All characters used with permission, some incidents tweaked slightly to protect the guilty. © John Berryhill 1999 AD
New Worlds Awaiting - BrightEyes' Story
The young boy slams the door to his room open, striding
in quickly... swearing as the low pocket on his jacket catches the outer handle
of the door, a dull *rrrippp* sounding as the worn canvas rips free. He growls,
twisting until it falls loose, pushing the door shut with his foot, and tossing
the tan canvas rucksack onto his bed... thumbing the lock on the handle shut,
and setting the cheap paper portfolio near the edge of the closet, along with
the old drawing board. He unslings the plastic bookbag from his shoulder, setting
the disintegrating satchel next to the canvas bag. A quiet sigh escapes him...
"Damn.. glad that's over. 'til Monday, anyway." he shakes his head,
pulling off the cheap jacket to survey the damage to the many-times patched
pocket. Another sigh. He tosses it over the bags, turning toward the desk, the
particle board at least strong, under the last things keeping him sane... his
computers.
Sure... they weren't the best, but they hadn't cost him a
cent, besides a few small parts, and one of the hard drives. He flicks the monitors
on, watching them warm and flicker to life... sitting down and slowly browsing
through programs for a moment, checking on this and that before finally clicking
on the connection button.. hearing the modem spring to life, dialing... dialing...
damn. Busy. As usual, the wonderful service of AOHell could be relied upon.
He stands, leaving it to dial and grabbing a clean coffee mug from his small
collection, and heading out... closing the door to his room behind him, securely
locking it. He takes another look around, the garage still packed, the floor
space much reduced, since he finished building his room out here.. the supports
steady at least, the wiring clean. He should know... he was the one that had
to do it.
A shrug and a few quick steps, and he's out the garage door,
and in the back door of the main house... stopping to pat one of the dogs' heads..
a short-haired white dog, some kind of staff terrier (pit bull) mix, just enough
of something else to make him stand about twice as tall as a normal pit, and
without the smooshed-in face. "Heya, Pogo. You been chewing up the linoleum
again?" nudging a few shards of obviously-gnawed flooring with the toe
of his shoe. Pogo just thumps his tail, happy with the affectionate pat. Careful
to close the door behind him so the dog wouldn't get in and start chewing on
the furniture, like he had in the past.
Quickly into the kitchen, detouring around his 17-year-old
sister, laying face down in the hallway... into the kitchen, out with the can
of coffee crystals, and in with some hot water and sugar.. don't forget the
milk, of course. This was going to be a long night, if he had anything to say
about it, and with the way he made coffee, it'd kill a Marine, if you didn't
add some cream.
The usual greeting from his Mother... "When are you going to start exercising,
John? Lift weights.. sit-ups... pushups... something? You're going to be nothing
but a fat, ugly pig if you sit in front of those computers all day. Oh... don't
step on your sister. She's trying to overdose on Vitamin C."
A quick turn, and out... past his mother, who refused to
see the time he spent each day rollerblading as exercise.. but then, she was
a carpenter. Strong, wiry, even in her mid-forties. The down side being, she
didn't give something any credit for knowing, unless you could hit it with a
hammer, or check it with a level. At least she taught him how to carry drywall,
and the right way to hang a door, among other things.
Into the room, and locked behind himself... finally taking
a sip of the coffee, and wincing... both from the heat, and the strength. It
goes atop one of the tower cases, as soon as he sees that -miracle of miracles-
he's online. He peers at one of the alarm clocks spaced around the room. "Wow...
fifteen minutes. They must have added another modem rack or something."
a shrug, and a few more quick keystrokes bring his terminal programs up... automatically
logging themselves in, he settles down... flicking through the news, and noticing
nothing of real interest... another war gearing up, more about the Clinton scandals,
and a little blurb about the supernova occurring somewhere out there. Wherever
'out there' is.
Back to the other bits... browsing through IRC, and countless
MUCKs.. Multi-user C kernels, where others with similar interests could meet
and talk. Here he could truly be at home... no peeling paint, no family to worry
or bother with (or to be bothered by)... just friends. People that wouldn't
call him a freak, just because of what he truly felt inside... that he was not
human. He couldn't be. That, or whatever creating force made him had a really,
really sick sense of humor.
