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tacent satis laudant - Mapplethorpe - Jan 23, 2013 [dohtml]
January 23rd; Sunrise; Light snow; 5° F/-15° C
Sliding down from the cliffs he now called home, Mapplethorpe had originally made plans of hunting something down for a quick breakfast. Rather than putting his tracking skills to use he, instead, found himself meandering down the rocky paths and into a patch of forest where he had first met Rhysis. The darkening shadows of the ancient trees immediately called to mind the thoughts about how far he had come since that fateful day, how much of his figure he had gotten back after joining his pack, and how his temper had somewhat mellowed. Deep down it made him sick, to think that he had somehow been tricked into joining the band of nomads, actually somewhat bound to a hierarchy. Aside from the disgust, however, he found it amusing how Naira and Rhysis let him come and go as he pleased. Over the past three weeks, he had memorized a great deal of his new home, committed to memory where every trail, cache, and distinguishable landmark laid. By now, it only seemed right for him to descend from the Pass and explore the immediate world beyond it, to bring something back something useful for Rhysis or Naira's mere amusement.
With careful steps he drank in the scenery, every snow-covered article - a fallen branch, a jagged boulder, a pile of forest debris - identified with the blink of an eye. All... except one. Something, or someone, just within his field of vision, hacked and sputtered, their body heaving quick breaths as they laid on their side. Mapplethorpe, caught off-guard, froze in his steps. He opened his mouth to say something, but the creature in the snow let out another hoarse cough. The Nomad cleared his throat, even muttered a cautious "Hail,", but the being did not acknowledge him.
He scowled, rather dissatisfied in being ignored. "Excuse me, madame," he began again, his tone loud as he drew closer to the tawny mass of fur. Again, nothing. He dared to draw closer, staring in unease as the newfound coyote simply laid there. Mapplethorpe looked her over, observed the area immediately surrounding her, but found neither blood nor a clear set of tracks. It seemed as if the large-eared canine had come crashing into the area, only to lay down and find herself unable to get back up on her feet. Judging by the snow that had piled up on the coyote's pelt, he could only guess the woman had been rendered immobile for the past couple of hours... but, by what?
Puffs of moisture lifted into the air and Mapplethorpe could only stare in bewilderment, only somewhat certain that the lesser being had broken a limb. The saliva that had bubbled up into a foam all around her muzzle had him convinced otherwise. His tail flicking behind him, Mapplethorpe hesitantly leveled himself with her, glaring as he could smell the air of sickness that fell like a curtain around her. A growl rumbled in his chest, and when it was not returned, he let out another. Did she have manners, no integrity to even bother to address him? To cry out that she clearly needed help?
He met the creature's deep auburn eyes, scoffing as her breathing visibly slowed. "Mors omnia solvit," he whispered into the lass's ear, smiling as he thought of all the deeds and misdeeds she must have done to deserve such a fate. Thorpe watched with a perceptive gaze as the dying woman took a deep breath and more foam gushed from her mouth. "Here, let me help you..." The sack of skin and bones suddenly grew very still; the visible ribcage deflating one last and final time. Mapplethorpe meant to take a step backward, to withdraw himself and find or carry out the means to put the carnivore out of her silent and obvious misery, but the realization that the canid had died before his very eyes made his lips part in both disgust and apparent delight. "Poor thing," he whispered eerily with a sneer, walking idly around the corpse only to crane his neck down to stare into her now unseeing eyes. "Lex est, non pœna, perire." RE: tacent satis laudant - Sagacity - Feb 02, 2013 [dohtml]Sagacity had been awake for the latter half of the night, on the move. Considering that she was a part of a pack called "Nomad's Pass," she assumed that she would be forgiven for her need to travel. She knew she would return to the Pass before too long, and would always return there, remembering the oath she'd made to Rhysis, her Alpha. But it did not keep her tied to the mountain region full of crossing pathways and secrets in the woods. It was an area she still needed to explore- but she found herself still drawn to the land to the North, where she'd first entered what she'd learned was called Relic Lore. She felt drawn back to the place where she'd first met the wolves of this place, and wanted to re-trace her steps to see if it still led her to where she was now.
RE: tacent satis laudant - Mapplethorpe - Feb 09, 2013 [dohtml]
He continued to sneer and smirk, the grin on his face both unbecoming and not misplaced at the same time. When the perfume of a pack member curled in his nostrils, his facial expression went blank. His brows evened out and the smug curl of his lip dropped into a hard line. She moved closer and one of his russet ears turned in her direction before he fully faced her, taking in the fascination that was apparent in her amber eyes and all over her face.
