Closed Dawn Huntress

A rabbit hunt turns into an unexpected meeting.

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Not found on any map, Endrykas is a large migrating tent city wherein the horseclans of Cyphrus gather to trade and exchange information. [Lore]

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Dawn Huntress

Postby Tani on September 8th, 2013, 5:45 am

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513 A.V, 3rd Day of Fall.
Silence settled over the camp like a blanket, dark, heavy, and surprisingly comfortable. The moon hung low in the sky, bands of shadow stretching behind the pavilions that kept their quiet vigil as the Drykas slept. Dawn was still a distant concept, and it would be bells yet before the morning's hunting parties dragged themselves from their dew-coated tents. Tani moved through the sleeping city like a phantom, paws all but silent as they brushed the damp grass, packed down by the passage of tens of Striders. She didn't mind the silence. Endrykas moved almost constantly, and the ceaseless clatter of a city's industry followed it, assaulting her ears. These early mornings hunting trips were the only time she could find some measure of quiet. Kyron, her bondmate, had spoken fondly of the thrum of the city's markets. To Tani's sharpened senses, the markets had been a cacophony of conflicting smells and sounds that she had been glad to leave behind.

She swiped an errant blade of grass in frustration. The Drykas had only been here a few days, and the constant racket of the city had already pushed her prey far from the city's tent-marked borders. It meant an earlier wake up for her and, unforgivably, a longer walk. The only creature to note her passage was a buckskin Strider, standing watch over two sleeping companions. The great horse gave an whinny as the feline slipped past, anxious at the movement. Tani regarded the sight with faint amusement. No matter how the Drykas cared to see them, the horses still stood vigilant for predators, still thought themselves prey. Really, when it came down to it, they were no more hunters than their riders.

There was no elegance to how the Drykas hunted, chasing down prey on horseback, relying on the muscle and sweat of another creature to carry them to their meals. It felt like cheating. Where was the patience, the challenge? Oh, it was necessary, she knew that much. Endrykas' herd was too large to sustain otherwise, and the idea of a clawless Drykas struggling with a gazelle was laughable. Still, downing a doe with a bowshot felt somehow unfair.

The meager light faded further as she wandered further from camp, obscured by the walls of grass that reduced the starlight to dull splotches on the earth. Capable of swallowing fully-grown Drykas with ease, the grass quickly enveloped the feline, reducing her vision to a few hand-spans. Once, the blindness had terrified her. Now, she welcomed the safety it offered. Open ground was not a safe place for a cat in the Grasslands, even a Kelvic one. That had not been a pleasant lesson to learn, and it had earned a yellow-specked Glassbeak a permanent place in her nightmares, but she had taken it to heart. Sight hardly mattered that morning. Her route was marked by a different sort of path.

Rabbit were creatures of habit, and she smelt the warren long before she saw it. Hidden in a thin clump of grass, this particular entrance had taken her almost half a day of patient observation, perched atop one of the scraggly trees that dotted this part of the grasslands, to locate. Within a panicked bolt of what, in wetter weeks, was a watering hole, it was almost comfortable. Rain hadn't fallen here in some time, and the hole had receded to a muddy bog that was of little use to larger predators, but perfect for smaller creatures. Prey. Watching the rabbits when she could have been hunting them had been an exercise in frustration, but it came with its own rewards. No sound from the tunnel reached her ears. Hardly surprising, rabbits were no more inclined toward midnight forays then most of the humans she shared a tent with. They would move, in time.

Tani found a fallen branch beneath her earlier perch and settled underneath it to wait. Rotten timber came off in thin strips at the movement, speckling her coat with damp flecks that sent an itch marching down her spine. Her tail flicked the dirt in annoyance, sending a fresh wave of flecks sprinkling down.

This would be a long wait.
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Dawn Huntress

Postby Tani on September 8th, 2013, 2:51 pm

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Pain pulsed through Tani's neck, a dull, damp ache. Dawn had begun to stretch her amber fingers across the grass, though the air still carried remnants of the nightime chill. The steady cascade of rotting timber had left her once-pristine coat a mosaic of wet patches that would take half a day to clean properly. Time was uncertain out here; but Tani was certain she had been watching the warren for at least three bells. If the cramp in her neck was any indication, it had been days.

It was a long time to wait for a rabbit.

