excitent. I was going to get pulled after all. I had no complaints.

Not so fast. Namir lifted up out of the sledge. Seemingly disgruntled by the sowhat condescending manner in which the giants leader had taken control of our supplies and the group. Youll harm your progress to rely on others for your rescue. He pointed out to .

We rescued ourselves. This is just making my life a little easier. I argued back.

The system asures all. He countered. Until we reach their village, you should make the most of the experience and pull your weight for as long as possible.

I turned to the giant for support.

Dont look at . Your kin can train you better than I can. he avoided taking any responsibility for resolving our family dispute. If he thinks you can keep up, then who am I to argue otherwise. He shrugged disbelievingly.

Keep up for as long as you can. He smiled at Namir.

Accepting the challenge, Namir surged forward ahead of the group, and I could see the giant reassessing at least one of our abilities to keep up with their group. Hah, He chuckled as he stepped forward after him.

Give it your best. The son said supportively as his father set out after Namir, soon drawing alongside him; seeing as he was waiting for him on the ridgeline, not knowing our direction, but they did not race ahead once they aligned. They made an odd pair of walkers, the giant and the beastkin.

I was sure I looked even more distinctively different with my walking companion, the giant and the human child. Despite his smaller stature compared to his father, he still towered above even more than the giant leader did to Namir. I was running in order to keep up with his sons steady plod. My stats kept from being out of breath, but I could tell this would be a long day.

The final two giants brought up the rear. Silently watching our rear trail and scanning the sides for any unexpected dangers.

You know you never told us your nas, I comnted to the giant leaders son.

Neither did you, Kai. He replied haltingly, and I recalled Namir giving my na away when he called for to step forth.

You have at a disadvantage then. I pointed out.

Yes, we do. He replied simply as he grinned in return, either at the fact that I was running to keep up with his steady strides or at the fact that he was still continuing to obfuscate their nas from us.

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Greetings, oh northern giant of the endless ice. My na is Kai, and my guardian is Namir. May I have the honour of knowing the nas of my companions as we race across the endless ice of Tramontana? I flexed a few of the social skills I had been forced to learn under the direction of Lady Acacia.

My companion stumbled as the silliness of the situation, my skills hit him or as he attempted to understand my verbose vernacular either way, he replied. My na is Erik Bjrnson, Son of Bjrn. He gestured at the giant leading alongside Namir. Trailing us is Ivar, He looked over his left shoulder at the giant following behind us on our left. And Ragnar. He looked at the giant behind to the right of our trail.

A pleasure to et you. I bowed my head truly in acknowledgent of that fact. I was looking forward to seeing more of their nations customs, skills and, most importantly, magic. Lady Acacia had been able to teach us Elvish Spellsong, Humanities spellcraft, and the most basic Dwarvish runes we had been able to lift from the ships we had pilfered. The stone glyphs of the giants had been sothing she had been unable to impart.

A pleasure to et you, too. He cautiously replied, testing the words as he said them clearly, unused to conversing too much in Bussola. It may be the common tongue for the central kingdoms of the compass continents, but we were traversing its edges, and it showed if only in the limited vocabulary of our companions.

Before they had returned, Namir had suggested that we keep the fact that I could speak the giant tongue hidden a little longer until we knew whether we could trust the sincerity of our giant guides.

Where are we heading? I asked, then added Going? as he seed to struggle to understand the first questions verb.

Ho. He replied simply.

I would struggle to draw much out of him without revealing my ability to speak his own tongue. But I was not quite ready to give up just yet.

"Your father is a giant, your mother?" I asked, referring to the earlier conversation by his dad.

"My mother is a giant too." He replied a little defensively.

His father had said it didn't matter, but maybe it did, despite his assurance. "Yes, but you are smaller than the others." I probed, possibly a little insensitively. He was younger, it was true, but also noticeably shorter compared to his father despite the fact that he towered over the two of us.

"And your mother?" I turned the question around.

