|
Author of 16 Stories |
Familiar scents whafted into his nostrils, and the unicorn took a deep breath, letting it out again with a soft sigh. The milkwood trees were dropping their leaves, he could feel the silvery-green foliage settling onto his swayed back, and the tiny buds growing would bloom come summer, as they always did. An ever unchanging cycle in an ever changing world, the stallion thought.
Suddenly he could feel the sun's rays on his back, and he knew he had arrived. Smiling, he halted and lowered himself to the sandy bank, resting his bearded chin on knobby forelegs. There was nothing in all of creation that soothed him more than the presence of the Mirror of the Moon. He could still faintly see the light bouncing off the still sacred pool, knew that if he supped from its waters the taste would be sweet on his tongue.
He flicked one ear at the sound of rushling underbrush and smiled as a familiar presence, just as old as he, settled beside him. "Good dawn," the stallion murmured.
"Good dawn," the mare replied. "You beat me here today."
He barely stiffled a chuckle. "It's not often I do, so allow me a bit of smugness." She hmp'ed, and this time he did laugh. She nipped hard at the base of his ears, but it was without malice, and the pair settled into a comfortable silence.
"We are the last, you know," she murmured. "The last of a generation that saw the end of an age and the birth of another." The stallion nodded, leaned against his companion and sighed.
"Are they ready?"
The mare rolled her eyes, even though the other unicorn couldn't see. "You ask that every time."
"And I will continue to ask. Are they ready?"
She paused, then sighed. "Yes. Yes, they are. They will rule wisely and well. But I shall miss them."
The stallion nuzzled her cheek. "Ah, but where we are going, we will be able to watch over and be with them always. This is our twilight and it is ending, as the dawn is beginning for another. It is the balance, the Mother's cycle. Our children understand that, and our grandchildren, too, and our great-grandchildren will as well."
"And so the dance of the world goes on, twisting and turning as it always as, until the sun sets for the last time," the mare said.
The pair exchanged smiles. "And so the time comes," they intoned together, still smiling, and settled against each other, closing their eyes one last time.
So they were found late in the evening by worried search parties, the twin seers Aiony and Dhatter, having ascended the starpath to frolick beside the summer stars for all time.