She ached to rest her tired head, let it droop atop her paws. Rabbits were noisy creatures, surely they would wake her. Besides, it could be that they saw they glimmer of her eyes in the moonlight. She had seen a similar glare in the eyes of the Drykas' hunting cats. Big, sleek animals, they hunted with a grace that gave Tani shivers. Still, they weren't perfect. None of them would have had the patience to lurk, concealed for bells, for prey. It was nice to know that the cat's superiority wasn't absolute. They were stronger, true, and faster, but they weren't hunters. Not like she was. Content with the resolution, she shifted a paw from its position beneath her, stretching the limb out from her log to catch the morning sun. It was hardly stealthy, but the rabbits had given no sign of movement, and the aching limb insisted that she needed to move.

The faint odour of burning timber reached her nose, carried by the wind. Evidently the Pavilion's kitchens were preparing for breakfast. Had she really been crouched in the dirt that long? There would be warmth back at the camp, somewhere to curl up and dry her coat. Possibly even food that didn't require marinating herself under a rotten log all night first. Gentle rustling rippled through the undergrowth, at the border of her hearing. Tani banished thoughts of a warm bed and snatched her foreleg back, ears pivoting in the direction of the noise.

Something was moving in the undergrowth, just behind her and to her left. Tani froze, listening. A dry scraping tone, punctuated by a series of thumps, a heartbeat of crushed grass. She knew that noise. Prey. The rabbit must have left by a different exit that morning. She twisted beneath the log, prompting a fresh shower of flakes. Tani hardly noticed, muscles tensing, legs coiled beneath her. The sound grew closer, a thumping beat on the dirt.

A blur of grey bolted from the grass clump, throwing up puffs of dust. Tani pushed off the log, claws extended. She lunged at the rabbit, paw swiping the little herbivore's tail. The creature tumbled through the air, landing in a flurry of limbs. In a heartbeat it was up again, streaking for the cover of the grass beyond the mud-pond. Not today, little one. Tani raced after it, half leaping, half-running over a tangle of fallen branches.

Tani's vision narrowed as she closed the distance, pupils contacting to slits in the morning sun. The rabbit was fast, but it wasn't built for endurance. Neither was Tani, but she was well-rested, and had legs easily twice the length of the little creature's. A stumble on a loose twig was all it took, and Tani fell on the rabbit like a furry thunderbolt. It kicked at her, legs raking her stomach, twisting beneath her claws, but Tani clung to the rabbit like grim death. Her teeth closed around the struggling creature's neck, pulse palpable through the contact. She bit down until she felt bone, metallic blood filling her mouth. Slowly, the rabbit's twitching subsided, life fading from its dark eyes.

She paced back, eyeing the kill with a mixture of satisfaction and trepidation. Life was circular, and the rabbit was just another step in the cycle. Yet... Something was wrong. Rabbits may have been strange, stunted things, but they weren't clumsy animals. Why had this one stumbled? With a start, she made the connection. She had been hidden beneath the log, yet the rabbit had come out at a gallop. She prodded the body, rolling it. Their struggle had been too brief for any significant injury, beyond the damage to the rabbit's throat, and anything else was either hidden beneath thick fur or too minute for her to see.

Sound reached her ears, the same dry, raking rustle that she'd first heard beneath the log. Tani tensed again, tired muscles preparing for action. This was her kill. She had dragged herself from a perfectly warm tent for it, and Dira take her if she was about to give it up. A jewelled head pushed its way through the grass, reptilian eyes set in a flat skull. The snake slipped into the clearing, cord-like body rippling behind it. It was huge to the Kelvic, with a body easily as thick as her skull, the snake was an undulating mass of muscle and scale. A rabbit would barely be a snack to such a predator, and it seemed to be focused on hers.

Tani snarled, hackles creeping up.
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Dawn Huntress

Postby Arundel on September 8th, 2013, 9:20 pm

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Her body shivered in protest as her arms stretched for the sky, trying to banish the lethargy from her tired muscles. The sun crept her first tendrils of light across the horizon, setting the land in a mixture of inky shadows and beautiful golds. The moon was still visible in the sky, but only just. It was day's turn to chase the chill from the air. Arundel could taste the coming of fall on her tongue. Cool moisture clung to the grass, and glittered in the slowly increasing sunlight. She hummed in the back of her throat as her back popped deliciously. That'll do it. Her breath escaped in a relieved sigh. Just what she'd needed. In the back of her mind, the horrible reality that winter would be fast approaching tried to rear its ugly head to ruin her fine mood. She quickly shoved the thoughts away, refusing to think about running noses, sneezing, and blistering cold winds.

