Sign up to save your library
With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.
Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Search for a digital library with this title
Title found at these libraries:
Library Name | Distance |
---|---|
Loading... |
She could feel her body separate, and her soul began to float up. In a few moments she was able to look down upon her home, at the cabin her father had built years earlier. The moss thickly coated the roof boards and the smoke still chugged from the chimney. Her body sat by the smoky fire and Bob stalked a rabbit in the bush beside the cabin. The new leaves were popping out on the aspen trees, the green fresh and vibrant, a stark contrast to the dark shades of spruce, fir and pine trees. The tiny garden she had prepared last fall was ready to be seeded. Just off to the right of the garden were the graves of her parents, the wooden crosses askew; obviously they needed to be replaced. The mountain creek, usually so tiny it barely trickled all summer, was still swollen from the melted snow, and it was the creek that she floated over, following it down the mountain, following the directions of the voices.
In a small clearing where she gathered berries every summer she saw a tan coloured horse standing, its reins hung loosely, the saddle hung under its belly. The buckskin quietly munched on fresh new grass, undisturbed by the fact that his owner was lying still on the ground beside him. Ravenwing could see where the man had fallen from his mount, crawled a short way, and then lay still and face down. She let herself fall closer to him, but she could see no visible wound.
Satisfied that the man was what the voices wanted her to see, Ravenwing let herself travel back to her body. As she approached her cabin, she could feel her two halves become one again.
Ravenwing opened her eyes and stood up, reeling a little. It was always unsettling to return to her body after travelling, and she took a few moments to regain her equilibrium. A small wave of nausea gripped her for a second and then she felt fine once more.
The man needed her help.