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fractalsfrozen | Ice Fae Sigma AU
There's a part of him who knew it'd end up this way. Cast out of the town he'd lived in his entire life, where everyone knew each other like family. In the end it hasn't mattered.
He was a warlock, a friend trying to poison their town with witchcraft and dark magic. Or that's what everyone thought. Change was frightening and right now it wasn't something they were ready for, Harold had feared it, but it hadn't been an excuse to not try to better the lives of the towns people.
Medicine and the advancements in it were not to be trusted, so he'd been cast out, forced out into the harshness of winter and the wilds to fend for himself. Harold packed as much as they allowed him, bundled up in as many layers as he could wear without inhibiting his movement.
The first few days aren't so bad, cold, but thankfully not windy. He's got enough food for maybe a week if he rations it out. Making a fire is dangerous, it draws attention and he's on his own, his only weapon a knife he uses to eat with.
In the end it's not monsters or animals or even ruffians that get him, it's the storm that hits three days in. The wind bites through his clothes and there's no way he could make a fire like this.
So he fights through blinding snow drifts to find a cave or anything he could take shelter in, but his body gives out before he has any luck. The cold is just too much and he collapses, still clutching a blanket tight around himself to try and fight off the wind and snow.
He was a warlock, a friend trying to poison their town with witchcraft and dark magic. Or that's what everyone thought. Change was frightening and right now it wasn't something they were ready for, Harold had feared it, but it hadn't been an excuse to not try to better the lives of the towns people.
Medicine and the advancements in it were not to be trusted, so he'd been cast out, forced out into the harshness of winter and the wilds to fend for himself. Harold packed as much as they allowed him, bundled up in as many layers as he could wear without inhibiting his movement.
The first few days aren't so bad, cold, but thankfully not windy. He's got enough food for maybe a week if he rations it out. Making a fire is dangerous, it draws attention and he's on his own, his only weapon a knife he uses to eat with.
In the end it's not monsters or animals or even ruffians that get him, it's the storm that hits three days in. The wind bites through his clothes and there's no way he could make a fire like this.
So he fights through blinding snow drifts to find a cave or anything he could take shelter in, but his body gives out before he has any luck. The cold is just too much and he collapses, still clutching a blanket tight around himself to try and fight off the wind and snow.

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He paused and canted his head.
"Last name....I...I do not know of that concept. We simply have one name. Could you explain it to me?"
Now that it seemed he had a human friend again...for the moment...he could ask when something presented itself that he did not understand.
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"You've certainly grown into them now." He smiles with a little sniffle. Definitely coming down with a cold.
"I don't blame you for keeping your distance from us, humans don't handle things um... delicately, especially things they don't understand." Most don't, some can. His town being one example.
"Oh well- Harold is my name, the one you call me. Winston is... erm... it's the name for my family, it's how humans keep track of them. Who belongs to which family." That makes sense right? "We all have different first names, well except for me haha, my father was Harold too." A common thing with men pasing down their first names to their sons. He won't get into that. One step at a time.
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"Thank you."
A clawed hand smoothed his hair so that it fell more evenly between his clear, icy horns as he continued to listen.
"So multiple humans in the same family can have the same first name and last name but the last name is always the same but the first name is usually different but can be the same? I think I understand."
He leaned forward at the sniffle.
"It seems you've caught a chill from the mountain. Perhaps we can make you a remedy to shorten its duration, yes?"
He wasn't sure if fae medicine would work on Harold, but it was certainly worth a shot.
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"I think you've got it in a nutshell. Honestly I think us humans make things needlessly complicated on purpose." And then he's shaking his head a little, tugging the blanket tighter around himself.
"No I think it's just-" A harsh sneeze interrupts him, and he'll look sheepish as he excuses himself, "I've already been a nuisance today, I suppose I should just relent and be a good patient." Harold tries to laugh a little, but it devolves into a bit of coughing.
"Oof, I have to say it's no fun having the tables turned on me like this." Being the patient instead of the healer. He'll be good though, no fussing.
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He nodded to his right.
"Come this way. We shall see if my medicine works on you."
The two of them made their way through the mountain cavern, passing many glowing crystals in several different colors. They illuminated the space, revealing it to not be a tight cave, but a large open cavern. Hot springs steamed and occasionally geysers would spray. They passed pools with glowing fish and aquatic lizards. They seemed to pay the fae and his guest no mind.
They finally reached a side cavern with a square of ice on the wall. With a wave of his hand, Siebren caused the ice to move away. Beneath its surface were shelves filled with bottles, vials and bowls made from ice. Each contained a different herb or flower.
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Nodding he follows the fae, careful as he walks, he's barefoot now, still wrapped up in the blanket as he trails behind Sigma. It's hard to not gape, to stare, it's magnificent in here. Expansive and some how dark yet filled with light and life.
Harold most definitely stumbles a few times caught up in it all, at least until they arrive where Sigma meant to bring him. When he shows him his expansive collection of herbs and flowers... it's like what he did before he was exiled. Had this sort of practice of mixing herbs and things from the earth come from the fae? He had to wonder.
