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Posted: Wed Feb 21, 2024 1:38 pm
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Posted: Wed Feb 21, 2024 1:50 pm
Rose petals of white and scarlet mingled with the autumn leaves littered across the well traveled forest path. It was a path that the siblings had taken many times before. This time was their fourth rehearsal in a single day. The trio were growing agitated, well the boys were. Lady Primrose was just weary. She closed her eyes and sighed. They had used up all of the petals she had collected which meant that after this last practice run she’d have to go into the woods and gather more. She wasn’t going to be able to rest anytime soon, but that was to be expected with the parade scheduled for dawn the next day - a time that her stubborn brother and cousin had chosen. There was no arguing with them once they had their mind set. She’d learned this well as a foal. But it wasn’t all so bad, she told herself, once the parade concluded they’d have the rest of the day to relax and celebrate. A few more drills and Scarlet, her brother, finally agreed on releasing them for the day. There was still a bit of sunlight so Prim took that as a win. “Great!” She cheered, “I’ll be sure to collect even more petals for tomorrow!” Despite the training fatigue, she kicked up her hooves and trotted off. Her brother’s voice carried behind her, “No wilted ones!” She shook her head but kept up the pace. She definitely needed her space. She sighed and drank in the peace and quiet in the center of the forest. Her favorite spot, which was no secret, was lined with wild and cultivated roses - it was the same place her aunt (Grey’s mother) had taken her when she was a foal. The mare had shown her how to tend to the garden and named every single plant that was in the circumference, even the ones without blooms. Primrose scoured the garden looking for full blooms that were about to fall or had already fallen. She gathered them into a pile for safekeeping until morning. Once she was done, she headed back to the village. Primrose felt serene and light as she followed the path back home. Her gentle smile quickly faded at the sound of raised voices and she hesitated before stepping out into the village clearing. Just at the edge of the village, she could see Scarlet and Grey. “I can’t believe you!” Her cousin shouted at the darker stallion. “I would have told you…eventually.” That last comment seemed to spark something within her cousin. Grey snorted and whirled in a huff. “Grey…” She barely got his name out before he pushed past her and disappeared into the forest. --- “Ugh!” Grey groaned and huffed, and vented, now that he was away from the village and deeper into the woods. “How could he! How could they!” He stomped his dark cloven hooves into the soft earth. He watched as they left an impression. The anger was still there…he stomped again. “Two faced liar!” He flattened his hoof into what was becoming a patch of mud. “No good cousin!” A flurry of insults followed as he kept stamping the mud, ignoring the mud caking on his foot. Deep in his fury and frustration he almost missed the soft voice calling to him, “Grey? Grey…” He looked up and furrowed his brow at his fair cousin. “What?” He growled at her. Primrose flinched. It was so unlike him, that it even took him back. His voice softened but still remained irritated, “What do you want?” She moved closer but kept her distance after glancing at the pockmarked earth and the mud all over his limbs. “What happened?” “Seriously?” He huffed, “Wow that’s rich coming from you! You know what you two did.” “I don’t -” He didn’t let her finish. “Ugh give it up! You and Scarlet are working together! That’s why he entered you both into the competition!” He turned away from her, giving her his backside as if that would end the conversation. “Competition? What competition?” He glanced at her before turning his back to stare at the bush in front of him. He focused his navy eyes at a single bud. “The dance at dusk!” It was a yearly tradition. With each passing year becoming even greater than the last. Those that competed were admired, and those that won were given the greatest honor - to coordinate the coming year’s events. If they won, they could incorporate so much more into their parades - to make them into a real show. It had been his dream since he was a colt, and his cousin Scarlet’s. “I didn’t enter that.” “Well your brother entered you and him AND not me!” Primrose sighed. “Oh I see…” Grey harrumphed in reply. She sat her on her haunches indicating she wasn’t leaving anytime soon. “You know how Scarlet can be…” “He told me it was for the good of our group! And that…I can’t dance…” She paused before replying, trying to be tactful. “You could use some practice. We all could!” His shoulders drooped in response. “Oh…so he was right?” She stood up and walked over to nudge him. “Well he certainly didn’t go about it in the right way. That’s my brother for you! I wouldn’t mind practicing with you. Then maybe we’ll be ready in time for the competition. That’ll show Scarlet!” “Yeah…maybe…” Grey took a deep breath then turned to her. “Okay but it’ll just be the two of us…for now.” He added. Word Count: 926
