Beauty of the Snow: Part One by extreme_fj0rd
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Snow fell softly onto the trees and bushes of Neopia Central
Park. A thick blanket of it already covered most of the ground, and the wind was
hard at work pushing the still-falling snowflakes into the nooks and crannies
missed by the earlier snowfall. Drifts heaped themselves over small shrubs, and
pockets of hidden snow fell on anyone unwary enough to walk beneath a tree's spread
boughs. Those travellers who were in the park were in a hurry, muffled in coats
and scarves and hats against the cold and the snow. Their paws hit the frozen
ground with sharp thuds, and their heads stayed bent, as if somehow that might
help lessen the cold or the snow.
One Aisha walked alone through the woods. Her
white-coloured pelt melted into the snow, so that only her large, pale blue
eyes were to be seen at all. She moved gracefully through the drifts, hardly
disturbing them; though a path of pawprints trailed behind her, they were soft
indentations, hardly making a mark on the snow. What depth the pawprints had
was quickly filled by the falling snow.
Ears trailing behind her, the Aisha stepped
peacefully between two bushes and brushed a light paw against the trunk of a
tree. Her touch, gentle as it was, dislodged a few snowflakes from those encrusted
on it, and they tumbled end over end towards the ground.
Her expression softening to a gentle smile,
the Aisha knelt in the snow to watch their elegant progress through the air;
they settled to rest on a drift, and she rose and walked once more through the
snow.
The faint, treble voices of a choir singing
wound their way through the trees to her ears, and she turned towards the voices
with faint surprise and, after a moment, delight. It had been years--ah, years
and years--since the first snowfall had called children from their homes to
sing for her and the snow.
Moving quickly now, brushing now one paw, then
the other, across tree trunks in her path, she made her way through the snow.
Her path intersected those trails that had been paved over for convenience,
and she winced and hurried across these with even more haste, her distaste showing
in expression and in the way she picked out the spots with the deepest snowdrifts
to step upon. The center of the park was not far; it was not a large wilderness,
just a corner of Neopia Central that had been left to itself for an age and
eventually tamed by a respectful crew of gardeners. Stepping around a large
oak tree, the Aisha paused to look across the cobblestoned square at the small
group of pets who, rosy-cheeked, let out the music inside of them.
The Aisha let out a small sigh at the beauty
of the piece, still resting her paw upon the oak beside her, and leant forward
a bit as the choir, glancing up from their books, rested their eyes familiarly
on the passersby. These all hurried past quickly, barely even sparing a moment
to nod gruffly in acknowledgement of the choir's festive spirit or perhaps a
few Neopoints to drop into the hand of the tallest, rosiest-cheeked soprano
whose voice soared above the rest. This Techo would always give them a beautiful
smile of thanks as they hurried past, then open her mouth once more, letting
out a cloud of white mist as she joined her fellows in the song.
Watching, the Aisha's eyes widened at this ritual
of thanks. Clearly this was some fee that passersby paid in lieu of staying
to watch the choir sing, she realized, and frowned as yet another hurried Eyrie
strode up to press a few coins into the Techo singer's paw. She glanced around
for some means by which to stop this absurdity, but found nothing to hand save
the snow that had drifted over the bushes and trees next to her and the cobblestones
of the square.
Placing one paw carefully upon the deepest drift
nearby, the Aisha stepped out from underneath the shadow of the trees. Another
two swift steps, and she smiled: it was working better than she had thought
it might. Turning her face up to the clouded, gray sky, she revelled in the
snowy weather and took another step.
Next thing she knew, she was lying on her back
in a snowdrift, and her back and paws ached from contact with the rough stone
cobbles of the square. Only the backs of her legs had been spared, she realized,
and only because the patch of ice her paw had slipped upon was there. She remained
lying down, more from surprise than pain, and stared upwards at the snow.
"Oh, Fyora!" a concerned voice said, and swift
pawsteps disturbed the drift the Aisha was lying in. "Hello? Are you all right?"
Turning her gaze upon her would-be rescuer,
the Aisha's eyes widened. The Techo bending worriedly over her was the same
that featured prominently in the choir.
"Are you okay?" the singer reiterated, her gaze
growing more concerned as the Aisha did not answer.
Giving a careful nod, the Aisha sought out a
patch or two of snow and put her paws on them to push herself upright. The Techo
started backwards as the Aisha scrambled up to a sitting position, and then
to stand.
"Are... um, are you sure?" the Techo asked,
risking a glance back at the choir behind her, which had stopped singing and
was watching them.
The Aisha nodded again, her eyes fixed on the
Techo. The singer nodded in reply, tentatively, and then stepped backwards again
in surprise.
"Why, you don't have a coat--aren't you cold?"
she asked, frowning in concern. "And no boots, either--oh, you must be freezing!"
