OOC Note: Looking for S’hazende to meet another Kelvic perhaps even one of the Drykas people that he could travel to Endrykas with. If you have an idea, please feel free to PM me and discuss it or post a reply and I will do my best to work with what you would like for your character.
S’hazende looked out across the sea of grass, the wide open plains of Cyphrus. The Drykas people he had been travelling with on the way to Endrykas had decided to camp for a second day and try and find their position before carrying on; which probably wouldn’t be until early the following morning now, giving the young, wayward Kelvic time to explore.
Powerful, masculine legs carried the animal’s body up the grassy hill, giving him a better view of the long, rolling hills before him. S’hazende couldn’t see anything but grass for miles; not even a tree to scratch his rump against. He flicked his long, ebony coloured tail, whipping it across his back before glancing down at the small encampment. Hopefully it wouldn’t be too long to the main camp. The excitement in his stomach was building, a real Drykas campsite; what if all the stories his mother had told him about Endrykas were true?
It was told that a man could walk in a straight line until his feet gave out and still not find the Endrykas campsite. S’hazende wondered then if it was possible for a horse to stumble upon a more favourable outcome, seen as he could gallop a lot faster than a man could run, and, being that he was a young stallion, he felt even more intrigued by the notion that led him to want to find out.
Presently, there was a nicker in the distance, causing S’hazende to look away from the small campsite once more to study the direction in which the sound had travelled from. He raised his head to the sky and took note on the position of the sun. That was important, was it not, watching for the position of the sun in regards to the location of one’s own camp in case they wanted to leave in any direction and safely return to the same place; or was he confusing location with time again? He pushed the sound from his mind and turned back to the camp to see if he was needed among the travellers to help with anything.
Before he had taken his second step, the noise came again, this time louder and more desperate than it had been the first time. S’hazende turned swiftly and cantered to the edge of the hill, looking out into the distance for any sign of movement and when none came, he called to the voice that had moments ago echoed across the plains from afar. The horse made a deep guttural sound that seemed to roll in the back of his throat before trumpeting out through his velvet nostrils.
As his call was returned, S’hazende bucked his back legs high in the air and tore off down the hill in a tremendous gallop, kicking grass and dust up and he raced off into the distance and away from the safety of the camp; of the safety in numbers and went to investigate.
20 Spring 513 AV
S’hazende looked out across the sea of grass, the wide open plains of Cyphrus. The Drykas people he had been travelling with on the way to Endrykas had decided to camp for a second day and try and find their position before carrying on; which probably wouldn’t be until early the following morning now, giving the young, wayward Kelvic time to explore.
Powerful, masculine legs carried the animal’s body up the grassy hill, giving him a better view of the long, rolling hills before him. S’hazende couldn’t see anything but grass for miles; not even a tree to scratch his rump against. He flicked his long, ebony coloured tail, whipping it across his back before glancing down at the small encampment. Hopefully it wouldn’t be too long to the main camp. The excitement in his stomach was building, a real Drykas campsite; what if all the stories his mother had told him about Endrykas were true?
It was told that a man could walk in a straight line until his feet gave out and still not find the Endrykas campsite. S’hazende wondered then if it was possible for a horse to stumble upon a more favourable outcome, seen as he could gallop a lot faster than a man could run, and, being that he was a young stallion, he felt even more intrigued by the notion that led him to want to find out.
Presently, there was a nicker in the distance, causing S’hazende to look away from the small campsite once more to study the direction in which the sound had travelled from. He raised his head to the sky and took note on the position of the sun. That was important, was it not, watching for the position of the sun in regards to the location of one’s own camp in case they wanted to leave in any direction and safely return to the same place; or was he confusing location with time again? He pushed the sound from his mind and turned back to the camp to see if he was needed among the travellers to help with anything.
Before he had taken his second step, the noise came again, this time louder and more desperate than it had been the first time. S’hazende turned swiftly and cantered to the edge of the hill, looking out into the distance for any sign of movement and when none came, he called to the voice that had moments ago echoed across the plains from afar. The horse made a deep guttural sound that seemed to roll in the back of his throat before trumpeting out through his velvet nostrils.
As his call was returned, S’hazende bucked his back legs high in the air and tore off down the hill in a tremendous gallop, kicking grass and dust up and he raced off into the distance and away from the safety of the camp; of the safety in numbers and went to investigate.