Timestamp: Spring 1, 512
Tulaj had been missing for for nearly twelve hours after having not returned during one of their training exercises the previous day, and Vira was somewhat concerned. The albino bird had been a special case and had proven a never ending challenge in terms of training. Raptors did not experience joy and sadness and anger the way humans did. They knew hunger and pleasure and pain. What other emotions they might otherwise posses was difficult to transpose.
But Vira needed to do her job first. As a nesting attendant, her work tended to be both challenging and easy, depending on the moods of the eagles. There were well over a dozen caves with eggs in them this season, all of which were anticipated to hatch sometime this spring. The other nine caves had various ages of hatchlings being looked after by one parent or another, usually the mother. Yet, when the teenager entered the nesting area, the sound that greeted her was absolute silence.
It had been like that since last night when huge droves of birds simply took to the air and fled from the volcano, as if sensing something the humans could not recognize. Even Vira, having spent a good amount of time with most of the current mothers, did not know what to make of it! The eagles themselves seemed tense and snippier than usual yesterday; but the absolute silence that greeted her as she made her way aerie to aerie to check in on each one before getting to the bigger part of her job was bothersome.
When she poked her head into the first aerie, she did not see the mother bird, only the silhouettes of the birds in the nest. She frowned and moved on. The second cave had a pair of one year old chicks, both of which were wide awake and staring at the wall. The behavior seemed very peculiar to Vira as she continued on, making a note in her head to check the vents. In the third and fourth cave were Dek, cleaning out some food bins that she would be filling later.
The next several caves held various aged young, from last years hatchings to two years ago, the chicks fat and large, their feathers just beginning to mature to prepare them for flight. The same behavior was observed in these as well and Vira decided to enter one of these and approach the next. The mother bird was gone here, too, and the hatchling that lived in this nest was standing at the edge looking up.
Vira followed its gaze skyward and saw the massive circling of the dire birds, their dark bodies appearing and disappearing constantly as they rotated around the peak of the volcano. "Weird, I've never noticed them do that before." She remarked to herself. "Hey, Insurq, come here!" She called, remembering that she'd seen the Dek woman in one of the previous aeries as she went by.
The hunched figure of her friend came in and stopped beside her. "What do you make of that?" She gestured with a hand towards the circling colony.
"I don't know; I've never seen them do that before."
"Exactly what I said. Were they doing it last night?"
"I don't remember, Lavira. Maybe we should get an Endal?"
But the teen shook her head. "No, they have probably seen it already, too, and would just tell us to worry about our work and let eagle business be theirs. Funny how it is our business, though..."
The Dek laughed and headed back out, leaving Vira to watch on in silence for a while longer.
Nearby, the not-quite fledgling was flapping its immature wings, screeching at the heavens and nearly knocking the teen over a few times in its near frantic actions. "Hey, hey, calm down! It's okay!" But the chick just snapped its beak at her and continued in its funny and nervous dance.
Shaking her head, Vira turned to head on to the rest of the aeries, not seeing that one of the birds was descending towards the nesting area rapidly along with three more of its brethren.
Tulaj had been missing for for nearly twelve hours after having not returned during one of their training exercises the previous day, and Vira was somewhat concerned. The albino bird had been a special case and had proven a never ending challenge in terms of training. Raptors did not experience joy and sadness and anger the way humans did. They knew hunger and pleasure and pain. What other emotions they might otherwise posses was difficult to transpose.
But Vira needed to do her job first. As a nesting attendant, her work tended to be both challenging and easy, depending on the moods of the eagles. There were well over a dozen caves with eggs in them this season, all of which were anticipated to hatch sometime this spring. The other nine caves had various ages of hatchlings being looked after by one parent or another, usually the mother. Yet, when the teenager entered the nesting area, the sound that greeted her was absolute silence.
It had been like that since last night when huge droves of birds simply took to the air and fled from the volcano, as if sensing something the humans could not recognize. Even Vira, having spent a good amount of time with most of the current mothers, did not know what to make of it! The eagles themselves seemed tense and snippier than usual yesterday; but the absolute silence that greeted her as she made her way aerie to aerie to check in on each one before getting to the bigger part of her job was bothersome.
When she poked her head into the first aerie, she did not see the mother bird, only the silhouettes of the birds in the nest. She frowned and moved on. The second cave had a pair of one year old chicks, both of which were wide awake and staring at the wall. The behavior seemed very peculiar to Vira as she continued on, making a note in her head to check the vents. In the third and fourth cave were Dek, cleaning out some food bins that she would be filling later.
The next several caves held various aged young, from last years hatchings to two years ago, the chicks fat and large, their feathers just beginning to mature to prepare them for flight. The same behavior was observed in these as well and Vira decided to enter one of these and approach the next. The mother bird was gone here, too, and the hatchling that lived in this nest was standing at the edge looking up.
Vira followed its gaze skyward and saw the massive circling of the dire birds, their dark bodies appearing and disappearing constantly as they rotated around the peak of the volcano. "Weird, I've never noticed them do that before." She remarked to herself. "Hey, Insurq, come here!" She called, remembering that she'd seen the Dek woman in one of the previous aeries as she went by.
The hunched figure of her friend came in and stopped beside her. "What do you make of that?" She gestured with a hand towards the circling colony.
"I don't know; I've never seen them do that before."
"Exactly what I said. Were they doing it last night?"
"I don't remember, Lavira. Maybe we should get an Endal?"
But the teen shook her head. "No, they have probably seen it already, too, and would just tell us to worry about our work and let eagle business be theirs. Funny how it is our business, though..."
The Dek laughed and headed back out, leaving Vira to watch on in silence for a while longer.
Nearby, the not-quite fledgling was flapping its immature wings, screeching at the heavens and nearly knocking the teen over a few times in its near frantic actions. "Hey, hey, calm down! It's okay!" But the chick just snapped its beak at her and continued in its funny and nervous dance.
Shaking her head, Vira turned to head on to the rest of the aeries, not seeing that one of the birds was descending towards the nesting area rapidly along with three more of its brethren.