There once was a wolf. A wicked wolf who was all alone. And this wicked, lonely wolf was very, very hungry.
So one day this wolf went to hunt and—
Woof!
Asta, shh. Let me finish the story. This wicked wolf went to hunt. He went far and wide, growing hungrier and hungrier. Until finally, he came across a little white rabbit. But this hungry wolf was smart. He knew that if he chased after the white rabbit it would run and hide. So instead this wicked wolf came up with a plan.
He would befriend the rabbit and protect it from the other beasts in the forest. He would call himself the little white rabbit’s friend. And when the time was right, the wolf would open his jaws and—
. . .
Asta jolted awake, looking around her surroundings in feverish panic. She felt the cool air against her bare skin, could feel the slick of sweat still rolling down from her brow and underneath her arms. She was tied up, but the golden rope had loosened up, and so like many months before this one, she shimmied out of her bonds.
She moved with heavy steps towards the spot she had hidden her clothes and gear. With a sluggish, sore and deeply fatigued body, every inch of Asta ached. She fell to her knees, removing the leaves and vines over the hole she had dug and sighed in relief when she saw her things hadn’t been taken. Gingerly, she began to pull her gear out and it wasn’t long until she was dressing herself.
For weeks now, Asta had been having dreams, a strange occurrence since she never seemed to remember her dreams. But the waking dream felt like a memory. Despite that, she couldn’t shake the feeling that there was something off about it. A frown pulled her lips downwards as she thought over the dream. A big black wolf had been invading her dreams before she had shifted.
All it ever did was stalk and prowl around a place that was pure white. Snow? Had to be snow, it always left behind a trail of large paw prints. And when it growled and raised it’s tail, Asta could do nothing but follow.
She wasn’t sure if it was the dream or something else, but she had found herself making her way to the Ixchel Wilds. A strange place to feel drawn to, especially when she had never been there before. There must be a big bad wolf that needed slaying.
Or a abandoned temple that needed a entire cleaning team. Asta’s entire face was made up a undeniable displeased grimace. Her nose was wrinkled up and she glared at everything she set her gold eyes on. Spiders and other bugs were crawling all over the steps that led to the what she suspected was the main unit of the entire structure.
It was large, with various towers spiraling up that were still dwarfed by the massive trees native to the wilds. Vines and reached overhead, crisscrossing this way and that and Asta had to be careful where she stepped. Not just because she had gotten stuck in mud here and there— even if it was embarrassing when she had to struggle to pull her foot out, but because the roots of the plethora of green trees threatened to trip her if she didn’t pay attention.
And falling face first into dirt would have pissed her off more than she already was.
For as Asta had come closer and closer to this temple, she had grown more irritated with every step. The smell of her kind was
everywhere. Worse yet, it wasn’t just one but many. Many different interlocking scents that spread across the ground and trees as if a whole pack of lycans were running about in a jungle. Asta decided right then that this would be her first and last visit to the Ixchel Wilds, even if the dreams got stronger the more time she spent here.
Asta took a step forward, readying herself to climb the many, many stairs before her.
“
Ugh— GROSS!” She hissed realizing a second too late she had stepped right into a giant spider thread that was totally invisible. Of course, how could she have forgotten about those Black-Belly Weavers? What a nuisance. She stepped back, busy with pulling the spider silk off her face and hair.