06-16-2024, 05:09 PM
i'll be getting over you my whole life -
As soon as she was able, she took her leave from the forest.
Though she was eternally grateful for the man that had freed her — Jack, he had said his name was — she now could not shake the feeling of humiliation that was taking root inside of her. The forest was no place for a girl like her. She had lived a life that was too sheltered, and like a fool she had walked into the darkest depths of a place known to house danger, thinking that she could manage it on her own. She is not sure how often others walk into the forest and find themselves tangled and ensnared by briars, but she doubts that it is very many. She should have kept to the meadowlands and the riverlands, to the familiar grasses and the tame forests that provided shelter but were not quite so treacherous to traverse.
Moving through the sea of meadow grass that trembles in the breeze, she tries to put everything out of her mind, but the wounds she still carries make it difficult to do so. Most of them are superficial; places along her neck where branches and thorns had scuffed her coat and scraped the top of her skin, and bramble still tangled in her black mane and tail. But where the thorned vine had wrapped around her front leg was throbbing and raw feeling, the dried blood having darkened to a rust-red. It was not currently so tender that she could not force herself to move soundly, disguising just how sore the injury is, but with every step she felt the pain pulse up her leg, a constant reminder of her foolishness.
But the relief she feels to be back in a place so familiar is a balm to her pain, and she pauses on a knoll to simply breathe and take it in. The air is fresh, fragrant with sunshine-warmed grass, and the heat of the sun is strong against her back. A sapphire sky stretches above her, with only a few wispy clouds drifting lazily across it. She revels in it for a moment longer until she finds herself longing for the shade, and she scans the nearby area. Her silver eyes settle on a peculiarly bare tree, stark amongst the verdant leaves that adorn the others, but her gaze is most drawn to the figure that stands below it.
He could have just been resting, but even from where she stands she can nearly see the exhaustion that seems to weigh him down, pulling him like an anchor. Daring to move closer — ignoring the striking pain that shoots up her own leg — she cautiously steps beneath the tree with him, though does not draw directly alongside him. “I’m sorry to intrude,” she says, soft and a bit uncertain since she does not know him. “Are you all right?”
Though she was eternally grateful for the man that had freed her — Jack, he had said his name was — she now could not shake the feeling of humiliation that was taking root inside of her. The forest was no place for a girl like her. She had lived a life that was too sheltered, and like a fool she had walked into the darkest depths of a place known to house danger, thinking that she could manage it on her own. She is not sure how often others walk into the forest and find themselves tangled and ensnared by briars, but she doubts that it is very many. She should have kept to the meadowlands and the riverlands, to the familiar grasses and the tame forests that provided shelter but were not quite so treacherous to traverse.
Moving through the sea of meadow grass that trembles in the breeze, she tries to put everything out of her mind, but the wounds she still carries make it difficult to do so. Most of them are superficial; places along her neck where branches and thorns had scuffed her coat and scraped the top of her skin, and bramble still tangled in her black mane and tail. But where the thorned vine had wrapped around her front leg was throbbing and raw feeling, the dried blood having darkened to a rust-red. It was not currently so tender that she could not force herself to move soundly, disguising just how sore the injury is, but with every step she felt the pain pulse up her leg, a constant reminder of her foolishness.
But the relief she feels to be back in a place so familiar is a balm to her pain, and she pauses on a knoll to simply breathe and take it in. The air is fresh, fragrant with sunshine-warmed grass, and the heat of the sun is strong against her back. A sapphire sky stretches above her, with only a few wispy clouds drifting lazily across it. She revels in it for a moment longer until she finds herself longing for the shade, and she scans the nearby area. Her silver eyes settle on a peculiarly bare tree, stark amongst the verdant leaves that adorn the others, but her gaze is most drawn to the figure that stands below it.
He could have just been resting, but even from where she stands she can nearly see the exhaustion that seems to weigh him down, pulling him like an anchor. Daring to move closer — ignoring the striking pain that shoots up her own leg — she cautiously steps beneath the tree with him, though does not draw directly alongside him. “I’m sorry to intrude,” she says, soft and a bit uncertain since she does not know him. “Are you all right?”
s h e e r
@ Oaks