⟸✯ᴄᴀꜱꜱɪᴀ ᴀʟᴅᴇʀꜱ-ʟᴏᴄᴋᴇ✯⟹
⟸✯The Newcomer ✯ She/Her ✯ Tags:Jackson/Huan/Frances ✯ Location:house ✯⟹
⟸✯The Newcomer ✯ She/Her ✯ Tags:Jackson/Huan/Frances ✯ Location:house ✯⟹
The rapid thud of Cassia’s pulse was bouncing around against her skull. It made it difficult to focus but not impossible. She leaned all of her weight onto three of her four legs while standing on the dark road with Jackson and Huan. The pair seemed to be communicating. Groggily, Cassia wondered what that was like. To hear someone else's voice in your head. She imagined it must be jarring if you weren’t prepared for it. Effectively unable to contribute to the conversation still she looked back at the crumpled heap that had once been a truck and felt a bit guilty. While objectively she knew that the blame lay with the nomad for the crash, she still felt responsible for Huan and Jackson getting hurt since they’d been out to meet her in the first place.
Perhaps it was stereotypical but she hated nomads. Memories of the past in her mind played like snapshots of some of the least fun moments in her life. Eventually, though the group started moving and she left the thoughts behind on the dark road with the remains of the old truck.
The rain had let up. Here and gone just as the nomad had been, though some of the clouds still stuck around. The ground was damp under her paws, and while she did her best to reach her senses out in case the vampire returned, the scent of her companions’ wounds clouded her attempts. Being towards the back of the group her gaze kept straying to the two. Over the duration of their slow walk, Cassia could feel her healing ability doing its best but it did little to ease the pain sending jolts along the side she had landed on. Getting thrown out of a moving truck onto dirt and rocks wasn’t fun, who would have thought? Her bitterness was a bit uncharacteristic but Cassia felt like she deserved some bitterness after the kind of night she’d been having so far.
Relief flooded her when a house came into view. Their destination- if the heavy, ingrained scent of wolves was anything to go by. The tall windows held a warm, inviting glow that promised all of the warmth and comfort that Cassia was lacking. She tried to move a little faster even if she was only half successful in the endeavor, following after Jackson over the leaf-littered yard but stopping before the stoop. Cassia wondered belatedly if there was some kind of etiquette about entering a pack’s home for the first time. It was with those thoughts that she missed the initial interaction at the door, at least until she was brought up. She still hadn’t had a chance to introduce herself yet, but given the tension, she figured now wasn’t the time for it either. All she managed was a nod to Jackson before she was being led off by the woman who had answered the door.
She hobbled after the woman, trying to keep up a decent pace. While she hadn't expected everything to be sunshine and rainbows, Cassia did feel like she was one for three as far as first impressions went. Maybe this was why not all wolves joined packs. It felt like an impossible challenge- joining a group of people who already had an established rapport with one another. With the Elk Creek pack in particular it seemed there was a distrust for outsiders prevalent among many of the members.
Jackson had been welcoming and that was significant coming from the leader of the pack but Cassia wasn’t exactly feeling the love. There was a stray thought in her mind, wondering how packs even stayed together with so many different personalities having to work together like they seemed to. But maybe that was why they all worked? Who could say, certainly not her. She’d only ever spent an extended period of time around one other wolf and the pair of them had been too busy trying to figure out how to be werewolves to worry about something as complicated as pack dynamics.
She distracted herself from the meandering trail of thought by studying the décor. The deer skull wasn’t exactly her idea of interior design but she had to admit it went well with the aesthetic of the house. Cassia was drained, but it was the kind of exhaustion that was so far removed that it looped back around to her being energized. It was only because of that feeling that she made it up the stairs without giving up halfway through. She made noises to make sure the woman knew she was paying attention for the duration of the little tour. The location of the bathroom and towels cemented in her mind as they passed them and into the unoccupied room. More than anything Cassia wanted to curl up and fall asleep on the bed but the dirt and blood she felt sticking to her person had her putting off the idea of settling down for now.
Belatedly she watched the woman as she gave her final bit of information before closing the door behind her.
