The Way of the Wolf (c) 98 by
MistressAli
All "Sonic the Hedgehog" characters and
related indicia (c) and TM Sega.
Used without permission.
Amalace,
Javelin, Todd, Tressa (c) MistressAli
This document may be freely distributed, as long as it's not
altered in any way.
Ok, peoples, this story contains: violence &
mild swearing...just a warning...!
Yeah, this story contains 'wolven' language. Here are the
translations, but don't worry, I give them through the
story.
Ozagata-tattoo of the wolf pack. All members have it. It is
a howling non-anthro wolf.
Lazolou-leaves that when crushed, and
the juices drunken, cause hallucinations. They're like
drugs.
Garato-leader
Garato-heem-the first wolf. He is very
highly respected and treated as a god.
Heem means
father.
Sheem-mother.
Maladi-daughter
Graheen-a sort of
'birth control' plant
Sedrat- wolven curse...equivilant to "crap
(py)"
Wert-egg
Naughta-human
Weirgo-a weakling; like
the runt of the litter
"The Way of the Wolf"
By MistressAli
The campfire flickered, casting yellow light on the group. Sally
and Sonic were sitting close, holding hands. Antoine and Bunnie were
curled up together, 'Twan's hands around Bunnie's waist. Bunnie's
eyelids drooped and she sighed sleepily.
Lupe' stirred the fire
with a stick. Sparks flew.
Tails spoke. "Someone tell a
story."
Looks were exchanged.
"Yes," said Sally.
"Tell us about your culture, Lupe'."
Lupe' turned to one
of her pack, a fox named Amalace. "Ama here is the best
storyteller among us--perhaps because us wolves express ourselves
better through art. Tell her about the past, of our ordeal with
Robotnik. Up to the part where we met the Freedom Fighters."
"All
right," said the fox. Her voice had the same soft accent as
Lupe'. "A marshmallow please, Rotor?"
The walrus handed
her one. She thrust it onto a stick, and balanced the stick on her
knee. The fire licked the marshmallow, turning it golden brown.
After
eating it, she wiped her hands on a leaf, and cleared her throat.
"All right. Everybody get comfortable. Here goes." She
peered into the fire for a moment. "I am a rather new member to
the pack, the rest have been in it for years and years. So, I will
start with my initiation."
Amalace had already proved herself worthy in hunting. She had run
through the obstacle course in the ancient canyon, and had gotten
through alive and unscathed. She had received an ozagata (tattoo) of
a wolf on the inside of her flank, where the fur was thin and the
tattoo visible. But the head was missing. If she passed the rest of
her initiation into the wolf pack, then the tattoo was completed, if
she failed, then the headless wolf was a sign of her unworthiness,
and the pack would cast her away.
Next, lazolou "vision
leaves" were crushed and she had drank the juices from them. Her
veins raced with fire. Glazed, her eyes stared blankly ahead. Then,
everything went black.
In the blackness, symbols swirled before
her. She squinted; it was the writing of the ancient wolf pack. An
old wolf's face appeared before her, fur touched with the white of
wisdom. His eyes, one milky white from a cataract, and the other a
vivid brown, locked with hers. She gasped. He opened his mouth, and
breezy like the wind, one word sighed.
She woke. Around her crouched the pack, staring intently at her.
BrownHide, the Garato (leader), took her hands in his.
"Did
you see him?" BrownHide asked. "Did you see Garato-heem,
the ancient one, the first of wolven flesh and blood?" Normally
BrownHide did not speak like this, but he was reciting the ancient
initiation questions.
"Yes," said Amalace, still woozy
from the drugs.
The pack exchanged glances. Lupe', the Garato's
maladi (daughter), was of fourteen years and this was the first
initiation she had seen. A stranger had never made it this far into
the initiation...most strangers failed the first stage, the hunting.
Lupe' had seen several of her brothers go through the rites of
passage, from boy to man, but this was different and exciting.
Besides, there would be a feast afterwards, and Lupe's mouth watered
at the thought.
"You have seen the first wolf, Garato-heem,
in your vision. Has he deemed you worthy of our pack? Yes or no?"
asked the Garato.
If she lied, he would feel it through her hands.
It was the power bestowed in him. "Yes. He has deemed me
worthy."
BrownHide clasped her hand tighter. He felt the
flesh, the fur, even the bone underneath. But he felt no coldness, no
lie.
"She is truthful. She had been deemed worthy by
Garato-heem!"
The pack cheered. Amalace smiled. BrownHide
patted her shoulder. "Are you ready for the last stage?"
"Yes,"
she said firmly. Inside, butterflies bashed frantically against the
walls of her stomach.
The last stage is the hardest, she thought.
I have fasted and kept awake for two days...big deal. The cleansing
power is necessary. I have hunted, and ran the course, and gotten my
tattoo...well part of it. I have gotten Garato-Heem's blessing, bless
him! But this part...Garato-Heem, please help me get through this
part!
Wolves formed a circle around her, each holding a wooden
club, painted with symbols of strength and power. Strength and pain
endurance were highly valued, and if one didn't have it, then they
were considered a weakling, and unworthy of the pack.
Amalace
stood with her legs apart, a good solid stance. She eyed the circle.
Only a certain number were allowed to participate in this part of the
ceremony. This number was nine, counting the Garato.
Nine, thought
Amalace. I can do this.
"The last test is the test of pain
endurance," said the Garato. "Are you ready?"
"Yes."
BrownHide gestured with his paw. One by one, each wolf went up to
Amalace, swung the club like a baseball bat, and struck her. No
whimpers escaped Ama's clenched teeth. Tears sprang up in her eyes;
she blinked them away.
The last to hit was BrownHide. He dropped
the club and looked her over. Her eyes were wet, but she made no
sound. From her mouth, blood leaked. He raised a finger, put it on
her lips, and drew it away. Blood slicked it, and he sucked it off.
He made another gesture.
The wolves came up to her, and each wiped
blood from her lips with their fingers, and then swallowed the
blood.
"Now," said BrownHide. "You have proven you
can endure pain. We drank of your blood; we accept you, and are now
connected to you. In return, you must accept us." He drew a
ceremonial knife and a wooden bowl from his belt, and sliced his
thumb. Drops of blood splattered into the bowl. Each wolf did the
same. There was no hesitation.
BrownHide stood before her again,
with the bowl in hand. "We accept you," he repeated. "Do
you accept us?"
"Yes," she said.
"Then
drink. Connect to us."
Amalace took the bowl in her hands.
She raised it to her lips, and slowly tilted it back, until the warm
liquid flowed into her mouth. She carefully swallowed each drop, and
licked her lips clean.
The pack cheered. Amalace smiled, and kept
smiling as her tattoo was finished. She was now a member of the Wolf
pack!
After she rested, there was a huge feast.
Antoine began coughing loudly. Bunnie slapped him on the back.
"You ok, sugah?"
Antoine cleared his throat. "You
drank blood?"
"Yes. It is an ancient ritual," said
Amalace.
Antoine wrinkled his nose. "I would nevair have done
dat."
"Shut up, Ant," came Sonic's impatient voice.
"I wanna hear the rest."
Ama laughed softly. "All
right, Fast One. Here it comes."
