Sunday, January 25, 2015

Amazonian story

The house guest of an Amazon woman

Winds shook the windows as the biting wind raced through the streets of Richland, the December winds had finally caught up with us and now it was a fight to even stay warm. The electricity had been going out around town and it was only a matter of time before it hit my neighborhood. Right when I thought that the lights shut off. Even the lamp light on the street had shut down, it was without a doubt the coldest night Richland had ever gone through. I looked around my house to check for any flashlights, cursing myself when I didn’t find any. My house creaked as another gust of biting wind hit it. The worn blue wall bending to its will before regaining its shape. I saw a flicker of movement outside my window, soon more flickers were seen. Shadows.
            I walked to my bedroom to get my knife that I always had and a blanket to wrap around my shoulders. Slowly I opened the door, right as another gust of wind hit. Pulling my blanket tighter around me, I looked outside, fingers gripping my knife harder. Richland doesn’t have a lot of crime but I never underestimate the places I go to. In Maryland I thought it was safe and had foolishly walked outside my door when there was a serial sniper on the loose. I have the worst luck, so of course, who found me unarmed? I learned my lesson the hard way then, I now have a large scar on my neck, where he managed to get close enough to slash me to remind me of it every day.
            My sight returned after the wind had lessened, eyes watering from the cold, I looked around for the shadows I saw. I didn’t have to look far, a small group of people were sitting on my porch shivering in a circle, with barely any clothes on them. They looked terrified. But I guess when you are freezing your butt off outside with a small group of people on someone’s front porch, you do not expect an Amazonian women to open the door holding a knife and a blanket. I am 6’ 8” an sometimes I forget how intimidating I can be. My red hair was whipped around as another gust of wind tried to batter my house to the ground. My blanket was doing no good and my house was going to get cold if the door stayed open. So I closed the door and stared down at the strangers. A man, a woman and 2 children sat staring at me like I was death’s messenger here to say: “hello, now die for the sin of sitting on my front porch”.
            Being paranoid has its advantages, one such being I am still alive. Another convenient thing is that when you are paranoid you beef up so you can handle whatever threat my come your way. I looked down at them and saw no threat, but still I wasn’t going to offer my house to them. Even the smallest of things can pack a big punch. As I found when I was in Arizona and had to fight the Catoblpas, nasty little pig, the wings didn’t help either. Silence was apparently too much for the freezing little family, and one little boy piped up. “Miss, its cold. Can we come inside?”
            I still hadn’t decided if they were a threat of not, I had just settled in, so the chance of the Olympians finding me so soon was nil. Four pairs of eyes looked into my tea- green ones. I stood for a while before finally deciding to let them it. Amazonian Island was never this cold in the winter. I prayed to Artimis that I was making the right choice. I led them inside my shabby home, shabby in the way it was old not that I kept it shabby. The oldest male thanked me and I had to fight a snarl. Even after a thousand years my habits never broke. I still hated men.
            Sighing I followed after the woman, she looked to be the worst off. Her fingers had a blue tint to them and she was still shivering even after I put the blanket over her. I walked down the hallway knowing that the brown carpet, probably yellow at some point, would mask my steps. In the kitchen it was a little harder to find what I was looking for, the cold tile did nothing for my feet, not like the warm hearth back home. Sighing I saved the reminiscing for later as I continued searching. Finally proving successful when I emerged from the cupboard with a pack of matches and a candle.
            I lit the wick and walked back to the living room where I found the small family huddled again under the blanket. As I came closer they edged away from the light, like they might be burned if it came nearer. This time, in the light I saw lines tracing up their bodies, like the wood of a tree, their hair was brown and had many twigs tangled in them and their green eyes were a little more intense than mine. Wood nymphs. The gods must love playing with me.
My sisters and I would have rejoiced to shelter nymphs some time ago. They were like ourselves independent, and strong. They were always welcome in our tribe, as long as they didn’t provide any mischief. Maybe that’s why the Gods knew to send them when we were punished. My sisters and I didn’t expect a thing. They stole our orb, the orb that drew from the land and made it so we did not age. We did not need men if we did not die. I must of let some of my aura majik’ loose, remembering my poor sisters did that. They were now stuck on a forbidden Island where they suffer aging but do not die for our punishment.
My punishment. The wood nymphs coward and edged farther away from the flames, as I was tempted to let it burn them right there. No more nymph meant no early warning for the Gods to find me again. I looked at the family and cursed at myself, they probably didnt even know what misery their ancestors caused me and my sisters.
I glared at them, using the old tongue I told them “I am sheeika, from the Amazonian tribe of knife. Why did I find you on my land?” I let some of my aura majik’ leak into my voice so they knew I meant business. They coward away from me more until the little boy spoke to me again. This time in old tongue “we are the Kapok, from the Cotton tree clan. We mean no harm, winter winds f-forced us to land at your lands” his tongue was not used to making these sounds, no one spoke the old language anymore, but it was in their roots, you could say. “why doest thou speak for ye elders?” I asked the boy looked uncomfortable and opened his mouth to reply when a hand reached up and grabbed his tattered excuse of a shirt.
“Leone?” the boys name I presume “can we stay?” I looked to the speaker, a human child. A boy not much older than 4 years. Both his and Leone’s eyes pierced me, silently begging to stay. “fine, you may stay. But there will be questions tomorrow” I promptly turned and left to my bedroom, setting up traps with my aura majik’. Being this careful is why I am alive. Soon my head hit the pillow and I fell into a light sleep.
When morning came, I walked out to find no one in my living room, I gripped that handle on my knife tighter and searched, I only found two of them, the little human boy and Leone with a note written in the old tongue that said.
“They are yours now, take care of them.”    

