Post by ♛ 𝔽𝕒𝕓𝕣𝕚𝕔𝕒𝕥𝕚𝕠𝕟 on Dec 15, 2019 7:16:03 GMT -5
Splash of Leaping Trout
tribe of forgotten waters
Splash of Leaping Trout's nose twitched, a sleeplessness overcoming here that she couldn't shake. The torbie's mouth tasted dry, though she had eaten earlier that day. Her parched tongue drew over her lips, and she raised her head from her nest, eyes glinting in the darkness. It was very late at night, her first night as a Cave-guard To-be, and she could hear the soft breathing of her siblings and her new denmates around her. Their snores would have irritated her if it wasn't for the sleepy thought that she should be comforted by the sounds of her Tribemates breathing. Her paws ached as she stood and stretched, her tail flourishing. She squeezed out of her nest of feathers and pine needles, squeezing into the open. She missed the familiar warmth of her mother and father, their closeness lulling her into contented sleep.
But she was grown up now, or at least she had to start growing up. Stifling a sad sigh, Splash glanced towards the path that led down to the pool at the bottom of the waterfall. She had never walked down there without Dusk and Snow close by her side, watching her every step. She held her breath. She was a To-be now, if she couldn't trust herself to take care of herself, then how could she ever be able to protect her Tribe? She slipped out of the cave-entrance like a phantom, her tail whisking behind her. The stone path was slick with water spray, as it always was, and she reminded herself to take her careful time as she began to make her way down the slippery slope. Her claws unsheathed and dug into the ground beneath her for better grip, and she kept pressed against the stone wall as her parents had always taught her. The moon was a pale white eye that glared down from a milky sky. It had been raining all afternoon, and the night air was still moist and fresh with the scent of it.
It felt like an eternity when she finally reached the bottom of the path, the pool reflecting the starry night sky. She glanced up, her green-gold eyes paler and sharper in the moonlight. She had often been told by the Tribe that the Tribe of Endless Hunting looked down from that starry swath, observing all that the Tribe did below. When a cat died, their spirit left their body behind to sour up above the clouds and join the Tribe of Endless Hunting, where they would reunite with the souls of lost loved ones. Splash wasn't sure if she believed that. She had never seen a spirit-cat, and something in her heart told her that they were just stories to make the loss feel easier, so that cats could tell themselves that someday, they would all meet again in some better place.
She wondered that if this magical Tribe in the sky existed, would Pebble have joined them? The thought of the she-cat that had given birth to her and suckled her in the first few moons of her life left her with a hollow pang in her chest. She hardly remembered her at all, and that made her feel somewhat guilty. Did she have a responsibility to remember Pebble? Loner cats were, as the word implied, alone. Pebble's kin, her siblings, her parents, would never know that she was no longer alive. But as far as her memories went, Snow had always been her mother. That vague memory of the scent of milk and that small hollow in the dirt where she'd been born was so distant she wasn't sure if she was making it up or genuinely recalling something from her early life. More vividly was the memory of crows jostling at the entrance, beaks gaped wide as they snapped and pecked at the mewling bundles of fur that were her and her littermates.
A scrape of claws on rock made her jump, and turn her eyes towards the looming darkness. She wasn't sure if she'd even heard it, the waterfall was so loud and thunderous that she felt nearly deaf to the sounds of the mountains. But there, she heard it again. "Who's there?" She squinted into the shadows, a slight bristle of unease running through her long pelt. Perhaps she shouldn't have come down here alone.
But she was grown up now, or at least she had to start growing up. Stifling a sad sigh, Splash glanced towards the path that led down to the pool at the bottom of the waterfall. She had never walked down there without Dusk and Snow close by her side, watching her every step. She held her breath. She was a To-be now, if she couldn't trust herself to take care of herself, then how could she ever be able to protect her Tribe? She slipped out of the cave-entrance like a phantom, her tail whisking behind her. The stone path was slick with water spray, as it always was, and she reminded herself to take her careful time as she began to make her way down the slippery slope. Her claws unsheathed and dug into the ground beneath her for better grip, and she kept pressed against the stone wall as her parents had always taught her. The moon was a pale white eye that glared down from a milky sky. It had been raining all afternoon, and the night air was still moist and fresh with the scent of it.
It felt like an eternity when she finally reached the bottom of the path, the pool reflecting the starry night sky. She glanced up, her green-gold eyes paler and sharper in the moonlight. She had often been told by the Tribe that the Tribe of Endless Hunting looked down from that starry swath, observing all that the Tribe did below. When a cat died, their spirit left their body behind to sour up above the clouds and join the Tribe of Endless Hunting, where they would reunite with the souls of lost loved ones. Splash wasn't sure if she believed that. She had never seen a spirit-cat, and something in her heart told her that they were just stories to make the loss feel easier, so that cats could tell themselves that someday, they would all meet again in some better place.
She wondered that if this magical Tribe in the sky existed, would Pebble have joined them? The thought of the she-cat that had given birth to her and suckled her in the first few moons of her life left her with a hollow pang in her chest. She hardly remembered her at all, and that made her feel somewhat guilty. Did she have a responsibility to remember Pebble? Loner cats were, as the word implied, alone. Pebble's kin, her siblings, her parents, would never know that she was no longer alive. But as far as her memories went, Snow had always been her mother. That vague memory of the scent of milk and that small hollow in the dirt where she'd been born was so distant she wasn't sure if she was making it up or genuinely recalling something from her early life. More vividly was the memory of crows jostling at the entrance, beaks gaped wide as they snapped and pecked at the mewling bundles of fur that were her and her littermates.
A scrape of claws on rock made her jump, and turn her eyes towards the looming darkness. She wasn't sure if she'd even heard it, the waterfall was so loud and thunderous that she felt nearly deaf to the sounds of the mountains. But there, she heard it again. "Who's there?" She squinted into the shadows, a slight bristle of unease running through her long pelt. Perhaps she shouldn't have come down here alone.
I got spirit I got wings
I got fire in my lungs
I got fire in my lungs