๐พ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ฃ๐ฅ
-- She-cat :: 42 Moons :: Guard :: ~n/a
There had been a split second, right as she realized Stormhaze had been starting to move, that Gleamingheart had almost tried to intercept him. Almost. Who was she to question her captain, even if everyone could see the folly of his actions? No one, and she had made her fair share of poor choices in her past as well. She was in no position to judge, and a priestess lie dead. Even she could see that a death in return would be the price no matter what, the clan would demand it. To make the two fight, though..? She questioned that, silently to herself. Despite her original instinct to stop him - for his own sake rather than the two toms admittedly - by the next dawn she would have stood by the young captain's opinion. A night of reflection would do that, as it turned out.
That too she would keep to herself though - as with most of her thoughts these days - as she emerged from the den as dawn began to break.
๐ฝ๐ ๐๐ค๐ฅ๐๐ก
-- She-cat :: 25 Moons :: Fighter :: ~n/a
She'd been one of the ones to keep watch through the night, tail curled around her paws. Even she had the good sense to not try and lift the mood with any type of humor. Make the wrong joke around the wrong cat and she'd find herself right there alongside the captain of the guard she imagined. Fogstep had no desire for that, so instead she simply kept her mouth uncharacteristically shut. She'd made the decision immediately after the event in question to more or less avoid thinking about it. A priestess was dead, the murderer was as well, and the captain of the guard had been a fool to speak out against the decisions those above him had made. Those were the facts, and all that was really important. Dwelling on the rest was pointless.
Stars above, she was glad when the sky began to lighten though, and hopefully with it would come relief from her post.
๐ฝ๐ ๐ฉ๐๐๐ฃ๐
-- Tom :: 31 Moons :: Scribe :: ~Scarabstone
He was no stranger to bloodshed, nor to gristly repercussions for actions. Both in his life before the clan and in his time among the servants he had been witness to many terrible things. It was one of those things he just had to compartmentalize. Break it down to the facts of what had happened, and separate them from his own feelings on the matters. He couldn't slack off even now, it wouldn't end well for him. He walked a thin line every day with his past as a loner and a servant. The red tom paused to stretch once more before making his way towards the treasury. So much to do, no time to think of anything else. He would later, if he did at all. He wasn't the only one moving either, and he dipped his head in greeting to Scarabstone as he caught his eye.
๐ฝ๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐ฅ๐ฆ๐ค
-- Tom :: 26 Moons :: Scout :: ~n/a
He'd been awake for a while, though not for any particular reason. Fadedlotus simply rarely slept well. Sitting in the courtyard near the scout's den, his eyes were a little glassy as he waited for... something. Being given a task? Perhaps, but he was unsure of where those tasks would come from considering the circumstances. More likely than not he'd simply be sassed at for not doing anything once more of the clan was out and about. As if he didn't play his part to the best of his ability. Glassy as his eyes were, his expression wasn't giving any of his thoughts away. About the day before or anything else. At least a small part of that was that Fadedlotus himself wasn't even sure of his thoughts on the day before. There was too much to process all at once.
โค๐๐ฃ๐
-- Non-binary :: 19 Moons :: Music Courtier :: ~Layla
Zeri had been awake long before dawn had started it's approach, the display the day before weighing heavily on their mind. And dredging up bad memories of how they had found theirself here. They'd try to close their eyes and the tom which had murdered that priestess became Nak, lying there, dead. Their dear, sweet Nak who had only reacted with a desire to protect them and had died for it. It made sleep near impossible to find. They hadn't even realized the time until Layla had begun to stir, in all honesty. Then they blinked and realized how close to making a mistake they had been.
They rose immediately after, giving the younger she-cat a comforting lick on the top of her head as they passed her. "Walk softly today, Layla," they murmured softly as they did, "the High Bloods will not be in good moods." They wished they could stick with her - the clan cats were always especially cruel to her in particular and they didn't know why - but they had their own job to do.
๐๐๐ก๐๐ฃ
-- Tom :: 27 Moons :: Rogue :: ~n/a
If he didn't know any better, Viper would assume a fox was playing with him instead of actually threatening his territory. This was the seventh time this moon it had ventured close, but it never attacked or wandered far in. It just seemed to linger just over the border and then leave. Except for the one time not long ago, when it had stayed just long enough for him to catch a glimpse of it. He swore the thing had been laughing at him and it was starting to annoy him to the point he barely lingered over the far edge any more. If it was just teasing,and not a threat, he needn't worry. Especially this morning, he'd gotten a late start and the heat would be getting worse soon. Viper lifted his one good eye to the sky as he padded along the border nearest to Sunclan's territory - there was a bit of a buffer between the two, enough so that it would have been difficult to wander across even if he hadn't been paying as much attention as he always did. His predecessor had been careful to not anger the clan, and so was he.
He paused for a moment as he reached the furthest corner of the territory, taking a short break to dislodge a stone from his paw. His single green eye flickered idly over what he could see of the area beyond what he'd inherited from his adoptive mother. There was, of course, nothing stopping him from straying from it. He did quite often in fact, though not in the direction of the clan. He had no desire to return there and he never would. This little piece of desert was home. A place that was his, which had once been hers. He was more or less content.