In civilized places, around civilized campfires, when people described the people or stories they liked, one word surfaced again and again.
Bravery.
Sometimes it was treated as an inherent quality which some people simply had and others didn’t, like black hair or brown eyes. If you had bravery, you were a hero, or else the sort of villain audiences loved to hear about.
Other times, bravery was something to be found, like a rock on the ground which could turn the tide of a story if used the right way. The thing that turned farmboys into city-savers and mothers into earth-shakers.
Then, sometimes, bravery was built, like a skill which could be learned. Cowards, if they were good people under all that shivering and mumbling, could become brave if they worked at it. Perhaps save a life. Earn the favor of an immortal. Never stay the same, though, because what use did bravery have for small things like this?
Jinyel stood upon another Scalvoris shore, this one with unnaturally green sand. Unlike the blue sand of Egilrun, this beach seemed to have no distinguishing quality except that it was cold and wet, which he did not enjoy at all on account of being barefoot.
His boots, clothes, and armor sat a small distance from the water, Monya posted to watch over them. The she-wolf barked as Jinyel neared the surf, but remained obediently on guard. He couldn’t have anyone stealing his possessions as he experimented, and he certainly couldn’t bring Monya or Littlespark into the water with him.
It was going to be very, very cold water after all.
Bravery. Jinyel had always thought he was brave. How many times had he run toward danger, stood his ground against unwise odds, even when he knew his side was weakest?
With all that, why was it such a struggle to step into the damn water?
One wave crept close. The next one, closer. Jinyel shuffled forward so the following one brushed his toes, and―
“Fuck.” Cold. Cold. It was cold! He had known it would be cold. But worse than the water was the air after it left, stinging the wet salt from his skin.
He shuffled forward again. The next wave came up to his ankles. For a moment ― more of a heartbeat, really ― his skin adjusted to the water, and was then slapped by mid-Vhalar wind as the tide retreated again.
Monya barked. Jinyel signed Calm and kept going.
The further he went, the easier it became. His feet, once fully submerged, eventually adjusted to the constant temperature of the ocean. It was the initial wading that demanded discipline. Soon the sea reached his knees, then his waist, then his chest, and then finally his neck.
The Saltenrock dug into his palm, smooth and refined. Was that magic coursing up his arm, or his imagination? Was it utter madness to test it when he didn’t know how to swim? What was the difference between madness and bravery, besides whether he succeeded?
But this was what he had stepped into the ocean for. This was why he had labored so long in the Prince’s workshop. He hadn’t come here to learn to swim.
Jinyel took a deep breath, closed his eyes, and sank into the water.
Monya had always been loyal. Obedience was something more flexible, to be practiced when it aligned with loyalty and abandoned when it did not.
She did not know what a well was, or regalia, or that Jinyel would survive from the power of a smooth stone. She knew water. She knew depth. She knew the way prey vanished beneath a surface and did not return. Her packmate had walked into the great moving water, and the water had taken him.
She barked until her throat burned, but the waves did not answer. The longer she waited, the tighter something wound in her chest, an instinct screaming that standing guard over dead things was useless when the living were gone. So she did something she had never done before, because there was nothing else she could do.
She went looking for help.
Jinyel’s skins and metal were nothing to her, but the hanging thing, the thing which smelled of smoke and otherworld ― that mattered. She took it in her jaws and ran into the forest which was crossed with two-legged scents.
Monya followed the nearest trail which smelled of upright feet, cloth, and fire. A woman whose hands touched a thousand dried plants which the wolf knew but had no names for, and similar at least to the scents which often coated Jinyel’s own hands.
The wolf approached the woman with a metal censer in her mouth, ears pinned and a submissive whine in her throat. She did not attack, but kept her head lowered. Every muscle was curled in tension, ready to turn around and run as soon as she was sure the woman would follow.
Surely an odd sight for anyone to meet in the woods.
Specifics
Mo is approached by a young black wolf carrying a censer in its mouth. The wolf has a simple necklace made of seashells, clearly made by hands with thumbs. If followed, it will lead Mo to a campsite with folded clothes, armor, and an old firepit.


