Once the simmering sun had been doused by the starry night's crest, the wraith rose from her burrow in the ridge and dragged forth from it the blooded wedge of a wolf's head -- blind and sightless with eyes gouged and mouth bloodied by abuse and the indignity of death. Behind it the length of its spine trailed in the snow, darkening the ground with the red speckle of its progress.
Boldly the waif threw her claim upon the borders, her gaze harsh. With a tremulous howl that pierced the air she called for the wretched Duskfire wolves to behold the inhumanity behind her actions -- and with a final contemptuous shriek that cut through the air like a dagger, the Siren Queen left, leaving at their gates the rotted, fecund head as a promise that there was only one conclusion to be had for their lives: their death.
but my petals have fallen.
We've been given permission to post with our characters coming across Caiapha's "present", despite the thread being read-only, so feel free to throw yourselves in here if you wish!
The ground passed beneath Malachi's feet in a shadowed blur, his only guide the light of the hosts and the lingering note of the wraith's curdling shriek. The voice was one he scarcely recognized, distorted, and his first thought was that Tuwawi had lost herself again. The silhouette breaking the soft horizon did nothing to still his terror, but when the creature's scent rolled in from the plains and filled his nostrils with putrid decay, cold dread wrapped its fingers around his throbbing heart.
A startled bark escaped him and he started when his icy gaze fell upon the creature paces beyond his feet, sockets staring back at him with gaping pits where twin eyes of a wolf should have been. The mangled flesh grinned and stained the ground crimson, and Malachi retched as another gale blew the scent of the dead up the path of his nostrils.
This wolf had not made the cry that had pierced the night, its life long stolen and lost. But as the stench overwhelmed him again, Malachi began to realize he knew who had. Confusion stole him, but soon a sharp anger swallowed his heart, for mingled within the sick sweetness of death lay the tang of salt and sea brine, the scent of tousled waves.
Caiaphas.
His eyes hardened and a low growl escaped his throat, and without a second thought, the man charged forward, seeking her trail in the cover of snow before it vanished like the night.
Eventually her red eyes fell on a the mangled head of a wolf. The kind female froze in shock the sight in front of her. Who would do such a thing!? Her first thought went to Black Feather. It was her fault. Maybe it was Bane who gave her a warning to never return to Black Feather ever again. The young female trembled in fear, feeling terribly guilty for what she had done. Oh no. She could never come close to Black Feather ever again! It would make these horrible things appear on their doorstep.
Scarlett bursted in tears at the thought that she caused this to happen and that she would never be able to see Kove ever again! The albino got her muscles to work and ran away as fast as she could.
Even for a seasoned warrior, the sight was not a pleasant one, though neither did it raise in her a desire to run. Instead she looked coldly at the trail it had left in coming. It was obviously a threat made towards the wolves here. With that single thought had, she growled. If anyone tried to touch Tyrr, she'd tear them apart. The rest, however.... She could not harm them, but nor would she jeapordise her mission keeping them safe. She didn't care much what became of them, for they had obviously bought someone's ire.
The huntress too set out on the path, following tracks that had traveled swiftly. She would try to deal with this at the source, for her job was protecting her charge and he had been threatened here.
Sen isn't one to get sick at many sights. She would rather make jokes about whatever gross thing came into her path than get sickened by it. What she saw this time, though, well it was enough to make bile rise up in her throat. For a second, she was sure she'd end up spilling her guts right there, but the feeling was quickly pushed away, and she tried to catch whatever scents lingered with the dead. Two she knew for sure, the third she knew was apart of the Glacier, but the scent of the salty ocean was very unfamiliar. She hadn't smelled the ocean since her arrival, and even then the smell had quickly been wiped away when rain started to fall. Slowly, she allowed her head to move back and forth, glancing between the direction of the albino, and the direction in which her pack's leader had gone with the other. With an audible sigh, she swallowed whatever still tried to linger in her throat, and followed after in the direction Malachi had gone. She wanted to catch a glance at who—or what—had left such a vile thing on her pack's border.
He took a moment to assess the scent aside from the one wafting unpleasantly from the present that had been left from them, smelling salt and ocean brine. His first thought was immediately of the Bay, and how he would love to sink his teeth into and tear Ragnar's throat from his body, to feel the last gasp of life in the Viking's throat as his fight was lost in vengeance for what he had done to Týrr — after all the Rekkr could think of nothing better; Ragnar had stolen from him everything he had loved, and if Týrr did not kill the whore and her child he called his family, then he would tear Ragnar from them so they might suffer as he was left too, except he would be kinder and allow them their memories so that his vengeance might be all that more cruel and sweet — but the scent of the pack was not that of the Bay. It was unfamiliar to him, though the nagging persisted.
For now the Rekkr tuned it out, focused on what he had chosen to do: to protect those that stayed behind. There must always be a wolf in Duskfire, after all; despite that he had momentarily caught Scarlett's scent retreating further into the Glacier, right now there were more pressing things on his mind aside from why she was retreating instead of pursuing or guarding.
a crime so old as the sky and bone
She gnashed her teeth indignantly at the thought, a strand of spit oozing from a canine. Had they abused her son? Refused his return? She could only imagine what Larus looked like now. Maera was fiery and beautiful -- the apple of her eye -- did her child resemble his father? Or perhaps his golden mask was as vibrant as Tuwawi's red cape. The memory of her missing boy made the ember's face burn, bereft by his absence, and her eyes welled with rare tears of complete, and utter remorse.
Without warning, a shrill cry pieced the glacier's silence and Tuwawi broke into a canter, fur wild and posture untamed. She was one of the last to arrive -- just in time to watch Malachi, Manauia, and Sen kick off into the outlands. Scarlett wilted away towards the territory's heart but Týrr stood, eyes gleaming, at a dark and ragged clump a few yards away. There, in the snow, laid the ruined head of a wolf. Its eye sockets were bloodied and gouged in the most horrific way, the tail end of its spinal cord spindled like a rat's tail. The rotting smell was putrid, but not nearly as strong as the message it represented -- something Tuwawi understood all too well.
Every hair stood on end as she ruthlessly beelined towards the decapitated head like prey, pouncing with a violent jab of both forelimbs. In a moment she snatched it up in her tattered maw and delivered powerful bites to rend the skull apart. Its taste was rancid, texture chunky but brittle, and the coagulated blood spilled on the ground in thick, soupy clumps. She broke the jaw in two and cracked the cranium in her frenzy, tattering its face until it was but an unrecognizable piece of meat. "I'll kill them!" the queen screeched, unbidden -- tossing the head aside. "I'll kill them all!"
Her lips pursing in thought as she tried to imagine what it was that had happened, she was struck with the sound of erratic screaming and growling, and all of it coming from familiar voice. Her mother.
Terrified that she might have lashed out at one of the very own members of the Glacier, (she had heard through the grapevine what had happened with the loud-mouth boy Adlartok) the girl broke into a run. Quicky, weaving her way through the gathered bodies, she reached her mother and with a stern voice yet kind eyes she tried to hush her.
"Mother! Mother?!" she urged, her muzzle poking at her side softly in an attempt to soother her.
Until now, the piece of shit that was Caiaphas, and her literal piece of shit she had left behind remained a mystery to the girl. [/SIZE]