@_____@ koolaid man says OOOOO YEEEAH @
Karina your turn
Here she was, breaking one of the
only "rules" of Oak Tree Bend. Was it a rule? It had been more or less unspoken since she had been a child: no one liked a deserter. There was so little else to care about, so how was it that Sahalie could not even follow this one simple rule? How could she talk herself into breaking it for a man as thankless and brooding as Larkspur who had a shit-eating smirk on his face? Something in her said that this was a clear sign that she would break it for
anyone, but the rest of her was not sure. It was hard to say, certainly harder to say than any of her treacherous words had been to form in her mouth. Even with the sensation of bile tickling the back of her throat she felt her resolve harden. This was something Sahalie felt in her gut: that some wolves would be worth protecting.
Rules be damned,
laws be damned, it was the wolves in the end that mattered most. Doing the right thing, rather than the righteous thing, was what mattered to the girl. Into heart she carved this maxim. The guilt seemed to be fading...
Until suddenly she heard the sudden, barely-familiar lilt of her cousin.
Overhear? The girl's ears twisted backwards, wondering selfishly what her cousin might think of her now. Karina had not said much at their meeting, it seemed possible that the woman could be anyone, think anything. And her dark ears continued to twist as Karina opened the dialogue, fighting any urge to look at Larkspur and form her opinion based on whatever expression he wore on his face. Because, honestly, she had no idea what to make of
any of it. Her silvery cousin was incredibly eloquent, and it wasn't any fault of the individual words or the syntax that lead to the confusion, but somehow when the words came together the meaning was absent from this plane, as if it lived on some higher cerebral level that Sahalie did not understand. It began to dawn on the young, dark Tainn that she had never thought of herself as a spiritual girl. Her heart, though optimistic and idealistic, was firmly rooted to the here and now, flesh and bone. In the back of her mind she was reminded of something curious Drift had said once upon a time, but she remembered only the sense of it and not the exactness. No laws? A blessed land for chosen? Karina thought she was
chosen? The girl blinked, jaws loose. Again, she reminded herself to keep her face neutral, open, and for fox-sake
not look at Larkin.
Luckily, there was not much else for her to do as she had not been the wolf Karina spoke to. Larkspur seemed to neatly put the speech into terms that a simple, unworldly girl like Sahalie could understand. Well, understand save for the
cult part. She was left to wonder what on earth a cult was, though if it was truly anything like what Karina said, Sahalie was not sure they were for her. For the first time—was she going crazy?—the cantankerous man's words resonated with the girl—except the dying part, she hadn't really thought about a place after death—and though the word
bullshit seemed awfully strong it seemed to encapsulate the nonsense involved in worrying about the ethereal as opposed to the corporeal. Her mouth hung open, and she dared to glance at Lark for just a moment, and her eyes glittered with concern. Should she say something?
"
Are you... are you going somewhere too Karina?" To a sacred land? What other reason would her cousin have for a sacred land? Her eyes roamed the golden trees, wondering if there could be a land that felt more sacred than this. "
Are you...going to. Are you trying to start a pack?" At the heart of it, she felt vaguely reminded of Drestig and Jessie. Had they found their land free of bad memories?