Jan 07 2016, 09:46 PM
Hidden at the roots of a fallen tree, blanketed by the thick of the fog, and barely out of the water rested a small, gembound egg, ready to expose a new life. It rocked a little, tapping from the inside starting to grow louder. It titled a little more in one direction, then little lines began to form as the shell started to break away. The first thing to be licked by the air was the end of infant beak. Further shifting occurred and more shell broke away. Slowly and awkwardly, a duckling crawled from it's hardened womb into a world with no mother nor father. His damp down caused a shiver, which sparked the instinct to clean himself. With plenty of stumbling and falling over, his effort sowed results. He was finally a ball of fluff with big feet.
It took several moments of blinking and several shakes of his little body to really feel prepared to strut into the world. Except, it was more of an adorable waddle with lots of tripping. He had no idea how anyone could ever work such awful contraptions (his feet) and often flapped his tiny, undeveloped wings in pitiful effort to not fall over. With some time and frustration, he finally found deep enough water (two inches was enough to make him happy) to rely on his natural buoyancy and float along to explore in the foggy world he had entered. He fearlessly paddled along, pausing to visually inspect strange shapes and look toward new sounds.
With so much to see, he nearly forgot the instinct to eat. Without any thought to it, he dipped his head under water and tapped his parted beak against the swampy bottom, filtering the water for delicious particles of fungi within the murky waters. Upon a full belly, his nub of a tail wiggled excitedly, and onward he swam into the dull-colored room. He began quacking... if you could call it that. More like peeping. He peeped more, excited by his own sounds. He dipped his head under the water and splashed water onto his back, then brushed his little wings on himself to really "rinse" himself. Lots of space to bath, play, and peep, it seemed. Danger seemed to be of no concern to the newly hatched Kawenu.
@Czernobog
It took several moments of blinking and several shakes of his little body to really feel prepared to strut into the world. Except, it was more of an adorable waddle with lots of tripping. He had no idea how anyone could ever work such awful contraptions (his feet) and often flapped his tiny, undeveloped wings in pitiful effort to not fall over. With some time and frustration, he finally found deep enough water (two inches was enough to make him happy) to rely on his natural buoyancy and float along to explore in the foggy world he had entered. He fearlessly paddled along, pausing to visually inspect strange shapes and look toward new sounds.
With so much to see, he nearly forgot the instinct to eat. Without any thought to it, he dipped his head under water and tapped his parted beak against the swampy bottom, filtering the water for delicious particles of fungi within the murky waters. Upon a full belly, his nub of a tail wiggled excitedly, and onward he swam into the dull-colored room. He began quacking... if you could call it that. More like peeping. He peeped more, excited by his own sounds. He dipped his head under the water and splashed water onto his back, then brushed his little wings on himself to really "rinse" himself. Lots of space to bath, play, and peep, it seemed. Danger seemed to be of no concern to the newly hatched Kawenu.
@Czernobog