Star had run earlier this morning and, finding herself bored, continued her run towards this swampy area. She had slowed to a walk- well, a wade actually. The ground was wet and her feet sunk into squishy mud. She was careful to try to keep it off of her- it would surely ruin her perfect flawless white fur. She could see an owl that was hunting its own prey, a mouse. If she came at just the right time, she might be able to catch the owl as it caught the mouse. She crept closer, hiding herself from the owl behind muddy reeds. She could see it tense as it prepared to swoop. As it did, it caught the mouse in its talons, and Star had just leapt, biting the owl's neck quickly. Now she held in her jaws an owl that held in its claws a mouse. It was a double catch, a little sprout of good luck for her. She found the most dry dirt she could find, and dug. She buried her prey and layed two crossed sticks there in an x to mark the spot for when she headed back. She continued to walk in the mud that sank under her paws.
Sumayl froze suddenly, ears erect atop his skull when he heard the distinct sound of another creature moving through the marsh lands, not too far from his position, the tell-tale squelching of their steps unmistakable in the otherwise silence. Peeking over the tall grasses he didn't immediately see anyone and so out of options the golden outlaw let out a chuff to announce his presence to whomever else was haunting these lands as he was, the herd temporarily shoved from his mind.
Star could smell a pack scent on him, although she couldn't pick it out yet. But it was similar to Rain's in the way that it smelled like the mountains too. Anyway, he didn't smell like the Creek, so he couldn't be from there. But then again, it was hard to tell with the awful smell that covered everything.
"I'm from Swiftcurrent Creek." She told Sumayl. Hopefully he knew of the treaty as well, or at least wasn't aggresive. A soft breeze came by, blowing through her white fur. Star shivered. Soon Winter would be here, and she would need a heavy fur coat and full caches if she was to stay comfortable during it.
The girl, Star, Sumayl reminded himself, spoke simply with perhaps an edge of a bite (at least that was how Sumayl interpreted it) that she was from Swiftcurrent Creek. Sumayl was hit with the impression that, that was supposed to mean something to him. “Ok?” He responded with a shrug, getting the feeling that he was missing something. “Is that supposed to mean something to me?” He couldn't help but ask her, because if there was one thing that the Gamekeeper hated it was being kept in the dark.
“I don't know anyone by the name of Ferdie. Never even heard of him,” So obviously, who ever he was, again, he wasn't very important to Sumayl. Though Suma got the feeling that there was much Jace hadn't bothered to tell him the two times they had met, being as it seemed to the Ostrega, more interested in bickering and attempting to throw his position of power in Suma's face. “You mean Jace?” Sumayl asked, figuring that it had to be who she was inquiring about. A soft snort left the Ostrega's black, leathery nostrils but he did not speak immediately. Just because he disliked Jace's abuse of power and belief that everyone had to confirm to his perfect ideal or they were wrong, didn't mean that he was going to necessarily bad-mouth him in front of this stranger. Their quarrel with one another was personal, and frankly, none of this woman's business. There was so much that Sumayl did not agree with Jace upon but he wasn't going to go out of his way to disrespect Jace like that, because as much as Sumayl wished it to be other wise, he was Jace's subordinate, and Jace, also, as if whatever deity that ruled above already didn't have a massive sense of cynical humor, happened to be the brother of a woman that Sumayl was growing to care for. There was the omnipresent feeling that if he hoped to have any type of future with Vienna that Jace's approval was likely going to be a major player in the game.
Sumayl, currently, didn't know Jace well enough to have anything nice to say about him and wondered if he should respond to it at all. “I'm still too new to have any sort of personal opinion about him.” It wasn't exactly the truth, but she didn't know that and Sumayl had no qualms about being a little deceitful to make sure that he didn't appear disrespectful to Jace towards a stranger that, supposedly, was something of a rival.
"I know, I know." She said with a little roll of her eyes. "I haven't encountered him a lot, so I'm not completely sure... " She added to defend her case. It was a little funny that she still couldn't describe his personality very well... Well, she had hunted with him, fought a trespasser with him, been to a few meetings with him, and talked to him. Why didn't she know yet? Oh well, whatever. "I believe it will be time for me to get back. Goodbye, Sumayl." She said with a little wag of her puffy fluffy tail before beginning to trot away at a steady pace towards the Creek.