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Ooc — Alyssa
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September 09, 2013, 10:39 AM
"Then try to be more careful next time. I wanted duck for dinner." Goldry snickered and wagged his tail too.
He noticed her stiff posture seemed to loosen up, and her eyes had wandered briefly before his question. He slid into sphinx-like repose, and he continued to watch her but with a softer expression. It seemed they were both eager to drop their guard, yet experienced and cautious enough not to do so with abandon. Despite his gibe at her recklessness, Goldry was under no illusion that she was defenseless nor that she would hesitate to attack if necessary. The slew of scars on her face and back leg—the old wound on her left shoulder—convinced him she knew combat intimately.
He, too, knew battle well. Yet the knowledge prompted him to avoid conflict whenever possible and to keep the fight short and sweet. He had no prominent scars, no trophies; he knew some might take this as evidence of cowardice. Aguta seemed like the type to make this mistake. His grin grew a little lopsided. Better to be underestimated than well appraised.
For her sake, he tried not to assume too much; although it seemed to him that her hard eyes, her flinty expression, her tough exterior were all betrayed every time she spoke. Aguta seemed to be a fiery, passionate woman locked in the body of someone taught to be cold and aloof… which was, of course, merely speculation. But if he took her words at face value, there was certainly evidence for it. If she really was so reckless when she tried to run from herself, it was not a huge leap of faith to assume she was acting on an impulsive, self-destructive whim. Hardly the behavior of a practical, analytical creature of cold detachment.
Goldry regarded her steadily for a moment. "What about you? Are you hungry?"
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49 Posts
Ooc — Charmy
Offline
September 09, 2013, 01:18 PM
bone of the father, unknowingly given
you will renew your son
flesh of the servant, willingly sacrificed
you will revive your master
blood of the enemy, forcibly taken
[size=3]you will resurrect your foe[/size]
Even if she weren’t to admit it, his assumptions of her were actually quite spot on. Having learned to show little to no emotion, she fought within herself more often than not. Feelings raged inside of her and the only way she was able to really let them out was to try to run from herself with absolute reckless abandon. It really was like she was on a self-destructive mission during those times because, honestly, she cared little of what happened to her, where she went or where she ended up. Just like right now. But being Tartok, she didn’t want to be viewed as weak in the pack. She’d had her share of being the weak one within Tartok, but that was from years ago. She’d fought hard both within herself and without to rise to what she was now. If only she could completely shut off her emotions.
The large woman tilted her head slightly to the side when he asked her if she was hungry. One day she would learn to expect the unexpected, because this was definitely something she had not expected. On the other hand… “After having been running nearly all day,” she began to answer, still studying the male. “I’m famished.” She would definitely not pass up the chance at a meal, especially if it was a meal that she wouldn’t have to catch entirely on her own. “Have something in mind?”
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Ooc — Alyssa
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September 11, 2013, 04:22 PM
She seemed reluctant to answer him at first. Was she suspicious he invited her to a meal? It seemed in keeping with her character to assume the worst of everyone; but again, Goldry tried not to presume too much.
His whole face smiled and his tail lashed out once across the grass. "I do," he said.
Goldry stood up, half-stretched, then turned and trotted along the lakeshore. He slicked his ears back as he went, and glanced once at Aguta over his shoulder. Laughter boiled up in his chest, though he smothered it with a silent grin.
He peeled away from the lake when he reached the base of the hill he napped on earlier, and he started trotting up its grassy incline at a clipped pace. Their prey lay in the gullies behind the hill.
In his last encounter with them, one had been critically injured, prohibiting its escape from the area. Nevertheless, it was still a formidable creature and eluded his hungry jaws with ease. Goldry had been recuperating and preparing for another attack when Aguta plunged into the lake. He wondered if two hunters would have any more success than one.
Goldry stopped underneath the cottonwood at the top of the hill, and squinted as he surveyed the grassy fields below. But his nose pinpointed his prey before his eyes did: the scent of the blood and marrow of a broken bone was hard to hide.
"There." He pointed his nose at a trio of tawny creatures grazing near a clump of aspen in a gully. Their flanks twitched at every sound, and their ears flicked back and forth. Two of them would periodically lift their heads after a bite or two, scouting for danger; for him. The third hobbled between them, chewing feverishly.
