2nd of Summer, 522
The second day of Summer was just reaching its full, mid-day stride when Brisa made it to the Dust Bed.
Crumbling, half-buried grave markers suck out of the rocky hillside like the crooked teeth of a brawler. Brisa prowled between them, nothing but a dark smudge of black against a dusty backdrop of tough, scrubby grass and sad shrubs. A breeze was picking up from the south, doing much to wash the stink of the city out of the graveyard. Here the air was almost fresh.
The Dust Bed at high noon was as peaceful as Sunberth ever got, but still Brisa's shoulders rolled restlessly under her velvet coat. She was hungry. Kane wasn't being very open-handed with their money these days. Not when the city was knee-deep in so much celebratory fervour. But cheap wine could only do so much, and sometimes it felt like she was carrying both their hungers through the bond.
This wasn't the first time, and gods knew it wouldn't be the last. At times like this she would leave Kane to sleep off his stupor while she caught a fat brat to tide her over until the purse strings loosened or her bondmate snapped out of his apathy. And maybe she was getting slow, but the last few days she hadn't seen so much as a bald tail whipping out of sight. Strange as it was, as soon as she needed them the brats disappeared, and now she was getting hungrier by the day.
Thankfully she knew of more than one way to eat for free.
Brisa lowered her muzzle to sniff at the ground. Dragging in short, explorative gusts of air she cast side to side trying to locate the loamy, fresh smell of turned earth. Her short, pointed ears were pricked forward, only half listening to what was going on around her. Jedediah was the only human she was really worried about this far south of the city. And the bear of a man and his enormous sword had a tendency to make themselves known when he caught her messing with the graves.
The breeze picked up, winding between the markers carrying the smell of a fresh grave. She followed it a few crooked rows until her paws sunk into the loosened ground
From here it didn't take long. Digging her claws into the soil, she scooped huge drifts of dirt out from between her legs, and less than two feet deep she hit something solid. Reaching in with her muzzle, she sunk her teeth into flesh, leaned back on her legs, and pulled in short, hard bursts. Out of the earth rose a stiff wrist, discoloured but still intact, followed by the weak, stringy arm and shoulder of a young man. An ear and the first wisps of blonde hair were just starting to show when Brisa suddenly stopped.
A stiffness rippled up her back and settled in her shoulders, pulling her upright with the man's wrist still in her mouth. It took a moment for her mind to catch up with her senses, and she realized she was being watched.
Several lengths alongside her, much too close for comfort, a she-wolf was standing with her head low between two gravestones, staring at her.
Brisa twisted to face her, and the sound of the corpse's elbow joint popping out of its rigor mortis caused the wolf to flinch. The kelvic didn't look the other predator in the eye, her gaze was fixed low and to the left, keeping the creature in her periphery as she growled her warning. I see you. I don't want to fight you. Do not come any closer.
The wolf wavered for a moment, eyes fixed on the dog crouched over the body. Brisa saw a mirrored desperation in her yellow eyes, that same bloody hunger, and she finally dropped the corpse in order to bare her teeth. Her tongue lapped out of her open mouth, and she could feel saliva starting to collect in her lip. The growl turned into a snarl, the rumble in her chest collecting hard and heavy in her throat. I see you. I am warning you.
The wolf took a slow step forward, Brisa's weak show of intimidation not enough to deter her from an easy meal. The two didn't blink as they stared, sizing the other up, weighing the risk. The wolf was older than her, and just as tall, but painfully thin, bordering on malnourished. And she must be alone, or else Brisa would have been run off already.
The Kelvic wasn’t an experienced fighter, but she was so hungry. They both were. She curled her back legs tight under her body.
At some unspoken signal the tension snapped and the two lunged at each other. The quiet of the graveyard was broken by a cacophony of noise as the two drew up on their hind legs and crashed into each other. The wolf was faster, but Brisa's collar got in her way, and the snap for her neck failed. The creature's teeth sank into the loose skin just above Brisa's shoulder, knocking them both to the ground.
Looking for a better grip, the wolf came down on the Kelvic again, ripping into her cheek, still unable to get through her collar to her throat. Brisa kicked hard, raking her claws down the wolf's thighs and belly. Twisting in her grip, the dog barked and snapped until her mouth managed to find fur.
Her teeth closed hard under the creature's jaw, and from beneath the thick fur and muscle Brisa felt more than heard the snarl pouring from between the wolf’s teeth cut off into a trickle. Throwing with all her weight, Brisa shook her head viciously from side to side, upsetting the wolf’s already weak balance until she could finally roll and wrestle her down and under her. Finally standing over the wolf, she held on for all she was worth, laying on top of her to avoid the scratch of her claws, feeling the air move above her ear as the wolf's teeth snapped viciously just out of reach. Finally the wolf began to weaken.
It was a slow death. Eventually what little air the wolf could suck into her body was not enough, and she began to suffocate. Her limbs twitched, her muscles unspooled, and finally the body slumped under her. Brisa didn't let go until she could feel the blood pumping sluggishly from between her teeth finally stop.
Brisa stood shakily, quivering with the last shockwaves of adrenaline. Blood was trickling from the bite to her shoulder, but the rip in her cheek felt more serious. She hoped she wouldn't need stitches. Kane would kill her.
But that problem could wait. She looked between the corpse of the wolf and the half-buried human, before deciding that the wolf was fresher meat.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Skull crows were starting to perch on the gravestones, patiently waiting for their turn, as Brisa tore out one last strip of flesh from the wolf's mutilated thigh. She had eaten as much as she could as fast as she could. She was starting to feel sick, but it was that satisfied kind of sick that came from a belly being too full. The scavengers could have the rest.
The skin around Brisa's muzzle felt tight as the wolf's blood started to dry. The pain in her cheek and shoulder was just a low static hum in her head, incessant but not urgent. Perhaps she should lie down for a chime and let her body rest and recover, and let this meal to settle.
Stepping back over the half-buried human corpse, she wandered behind a couple of tightly placed gravestones beside a scrubby little tree for at least a little bit of cover. Turning a couple tight circles she laid down, resting her heavy head on her front paws, feeling satisfied for the first time in days.
[/indent]