10-01-2019, 11:25 PM
( written for the october cdc prompt of "hay" !! )
To an outsider, it might've seemed like Wormwood spent a huge amount of time fighting, or training to fight, but in reality he didn't actually enjoy fighting that much. Sure, he knew that knowing how to fight effectively was a useful skill, and he would be eternally grateful to his father for that being one of the only things that he did right for his son, but beyond that he didn't think much of it. He didn't get the insane thrill from it that it seemed most of the Pittians did, and it wasn't as if he usually had the goal of killing others when he was fighting. After all, he hadn't even really fatally wounded anybody until Roman, and he hadn't even been the one to do the finishing blow in that case. Rather, he used fighting as a method to protect himself and others, something he hoped that his fellow Tanglers also understood and did, but something that it also seemed most people were forgetting these days, instead choosing to fight for the thrill of it, or because they thought they could impress others. Just the thought of it, and how it made him sigh, made him feel like he was somehow an old man in that sense, which was pretty funny considering that Wormwood was still considered pretty much just a young adult lion, and far from ancient. Still, the point to be made was that Worm actually didn't care for fighting that much.
Now, some might not have believed that when they came across Wormwood, sitting just a bit away from the main town against a tree, struggling with his paws and jaws to stuff hay inside of fabric to create "training dummies" that they could use for practice at some point. However, he wasn't doing it because he was excited for more fighting, or for more fighting training. But these days he could always feel the faint prick of danger beneath his skin, with every hour that Jervis remained as the head of the Pitt, a constant looming threat of what his desert dwelling group could do. Moth's almost kidnapping was still fresh on his mind, and just thinking of it, and thinking of the sight of Moth's injured and limp body... it made him shove some of the hay in more forcefully, a soft grunt of anger leaving him as the fabric he was using fought against him. It was almost as if he were making a scarecrow, given how similar the dummies looked, but it was pretty clear from the sloppily written on red x's, written in red paint that Worm had swiped from Feza, they weren't meant to be friendly scarecrows meant to defend crops.
The scent of hay slowly permeated the air around him, and as he continued his brain numbing task, he found himself being whisked away, back to a time when things had been much more simple, and fighting had been one of the last things on his mind. He could remember the little town that had stood outside of the pride's city, one of the many strongholds that the hyenas had held before their father had taken it over for them, making it into an extension of their large territory. The little town had been mostly farmland, full of many different tall crops and scarecrows, along with farm animals that had long since either migrated away from the area, or formed their own little societies amongst themselves. Worm had always loved hanging out in the town as a cub, even though the scent of hay and fertilizer and everything else that had been involved in making the farm area profitable back in the day had been ever present and sometimes even suffocating. It didn't matter to him, because the place represented an escape from the constant criticism that he faced constantly back in the huge towering city that his parents called home. Nowadays he wasn't really sure if he had ever really considered the coty a true home, but back then he hadn't questioned it, figuring the reason that he felt so much happier among the farmlands was just because it was something new and different.
Of course, not everything about the farmlands had been sunshine and rainbows, especially considering that there had been where Poet had gotten injured one day by a still hiding hyena within the place – something that he had been forced to relive even more gruesomely in one of his recent dreams – but still, it had been a safe haven for him. Besides, even after Poet had gotten injured, they had continued returning to the place, playing hide and seek in the tall lines of crops, and just sitting watching the sun rise on the top of one of the barns. The thought almost brought a smile to his muzzle as he worked, but then he remember how, as time went on, Poet's appearances at the farmland and had become fewer and fewer, and over time it had eventually become just Worm laying there alone, staring out at the sunset and wallowing in his own loneliness and jealousy. He knew it was petty, but he couldn't help but think that Poet had ended up ruining the farmland eventually for him as well, as be had done with so many other things that Worm had cared about in the past.
A soft huff left the lion's nose as he shook his head to clear his own rapidly degrading thoughts, his shoving in of hay into the dummies having gotten so erratic that some of them were bursting awkwardly at the seams, liable to just explode if they were attacked. Eying them for a moment, Wormwood eventually just groaned loudly, letting himself fall back onto his spine and staring up into the blue sky, surrounded by half finished hay dummies and cursing his missing brother, "Fucking Poet."
