Bhae
New Member
Bright sun beat down over a small city park, the grass field glistening with rain drops. The storm had been so abrupt-and had ended so quickly-that more than a few people stopped to stare at the sky in shock. Now everything was clear, without even a hint of the dark clouds that had rolled in moments earlier.
In the far corner of the park was a dog run, tennis balls and Frisbees abandoned in the haste of pet parents scrambling back to their cars under the torrential downpour. A basketball court squared off the other end of the park, and trees encircled the rectangular space except for the street side, which housed a sidewalk, a modest parking lot, and some furry-looking lump with a growing puddle around it.
The lump groaned and shifted. Warm sun felt nice considering she was soaked head-to-toe. A slender hand appeared from beneath the furry dome, skin pale white and rippled with goose bumps. Another groan, and some muttering as she rocked from side to side and pulled her knees up under her body. She lifted her head slowly, fingers curling into lavender hair that clung to her cheeks and forehead.
Hard…the ground was hard. Like rock. She narrowed her eyes and glanced down. It was black rock, of all things. How strange.
Now that she was sitting upright on her knees it became more apparent that it was a young woman wearing a thick furred cloak that fell to the small of her back. Her hair, lavender, was long and had once been tied back as an intricate braid. Now, only half of it was contained, and the rest had been blown loose to stick to her neck and face. She was small, petite, but definitely not a child. With dark lashes and slender pointed ears she maintained an eerie beauty despite her disheveled look.
“Are you okay?”
She blinked, looking up at the sky first, then around her until she spotted an older woman with greying hair and a small white dog with curly fur wrapped up in her arms. She was a stout lady with rectangle glasses, and a sweet face. But the purple-haired woman had no idea what she was saying. Even when the dog-walker spoke again, she received only a confused expression in response. Vivian teetered to her feet and shook her arms, flinging water everywhere. Her cloak felt like it was fifty pounds, so without much concern over the matter she unclasped it, letting the mass drop to the ground with a squelch.
“Your wolf is very small,” she commented- this time receiving a confused look from the woman as gibberish had left her own lips. “…and possibly sickly.”
With this advice given, the small woman took off walking briskly down the road. She made it a whole four steps before the world around her began to spin. Vivian paused, throwing her arms out to catch her balance. She glanced downward at the asphalt and cautiously lowered herself to her knees to poke at it again, scratching gently at the white painted lines of the parking spaces. She checked her fingernails for any residue, and when she found none, shrugged.
Now concerned that she had discovered a crazy person, or at the least a young woman with a concussion, the middle-aged dog walker began looking around for someone to ask for help. She just needed someone with a phone on them, or a car to flag down, and she could get this wild-haired woman some help.
In the far corner of the park was a dog run, tennis balls and Frisbees abandoned in the haste of pet parents scrambling back to their cars under the torrential downpour. A basketball court squared off the other end of the park, and trees encircled the rectangular space except for the street side, which housed a sidewalk, a modest parking lot, and some furry-looking lump with a growing puddle around it.
The lump groaned and shifted. Warm sun felt nice considering she was soaked head-to-toe. A slender hand appeared from beneath the furry dome, skin pale white and rippled with goose bumps. Another groan, and some muttering as she rocked from side to side and pulled her knees up under her body. She lifted her head slowly, fingers curling into lavender hair that clung to her cheeks and forehead.
Hard…the ground was hard. Like rock. She narrowed her eyes and glanced down. It was black rock, of all things. How strange.
Now that she was sitting upright on her knees it became more apparent that it was a young woman wearing a thick furred cloak that fell to the small of her back. Her hair, lavender, was long and had once been tied back as an intricate braid. Now, only half of it was contained, and the rest had been blown loose to stick to her neck and face. She was small, petite, but definitely not a child. With dark lashes and slender pointed ears she maintained an eerie beauty despite her disheveled look.
“Are you okay?”
She blinked, looking up at the sky first, then around her until she spotted an older woman with greying hair and a small white dog with curly fur wrapped up in her arms. She was a stout lady with rectangle glasses, and a sweet face. But the purple-haired woman had no idea what she was saying. Even when the dog-walker spoke again, she received only a confused expression in response. Vivian teetered to her feet and shook her arms, flinging water everywhere. Her cloak felt like it was fifty pounds, so without much concern over the matter she unclasped it, letting the mass drop to the ground with a squelch.
“Your wolf is very small,” she commented- this time receiving a confused look from the woman as gibberish had left her own lips. “…and possibly sickly.”
With this advice given, the small woman took off walking briskly down the road. She made it a whole four steps before the world around her began to spin. Vivian paused, throwing her arms out to catch her balance. She glanced downward at the asphalt and cautiously lowered herself to her knees to poke at it again, scratching gently at the white painted lines of the parking spaces. She checked her fingernails for any residue, and when she found none, shrugged.
Now concerned that she had discovered a crazy person, or at the least a young woman with a concussion, the middle-aged dog walker began looking around for someone to ask for help. She just needed someone with a phone on them, or a car to flag down, and she could get this wild-haired woman some help.