oocThis thread continues from a thread that is partially started, outlining the details which are: Merevaika kills her nephew at a horse race, is chased out of Endrykas and kills several of the men chasing her. On her person: Simple shirt and pants, undergarments, boots, belt with scabbard and knife, amethyst necklace. On her horse: Yvas, fancy cloak.
89th Winter 515
The storm smashed around her. She had run from Endrykas yesterday yet she still couldn't stop, heart pounding with too many emotions. Fear, anger, guilt, disappointment merged into one. Water ran down her face, tears that hadn't come when they should have. There was no thunder nor lightning, lacking the very things she had compared herself to that morning before the race. Before the killing.
But the rain came down, soaking her to the very core and masking her vision. Everything was either mud or a misty haze that rose up from the ground with the heavy rainfall. It was hard for Eryunt to move in the mud, pushing through it as he shivered in the cold. They couldn't continue like this. It was cold, wet and dangerous. One wrong move and they could slip and fall, or be swallowed by the mud.
They couldn't move any further anyway, for the pair stumbled across a cliff, barely spotting it in the poor weather. Large waves smashed against the side, showering them with even more water. Eryunt reared, moving back in the mud but finding his hoof stuck in the ground. It was firm, the ground grasping it tightly as his back leg sunk in, almost reaching the joint. He reared again, neighing loudly and knocking Merevaika to the ground. She slipped onto the mud, sinking in it. It tried engulfing her too, but Merevaika fought it, pushing herself up onto a drier section. Quickly, she hurried forward, only just managing to make her way over to Eryunt without getting caught in the mud.
“Eryunt, stop!” she yelled over the torrent of rain, barely audible. She reached out, trying to calm Eryunt. He struggled with his hoof, managing to pull it out before rearing again, moving back with the voice.
“Eryunt, stop!” she yelled again, moving forward to grab the yvas. He stopped, starting to shiver with cold. She pulled off her cloak, wrapping it across his back to keep him warm from the rain. Hair clung to her face as she wrapped her hands around him, holding him tight. The two stayed still, concentrating only on the warmth of the other and their beating heart that somehow stood out in the rain.
“Eryunt, I love you. I really do,” she said softly, bringing a hand softly across his forehead. Her throat caught as she realised what she was planning. Laivku could take her body and let her start a new life as a new person. “I will never forget you.”
She pushed him away, slapping him to get him to run away, further away from her, to safety.
Then she turned towards the cliff, walking over carefully and peering over the edge to the waves below. They smashed against the cliff face, taking large chunks with them, swallowed by the churning currents below. Merevaika took a deep breath.
She couldn't do it. She was here to return. To get revenge, to prove herself worthy. There were people she knew needed her. There were her dogs, her horses, left all alone.
There was Eryunt, her strider. She couldn't leave him alone.
And finally she felt real tears come from her eyes, almost lost with the rain. Her shirt clung to her body, showing off the curves that had brought several men to her mercy that season. Her long hair, matted with wind and wraps, stuck to her cheeks and neck, once a mighty mane. The proud woman shook to the bone. “Eryunt! Wait! I'm coming!” she yelled, turning to see the mighty stallion had come back and was watching her.
She made a step forward to reach him.
And a large wave came forth, bringing the earth she stood on down. Merevaika screamed, lost in the rain and wind. The water pulled at her, pushed at her, churned her. She felt her lungs go weak, no air in them; her legs tried to kick out, but she had no sense of up and down; her arms reach out and feel stone and dirt moving around her. The waves moved her up, up towards the holes in the cliff that she couldn't see, but that were there. They pushed her in, bringing stones and rocks behind her to seal the way.
She smashed against wall after wall, feeling it cut her skin. Cloth was torn, her thigh was deeply scored, Merevaika herself smashed against the base of the cavern. Then the rains stopped a little, the waves subsiding, placing her gently on the ground.
Merevaika was alive. But only just.
89th Winter 515
The storm smashed around her. She had run from Endrykas yesterday yet she still couldn't stop, heart pounding with too many emotions. Fear, anger, guilt, disappointment merged into one. Water ran down her face, tears that hadn't come when they should have. There was no thunder nor lightning, lacking the very things she had compared herself to that morning before the race. Before the killing.
But the rain came down, soaking her to the very core and masking her vision. Everything was either mud or a misty haze that rose up from the ground with the heavy rainfall. It was hard for Eryunt to move in the mud, pushing through it as he shivered in the cold. They couldn't continue like this. It was cold, wet and dangerous. One wrong move and they could slip and fall, or be swallowed by the mud.
They couldn't move any further anyway, for the pair stumbled across a cliff, barely spotting it in the poor weather. Large waves smashed against the side, showering them with even more water. Eryunt reared, moving back in the mud but finding his hoof stuck in the ground. It was firm, the ground grasping it tightly as his back leg sunk in, almost reaching the joint. He reared again, neighing loudly and knocking Merevaika to the ground. She slipped onto the mud, sinking in it. It tried engulfing her too, but Merevaika fought it, pushing herself up onto a drier section. Quickly, she hurried forward, only just managing to make her way over to Eryunt without getting caught in the mud.
“Eryunt, stop!” she yelled over the torrent of rain, barely audible. She reached out, trying to calm Eryunt. He struggled with his hoof, managing to pull it out before rearing again, moving back with the voice.
“Eryunt, stop!” she yelled again, moving forward to grab the yvas. He stopped, starting to shiver with cold. She pulled off her cloak, wrapping it across his back to keep him warm from the rain. Hair clung to her face as she wrapped her hands around him, holding him tight. The two stayed still, concentrating only on the warmth of the other and their beating heart that somehow stood out in the rain.
“Eryunt, I love you. I really do,” she said softly, bringing a hand softly across his forehead. Her throat caught as she realised what she was planning. Laivku could take her body and let her start a new life as a new person. “I will never forget you.”
She pushed him away, slapping him to get him to run away, further away from her, to safety.
Then she turned towards the cliff, walking over carefully and peering over the edge to the waves below. They smashed against the cliff face, taking large chunks with them, swallowed by the churning currents below. Merevaika took a deep breath.
She couldn't do it. She was here to return. To get revenge, to prove herself worthy. There were people she knew needed her. There were her dogs, her horses, left all alone.
There was Eryunt, her strider. She couldn't leave him alone.
And finally she felt real tears come from her eyes, almost lost with the rain. Her shirt clung to her body, showing off the curves that had brought several men to her mercy that season. Her long hair, matted with wind and wraps, stuck to her cheeks and neck, once a mighty mane. The proud woman shook to the bone. “Eryunt! Wait! I'm coming!” she yelled, turning to see the mighty stallion had come back and was watching her.
She made a step forward to reach him.
And a large wave came forth, bringing the earth she stood on down. Merevaika screamed, lost in the rain and wind. The water pulled at her, pushed at her, churned her. She felt her lungs go weak, no air in them; her legs tried to kick out, but she had no sense of up and down; her arms reach out and feel stone and dirt moving around her. The waves moved her up, up towards the holes in the cliff that she couldn't see, but that were there. They pushed her in, bringing stones and rocks behind her to seal the way.
She smashed against wall after wall, feeling it cut her skin. Cloth was torn, her thigh was deeply scored, Merevaika herself smashed against the base of the cavern. Then the rains stopped a little, the waves subsiding, placing her gently on the ground.
Merevaika was alive. But only just.