jerenda
Member
|
Heaven’s Wrath- Ch 6 Chauven and Taipo Arden flopped down on the grassy hill, her golden eyes gentle. Tai looked into the burning orbs and noted with relief that all the red had vanished. For some unknowable reason, Changeling eyes turned golden when they were angry, and red when the lust for blood drove them out of control. Once upon a time, Arden’s eyes had been a clear almond brown, but something had driven deep into her heart and burned her eyes forever gold. It was a rare thing indeed for her to show even a hint of brown. “So, where are we?” Arden asked, hands laced underneath her head. Tai, collapsed next to her, turned to look at the eagle. She, like him, was only half-Changed, and she looked strange indeed, with wings that were arms and feathers that had only partly vanished imprinted on her skin. Arden sensed his attention and rolled onto her side, propping herself up with her elbow and somehow managing to arrange her wings so the delicate feathers didn’t get crushed under her arm. He crooked an eyebrow at her and sat up, resting his hands over his knees as he explained the lay of the land. Behind them was a patch of forest, the thick trees thinning out as they reached the border. The land sloped gently downward where the trees ended before continuing on to the outskirts of the city and leveling out. Beyond the pair lay the outskirts of the city, smaller homes where the more sedate pace of suburban life ran its course. To the right of the trees lay a long strip of green grass, marked by a strange pair of footprints. The prints began as that of a cheetah, but slowly changed to look more manlike, though by the end there were still deep marks where claws assumedly remained. “Well, down the hill there is Terisina, that place we were supposed to be last night,” Tai said, sitting up and sweeping his arm out. “Straight behind us, that’s the Amazon rainforest, and back a few hours, to the right a ways, those are the crazy scientists trying to kill us and whatnot.” Arden laughed, but then grew serious. “Yes, last night… wonder what happened with that child.” Tai’s eyes flashed gold briefly, and a deep growl raised his fur. “Section 8 probably has him under lock and key by now. We were supposed to get him out of the city so they couldn’t touch him.” His features, a confusing mix of cheetah and human, twisted in frustration. Before he could continue, however, a deep voice sounded from the trees. “Actually, it’s a she.” Arden was instantly tense, senses on full alert, instincts screaming at her to bolt. Somehow she stayed where she was, holding her reflexes back with an iron will. Tai's hand, immediatly placed on top of hers, steadied her nerves. “Identify yourself,” she ground out through clenched teeth. “Strongpaw, meant to meet the Watcher and Darksun yesterday evening. Strangely enough, they never showed, and I got to carry out the mission myself.” The voice was half apologetic, half accusing. With a deep sigh, Arden let her muscles unclench, and a tense smile flitted across her face. “D’ya know I nearly killed you, Mathuin?” The eagle rose to her feet, giving the shadows of the trees a craggy smile. “Sorry for disappearing. There were… complications.” Mathuin stepped forward, all six feet of shaggy brown hair and muscle. He was a grizzly bear, and it showed. “I realized that. Glad you didn’t. So, about this kid. I can’t take her, so…” Arden raised an eyebrow. “Don’t tell me…” “…I want you to take her. C’mon, I’m full up!” “Don’t be daft,” Arden said, and launched herself at him. Mathuin managed to dodge Arden’s initial attack, but her left hand caught his right and, with a swift twist of the wrist, Arden threw Mathuin onto his back. She promptly sat on him and pinned his shoulders to the grass, not even breathing hard. Tai, sitting cross-legged on the side of the hill, sighed and put his head in his hands. Here we go again. “It’s you who’s being daft!” he growled, struggling against her iron grasp. “I’m being perfectly sensi-” Arden began, but Mathuin laid his palm flat against her ribs and heaved with all his might, sending Arden flying into a tree. She grimaced as the rough bark scraped her back, but Mathuin was already moving, dashing up the slope and gaining momentum fast. Arden didn’t even try to halt him, but instead twisted out of the way. While he was attempting to stop, she leaped into the air and kicked him in the head. He caught her foot, throwing her to the ground, but when he turned to follow up with another attack he tripped over her outstretched leg. He stumbled, almost fell, and in the few seconds of breathing space given her Arden drove him back against a tree with two strong, well-placed palm heels to his shoulders. Mathuin, pinned against yet another tree, met Arden’s blazing golden eyes without flinching. Instead, his steady, dark blue gaze drove Arden to speak again. “I couldn’t train a kid if