Mirror, mirror, show me …
75th of Summer, 510 AV
75th of Summer, 510 AV
Despite being a native of Avanthal, Kilviria found herself spending less and less time inside the walls of the icestone city.
In the short seasons since the end of her previous life, she had become a fresh air addict more and more. She avoided the warm rooms they had shared, avoided the blankets that were still imprinted with his shape and had gotten herself a new set of clothing that didn’t carry his smell. She loathed being surrounded by the ghost of his presence. So she escaped outside.
A polar bear was on the top of the food chain and a dire-sized even more so. Feeling nothing and fearing nothing, Kilviria roamed the white, glittering plains she so loved. Out here she could appreciate nature without thinking about its cruelty that took him away from her.
Her strolls got more and more extensive. After a while she saw the outskirts of the large Talderian Forest again. That place inhabited creatures like that which had taken him from her side.
While approaching the trees slowly, she tried to make up her mind about how she felt. Of course, she couldn’t blame the forest for what had happened to her. Caiyha was like that: Who was too weak to survive would aid the others in surviving. Instead, what she felt a dislike for was the giant forest cat that had cowardly attacked her from the back and used her confusion to get right to her weakest point.
Too bad Kilviria had missed the change to make the cat pay back.
However, she also knew that carrying out her sadness and anger on an animal was nothing but stupid. So she started roaming the wilderness and hoping that the problem of confusion and loneliness would solve itself one day.
If it didn’t, the vantha would save it for her. They’d find her a new bondmate, a guy suited for riding a polar bear and bonding with a human-shaped animal that had lost its dearest companion. He’d fill the hole. But was that really the way it should be?
Never before had Kilviria given room to doubt, and it probably had something to do with her unusual condition, but she couldn’t push it aside as easily as before. It was what confused her most: the question of what to do next and how the future would be.
She had to admit that she felt slightly unnatural, asking such questions while at the same time placing her paws in the thinning blanket of snow and leaving big prints. Morwen knew she was only a kelvic, a predator at heart. And as a kelvic, she would do what she enjoyed most: hunting and filling her stomach.
Having made up her mind for the time being, she continued approaching the forest and soon found herself in the middle of its green and wet embrace. Being such a big creature, she found moving between the tree trunks quite difficult. Her pace slowed down significantly. She didn’t care though.
The massive polar bear continued, its white fur shimmering through the shadow of the forest. It looked like a typical animal – for Taldera, anyway – despite the detail that gave away its identity: a slim silver chain around its neck with a small ivory pendant shaped like a bear’s head.
In the short seasons since the end of her previous life, she had become a fresh air addict more and more. She avoided the warm rooms they had shared, avoided the blankets that were still imprinted with his shape and had gotten herself a new set of clothing that didn’t carry his smell. She loathed being surrounded by the ghost of his presence. So she escaped outside.
A polar bear was on the top of the food chain and a dire-sized even more so. Feeling nothing and fearing nothing, Kilviria roamed the white, glittering plains she so loved. Out here she could appreciate nature without thinking about its cruelty that took him away from her.
Her strolls got more and more extensive. After a while she saw the outskirts of the large Talderian Forest again. That place inhabited creatures like that which had taken him from her side.
While approaching the trees slowly, she tried to make up her mind about how she felt. Of course, she couldn’t blame the forest for what had happened to her. Caiyha was like that: Who was too weak to survive would aid the others in surviving. Instead, what she felt a dislike for was the giant forest cat that had cowardly attacked her from the back and used her confusion to get right to her weakest point.
Too bad Kilviria had missed the change to make the cat pay back.
However, she also knew that carrying out her sadness and anger on an animal was nothing but stupid. So she started roaming the wilderness and hoping that the problem of confusion and loneliness would solve itself one day.
If it didn’t, the vantha would save it for her. They’d find her a new bondmate, a guy suited for riding a polar bear and bonding with a human-shaped animal that had lost its dearest companion. He’d fill the hole. But was that really the way it should be?
Never before had Kilviria given room to doubt, and it probably had something to do with her unusual condition, but she couldn’t push it aside as easily as before. It was what confused her most: the question of what to do next and how the future would be.
She had to admit that she felt slightly unnatural, asking such questions while at the same time placing her paws in the thinning blanket of snow and leaving big prints. Morwen knew she was only a kelvic, a predator at heart. And as a kelvic, she would do what she enjoyed most: hunting and filling her stomach.
Having made up her mind for the time being, she continued approaching the forest and soon found herself in the middle of its green and wet embrace. Being such a big creature, she found moving between the tree trunks quite difficult. Her pace slowed down significantly. She didn’t care though.
The massive polar bear continued, its white fur shimmering through the shadow of the forest. It looked like a typical animal – for Taldera, anyway – despite the detail that gave away its identity: a slim silver chain around its neck with a small ivory pendant shaped like a bear’s head.