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Oh my heart, I cried when I finished this issue.
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@speta-elinor
Avatar: Tsu'tey's Path comic page.
Oh my heart, I cried when I finished this issue.
We were flooded by rainwater today, and my mother and I became ill due to the downpour caused by the low-pressure system. I suffer from depression and take psychiatric medication. My eye doctor told me that my right eye needs surgery. I speak here every day about my situation, but no one listens. Why? Because I am Palestinian. I urge everyone who can donate to please do so, as my mother suffers from chronic illnesses. I am fulfilling my humanitarian duty towards my elderly parents, and I have not received any donations.
Don't ignore this post if you can't donate. Share it; don't let it stop with you. I desperately need help. I'm suffering and no one is paying attention. Please help me.
verification#336. PayPal. GFM
Please donate if you can and share. Ibrahim and his family are relying on donations to survive, and he and his mother both need money for medication. He urgently needs eye surgery, or he could lose vision in his right eye.
Donate and reblog!
Arya finding her mother's dead body drawn by @putridbenny
Swords Of Storms - Chapter Arya
That night she went to sleep thinking of her mother, and wondering if she should kill the Hound in his sleep and rescue Lady Catelyn her-self. When she closed her eyes she saw her mother's face against the back of her eyelids. She's so close I could almost smell her...... and then she could smell her. The scent was faint beneath the other smells, beneath moss and mud and water, and the stench of rotting reeds and rotting men. She padded slowly through the soft ground to the river's edge, lapped up a drink, then lifted her head to sniff. The sky was grey and thick with cloud, the river green and full of floating things. Dead men clogged the shallows, some still moving as the water pushed them, others washed up on the banks. Her brothers and sisters swarmed around them, tearing at the rich ripe flesh.
The crows were there too, screaming at the wolves and filling the air with feathers. Their blood was hotter, and one of her sisters had snapped at one as it took flight and caught it by the wing. It made her want a crow herself. She wanted to taste the blood, to hear the bones crunch between her teeth, to fill her belly with warm flesh instead of cold. She was hungry and the meat was all around, but she knew she could not eat.
The scent was stronger now. She pricked her ears up and listened to the grumbles of her pack, the shriek of angry crows, the whirr of wings and sound of running water. Somewhere far off she could hear horses and the calls of living men, but they were not what mattered. Only the scent mat-tered. She sniffed the air again. There it was, and now she saw it too, something pale and white drifting down the river, turning where it brushed against a snag. The reeds bowed down before it.
She splashed noisily through the shallows and threw herself into the deeper water, her legs churning. The current was strong but she was stronger. She swam, following her nose. The river smells were rich and wet, but those were not the smells that pulled her. She paddled after the sharp red whisper of cold blood, the sweet cloying stench of death. She chased them as she had often chased a red deer through the trees, and in the end she ran them down, and her jaw closed
around a pale white arm. She shook it to make it move, but there was only death and blood in her mouth. By now, she was tiring, and it was all she could do to pull the body back to shore. As she dragged it up the muddy bank, one of her little brothers came prowling, his tongue lolling from his mouth. She had to snarl to drive him off, or else he would have fed. Only then did she stop to shake the water from her fur. The white thing lay facedown in the mud, her dead flesh wrinkled and pale, cold blood trickling from her throat. Rise, she thought. Rise and eat and run with us.