
I'm not my Season
What felt like hours of wandering caught up with Bernard's limbs as he leaned against a tree trunk. The dull ache spread through his muscles, seeping deep into his bones. He was panting hard. The sinews in his legs burned with every movement, and his sides stung each time his lungs laboured to push out used up breaths. He couldn't remember the last time he'd stopped to rest since he left the small hut that was now his home.
The trees here were larger than the ones closer to the edge of the forest, and the underbrush less easily traversed. The treetops could barely be seen between the branches, and there was no trodden path was in sight for as far as the trees allowed eyes to see. For the first time in a while, birds sang and leaves rustled here and there as paws disturbed them.
The sounds were distant--Bernard wasn't as light on his feet as he used to be--but the knowledge they were there at all was calming. His previous residence, Tion's third moon, had been a barren world of ice and rocks, and some part of Bernard was more content for having left it behind in favour of New Holstice. A different part was more miserable for it.
The forest was alive, vibrant and verdant. It was an ecosystem in perfect equilibrium and harmony, where life breathed without intrusion. Save for Bernard, who now stood among it as a trespasser. He was not part of its balance anymore. He'd become an observer.
A voice called out a word just above Bernard. He didn't understand the meaning, but it got his attention. The voice was high pitched and echoed in a way that made it seem like the voice faded in and out of reality for the duration of a single word. Whoever it was, they weren't (near-)human. He shot a glance upward. There was nothing in the trees, save for a pale glow that belonged to a small, winged creature. It vaguely reminded him of a moth.
Another voice echoed. At first, Bernard thought the same person was calling out again, but it had come from a new direction. There, another one of the creatures drifted by on the wind. He recognized the word. It had been a name. Then another voice called out, and another, and soon Bernard found himself surrounded by the things.
The small swarm danced between the trees and around Bernard, seemingly spurring him on to follow. All the voices coalesced into an ethereal crescendo that rose and waned with their movements. They continued to dance around him for several moments, always flying off in a wide arc away, always in the same direction, only to come back to circle him before their dance started again. The pattern confirmed his suspicions. They were beckoning for him to follow.
With one hand on his hip-holster, Bernard kept resigned himself to their request. The swarm kept up a loose dance around him, though their numbers were so great that he could barely make out the trees ten feet ahead of him.
He walked for a few minutes, muscles still aching, until the sea of moths parted just as suddenly as it had appeared. The swarm dispersed to reveal the edge of a forest clearing bathed in bright light. A blue pillar of energy rose from a circular shrine of stone. Arcs of light played along its surface, and moths seemed to dance in and out of it at will. The entire place seemed to be full of them, their voices repeating names to an audience of none.
Bernard stepped clear of the forest edge, towards the light beam. He wasn't sure what to make of it all. What did these creatures want from him, and why did they guide him here?
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