That is how I got stuck with two people who will never leave. 

Razsith the dragon

Razsith
He lifted his wings and pushed them down to the ground, brittle bones lifting easily, and tough, reptilian skin protecting him from the harsh elements. His horned head high as he flew. For a dragon, he was small, with skin that stood out and made it hard to hunt. He was a rare orange color with black undertones on his belly, underneath his wings and up his long neck.
Dragon hatchlings were smart and didn’t necessarily need their parents unless they were attacked by other dragons. If they didn’t hatch in time for the migration to the northern volcanos, they were abandoned to fend for themselves. Those that were abandoned either starved or attacked and fed on each other.
The fledgling was named Raz even before he was hatched. In their language it meant orange scales. He would only gain his second name and be recognized as an adult name after he made his first. Only the greatest and noblest of dragons had a third name.
Raz was the last to hatch from his egg. Sniffing the air, he found the stale scent of his parents who had already left for the migration. Thus leaving him with--he sniffed the air again--his four brothers and one sister who all had hatched earlier. Breaking from his shell exhausted him and left him physically drained. The light shone brightly in his eyes, blinding him. He tried to mewl for food or comfort, but no sound escaped his throat. It was luck that his brothers hadn’t seen him. They were too busy fighting each other to see who would be the one to eat and live on.
The tallest of the dragon chicks was blue fading quietly into a black that was darker then night. His almond shaped head had no horns, but he used it to bash at a slightly smaller brown chick, the only female in the small group. She was smart though, and she quickly evaded the blue one’s attack and jumped out the cave entrance. She only had a 50% chance that he wouldn’t pursue her. Her luck held out as she flew, because the blue one turned to a white chick and promptly killed it with one bash to its fragile head.
Raz could finally feel the strength coming back to him from getting out of the egg. He slowly stood on wobbly claws, but he dared not walk for fear that his brother would attack him next. He could hear the crunch that came from his brother’s first kill. The first thing a dragon eats is his diet for his entire life, and his brother was sure to be hungry for more baby dragon. Tomanth would now be his name. It meant “blue basher” since Tomanth used his head to bash his opponents.
Sparks leaped at Tomanth as another of his brother’s tried to get something to eat, this time he was dark gray and he blended with the cave. The gray one named Vez had a flat head rough around the edges and he would be an ideal hunter on the mountains. As the two brothers fought Raz, edged to the side.
Each dragon had its own special power like fire, brute strength, camouflage, or poison. Raz was bitten by a dark green dragon that had snuck up behind him, poison slowly flowing through his veins. It felt like acid pulsing through his body. Suddenly, it stopped, but before he could comprehend why, all his brothers were attacking him. Claws slashed and teeth met skin, as Raz fought for his life. When suddenly a spark went off in his head, or from his horns as he had shocked Tomanth with a bolt of lightning.
His brothers slowly circled him and Raz used his powers to keep them at bay. They were getting closer to him, and Raz was slowly being backed into a wall. He knew if he didn’t act fast then he would be their dinner. Raz took a huge gulp of air and readied himself to roar, the roar of a dragon meant two things: that he meant business and he was going to kill. Expelling the air from his lungs he tried to roar, all that came out was a puff of hot air. Raz was mute.
With the horrible realization that he couldn’t communicate, he readied himself to run. Dragons who can’t roar were weak and they were hunted down because they were just not right; it was taboo. See Raz’s attempt to escape, his brothers descended on him again. Desperate, he used his static bolt and shot at his brothers for any means of escape. He hit the green one, Sku, and ran through the opening. He heard his brothers’ cheer and then the crunch of bones as Raz realized that he had just made his first kill. He was now Razsith, Orange Shock.
Unfortunately Razsith wasn’t watching out and he hit the broad side of a bolder forcing his wings to be set in an uncomfortable angle. He fell to the ground and landed in a thorny bush. His scales kept the thorns from penetrating, but they didn’t soften the impact he had with the ground. Air wheezed out of his lungs as he landed, and Razsith was paralyzed with pain.
He slowly closed his eyes accepting his fate of death. A downed dragon, always died. He finally got air back in his lungs, when a shadow passed over- head. A large dragon was landing in the cave he had just fled from. Shrill roars pierced the air as the two remaining chick tried to fend off the larger dragon. Tomanth jumped from the cave leaving the gray one to fend for itself as it flew off in the distance. The shrieks continued before they were suddenly cut-off. The large dragon was a grain-ish yellow color, Baz dragged the carcass of the gray chick out and flew with his prize.
 Until he spotted the Razsith in the bushes, his orange color making it hard to hide. The yellow dragon swooped into a dive and landed in front of the bush line. Come out, I am not yet fully fed!” Baz growled out. His voice grating like a rock against Razsith’s ear drums. “I challenge you, chick! Come out! 
Razsith stood looking for any way out, the older dragon would defiantly kill him in a fight. Sparks leaped from his body as he nervously moved deeper into the thorny brush. Dark leaves covered him, and he moved deeper and deeper. Baz was growling loudly, his prey choosing to flee instead of fight.

Dragons were noble powerful creatures they never ran, this chick was a disgrace to all dragons. He would pay, the orange chick, Raz would pay dearly. Baz grabbed his kill and flew to the northern volcanoes. He had to tell the leaders. Razsith would soon be hunted by every dragon in the horde.