ANY WAY THE WIND BLOWS DOESN'T REALLY MATTER Username: Wingseagle Preference list: white hellebore, arctic parrya, camellia, dark hellebore Entry: Notes:
NEMESIS IS THE MOTHER OF KARMA Usernames: Ruriska, Astraea Pandora Preference list: red fox and arctic hare; grey wolf and bighorn sheep Poem One:
my heart thuds
i am the snow
the earth
the ground
i am not flesh
i am not for you
stay low
stay quiet
listen
closer now
huddle down
tensed
trembling
waiting
if i run
there is only one chance
to escape
to live
i want to live
to survive
if you catch me
i will not beg
i will struggle
until the very end
when the thud of my heart
is hollow and quiet
extinguished
Poem Two:
I am cold
My insides twist
The gnawing feeling
You feel it too
Only one of us will feast
I hear your heart
The warm rush of blood
The smell of your fear
You are not invisible
Running
Darting
Weaving
Chasing
I'll make it quick
No pain for you
My only boon
I am warm now
The twisting is gone
And eternally so is yours
Thank You Notes:
SEASONS MAY CHANGE, WINTER TO SPRING Username: Maxx D Preference list: four, one, two Entry:
Foxy was trying to figure out just what to use her main character, and in the end, decided to use a fox, because she had one. Such was her depth of preparation when she was confronted by a bunch of babes at the Mothers Club, and requested to tell a bedtime story. (Which is to say, a bunch of foals yelled STORY! STORY! at her multiple times, and waggling her twin tails was no longer sufficient entertainment.) A fox it was.
"Once there was a fox," she started, tilting her head slightly towards her own Heart cleaning itself, "who lived in a land of snow. And rocks," she said, wondering whether that was enough set-up. "The fox, silvery white and awfully fluffy, knew how to survive there - how to hide in the snow, where to look in the wintery landscape, how to hunt the prey that blended in just as well as it did. The fox knew how to thrive there, having grown up in the land of snow, and knew itself very well too: it was clever, it was quick, it was stealthy, it was good at hunting. The fox knew just how to step in the snow, and where to keep its warmth. The fox was satisfied...
...until the avalanche. You probably haven't seen an avalanche. Imagine a giant waterfall of snow - that's an avalanche. As the fox was hunting at the foot of the mountain, it heard a rumbling - and looked back to see a wave of snow rushing towards it. The fox was fast, the fox was clever - and the fox knew how to, and knew it should run.
The fox ran, and ran, as the snow chased, threatening to swallow it up. The fox ran, and ran, and the land started to look strange - fields of white started to fade to grey, to brown, and the fox was out of breath and energy. The fox fell, with the last rolls of the snow lapping at its feet.
The fox awoke, in a pool of water and a brand new land. The new land was so mighty, it had devoured the snow, melting it away. The new land was browns and greens, and instead of light, fluffy snow, there was sticky mud and tickling grass. The fox looked back, but had not known where it'd run from, and did not know how to return.
The fox had no choice, but to live in this new land.
The fox, who had thought itself clever, quick, and good at hunting, now knew very little. It moved poorly on dirt, its little paws sticking in confusion, and it whimpered from the wet when it rained. The fox found itself stumbling after prey, falling face first into the mud as it tried to turn quickly.
The fox was no longer what it thought it was, except that it was still a fox.
Then, when it drank slowly at a river, it saw itself: the white pelt was gone. It wasn't just mud and grass stained, no - its fur was flatter, and its white fur had given way to patches of brown.
The fox, in its eyes, was no longer a fox, and no longer itself - but with no way of turning back, the fox had to go on.
One day, the fox realised, that its paws were no longer slipping and sticking. It turned just as sharply as the rabbit it was chasing, and felled it quicker than they'd ever remembered. The fox was no longer wet and cold, having found shelter in a familiar cave when it rained. The fox wondered: did the land change, somehow? It was ever more convinced when edges of its new land started to turn cold, and white with snow, that the land was changing. Its white fur returned, and the new land seemed just like the old one.
And when the new land's snow started to melt away, the fox once again, despaired.