The next day, Amalace awoke around eight. She was sharing a hut
until hers was built. She yawned, and strode outside.
Some of the
females were forming dough into rolls and popping them into a
solar-powered oven. Other wolves were eating the rolls that had
already been cooked. The wolves ate only breakfast and dinner, with
fruit as a snack in between.
Their village consisted of wooden
huts with straw-thatched roofs. Each hut had a garden. The village
sat in an open field. It was diverse territory; rich plains where
they lived, a lush forest five miles south, and a desert canyon two
miles west. To the east and north were more plains.
Over the next few days, Amalace learned more about the wolven
culture. They loved to wear beaded jewelry, and the children often
made jewelry for their elders. As for children, it seemed only the
Garato and his mate were allowed to breed.
"So, only the
Garato and his wife may...do it?" Amalace asked one of the
females, a wolf named Tressa.
"Well...that is our way. Only
the leaders may have children. But that doesn't mean others can't
have sex."
Amalace was surprised at Tressa's openness. Among
her kind, sex was a naughty-naughty kind of topic. She was surprised
she had even asked Tressa about it.
"But...how do the females
NOT get children?"
Tressa laughed. "Very simple, Ama,
dear. The graheen. The berries of that plant stop the baby from being
conceived."
"Does the graheen damage the body?"
"Oh
no," said Tressa. "Not at all. However, when there is much
food and resources, then sometimes others may have children. But most
of the time, we haven't got enough food to feed many children. They
eat a lot, you know."
Amalace gazed at Tressa admiringly. The
female wolf was well-muscled, and stood about five and a half feet
tall. Her fur was a rich black, accented with purple, and her eyes
were a startling green. She wore little clothes, as did most of the
other wolves; she wore a loin-cloth, and a beaded choker necklace,
and flat sandals.
"You are very beautiful," said Amalace
suddenly.
Tressa's fingers worked stiff grasses into a basket.
Then she lifted her emerald eyes to look Amalace over. "You are
pretty also, dear."
Amalace sighed, and shifted her position
a little; her leg was starting to fall asleep. She was wearing a
short blue loincloth, and sandals. Then she stood up, and went to
gaze in the small stream that ran through the middle of the village.
Her reflection stared back at her.
Although she was treated like
one, Amalace was not a wolf. She was a gray fox, so she was shorter
than the others. She had a fair amount of muscle for her size, but it
disturbed her that the wolves were stronger. I've been accepted, she
thought, But I can never really be a wolf. She sighed loudly,
brushing her black hair out of her face.
I'll tie it back, she
decided, and did so, holding the ponytail with a piece of string. Now
her eyes were not hidden by her hair; they gleamed in the sunshine, a
vivid purple.
Later that night, a group of men set out south towards the
forest.
"Are they hunting?" asked Amalace.
"Of
course," said Javelin. She was the Garato's mate.
"Do
women hunt?"
"If they wish." Javelin smiled as
Lupe' slipped a new beaded bracelet onto her wrist. "Thank
you."
The child--well not really a child, thought Ama, since
womanhood began at sixteen and Lupe' was fourteen--beamed at her
mother and watched as her younger brother struggled to light the
evening fire.
"You're doing it wrong!" teased Lupe'.
Then she went over to help.
"I can't hunt," said
Javelin, fingering the beads.
"Why not?"
"Because
I am valued as a child-bearer."
"Oh." Ama loved
hunting, and was glad she was not the Garato's mate.
Pretty soon, Amalace was following a daily schedule. She'd get up,
and eat a few rolls to start off her day. Then she'd take a bath in
the stream. Fishing, basket-weaving, and blanket-making took up the
next few hours. Then she took a short nap. The rest of the day was
basically free time; she did whatever needed to be done. Later at
night, she'd go hunting with the group.
They'd come home. The
women cooks made dishes of vegetables and fruits, so if nothing was
caught, then there was still dinner. If food was caught, then it
would be cooked, and eaten with the vegetables and fruits as side
dishes.
After dinner was one of Ama's favorite parts of the day,
the fireside time. The fire would be roaring, and they'd all lay
around it lazily, and tell stories. The four elders told the best
stories.
At first, Ama had not liked the elders. They sat around,
and were tended on hand and foot. With her species, elders were
considered nuisances; if you were not strong enough to take care of
yourself, then you should die. That was the way of the gray fox.
But
the wolves strongly respected their elders, for their wisdom, and
their strength to remain alive for so long. The elders wore a wealth
of beaded jewelry, and were constantly adorned with flowers and given
delicious fruit drinks that were tedious to make.
But as time
passed, Ama grew to like the elders. They were wise, and they were
filled with many stories. They knew much, and could often answer any
question given to them, and solve any problem. Although frail in
body, they were sharp in mind, and soon Amalace found herself smiling
at them affectionately whenever she caught sight of them.
After the fireside stories and chat, they would go their separate
ways. Ama often saw some women drinking graheen drinks, and knew
those females would be busy with a man that night.
She would go to
her hut, and sometimes turn on her computer (yes, the wolves had some
technology) and type awhile. But most of the time, she'd go to bed,
stare up at the ceiling, and think.
There was a certain wolf she
had her eye on. He was a handsome man, with light brown fur, and
heart-melting dark brown eyes. She sighed, she wished he would notice
her. He never seemed to. Ama would usually blush fiercely when she
thought of him, even though she was alone, and it was dark, and
nobody could read her thoughts. Then she'd close her eyes and fall
asleep.
Amalace stopped her story, and glanced over at a light brown wolf.
He smiled affectionately back.
Lupe' laughed softly. "Yes,
Todd and Amalace did become a couple, eventually."
"Like
Bunnie and moi," said Antoine. The rabbit snuggled closer to
him.
"Yes," said Lupe'. Her eyes moved to Amalace. "Now
the story darkens...Amalace?"
The fox cleared her throat
delicately. "All right. Here I go."
The nap had lasted longer than usual. Amalace awoke, and
stretched. "Aghh, I slept long!" she exclaimed, sitting up.
She stood up, and looked around. Around her, wolves went about their
daily tasks. Her eyes moved up to the lazy clouds, and she suddenly
froze.
Through the sky, hurtling towards their village, were five
black objects. "Are they birds?" Ama asked aloud, shading
her eyes with a hand to see better.
They were coming nearer, and
they swept by, circling the village. She saw the gleam of turquoise
metal, and heard a high-pitched whine.
"Flying machines,"
she said. "What are they called...hovercrafts?"
"Yeah,"
said a voice behind her. She whirled around, to see the light brown
wolf, Todd, standing there.
"Who owns them?" asked
Amalace.
"Have you heard of Robotnik?" asked
Todd.
Amalace's brow wrinkled as she thought. "Yes. Didn't he
stop the Great War?"
"Not only that, but he's the one
who overthrew the Mobian Garato."
"The Acorn
King?"
"Yeah."
She frowned again. "I think
I have heard of this Robotnik. He lives in a city."
"Yeah.
Robotropolis." Todd shuddered suddenly. "I've been there
before. Ack, is that place sedrat! (wolven curse)" He laughed
suddenly. "We call Robotnik Heem Wert."
She laughed too.
