[Eastern] // Of Wanderings and Wool
Sept 2, 2012 15:49:03 GMT -5
Post by wimdy on Sept 2, 2012 15:49:03 GMT -5
In my many years (or has it been months or days, I can't remember a thing) of wandering around trees and crawling through mossy nooks and crannies of the forests of unforetold depth, I had never once found a home. Sure, I'd been able to find a tumble-down shack or two that could last me a few days of shelter before it simply grew too rotten to hold itself up. Other times I could find hollowed out trees to curl up in during rainstorms or lofty branches to perch upon while searching for food. I'd found a little doe once and I'd kept it as a pet for a while in a small clearing, but even she'd left me eventually, disappearing into the trees and never to be seen again. It had simply never been a permanent state, having a home or companion. Wandering secured that fastly to my life. I'd been alone since I'd started out (or had I? I remember shadows of faces and guiding hands, but they're all just a dream now) and as far as I could see, my only company was a squirrel up above and a few crickets all around.
The darkness is an inky black cloak draped across the globe and fitted with billions of twinkling lights tonight, a glowing moon strung up among fluffy clouds. The branches sway and moan with the force of the wind, leaves shivering with the movement. Owls' eyes watch me from above, their bodies nestled tightly into the notches of the trees so that only their beady eyes. None of this, however, is what has me sitting in the mud and matted grass sobbing to myself like a small child lost in a market place and with no way to find her mother. No, the thing that does that is the lightning. Flashes of brilliant white light surge across my sight and spider across my heart, poisonous fear seeping through my veins with every pump that paralyzes me. I'm molded against a tree, one of my hands clenched against my chest and my other knotted in the slippy grass strands beneath me. Every clangboom of thunder sends my heart racing into my throat and my lungs constricting so I can't breathe or focus on anything. It hurts to move even an inch after my body has been clenched so long, limbs under the spell of the unforgiving curse of fright. I don't even know what it is about the illuminating webs of energy that catch me off guard and send me spiraling into a panic (though something in me is screaming that I do, I do, I do).
A boom sounds nearby, the flashes of light dancing before my eyes as it hits earth. My body flutters into movement, my legs taking me soaring across the forest and skidding through thickets of mud and vines. I can hardly keep myself upright as I push my way through the bindings of earth and claw at the weeds that hold me back, crying out as I fall into the brown mush of land. It only takes me a moment before I'm up again, shoeless (no doubt lost in my struggle with the mud) and sprinting into an open pasture and towards a fence, the looming barrier foreboding, but holding no power. None of them did. I slip through, into the safety of a district unknown, whimpering as the barbed wire fencing catches upon my dress and tears with my every little move. My hands don't want to work in the storm, my hair sopping as it falls into my face and obstructs my vision. Another flash of lightning sends me into a whirl, pulling without care at my dress until it rips free of the binding and I'm sent tumbling downward again, already caked in mud and grass and soaked through with rainwater. My every nerve is on fire as I pull myself up from the fall again, tears mixing with rain as I scuttle haphazardly across the land sprawled before me.
My eyes are fixed on the building in the distance, the little barn looking like the coziest of homes in my eyes. (When was the last time I'd seen such a place? When was the last time I was inside something that wasn't falling down?) The wood is faded and old, but as I stumble through the creaky doors and shut myself in a world of hay and animals, it feels like home. (At least, it feels what I think home should feel like. Did I ever really have one?) The water is leaking through in some areas, the corners wet and animals avoiding them at all costs. As I shuffle across the barn, my eyes blink wearily at the darkness before me, the pens lit up every so often by my greatest enemy and darkest of foes. I don't even know where I'm going, but I let myself drop to the floor and crawl forward until I reach a wall, body sagging into a mound of hay and soft fluffy fur. It takes only seconds before I'm drifting off into an abyss of dreams, my mind already fuzzy with sleep and forgetfulness. (Why am I curled up in hay? And since when has it been raining?) However, as the numbness takes my mind and the warm woolen beings curl up against me, I can't help but let my questions cease. There's only one thing I can think of. This is the greatest home I've ever been in.