Goldry glanced at Aguta and gave her a toothy grin. "Ever hunt pronghorn before?"
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49 Posts
Ooc — Charmy
Offline
September 11, 2013, 06:02 PM
bone of the father, unknowingly given
you will renew your son
flesh of the servant, willingly sacrificed
you will revive your master
blood of the enemy, forcibly taken
[size=3]you will resurrect your foe[/size]
She was suspicious but purely because she rarely interacted with anyone outside of Tartok, and even more rare was for her to hunt with anyone outside of Tartok. Granted, she had done just that with one that she had found on the mountain that had been her home since coming to these new lands, but she had been terribly lonely at that moment in time and had been the one to invite that stranger to hunt with her. It was also because she’d wanted something larger than a rabbit to eat. So for this male to be inviting her to a meal with him, she couldn’t help but be suspicious. Was he expecting something from her in return? Or was he actually just a decent guy? Either way, he was paying attention to her.
When he set off into motion, Aguta paused for only a moment before pushing herself forward and easily catching up with him. Falling into step beside him, she carried herself quite proudly and, surprisingly, allowed herself to begin to enjoy his company. She remained silent as she moved along beside him, feeling curious as to where he was leading her but not wanting to damage the moment by asking questions. For the first time in a long time, Aguta was forcing herself to just trust him even though he was a stranger. The large woman doubted she’d run into him again once she returned to where she’d come from, so why not allow herself to relish in the moment?
She stopped when he stopped, allowing her gaze to follow where he had motioned. Icy gaze fell upon the animals he was pointing at. Though she had seen animals like that before, she’d not hunted them that she could recall, sticking to the things that lived on the mountains instead. Her gaze shifted to him as he asked his question. “No,”, she answered, giving a slight shake of her head. Though she was large, she was long legged, built more for speed, for the chase. Though she could also very easily take a hit, too, be the “catcher” of the animal being chased down. Since this was his thing, she would actually let him instruct her as to what he wanted her to do rather than try to take it over and tell him what she expected of him. “What would you have me do?”
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Ooc — Alyssa
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September 12, 2013, 12:36 PM
Feel free to begin the hunt in your next post if you want :)
Goldry chuckled and he looked back down the hill again. His ear flicked and he glanced at Aguta, but he canted his head and said nothing. The soft evening breeze blew into his face, but the pronghorn's strength was sight and his position on the hill was a bad one. Dusk had fallen upon them, however, so although it was a risk to descend, their chances of sneaking down were good.
The field panned out below the hill for several feet before a shallow gully cut across it. All three pronghorn were on the other side on a small slope in front of another deeper, wider gully where quaking aspen grew. Beyond that was a knobby hill. Pronghorn needed space to run—they'd be at a distinct disadvantage in the trees—so they would likely run along the length of the grove before striking out toward the hill.
"Don't get too close to them," he said at last.
"The buck might charge if you do, but that doesn't matter. More likely, they'll panic and run. They're too fast, even for you." He looked her up and down, looked at her long legs, and gave her a short, lopsided grin.
"I'll follow that gully—" He nodded at the shallow ditch just past the hill,
"—and sneak around them to that hill over there. The one behind the trees.
"You cross it. Keep an eye on me, but don't do anything until I get to that hill. Keep your distance, and don't try to hide. I want the pronghorn to see you. They're tired, and that middle one's injured, so they won't run. You'll be my diversion."
He paused, exhaled sharply. He narrowed his eyes a bit and twitched his tail.
"When I get there, I won't give you any signal. Just start running at them. Stay at an angle and push them toward the trees. Don't press too hard or they'll break into top speed. I'll jump out at them when they get close. At that point, they're only option will be to jump into the grove. They could try to dash between us, but the injured one won't be able to accelerate quickly enough to escape. That's when we strike."
He looked at Aguta, his eyes flashing to green in the dimming evening light.
"Got all that?"
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49 Posts
Ooc — Charmy
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September 12, 2013, 05:57 PM
bone of the father, unknowingly given
you will renew your son
flesh of the servant, willingly sacrificed
you will revive your master
blood of the enemy, forcibly taken
[size=3]you will resurrect your foe[/size]
She was silent as she listened to him giving instruction. When he spoke of the beasts running too fast even for her, she kind of smirked, the first sign of seriousness finally leaving her face. It was something she would normally take as a challenge. Aguta would try to keep herself from thinking of it as such, though, at least this time around. Perhaps next time, she would have to give it a go just to see how much faster than her they were. Aguta liked a challenge, especially when it was something that involved speed and running. There would be plenty of time for that, though, and right now was not that time. Right now, she was allowing someone else, a stranger, give her instruction. That, too, was something that never happened.