Heem Wert meant Father Egg. "Is Heem Wert a naughta?"
"Yes.
He is egg-shaped and very ugly. He is the ugliest naughta I've
seen."
"They are all ugly. Furless things, ugh."
Amalace wrinkled her nose at the thought of naughtas; humans.
"Yeah,"
said Todd, grinning. Then the grin disappeared as fire suddenly shot
from one of the hovercrafts. Two huts went up in flames.
The other
craft began to fire, and then three landed. SWATbots poured out of
the crafts, armed with laser guns set to stun.
"Ack! Metal
naughtas!" cried Amalace, running for her hut. Under her bed was
her spear, the one that had helped kill many a dinner.
She charged out. Raising the spear over her head, she plunged it
into a SWATbot, right where the head joined the body. The robot
crumpled down to its knees and Ama released the spear with a
surprised yelp; electricity had surged up it, shocking her
hands.
Then she grabbed it again, yanking the weapon free.
Javelin heard shouting, and dropped a handful of weeds. She leapt
to her feet and ran from her vegetable plot, crushing a few tomatoes
underfoot. Her eyes widened and she cursed.
"Sedrat! What is
going on?!" Then she ducked as a robot turned towards her and
fired.
"An invasion. I see." She narrowed her eyes. "It
must be from that fat naughta, Robot-man."
"That's
Robotnik," panted Todd, running up to her. He was holding two
spears and he tossed her one.
"No naughta raids my village,"
she growled. She rose her voice into a battle cry, one that alerted
the entire village, sending them running for weapons.
Four
SWATbots fell under a vicious onslaught from Todd. Lupe' and her
younger brother used their slings against the metal men.
One
SWATbot, severely damaged, switched his gun to kill, intending to
take out a few wolves before he went off-line. He lifted his gun and
aimed it on Lupe's little brother, who was twirling his sling.
"Don't
think so, bud," growled a deep voice, and the SWATbot swiveled
its head around. A second later, a large rock descended down on its
dish-shaped head, crushing it. BrownHide kicked the 'dead' SWATbot in
satisfaction.
Ama felt the spear in her hand, strong and solid; a
part of her body. Her arm propelled it forward into a SWATbot's
vulnerable neck spot. She ignored the shock, this time wrenching her
spear free and kicking over the malfunctioning 'bot. Todd was beside
her, and he tossed her a flask. She raised it to her mouth and
quickly drank; inside was the juice of Tergato plant...which
quickened the blood and gave the drinker energy and cleared the
mind.
She tossed the flask back, so he might give it to others.
Already her blood was pulsing through her veins, and she felt almost
high with adrenaline. Screaming a wild ragged note, she attacked a
SWATbot.
It stumbled around as she leapt onto its back, pounding
its head with her fist. Holding her spear close to the spearhead, she
cut wires and cables in the 'bots neck, as easily as she sliced
through the hamstrings of a running deer.
The 'bot crumpled,
though not before giving her a shock that made her teeth rattle. As
it fell, it reached out for her, grabbing her ankle. She tried to
wrench away, but the robot raised its rifle. She struggled harder,
raising her spear to knock the gun away. Too late. The SWAT's finger
tightened, and she reeled backwards, stunned.
Weak-kneed, she
dropped down to the ground. Her muscles were locking up, her brain
numb. Even in this state, she reached for her spear. But blackness
enveloped her; she was out cold.
"Amalace!" bellowed Todd, running over to the fox. He shook her gray-furred body gently, then put his hand to her nose. Light air ruffled his fur...but he frowned, it could be the breeze. He heard a high whine, and looked behind him and tried to dodge...too late for him also. The blast from the stun gun dropped him to his knees.
Yawning, Packbell leaned his head on his arms, looking out through
the windshield of the hovercraft. The SWATbot piloting was flying the
craft around the village in slow circles.
Two wolves lay stunned,
ten of the 'bots were down. Ten out of the twenty-five he'd brought,
besides the one flying his craft. He picked up the headset off the
hovercraft console and spoke into it. The transmission went to the
lead 'bot.
"SWAT team leader, respond."
"What is
your bidding?"
"Have half of your team switch their
rifles to kill."
"Confirmed."
Packbell's gaze returned to the windshield. Now more wolves fell, and from the smoke that curled up from their bodies, he could tell they would never rise again.
"Sedrat!" yelped Javelin, as a fatal laser shot nearly
struck her. "Watch out! Some stun, others kill!" She neatly
dispatched the 'bot who had almost killed her.
BrownHide dipped an
arrow into a wooden bucket that was filled with the juice of Krudoz
plants. After shooting a few 'bots, he watched with satisfaction as
the juice, like acid, ate clean through the robots. Then he noticed
the hovercraft circling around the village.
"That must be the
naughta garato," he growled. He dipped an arrow, notched it into
his bow, aimed upwards, and waited. The hovercraft swept by. He
released the arrow. It arched upwards, and hit the underside of the
craft.
He frowned as it bounced off. "The craft is of strong
material," he muttered. But then, looking closer, he saw a tiny
spot of the hovercraft had started to bubble up, like it was boiling.
He grinned; the juice must have smeared on the craft, and was now
eating through it.
"Heh. Take that naughta!" Then
suddenly, he pitched forward. Weakened, his arms couldn't even fly
out to catch his fall. He hit the ground heavily, groaning.
"Call
a retreat!" yelled one of the elders at Javelin. "Call it
now, sheem-garato!"
"But...our village!"
One of
the elders placed his white hand on her shoulder. "Dear...we
still have the caves in the canyon. We are not strong enough to fight
them now...we must wait. For now, call the retreat! Before we all
die."
"But is it not cowardly?"
"No, my
child. 'Tis not. If you die now, then you can have no vengeance
later."
"But the garato..."
The elder's eyes
were hard. Sighing, Javelin raised her voice. "Retreat! Retreat!
Quickly!"
Packbell watched the wolves race away, leaving behind their dead
and unconscious comrades.
"Methought they were going to put
up quite a fight. How disappointing." His mouth twisted in
disapproval for a second, and then he turned to the
pilot.
"Land."
"Confirmed." The SWATbot
began lowering the craft.
Packbell hopped out of the craft before
it touched down and walked among the bodies. He could tell by looking
which ones were dead. He paused by a young male, whose face was still
locked into a snarl.
"And what'd you get for your pride, eh?"
laughed Packbell. He unzipped his pants and yellow liquid splashed
into the wolf's lifeless eyes.
Chuckling as he redid his pants,
Packbell turned to the SWATbot leader, who was standing idly,
awaiting orders.
"Bring the live ones into the crafts and
secure them," the 'droid ordered.
Five minutes later, the hovercraft zoomed away. Wind ruffled the fur of the nine dead wolves.
They crept back quietly. Javelin's throat closed up when she saw
one of her sons laying motionless, the scent of part machine/part
naughta urine on him. Her teeth bit into her lower lip, and blood
flowed down into her white chest fur.
"The naughta seeks to
humble...to humiliate us. He seeks to subdue. We will NOT be
subdued!"
Breathing hard, she knelt beside her son, and then
looked up at her pack members. "The canyon is our home now. We
will brink the dead there. Our ceremonies will be held later."
