Namid’s stomach growled once again, causing her to flinch. She doubted she had ever been this hungry before, and the hunger had been gnawing at her bones for the past few weeks. The snow had scared away most prey in any area, sending rodents and other mammals down into their holes for the winter. With most of the easily catchable prey tucked away from the cold, what was out there either didn’t reside on the ground or was too big for her to catch on her own. On occasions she’d been able to suffice herself with tough snow hare or a ferret but other than those meager rations, she’d been a starving girl.
The Star Dancer’s lack of food showed in her physic. Her fur wasn’t up to its usual luster, it no longer looked well-kept and shiny but rather it was bed-ragged. It clung to her body, which had grown thin and slightly emaciated looking. Her mismatched eyes were dim and non-too alert like they usually would be, and her nose seemed to never stop running. Everything about her said she wasn’t up to par, and that showed even more in her sluggish posture and movements. With her sapping strength it made catching her food to keep her going even more difficult, which was never a good thing. The poor girl had been through a hell of a time for these past few months.
The only things that had kept her going was the thought of her companion, @Rook , and her parents. She knew that Rook still needed her in some form, and she needed him. He was her best friend, and she had made a promise to him to help him find a cure for his father. That was something she couldn’t break, and she wanted to see him as well. She also knew that her parents would never allow her to take these conditions lying down. They would have had her hide for giving up easily when things got tough, saying she wasn’t raised in that way. And the thing is, she knew she wasn’t. Though her body wasn’t strong, her mind was. Namid had the spiritual and mental strength like that of steel, and she’d be damned if this took her down. Where there was a will, there was a way. This thought made her pause for a moment, take another look around her to see if she possibly had her bearings, then continue to trudge on the way she was going with grim determination.