He half-snorted, half-sniffed as his golden eyes quickly looked her over. He knew she was one of Rhysis' newest recruits - her fur still carried a distinguished trace of his cologne - but nothing more aside from the fact that she was apparently worthy of the Monarchs' saving graces (having survived being initiated into the pack and all). Unsure of what to say, for some time he merely watched her and stared at the dead creature at his feet. He took a step backwards as if to invite her further and allow her to inspect it closely. Grinding his molars together, he slowly closed his eyes then opened them again to study his companion's face once more. While not thoroughly opposed to conversation, it seemed only right in his mind if she spoke first or asked questions. He could have extended a 'Good morning' to her as was custom to interacting with one's pack members, but with a dead body at hand it seemed downright inappropriate.
Standing up as tall as he could, Mapplethorpe's tail twitched and he suddenly wondered why the young lady had come down the mountain. He scanned the area from where the both of them had wandered from, lifting his muzzle just enough in attempt to test the air for the presence of other Nomads. Ever so slowly, he walked in a wide circle around her and the corpse before coming to a stop when he returned to his starting point. One of his ears drew back before righting itself again and he opened his mouth just slightly before closing it again. She could think what she like, he resolved. Whether or not she believed he had killed the coyote or somehow assisted in its demise or some other fanciful ideas, he would allow her to make the first move, maybe even engage him in conversation if she fancied it. Despite whatever she thought, however, he hoped she would realize that something was indeed wrong with the lesser being. The foam around the coyote's mouth, still bubbling and rising even in death as the body let itself go, had him on edge now as he considered for a moment what could have caused its untimely death.
His eyes dropped back down to the large-earred canine, his eyes narrowing before turning away completely, pretending to focus one something far away in the distance. RE: tacent satis laudant - Sagacity - Feb 09, 2013 [dohtml] When he turned to face her, Sagacity stiffened slightly, turning her ears back to show respect. She didn't know him, nor did she know how long he'd been in the pack, but she assumed that he would've been in the pack for longer than she and therefore deserved respect without question. He did not send her away with a grimace or vocalize anything, but instead took a step back, inviting her forward. She moved with relative ease then, summoned by him to investigate the dead coyote at his feet.[/dohtml] RE: tacent satis laudant - Mapplethorpe - Feb 10, 2013 [dohtml]
From the corner of his eye he watched as she came forward. Her attention to proper etiquette did not go unnoticed and while he merely feigned interest in a distant tree, he secretly appreciated it. "Vermin." The word that easily slipped from her lips didn't faze him in the slightest. By the sound of it, she seemed smart; savvy in her ways as he watched her senses flare up and her hackles rise about her neck and shoulders. She bared her teeth and the brute turned his neck to take in her face again, to read the expression that was now apparent on her face. Was that disgust? Some sort of knowing what had befallen the pitiful canid? The rotation of his ears and the flaring of his nostrils made it clear that she had completely ensnared his attention. A subtle tilt of his head further emphasized his inquisitiveness.
An amused smile lit up his features. "Undesirables," he agreed, his low voice as slick as oil. He let out a scoff, his eyes flickering down only once to the coyote's damp mouth before gazing back to the young lady. "I have not seen anything like this since I was about your age," he remarked, his dark brows briefly touching. "To find that it's manifested here is... nothing short of unsettling."
He continued to round on her, his gaze raking up and down her figure in concern. "Do... Do you know what this sickness is?" he asked, his tone taking on a more grandfatherly note now as he became curious about whether or not she had correctly identified the coyote's blight, this particular pest's downfall. Assuming her reaction to his discovery had been sparked by some vivid or traumatic memory, he could not help but to crave for that specific event in her still short-lived life. RE: tacent satis laudant - Sagacity - Feb 10, 2013 [dohtml] It seemed that he too shared the same dislike for the bedraggled creature that she had, though when he asked if she knew of the plague it had died from she was slightly surprised. It would seem, then, that he disliked the coyote because it was a coyote. Most of Sagacity's aversion came from the fact that it had been sick- she probably wouldn't have spared a resentful growl for the creature had it died of natural causes. She didn't hate coyotes with a jacobin disgust, but a contempt for their ways. This one, however, deserved extra loathing because the damn thing had become diseased- and in the middle of winter. Sicknesses such as this were more common in the summer- the creature had truly been damned to be cursed in the cold months.[/dohtml] RE: tacent satis laudant - Mapplethorpe - Feb 11, 2013 [dohtml]
A click of his tongue further extended his distaste; the smile that now reached his eyes continued to reveal another facade of his personality. The wolf before the woman was not the same man who had laughed at Rhysis the desperate or ridiculed the transforming queen that had been Naira, seemingly lost in the Thickets. Mapplethorpe gave her a rather kind nod, listening attentively to her every word with an open mind. The White Plague, she had replied and all too quickly it occurred to him exactly had caused the coyote to breathe its very last breath. While her answer was not the one he had been expecting, it was nevertheless satisfactory.
