- Aug 3, 2022
- 326
- 143
- 43
TW !!!!!!! DELIBERATE VIOLENCE AND MAIMING !!!! YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED !!!!!!
He can scent her, here by the Thunderpath. She’s like an exotic flower, and he’s like a hummingbird—no, a honeybee, longing to drown in nectar, stinger poised and punishing. Granitepelt can scent her through the acrid fumes, can hear the delicacy of her pawsteps over the thundering roar of monsters. He creeps through the moor, his gray pelt blending into the leafbare-stripped bracken, his fur snagging on the gorse that pricks his sides. Long, slender dark green eyes narrow into slits as they find her through the ferns edging the border.
She moves the same. She moves exactly how he remembers, in patterns he’s long memorized, with careful anxious steps, small twitches of her ear. She’s nervous. Does she know he’s so near—can she scent him, still, he thinks, crouching so low his belly hitches against the earth. Can she get him out of her head, or is he still dancing through it, leaving claw marks through everything she loves and splintering her fragility? He tastes the air, drinks her in. It’s intoxicating. It makes him want to be reckless.
“You’re still so perfect,” he says, rising to his paws. Undergrowth cracks under his weight. He’s different now, hardened by a life on the moor, his face and shoulder, his flank and stomach, all bearing the scars her Clanmates had left on him. His eyes are the same, limp with love and obsession—but there’s something different, too, the surface cracked like ice. She’s broken something inside of him that he cannot repair.
He doesn’t want to repair it, he finds. He wants to rinse his body in its coolness, bathe in the mess she’s made of him. He wants to hurt her for hurting him. He wants her to feel how she’s made him feel. His claws are unsheathed before he reaches her, but he’s smiling still, and it’s achingly youthful, the smile he’d given her when he’d offered to pry the thorn out of her paw pad when they were nurserymates.
“Don’t worry,” he murmurs. It’s supposed to be soothing. It’s cold. It’s like rain slick on asphalt. “I won’t leave you the way you left me. I will stay with you until it’s over. I owe that to you, don’t I? I owe you that.” He impedes her space, and being so near her is like setting his fur aflame—the tips of his pelt blazes, electrified. He lifts his claws to her face almost tenderly, sinking them into her left eye and tearing. “I’ll hold you while you die. I’ll hold you until—”
He smacks the bloodied tips of his claws down her chest, ignoring her screams, ignoring whatever she shrieks at him. They run red with her blood. They glisten and shine and he lifts them to his own muzzle and presses them into the white fur there so that he may taste her blood.
“I love you, Starlingheart.”
He can scent her, here by the Thunderpath. She’s like an exotic flower, and he’s like a hummingbird—no, a honeybee, longing to drown in nectar, stinger poised and punishing. Granitepelt can scent her through the acrid fumes, can hear the delicacy of her pawsteps over the thundering roar of monsters. He creeps through the moor, his gray pelt blending into the leafbare-stripped bracken, his fur snagging on the gorse that pricks his sides. Long, slender dark green eyes narrow into slits as they find her through the ferns edging the border.
She moves the same. She moves exactly how he remembers, in patterns he’s long memorized, with careful anxious steps, small twitches of her ear. She’s nervous. Does she know he’s so near—can she scent him, still, he thinks, crouching so low his belly hitches against the earth. Can she get him out of her head, or is he still dancing through it, leaving claw marks through everything she loves and splintering her fragility? He tastes the air, drinks her in. It’s intoxicating. It makes him want to be reckless.
“You’re still so perfect,” he says, rising to his paws. Undergrowth cracks under his weight. He’s different now, hardened by a life on the moor, his face and shoulder, his flank and stomach, all bearing the scars her Clanmates had left on him. His eyes are the same, limp with love and obsession—but there’s something different, too, the surface cracked like ice. She’s broken something inside of him that he cannot repair.
He doesn’t want to repair it, he finds. He wants to rinse his body in its coolness, bathe in the mess she’s made of him. He wants to hurt her for hurting him. He wants her to feel how she’s made him feel. His claws are unsheathed before he reaches her, but he’s smiling still, and it’s achingly youthful, the smile he’d given her when he’d offered to pry the thorn out of her paw pad when they were nurserymates.
“Don’t worry,” he murmurs. It’s supposed to be soothing. It’s cold. It’s like rain slick on asphalt. “I won’t leave you the way you left me. I will stay with you until it’s over. I owe that to you, don’t I? I owe you that.” He impedes her space, and being so near her is like setting his fur aflame—the tips of his pelt blazes, electrified. He lifts his claws to her face almost tenderly, sinking them into her left eye and tearing. “I’ll hold you while you die. I’ll hold you until—”
He smacks the bloodied tips of his claws down her chest, ignoring her screams, ignoring whatever she shrieks at him. They run red with her blood. They glisten and shine and he lifts them to his own muzzle and presses them into the white fur there so that he may taste her blood.
“I love you, Starlingheart.”
, ”