October 31, 2024, 09:18 AM
The morning light paints the outskirts of the valley in amber, lacquering tree bark crimson and blades of grass a warming green. Paler blues mount the midnight sky to wash away the darkness. As rays of warmth began to soak into charcoal fur, the woman stirred with a croaked groan, dark lashes fluttered open. Pushing back against stiff muscles, Gjalla forced an upright position. She doesn't wait for the wave of vigilance to reclaim her body before pivoting from the ridge, tracing the stone path back into the heart of the glen.
The gnawing hunger in her belly guides her steps, urging her onward as she moves with purpose. Black-tipped ears curve to the sound of rushing water - it spins webs in her mind, an old familiarity to when the woman committed the Stormrift's rivers to memory. Her body turns rigid before she registers his figure, their scent stinging the inside of her nose – a stranger. Competition, if she was particularly unlucky.
She stood at the edge of the clearing, her ebony-blue form framed by the shadows of the trees. The princess was half tempted to turn, leave them to their solitude, and drink downriver and hunt elsewhere so she would not have to deal with them, but Gjalla did not pride herself on cowardice. Begrudgingly, the woman pads forward. She maintains the gap between them, lingering at the opposite side. The water ripples against her paws as she dips her head, pink tongue lapping at the liquid in eerie silence. Periwinkle eyes do not leave them, no, staring daggers at the beast.
The gnawing hunger in her belly guides her steps, urging her onward as she moves with purpose. Black-tipped ears curve to the sound of rushing water - it spins webs in her mind, an old familiarity to when the woman committed the Stormrift's rivers to memory. Her body turns rigid before she registers his figure, their scent stinging the inside of her nose – a stranger. Competition, if she was particularly unlucky.
She stood at the edge of the clearing, her ebony-blue form framed by the shadows of the trees. The princess was half tempted to turn, leave them to their solitude, and drink downriver and hunt elsewhere so she would not have to deal with them, but Gjalla did not pride herself on cowardice. Begrudgingly, the woman pads forward. She maintains the gap between them, lingering at the opposite side. The water ripples against her paws as she dips her head, pink tongue lapping at the liquid in eerie silence. Periwinkle eyes do not leave them, no, staring daggers at the beast.
all welcome !! bring me your dogs...
October 31, 2024, 10:21 AM
Ameline returned to her campsite with the haunch of an elk in tow. For her hungry daughters, it would be breakfast- she’d selected the hunk of meat (complete still with the rest of the leg and hoof) from the leftovers before the sun had risen so that they could eat as soon as they awakened.
Blue eyes- as bright and cool as sapphires- peered up hungrily as the woman drank. Ameline inhaled, and from the woman, she could smell only frost, and the pine-like scent of juniper.
Ameline had once been a starving orphan- so she knew what hungry looked like. But she could also see potential in the woman’s form, health in her coat, and intelligence in her expression.
She set the elk haunch down, and chuckled lightly.
Blue eyes- as bright and cool as sapphires- peered up hungrily as the woman drank. Ameline inhaled, and from the woman, she could smell only frost, and the pine-like scent of juniper.
Ameline had once been a starving orphan- so she knew what hungry looked like. But she could also see potential in the woman’s form, health in her coat, and intelligence in her expression.
She set the elk haunch down, and chuckled lightly.
You jutht wandered into about the betht plathe on earth for a loner.She said, quietly, so she might not awaken those who slept still.
Gjalla eyed the elk haunch with muted interest, her gaze flicking to the black and golden she-wolf. The lisp, soft and almost melodic, grated in her ears, and she resisted the urge to narrow her eyes. Practicality first; her tolerance could come later. There was time, yet, for the woman to earn her ire.
Gjalla narrowed her eyes, skimmed over the woman’s form appraising her like a potential threat before letting them slide to the meat at her paws. The chunk of elk dangling in her jaws, the glint of that hauntingly blue gaze, the barest hint of a smile tugging at her maw.
The warm scent of blood taunts her, makes her salivate while her stomach snarls. "Convenient, is it?" she murmured, voice low as her gaze swept over the meat and then the woman. Fortunate, perhaps, but best was generous. "No more convenient the meal you hold." To her, at least. Though Gjalla was no diplomat—not anymore—she wasn't above persuading the girl to share.
