After Indru's caution towards the cherries, Borlla took a moment to sniff at the air again, noting a sweet note to the air. Fruit scent was a lot different from prey scent. Well, not too different, but it didn't matter what the fruit was, it couldn't hurt you. Prey was unpredictable. If you didn't know the scent, it could be the end of you.
"I won't, they smell really sweet." She smiled, and turned away from the cherry scent.
So that's what rabbit smelled like. She sniffed again, trying to dedicate the scent to memory, ignoring the already archived scent of the cherry, which proved a tad difficult. "Rabbit." Borlla repeated, hoping that vocalizing it would help her remember it. When he moved for it, she immediately got quiet, watching the excitement, but he'd stopped, and she tilted her head in confusion. But she didn't say anything, strictly listening to him and following orders. Down the on the ground, tail down, legs tensed, like he'd said. Rabbit, she thought, when he told her to go for it. Carefully, she moved forward, searching for the scent path.
It was out of the way of the place where she'd buried the cherries, although it occasionally sneaked back into her nose, and she had to completely refocus. Since she'd only really hunted inanimate things before, she wasn't sure how to move her paws, and became a bit self-conscious about it. There wasn't much leaf litter about, but she still tried not to shuffle, or lift her paws to high. Her movement wasn't far from a train that looked about ready to jump the track; shuffling along, but if you looked close enough, it had a strange bounce to it. Her mind went completely blank though when she saw the rabbit. Her stomach clenched, and she was frozen to the floor.
She wanted to look back at Indru, but was afraid that any movement would scare the rabbit away. A few more paces forward she shuffled, before making the leap. When she landed though, there wasn't anything beneath her paws. A frustrated growl became her post-hunting exhale, and she sat, half-flopped. She hadn't even heard it run off.