No fights in progress
No fights in progress
No fights in progress
No fights in progress
No fights in progress
Not only was his heart breaking at the disappearance of his son, but also in seeing the guilt that washed over his wife. Roan turned to face @Faelyn, minty greens searching earnestly to look directly into her cerulean gaze. "Fae. This is not your fault," the Hodari insisted. Children wander. It was good to give Jai the breadth to explore. He was under supervision even if he didn't know it. There was no way they could have known the mist would swipe him up before they even knew what was happening. Roan would attempt to wrap his foreleg around his wife's shoulders, wanting to pull her close for comfort as they backed away from the mist.
The king looked to @Evangeline as she questioned their experience with the mist. Fae was quick to answer, giving the same answer Roan would have given himself. "It was only a barrier the last time. You couldn't get past it," the mauve lion expanded on their knowledge of the mist. "But lions weren't disappearing into it." The masked man then paused, gaze turning back to the wall of white clouds that taunted them all. He had yet to hear anything come out of the fog. Just deafening silence accented with their own voices, but nothing that sounded like his son.
When @Giselle offered her assistance before asking for a description of their son, Roan couldn't help but snap out of his own frustration. "He's white," the king practically growled. "He's a white cub lost in a fricken mess of white mist." The father's anger was poorly directed, already feeling the hopelessness in trying to find Jai among the mist. It was like trying to find a very specific needle in a needle stack. This wasn't even a haystack, people! As quickly as the anger had risen within him, though, the Hodari realized his own tone. "I'm sorry," he sighed with a shake of his head, defeat already seeping into his words as he looked to Giselle for forgiveness. "It's just..." but the father couldn't finish the explanation, allowing his voice to fall flat. The Obsidian king's gaze fell to his paws until he heard @Ulla's voice. Head lifted to find the ashen woman before looking back to his wife. "She's right," the Hodari relented. "If we stay too close, we'll just get lost as well." And then who would find Jai? Reluctantly, Roan started to move towards the rocky edge of the shoreline, pausing to make sure Fae was coming with him before moving any further away from the mist.
Roan put an arm over her and she leaned into him, unable to completely stifle the sob that escaped her as she finally gave in to the fact that she wasn't going to be able to find her son. Whatever the mist had done to him, he was now beyond her reach.
She wasn't really listening to anyone around her anymore, and so the conversation going on around her went over her head. She knew the others were talking, but if you asked she wouldn't know what had been said. Not until Roan commented that they might get lost as well. That wouldn't be good. She couldn't handle Roan disappearing as well, and she supposed neither could he were the situation reversed.
"We'll have to come back and look for signs of him when the fog clears," she said rather distantly, still staring at the mist as though he might waltz out of it.
He was helpless. There was nothing they could do to go in and get Jai. It made matters worse that Roan felt like his son was just on the other side of this fog and yet he couldn't reach his little prince. The mauve man could do nothing but hold his wife tighter as they resigned themselves for the moment. The only thing that gave the Hodari any hope about this ordeal was that the mist seemed to move this time around. It wasn't stagnant like before. @Faelyn was right and they would just have to come back when the fog had cleared. Maybe they would find some footprints or a scent, anything that might lead them to finding their son. "You're right," he murmured against her ear as Roan continued to hold her close. "We'll just.... We'll have to come back. When it's clear. We'll find him." There was a firmer assurance in his last statement. "Let's just get away from the mist for now." Defeat was evident in the king's voice, unwilling to turn his back on his son, but that was all they could do for now. With that, the mauve man would begin to turn away from the shore, hopeful that his wife would follow and they could regroup before searching again.
exit
-exit faelyn-
-exit
It all happened so fast. One moment she was picturing them in her head, the white cub with the scars, and nodding profusely at the distraught mother. A man, perhaps the father of the lost child, snapped at her in the throes of desperation. She watched as the anger flashed and ebbed in his eyes, her heart breaking for him. “I understand. But you can’t lose hope yet!” Giselle’s brow was furrowed in a mixture of determination and worry, the mist a constant presence seen from the corner of her eye. That wall could hide all sorts of things. All cub-snatching, lion-eating sort of things. “We just have to look har-” There came a shout to move to higher ground, and so she did, regaining her place beside the small grey lioness. And when she finally had her wits about her again, the parents decided to retire. Giselle opened her mouth, wanting to say some courageous words that would lift their spirits once again. She was so sure they just had to look a little closer. After all, it was just mist! It had to be…right? She smiled feebly at the white woman as she thanked them, feeling like she’d done nothing at all. The truth was, she had done nothing. And it made her feel like she had a cold rock in her stomach. Giselle turned her attention to the two women who remained. “Y-yes, I saw a woman too.” Another pang of guilt hit her, hit her hard. How could she have forgotten…and PERRY! Oh, how could she have forgotten about him. He must be so far away by now. What if whatever was in the mist had gotten him too? “Have any of you seen my pet seagull? He’s really fat and he has a limp.”
I've been dreaming of a true love's kiss |