I was once told by an old lioness that rain was like life. Water flowed through the lands and made them come alive, vibrant and healthy. That crippled old coot was probably senile.

The mud squished underneath my paws, squeezing through my toes and staining them a clay red. The shelter above my head leaked and dripped even more of the disgusting mud onto my fur, as well as my sister's and half-brother's. My mother never slept with us—I often wondered where she went at night, but was never clever enough to follow her. She could disappear like a wisp when she wanted to. The other pride lionesses (if you could call this a pride) huddled together under the spots of roof that didn't leak. Rain should be a blessing, but when it pours down for days and drowns the life that was there, it seems more like a curse. The water carved into our measly home and washed away most of the termites, and as the water ran, it stagnated into horrible dirt pools that smelled.

Vitani grunted as I mashed my small body against her bony one. We were both technically twins, but we didn't look anything like it. Nuka looked more like me, with his fur color and stuff, but I'd always been kinda curious about why Vitani got the colors she had. No lion I knew had blue eyes or had such dark whisker follicles like she did, and no lioness had that long hair tuft like she had. She's always been kinda weird like that, though, and not just in looks. Nuka hated that I looked anything like him and enjoyed denying that we had the same mother. Which was all the same to me—Nuka annoyed everyone. I often tried to get along with him, inviting him to play and everything, but it seemed like he was too jealous. Mother played favorites with me and it made me feel real guilty, and Nuka would always rub it in. I stopped asking him to play after a while.

A lone figure slunk between the huddled mass of fur and limbs, picking its way towards us. It was our mother, ears drooping with the rain and looked skinnier than a drowned ground squirrel. She had sort of a blank look on her face, eyes half closed and her muzzle relaxed into a soft frown. She almost looked… sad. But then she caught my eye and Mother immediately went back into the constant scowl she wore.

"Why are you still awake? You know we must train at sunrise, no matter the weather," she snapped, eyes sharp. I immediately cowered into a submissive posture, eyes lowered and ears tucked flat against my head. A few seconds went by and nothing happened, so I dared a peek upwards to see that she'd moved to lie behind my snoozing sister and brother, her face falling into the sad look I'd seen her doing a minute ago. I pretended not to notice and curled up against my sister again. I allowed myself a secret smile—this was the first time I'd ever seen my mom lie down with us at night. Maybe she always did it after we'd been asleep for a while and left before we woke up? It didn't really make any sense… she always acted like we were in the way.

'Maybe she cares about us,' I thought hopefully, and with that happy thought I fell asleep.