It was a beautiful mid-morning. Songbirds were chirping, the sun was shining in golden rays through spaces in the emerald green branches. The air was fresh and the grass that lined the narrow dirt road glistened with the last remnants of dew. There are some things that a man ponders on such peaceful moments when their mind is left to wander, serious things and inconsequential things alike.
The stout redheaded man that tread along this path was nothing if not a well educated man and an excellent ponder-er. He pondered about how exactly a bird chooses its morning song. He pondered how the tiny little gnats knew exactly where his mouth was in relation to their flight pattern. Did they decide he was a great swarming target through his sweat, breath or body heat?
The most important thing that he was pondering at the moment was how he had never learned what made a good, sturdy shoe for walking. Was it support of the ankle, the heel or just having enough space for the toes? He did know for certain that whomever he had gotten this pair of shoes from did not have the first clue. These shoes were definitely not made for walking, he reassured himself as he took a small pause in his walk.
Hrothgar had decided this the second day into his wanderings, and it was still true nearly three weeks later. This wonderful, glorious blessing of a morning had come complete with fresh blisters. He never once perceived his feet to have that many places that chafed so brutally. Perhaps it was less of a problem of his shoes and his inexperienced feet himself, but occasionally he had half a mind to stop and turn around. Then again, to turn around would mean that he would have to walk all this distance again.
It would mean he would return to the great hallowed halls of education that brought nothing but nightmares and distress. His nights had become so much more peaceful since leaving that place, though he wasn’t sure how much of that restful sleep could be attributed to exhaustion. All he knew was that since he had left, slumber no longer abandoned him for terror and anxiety.
Hrothgar shook his head dismissing the thought, shouldering his large leather satchel that he had removed for a momentary reprieve. To think of such bad memories would only distract him, and he would walk right past the small turn-off that he was to enter. He was informed that at a brisk pace a man could reach it at noon. But he had found that his pampered gait, even while attempted to be quick, was quickly tired out to dejected and painful plodding. Most men who had lived their life on their feet, and he had spent a majority of his life doing the exact opposite.
He had learned to change any directions given to time and a half lest he feel too disappointed in himself. He disliked disappointing people, and with a sinking feeling in his stomach, his mind began to crawl back to memories of school. His mind swam with how he had lied and struggled and pretended everything was alright when they were not. He swatted a buzzing sound away from his ear and shook his head in attempts to foil the bug from finding his ear again and drive out such thoughts. It was too beautiful a morning to be thinking such things. It would only ruin his day to think of what he was walking away from.
His feet thought for him now, screaming to continue and push on. His heels were motivated by the thought of a cold soak in a bucket of water, his toes bent with determination that rest would soon be found, and is arches shouted rallying cries, muffled against the dirt. They would not give up, not until they closed that final distance to the congregation of houses that constituted the village of Ceildh.