WITH SOMBER THOUGHT
She revels in this place. In the shadow of the crumbling towers in the background, a bleak contrast to the blissful greenery surrounding her. The winds here are warm, unseasonable, and her thick fur is hot against the sun beating against her back like some vigorous drum. She aches to return north, to escape this province of fire and seek the chill of the snow—but she is enraptured in all this beauty, the ice forged of winter long leaving her yearning for the blissful taste of spring. Here, it is different, as if it were petrified and kept in this form forever; fields of bright blue and gold tickled her paws with each careful step, making sure to avoid each delicate flower as not to crush it under-paw, to disturb the serenity of this hollow. She is alone, and upon the wind is nothing but the scent of leaves and promises of summer, the harshness of the continent long left behind at the beach she crossed to get here. How achingly beautiful, she thinks, golden gaze flittering about the meadow, this is just like a dream. Perhaps it was. Perhaps Jendayi would awaken, and find herself shivering in her makeshift den during a thick snowstorm, once more listening to the terrifying crumbling of the mountain as another avalanche unfurled its alabaster doom down the mountainside. She bites her tongue—and she does not wake. This is real. The flower atop her crest is old and withered from the journey, and so Jendayi carefully places it upon the ground, before quickly snipping the bud of another one, just as golden as the one before it, and places it where the other once lay. It was her last lingering connection to the matriarch she had left behind, the one final surrender she’d given herself to the past she’d suppressed and long forgotten. There is a daintiness about her that usually is not there, some girlish and youthful giddiness that is no longer shackled to the bleak winter, no longer quelled by the idea that others may be here, watching. She loses herself, if only for this single moment—to roll in the grass and laugh as young girls always do, to tumble in the flowers and send their petals spiraling into the sky to dance with the wind. The smell of fruits and berries soon mixed, and Jendayi soon grew blissfully enveloped within them—until finally, she stops, and lays on her back among the shrubs, staring at the endlessly blue sky and hoping, pleading that it never ended, that the sky would be unfaltering as it always was, and that the sun would fight the dusk for as long as it could. |
Leaving the harsh winter of the northern continent behind felt like deliverance. While thunderstorms accompanied most evenings, breaking the heat of the day with cracks of lightning and occasional downpours, the days remained pleasant. He knew the dry season would be upon them before long. His family had been stationed in the arid lands nearest to the Bent Canyon for the past year, and he considered himself well acclimated to the climate. In fact, it hardly seemed worth noting, especially coupled with the other tasks that weighed on his mind. Establishing him family a permanent position, and making plans for the future, was no small task. In his odd spare moments Amon would disappear to scout the lands nearest to their own. It was rarer still that he had more than one day to venture, but when he found himself available Amon was more than happy to range even farther afield. It would be some time yet before he ventured northward of the Bifrost of course, but he imagined winter would waylay most northern packs for the time being anyways. Blizzards and famine were hardly conditions one would want to wage war under. It was enough to set his mind at east, at least for the time being. During one such bout of wandering, Amon was surprised to find an indistinct figure in the distance having caught his eye. He thought that it might be a prey creature at first, and was appropriately disappointed to find that it was in fact just a small fae. The waifish creature seemed enraptured with her jovialities, prancing and mincing about like a pup. Or perhaps she was a pup. Several of his children had been the size of this creature when they were only a third of the way grown. He did not approach, more concerned with observing before announcing his presence. There was something to be said for maintaining an advantage, no matter what situation you found yourself in. Partially concealed by the shrubbery and other flora crowding the grove, Amon was sorely tempted to turn away and sure he was never known to the young female. He had no time for either a fight or the senseless, ceaseless questions that typically accompanied meeting a new face. And yet, he was no longer just one brute who felt he had been delivered a mission. He was a leader now, and if he truly meant to claim this realm as his own, ignoring and avoiding those he felt he had little time to suffer was no longer an option. Besides, one never knew when the opportunity to learn something useful or influence another in a useful way might arise. "You have the look of one that has recently escaped winter's grasp," he called out, attempting to affect a neutral tone, if not necessarily a friendly one. In truth he was entirely interested in where the small woman had come from, and what information she might carry along with her. Walk, "Talk" Think |
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Jendayi does not need to think of much. She had once smelled scents upon the entrance to the grove but they had quickly been overwhelmed by the aroma of fruits and flowers. The wind and sky were adamantly beautiful, and it still carried with it the soft chill from the northlands without it overpowering the cold. The flowers and branches of shrubbery swayed all around her, and sometimes even bent down far enough to tickle her pale nose, eliciting a soft giggle. She closed her eyes, and found the ideation of drifting off into a blissful slumber far too tempting—but even Jendayi knew in the back of her mind she could not allow her sense of safety to falter because this place seemed like paradise (but likewise, she thought, what sort of ferocious beast could ruin this? She would be content to die here, if she must—it were a fitting grave). She does not first notice his approach, however, until his voice breaks the delicate boundary of her distracting thoughts. She inhales sharply, and the eyes she didn’t know she’d close flutter open, revealing deep gold. She quickly turns in one fluid movement until she is on her belly, and then slowly pulls herself into a sit. There, she sees him, standing among the fruits and flowers. You have the look of one that has recently escaped winter's grasp, he says, and Jendayi’s gaze rests neutrally on him, as well; she had long mastered the art of stoicism, but deep down, Jendayi was a truly neutral creature herself. She cared little for the thoughts and trifles of man where there was much more to learn, more much to experience. “Is it that obvious?” she asks, and there is the faintest bit of humor on her tone—but it does not spark in her eyes the way it perhaps should. (Inside, however, she was feeling oddly thankful; perhaps it was due to the invisible, generous sabrecat). Perhaps luckily (or unluckily) for Amon, Jendayi was a woman of few words. She did not often seek to overwhelmed others with pleasantries and smalltalks, and thus took no care in officially introducing herself, or in asking for his own name (it was always understood by her that she would be allowed what information they were willing to give, but only on their own accord). He does not seem angered by her presence, so Jendayi assumed this land was still yet unclaimed, and her presence was not intruding nor unwanted. She did not move, did not appear aggressive but neither unaggressive—it was some blissful middle, some content (almost too content) demeanor she’d long learned would often frustrate the most boisterous of wolves. But this one seemed different; there was something else. Part of her was intrigued, and part of her wished not to even try to understand it. |