He jerked awake with the first annoying *BLAAAAAAP* from
an alarm clock he had forgotten to dis-arm, blearily fumbling for the 'off'
switch, or at least the 'snooze' button. He growled, his arm seeming to refuse
to work the right way... flopping around limply as he tried to lift it... bumping
against the mini-fridge and knocking the offending appliance onto the bed...
settling for smothering it with his body. Another growl as it doesn't seem to
help, just a little quieter than before... blinking slowly with a wince. "Damn!
Forgot to shut off the light before I crashed.." finally managing to silence
the noisebox.
With the quiet came a new kind of clarity... listening to his computers hum,
also disturbingly loud... turning his head this way and that, trying to figure
out which one of the power supplies was going out. "Damn... that sounds
/bad/... must have happened overnight. Ball bearing gave out or something. Rrf.
Better shut them down." He stumbled to his feet, almost falling over...
catching himself on the edge of the bed, and trying to keep his balance... slowly
getting it back, and wobbling. Maybe his legs were still asleep, too. If only
the rest of him still was.
Carefully hand-over-handing himself along the bed, and settling
into the chair, YELP!!ing as he felt a surge of pain shoot up! "Oww! What
the.." looking down at the seat, for whatever had stabbed him in such a
sensitive spot... reaching behind himself to rub his now-aching tuchus. Freezing
as his hand encountered a puff of fluff... slowly feeling over it with his fingers...
almost blinking, before remembering the light. Carefully exploring the warm
fuzziness, and giggling as ticklish sensations shot up his spine.. squirming
for a moment before freezing again, in shock this time.. wrapping his hand around
the appendage... a.. tail? He did blink this time, careful to look away from
the un-shaded bulb overhead... the only problem being, the light was coming
from the black-screen screensaver. Another moment of wincing, and his eyes slowly
adjusted... the room looking bright as day, when he slowly looked around.
Another thing... part of his vision was blocked. "Oh...
wonderful. A floater... wait... but..." another blink, realization striking
home... his hands lifting to his face, slowly running his fingers along the
delicate muzzle gracing it... his eyes going wide. "..is it... can it..."
looking down at himself, quickly walking over and flicking the overhead on,
going through another bout of wincing and squirming, as his eyes adjusted...
more quickly this time. He looked down... eyes wide again, as he ran a hand
down his chest... slowly ruffling the deep black fur there. His gaze turned
to his hand... realizing why it was acting so weird, the last two fingers lengthened
immeasurably, almost as long as his arm again. He slowly closed his hand, the
last two fingers laying up along the back of his arm, smoothly folding the flap
of his wing as well... tracing it downward to where it joined with his back,
just above his teardrop-like tail.
A happy shiver as he continued exploring his new body, running
his tongue over his teeth, a bit more carefully when he realized how sharp they
were... still having the grinding molars at the back, for some reason. He quickly
looked around, grabbing the wall-mirror out from under a pile of assorted electronic
components, easily yanking it free, sending LEDs, switches, and waferboard all
over the floor with a quiet curse. He shook his head, holding up the mirror...
"Get it later..." drawing a quick breath, as he caught sight of himself
in the reflective surface. His eyes were black all over... not a trace of white
showing anywhere... glittering in the room light. His hair was longer, black
as the rest of him, instead of the dark blonde he'd lived with for 19 years..
tracing every line of his face, turning and staring at himself.. cracking a
slow grin, his lips sliding up smoothly, baring the long, thin fangs.
"Gods... I'm... is it.. I'd better not be dreaming,
or someone's getting hurt." admiring himself for another moment, before
looking toward the door.. padding over and double-checking the lock, as the
thought of his Mom coming in, screaming, then taking a sawzall to him popped
to mind. He padded over and sat on the bed... his small tail flicking out of
the way easily. "Okay... I'm a bat. Now... let me think... first things
first... I can't go out too easily without clothes.." -blink - "..like
anyone would notice any difference between a naked six-foot tall bat, or a clothed
one." he hesitated, not wanting to find out if his height was changed along
with the rest of his body... then looked around, picking up a set of white briefs
and slipping them on... looking at himself critically, the white blaringly *there*,
against his fur. He sighed, rooting through his dresser... finding a pair of
black swim trunks, and trying them, instead. "Better..." letting the
back of the waistband snug up underneath his tail.
He grinned to himself, remembering all those imaginings of a real furry showing
up at ConFURence, or FURther CONfusion, slipping back over to the chair and
clicking the screen saver off... Thankful for the practice at three-fingered
typing, again a part of his imaginings... only slowed down a little by the long
black claws tipping his fingers and thumbs. Keying in the password, and bringing
it up... joy of joys, having been kicked off over the night. Predictable. He
set it to auto-dialing... getting through on the first ring this time, oddly
enough. Each of the programs returned a 'Unable To Connect', save the one to
Furry Faire... their AOHell siteban still active. Stupid. He brought up his
IP-supression script, and tried again... this time, the server at least brought
up an odd maintenance screen... Cherry apparently deciding to upgrade the server.
