Aug 30, 2021 3:07 am
Animal Taming: A Practical Guide
Chapter 1
All manner of beast can be tamed, but not forever, and not without a cost.
A line of Condor Riders swoops low, just above where I lay at the bottom of the ships mizzenmast, no doubt escorting the last flotilla of rafts over the falls.
Forever I am forced watch. To stand witness to the deaths of my people. But the more I watch, the more I see the ships look as enormous floating flour beds. Or like a freshly dug grave filled to the brim with dirty, writhing earthworms.
I watch the way they wiggle and squirm and fight against their restraints. I watch them paddle until their hearts give out, against certain and inevitable death they still paddle and fight and claw as they're yanked around and around, ever closer, with no way out. Trapped like a worm on a hook waiting to be eaten whole.
I know the feeling well all too well. These are my people. My worms. And I know their pain. I hear their screams. Tens of thousands of cries in the night. They ring in his ears throughout every moment of my existence, all simultaneously stacked upon one another on a continuous loop.
Another ship full of my countrymen cascades over the falls at the center of all things, and are swallowed up, and Cartegus--studious, sleazy, rat-faced Cartegus--scribbles down another tally in his big brown ledger. As if it were possible for me to forget the count.
"We'll make it, your majesty," Cartegus sputters. He doesn't look back, just stares out over the water at the setting sun as it dips behind the rig tower of platform four. He compares that its position to that of the remaining raft, a few minutes from death, and mops his sideburns and the back of his neck with a handkerchief. "We've been father away with less time before," Cartegus says in a plea of reassurance, but I am not sure we ever have.
***
Truth eases out of a spindly patch of whitevine brush, her hands up in surrender. "Woah. Hey now. It's just me. You remember me, right boy?"
The beast towers over the small girl, rearing back, stamping its hooves.
Truth scoops up the wooden pale at her feet and retreats back a step. She dunks her hand in. "You remember this though, don't ya?" Truth pulls a hunk of corned beef drenched in thick brown gravy. She dangled it between her fingers like a freshly caught fish.
The monster of a horse, fierce even an inch from starvation, turned to butter at the smell of it.
"Yeah, smells good right. Come on. Come and get it." She rings out the hunk of meat in little hands like a wet rag and spills a trail of brown gravy into the cracks of the sun-bleached earth.
"Not too quick, okay?" Truth takes a step backwards to give the him some room to limp forward and lap up a much as he needed. "It'll hurt your belly like last time, remember?" She dunked the meat back into bucket and dripped down some more of the good stuff.
At least the horse's tongue worked fine, she thought. She watches in weird fascination as the enormous slimy slug of a tongue formed to fit every crack, however jagged, he managed to slurp up every drop, no matter how far down in the cracks it was.
The horse would've been way too big for Truth on account of her age, but being small for it didn't help neither. Still, she figured this was likely the scrawniest and sickliest looking Shire she'd ever seen. Normally they stood about a fathom and a half tall and weighed a good ten anchors or so--supposed to be so big you can't barely get them in a door even with their head bowed. But this one was worse for wear.
Truth tried to imagine how such an enormous animal could have survived out here long. It was starving, definitely, but with the amount of what Truth was sure had to be blood matted to the horse's back, she figured there had to be a wound or two under the gore as well.
The poor creature looked just as likely to keel over and die on her as to be of use to anybody, but the village always needed strong animal to draw up nets and plough paddies, and one can't be too choosey on the tundra, gran would say.
Truth had been lucky to find the mare's tracks the week before, and even luckier The Great Tide held off long enough to track him down again today.
The big lunk had been too stubborn to follow her home before, but Truth had determined, deep down in herself, that she could not possibly live with herself if she just leave him out here to drown.
She'd told Gran and Grampa about the horse, and the stableman, and multiple town watchmen too. Nobody cared. The only person who took any interest at all was Karn Hawkings, the village butcher, and there wasn't a change in hell I was letting him go that way.
So Truth had set out to on her own, this time prepared with her secret weapon. Meat and gravy. She figured she wasn't likely to get third shot it at. Although, who knows with the water acting the way it was these days.
The Great Tide had been more and more erratically every year, to the point where it was becoming darn near impossible to predict when it might come in, and even harder to know when it might go again. The year before last it'd stayed through the first five seasons without leaving once, drowning the crops and causing torrential rainfall that lasted for weeks on end, while this year they hadn't had a single flood and folks were starting to worry they'd go all twelve phases without seeing a drop.
"You gotta name, boy?" the girl asked, flopping down a strip of soggy meat. "My name is Truth, and that's the truth!" she said with waning enthusiasm. "That's what my mom would say..." She smiles, a twinge of pain in remembering. "I'm thinking... Chomper," she says as the horse gnaws on the meat. "Or maybe, Bitey..." She considered it. "Hmm."