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Posted: Sun Mar 31, 2024 10:57 pm
March 2024 The night dragged on as the budding witch poured over his books. Volumes of novels and scraps of scrolls lay scattered at his hooves. He grimaced and groaned as his eyes roamed over the endless pages. His frustration was growing. For some strange reason he was the only one in his family that hadn’t managed to conjure a familiar yet - it was the bane of his existence. How difficult could it really be? His brother had managed to summon his after only six moons. His father, four. And his mother held the fastest at only two moons of study. Brier had been practicing for nearly a full year and still…nothing. He shook his tail, its grip tightened on his wand. Nothing, yet again. The annual scholarly tests were fast approaching and he had absolutely nothing to show for it. He flipped through one last book. There were some words scrawled in the margins, the ink had started to fade. He peered closer with his crystalline blue eyes. He struggled with the interpretation and muttered to himself, “Phir…Phur Mol- Moldorgh Mern..ax.” The draconic words made no sense to him, he had never seen them in any of his literature. A bit of the script trailed off the page. He skipped to the back of it. Whoever had penned the words had circled one singular word multiple times for emphasis. “Danu…noo.” Brier pointed his wand at a basket across his quarters and repeated the last word with emphasis. “Danoo!” His wand sputtered and shook, then the bright blue spark ricocheted off of the basket to the wall and out the open window. “Well that was eventful, so much for my tool, my wand is but a stick…and none of this is quick,” he broke out into a poor attempt at a doggerel. Brier sighed. It was a preconceived fantasy of his to think he’d be able to summon a familiar so quickly. Maybe if he had spent more time studying than d ay-dreaming. The young stallion decided to call it a night. Though to call it night wasn’t quite right, what with traces of dawn on the horizon. He pushed aside the parchment and books, just enough so he could lay down. He paused, his gaze lingering on his wand as he held it up to the candlelight. He finally set it down then curled up and dozed off near instantly. His dreams were filled with hellish things and stress with every twist and turn. Inky black demons materialized and began to chase. Brier ran as fast as he could, his body tossing and turning in the waking plane, but he could not outrun them. He turned and pointed his wand, one demon ruptured into a black stain. Another, and another…but it was useless, when one was vanquished three more replaced it. He woke up with a start, and kicked over some candles that he had stupidly left lit! It didn’t take long before the flames found the paper. The blaze was growing! Brier grabbed his wand and struggled to push through his sleepy haze, “Aa…Aquinas!” Only a small burst of water erupted from his wand. Not enough to douse the roaring blaze that had found the last of his scrolls. Smoke was filling his quarters quickly, so thick that he couldn’t recall where the exit was. “Danoo!” He could never be certain why that one little odd word left his mouth, later he would chalk it up to stress. His wand shuddered in his tail’s grasp while emanating a bright blue glow that grew. The light seemed to push away the smoke and the flames flickered at its boundary. He watched in awe as the light erased the fire, only the charred remnants left behind reminded him that this was not a dream. What just happened? What was that light? What had he done? Had -he- done it? His whirlwind of thoughts were interrupted with the smallest of meows. He hadn’t realized he had an audience. He blinked and looked down at his hooves, at a feline! She purred and rubbed her translucent form against his fetlocks. Her bright blue fur reminded him of his own family’s familiars - they all were of this nature though the hue could vary. This couldn’t be right, he thought to himself. His family familiars were avian in nature, typically crow but a few like his grandfather were from the halcyon family, kingfishers. “No…no…no no no.” He kept repeating the cutting words as he took a step away from the kneazle. “You can not be my familiar! You can’t! I am Brier Crow! A cat?! I can’t…no I can not have a cat as a familiar!” Like a true familiar, the kneazle was besotted with him - her purr never wavered even after his scalding words. She took a step to get closer to him. This time he didn’t move. She stared up at him with her bright blue eyes. He sighed, “How do I explain this to my family?” Ironically, summoning his first familiar seemed to contribute more stress than not being able to summon one. Words: 852
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Posted: Wed Apr 24, 2024 2:39 pm
