From above, Khida could clearly see the trees, practically glowing green under the warm summer sun -- one and all in full leaf, shrouding the earth from her view. That wouldn't be so bad a thing, if she had a better idea of what the man intended. She could see the grasses beyond the copse, stretching off in gently undulating hills towards the horizon; given as he had gone into the trees when he walked away before, the falcon was reasonably confident she could ignore that entire area. She needed only consider the ring of trees and the pond in their center. He had been... there... when she last had sight of him, and he had walked... that way... into the trees, before.
The falcon came around to overfly what she knew of the man's previous course, guessing he would follow it again. Anything under the trees would likely shelter within their branches or a denser patch of undergrowth, which left the waterfowl in the middle of the pond as the most probable targets. But her knowledge of his actions was badly limited -- had he turned? Stopped? Did he see her above the trees any better than she could perceive him below? Khida didn't think so, and as she continued to circle overhead, she began to realize this was going to pose a serious problem.
These thoughts were abruptly interrupted as an imitation of her own cry rang out from amidst the trees below. Surprised, Khida pivoted about to see the man come running out from under the trees and vault into the pond, splashing up water and fowl alike. He had not been where she expected, at all, and as the fowl scattered upwards, the peregrine found herself not in the position she had wanted to achieve. Of all the startled birds, only one had fanned out on a trajectory she thought she had a reasonable chance to intercept. Trying to make up for their discoordination, she hastily projected the fowl's course forward, adjusted her own angle of flight, and dove.
It didn't take very long into the stoop for Khida to realize her attack just wasn't going to work; she needed to cross too much horizontal space, as well as the vertical distance. She didn't have the angle or the speed for a fisted-talon strike to succeed, as much because the fowl would almost certainly see her before she closed -- and a raking strike had the same issue. Still, she followed through on her dive, continuing to close --
-- only for the fowl to glimpse her in its peripheral vision, breaking off to one side in an evasive maneuver. The peregrine snapped her wings open, angling them to send her following after, hoping she could at least catch it and bring it to the ground. She had the advantage of speed, but it had nothing to lose and the advantage of lower altitude: the bird reached a sheltering thicket first, and dove heedlessly in. Not inclined to the same degree of recklessness, the falcon backwinged just before the shrubbery and peeled off, scanning the air as she came back around.
Of course, there was nothing lower than she except branches and earth; the fowl had dispersed up and out, seeking other, safer ponds for their respite. The peregrine had no chance at catching something already higher in the sky, leaving her to climb back up with only the intangible yet heavy burden of disappointment in her grasp. |
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