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  • Beqanna

    COTY

    Assailant -- Year 226

    QOTY

    "But the dream, the echo, slips from him as quickly as he had found it and as consciousness comes to him (a slap and not the gentle waves of oceanic tides), it dissolves entirely. His muscles relax as the cold claims him again, as the numbness sets in, and when his grey eyes open, there’s nothing but the faint after burn of a dream often trod and never remembered." --Brigade, written by Laura


    where the wild things are; ruan
    #1
    She has been a true doe by the sheer willfulness of magic. Turned so, by a stallion that became a buck to run with her through the trees. That single small taste of rightness in a shape that was not wholly hers had left her aching ever since. For what, she could not say since she’d never been much for speech in the first place.

    Language came to her in the emotions that moved across the glossy dark of her eyes; in the threat of her eight-point antlers in their majestic rise from her head; in the cant of her small feral head - all these, a language that she knew how best to speak.

    Then came the excruciating violation of a most sacred part of her. The same part that saw further hurt and struggle as life squeeze-pushed out of her. That one bore more resemblance to the deer she chased after than even she did, antlered and cloven-footed as she was. But she loved her; essence of deer and daughter.

    It made her remember, how she had been a daughter once and briefly - -

    Ru-an.
    Because their tongue troubled her. It was not the warning chuff of a doe or the fawn’s bleat. This was the strange pattern of sound into something else that mere breath and noise alone could not convey. It was her stuttered pathetic attempt at his name because it was not as simple to her as grass, water, or nut.

    Except, she remembered.
    The smidgen of courage she had felt at the feathery brush of a wingtip from sister-Heda. Fear and the strong presence of wolf in their midst. Even stronger was the memory of the very thing he swore to her - safe.

    It is that and the tantalizing allure of a bygone scent on the air that pulls her from one forest to another in search of the Others, the not-deer kind that she has trailed diligently after all these years. Trailing after her, is a Fur-in-miniature with budding antlers and a slim graying build: Lichen-daughter.

    She recognizes this forest of tall old trees, knows that they have seen and endured much. Talks of it to Lichen in gestures of head-flick and eye-roll. Of bear-wolf-ruin and how she’d run off (away!) in the midst of the confusion. Fur tells how she’d not come back since. The memories too painful for her slim shoulders to bear. She can see the question of why now in the nutty brown of her daughter’s eyes.

    “Ru-an.”
    she says, by way of explanation.

    @[Ruan] couldn’t resist! <3
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    #2
    ruan

    Of all his children, he'd yearned for the connection with Fur. It was as though he'd found a kindred spirit in her, in the way she relied on the language of body and intuition rather than speech. He could go without speaking and be completely comfortable with it. And with her, he hadn't needed it to communicate. When so many others seemed blinded to the language, she'd been born into it.

    Losing her had been hard. He had surely failed her as he had so many others. He wouldn't forgive himself for it.

    His heart was thrilled even still when he caught her scent. That blue gaze sharpened and swiveled in the direction it had come, carried on a light breeze and filling him with the warmth of a homecoming. She had come home? Or perhaps not her home, but one she'd had for a time at least. That meant a lot to him just that she would even return to wander in this forest she used to know.

    He followed the trail of her scent carefully until he was near enough. In his fear of frightening her, his innocently skittish baby, he prostrated himself, lowering his wolf-colored body to the ground to be as small as he could manage. He let out a cold sigh, not entirely disliking a little rest on the ground, but then propped himself up to wait for her.

    "Fur," he called gently, letting his voice be what greeted her before she ran across his startling appearance. He hoped he would be able to ease any tension it may cause. He hoped to meet the little miniature that followed in her wake and not frighten either of them looking as near to a predator as he did.




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