to me, you will be unique in all the world
Your throat tastes of ash and smoke, but your mood is light and jovial. Your pace is a cheerful little jaunt full of innocent imaginings, picking your way through the underbrush of the Viride Forest, smelling all sorts of new scents and spotting so many new sights. There had been so many new experiences since your home had been swallowed by the flames. The wildfires had been frightening for quite a while, the smoke so very dense and cloying, scaring you away from your den and your kin in a dash of run, run, run! You had gone back to your den for a few lonely nights, waiting and hoping that your siblings or your parents would return… But no one had come.
It had been hard leaving behind what you knew. The den you shared with your siblings beneath the large trunk of an old oak tree, warm and comfortable and content. Your parents, wise and cunning. Your three sisters. Your favorite chewing stick… They were all gone, but you, oh you, despite your youth and innocence, knew that you could not remain. There was no future there.
So, you moved on. A petite, lithe body of sleek rust red, traveling with black paws coated with ash and grime through the burnt, skeletal remains of the Viride Forest. The sun would rise and then set, but steadily you made your way through the remnants of the fires, napping in hiding through the worst of the daylight before continuing on when evening arrived. Hunger pooled in your gut, clawing and terrible, and so you would hunt to scrounge up food, your efforts clumsy and uncoordinated. There hadn’t been much time to learn to hunt before the fires had come, but you did your best, rewarded once with a tasty field mouse just on the shore of the Rapax River. By then, the terrain had begun to change. You notice it, gradually at first. Where the world had been a constant state of browns and blacks, the large trees dead and charred, ash staining the ground and covering the dirt, the closer you grew to the Rapax River, the more green things had become.
Grasses, leaves, plant life in abundance. You drank from the river, the cold waters soothing the burn in your throat. Resting the day beneath a thick brush, you sleep, dreaming of playing with your sisters, your warm, loving parents, and the future you have yet to discover. Somewhere, somehow, something is falling. You dream of the colors of cream and spindly legs, of dual-colored eyes blinking at you with a curious sort of innocence that rivaled your own. You dream, and you learn.
As evening crested, you traveled once more. On and on, following that invisible little tug in your russet chest. Through the trees and bushes, through the hills and thick grasses, you crest the hillsides until a large shape looms in the distance. It is far larger than any shape you have ever seen in your weeks of life; made of stone, cresting up, up, up into the evening lit sky, taller than any tree you have ever seen before. It looks important. It looks scary… But that tugging has grown in your chest now, and you are powerless against it. Something unknown has begun to steal your breath, excitement bubbling through your limbs, creating your eager little jaunt once more.
Brazen, but with a note of caution, you approach the looming structure while remaining in the stretching shadows. Cresting the path you have chosen, maw half-open and tongue lolling from the corner of your mouth, you spot him; he seems to be searching for something, a stick brandished within his mouth, with his long, spindly legs and creamy colors. It digs into your memories, making you recall the dreams from before.
All of a sudden, you are thrilled. Some other force seems to grab hold of you, compelling you to act, and you look around almost frantically. Twisting about with an audible little cry, you find a small stick at your paws. It isn’t as nice as your chewy stick, the one lost at your den, but it’s appropriate all the same. Unthinking, you scoop it up, grasping it firmly within your jaws and tiny teeth. Next? Well, next you launch yourself forward and out of the shadows, towards this spindly-legged equine with his own chewing stick, and brandish your own with unfathomable pride.
’Play!’ You mentally cry, eager and ready and so desperate for him to hear you, to understand you, to feel you. ’Play!’
It had been hard leaving behind what you knew. The den you shared with your siblings beneath the large trunk of an old oak tree, warm and comfortable and content. Your parents, wise and cunning. Your three sisters. Your favorite chewing stick… They were all gone, but you, oh you, despite your youth and innocence, knew that you could not remain. There was no future there.
So, you moved on. A petite, lithe body of sleek rust red, traveling with black paws coated with ash and grime through the burnt, skeletal remains of the Viride Forest. The sun would rise and then set, but steadily you made your way through the remnants of the fires, napping in hiding through the worst of the daylight before continuing on when evening arrived. Hunger pooled in your gut, clawing and terrible, and so you would hunt to scrounge up food, your efforts clumsy and uncoordinated. There hadn’t been much time to learn to hunt before the fires had come, but you did your best, rewarded once with a tasty field mouse just on the shore of the Rapax River. By then, the terrain had begun to change. You notice it, gradually at first. Where the world had been a constant state of browns and blacks, the large trees dead and charred, ash staining the ground and covering the dirt, the closer you grew to the Rapax River, the more green things had become.
Grasses, leaves, plant life in abundance. You drank from the river, the cold waters soothing the burn in your throat. Resting the day beneath a thick brush, you sleep, dreaming of playing with your sisters, your warm, loving parents, and the future you have yet to discover. Somewhere, somehow, something is falling. You dream of the colors of cream and spindly legs, of dual-colored eyes blinking at you with a curious sort of innocence that rivaled your own. You dream, and you learn.
As evening crested, you traveled once more. On and on, following that invisible little tug in your russet chest. Through the trees and bushes, through the hills and thick grasses, you crest the hillsides until a large shape looms in the distance. It is far larger than any shape you have ever seen in your weeks of life; made of stone, cresting up, up, up into the evening lit sky, taller than any tree you have ever seen before. It looks important. It looks scary… But that tugging has grown in your chest now, and you are powerless against it. Something unknown has begun to steal your breath, excitement bubbling through your limbs, creating your eager little jaunt once more.
Brazen, but with a note of caution, you approach the looming structure while remaining in the stretching shadows. Cresting the path you have chosen, maw half-open and tongue lolling from the corner of your mouth, you spot him; he seems to be searching for something, a stick brandished within his mouth, with his long, spindly legs and creamy colors. It digs into your memories, making you recall the dreams from before.
All of a sudden, you are thrilled. Some other force seems to grab hold of you, compelling you to act, and you look around almost frantically. Twisting about with an audible little cry, you find a small stick at your paws. It isn’t as nice as your chewy stick, the one lost at your den, but it’s appropriate all the same. Unthinking, you scoop it up, grasping it firmly within your jaws and tiny teeth. Next? Well, next you launch yourself forward and out of the shadows, towards this spindly-legged equine with his own chewing stick, and brandish your own with unfathomable pride.
’Play!’ You mentally cry, eager and ready and so desperate for him to hear you, to understand you, to feel you. ’Play!’
After taking refuge within the burnt remains of the Viride Forest, a young fox ventures across charred ashland, dense forests, thick grasslands, and even water to follow the pull of his heart towards his future Bonded. Upon arriving to the citadel of the Dawn Court, he spots Regis playing within the courtyard, scoops up a stick, and demands to join him in play. Regis, it is up to you how to receive this wayward fox kit.
Regis has met his Bonded.
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Let the adorable shenanigans begin! - Sparrow
Regis has met his Bonded.
How to tag this account: @*'Random Events' without the asterisk!
Once you respond, you may begin including Milo in your posts!
Let the adorable shenanigans begin! - Sparrow
Please be advised, tagging the Random Event account does not guarantee a response!