She nodded as he gave the rest of the instructions to show that she was getting it all. “Got it,” she responded out loud to his question. Icy gaze watched him move away from her, heading where he said he was going to head. She waited for several minutes before she began to slowly make her way in the direction he had instructed her to go. Stopping at one point, she scanned the general area of where he said he was going to be purely to make sure that he was either there or at least most of the way there. She didn’t want to set the beasts moving too soon because that could be an obvious mess-up and not something she wanted to do. Aguta strove to do things right and not half-assed or incorrectly.
Satisfied that he was where he said he was going to be, Aguta began to move forward once more, moving toward the trio of pronghorn. After a few steps, she began to pick up her pace, running at them at an angle just like he had told her to do. She made sure to keep her speed in check, though, not wanting to press them too hard like he had warned against. Sure enough, the beasts began to head in the direction he had said they would. Now it was just a matter of getting them closer to where he was so that he, too, could make his move.
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Ooc — Alyssa
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September 13, 2013, 04:50 PM
“Good.”
He left her with a smirk of his own as he padded away down the hill. The cold earth muffled his passing, and his agouti fur cloaked him against the rustic grass. He watched and listened with wide eyes and erect ears, and his smirk faded as his focus intensified. As he reached the shallow gully, his face had grown stern. He crouched into it and started stalking along it's narrow bottom. The thick shadows in the gully cloaked him still further, but the Pronghorn, with their specialized eyes, would see him if Aguta failed to grab their attention.
He resisted the urge to check on her. Her job was less precise; easier. He'd be surprised if she couldn't handle it. He just had to trust that her reckless impulsivity wouldn't extend to the hunt.
Goldry slid expertly through the darkened gully until it started to pan out and rise into the field. He crouched even lower into the grasses, aware that the breeze would be at his disadvantage now. His lips spread apart in a wide, white-toothed smile, however, as he saw all three pronghorn fixed on Aguta. She stalked forward like a graceful marionette, appearing almost suspended above the field. They were too far away to make eye contact, but she didn't need it. She burst forward toward the tawny creatures just as he slipped into position.
Perfect.
It was a little eerie how well this hunt was going. She was inexperienced, and he was... well, only lucky. It was nothing more than chance that one of the pronghorn broke its leg earlier. If it had missed that prairie dog hole, none of them would be here now.
Goldry tensed his back legs, which were coiled beneath him like a spring. His pupils were wide and his eyes glued on the pronghorn with an awkward lope. Aguta ran behind them in careful, measured paces. She was their shadow.
The lead pronghorn, the buck, came within fifty yards, then thirty, then ten. Right before it flew past him, Goldry sprang. He struck at the group like a viper. The buck broke away to his right, sprinting like mad to the cottonwood on the high hill. The other two dodged to his left, tripping into the quaking aspen and tall, thick grasses of the deep gully. With hardly a glance at Aguta, Goldry shot after them. The healthiest of the two does could make it out if she hurried, but the one with a limp was almost certainly doomed.
Yet there was still a desperate hope in her eyes. The wolves hadn't caught her yet.
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49 Posts
Ooc — Charmy
Offline
September 13, 2013, 05:55 PM
bone of the father, unknowingly given
you will renew your son
flesh of the servant, willingly sacrificed
you will revive your master
blood of the enemy, forcibly taken
[size=3]you will resurrect your foe[/size]
She wasn’t inexperienced, per say. She was just inexperienced when it came to hunting pronghorn. Aguta mostly ever hunted animals that resided on the mountain that she now called home, as well as the mountain she lived on prior to coming here. She had nearly been killed by the mountain that had been her home for the last two years, but she lived, rose to conquer not only the mountain that had nearly beaten her, but conquered the fear that had been instilled into her by that very mountain. She had risen from her wounds and became what she was today; a force to be reckoned with. There was little that she was afraid of now, though she would likely never openly admit to being afraid of anything to anyone.