"Half beastkin, half-elf," I answered unashadly. If we were going to lean into Namir's idea of what my imaginary genealogy might be, I might as well make the most of it in explaining my rather unusual collection of racial traits.

"Half and half?" He questioned, raising his eyebrows, surprised. "But you look human."

"Yes, my father." I grimaced, rembering the role I was supposed to be playing. "Not the best father." my frown elicited sympathy from the young giant.

" too." He replied in commiseration,

I raised my brow in surprise and he seed to realise that he had implied his father was equally 'not nice.'

"No, no. too. My mother is half-giant, half-dwarf." He explained away his smaller that comparison stature. At the sa ti, seeming to emphasise our similarities.

"Thanks." I smiled, and he nodded in our mutual understanding and sowhat similar situations.

I struggled to see how that could have co about. But it wasn't sothing I could politely raise in conversation with her son, especially with his limited vocabulary. Nevertheless, I had laid the groundwork for our story, so I put my head down and ran alongside them. How long would I be able to keep this up? They continued to stride forward across the desolate, icy wasteland while I slid across the top of it.

I would have to find out.

. . .

I made it up until they called a break for lunch, surprising their leader Bjrn and possibly even Namir with my ability to keep going despite my small stature and the number of steps I had to take for each of their strides. The only things that allowed to keep going alongside them besides my high stats and supplentary traits were my skis and the ability to slide over the snow rather than plough through it. The breaks at the ends of the downhills, as well as being able to glide forward and catch up with Bjrn and Namir were always welco whenever they ca. The giants seed to be fascinated with the idea of my skis. The sledge made sense to them, and they had seen its like before, but the skis were sothing novel and new. I was not completely sure that they would work as well for them as they did for . After all, they were significantly heavier than I was and would require sothing suitably strong enough to stand up to the punishnt they would receive underneath a giants foot. I could see many of them snapping in the future and or not being viable due to their extre weight. Giants might have the racial trait strength on their status, but it certainly had added both size and weight to their physique.

As we sat in the lee of a stone outcropping eating a hast lunch, Namir was quizzed about my ability to keep up. Quarter cast, you say? I would have expected him to need to be carried by now despite the unusual contraptions strapped to his feet he is using to slide over the snow. He clearly carries more than one trait and even then . . . Bjrn asked Namir ignoring in favour of conversing with who he viewed as the adult and leader of our group. But even then he paused before accusing of anything outright.

As my daughters son, I know he carries super senses and vitality. A dalliance with an elf in my younger years, far from ho. One of many reasons I was unaware of her existence, capture and his existence until it was too late. As for the rest, . . . He shrugged. Turning to continued, It could be any realm of possibility.

Hmmm, Bjrn pondered. But whatever it was he kept to himself.

I took the hint. I was clearly operating outside of the realms of possibility, even if it was Namirs idea to start off with and only with my physical attributes.

Can I have a lift after lunch? I asked.

Yes of course, his rumbling voice warmly answered.

After eating, I buried into the bearskin rugs and wolf pelts wrapping our sledge, it was welcomingly warm and terribly tempting to fall asleep as the sledge was pulled across the icy wastelands.

Nyx, though was not willing to let sleep until she managed to arrange herself on top of to her liking. She had been hiding out in the sledge as it was the warst place besides within my clothes. I had been avoiding using my magic too much in front of the others. It had made this mornings trek a little colder than I had been used to. Nyx rapidly realised that the sledge was the warst place to be and retreated there before the giants had even appeared when my normal bubble of warmth was not forthcoming.

Now nestled together, she endeavoured to find the warst spot above my chest and enjoying the warmth, I, too, pulled the pelts over my head and snuggled down to sleep to the rhythmic rocking of the sledge sliding over the waves carved into the ice and snow by the wind of the endless ice.

With nothing else to occupy my mind and exhausted from the mornings trek I succumbed to the warmth and welcod the senseless slumber.

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