Naya has been traveling for the past day and a half, but there is still no sign of anything other than desert in any direction.
The sun is almost at its highest point in the sky and the heat is unbearable, so the witch takes shelter at the nearest outcropping of rocks she can find. It’s not much more than a boulder in all honesty, but it casts a blessed shade that’s just big enough for the blue eyed girl to hide away in until later on in the evening, when the heat will hopefully be less sweltering. Before she sits down, Naya kicks at the boulder with her boot clad foot and the vibrations send a night adder slithering out from its hiding spot, hissing and puffing angrily at her for daring to disturb him. “Go on,” Naya grumbles, waiting for the tiny beast to get it out of his system and move on to a less inhabited location. After a moment or two the snake deflates when he realizes she doesn’t mean him any harm and decides to retreat, winding a path through the scorching sands and leaving the outcropping blissfully reptile free.
Naya drops her satchel and pulls her green traveling cloak off, spreading it over the scalding earth before she sits down with her back against the bedrock. Had the youth realized she’d be traversing the wastelands when she had gotten dressed yesterday morning she would have donned more substantial clothing, but as it were she only wore a dress she had patched together with the left over fabric scraps. It was flimsy and small and completely useless against the unforgiving extremes. It frustrated the girl so much that if it weren’t counterproductive to her survival, Naya would have shucked the damn thing already and set it on fire.
But the brunette had no way of knowing of what lay ahead of her when she had gotten ready that morning, so she was strikingly unprepared. The only things she had in her bag were her grimoire, the strawberry jam Meng had given her after their visit, and a few yarrow stalks she’d found growing in a meadow not far from her tree. Naya hadn’t brought any water at all, since it wasn’t more than an hour walk to get to her friend’s farm, and she was beginning to feel the effects. The witch’s head was pounding to the point that it was almost blinding and her lips were chapped and raw with dehydration. At least she had grabbed her cloak on the way out, otherwise her pale skin would have burnt and blistered under this oppressive sun.
There is a rustling above her and powerful burst of wind sends her short hair flying in every direction. Naya turns to look up and strains her eyes against the sun to see that a hawk has landed on the top of the outcropping and is staring back at her, turning its great feathered head back and forth like it’s trying to figure out what to make of her. “Hello little love,” she greets, her normally soft voice rough from disuse and lack of water as she raises a brow at the curious creature. This one has been following her for the past couple of hours, which Naya thinks is odd behavior, but she can’t be sure since she hasn’t had much dealings with hawks in the past.
“Your dinner went that way,” she tells it, nodding in the direction the night adder went. The bird remains unearthly still and continues to peer down at her, so Naya turns back around to give it its peace. The witch doesn’t want to disturb the creature, since she’ll be dead in a little while if she doesn’t find water or the end of this desert, and if it keeps following her it can at least peck out her eyes for nutrition so her death won’t be a complete waste.
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The sun is almost at its highest point in the sky and the heat is unbearable, so the witch takes shelter at the nearest outcropping of rocks she can find. It’s not much more than a boulder in all honesty, but it casts a blessed shade that’s just big enough for the blue eyed girl to hide away in until later on in the evening, when the heat will hopefully be less sweltering. Before she sits down, Naya kicks at the boulder with her boot clad foot and the vibrations send a night adder slithering out from its hiding spot, hissing and puffing angrily at her for daring to disturb him. “Go on,” Naya grumbles, waiting for the tiny beast to get it out of his system and move on to a less inhabited location. After a moment or two the snake deflates when he realizes she doesn’t mean him any harm and decides to retreat, winding a path through the scorching sands and leaving the outcropping blissfully reptile free.
Naya drops her satchel and pulls her green traveling cloak off, spreading it over the scalding earth before she sits down with her back against the bedrock. Had the youth realized she’d be traversing the wastelands when she had gotten dressed yesterday morning she would have donned more substantial clothing, but as it were she only wore a dress she had patched together with the left over fabric scraps. It was flimsy and small and completely useless against the unforgiving extremes. It frustrated the girl so much that if it weren’t counterproductive to her survival, Naya would have shucked the damn thing already and set it on fire.
But the brunette had no way of knowing of what lay ahead of her when she had gotten ready that morning, so she was strikingly unprepared. The only things she had in her bag were her grimoire, the strawberry jam Meng had given her after their visit, and a few yarrow stalks she’d found growing in a meadow not far from her tree. Naya hadn’t brought any water at all, since it wasn’t more than an hour walk to get to her friend’s farm, and she was beginning to feel the effects. The witch’s head was pounding to the point that it was almost blinding and her lips were chapped and raw with dehydration. At least she had grabbed her cloak on the way out, otherwise her pale skin would have burnt and blistered under this oppressive sun.
There is a rustling above her and powerful burst of wind sends her short hair flying in every direction. Naya turns to look up and strains her eyes against the sun to see that a hawk has landed on the top of the outcropping and is staring back at her, turning its great feathered head back and forth like it’s trying to figure out what to make of her. “Hello little love,” she greets, her normally soft voice rough from disuse and lack of water as she raises a brow at the curious creature. This one has been following her for the past couple of hours, which Naya thinks is odd behavior, but she can’t be sure since she hasn’t had much dealings with hawks in the past.
“Your dinner went that way,” she tells it, nodding in the direction the night adder went. The bird remains unearthly still and continues to peer down at her, so Naya turns back around to give it its peace. The witch doesn’t want to disturb the creature, since she’ll be dead in a little while if she doesn’t find water or the end of this desert, and if it keeps following her it can at least peck out her eyes for nutrition so her death won’t be a complete waste.
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