Gradual happenings are so strange when they finally reached that crucial point – the goal they had inched towards for so long, unnoticed. The soft murmur of potential steadily progresses at such a slow pace that it would almost be better if it never did reach that final culmination. A sudden something is so foreign to the consistent, measured action of growth that it is nearly an offense when it occurs, even if it was the desired result all along. Such was the sound of a final victorious crack rupturing the quiet as the outside of the vessel fragmented with a sudden fissure down the middle. The leaves around the chrysalis shuddered and a small piece of the rock seemed to pull away and tremble with a mind of its own while the rest fell. In the wake of the collapse, a small creature tumbled out to the ground.
He lay prone on the ground, large eyes shut and legs stretched out behind him. The ebony keystone that had pulled from the chrysalis was in fact attached sturdily to his tiny head like a crest and gleamed in the dim light. Gentle breaths circulated through his body – the purest expression of life. It was this that he noticed first. And then the feeling in his legs, and the pressure of solid ground and soft moss against his body… or was it the other way around? Becoming groggily aware of his own existence, the infant timidly blinked his amber eyes open – a motor function only instinct would tell him he had.
Green. Green everywhere. He didn’t quite have the name “green” to pin to it, but he saw it, was bombarded by it. He blinked some more, giving his eyes some brief time to adjust. Then, with growing awareness and control over his body, he struggled up to a sitting position (which looked rather funny with his two stout legs bent forward at right angles, looking like slightly oversized arms). His narrow little head swiveled this way and that, then tipping back to view the overwhelming place he was in. What was this? What was he? Such vague ideas of confusion and question swam about in his staggering brain. Deciding to take more time to soak in the environment and his newfound life, the baby bird would inhale deeply and glance around a bit before pecking gently at the moss where he sat, testing out the ground.