the bowl is set down with little ceremony, placed at the foot of a great tree. in it are whatever fruits he managed to gather, along with a single stick of incense that he sticks into the earth & lights. it wasn't much, but for the creature of the forest, he will offer her a prayer for her blessings.
This is not the first time he has come.
At first Ahri was skeptical, as she always is: his intrusion so near to her home was unwelcome, and was more than enough cause for concern. She would let the offerings the man laid out for her go completely untouched, left to be carted off by wildlife or taken by rot. She would watch him come and go when she could, concealed in the branches of a towering oak, and sometimes she would arrive and find the gifts already there, his brief visit long since passed.
( Once, after he had already left, Ahri curiously plucked up the fragrant stick he had left behind in the earth, still curling sweet - smelling smoke into the air. She liked it so much she kept it — just once — and the next time he returned he left behind an extra, tucked in among the fruits. That cowed her into not approaching again for a long while. )
Ahri feels a strange frustration prickle her skin. He gained nothing — she had hoped remaining impassive would dissuade him from returning, but he did time and time again, seemingly unswayed. She watches this time from a high bough of the very same tree he kneels at — closer than she has ever dared approach — her tails picking up an irritated, jittery sway. Words swell in her chest and stifle at the barrier of her tongue.
‘ Why do you come here ? ’
The fox blurts out her demand almost without thinking. She sees him freeze, notices every muscle go cold and still halfway through the motion of lighting the incense. His gaze tips back, and for a long moment their eyes meet, hers a burning gold gleam in the shadow of the great oak. Ahri drops to the forest floor nigh soundlessly, tails fanning out to retain her balance. She reaches down to the bowl with her eyes still not leaving his, poised tense like an animal readying flight or fight, and gently plucks free a white pear — the motion of rising it to her nose to smell is one slick with suspicion. She wonders if he means to make her ill with poison… but the fruit is so clean and fragrant it makes her mouth water.
She does not indulge in a bite, but she does not throw away the fruit either. She lowers her hand, cradling it close to her chest.
‘ … You should not come here, ’ Ahri says, her accusatory edge softening. ‘ Hasn’t anyone told you ? These woods aren’t safe. ’

















