Crizzle
Hive Bitch
November 24, 2018
::: subchapter
Somewhere above, as if waiting, the loversuns still shone.
Below that --- past all the ash, dust and smoke --- the two suns'
light became a vague hint, offering the lake's surface to the shadows.
And they accepted, waving their shadow tongues, swishing their shadow
tails, and enveloping.
Trudging over the crumbly shell of this molten glass lake, you'd tire of
the lack of light or company in your first breath cycle. The Berwem was
vast and empty; there was only me and --- somewhere I couldn't
see --- my companion, Hinte.
Without dropping my prize, I hugged my wings a little closer to myself,
and pouted. I had lost her again... but it was the lake's fault, not
mine.
I sighed, my tongue flicking out in starless habit, and, traitor it was,
brushing the vomer on the roof of my mouth. I scented despite myself.
The lake could have smelled worse. Its ash just tasted... ashy, but its
dust tasted like aluminum and copper, with little hints of electrum. If
that were all, well, I think anyone could stand to scent precious metals
all evening, if maybe without the mouthful of ash and dust it came
with. Pervading them both, though, was a vog that choked and stung and
reeked of smoke and sulfur like a horribly burnt dish of festering eggs.
The image gave me a little giggle. Maybe some frilly god had prepared
the lake Berwem as a little bowl walled in by cliffs, turning up the
heat with volcanic vents, adding in some weird crabs and weirder stones,
and then sprinkling in so much ash and metal, all as some big joke.
The silliness lifted my thoughts off the vog that slithered down my
panting throat, and off the wriggling, constricting shadows.
So I started forward like that, giggling, every step of my four
night-blue legs cracking the lake surface. It opened glowing breaks in
the lake's gray skin, like slit eyes that stared. I peered back at
them.
Writhing under the skin, molten glass split the ground into brittle
plates. Those plates rattled as they ground against each other, and the
burning glass underneath hissed as the air vitrified it. Those rattles
and hisses, taken together with the scaly plates and cracked eye slits,
only completed the image.
I could imagine the lake as a meal all I wanted, but it would never stop
feeling like it had swallowed me instead.
After that thought, I wasn't laughing; the giggly tongue-clicking
stumbled in my throat and turned into a choked cough that bit into me,
and --- determined to drag up a yelp or a groan with
it --- stretched and overstayed itself for ten heartbeats, long after
I'd gotten tired of it.
Coughing filled the air, and even when it waned it left my breaths
wheezing. Its only accompaniment was the lake's dim rumbling. The
sound --- the emptiness of it --- stilled me. Fangs wet, I looked
left and right, forward and backward, listlessly up and then finally
down at my scaled blue feet.
I'd lost Hinte again, and now I was alone in the lake.
It wasn't my fault. I'd tasted an opportunity scuttling along unawares
and leapt for it. But we shouldn't have lost each other so quickly.
Last time --- every other time --- she'd only gone as far as the
edge of my sight, and it was a matter of leaping over to her. Now, I
couldn't see or hear her --- I could smell her, but that was awash
in everything else, nothing but a tinge. Hinte had been more than
enveloped, she'd been swallowed, just like me.
My fangs dewed with a little bit more... saliva. It wasn't sour, and it
was only a few drops. They dripped onto my muzzle and slid and fell to
the ground by my black-covered feet. I looked up.
It'd be a bit easier to forgive the friend-swallowing shadows if they
hadn't come from this stinking, sulfuric, vog-stuffed air, or if they
were at least thin enough to see farther than six strides ahead in.
I was glaring at the shadows now, but stopped myself with a cringe.
Hinte would see me before I saw her. Would she catch me glaring and
think I hated sifting? I couldn't seem unappreciative.
From behind, a smell of boiled meat reached me, reminded me, and I
squeezed the glasscrab held between my night-blue wings --- my
prize. The dead gray form swung over my back, then bounced and fell
into a bag opposite my lunch. I had gained something from getting lost,
at least.
Glasscrabs. They were some weird lake creature said to have alchemical
blood --- disease-purifying alchemical blood. And I would know, with
how many long rings I'd lost poring over old, smelly scrolls about them,
expecting Hinte to be impressed.
What the scrolls hadn't mentioned was how flighty and stinky they were.
Or how silly... though maybe that was just the one I'd found. Dumbly,
it had scuttled right by me and Hinte as if we didn't exist. So I'd
pounced on it. A long-sought alchemy ingredient walking right past? A
chance to do something besides walk and ask unanswered questions? It
should have been worth it. Instead, I'd lost Hinte again.