She looked around. "There were more left behind then this. The
naughta must have taken them to his demon city."
She stood
up. "A team of three, plus myself, will go to the demon city and
rescue them."
They carried the dead back. Then Javelin chose
her team. It consisted of two young men, Teak and Conrad, and an
older female, Grotta. Armed with spears, bow and arrows, and flasks
of tergota juice, they headed towards another part of the canyon,
where they would have the last preparation for battle.
Carved in stone, his eyes looked down upon them. From his mouth,
water flowed, pooling in the stone basin at his feet. Humming low in
their throats, Javelin and her companions knelt before the
statue.
"Great is the power of Garato-Heem," sang
Javelin. "Our kin and yours have been captured, O Great One.
Please aid us in freeing them."
"Great is the power of
Garato-Heem," she repeated. This time the other three sang with
her. Then they cupped their hands and drank from the basin.
Blessed,
the group of four set out for Robotropolis.
Amalace came to, and groggily raised her head. She tried to move,
only to find herself shackled to a metal floor. She blinked her eyes,
and gazed out the windows at the moving sky...wait a minute! Sky and
clouds?
I am inside the flying machine, she realized. Looking
around her, she saw more of her pack also shackled.
It seemed she
was at the back of the craft. At the front, there was a door which
she assumed led to the cockpit, and in this door a figure suddenly
appeared.
It came into the back part, and stood right by the
windows, in the brilliant full light, as if displaying itself for her
eyes.
It was a male naughta. He stood six and a half feet tall.
She herself stood five and a half, while most of the wolves stood at
six. He had the revolting hairless skin that cursed naughtas. She
couldn't see much of it; he wore long sleeves, pants, boots-all
black. His head hair was a shaggy mop, much like Tressa's fur; a
glossy black with purple highlights. His eyebrows were black
triangles, frowning above unpleasant red eyes. His clothing was
rather tight, and he appeared to be heavily muscled. An impressive
specimen.
But there was something wrong with his smell. He smelled
of skin, and hair, and blood, yes, but it was false somehow. The
scent of machine clung to him.
"Are you a naughta?" she
asked suspiciously.
"A what?" His voice was steely cold,
and danced like razors along her spine.
"Naughta--a human,"
she translated.
"No. I'm an android. Far superior to flesh
creatures."
"Then you ARE a machine." She narrowed
her eyes. "A machine can never be superior to a flesh creature.
Flesh creatures MADE you."
"They gave me life, and for
that I thank them. But I am superior."
"But you work for
a flesh creature, do you not?"
He seemed annoyed by her
questions. "Yes." Then his eyes moved to a spot on the
hovercraft floor where there was a small hole. Sky shone up through
it. "What the hell?" He leaned down and touched the ragged
edges.
"It is from our arrows. Dipped in Krudoz
juice."
"Krudoz?" the android seemed startled.
"Those are the metal-eating plants!"
"Yes,"
she said.
"Do you have Krudoz with you?" he asked. She
thought she heard nervousness in his voice. She smiled slowly, her
sharp teeth shining.
"Maybe. Is the metal naughta
afraid?"
"No," he growled.
"You sound
scared."
"Your ears need cleaning, foxy."
She
changed the subject. "Where are you taking us?"
"To
Robotropolis."
"The demon city?"
He laughed.
"Yes, I guess you could say that."
"Are you the
Garato?"
"Speak normal."
"The leader."
"No.
Robotnik is."
"Will I meet him?"
"Perhaps.
Perhaps not." He smiled cruelly. "But you will work for
him."
She scowled. "I think not."
He laughed and
reentered the cockpit, leaving her with the unconscious bodies of her
friends.
The streets of Robotropolis were more familiar with the feet of
intruders than Robotnik thought. The SWATbots and SpyEyes spotted
about seventy-five percent of the intruders; twenty-five percent
snuck in and out of the city undetected. So far, Javelin and her
group were in that twenty-five percent. Walking silently on upraised
toes, they used the deep shadows and cluttered alleyways to their
advantage.
Teak peeked around a dumpster. A huge egg-shaped
building loomed far up into the smog-filled sky. "Do you think
that is the main building?"
"Yes," said Javelin.
"But we do not know if they are in the main building."
"The
rest appear to be factories," said Grotta. A hovercraft whirled
around the top of the Death Egg and Javelin nodded, seeing it as a
sign from Garato-Heem.
"We will check in there, then."
They moved closer to the building. It sat on a nest of twisted
cables...huge long things that were like metal-plated pythons. They
climbed over, ducked under, and slid in between the cables until they
finally reached a more open area. The double doors that led into the
main building were closed. Four SWATbots were standing with folded
arms in front of the doors.
Conrad raised his spear. "Let's
kill them."
"Don't be foolish," hissed Grotta. "You
kill them and the whole place will know."
"How?"
"Like
our pack...the city has sentries. It has eyes and ears. It has
to."
"Then what shall we do?"
Brows furrowed in
thought.
"There must be another way in," said Grotta
finally.
They made their way around the building, moving in closer
until they were right up against it.
Teak paused at a
square-shaped air duct. Clenching a fist, he slammed it into the
steel-mesh grating. It busted inwards. Shaking his hand, blood
dripping from his knuckles, he gestured at the air duct. "There
ya go. Our way in."
"Let's go then," urged Javelin.
"There may not be much time."
They filed into the air
duct.
"Garato-Heem!" exclaimed Teak. His statement echoed
around them, and he flattened down his ears. They had been crawling
for about an hour now.
Voices echoed around them. They had passed
many grates in the air duct, that looked down into rooms. But they
had not seen their companions yet. Sound carried in the duct; any
sound that filtered through the grates echoed down the tunnels
endlessly.
Over the past hour they had heard evil cackles. They
had heard a deep voice bellowing, "Shut up, you moron!" and
a meek little voice reply an incoherent response. And just now, they
had caught the voices of their pack members.
Javelin lay on her
back, panting. The heat in the ducts was unbearable. Occasionally, a
blast of cool air would ruffle her fur. She was thankful for that;
but irritated by the fact that all the air had a disgusting toxic
tinge to it.
"Three more minutes," she said. "Then
we move on."
Tongues lolling, the group agreed.
Amalace huddled in the cell, arms clasped around herself. Cold,
yes she was cold.
Then she heard footsteps, and up to her cell
strode a naughta. It was a different one from before, and she eyed
the small creature in disgust. She knew the android had been molded
into a normal human form. This one was too small, too thin.
This
one was also male, and he was a real naughta; she could smell no
traces of machine or fake flesh. He seemed small for a male; male
wolves were almost always bulkier than females. He must be a weirgo
(a weakling), she thought. This only heightened her disgust, weirgos
were not well-liked by the wolf pack, who highly appreciated strength
and height and muscle.
He stood in front of her cell, arms crossed
in front of his chest. She eyed his stance. Legs slightly apart,
shoulders straight, his eyes locked directly on her face; he might be
a weirgo, but he insisted on taking an aggressive pose.
