nature sucks
By 'appreciation' he meant seething dislike.
He'd woken up to find his fur coated in frost, to begin with, and had needed to mince his way over cold, wet leaf litter until nearly noon. The incredible fiery colors of the trees mostly served to remind him that he could even then have been sitting around a nice warm fire rather than wandering through the woods in the middle of autumn. Squirrels raced back and forth between the ground and their stashes, carrying burdens of acorns and other food items to store for the winter, the industrious gathering serving only to remind him of how hungry he was as he dashed from one to the other in a futile attempt to catch one of the little bastards to eat.
Once in a while he saw hares partway through changing from summer brown to winter white, the pale patches revealing them against the bright orange foliage without the snow that would later conceal them. Not that it did him any good, since he couldn't catch any of them either, and his stomach complained loudly every time he saw one of the stupid badly-camouflaged vermin.
High overhead and far distant, he could hear the mournful honking of geese travelling south for the winter. He could not ever hope to catch any of them, of course, unless he miraculously learned to fly himself, but the clatter of geese in the far distance made him wonder if there were a great deal of them on the ground somewhere. Did geese congregate somewhere? Like songbirds in trees? He admittedly had no idea about the lives of birds, except that they migrated when it was cold and made a great deal of noise. And tasted absolutely magnificent when properly prepared.
The frost finally went away around noon, shortly after he broke out of the forest and into the grassy plain. Of course, that was because the gray cloudy sky had opened up in an autumn thunderstorm, and the sheeting rain had quite washed away the frost. The rain wasn't much warmer than the frost, though, and he was quite shortly soaked through to the skin in icy cold rain. For a long moment he stood blankly, shocked at the sudden downpour and glacial chill.
Turns out, autumn is also known for it's storms.
Orthos had never needed suffer through an autumn store out-of-doors. At best he needed only to suffer a few scattering of raindrops in the time it took to scurry beneath cover, there to while away the time before the rains stopped playing at dice or drinking or other pleasurable pursuits in the warmth of civilized shelter, with lights and heat and music to chase away the gloom.
Now he stood frozen figuratively and quite nearly literally. He'd been shocked at how quickly the dark clouds had boiled up in the dreary sky, more yet at how quickly it became dark, almost as though night had fallen. And then, of course, the rain came sheeting down all at once in a rush of water as though the sky were upending a bucket overtop him, and his artfully messy fur was suddenly sodden and limp, pressed against his slender body as though he were a drowned rat.
He trudged on in the same direction he'd been going, not knowing what else to do. Even if he turned around and returned to the forest it would offer at most a dubious bit of shelter from the rain, but not much at that and certainly no warm fire to warm himself and no roof to keep the rain off, just the leaf canopy and cold dirt and those Ley-damned squirrels chattering at him from their own warm nests.
He continued on for what seemed like hours in grim silence but for the hissing of rain all around him. His skin had long since gone numb with cold, his elegant head and plume of a tail held low in misery. It did, in fact, take him several tottering steps to realize that he was now up to his underbelly in water and mud, already too soaked and numb for the additional wetness to immediately penetrate the numb fog of his brain. He stopped suddenly when he realized, but the mud squelching under his numb paws shifted and sent him even further into the cold water of the lake until he was up to his neck.
How could he have walked right into a lake without realizing it? Didn't lakes have like... frogs and stuff that were constantly shrieking out their various territories or whatever, or searching for mates or whatever it is frogs ribbited for? They must go into hibernation, like bears, because they certainly couldn't go south like the birds, and it was the only explanation his foggy brain could think of for the lack of peeping to warn him of the presence of a lake.
He stood stunned for a long moment in water and mud to his neck, coat bedraggled and splashed with the slimy substance that mired his paws, and began to laugh in bitter semi-hysteria. Of course this would happen to him. He was sure that the pious sour-mouthed old bastards back home would say Ley was punishing him for his hubris in leaving home. Who knew - maybe they were right. He stood there in rain and lake and mud and laughed until he began hiccuping. Oh, by Ley's hairy scrotum, he was a damned mess.
