Where Do We Go From Here?
35th of Summer, 512 AV
35th of Summer, 512 AV
"Ach, you just ate this afternoon you big tub of fat!" Tinnok complained as they trekked through the jungle. The boy cub, which she had taken to calling Leaf was mewling again from his makeshift little carrier upon his back. He mewled when he needed to piss, excrete other fluids, and when he wanted to go down and walk, but his cry for food was much more piercing, and made it bloody hard to hunt. Generally it was better if one of them stayed with the cubs, the other going out to hunt some distance away, but it made for slow moving with the two cubs, which like any infant, had a constant list of desires, needs, and complaints.
And while they hunted, they both searched for more jaguar tracks in the hopes that somehow...somewhere, they could find an adoptive mother for the two cubs. But it had been more than a week out in the jungle, and it was looking desperate. One of the last things Tinnok wanted to do was bring the cubs back to Taloba. She was sure they could get a high price for them in the pet stalls, but the idea of making them pets when they had been born in the wild set her nerves on edge and made her grit her teeth out of the blue, which was actually...what she was doing now.
Forcing herself to relax the half breed glanced over at the comparatively quiet female that Razkar had named, who kept almost dozing off in her cradle until the Myrian male stepped on a piece of particular bumpy or rough soil when she'd be jolted awake again with a little grunt before slowly drifting off again. Tinnok grinned.
Golden eyes scanned the brief pockets of blue that shone through the thickness of green above them. It was about late afternoon, the sun falling low in the sky, and her legs were sore from the constant trekking, and her shoulders ached from the long periods of carrying the cubs. Leaf was heavier, so they switched off every half of the day, once they stopped for their next break, so she had him till they broke for nightfall.
Tinnok sighed softly to herself, a feeling of guilt still heavy in her gut from dragging Razkar along. His wounds form the jaguar attack were healing nicely, they had made sure to clean them and pack them with river moss three times a day most of the time, two times a day when that wasn't an option, but she could still see him wince occasionally when a branch hit him on the spot where the cat had gouged him.
"Break for camp soon or do you want to go for another bell?" Tinnok called up to him.