Woodlands
A lone man wanders through a desolate forest. Trudging through thick snow he meanders like the last fugitive snowflake from a storm long since past. Nighttime surrounds him, he follows the direction of the wind. Looking up to the sky he hopes to find the weakest sign or call but is only met with the darkness, the silence.
Plants wither and decay like specters forecasting his own fate. Through the woodlands he sees nothing but trees who've lived to see more seasons than he has footprints in the snow. In the distance he hears the occasional plaintive cry of a crow or wolf before once again being engulfed by the silence. He can feel it now, the cold, icy grip, his mind is failing him, there's nowhere to go. He lays down as the complacent spectator to the erasure of himself, his mind grows as blank as the terrain surrounding him; he's now one with his environment, soon he'll be as pure and indifferent in conception as the shriveled plants and rigid trees.
The man had always followed the wind. Its direction wasn't always certain, its call not always strong, but tonight it whispers to him.
"Keep looking for glimmers of light in places where there is nothing."
He opens his eyes and for a moment the infinite black sky is no different than the oblivion from which he had woken up from. Then, in the distance, a soft, white star begins to glimmer plainly, and soon came another, then another. He looks for any discernible pattern or meaning in their configuration and realizes that they form Orion. Despite the veil of tears now clouding his vision, everything preceding that moment felt blurry and obscure. Now he could finally see; he staggers back up to his feet.
He doesn't know where to go. He stands alone in a vast forest and struggles to find one clear path to take. The last few drifting snowflakes fall to the ground and sunlight begins to break through the clouds. All he can do is walk in the direction of the wind, slowly, steadily, until he arrives at some distant light and finds refuge in a place he may call home.