my life depended on it!” Arden hissed, and Mathuin responded throwing her across the grassy expanse. She skidded past Tai, barely missing him, and dodged Mathuin’s follow-up punch by springing over the half-Changed cheetah-man. They traded punches over his head, finally ending with Mathuin managing to knock Arden off-balance and towards the trees. With unusual agility for a man of his size, he darted around behind Arden and locked her in a stranglehold.. “Luckily, it’s not your life that depends on it. It’s hers.” Arden curled her lip and elbowed him in the side, causing him to release her and double over. Instead of attacking, though, she stepped away. “Fine. But don’t be surprised if she comes back dead.” I hate it when he does that! Make me feel guilty for not taking her on… I’m a terrible mentor… “Good," he breathed, straightening up, "because I wasn’t sure I could have caught you again.” “Oh, I don’t know,” Arden said lightly, “You seemed to be doing pretty good.” Tai rose elegantly and intervened before Mathuin could reply. “Was that really necessary, Arden?” he asked, exasperated. “Of course.” Arden winked at the cheetah, tilting her face so Mathuin couldn’t see. She walked around the big man, poking him with a quick finger in his pressure points- above his collarbone, below his ribs and so forth. “Look at this- all soft. Tsk, tsk, Matty, you’ve let yourself go.” Mathuin, who clearly had not an ounce of unnecessary fat on his whole body, and actually looked a little emaciated from lack of food, just rolled his eyes. Then he flinched back when the eagle-girl brushed his chin. “Careful, Arden, you bruised me.” “Hey, that wasn’t my fault. You blocked with your face." Tai interrupted the conversation before it went off-track, gesturing into the shadows. “Hadn’t we better meet this girl you’re supposed to train?” “You can come out now, child.” Mathuin turned to the trees, beckoning. “Her name is Chauven.” The girl named Chauven stepped into the sunlight, hesitant and afraid. She was a quite ordinary thing, as far as humans go, with the beaten-down look that most new Changelings acquired and tired brown eyes. Her face was of the persistently ordinary variety, the type to vanish in a crowd. Indeed, the only thing that marked her as different was her hair. Brilliant red locks flowed down her back, obscured her ears, and got in her eyes. The red curls caught every shaft of sunlight, flashing and burning as they attempted to break free of her ponytail, wildly clamoring for attention. “Chauven, eh?” Arden asked, scrutinizing the girl. She shrank back, one hand going to her hair reflexively as if she knew what had caught the eagle’s attention and wished it otherwise. “Yeah. She used to be called-” Arden cut Mathuin off with a sharp look. “Her former name is unimportant. If she tries to keep ties to her old life she’ll die that much quicker.” Chauven winced. “Hawk, I suppose? Red-tailed, even.” “H-how did you know?” she stammered, both hands on her hair now as she tried to stuff it back into its ponytail. “Oh, it’s kind of obvious. You’ll get the hang of it eventually.” Arden turned to go, the caught Tai's look. :Arden. Teaching moment. Tell her how you know.: The cheetah raised one eyebrow, arms folded impassively across his bare chest, when she glared at him. “Fine.” Arden turned back to Chauven. “For starters, you’re extremely small, even for a thirteen-year-old.” “Fourteen,” Chauven corrected, then quailed as Arden met her eyes. “Fourteen. Yes. Bird-Changelings are smaller and more slender then ordinary humans- less mass to have to Change. Then we have your name- Chauven. Hawk. Generally the names tell you what they are- Arden, for example, is the name of a star. Translated, it means ‘eagle’. Then again, there could be names like Tai. His name means ‘great,’ or ‘extreme’, so you have to use other factors to find out what he is. For example-” Arden was circling Tai now, pointing out his features- “his eyes. That tear-drop mark stays all the time. Currently he’s half animal, so you can see his fur and tail.” She went to pick up his tail, and it wrapped around her hand, moving to the side so Chauven could see. The little hawk grinned shyly, and Arden allowed a smile to pass across her lips. “Tails are very useful." Tai said, grinning mischievously. "They help with balancing, and can do things like this.” In one deft move, Tai flipped Arden on her back and then sat on her. “Let me up, Tai!” She glared at him, apparently furious, but he only grinned. He could see the smile hidden by the fury. “Alright.” He rose to his feet, then offered her his hand. She took it gratefully, turning to Chauven again. “Where was I? Right. Well, your hair kind of gives the game away. Red, violent, and very flashy, just like your kind. Got all that? No matter, you’ll get the hang of it eventually.” Deciding that her mentor duty was done for now, Arden turned to