But the fox realised, as its pelt returned to brown, that the land had changed in the same way. Yet, the fox was just as adept as it was - clever, quick and a magnificent hunter - and even more so, as the land returned to green and brown.
It took two turnings of the seasons for the fox to realise it, itself, had changed. The fox now knew itself just as it did: it was always clever and quick, it had always been, but in the new land, it had changed, for the better. The fox thought it had learned to hunt in one season, then the other, but found it now knew how to hunt in two seasons, than just one alone."
She paused for effect, and smiled broadly. "So don't be afraid of change. The land will change around you, as will your body as you grow, but a changed kin is a better kin."
Of course, the babies had fallen asleep long before the moral of the story.
SEASONS MAY CHANGE, WINTER TO SPRING Username: Jun D Preference list: four, one, two Entry:
There once was a Kin – ah, let's say he was…a Kimeti. There are so many Kimeti running around in the Swamp, after all, it would hardly seem amiss. And let us say that he was called…Growing Pains – well, why not? A little trite, perhaps, but no matter: his story will soon be over.
Growing Pains was a most unremarkable Kimeti. In fact, you could say he was a sorry excuse for a Kimeti. There was nothing particularly strange about him, but all the same, it was plain to see he ill-fitted his skin. For one, he gangled – he had gangled as a foal, and then as a colt, but foals and colts are meant to gangle, and his mother had said he would grow out of it. He had grown into a buck, and he gangled still. His limbs were just uncomfortably shaped, and his pelt disagreeably scruffy. He was a mess, and at odds with his own body. Such was Growing Pains, and he shuffled through life, moaning and groaning all the way. Well – I say he shuffled through life, but, really, mostly he just pootled around in a little patch of Swamp, complaining to his mother of his misfitting skin and aches.
And then, one day, the most amazing thing happened: he felt worse. He had not know it was possible, but he did. It started as a a little twinge behind his eyes, a little thud in the back of his head, but by lunchtime, it had become a full-blown splitting of his skull.
"Oh," he moaned to his mother, who was the forbearing sort, "I don't feel so well. Perhaps I should take a herb for it."
"You don't feel so well?" his mother repeated, somewhat unnecessarily, "could you have eaten some strange plant you shouldn't have?"
"Perhaps," he admitted, for he was in the habit of taking herbs, or, at least, what he assumed were herbs, of whatever kind, "perhaps another herb will cure it."
But his skull was splitting, so he did not look for one, and spent the rest of the day lying about, and moaning, instead.
The next day, his skull was still splitting.
"And my teeth, I rather fear," he moaned to his mother, "are tearing up my gums."
"You are looking rather long in the tooth," his mother agreed, peering worriedly between his open jaws, "and rather long in the face. Have you lost some weight?"
"I would not be surprised," he said, glum, as he nursed his gums, "I don't feel so well."
"Perhaps you are just tired," his mother said, "if you sleep, you would feel better."
When he awoke on the third day, he did not feel any better.
"And my tail, I feel," he moaned to his mother, "has grown heavier – it drags, I have no strength to lift it from the floor."
"Why, it is rather shaggy," his mother agreed, peering at his tangled tail, alarmed, "perhaps it would do you good to wash it out."
"I am too tired to wash it," he moaned, "and my head hurts – much too much!"
"Poor thing," his mother said, for she was the forbearing sort, "I'll tell you what – I shall go and find a healer, and I shall bring back one of those plants you like so much. When you eat it, you will feel better."
"They're called herbs, mother," he whined.
And so Growing Pains' mother left their little grove – at first her little grove, but now his too, for he would not leave and she did not make him – to find a healer, to bring back one of those plants he liked so much.
The first day that his mother was gone, Growing Pains did not feel better. He felt worse – ever worse: his skull was splitting, his teeth were tearing up his gums, and his tail dragged. His bones felt strange, uncomfortably shaped, and ever more uncomfortable, as if they stretched, and squashed, and bent beneath him. He shuffled and stumbled and rubbed his odd limbs against rough bark, shuffling and scraping till deep night fell, and he finally fell asleep.