Aguta knew better than to allow her recklessness impede in her ability to hunt, especially when she was hunting with someone she didn’t know well at all. Without admitting it, she was out to impress the male, not cause him to turn his nose up to her, and that meant putting her best foot forward in this hunt. She strove to do the best that she possibly could, especially considering that she knew that her assigned job in this hunt wasn’t something that was all that tough. The scarred woman knew that she was doing good when she took notice that the three beasts had turned their focus entirely on her, watching every move she made. That meant that Goldry would be able to get himself into the position that he wanted to be in.
Though she was keeping an eye on all three of the beasts, she paid the closest attention to the one with the broken leg. The moment Goldry made his move, causing the buck to veer one way while the two does veered to the other, Aguta turned herself so that she was giving chase to the one with the very obvious limp. Pushing herself now, she easily, and eagerly, chased after the beast with the broken leg. Getting closer little by little, Aguta swiped outward with a front paw to smack at the hind legs of the beast with the limp. She hoped that doing that would cause the doe to stumble at least a little bit.
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Ooc — Alyssa
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September 13, 2013, 09:58 PM
The crippled doe careened down the slope into the rich, soft grasses beneath. Goldry threw himself down after it before he noticed Aguta had done the same. He barely lurched out of her way, then righted himself and sprinted between the pronghorn and its friend, blocking any aid or route of escape. He would take the secondary support role now while the black woman closed in on the flailing doe.
Now that its route was cut off, the pronghorn shot deeper into the grove with Aguta hot on its heels. Goldry chased after them, his lungs aching, his heart thudding, his paws whispering across the earth. He had an open-mouthed grin and dancing eyes. The hunter was fully alive.
He dodged around a clump of trees just as Aguta swiped at the doe's hind legs. Aguta's aim was true, and the doe reeled head over heels into the tall grass; but it lashed out with a vicious kick as it went down, intent on fighting until the bitter end.
Goldry rushed in, snatching the back of the pronghorn's slender head between his teeth, clamping down as it heaved itself upright. He prevented the doe from lifting its head, and he forced it into an awkward position by throwing his weight down. The doe tried to compensate by leaning onto its broken front leg, but it crumpled.
<small><i>avatar by lieu</i></small>
49 Posts
Ooc — Charmy
Offline
September 13, 2013, 10:26 PM
bone of the father, unknowingly given
you will renew your son
flesh of the servant, willingly sacrificed
you will revive your master
blood of the enemy, forcibly taken
[size=3]you will resurrect your foe[/size]
Aguta could feel the burning in her legs and chest already. Usually it took a lot more than this to bring on the burn, but she hadn’t really rested all that much after having run all the way down the mountain that was her home to the lake where Goldry had found her. That meant that her limit of stamina was diminishing quicker than if she had started this hunt fully charged and ready to go. But she was not about to give up until either the beast was dropped, or she, herself, dropped from sheer exhaustion. Aguta was not a quitter.
Her aim was true, knocking the doe off balance, causing the beast to trip. But when it lashed out, kicking out with its vicious kick, Aguta was a little too close. The hoof of the pronghorn doe landed in the middle of Aguta’s chest, winding her and causing her forward momentum to falter. As she tried to catch her breath, Goldry flew past her, grabbing hold of the kicking beast by the back of her head. A strangled snarl escaped from Aguta, but not directed at him, as she dove forward just as the doe’s broken leg crumpled beneath the weight.
A second angry snarl ripped forth from Aguta as she shoved her own head into the mix, clamping strong jaws around the snout of the doe. She was going to go for the throat, but the doe had her head at an awkward angle making it impossible for Aguta to grab where she wanted to. So she settled for the snout, crushing it beneath the power in her jaws. She had no intentions of letting go until the beast ceased thrashing about. Her chest burned both inside and out, out from where the kick landed.
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Ooc — Alyssa
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September 15, 2013, 10:29 AM
Aguta snarled. Goldry's skin wrinkled on his nose. Neither of them meant aggression or antagonism toward the other, for it was a common manifestation of violence inherent in a hunt. It would have been surprising if either of them had enough self-control to be polite.
