Fall 72, 514 AV
morning
The morning dawned gray, but a bright sort of gray -- the kind of overcast that did not forebode rain, at least not in the immediate future. Tonight and tomorrow were anyone's guess. All Khida needed was fair weather now, however; tonight and tomorrow could take care of themselves. She could barely make out the sun's direction through the clouds, but the layout of the camp provided a starting reference, and that told her where to look. So informed, she set out into the grass, retracing her steps towards the traps she had laid the night before.
There were some landmarks to be found amidst the grass, at local scale -- the vining bramble with shriveled berries that looked like they had failed before ever ripening; the pockmarks of entrances to burrower tunnels, two of which she had passed between; the gully she had crossed, a rivulet running north-east to south-west, but which turned sharply south just a little further on. What Khida did not expect was not a visual, but a sound -- the sound of a large body moving through the grass, soon accompanied by that of hooves impacting against root-matted earth. She expected it to be a Strider, and was not disappointed; but that she knew the rider, the Kelvic did not anticipate at all.
"A pleasant morning to you, my fine falcon," Jaron Foxwhisper greeted as his horse slowed to a halt, his Pavi accompanied by appropriate and largely familiar signs. "It's a nice surprise to see you! What brings you out this way?"
Hunt, Khida signed in return, before offering her hand to the Strider. The horse whuffed at it and nudged, to which she began scratching above its nose. "I have... trap," she elaborated a moment later. She frowned slightly, picking through her limited vocabulary. "I go to see."
The man signed something which might have been pleased surprise. "I have traps to check as well. Maybe we can go together? We can take you to your traps, and we can catch up along the way?" Something to the effect of you ride and query accompanied his words, underscoring the heart of the offer.
Ride the horse. Khida contemplated the Strider for a long moment, her expression pensive. It was true, she didn't really want to walk so far -- she just hadn't been presented with many other options. While she could, perhaps, ride Dainellas, she mostly thought of the mare as belonging to Hope.
Yes, her hands shaped, before the decision even reached her conscious mind. And with that statement, she was committed; she could not, would not, take it back. No matter how dubious she might be of the choice.
morning
The morning dawned gray, but a bright sort of gray -- the kind of overcast that did not forebode rain, at least not in the immediate future. Tonight and tomorrow were anyone's guess. All Khida needed was fair weather now, however; tonight and tomorrow could take care of themselves. She could barely make out the sun's direction through the clouds, but the layout of the camp provided a starting reference, and that told her where to look. So informed, she set out into the grass, retracing her steps towards the traps she had laid the night before.
There were some landmarks to be found amidst the grass, at local scale -- the vining bramble with shriveled berries that looked like they had failed before ever ripening; the pockmarks of entrances to burrower tunnels, two of which she had passed between; the gully she had crossed, a rivulet running north-east to south-west, but which turned sharply south just a little further on. What Khida did not expect was not a visual, but a sound -- the sound of a large body moving through the grass, soon accompanied by that of hooves impacting against root-matted earth. She expected it to be a Strider, and was not disappointed; but that she knew the rider, the Kelvic did not anticipate at all.
"A pleasant morning to you, my fine falcon," Jaron Foxwhisper greeted as his horse slowed to a halt, his Pavi accompanied by appropriate and largely familiar signs. "It's a nice surprise to see you! What brings you out this way?"
Hunt, Khida signed in return, before offering her hand to the Strider. The horse whuffed at it and nudged, to which she began scratching above its nose. "I have... trap," she elaborated a moment later. She frowned slightly, picking through her limited vocabulary. "I go to see."
The man signed something which might have been pleased surprise. "I have traps to check as well. Maybe we can go together? We can take you to your traps, and we can catch up along the way?" Something to the effect of you ride and query accompanied his words, underscoring the heart of the offer.
Ride the horse. Khida contemplated the Strider for a long moment, her expression pensive. It was true, she didn't really want to walk so far -- she just hadn't been presented with many other options. While she could, perhaps, ride Dainellas, she mostly thought of the mare as belonging to Hope.
Yes, her hands shaped, before the decision even reached her conscious mind. And with that statement, she was committed; she could not, would not, take it back. No matter how dubious she might be of the choice.
Common | Pavi | someone else