The second day that his mother was gone, Growing Pains felt worse – ever worse.
"This pain," he howled, rolling about, with his bending bones and his tearing teeth and his splitting skull – and his hooves, even his hooves, that felt like they splintered and dug, deep, deep into his flesh, "this pain – aaarrrghhh – aarghablaaaarrrrgghhh – aarrrrrrrooooo!"
The third day that his mother was gone, Growing Pains felt – rather good, actually. For the first time in his life.
He felt fantastic.
His hooves felt sleek, and sharp, like deadly points. His bones felt neatly curved, and tensile, and strong. His teeth – what teeth! They glittered and flashed, cutting the air where he bared them. The magnificence of his tail plumed low on the ground – then swished high in the air. His skull was no longer splitting – no, it was whole, and so much better: he could hear things, from such a distance away, the leap of a hare, the wing of a bird. He could smell things – a feast of smells! The tantalising headiness of the blood that beat through a passing mongoose's body…his wild eyes gleamed.
Had he truly been alive before this day? Surely this was how he was always meant to be: not that ill-fitting skin of a Kin, that gangling, scruffy, mess of a misfitting body. This, strong, and free, and sharp, and wild, claw and fang and red, red – red to the blood!
For that was what Growing Pain's mother found him as, when she finally returned that moon, carefully bearing one of those plants he liked so much in her mouth: a bonny, bouncing wolf!
But not a little one. Not like the ones that come yea high, up to a Kimeti's haunch. No, he was a big one – bigger, a hulking beast, with jaws that bite and claws that catch: a werewolf.
"Growing Pains," she dropped the plant and screamed, for she could well recognise her son, warts and all, even as a shambling wolf, 'oh, Growing Pains – Growing Pains!"
After all, they did say: if you call a werewolf by their Swamp-given name thrice, they would remember who they are.
The hulking beast that was Growing Pains stilled. His wild eyes gleamed. He crept before her, snuffling, peering down with his wild, gleaming eyes. This was the Kin, the doe, who had borne him, and given him life, then borne him with equanimity and given him home. She had called him by his Swamp-given name, thrice.
Growing Pains remembered who he was…as he was always meant to be: a wolf! Claw and fang and red, red – red to the blood!
And so he gobbled her up."
Distant Tidings bared his own teeth in a maniacal grin, waiting patiently, if not a little obviously, for the horror or delight of his captive audience.
The three foals: a Kimeti sister and brother, and a Totoma colt, stared rather boredly at him and scowled.
"That's stupid," the girl said.
"What a lousy story," her brother said.
"That is a bad ending," the Totoma said, sternly.
Tidings snapped his dainty jaw shut.
"What?!" he exclaimed, "no! It's a wonderful ending! Certainly, he had his share of pains, and went through more – and even more – and also ate his mother but that's something else altogether to get to where he needed to be, but the point is: sometimes you must suffer to change, and change to grow, but all the pain is worth it to be a better self, your truer self, and that's what counts – for he ran away into the Swamp after that, and quite happily lives as a slavering wolf to this day."
"Oh, I see how it is," the Kimeti boy said.
"You're just trying to scare us into behaving," his sister said, "don't run around by yourself and all that."
"This is a thing grown-ups often do," the Totoma said, solemnly.
"I don’t care if you little brats get eaten up by a wolf," Tidings huffed, "I, for one, think it's a beautiful story, and it's wonderful he gets to be himself."
"I question that his true self is a wolf," the Totoma said, seriously, "because wolves don't eat their mothers. I've seen them. They are pack animals."
"Yeah, you're grie-vo-us-ly misrepresenting wolves," the Kimeti boy said.
"He's not a wolf," the girl said, "he's a very naughty boy."
"Alright, so I took some creative liberties," Tidings snapped, "but I think a wolf ought to be able to eat his non-wolf mother if he so desires.
Somehow, that elicited the horror that he'd so craved at the original conclusion of his tale from his picky little audience.
"You want to eat your mother?!" the girl shrieked.
"Oh no," the Totoma gasped, "he is a mother-eater."
