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initial hypotheses - Printable Version +- ORIGIN (https://origin.boreal-nights.space) +-- Forum: IC Archives (https://origin.boreal-nights.space/forumdisplay.php?fid=50) +--- Forum: Year 4 Archives (https://origin.boreal-nights.space/forumdisplay.php?fid=54) +--- Thread: initial hypotheses (/showthread.php?tid=6368) |
initial hypotheses - Doctor - Dec 09 2018
The stone that lay beneath clustered moss, in among roots and rocks and slicked with drops of dew, was unusual. It was striated--banded with greys, and darker greys, and browns, so that in places it appeared to be the striped rock of a canyon. And in others, it looked like the cataract-fogged center of a blinded eye. The surface of the stone exposed to air had grown thin, over the last few weeks. Almost paper-thin, in places. Hours passed, the lights dimming, then rising up again, the mists clearing and then returning. Rain was pattering down, dampening the jungle, when the stone at last gave way. There was a crack--dull, but resonant, audible from some distance away and easily-recognizable for what it was. The creature that tumbled forth, half-conscious already, was wet through in seconds. It was darkly-feathered with fuzzy down, and had a large, grey, hooked beak. Its eyes opened as it stumbled, talons gripping and inadvertently tearing at the moss beneath, scraping over roots. One of those eyes was a shade of brown so dark that it looked black, particularly in this rainy light. The other was pale, as fogged as the cataract-gloss of the stone behind it; a small section of that very stone had replaced the bird's eye, in development. The vulture looked around, his mind--never having experienced anything at all, before--trying to make sense of everything at once. Of sensation--the wet beneath his feet, the cool air, the dripping rain. The strong rustling of the foliage, the pattering of rain, the petrichor odor--it was all overwhelming. And the concept of sensation, at once--here was a new creature, one with no sense of self, rapidly trying to assimilate the idea that it was alive. It did what most young beings in its state might do--it opened that thick-hooked beak, and let out a low-pitched, but loud, frightened croak of fear. Its own noises frightened it, and it quickly fell silent, huddling down soaked and confused in the rain. RE: initial hypotheses - Doctor - Dec 12 2018 Nothing came. No one came. The rain continued, for a time. The vulture chick remained huddled beneath the ferns, looking around, quietly observing his world. He could see an insect, struggling to cling to a leaf as it moved, before tumbling down with a tiny spray of raindrops. He saw light shifting down, dim and grey, with the mist. He could see, too, when he looked closely around him, the shattered remnants of his own chrysalis. He shook himself, thinking. When I think, I move. So I must control this body? It is mine. And I came from here--this stone. Was I born from it? Is this where all life comes from, like that bug? Are these plants alive? Did something create me, or was this spontaneous? His words, perhaps, weren't quite so complex--but the concepts were there, and were indeed complicated, with far-reaching consequences to their potential answers. And, too, they raised many, many more questions. When the rain stopped, the vulture ventured out at last. He found the bug on its back, legs slowly waving, silent in its trapped hell. He leaned down, inspecting it. Why couldn't it turn over..? Its body was black, legs long and angular. He could eat it--he was tempted to--but he held back with a self-control perhaps startling for one so young. At length, he flipped it--a quick nudge of his hooked beak--and watched it scramble up, and begin to crawl away. And he watched, satisfied that he had helped. He could eat that thing--but perhaps he'd try to find ones that were already dead, instead. Quiet, he waddled further into Eridanus, ever-attentive, and curious. RE: initial hypotheses - Doctor - Dec 14 2018 The vulture waddled along, his not-quite-formed feathers unable to sustain him in flight had the thought even occurred to him to attempt it. Instead he was stuck on foot, pushing his way through rain-drenched foliage and plodding talon-first through cold puddles. He was soon shivering, this unpleasant new feeling of cold not a kind one. RE: initial hypotheses - Doctor - Dec 14 2018 It was an hour or more before he found the snake. It was lying in the wet, half-submerged in mud, its belly white to the sky and the forefront of its length loosely coiled. The tail was extended out behind it, the jaws slightly open, and blood lightly smeared its scales here and there. RE: initial hypotheses - Doctor - Dec 15 2018 The vulture kept on until he found a stream, and despite there already being water everywhere, he chose to pause there to drink. He found little else of interest in that area, and moved on, heading up the slope on the far side of the creek. RE: initial hypotheses - Doctor - Dec 20 2018 Many Gembound found guidance when they hatched. exit |