Ignoring the debilitating pain in her stomach, Cessair mentally replayed her conversation with the kind Whisper Caverns teacher Namid from a few days ago. Everything the friendly woman had said was satisfactory, and how badly Cessair wanted to join Whisper Caverns! So why didn't she? Why did she walk away? Why was she still walking away, even at that very moment? Cessair halted her thoughts and instructed her paws to stop. They did not. On and on she walked, without a destination, without a purpose, without a will. Some frail voice was wailing in the depths of Cessair's mind, demanding -- begging -- she turn back. Begging she turn back before her consciousness perished. Oh, how it wailed! Turn back! You are dying! Go back for your brother's sake! Your mother's! Yours. Life, death. Will, conscious, conscience, food, pack, breath, rest, life. Death. Cessair flattened her ears and pressed on.
A sigh. Fainter and fainter had the wailing waned, and now it stopped altogether. What wonderful ecstacy of peace Cessair felt at that moment! Her mind was clear and gone was the pain of her stomach, of her bleeding paw pads, of her aching muscles; all was quiet and all was numb. At last her legs ceased their motion. Cessair lifted her eyes and licked the dry leather of her nose as she began the effort of processing her surroundings. She was in a forest. It was night, but the trees and bushes were dimly lit from an eerie russet light. There was motion all around. Fog. Spectres?
Cessair's cracked lips rose into a grin and she broke out in a laugh -- the foolish laugh of the damned. This was the night, the very night, three years ago, that her wandering began. It began with death. Her mother died in the jaws of a fiend, a demon with thick black fur and fire in his eyes. She lost her brother Dolan shortly afterward, and herself with him. Since then, Cessair had herself been a spectre, ever seeking the fate she had thought would be hers. How wrong she had been! Cessair's stomach growled, disturbing the hush of the forest, and the pain of her starvation clawed again at the edges of her sanity. She curled up next to a boulder and in gruesome euphoria awaited the nightmares that were bound to come. The fog slid like blood through her matted fur.