In the fortnight since Alfred Earl of Warwick captured and commuted her vapourous self to the corporeal, Mara's consuming hunger gnawed on her as brutally as a feral dog on carrion. Yet only thrice a day did the Earl deign to feed her ravening hunger.
She soughed, then inhaled slowly, deeply, sensuously. Hidden from even the dying light of the day, her sharpest sense by far was smell, and every intake of breath brought bodily gratification. The admixt pungency of man, horse, and hay. Tanned leather, damp wool, and even the bite of cold silver wended their way into her sensitive nose. And the smell of the young and virile men around her overlay it all.
Jealous thoughts surged from deep within her; the scent of pristine flesh from the Earl's retinue pressed constantly upon her newly-awakened senses. All well-fed, hale and hearty, they fair exuded the smell of a feast. Prey close at hand, yet she was unable to pursue her quarry.
Why would he not let her feed of them? He refused to explain; yet the Earl was not one to let anyone under his command thwart his will, and he commanded that none but him should have aught of her.
A sign, surely, that her existence was forever changed were the horses and their acceptance of her as merely one of the party. In her wraith-like existence, such tolerance was utterly impossible; horses sensing her lurking in the passing mists would snort with fear and stamp their hooves hard against the ground, eager to be away from her whispering presence.
Concealment, obscurity; these were her watchwords. Prey upon the unwary; warn no living creature of her coming or going.
Wrapped around the Earl's firm body, her arms ended in fingers of sinew and muscle and bone. She made furtive movements with those fingers as her hunger reached up within her to claw at her throat; tiny signals from her hands that belied the urgency within her body.
"Patience, little one," said the Earl softly. His voice was a tenor rumble, an even hum against the trenchant crackle of autumn leaves under hoof.
The party plodded on, the thick layer of autumn leaves announcing their passage with its gnashing cries. Tree branches, dry and rigid in the dying days of autumn, scratched against each other and from time to time snatched at the concealing cloak. Lonely cries from evening birds rang out along the darkening path. Horses snorted and nickered in their own constant manner, the rhythm of their stride restful.