A Learning Experience Fall 28, 511 AV Purpose: Training Khasr trudged through the grass, leaning slightly forward under a rather ungainly amount of weight. He was still mulling over his conversation the previous day with a particularly vexing young woman, still not quite sure what to make of it. The idea of venturing off had struck him in the very middle of it, and he was following his own advice. He had never left his pavilion for very long before, at least while they were a single tent, and a new side of living in Endrykas had presented itself. As a major city in all senses of the word aside form the fact that it moved, the noise and sheer population could work to his advantage. He planned to follow it a few days behind, far enough so that the hunting would still be decent while close enough to avoid glassbeaks. He planned to remain alone for five days, seven at the most, which should be well within his survival range, or so he hoped. He had set out before dawn, and the sun was starting to show itself. The horizon was painted with a dazzling display of pinks and reds, while the rest of the sky was distinctly purple. Khasr raised his head and breathed in the world around him. The air was quite cool, distinctly of fall but harboring whispers of things to come. Crickets and cicadas sang still, not quite ready to fade. The stream he was following bubbled happily, and birds flitted between shrubs and chirruped angrily over what morsels they found. He stopped and grew quiet as the grasses parted ten yards ahead of him, hailing a deer and her fawn as they took their morning drink. Khasr had no intention of hunting them, even if he was capable and didn’t have his blasted pack on him. No, dawn was a time for renewal, not death. Hunting should take place either before dawn or after the sun was solidly in the sky. It was for this reason that Khasr watched the mother and child drink their fill and disappear before reshouldering his load and returning to the road. |
He had set out before dawn, and the sun was starting to show itself. The horizon was painted with a dazzling display of pinks and reds, while the rest of the sky was distinctly purple. Khasr raised his head and breathed in the world around him. The air was quite cool, distinctly of fall but harboring whispers of things to come. Crickets and cicadas sang still, not quite ready to fade. The stream he was following bubbled happily, and birds flitted between shrubs and chirruped angrily over what morsels they found. He stopped and grew quiet as the grasses parted ten yards ahead of him, hailing a deer and her fawn as they took their morning drink. Khasr had no intention of hunting them, even if he was capable and didn’t have his blasted pack on him. No, dawn was a time for renewal, not death. Hunting should take place either before dawn or after the sun was solidly in the sky. It was for this reason that Khasr watched the mother and child drink their fill and disappear before reshouldering his load and returning to the road.
He checked his traps and found both sprung but only one filled. It was a large jackrabbit, and after resetting both traps Khasr found his spirits lifting slightly. With nothing pressing to do, he returned to his camp and set about to processing it. Khasr had often watched his family skin and preserve meat and skins, but was for some reason had never done it himself. He knew the basics, but that was all. He did it a ways away from his camp since he knew it would be very gory and animals would be drawn to it, no matter how he tried to hide it. He slit it from its neck, across its stomach to between its hind legs, and its innards spilled out in a great wave. Khasr quickly flipped it onto its back and picked out what he wanted to keep, namely the heart and liver. The rest he buried and covered with a pile of heavy stones from the creek, knowing that it would keep scavengers busy. Once most of the blood seemed gone, he returned to his camp and tugged at the skin. It came off easily, like a piece of clothing, though it took some work to get it off the head. The skin was mostly covered in blood, so it didn’t take much scraping to clean it. He finished after roughly an hour, and tied it to a frame of sticks before allowing himself to rest. He had never tanned before, and he didn’t like it. Not at all. He lay against a tree for a good while, letting his burning arms recuperate, before looking for a place to put the hide. It was fairly small, only about three feet in diameter, and he ended up tying between two javelins embedded in the ground. He’d let it dry overnight and rub the brains into it tomorrow.