12-18-2015, 01:51 AM
Shadi
A thin, smokey figure tangled amongst a knot of black threads muddled to the edge of the creek in front of her.
Shideezhi would never have let this happen. She was too sociable. Too kind. Too appealing to anyone she met. Too much of the opposite of her counterpart.
The dark femme dipped her muzzle to the frigid, murky liquid beneath her hooves and snorted as the water leapt from the stream and tore down her throat like shards of glass. It was a cold night and she was covered in half-dry mud and deep burgundy stains ran along her once snow-white knee. That's what happens to stupid white coats. At least it was only one leg. She waded into the cool liquid to rid herself of the crimson marks but on contact it stung. Like a thousand blades ripping into her pillar. She didn't realize the wound would be so fresh after so many hours. She allowed the icy waters to soak into her wound as she focused on the calm waves rolling past her, rather than the uncomfortable sensations pulsing through her white leg.
Stepping back from the creek's edge, the mare scouted out a large tree nearby to take cover for the night. It was only a few minutes walk down the water's edge so she began her trek. New blood dances it's way back down her pearlescent knee but she ignored it. Noises came from the tall grass next to her and so she moved more quickly. They got louder and her pulse ran more furiously through her veins. The mare felt something grab hold of her hind leg and let one limb jolt out behind her before she saw a flash next to her. Instinctually Shadi jumped to her hind legs and lashed out in front-splashing loose crimson water onto her smokey face. Her mind was spinning. Not again. I should have known better. I didn't think it was still breathing.
As her forefeet met the earth again, her heart continued to race and she felt it in her skull. Reality was almost worse than whatever had just happened. It should have been me, not her. She calmed her terror-filled mind but it soon flooded with mourning thoughts as she found herself collapsing beneath that tall, lush foliage.
A thin, smokey figure tangled amongst a knot of black threads muddled to the edge of the creek in front of her.
Shideezhi would never have let this happen. She was too sociable. Too kind. Too appealing to anyone she met. Too much of the opposite of her counterpart.
The dark femme dipped her muzzle to the frigid, murky liquid beneath her hooves and snorted as the water leapt from the stream and tore down her throat like shards of glass. It was a cold night and she was covered in half-dry mud and deep burgundy stains ran along her once snow-white knee. That's what happens to stupid white coats. At least it was only one leg. She waded into the cool liquid to rid herself of the crimson marks but on contact it stung. Like a thousand blades ripping into her pillar. She didn't realize the wound would be so fresh after so many hours. She allowed the icy waters to soak into her wound as she focused on the calm waves rolling past her, rather than the uncomfortable sensations pulsing through her white leg.
Stepping back from the creek's edge, the mare scouted out a large tree nearby to take cover for the night. It was only a few minutes walk down the water's edge so she began her trek. New blood dances it's way back down her pearlescent knee but she ignored it. Noises came from the tall grass next to her and so she moved more quickly. They got louder and her pulse ran more furiously through her veins. The mare felt something grab hold of her hind leg and let one limb jolt out behind her before she saw a flash next to her. Instinctually Shadi jumped to her hind legs and lashed out in front-splashing loose crimson water onto her smokey face. Her mind was spinning. Not again. I should have known better. I didn't think it was still breathing.
As her forefeet met the earth again, her heart continued to race and she felt it in her skull. Reality was almost worse than whatever had just happened. It should have been me, not her. She calmed her terror-filled mind but it soon flooded with mourning thoughts as she found herself collapsing beneath that tall, lush foliage.