“Let’s go home…” Cojini’s voice was soft but her words weren’t a mere suggestion. Aishe huffed, if Cojini truly wanted to go home then there would be no argument. She had full control over their limbs. When Aishe focused she could manipulate her side of the body but it was draining, which is why if her sister wanted to go home then they would. They had been walking all morning through forest clearings and meadows. They were further than they had ever ventured. The landscape had slowly changed from lush green fauna to rocks…lots of rocks and a few scattered plants. It didn’t look like much to her sister, but to Aishe it was perfect. They were finally somewhere new and away from their herd. Her blue eyes took it all in eagerly. She memorized what few details she could make out before her homebody of a sister turned tail and headed back. A jagged rock a few yards ahead sprouted a spiky plant as if it were a mane. Then beyond that she could make out larger rock formations, tall pillars and arches. A small ravine lay to the west, its riverbed wide and dark. She stretched her head toward the distant pillars as a scarlet lock dropped in front of her eyes. She shook her mane before turning an eye on her long haired sister, “Can’t we at least see those rocks before we go home?” “Come on. We can’t have gone this far and not seen anything new! Please big sis!” Aishe pleaded. Cojini sighed. She heavily preferred staying close to home…but she would do just about anything for her sister. She didn’t want to give in too quickly, or that little secret would be out. Cojini scrunched up her face as though she were trying to decide. Out of the corner of her eyes, the same crystalline blue as her twin’s, she could see Aishe silently pleading. “Oh alright!” She groaned. “But only to the pillars, we take a quick look around and then we are headed home. Okay?” “Yes!” Aishe jumped for joy, pulling Cojini’s side up as well. Cojini chuckled. “The things I put up with…” “Because you’re an awesome big sister, that’s why!” Cojini smiled as her sister yammered on about everything they came across; rocks, plants, lizards, beetles. Instead she focused on their footing on the loose dirt. This region was far more dry than any of the forests they had been in. Their claws scratched the caked earth with each passing step, dredging up dust as they strolled. First item of business when they reached home - a bath. “Oh! What’s that?!” Aishe exclaimed. Cojini looked up to see what her sister was on about. Only a few yards ahead stood a strange silhouette amongst a rocky arch. Judging by the size it was another Soquili but it wasn’t shaped like one they had encountered before. “Huh that is strange…” Before Cojini could stop her sister, Aishe called out, “Hello there!” The silhouette didn’t move. “Maybe they didn’t hear us?” Aishe muttered. Cojini stopped walking. Aishe tugged on their limbs. “Come on, they’ll hear us better if we’re closer.” She didn’t fight her adventurous sister, but she did keep their gait slow and cautious. “Alright but let’s be careful.” — “Hello there!” Linden stayed frozen even after the second greeting. He glanced down at his rabbit plush. He kept his voice low and barely moved his muzzle, “Shh, Lyle. We don’t know who that is.” He groaned and forgot to stay still, “Yes, I know we would know them if we met them. But right now they are strangers and we do not talk to strangers.” The young stallion turned back to see where said stranger was and jumped when he realized how close they were. “Hi!” He gulped and snatched up Lyle from the ground. “Oh! I’m sorry, we didn’t mean to startle you.” His umber eyes frantically searched for a way out of this situation. “Wait please!” The red haired head said. “We’re new to this area. I’m Aishe and this is my sister, Cojini.” The sudden urge to flee eased. They weren’t strangers anymore. He put his plush down and cleared his throat. “Erm, I’m Linden and this is Lyle.” The two sisters exchanged glances. Then the blonde head spoke up, Cojini if he remembered correctly. “Are you from this area?” He waited a breath before answering. This was the most conversation he had had in a very long time, not since he was a young foal. “No.” The sisters waited for him to add more but he didn’t. “So where are you from?” “I…I don’t know.” The two exchanged glances again. He gulped. Was that not the right answer? He truly could not remember where he and his family were from. The last place he remembered being with his family was a meadow full of sweet smelling flowers but then he had wandered off through the trees and couldn’t find the meadow. He did his best to retell this to the sisters. “Oh…” Cojini looked at him so sadly. “And you still haven’t found them? You must miss them so much,” Aishe tilted her head towards him. “I don’t remember them. It’s just been me and Lyle.” He nudged his bunny plush. “You don’t remember anything?” “No. I know I had a mom, a dad and a sibling but I don’t recall their names, their voices or even what they looked like.” The two headed sisters exchanged another look. Cojini sighed, “We come from forests and meadows. Our herd has traveled far and wide, maybe someone would know of them.” “I could find my family?” He blinked in disbelief. “Yeah, will you come back with us?” He nodded and picked up Lyle, tossing him onto his back. — The three of them headed back home. Cojini kept a close eye on the stranger, while Aishe chattered away. They never did make it to see the arches but her sister didn’t seem to care. She really had seemed to take a liking to the strange stallion and his odd ways - then again she didn’t have much room to judge considering how odd the two of them were. Just as one adventure came to a close it appeared they were onto their next - to find Linden’s family. Words: 1055
