03-13-2025, 03:17 AM
![[Image: df7imu5-0c00c6fc-2d61-40f2-84d9-2d9bd442...47_B4gDs7s]](https://images-wixmp-ed30a86b8c4ca887773594c2.wixmp.com/f/657bb1f5-6e28-46c2-833c-44708d04e200/df7imu5-0c00c6fc-2d61-40f2-84d9-2d9bd4421064.gif?token=eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJ1cm46YXBwOjdlMGQxODg5ODIyNjQzNzNhNWYwZDQxNWVhMGQyNmUwIiwiaXNzIjoidXJuOmFwcDo3ZTBkMTg4OTgyMjY0MzczYTVmMGQ0MTVlYTBkMjZlMCIsIm9iaiI6W1t7InBhdGgiOiJcL2ZcLzY1N2JiMWY1LTZlMjgtNDZjMi04MzNjLTQ0NzA4ZDA0ZTIwMFwvZGY3aW11NS0wYzAwYzZmYy0yZDYxLTQwZjItODRkOS0yZDliZDQ0MjEwNjQuZ2lmIn1dXSwiYXVkIjpbInVybjpzZXJ2aWNlOmZpbGUuZG93bmxvYWQiXX0.f2ysygsEmoeSC5IDcgmip-5SOZnGkyU7z47_B4gDs7s)
And all of a sudden, the world was too quiet.
Not the peaceful sort of quiet—the kind before a storm. This was the kind that felt wrong, like something had been stolen from the air itself.
There was no honking of busy traffic, no squeal of brakes, no steady hum of engines. The rhythmic shuffle of people on the sidewalks was gone. No cheerful jingle of shop bells, no distant wail of a siren cutting through the noise. Not that she had ever truly loved the city, no matter how much she had tried to convince herself otherwise.
She missed the wind whispering through tall wheatgrass, the low, steady grumble of a tractor passing by, the gentle coos of chickens and the muffled crunch of cattle grazing.
And God, did she miss the smell.
The sharp, sweet scent of sweat on a working horse, rich and familiar. The fresh-tilled earth, dark and damp, waiting for the year’s harvest. The clean air that carried for miles over rolling hills of knee-high grass. The soft breath of honeysuckle drifted from the tangled overgrown bushes, its sweetness clinging to the air—the same way it once clung to her tongue when she plucked the blooms as a child, savoring the drop of nectar inside. The ripeness of blackberries, heavy on their brambles along the winding red dirt road, left their mark on her fingers and the hems of her dresses, smudges of summer that never seemed to fully wash away.
She couldn’t smell the city anymore—the stench of concrete and exhaust, the desperate attempt to drown it all in the latest perfume.
Now, the air was clean. Pure. It smelled like home.
She realized she was lying on her back, staring up at the sky. It stretched vast and open, a brilliant blue, framed by drifting clouds. But something was off. Just a moment ago, the sky had been darker, muddied by the city’s haze.
She moved to brush her hair back, feeling the strands shift against her face, cascading past her shoulders—but it was softer now. Denser.
She pushed herself upright, and the world tilted. Her balance was off. Her limbs moved in ways they shouldn’t—too many joints bending too easily. A sharp breath caught in her throat, but it came out wrong. Deeper. Rougher. Wilder.
She turned, expecting the familiar weight of her body, but what she saw wasn’t hers.
Lean, lanky limbs. A thin coat of sandy and mocha fur. Wisps of cheek fur that almost mirrored the blonde hair she once had. A tail shifting in the wind behind her as if it had always been there.
She lurched back, heart hammering—too fast, too wild, too unlike anything human.
And that’s when it hit her.
She wasn’t.
Not the peaceful sort of quiet—the kind before a storm. This was the kind that felt wrong, like something had been stolen from the air itself.
There was no honking of busy traffic, no squeal of brakes, no steady hum of engines. The rhythmic shuffle of people on the sidewalks was gone. No cheerful jingle of shop bells, no distant wail of a siren cutting through the noise. Not that she had ever truly loved the city, no matter how much she had tried to convince herself otherwise.
She missed the wind whispering through tall wheatgrass, the low, steady grumble of a tractor passing by, the gentle coos of chickens and the muffled crunch of cattle grazing.
And God, did she miss the smell.
The sharp, sweet scent of sweat on a working horse, rich and familiar. The fresh-tilled earth, dark and damp, waiting for the year’s harvest. The clean air that carried for miles over rolling hills of knee-high grass. The soft breath of honeysuckle drifted from the tangled overgrown bushes, its sweetness clinging to the air—the same way it once clung to her tongue when she plucked the blooms as a child, savoring the drop of nectar inside. The ripeness of blackberries, heavy on their brambles along the winding red dirt road, left their mark on her fingers and the hems of her dresses, smudges of summer that never seemed to fully wash away.
She couldn’t smell the city anymore—the stench of concrete and exhaust, the desperate attempt to drown it all in the latest perfume.
Now, the air was clean. Pure. It smelled like home.
She realized she was lying on her back, staring up at the sky. It stretched vast and open, a brilliant blue, framed by drifting clouds. But something was off. Just a moment ago, the sky had been darker, muddied by the city’s haze.
She moved to brush her hair back, feeling the strands shift against her face, cascading past her shoulders—but it was softer now. Denser.
She pushed herself upright, and the world tilted. Her balance was off. Her limbs moved in ways they shouldn’t—too many joints bending too easily. A sharp breath caught in her throat, but it came out wrong. Deeper. Rougher. Wilder.
She turned, expecting the familiar weight of her body, but what she saw wasn’t hers.
Lean, lanky limbs. A thin coat of sandy and mocha fur. Wisps of cheek fur that almost mirrored the blonde hair she once had. A tail shifting in the wind behind her as if it had always been there.
She lurched back, heart hammering—too fast, too wild, too unlike anything human.
And that’s when it hit her.
She wasn’t.
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