OOCI got permission from Mao to NPC her to finish the thread off.At the Kelvic’s wry chuckle at Raiha’s remark, the Akontak went from purple to a pale blue, because soon Mao was no longer a young woman, but a very large black panther, who disappeared into the grass as Diallo started growling, turning slowly, tracking the sound in the grasses. And now that it was closer, Raiha spotted the glassbeak’s Aura. It was a bit like that of larger predators, she realized - it was one pure bundle of malevolence. But now that she could see it, she wasn’t turning her back on it, either. Giving such a creature, no matter how old or healthy it was such an advantage would have proven fatal, and Diallo knew it. She, in turn, followed the dog’s lead, suvai out and at the ready. Mao’s aura, Raiha perceived it in flashes at the edges of her awareness as she studied the creature that was advancing on her in the dog. Overhead, Uzima called out in warning. It was coming closer.
Well, she had to admire Mao’s stratagem. Even Kanikra agreed with it. Namely, the blue-skinned female and the big white dog made an excellent bait and distraction. She studied the Glassbeak’s aura as it approached. Male, the bundle of colour told her. Old. Its left leg was a little differently coloured than the rest of its aura, which usually indicated to her that there was an injury or a sickness. And because she was pretty sure one did not get sicknesses in their legs - though there were always the bones - she was certain it was an old injury. It didn’t seem to be bothering it too much - it didn’t seem to be favouring its leg, but those sorts of things were hard to tell from the distance from the aura alone.
The hair on the dog’s back stood straight up as Raiha clutched the suvai, ready, waiting, legs bent slightly at the knees, shifting her center of gravity to prepare. The glassbeak stopped circling then, and faster than Raiha could breathe, the enormous bird came charging through the grass at them with only one thing on its mind. Hunger. Its leg was bothering it, too, and then it was there. Uzima dived, claws gouging for the creature’s eyes, and Diallo charged for it, his big bulk in front of Raiha and not moving, as the Akontak, suvai lining the outside of her arm, made a desperate slash at the creature’s beautiful beak as its momentum was thrown by the bulk of the dog crashing into its chest, and sending it off balance. It was already limping from the leg - dried blood told Raiha that something had injured it some time ago and hadn’t finished it off - and Diallo sent it crashing down, trying to grip its neck as that beak went for the dog.
A flash of black pinned the bird to the ground, gripping the Glassbeak by the back of its throat, tilting its head up. Mao had the bird by the throat, clutching and squeezing as the bird’s windpipe was crushed, and its lashings stilled. Raiha breathed heavily. Well. She... she would definitely be more careful when she ventured out into the sea of grass again. And Diallo was going to need some stitches, though it didn’t look too bad... Overhead, Uzima shrieked again, and Raiha was on her feet, looking for any more. They hunted in packs, she remembered being told. What it looked like they had, as she stared at the beast’s aura, was an young male who had gotten left behind his pack with his injury and left for dead... because Uzima was calmer, Diallo wasn’t on the edge quite so much, and she couldn’t see anymore threatening auras. Only once she was certain it was dead did she approach.
She activated Rak’keli’s power, and went over her big white dog with her hands, gold fringing her skin as she burned away the infection. The rest she’d stitch when she got back - that, she could not heal. If Rak’keli saw fit in the future to give her a greater gift, then that would be the way it would be, but until then, she would make due with what she had. Mao was unharmed, and Raiha exhaled.
“Well. This will be meat to feed the place,” she told the panther.
“Now, we just have to get it back to Sanctuary.” She was breathing heavily, not from actual exertion, but from a combination of Auristics and the adrenaline rush that was fading now that the thread to their person was gone.
--
Some huffing and pulling later, they had the dead Glassbeak in the courtyard, and Raiha decided it could be left there for the time being - for now, though, she wanted to stitch Diallo’s shoulder. Leaving Mao to luxuriate in the sun and stretch and enjoy the smug superiority that came from bagging a glassbeak, injured though it had been. Up in the mews, with Uzima on her perch and Diallo lying in the light of the open window, Raiha gathered the needle and thread, and let the dog get comfortable, resting his head on her leg.
“Mmn. You’re my boy,” she told the dog with a smile and cleansed it out again, burning away the infection before taking the rag in the bowl of water and rinsing it out onto the cloth.
“Good dog,” she told him in Kontinese as she dried her hands and prepared to stitch, poking the needle through as skin quivered under her hands and the big dog just rested there stoically.
“You are such a good dog,” she told him again and again.
“You’ll get the big leg bones for chewing, right? All yours,” she promised him, talking steadily as she put the skin back together.
“There we go... almost. Almost, Diallo,” she promised him. With deft fingers, she carefully put a neat line of stitches in the dog’s white coat, shaking her head at him.
“You’re going to scare everyone around here, aren’t you?” she told him fondly when she snipped the thread and rinsed her hands before sponging the rest of the blood out of his coat.
“Good dog. Good dog.”It was a lesson harshly learned - without Mao, she likely would have died out there, and no one would have been none the wiser. . From now on... she would certainly keep much closer to Sanctuary until she could defend herself better. But for now, it was time to go butcher that glassbeak - she had some ideas for the feathers, beak, and talons... and, of course, the legs had been promised to her dog. Sanctuary would eat well tonight... and she would show respect to Eywaat and Caiyha by making sure that every last morsel was used. That was only fair, when you hunted. You took what you
needed - not whatever you
wanted.