6th Day of Summer, 507AV
15th Bell
Outside the Wall of Taloba
15th Bell
Outside the Wall of Taloba
It was a slow day. Well, to anyone else it would be. But for the tortoise, it was going at a rather brisk pace.
One gnarled foot after another, the shell with legs and a wrinkled neck connected to a wizened head made its way across the jungle floor. Every few yards it would pause and sniff at a promising morsel of lichen or vegetation, tasting delicately and then either devouring it with laborious precision or move on to greener pastures. Which was everywhere, fortunately.
Falyndar was, theoretically, a herbivore's dream. Endless miles of trees, shrubs, vines, bushes, mushrooms, roots, moss... one big meal for a fifty-pound armored turtle that had little else to do but eat, sleep and-
Something creaked above it. The tortoise went from painfully slow to still as marble.
That was the problem with theories: there were always variables.
One of them landed with practiced grace a dozen yards away. The tortoise blinked warily at two hundred pounds of black and yellow fur, tipped by black claws and crowned with unblinking, remorseless black eyes. The jaguar regarded it with something akin to surprise. The tortoise felt the same; it had never seen one of these... things, before.
Not that it needed a lecture and anthropological note. It knew danger and death when it saw it. As the creature padded forwards, cords of tight muscle rippling and shifting under the spotted fur, it did what came naturally.
In a blink, four limbs and a head vanished into the shell. Now the big cat blinked. It didn't know they could move that fast, even for such a simple movement. Inside the shell the tortoise waited, calm in the way that only genetic certainty can endow. Baboons and hawks and even the occasional wolf had all tried to carve and gnaw their way into his shell; it had plenty of marks to prove it. They had all failed, and it had no reason to suspect this would be different.
But... this was strange. Through the tiny hole his head had retreated into, he could see the fur-and-claw-topped feet shift and contort. First as if glimped through a haze, then through a waterfall, until the awful, unnatural absurdity of what was unfolding became undeniably real.
Dark skin the texture of well-tanned leather drew dominion over fur. Four legs became two, and the tortoise could hear gentle crackling, like a multitude of deer running over a field of twigs. It rose higher, higher, as if the creature was getting taller...
Its world shifted. Strong fingers connected to stronger muscles heaved the shell upward... and a different face stared into the shell.
Brown eyes. As unflappable in their way as the form it had been before. Thicks lips above a straight nose, mercifullY unbroken even after three years patrolling, tracking, stalking, killing, cleansing, protecting in the name of Blessed Myri. A patch of flowing fur above a suitable high forehead, bedecked in bone and shards of things no tortoise could name that sparkled and clinked in the sparse Syna and rustling wind.
It could sense some... thoughts, at work. Something being weighed and measured. Not just it, but a solution to it. A hard rapping on the shell... and a sigh, almost regretful.
Tarukko would have preferred to remove the odd and shrunken little creature before examining its impenetrable home. More rapping. Over every surface, until... ah. The underside. Somewhat expected.
What we prefer, and what we must. Those conundrums only ever end one way.
The world span and blurred as the tortoise went on its back. A grunting from ape-like lungs that was soon drowned by that crackling again, glimpses of a form devolving, sprouting, morphing into the great feline of before. Who now had a perfect angle at his softer underside.
The tortoise knew fear, hot and choking, as a maw opened, lined with fangs and peaked by twin sets of long, thick, yellowed canines and incisors. The head dove down at its armored belly in a ferocious rush of movement.
Pain. Agony. Shattering shell and crunching bone and precious flesh found and chewed and swallowed.
The hunt. The freedom of it, the perfect isolation. How Tarukko had missed it.