There was something eerily peaceful about the parks at night. For one reason or another, they were mostly deserted at this midnight hour; it wasn’t hard for Cailet to find a shadowy spot to sit and enjoy the absolute silence. Not that the shadows really made a difference to her, but it kept her from the passing gaze of those not so blessed.
Having finished her patrol of Lapas park, taking a wide circuit around the trails that weaved throughout, the young woman perched herself on a rock beneath a feral looking tree. Used to her duties as a Shinya in Lhavit, it was hard for Cailet not to be doing
something to uphold the peace. How she would subdue the large blue men that inhabited the city was a problem all of it’s one, and one she would face when and if she ever met trouble on any of her volunteered rounds.
Settling herself cross-legged on the flattest part of the stone she could find, Cailet shook her shoulders to loosen them, letting her hands fall onto her knees in the easiest and most well known mediation position. The familiar weight on her knees allowed her to ground her thoughts and settling herself into a state of calm, the ease of which had everything to do with years upon years of practice. It took only moments for the errant thought to fade into the back of her mind.
Rather than clear her mind, Cailet instead focused on the sounds of the nature around her, disregarding her own feelings and opinions as she did so. It wasn’t as easy as it sounded, turning a deaf ear to your inner voice, but once Cailet found the rhythm of her breathing, it was easy to match it to the rustling of leaves and twigs around her, the gentle whisper of the breeze along the soggy ground.
Nature found amidst the city such as this was a novelty, one that Cailet still treasured. Lhavit had been a lifetime of patrol, and practice. Yes, the city was beautiful but she had hardly any time to enjoy the equally beautiful but drastically different qualities of nature. Growing up on the road had endeared the wilderness to her, and it had been far too long since Cailet had just lost herself amongst the plants and animals. It was as Cailet drifted along with the sighing breeze, immersed beyond herself in the upper branches of the trees, that the scream rent the night air.
The absolute fear of the sound was primal in its origin, connecting with even the inanimate objects in such a way that the ground itself grabbed hold of and amplified the sound. The wind whipped it faster through the air than any normal sound should travel. So different was it from the peace that Cailet found in her surroundings that the force of it slamming the breath the meditating women harder than any swinging hammer. Having closed her eyes while she drifted, the impact of the cry caused them to fly open just in time to see the world spin as she toppled from her perch to land with a sucking squish on the marshy ground.
She said don’t leave her alone. Laying here isn’t helping anyone. Get up already. The nagging, childlike voice roused Cailet like a bucket of cold water to the face. It was hard for her to regain her bearings, blinking owlishly around through the shadow and the night.
“What… was that?” You’ll never know if you don’t get up, now will you? The wispy form of the little girl stood not a dozen feet away, her hands perched on her hips and her finger waggling in a very maternal way. When Cailet managed to find her feet, taking stock of the large brown smear that ruined the crisp white of her clothes from her fall, it took only a handful of ticks before the memory of the cry surfaced from beneath the haze of her meditation.
A cold chill worked it’s way down her spine, immediately shaking Cailet from her stupor. That cry. It was horrible.
“We have to go help.” Taking off at a jog, the young woman missed the exaggerated eye-roll of the child ghost before she winked out of existence, leaving Cailet alone as she sprinted through the deserted park and out towards the main gates, muttering under her breath.
"Why does this always happen at night?"For once, Cailet was not the first on the scene; a hunched form pelted through the tall grasses, sticking to the shadows though it did little to hide her from Cailet's gaze. It took only a quick glance to spot where the stranger was headed, the Nightwalker adjusting her own path so that she too headed towards the fire.
But before either of them reached the makeshift camp, a large form sprinted from the tent, taking off into the long grass as well and heading in the general direction from which the cry originated. The woman Cailet had seen leaving the city took off after the large man, but the Nightstalker instead looped her path wide so that she passed through the camp itself on her way.
"Tell me." The pair of words were snapped in Maketh, directed towards the shadows that lingered about the camp. Normally, Cailet would cajole the creatures into giving her information but at the speed everyone had been moving... well, she didn't have the time for that if she wanted to keep up.
A cry, to the east.
Pain. Run.That was all she needed, growling softly under her breath as she picked up her pace and turned towards the tall grasses just as the other woman disappeared amongst them. Hopefully she wouldn't lose them in the unfamiliar sea of grass.
OOCEdited because my geography sucks