Today would be a good day. The Drykas forced herself to repeat that manta over and over until she convinced herself to halfway believe it. She was careful not to think of winter as she went back inside her family's pavilion to retrieve her gear. She was in the mood to try her hand at some hunting. Arundel was sure that her endeavor would be a complete flop, but that wouldn't stop her from giving it a shot. Her skills with her spears - which were all now bundled neatly under her arm as she picked way toward her family's grazing ground - was pretty laughable at best. She wasn't confident that she could hit anything smaller than a nabato. The thought alone made her cheeks heat with embarrassment. Her skills with animals were better yet, but those along wouldn't propel her into the ranks of the illustrious Watch.

Arundel's pack thumped rhythmically against her back with each purposeful stride. Her tent was rolled up tight and tied to the top of that, and a stake kept poking uncomfortably against her shoulder. Everything else - except the full waterskin bouncing on her hip - was stuffed down tight in the backpack. Torches, bedroll, blanket, etc. She felt pretty well prepared, but planned on only being away for only a single night. Upon arrival at where her family's horses grazed, she stuck two fingers in her mouth against her tongue and blew. The shrill whistle sounded similar to the cry of a bird, and instantly her mare's big head popped up among the backs of the herd. The answering whinny made her smile, and she observed as Juniper muscled her way through the throng of grazing bodies, and galloped full-tilt toward the waiting Drykas.

Arundel held up her hands in greeting as the Seme thundered to a stop, tossing her head and snorting. Her velvety nose reached out and explored her rider's cheek, and her hot breath tickled her skin. "Hello, beautiful," Arundel murmured, signing the words for greetings and love. She dropped everything she was carrying on the ground and began to tack up. Her riding pad was the color of her clan - amethyst - with darker purple embroidery making a border of tangled Drykas knotwork all the way around the edges. Beads of various colors - from white to more shades of purple - were sewn tactfully to the pad, in a tasteful pattern that looked like a storm.

Next the yvas was buckled on. The tent was attached just behind the handles, and she transferred most of the less important items into the yvas bags before hanging those on hooks at the mare's withers. Arundel shook one of the handles to make sure the entire thing was secure, and Juniper rocked from the pressure. It was tight enough. "We're going for a short trip, but we'll be back tomorrow," the Drykas explained absently, as she added the finishing touch. Her small bundle of spears was tied securely to the Seme's right shoulder, and finally they could be off. Her backpack was slung once more onto her shoulders, and Arundel positioned herself on her horse's left side.

Her fingers clutched a fistful of dark mane, and with a much practiced swing, threw herself up onto Juniper's broad back. Before she was even settled firmly behind the tent at the base of the mare's broad withers, she started walking with purposeful excitement. It wasn't often they went on jaunts that would take them away for more than just a handful of bells. Juniper knew what that tent on her back meant. Arundel grinned and squeezed her flank with her left heel, cuing the mare to pivot in the other direction - toward the sun. As the tents and pavilions of Endrykas began to thin, she urged her mount into a steady, ground-eating trot. Her hips rocked easily with the smooth movement. Junipter was a dream to ride. Her body was broad and easy to grip with her thighs. The downward slope behind her withers was rounded by muscle and fat, then swelled gently into a round, heart-shaped butt.

When the last border pavilion was behind them, Arundel let her speed up fractionally with a squeeze of her thighs. The sounds of smells of their waking city were still on the wind though, when Junipter suddenly balked. Arundel gasped and grabbed the yvas handled in front of her. "Wha-?" she started to sputter in confusion, but grunted as the Seme broke into a fit of violent crow-hopping. Her mouth hung open, the exclamation of whoa frozen before it could leave her lips. Juniper's neck arched and she snorted in fear, dancing quickly to the side and twisting recklessly. With one final, powerful buck with her back legs, Arundel came unglued and sailed right over the top of her pinned back ears. The air left her body on impact, and she jarred her hip painfully. It must be what a newborn feels like after just being born. For a moment the Drykas couldn't remember how to breathe, or move.

