She didn't even feel like she could move anymore. After she'd run away from her mother's body, Ris had ended up half-in and half-out of an abandoned den near the riverbank. It was hardly big enough for her to fit in, but it made her feel a little bit safer, being enclosed from behind. Not to mention the fact that she could squeeze entirely inside if she felt the need to. But for now, she was laying with her forelimbs and head out, paws stretched toward the water and her cheek resting in the crook of one elbow. Her pelt was still matted and sticky with her mother's blood, though she could easily have rinsed it away in the river if she'd wanted to.
But she didn't. Instead she stared at the rust encasing her paws and flanks, a reminder that her mother would not be coming by to comfort her or help her clean up. At first, that thought had brought on waves of grief and tears and pain, but now that the tears had dried in tacky tracks down her cheeks and the sobs had died down, she just felt tired and numb. She hadn't slept the night before - how could she? - and she hadn't gotten up to eat, drink, or take care of any of her body's needs for the last twenty-four hours. She had thrown up, once, the day before when she'd been running from Kisla's dead body, but since arriving in the abandoned den, she hadn't moved.
Her throat felt raw, her nose was dry, and her head hurt, but she didn't know what to do. She didn't want to do anything. She'd tried to sleep multiple times, but every time she closed her eyes, Kisla's lifeless ones would be staring her in the face. Even to the child, as young as she was, it was apparent that she would never, ever forget what she'd seen the day before. Her mother's spine being broken and lying in a pool of her own blood while that monster stood over her. And then Lekalta running off with it... was her sister even alive?
Dull silver eyes squeezed shut before traveling back down the length of her forelimbs and settling on the water before her. Maybe she'd just lay there forever. It wasn't so bad. She felt too sick to eat or drink, and all the other stuff was pointless anyway. So she just continued to watch the water bubble by, unchanged and uncaring that Kisla Baranski wasn't there anymore.
It seemed so unfair.