I'm doing the Monthly Prompt!Username + ID: kobieface + 1105594
Co-op Archive: Forum/viewtopic.php?p=147171843#p147171843Monthly Prompt: "How does your Vastral usually spend their day? Do they hang out with friends, forage, swim or something else?"
Entry: Featuring




Lucero, Genevieve, Snapper, and Aisha
1054 words
Lucero thought of himself as an adventurer.
He liked to spend his time running along the shores, dipping into various alcoves and pockets of forest that lined the coast. He loved looking at all the differences that made the worldโฆthe world! There was a method to his madness, truly.
His days always started out by the shallow reefs, where he would break his fast with Genevieve and her family. It was always a big feast - to him, at least - considering just how big the other Vastralโs family was. Aunts and uncles and cousins and siblings. Lucero had become close to her when they were younger, and her family treated him like one of their own. When he had been growing into himself, and his confidence, he was more embarrassed about having to rely on her for that familial love he didnโt have. But, now, he embraced it for all it could give him. The matriarch of the family, Genevieveโs grandmother, wouldnโt let him live it down if he missed even one breakfast with them without a proper excuse.
With his belly full, his next stop was always venturing into the mangrove just beyond the shore. Every now and then Genevieve would join him, but she was often faced with too busy a day to join in his adventuring. He liked to keep track of the flora and fauna just next to their beach, steering clear of large predators in favor of counting the fresh blossoms and wading in shallow ponds to feel the mud underneath his paw pads.
It was often there that he would meet Snapper, a new friend of his. They had met one fateful day when she had literally run into him as he was batting a paw into a puddle, just to watch the steady ripples as they floated away from him. She had, of course, shoved him face first into the puddle, but had apologized with just enough juice, red berries that Lucero had no choice but to forgive her.
She was flighty and brash, with sharp teeth that liked to show off how quick she could catch a mid-morning snack for them to share. He used to think she was too loud - too eager - but she would argue that he was too quiet, too lost in his thoughts. He supposed they balanced each other out, and she was a great resource to distinguish between the great diversity of flora and fauna around them. He loved to keep track of everything, of certain patches of blooms and swarms, and compared his data year to year. He wasnโt sure what he was tracking, really, to what end. But it made him happy, anyway, and he thought maybe one day his information could be of use. Perhaps knowing what impacted the game could help them adapt, help them redirect energy during cold months when they needed to conserve themselves.
Snapper didnโt really get it, but Genevieve told him to keep at it.
On the days where he was feeling particularly energetic, Lucero would travel deeper inland, where the mangrove gave way to thicker brush and sturdier land. Land that allowed for taller, thicker tree trunks and robust bushes and different game. Different predators, too, but Lucero had learned enough at a young age about how to cover his tracks and keep himself inconspicuous.
Aisha was another one of his friends, one that liked to spend her days digging into tunnels after prey or chasing after her younger siblings. Lucero always loved to meet with her, as she would travel out of the woods she called home every few weeks to go on adventures of her own. Lucero was still learning more about what she did when she left home, as she was rather secretive about it, but she often brought him back things. Souvenirs, she said, to represent her time away. A pot made of a color of clay he had never seen before, once. A bouquet of dried flowers, another time, to match the decor she had seen the few times she had travelled back with him to meet Genevieve and the rest of the family.
Together, they would spend the rest of the day discussing the patterns of larger prey, or basking in the sun, or wrangling Aishaโs younger siblings back home once the sun set. He knew the least about her corner of the world, as it had only been recently that he was brave enough to travel so far, and he enjoyed listening to her stories of her time growing up as the first stars poked their way into the night sky. He could never spend too long there, in order to get back home before it was too dark outside, but it was always worth the effort.
Luceroโs favorite part of his day was going back home. He had scrolls of paper everywhere, all serving as a reminder of all his adventures and the Vastrals he spent his days with. He had always been artistic, and he used his talent to paint the many things he saw on his adventures. Different Vastrals he met, or a new plant, or even a strange bug that landed on his nose as he sunbathed. The beautiful blooms of spring, or the dusty cover of snow that blanketed their land in the winter.
He had parchment scattered on the floor depicting his newest discoveries, as he could rarely work on only one painting at a time. One showed depictions of the reef, and the fish that tried to dodge his paws. On another, the path of water through the two biggest trees in the mangrove that seemed to dig deeper than it had the previous year. Another - a meadow of blue, yellow, pink, and purple that was cleverly used to cover hidey holes that Aisha and her siblings used to hunt.
So many memories, all flickering through Luceroโs mind with every stroke of his brush.
Memorykeeper. Genevieveโs grandmother had called him that once, as Lucero shared the various paintings that depicted his life with the younger members of the family. Changes in perspective, and changes in the land that they called home.
Perhaps that was true.
So many memories, and yet he couldnโt wait for the next day. He couldnโt wait to collect even more.
code: prompt 1