She floundered awkwardly, dazed and confused. Finally, she drew in a large lungful. Arundel coughed violently, but shook with relief. "For the love of Gods," she murmured, rolling onto her smarting side. And what in Zulrav's name is that sound? It made the fine hairs along her muscular body stand on end. Her scalp prickled uneasily, and her heart thudded a little faster. Curiosity propelled her onto her hands and knees, and she tentatively crawled forward through the stiff grass. It itched against her skin, and slowly the dry, high pitched rattling grew closer. Suddenly the memory flooded back, and for a short moment she was eight years old again. Arundel could see that rattlesnake curled up in her path as clear as day. It chilled her blood, and her skin crawled. Yet still her curiosity drove her forward.

She heard the feline snarl next, and reached the edge of the petite clearing in which the showdown was about to take place. Her fingers parted the grass like a curtain, and there she saw them. The black cat - no larger than a domesticated pet - her dead quarry, and the invading serpent. It was a massive rattler, with pitiless eyes and an eager tongue that tasted the air. Its body tensed, starting to coil as if readying to strike. The air was filled by the dangerous song played by its fat, club-like tail. The black cat's fur stood on end. Run! Was it really going to face down this venomous serpent? Maybe it was desperate for food. Arundel's green eyes raked over the cat's body. It looked healthy enough. Then why? The snake hissed, and cold chills caressed her sun-kissed skin. Quickly, she looked around for something - anything to grab. There! A stick had fallen from the branches of a nearby tree. It was half as thick as her wrist, but not very long.

Her mouth went dry just imaging inching closer to the snake. She'd almost been bitten by the one all those years ago, but her father's stallion had trampled the deadly creature into oblivion. That strider would kill a snake quicker than a Drykas could blink. Arundel was just grateful she'd been around the horses at that time, and not alone. Trying to be silent, her fingers closed around the rough bark. It was heavy in her hand - like a club. Just as the serpent was rearing its ugly, angular head, Arundel lunged from the grass behind its prone, coiled body and brought the stick down atop it with all the force she could muster in a two-handed chop. Her face twisted in a savage grimace as the makeshift club made impact. Its body writhed wildly, the pain making it thrash without direction.

Arundel gasped through clenched teeth and flinched away, fearing a bite. But she'd broken the rattler's spine, and it was in the throes of death. Still, she kept back. Even a stray, reflexive bite could end everything. What a horrible way to start a day.
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Dawn Huntress

Postby Tani on September 9th, 2013, 2:56 pm

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Tani wasted no time with surprise. She would deal with the materializing woman in a moment. For now, the serpent was distracted, and wounded. Unlike the rabbit that lay at her feet, there were no traces of panic in those beady black eyes. Nonetheless, it was evidently in pain. The snake twisted to and fro, struggling to move amid the mess the club had made of its body. Tani fell upon it in a moment, the creature too battered to manage more than a pathetic flop. For the second time that morning, she tasted blood. The rattler fell still, leaving the clearing silent, save the wind that rustled through the grass and the pounding of Tani's heart beating a savage dance against her ribs. As one, her hackles settled back into position along her spine, ears swivelling back to the newcomer.

Not a predator. Not an intentional one, anyway. Snakes were poor prey, even large ones. Awkward to catch and doubly awkward to eat, Tani usually left the serpents alone. Usually. She eyed the fallen rattlesnake with a faint sense of pride. At least she'd eat today. The pavilion would take care of themselves for a few more days, even with the reduction in trade that seemed to have gripped them. Besides, it gave her an excuse not to face them. Then again, perhaps the Drykas had found her. The woman before her certainly smelt like a Drykas, horse-sweat clinging to her like a coat. Though if appearances were any judge, she had been dragged through the Grasslands behind a Strider, rather than atop it. Odd.

Tani crossed the distance to the rabbit's body in a few luxuriant strides, relishing the sensation surging through her limbs as she shook the cramps from her muscles, one ear keeping watch over the club-woman. The rabbit didn't twitch as she grasped a leg between her jaws, dragging the prey across the clearing. It was an awkward grip, and the fur irritated her mouth. Twice, she was forced to drop the creature to get a better angle. It was like trying to grip a carving knife with winter gloves. Eventually, she settled on a jerking pattern that let her tug the rabbit a foot or so each pace. It was a long way from comfortable, and slightly demeaning, but it worked.