"I don't know what others call it," she continued. "No one taught me about it, but I've seen it before." "Good," he praised her, his brows lifting once before settling back to their normal positions above the hollows of his eyes. She enlightened him further, and rather than snapping back at her that he already knew about the malady, he patiently concentrated on her. "It is contagious," he informed her. "Where I'm from it's called rabies. From the word rabere... to rave." He paused just long enough to build a more semi-dramatic tone in his voice, "Madness."
Her next question made him inhale slowly, holding the air captive in his lungs for a brief second as his mind conjured up the memory in his head. "Nothing as interesting as this poor soul," he disclosed. "I saw an old man arguing with himself... and the shadows around him. He was spinning in circles, snarling at and jabbering to no one, saliva bubbling up around his muzzle as if it were the product of his foul blathering. It took only a turn of his head to notice me as I was passing through a section of unclaimed forest." A frown began to form on his face. "He accused me of sullying my soul, of learning the words only found on a dark being's tongue."
He gave a shrug, half a guffaw lifting from his throat. "I only assumed that my mother's friend had built up quite the reputation as to have other wolves belittle him so roughly. He charged after me then, teeth bared and tail held up like a war banner, his yellow eyes wild unlike any rogue wolf I've ever seen." He suddenly stopped as if he was trying to remember something particular about that stranger but shook his head. "Perhaps it affects us differently," he mused, his eyes falling back to the lifeless canine. "I wasn't sure if she had suffered as he did. Tsssk." Another click of his tongue against his teeth. "No wonder why she didn't do anything when I approached." A glimmer of disappointment shone in his pupils, "Why do you ask? What have you seen?" RE: tacent satis laudant - Sagacity - Feb 12, 2013 [dohtml] Though he appeared to have more knowledge of the disease than she'd originally suspected, he did not treat her as a kinchin while he went on to share his own experiences with this terrible madness with her. The way in which he spoke did not make her feel childish for having made up her own name for the disease, but rather made her curious to know him more- to learn from him and see what he knew about other diseases she'd seen and had learned about, but only through experience. Sagacity's knowledge came largely from things she experienced, not from things she'd been taught. She'd learned much on her own, rather than tagging along with others and asking multitudes of questions. Now, though, she had the chance to learn even without having to ask those questions; the sagely male obliged and fulfilled her curiosity.[/dohtml] RE: tacent satis laudant - Mapplethorpe - Feb 14, 2013 [dohtml]
She unhesitatingly gave him an answer; almost instantly the figure of a vivid red-orange fox came dancing into his mind's eye. As quickly as it pounced into a spot of summer sun, its coat faded and its shine dulled; it fell into a sort of stupor, thrashing about with a mouth full of foul, white froth. The woman's figure came into view and the vulpine creature crashed after her, unsuccessful in its attempt to attack her. Brought back to the present from her rumination about where the coyote could have come from, he blinked slowly. His tail flicked about at his heels.
His cadmium yellow eyes trailed the crooked footprints in the snow before he stepped over to where it had only recently staggered into the woods. The impressions had nearly filled up, almost covered with the light snowfall that the morning had brought. Gingerly he lowered his nose into one of the depressions, closing his eyes as he picked over the traces of wilderness that the canine had left behind. Hidden underneath what was left of the musk and sickness was an earthy perfume and the stink of old, dead rose meadowsweet stalks. He moved over further along the set of tracks where it looked as though the tawny being had actually run straight into a tree before continuing onward, then sampled the marks again.
"Are you familiar with plant life?" he asked, only briefly looking at his companion before returning to the marred snow. His eyes narrowed as he assumed the possible worst case scenario for the large-earred canine to have suffered. The idea that the scent of rose meadowsweet brought him to assume that she had fallen from the mountain. It might have easily explained her limping and teetering steps but it did not convince him of where she had come from. "She might have come from the cliffs; made a home within the base of the mountain," he considered, rambling mostly to himself. "Check these out?" he then asked, stepping back once more to turn his gaze to where he had descended the Pass. "Not sure if she could have been slinking about our lands or not. There's... a sort of telltale marker in her prints that hints she might have come from a higher elevation. Rose meadowsweet and some other foliage I can't seem to place." RE: tacent satis laudant - Sagacity - Feb 19, 2013 [dohtml] He seemed interested in her story, as interested as she'd been when she'd listened to him speak about his former packmate. She appreciated this to no end, and found herself quite comfortable in his presence. Not in a friendly way- though she did believe that their current situation was amicable to say the least- but in a way in which she felt that she was the student and he the scholar. Had he spoken lies to her with the same voice he'd just used, she would have believed him. She had already formed the opinion that Mapplethorpe was one who could be looked up to as an expert on many matters.[/dohtml] |