12-16-2018, 07:39 AM
[div style="margin: 0 auto; border-width:0; width: 70%; text-align: justify; line-height: 1.5; font-family: arial; font-size: 9pt;"]He hates his home. That isn't normal, is it? To hate the space that you've claimed as your own. It's filled with such an oppressive air, one that weighs on his chest and throat like pure lead. He can't stay in that little hut for too long at a time, or that God awful sadness starts to seep into his bones. Perhaps sadness is too light of a term for it. He can't sleep, he can't think, all he can do is lie there and stare at the wall while trying to place that missing piece. Was it a person? A place? A thing? His memories were evading him, but they don't give him the mercy of filling the blank spaces with useless crap. Instead they leave ugly blank gaps in his mind, whole periods of static that don't get clearer no matter how many times he turnes them over in his mind. Staring at the blurry images projected behind his eyelids has started giving him a headache. Luca tossed and turned for a bit before suddenly standing in a huff, rage etched into every line of his expression. There's something so frustrating about being tired but unable to sleep. He isn't going to put up with the insomnia that leakes from these walls like blood from a wound.
The hellhound stomps out of the makeshift bakery, slamming the door behind him as he exits into the night. If he couldn't sleep at home, so be it. He could find other places to stay. It takes him a few minutes of digging, but soon he manages to carve a little dip in Barracuda Bay. It looks exposed and cold, but even that's better that creaking wood and the faint smell of something rotting downstairs. He places himself in his hole. It's a bit of a tight fit, and he has to lie like a cat with his paws tucked neatly beneath him, but he's too stubborn to give up now. One final huff exits his lips before he falls limp, trying to beckon the calming caress of sleep.
The hellhound stomps out of the makeshift bakery, slamming the door behind him as he exits into the night. If he couldn't sleep at home, so be it. He could find other places to stay. It takes him a few minutes of digging, but soon he manages to carve a little dip in Barracuda Bay. It looks exposed and cold, but even that's better that creaking wood and the faint smell of something rotting downstairs. He places himself in his hole. It's a bit of a tight fit, and he has to lie like a cat with his paws tucked neatly beneath him, but he's too stubborn to give up now. One final huff exits his lips before he falls limp, trying to beckon the calming caress of sleep.