Thursday, March 17, 2016

New World Starter Kit

The storm outside howled through the woods, bending trees and stripping leaves from the branches.  Leaves, small branches and unidentifiable debris pelted the side of the small cabin nestled deep in the woods, drumming on the wall in counterpoint to the rain hammering the roof.  With a creak and a snap, one of the wooden tiles pulled away from the roof, breaking off and sailing into the night.
Hunched over a scrap of parchment laid out on the cabin’s one small table, Sam scowled as a draft gusted through one of the many cracks in the cabin’s walls and seemed to creep straight up her back.  Shifting awkwardly on her stool, she tried to pull her tunic down to cover the gap between the top of her britches and the bottom of her shirt.  It was a useless gesture, done more out of habit than out of any real expectation of success in protecting herself from the random icy daggers stabbing her in the small of her back.
Sparing a second scowl for the candle guttering on the table next to her, she scribbled faster, trying to finish her note before it went out and she was left entirely in the dark.  Well, she’d banked the coals well enough, heaped them together and covered them with enough ash to last a day or so.  It would have to do.  Finishing with a signature cramped into the little gap she’d left at the bottom of the page, she carefully folded the parchment and addressed it simply, “Mom and Dad,” then propped it on the table, in front of the inkwell.
Suppressing a squeak as another cold gust shot right up her spine, she reconsidered the placement of her note and laid it flat on her table, and weighted it down with a pewter cup, decorated on one side with a small cat, and on the other side with elegant script.  Rising, Sam took the candle with her as she donned coat and cloak, pulling the hood forward.  The near-constant gusting winds nearly blew the candle out when she stuck it on the small shelf next to the door.  Surveying the one-room cabin one final time, Sam pulled on a heavy pack, then reached for the sword belt hanging on a peg next to the candle.  Face hardening, she pulled it off of the peg, and buckled it around her waist.  It felt awkward, too heavy and unbalanced. 
It didn’t matter.
The pewter cup on her letter caught the candle’s light, and she felt a pang of guilt, but there was no way she could take it with her.  Nothing that was not essential could be allowed to weight her down.  Dropping one hand to the hilt of the sword at her waist, she caught up the candle and blew it out.  Perversely, she had to try three times to get the damn thing to go out.  Carefully reaching around to a side-pocket on her pack, she slipped the candle in by touch, then opened the door.
Immediately, the wind seized it, tearing the handle from her hand and banging it all the way open, smacking it into the wall.  Stepping through, Sam had to grasp the handle with both hands and pull hard to get the door to shut against the wind.  Throwing the latch from the outside, Sam slipped the string she had prepared around the hook and tied it off.  It wouldn’t keep out any bandits, but it would keep the natural course of nature from disrupting the cabin that had so briefly been her home.  Besides, if she sealed the cabin up too tightly, her parents would never find the note she had left for them.
It wasn’t like there was anything worth stealing in there anyways.
Not anymore.
The remembered glint of candlelight off of the side of the cup hung in her mind’s eye as Sam fought through the wind and into the night.
There was work to be done, and delaying wasn’t going to make it any easier.


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