by nindroidzane » Fri Feb 25, 2022 7:04 pm
It wasn't like she'd never stepped paw out there before. There were plenty of days she'd been fed up with sitting at home with her mother, but she didn't want to put up with the local strays' teasing. The woods were a lovely place to sit beneath a tree and listen to the birds sing, or the wind rush gently beneath her fur.
But it felt much different today. Dolly couldn't tell if the way the trees loomed down towards her was comforting or frightening, but she supposed she would have to get used to it - at least for now.
It was the walking that got to her, eventually. Although the new sounds and smells of the forest were exciting, and the birdsong sounded much more clear than on her shows, she was getting exhausted. This was probably the longest she'd walked in one stretch her entire life. Not to mention the stinging the fire had left in her shoulder.
But where to sleep? She'd certainly never slept away from home; despite her gripes with being a showcat, she had to admit that she loved her warm, soft bed. Animals just sleeping on the bare ground never looked comfortable, exactly, no matter what they scraped together for a nest.
But she supposed this was a fair trade-off, if she was going to leave home forever. A little more freedom for a little less comfort? A little more loneliness for a little less abandonment?
She was sure she would survive.
Scanning the area briefly, Dolly settled for sleeping in a nest of reeds by the lake - it seemed peaceful enough there for a nice nap, and the reeds were already roughly in the shape of a nest. Maybe a little prickly, but her fur was thick enough to manage.
She wasn't sure quite when she actually dozed off, but it must have been hours before she was awoken again. An angry chattering sound filled the air, and Dolly lifted her head sleepily to see where it was coming from.
When she'd finally realized it was coming from up in the trees (after shaking the sleep from her fur), she figured it was just some strange bird - until she looked up. Hanging from the tree, suspended not far up from the ground, was a very odd, very angry looking little creature. One she'd seen on her housefolks' shows!
The name didn't come back to her until she'd trotted up close to the creature, who was suspended in the air by a rope, for some reason. A platypus! She never thought she'd see one of these in real life.
The platypus chittered angrily into her face, even trying to bite her with its beak. She cast a sideways look back at her reeds; maybe there'd been a reason they had already looked so nest-like.
Fortunately, she was out of reach of the platypus' flailing and attacks. She could leave right now if she wanted to. Maybe it would prefer that; she wouldn't want a stranger sitting in her bed back home while she was strung up to watch.
But she couldn't just leave it like this, could she? There was no way it was going to get down on its own, that she could see, and she had a feeling that whatever human left this rope here didn't exactly have the best intentions. She knew what they were like.
And that knot in the rope looked awfully similar to her bows…
With a small frown of resolution, Dolly shook out her fur, her bells jingling. She could probably untie that; she'd untied plenty of knots back at home. If the platypus stopped moving, she could get it down just fine.
"Hey!" She snapped, earning a strange little hiss from the creature.
Reaching up carefully, and sitting back on her haunches, she leaned around the platypus to tug at the rope with one claw.
"Do you want me to get you down?"
The platypus eyed her for a long moment. Dolly was very aware of the spike on its leg, the one right next to her own foreleg. Perhaps not her brightest move - it was full of venom like a snake. She hadn't forgotten that, and she was quite sure the platypus hadn't, either.
Fortunately, it seemed to understand what she was trying to do, and finally quit its struggling. Heaving a small sigh of relief, Dolly shifted into a more comfortable position and got to work.
Admittedly, the rope was much more difficult to untangle than any bow she'd ever worn. Although it frayed against her claws, the knot itself held tight, no matter how she plucked and twisted at it.
But she didn't give up. She could tell it was loosening. And bit by bit it did give way, until finally the platypus had collapsed practically onto her head, sending them both tumbling into the grass.
The platypus got to its feet, looking dizzy. It looked at her, gave a small, much less aggressive, chirp, then skittered off to its nest of reeds. At least it had said thank you, she supposed.
Dolly looked up at the sky - it was already dark (which hadn't helped with the knot-picking), but her earlier nap in the stolen nest kept her from feeling very tired at all. She supposed it wouldn't hurt to keep trekking through the forest under the cover of night. She still wasn't quite sure where she was going, so it wasn't like she was in a rush. And anyhow… what else would she do out here?
Last edited by
nindroidzane on Fri Feb 25, 2022 7:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.