Instead, Elias was there. He wasn't moving fast, but he wasn't stopping. He used a rhythmic, swaying gait that utilized the weight of the pack rather than fighting it. His eyes were fixed not on the horizon, but on the very next inch of ground.
They pushed on. Kael leads at first, his raw power forcing a path through the deepening drifts. But an hour in, the cold began to leach the fire from his muscles. His breath came in ragged gasps. Every time he stumbled, the heavy pack threatened to pin him to the ice forever. He looked back, expecting to see Elias collapsed in the snow. Only the Strong
The storm didn’t announce itself; it simply arrived, a wall of gray wind that turned the mountain path into a river of slush. Instead, Elias was there
Elias and Kael were three days from the nearest village when the blizzard hit. They were "Strong-Men," professional haulers hired to carry delicate medicinal roots across the pass before the freeze. Kael was the specimen of the title—broad-shouldered, young, and capable of carrying eighty pounds without breaking a sweat. Elias was older, wiry, and moved with a hitch in his left hip. His eyes were fixed not on the horizon,
In the morning, the sun broke over a world of white. They descended into the valley, two men weighted down by the needs of others, arriving not because they were the fastest, but because they were the ones who refused to be light.
"You’re right," Elias replied, tightening his own straps. "Only the strong survive. But you don't know what strength is yet."
When Kael finally fell, his legs turning to lead, Elias didn't keep walking. He reached down with a hand that felt like iron cable and hauled the younger man up. "I can't," Kael sobbed. "I’m not strong enough."