Jun 29 2021, 08:11 PM
You are my sunshine
my only sunshine
my only sunshine
Birth.
To some, a wondrous occasion for the whole family. To others, just another step in mass-producing valkhounds. But to Simon (the Second) it was the most special birthday of all. For today was his.
The serpent child woke up in a crystalline cage. Warm, dark fluid surrounded him. He breathed in hesitantly, and it trickled into his lungs. Not good. He had to find air. What is air, one may ask? Simon didn't know, but it certainly wasn't in here.
The creature wriggled blindly, smacking his coiled body against the sides of the chrysalis. Thump, thump. Nothing worked. By accident, he lashed out his pointed beak-horn and-- look! It cracked! Golden light shone through the seams of his stone. He gave one last shove at that holy sight-- and collapsed onto sandy ground.
Honey-colored paws touched earth for the first time. Crystalline eyes opened wide and clean air filled his lungs. The landscape was like nothing else, though he hadn't experienced anything else to argue otherwise. A flat expanse of shimmering sand that opened up before him, warmed by the early cave-light of morning. Over here was a dead bush, over there a strange, twisted column that shot into the air, with another further in the distance. He cocked his head towards them, curious-- and for the first time, walked.
It was more of a slithering motion than anything, his small body having the poise of a newborn fawn as he made it to the torch. Partway there he perked his head at something interesting sticking out of the haze. The skeleton of a creature (he figured it looked a bit like himself), jaws bared and great claw marks going down its sides. An empty abscess gaped where its stone might've been. He decided he liked it.
Simon continued his weak crawl forwards, goalpost moved to the curious-looking remains. There, he had his first, proper thought:
'The sand is soft.'
To some, a wondrous occasion for the whole family. To others, just another step in mass-producing valkhounds. But to Simon (the Second) it was the most special birthday of all. For today was his.
The serpent child woke up in a crystalline cage. Warm, dark fluid surrounded him. He breathed in hesitantly, and it trickled into his lungs. Not good. He had to find air. What is air, one may ask? Simon didn't know, but it certainly wasn't in here.
The creature wriggled blindly, smacking his coiled body against the sides of the chrysalis. Thump, thump. Nothing worked. By accident, he lashed out his pointed beak-horn and-- look! It cracked! Golden light shone through the seams of his stone. He gave one last shove at that holy sight-- and collapsed onto sandy ground.
Honey-colored paws touched earth for the first time. Crystalline eyes opened wide and clean air filled his lungs. The landscape was like nothing else, though he hadn't experienced anything else to argue otherwise. A flat expanse of shimmering sand that opened up before him, warmed by the early cave-light of morning. Over here was a dead bush, over there a strange, twisted column that shot into the air, with another further in the distance. He cocked his head towards them, curious-- and for the first time, walked.
It was more of a slithering motion than anything, his small body having the poise of a newborn fawn as he made it to the torch. Partway there he perked his head at something interesting sticking out of the haze. The skeleton of a creature (he figured it looked a bit like himself), jaws bared and great claw marks going down its sides. An empty abscess gaped where its stone might've been. He decided he liked it.
Simon continued his weak crawl forwards, goalpost moved to the curious-looking remains. There, he had his first, proper thought:
You make me happy
when skies are gray
when skies are gray