A/N: Here's the second chapter of my story. The truth is, keeping chapters as short as possible are rather difficult.
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It had been twenty minutes since Sindell ceased her
meaningless crying. In the silence that followed, Myste Delane and Lightana
Zhao slowly aroused themselves from sleep, and with ease they rose into sitting
positions and looked around. Seeing her friends, and comparing their wounds to
hers, Sindell wondered why her injuries were the most serious.
Malvina explained to her other two friends of the situation
they were in—of how they were stranded in the middle of forest near mountains,
probably very far from civilization, and of how they were caught in a brutal
winter, barely clothed without food or water.
A depressing silence hung in the air between the four
friends for the many minutes that followed. The realization of being lost was
so surreal, and the reality it was
actually snowing stunned them.
“It doesn’t snow in our country,” Myste released a confused
and exasperated sigh, massaging the bridge of her nose. “Wherever we are, we’re
far enough for the seasons to be
different.”
“Who did this to us?” Lightana wondered aloud,
subconsciously trailing her fingers along the scars on her arms. The cuts were
very light and did not hurt. Her gaze wandered from her own wounds to Sindell’s
body.
Her condition was dreadful. Dark bruises covered up most of her
yellowish-tan skin, and where bruises were absent, cuts replaced them. The
scrapes on Sindell’s body were unlike Lightana’s—they were long and deep,
disgustingly crusted with dark red blood, as though a razor had been pressed
and dragged slowly along her skin. The left side of her head was bleeding, the
red blood stained a part of her short hair, and the sight was too gruesome to
look at any longer.
The woman looked so beaten up that her face—which was
completely untouched—stood out from her sore and marked body.
Noticing Lightana’s grimace, Sindell laughed bitterly. “I
know I’m not as pretty as I usually am.”
Myste frowned, her voice riddled with weariness. “Sindell, your
injuries are more serious than any of ours. We’re worried, especially since
you’re bleeding at the side of your head.”
“The head wound is only serious enough to make me forget
what happened before all this,” Sindell assured, earnestly. “Nothing serious, I
promise. It’s just the bruises and cuts which really hurt.”
“They’re all over
your body,” Malvina pointed out, her voice thick with compassion. “Whoever did
this to us was primarily targeting you.”
“That doesn’t mean this person had to involve you girls,
too,” Sindell muttered, looking down. The vague voice, riddled with regret,
whispered again in her mind, and sent thousands of questions to her head, as to
who the person was, what did she do to deserve this and why her friends were
involved in this brutal beating.
A moment of meaningful silence fell upon them. It was long
enough for Sindell to realize the engagement ring was still around her delicate
finger, and she gently rubbed a thumb against the diamond, feeling stupid for
not having noticed it earlier. The gem glinted underneath the light, sending a
warm smile to her face and tears to her dark eyes.
“Daniel,” Sindell sighed quietly at the name of her fiancé.
Malvina, who was closest to her, overheard the whisper, and
the thought of her own husband and child came to mind. Much to her surprise,
the gold ring, proof of her marriage with her husband Verone, was still on her
finger.
“This person treats us like trash and doesn’t take our
rings?” Malvina raised an eyebrow. “That’s interesting.”
Lightana looked down at her feet, relieved her gold
ankle-bracelet, a gift from her parents from when she was a girl, was still
with her.
“We should head out soon,” Myste announced abruptly, rising
to her feet. Her friends looked up at her inquiringly as she slowly looked
around. “There’s no time to lose. Let’s hope the snow isn’t so heavy.”
“Wait, you want to go out there?” Lightana repeated, eyes widening as she stood up. She
stared at Myste with disbelief and snapped, “We’re dressed in undergarments, and you want to go out
there? Into winter, a season our country’s never experienced before? Are you
crazy?”
Myste frowned in annoyance and argued, “So what, you want to
wait here for some guardian angel to come down and rescue us? We’ll die of
hunger and thirst before that. We have to leave now, when the snow is still
light, until we can find some sort of village or a cave or something, rather than sitting on our asses doing nothing!”
Lightana opened her mouth to continue the argument, but was
halted when Sindell came in between them, her expression strained with pain
from sudden movement.
“G-Guys, if there’s one time we really need to work
together, it’s now,” Sindell reasoned, looking from Myste to Lightana with a
serious expression on her face. “Stop fighting, and let’s just start moving.
Myste is right; we have to move out even though the odds are against us.”
The Zhao heir gave in
eventually, turning away as a sign of defeat. Myste murmured an apology before
approaching the door and throwing it open, shuddering at the cold that she and
her friends were unaccustomed to. Her eyes widened at the sight of winter and
snow, at the marvellous view of the mountains, at the gold-painted sky.
She took a step out and immediately noticed a stack of
clothes near the door. Raising an eyebrow, Myste examined them, discovering
there were exactly four outfits, complete with four boots, waiting for them.