He felt the doe jerk back as Aguta latched onto the long snout of the beast. The doe kicked in all directions, but its legs merely skittered about in the long grass, lacking the strength of its earlier strike. Goldry's muscles rippled. He braced his neck and shook the pronghorn's head back and forth like a rag-doll. Its neck snapped. Its body shuddered. Its legs stropped thrashing, and grew still. Goldry held on for a minute longer, still tense, the bridge of his nose still furrowed.
He dropped the doe. The back of her head hit the ground with a dull thud. “Dig in,” he growled, and his hot breath steamed away into the cold, late evening air. He could hear the second doe scrabbling up the embankment somewhere in the dark, but though his ears flicked toward the sound, he moved away from it, stepping squarely on the dead doe's neck and shoulder to rip into the soft skin beneath her arm. He kept one eye on Aguta.
He didn't know she'd been kicked earlier. Even if he had, the bloodlust was on him and he couldn't have found the compassion to care. Although he was willing to share this meal with her, a mere acquaintance, it was difficult to resist snarling at her if she came too close. He tried to focus, instead, on breaking through the doe's ribs to get to the succulent heart and lungs inside.
Steam swirled about his head as he exposed the still-warm chest cavity to the cool air.
Somewhere in the grove, an owl hooted.
<small><i>avatar by lieu</i></small>
49 Posts
Ooc — Charmy
Offline
September 17, 2013, 12:20 PM
bone of the father, unknowingly given
you will renew your son
flesh of the servant, willingly sacrificed
you will revive your master
blood of the enemy, forcibly taken
[size=3]you will resurrect your foe[/size]
Aguta rarely ever showed aggression toward others during a hunt, just as she was not doing so toward him either. It was at the doe that her anger was directed toward. Anger because the damn beast had kicked her full on in the chest, knocking the wind out of her. If he thought the aggression was directed at him, she would actually make sure to set that right. Thus far, she had no reason to direct her aggression toward him.
The scarred female kept her hold on the doe’s muzzle when Goldry began shaking it’s head back and forth. That was quite a feat; being able to hold on. It wasn’t until she heard the neck snap that she released her hold. Now that she was no longer having to focus on the killing of the beast, Aguta stumbled backward slightly. Her rump hit the ground with a bit of a thud. She was a big girl, after all. There was a little trickle of blood where the pronghorn doe had landed her kick to Aguta’s chest. The cut on her chest was from the sharpness of the hoof and the way the kick landed.
She just sat there for several long minutes. Her legs burned, as did her lungs and her chest where she’d been kicked. But it was the growling of her stomach that finally pushed her forward. Aguta tried to keep her distance from him, tearing into the hindquarter of the dead doe. Icy gaze fixed upon him, making sure that he was respecting her space as she was respecting his.
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Ooc — Alyssa
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September 18, 2013, 09:31 AM
Aguta didn't start eating right away. Had he been clearheaded, Goldry would have asked her why. But she joined him eventually, respecting his space as she tore into the hind end of the doe, and he didn't give it another thought.
Somewhere in the thickening darkness, two crows cawed in the trees. The wolves' meal would not be theirs alone much longer.
Goldry ate the heart and lungs, but left Aguta the liver and kidneys. He then braced himself against the pronghorn, planting both forepaws on its side and ripping its hide from the front half of its torso, exposing the fatty shoulder beneath. Goldry devoured it. Then he ate along the doe's spine toward Aguta, but his body stiffened and his hackles bristled the nearer he came, until he moved back to the front of the kill before any violence could erupt between them. There, he nosed between the doe's shoulder blades, tearing the meat from its neck, its trachea, and finally its tongue.
By the time the fog in his mind started to clear, Goldry had returned to the doe's chest while a pair of crows pecked at the thing's eyes. He was gnawing on the ribs, but he stopped, licked his chops, and for the first time, his nose detected something out of place. Blood; Aguta's blood. His ears flicked up and he glanced warily in her direction. “You're hurt,” he said in a slow, gravelly voice. He cleared his throat. “Are you... okay?”
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49 Posts
Ooc — Charmy
Offline
September 18, 2013, 06:17 PM
bone of the father, unknowingly given
you will renew your son
flesh of the servant, willingly sacrificed
you will revive your master
blood of the enemy, forcibly taken
[size=3]you will resurrect your foe[/size]
When he moved, leaving her the liver and kidneys, Aguta didn’t hesitate to lurch forward, snatching them up straight away. Once they were gone, she moved back to the hindquarters that she’d already been eating from. Her lip curled back in a bloody display when she realized he was getting nearer to where she was eating and a deep warning growl easily slid forth from her. The scarred female wouldn’t hesitate to physically lash out if he got too much closer into her space. She would do the same toward anyone that got too close to her space while she was eating. It was something she just didn’t tolerate.