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Posted: Wed May 29, 2024 1:53 pm
It was a perfect warm spring day for the artisanal fair. Demure and Shelah giggled and smiled as they strided down the path to the main event. The duo were in search of some mushrooms for their garden. It was the main reason for them attending but certainly not the only. Shelah flitted back and forth in front of Demure, “Ooh I’m so excited!” We’re going to have to stop at every stall!” Demure Lane smiled at her blue companion. “Of course. Just don’t forget that we need to get the fungi first. I’d hate for them all to be gone by the time we arrive.” Though the sun was still in the East, the meadow was bustling with ponies and familiars. “Wow, it’s busy!” The bird did like stating the obvious. The soquili nodded. Her sapphire eyes darted back and forth, trying to scan all of the booths. There were three main rows of colorful displays and a few scattered wooden carts off to either side of the fair. It wasn’t small at all. “Well where do we start?” “Over here!” Shelah zoomed off towards the first row closest to them. She stopped at the first very cluttered stall. The small section was filled to the brim with everything and anything. It took a bit to take it all in. “No mushrooms.” Her small voice sounded disappointed. Demure glanced at the shopkeep and offered a gentle smile. “No but look at these.” She gestured with her feathered wing. “Oh! Rocks!” The songbird squealed in delight. “Look at this one, and this one…oh this one is blue!” The shopkeep smiles and turns back to unloading even more trinkets to add to the already full table. “We should take a look around at least once before we start to barter.” The bird started to protest but nodded instead. “Don’t worry we’ll be back.” The next stalls were just as colorful but far less cluttered than the first. Raccoons had fashioned some leather skeins for water. They were beautiful but Demure and Shelah didn’t travel nearly enough to warrant one. The next was advertising something for the smaller local community. Shelah wasn’t interested and so they kept walking. Then from there it was more commonplace items that didn’t warrant much more than a cursory glance and a polite hello. The two friends finally stopped at the end of the row, the last stall being empty and roped off. “No mushrooms, yet. Maybe we weren’t early enough?” Shelah glanced up at the sun to gauge the time. It wasn’t yet midday. “Maybe…but we still have so much to see so let’s not give up just yet!” She put on a burst of speed and flew between passing fair attendees. Demure waited for the group to move by before following her companion. Ahead she could see the little bird zipping between each stall, pausing only for the briefest moments before continuing down the lane. By the time the mare caught up they were standing at the last booth in the row. Shelah bounced excitedly in the air. “Look! Look! I found a mushroom!” Demure leaned in closer to see a garden gnome with a red mush cap hat sitting on the table amongst other painted gnomes of varying poses. She chuckled and admitted, “Well…that is true.” “It’s perfect for the garden. We should get it!” “But what about the other rocks?” “We should get those two.” Shelah beamed. Demure had a hard time saying no to her familiar. She paused as if she were contemplating her answer even though she already knew that the two would be bringing that gnome home. “Alright,” she said finally. “Thank you!” The songbird flew into her thick navy mane and gave her a quick snuggle. “Excuse me, we’d like this garden gnome.” She knelt down until her nose touched the brim of its hat. The shopkeeper, an older greyed stallion, moved closer. He squinted his milky blue eyes before turning to her. “What are you offering?” She lifted a wing so that Shelah could open the pouch and snatch a few rocks. She placed a clear quartz and a darker grey pebble onto the table. A small dark squirrel emerged from below the table to pick up the pebble and inspect it. “Anything else?” The rodent mused. Demure nodded at her friend, “It’s alright.” They hadn’t brought too much to barter with but they did have a few other stones that they could part with. Shelah grabbed two of those, leaving the pouch significantly lighter. The squirrel held and examined each before pushing the second piece back to Shelah and Demure. “You can keep that one. We like these best.” “The gnome is all yours.” The soquili bowed his head, “Thank you.” They murmured their thanks and goodbyes once they pocketed the gnome in the other pouch intended for the shrooms. The duo took another stroll through the fair, stopping for some baked treats before finally making their way back to the very first booth. The booth was still surprisingly cluttered but most of the stones that had caught Shelah’s eye were still there. The barter session went quick and smoothly and then there was nothing left to do but return home. Demure glanced up at the bright sun directly above them, “I guess next time we’ll have to arrive even earlier if we want actual mushrooms.” Words: 899
