I DID A THING! HOORAY! I ACTUALLY WROTE ONE OF MY IDEAS!!!!!!!
*aherm*
Well, ya. I did it. Trying to convince myself I'm not all written out so I can get the poem(s)/story out sometime soon.
Harper, a Living Ship engineer, had been in many harrowing and dangerous situations (it came with the job, really), but he’d never thought one of them would be facing a hungry Ship Gremlin (a small one, mind you — Rosencrantz couldn’t have been more than a foot high) hissing at him from atop a shifting pile of sugar. It would have been cute if not for the acid that Harper knew could come flying out the little creature’s mouth, as well as those serrated, sharp teeth lining said mouth.
“Rosie,” Harper started, holding his hands up near his head.
“Rosencrantz,” the Gremlin snapped, a hiss accenting his gravelly voice.
“Rosencrantz,” Harper repeated. “I can’t make you any real food if you won’t let me into the kitchen, and sugar is not real food.”
“It is too,” Rosencrantz hissed huffily. It was amazing how childishly stubborn he got when the lack of food was taking over his brain functions. “You can digest it, it produces energy for your body, it’s real food.”
“Right, but it’s not energy that lasts very long,” Harper said, trying to maneuver around the dragon-shaped creature so he could fix something for both of them. Lunch had been less than satisfactory. “Please let me get in?”
“No.” A sniff accompanied that statement.
The young engineer opened his mouth to reply when an outraged shriek echoed through the living ship’s hull.
“WHO ATE MY LAST POPTART?!?!? DANTEEE??”
“IT WASN’T ME, GRETCHEN!”
Harper raised an eyebrow at the Gremlin after he recovered from the surprise of their navigator yelling. “Don’t suppose it was you?”
As a general rule of thumb, Rosencrantz didn’t look guilty for any reason. But Gretchen tended to have an unhealthy obsession with her toaster things — being on the recieving end of that could be . . . intense. “What proof do you have, human?” Rose sneered, the guilty look melting off his face.
Harper sighed. “Rose . . .”
“No!’ Rosencrantz snarled, the blue light behind him shining through his feathery wings. “This is my kitchen now, no one else gets in or out!” They stared at each other, neither party willing to back down. Then Gretchen came thundering down the stairs, screeching about her poptarts and thieves, and Rosencrantz decided that maybe guarding the kitchen wasn’t that important.
“So,” Harper said grumpily, a few hours later. When Gretchen had found them both in the kitchen doorway, she had decided that even if the Gremlin was the original culprit, Harper was guilty by association. “Are you happy now, you goblin?”
“Gremlin,” Rosencrantz corrected. “And no; I got caught! No self-respecting Ship Gremlin gets caught, in the act or afterwards!”
Shaking his head, the engineer just scrubbed harder at the greasy pot. “Just keep washing, Rosie. It’s your fault we’re stuck with kitchen duty for the next month, and I’m not doing it all by myself. Even if I ahve to get Auntie Beast to help me keep you in here.”
The Gremlin glared. “Stop calling me that, human, that’s not my name!” He kept spitting at the dishes though, wiping his saliva off them to get them shining. Gross, yes, but effective. And it meant what spirits they met and floating around the ship could be shooed out easier with their reflections.
“So,” Harper eventually said. “Next time you’re starving, you’ll come to me for food, right?”
Rosencrantz stopped his task to turn a baleful stare on the human. “Debatable.” With a flick of his tipped tail, he spread his wings and flapped off, ignoring the rest of the dishes that were still in the sink and the glare Harper sent after his retreating back.
xxx43 days had passed so far. Over 1,000 hours spent in this wilderness, surrounded by snow and ice that stretched for an eternity in ever direction. A howling wind attacked me on all sides, unrelenting and unwavering. I knew, deep down, that I had no hope of finding the creature I had once seen in this wasteland. But I kept searching. For my sister.
xxxI stopped after a while, I don't know how long. The spot I chose to put up my tent wasn't special in any way - there was no shelter, no wildlife. Still, it was where my snowmobile had ended up after another day of driving nowhere. It was where I was.
xxxWhen I crawled inside the small one-man tent I didn't bother to take off my woolen gear - my tiny electric heater wouldn't do much to keep away the cold and if I didn't want to freeze to death I needed to keep as warm as possible. I rubbed my gloved hands together as I sat, shaking and alone, wanting more than anything to give up.
xxxBeing so isolated was the worst of it. Nobody had wanted to join me on this wild goose chase, so all I had for company were the memories of the time I'd come out here with my sister. The snowball fights, the hot chocolate, the fun of being together in such a wonderful place. The memories didn't match up with where I was now, even though I was no more than a few kilometers from the spot we'd sat together and laughed. Laughed, and gasped, and screamed, and cried.
xxxNo. Don't think about it, I told myself firmly, just go to sleep. So I did - the same way I'd fallen asleep the last 42 days. So tired that I could almost ignore the cold.~*~
xxxWhen I awoke the next morning, I heard footsteps outside. There were a couple of seconds where I though it was my mother, walking into my bedroom to wake me up, before I remembered where I was.
xxxThose weren't human footsteps...
xxxWith a gasp of shock and fear, I sat up and grabbed my pack. My numb fingers wasted precious seconds undoing the zips of the bag and tent door before I grabbed my gun and ran outside.
xxxThere it was - three meters tall, with feathers the same colour as the snow around it. Its icy cold eyes gazed at me, emotionless, as I raised the gun with shaking hands, aimed, and pulled the trigger.
xxxThe creature screeched - but in fear, not pain. I'd missed, and within seconds it had shot into the sky. My frozen fingers dropped the weapon. Too late. The monster that had killed my sister was gone. And I doubted it would ever come back.
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