Location: Snapping Jaws Clanhome
Timestamp: Mid-morning, 75th of Summer, 512 AV
"...lost another two to injuries at the eastern bank of the Basin, and news from the west..."
The Snapping Jaws warrior orating his report trailed off as Siiri waved her hand in an irritable and dismissive gesture. The matriarch-in-training had been sitting on her mother's chair for half a bell now, listening to the updates of her clanmates who had been sent to deal with the yearly problem of crocodile migration. She had tried her best to maintain interest, but as was natural of her, she grew annoyed as minute after excruciatingly boring minute passed. By now she was despondent, sitting slouched upon the throne of bone, with one leg raised haphazardly upon an arm rest, not truly caring if her posture was inappropriate for the title of soon-to-be-matriarch everyone had been insisting on her.
Her gaze flickered at the man in front of her whom she had supposedly dismissed. Unsurprisingly, he had not moved from the spot where he stood. He seemed unsure of himself, the rigidity of his body betraying his uneasy desire to fidget. His eyes weren't upon Siiri either, but rather on the person that stood beside her.
Tala. Her older sister. The one who, save for a twist of fate, was supposed to be sitting on their mother's throne instead of her.
The elder Myrian heaved a resigned sigh. "Relay to me your report, Tellos. Please wait for me in my quarters. I just need to have a word with Si...our would-be-matriarch." She did not speak again until the male had left their presence to find the indicated room within the clanhome. Siiri could only roll her eyes.
Tala sighed once more. When she spoke next, her voice was soft and tolerant - the tone she usually used when speaking to her more volatile sister. "You're supposed to be listening and-"
"I'm not interested," Siiri interrupted, her own tone short and clipped.
"Siiri, you know it's your duty to-"
"I'm going out."
Suiting words into action, Siiri sprang from the throne, her muscles fairly rippling at the brief movement. Her strong frame was a sharp contrast to her sister's softer one, an indication, perhaps, on who between them held the power, however unwilling, within the household.
"Siiri, you need to stay for your training."
"Try and stop me." Siiri strode towards the longhouse's exit at the end of the hall.
It was obvious she couldn't so Tala tried a different tactic. "It's raining outside. Hard."
"So?"
"You hate the rain."
"Not as much as I hate what I'm doing in here. I refuse to be cooped up because of...duties. Petch that shyke, there are things that needed done."
"Siiri..."
"With my authority as future matriarch, blah blah blah, I give you authority to run the Snapping Jaws clan, yada yada yada..." Siiri declared mock ceremoniously, theatrically waving her hand. She still did not bother with a backward glance at her sister. "We both know you're better at this than I am, Tala. Get the petch out of my way!"
At this point, Siiri had already reached the doorway leading out into the Snapping Jaws compound, and the last part of her words were directed at her two clanmates who stood barring the way. No one usually guarded the door, and Siiri would bet that their presence there was no doubt one of her sister's ploys to keep her indoors.
"Tell them to move or I'll leave them both bloody in the floor," she threatened. Without looking back, Siiri knew her sister had nodded her head in acquiesce. As always. That still did not stop her from shoving one of the guards aside when he moved too slowly for her taste.
Tala could only sigh once more as her sister stormed out into the rain.
==/==
Location: City Gates
Timestamp: Mid-morning, 75th of Summer, 512 AV
It had always been a game between them, this powerplay, ever since the year had started. Two seasons in and Siiri already wanted out, even while Tala insisted that she learned everything there was to learn in managing their clan. She would be matriarch, whether she liked it or not. Siiri still protested that it should be Tala and not her who should assume the role. Her sister was born to fill those shoes while she was better suited in the frontlines, dealing with the Dhani, the Charodae, the deyhan. Everything out there in the wilds. Not what was in the city. Taloba could take care of itself, she knew.
The wilds.
Siiri's eyes drifted towards the direction of the gates, her spirit already yearning to be out there. But after a long patrol earlier in the season, it was her time off from the fang, the army. She had a few weeks to herself, but she had a hard time figuring out what to do. Always the same problem when she was back in the city. Usually, she liked hanging out by the training yards challenging her fellow soldiers in a game of strength and guile, or just watching, or even training, the new recruits. But with the incessant summer rains, the exercises among the grunts were suited for the weather, and Siiri wasn't exactly looking for a sparring match, not with her extreme dislike of being pinned down into the mud.
A hunt.
It had been too long since she went out hunting by herself. Ever since that strange, magical storm at the beginning of the year, the storm that destroyed plenty of lives and property after its passage, the creatures inhabiting the jungle and turned more vicious and ferocious, attacking anything and everything, even a fully armed fang. It was deadly out in the jungle right now. Dangerous. And Siiri wanted to taste that danger. She needed it, to get her mind off of home, the duties that were forced onto her, and, well, the heart-wrenching events of the past year. She had been doing her best not to think about that, but they tend to trickle into her thoughts, especially when she was alone and not doing anything.
Such as now.
Presently, she started jogging towards the city gates, which soon turned into a full blown run. Physical exertions always got her mind off such matters. She enjoyed the rapid beating of her heart, the sound of pumping blood in her ears. It would even be better if she was actually chasing prey. Siiri soon lost herself in the motions of her flight, from the steady pumping of her legs to the controlled intake and release of her breath. Every step she took sent her farther away from her home, her problems. A good fifteen chimes passed before she caught sight of the stone walls that protected Taloba from the encroachment of the jungle outside.
The place was empty, of course. Because of the rain, everyone would either be at home or at the city's center, enjoying whatever obstacle course had been put up for this year's Quoalelye. The guards would be on the other side of the tunnel leading out, and the archers manning the ramparts couldn't be seen from where she stood. There was only her.
Her, and a tiger prowling back and forth at the base of the wall, near the tunnel's entrance.