A glance around, the shorts already starting to chafe at
his fur, prickling... hating what he knew he'd have to do next... picking up
the blue jeans, and slipping into them... again letting his tail hang out over
the back, cinching up the heavy-duty leather and steel belt tight, so they wouldn't
fall off. Pushing the accordion door to his closet open, and carefully pulling
the heavy black duster out... taking a deep breath of the sweet smell of the
pack of clove cigarettes resting in the inner pocket, folding his wings back
tightly as he slipped it on.. closing the front buttons, and realizing that
his chest was actually slightly bigger than it was before... the material a
bit snug. A pair of dress pants served as a quick makeshift turban, silly-looking
as it might be, after they had been shredded into long strips by his talons...
an old rubber lizard-mask serving to hide his muzzle, after a pair of holes
had been cut in the top to let his ears through. And so he finally went out...
looking like the weirdo bum that no one really wants to touch... his ears bound
in the black turban, hoping that he'd get enough time to at least explain to
Mom what had happened.
As it turned out, there was no real need... There was no
one inside the main house... the TV shut off, no smell of a breakfast having
been made... not like he'd have been able to smell it that easily, through the
pungent scent of the old, degrading rubber of the mask. He peered out the window
through the tiny eye-slits, noticing the cars still parked outside... looking
over at a clock, and seeing it read just after 9:45... the mechanical arms not
marked at the minute-level. He carefully un-wrapped the turban, flicking his
ears around... the sound of a humming motor, just sputtering out drifting to
him... not even the constant background rush of traffic, or the rumble of a
jet passing by overhead. He slowly pulled off the mask, looking around... everything
looking quite undisturbed and peaceful, as he carefully searched through the
house... finding the dogs still asleep (lazy things) in the living room, the
rats in their cage, and nothing else.
He opened the front door, cautiously padding out... looking
around... a dog barking somewhere in the distance, off to the northwest.. someone's
automatic sprinklers just coming on, as he started to pad down the street...
a quiet scritch-scratching following him, until he realized that he also had
the talons on his toes... looking down, and doubting he'd ever fit into his
boots again, no matter if they /are/ size 13. A turn down one of the neighbor's
pathways, and a quick knock... no answer forthcoming.. the same repeated, with
every door on the street, and the next, and the next... only going home an hour
and a half later, having worked all the way over to the main streets on all
four sides of the city block. The dogs were awake by now, and sniffing at him...
Ginger padding up and wagging her tail, her stomach still shaven from the recent
surgery.. some kind of hole in her diaphragm. Pogo just looked up and growled...
barking for a moment, before a quick swat on the nose silenced him... sending
him down as well. *blink* Pogo being a really well-built dog, this was quite
surprising... apparently to him, too.. seeing as how he shut up, his tail tucked
between his legs.
Strip off the coat, and back out to the room... try again,
with the MUCKs... still down for maintenance. Damn. He glanced toward the coffee,
wondering... then shaking his head... he's had it many times in the past. Another
slow blink as another possible epiphany occurs... "Am I inside the MUCK?
No... there's no Burbank there... but... I look just like... well... either
BrightEyes, or Talesin... damn. Shouldn't have scalped the descriptions between
them." he thought for a moment... "Well... okay... let's follow this.
I'm one or the other, if this follows, and I'm not just being an idiot."
he grumbled, berating himself for talking aloud to himself.. then went on. "Let
me think.. okay... both are vampire bats... both can fly... neither are undead...
one's a Derysi, the other... well.." he looks at himself.. "No real
difference there, anyway. Rrf. Okay..." blinking as he remembered the one
real difference between Talesin and BrightEyes... then pushed it to the back
of his mind. "I'm Talesin... I hope." looking toward the door nervously..
"I wonder how wide-spread this thing is..."
He quickly brought up his computerized phonebook, scribbling
down a few numbers and heading inside to use the main voice line.. flicking
on the TV as he picked up the phone, punching in his best friend's number, Brad...
a ring... ten... fifteen... he hung up and tried the second number... this one
busy. Then he noticed that the TV hadn't come on... punching the power button
a few times... seeing it power up, then just display blackness... slowly paging
through... going past the computerized pay-per-view scrolls (at least it was
receiving) some channels broadcasting re-runs, or new shows... nothing live
airing, though... MTv blank, CNN.. even C-SPAN. All dead to the world.
