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56th day of Summer 515AV
Leeta sat upon the grass on the edge of town. There she could watch the mindless drones shove things in the back of wagons. They all seemed happy to do it as they hopped about like little rabbits, carrying various things. Part of her was dead inside, the other, rotten. Looking to the town briefly she despised it, it and its people. She longed for a new home, a place far away from here. Out in the bay she could see the masts of ships swaying gently on the ocean’s waves. “Maybe I could stow aboard one.” She stabbed the ground with the limber stick that was in her hand, puncturing through the grass and making a hole in the dirt. She then ripped backwards, revealing the earth beneath.
“well...I think I might just get keehauled doing that.”
Yes she was talking to herself, audibly. She frumped, not liking the thought of having herself tied to a rope, dragged undership against barnacles, and raised up to the other side. Looking back she viewed the wagons. Her limber pale form stretched out on the grass, propped up by her elbows as she viewed them. There was nowhere to hide stowing away on a caravan. They’d probably just kill her, or at the least tie her to a post in the middle of the wilds for taking advantage of them. No, she was stuck here. The black dress she wore had been somewhat cleaned since her sister’s death, but still there was blood upon it. The black hid the stains well and only a trained eye could see them.
Her lithe body was adorned with all sorts of tattoos, and her sickly complexion seemed to make them stand out in the hot Zeltivan sun. Suddenly a shadow flitted this way and that over her body. It was that of a sparrow. The heat had gotten to it and she watched with eyes that had seen death many times over, knowing it was in its death throes. It flopped wildly and then came crashing down to the ground a few feet from her. There it struggled in the grass, its legs and wings fluttering this way and that. Slowly she moved over toward it, pulling the stick out of the ground beside her.
As she crept closer it tried to catch its breath, but old age and the heat had struck it hard. It’s fate was in the belly of a cat or some other predatory scavenger. She jammed the stick into the ground next to it and dug it a little grave. As it watched her, occasionally kicking its feet, she made sure its body would fit.
“There there...no need to fight anymore.”
Slowly she brought a finger to its face. It bit her but she didn't care. She had compassion for it and brushed the tight backswept feathers on its head. Then removing her finger and leaning back, she picked the stick up in her hand and gripped it tightly. With strength unfitting the young twig of a girl, she took her stick and jammed it into the bird’s head, killing it quickly rather than letting it die slowly. She slowly plucked a feather from its wing and then slid it into the grave, covering it in dirt.
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Leeta sat upon the grass on the edge of town. There she could watch the mindless drones shove things in the back of wagons. They all seemed happy to do it as they hopped about like little rabbits, carrying various things. Part of her was dead inside, the other, rotten. Looking to the town briefly she despised it, it and its people. She longed for a new home, a place far away from here. Out in the bay she could see the masts of ships swaying gently on the ocean’s waves. “Maybe I could stow aboard one.” She stabbed the ground with the limber stick that was in her hand, puncturing through the grass and making a hole in the dirt. She then ripped backwards, revealing the earth beneath.
“well...I think I might just get keehauled doing that.”
Yes she was talking to herself, audibly. She frumped, not liking the thought of having herself tied to a rope, dragged undership against barnacles, and raised up to the other side. Looking back she viewed the wagons. Her limber pale form stretched out on the grass, propped up by her elbows as she viewed them. There was nowhere to hide stowing away on a caravan. They’d probably just kill her, or at the least tie her to a post in the middle of the wilds for taking advantage of them. No, she was stuck here. The black dress she wore had been somewhat cleaned since her sister’s death, but still there was blood upon it. The black hid the stains well and only a trained eye could see them.
Her lithe body was adorned with all sorts of tattoos, and her sickly complexion seemed to make them stand out in the hot Zeltivan sun. Suddenly a shadow flitted this way and that over her body. It was that of a sparrow. The heat had gotten to it and she watched with eyes that had seen death many times over, knowing it was in its death throes. It flopped wildly and then came crashing down to the ground a few feet from her. There it struggled in the grass, its legs and wings fluttering this way and that. Slowly she moved over toward it, pulling the stick out of the ground beside her.
As she crept closer it tried to catch its breath, but old age and the heat had struck it hard. It’s fate was in the belly of a cat or some other predatory scavenger. She jammed the stick into the ground next to it and dug it a little grave. As it watched her, occasionally kicking its feet, she made sure its body would fit.
“There there...no need to fight anymore.”
Slowly she brought a finger to its face. It bit her but she didn't care. She had compassion for it and brushed the tight backswept feathers on its head. Then removing her finger and leaning back, she picked the stick up in her hand and gripped it tightly. With strength unfitting the young twig of a girl, she took her stick and jammed it into the bird’s head, killing it quickly rather than letting it die slowly. She slowly plucked a feather from its wing and then slid it into the grave, covering it in dirt.
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Other's Words -- My Words -- My Thoughts