They stood. Leudh
retrieved his tunic and slipped it on for the breeze blowing on his
sweat-dampened body felt cold. They
turned and started down the wooded slope towards home.
A mile walk took them to a broad clearing hidden amidst the
trees. A woodsman and his family lived
off the bounty of the forest, essentially harvesting the animals and plants
that nature provided. They weren't
farmers so they needed no large piece of ground. This quiet, little clearing was enough space
for their needs. What the forest
couldn't provide, they obtained through trade.
Eghero had been a skilled hunter so the family always had what they
needed.
There was a cozy, two-story cabin on the west side of the
clearing with a smaller cottage on the opposite end of the space. When Leudh had married, he and his father had
built this smaller home to provide some privacy for Leudh and his new
bride. They had planned to add a second
story when the needs of a growing family demanded the extra space.
There was a shared barn on the north side of the clearing
and a large vegetable garden filled the space between the two homes. All shared in the work of the garden, but
this was really Dakra's space. She and
Eghero had planted this garden when they first started their home in this
clearing and she loved spending most of her time growing food for her loved
ones.
Most of the vegetables in the garden had already been
harvested but some of the leafy plants and herbs had survived the first frosts
of the season. It was a homey sight and
Flindra's eyes filled with tears when it came into view. Her Papa would not be with them to enjoy the
bounty of the harvest this year.
There was smoke rising from the chimney of the big house and
both Flindra and Leudh knew the rest of the family was awaiting their return in
there.
"I'll get the horse and cart ready," Leudh
said. He headed for the barn while
Flindra continued towards the house.
As she approached the house, Flindra could hear a sob coming
from her mother's room for the window was slightly ajar. She recognized her mother's voice and felt
tears of sympathy well up in her own.
Flindra walked inside and followed the sound of the sobs to
the bedroom her parents had shared.
There she found her mother, Leudh's wife, Brehwan, and the twin boys,
Alek and Arek. They were kneeling around
the coffin, which was set up on two benches next to the bed. All their faces were stained with tears.
"Leudh's hitching up the cart," Flindra said in a
low voice. She was relieved the lid to
the coffin was already closed. She
wanted to remember her father as he was in life and not as he looked embraced
by death. She joined her mother on the
floor and waited in tearful silence.
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