"This is amazing, Sigma... this is what I did back home, before-" Another coughing fit interrupts him, once it passes he fixes his glasses clearing his throat.
"It seems I could learn a thing or two from you." Or more. Paddding over to the display he carefully reaches out, before thinking again and stops, looking to the fae.
"May I?" He'd just like to peek at your ingredients. He has so much he's never seen before. So much that he didn't know what it could be used for.
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"Of course. Be my guest."
He can gather what he needs when the human is done.
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He'll happily look around while Sigma does what he needs to, trying to stay out of the way. Mostly just low-key jealous of the fae's supplies. Not like it mattered right now, no one wanted his healing services or help.
"You have a great amount of knowledge and healing here, I know only a drop of it." A lamentful statement, he could only dream of knowing so much.
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"If you see anything you want, help yourself, just tell me if it is the last of anything so that I can replenish it in the Spring."
He smiled.
"It was not gathered overnight...it was over many years and collected from others. If you have questions, I would be happy to tell you. I have scrolls and some books detailing recipes. As a healer, I think you would find them useful."
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"Oh no I wouldn't- I couldn't take from you." This wasn't for him to take, this was hard work for years and years. He'll perk a little at the mention of scrolls and books though.
"I would love to read anything you'd allow, I'd be lucky to learn an ounce of what you know." He's lucky to even be alive on the presence of the fae.
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"My offer stands. If you need anything, let me know. Now come, we shall brew you some honey tea and get you to bed to rest."
With a wave of his hand, the ice froze over the cabinet, effectively closing it. He motioned with his head.
"We need to get honey and a mug from the pantry. The hot water would surely melt my ice before you could finish your tea."
They made their way a little further down to another enclave with a boiling spring and a much larger ice cabinet. Sigma waved his hand over it and the layer of ice melted away revealing ice containers of food and wooden mugs and plates. He picked up a mug and dumped the contents of his bowl into a mug and in a swift motion, scooped the mug through the boiling water, filling it. Satisfied, he reached back into the food cabinet for the honey which he poured into the mug. He offered the concoction to Harold.
"Here. Drink it once it is cool enough. It will help with your cough."
Sigma nodded toward the food cupboard.
"Do you need anything to eat?"
Sigma reached into a jar and retrieved a preserved fish from an ice jar and ate it in a single go.
There were other...non fish related foods-dried meat jerky, nuts and dried fruit.
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"Honey...?" He tilts his head slightly, what would honey do? Yes it tasted lovely and sweet, great for baked goods, but helping with a cough?
When the tea is offered to him he holds the cup gingerly, it's quite hot after all. With a little 'thank you' he blows on his tea, sipping carefully to test it. Oh... it's still way to hot, but the honey added a very nice flavor, not that it was the point of it.
"I'm not hungry at the moment, but I appreciate it. I appreciate everything you've done for me." Truly. Without the fae's help he'd have been dead hours ago.
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"Yes. Honey has strong anti-bacterial properties."
The human was grateful...not a typical trait of the race as a whole...but present in individuals. While he avoided humans for the most part, he had crossed paths with a few that were notable exceptions. It seemed he had plucked another from the snow. He had done nothing but thank him since he arrived. The fae smiled and put a clawed hand on Harold's shoulder.
"I think you need to rest, my friend. Let the medicine work, let your body rest and your mind and heart heal."
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"Mm, I have to agree. It will be nice to sleep in a proper bed after being out in the wilds for days now." Harold tries to ignore just how big that hand on his shoulder is, how big Sigma is compared to him. He should feel scared a part of him thinks, but he's not. It wouldn't matter how terrifying the fae could or did look, he didn't actually, Harold thought he looked quite neat, he'd been only kind to him. So he had no reason to fear him.
So with his advice he'll shuffle back to where he'd woken up, consider looking for his bag, or asking for it, but then decides to be a good patient, sitting in bed to finish his tea before curling up in bed under the covers. Only the top of his head peeks out, mused hair still drying from the hot spring. If he sleeps for far too long it's only because he'd been so worn down from being outside in that storm, in almost dying and the cold trying to cause havoc inside him.
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He periodically checked in on Harold, laying an extra blanket or two while the human slept. Outside the cave, the wind howled and snow whipped about...but as all things...it passed...and when it did it was time to venture out an assess the damage and see if there was anything he could do for any of the creatures that lived on the mountain.
He was about to leave...but then paused...perhaps the human would like to accompany him? If he was not indeed still ill. He made his way to Harold's cavern to see if he was awake yet.
"Harold? Are you awake?"
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Oh that's a fae. That's still very much the very tall very large ice fae who'd saved his life. He'd dreamt that it had all been a misunderstanding, that he was let back into his town and things were fine.
But here was Sigma and Harold felt bad about the pang of disappointment. Not the fae's fault at all and he felt bad even feeling it. Wiping the sleep from his eyes he'll sit up finding his glasses and putting them on with a yawn. Excuse his messy hair.
