He travels in the shadow of the old buck's bulk, watching as the buck's thin hips and wiry frame move under his pelt.
The buck has a peculiar gait as they make their way through the desert, not just because his joints must be weary and his muscles tired.
He walks in a roundabout way, stepstep, step, st-step, a pause; step step. A pause. Step. Each motion is carefully weighed, considered, enacted.
The youngling finds himself confused, but tries to mimic as best he can, until a foal's curiosity overtakes him. He pauses, and asks, "Why do you walk without rhythm?"
The old weathered buck looks down at him with an impassive face. Step. Stepstepstep. Step step. Stepstep. Step. Pause. And then his blue eyes flick to the sand underneath their feet.
"Walk without rhythm," he says, "and you won't attract the worm."
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He stands on the cliff, plants his feet, and faces the oncoming storm.
The wind rises up and whips his mane and tail into a knotted tangle, steals his breath away, pelts his skin with rain.
It's a threat, and he has never been one to be threatened.
The storm breaks to either side of him. He pierces the clouds.
They mound up to either side in great dark heaps, lashing the ground with rain, lightning streaking between the clouds...
He finds the fruit hanging deliciously red and swollen-ripe from the tree, gleaming in the sun, and eats as much as he can.
It's there for the taking, and it has an interesting sort of buzzing taste, almost effervescent.
When they find him three days later, eyes bulging and tongue sticking out of his mouth, throat swollen shut and lips blue, sides still in death, they shrug.
It was poison, they nod, sadly, to one another. He should have been more careful. Didn't he know that fruit would kill him?
The flies buzz over his corpse, but leave the now-rotting fruits on the tree well enough alone. Even they know.
Last edited by phoe on Sun Jul 12, 2020 1:15 am, edited 1 time in total. word count: 114