The water was wonderful. That was the only way to describe it. Good, or bad, insane, or not, she was glad she came. As she sank into its depths, the waters did as she hoped, washing the aches and pains of her pregnancy away. But as the water closed over her head, the world...lurched. It spun rapidly around once, much the way a child would twirl a rock in a bag over their head to build up the strength in their arms. Then it was over.
Seirei surfaced, almost reluctantly. The waters felt wonderful, but she really needed to get back home. The twins would need to be fed soon enough, and her friends would worry if they woke to find her not there. With that thought in mind, she opened her eyes, preparing to lever herself out of the water...only to fall back in shock as she took in the world around her.
The pool ended at a grassy bank. A line of trees grew nearby. Seirei didn't know how far they went, but she did know that they shouldn't be there. They certainly hadn't been when she'd submerged herself in the pool. Startled, and more than a little confused, Seirei pulled herself out of the water, and looked around, searching for something familiar. Something that made sense. There was nothing, and the world felt...off to her somehow. Strange. Probably because she wasn't in the same place she'd been mere ticks before.
There were others standing nearby. Drykas, by the look of their clothes. That was something, at least. Maybe they knew where they were, and how to get back home? A path lay before them, seeming to lead deeper into the trees. It felt almost as though it was waiting for them to follow it. That it knew they were there, and it wanted to lead them to something. Was that the way they were supposed to go? But there were smaller trails, too. And there was a sound coming from behind them. It sounded much like the sound of the waves along the coast where the pools she had been in mere chimes ago were.
She couldn't find Kairi, anywhere. But as she looked at the people, she realized that she recognized one of them. Shahar. Did that mean that Naiya was there, too? If so, who was back at camp with the twins? Seirei looked around, but she didn't see Naiya anywhere. So she made her way over to where Shahar was standing as quickly as her swollen belly would allow.
Seirei didn't have an answer to her adopted brother's signed questions. So she responded with one of her own. It seemed likely that Shahar and the others would have noticed the path already, but she gestured to it anyway, asking a silent answers there? Her own worry, and desire to return home were obvious in her tense, alert posture, and the hesitant confusion in her hands.
.
.
.
Seirei surfaced, almost reluctantly. The waters felt wonderful, but she really needed to get back home. The twins would need to be fed soon enough, and her friends would worry if they woke to find her not there. With that thought in mind, she opened her eyes, preparing to lever herself out of the water...only to fall back in shock as she took in the world around her.
The pool ended at a grassy bank. A line of trees grew nearby. Seirei didn't know how far they went, but she did know that they shouldn't be there. They certainly hadn't been when she'd submerged herself in the pool. Startled, and more than a little confused, Seirei pulled herself out of the water, and looked around, searching for something familiar. Something that made sense. There was nothing, and the world felt...off to her somehow. Strange. Probably because she wasn't in the same place she'd been mere ticks before.
There were others standing nearby. Drykas, by the look of their clothes. That was something, at least. Maybe they knew where they were, and how to get back home? A path lay before them, seeming to lead deeper into the trees. It felt almost as though it was waiting for them to follow it. That it knew they were there, and it wanted to lead them to something. Was that the way they were supposed to go? But there were smaller trails, too. And there was a sound coming from behind them. It sounded much like the sound of the waves along the coast where the pools she had been in mere chimes ago were.
She couldn't find Kairi, anywhere. But as she looked at the people, she realized that she recognized one of them. Shahar. Did that mean that Naiya was there, too? If so, who was back at camp with the twins? Seirei looked around, but she didn't see Naiya anywhere. So she made her way over to where Shahar was standing as quickly as her swollen belly would allow.
Seirei didn't have an answer to her adopted brother's signed questions. So she responded with one of her own. It seemed likely that Shahar and the others would have noticed the path already, but she gestured to it anyway, asking a silent answers there? Her own worry, and desire to return home were obvious in her tense, alert posture, and the hesitant confusion in her hands.
.
.
.