For @Namid <3
Lunette Vuesain
I’ve got my love stuck in my head
The sun filtered down from a dappled sky, a patchwork cover of white clouds scudding across the pale winter heavens. They were far off, those clouds, icy wisps strewn across the high vault, and whenever they passed over the sun they took to shining. Lunette liked those clouds. They were pretty, and the world didn't get so dark when it was those who drew in across the sky. Besides, it didn't snow from them, and after a couple of days of thoughtful deliberation, she had come to the conclusion that she preferred rain to snow.Snow was pretty, though, she had to admit as she picked her way along the frozen shoreline. It covered the world and made the jagged edges softer, and when the sun struck it—particularly in the mornings—it glittered like a sea of crystals. And in the nights.. when the moon shone full and silver, and the stars shimmered in the sky, and everything seemed to be made of the same moon-silver, pristine and pure, though the shadows were so dark...
Lunette was at once both in love with the dark, and terrified of it.
But the sun was out now, still high in the sky, and she was content to know that, if she didn't go much further, she'd be back home before nightfall. While she had on occasion napped out in the wild, she'd never spent a full day away, and she wasn't keen on starting now, either. Her nose sampled the air, breath smoking into the cold day, and stopped. Cocked her head. Looked up the sloping sides of the valley again. Was that.. a path? It looked old and overgrown, unused, sort of.. hidden.. and utterly mysterious.
Gasping slightly with excitement, the young lady veered off her chosen course along the lake, and set her paws upon the path. Old mysteries seemed to reverberate through the ground and up into her bones, and she took another couple of steps along it, before pausing. Snow had bent and broken vegetation by the path's sides, and, curious, she used her muzzle to free some of them. Once they peeked through their blankets, she took a step back to survey them, snow still clinging to the top of her nose.
She didn't know these plants. She hadn't seen any of them before. Curiously, she leaned in again to sniff them more closely, but the winter had taken much of their scent away. Most of their leaves were sagging and unhappy, half-decomposed and frost-bitten by the time the snows had set in. A low whine of frustration escaped her throat as she inspected every inch of them, committing them to memory.