<i>Human beings in a mob, What's a mob to a king? What's a king to a god? What's a god to a non-believer, who don't believe in anything?</i>
<blockquote>
<i>Had it not been bad enough before?</i> she kept asking herself, deadened gaze roving the tall grasses that rolled through the field. On a regular day they were calm, waving easily as gentle winds caressed the green stalks and they would whisper a quiet mantra that everything would be alright. It had been like that the last time she had been here, and the time before, and every time her golden eyes had ever caught sight of the meadow. Peaceful, calm, thoughtful. There was no gentler place within the entirety of Relic Lore than the field that lay within the southern eden. Yet upon that night even the Hush Meadow was showing signs of the world having been flipped all around. The grasses whipped to and fro without heed for who was walking among them while the black sky above snarled and lit up the open plain with a yellow ferocity. Water pounded down from the sky, as though trying to force the long grasses back into the flooded earth. In the most sacred of places, there was no mercy to be found.
Despite the crash of thunder that boomed across the vast field Ava could hear nothing. Nothing but deafening silence, all around her just emptiness. And she herself was <i>empty</i>, so little of her being had function besides the motorized movements of her stiff legs that she wondered if she was even real. Did her paws even hit the ground? She couldn't feel them. Was she still moving? Ava floated by like a ghost, a dark spectre of misery. She did not weave through the grasses like one touched with wanderlust; her gait was one of straight-laced agony. The path she followed was true, a line cutting through the violent storm. Every muscle in her body was tensed to numbness and didn't allow for her to meander about easily. This was only aided by the fact that Ava was entirely lost, nothing to accomplish within her mind to take her anywhere. She had wanted to run to purge herself of the negativity, but her body would not allow it. There was nothing freeing about her trek. The grass whipped her and the wind froze her and nothing gave her any pity.
Life as a pack wolf made her healthy; life as a wolf of the mountain made her strong. Yet as the rain pelted her, soaking through her jet-black coat down and in to her skin, she felt as though she were the same rag and bones wolf that had showed up into the Hush Meadow some several months ago. Where was her strength now? Where was that resilience which she prided herself on? Some days she could fake it, and others it felt as though every ounce of her being had taken off with Rhysis and Naira that fateful day. It was clear from her automaton movements which of the afflictions had taken her today. The numbness was infectious, egged on by the violent cold that surrounded her. Perhaps the sunrise would bring her out of it; but it was hours away from coming back up. Ava was stuck in a bubble of disbelief.
A bolt of lightning snaked through the sky, lighting the entire meadow and exposing her sorry figure while a growl of thunder came to pass shortly behind it. Ava did not flinch; she had forgotten how to feel. </blockquote>