Chapter 21
The blizzard arrived just before dawn, with enough force that it almost extinguished the bonfire despite the windbreak.
Fergus trudged over to Sarette. "Come help me!" he shouted over the howling of the wind. "If we move the firewood and build another wall closer to the fire, it'll keep it from going out!"
"I'll do it!" she yelled back. "You should be in your shelter!"
"The work will keep me warm!"
Other than Sarette, Fergus was the last person still out and about. A few of the other refugees had stayed up all night or drawn the early morning shift to watch over the camp, but she'd convinced them to take shelter before the storm hit. It turned out she was lucky Fergus was still awake—there was no way she could have moved the woodpile on her own. They worked for five minutes before he went to the nearest snow cave and woke up two of his men, a pair of broad-shouldered young brothers.
The four of them toiled back and forth, passing each other as they carried armfuls of wood from the old pile to the new, then returned. All three men were huge, and carried twice as much per trip as Sarette, but she kept at it, and finally they'd moved the entire stack. The fire had stabilized with the extra protection, and they took the opportunity to feed it and build it up again.
"We'll have to hope the wind dies down before we use up too much of the wood!" Sarette yelled to the men.
"It usually does after the first few hours!" Fergus called back. "You did good!" She couldn't see his face—his hood and wraps were covering up everything but his eyes in an attempt to ward off frostbite—but she thought she detected a note of admiration in his voice.
"Thank you!" she said. She wanted to praise him in return, but he was older than her, and she couldn't quite bring herself to do it. "You should get to your shelters now!"
"What about you?"
"Someone's got to watch the fire! Go!"
She'd explained the plan to him earlier, and Gregor had agreed once he'd returned from hunting, but Fergus still hesitated. At least he'd stopped calling her
m'lady
.
"Are you sure?" he said. "It's worse than I thought it would be!"
"I'm stormborn! I'll be fine!" That was overstating things, but the people of Jol's Brook seemed to hold the stormborn in high regard, and she'd used that to keep them from panicking during the long day of preparations.
He nodded. "I'll go! Come get me if you need anything!"
"I will!" she assured him, while privately planning to do nothing of the sort. He'd been up for a full day and night working at heavy labor. If she needed anything, she'd wake Corec or Boktar, who should have managed to get at least a few hours of sleep by now.
Once he was gone, Sarette did a full circuit around the camp. At times, to keep moving forward, she had to bend so far into the wind that she'd have fallen over if it hadn't been pushing back at her so hard. She stopped to check the snow caves along the way. Each of the shelters had something partially blocking the entrance—personal belongings or a plug of snow—to cut down on cold drafts, but she made sure that the new snowfall wasn't blocking off the rest of the opening. Air still needed to get through so the people inside wouldn't suffocate.
By the time she reached the shelters farthest from the center of the camp, she could no longer see the glow of the fire through the swirling snow. They'd been intending for the fire to provide a beacon to guide anyone who went outside during the blizzard. Without it, people could get easily lost and disoriented. If they went the wrong direction, they might die before anyone realized they were missing.
Sarette considered her options, then went to find the supplies they'd unloaded from the sleds, so she could set up guide ropes throughout the camp. Between what they'd brought with them and what the woodcutters had kept in their equipment shack, there was plenty of rope, but she'd need to find something to fasten it to. She started with an obvious choice, tying one end of a rope to a tree that stood sheltering two snow caves, and the other end to the log windbreak Fergus and his men had constructed. Anyone near that part of the camp would be able to follow the rope until they were close enough to see the fire.
Finished with the first guide rope, she returned to the bonfire to add more wood, then started a large pot of tea, setting it up at the outer edge. The bonfire made cooking awkward, but it wasn't feasible to keep the smaller fires burning during the storm. They planned to limit cooking, and stick to trail rations as much as possible, but there would still be a need for hot drink and hot food to help keep people going in the cold.
A voice came from right behind her. "Do you need help?"
Sarette whirled around, her heart pounding. She hadn't heard anyone approaching over the wind. "Shavala! What are you doing out here?" The elven woman was too slender to be out in the weather, and she wasn't wearing enough layers. She'd decided against buying a heavier coat in Snow Crown, and she hadn't covered her head or her face.
"I'll be all right for a little while," Shavala assured her, leaning in to make sure she could be heard. "Like you. My teacher can ignore the cold entirely."
Sarette hesitated, then nodded. It wasn't her place to judge the other woman's abilities. "Did you need something? There'll be tea soon."
"I couldn't sleep with all this," Shavala said, pointing up at the sky. "I've never felt so...
much
of a storm before. Is it always like this?"
"No, but it happens. This is why most of our people live in Snow Crown—it's sheltered from the worst of it."
A blast of wind came from the direction opposite the two windbreaks, causing the bonfire to sputter and blow almost sideways.
The elven woman shivered. "I guess it
is
colder than I expected."
"You should get closer to the fire to warm up. I need to figure out a way to keep it burning if the wind's going to change directions."
Shavala closed her eyes, then opened them again. "The wind is too strong; I can't stop it."
"No one could," Sarette said in disbelief. "Not for the length of a blizzard."
The other woman shrugged. "I thought I'd give it a try. But if I can't change the wind, maybe I can do something else." She squatted down near the bonfire and held her hands out, looking as if she was warming them. Parts of the fire that had been blown out by the wind suddenly sprang back to life. The flames were still being blown in one direction after another, but they no longer sputtered.
Shavala stood up. "That should hold it for a while. I may have to do it again later."
"What
did
you do?"
"I asked it to keep burning, and it agreed. It wants more wood, though."
Sarette blinked, not sure how to respond. "You
asked
it?"