by Tiki on July 6th, 2011, 5:45 am
Silence, that was the note last left on the kelvic’s track. He had gone a while before the actual sensation hit him, and the following paranoia. Was it him who had caused this dreadful din, the pounding of his heart echoing throughout his mind and body of what was wrong? Had his small act of necessity caused so much anger in this unfamiliar wood that even now the goddess herself may have felt wronged? Maybe it was her favorite pet… He would look to the side, and back, but nothing showed sign of the cause. His paranoia worsened as his thought of being alone ensued upon him. Why had he left home, his family? Now he was lost, alone in the woods. Wait, lost! No, he couldn’t. He remembered now clearer than ever, the road, it was kept to his left, he was sure to keep it on his left. As quick as his legs could take him he ran south by south west towards the road.
It didn’t take too long before he began to feel the dip in the terrain. He soon was stumbling down into the worn grass and light mud. A moment more of silence… He took the moment and let it out; he sat down and just tried to make sense of it all. He had already come so far, miles from his family, so many friend that he had made, so many adversaries and challenges he had overcome. What was he, a child, a little child crying in the middle of a road way over a bitty fear of losing his way?
It began to come back to him, his control or rationality. The fact was he did it, he did come this far without family or friend, overcoming the worse thus far the forest had to offer against him. He wasn’t lost and kept damn good track of his being. Either way, he needed the break. Lost in his own solitude, he turned his focus toward his bag and began to dig for a sack.
“What do we have here…this is the thief who has been stealing from me? A sniveling little brat of a two-legged pale skin...disgusting. I will show you, you shall learn better than to steal from me.” The kelvic turned full back toward the source of his growl, a female lynx clearly upset with his being in the forest. He gathered his pack back up and jumped back into the road growling in a low tone. The lynx made her way down to greet him.
“Disgusting little slime, you dare mock me! All of you damn hu-mans think you’re so tough with your growling and yelling. The nerve of you to growl back at me, as if you are on my level! In my own wood at that! The audacity you have to both steal and insult me in my own home!” The lynx growled louder now as she neared half way of the road, the kelvic plenty toward the opposite side from which he once sat.
“Please, I didn’t mean to steal! I was just passing through! I was hungry!” The young kelvic’s words rattled off to no avail, the lynx hissing back ready to defend her territory. He had no choice, fight or die. Flight or fight leads him to the natural choice. In a quick shift he was pulling his shirt away and loosening his undergarments. In a leap he transformed forth into his bestial form. The lynx stepped back and lowered herself growling.
“Shifter! Even more abominable than the rest you bastardly little-"
“I told you, I didn’t mean it! I was just passing through and needed to eat! I’m sorry, but it’s already done.”
“Damn right it is already done, and now I will take back the meal which was rightfully mine!” They both growled and hissed at each other. The lynx lowered her head, tail in the air swaying. The kelvic remained rather tall, his claw swatting at the air between them. She looked ready to pounce and he worried. He was larger, by far, but this lynx knew this wood, she had earned her right to live here and ruled supreme with reason. He had little option but to react as the lynx pounced into him, her claws sinking into his forearms. He too latched onto her and both violently kicked and scratched at the other with hind legs. The other would try to bite and fail as the other would reflect the action, both going for the mouth and throat. The tumbling eventually resulting in the kelvic on top of the lynx with his greater weight. Her feet were little help under his own weight. He pulled his head back and ripped a claw back and out. He quickly got back to his feet and backed away; the lynx rolled over and regained herself.
She cursed him, he had hurt her. Her shoulder now bled from tiny gashes from his large claw. Otherwise they shared the pain on each others’ biting and scratching, and latching claws for the matter-their pricks stinging with blood and bits of dirt. The lowered herself again. Clearly this would not go to a mutual acceptance of fault. They jolted at each other from a distance and stopped dead, both caught off guard by a large bear stomping down into road over the kelvic’s bag. He lingered there, the precious goods just from his reach. The kelvic stepped forward roaring for return of what was his. As he did, the lynx too moved against the panther. He had n choice but to back down at the moment and defend his self being. She crept onto the jaguar with her hissing only to be stopped again by the bear. Caught between the two, the kelvic wondered by what unfortunate mishap he had come to this crossroad.
No one would have thought of it, especially him, his face rooted deep into the source of this predicament just past high noon. The scent was all about him, blood. The blood of his morning kill which he failed to clean from his nostrils, but worse, his foot well enough. This whole while he marked himself for death with blood for whatever predators lurked about. And now this, lynx and bear both followed him to what could so easily be his doom. He was stunned, from both the quarrel of moments ago and surprise of the new coming foe.
The moment was on though, and now that was the fact. The lynx was so foolish as to swap at the bear and take a bit of his nose. He roared and jumped for her and they ran. The lynx was chased back north, the bear hot on her trail. Tiki rushed to his things and inspected everything over. Thank the gods…the water was intact. He gathered his cloths and…put them in the bag.
The bag was quickly stashed into the near try which he was quick to mark. Transforming back he rushed after the lynx and bear, maybe a minute or two ahead of him. They had stopped at a sickly tree, bent over to grow at an odd slant. The lynx was holding her ground upon the think of the tree, the bear crawling up to claw at her. She got him again on the nose with a quick swipe. The roar echoed back to the kelvic. He saw them now and rushed. His momentum was put forth into a quick motion: he leapt up upon the bear, his claws sinking into the shoulders. He bit down into the back of the bear, near the neck. The bear roared in greater agony and fell on all fours. He tried to shake him, but there was no use in it. The lynx took advantage and ran.
Now look what he’d done, clung to the back of an enormous beast with no help about. He dug in deeper, skin, fat, and flesh. His bite was less than effective, caught on the scruff of the bear. His bite was not quite wide enough to get the hold he would need to kill. Time was running out, and perhaps soon more would answer the cries of the cats or the bear. But, the bear was waning, losing energy and strength spent in his chase and climb. He too must have hungered when following that scent. Down the bear went, his front legs the first to give. The big cat still hung on for dearest life and ripped into the shoulders more. It was done; the bear was too tired to fight back much more with something he could not reach. With his opponent down, the kelvic leapt back and off the beast. He ran back for the marked tree, but did stop to ensure himself. The bear, weak, pulled itself up and backed away from the kelvic. He was holding his own ground now. With a final hiss, the kelvic returned for his things.
He shifted back in the tree, his chest struggling to rise and easy to collapse after it all. His hand shook as he reached in for water. He drank, some of which spilled over his burning chest. He waited a while longer, just collecting himself and regaining some strength. Any when from half an hour to a whole had passed before he was calm again, and the birds, the birds were singing once more. There wasn’t much else to do here, think or speak of for the matter. He remained bare as he continued down the road, just in case something else was full of ideas.
He saw an oddity in the road before him, a fork. A prong turned south west, the other north west. Windreach…which path would take him to Windreach… He had heard long ago that Windreach was to the north west of the continent, so of course he took the right path…right? Well wrong path, in all actuality. The left lead to Kalea inevitably, but nothing got past this sharp kelvic. So, north west he went along the calm, song-filled road north west. Very soon he would find himself in the grace of the Spires.
Last edited by
Tiki on April 20th, 2012, 12:02 am, edited 1 time in total.