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the less i know the better - Shoal - Apr 07 2019

some swearing ahoy


Shoal had made an interesting discovery.

The haggard old owl stood on a smaller tree, leaning over to inspect something she'd somehow never seen in Cetus before. Or, perhaps, never had the chance to, before she was trampled to death by another cave deer. Almost death. Whatever.

She overlooked a pile of corpses, some more decayed than others. Cave deer, hallowed callers, rabbits-- it seemed like whatever you could find in Cetus, it'd been killed and dragged here. Added to the pile. It didn't seem like there were any greater gembound crammed in there, however.

So... was it food?

Shoal hadn't exactly eaten since re-emerging and her stomach had been gnawing away at her, complaining to eat something. The owl was willing to obey, if just to get some peace from her own gut. These bodies, just laying there doing nothing, was easy food. She didn't have to hunt, she could take her fill and leave before anyone noticed.

It wasn't exactly the most dignified way of eating, at least-- something about the idea of scavenging like the hallowed callers but Shoal at slight unease. But she sure as hell wasn't going to risk getting thrown back into her chrysalis to recover when she accidentally bumped into a cave rat the same size as her.

But something about it seemed... wrong, and not in the way that it'd damage her pride. Perhaps it was a trap set up by someone else, for whatever reason. Who would just leave perfectly good food lying around, after all?

Perhaps someone was specifically feeding the hallowed callers? It seemed like a damn waste to her, those things could likely swallow anything you put in front of them. You don't need to down an entire cave deer to make a couple of dumb birds happy.

Shoal mulled these thoughts over for a very long time but, eventually, the raggedy owl unfurled her wings and glided carefully down to the edge of the pile, touching the marshland in perfect silence. Her huge, patchy wings remained spread as she bent her head down, picked up a cave mouse, and swallowed it whole.

Then, amber eyes glanced around frantically, searching the area, awaiting ambush.


@Oliver


RE: the less i know the better - Oliver - Apr 07 2019


Oliver was sitting quietly in the darkness on the other side of the pile, well away from the glitter of dead scales.

He had come to gather plant seeds, to look for his mother (if she were emerged; he hadn't seen her in some time) and to check on those he knew, here. So far he hadn't seen any of them, and the faint worry that they might have died in his absence gnawed at him. But he knew, too, that Cetus was nothing if not good at hiding its secrets. They might all be present--just lurking elsewhere in the misty darkness, as unaware of his presence as he was of theirs.

He had stopped upon seeing the old offering pile once again. He'd not been here in some time, and the mountain of death pulled at him in some way. He was thinking about it--of life, of death. Was there meaning to it? The violence that had been unleashed in Eridanus still haunted him, and he wanted nothing more than to understand it all. Why did Gembound act the way they did? Why were some kind, and some terrible? Aquarian demanded tribute, in return for his aid--why was he somewhat benevolent, but only when it pleased him to be so?

What happened after death? Where were the spirits, the minds, of those dead Lessers, now? Those fish, that Hallowed Caller, that cave deer--did their incorporeal selves still roam, somewhere? And where? What did they think, how did they feel?

His quiet rumination on these somewhat morbid thoughts was interrupted by a small shape in the mist: a brief flicker downward, something with broad wings and a very faint golden glow to it. For a moment he thought perhaps that it was Eve, with a baubled gem--but no, this thing was much, much larger. Still small--still a bird, or a bat--but what struck him was that it had made absolutely no sound as it ghosted through the fog. It was quite unlike all of the birds of Cetus that he knew.

Quietly, he stood, hesitating before beginning to pad his way with taloned forelimbs and dog's rear paws over through the wet swamp. To even his sensitive, tufted ears, he was relatively quiet--but to an owl, undoubtedly the soft squelching of his distantly-approaching feet would be quite loud.

He did not yet speak--he was still some distance off, but curious as to who--or what--the stranger might be.
{Table code credit to Madison, altered a bit!}



@Shoal


RE: the less i know the better - Shoal - Apr 07 2019


For a moment, Shoal thought she might have been safe. Nothing immediately came charging towards her, at least, and it was relatively quiet. But only for a moment.

It was enough for her to briefly let her guard down at least. She began folding her wings back up, leaning over to take another mouse into her beak, when she heard the gentle squelching of something walking along marshland.

"WHAT THE FUCK," she shrieked, startled and mildly panicking. Shoal almost stumbled over herself to try to fly back up into the air, her wings battering uselessly against mangled rump of a cave deer before she actually took to the air, getting a few feet.

When she saw what had made the noise, further panic spiked in her chest. She refused to be thrown back into her chrysalis again, not again, not so fucking soon. The owl was breathing raggedly, sharply, trying to reach out to her magicka-- but the faint flicker of magic rising up in the back of her head quickly faded out.

She wasn't going to get any help from that, it seemed.

Instead, she fluttered over onto the tree she'd been hanging out in before. There was safety in the advantage of height, after all. She turned, staring down at the dark hybrid. "What the fuck?" She repeated, though at a much more reasonable volume.

