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- Character Biography
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The sun was already settling toward the western horizon, the light a golden syrup that poured across the world and cast long shadows that danced with the soft southerly wind, blowing in the scents of the savannah farther to the south. great lumbering beasts, native to these grasslands, plodded along unconcernedly across the flat lands, heading for the slow, silt-laden waters of the Cairou river of which that golden sun gleamed off of as it wended its way across the northern extremity of the plains, and those sparkling lights reflected into a cloudless sky that was already beginning to go orange and red, fading to purple. The delta was a beautiful place this time of day, and of a morning as well.
An idyllic place to sit and stare across the world as the night marched onwards. Pneria rising slowly in the east as the sun dipped low in the west. Only the sound of the wind, the lapping of the water, and the lowing of the great herbivores treading across the grasslands.
The moment was shattered in an instant at the feral cry of some cat, the sudden thunder of hooves startled into panicked flight, and the low roar of a stampede as the small herd took wing and fled.
***
Feline eyes blinked in the light of the sun, blinked from the golden, slitted irises of a cat to the jade-green of a human, and back again. Their owner crouched low in the grass, moving forward on all fours like some kind of an animal, silent as a ghost. Maybe it was an animal, but it certainly did not look like one.
Maranae licked her chops, ignorant of the saliva spilling across her lips and dripping from her chin. She was hungry, and when she was hungry she was single-minded in the pursuit of the next meal. Her middle felt as though it had been hollowed out with a knife, and that knife stabbed at her every time she moved. She could ignore it - had to ignore it - but it did not make her happy to do so.
The beast she was stalking was at least ten times her size. It had sighted her, but as the wind was blowing the wrong way for it to scent her, it had merely assumed she was not a threat, casually flicking a floppy ear at her (or perhaps some flies) before stepping forward a bit more, bending its great neck to tear up more grass. The thing had great horns on its head that probably weighed about half of what she did, curling things that jutted from above the eyes and curled round on themselves.
On second thought, there probably wasn't much it was concerned about from an apparently human girl. A spear would only make it angry, and a bow would not penetrate a hide so thick easily enough to drop it in one shot.
The girl was a tall one, though, abnormally so. That willowy frame looked like it was as fragile as spun glass, red hair flowing in a tangled, knotted mess down her back to just short of her rump. Her eyes were not the only disconcerting thing about her. Intent as she was on her prey, following its every movement like the predator she was, it was easy to see the tips of long incisors jutting from beneath her upper lip except they were not always there, no more than the claws on her feet or hands were. Viewed from afar, it would be hard to see, but up close it seemed like she shifted wildly between one form and another, neither of which were too dissimilar from one another.
Crouching in the grass, she gave the distinct impression of a tail switching behind her, although there was none present.
Suddenly, like a striking viper, she was up on two legs and running, a feral cry ringing from her mouth that sounded inhuman. The beast, startled at the sight of the slight woman running at him, backed a step and slowly swung its massive head around. The woman was impossibly fast, though; she covered the fifty meters between them in seconds. There was a split moment before the beast bellowed in pain as she leapt the last five meters and landed on its head, claws shredding the hide.
The beast wasn't going to have anything to do with this. Twelve hundred pounds of muscle and bone turned and bolted. It tried to shake the infuriating thing off its its head, but Maranae clung to it like a limpet, crawling down the neck before reaching down to sever the carotid artery in a spray of blood before digging in with her claws.
If anything, this infuriated the beast even more. Mortally wounded, it nevertheless went insane, bucking and tossing its head to shake loose the biting, slicing dervish on its back. Maranae did not stop tearing at it, trying to inflict as much damage as possible, until it finally managed to shake her off. She sailed through the air and landed maladroitly in the grass as the thing, enraged, rounded on her and charged. Wounded, dying, its breathing labored already as its life flowed out in great fountains, it was nevertheless still a mountain of muscle with an incredible amount of weight behind it. Maranae was only just getting back to her feet, turning to face the beast with blood of her own running from her hands and a gash across her face, when the thing hit her like an avalanche, tossing her into the air like a rag doll. The force of the blow should have shattered bone, but it did not. Instead, she hit the ground, blood pouring from another gash in her scalp and from a torn bit of flesh on her forearm.