‘Strange,’ she mused, ‘It’s as though somebody wanted us to find
it…’
She brought the clothes and boots back inside, and after
expressing her suspicion, the four friends changed into the garments. The
outfits were identical; a dark, long-sleeved shirt, dark and thin cotton pants,
and a pair of brown, knee-length, worn-out boots. Lightana constantly grumbled
the clothes were unsuitable for the serious winter (and she knew better, since
she was a seamstress by profession), but it was better than nothing.
Lightana supported Sindell as the four moved out of their
small shelter and into the winter.
“Wow…” Malvina’ lips slowly curved upwards into a smile as
she extended an arm, watching with amazement as the slow-falling snowflakes
melted on her palm. “Winter is beautiful.”
Sindell smiled and brushed away a few snowflakes which got
caught in Lightana’s long hair. “Yes, winter is beautiful, but it can also be very, very harsh…I think it’s only
the third or fourth day since it started snowing. We’re lucky, the blizzards
won’t be coming by any time soon.”
Malvina nodded slowly, turning to Myste, who led the way.
“What do you think of winter?”
Myste flashed a lopsided smile. “Sindell took the words
right out of my mouth. What she says is true.”
Out of the four, Myste Delane and Sindell were the only two
who had experienced winter for a brief moment in their young adulthood. Sindell
went through many winters during her decade-long journey to England to pursue
knowledge in dentistry, whereas Myste, being an active woman, travelled to
Europe during winter time on an adventurous vacation.
However, these journeys were long ago, when the women were
in their twenties. Now, the women were thirty-three, and it had been four years
since Sindell returned to her home country, Malaysia, and it had been four
years since she experienced winter.
Squirrels scurried about the branches, running away as the
women drew near, whereas white hares retreated into snowy bushes as they
approached. Flocks of birds flew overhead, heading south in great numbers,
creating a scenery that momentarily distracted them from the severe situtation
they were in. Somewhere along the first thirty minutes of their blind journey,
they spotted an owl, perched calmly on a high branch, snowflakes alighting its
thick feathers.
Though the beautiful winter and exhilarating scenes really
took their minds off the grave situation they were in, a constant worry
lingered in Sindell’s mind. It was a slowly rising alarm that made her rather
edgy and sensitive, but with each passing minute, as the mountains began to
recede and the cold really began to bite, she concluded she was simply worrying
for no reason.
“I knew these clothes were way too thin,” Lightana
shuddered. “I don’t think I’ve ever been through weather as cold as this
before.”
Malvina shrugged. “Well, the lowest temperature you can get
in Malaysia on an average day is twenty-seven degrees. I’m pretty sure we’re just
on zero degrees right now.”
“The last thing we need is a geography or science lesson,
Vina,” Lightana chuckled.
Malvina frowned. “Just because I’m a teacher doesn’t mean
I’ll be giving out lectures. It isn’t funny, Light.”
“Sorry,” Lightana smiled sheepishly.
Most of their journey was spent in comfortable silence, with
an exception for comments on the scenery and a few jokes about their girlhood. Besides,
what was there to talk about when one knows one is lost in the middle of nowhere?
Sindell’s mind was completely occupied by the subject of her
wounds; her mind blank as to how to find suitable supplies to properly patch
herself up, especially since she was the most injured of the four. The hunger
and thirst, slowly building up at the corner of her mind, soon became a
concern.
A few hours into their aimless venture, Malvina was seized
by sudden exhaustion. She found it harder to breathe with each minute passing
by, each puff of smoke as a result from her exhales adding to the blurriness of
her perception.
“We haven’t…we haven’t adapted to the winter yet,” she said,
stopping and putting a hand against the decayed, white trunk of a tree. Her
other hand rested on her chest as she looked up weakly. “C-Can we find a place
to rest? A cave…or some sort?”
“And I thought… that I-I was the only one…who was tired,”
Lightana smiled at her weakly.
“Hold on,” Sindell assured, “Let’s walk just a bit further.
Hopefully there’ll be a cave somewhere.”
Sindell tried her best to keep off Lightana as she and
Malvina pushed to continue, but her wounds prevented such movement. After about
twenty minutes of walking, Sindell noted how her two friends were genuinely
struggling with the new climate and silently prayed for shelter.
Luck smiled upon them, for a few moments later, the opening
of a cave tucked away to the side of a hill came into view. With an exclamation
of happiness, the four hastened their pace for the provided shelter.
However, as they reached the mouth of the cave, a
medium-sized creature leaped forward and unveiled itself from the darkness,
startling Myste, who was nearest to the entrance.
Taking a small step back, she eyed the white-coated cub
cautiously.
“A bear cub…” Sindell murmured. Its sudden appearance
rendered the women startled and paralyzed for a moment.
It was then a deafening roar tore away the confusion, and a
much, much larger bear emerged from the shadows…
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