by Siiri on March 17th, 2010, 8:36 am
The boy from the Blood Fangs – Siiri thought his name was Ajai or Akai or something similar sounding – forcefully tugged the child Charoda upright as his partner prodded the elder fishmen forward with the butt end of her spear. The female Charoda must have noticed the maltreatment of her young for she turned and reached out, as if to gather the child in her arms, but the Myrian woman slapped her hands away and threatened her with the business end of the spear. The creature was forced to comply.
The Myrian boy shoved the little Charoda towards its sires but it was still clumsy, perhaps not yet used to movement on land. Appearing not much bigger than a four year old Myrian toddler, the child fell on its skinny knees, though it whimpered not a sound, too terrified was it of its captors. The Myrian boy dragged it upright once more, only to shove it forward again.
The scene unfolding before her caused Siiri’s brows to further knot together. There was something that disturbed her about it but she couldn’t exactly say what. The image of Tala being picked on, and oftentimes tripped up, by other children while they were much younger flashed suddenly in her mind. She remembered getting into scraps with these antagonists, kids four years older than her or more. Despite being younger, she could beat up some of them, but the others would always, always gang up on her and she would go home with much more damage that she dished out. As she watched the Charoda child fall on its knees for the second time, Siiri felt a tug at her heart, a strange sensation she could not name at the time.
It was pity. Pity for the little Charoda child – a weak and helpless creature whose sires she could feel nothing for but, for some unspeakable reason, she could identify with as her Myrian compatriot pushed and shoved it around. As Ajai was about to reach down and force the Charoda child up again, Siiri stepped forward and caught him by the wrist. The younger Myrian stared up at her, surprised that she was preventing him from doing what she ordered seconds ago.
“Forget that one,” Siiri said curtly. “It’s too small for the slaughter anyway. It wouldn’t satisfy anyone.”
“Sure it can, what are you talking about? Meat is meat!” Ajai laughed, thinking the woman must be joking with him. “At the very least, we can throw it to one of the tigers. Kreesha's is looking mighty hungry!” The boy reached down again, or tried to, but found that he was still held by the wrist.
“It wasn't a suggestion,” Siiri growled, tightening her grip.
If she hoped to intimidate him, Siiri was sorely disappointed. Ajai held his ground. “Meat is meat!” he insisted, his voice rising, attracting the attention of the other Myrian herding the adult Charodae. The boy had guts, Siiri had to give him that.
“What, you feeling sorry for them now?” Ajai dared ask. “They are meat!”
“Don’t be foolish, they are nothing but cattle!” Siiri was tempted to punch his face in to end the discussion rather than explain, but she felt the need to justify her stand. The neophytes won’t learn anything if all they got was a beating every time they questioned their superiors. Taking a deep breath, she let it out slowly. “Use your head, boy. If we ate everything now, we won’t have anything left for tomorrow. I say let this go now and catch it another day when it’s bigger. More meat then!”
Siiri could sense that Ajai was closed to being convinced of her argument but wasn’t quite there yet. Her hands settled on the twin daggers belted on her hips. On of her eyebrows arched up in challenge. “Do you really want to make an issue of this?” she asked, her voice steely once more.
Ajai balked, his eyes widening. He held up his hands to pacify the larger warrior. “Fine,” he conceded. He stepped back and nudged the Charoda child towards Siiri with his boot. “But you toss it back in. Damn thing’s too much aggravation for me.”
“Fine,” Siiri growled back. “Now get those two in those barrels!”
The boy left as his was bade, muttering under his breath as her rejoined his partner. Before Siiri turned to pick up the little Charoda, she saw the other Myrian smack Ajai on the back of the head in chastisement. “Stupid,” she saw the girl mouth at him. Shaking her head, Siiri hauled the Charoda fishlet back to the shore near the rocky part.
The little creature was light; Siiri carried it by the waist in one arm. It was so quiet that the Myrian thought it must have been mute since birth. It never occurred to her that the Charoda’s silence was born out of terror of her. Climbing over a large rock where she assumed the other side was water at least waist deep, she turned the creature to face her. It shrank back in fear but Siiri held it firmly by the jaw, one handed, making sure not to choke it inadvertently with her grip. She lifted it up and drew it level with her eyes.
“Do you speak Common, fish?” she asked in the trade tongue.
The Charoda nodded, a slight motion. Its glass-like eyes gave away nothing but the expression of dread on its face spoke volumes. Siiri ignored it.
“Good.” The Myrian pulled out a dagger, a nasty weapon with a serrated blade as long as her forearm. The creature began to struggle feebly against her hold at the sight of it. “Quit it.” She shook it once, hard, and its thrashings ceased. She held the dagger up between them and displayed its wicked edge.
“Know that I did not spare you out of any feelings of compassions or benevolence,” Siiri began, but hesitated halfway as if unsure of what she truly felt. Some internal battle seemed to rage in her psyche as she regarded the creature before her. Something must have won out eventually, for her expression suddenly hardened. She slashed at the left side of the Charoda’s face viciously, carving her weapon deeply to make sure the wound did not heal properly but making sure to keep the eye undamaged.
“I have thus marked you, fish,” Siiri declared, tapping her own scar with the bloodied dagger to emphasize the significance of the wound she had just inflicted. Despite the haze of pain it must be in, the woman was mildly surprise to find the Charoda child was actually listening to her. Its attention was focused solely on her. She continued: “Know that it was I, Siiri of the Snapping Jaws, who sealed the fate of your sires. Remember that. When you are old enough to hold a blade of your own and wish for vengeance, seek me out. I will welcome it.”
Her short speech ended, Siiri flung the Charoda bodily into the sea. The creature vanished under the surface, only to reappear several yards away. The salt water must have caused it excruciating pain for it clutched its wounded face in its small webbed hands as its blood mingled with the brine.
“Now get lost. If I see you again, I will catch you and break your limbs and let you watch as I eat your intestines.” Siiri picked up a good-sized rock and hurled it at the Charoda. It would have hit the creature squarely had it not ducked under the water and swam farther away. Its head broke the surface once more but by then Siiri was already walking back towards her troupe. She turned once last time to catch a glimpse of the child, adrift alone in the sea, one hand covering its wound in an attempt to stem the bleeding, the other reaching out for its lost parents.
Apologies to everyone I'm threading with, but it's like the Danaides for me right now.==/==
"If it doesn't solve all your problems, maybe you're not using enough of it." - Violence