She looks closer. "What's wrong, buddy? Too thick?" The horse gums the hunk of meat, sucking on it with a toothless, bloody mouth. "Oh, Tide... You poor thing." Whitevine burrs cling to the dry sockets and she hadn't the tools to remove them, not without losing a hand at least. If the horse was any stronger, Truth might worry about become his lunch. A full grown Shine had made quick work of many-a-stable boy her Grandpa'd said, but a ten year old girl--? And a scrawny one at that--? Well... she'd barely be a snack.
Without really thinking--Truth's natural state--she reaches out and strokes the horse's mane, pulling out knots and sweeping away a few brambles before she realizes the horse was letting her touch him for the first time. He liked her, she supposed. Well, that or Grandpa's yak gravy; it was known to have that effect on most living things.
"I'mma go with Slurpy!" She says, beaming down at the beast as he nuzzles his nose down into the gravy pale and embodies his namesake. "Easy boy," she strokes, "Don't wanna have to rename you Barf!" She giggles. "Or, or, or... Ralph!" Truth reaches up and pats him on the butt, feeling better, rejuvenated.
Truth scoops up the bucket, empty now except a few strips of meat that had been licked clean. "Come on, boy. I got more where this came from," she said, tantalizingly, but after a few steps this way and that it appears the horse had other plans. "Come on you big lump! You want to get stuck out here during a High Tide? I don't think so, so come on!"
She yanks on the horses bit and bridle, which were elegantly made with an intricate, scrolling design," but the horse doesn't move an inch. "Pretty fancy digs you got here, Slurps." She looks him over. There was no saddle, but by the line of discolored fur, Truth could tell the horse's owner must've used one, and not long ago.
She scans the constant, flat horizon. Nothing but broken earth, barren trees, and spindly, lifeless brush for as far as you could see, even with alchemist's glass--not that she had a piece clear enough to see through anyway. If she did, she sure as heck wouldn't be out here fishing for salt worms.
Truth eyes the horse, suspiciously, "Who are you, huh? Ain't like no wild horse I ever seen." She waited, staring at the horse, as if expecting a reply, preferably in clear, common Allerian if he could manage. "Hmm. Welp, you're mine now. 'Peeper keeper, sleeper weeper!' Grampa'd say." She pulls the length of broken rein over Slurpy's head, wondering what could have snapped such a thick piece of gully leather, and so cleanly. Not even sword or scythe could of cut through the thick hide of Gullers. She'd never seen one herself, but Gran had told her stories of when she was a little girl and the Gullers roamed free across the land, before the Tide starting acting up.
She pulls the horse in the direction of her , but the beast doesn't move. She heaves with all ninety or so pounds of her, but he doesn't budge even an inch, instead dips his head down to lick bait pale again, as if he hadn't even noticed the weight pulling on his head forward.
Chapter 1
All manner of beast can be tamed, but not forever, and not without a cost.
A line of Condor Riders swoops low, just above where I lay at the bottom of the ships mizzenmast, no doubt escorting the last flotilla of rafts over the falls.
Forever I am forced watch. To stand witness to the deaths of my people. But the more I watch, the more I see the ships look as enormous floating flour beds. Or like a freshly dug grave filled to the brim with dirty, writhing earthworms.
I watch the way they wiggle and squirm and fight against their restraints. I watch them paddle until their hearts give out, against certain and inevitable death they still paddle and fight and claw as they're yanked around and around, ever closer, with no way out. Trapped like a worm on a hook waiting to be eaten whole.
I know the feeling well all too well. These are my people. My worms. And I know their pain. I hear their screams. Tens of thousands of cries in the night. They ring in his ears throughout every moment of my existence, all simultaneously stacked upon one another on a continuous loop.
Another ship full of my countrymen cascades over the falls at the center of all things, and are swallowed up, and Cartegus--studious, sleazy, rat-faced Cartegus--scribbles down another tally in his big brown ledger. As if it were possible for me to forget the count.
"We'll make it, your majesty," Cartegus sputters. He doesn't look back, just stares out over the water at the setting sun as it dips behind the rig tower of platform four. He compares that its position to that of the remaining raft, a few minutes from death, and mops his sideburns and the back of his neck with a handkerchief. "We've been father away with less time before," Cartegus says in a plea of reassurance, but I am not sure we ever have.
***
Truth eases out of a spindly patch of whitevine brush, her hands up in surrender. "Woah. Hey now. It's just me. You remember me, right boy?"
The beast towers over the small girl, rearing back, stamping its hooves.
Truth scoops up the wooden pale at her feet and retreats back a step. She dunks her hand in. "You remember this though, don't ya?" Truth pulls a hunk of corned beef drenched in thick brown gravy. She dangled it between her fingers like a freshly caught fish.
The monster of a horse, fierce even an inch from starvation, turned to butter at the smell of it.
"Yeah, smells good right. Come on. Come and get it." She rings out the hunk of meat in little hands like a wet rag and spills a trail of brown gravy into the cracks of the sun-bleached earth.
"Not too quick, okay?" Truth takes a step backwards to give the him some room to limp forward and lap up a much as he needed. "It'll hurt your belly like last time, remember?" She dunked the meat back into bucket and dripped down some more of the good stuff.