With no small measure of pride, she dropped the rabbit a few hand-spans from the snake and set herself down a pace behind both, unblinking green eyes staring up at the woman with what could have been amusement. Tani has hardly the picture of beauty herself, coat speckled with grass, dirt, timber, and a few specks of blood dotted the white patch beneath her chin. This Drykas, or what Tani could make out of her against the sun, was a little better, but not by much. Seed pods had made a nest of her clothing and hair, indiscriminate in their attachment, and Tani thought she could see a pack peeking over her shoulder.

She cocked her head to one side, that irrefutable gesture of animalistic curiosity. Who are you?
Last edited by Tani on September 11th, 2013, 1:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Dawn Huntress

Postby Arundel on September 11th, 2013, 4:17 am

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She watched in clear fascination as the cat fearlessly made a quick kill out of the writhing serpent. Arundel barely wanted to touch it with a stick, let along leap on it. A brave little thing, for sure. Or it had a death wish. Maybe a mixture of both. There was a small part of Arundel that wanted to take that snake with her. She could make a good midnight snack out of it. But she would leave it with the feline. The creature looked fed, but a little ragged. Its fur was peppered with Cyphrus earth and debris. There was no denying that the cat was not a simple house pet. The thing needed a good grooming to say the least.

The Drykas sat back on her haunches - elbows resting on the knees drawn up to her chest. Her eyes couldn't help but follow the black cat as it went to retrieve its rabbit, awkwardly dragging the kill over to the body of the rattler. Her lips turned up in a smile. A persistent little hunter. One would think the feline would be ten feet tall, for how proudly it - she - sat. Arundel caught a look at its little hindquarters and didn't see any masculine bits. You go girl, she thought to herself, laughing quietly. Finally the cat sat, just as her human audience was, and stared. They watched each other a moment before her little back head tilted, and ears twitched quizzically.

Arundel's smile widened. The curiosity radiating from the animal was almost tangible. How odd, that she didn't dash into the grass and hide. Perhaps she lived among people. Her people, even. They were still within walking distance of Endrykas. It wouldn't surprise her if the cat made her home in one of the many pavilions. Several, even. Cats were funny like that. Slowly, Arundel leaned forward until she was braced on hands and knees. She bit her lip and crawled forward a few paces then stopped, offering her outstretched fingers. Absently she noted that they both shared green eyes. The white patch on the feline's breast, speckled with blood, stood out starkly against the inky fur. She was pleasant to look at, even if she was a little filthy.
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Dawn Huntress

Postby Tani on October 5th, 2013, 5:15 am

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Curious. Tani traced the woman's movement, motionless as a statue, her kills momentarily forgotten. Some primal part of her, the savage aspect that guided her through hunt after hunt, nudged her toward the swaying grass, closer to safety and away from this odd woman and her outstretched fingers. She stood slowly, stretching her paws before her, relishing the answering tightness in her back. She was halfway across the clearing and the cover of the grass before the feline paused, tail hovering uncertainly. Hoof-beats and voices drifted across the miles, carried from the camp. The day had well and truly begun, and she would be better off back at the pavilion before the horses drove the last of her prey from the grass.

Yet, she could not bring herself to abandon the woman, or her kill, without an explanation. With only a single rabbit to return to the pavillion, lunch may have been lacking that day, but the possibility of a meeting almost made up for it. Almost. Tani turned about, shaking a clump of rabbit fur from her paw. Green eyes met the Drykas' with something like amusement. Then Tani reached deep within herself and breathed.

The cat vanished in a malestrom of swirling light. Tani felt the familiar resistance, like a poorly-fastened tent, and tugged. She felt no pain as her human features came to the fore, the feline vanishing somewhere within until she once again had need of it. This was not the inelegant shifting of a half-trained morpher, it was who she was, and to her the transformation was no more complex or agonizing then donning a coat, albeit a coat that allowed her to wrap her tongue around the intricacies of Pavi. She had never understood how the shift worked, nor had she ever seen any need to find out. It was, to her, as natural and mundane as breathing.

