The archer’s name escaped Haya’s throat as a hoarse yell, her eyes widening in horror when the man dissappeared from her view. With his support gone, Haya fell on her knees, palms clutching where the half-blood’s fingers had desperately scratched the earth mere seconds before. When peering over the edge though, a shock went through her body. She did not know what she had expected, but certainly not to meet Kovac’s gaze as he was clutching the cold rock, holding on for dear life.
For a second the Drudge’s mind was blank, trying to process the situation, until the rush of adrenaline took over. She was already acting out her thoughts before they had even completely formed in her mind.
“Hold on!” She yelled, needlessly, before crawling away from the edge. Haya wildly gazed around, tossing her head from left to right. Searching, for anything usefull at all. There was nothing.
What did she have? The fabric of her Lontev wouldn’t hold, would not even reach his height.
Hair. If Haya ‘d had time to properly consider the idea, she would’ve found it quite rididculous indeed, but she had none, and thus immediately acted upon it.
She closed her eyes, mind wandering into a certain area of concentration. Her hands gathering her messy curls together.
Again, if she’d had more time, she might’ve contemplated wether she actually wished to expose this side of her, but she had none, and so exposed it would be.
Familiar warmth had begun spreading through her veins, soon engulfing her completely. She was very concious of every inch of her body now, it’s size, it’s structure, shape. It was in this state that morphing became possible to her. She imagined the change, willed it to be, and it would be.
One could see her, eyes still closed and brows furrowed in concentration, pulling her bundled hair downwards. And while she pulled, it did not tense, it rapidly elongated itself instead. Soon it had grown so long it covered her knees, pooling around her form in auburn strands.
Haya released her hair, but did not yet break her state of concentration. Instead she ran her fingers along both her lower arms, in the direction of her palms. It seemed as if the bone in her lower arms grew, the skin of her palms retreating to let it through as it spiked out for a couple of inches.
It was then that Haya’s eyes snapped open. She wrapped the strand of her own hair around her hand for a couple of times, flinching when she clamped her fingers around it. The piece of pointy bone sticking out of her palm was hindering the usual muscle functioning, but nonetheless she’d shaped it like that for a reason. The Drudge dug one of her palms in the frozen soil of the mountain path, giving her some much-needed grip and resistance. Still on her knees she crouched down deeply, lowering her center of gravity as much as possible to keep herself stable. Kovac was a lot heavier than she was, and she’d better not be dragged over the edge with him.
With her free hand Haya swung the long end of her hair over the edge, praying it’s length was sufficient to reach the archer, and dug the bone of this hand into the rocky soil too.
“Just grab it!” She yelled, which was most probably quite an unnessecary thing to say. Simply because the archer wasn’t in any position to be picky about whatever was it was that was being thrown at him for help. He’d have to climb up himself though, it would already take all of Haya’s effort to keep steady.