Despite
her disgust, she was interested in the naughta; she had never seen
one so close up before. She leaned forward to see him even more
closely, but lightning leapt from the bars, shocking her. She made no
sound, but scrambled backwards. The naughta laughed. His front teeth
were flat and square, on the sides of those were short dull fangs (no
match for her's), and in back were wide flat molars, similarly to
grazing animals. A strange assortment of teeth, she thought. The
naughtas must eat both flesh and plant.
He had no fur on his body,
expect for a few strands of hair on his head. Looking closer, she saw
he had some fine hairs all over his visible skin, which was not much;
the naughta was clothed from head to toe. His nose was long and
pointed; it reminded her of the digging tools back at the village.
His ears were small and close to his head, not standing away like
hers. She decided that he probably could not hear very well.
His
eyes were bigger than hers, a shade of gorgeous pale blue, with fine,
wispy eyelashes, and a coldness in them that did not intimidate
her.
The human's body was a pathetic thing, and she nearly
laughed. He was shorter than her, but remained staring up at her
fearlessly. He was extremely thin. His uniform sleeves were too big,
and they hung several inches below his skinny wrists. He wore a belt
around his waist, and she made a circle with her two hands. I bet
that I could circle my hands around his waist, and my fingers would
touch. And I have small hands! What a slender thing he is! How can he
move with so little muscle? Where is the power?
She laughed aloud.
Finally, the naughta spoke. Her ears recoiled from his voice, like
her foot would draw away from a serpent; his voice was a nasty thing,
all high and snooty, and strange sounding, as if his nose were
clogged.
"Well, are you ready to be roboticized?" he
said.
She almost lashed out at him, but remembered the bars. "Who
are you, naughta? Where is your garato?"
"I only speak
common Mobian and Overlandish," he said.
"Of course,"
she said. "Who are you? Where is your leader?"
"Does
it matter?" he asked.
She snorted indignantly. "Of
course it matters. The gar-leader is...it is respectable for guests
to speak to the leader before conversing with his underlings."
He
looked irritated. "Do I look respectful, bitch? I AM the leader
at the moment, so you may converse with me." His voice went
hissing for a moment; he was obviously annoyed at being called an
underling.
"Bitch?" She rolled the unfamiliar word off
her tongue. She spoke mostly wolven and knew much common Mobian. But
she knew Overlandish (the language of humans) had begun to intertwine
with common Mobian, but she had never learned any of it. Bitch was
one such Overlandish word. But from the way he had said it, she knew
it was a curse.
"Yes, bitch. That's what you are." He
chuckled evilly.
"What is bitch?"
He sighed.
"Nevermind. Do you know what roboticization is?"
"I
have heard of it, but I know not what it is."
He pinched his
hand, holding a fold of skin between his thumb and forefinger. "You
see how we are made of flesh?"
"Yes."
"Well,
the roboticizer, to put it simply, is a glass tube. You are thrown
inside, and you cannot escape."
"But, if it is glass,
then I can break it." She clenched a fist.
"Not exactly.
You can't break it."
"I can! I am strong."
He
sighed again. "Listen, you can't break it. It doesn't matter how
strong you are."
She didn't believe him, but she nodded. "All
right. What happens next, naughta?"
He narrowed his eyes;
probably thinking naughta was insult. "Next a light shoots down
on you. You will feel incredible pain, such as you've never felt
before."
"I can take any pain!" she broke in,
boasting. "I have felt vast amounts of pain, and whimpered not
once!"
"Fine," he said. "But this pain will
make you cry."
"I think not."
"Then, your
flesh will turn to metal."
"Flesh to
metal?"
"Yes."
"That is very strange. I do
not see how it could happen."
"It does. And when all
your flesh is completely metal, then your body is no longer yours. It
is ours. Your mind is trapped within you. Your body responds to your
programming, it obeys us, not you."
"No!" she
cried. "That is not possible!"
"Oh, but it is!"
he mock-cried, imitating her. "I don't where you've been,
fox-girl. You really haven't seen a roboticized person before?"
"No.
We live far away from your demon city."
"Demon
city...hmmm...I like the sound of that."
"Your voice is
like a black fly," she said suddenly. "It is annoying and
it never goes away."
He laughed. "You're quite clever,"
he said. "But that won't save you...or your little friends."
She
lashed out then, and was punished by the lightning fingers of the
bars.
He laughed, then looked tired for a moment and leaned
forward, as if he was going to rest against the bars. Then he seemed
to remember the severe shock he would get, so he slouched against the
wall instead.
"Slouching is not a good posture," she
said. "It will give you backaches."
He laughed shortly.
"I'm sure you get backaches all the time, miss."
She
frowned, not understanding.
"From all that frontal
weight."
"Oooh", she growled, and crossed her arms
over her chest in an x, trying to hide her breasts.
"So what
is your name?" she asked.
"Lord Snively."
"Lord
Snively? But you are not the garato."
Snively remembered
earlier she had changed 'garato' to 'leader'. "No, not the
garato, but I'm close to it," he said. "And what is your
name?"
"Amalace," she said. Each wolf really had
two names, and they never gave their second name to strangers. Names
had power; this power could be used against the bearer of the name.
Her second name was in ancient wolven tongue; it was
Ragatay-Sheem-"Vixen Mother".
"Amylase?" His
tone changed to lecturing. "An enzyme that converts starch to
sugar."
"What?" she frowned.
He snickered.
"Nevermind. It's a nice name." Then he left. She sighed.
The bars in front of her flickered, and then disappeared.
Cautiously,
she stepped out of the cell. But the short man returned, this time
with two robots at his side. A tazer was in his hand. They seized her
by the wrists, and when she struggled, the small lord zapped her with
the tazer.
She screamed, and tried to lash out at him, but he
merely laughed and walked off. The robots followed him.
Through the air duct, Javelin and her companions could hear a lot
of voices, yelling and cursing.
They crept through the ducts
towards the next grate. Teak's paws slipped out from under him; they
were slick with sweat and slippery against the metal inside of the
pipe.
"Ssssh," hissed Grotta.
They reached the grate and peered through. Below them was a rather
large room, filled with glass tubes, and a large computer.
Standing
in the room were sixteen wolves, and Amalace. They were standing in a
group, with rifle-armed SWATbots standing around them. Packbell was
cackling near the computer console. BrownHide, the garato, was
standing inside one of the glass tubes. Lord Snively was standing
near the tube.
"Well, now that we're all gathered together in this happy
group, I'd like to give you a little demonstration," said the
large android, moving in front of the group. He gestured towards the
tube. "Roboticization is an amazing process," he began,
sounding like a professor, "One that turns living creatures to
robots, making them obey their programming...which is programmed by
me, by the way. Heh heh."
None of the wolves looked
amused.
"Today, you shall see this fellow here roboticized!
Then you shall undergo it yourselves!"
Amalace's eyes widened
as Todd stepped forward, then fell back as a SWATbot prodded him with
its rifle. The wolf clenched his fist. "Release him!"
Packbell
laughed. "Or what?"
"You shall die."
Amalace
felt a sense of pride at Todd's vicious words, but at the same time,
she wondered just how they would kill Packbell. The machine seemed to
be very well built.
The smaller naughta rolled his eyes, while
Packbell smirked. "Gee gosh, I'm scared, eh, Snively?"
The
lord nodded. "Terrified."