She finally had eaten more than enough, moving backward away from the carcass and dropping her rump to the ground, reclining comfortably while licking the pronghorn’s blood from her mouth. When he spoke, taking notice that she’d gotten injured by the doe, she cast an awkward feeling glance down at her chest and shrugged slightly. “The bitch kicked me,” she replied. Lifting her gaze from her chest, she allowed her icy colored eyes to fall upon him. “It’s no big deal, really,” she added with another shrug. “I’ve had far worse than this.”
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font-size: 11px;text-transform:uppercase;">Avatar by Steph</span>
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Ooc — Alyssa
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September 19, 2013, 10:03 AM
this felt like a natural place to end it for me, but we can keep going if you want!
Goldry grinned wide. His white teeth had a reddish cast.
He turned away as she looked at him, careful not to rouse any latent aggression from the hunt.
“I'm sure you have,” he replied with a chuckle, swinging his tail once in a broad arc across the thick grass. Her injury worried him, but if she insisted it was nothing, he trusted her judgement.
Goldry gave her a sideways glance and a small smirk, then stood up and shook himself from head to tail. His adrenaline rush was over. Pounds of warm food filled his belly. Seratonin and melatonin flooded his brain. He meant to stay awake until he returned home; he could not indulge his drowsiness yet.
He pried a small rack of ribs from the stiff carcass: enough for a decent meal for one of his comrades, if he could find them—or for one of the Ookaan caches he kept stocked around the meadow.
He dropped it at his feet for a moment, smiling at Aguta.
“Thanks for your help,” he said. He hesitated, wishing to say more but bound by loyalty to Ookaan not to confess the dire situation of the pack, nor divulge his own loneliness. Little did he know that days—or perhaps only hours—later, he would be tracking Aguta into the Sunspire Mountains, never to return to Ookaan. He ground his teeth for a moment, then the thoughtful look passed from his face and he grinned again.
“I should go. Enjoy the rest of it.” He gestured to the carcass.
Goldry picked up the ribs, and trotted into the dark toward the embankment and the cottonwood tree on the high hill. Before he left her line of sight, however, he turned and dropped the ribs for a spare moment.
“And Aguta. You can keep running from yourself, but sooner or later, you'll run out of places to run to.” His breath steamed away on the cold air. His yellow eyes glinted like greenish lanterns in the dark. Then he gave her a lopsided smile; his Confucian moment passed; his face and tone were impish.
“Take care on your journey home,” he said. He grabbed the ribs and slid into the shadows.
<small><i>avatar by lieu</i></small>
49 Posts
Ooc — Charmy
Offline
September 19, 2013, 07:15 PM
This was a very fun thread. Thank you! <3 I look forward to many more!
bone of the father, unknowingly given
you will renew your son
flesh of the servant, willingly sacrificed
you will revive your master
blood of the enemy, forcibly taken
[size=3]you will resurrect your foe[/size]
There was little left to be said between the two of them it seemed. The hunt had gone well, minus her getting kicked in the chest, and they both now had full stomachs with plenty left over to share with others. Aguta would not likely take any with her, though, because she had quite a distance to travel and did not want to be hindered with carrying any part of the leftover carcass with her. “Thank you,” she responded, giving a slight dip of her muzzle. It had been an interesting experience, hunting with a stranger in strange lands, but it had been well worth it, especially since her stomach was plenty full now.
She was just rising to her paws from her seated position as he walked away when he stopped, turning back toward her and addressing her one last time. For a moment, her ears slicked backward as his words rang true. Aguta diverted her gaze away from him for a brief second before returning it in his direction, letting her icy gaze meet his of yellow. “I know…” was her almost hushed response. Watching him go, she finally pushed herself onward. Aguta did as she was used to doing and did her absolute best at hiding her trail as she traveled back in the direction of the mountain that was her home in these lands. She made it damn near impossible for anyone to be able to follow her. Little did she know, he would end up doing just that.