"Why are you trying to sneak up on me? Are you going to kill me?" She half-demanded, her stern tone managing to disguise the fact that, roughly six seconds ago, she was about ready to die from the startled terror alone.

@Oliver


RE: the less i know the better - Oliver - Apr 07 2019


Oliver paused and winced, heavily, at the sudden shrieking, half-muffled as it was by the mist. He cowered down, a little, memories of violence threatening to flash through his mind--but he was also briefly taken aback by the language.

His first thought, therefore, was not exactly one that inspired confidence as to his origins: ...Mom?

But it wasn't Eve--though the language was equally foul (even if Eve had tended to try and watch her tongue around her children), the bird's voice was distinctly more gruff, and its body much larger.

...Maybe all birds just talked like this. Maybe all birds were violent..? Oliver tried to think back. Blackberry certainly had been. But then, so had all the -berries. He shook himself free of his thoughts, not having moved from where he crouched in the muck some thirty feet away. He looked as frightened as the owl was.

"Um--no," he called out finally, his voice holding a faint tremor of his own fear, and a tone of apology. "I just--I wondered who you were, that's all. I'm Oliver, I'm not--mean," he added, a little lamely.

Caves knew there were enough of those types around.

"I can go away, if you want me to, but um--this is Aquarian's food pile and someone might eat you if they find you taking from it alone. Unless--uhh--you were putting stuff on it," he added. It wasn't a threat, but a soft, fearful warning. A bird might get seen as prey, and swallowed whole along with the rest--or snagged by one of the Children to add onto the pile.


{Table code credit to Madison, altered a bit!}



@Shoal


RE: the less i know the better - Shoal - Apr 07 2019


At first, Shoal didn't reply. She stood, overlooking the black shape below. She was a dark shape herself, sitting sentinel-like in the tree, a dim amber light blinking in the mist.

She concluded, in her brief silence, that Oliver must be young. Granted, she had no idea what he was, but child-like seemed somewhat likely to her. She shifted, croaking, eyelids falling as she squinted into the dark.

He didn't seem like he was lying. "Right," the owl said. "It seems to be a common thing around here." She was referring both to 'I'm not mean' and 'someone might eat you.' Even outside of Shoal's own experiences, she recalled the stories (likely dubbed fake, in her opinion) of a band of murderers in the caves.

"I wasn't taking anything from it," she said, as casually as possible. "But I wasn't adding anything to it either. I have never seen this before." She took another glance-over the pile and then, carefully, silently, glided back down to where she'd been before.

She at least trusted Oliver not to maul her right then and there.

The ragged owl turned her head about, briefly, before settling her gaze back onto Oliver. "Were you?" She asked. "You don't look much like a predator. Why were you near the bodies if you risk getting killed?"


@Oliver


RE: the less i know the better - Oliver - Apr 07 2019


Oliver watched Shoal in respectful silence, and though he approached more closely, he did so slowly and not that close. He sat back down in the mud perhaps twenty feet away, craning his head to peer up at the corpses.

He answered the question with what he thought was a self-evident truth, and simply so: "I wasn't near them. I was watching from far away," he explained, "I came over 'cause I saw you in the fog. I don't think anyone would mind if you take something small," he added, glancing at it--"if you were hungry. But I meant--if you sit on it or if you take stuff without them knowing you're a Greater they might try to, uhh. ...Add you to it. Or you might get eaten on accident if he comes out and swallows the pile," the hybrid added.

The information was imparted gently, softly, as if he was too frightened (for whatever reason) to be loud--or merely very quiet-natured. His taloned wing-arms were placed neatly, almost politely, before him, and he seemed by his body language almost to be awaiting Shoal's orders. It was as if a butler or a servant had materialized from the mist to offer gentle advice, and to place himself at the owl's disposal.

Whatever he was, it was clear he had no interest in eating her--or was a very, very good (and particularly strange) actor.

"I don't know if I'm a predator. When I was growing up I ate rats and things, mostly--but my mom's a bird who eats almost anything, and I learned magic to help with that. I eat a lot of plants now--uhh. Fruit and seeds and nuts and things, too," he added thoughtfully. "But I was only watching the pile because I was thinking. Do you know where we go, when we die?" he continued. This question was delivered without pause from his other stream of thoughts, gently curious, as if he did not consider it a separate topic from any of the rest.

It was, at best, odd.

{Table code credit to Madison, altered a bit!}



@Shoal


RE: the less i know the better - Shoal - Apr 07 2019


Shoal grumbled quietly, thoughtfully. She prodded the back leg of a cave deer with her talon before looking back to Oliver again. "I'm not a scavenger," she said, stubbornly. "I hunt for my food. Fresh food. I don't like this sort of thing, it's all rotting." She glanced into the pile, briefly.

"After all, it's someone else's food," she added, and then moved on. She considered Oliver to be a little odd, but it's not like Shoal had much of a base to go on here. Any encounters she'd had with other gembounds was fleeting, at best, but this was the second one she met who seemed a little afraid of her.

She concluded, as she did with Selena, it was because of the scars.

The ragged owl grumbled again, listening. She couldn't quite imagine being satisfied eating fruits and nuts and seeds and 'things,' though right when she was about to mention this to him, he brought up... death?

