Timestamp: Fall 40, 523 AV Gillar's Nano Challenge Scenario: Number 2 The day was young, the first of the sun's rays just beginning to peek out from behind a sea of deep grey clouds. The last of their once heavily-laden bodies drizzling onto the earth, onto Maya's exposed skins, like the tears she could no longer shed. Silently, she hoped, as she made her way through the city's streets, which were becoming more and more familiar to her with each passing day, that her makeup wasn't running. And if it was, she hoped it wasn't much, for she could not afford exposure in a city such as this. As she continued in her travels, she felt her shoes sink into the damp earth, her step squelch against the mud. Her skin felt cooler than usual, and the city, she found, was noisy in a way she found atypical. The last of the rain must have been drowning out the screams and shouts she had grown accustomed to. As she walked, she tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear and continued on her way, into a portion of town she had never visited before. She wasn't quite sure which it was, exactly, since it was entirely new to her, but it was far more open than where she had come from and littered with a series of caves. Some had a sort of wooden gate around them, others had a wooden shack nearby, and Maya wondered if these were some of the old mines Sunberth was famous for. Maya moved past them in silence, until something entirely unexpected caught her eye. A light in the darkness, a glimmering from deep within its depths that stopped her dead in her tracks. She blinked water from her eyes as she stared at the light, wondering what it could be. Had she been alive, her heart might have skipped a beat or she may have stopped breathing entirely, for a time. But she was no longer alive, and although largely devoid of emotion and increasingly more so the more distant she grew from the life she had once known, she found herself drawn to this cave opening and its eerie light. She found her feet moving toward it of their own accord. Once she had made it to its deep grey maw, walked into its mouth, she began to realize just how far back the light was. Perhaps it's one of those mystical mushrooms I've only heard about in stories, she thought as she moved farther into the cave's depths, following a largely horizontal path, that hardly wavered any more deeply into the earth as she moved farther into the cave, hardly drifted left or right. When she had made it a few hards into the cave, the earth began to tremble and she was thrown against her side. Luckily, she didn't hit her head on anything sharp, and avoided a more serious injury than what she assumed was the scraping of her palm. She felt a sharp searing pain course through its length as the earth continued to grumble, and she groaned as she looked over her shoulder and took note of the dying light. A waterfall of earth and stone was pouring over the entrance, obscuring her view of the outside world, before covering it completely. Maya didn't even try to make it out in time; she knew she couldn't have. And as a cloud of dust drifted toward her and she descended into darkness, she felt nothing. She had no need for food, water, or sleep. She did not need to breathe either. And for once, she found her current state of existence far more suitable to this situation than the body she had held in life. Although it was stronger, it had its weaknesses. Its needs. Needs she had shed when she taken her second body and every one that had come after. But this body, too had its shortcomings. Physically, it was weaker. And she had injured her hand. And just as would have been the case had she still been in her original body, she could not see in the cave's darkness. But that was a problem for later; she needed to tend to her hand, lest even more of her precious ichor seep out. Since she could not see it, she would have to rely on feeling and her medical knowledge to bind it. There was no use trying to stitch it in this impenetrable darkness. Thus, she lifted herself into a sitting position and raised her left hand, the injured hand, so the palm would be facing up. From what she could tell, the pain was radiating outward from the center of her palm, suggesting that the injury was somewhere in the middle of her hand. She should be able to feel where her skin was slit if only she touched it... she raised her trembling right hand to the left, brushed her cold fingertip against her skin until she found the ridge. Then she traced it slowly, over and over again until she could see the shape of the injury in her mind's eye. She found the sensation of her nail against flesh tickled, that it helped push her ichor away. Now, I need something to bind you, she thought as she started to pat herself down with her injured hand. All she needed was a tear, something that would make it easier for her to rip her clothes and make a bandage. She could tend to herself better when she returned home, when she could actually see what she was doing. For now, a simple bandage would have to do. Unfortunately, she found no tears, but she thought she felt some loose threads, so she tugged and tugged on her simple clothing, around where she thought she felt the thread loose, until she heard the familiar sound of fabric ripping. She kept at it until she pulled off a piece she hoped might be big enough to wrap her hand, and awkwardly, tied the makeshift bandage around her injury to keep the ichor from seeping out. It was loose, but it was something, and should be enough to staunch the flow of her ichor as she tried to make her way out of the place. With that in mind, Maya rose to her feet, brushed herself off. She knew there was no point in turning back; the cave entrance was covered in a mixture of earth, rock, and rubble. All she could do was go forward. Head toward the light. The only thing she could see, taunting her from the distance. She set her uninjured hand against the wall. Other than her eyes, it was the only thing she had to guide her. Word Count: 1,122 Words |