Post by Star Fall on Jul 28, 2017 2:47:30 GMT
Saber!pR.BaFF/uk 6 Oct 2015 8:46:43 PM No.41101732>>41102307
>It might have been her idea to follow him, but she certainly hadn't planned on having to rely on him like this. How long had they been trekking through this flame-forsaken woodland? Cities she could navigate, but wandering off the beaten track wasn't something she was good at, particularly when they were awfully close to the Astrolian mountains!
>What were they going to do for food? Money wouldn't work out here, you couldn't pay animals to let you eat them. Long gone were her days of travelling in a similar manner, as was the guardian who had taken care of her during that time. Instead she had become far too used to the benefits of working with a steady income and getting her meals like anyone else who worked in her industry (that is to say the industry of assassination and other less morally obliged mercenary contracts).
>The worst part? He hadn't said a single word since she'd started following his trail. All she'd seen were his hunched up shoulders hidden away by that armour. Didn't he ever get tired!? Sure, she didn't mind the silence, it let her keep an ear out for any dangers they might come across, and perhaps it wouldn't have been so bad if some sort of animal were sneaking up behind them. Instead it had been a long, dreary walk, and it looked like it was going to rain. 'Screw this', she thought, letting out a particularly loud and obvious sigh.
Do you even know where you're going? I'm starting to wonder if you're just walking in the hopes that I'll turn around and go back the way I came.
>Even if he was expecting that, she wouldn't be able to in the first place!
>It might have been her idea to follow him, but she certainly hadn't planned on having to rely on him like this. How long had they been trekking through this flame-forsaken woodland? Cities she could navigate, but wandering off the beaten track wasn't something she was good at, particularly when they were awfully close to the Astrolian mountains!
>What were they going to do for food? Money wouldn't work out here, you couldn't pay animals to let you eat them. Long gone were her days of travelling in a similar manner, as was the guardian who had taken care of her during that time. Instead she had become far too used to the benefits of working with a steady income and getting her meals like anyone else who worked in her industry (that is to say the industry of assassination and other less morally obliged mercenary contracts).
>The worst part? He hadn't said a single word since she'd started following his trail. All she'd seen were his hunched up shoulders hidden away by that armour. Didn't he ever get tired!? Sure, she didn't mind the silence, it let her keep an ear out for any dangers they might come across, and perhaps it wouldn't have been so bad if some sort of animal were sneaking up behind them. Instead it had been a long, dreary walk, and it looked like it was going to rain. 'Screw this', she thought, letting out a particularly loud and obvious sigh.
Do you even know where you're going? I'm starting to wonder if you're just walking in the hopes that I'll turn around and go back the way I came.
>Even if he was expecting that, she wouldn't be able to in the first place!