tabithateivel:
As world weary as Sallie seemed, she sure did trample into the thick of the woods without so much as a glance backwards. It was perfectly foolish really, but Tabitha supposed if the roles were reversed, she would have done the same.
“Easy does it Milton. One wrong step can put you on a different path entirely.” She called out, eventually catching up and gazing at the brunette intensely. This was the deepest Tabitha had been in Northwood since returning, and even the branches as dry and bare as they were seemed to be reaching out for her. Tabitha wrapped her arms around herself, watching her breath appear and dissipate quickly in front of her.
Finding the scarf felt too lucky. Any footprints, including their own as they wandered inward had already been swept away from the snow. Tabitha didn’t like being out here, not with suspicious Sallie Milton. Not when it was so eerily quiet their footsteps seemed to screamed alongside the strange otherworldly whispers and laughter only for her to hear, flittering through the dead crooked branches.
Then suddenly, there it was. The look, the accusation. Not said outright, but with enough roughness that Tabitha understood. “I didn’t do it.” She responded through clenched teeth before quickly striding forward in the direction the pink scarf had been laying. It led to a small, circular grove warmer and vibrant than any other spot of the wood thus far. Red toadstools making up two separate rings, patches of clovers, and a few snowdrop flowers could be seen peeking out from a light dusting of snow.
“She’s here.” Tabitha pursed her lips, arms still crossed as she pondered and looked deeper into the environment laid out before them. “Just out of reach.” She suddenly shot her arm up to stop Sallie if she decided to rush forward, “Don’t do anything dumb.”
.
Reason was for rationale beings who felt things less deeply. As it was, the burn of poorly suppressed anger had Sallie shaking harder than the cold could.
“Course she’s here. You’d know wouldn’t you?”
She was whispering despite herself. Maybe it was the fear lodged in her throat. Maybe it the tension in the air, compounded by the unmistakeable sense that something or someone was close by.
“The only dumb thing would be letting you stop me.”
A crack a few steps ahead. A soft noise, almost a groan. The susurration of fabric.
“Rosie!”
Another crack. Sallie trampled through a patch of clover to a dense cluster of trees, fists already balled, a rhyme for protection on her tongue.
“Juniper and ivy, have you lost your mind?”
Just on the other side of the tree, Rosie, with her arms folded in a neat ‘x’ around the thick neck of a boy roughly her age who was tall as an oak and had a face red as the blood Sallie had been expecting to see, turned, irked.
“Oh, don’t start making noise like it’s ritual sacrifice. It’s just kissin’.”









