Nov 22 2015, 06:08 AM
The thing that toddled along was having trouble walking. He seemed to be, at first glance, nothing more than a black puppy: a furball, with little tufted ears. On closer inspection, though, those ears were tufted with not fur but a few scraggly feathers, and strange downy fluff and bald dark spines jutted from his oversized forelimbs. Those forelimbs were long, thin and long-fingered, tipped with curved talons that were certainly out of place on the canine body. And the way he looked about him, too, there was a strange birdlike sharpness to it, even with the wide pale puppy eyes that accompanied his gaze.
The birdlike forelimbs were difficult to walk on, and he frequently had to stop, resting on them like a bat leaning on its wings. Perhaps the dog would grow wings, one day; for now they were stubs, and out of balance with the rest of him. His more canine hind legs propelled him forward, and any time he grew excited he'd try to bound forth, only to stumble over his birdlimbs and fall to the ground in a tangle of black fur and feathers.
His mother couldn't help him. She was leading the way, patient, supportive, but she was too small to carry him along. They'd left the swamp; she wanted to consult with someone, show him to someone. Were he a little older he might have worried that something was wrong with him; the crow was nervous around him, though she tried to hide it. At his age, he didn't pick up on this; perhaps he never would. Instead he bumbled along, from the dampness of Cetus and into the freezing ice tunnel that had made him shiver and cower down, then flee from the cold biting ground beneath his feet. From there they'd come to Polaris, and Oliver gazed around at the glowing crystals with awe.
Eve had moved on a bit ahead, and was looking back at him; obediently he tried to catch up, again tumbling down in a heap as he reached her. He stumbled up and wagged his tail--a little finger of a thing, again studded with as-yet unadorned quills--and peered up at her.
Words still didn't come easily to him, but there were some that he knew, and he offered one now--brightly, and with a voice that was half raucous caw, half sharp bark.
"Shinies!" he yip-crowed excitedly, wagging his little tail as he gazed up at his mother.
@Eve