the chill of coming winter - Printable Version +- Ruins of Wildwood (https://relic-lore.net) +-- Forum: Library (https://relic-lore.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=23) +--- Forum: Game Archives (https://relic-lore.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=26) +---- Forum: Incompleted Relic Lore (https://relic-lore.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=22) +---- Thread: the chill of coming winter (/showthread.php?tid=5843) |
the chill of coming winter - Sorren - Nov 10, 2013 [doHTML] She had grown thinner and weaker. Hunger clawed deep at her belly, pain striking like lightning bolts through her innards. It was when that pain stopped, Sorren knew, that she was truly on the brink of death—not that she was all together healthy and vibrant at the moment. She tried not to allow the panic to consume her. It would be more difficult to join a pack now, even if she found Silver. Who wanted to take on a starving, weak yearling? Wouldn't it be best to simply allow nature to take its course? Sorren could smell her kindred in the territories surrounding her, though nothing quite so strong as a pack. She had hoped that by following the river, she would run into someone (or something to eat), but it appeared to be a poor guess on her part. Without really knowing where she was—the territories seemed to all look the same, at least from her perspective and unfamiliarity with the area—Sorren lay down near the shore of the creek. Stretching her neck out to reach the shallows, she drank deeply and desperately. It would not provide her with the same sort of sustenance as food, but it would fill her belly for a time. RE: the chill of coming winter - Phineas - Nov 10, 2013 [dohtml] [/dohtml] RE: the chill of coming winter - Sorren - Nov 12, 2013 [doHTML] Truthfully, as desperate as Sorren was, she did not notice the icy cold of the water she drank until she paused to catch her breath and found her throat burning. Indeed, the shallows were not really the shallows, but the break-off point from where the water was yet too deep to freeze. Her ears went back, ashamed that she hadn't noticed the drastic change in weather. Winter wasn't coming; it was here, and it was time for her to either find a pack or give in to nature's elements. When she came out of that revelation, Sorren noticed the sound of pawsteps falling on the cold ground nearby. She swung her head in surprise to be greeted by the presence of an older male that appeared to be just as surprised as she was. Her ears went flat at his growl—submissive—though the sound did not seem terribly aggressive. Still, Sorren didn't want to press her luck. She shifted to her paws, painfully aware of how weak and thin her body had become. For the moment she did nothing other than acknowledge his presence and authority; she would wait to see if he would kill her, or if he deigned her someone worth saving. Re: - Spirit of Wildwood - Nov 12, 2013 [dohtml] Look Out!There is a rabbit's nest nearby. +1 Health [/dohtml]RE: the chill of coming winter - Phineas - Nov 14, 2013 [dohtml] [/dohtml] RE: the chill of coming winter - Sorren - Nov 18, 2013 [doHTML] He remained silent for an uncomfortable—at least it felt thus to a terrified, yearling loner—amount of time. Her submission seemed to placate him, however, for the elder and stronger male made no move to attack. As he lifted his head and his nostrils moved to glean what information they could from the wind, Sorren straightened her posture slightly and ventured to do the same—were they in danger? She never took her green eyes off him, lest he change his mind and attack, but they widened as she realized what he had noticed. As he nodded and rumbled in command, Sorren's body slouched in slight embarrassment—she had not noticed the scent of prey so close when she had first come to this place. If he did not think her inadequate before, he may very well believe so now. She followed obediently, in hopes that his mood would not suddenly change for the worst. When they arrived at the warren, he waited expectantly, and Sorren realized it was a chance to prove herself. It would perhaps be in a small, pathetic way—but for the moment, she was a small and pathetic creature. It would have to do. She moved towards the entrance and began to dig a wide enough hole that her head might snatch whatever lay inside; she desperately hoped that there were no emergency exits, or that at least one of the small mammals would be slow enough for her to catch. After a swift spray of half-frozen soil, and a dart of her head into the widened gap, Sorren emerged with a single rabbit in her jaws. She had been lucky, for it had taken a wrong turn and she caught it at a dead-end. Though her mouth watered around the creature, she set it delicately between the male and herself, and nudged it cautiously towards him. He seemed well-fed, but she did not want to presume too much and offend him by eating without his express approval. Sorren had no way of knowing his position in the pack, but she could smell other wolves interlaced in his own scent—and a pack wolf stood tall above those with no place to call home, no matter how highly or lowly they were ranked. RE: the chill of coming winter - Phineas - Nov 21, 2013 [dohtml] [/dohtml] |