The familiar vertigo that came with a sudden five-foot increase in height pounced on her as the light of her transition faded. For as long as she could remember, shifting from her feline form to its human counterpart had bought with it a dizziness that set her eyes watering. She raised a hand to her face, blinking in the suddenly dull light. Tani hated that, the bastardization of her senses that greeted her when she wore with her human face. Where before the grain of the strange woman's fallen club had stood proudly against the timber, now Tani's human eyes saw only a piece of wood. Where a few brief moments ago the grass had towered over her, impenetrable as a fortress wall, now she could make out the faint lines of smoke on the horizon that marked the camps of Endrykas. Somewhere above her an eagle circled, feathers spread to make the most of the morning's heat. Squinting against the early morning sun, Tani could swear she saw an amber eye tracking her, watching this strange, vulnerable creature that thought to dabble in its kingdom. Tani didn't like it. She felt dull, exposed, and vulnerable. Most of all, she felt like prey.

"I was fine, you know. It was only a snake." She said, backing the statement with as much bravado as she could muster, which was precious little. Gods, if news got back to camp that she'd been a bite away from providing dinner for such a small predator, the Emerald Clan would never let her live it down.

"You're walking alone." Tani's hands danced as she spoke, sketching the signs for horse, new, and a third sign, more typically used by hunters to indicate a single animal who had wandered far enough from the pack to be vulnerable and occasionally used to admonish family for the same.
"And you're evidently not hunting. At least, I hope not." She added, with an aside glance at the makeshift club. A poor excuse for a weapon, even in her limited experience. It, and the grass stains dotting the woman's clothes begged an obvious question. Tani obliged, tilting her head to one side. "Are you lost?"
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Dawn Huntress

Postby Arundel on October 30th, 2013, 2:57 pm

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Of everything that could have happened, this was unexpected. Arundel's eyes widened at the sudden swirl of light. It devoured the cat in a beautiful but strange display, and in a heartbeat left another creature in its wake. A human woman - or not so human - standing naked and proud in the increasing morning sunlight. The Drykas rose unsteadily to her feet and dropped the stick in her fingers, not quite matching the stature of this stranger. A tall woman, with green eyes that mirrored those of the cat who had just stood where her bare feet were planted. Inky black hair instead of fur hung longer than her own brown curls, and an oddly defiant light glinted in her animal eyes. Arundel had met a few Kelvic in her life.

A woman in a neighboring pavilion was actually bonded to one - a small kestrel. She had met the two of them on multiple occasions, but didn't know them well. This was the first feline she had met, and the only one who's transformation she had witnessed. It was an odd but beautiful thing. The woman's casual statement took Arundel slightly off guard. Instead of some kind of greeting or explanation, there was defensiveness. If anyone should be defensive, it should be her. After all, she'd assumed this was a normal cat. Not the kind that would suddenly turn into a naked woman. The Kelvic knew sign, and spoke Pavi fluently. Obviously she lived among Arundel's people. No Windmarks seemed to mark her body though. Perhaps bonded to a clansman?

She couldn't help but smile at the question of her being lost. Arundel looked down at her rumpled appearance, and brushed some dirt from her shirt. It banished the awkwardness of this current situation rather effectively. When she looked back up at the woman, her eyes were amused. "I was on my way to go hunting." Camping and night her gesturing clarified further. "But that snake spooked my horse, and I was thrown off. Not lost, just impeded momentarily." Her shrug was apologetic. The woman made it seem like she'd interrupted something. Arundel looked at the tall grasses around them. She shielded her eyes when the sun glinted on the horizon, and squinted in discomfort. The black mass of her horse's body was a ways away. Juniper's head was hidden from sight, dipped down while she grazed. Safe, at least.

The Drykas looked back at the dark haired woman. The blood was still there, flecked on her bare breast. Such an odd thing, knowing that she was feline only moments ago. "You're Kelvic," she stated, like she needed further clarification. "I've never seen one change with my own eyes." Beautiful, her hands signed. "Is it painful?" The curiosity in her eyes was obvious. "You live here? In Endrykas, yes?"
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Dawn Huntress

Postby Taylani on November 24th, 2013, 3:53 am

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XP Award!


Arundel:

XP Award:
  • +1 animal Husbandry
  • +2 weapon:Club
  • +1 Observation
  • +1 riding
  • +1 socialization

Lore:
  • The pain of being thrown from a horse
  • Example 2

Notes:Gave you a point in club because using a stick the way Arundel did is basically clubbing it. These are comments.




Tani:

XP Award:
  • +2 hunting
  • +2 brawling
  • +1 observation

Lore:
  • Silence is nice
  • Using striders for hunting was cheating 2
Notes: These are comments.


Comments :
As always feel free to PM me if you have any concerns about the grade. Please remember to delete/edit your grade request.

TAYLANI
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