"You should be!"
yelled Todd. Amalace closed her hands around his arm. "Sssh...Don't
lose your temper."
Teak trembled violently, his fists clenching on the bars of the
grate. Javelin laid her hand on his shoulder. "Calm down,"
she whispered.
"Well then, let's begin the show, shall we?"
Packbell strode over to the console that controlled the
roboticizer.
Teak punched through the grate with his hind feet.
Before Javelin could grab him, he had landed on the floor below and
was charging towards Packbell.
Ten laser blasts ripped through his
body. As Packbell whirled around, Teak fell in a bloodied heap at his
feet. Cursing, Packbell raced towards the grate and looked
up.
Without hesitation, Conrad leapt down, his arms flaying out.
Packbell and the wolf ended up in a pile on the floor, viciously
wrestling. The SWATbots stood, guns poised, not daring to shoot, lest
they hit Packbell.
The captive wolves broke free from the circle
of SWATbots around them and began to trash the robots. Laser shots
whizzed through the air, but none hit their furry targets.
Amalace
ran to the console, searching wildly for a button. Her finger moved
past 'Roboticize', 'Red Alert' and finally found, and pressed, 'Open
tube #1'. With a hissing noise, the tube that BrownHide was lifted
up, and the Garato stepped out.
Snively was backed up against the
wall, looking around helplessly. The place was in chaos. From the air
duct, an old female was shooting arrows at the SWATbots. More SWAT's
were falling to the wolves' physical power. The wolf in the tube was
free and wrecking havoc. Near the console lay a dying wolf, and
Packbell was still wrestling on the floor.
Finally, Snively made
his way to the console, his eyes lighting on the red alert button. He
lunged towards it, but something grabbed his foot. He looked down to
see the dying Teak's bloody hand closed around his ankle. He kicked
his leg, but the wolf held on tight.
He stretched his arm out,
straining to reach the button. The tendons in his arm pulled tight
painfully and he gritted his teeth, his fingers struggling, the cords
in his hand standing out. There. The button pressed down and sirens
screeched.
Through the doors came more robots, dozens of them. It
took some time, but finally the SWATbots herded them up into a group
again.
Javelin and Grotta were still up in the air duct. Grotta
took a few of Javelin's arrows. She unleashed one, sending it
whistling towards Packbell.
The android turned and caught the
arrow in his fist. He looked up, his eyes locking with
Grotta's.
Javelin screeched and backpedaled down the tunnel, as
laser shots bounced through the open grate. The floor of the air duct
was filled with holes. Poor Grotta was sliced apart from the shots
that came from the air duct floor beneath her; she slumped down dead,
her blood dripping down the walls.
Packbell saw the blood dripping
from the swiss-cheesed air duct and turned away satisfied. Holding
her breath, Javelin huddled in a ball, but no more shots came.
Packbell paced the floor in front of the wolves, jaw clenching and
unclenching. "You pitiful wretches," he hissed. "You
really think you can defy me?! I can crush you!"
As he passed
by her, a young female leaned forward and spat on him. Packbell stood
motionless, the spittle dripping down his cheek. His eyes glowed
red.
Snively knew very well what that meant, and was not at all
surprised when Packbell pulled out his laser rifle and shot the girl
point-blank in the face. But the red glow didn't fade. Snarling,
Packbell grabbed one of the older wolves.
"You think you can
mock me? You think you're tough, eh? You're nothing." A press of
the trigger and the wolf went limp in his grip.
One of the wolves
charged him, and Packbell grabbed him. The wolf struggled. Lifting
him up, the android stood on one foot, his knee up. Then he slammed
the wolf down on his upraised knee.
Back broken, the wolf writhed
on the floor where Packbell dropped him.
"You still don't
understand. I will destroy you!"
"We shall destroy
YOU."
Packbell lost his temper entirely. He raised his rifle.
The youngest wolves fell, clutching their wounds. Blood washed over
the metallic floor. The young wolves, mostly children, whimpered as
they squirmed on the floor.
Packbell aimed his rifle downwards,
still shooting. The children shrieked in agony as the lasers ripped
through their flesh. More blood sprayed. Packbell kept shooting
them.
Most of the children were dead; still Packbell bombarded
their bodies with laser shots. Screaming, the other wolves tried to
shield them, but SWATbots held them back. Feeling faint, Ama's knees
trembled. Todd neglected to support her, so busy was he pushing
against the SWATs.
With a maniacal gleam in his eyes, Packbell
continued to shoot the dead bodies, which now resembled hunks of
meat. Chunks of flesh and fur scattered the floor.
Eyes widened in
horror, Snively stood with his hand clasped to his mouth, whimpering.
"Stop it, Packbell!" he squealed. "Stop it!"
Packbell
stopped shooting and looked over. After flashing a smile at Snively,
then one at the captive wolves, he kicked one of the corpses. Then he
began stomping down upon its body. Bones snapped. As Packbell lifted
his foot, long threads of thin bloody flesh clung to his boot,
dripping down. The captive wolves screamed louder, and the SWATs
could barely hold them back.
There were five children dead.
Packbell raised his foot to crush another corpse. "STOP IT!"
Snively screamed. "That's a direct order, Packbell!!"
Packbell's
foot descended hard on the corpse's skull. It shattered and the
brains oozed out around his foot.
"Garato-Heem noooo!"
howled one of the wolves.
"GODDAMMIT PACKBELL STOP IT STOP IT
STOP..."
"SHUT UP!" growled Packbell, striding up
to Snively. "Shut up or I'll kill you too!"
Snively took
a step backwards, terror apparent on his face. Voice trembling, he
whispered, "I'm going to tell Robotnik if you don't
stop."
Hissing, Packbell leaned down to thrust his face
directly into Snively's. "Do you think I'm scared?"
Sniv
pulled away, but Packbell moved forward, keeping his face right in
front of Snively's. "You won't be able to tell him crap, because
you'll be a pile of dead meat, just like those kiddies."
Snively
gulped loudly, still moving backwards. His back hit the wall, and he
shrieked as Packbell laid a hand on his shoulder. "I'll stop,"
said Packbell, almost gently. "I had my fun, anyway." He
squeezed down hard, smiling as Snively cringed in pain.
He moved
away, standing before the wolves again. A cruel smile graced his
face. "You see, you are foolish to defy me." His black boot
kicked a corpse. "This is what you are to me. Hunks of meat.
Pretty meat," he said, reaching a hand out to stroke a female's
cheek; Amalace's. She quivered, but decided not to bite. "But
meat just the same."
Javelin peered through the swiss-cheesed air duct floor. She
trembled hard; her children were dead. There were too many 'bots in
the room; no way she could make it to he who had killed her
offspring.
Her head spun as she crawled down the tunnel to another
grate. She looked through it, seeing that it led to a hallway right
outside the roboticizer room. She pushed the grate out, slid through
the opening, and landed on the floor below. She saw an alarm on the
wall, and she ran over to it. Her fist smashed into the alarm,
efficiently tripping it.
"Now what?" snarled Packbell. He had his finger poised
above the 'roboticize' button. Six angry wolves pounded their fists
against the inside of the roboticizer tubes.
"Snively, come
over and do this," said Packbell. "I'll go out and check
the alarm."
