
The woman who had come seeking further aid for the wounded left shortly after, returning to the tent with its heavy scents of medicine and blood and fire. K'ile and K'piru remained frozen in the middle of the ragged camp for some time, bodies supporting one another as though they were the only things keeping them from sinking into the sands and becoming lost forever.
K'piru already felt lost.
At some point, K'ile stood, pulling her up with him when she made no move to get up on her own. She couldn't feel her legs moving as he guided them both out from under Azeyma's eye, and the eyes of the tribe. Her feet drug through the sand as foreign instruments. She strained briefly when they turned away from the horizon, but went quickly limp, once more numb.
They curled up under the shelter of the rocks, and there K'piru cried again for a short time. They were quiet tears, her body trembling but making no sound as they burned tracks down her face. They soaked her skin and cloth as her daughters' blood, as K'thalen's blood had soaked their own; they fled her body like the blood of her family.
***
When the shadows of the cliffs merged with the shadows of night beyond, K'piru finally stirred. She hadn't slept, but her mind had fled. It returned to her there in the cool crevice K'ile had brought them to, and she blinked slowly, feeling course sand along her side, a warm body at her back. She breathed in his smell, and her heart clenched.
Body unmoving, her eyes roamed towards the open sands, catching on a few, tattered remnants of tents set up to ward off the elements and then shifting to gaze past them, further into the dunes.
A faint shudder echoed in her skull and deep in her ribs and in slow, deliberate movements, K'piru pushed herself up. K'ile must have drifted to some shallow, troubled sleep briefly, for he didn't move when she stood, her legs unfolding shakily, feeling as weak as a newborn.
She kept her eyes on the dunes ahead and let her feet carry her forward.
Once moving, she didn't stop until she'd crested one of the dunes a short distance outside the camp and dropped down into its valley. It didn't take long, as though her movements were outwardly calm, they were also quick. There at the bottom of the dune, she fell to her knees in the sand and turned her face up. Her features shivered with a strange, hopeful desperation that she was only half aware of.
Any moment now, her children and nunh would come bumbling over those dunes. K'thalen would give some half-hearted excuse for their delay, some silly adventure he'd prodded her girls into playing along with. K'airos would be sheepish but happy, and K'airi would be vibrating with a sense of victory, the kind of rush she always seemed to have upon returning from a hunt.
They would return soon, and K'piru would be here to greet them.
K'piru already felt lost.
At some point, K'ile stood, pulling her up with him when she made no move to get up on her own. She couldn't feel her legs moving as he guided them both out from under Azeyma's eye, and the eyes of the tribe. Her feet drug through the sand as foreign instruments. She strained briefly when they turned away from the horizon, but went quickly limp, once more numb.
They curled up under the shelter of the rocks, and there K'piru cried again for a short time. They were quiet tears, her body trembling but making no sound as they burned tracks down her face. They soaked her skin and cloth as her daughters' blood, as K'thalen's blood had soaked their own; they fled her body like the blood of her family.
***
When the shadows of the cliffs merged with the shadows of night beyond, K'piru finally stirred. She hadn't slept, but her mind had fled. It returned to her there in the cool crevice K'ile had brought them to, and she blinked slowly, feeling course sand along her side, a warm body at her back. She breathed in his smell, and her heart clenched.
Body unmoving, her eyes roamed towards the open sands, catching on a few, tattered remnants of tents set up to ward off the elements and then shifting to gaze past them, further into the dunes.
A faint shudder echoed in her skull and deep in her ribs and in slow, deliberate movements, K'piru pushed herself up. K'ile must have drifted to some shallow, troubled sleep briefly, for he didn't move when she stood, her legs unfolding shakily, feeling as weak as a newborn.
She kept her eyes on the dunes ahead and let her feet carry her forward.
Once moving, she didn't stop until she'd crested one of the dunes a short distance outside the camp and dropped down into its valley. It didn't take long, as though her movements were outwardly calm, they were also quick. There at the bottom of the dune, she fell to her knees in the sand and turned her face up. Her features shivered with a strange, hopeful desperation that she was only half aware of.
Any moment now, her children and nunh would come bumbling over those dunes. K'thalen would give some half-hearted excuse for their delay, some silly adventure he'd prodded her girls into playing along with. K'airos would be sheepish but happy, and K'airi would be vibrating with a sense of victory, the kind of rush she always seemed to have upon returning from a hunt.
They would return soon, and K'piru would be here to greet them.
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"Song dogs barking at the break of dawn, lightning pushes the edges of a thunderstorm; and these streets, quiet as a sleeping army, send their battered dreams to heaven."
Hipparion Tribe (Sagolii)Â - Â Antimony Jhanhi's Wiki