The carmine babe is very bored. She travels alone, volcanic orbs dancing along the black surface of the tar pits, an erotic expression gripping her features. So many animals have fallen victim to these pits, and as she passes the fools within the pits she can't help but laugh. What idiots! How could they have been foolish enough to fall victim to the pits? Surly everyone knows the danger that lurks beneath the bubbling surface. The babe stops in her tracks, the screeching of a live mammal catching her attention. Her eyes shift toward her right, and she beholds a rabbit whom is waist deep in the tar, its skull thrashing from left to right as it tries deperatly to free itself. The babe reclines onto her haunches, a devious smirk playing across her lips as she reaches a single paw toward the rabbit. Dauntingly she runs the tip of its right ear between her toes, showing the animal she has the power to free it although she has no intentions of doing so. "If only you were strong enough to pull yourself free... What a shame." She taunts, lips curling to reveal her deadly fangs.
"Why aren't you helping it?" came a still-youthful voice from behind Fia as she stared at the struggling rabbit. His orange eyes moved slowly from lapine creature to the familiar bright red pelt of the young woman. They'd met briefly when they were pups, and he could remember a name - Fiamette, but could remember little else about her. He rarely wandered from home, and yet twice now out of that handful of times he'd run into her. Strange. He'd not, in fact, even had a reason to leave pack lands today, only that odd restlessness that seemed to infect many yearling wolves though he was in general he simply ignored it. He'd seen the bright red of her coat against the blackness of the tar almost immediately upon entering these lands, and had gravitated toward that one bright spot of color. He was nearly oblivious to the nuances of her body language, seeing only her, staring at the rabbit as it thrashed squealing, and not much moved to hasty action he stayed where he was, a few feet away, as he watched.