I braced for the burn, pain just another part of life when
you have something people want. Or you want something, because nothing ever
comes for free, and crossing that barrier had to come at a cost. The light was
warm, then warmer, like the sun on a summer’s day at noon and it stung my eyes
just as badly so I squeezed them shut. Sweat sprang up on my forehead, and I
shook as I took another step, sure that was when it would start.
A shadow fell over my face, cooling the warmth, and my foot
came down onto something crunchy. I gasped, opening my eyes. The source of the
light hid behind more trees, just like the one that had been floating in the
sky above the path, but this golden radiance gleamed in random patterns in the
air and striped the ground. I wiped my hand through some quickly but… nothing.
My skin was milky as always, not even a hint of pink.
The path was framed on either side by glowing rocks, and the
snow crunched under my boots like gravel. Snow mounded between the trunks and
into the distance. I scanned the trees, but the ill-omens were gone. It was so
warm, I had to put my bag down and take off my extra clothes.
I dropped the ties of my bag into the snow and grimaced, my
fingertips still chilled a dangerous white. I reached into the crunchy snow of
the path to pick it up, then frowned. It was… warm. Well, not exactly, but not cold.
It felt most like fluff, similar to soft fuzz from a broken cattail or shorn
wool from a sheep before it was carded and spun.
Scooping up the tie, I closed my small pack and then slung
it back over my shoulder. Was all the snow warm? I crept to the side of the
path, wincing with each step no matter how gingerly I tried to place my feet. I
reached over a glowing rock and touched the snow outside the path. “Brr!”
Nope, not all warm. Or not all snow here wasn’t real snow?
If only the witches or wizards who’d taken me had trained me
rather than draining me. My magic had to be good for more than farm tokens, spelling
livestock, and bewitching familiars.
“It is.” A deep voice behind me was the first indicator that
I’d spoke aloud and that I wasn’t alone.
I whirled, heart racing, mouth agape and bent, poised to run…
somewhere else. The voice was a young man’s, but the glowing being before me
was a golden stag, with wide antlers that boasted many tips. So beautiful! He’d
make a fine prize and provide many meals.
“I don’t think I’d like to be eaten, thanks. At least, not
for dinner.”
Clamping my lips shut, I swallowed hard. Had I just offended
him? Should I apologize? “Please forgive my words. I didn’t mean to say that
aloud, and I would never dream of harming you.” A glowing stag as magestic as
he? Never.
No matter how much my belly pinched with hunger.
A strange laugh, almost human, came out of the stag. “I bet
you’re hungry.” I hadn’t said that aloud, I was sure of it. Maybe my expression
gave me away? I always tried to hide how I felt, but I so often failed, leading
to punishment. “Come.”
“Come where?”
“Winter’s Haven, of course. Where else do you think this
path goes? I was sent to bring you the rest of the way.”
“Who sent you?”
“You shall see,” was all he would say.
Fortunately, we didn’t have far to go. The path rose for a
time, challenging the last of my stamina. I caught my breath when we emerged
between the branches of two trees that interwove in an arch over the path and
stared down into a dell.
Somehow, the land itself created a home for those who lived
there. I saw structures in trees, like birdhouses but nearly human-sized, while
some trees had huge arching roots that grew into tangled webs poking into the
ground for round cottages, set with doors and everything! There were stone
buildings along a rock wall, but I couldn’t see any seams at this distance,
with vibrant mossy roofs that draped over the eaves.
All along the pathway were other beings in different forms.
Some glowed white, or black, or white and black like the ill-omens who had
guided me to the entry to Winter’s Haven while others gleamed gold like the
stag who’d come to greet me. I gasped when one ill-omen, maybe even one of the ones
who’d come to me, hopped out of her little wood hut in the branches of a tree
and flew toward the ground.
Before she landed, a white and black swirl of magic
surrounded her, and then she was a human. Pale skin, dark hair… she could be my
long-lost sister, if my sisters actually looked like me. “Is that— Did she—” I
couldn’t finish either question, because the stag at my side was now a young
man with golden skin over solid muscles and sun-kissed hair, his eyes a light honey-brown
just pressed from the hive.
“Welcome to Winter’s Haven. Once you stop having your magic
syphoned, you’ll find your own form and begin to transform too, don’t worry.”
“I will?” Wait. “You’re a dyrpath?”
He smiled. “Yes, dyrpath can also be born on the longest day
of the year, on the stroke of noon. And we were all once like you: scared,
hungry, so new to a life free from the abuse that the outside world heaps upon
dyrpath.”
“How?”
“The gods, maybe, in recompense for the world’s cruelty, gave
us Winter’s Haven as a refuge. We try to find and save others, but the protective
magic means you have to make the choice to take the path toward a new life.”
At first, I’d just planned to run away. But maybe he was right, in the end, I was running toward something instead. The dreams I’d heard whispered for years gave me just enough hope to take the first step, and now here I was. Pure joy and relief, feelings so foreign but so powerful, took hold and tears stung my eyes even as I grinned. I turned toward the stag.
“Thank you for helping save me. My name is Jophiel. What’s yours?”
Want more flash?
Julie Lynn Hayes
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