He padded out to his car, an economy roller skate... then
hesitated... going back to get housekeys, and picking up the keys to his step-dad's
Taurus. He'd fill it up with gas before he brought it back. The engine came
to life easily, as always... putting the transmission in gear, and slowly backing
out... driving down street after street of emptiness... finally turning onto
the freeway, a few cars just sitting in the middle of the concrete strip...
some of the doors open, most closed... some with damage, having been run into
by other cars... very few on the road, in fact.. most either off to the side,
over the edge of the embankment, or simply not present; not what you'd expect
out of 10am traffic. Another swing around home, to pick up his sun-goggles and
CD-player... glad for the former, a gift from his little sister the previous
christmas.. snowboarding bug-goggles. They adjusted to fit his head, just barely...
the tinting reducing the sunlight to a point where it wouldn't give him a headache.
Another few hours of this, driving slowly, stereo blaring
at maximum... trying to draw SOME kind of attention... eventually getting fed
up with it, and heading over to Fry's... the doors still locked, the lights
on the cheezy spaceship crashed into the front still un-lit... picking up a
basket left out overnight with surprising ease, and HURLING it into the glass
door- the shatterproof, safety-glass door it seemed. A frown crossed his muzzle,
padding over to the doors... setting his hands on the handles... pulling on
one, pushing on the other, and managing to _wrench_ both of them out of their
frames. Metal twisting and groaning under his grip, until the lock finally snapped...
the twisted doors opening with a SCREEEEEEEEEEECH that hurt his ears.
He stalked inside, looking around at the blackness of the
warehouse-like store... his ears picking up a high-pitched whine, as the silent
burglar alarm went off. He stands there for a moment... finally looking around,
ten or twenty minutes later, finding the security panel, and tripping the breakers..
everything shutting down. He looked around, opening his mouth slightly, yelling...
then closing his eyes and doing it again... and again... slowly narrowing it
down, to the battish *ping*, only taking an hour and a half to get his sonar
working properly, and to get used to the colorless view as he wandered through
the dark store.. another grin crossing his face, as he gets past the self-help
books, and the video games... looking over the rows and rows of systems.
Back at home, I wondered if I was being excessive... having loaded the car up with as many laptops, components, and toys as I could... the rest in a bundle back at the store.. the front doors twisted shut again, in case of rain.
Out again... this time to the local shooting range. It
might seem a little unfriendly, but if I wasn't the last person alive, it might
be more than a little dangerous to assume that I was. I'd never really understood
just how many precautions are taken, to prevent break-ins... at least, at the
particular one I chose. I'd been there a couple of times with my Dad, but we'd
been buzzed through then. The doors gave way again, with a bit more effort...
the locks tearing loose form their moorings before falling off. I almost stumbled
when their alarm kicked in... not the high-pitched whine of a silent, but the
70 decibel *BLARE* of an alert system. It was silenced almost as easily, again...
making sure to only cut the power to the speakers this time. I'd learned that
reading labels by flashlight is no fun.. printed word doesn't show up under
soundsight.
I strolled along the display cases, trying to minimize the
damage, in a silly show of neatness just removing the rear panels to two display
sections. I hefted the pair of handguns, looking them over carefully... a Luger
.22, and a Mustang .357. I'd tried them before, learned how to clean them, and
fix any jams that occurred.. had actually gotten a few hangfires. Not fun. In
any case I also picked up a Winchester bolt-action, that had a telescopic sight
attached, out of their workroom. Next, three boxes of shells, and a target..
I wanted to make sure that I could still handle the dang things, with only three
fingers. Over into the range-section, then clipping the target into it's holder
and zipping it to the other end of the field, carefully loading the Luger's
clip, only needing about five rounds. I took careful aim, then-
The next thing I remember, I was laying flat on the cold
concrete, with a headache the size of Alaska. This was especially odd, due to
the fact that I'd never had a headache before in my entire life. A new experience,
if you will. The Luger was laying on the floor as well, only one shell casing
resting on the floor, quite cold. Apparently I'd been out for a while. I picked
up the gun, flicking the safety back on and peering around a bit sheepishly
as I stood. I glanced out at the target, reeling it in after a fit of blinking..
the shot clean through the shoulder. Not bad, except I'd been aiming for the
little cross-marker in the middle. I rubbed at sore temples, setting the gun
down on the rest in front of me... massaging aching temples as I realized exactly
what had happened. Between the fact that it was advisable to wear ear-protection
while shooting (I couldn't find any that would fit), and the fact that my hearing
was about a thousand times better than it was (the reason none of it would fit),
the sound of the gunshot had sent me into shock and unconsciousness, just from
the volume alone.
