Blackfoot Forest misery - Printable Version +- Wolf RPG (https://wolf-rpg.com) +-- Forum: In Character: Roleplaying (https://wolf-rpg.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=5) +--- Forum: Archives (https://wolf-rpg.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=11) +--- Thread: Blackfoot Forest misery (/showthread.php?tid=1478) |
misery - Tezcacoatl - March 16, 2014 Týr had not meant to allow the sickly fawn - a scrappy little thing that had bleated pathetically, calling to the Nord’s attention as he scouted the territories near Swiftcurrent Creek - to lead him so far from Swiftcurrent’s borders. It was a substantial combination of predator instincts and resolute unwillingness to pass up what he considered the perfect prey. The fawn was obviously not the healthiest of it’s herd and had either been left for dead or wandered too far away. It was enticing and Týr was determined he would bring it back to Swiftcurrent Creek for the caches, eager to fulfill the task Fox required of him. Perhaps there lingered a touch of reckless abandon in the combination as well as he raced through the darkening lands, the shadows blurring as he pushed himself off an outcropping of rock with a soft grunt, sides heaving with each heavy, stifled pant. Crystal blue eyes scoured the dark forest viciously as the Viking caught the silhouette of his fawn. For a sickly thing Týr had to reluctantly admit that it was agile and swift, nevertheless. Cloaked in the grasping shadows, coat splashed with drying mud - useful for masking his scent - Týr patiently lowered himself betwixt a rotten log and another boulder, moving akin to army crawling wiggling his body (an impressive feat given his bulk) past the tightest part of his hiding place for the fear of getting potentially stuck on take off. RE: misery - Haunter - March 19, 2014 As some times he tended to be, the creeper sat motionless in the shadows somewhere to the Lambda's left as he began his miserable retreat back to the Creek. He had followed the male at a safe distance, incredibly careful to keep downwind of him and his designated quarry. Now the reason he had chosen to hunt the hunter had been entirely out of envy at first—still mulling over this young male calling Fox his "queen"—but eventually his foolish jealousy had turned to curiosity; so he watched Sveinn hunt with yellow, judgmental eyes. When the milk-chocolate brute had lost his prey to this noisy forest Haunter hadn't visited since the first time, he didn't find the joy he thought he might in the male's loss. His one ear twitched, and though he had the capacity to be smug about the situation, instead he spoke languidly from his vaguely concealed spot, only able to be seen if one were looking and had noticed his bright eyes. "You might have caught it, if you weren't prone to hesitation," he told the young wolf. RE: misery - Tezcacoatl - March 22, 2014 Týr had not taken notice to the shadow observing him, for the forest was full of shadows, shallow and deep, and in the cover of the darkened foliage failed to see the sunflower yellow eyes that would have, otherwise, given Haunter away. The loss of the fawn was disappointing, and the weight of his failure hung heavy in the young Nord’s breast. Ragnar would have not let the deviant thieves take his meal, but, Sveinn had observed that his father had a sort of …reckless abandon, and while Týr himself had found himself doing reckless things - just as any other would - he was more …dignified than his father. Defeat had been handed unto him in a corroded platter and he was left with no choice but to chalk it up as it was: a loss. Mistakes had been made, and now, Týr was forced with identifying them, observing them, and learning from them. With an annoyed flick of his tail the young Viking turned and began to trudge through the tangles of webs, roots and earth. A pause was given only when a voice called out to him from the shadows. RE: misery - Haunter - March 26, 2014 When the male answered, it was to say something that Haunter had already been made aware of, and then to further spew some nonsense about how mistakes kept a wolf humble. Haunter didn't see how this was related to feeding one's belly, as his own philosophy regarded a "mistake" as something to experience and suffer through only so that you wouldn't do it again. There was a mocking glint in the inky monolith's yellow eyes, but to Sveinn it would read as something like mild interest due to his generally lank expression. He was further irritated by the yearling's last words, but his expression didn't change and he had been wholly silent up to this point. "Humility has nothing to do with hunting," he said after an uncomfortably pregnant pause. "And overworking yourself won't solve your problem either." He stared at the chocolate subordinate, wondering if he would be further offended or if he wanted to actually learn something. Neither choice would bother Haunter in the least. |