Bronze eyes crinkled as the boy breathed out a
Wow! Children this age were two things: annoying and precious, in equal parts. Everything was new, everything was spectacular... their lives so very sacred. Kuwindwa was sharply aware of a chasm in her heart during that moment. He was the right age, and it was the right season. She remembered, and her broken heart ached, longed, to love, be loved, to protect... but a wall remained, higher than ever even though she laughed unexpectedly at the boy's antics as he attempted to do as she had done. Of course, he did so sans the practiced ease Wind had gathered over the course of her years, and the unpracticed movements of a puppy never ceased to be amusing, if not heartwarming.
Laurel wobbled and danced—it was a wonder he didn't fall over more—and, finally, Kuwindwa found him facing her directly again. All this time the woman didn't move but for her hind end flagging. She continued to growl and paw, coercing the child to try whatever it was he had in mind. Only when he was near enough to leap did her own paws plant firmly into the earth, ready and waiting. He sprung up, his leap clumsy and daring. Kuwindwa made as if to leap back again, but at the last moment froze and collapsed, her hindquarters falling back to the earth. Feigning surprise—
"Oof!"—as a small grey body plopped firmly onto her face, Kuwindwa tried to nip gently at the tiny hindpaws just barely within her sight (when she wasn't shutting an eye to avoid getting poked). All the while she could feel him scrambling for her ears. The warrior was somewhere between tilting her head to help keep the boy's balance and considering dislodging him before he could
actually grab an ear and do any damage with those needle-teeth.
"Come now, you'll have to do a little better," she decided finally and gave her head a shake to rid herself of the Ritter.
The woman hopped back fluidly, keeping her body crouched low. Her tail waved again, her play-bow complete with wide-spread forepaws.
"Come! Catch me," she grinned, her mask utterly shattered for the little boy—a little boy who couldn't yet appreciate the rarity of the unfettered smile on the woman's pale face. If she could wear him down a little, maybe he would go back to sleep? She could take him back to the den...