To an outsider, it might've seemed like Wormwood spent a huge amount of time fighting, or training to fight, but in reality he didn't actually enjoy fighting that much. Sure, he knew that knowing how to fight effectively was a useful skill, and he would be eternally grateful to his father for that being one of the only things that he did right for his son, but beyond that he didn't think much of it. He didn't get the insane thrill from it that it seemed most of the Pittians did, and it wasn't as if he usually had the goal of killing others when he was fighting. After all, he hadn't even really fatally wounded anybody until Roman, and he hadn't even been the one to do the finishing blow in that case. Rather, he used fighting as a method to protect himself and others, something he hoped that his fellow Tanglers also understood and did, but something that it also seemed most people were forgetting these days, instead choosing to fight for the thrill of it, or because they thought they could impress others. Just the thought of it, and how it made him sigh, made him feel like he was somehow an old man in that sense, which was pretty funny considering that Wormwood was still considered pretty much just a young adult lion, and far from ancient. Still, the point to be made was that Worm actually didn't care for fighting that much.
Now, some might not have believed that when they came across Wormwood, sitting just a bit away from the main town against a tree, struggling with his paws and jaws to stuff hay inside of fabric to create "training dummies" that they could use for practice at some point. However, he wasn't doing it because he was excited for more fighting, or for more fighting training. But these days he could always feel the faint prick of danger beneath his skin, with every hour that Jervis remained as the head of the Pitt, a constant looming threat of what his desert dwelling group could do. Moth's almost kidnapping was still fresh on his mind, and just thinking of it, and thinking of the sight of Moth's injured and limp body... it made him shove some of the hay in more forcefully, a soft grunt of anger leaving him as the fabric he was using fought against him. It was almost as if he were making a scarecrow, given how similar the dummies looked, but it was pretty clear from the sloppily written on red x's, written in red paint that Worm had swiped from Feza, they weren't meant to be friendly scarecrows meant to defend crops.
The scent of hay slowly permeated the air around him, and as he continued his brain numbing task, he found himself being whisked away, back to a time when things had been much more simple, and fighting had been one of the last things on his mind. He could remember the little town that had stood outside of the pride's city, one of the many strongholds that the hyenas had held before their father had taken it over for them, making it into an extension of their large territory. The little town had been mostly farmland, full of many different tall crops and scarecrows, along with farm animals that had long since either migrated away from the area, or formed their own little societies amongst themselves. Worm had always loved hanging out in the town as a cub, even though the scent of hay and fertilizer and everything else that had been involved in making the farm area profitable back in the day had been ever present and sometimes even suffocating. It didn't matter to him, because the place represented an escape from the constant criticism that he faced constantly back in the huge towering city that his parents called home. Nowadays he wasn't really sure if he had ever really considered the coty a true home, but back then he hadn't questioned it, figuring the reason that he felt so much happier among the farmlands was just because it was something new and different.
Of course, not everything about the farmlands had been sunshine and rainbows, especially considering that there had been where Poet had gotten injured one day by a still hiding hyena within the place – something that he had been forced to relive even more gruesomely in one of his recent dreams – but still, it had been a safe haven for him. Besides, even after Poet had gotten injured, they had continued returning to the place, playing hide and seek in the tall lines of crops, and just sitting watching the sun rise on the top of one of the barns. The thought almost brought a smile to his muzzle as he worked, but then he remember how, as time went on, Poet's appearances at the farmland and had become fewer and fewer, and over time it had eventually become just Worm laying there alone, staring out at the sunset and wallowing in his own loneliness and jealousy. He knew it was petty, but he couldn't help but think that Poet had ended up ruining the farmland eventually for him as well, as be had done with so many other things that Worm had cared about in the past.
A soft huff left the lion's nose as he shook his head to clear his own rapidly degrading thoughts, his shoving in of hay into the dummies having gotten so erratic that some of them were bursting awkwardly at the seams, liable to just explode if they were attacked. Eying them for a moment, Wormwood eventually just groaned loudly, letting himself fall back onto his spine and staring up into the blue sky, surrounded by half finished hay dummies and cursing his missing brother, "Fucking Poet."
[glow=black,2,300]THE FREEDOM OF FALLING[/glow]
— Reggan