Sadly, I set them back down.. debating the intelligence both
of leaving them there, and going without a firearm of any sort. I hemmed and
hawwed for a good half-hour, looking around at all of the weapons of devastation,
before coming to a decision. I may not have been able to use them, but there
was no way in hell that I was going to leave them out in the open, possibly
to be used against me. I carefully started loading the weaponry into the back
of the car, making sure each piece wasn't loaded before putting it in the back...
driving to a local rent-a-storage, and locking them in an obscurely numbered
bay, where they still may be today. Think I still even have the key, somewhere.
On the third trip, the store was looking quite empty... only a few items left.
Mostly accessories, sights, scopes, cleaning gear.. as well as a few air rifles.
Now, I had always seen BB guns as more of children's toys...
things for shooting cans with. But these... well, they were anything but toys.
Assorted caliber, some able to take darts, others able to take little mushroom-shaped
rounds that I remembered my Grandpa had said would do as much damage as a .22
would.. gas-cartridge models and hand-pump. A blink, picking out a well-made
looking one.. obviously designed for hunting, now that I actually held it. I
picked up a box of the little rounds, and walked back into the shooting range
to try it... putting seven clean hits through the target, with only a little
irritation to my ears. I had my defense.. quickly modified with the best the
shop had to offer. I mostly dismissed the gas-cartridges, knowing full well
that a supply wouldn't last forever.. finding one that would store multiple
shots in an internal gas reservoir.
As I finished tightening down and calibrating the telescopic
sight on one (I was feeling a little silly, with all this new stuff to play
with) another bit of gear caught in my memory. Something that I'd seen in an
Anime film, and something I was pretty sure I had seen on the Naval base my
Dad worked on, one time. I made a note to pick it up, if it was still there.
Also on my shopping trip, a local 'adult' store that I'd
never had the nerve to go into before, a Radio Shack, and the local HAM Hobbyist
shop.. (making sure to pick up a few manuals, and a 'For Dummies' text, along
with the most expensive equipment they had available.) The Taurus had been left
at home by this time, one of the neighbors' minivans sufficing to transport
everything... the front room of the main house decked out in a technophile's
wet dream; several UPS units, and a number of portable generators (some solar-cell
ones, too).
You might be asking yourself... 'Well, why doesn't he just
fly?'. Realize... flying is an art form... not something to be mastered in a
day, or a week, or a month. Maybe not even in a lifetime. Also, I could change
back at any time... the world might go back to normal... of course, with all
the damage I'd done, it might actually be a /good/ thing if I was a few hundred
feet up.
Two days later, I had made my first kill.
I had not even realized just how hungry I had become...
or how hungry the former domestic animals had grown. I also had forgotten that
our neighbors two houses down on the right had a huge German Shepherd, until
it came loping down the street at me, snarling.. Apparently a house-only animal,
unable to catch any of the squirrels running loose, and hungry as all get-out.
Even enoughso to attack something well over twice as big as he was. The box
of books I had requisitioned (okay... snagged) from the library made a good
weapon, slamming down on the dog's muzzle solidly as it lunged for me.. a dull
*snap* as the nose broke. I shuddered, trying to backpedal as it kept after,
snapping at me hungrily and whining, blood starting to flow from its nose.
Now, at the time, I was just trying to get away... had no
intention upon it. But that scent... the first whiff of the blood scent caught
my attention instantly. All the hunger built up twisting my stomach into knots,
instinctively settling into a crouch and tossing the books aside, to let the
box spill open and scatter the tomes over the asphalt.
The canine's next lunge was it's last.. talons sinking deep,
silencing a pained yelp with a further crack from the muzzle and lifting it..
wrapping myself around, as my fangs bit deep.. drinking of the gush, lost in
the bliss. As I fed, sating one hunger, the other arose... the part of myself
that I had hoped was not-- that I hoped did not exist. That hunger was
sated shortly as well, also by the once-attacker, now supper.
