"Did you know his name?" Pride asked, quiet; he glanced at Sora, sombre. "I can try to find out if he has any surviving friends." He had no intention of reviving that stone--the dog had been a stranger to him and it wouldn't have felt right--but he'd try to find a home for it, someone... to grant closure to.
And then they were moving on again.
Pride blinked past the heat, pale eyelashes fluttering. He could hear his own heavy breaths in his ears, the stifling of Hydra muffling all but his own heartbeat, his own heaving lungs. Still, he tried to focus, casting out his magic--the throbbing of his head fighting him all the way.
He could see Fireheart's body, but he wanted a few moments for that... he was almost reluctant to approach, to acknowledge the finality of it. He looked around with his magic, instead, grimacing at the hum of pain in the back of his skull, and concentrated.
"Here," he offered softly, and picked his way through the sucking waters to the half-buried primate-hybrid lying in the muck. The bones were stained, dirty with water, and Pride regarded the little gemstone with sadness. "One of yours?" he asked softly, glancing back at Sora.
Another pass with his magic, and-... "This is the last of them that I can see. There may be more farther on--where do we go from here?" he asked, unaware that this was the end of the line. Unaware that the rest were lost, forever.
Unaware how lucky he was to find the stones he sought, to find closure here, where Sora would find so many missing.
He came to stand over Fireheart's bones, staring down at them, his brow a little furrowed. Sora's words came floating back to him, her halting explanation given in Orion what seemed, now, like a lifetime ago. 'Fireheart gave this speech. Kept our spirits up. Told us to, uh, to live for the dead. He... he died, saving my brother, Ifrit. The shadows-- they started to take him, and he fought. Fire everywhere. He burned himself alive to scare back the shadows, and... my brother survived, because of him.'
The stag's ears drooped, and the heat seemed almost too much to bear. An irony, came a soft thought; this one had died in fire, and here he was suffering mere desert heat. He steadied himself. If Fireheart had done that, he could survive another hour in Hydra for his memory.
It took some doing to twist the gemstone free, and each time he wrenched it and rattled the bones, he felt his heart pull with grief. It felt wrong--desecrating--but worse still would be to leave all of this out here to rot. He would have brought the entirety of the skeletons, but the bones were loose and perhaps it was a fitting resting place: for the heroes to lay where they had fallen, ever a testament, a monument to their courage.
When at last he'd gotten the stone free--and didn't it gleam and glitter, as if it still held fire within itself?--he looked to Sora. "This one won't fit, I think. I can carry it, I believe." He looked back to the bones, and took a shaky breath. A moment, then, for a little mental eulogy.
Nassir, Fireheart: you both fell defending others, selfless, courageous to the last. I admire you, I mourn you, I will tell others of your bravery and you will be the shining examples of those who come later. I will tell them of your kindness, Nassir--quiet. Unobtrusive. Support in ways most don't realize they even need, I think. Your determination, Fireheart--driven by goodness in you. And if your stones are given life--by me, or by others--in the future, I will tell the children of what heroes you became.
He paused, and then turned away, head hanging, grief pouring through him.
Ahh, but if deer could cry-!