-:7th of Summer 509AV - Southern Cyphrus:- A passing wind carved motion into the grass, haunting the tiny holes and crevices of the land as it swept across the sea of grass, leaving no stalk or rock untouched. Dirt that had been pulled into the air currents sailed through the air, curling and twisting until evaporating over the landscape like sunlight hitting fog. Broken by the hum of distant bird calls, the eerie silence revealed the presence of a predator lurking in the shade of the tall grass. Curt tails of wind flighted over the grass tops but were interrupted as the stalking movements of a desert wildcat swooped its shoulders as it padded close to the ground, weaving itself through with the fluidity of a shuttle through the shed of a loom. Approaching the glassbeak was a delicate balance between staying silent and making noise in rhythm with the stumbling sounds of the glassbeak dragging its leg, and the wildcat had managed to edge its way to the left flank of the deadly beast, laying in wait for the succinct moment to pounce. Darting its eyes back and forth, the wildcat made an intelligent analysis as to the energy levels of the glass-billed creature; it easily had a good fight still left in it as its fatigue did nothing to dampen the powerful capacity of its razor-edged jaw. If she could evade or sustain any wounds she'd be in the clear to thrust forward with one movement and crush the glassbeak's neck. There she was, hanging in suspense as she waited for her prey to lumber towards her in the exact direction it had been going before. Everything was set up, everything carefully prepared to flank it from the side as it neared her on its death row. Blood flooded the wildcat as it sat up and tried to lick at the wound. A putrid taste touched her tongue and she spat repeatedly to rid herself of whatever the glassbeak had dug its beak into it. An infection was imminent and as a 3 year old adult cat on her own, she was bound to die before she was even able to have offspring. Perhaps next life she thought, not in a conscious kind of way but a thought of general acceptance of the circle of life. Even those lifeforms that did not ponder its existence seemed to be inextricably in tuned to life's vibrational rhythm. ----- Silence in the grasses made Hex take a moment before stepping any further. She knew from her experience in Cyphrus that when death was about, the birds would stop chirping, the sun would retreat behind the clouds, even the streams would quiet their burps of flowing water that crashed against the rocks. All was eerily still as Hex crept between the base of two weaving hills that zig-zagged further into the ground until opening up into a clearing, the very clearing where wildcat battled glassbeak. Caught in a flurry of caution, Hex crouched onto all fours and pressed her fingers into the ground, closing her eyes and opening her third eye to the cosmic djed of her auristics and the extrasensory readings of her chaktawe ability. First she listened with her sense to the vibrations of the area; the bugs, birds, plants, and everything else appeared before her, information about each subtly oozing onto the canvas of her visual field like paint forming into fuzzy images. A particular animal form lit up amongst the others when it made growls of agony under its breath. The sound waves whipped through the sensation she had of the beast and when she focused her attention on the single source of energy with her auristics, she instantly knew that it was hurt. The chance of it being a deadly predator was high but something came through to her while she read its aura; a cry for help. Any urge to run away wasn't hard for Hex to resist - her thirst for adventure drove her forward through the long grass, slipping as silently as possible until she appeared short of the wildcat's location. Peering through the grass she noted the sand coloured fur that lay slick against its body, and the puffed up skin of the wound, red in colour and inflamed. Hex sat perfectly still and observed the wound from afar; the discovery of the infection solidified the beasts' fate - it was as good as dead. A divine daze decorated her face as she pressed her hand to her pack, using her auristics to see how many herbal healing vials she had left; ten. The amount was clearly not enough, and all logic would suggest that her skill not be able to heal a shattered shoulder bone with herbal remedies, but her faith outshone all of those initial reactions and something powerful nagged at her to help the wildcat, even if it was an enemy... |