
60th Ymiden 717
It was later that afternoon, the sun was highest in the sky. Fridgar picked himself up off the floor and dragged the two Scythons through the forest with him after refilling on water. His sixth sense had been at the forefront of his mind the entire time, keeping an eye on Alistair from a distance. He hadn't returned yet, but he was still alive. That much was certain. In the time they'd been apart, Fridgar had found a spelunking hole next to the river that opened into a large cavern, tall enough for even him to stand up freely in.
It was dark, damp, cold and noise. There was an underground waterfall in there, likely flowing from the nearby river. using his portals and his mutations, he didn't have any light source but his portals to light the cave, so he was left to carefully wander while he was down there. One of the two intact Scython corpses was strung up in a tree outside while the other he kept in the cave, he didn't have enough rope. Just like he'd promised, the first of the Scython that were killed had been strung up for his rose, whenever he returned.
The two suns were starting to set, casting their amber light through the canopy. Fridgar was growing worried. Was Alistair being serious about not coming back? Had he really done that bad at being a husband? No, now wasn't the time to wallow in self-pity, he'd done enough of that for hours, even as Alistair left him in the dirt. This was the time to take responsibility for his actions. As much as he wanted to stand guard over their camp, he couldn't. Instead, he cast totem guardian and summoned the willow redbear to stand guard over the camp, giving the Lothar a good three breaks away before expending all his ether. Through the whole trial, he'd resolved not to use magic and had done it twice for the sake of his beloved.
Wearing nothing but his leather loin cloth, Fridgar set off in the direction that Alistair's energy felt strongest. Yes, he was leaving his strongest form behind and it was growing dark, but Alistair still wasn't back. He could be hurt or out of ether or stuck somewhere, and for that he needed to take risks. Allowing the camp to be compromised and having some wild animal steal their Scython carcasses would be as good as condemning Alistair to no food for a trial.
he carried the femur of the mauled scything carcass, snapped on one end and sharpened to a point. it made for an effective puncturing weapon, especially as Alistair had taken their own blade when he left Fridgar alone. As he walked, the familiar sound of footprints behind him could be heard. For fucks sake was all he could think of as a large beast prowled behind him for what might have been the third time since Alistair left. Fridgar would strafe behind a tree and raise his bone dagger, waiting for what was obviously another stekir to roll by.
Sure enough, the half-cat-half-fish thing walked past the tree, still dripping from having stepped out of the river. Before it could even look at him, Fridgar charged his fist with palenon's lightning and drove the bone dagger into the body of the creature so hard that several of its bones shattered, no matter where he stabbed it. The beast would scramble, hissing wildly as it shrieked with pain before being brutally stabbed repeatedly all over its stupid fish-cat body. When he was done, Fridgar licked the blood from his bone dagger and walked away, leaving the creature still alive... barely.
he continued to walk for what felt like twenty bits before coming to a tree with the strange indent and its roots. Fridgar would lower his body, moving around it a little as he tried to get a feel for Alistair. This was him, slumped against the trunk of a tree. He was alive but... was he in one piece? Fridgar slipped his bone dagger into the edge of his loincloth before proceeding carefully toward the silent man. He stood at his side for a trill, looking down to him. Before the noble even looked back at him, Fridgar lowered onto his backside next to the noble and wrapped him in his arms, providing what was probably the first sliver of warmth that he'd had all evening. Fridgar didn't say anything, he only cuddled. Words had gotten the pair into this mess and cuddles would get them out.