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Posted: Mon Jul 29, 2024 5:47 pm
July 2024 The sun had begun to set over Dynamira’s new garden. New to her, but otherwise well established - perhaps too established. She strolled through the overgrown plants, her hooves barely able to find the path. She pushed back a few vines to no avail. The field had been neglected for too long. This wouldn’t do. She sighed and glanced at the mice upon her back. “Where do we start?” The three rodents exchanged glances but didn’t say a word. Instead they clambored down her back onto the closest bramble and started to get to work. They began clipping small branches, leaving the stubborn weeds to her. They continued to work until the moon had settled fully into the night sky, its bright light shining upon their meadow and the tangle of moon flowers that lined the area had bloomed, adding an ethereal glow to the garden. Tending to plants at night was not unusual for the group, they preferred it. Their speciality was tending to the unusual glowing fauna - and night was always best for that. One can’t prune a phosphorescent pricker bush if one was unable to see the thorns that only reacted in the moonlight. She had learned that lesson the hard way, with the scar to prove it. Dyna smiled and brushed her head against her flank, wiping off a small beading of sweat. Luckily the night breeze wafted in to help cool her down. She stepped back to survey the rest of the garden. They still had so much to do. She wandered off a bit to inspect some more tangles. Most of the landscape appeared to be flowering plants, but at the edge of the woods she spotted a strange purple fruit peeking out from between a hulk of weeds. The purple was brighter than a plum or eggplant, with an almost pink hue to it. It was odd. She walked over and started plucking away the dandelion weeds. The billowy seeds shook free to float and drop everywhere. Dynamira couldn’t help but sneeze. She hadn’t always been allergic to dandelions but over time and the constant garden pruning seemed to have lowered her ability to handle them. A few more sneezes and some weeds were thrown as far away as she could manage until the Soquili managed to uncover the strange plant. She was delighted to see that it wasn’t just one fruit. It had small bunches almost like the blue tipped berry bunch plant. Perhaps it was from the same family? She leaned in closer to get a better look and a long sniff. It didn’t smell off and upon closer inspection she found the skin of the berry-like fruit to have a delicate fuzz. The blue tipped berry bunch plant did not have fuzz on it. She cocked her head to the side, racking her brain, trying to recall what other fruiting plant had fuzz. Of course there were your standard run of the mill types like peaches. This was most definitely not a stone fruit, she concluded. Normally, it’s not recommended to taste strange food but Dynamira and her mice were far more experienced in the unusual flora and she was confident this plant was edible based on her expertise. She plucked one fruiting bunch off the stalk of the plant. Carefully she nibbled down one small piece, just one. She let it sit on her tongue for a moment. The flavor was mildly sweet. There was no burning or itching, not even when she burst the berry between her teeth. “Hmm.” Then with a quick motion she swallowed it all. She stood there waiting for her body to start rejecting it or let her know she had done something wrong, but nothing came of it. She waited in the moonlight and felt fine. Dyna called over to her friends, “Hey guys, come check out this plant!” The trio were eager for a break and scurried over. She showed them the plant she found and nudged a few of the pinkish purple bunches. “I only had a small bite but it wasn’t bad. No reaction at all.” They looked at her for a moment as if to say, really? She nodded to them. “Nothing at all. I swear.” She plopped the rest of the berry that she had plucked moments earlier into her mouth. “Mmm.” With a little pressure the berry burst on her tongue, the taste still mildly sweet. Dynamira helped herself to another berry just as the mice began harvesting their own. “It’s good, isn’t it?” They nodded as they chowed down. The mare watched their heads bob in slow motion, then her eyes started to shift out of focus. “Uh oh…” She closed her eyes and sat her rump down before she got any more disoriented. Her body felt heavy and slow. She tried to lift a hoof but quickly dropped it down onto the grass. She heard a squeak and opened her eyes to see a mouse jump