Spring 65, 515 AV
morning
Water enveloped Khida's feet, cold and murky and altogether unexpected. She splashed back out of hte shallow liquid, returning to merely damp earth, the better to study this surprising development. Grass filled her field of view, stalks already waist-high with the rapid growth of spring -- grass just like all the rest of the Sea, just as she expected dry land to look. It was not a place that seemed like it should harbor surface water, and yet it did. The look resembled the marshes of the north, except for the flora being all wrong.
It seemed something had caused the area to flood. So much for placing traps out that way. The rope she used for her snares wouldn't serve in water; it would swell and freeze the slipknots, or perhaps just come loose entirely. Rain was one thing; immersion, another case altogether.
The Kelvic turned away, keeping her course to that which was only muddy, and not flooded outright. She had no particular destination, after all; any direction served so long as she found places to set traps. Or perhaps happened across game she could bring down here and now with the bow -- but in her slow human plodding, not to mention her current ability with the weapon, that was unlikely to happen.
Her thoughts turned forward, her path turned alongside but also away from the flooded earth, her attention scanning for either likely places to put traps or potential dangers, Khida gave no more thought to the new marsh. Not until the strident cry of some beast's alarm reached her ears -- a cry which came from deeper within the flooded area.
Danger, that cry meant, perhaps even danger for her. The Kelvic paused, looked, listened -- and realized, upon hearing a second cry, that she knew which manner of beast made such a call.
Somewhere out there was a horse. A horse in trouble.
Whether predatory or prey or mysterious other, all things came into danger and death at some point. Sometimes one triumphed, and sometimes one died. That was the way of life and of the wild. And yet... For no reason she could put words to, Khida could not simply let this situation be.
It was a horse.
morning
Water enveloped Khida's feet, cold and murky and altogether unexpected. She splashed back out of hte shallow liquid, returning to merely damp earth, the better to study this surprising development. Grass filled her field of view, stalks already waist-high with the rapid growth of spring -- grass just like all the rest of the Sea, just as she expected dry land to look. It was not a place that seemed like it should harbor surface water, and yet it did. The look resembled the marshes of the north, except for the flora being all wrong.
It seemed something had caused the area to flood. So much for placing traps out that way. The rope she used for her snares wouldn't serve in water; it would swell and freeze the slipknots, or perhaps just come loose entirely. Rain was one thing; immersion, another case altogether.
The Kelvic turned away, keeping her course to that which was only muddy, and not flooded outright. She had no particular destination, after all; any direction served so long as she found places to set traps. Or perhaps happened across game she could bring down here and now with the bow -- but in her slow human plodding, not to mention her current ability with the weapon, that was unlikely to happen.
Her thoughts turned forward, her path turned alongside but also away from the flooded earth, her attention scanning for either likely places to put traps or potential dangers, Khida gave no more thought to the new marsh. Not until the strident cry of some beast's alarm reached her ears -- a cry which came from deeper within the flooded area.
Danger, that cry meant, perhaps even danger for her. The Kelvic paused, looked, listened -- and realized, upon hearing a second cry, that she knew which manner of beast made such a call.
Somewhere out there was a horse. A horse in trouble.
Whether predatory or prey or mysterious other, all things came into danger and death at some point. Sometimes one triumphed, and sometimes one died. That was the way of life and of the wild. And yet... For no reason she could put words to, Khida could not simply let this situation be.
It was a horse.
Khida space Common | Pavi
other space Common | Pavi
other space Common | Pavi