@Jethro - set the morning after this thread
I wrote Jet as still asleep, so if you want that changed, please let me know ^^
I wrote Jet as still asleep, so if you want that changed, please let me know ^^
It was early, but Nori was generally an early riser anyway. The forest was still dark, but tinged with a lighter blue that suggested the sun was rising somewhere to the east. The girl stretched out of her curled position, wincing just a bit at the ache in her right shoulder - that was much more uncomfortable when she had to lay like that. It gave a satisfying crack, and the ache abated significantly. She was delighted to note that it had stopped raining sometime during the night, but the ground squished beneath her feet and she winced; muddy fur was not something she wanted to deal with today, but it seemed inevitable.
Fortunately, it didn't seem that her new companion was awake just yet. It gave her enough time to be a bit vain, grooming her fur into place and rinsing her muddied belly off in the creek. She turned her attention toward the dark, shadowy figure dozing beneath the bushes across the narrow stretch of water.
She had been lucky to run into him, she reasoned - grouchy and intimidating as he might be. But she wasn't blind - she could see the scars splitting his fur, and he mentioned his family being... well, bad enough that he wanted nothing to do with them. Now, Nori's family had been much less than perfect, of course, but she didn't hate them. And she had so many questions - What did they do to you? Did they make those scars? Was it both your parents, or just one? Why do you hate them so much?
Of course, she wouldn't ask any of those questions. Not yet, anyway - she didn't fancy being left in the woods, nor having her face ripped off if he were that aggressive about it. Not that he seemed that aggressive; Jethro was more growly than anything, she figured, but she didn't wanna test the limits of his patience.
During her contemplation, the forest had lightened further, signaling that it really was time to start the day. The little stream was narrow enough to hop over, and her shoulder only gave a slight twinge in protest, which she brushed off easily. Nori padded over to the sleeping boy and crouched down next to the bush, reaching in to give him a slight nudge with her forepaw.
"Wakey, wakey!" she declared, tail wagging in a high banner above her back. "We can't snooze all day, lazy-bones. Surely you don't need that much beauty sleep." She kept her tone carefully light and airy, a cheerful smile stretched across her maw. It was always better to face the day in a good mood, she figured, even if it was kind of dreary and damp and gross outside.