Also as a note, while Healer is the little nameless one's current guardian, she won't allow that to impede her job in any way. Feel free to bring in injured Samanayr for her to salve and heal! She's also looking for a more solid home for the lil'un, as a life constantly on the move is no life for a foal in her opinion, so if you have any Samanayr who would take in a little homeless filly... :3 ]]


Brisk winter breezes tossed tendrils of light snow across a landscape unsuited for the season's chill fingers, sending the tiny white flakes into the fur of the group passing determinedly through. The landscape, only weeks ago a warm, lush green growth around the foothills of a great mountain, was one of many victims of this particularly harsh winter, and Healer was as always occupied by her search for the Samanayr affected by this unusual chill. However... the mare's usually obsessively undivided attention was uncharacteristically split this particular night.
"Wish? Wish! WishWishWishWish-"
The bubbly yet irritatingly loud voice piped from somewhere above and to the right of her bat-like ears, and Healer had to stop herself from flicking them backwards in mild irritation. As it was, her quick steps barely faltered with her clipped reply.
"What is it, child?"
Her gaze flicked to the side, meeting briefly the heavy-lidded amber-orange eyes of the large feline that padded alongside her. The two had been walking aimlessly for as long as they had known each other and O'arth was clearly in need of a holiday, whereas Qi was little more than a scaly orange ball who woke up only to grumble about food. The voice had emitted from neither of these more constant companions, but rather, from the tiny grey-white foal huddled in Healer's usual place atop her steed. Wide red eyes stared down at her expectantly, the foal all-but bursting with the need to say something.
"I saw it! I saw it! A shooting star! Like you said, like you said!"
The older mare felt her face soften with the slightest of smiles as the foal returned her gaze to the sky, as though another could pass by any minute and she didn't want to miss it. It was, indeed, an excellent night for stargazing, the winter sky a clear glittering expanse between the bare black netting of branches. The group's pace slowed as she too let her gaze wander toward the heavens, white eyes filled with a glow of serenity even as her ward's glowed with a child-like curiosity.