Alone once again Cassia sighed though she got moving to get to the shower, transforming now that she was alone. The grime needed to go. She collected a pair of towels on her way to the bathroom before locking the door behind her. It was as she was putting the towels on the counter that she caught her reflection and cringed.
Oh I look awful.
There was dried blood and motley bruises forming where her body was trying to heal. Clumps of dried mud and the broken remnants of leaves and brush stuck to her skin and hair- her hair in a knotted mess that she knew would be a pain to detangle. Cassia tried not to spend too much time showering off, waiting until the water ran clear before she finally got out though she missed the hot water on her exhausted muscles already.
Perhaps it was stereotypical but she hated nomads. Memories of the past in her mind played like snapshots of some of the least fun moments in her life. Eventually, though the group started moving and she left the thoughts behind on the dark road with the remains of the old truck.
The rain had let up. Here and gone just as the nomad had been, though some of the clouds still stuck around. The ground was damp under her paws, and while she did her best to reach her senses out in case the vampire returned, the scent of her companions’ wounds clouded her attempts. Being towards the back of the group her gaze kept straying to the two. Over the duration of their slow walk, Cassia could feel her healing ability doing its best but it did little to ease the pain sending jolts along the side she had landed on. Getting thrown out of a moving truck onto dirt and rocks wasn’t fun, who would have thought? Her bitterness was a bit uncharacteristic but Cassia felt like she deserved some bitterness after the kind of night she’d been having so far.
Relief flooded her when a house came into view. Their destination- if the heavy, ingrained scent of wolves was anything to go by. The tall windows held a warm, inviting glow that promised all of the warmth and comfort that Cassia was lacking. She tried to move a little faster even if she was only half successful in the endeavor, following after Jackson over the leaf-littered yard but stopping before the stoop. Cassia wondered belatedly if there was some kind of etiquette about entering a pack’s home for the first time. It was with those thoughts that she missed the initial interaction at the door, at least until she was brought up. She still hadn’t had a chance to introduce herself yet, but given the tension, she figured now wasn’t the time for it either. All she managed was a nod to Jackson before she was being led off by the woman who had answered the door.
She hobbled after the woman, trying to keep up a decent pace. While she hadn't expected everything to be sunshine and rainbows, Cassia did feel like she was one for three as far as first impressions went. Maybe this was why not all wolves joined packs. It felt like an impossible challenge- joining a group of people who already had an established rapport with one another. With the Elk Creek pack in particular it seemed there was a distrust for outsiders prevalent among many of the members.
Jackson had been welcoming and that was significant coming from the leader of the pack but Cassia wasn’t exactly feeling the love. There was a stray thought in her mind, wondering how packs even stayed together with so many different personalities having to work together like they seemed to. But maybe that was why they all worked? Who could say, certainly not her. She’d only ever spent an extended period of time around one other wolf and the pair of them had been too busy trying to figure out how to be werewolves to worry about something as complicated as pack dynamics.
She distracted herself from the meandering trail of thought by studying the décor. The deer skull wasn’t exactly her idea of interior design but she had to admit it went well with the aesthetic of the house. Cassia was drained, but it was the kind of exhaustion that was so far removed that it looped back around to her being energized. It was only because of that feeling that she made it up the stairs without giving up halfway through. She made noises to make sure the woman knew she was paying attention for the duration of the little tour. The location of the bathroom and towels cemented in her mind as they passed them and into the unoccupied room. More than anything Cassia wanted to curl up and fall asleep on the bed but the dirt and blood she felt sticking to her person had her putting off the idea of settling down for now.
Belatedly she watched the woman as she gave her final bit of information before closing the door behind her.
Alone once again Cassia sighed though she got moving to get to the shower, transforming now that she was alone. The grime needed to go. She collected a pair of towels on her way to the bathroom before locking the door behind her. It was as she was putting the towels on the counter that she caught her reflection and cringed.
Oh I look awful.
There was dried blood and motley bruises forming where her body was trying to heal. Clumps of dried mud and the broken remnants of leaves and brush stuck to her skin and hair- her hair in a knotted mess that she knew would be a pain to detangle. Cassia tried not to spend too much time showering off, waiting until the water ran clear before she finally got out though she missed the hot water on her exhausted muscles already.