It had been raining for days, off and on. Most of the interior of the castle was well-sheltered from it entirely or most of the downpour, but he'd checked the underground level and found it unfit for anyone to go there. He'd been sure to announce to the Concordians to be cautious of flooding and slick marble flooring, but found himself preferring to be outside of the castle. His usual room was one of the drippy ones, and there was a tapestry scrap bundled in a corner that was giving it a musty smell. Francis was loathe to leave the place, though. There was a growing collection of all the flowers Kairos had brought him, shielded from the worst of the moisture between a shelf and the top of a lopsided dresser. Most of the older ones were dry, shriveled but holding a faint shred of their original color. The newer ones were still holding on the best they could, in all shapes and sizes - ranging from daisies to lobelias to roses and more.
He was partial to anything but a rose. He'd had some help to put that one behind his ear and ended up mildly stabbed by one of the thorns the entire day.
Francis was attempting to hunt, but the petrichor and scent of wet loam permeated the moors heavily since the rains. He was lucky it wasn't raining now, but the skies were certainly threatening another cold late summer storm.
It was clear enough without the rain to try to hunt with his eyes, but that meant coming up on something close enough to either see or hear. No luck yet, and mud was clumping the fur of his ankles in smeared, damp strands.
The Prince sighed, swishing his tail instead of muttering a curse. They needed to gather food and keep weight on everyone before fall and winter hit. There were plenty of bears living out on the moors, not often seen but scented, and they would be a nuisance to trying to properly catch and eat prey during the fall. Francis continued on his way, lost in thought and plans for the worst-case scenarios his paranoid mind kept providing him.
He did not notice the particularly wet, squishy terrain he began to walk on, or the bend of the sparse trees set in the sloping hillside he was meandering across. Francis had more pressing matters to think about than notice the evidence up ahead of where a flash flood had already weakened the foundation of the earth he stood on...until they earth began to give way.
To his credit, he tried to move, leaping up the side of the hill in an effort to avoid being caught up in the way the earth, once solid, had almost become a violently moving liquid. In the end, the current caught one of the Prince's mud-slicked paws and yanked his legs out from under him like a particularly cruel rug.
He was tumbling, head over heels, down the hillside with the rest of the stones, mud, moss, bushes, sticks and trees that had once been set in the hillside - no longer a hillside, but a gaping maw of raw and open earth.
He popped his head up once the earth stopped thrashing beneath him, pleased to find himself not crushed beneath an impromptu grave.
For a second, as Francis determined he was not pinned so badly he could not get up, he was already making plans for future landslide-risk assessment and warnings to give to the Concordians so no one else would stumble into the same situation he had.
Then the pain hit, an electric hot-cold throbbing that started in his front left wrist and radiated outward from there, ending somewhere vague in his elbow but threatening to go further.
Likely, Francis thought, if he moved. But he was currently encased in wet mud and a rock was jammed uncomfortably in his side. He would have to move eventually, and the adrenaline hadn't worn off yet. He was up on his feet in a second, a low groan huffing past the Prince's clenched teeth. Three limbs were in good working order, besides a few achy bruises-to-be. And his front limb was searingly painful.
Definitely broken, but not so bad it was misaligned, at least.
He glanced around, failing to spot anyone for the time being.
Good. No one here to hear him.
MERDEFrancis spat, ears pinning to his skull. He was less in pain than he was angry with himself. This kind of setback could seriously affect the Concord.
He tentatively set weight onto his paw, and suddenly, the Delacroix missed his mother quite a lot.
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