away from her feet. “Whoops!” She chuckled. Her head swiveled achingly slow to see the other two mice also on their butts. They pointed their tiny pink hands above her head and started laughing like someone had shared the best joke. She looked up, unable to see what they found so funny. Then when her eyes turned back towards them, she watched as their heads ballooned and bobbled on their shoulders. She burst into her own fit of laughter. They stayed there for what felt like most of the night exchanging laughter and pointing. It wasn’t until the sun had begun to rise that they started to feel the numbness wear off. When Dyna looked at her rodent companions she was no longer filled with uncontrollable glee and dizziness, and their heads had returned to their normal size. She yawned and stretched her limbs. It took a few attempts until she had righted herself. The mice chuckled but only a minute amount compared to their earlier joviality, obviously their side effects were waning too. Her throat was a bit hoarse, probably from all of the laughter and possibly from the odd plant too, “Okay…let’s not do that again.” She pulled the plant up from its roots and tossed it into the forest. The mice let out a disappointed groan. “Nope, too dangerous.” She shook her head, “That was only two berries for me, and a third for each of you. We can’t take a chance with any more.” They grumbled but relented. Dyna smiled as she scooped them up and headed to bed. She was certain their dreams wouldn’t compare to the crazy evening they just had. Words: 1107
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Posted: Sat Nov 09, 2024 1:47 am
October 2024 The night was eerily still. No wind howled through the trees and the moon was hidden behind a layer of dense dark clouds. Not even a chirp from some wayward cricket could be heard. Edda paced the ruins they were temporarily calling home. Her feet leaving the barest of imprints in the dried mud. There would be no hunt tonight, she sighed to herself. Her mate watched her anxious dance but had remained silent. When she glanced his way she could see his all too familiar furrowed brow. He was worried about her. He was worried for her. Finally, she turned and faced him. Her azure eyes meeting his pale aventurine irises. “What?” “Well…you’re-” She interrupted him before he could finish his sentence. “I’m agitated. I know. It’s just been so long since I’ve been a part of the hunt.” She resumed her anxious pacing. This time her claws left deeper imprints. “I can feel it in my bones. The moon is nearly just right…” Her words trailed away as her thoughts swirled around in her mind. “It will be soon, my love.” Uzziah reassured the mare. She nodded but kept walking back and forth. Then as she turned, her eyes caught sight of the ruined temple’s walls and the deep gouges that ripped through what was left of the half walls. Her eyes widened as a sudden memory coalesced in her mind. “Did I ever tell you the story about Ea and the shadows?” Her mate looked at her, puzzled, his brow furrowed even more. A feat of its own. Edda inwardly chuckled. He was her little worry wart, emphasis on the worry. “No…” He was hesitant. She shook her fiery mane and closed her eyes with a smile, “Really? Never?” He shook his head. There was no hunt, so a story would have to suffice. She stopped pacing and sat down in front of Uzziah, her eyes locking with his for dramatic effect. “This was before I met you. Long before I found Ea. This happened when we were foals, before we lost her. Our parents attended every Hunt but alas we were too small to join. We were told to stay in place and hide away for bigger monster than us roamed nearby. We were young, of course we listened…at first.” “A few hunts we would venture out of our hiding places, always staying close to home. Truly it wasn’t very far. We weren’t that stupid.” Uzziah nodded but remained silent so she could continue. “Each time, nothing happened. We could hear the Hunt far off in the distance, that was exciting. We would talk at great length about what we would do in the Hunt, how we would hunt and what.” She sighed happily, reminiscing momentarily. “Then one night, like all of the other nights before, we left our hiding spots when we felt it was safe. Little did we know that we were not alone that night. Our parents were long gone. The night was eerily quiet and we spoke in whispers. Perhaps that was our first clue that something was there. Ea complained that the night was chilly but I didn’t feel cold. She kept interrupting our usual discussions asking ‘what was that’. I never knew what she had seen or heard. She never elaborated.” She started to shift uneasily. Her tail flickered, matching her agitation. “The night was darker than usual. But I had attributed that to the new moon. Not every Hunt followed the full lunar cycle of course. Though it certainly helps.” Uzziah nodded in agreement. Since officially wedding his beloved, he had learned so much of the Other Side and its inner workings. He knew the Hunt did occasionally attune itself to the moon, which made for some very powerful hordes, but