RE- Violent thunderstorms overtake Relic Lore
The going had been slow, with her broadening sides and constant pangs of pain coursing down her flanks, ravenous hunger and frequent mood swings. She had no doubt she was a less than ideal travelling companion, but they put up with her much like they put up up with the spring storms, an inconvenience that could not be avoided (or so she felt, as burdensome as she was).
The hills had been the hardest part, convinced on more than one occasion that this must be it...they would have to stop here, now, but she gritted her teeth and kept her mouth shut, trudging forward though the false contractions. They still had ground to cover yet, and when finally the valleys and gulches gave way to the wide, flat expanse of the tundra she could have cried with joy. Instead a nudge to Craw's cheek was all she could manage as she winced through yet another pang, but they came with no regularity so she wasn't about to call a halt yet.
They had shifted in the night, those small mysterious beings that loved to throw their limbs at any who dared lean in too close, and what might have felt to the first time mother like three or four children suddenly felt like 10 as she tried to combat the heavy pressure in her hips (like gripping a boulder between her thighs and expecting to be able to walk normally) with her splay legged waddle and deep steady breathing. The founders eyes were set on a speck of elevation on the far side of the tundra, the only real landmark for miles and she'd be damned if she was the one that prevented them from reaching it.
The air pressure was building, an insufferable heat setting her tufty coat on fire. The itch was worse than any heat she had endured yet. Each step across the many hours grew heavier as the storm clouds at their back rolled in, darkening the sky until the early afternoon could easily be mistaken for the depths of night. Sight was obscured as the downpour began, fat drops of rain soaking even into matted shedding coat until she felt her poor limbs were supporting three Morgannas, instead of just the one. It was only when the water rose up around her ankles that she dared to raise her head, finding herself headed straight into a lake that skirted a cliff unlike anything she had ever seen before. It seemed to be made from uncountable columns, some torn away by gravity and protruding from the water below. She didn't even get a chance to get the a question about just what this sort of thing was called before another contraction hit her full force.
Despite all the rain, she hadn't drunk more than stray droplets licked off her soaked muzzle for what felt like at least a day. The roiling of her stomach, a frantic crescendo, ignored as she lowered her head to greedily lap at the pristine waters, almost sweet after so long without. But that gradual build would not be ignored. Almost immediately she back-pedalled, scrambling clear of the banks and away from her companions to wretch behind a tussock of already browning grass, her body protesting, finally declaring enough. She could no longer ignore the warning signs. Ready or not it was time.
A nervous whine left her throat as panicked eyes sought out Craw in the downpour. "This is it." She was utterly unprepared. Just past his shoulder she spotted a break in the grass and what seemed to be a shale-lined track moving up there. The way the rains were falling she wasn't convinced her children wouldn't drown if she stayed down here and through clenched jaws she gestured there before shaking limbs dragged her forward. All else was forgotten in that moment. She needed somewhere warm and dry.