Oct 30 2019, 04:10 AM
The skeleton's steps hastened as the young ones moved closer. It veered slightly away, the great skull turning as if to peer down at them--and then its head lowered, abruptly, and swung at the children who drew so close.
Perhaps it was some innate instinct: crowding predators were a bad thing; or perhaps it simply wished to have its space. It didn't strike with the long horns, at least; it was a light swat from a heavy skull. Regardless, the strike still missed, whooshing harmlessly through the air above the children: a warning, perhaps?
The bones then trundled onward, now at a lumbering trot, the clicks and rattling of the bones all together quite loud.
...And then, as if from every corner of Canis, other skeletons began to arrive. They were invariably prey creatures: hooves and horns on each of them. Three that clattered over a rocky crest looked like small, stocky horses; a few others were slender beings, not unlike Aran, but with narrow and twisting horns curved back from their skulls. In only moments, the group of bones had formed what looked like a small savannah migration: zebras and antelopes, wildebeests--all led by the rhino, all without flesh and blood.
All moved with ghostly fluidity, their sockets empty of eyes, without faces for expression. With eerie blankness they moved as one. The rhino-bones slowed a few paces onward, and its skull lowered. It began to search amongst the bones, as did all the others behind it.
What they were seeking wasn't quite clear--but from the way they browsed among the rocks, nudging aside bones, it was obvious that they weren't finding it.
Perhaps it was some innate instinct: crowding predators were a bad thing; or perhaps it simply wished to have its space. It didn't strike with the long horns, at least; it was a light swat from a heavy skull. Regardless, the strike still missed, whooshing harmlessly through the air above the children: a warning, perhaps?
The bones then trundled onward, now at a lumbering trot, the clicks and rattling of the bones all together quite loud.
...And then, as if from every corner of Canis, other skeletons began to arrive. They were invariably prey creatures: hooves and horns on each of them. Three that clattered over a rocky crest looked like small, stocky horses; a few others were slender beings, not unlike Aran, but with narrow and twisting horns curved back from their skulls. In only moments, the group of bones had formed what looked like a small savannah migration: zebras and antelopes, wildebeests--all led by the rhino, all without flesh and blood.
All moved with ghostly fluidity, their sockets empty of eyes, without faces for expression. With eerie blankness they moved as one. The rhino-bones slowed a few paces onward, and its skull lowered. It began to search amongst the bones, as did all the others behind it.
What they were seeking wasn't quite clear--but from the way they browsed among the rocks, nudging aside bones, it was obvious that they weren't finding it.
@Aran @Deli @Kazgut @Vyette