Current health condition: 70%, please ignore health bar
The shadow of a bird of prey slipped across her path, as the pale-gold young woman marched along a thin trail. Or perhaps it was a vulture, she thought to herself. A doggedness haunted her steps. Stella's search for Kip, or anything else for that matter, had been largely fruitless. Though at first she had taken this as motivation to redouble her efforts, as the days grew longer and the waters dwindled away, she knew it was time to admit defeat and return home. Not quite a year old, the petite girl had grown thin and weary spending roughly wo months' time alone and on the road. To her, it felt like an eternity.
There was a deep magnetism that guided her steps, and she did not need to think about the way. She could have found it with her eyes closed, she felt. Her destination was her birthplace after all, the home she shared with her family. A beacon of love and security in a lonely, harsh landscape. Still, there were knots in her stomach as she thought of what she might find, what sort of reunion awaited her - what version of sanguine awaited: optimistic and positive, or bloody?
With a flick of her head, Stel banished the most pessimistic of her thoughts along with a fly which had so rudely lighted upon her brow. More pragmatic thoughts were not so easily sent fleeing, though.
Have I been gone too long? The thought had lodged itself somewhere in her mind not long after she'd left, burrowing and growing with each day. Roughly two months had passed since she'd seen her family, seen the cove. Would she still have a place among them, or would it have dwindled away like the water and shade had done?
She was back in the Lore now, but home was still too far for comfort, she simply wished to slake her thirst and continue on. The hope of water had drawn her here but she found nothing but mud expanding out from the edge of the shore in a sticky, flat alien landscape. She wrinkled her nose, noting that even the scent here seemed particularly uninviting. Stella couldn't help but feel as if she was intruding, as if the very landscape was urging her to keep moving.