"How long are you staying, uncle?" Asked Joran out of nowhere, crunching an apple and making Rogar start awake.
"Gods, lad!" He exclaimed, clutching his chest. "You'll get yourself killed, waking people up that way."
"I know," rebutted his nephew, unconcerned. "I make sure they're disarmed first." He walked away without hearing the answer to his question, presumably to go and do his chores.
When Rainath emerged, the rest of the family had risen and set off on their respective courses. Only Jade sat in the den, knitting, two pairs of stockings hung to dry near the remnants of the morning's fire.
"How are ye?" Asked Jade, pouring her a mug of tea from a pot on the hearth.
"Tired," Rainath answered honestly.
"Lover's quarrel?" Jade sympathized.
"Er," Rainath said hesitantly.
"Men," Jade agreed, tsking. She set her knitting aside and stretched, relieved to be rid of it. "I'll leave you to settle in, then. I'll be at the forge with ma, but she'll be home for tea soon. Jo has his lessons, and who knows what they're about," she waved a hand that effectively indicated her husband and brother. "Until then, you've got the place to yourself," Jade concluded. "Make yourself at home." She told her with a kind smile, and the shutting door finalized her departure.
Never having had a home to speak of, Rainath had no idea what to do with herself. She drank the rest of the tea from her mug, and refilled it. When the pot was empty she took it to the kitchen to rinse the leaves from it. She looked for something else to wash, but the only thing out of place was a bowl on the stove with a cloth draped over it. When she lifted the cover Rainath found a bowl of porridge, its top glazed with melted butter and honey. Her stomach groaned lustily.
There were spoons in a crock on the counter and she made short work of the breakfast, fervently hoping it was intended for her. When it was gone she washed the bowl and spoon, dried them with the cloth and put them with their mates.
After washing up and having a curious peek around the house, Rainath let herself out the back door, boots in hand. She slipped them on and straightened, barely suppressing a cry of alarm at the sight of Rogar and Cathon watching her with twin faces of curiousity.
"Morning," they echoed.
"Morning," she muttered awkwardly.
"Kaf?" Cathon offered, gesturing to a small copper boiler on the workbench. Rainath nodded, and Rogar reached to pour her a cup.
"Here, have mine," Cathon held his cup out to her. "Now that someone's come to keep an eye on him," he told her in low tones, and jabbed his thumb at Rogar, "I can get some work done," he winked at her, smiling, and exchanged an inscrutable look with Rogar before vanishing around the corner of the house.
"Morning," Rogar started again, unsure where to go from there. Rainath nodded, and they passed some moments of silence staring into the wilderness beyond the dooryard.
"When are we leaving?" Asked Rainath, sipping her kaf. She made a face. "I miss ale," she confided to him, quietly. He laughed.
"Aye," he agreed mirthfully. "There would have been some brewed in the summer, but it's probably all drank by now. Freezes when the weather turns cold, unlike brandy." She grimaced and looked toward the site of the last night's misadventure, but all traces were mercifully covered over with snow. The cup of steaming kaf did bleed warmth into her palms, which was a comfort. He hadn't answered her question.
"I'm paid up for a week yet," he told her. Judging by her expression, she hadn't expected a delay in their return. "I can walk w' yeh back to the ruins, if you'd rather be off," he offered out of fairness, refilling his earthenware mug.
One thing she hadn't taken time to appreciate until just then, was the way the cup fit his hand- hers too, for that matter, and not just the mugs, but everything. The whole house was scaled to accommodate people of their size. Rainath hadn't bumped her head on a low lintel or checked her shoulder on a narrow doorway since they'd arrived.
"I could stay another day or two," she allowed, casually. Rogar nodded. "I wouldn't want to impose," she went on, worrying. "Is there an inn, or something?" She tilted her head to indicate the township beyond the house. Rogar's chuckles echoed in his mug.
"Not at this elevation," he told her, amused. "You could take an empty bachelor's cabin, if you want, or a few folks will take boarders, if you'd rather sleep in a different stranger's home." He chuckled at the irony.
"The cabins?" She asked reticently.
"Tend to be cold, and lonely." Rogar shrugged. "They help w' cabin fever in the winter, for those that need a night to themself, maybe. Visitors from other clans will use them if they travel through." He took a drink, remembering the cabin he'd claimed as a lad- not unlike his room in any inn, now.
"Rebellious youth and young lovers make use of them, but we all got cold and hungry enough to come home, eventually." Rainath's shoulders dropped in resignation.
"My mother and sister wouldn't have it, anyway," he added in a cynical mutter.
"They seem nice, to me," she defended, feeling loyal to the women who had made her welcome.
"Aye, you haven't contradicted them, yet." Rainath rolled her eyes. Rogar seemed younger, here. Less world-weary. She wondered why he left, when he seemed happier here than she'd ever seen him off the mountain.
"I hate the cold," he told her, as though she'd asked aloud. "This," he gestured at the picturesque snowcap the landscape wore, "is just the beginning." His voice conveyed loathing for whatever came after the beginning.