Sensation was incredible.. like... well.. eating sunshine,
then diving into a vat of lemon curd. Having every vessel set on fire. Indescribable,
really. I turned and spun, just to feel myself moving... threw the corpse, just
to see how far I could... giggling as it thudded down wetly no less than twelve
houses down the block. I just had to... I can't even remember. I vaguely recall
flying, laughing. Almost like being drunk. Possibly exactly like being drunk,
I have no idea.
I whimpered... my butt getting cold, the wind chilling me so high up... only a tiny bit of shelter in the lee of a sculpted protrusion. I shivered, looking at my wings and slowly stretching them.. going through a long-neglected stretching routine that had been a daily part of my life for many years, while I was still studying various martial arts.. my legs a little tense, but everything else just as limber as before. I carefully stepped to the edge, looking down again as I opened my wings wide.. guessing I'd have about fifteen to thirty seconds to learn to fly, before I became street pizza. I oddly wished I'd remembered to get some kind of parachute, even if it wouldn't fit with my wings, stalling for a moment before a gust of wind pushed me over the edge, just barely enough time to push off and away from the side of the building before it started whipping by, faster and faster.
A shudder, keeping my wings fully open as I leaned back..
the flap biting into the wind more and more... 250 feet... slowly curving out,
turning in the flight... 200 feet... holding my shoulders steady against the
ROAR of the whipping wind, and leveling off.
Carefully keeping my arms locked out, spans spread wide,
quite content to glide down for now... going in a straight line, my legs streaming
behind me gracefully. I started to overshoot, easily keeping my glide and leaning..
banking, not wanting to lose control of it. I spiraled down, flapping my wings
hard as I leaned back even further, backwinging a good 10 feet up, and falling
the rest of the way... my legs absorbing most of it, sprawling on my side and
rubbing my calves, trying to get rid of the numbing tingles shooting through
them at the rough touchdown.
The next few days were filled with practice... first in
gliding, off the roof of the three-story school, and landing especially... getting
it down to the point I could land on tip-toe. Then working on actually flapping,
to gain altitude. Mostly staying low, since I was still deathly afraid of heights,
when it was just me. Planes, I was fine in. Lastly, taking off from the ground.
That was the most difficult to learn. Any flighted morph will tell you, ground-takeoffs
are tricky.. and I was teaching myself. Also picking up some nice road rash
on the tips of my wings, when I brought them down at the wrong times. The first
time was exhilarating. Throwing off the earthly shackles... flying up to dance
with the clouds. About that time, the power grid started going down.. Streetlights
browning out, finally dying entirely. Backup generators working overtime, while
I wired in a new unit to support the whole house.. the engine sounding more
like a thunderstorm. The phones went, not long after that, and we moved the
whole operation into the local high school at DEC's request, due to the fact
it was built like a bunker. Ten-inch thick concrete walls, louvered blast shutters
on every window, with heavy security gates able to be brought across at a moment's
notice. Tells you just what school officials back then had to deal with.
I took up residence in a roof maintenance shed, the pipe-rafters
easy to grab onto (I had started sleeping in the usual bat-fashion by then,
after nights of insomnia, fearing I would fall on my head if I tried. It worked
fine.), and the flimsy construction quite conducive to a quick escape. Tails-P
and DECWolf saw less and less of me, due to the fact that I had begun avoiding
them. Flying and scouting, as well... in greater circuits each night. This was
due to two things... firstly, they had started getting on my nerves. I had developed
a bit of BrightEyes' temper toward land-bound furs. But mostly, it was due to
the fact that I had started seeing.. things. Glitters. Glows. Half-imagined,
half-felt. Half-seen, half-smelt. Beautiful things and decrepit, slimy spots.
I avoided those areas, for the most part.. they just felt /wrong/. Made me nervous
to even be in a ten-span of them. 140 feet, in old-measurement.. I took to calling
spans by 14 feet, and haven't been able to really break the habit all that much..
Have to re-learn someday.
The close of the first month came and went, and I found that
I only really needed to feed about once or twice a week, if I wasn't doing anything
particularly strenuous.. going out for a glide, or whatever. By the end of the
second month, I had started to get nervous.. Thalyn had said that he would be
coming right away.. I was sure that it would take no more than two weeks, even
driving all the way. With plenty of stops. When I found myself gliding over
Barstow one night, I finally gave in and admitted that I was worried... the
phone system long down, the last CD burned, all but a few of the systems shut
down, maybe forever. I returned just before dawn, and walked down to the science
lab, the Bunsen burners and sinks also working for cooking, no matter how unsafe.
