~
The rank stench was undeniable. Like a thick gloom it blanketed the air and lined her lungs with each breath. She was no more than thirty fulms from the singular as they quietly grazed... one could smell them long before they were spotted in the tall grasses as the gentle plains breeze carried their scent. While the wild boars were relatively easy to track, bringing them down was another matter entirely. Such a hunt wasn't permitted for the weak or young, and often had to be coordinated in groups.Â
Without comrade or companion, the small miqo'te was on her own. But this was not out of the ordinary for her in this day and age. In the absence of aid the work was doubled. It was an improbable task for many when the slightest error could cause great injury.Â
Lying low in the swaying grass, eyes pale as the moon peered out, staring at their prey beyond with an otherworldly patience. A dark red tail, tipped with white strands shifted back and forth in anticipation, body otherwise motionless. Darkness cloaked the land save for the faint glow of a starry night. Shallow breaths and pounding heart were masked by the winds, and her shadowed silhouette suggested to be an inanimate lump in the dirt. For five minutes this continued as she waited for the right moment.
The hunt was not unknown to her. She had fought for blood and mercilessly tasted it upon her lips. It was the way of survival. The way of her people. To fail was to die. The fittest and brightest continued their legacy, passing down wisdom, strategy and experience. Who better to learn from than those that lived to tell the tale? The dead did not often speak, if only to murmur their regrets and shame.Â
A heavy grunt broke the redhead from her moment of thought. Her marquise pupils dilated, focusing more intently upon the location from which the noise was emitted. The beasts were tired from a day of rooting, but ever were they ready to spring at a hint of danger. Now was the hour when fortune would be most in the predator's favor. She scanned the line of bristled backs, settling her attention upon the nearest one. A healthy boar of moderate age, nose pressed to the dirt as he continued to search for edibles and completely unaware of her presence. Blade in hand, she gripped its handle tightly.Â
With a defining leap she sprung. The distance was closed within seconds by powerful legs tearing through the grass. A killer in the shade, brought to light by the glow of the moon as she fell upon her prize. Like a wave, shrieks of surprise erupted among the singular as they darted away in multiple directions, obsessed only with personal survival. Without time to appraise the danger, there was no consideration towards protection. The final boar spun on short yet strong feet, attempting to send the attacker flying as the blade pierced its hide. Claws dug into the skin, fastening themselves to the beast as both prey and predator kicked dirt up in clouds about the area. Carefully did the miqo'te twist her body, evading the deadly tusks that swung about threateningly. To fail was to die.
The tussle continued, each creature strong in their own right. But with the advantage atop the boar, the miqo'te finally retracted her blade, deftly slicing along the soft skin of the left elbow pocket. The beast squealed, lurching forward onto the ground as it struggled in desperation to regain its footing.
Her head pulsed at the sound. Its sharpness raised the hairs on her neck. She knew this noise - this howl of terror - not just as the shriek of a dying pig. Promptly did she grab for a tusk, tugging it back harshly as she delivered a final skillful cut along the throat, silencing the piteous cries for help. The meaty body sagged, its life draining away. Yet the pulse continued in her skull... a throbbing sensation that forced the miqo'te to catch herself on the now limp body of the boar. Her vision blurred, and with a wince she brought her free hand up to her head. What was this...? Why did she suddenly feel so sick?
Her mind grew distant, fading beyond images. No, not just images. Memories. Something that pulled itself forward insistently. So unwelcome and unknown was its presence that it rattled her head. This sensation. It was wrong. She did not choose to remember. This act was like an intrusion, she thought through gritted teeth. One that seemingly could not be stopped as it took control of her head.
Similar cries echoed as visions flashed behind closed eyes. Shrill they were.. and as pitiful as the stuck pig. "No!" They shrieked, the words tangible through the inflection even as the language was incomprehensible. "I don't want to do this anymore! Please!" A hand blurred over watery eyes, snatching at the humanoid shape just out of reach, its garb colors a dull blue.Â
Then, unexpectedly, the point of view altered. Someone else struggled in place of the previous one. "Enough! Stop!" Their vision was red, merging shapes making sense of only shriveled, bloodied hands grasping at glowing strings.Â
"It will work!" A voice reassured, an eerie confidence amidst the anguish. But they were only met with further wails. Their words died beyond the vision as her pulse drummed endlessly in her ears.Â
What felt like minutes was only seconds as the heavy, weighted burden of memories subsided. The cold of the night air tickled her ears, reminding the gasping, panting miqo'te that she was in fact still alive. She blinked herself into focus, peering about into the darkness searchingly as she remembered where she was. Ever so slowly did her racing, terrorized heart fall back into a gentle rhythm, calmed by the collection of her true thoughts and the reassurance that she was in fact still herself. The plains were silent, all trace of the other boars long gone as they likely startled nearby beasts in their loud effort to escape.
Her eyes drew down in recognition to the still warm body beneath her, and her blood-soaked trousers as she sat in the pool of death that had slowly seeped around her legs.
Those linens were going to be a bitch to clean.
~