Shadowtail’s Song, Act 2

Start with Act 1 here. In my D&D campaign, I surprised my players with this knowledge by introducing a cat by the name of Shadowtail. This is Shadowtail’s origin story, Act 2.

I was inspired by several things: cats I’ve known in my life, for one; the stories about Lankhmar Below by Fritz Lieber; the novel Tailchaser’s Song by Tad Williams; and the Dream of A Thousand Cats from the Sandman series.

Act II:

She did not have a name. She had lived so long among the Two-Legs that she had nearly lost her meow, which surprised me. Whatever the Two-Legs called her did not sing to her, so she ignored them. She had spied me from a distance and it had reminded her of something, and eventually had approached me.

She was as free as the wind, and as patient as the stone, and as fierce as a fire. But what she was all else: she was clever. Nearly as clever as I am.

We spent most of our time aboveground. Riverwild would come find me and we would hunt together or sun together in the late afternoon. On rainy days we would hide in one of the buildings – avoiding the stone hall near the gate where the Two-Legs came and went, and the main temple where the fount of magic once was. We would hiss and taunt the giant spiders in the pavilion, or chase game down the stone steps into the deep hole, or chase each other along the broken wall tops. 

Best of all we would watch the sun, moon and stars chase themselves across the sky from the top most level of the tallest tower, and we would sing to them, and to each other.

One day, we had wandered beyond the walls in search of tasty mice, and seeing her on the bank of a rushing stream, I said that she was as wild as a rushing river. She sneezed in laughter, and said, “You, and only you, may call me Riverwild. I may not come when you call, of course, but my heart will hear it, Shadowtail.”

Eventually, kittens happened, as they often do.

Riverwild and I would roam and hunt still. We were particularly careful about avoiding the gatehouse during these long warm days andshort warm nights. When Riverwild became too gravid to hunt, she would nest in the long grass near a pool of potable water, and I would bring her meat to feed her and her — our — kits. When they were done with nursing, Riverwild and I would give them prey to play with, and sometimes hide and pounce on them, until they learned to hide and pounce on us. We gave names to the one or two who could sing more than just cat-song.

It was a good summer. But the warm season does grow cooler. Leaves turn from green to brown and orange. Days grow shorter, leaving more night in which to hunt. Kittens became ptoms and qweins. They grew and some stayed nearby, and others wandered off on their own adventures. In the lazy afternoons, bellies full, I would sing them songs of Kopno’domas Below and the War of Cats, Dogs, and Rats (hissss!)

Shadowtail’s Song, Act 1

When designing a world, whether for fiction, or a table top role-playing game, the best advice I’ve ever received was “put the things you love in your world.” Because of that, in my D&D campaign, I’ve decided that many rats, some cats, and a few dogs can speak. They’re otherwise ordinary examples of their kind; no other special abilities or extra hit points, no opposable thumbs, they can just talk. They don’t like to talk around the Two-Legs, and they’re in constant war with each other.

I was inspired by several things: cats I’ve known in my life, for one; the stories about Lankhmar Below by Fritz Lieber; the novel Tailchaser’s Song by Tad Williams; and the Dream of A Thousand Cats from the Sandman series.

I surprised my players with this knowledge by introducing a cat by the name of Shadowtail. This is Shadowtail’s origin story.

Act I:

It’s true; some cats can speak with lesser creatures, like dogs, or rats <hissss> or even Two-Legs. Not all of us, though. And some of us don’t like to let the Two-Legs know. They can’t all be trusted.

I’ve always known how, as far back as my kittenhood. My mama Sunrise, and my papa Stonegray, both knew how, and they taught me. I was better than my brothers and sisters, I knew that much. Don’t tell them that I loved them. I did, but they wouldn’t believe me. That was a long time and a far journey away, in Kopno’domas Below, the city beneath the city. We hunted and rested, and avoided the Two-Legs above, for the most part.

My family and the rest of the colony didn’t only play and hunt and sleep, though. We were at war, always at war, with the dogs, and the rats <hissssss>. I hate the rats the most. Dogs are just dumb but many of them are bigger than even the biggest cat, and can be dangerous sometimes, in large numbers.

A few years back, the Rat Queen and Her Court <hissssss!> had somehow gained the upper hand on our little colony of cats. They greatly outnumbered us, and had enlisted help from among the Two-Legs, and were coming to eat us all. It was the smart thing to do to leave. We had no ties to Kopno’domas Below. Pfft. It didn’t hurt us at all, leaving the only home we had ever known, full of warm soft places to sleep and many tasty things to hunt. Surely anywhere would have those things, right?

So we left, my brothers and sisters and I, and Sunrise, and Stonegray. One night, we crept out above ground, made our way past the Two-Legs with big knives in metal shells, and we kept traveling in the direction of the setting sun. We found plenty of things to hunt, though some of them were large and better avoided than chased. We found fields full of grain, and kept going. We found tall mountains full of dangerous things, and kept going. We smelled salt in the air, and living fish, and followed the streams to the biggest area of sand, jutting up against a bigger than big pool of water, from where the scent of salt and fish came from. Mama and papa said that surely this was the hunting ground we had dreamed of for many of our lives. 

Sunrise and Stonegray called this a beach, and The Ocean, and when the sun fell into The Ocean it all lit up like it was on fire. It was a good life. We didn’t have comfortable cushions to rest on, and there were no small fires to sleep next to, and there were no Two-Legs around to leave out tasty treats to eat. We had to find those comforts ourselves. And we mostly did.

As we roamed we found smaller towns full of Two-Legs, and over time, some of my brothers and sisters wandered into them. I worried (don’t tell them) but I also hoped for them. Not all Two-Legs are bad.

Sunrise and Stonegray also felt the call of sleeping on windowsills and silk pillows to rest on after a good hunt, and one day they butted my head, told me I was special, and wandered into the town. I was torn, but I also knew I was not fit for these kinds of comforts, as special as I was. So I kept wandering, keeping The Ocean and the setting sun to my right as I continued down the coast, hunting and sleeping as I wished. Mice were plentiful and clever, but I was cleverer. 

One evening from atop a bluff, I saw a big wooden boat out on the ocean waves. It had wine-red sails that caught the wind and pulled it over the water. From the beach, I kept up with it as best as I could, until the boat pulled into a cove, and it lowered a smaller boat, full of Two-Legs. They had found a Two-Legs ruin, walled off, abandoned. It was a large area, with a dead tree in the center, and many towers and buildings. Some of them stayed above in tents with a fire, the others disappeared into one of the buildings. This was not a town or a village. I could keep my distance from them, so I stayed for several nights, hiding in the bushes. I stole bits of food and cheese from them but kept out of their awareness. I slept near the dead tree, where they did not go.

One night, I woke, whether from luck or alertness, to see another cat, pale with ginger stripes, and blue eyes, watching me. “Hello,” she said, in the common Two-Legs language.

What do you think about cats?

I said goodnight to my friends and logged out of 7 Days to Die. From my computer room, I could hear the faint noise of a TV drama playing downstairs. The wall of the stairwell flickered light and dim. I got up, picked up my empty 20 ounce beer can, and went downstairs.

“Hello!” I dragged out the vowels, trying to sound goofy.

Dad sat on the couch, watching TV. He angled his head to his left. His neck, now pinned with steel rods, didn’t have much articulation left. “Helloooo!” he said, mimicking my goofy tone.

“You’re back from the bar?”

“Yeah. I said it was me when I came in but you didn’t hear me.”

I patted his shoulder as I walked behind him; the couch was placed so the path behind it led to the back door and the kitchen. “I was online playing games with Max and Luke. Had my headphones on.”

“Oh.”

In the kitchen, I turned on the water to rinse the can out. There were a bunch of bottles by the sink, mostly glass Mexican Coke bottles. I kept the water running and started rinsing them out. Some of the bottles had a greenish tint to the glass; others appeared clear, at least in my yellowish kitchen light.

Behind me, through the open window between the living area and the kitchen, dad said “There were a lot of women at the bar tonight.” He said it deliberately but not slowly.

I chuckled. “Is that good, or bad?” Dad is an incorrigible flirt, even at 86ish years old.

“Well, that’s good!” Now his tone was bright, cheerful. “There were a couple of ladies in there I’d never seen before. One was a stone cold fox.” His use of old slang made me smile. I felt sentimental. Nostalgic.

I made a new… pile? Stack? What’s the word for a bunch of bottles standing up next to each other? Pile or stack implies verticality; these were horizontally arranged. I could hear dad grunt a little as he levered himself forward and up off the couch. He pointed the remote and turned off the TV, cutting his show off in mid-plot.

I poured a little dish soap on a sponge, and turned the faucet water warm but not hot. I started scrubbing the dishes and untensils in the sink.

Dad walked past me, tapping a cigarette out of a pack. He paused in the kitchen entryway, watching me wash. “I should have taken out the recycling.”

I tsked. “You don’t have to do that. You’re a guest.”

“Oh, fuck that. I can pull my own weight.” He opened the back door, and through the kitchen window I saw the flare of orange as he lit up in the dark on my patio.

I carried the bottles, three or four at a time, and dumped them in the recycling bin hung above my washer and dryer, in the closet. I was careful not to open the folding door to that closet too far, or it would prevent the back door from opening up, in case dad finished and wanted to get back in. The clear bottles and the green ones all made the same clinking noise. Yes, the bin was full, but I didn’t want to take it out tonight. That’s a tomorrow job.

That done, I saw dad’s bald head and beard softly glowing in the tobacco ember, outlined by the kitchen light through the window. I leaned against the door frame, watching him.

“What do you think about… cats?”

He again angled his shoulders to point his head at me, cigarette held between two fingers. “I like cats.” His tone of voice was exactly the same as his comment before about women being at the bar. “You, uh.. got a supplier?”

Was that a dirty joke? Or was he just being funny? I smiled. I snorted a short laugh. “I was just thinking, now that I’ve got a stable job, I’d like to have a cat. I think I can take care of it now.” Dammit, a surge of emotion threatened my eyes with tears. This moment. I wanted to remember this moment. I resolved the write it down, soon. “Maybe keep you company during the day, at least while you’re here.”

“Yeah. Cats are cool.” Dad took a drag on his cigarette, then leaned down and rubbed it out against the concrete. Standing back up as straight as his broken back would let him, he burst into a sudden arm-out throw, tossing the butt over the fence into the vacant lot behind the townhouses.

He chuckled, recognizably the same sound I make, the family sarcastic laugh. “Someday someone’s gonna do something with that lot, and they’re going to be pissed at all the butts over there.” As he walked past me back into the house, he didn’t, couldn’t, look up at me. For most of my adult life he’s been taller than me. Not anymore. I don’t think he could see the sad affection in my eyes.

Daily Check-In #4 + funny cat video

It’s Friday! Have a funny cat video. You deserve it!

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ycromSr6PY&w=420&h=315]

How did I do on my writing goals yesterday?

  • I did find another two sites I can query or pitch to.
  • I did not look for any content farm sites.
  • I did search Mechanical Turk for writing HITs; found none.
  • I didn’t work on my novel.
  • I didn’t keep track of interesting articles.

I did apply for a non-writing job I found on Craigslist. Also made another $10 doing surveys on MTurk. And I found three technical writer positions late in the day; I’ll apply for those, after doing some research. The descriptions for the technical writer jobs all mention UML, and DMD; I have no idea what those are.

Must make some time to work on the novel today. Also, I’d like to post something here that isn’t just a daily check-in. And it’s time to hustle and submit stories to the sites I’ve found.

“Hustle” is such a great word. I thank my friend Tristan J. Tarwater for that word.