I carefully opened one of the drawers, pulling out the little 'toy' I had salvaged
from the naval base, still there in the hangar. It was currently attached to
a five-point harness, along the chestline... the headpiece modified to fit my
non-human cranium, and accommodate my ears. I picked up my hunting piece, pumping
ten or twelve good shots into the storage chamber and loading the mini-clip
with point-head shells, clicking it into place, and hooking the camera analog
trigger-wire I'd salvaged into position. I lifted the pack, settling it against
my chest and arranging the straps, clicking the buckles down and tightening
it, then slipping the HUD over my head.. the brightness greatly reduced, the
glow not even detectable by human eyes. I wrapped the wire into place, shivering
and cracking a grin as I held the trigger.. looking around the room, and feeling
the muzzle follow my gaze. I thumbed the trigger, a soft *fft* and a loud *CRACK*
as the shell impacted and fractured the slate chalkboard, spiderwebbing it.
I snickered, shaking my head and having to say the line. "You act like
you've never seen a Valantian before." then turning, padding for the door
as it powered down, the rifle laying against my side smoothly. Stopping in only
briefly to let Tails and DEC know I was leaving... possibly for a few months.
they promised to keep it all running, enough meat in the deep freezers to last
them until February, if they were careful with it.
So I set out to find Thalyn.. after one short stop. Quietly
setting a bunch of pretty wildflowers on top of the flat stone I had set as
a grave marker, for each of my Hosts.. and pushing a clipping from a briar rosebush
I had found into the soil covering my first.. a lame apology for my ineptitude...
for having to make it hurt so much.
When I tried to take wing I realized what I had overlooked..
though the rig may have worked perfectly, I had forgotten all about the balance
and added weight it would add to my flight. Forty pounds of gear may not sound
like much to carry, but it was enough to set me panting and working for altitude
after only a short while. A quick return, and I realized what I would have to
do. The servomount was designed for a plane.. camera gear and things along those
lines. To a plane, the weight of the steel might be almost negligible. To me,
it was just under an extra thirty pounds to carry. A few quick detachments and
some pounds lighter, I was reflecting on how badly it would have worked anyway,
without a hard dock point to keep the targeting stable. Though it had been a
neat idea. My rifle was sheathed in a makeshift holster along the side of the
laptop, peace-buckled to keep it in against the wind as well.
I was glad that I'd spent so much time working on my rig...
the laptop resting between my shoulders processing the data from one of the
GPS systems I'd scalped from the by-now defunct base outfit.. correlating it
with a computerized atlas, and the data I'd picked off the Internet Furry Proximity
Locator... Most would have moved in the time I'd spent getting set up temporarily,
but hopefully most would still be fairly near. The radio tied into a band-scanner,
along with the other odds and ends.. a few power-packs resting along my lower
back. I was pretty much a flying sensor, at that point... completely dependent
on the hope that any place I landed for the day would have some kind of power
source... gas generators, UPS systems... heck, even windmill-powered generators.
I'd decided to follow route 66 for the most part.. just because
I knew it went coast to coast, and I didn't quite trust the waypoints set by
the GPS system. Had never used one before, so didn't know just how reliable
they were.
I set my first stop to be Las Vegas. I wanted to see just
how it would look and sound with all of the neon dead, the bells and sirens
silent. To put a word to it, gliding through the empty streets was eerie.. any
furs once there long departed, or hiding so well that I couldn't hear them,
which was saying a lot. It looked like some of Caesar's Palace had caught fire,
but burnt itself out.. half the hotel section nothing more than a blackened
wreck, the other half only a little better... covered in soot, and listing badly
to one side, the twisted iron of the support beams buckled in spots. The newly-rebuilt
Riviera had been crushed by the fall of the Stratosphere, and there was only
a little water left in a few of the other hotels' holding tanks. I left the
same night. All the empty, dark windows were actually starting to scare me,
along with the fact that the whole place felt.. well... not right. Again, I
can't really explain it.. it just felt like something was very, very wrong there.
I spent the day in Kingman.. a few hours' drive, but only
one by wing.. the town nearly self-sufficient, with the constant service outages
from the Hoover Dam power station. As I wandered through my grandmother's home,
the realization struck home that she wasn't there. Silly? Well, I don't really
think so. My grandma had been the closest family member I'd ever had... and
that includes my parents and sister. Some part of my mind was still saying that
she /was/ here, and she /would/ be coming through the front door after a day
of gardening, or working down at the local church.. but she never would have
let something like this happen. Her kitchen was in disarray, apparently in the
middle of making a midnight snack.. re-heating stew, from what was splattered
over the floor, and dried. I left the refrigerator closed, already scenting
a hint of decay.. not wanting to make it worse. I quietly wandered into her
room, and turned on the rechargeable air compressor she kept with her any time
she went out of the house, to take her inhalant medicine.. passing out on the
bed, to the dull *hummmmmmm*...