At least the horse's tongue worked fine, she thought. She watches in weird fascination as the enormous slimy slug of a tongue formed to fit every crack, however jagged, he managed to slurp up every drop, no matter how far down in the cracks it was.
The horse would've been way too big for Truth on account of her age, but being small for it didn't help neither. Still, she figured this was likely the scrawniest and sickliest looking Shire she'd ever seen. Normally they stood about a fathom and a half tall and weighed a good ten anchors or so--supposed to be so big you can't barely get them in a door even with their head bowed. But this one was worse for wear.
Truth tried to imagine how such an enormous animal could have survived out here long. It was starving, definitely, but with the amount of what Truth was sure had to be blood matted to the horse's back, she figured there had to be a wound or two under the gore as well.
The poor creature looked just as likely to keel over and die on her as to be of use to anybody, but the village always needed strong animal to draw up nets and plough paddies, and one can't be too choosey on the tundra, gran would say.
Truth had been lucky to find the mare's tracks the week before, and even luckier The Great Tide held off long enough to track him down again today.
The big lunk had been too stubborn to follow her home before, but Truth had determined, deep down in herself, that she could not possibly live with herself if she just leave him out here to drown.
She'd told Gran and Grampa about the horse, and the stableman, and multiple town watchmen too. Nobody cared. The only person who took any interest at all was Karn Hawkings, the village butcher, and there wasn't a change in hell I was letting him go that way.
So Truth had set out to on her own, this time prepared with her secret weapon. Meat and gravy. She figured she wasn't likely to get third shot it at. Although, who knows with the water acting the way it was these days.
The Great Tide had been more and more erratically every year, to the point where it was becoming darn near impossible to predict when it might come in, and even harder to know when it might go again. The year before last it'd stayed through the first five seasons without leaving once, drowning the crops and causing torrential rainfall that lasted for weeks on end, while this year they hadn't had a single flood and folks were starting to worry they'd go all twelve phases without seeing a drop.
"You gotta name, boy?" the girl asked, flopping down a strip of soggy meat. "My name is Truth, and that's the truth!" she said with waning enthusiasm. "That's what my mom would say..." She smiles, a twinge of pain in remembering. "I'm thinking... Chomper," she says as the horse gnaws on the meat. "Or maybe, Bitey..." She considered it. "Hmm."
She looks closer. "What's wrong, buddy? Too thick?" The horse gums the hunk of meat, sucking on it with a toothless, bloody mouth. "Oh, Tide... You poor thing." Whitevine burrs cling to the dry sockets and she hadn't the tools to remove them, not without losing a hand at least. If the horse was any stronger, Truth might worry about become his lunch. A full grown Shine had made quick work of many-a-stable boy her Grandpa'd said, but a ten year old girl--? And a scrawny one at that--? Well... she'd barely be a snack.
Without really thinking--Truth's natural state--she reaches out and strokes the horse's mane, pulling out knots and sweeping away a few brambles before she realizes the horse was letting her touch him for the first time. He liked her, she supposed. Well, that or Grandpa's yak gravy; it was known to have that effect on most living things.
"I'mma go with Slurpy!" She says, beaming down at the beast as he nuzzles his nose down into the gravy pale and embodies his namesake. "Easy boy," she strokes, "Don't wanna have to rename you Barf!" She giggles. "Or, or, or... Ralph!" Truth reaches up and pats him on the butt, feeling better, rejuvenated.
Truth scoops up the bucket, empty now except a few strips of meat that had been licked clean. "Come on, boy. I got more where this came from," she said, tantalizingly, but after a few steps this way and that it appears the horse had other plans. "Come on you big lump! You want to get stuck out here during a High Tide? I don't think so, so come on!"
She yanks on the horses bit and bridle, which were elegantly made with an intricate, scrolling design," but the horse doesn't move an inch. "Pretty fancy digs you got here, Slurps." She looks him over. There was no saddle, but by the line of discolored fur, Truth could tell the horse's owner must've used one, and not long ago.
She scans the constant, flat horizon. Nothing but broken earth, barren trees, and spindly, lifeless brush for as far as you could see, even with alchemist's glass--not that she had a piece clear enough to see through anyway. If she did, she sure as heck wouldn't be out here fishing for salt worms.
Truth eyes the horse, suspiciously, "Who are you, huh? Ain't like no wild horse I ever seen." She waited, staring at the horse, as if expecting a reply, preferably in clear, common Allerian if he could manage. "Hmm. Welp, you're mine now. 'Peeper keeper, sleeper weeper!' Grampa'd say." She pulls the length of broken rein over Slurpy's head, wondering what could have snapped such a thick piece of gully leather, and so cleanly. Not even sword or scythe could of cut through the thick hide of Gullers. She'd never seen one herself, but Gran had told her stories of when she was a little girl and the Gullers roamed free across the land, before the Tide starting acting up.
She pulls the horse in the direction of her , but the beast doesn't move. She heaves with all ninety or so pounds of her, but he doesn't budge even an inch, instead dips his head down to lick bait pale again, as if he hadn't even noticed the weight pulling on his head forward.