Looking a little sick, Snively slunk over to the
console. Packbell left.
Javelin stood straight against the wall,
waiting. She heard the doors slide open and she gripped her
spear.
She saw the black hair, the red eyes. She lunged towards
him, the spear driving forward towards his throat. He saw her almost
too late, and sidestepped. The spear plunged into his right
shoulder.
Then his hand shot out, grabbing her around the throat.
She fought, claws ripping his throat, her legs kicking out at him as
he lifted her off the ground. She noticed that his face was spotted
with blood; her children's blood.
"Garato-heem burn you,"
she hissed. His hand tightened, crushing the life out of her.
Gasping, she still fought. One of her claws met his eye, and she
yanked it downwards.
Packbell cursed as his optical sensor
flickered, then went off-line. "Goodbye, bitch," he
growled, giving a hard jerk on her neck. The bones snapped. He sighed
and let her limp body drop.
"Pathetic," he said. Then he
raised his hand to his face. Ah, Sniv'll be fine in there. I'm gonna
go repair this.
"All right," said Snively flatly. "Prepare to be
roboticized." He pressed the button, and blue light filtered
down onto the wolves in the tubes. Their agonized screams as their
flesh turned to metal did nothing to help Snively's stomach.
BrownHide's howls were the loudest of all. He leaned his head against
the console, eyes closed and teeth clenched, willing himself not to
vomit. The smell of blood was thick in the air.
Amalace suddenly
broke from the circle of SWATbots that still surrounded the now small
group of wolves. Laser shots whizzed towards her, but none hit. She
launched herself off the ground, tackling Snively. They both hit the
ground hard. Sniv shrieked as laser fire peppered the floor around
them.
"Hold your fire!" he howled. "Hold your
fire!"
The SWATbots stopped shooting.
"Tell them to
leave," growled Ama.
"SWATbots, return to war room."
The
SWATs saluted and trooped out of the room.
"Good work, Ama,"
said Todd. Then he reached down, grabbing Snively by the front of the
shirt. The human struggled as Todd's strong arm lifted him up high.
Amalace laid a few hard punches on him. Todd let him drop to the
ground. Sniv whimpered as Todd crouched down next to him.
Then the
wolf grabbed the sparse strands of Snively's hair, yanking his head
back viciously. Throat exposed, Snively's eyes widened as Todd
pressed the sharp blade of a dagger against his neck.
"Last
words?" asked Todd.
"Oh God," groaned the small
human, "Oh God, please..."
Todd's fingers tightened on
the handle. One quick slash...
"Please, please don't hurt
me," whimpered the human.
"We're not going to hurt you,"
said Ama. "We're going to kill you, naughta."
Snively
knew he'd been a little jerk to Amalace, and looking at the female's
glittering purple eyes, he was not surprised in the least that she
wished to kill him. Not only that, he'd just roboticized members of
her pack, and he'd stood by as Packbell slaughtered the children. Not
that he had wanted that. That had made him sick.
He looked around
at the canines, knowing that after they dealt with him, they would
escape. If he lived, he would have to face the wrath of Robotnik, who
would most likely beat his nephew bloody for their escape. If he
died, then he wouldn't have to face Robotnik ever again, wouldn't
have to...NO. The thought of death scared Snively more than the
thought of the abuse he would suffer.
"You...you don't really
want to kill me," he whined.
Todd's eyes narrowed, and he
drew the knife away. "You're right."
Amalace eyed her
crush. "Todd, what are you doing?" Then he pressed the
knife into her hand.
"I don't want to kill him...you
do."
Amalace smiled and accepted the knife. Ama grabbed his
wrists in one paw to hold him. She marveled at how skinny his two
wrists were, even pressed together, they fit easily into her
hand.
She traced the knife over his soft belly, then drew it back,
intending to plunge it in. One twist, and she'd rip him open, and see
the raw panic and pain in his eyes as she gutted him alive. She done
it while hunting before, and she knew he would wiggle and shriek just
like a dying deer.
Her ears swiveled, catching his high-pitched
whimpers of fear. She could smell a lemon-bitter, dank heavy
odor...his fear.
She tightened her grip on the knife and then
plunged it. And stopped her hand an inch before the point touched
him. Her eyes had moved towards his face as she drove the knife, and
his look had stopped her.
Was it how he cowered, on his knees, an
amber puddle of pure terror spreading out around him? Was it his
eyes, the eyelashes standing out-horrified spikes, and tears starting
to flood them? Was it just the smallness of his body, the almost
child-like frame, that perhaps sparked the pang of mercy within her?
How his mouth moved in a silent plea?
Maybe it was all of these
aspects combined-whatever it was, it had stilled Amalace's hand, and
she just stared down at the tiny naughta.
Todd looked at Ama, then
at Snively. He couldn't understand her hesitation. All he saw was a
pathetic cowardly human, who had wet his pants like a trembling baby,
who was the enemy for Garato-heem's sake!
"Ama, what's
wrong?"
"I can't do it," she growled, dropping the
knife. "Curse me, I can't."
Todd picked up the knife and
replaced it in his belt. "Very well. Let's leave." The
honor of the kill had been given to her, and if she did not take it,
then the kill would not be done.
"Let us go then," said
Ama. She suddenly placed her hand against the naughta's cheek. How
strange his skin was. Smooth as silk under her fingers. Warm too. For
some reason, she'd expected it to have the same coolness as a snake
or lizard.
They ignored the robotic wolves, knowing there was nothing to be
done for them. Their feet became slick with blood as each paused to
kiss the dead children. Todd cut a lock of fur from each dead
wolf.
If they could not take the bodies of the dead with them,
then they would at least take a part. The kiss was for remembrance
and of course, for love.
Snively couldn't understand the whole
thing...it all seemed so silly, and gross...he would never lay his
lips on a corpse. But they were primitive, weren't they? Primitive
fools. After Ama had released him, he had skittered over to the 'red
alert' button, but something stopped him from pressing it. They had
spared him--perhaps he should spare them in return.
So he let them
escape. He closed his eyes, leaning his head on the console, and he
let them go. Forty-five minutes later, Robotnik's voice came blaring
out of the intercom on the console, telling him to come down to the
command center, NOW! It woke him up.
He was slumped on the floor,
and his neck hurt. He rubbed it with one hand, and looked around. The
blood on the floor had congealed. On the way out, he nearly slipped
in a puddle, and was embarrassed to remember it had come from him.
But God, that fox had scared the hell out of him. He looked down at
himself...his pants were dry, so Robotnik would never know. Let's
just hope he still has that cold, thought Snively.
Before he left,
he called in a few SWATbots to take care of the dead bodies. He never
wanted to see them again.
But I will. Every night.
Robotnik heard the command doors slide open. He sensed a lowly
presence enter, but he didn't hear anything...Snively was always very
quiet. He's a sneaky little bastard, thought Robotnik angrily.
His
nephew appeared in front of the chair and stood silently. The two
relatives looked at each other.
"Snively," said Robotnik
slowly, "Did you release the wolves?"
"No,
sir."
"Did you let them escape?"
"Yes,
sir." A few beads of sweat dripped down Sniv's face.
"And
why did you allow that?"