Mathuin. “Hey, did Taipo show up? He-” “Yes, your pet is here as well. He arrived three days ago. I would have sent him away, but he knew all the passwords, and then some. What have you been teaching that kid?” Mathuin beckoned again into the shadows, and Taipo entered. He was tiny. Even Chauven, who was abnormally small by necessity, was tall compared to him. His grin alone looked much too big for his head, and the slightly-too-large clothes he was wearing didn’t help at all. His skin was a deep chocolate brown, and his eyes were the same color. His hair- oddly enough- was spiky and blond, with the green tint to it that generally appeared when swimmers forgot to shower after swimming. “Taipo, have you been sneaking into public pools again?” Tai asked, his deep voice suspicious. “Me? No, never!” Tai didn’t look convinced. “Well… maybe just a little.” “Mm-hm. I thought so.” Arden let Tai sort things out with Taipo, focusing instead on Mathuin. “We’ve been teaching him nothing. He absorbs stuff- through his skin, I think.” Chauven tugged on Mathuin’s shirt, causing him to look down at her. “Hey, if names are so important, what’s Taipo mean?” “Taipo doesn't actually mean anything,” Arden said before Mathuin could reply. He caught the venomous look she shot at him and decided against adding the more popular response to that particular question. “He followed Tai into our world, and it sounds similar to Tai, so that's what I named him. He’s not our pet, but neither is he a Changeling.” Chauven looked scared, but apparently fear didn’t stop her from asking questions. “What is he? How come you let him be with you?” Arden sighed, sending a message to Mathuin. :This is reason number two why I don’t want an apprentice. So many questions!: Out loud she only said “He’s fully human, and he’s with us because Tai wants him to be.” And anything that makes Tai happy is okay with me, even if it does involve bringing along a liability. That kid is going to get me killed saving him someday. “No more questions! Ask them to Tai on the way. We’re going to hunt and then move on. Matty, got a destination for us?” “Africa. Don’t know why, but Africa’s the word. Try Sao Jose de Ribamar or Parniba for a ship. I hear there are some fish thereabouts who can tell you a good ship to stowaway on. Ask for Glyph.” Arden nodded. “Glyph? Alrighty then.” "If you want to get there soon you’d better get started now. My team will cover your tracks.” The eagle nodded. “Tai, bring Taipo and come along. Chauven, stick close to me. We’re heading to Pairneba!” “Parniba? Cool! They have awesome tacos there! Can we have a taco?” Taipo asked, while Tai Changed. When the cheetah had fully formed, Taipo climbed onto Tai’s back, locking his little arms around his neck and clinging with his knees. “Only if you find the money, Taipo. Chauven, start Changing!” :Ready whenever you are, Arden.: Tai said. “Change? Eh…” Chauven blushed a deep crimson to match her hair. “You mean you don’t know how to Change? Matty, you’re fired.” The bear was already gone, probably rounding up his team. Arden sighed and sent a message to Tai. :The hawk doesn’t know how to Change. We’ll be a minute- get started without us.: Tai began running slowly, at a pace he could keep up for hours. Arden nodded and went to Chauven. “Okay, listen. Have you seen a picture of a red-tailed hawk?” “Yeah, at school.” “Good. Hold that picture in your mind. Imagine your arms becoming wings, and your mouth lengthening into a beak. Pretend you are the hawk. Hold that picture in your mind’s eye, perfecting it until you can almost feel the wind on your wings. Got it?” Chauven nodded, her eyes scrunched shut. “Now- let it loose! You’ve done this before, you can do it again. Become the hawk.” Chauven’s skin began to shift, feathery patterns imprinting themselves upon her skin and then becoming reality. Talons grew from her feet as her legs shrank, and her arms rearranged themselves to become wings. Her brilliant hair melted into her feathers, becoming long red streaks down her back and tail, even spilling a little onto her wings. Arden waited until she was sure Chauven would become fully hawk, and not some alien mix, then Changed herself. :Chauven. Can you hear me?: the eagle thought to the hawk standing beside her. No answer came from the hawk. Instead the bird launched itself into the air, letting out a shriek of defiance. Oh great. She went and lost control of her instincts. Reason number one why it is a bad idea to have the eagle train the hawk. Time to go half-kill my apprentice, I suppose. Arden leapt into the air herself and flew in the direction Tai had gone. With any luck, Chauven would pursue and they would get quite a ways before Arden had to stop and fight. By then, the hawk would be so tired she’d probably just fall out as soon as Arden brushed her. Or so Arden hoped.
< Message edited by jerenda -- 12/23/2008 16:38:28 >
|