The thing turned, listlessly, and charged again. The girl spit blood, and at the last second leapt so that she landed on the things head again.
And then she punched it in the face, one heavy blow after another. The beast staggered after the first inhumanly strong blow, dropped to its knees, but by the third or fourth blow it was down, shaking its head weakly. Finally, something broke on the sixth blow and it gave one last, shuddering breath before collapsing. Muscles twitched their final movements as the strange woman picked herself up off the cracked skull of the plains beast, trembling a little as she did. She looked at the thing with wide, unblinking eyes, breathing easing as she did...
...and then leapt into the air, one fist raised high. "Mara did it! She did it!" She did a little caper and skipped round the big beast, chortling and making happy little noises to herself.
***
The sun had failed to move much by the time she began her work. With the tail clutched tightly with both hands, she was tugging mightily, struggling to drag the thing down towards the river. The sky overhead had not gone to purple yet, but it would not be long.
It was comical, watching her - weighing at most a hundred twenty pounds - trying to drag something that was easily ten times that. And yet...and yet, somehow she was managing it. Each mighty pull, clawed feet scrabbling at the hard ground, yielded a foot or two. Sweat gleamed on her pale, freckled face, but aside from a certain glow gained from the exertion, she seemed otherwise unbothered by the task. She should have torn muscles doing what she was doing, and yet she did not. In fact, the wounds she had received during her barehand brawl with the beast had already mostly healed, leaving not even scars behind.
There was no need to drag it to the water, but the memory of someone from before whispered to her. The ragged clothing she wore had been gained from that person, and she tried to take care of it. Meal time was a messy affair, so when water was available she tried to sluice herself down afterwards. There was no way she could eat the whole beast behind her, but it wouldn't stop her from trying.
Grunting, hauling on her prize, she stopped to listen as the coyotes out in the grasslands raised their heads to greet the coming of night, snorted, and put her back back into the work.
An idyllic place to sit and stare across the world as the night marched onwards. Pneria rising slowly in the east as the sun dipped low in the west. Only the sound of the wind, the lapping of the water, and the lowing of the great herbivores treading across the grasslands.
The moment was shattered in an instant at the feral cry of some cat, the sudden thunder of hooves startled into panicked flight, and the low roar of a stampede as the small herd took wing and fled.
***
Feline eyes blinked in the light of the sun, blinked from the golden, slitted irises of a cat to the jade-green of a human, and back again. Their owner crouched low in the grass, moving forward on all fours like some kind of an animal, silent as a ghost. Maybe it was an animal, but it certainly did not look like one.
Maranae licked her chops, ignorant of the saliva spilling across her lips and dripping from her chin. She was hungry, and when she was hungry she was single-minded in the pursuit of the next meal. Her middle felt as though it had been hollowed out with a knife, and that knife stabbed at her every time she moved. She could ignore it - had to ignore it - but it did not make her happy to do so.
The beast she was stalking was at least ten times her size. It had sighted her, but as the wind was blowing the wrong way for it to scent her, it had merely assumed she was not a threat, casually flicking a floppy ear at her (or perhaps some flies) before stepping forward a bit more, bending its great neck to tear up more grass. The thing had great horns on its head that probably weighed about half of what she did, curling things that jutted from above the eyes and curled round on themselves.
On second thought, there probably wasn't much it was concerned about from an apparently human girl. A spear would only make it angry, and a bow would not penetrate a hide so thick easily enough to drop it in one shot.