Shaking her head, the Aisha stepped backwards,
and her paw hit a patch bare of snow. With a wince she quickly removed her paw
to a drift of snow, but the Techo had seen the grimace.
"Come on," she said, commandingly. "I'll take
you to my house, and you can get warmed up. My owner will give you one of my
old coats, too," she added, and turned back to her choir. "I have to go," she
called to them, and waved a paw.
Reluctantly, they began to sing again, but their
sound was clearly lacking for the Techo's voice. The Techo, whose name was Inga,
paid this no mind and turned to the Aisha.
"Come on," she repeated, and stepped away. The
Aisha made no move to follow immediately; when the Techo turned back, perplexed,
she saw that the mysterious white Aisha had disappeared. Then, glimpsing some
movement, she turned her head and saw the Aisha picking her way around the edge
of the square--where the snow drifts were deepest.
With a faint laugh, Inga hurried to the Aisha.
"The stones are warmer, I'm sure--" she started.
The Aisha shook her head definitively.
Inga paused. "Ah... or... not," she ended weakly,
and followed the Aisha's meandering path around the square and down the short
trail from there to the exit of the Park, which opened onto Market Street. This
road was more populated than the park's trails, though most shoppers still hurried
at their business; owners and pets hastened through the falling snow to the
doors of shops and pulled those doors open with relief to step into the warmth.
Inga cast these shoppers a wistful glance, and
then looked back at the Aisha, who stood precisely on the last drift of snow
before the street.
"Come on," Inga prompted, holding her paw out
for the Aisha. Shaking her head, the other pet refused to come. With a sigh,
the Techo glanced around. "Do you want... is the pavement too cold for you?"
she asked, with a faint sense of triumph, and was relieved when the Aisha gave
a hesitant nod.
"Okay," the Techo said, glancing around the
busy Market Street, "I'll, um... I'll go buy some shoes for you and I'll be
right back." She judged the Aisha's feet to be around a size six, she thought,
and made a placating gesture. "Just... stay here, okay?"
The Aisha nodded obediently and watched as Inga
darted off, melting into the crowd. It was where she belonged, the Aisha thought
wistfully, and then turned back towards the square where the choir still sang.
Though it lacked the full-bodied sound it had had while Inga lent her voice
to it, it was still song, and it called to her.
With just one last glance at the street, the
Aisha quickly slipped into the woodland and hurried back towards the central
square of the Park.
When Inga returned, bearing a pair of boots in
one paw, she scanned the sidewalk quickly and gave a frustrated sigh. She turned
to glance around Market Street, and then turned back to the park, wondering
where the Aisha had gone. It wasn't as if the Aisha meant anything to her, she
rationalized, but she hated to see anyone so ill equipped for the cold.
With a sigh, she stepped along the path, glancing
between the trees for a hint of movement. None came; she made her way back to
the square without getting so much as a glimpse of white fur against snow--not
that that meant she hadn't seen the Aisha, Inga realized with a grimace. Even
under perfect conditions, it would be hard to spot a white-coated pet against
the snow--and these were quite definitely not perfect conditions.
She stopped at the entrance to the square and
looked around, watching the woods carefully. There--a flicker of motion. With
a sigh of relief that puffed out of her mouth in white mist, Inga hurried over
to the white Aisha. The Aisha's eyes were trained on the choir, and she didn't
hear Inga's approach until it was too late: the Techo came up quickly and shoved
the boots roughly into the Aisha's arms.
"Here," Inga said gruffly, turning away to cast
a wistful look at the choir. They were picturesque, silhouetted by the falling
snow that gathered on coat collars and scarves, but they were missing several
of the notes and the sopranos were clearly suffering from the lack of Inga's
voice. With a wince, she turned back to the Aisha, who still stared down at
the boots in her arms.
Inga sighed. "They're shoes--boots," she said
patiently and took them back from the unresisting Aisha. "Here." She fumbled
with the laces and held the boot out. The Aisha stared at it for a moment, and
then stooped to take it from the Techo. Inga watched the Aisha hopefully; to
her joy, the other pet slid the boot carefully onto her foot. It seemed to fit.
Inga gave the other snow boot to the Aisha and watched her put that on as well.
Laces trailing, the Aisha stared down at her booted feet and stamped at the
snow experimentally. She had lost contact with it, standing in these contraptions
instead of simply on the snow, the Aisha realized, and leant down to brush a
snowdrift with her paw simply for the contact with her snow.
Hesitantly, she took a step forward, and her
eyes widened as no ache came to the soles of her feet from the contact with
the cobblestones. They may have cut her off from the world of the snow, but
they let her into the world of pavement.
Beginning to smile at the boots, a little, the
Aisha glanced back at Inga. The Techo gave her a nod.
"Well," Inga said, clapping gloved paws together,
"let's go back to my place so you can get warm."
To be continued...
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