mostly the Hunt had its own agenda and would ride when only it willed it. She couldn’t sit still any longer, much like how her younger counterpart couldn’t stay hidden throughout the night either. Edda stood up and shook out her fur. She watched her claws trace scratches into the dry earth. She didn’t look up as she spoke, “The next morning our parents returned. We ran to greet them like we always did…but we stopped in our tracks - all of us - when we saw these deep gouges in the ground. They cut through the path to our clearing and disappeared into the nearby bramble. The bramble was undisturbed. And yet the dirt looked to be cleaved by some mighty claw. You know Ea now, well she is not so different from when she was but a foal. Her eyes were wide with terror! Ea, terrified! Can you believe that?! Though all of us were surprised, even Mother and Father.” Edda had started to resume her anxious pacing, pausing to point a claw at the gouges on the stone wall. “They were deeper than this. And so jagged, not continuous.” Her mate’s brow furrowed once again. “What was it?” “I don’t know. My parents had seen nothing like it in all of their years. It was nothing they had encountered before.” “Was it something from the Hunt?” She shook her head. “No, it was the first thing they had considered. Nothing from the previous Hunt, or the ones before that, matched up to these tracks.” She paused waiting for more questions but he didn’t say anything else. He was always so patient that sometimes she’d forget just how patient he could be. She pressed on, “Mother left to scout the area. She found nothing. Father inspected the clearing, and nothing again. We left it at that and went to sleep as we always did. At some point during the night Ea had woken. Her mumbling in her sleep woke me up and I found her standing at the edge, facing those brambles, eyes dark as if hidden in shadow - dark even for nighttime. She wouldn’t respond to me. I even tried to shake her out of her trance but she wouldn’t budge. The only words she said that I could understand were ‘wait for me’. I still can’t believe we didn’t end up waking Mother and Father. She stood at that edge for what felt like the whole night. I fell asleep next to her. And in the morning it was as if it never happened. She had absolutely no memory of it!” She sighed and took a moment to catch her breath. “It wouldn’t be the last time I’d find her mumbling in her sleep, at the edge of the clearing, and unable to wake. It wasn’t every night but it had become a regular routine. Each time I’d fall asleep by her side. Maybe my presence alone was what kept her safe, kept her from crossing those creepy claw marks. Moons went by before more strange things started. We really didn’t put two and two together right away. At first it was broken tree limbs, normal right? Maybe the wind. Maybe a large squirrel. But then we would find deep gashes in the branches. And they would always be left on the path that led to our home.” Finally her mate spoke. “That’s quite a coincidence.” “The original claw marks had mostly been filled back in, practically invisible to a newcomer, by this time. We had nearly forgotten about the whole ordeal.” “What about your sister’s sleepwalking?” “It was happening less. Hmm, now that I think about it the branches were showing up more and more and she was sleepwalking less and less.” “Another coincidence.” Edda nodded in agreement. “But we still didn’t think anything of it. Our parents cleared the debris with little to say on it. So we followed their example and didn’t give it much thought either.” “When did things start to change?” He paused a moment while she thought on it, then rephrased the question. “When did you realize there was more to this?” “When everywhere we went claw marks would be there; some in tree trunks, dirt paths and even long grass. We couldn’t rationalize it anymore. There were too many to explain away. Then we started to see them.” Her voice placed emphasis on that last word - them. She glanced from side to side of her, as if searching for ‘them’. “Them?” “Shadows. It started out with little shadows darting through the forest. We thought it was a trick of the light. If I saw a shadow then no one else would have. Or if Ea had seen one then we didn’t. You get the idea. We couldn’t explain it, and we couldn’t prove it to anyone else. The claw marks kept showing up too, that never stopped.” “Even now?” Uzziah tilted his head at her, his tone playful. He started to think that his mate was joking with him, telling him a ghost story to pass time and retain a bit of that mystery she reveled in. Edda narrowed her eyes at him, slightly offended that he thought this was all a prank. “They never stopped.” She tilted a horn at the scratches in the wall, “See. They follow us wherever we go.” He looked at the scratches then at his mate. “Why have you never told me this before?” She shrugged. “They led me to my sister. And they led me to you. How bad can they really be?” Words: 1561
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Azael_Rose generated a random number between
1 and 3 ...
