I never would have met her if the storm hadn't come up so suddenly.
I was dragging a deer down from the forest when the sky began to darken. The wind whipped up, tossing snow at me from below, and the dark clouds circled the jagged peak to the north. I listened, and heard no animals stirring, heard nothing but the wind. I knew I wasn't going to make it back to Westhaven before the blizzard fell, so I found a cave and dragged the deer inside.
Just as the snow began to fall, I stepped to the mouth of the cave, to check my surroundings before the snow made it impossible to go anywhere else. Fifty yards away, crossing towards the hills to the north, was a figure wrapped in heavy furs. Whoever they were, they were taller than me, and they carried a bow and a spear.
I hesitated for just a moment when I saw a flash of green beneath their hood and realized they were an orc. Most of the stories from my village about orcs began and ended in blood.
But the storm was rising. Staying out in it was death, or at least frostbite, and I was willing to take the risk to spare them.
"Here!" I called out. "There's a cave!"
The figure heard me, over the rising wind, and turned towards me. She stopped a few paces from me and uncovered her face. She watched me for a moment, as hesitant as I'd been a moment before.
"I have no coin," she said.
"I don't want any," I replied.
"Nor have I anything else to barter with," she added, narrowing her eyes at me. "So what do you want?"
I admit, losing my temper while talking to an orc is probably not wise, but it's what I did.
"I want you to get out of the blizzard before the goddess of winter strikes us both dead," I snapped.
She paused for a moment, then laughed, the sound stomping out the wind for a moment. "Alright, human," she said. "I'll spite the gods with you." And, without another word, she stepped into the cave.
I followed her inside. I'd grabbed enough wood to start a fire, and I set about getting it going as the blizzard picked up outside. As the fire grew, I glanced over at the cave entrance. The orc had taken off her outer layer of furs and propped it against the cave entrance with her spear, keeping the wailing wind from rushing in.
"Thank you," I said.
In the rising firelight, I could get a better look at her. She was a few inches taller than me, with raven-black hair that she had tied back with a band of leather pinned by a carved animal bone. She had a scar on her left cheek, running from beneath her eye down to her jawline. The leathers that she wore could not entirely conceal the strength in her thick limbs or the swell of her bosom.
"I should be thanking you," she said, glancing past her furs out into the swirling blizzard. "I would not have made it back to the hills by now." She held her right arm out, hand raised to show that it held no weapon.
"I am Karka, of the White Bear clan."
She was waiting for me to respond, and I wasn't sure exactly what she expected. Guessing, I held my hand out just as she did.
"I'm Grant. I'm from Westhaven."
She smiled. From the way her lips moved, I guessed that some of her teeth were almost big enough to push past her lips. Before I could wonder any further, she pressed her palm against mine. Her fingers were a lighter green on the underside, like the first shoots of the plants in spring, and they stuck out past mine.
"Thank you for your hospitality, Grant of Westhaven," she said.
I nodded. "We may be in here a while," I said. "The sooner we dress this deer, the sooner we can have food."
She nodded, and took a knife from her belt. "That I can do."
--
It was growing dark by the time we'd finished with the deer. The cave smelled like blood, but we'd managed to keep it from smelling like anything worse, and we had food enough to last through the blizzard.
Watching Karka work was fascinating. She was clearly a hunter much like me, and for all our differences of culture, the way she worked through dressing the deer was almost exactly the way I'd learned it. Her hands were stronger than mine, but the motions were the same.
We sat together and turned pieces of venison over the fire as the wind howled outside. We were both hungry, so for a while we sat and ate in silence.
"Will they worry about you, when you don't make it back tonight?" I asked. "I know my little sisters are going to worry."
She sighed. "They will worry for me, too. There's nothing to do for that but live, though."
"At least you'll have a good story when you get back."
She scoffed. "I found no deer, I fought no enemies, and I earned no scars. Hardly a story."
"Scars?" I asked.
She paused, sizing me up. "My people remember our deeds with scars. They...they show what you're willing to bleed for."
I considered this for a moment. "But what if something important happens and it doesn't give you a scar?"
"Like what?"
"Like...helping a stranger survive a blizzard."
She smiled. "You could give yourself one," she said. "Or I could give you one."
"I'll think about it," I said.
"I've got a good knife," she added, her grin broadening.
"Not done thinking yet."
"Alright," she said. I watched her for a moment, wondering what her scars looked like, before I looked away. There wasn't a proper way of asking a woman to show me her skin.
She watched me, and I guessed that she was following my thoughts.
"When we meet strangers, those from the other orc clans, we trade scars. I show them a scar and tell of it, they show me one of theirs, and so on."
I nodded. "I have some scars," I admitted, "although some of my stories don't have scars to go with them."
"Our ways aren't yours," she said. "But I would hear your stories."
I took a deep breath. "Okay," I said. "Three winters ago, I brought a deer back from a hunt. When I got back, my neighbors' larder had burned down in a fire. So, I dressed the deer and gave it to them, and went back out to hunt again."
"Worthy," she said. "Did the rest of your clan help them too?"
"Yes," I said. "We do care for each other."
She nodded, then unlaced her shirt and pulled it over her shoulders, leaving only a band of cloth around her bosom. I stared at her, unable to tear my eyes away.
She was beautifully strong. Not even the blacksmith in Westhaven had muscles quite like hers. She moved, and I could have sat and watched her move all night long. Dozens of scars, large and small, covered her long arms, her broad shoulders, even her belly.
She saw my expression and smiled, not unkindly. She pointed at three jagged marks along her side, thick and softened by age. "When the gnolls came, four winters ago, I fought them with my clan. One raked me as it fell dead."
I imagined her in battle, wielding her spear, and I spoke before I could think. "I wish I could have been there."
She smiled sadly. "You would have been welcome."
I nodded. Not wanting to break the cycle, I pulled my shirt up and set it aside. I held my right arm out.
"It's faded a bit," I said, "but when I was younger our dog fell in the river, and she clawed me when I pulled her out."
"It is good to be scarred by animals you love, and not just those you defeat," Karka said. She glanced at my chest, and a sly smile crossed her lips. "Is all of your hair red?"
"That's not a scar question," I said, grinning back.
"Just curious," she said. "Our hair is black or white, nothing else."
"It's all red," I said. "Though some humans are yellow above and darker elsewhere."
"Interesting," she said. Then, shrugging, she reached for the band of cloth around her chest and pulled it up.
Time slowed down for a moment as her breasts were pulled up before slipping out of the band and falling. They were beautiful - full and generous and undoubtedly soft. They made a perfect contrast with the muscles of her arms, softness and hardness in harmony. I told myself I should look away, and I very much did not.
She'd turned to show me a narrow scar that ran down her shoulder blade, but she paused.
"Are you alright?" she asked. "You're changing colors. I didn't know humans really did that."
"I'm fine," I said. "It's just...for humans, that's usually private."
"Shoulders?" she asked. "Or...ah." She grinned. "Really? How do you feed your children, then?"
"Carefully," I said. "Or in private."
"And how do you fight harpies, if they nest near you?" she went on. "Because they have them out too."
"Awkwardly," I admitted. "But theirs aren't nearly as nice as-"
My brain caught up with my mouth, but Karka was already grinning broadly. She ran a single finger across her breast and around her beautiful dark nipple. I felt my blush deepening, and I didn't look away.
"I like making you change colors," she said.
"You're good at it," I said. "But you were showing me a scar."