Memories of joy etch just as deeply into a man’s heart as those of pain or terror.
And they, too, soak and pervade his awareness of the world. And so the memories of
my first day with Molly, and our first night together, and the day we vowed ourselves
to each other have flavored my life and in my darkest days they gave me a light to
remember. In times of sickness or sorrow or bleakness of spirit, I could recall how
I ran with the wolf through the snowy twilight with no thought beyond the game we
pursued. There are cherished memories of firelight, and brandy, and a friend who knew
me, perhaps, better than any other could. Those are the memories from which a man
builds the fortress that protects his heart. They are the touchstones that tell him
he is worthy of respect, and his life has a meaning beyond mere existence. I have
all those memories still, the ones of hurt and the ones of comfort and the ones of
exultation. I can touch them still, even if they are faded now like a tapestry left
to harsh light and dust.
But one day I will carry forward as if it were tattooed with sharp needles of both
pleasure and pain into the very core of my being. There is a day I recall with colors
so bright and scents so strong that I have only to close my eyes and be there again.
It is a bright winter day, a day of blue sky and glistening white snow and the wrinkled
gray sea beyond the roofs and roads of Buckkeep Town. Always that day will be the
day before Winterfest eve. Always I will hear merry greetings and the luring calls
of peddlers and tinkers and the gulls high overhead crying, crying in the wind. The
crisp breeze carried the scents of hot cooked foods both sweet and savory mixed with
the iodine and rot of the low tide. I walked the streets alone, buying small gifts
for the daughter I had left behind at Withywoods and necessary things for my injured friend, herbs to make the salves Burrich
had taught me and clean clothing and a warm cloak and shoes for his crippled, frostbitten
feet.