"Mother-eater!" the Kimeti boy screamed as they scattered, "Mother-eater!"
"That is not the moral of the story," Tidings yelled after them as they ran away.
"Well," he sighed, dusting off his hooves, "I suppose that tale still needs a bit of workshopping. Maybe he should suffer more, to really drive in the point. I should probably go find a werewolf or two, ask them some questions. Make it more authentic."
And so Tidings ran off into the Swamp to find a real live werewolf, for one must suffer for their art, and a story, too, must change.
NEMESIS IS THE MOTHER OF KARMA Usernames: Mika_Yumi & Pigxels Preference list: red fox and arctic hare; grey wolf and bighorn sheep Poem One:
Around the woods in a breakneck dash
I chase the fluffy-tailed red, white, and ash
Up this way and down another fast
Roll down that other hill, hey it's a blast
I'm the fastest here like a white hot flash
Hop over the water and avoid the splash
Before I knew it the sun didn't last
Never want it to end with this red friend steadfast Poem Two:
Child of mine
but not of my womb,
she does not fear
when my kind loom;
the red of our coats,
and grin of sharp teeth
seem playful and goading --
she just doesn't see
that these others are different,
they don't want to play,
I can hear their low growls;
she is nothing but prey.
I rush to her aid,
mother's instinct kicks in --
I'm ready to protect,
tear attacker limb from limb!
But as I close in, I find
to my greatest surprise,
they are bowing and pawing
before chasing behind.
Perhaps I am wrong,
and they have learned to see
this baby of mine
as an extension of me.
I will still keep watch,
just from farther away --
but it seems after all
she is able to play. Notes: WHOOPS I ALMOST MISSED IT ;; <3
SEASONS MAY CHANGE, WINTER TO SPRING Username: thyPOPE Preference list: 2, 4, 5, 3, 1 Entry: "Long ago," begins Little Red Hoof, looking just a little nervously at the gleaming sacs that are her audience. "Two lifemated zikwa lived together, in a cave that glowed with mushrooms and moss. Theirs was a good story - they were both hard workers, who had toiled for years side by side to bring prosperity to their neighbors and to their community. They had everything they could want - but for children, to love, and to continue the legacy of their community."
She takes a breath. "They had been raised together - by the same brood-mother, who they knew to be wise, and kind, and loving. So they traveled to her home, to seek advice on this matter. When the old mare heard the tale of their woe, of course she had to smile with sympathy. 'I will see what I can do,' she said."
"There was an herb, aboveground, said to increase fertility, but it grew only where wolves and caiman prospered - dangerous territory, of course. Many zikwa had tried and failed to obtain it for their own communities. But, the brood-mother reasoned, she was an old mare, who deserved her rest, and the couple had years of life left in them yet. So in the night, she snuck out, to retrieve the root so that the kin she had raised could beget more kin."
"And yes - she succeeded. But of course it was not without cost. In the morning the couple saw the place where her body had lain, now cold and empty, and knew where she must have gone. They traveled to the edge of the caves, and found her, stumbling back for them. She was tracking in blood. Still she smiled. 'Here,' she said. 'Here is the root which bring you foals.'"
"'Oh,' said the buck, for he'd never seen his strong, loving brood-mother made so weak. But he was a healer, so he trotted to help her before even taking the herbs."
"'Thank you,' said the doe, astonished, as her partner did his work. 'But why did you not wait for us to travel with you?' She was hardy and clever, one of the best fishers in the caves. She'd have been an excellent aid - and, although she probably would have also sustained injury, she'd have been able to share it with her brood-mother."
"The brood-mother just smiled. 'All kin will die,' she said. 'But you have more to give. Take them, and leave me - my stomach has been pierced.' The buck needed only a minute to confirm this for himself. 'Please, take this root - and teach your children what I have taught you. For my journey must end here.'"
"Of course, the brood-mother was right. She could not be saved, and her loss was a great one for her people. But the couple took her words to heart, and dedicated themselves to the study of her art, and raised even greater zikwa than she had. Death is hard, for those who live on - but only so can we progress." Notes: