stories:alien_through_alien_eyes
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| + | ====== An Alien Through Alien Eyes ====== | ||
| + | I was sitting atop her head, an arrangement she tolerated as it was the only way I could get a good look at what she was doing without risking getting under paw. In her rear paws she was holding two strands of wire insulated with some sort of tree gum, each strand half as thick around as my thorax. In one forepaw was another length of wire, softer and uncovered, and in the other she wielded a great iron rod fiercely radiating heat. at least it seemed great to me. She likely found its size quite unremarkable. A cable, even more thickly insulated, connected the iron to a large structure--she would have called it a mere box--that I guessed provided the iron's heat. | ||
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| + | "What are you doing, great one?" I asked. | ||
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| + | "I have a name, remember?" | ||
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| + | A pretty name, but one that hardly matched her appearance. "What are you doing, Sunbeam?" | ||
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| + | "My job," she rumbled. " | ||
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| + | "Your job?" I asked. | ||
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| + | As she spoke, she touched the exposed ends of the insulated wires and twisted them into a single braid, then touched the hot iron to the area where they met. " | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | "I wouldn' | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | I looked behind me. From four stories up, I could see the moss farm just outside of town. The field still bore a faint indentation in the shape of one of her paws. She had trampled over half the crop in a single step. This was on her first visit to town the day after her skyship landed, before we knew what she was, before she knew what we were. | ||
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| + | I had awoke to rumors spread by the town drunk that a star had fallen to the east, half a day's journey from town. I had dismissed them at first until a friend of mine, a fellow merchant who was up late taking inventory in his shop, confirmed that he saw it, too, a star, glowing violet, had fallen to earth. " | ||
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| + | The day went on as normal, other than a few lads trying to drum up a party of adventurers to investigate the fallen star, nobody seemd too bothered. "A great beast has returned!" | ||
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| + | I clicked my mandibles dismissively. " | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | I had closed my shop for the afternoon and was chatting with some friends at the inn on the east edge of town, sipping a bead of honeydew. That's when we heard it, a dull, rhythmic tremor sent ripples through the drink on the table. | ||
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| + | THUMP | ||
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| + | We put our drinks down and looked through the open door to the street outside. | ||
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| + | THUMP | ||
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| + | I and a few others ventured outside to find the source of the noise. | ||
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| + | THUMP | ||
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| + | A crowd was gathered near the edge of town. | ||
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| + | THUMP | ||
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| + | We stared past the moss farm at the crest of the hill behind. That's when we saw her. She bounded over the hill, crushing the moss crop under paw along with the decoy the farmer had placed in the middle of the field to scare away the crow-flies. She turned her head down to look at us all gathered at the edge of town. Her eyes widened and she checked her momentum just before plowing through the city. She dug her iron-red claws into the dirt leaving furrows in their wake. | ||
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| + | For a moment we stood there, this great beast and us terrified bugs, staring up at what, to us at least, was every bit the giant horror from the sky described in the old stories. It's hard for me to put into words exactly what I thought I was seeing. Some people say that you don't know what you're looking at until you know what you're looking at. I had always thought that an odd notion until I was staring up at this giant... thing. I didn't know what was paw tail or leg or snout or fang or fur, all things I would only learn much later, so it should be kept in mind that the description that follows is only possible with the benefit of quite a bit of hindsight. | ||
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| + | She towered over us, even while sitting with her back end on the ground and all four paws resting flat. I suppose the first thing I noticed was the heat, this calid humidity that seemed to envelope her. I'm not sure what compelled me to do this, maybe it was that same heat. She had this long thick round structure, as long again as the rest of her body, protruding from her back end, a " | ||
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| + | She pulled her tail away from me and I got a good look at her paws. She had six digits to our three, dug into the earth like tree roots. Each digit was tipped with a sharp iron-red claw. The ends of her digits were furless, the " | ||
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| + | Meanwhile, she had shrank back from my touch. When she shifted her paws back I caught a glimpse of their undersides. There were thick soft pads on each digit, with more pads arranged on her palms in the same pattern I saw pressed into the moss field. So ponderously massive was she that she needed cushions to soften the impact of her footfalls. I felt more heat, this time pulsing over me in rhythmic waves. I looked up following her forelegs covered in the same white pelage as her tail, up to her thorax, or what she would later tell me was called her " | ||
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| + | The mouth, I discovered, was the source of the hot wet gusts I was feeling. Once again only much later I learned why this was so. Just like us bugs, her body required air to live. We bugs simply took in air passively through spiracles dotted across our carapace. Because of her massive size she required organs dedicated to the purpose. These " | ||
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| + | Pointed white protrusions lined both sides of her mouth, " | ||
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| + | Framing the wet tip of her nose were clusters of stiff hairs, much longer than the surrounding fur, " | ||
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| + | Then came her eyes. Those were the only things about her that didn't make me nauseous to look at. Simple, deep, black. Soulful, I'd come to say with time. | ||
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| + | Lastly were her " | ||
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| + | I must reiterate that none of these details were evident to me at the time. All I knew was horror at this thing, this star beast, mountain-high and radiating uncanny warmth, and the only thing escaping my mandibles was endless gibbering " | ||
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| + | The last thing I saw before I regained sense enough to flee into the nearest building was her mouth, now dripping crimson fluid that dribbled down her jaw and painting her chest, still heaving like bellows with her breathing. | ||
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| + | What I say next is still a mystery to me. Sunbeam has explained it to me a hundred times, but I still can't grasp it. I said before we were terrified, and justly so, of this giant monster looming over our town. But, and I can't believe I'm saying this, she was just as terrified of us. We little bugs that she could trample to death in an instant with barely a thought, filled her with a sharp visceral fear digging into her gut and made her want to flee. That's why she retreated from my touch. That's why she merely tolerates my sitting between her ears. " | ||
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| + | That red fluid dripping from her mouth, it was tears caused by fear. | ||
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| + | "You are... quite singular," | ||
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| + | "Which is exactly why I have to watch what I say and exactly how I say it." She had slid a black sleave over the two spliced wires and was applying blistering hot air from another of her seemingly endless array of cunning artifices. "A gentle exhortation could be interpreted as the command of a goddess, a warning given out of love as a threat of divine retribution. That's why I'm hesitant to preach. I'm not afraid I won't be compelling, I'm afraid I'll be too compelling. Error barks, the Truth whispers, but how can I whisper when every syllable I utter is a thunderclap? | ||
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| + | The black sleeve had shrunk tight around the wires, joining them as one. Dazzling white light burst from the LED array, turning the fading evening twilight to mid-day. " | ||
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| + | She rumbled a prayer under her breath. "O icons of the Light, shine upon us little ones." | ||
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| + | "US little ones?" I asked. "You call yourself little?" | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | "Yes, infinitesimal in scale, but infinitely loved." | ||
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| + | category: | ||