514AV, 4th Day of Spring.
The grass resisted her passage, strands grasping at the fur of her coat. Even with the slope of the earth aiding her, the descent felt so much longer to the Kelvic then any she could recall. Which, she conceded, was not a great many. Her memories were slippery things as of late, mental butterflies dancing just out of reach. Fragments came and went, unbidden, but cohesive memory? Structure? Those things were thoroughly lost to her. She knew deeper memories were there, but couldn't fathom what they were supposed to mean. Not right now. They were too distant and recalling them was simply too much effort.The moisture hanging in the air was real enough, though - she could taste it, the water-chilled breeze sending waves rippling across the surrounding grassland. The wound on her foreleg still stung something fierce, but the pain settled to a dull ache as the ground leveled out before her, the height of the grass slowly decreasing as she edged forward.
Her journey had been the product of over a week's worth of slowly worsening dehydration. The few rabbits she had been able to track for more then a handful of bells had consistently failed to lead her to anything resembling a reliable water source, and the few pools that the rains had bought were hardly enough to survive on; even for a predator of her caliber. This, though. This was different. She could feel the water in the air. Still, she had survived, and she couldn't help but feel a measure of pride at that.
She was still countless miles from where she was meant to be, of course. Not lost, exactly. She never got lost. Everything else was just out of order. The camp the Drykas raiders had departed from two seasons ago was somewhere sunward, and her track had carried her in that vague direction for the past... However long it was she had been walking for. A long while. Tani wasn't overtly concerned. It would only be a matter of time before she found it.
A trio of faint green birds spiraled into the sky at her approach, frustrated calls shrieking their inconvenience. Tani paid them no heed, and pushed through the last of the grass confining her with a final shove. The Kelvic stumbled a few steps forward with a distinctly un-feline lack of grace, narrowly avoiding a patch of startlingly clear water at her paws, caught a glimpse of her reflection and nearly leaped back into the grass.
The battered creature that stared back at her bore little resemblance to the well-groomed kelvic that had departed the tents of the horse lords. Black fur hung in mangled clumps, dotted with the collected dirt and dust of weeks worth of wandering. A long scratch, clotted over, inched its way down her left forelimb - she'd seen the wound before, but seeing her reflection in its entirety was unsettling. She wasn't meant to look like this. Mangy and rotten, the reflection could have belonged to a stranger - one of the feral cats that had occasionally roamed the camp. Only her eyes were the same, twin patches of green squinting out beneath battered fur. Her ears twisted back in the feline equivalent of a scowl as she batted the image away, finally sinking to drink from the lake.