Serelai couldn’t help but smile when she saw the faint silhouette of
Maraan rising out of the haze. Relief spilled from her in a long, dramatic sigh, half laughter and half exacerbated groan.
"Thank goodness," she muttered.
They slipped down behind the ridge, finding a hollow between the dunes that promised at least some shelter from the wind. Serelai set her satchel down and tugged free a small folded tarp and a crooked stick. Hardly the work of a seasoned traveller, but it did the job. Within minutes, a meagre sort of tent stood, a small patch of shadow in the sand. She dropped a blanket beneath it, kicked off her boots, and flopped down with a long, theatrical groan that came from somewhere deep in her chest.
"Heavens," she breathed, eyes closing as her shoulders sank into the cloth.
"I think I’ve lost feeling in half my body. Oof, my feet..."
For a few quiet moments she stayed there, just breathing, allowing her muscles to finally stop trembling. The ache in her feet still pulsed with every heartbeat, but she’d never felt so utterly grateful to finally
stop. When she finally opened her eyes again, she caught Lilette’s pale figure in the dimming light and pushed herself up on her elbows.
"Suppose we should make a fire," she said as she reached into her satchel and pulled out a few small, dark wooden sticks wrapped in a cloth bundle. She crouched down, scraped a hollow into the sand and lined it with loose stones, setting the sticks in the middle.
She whispered something then under her breath, strange and otherworldly to those unfamiliar with it; the soft, lilting syllables of
Ïzä, her patron’s fae tongue. At once, violet fire curled from her fingertips, sliding like liquid silk across the wood. The flame clung and twisted, bright but strangely cold-edged, licking at the air rather than the timber, which refused to burn. It shimmered like an illusion, alive but impossibly still. Serelai sat back and sighed, dusting her hands.
"That's better."
The glow threw soft colour across her face, violet and gold, and she blinked down at the sand that caught between her fingers. Her nose wrinkled.
"Ugh. I hate this. So coarse and rough and irritating. Sand gets everywhere."
She looked up at Lilette then, observing her stature and the way she held herself. She was indeed unusual, but Sere couldn't quite understand why.
"How are you not cold? I suppose nun outfits are made for all sorts of climate, huh..."