- Messages
- 385
- Character Biography
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Something walked ahead of her, something she had never scented before.
It had been literal weeks since leaving the Bad Place, the place where others had hurt her and done harsh things to her. The chanted words that had been a part if her daily life for three years, since she opened her eyes and saw for the first time. Memories before her awakening were vague at best, a smear of color completely out if context, out of her frame of reference.
It was not a thing that Maranae thought of, not something that bothered her. Her world was a simple place, filled with sights and sounds and smells and colors, each more vivid and vibrant than the last. The world had been pared down to the need for food and water, and an insatiable desire to learn, to see everything. To smell it, touch it. For three years,there had only been cages and cells, only been Bad People and their Bad Words, words that hurt her. She had no words for what that place was, beyond what the ones who wore the robes and carried papers called it.
Research facility. She did not know what it meant, of course; they had taught her a lot of words, but not all. They had taught her many things, and she had readily learned all they had shown her, if sometimes with difficulty. They had beaten her if she did not learn quickly enough. Ultimately, in the end, they had beaten her ferociously with their sharp metal sticks, spilling the red water - blood - from her flesh.
Conscious mind shied away from that. Maranae was afraid of the thing that lurked in her mind, they thing that came out when she was very hungry, and had come out only once in that research place. The memories were blessedly blurred from that time, but the haunting shadows left in her mind were enough to shy back from.
Summer heat gripped the world, the trees seeming to wilt beneath the oppressive glare of the sun. In the east, The Spine rose to challenge the heavens themselves, a blue-tinged wall of stone twenty thousand feet and more tall, peaks graced with hazy snow even in the depths of summer.
The valley she traveled was between ridges of stone, deciduous trees mixed with pines at this elevation. To her right, a mountain river ran clear and cold, its chill water a welcome refreshment when she was thirsty. The path she followed was well worn, even if it did not quite qualify as a road; in these wild places it was uncommon to find people beyond bandits and scofflaws dodging authorities. And, perhaps, the occasional monster hunter or two.
The hear did not seem to bother the young woman. Tall and willowy of build, with flowing red hair that was a bit worse for wear, she was a rare beauty. In fact, she had the appearance of something a man would make, glorious curves and sensible proportions in the bosom and hips. That she had in fact been made would not be surprising. She wore ragged trousers and a shirt that had likewise seen better days. Both would likely not remain intact much longer without being replaced, but she would likely not even notice their absence. Modesty was not a concern to her, at least.
The scent was so interesting to her. She stopped every hundred yards or so to taste the air, gently sniffing the air to catch a whiff of what she followed. There was no concern that whatever it was might be hostile; once, already, she had followed a trail to a bear with her Cubs. After one mighty blow that had sent her sprawling, blood flying, she had run rather than fight the enraged she-bear. She disliked pain, but there were just too many new things to see in the world, and she was not likely to be deterred from her curiosity by anything short of a mob complete with pitchforks and torches.
It had been literal weeks since leaving the Bad Place, the place where others had hurt her and done harsh things to her. The chanted words that had been a part if her daily life for three years, since she opened her eyes and saw for the first time. Memories before her awakening were vague at best, a smear of color completely out if context, out of her frame of reference.
It was not a thing that Maranae thought of, not something that bothered her. Her world was a simple place, filled with sights and sounds and smells and colors, each more vivid and vibrant than the last. The world had been pared down to the need for food and water, and an insatiable desire to learn, to see everything. To smell it, touch it. For three years,there had only been cages and cells, only been Bad People and their Bad Words, words that hurt her. She had no words for what that place was, beyond what the ones who wore the robes and carried papers called it.
Research facility. She did not know what it meant, of course; they had taught her a lot of words, but not all. They had taught her many things, and she had readily learned all they had shown her, if sometimes with difficulty. They had beaten her if she did not learn quickly enough. Ultimately, in the end, they had beaten her ferociously with their sharp metal sticks, spilling the red water - blood - from her flesh.
Conscious mind shied away from that. Maranae was afraid of the thing that lurked in her mind, they thing that came out when she was very hungry, and had come out only once in that research place. The memories were blessedly blurred from that time, but the haunting shadows left in her mind were enough to shy back from.
Summer heat gripped the world, the trees seeming to wilt beneath the oppressive glare of the sun. In the east, The Spine rose to challenge the heavens themselves, a blue-tinged wall of stone twenty thousand feet and more tall, peaks graced with hazy snow even in the depths of summer.
The valley she traveled was between ridges of stone, deciduous trees mixed with pines at this elevation. To her right, a mountain river ran clear and cold, its chill water a welcome refreshment when she was thirsty. The path she followed was well worn, even if it did not quite qualify as a road; in these wild places it was uncommon to find people beyond bandits and scofflaws dodging authorities. And, perhaps, the occasional monster hunter or two.
The hear did not seem to bother the young woman. Tall and willowy of build, with flowing red hair that was a bit worse for wear, she was a rare beauty. In fact, she had the appearance of something a man would make, glorious curves and sensible proportions in the bosom and hips. That she had in fact been made would not be surprising. She wore ragged trousers and a shirt that had likewise seen better days. Both would likely not remain intact much longer without being replaced, but she would likely not even notice their absence. Modesty was not a concern to her, at least.
The scent was so interesting to her. She stopped every hundred yards or so to taste the air, gently sniffing the air to catch a whiff of what she followed. There was no concern that whatever it was might be hostile; once, already, she had followed a trail to a bear with her Cubs. After one mighty blow that had sent her sprawling, blood flying, she had run rather than fight the enraged she-bear. She disliked pain, but there were just too many new things to see in the world, and she was not likely to be deterred from her curiosity by anything short of a mob complete with pitchforks and torches.