Shoal had a lot of experience with getting beaten into her own chrysalis. Was that, death? But the cave rats didn't come back after she ate them, she vomited them back up after a few hours. There was really no coming back from that one.

She considered this, eyes narrowing. "I don't know," she admitted. "I have died many times, and gone back into my chrysalis, but I have always come back. Perhaps death is something like that-- true death, at least, or so I imagine it to be."

She paused, then elaborated a little further-- "like going to sleep. But dreamless. You just, shut your eyes and that's it. I don't know. Why are you thinking about that sort of thing? Are you dying?"


@Oliver


RE: the less i know the better - Oliver - Apr 07 2019


Oliver listened intently, curiously, to Shoal's ideas. And he blinked at her question with surprise.

"Uhh--no? I hope not?!" he answered, alarmed. "Not as far as I know, I mean. I guess it's just--"

He paused, eyeing the pile, and perhaps wisely decided to move somewhat farther away. He'd heard stories about Aquarian swallowing it whole, and how once the alligator Dragon had barely escaped being consumed along with it. He slinked a bit toward the trees before sitting back down, turning his attention back to the owl.

"Well, it's just something I wondered, I guess. But then there's also the Bloodberries. They went and attacked Eridanus and tried to kill everyone," he went on, his soft voice somehow both matter-of-fact and sad. "One of them died and a bunch of Gembound got hurt. I guess it was--uhh. Scary," he admitted, sinking down a little at the memory, his ear-tuft feathers pressing back. "I didn't know that, though. About sleeping. So--thanks for telling me. Can I, uhh--ask you things? Like--how old you are and--what happened to. Um. Kill you? You don't look very dead," he added, glancing over her--and his tone suggested that he felt this was a compliment.

{Table code credit to Madison, altered a bit!}



@Shoal


RE: the less i know the better - Shoal - Apr 07 2019


The owl's mangled face would have scrunched up, if it were capable, when Oliver shuffled away from the pile. Instinctively, Shoal began to follow-- up until she paused, wondering if Oliver were intentionally trying to lead her away from it.

Even if he were acting nice, perhaps he was trying to lead her into a trap? Shoal did not know-- to her, it could go either way, especially if his claims about some Children killing people near the pile were true.

Shoal took a quick look around before she silently fluttered up onto a rock, a few feet above the ground. Closer to Oliver, now, to listen to him speak about death, and other fun topics to discuss with a stranger.

"Bloodberries," she echoed, trying the word in her mouth. "What a stupid fucking name." That didn't stop them from trying to kill everyone, however, it seemed. The owl considered this for a few moments, ruffling her feathers out as she got comfortable on her new perch.

"And, what?" She asked. "You let these people go after they tried to kill everyone in Eridanus? Why?"

Though, Oliver was moving on-- asking questions about her. She didn't exactly get the chance to refuse or not, but felt obligated to answer anyway. She began with a prolonged croak. "I don't know," she said. "I hatched alone and was attacked by a pack of cave rats shortly after. I died, went into my chrysalis, and came out again."

"It's been like that my whole life. Everytime I come out my chrysalis, I end up being attacked, and I die. It's... mostly rats. I was trampled to death by cave deer twice, though," she added. "But I don't know how old I am. I feel very, very old."

It took her a few moments to realise 'you don't look very dead' was a compliment. It took her a few moments longer to realise how absurd this was. The owl let out a peal of rasping laughter, shaking her head.

"I don't look as pretty as I used to. My feathers don't grow in right anymore and I'm very close to having my beak severed. You don't look particularly dead or injured either, considering you were attacked, however."

@Oliver


RE: the less i know the better - Oliver - Apr 07 2019


Oliver paused, for just a moment, at Shoal's words.

"Thanks," he said at last, tilting his head a little. "And I didn't--let them go? I'm not a fighter. And there were a lot of them," he went on, "and a lot of gembound fighting them. I tried to just-... heal the hurt ones. A couple of them are being kept by Rift and them, in Eridanus. That's-... I dunno if you know, but it's a group of, like, healers and plant-growers and things and Rift named us--Rift's a big cat, but he's nice, mostly--anyway he named us the Kingdom of Eridanus."

A pause.

"We don't have a king, though."

For a moment Oliver went silent, studying the scar-studded owl before him, the way her beak was cracked, the eye that he could now see wasn't quite like the other, the missing tufts of feathers and her generally ragged appearance.

"Well, I don't think you're ugly," he said, at last--and his words were honest enough. "You look like a fighter. Like--I'm sorry you died a lot, that's awful and musta been really bad. But you look--um. Interesting? To look at. Like you probably have lots of stories, and uhh--experience. And it's not ugly," he added, somewhat repeating himself.

To Oliver, she looked distinguished. Aloof, perhaps--above other things (and not just literally), from a world, perhaps, of war and strife. She didn't look like a part of the shining, magical caves, its so many pristine and wondrous creatures. Instead she was grizzled, battered, and--"Tough," he realized aloud. "You look tough."

She looked like a badass, really.

{Table code credit to Madison, altered a bit!}



@Shoal