Pennyroyal Tea
By Mataoka
Part I of III
The
night before, while tending to resentful business, next to the iron bank vault,
she spied a hibernating druid resting his bony bottom on the floor, encased in
leaves, bark, twig and twine: all knotted up tight. Wound as a top, the energy
entombed, potential power ready to pop. The iron leached the cadence of the
forest from him, poisoning marrow, residing, tainted, and twisted. She saw that
he was ill, and heard his raspy sleepy breath, and dared not wake him. Momokawa
finished her duties, and discreetly cleansed the druid. She had a new portal spell she adored, and cast it without much thought. The magic did not work as
intended, and she found herself in a grove of unintended consequences.
Acrid
hazy air spun dusty spores onto the back of her neck, scuttling, skittering
like tiny spiders, into the hidey-holes of her pores. Momokawa scratched the
back of her neck, her fingernails and tips coming back a dry, baby-kind of
brown dirt. This area where she landed on her roulette-wheel of a spell, the
spell that would cast her to any area in the world promising of fat, lush
nature sent her somewhere—she lost the word. Insecure? She looked up at the
sky, and most of the trees covered the sun’s milky edge to the west, too low
for summer at the time of day she believed it was, and uncertainty took hold.
The hour never seemed to change. The air cotton-balled in her throat. Landing
in the middle of a mushroom circle, not perfect, but a confident, I-Dare-You-To–Question kind of circle. The top of her head fit just under the tallest
mushroom, and her kneecaps met the shortest of the lot.
The
spores dug in further: the meadow straddled in that middle space between decay
and regrowth. Her hair blew around
her face, unwashed but not unclean, but beginning to hold small grit from the
air. She studied the circle, a bit shaggy in the corners, wondering why her odd
spell would bring her here. It had never happened like this before, not one
time. She usually transported to tired, wise green forests, so old and soaked
with chlorophyll, transforming all living things to shades of emeralds, limes,
celadon and citron. Verdant to the point of obscene. Mating in those woods was
as natural as life spawns, budding in the open, spiraling fronds and dewdrops,
all pistils and stigmas, coated with nectar and pollen. She often wondered why
no elves lived there permanently, at least no permanent or stable community.
The odd flight master or elder kept vigil, seemingly too ancient or daydreaming
to care what visiting druids concerned themselves with under the shades of
trees and hollows of brooks. Those old forests offered every protection from
the outside world: no harm or fire ever touched them, and druids found no
judgment there.
But this forest was old, too, and
offered no protection.
Part II of III
In the mushroom circle, Momokawa
felt near nauseous with disorientation. She heard running, the distinct
crackling of brush and hardened lichen ground meeting sharp hooves, but could
not tell from which direction the beast, or beats, came from. There, as suddenly being aware of one’s shadow, two of them, black, sooty stags running
in unison, seeming to come near the mushroom circle but pulling away, just so,
to the other side, and then back, and then away. Never traversing the circle. Momokawa
gasped: Tirisfal stags. She was in Tirisfal. She felt both distress and
comfort: these were the woods of the dead, of zealots and the damned, and these
were the woods that still had living creatures. Shape shifting to her own stag
form, she gave chase. Her creamy fur, with gold and pink baubles on her
antlers, and soft wise eyes felt wrong and amateurish. The druids of the world
enjoyed a healthy stag form, sickeningly incompatible with the Tirisfal dark
form. Their eyes showed too much white, and their muzzles betrayed fear with
the foamy sweat. A thought in the back of her mind made her queasy, imagining what they would look like in bear or cat forms. She gave chase, in that desperate friendly manner, and
fearful, wondering what they were running from. They never stopped to graze,
just endless diagonals through the forest and clearings. Momokawa
surrendered—it was clear they saw her, and it was just as obvious they were not
going to run with her.
Her ears pricked back to a loon’s
call: if the gooey sun could be trusted, there was a lake to the north, and to the
west, the city of the Lady, once a Night Elf herself. She was terrified as a
little girl when her grandmother told her tales of the three sisters: one
forsaken, one lost, and one in grief. She heard an odd thshlump sound, and the mushrooms disappeared. Momokawa
instinctively put her hand to her belly, protected by a Pennyroyal leather
belt. Nothing in, and nothing out.
I am very much enjoying this so far! Can't wait to see what will happen in part three. And though I liked part one already, I think the edited version is even better. :D
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