"Yes, good morn- er... hello, Sigma." Was it morning? He couldn't tell in here. "Is everything okay?"
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"It is indeed morning, but you slept a full day...so it may not be the morning you expect."
The fae smiled, a little impishly. That human's messy morning hair was certainly more adorable than he had anticipated.
"The storm has passed and I would like to survey the mountain...to check for damage and injured fae and animals. Would you care to join me?"
He held up a smaller fur lined...and trimmed robe.
"This was mine when I was smaller. It should fit you a bit better for outside travel...not that you don't wear my shirts well."
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"Oh, I'd love to join you, but um... I'm rather hungry." All that sleeping had worked up an appetite! He'll take the offered robe and finds himself flushing at the fae's comment. Does he wear the shirt well? It just feels like he's wearing a large sleeping gown. Harold would have figured he looked childish and silly.
Well. He'll take well.
"I can't imagine you bring any smaller, especially my size." He says it good naturedly. "Thank you, it looks very warm."
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"It was long ago. All fae start out as children...like humans."
Harold's face was red...was he still sick? The human was a grown man and he would tell him honestly if he was feeling well or not for this excursion. Oh. Food. He'd forgotten about that. He really must keep better track of that. The fae made a not to himself to keep on top of making sure that Harold had enough to eat.
"Of course. We can definitely stop by the pantry before heading out."
They made their way back to where they had stopped to make the medicinal tea. With a wave of his hand, the ice melted revealing Sigma's food storage.
"Please, Harold...help yourself...and please ask me if you have any questions."
He smiled, glad that his robe fit the human a bit better. It would keep him warm in the snow outside.
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The far, may be able to go out with no shoes, but he was human. Also Sigma could float over the snow. No doubt he had some natural resistance to the chill as well.
"It must take hundreds, thousands of years for your kind to grow old." He'd love to learn about them, know more. Most of what humans knew of the far were stories passed down, fairy tales basically.
None of it could be proven. Thanking Sigma first, he'll eat from the food provided, his stomach growling it's thanks too. He finishes it off with a cup of tea, with honey, to warm up real good before they head out.
"... so do you often have humans who travel your mountain? I mean, have any come up here to see if you're real?" It's not like there weren't tales of a great ice king on the mountain, but the mountain was dangerous so anyone smart wouldn't travel it anyway.
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He said immortal not invulnerable. He doesn't want to share that yet...and probably not for some time. Fae are entitled to their secrets. Merely letting a human know they had weaknesses-iron...control by name...anything of the sort was not to be discussed. He respected the old ways as much as he respected the mountain that bore him.
He waited for Harold to finish, though he answered his questions freely.
"Not terribly often. It is not hospitable for them...many of the others...do not fancy humans and make the going harder. You are the first human to make it this high up in years."
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"That must be hard, living forever." So much time, especially up here on his own. Sure Sigma had said that he wasn't alone, that there were the animals, the spiders, other things, but it seemed he was the only fae like himself up here and surely it must be lonely not having your own kind to talk to? Or perhaps that was just how the fae lived, maybe having that sort of company didn't fulfill them like it did most humans.
"And here I wasn't even trying!" Harold smiles behind the cup of tea, "I can understand wanting to keep us away from your mountain, many humans have little respect for the world beyond themselves." Many couldn't even have kindness towards their own kind.
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What Harold said was true. Most humans were destructive. He had been fortunate enough to encounter one years ago that was not...and it was that exception that had caused him to pause...to not abandon Harold in the snow when he very easily could have left him to freeze to death and be eaten.
"Our paths were meant to cross, Harold Winston."
It felt right...the way they could just sit and talk. Normally, he despised talking to humans...their...inability to see passed their own noses frequently made interactions with them tedious no matter how rare they were...but Harold was open to discussion...he wanted to make the world better...it was refreshing.
"I think we will be able to learn a great deal from one another."
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"I think you may be right." He smiles warmly. He hoped he could at least be good company if nothing else. If some how the fae learned something from him then even better.
"I'm interested to see the mountain now that the storm has passed and I'm not fighting off hypothermia." It will no doubt be beautiful, everything still and covered in thick fluffy white snow. The sun shining on it like diamonds.
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"So we shall."
He nodded to the right and led the way to what looked like a wall on the far side of the cave. With a wave of his hand, the wall melted away, revealing the side of the mountain. He turned to Harold.
"Do you need help in the snow?"
It was fairly deep and they would make better time if he helped the human. He whispered quietly and gestured with a clawed hand. Harold floated gently up over the snow.
"Just until we get a bit lower."
The sun was shining brightly on the snow, causing it to sparkle. There were some fallen trees...but otherwise, birds were singing. A few even flew down to perch on Siebren's horns. They fluffed themselves and tweeted loudly, telling him of the storm and where they had hidden to stay safe. The fae listened and nodded, their words as clear to him as Harold's.
"Ah...I see. I'm glad you have kept safe, little ones."
His hand extended and a few chickadees came from the trees to perch on his long fingers.
"You as well? Wonderful."
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