October 31, 2024, 05:39 PM
She shrugged her shoulder. "If yuh lookin' fuh thomeone, thith ith ya betht chanthe to find 'em. If yuh lookin' for food...Well, there'th that too- fuh trade. An' if yuh lookin' fer a pack to join," She said, and gestured broadly to the Glen- where more than half a dozen packs mixed, mingled, and traded. She'd essentially just wandered into a job market, and everybody was hiring. "Take your pick." She said with a chuckle.
If the woman wanted to be alone, then she would have steered clear of the glen. "Tho," She said, flicking her tongue across her lips. The woman's mention of the elk meat did not go without notice, but she wasn't offering handouts to everyone; not when she was curious. "You come here jutht in hopeth of findin' a bite to eat, or are you lookin' fer thomethin' elthe?"
If the woman wanted to be alone, then she would have steered clear of the glen. "Tho," She said, flicking her tongue across her lips. The woman's mention of the elk meat did not go without notice, but she wasn't offering handouts to everyone; not when she was curious. "You come here jutht in hopeth of findin' a bite to eat, or are you lookin' fer thomethin' elthe?"
November 01, 2024, 01:37 PM
She stepped forward, tracing her tongue over her muzzle in thought. The glen offered prospects, something she hadn’t come by in a long time—places to scout, people to avoid, and just maybe, a few souls worth keeping around. There was potential in such a network; that much was true. She wasn’t one for charity or for blind loyalty, not after what she'd lived and seen. A pack could wait. For now, she’d take what she could, be it food or anything else useful.
A welcoming attitude— though a stranger willing to trade, to barter—seemed more a trap than a kindness. She’d seen generosity turn tooth and claw enough times not to trust its smell—old habits die hard, after all. "And what of you?" she allowed, almost grudgingly. "For trade, I mean." A pointed glance to the elk's limb was telling; Gjalla did not have much, but the princess had always been fond of elk.
A welcoming attitude— though a stranger willing to trade, to barter—seemed more a trap than a kindness. She’d seen generosity turn tooth and claw enough times not to trust its smell—old habits die hard, after all. "And what of you?" she allowed, almost grudgingly. "For trade, I mean." A pointed glance to the elk's limb was telling; Gjalla did not have much, but the princess had always been fond of elk.
November 02, 2024, 11:04 AM
Everyone was looking for something- and by the way the woman perked up, Ameline could sense that she was searching. For what, or for who, she didn’t know- but when the woman’s hungry gaze fell upon the elk’s leg, she guessed that she hoped to find her next meal here.
Hungry, huh?She asked.
I know the look, I got five daughterth,She said with a grin. That being said, it was her priority to feed them first, not every stranger she found on the way.
You got anythin’ to trade or am I gonna hafta barter on yuh behalf?There was more than enough food- it would take little more than a promise to take another share. And her promise might be more valuable than that of a lone wolf.
3 hours ago
Gjalla scoffed at the suggestion, a smirk curling on her lips despite the wary edge in her eyes. Trade, promise—everything came with a price, even here in this supposedly ideal glen of plenty. She wasn't about to promise a thing she couldn't deliver, and she had nothing to offer this woman but her own grit and perhaps a debt, though she'd bite her tongue off before she admitted it.
"Trading promises isn’t my way," she answered coolly, though her gaze lingered on the elk's leg, hunger gnawing at her patience. She shifted her stance, claws flexing in the soil. "But I know how to hunt, track, fight." Her eyes flashed, the blue of her gaze cold and sharp as steel. "If that’s of value to you, then we’ve got a deal. Otherwise, I’ll find my own meal—don’t need anyone to speak for me."
"Trading promises isn’t my way," she answered coolly, though her gaze lingered on the elk's leg, hunger gnawing at her patience. She shifted her stance, claws flexing in the soil. "But I know how to hunt, track, fight." Her eyes flashed, the blue of her gaze cold and sharp as steel. "If that’s of value to you, then we’ve got a deal. Otherwise, I’ll find my own meal—don’t need anyone to speak for me."
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