"They attacked me, sir, and
they were going to kill me, but they decided not to. I
thought..."
"...that they should be spared in
return?"
"Yes, sir," said Snively,
nodding.
Robotnik looked very very calm, very composed, as he
leaned forward in his throne. After all the years of living with
him--more than a decade--Snively should've known better. Robotnik
leaned forward even more, still appearing calm. Snively didn't
move--nothing in Robotnik's face propelled him to move.
Not even a
squeak came from the little man as Robotnik suddenly grabbed out. His
meaty hand closed around his nephew's throat. He began to viciously
throttle his lackey, feeling Snively's frantic hands scrabbling at
his arm. God, Sniv made him so angry! He growled, and threw Sniv down
onto the floor.
Wheezing, Snively tried to skitter away to
hide--hide where? It didn't matter--to hide. Robotnik stood up, his
fists clenched, and advanced on Snively. His nephew threw out his
hand in a weak attempt to protect himself. "No, sir,
please!"
Robotnik raised his fist, his glove molding tightly
to his knuckles. Snively's eyes widened in fear. "Sir,
please..."
Robotnik stared down at his pitiful relative for a
long moment. Then he let his fist drop to his fat side. "Get out
of here, Snively," he snarled. "Get out before I change my
mind."
But Snively didn't move. He stared down at the floor,
shaking. "Do you know what he did?" he whispered.
"What?"
Robotnik frowned.
"Packbell..."
"What about
him?" There was no sound from his nephew. Impatient, Robotnik
reached down and grabbed Snively by the front of the shirt, throwing
him into the chair. Sitting in that big chair, Snively looked even
smaller than usual. Robotnik stood in front of the chair, and crossed
his arms over his flabby chest.
"Well?" Robotnik hated
when his questions went unanswered. He leaned over, jutting his face
into his nephew's.
"Packbell...he...he..." Snively's
voice caught in his throat for a moment, and he shook even harder.
"Oh God, he killed them!" he suddenly shrieked. "HE
KILLED THEM!" His shoulders shook as he began crying, raising
his hands to his head.
Robotnik's lip curled in disgust.
"They
were j-j-just c-c-children...and he shot them...he kept
shooting...and they were screaming..."
"Get a hold of
yourself," growled Robotnik.
"You weren't there! You
didn't see it! On God, it was the most terrible...God please forgive
me I didn't want it to happen I can't believe oh God oh God
please..."
Robotnik growled, now his nephew was just
babbling, his words running together in panicked sobs. He raised his
fist, and shut Snively up, shut him up by knocking him into blissful
unconsciousness.
Panting and foot-weary, Amalace leaned heavily against the canyon
wall. Sand slid under her feet. She looked around at the rock walls
around her. They were spectacular, red-and-white striped swirled
patterns.
What am I thinking? The garato's a robot, Javelin's
dead...we saw her body outside the room, poor sheem...the children
are dead, and I'm admiring the canyon walls. Garato-heem, curse this!
It was wolven tradition to fast for two days following death. It
was the second day now, and Amalace watched as Todd piled the dead
corpses onto a pyre. Lupe' stood in front of the pyre, slightly
wet-eyed.
Ama gazed at the garato's maladi with a sympathetic eye.
Lupe's older siblings were all dead, and her younger siblings were
too young. That made Lupe' the new leader. What a burden for one so
young.
Lupe' knelt before the pyre. The other wolves did the same.
"Beloved ones, children of Garato-heem, may you return to the
Great Garato. May he use your life energy as he sees fit...may your
souls be given peace, return to the air, the earth, the water, to all
that gives us our life."
Lupe' looked over at Todd and
nodded. He touched a torch to the pyre, and the flames leapt up. "May
the fire release their souls."
Lupe' reached into a basket
and pulled out a handful of fur that had been taken from the dead
children. Her hands moved close to the flames and she threw the fur
into them.
Amalace watched the black smoke rise into the sky. Her
nose wiggled, catching the scent of burning flesh. It made her mouth
water slightly-she was hungry-and that in turn made her feel
sick.
Lupe', wearing a ceremonial death mask, rose to her feet.
The headdress consisted of the top half of a wolf's skull. Feathers
sprouted from the dome of the skull, and Lupe's blue eyes peered out
of the empty eye sockets.
The feathers danced as Lupe' hummed deep
in her throat. The others rose up. Around the pyre they danced, sweat
running off their bodies, arms flailing and clawing-they were
imitating the souls of the dead breaking free. Whoops and shrieks
emerged from their throats as the dancing became more frenzied.
They
reeled and pranced, dancing until they fell from exhaustion. Amalace
lay panting, chest heaving, her fur soaked with sweat. Her eyes
burned...she closed them. Her arms grew limp, her body still. She
yawned, hearing others yawn around her. The fire burned itself out as
they slept.
In the morning, Lupe' scooped all the ashes into a
basket. "Come," she said. The entire pack rose to their
feet, and silently followed the young garato.
Their feet moved
over sandy paths, and weaved through cactus patches until they'd
reached the top of the cliffs.
"Fly," sighed Lupe',
tipping the basket. The wind grabbed the ashes and swirled them away.
Away whirled her friends, her siblings, her family.
The rest of
the pack left, and Amalace paused. Lupe's toes were on the edge of
the cliff, and the headdress was on the ground next to her. With her
shoulders slumped, and head bowed, the young wolf looked like
weariness itself. A low sob hung in the air, and Lupe' swayed on her
feet. Ama rushed forward, catching the girl before she pitched
forward off the cliff. They sat quietly, letting the wind dry their
tears. The last dusting of ashes blew out of the basket and danced
away.
The fasting lasted for the rest of that day. The next day
returned to normal, although the mood was not normal. It was dark.
"And that is when we met you," said Amalace. The
firelight danced in her violet eyes.
Sally nodded. Lupe' smiled
slightly. "Yes, we found out Robotnik had outposts near us, and
we began raiding him. We were determined to have revenge, but we
realized we were still not strong enough. But now that we've joined
together, we will succeed!"
"You got that right,"
said Sonic.
Lupe's smile widened. "Of course." Then the
she-wolf drew a dagger from her belt. She looked at it for a long
moment. Then she poked her thumb with it. Blood welled up in the cut.
Without a sound, she handed the knife to Sally.
The group stared
at Sally intently, seeing what she would do. Silently, Sally jabbed
the point of the knife into her own thumb.
The two leaders pressed
their thumbs firmly together.
"Now, we are joined," said
Lupe'.
"Swear," said Sally, "swear to always fight
Robotnik, and to never betray our trust."
"I swear,"
said Lupe'.
With that, they drew their thumbs away. The fire
burned brighter. The group was quiet. Bunnie nestled into Antoine's
arms, while Sonic stroked Sally's hair. Amalace roasted another
marshmallow.
Later, Todd and Amalace sat side by side near the power-ring
pool.
"Ama?"
"Yeah."
"I'm really
glad you joined us."
She looked over at him. "So I
am."
He looked at the calm water. "I will always be
there for you...Ragatay-sheem."
She took his head in her
hands and said nothing, just smiled.
They accepted each other.
They joined. What was the wolven tradition of expressing love?
A kiss.
THE END