1!
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Posted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 11:02 pm
Museum Prompt: Quote: If you roll a 1: The cat is somewhere between in love with you to very much approves of you. The scent of blood still hung in the air like a thick fog as the sun rose above the horizon. Ea stretched, digging her claws into the soft earth, and yawned, completely at ease after a victorious hunt. She was ready to turn in for the day, her sleep schedule was abnormal for most. As she strolled through her glen, a teal iridescent feather fluttered across her path. She stopped and watched it dance around for a few moments, her lids drooping and her mind went blank. A flurry of green dashed in front of her legs. She reared up just in time. “Woah!” she called out. The green thing turned towards her with large magenta eyes. Ea recognized most of it as a cat, though she had never seen a cat with spikes like it had. Once she had crossed paths with a lion that had made the poor decision to harass a porcupine but it did not look anything like this creature. This was something else entirely. It stared at her and batted at the feather. “Next time, watch it, little kitty.” She stepped aside, giving the pointed cat additional room. The cat inched closer to her. Ea’s brow raised but she didn’t say anything else. She attempted to step further away again but with the same results. She narrowed her eyes at the feline. “Enough.” The usdia quickly turned around, her tail flickering in the sunlight, and dashed out of the glen. The cat quickly snatched the feather up in its maw and gave chase. Ea zigged and zagged all across the forest trying to lose the critter but in the end she couldn’t. Perhaps if she hadn’t been running in the hunt all night she’d have had the stamina. Finally, she stopped to catch her breath before telling it off. “Stop it! Shoo! Leave me be!” The cat dropped its feather and strolled up to her side. As it got closer Ea could hear it purring. The critter liked her! She felt like she could fall asleep on the spot. She sighed and knelt down in the grass for a quick rest of the eyes. The prickly feline curled up beside her, being mindful of the pokeys. She chuckled to herself as a feather brushed against her. Looks like she had a pet, one as strange and determined as her.
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Azael_Rose generated a random number between
1 and 3 ...
1!
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Posted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 11:03 pm
Museum Prompt Quote: If you roll a 1: After you walk a few feet into the tomb, you fall through the floor to find a secret room.
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Azael_Rose generated a random number between
1 and 3 ...
2!
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Posted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 11:04 pm
Museum Prompt Quote: If you roll a 2: You know that the mothman is trying to warn you. Like a prophet, you are tasked with relaying the message to others. Can you do it? What's the mothman trying to warn you of?
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Azael_Rose generated a random number between
1 and 3 ...
1!
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Posted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 11:05 pm
Museum Prompt: Quote: If you roll a 1: The curse winds up being more of you cursing at whoever did this to you. You can't do anything right. Everything you try to do goes wrong, often in hilarious ways.
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Azael_Rose generated a random number between
1 and 3 ...
2!
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Posted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 11:06 pm
Museum Prompt: Quote: If you roll a 2: You come face to face with a scorpion the size of a small horse (sorry if you're usidia!). What do you do to outrun it (because there's no way you can fight it)? 500 words for 2!
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Azael_Rose generated a random number between
1 and 3 ...
3!
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Posted: Fri Nov 29, 2024 11:07 pm
Museum Prompt: Quote: If you roll a 3: You are transported into the body of an injured and lost Valkyrie. Do you panic? Do you find your way home? (You do not have any breed healing powers as the Valkyrie you're in does not).
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