It has to hurt, a voice whispered.
She drew a deep breath. The scent of fresh rain felt as pungent as mint.
When Velyre opened her eyes, she was alone.
She stood up in the shadow of a tall, straight stone, her legs a little unsteady. Four legs. She looked back: a body covered in pale fur, ghostly in the gloom. But she was no ghost, for she felt pain in her head, her paws. She lifted one: there was a deep scratch on the underside.
She instinctively licked her nose. Dried blood.
The urge to panic filled her. It has to hurt, she told herself. She looked back at the grave behind her. The markings on its surface meant nothing to her.
Her head hurt so, so much. She stepped a few paces away and leaned against a cold stone wall.
She opened her eyes again. A growing hunger gnawed at her belly, but the pain in her skull had lessened.
Velyre did not know where she was going. She focused on taking one step at a time, her injured paw held off the ground. Water, she decided. She needed water.
She passed among the looming shapes of tombstones. To the buried she spared no pity: they had it easy.
“You could at least try to help,” Velyre growled at a grave marked with ominous engravings of skulls. “Why am I always the only one awake?”
She drew a deep breath. The scent of fresh rain felt as pungent as mint.
When Velyre opened her eyes, she was alone.
She stood up in the shadow of a tall, straight stone, her legs a little unsteady. Four legs. She looked back: a body covered in pale fur, ghostly in the gloom. But she was no ghost, for she felt pain in her head, her paws. She lifted one: there was a deep scratch on the underside.
She instinctively licked her nose. Dried blood.
The urge to panic filled her. It has to hurt, she told herself. She looked back at the grave behind her. The markings on its surface meant nothing to her.
Her head hurt so, so much. She stepped a few paces away and leaned against a cold stone wall.
She opened her eyes again. A growing hunger gnawed at her belly, but the pain in her skull had lessened.
Velyre did not know where she was going. She focused on taking one step at a time, her injured paw held off the ground. Water, she decided. She needed water.
She passed among the looming shapes of tombstones. To the buried she spared no pity: they had it easy.
“You could at least try to help,” Velyre growled at a grave marked with ominous engravings of skulls. “Why am I always the only one awake?”
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