Seasonal Skill Prompt: Navigation (solo)
Word count: 982
Word Count:: 840
The female was on her way back to the den when the weather finally broke. Philomena groaned aloud -- go figure she’d be out and about when the rain came. The female shook out her coat, yet still the water fell from the heavens above. It was too cool for her liking… the last thing she wanted was to catch a cold and get sick. Her little ones didn’t need to worry about their mother not being able to play or hunt. Sure she might be able to ask No Face to help with the latter, or even her brother, but it wasn’t really Ulric’s job to provide for his nieces and nephews. She didn’t want to stress him by adding things to his plate that he shouldn’t have to worry about. If anything she just wanted him to enjoy time with them… that was all she could really ask for.
The fiery colors of autumn seemed to be dulled by the overcast day. The vibrant reds, oranges, and golds that washed over the lands were now grayer, shifting under the different droplets that fell from above. The female loved the look of everything in the rain though, even if she worried about potential sickness. The downside too were that the fattened prey animals would be rushing to their dens as well. Squirrels, rabbits, and different types of fowl would be looking for cover… though they could make quite the tasty meal if caught before they managed to get to cover.
Philomena briefly considered going after something -- her children would need to eat as much as they could to continue to grow into fine adults. This was the season for all creatures, both prey animals and predators alike to build up stores for winter. They’d all need to be prepared for the dying season…
Herbs too, Philomena thought, would need to be gathered while it was still warm enough to do so. The young woman knew little of the leafy things but she knew they had medical properties that could be necessary for the health of her family. Evan liked flowers, she noticed, though mainly for their beauty rather than the medicinal parts of them. The bright, vibrant colors they offered in this season pleased her son. But as she had tried to explain to her children the land would soon begin to die, going into a sleepy season that would be hard on the land and its inhabitants. It’d grow even colder… the wind would become even more biting than it was now.
Philomena felt the mud squealsh underpaw as she kept her way around the lake. She wanted to make it home before her little ones and No Face began to worry… yet something nagged at her. She kept an eye peeled for any chance at easy prey, but she knew it was something else that was pulling at her. But what was it?
“Gods above…” Phily whispered. The last time she’d been dealing with this season she’d been with her uncle, right? She remembered shivering sometimes at night, coming to curl up beside the male to share warmth. To think that the next season was even harder made her want to groan again. The scents of the land would begin to change as well… and the smells of wet bark or leaf litter would fade away to the cold, crisp scent of snow.
Philly managed to catch herself as she slipped on some leaves underpaw, barely avoiding the lake as she did so. But then, just as she gave a sigh of relief, the young woman heard laughter. An almost hysterical laughter… Gods, who was out in the storm?
But her thought of the stranger turned to worry after a moment. Her blue eyes scanned the dreary landscape and she furrowed her brow. Fallen branches from the occasional tree here and there, tons of leaves… but no sign of another wolf. She perked her ears, hoping to zone in on him over the storm…
...and so she did. Philomena finally located the stranger a bit further up and… in the lake? The female slowly began to approach him, mindful not to slip on the leaves again as she did so. She forgot about the rain, well, sort of… at least the thought she should hurry to the den so she didn’t catch a cold or something.
Her attention was focused solely on the stranger now. The female paused once she was a couple feet from the man… he might have noticed her approach, or perhaps not, but either way Philomena supposed it didn’t matter. There was something strikingly familiar about the coloration of his coat she noted too. She didn’t say anything about that yet though… maybe it would all become clear after they interacted with each other.
“Are you alright?” She asked tentatively. She wasn’t sure she wanted to hear the answer… yet curiosity prompted her to ask away anway.
- Philomena's current avatar is by Risketch on DeviantArt.
- Philomena has a bat hawk companion named No Face who is generally somewhere nearby if he is mentioned at all in a thread. If not mentioned, assume he is not there!