The girl was a tall one, though, abnormally so. That willowy frame looked like it was as fragile as spun glass, red hair flowing in a tangled, knotted mess down her back to just short of her rump. Her eyes were not the only disconcerting thing about her. Intent as she was on her prey, following its every movement like the predator she was, it was easy to see the tips of long incisors jutting from beneath her upper lip except they were not always there, no more than the claws on her feet or hands were. Viewed from afar, it would be hard to see, but up close it seemed like she shifted wildly between one form and another, neither of which were too dissimilar from one another.
Crouching in the grass, she gave the distinct impression of a tail switching behind her, although there was none present.
Suddenly, like a striking viper, she was up on two legs and running, a feral cry ringing from her mouth that sounded inhuman. The beast, startled at the sight of the slight woman running at him, backed a step and slowly swung its massive head around. The woman was impossibly fast, though; she covered the fifty meters between them in seconds. There was a split moment before the beast bellowed in pain as she leapt the last five meters and landed on its head, claws shredding the hide.
The beast wasn't going to have anything to do with this. Twelve hundred pounds of muscle and bone turned and bolted. It tried to shake the infuriating thing off its its head, but Maranae clung to it like a limpet, crawling down the neck before reaching down to sever the carotid artery in a spray of blood before digging in with her claws.
If anything, this infuriated the beast even more. Mortally wounded, it nevertheless went insane, bucking and tossing its head to shake loose the biting, slicing dervish on its back. Maranae did not stop tearing at it, trying to inflict as much damage as possible, until it finally managed to shake her off. She sailed through the air and landed maladroitly in the grass as the thing, enraged, rounded on her and charged. Wounded, dying, its breathing labored already as its life flowed out in great fountains, it was nevertheless still a mountain of muscle with an incredible amount of weight behind it. Maranae was only just getting back to her feet, turning to face the beast with blood of her own running from her hands and a gash across her face, when the thing hit her like an avalanche, tossing her into the air like a rag doll. The force of the blow should have shattered bone, but it did not. Instead, she hit the ground, blood pouring from another gash in her scalp and from a torn bit of flesh on her forearm.
The thing turned, listlessly, and charged again. The girl spit blood, and at the last second leapt so that she landed on the things head again.
And then she punched it in the face, one heavy blow after another. The beast staggered after the first inhumanly strong blow, dropped to its knees, but by the third or fourth blow it was down, shaking its head weakly. Finally, something broke on the sixth blow and it gave one last, shuddering breath before collapsing. Muscles twitched their final movements as the strange woman picked herself up off the cracked skull of the plains beast, trembling a little as she did. She looked at the thing with wide, unblinking eyes, breathing easing as she did...
...and then leapt into the air, one fist raised high. "Mara did it! She did it!" She did a little caper and skipped round the big beast, chortling and making happy little noises to herself.
***
The sun had failed to move much by the time she began her work. With the tail clutched tightly with both hands, she was tugging mightily, struggling to drag the thing down towards the river. The sky overhead had not gone to purple yet, but it would not be long.
It was comical, watching her - weighing at most a hundred twenty pounds - trying to drag something that was easily ten times that. And yet...and yet, somehow she was managing it. Each mighty pull, clawed feet scrabbling at the hard ground, yielded a foot or two. Sweat gleamed on her pale, freckled face, but aside from a certain glow gained from the exertion, she seemed otherwise unbothered by the task. She should have torn muscles doing what she was doing, and yet she did not. In fact, the wounds she had received during her barehand brawl with the beast had already mostly healed, leaving not even scars behind.
There was no need to drag it to the water, but the memory of someone from before whispered to her. The ragged clothing she wore had been gained from that person, and she tried to take care of it. Meal time was a messy affair, so when water was available she tried to sluice herself down afterwards. There was no way she could eat the whole beast behind her, but it wouldn't stop her from trying.
Grunting, hauling on her prize, she stopped to listen as the coyotes out in the grasslands raised their heads to greet the coming of night, snorted, and put her back back into the work.