The thicket had begun to surround her as she prodded onward, the trees towering above her thin, lanky frame. <i>Five. Six. Seven. Eight.</i> Her mind remained busy with mundane tasks while her feet were granted the task of logic, being responsible for ensuring that she could safely navigate through the myriad of trees. Every step took her deeper within the thicket; it became a maze. Her awkward toes were forced to dance among the foliage, side-stepping and winding and begging for more logistic guidance from the mind as it stumbled into the occasional tree or bush. But she paid no attention; her mind was fixed on imperative nothingness and only contained thoughts of worry and rituals. <i>Eleven. Twelve. Thirteen. Fourteen. Fifteen.</i> Her heart quickened as she brushed against another tree, though she had no thought of taking a second to pull away from her counting to steer her in the right direction.
As it would be, she found herself face to face with a thick birch tree. She gasped as the two made contact and snorted, closing her eyes for the brief moment of pain.
The physical pain was secondary to larger turmoil, however; her mind became frenzied and raged and her heart beat quickened, and panic began to diffuse into the core of her bones. She had lost count. Her steps were forgotten before she had managed to reach twenty-four, and Llyra was not sure how to handle such a situation. Her nervous eyes darted; she shifted from heel to heel; her tail was tucked between the two back legs as her mind continued to rage. It was common for her to experience such a high level of anxiety when a calming ritual such as counting could not be completed, but mixed in with a thick unknown grove in an unknown place where the unknown was unknown, and she was beside herself.
She didn’t know what else to do but turn her attention to the object of this sudden bout of anxiety. <span style='color:#4A6995'>“Damn you, tree!”</span> she scolded, growling and barking at the large inanimate object. Her rib bones ascended in perfect visible patterns up either side of her body as she tensed and harassed the tree, a sign all too-telling that she was too feeble and starved to afford a terrible incident like this one.
It was at this moment her mind decided to absolutely loathe trees.</blockquote></span>
(This post was last modified: May 06, 2012, 06:46 PM by Llyra.)