All four of my feet were digging into the ground, biting into it, as if
the clinging would keep me from sliding swallowed down into the lake's
fiery maw --- even though they would crack it open instead. Breathe,
Kinri. The breath came clearly, but that was easier than relaxing my
feet.
Confused, I breathed again, and the breath came just as clearly, as
though the coughs had crawled further down my throat, into my breast,
where they were just a faint wheezing. Maybe they'd rush back out any
moment --- but for now? They were gone.
I didn't smile, but I spat out some dust. It left as a wet and cloudy
spray, turning my mouth into a little volcano. I did it a few more
times, making a little swirl in the air around me. You had heard of the
legendary heroes that could breathe fire, but I could breathe dust.
Tremble before me!
At that, I did smile a little. I didn't dare laugh again, though. But
I smiled. Because you had to stare at the silly side of things, keep
everything positive. If I stopped, then the dewing would start.
Suddenly, a crack beneath me! I jumped. Dustone was shattering in my
feet, and a storm of glowing cracks was ripping around me. I didn't
like how the ground was sinking.
I hadn't been walking. I'd stilled on the spot, alone, swallowed up
just like my companion, and laughing and coughing in that aloneness.
I breathed again, through my mouth, letting my tongue focus on just that
haughty electrum smell. Releasing the shattered dustone in my feet, I
stepped forward. Hinte hadn't been swallowed by the vog and I wouldn't
be either. I just needed to find her. She knew the Berwem like a
favorite scroll.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Below, furious molten glass burned beneath a façade of hardened dust and
glaze. The heat of the lake's blood rose and animated the air, driving
it upward. I found it curious, as that same heat wore me down, draining
my energy with every step I took toward... with every aimless step
forward. No sign of Hinte.
As the lake clouds rose, they became a gray-black ceiling above me.
Looking up at that blackness, sunslight still filtered down in vague
blotches, keeping their promise to the coiling shadows of the lake. At
the sight, the white-speckled frills on either side of my neck folded
and sagged; I missed the suns.
My scaled feet, still slick with a black slime, scraped the ground as I
walked on, leaving short lines above my footprints. More dust worked
into my nails and between my toes. Despite the slime, I felt all of
it.
I'd resigned myself to the sensation, but it still needled me. And
there was nothing to distract from it. Every single step forward
pressed more and more dust and glass bits into my soles! I shuddered.
If only I could shed on command, and just my forelegs...
Maybe walking with bare forefeet wasn't the absolute worst part of
sifting, but the feeling crawled over me, always worming its way into my
awareness. A pair of sandals, at least, spared my hindfeet.
Breathing, I wrenched my focus to other things. Like the drifting smell
of my lunch, caught by an idle flick of my tongue. So faint, yet I
savored the briny, acrid aroma of trout charred almost black --- my
favorite. Saliva moistened my mouth, and the smell twisted the waxing
hunger in my belly into a mean knot.
I hadn't eaten today, and the toil of sifting hatched an appetite I
might go days before working up otherwise. My first canteen had already
emptied itself, and we still hadn't taken a break. And now, I could
take one, and I needed to find Hinte instead.
"Hinte!" I called, as loud as I could, loud enough I felt a burning
return to my throat.
She hadn't wanted to bring me with her to the lake at all. But, after
all my incessant prodding and pleading --- which went
nowhere --- and after her rejections saying I would only slow her
down or I would injure myself, I still kept asking to join her. I
didn't have anyone else.
"Hinte!" I called, lower, rubbing my throat with a wing.
After that, the cycles had danced by, and the moons had wound in their
paths; in a word, the gray season approached, promising ash clouds and
vog. I faltered then. The gray season would have definitely grounded
her trips into the cliffs, and grounded any chance of mine to learn what
she did there.
"Hinte?" My voice was barely above conversational, and that was the
best I could do, now.
But the weather had done neither, because then she relented all asudden,
leaving me slack-tongued and wondering what changed. "Two days," was
what she told me, "and I will not wait." With two days to prepare, I
brought along a lunch, some light-shielding goggles and my excitement,
some thrill of adventure.
"Hinte," I said, and it could have been called a whisper.
Now, after an evening spent in this stinking lake, I only had the lunch.
I opened my mouth to call again, and my voice didn't cooperate.
Instead, a cough. I tried covering my mouth, I tried breathing slower,
I tried drinking more water
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