I managed to fall asleep somewhere along the I-40, the
horrible music still blaring as the retrofit truck rolled down the road; my
claws latched into a roof rack alongside some suitcases.. no thanks to the camper
shell closing off the back, where I could have gotten some sleep a bit more
safely.
I woke a bit after sunset, the truck pulling off to the side
of the road getting my attention, along with the shifting pitch of the engine
dying down. I made good my escape, jumping as the wheels and tracks hit the
uneven dirt... hoping it would hide my departure. I carefully landed a good
two hundred feet away, and ducked down into the brush.. the telescopic sight
on my rifle coming in handy to watch my unknowing carrier.. or carriers, I saw.
The oversized feline, and a smaller mustelid form that would be a little difficult
to miss. The metallic silver fur both drew and repulsed the eyes, shifting and
flowing with the owner.. a smaller musteline form, possibly five and a half
feet or so. My ears caught the conversation..
"I'll set up camp.. see if you can find anything to
eat around here, Danny." from the feline.
"Wuff, it's a /desert/.. there _isn't_ anything to eat!
It's hot and yucky and makes my fur all frizzy and dirty. C'mon.. I pricked
my paws last time I tried to pick a cactus-" Danny said. He looked a bit
like an otter, but something was wrong with his tail and paws.. Tail looked
too fuzzy. Paws I couldn't see clearly at this distance, without giving away
my presence.
Wuff cut him off. "So don't pick a cactus, fuzzhead!
Or cut off the prickles first. Use what little brain's still rattling around
in there." then turned away, and went back to unloading the gear... a twist
setting up an insta-tent, dropping it and pulling out some tent spikes. "Hurry
up. I'm hungry, and want a change from corn' beef hash an' chili."
I grinned to myself when the otter thing walked off in the
direction of a rain gully I had spotted from my brief flight.. it looked to
be deep, from the quick glance I had caught before landing. The otter looked
like the safer of the pair to approach, and I started to parallel his pathway..
keeping myself quiet until we were both some distance from their camp, and counting
on the noise and muttering he made to cover my own little sounds.
A few minutes later, we had both reached the rim.. it /was/
a deep gully, with a number of undercuts from the flash floods that must wash
through every rainy season. I watched him work his way down the steep side,
keeping hidden in the brush as he tried to stalk a rabbit near-laughingly. Needless
to say, it bolted and was gone in a fluffy flurry and a number of curses less
than a minute later.. the short pursuit only taking him further from the camp.
I had transferred myself to one of the underhangs in his distraction, the scrabble
and scrape of my claws on the loose dirt unheard through his frustration.
In seconds, I was upon him.. my wings wrapping tightly around
him, holding his muzzle closed and pinning his arms to his sides. I grinned
at the struggles and muffled yelling, letting him calm.. when he steadied, I
realized that I had no idea what to do.
"Don't scream, I won't kill you." I slowly loosened
my grip on his muzzle, only to be met with a quickly cut-off scream for help
(cut off thanks to the tightening of my grip again) and renewed struggles. I
decided to let him calm down again... until something grabbed ahold of my ear
and YANKED!
Now children, you probably don't understand what it feels
like to a bat to have an ear touched, much less yanked on like that. I was instantly
on the ground, writhing from a combination of sensory overload and the sheer
PAIN.. the whatever-it-was forgotten, trying to nurse my ear. I scrabbled at
the thing holding it, managing to get it loose long enough to scramble back..
the otterthing screaming like blazes for help, against one of the walls.. too
steep to walk, and the dirt too loose to climb.
I sat up, darting back further myself, noticing the tail
of the silver mustelid was flexing rather oddly.. Well not all that oddly, when
it was just the three tailfingers of a silkie. I took off running down the gully,
hearing the heavy footfalls of the feline growing quickly closer.. no doubtedly
carrying a gun as well. I must've run a mile before I decided to slow down...
the sound of the halftrack drifting to my ears, apparently making good time
toward wherever they were going.
Good sense lost out again; I took wing to follow the retreating
vehicle, careful to stay high and hopefully unnoticed.
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