Mar 26 2020, 12:51 AM
solo thread! backdated to around two weeks of age
the child crept like a ghost through corridors of stone. she was something small in a sacred place, approaching the altar at an empty church. the ceiling came to an arching point here, and shafts of dusty light filtered through cracks and holes in the walls — far from stained glass, but dramatic nonetheless.
damask was mapping these hallowed chambers, a project in progress that developed further with every passage. when she shuttered her eyes, she saw their architecture in vivid detail, every little room and walk, drawn to scale in all their ragged edges. in the space of barely half a cycle, she and the cave had become intimately acquainted; she'd recorded every nook and cranny she could find, skirting around the bones that populated them. maybe canis was a sort of surrogate, she admitted, for souls she hadn't seen. she had her father, of course, and his guidance and companionship were invaluable to her. but his nudges about meeting the other bonebound had grown less and less subtle, and still she held firm. her reasoning was simple and singular: she wasn't ready yet. words came easily inside her head, but somewhere between there and thin air, caution stopped her from letting them out. she couldn't be sure enough, not just yet, that no mistakes hid in their midst — and that was a problem. she'd spent enough time with auré to notice a pattern. he'd offer airspace, a clear opportunity, and in the moment she chose not to fill it, dismay would flit across his features before he scrambled to tuck it away. she wanted to speak, for him and herself, truly she did, and speak she would; but until then, silence wouldn't do for her family-to-be. and besides, well ... she'd seen her reflection. she had grown a little, yes, but she was still a downy, big-eyed mess. that wouldn't do, either.
she had to be better first. set herself up for a good first impression. now was the time to grow, learn, explore.
and she had something special in mind today. auré had been showing her how to hunt insects, and although she recognized the practicality in it, she was also painfully aware of how it must have looked. picture it: her ridiculous little self, snapping at moths like an absolute fool. the image brought a cringe to her face.
damask paused, listening. a steady drip of water echoed throughout the cave, as it always did — but otherwise, nothing.
she let it out in a sharp exhale.