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..91st of Fall, 514
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..91st of Fall, 514
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On the eve of the Season's change it was clear that Winter had already wrapped it's icy claws around Wind Reach. It was a night for celebration. A night where the Inarta as a whole took one last breath before holding it the the next ninety-two days of hardship. It was supposed to be almost magical and in truth it would be in the very literal sense as the Wind Tower would flare from red to blue.
There was nothing celebratory about it to Khara though. Only fourteen days had passed since she had felt like her small world had crumbled into nothingness but each had been determined to stretch out as long as possible as the Chiet had ran herself ragged. Days off from work had been ignored under the pretext of making up for other days missed that she had already accounted for. No one had argued, but then again no one ever argued against someone doing more work.
Work itself was another matter entirely.The snows that had moved in, the closing of the Sanikas Gates, the roads that were now practically unusable, each of these added complications to a game scout's routines. Not a day went by that Khara wasn't the first to volunteer for the more miserable assignments, the ones that sometimes needlessly put her in harms way, the ones that were almost doomed to fail from the start, the ones where no glory or pride was to be found and the best you could hope for was reporting back on herd movements that you were several days late to find. Azira hadn't called on her and no other hunter seemed to want to make use of her either. Each day was spent cold, alone, and left with her thoughts. It was torture and Khara fully believed she had earned every tick of it.
Every day had become a blur of the same mixture of terror and sadness from the moment she left her room. From scurrying past the Crafts Gallery, to pulling the hood of her katinu up over her head as she rushed past the stables as she left to returning in the same manner, trying to never spare it a glance as she passed despite the tightening in her chest she felt each time. Today had been different though. Today was supposed to be something special. A season ago she had asked Zhol to join her to watch the Wind Tower change color, a season ago they had made promises that were now fractured, a season ago things had been… perfect or at least as close to it as she was ever going to get. It was for that reason only that she had slowed in her approach and had looked up the first time in days, some part of her hopeful and the other anguished over the possibility of even remotely seeing the human boy she had dared to consider something other than just a friend. He wasn't there, though. Perhaps it was for the better.
The thought plagued her as the night wore on, through a meal barely eaten, though a bath taken in abstract numbness that made her want to scour her skin until it was raw. She had been determined to go to sleep early, to try and get as much rest before she launched herself back out into the Unforgiving the next day, but as Khara had entered her room her thoughts fled once more. All it had taken was for her eyes to settle on the ruby colored scarf that had been neatly folded and had gone unworn for days. There had been some plan to return it to Zhol at one point, but that would have meant facing him.
A bell was spent sitting on her bed, hugging her knees as all she could do was stare at the simple object. It wasn't fair. It didn't make sense. How could she matter to him? How could he have said he didn't mind when she had accidentally woken up in his arms? How could they have been so close only to have it end in Can't? The longer she thought about it the more upset she became, bordering between anger and torment.
There was only one way to solve it. With a huff the girl lunged off her bed and snatched up the scarf in her hand before heading into the warrens.
On the eve of the Season's change it was clear that Winter had already wrapped it's icy claws around Wind Reach. It was a night for celebration. A night where the Inarta as a whole took one last breath before holding it the the next ninety-two days of hardship. It was supposed to be almost magical and in truth it would be in the very literal sense as the Wind Tower would flare from red to blue.
There was nothing celebratory about it to Khara though. Only fourteen days had passed since she had felt like her small world had crumbled into nothingness but each had been determined to stretch out as long as possible as the Chiet had ran herself ragged. Days off from work had been ignored under the pretext of making up for other days missed that she had already accounted for. No one had argued, but then again no one ever argued against someone doing more work.
Work itself was another matter entirely.The snows that had moved in, the closing of the Sanikas Gates, the roads that were now practically unusable, each of these added complications to a game scout's routines. Not a day went by that Khara wasn't the first to volunteer for the more miserable assignments, the ones that sometimes needlessly put her in harms way, the ones that were almost doomed to fail from the start, the ones where no glory or pride was to be found and the best you could hope for was reporting back on herd movements that you were several days late to find. Azira hadn't called on her and no other hunter seemed to want to make use of her either. Each day was spent cold, alone, and left with her thoughts. It was torture and Khara fully believed she had earned every tick of it.
Every day had become a blur of the same mixture of terror and sadness from the moment she left her room. From scurrying past the Crafts Gallery, to pulling the hood of her katinu up over her head as she rushed past the stables as she left to returning in the same manner, trying to never spare it a glance as she passed despite the tightening in her chest she felt each time. Today had been different though. Today was supposed to be something special. A season ago she had asked Zhol to join her to watch the Wind Tower change color, a season ago they had made promises that were now fractured, a season ago things had been… perfect or at least as close to it as she was ever going to get. It was for that reason only that she had slowed in her approach and had looked up the first time in days, some part of her hopeful and the other anguished over the possibility of even remotely seeing the human boy she had dared to consider something other than just a friend. He wasn't there, though. Perhaps it was for the better.
The thought plagued her as the night wore on, through a meal barely eaten, though a bath taken in abstract numbness that made her want to scour her skin until it was raw. She had been determined to go to sleep early, to try and get as much rest before she launched herself back out into the Unforgiving the next day, but as Khara had entered her room her thoughts fled once more. All it had taken was for her eyes to settle on the ruby colored scarf that had been neatly folded and had gone unworn for days. There had been some plan to return it to Zhol at one point, but that would have meant facing him.
A bell was spent sitting on her bed, hugging her knees as all she could do was stare at the simple object. It wasn't fair. It didn't make sense. How could she matter to him? How could he have said he didn't mind when she had accidentally woken up in his arms? How could they have been so close only to have it end in Can't? The longer she thought about it the more upset she became, bordering between anger and torment.
There was only one way to solve it. With a huff the girl lunged off her bed and snatched up the scarf in her hand before heading into the warrens.
"Nari" | "Common" | "Pavi"