or: I didn't plan to die of dehydration today, where the hell did my caravan go? How do you lose fifty people on a plain?
Timestamp: 40th of Summer
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It had been said that if you placed an object on an infinite radial plane and that object was a goat and that plane had a mountainous outcropping, then the goat would try to climb it. While time and many nights spent weeping into her pillow had calmed her somewhat, it hadn't healed all her wounds. Dhanya had decided that climbing a plateau would make her feel more at home in herself and more connected to her roots. Perhaps it might have been more accurate to say she wanted to connect with her hooves. She had risen early, warned a travelling companion that she was going exploring on their day of rest and quickly wandered off.
By midday, she had realised her error. The small amount of water she usually lived on in a day was not enough to hold up to exercise. Reaching the top of the plateau had been simple, even enjoyable in the cool of morning. At the heat of day it was a mischief. It had not been a difficult climb and the view had been a sight for her young eyes, with desert spreading out at all sides, golden and shining in the light. The heat, however, was beginning to burn. She could not see her caravan anymore and she was unaware that the group had not moved far at all. They had just moved along with the shade, closer to a small spring they had found.
Dhanya could have sworn she'd brought more water. The skin had seemed full to bursting when she'd left but it was empty now. Her lips were chapped from the sun and she was worried that the heat would inspire some sort of delirium. She wondered if sunstroke made you woozy. There wasn't anywhere to hide from the sun that she could see. She settled for descending on the side that would be shaded in the afternoon. Dhanya moved slowly and carefully.
It was an under statement to say she was annoyed when she slipped. She fell six feet, clipping her foot against the rock before she caught herself. She felt something crackle and turn in an unnatural spin that sent fire up her leg. Dhanya screamed and swore, clinging to the rock as if it were her enemy and she wished to strangle it. She swore and panted, shaking as she waited for the pain to abate. She tried to place some weight on it so she could at least finish the climb down but touching the wall was enough to make her bile rise. In a panic, she chose something she would normally have rathered die than do.
"Somebody help me!" She screamed, burnt face turning white.
She called for help.