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[She got bored of (Green) Legend's house pretty quickly, so she's exploring outside again. She'll go back to the house before he knows she left. Or whatever.]
[She inconsistently switches from flying and walking. Sometimes she likes to see the ground.]
- @therealkheel
[He spots her on the ground as he's walking through the forest, trying not to gawk at her odd form and colors. He's never seen anything like her before. Is she a humanoid loftwing..? Some kind of new bird? She seems to be acting sentient enough though..]
[He keeps a bit of distance, but waves to her from his spot across from her.] Hello..?
Howâs the kids you gotta be busy with 5 kids and being a traveling bard ,do you visit them often?
Ever since getting back from abroad after the end of the Upheaval, I've done very little traveling! Amali and the girls have done a fantastic job supporting each other in my absence, but they all deserve a break, don't you think?
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This nugget of wisdom has passed through many iterations and transformations, and is not unique to the Dracozu. I am certain without needing to check that every culture that has existed has utilized this phrase. I believe the contemporary variant simply states that one is âoneâs own worst enemy.â It seems I, too, have become my own worst enemy! Through the action of tirelessly completing projects and copying historical drawings, I have injured my good arm. I have no time for breaks, however, and must find another way to record and categorize these stories. What shall I doâŚ
âŞď¸ [Directory]
Inali stumbled through the undergrowth, deliberately crushing unfamiliar plants under the pads of her feet and taking the extra time to let her claws rip at the soil with every step. Her feathers were soaked to the bone, but she didnât shiverâdespite the now-torrential rain beating down on her, the heat was overwhelming. She thought of Karranis.
She respected him. She believed in his goals and vision. She even liked him in a rudimentary way. But he could be like this damnable forest, awesome in its strangeness but absolutely draconian in its demands. She felt as though she were running a gauntlet, barely avoiding whipping foliage that seemed hell-bent on lashing her with the aid of the wind. The peaceful rain she was so used to in Rito Village didnât recognize her here, instead assaulting her with a brutality comparable to a volley of arrows. Karranis had sent her to this goddessforsaken territory with a barely-explained plan, and with Kheel of all people.
Kheel. She scratched at the earth in anger and tried not to screamânot that anyone would have heard her. She was so disappointed. She had told Karranis that Kheel might try something idiotic if they were placed together on this mission, and Karranis had dismissed her worries yet again. She knew she would have to reel him in, but she didnât expect another marriage attempt, and in front of potential allies. Was Kheel trying to ruin the plan? Was he so obsessed with humiliating her that he would self destruct to do it? He must have some kind of fetish for being humiliated himself, what with all the cringe-worthy attempts heâd made against her that only ended in total embarrassment.
âHe would, wouldnât he!â she screamed in her thoughts. âIâll give him what he wants, then. Iâll give him his shame. Iâll hang him by his feet from the Village pinnacle when weâre back!â She clawed at the earth in a few more steps, before spotting a flash of grey through the oppressive greenery. She paused, then changed course to investigate.
Inali battled her way through vines and ferns, and defended herself against the rain and wind, until finally she saw something that distracted her from her rage. In front of her was a clearing, filled with enormous stone ruins. There were relief carvings of strange figures on cyclopean blocks of grey stone thatâdespite her lack of artistic or archeological knowledgeâintrigued even her. She thought of Ikki for a moment and wondered what that woman would say.
âItâs a metagraphic, ice-neous, sentrimentry⌠godâs blood, who knows.â She chuckled and gave up trying to remember. Her mood was starting to improve already. Inali figured the ruins could give her a little break from the meteorological onslaught while she thought on what to do next.
She missed the click-clack sound of talons on wood that were ubiquitous in Rito Village; here, the ground was so packed with earth and plants that a step barely made a sound at all. She quietly trotted to a wall and looked for shelter. She found, however, that the wind roiled and swirled the rain through the air in that perfect, particular way that made it impossible to find a good angle with shelter.
âImagine,â she thought, âif we could weaponize this storm. No man would be safe.â She found as good a spot as any, slightly more protected from the rain than the open field, and sat. She was wet, she was furious, and she was exhausted. But at least she was alone.
           She heard rustling nearby and froze. Kheel wouldnât be this stupid, to follow her out hereâno, he wasnât a proficient enough tracker on the ground to be able to find her. Especially not in this mess of plants and rain. She listened as best as she could, and determined quickly that whoever was moving towards her was making no effort to be subtle or secret. The fact that she could hear someone moving through the underbrush meant they were crashing through it, like she had done earlier. Maybe it was an angry Kheel⌠but this person sounded heavy. It could be one of the Zora.
           She peeked around the stone wall, and saw a very familiar figure. What was this guyâs name, again? It was one of the Dracozu, the mid-sized one with the brilliant purple scales and the funny whiskers poking out from his face. What was this one doing out here? He must be looking for her. She wondered what had happened after she left. What had Kheel told them?
           âSheâs a wench! She needs some girl time, you know, how girls do!â Inali rolled her eyes, imagining the stupid things that probably snaked out of Kheelâs beak. Was it the stupidity that made him hate women, or was it some traumatizing past history? Didnât he have a mother? Maybe he just had the hate in him already, and he figured it was easiest to unleash it on the opposite sex.
           The Zora saw her as she pondered the mysteries of Kheel.
           âShit!â Inali whipped herself back behind the wall. No, wait⌠The Zora wasnât necessarily an enemy, so there was no reason to be this defensive. Being wary was essential, but this fearfulness wasnât. She looked back around the wall.
           Inali recoiled in shock.
           The Zora was speaking to some thing towering over him. Inali almost couldnât make sense of it. She was seeing fog, or smoke? Somehow the dark mass stood stationary, and its wispy tendrils were unaffected by the rain or wind. It was almost like an optical illusion, where the curling ends of the smoke disappeared into itself rather than escaping into the airâshe couldnât adequately explain it.
           Inali put a hand on her hip, on her knife, and stood to her full height. She was taller than the Zora but he definitely outclassed her in terms of weight. She had no idea what to expect from the smoke, or if it was even a threat.
           âHello!â The Zora turned from the smoke to Inali. âWeâve found you. Excellent.â
           âWhat is this.â Inali meant to ask a question, but it came out as a statement. She was controlling herself and her emotions as much as possible in the face of so much confusion.
           The Zora was all smiles. âWeâve come to return you to the camp. Your man said you were returning to your village?â He smiled at her, but here was something off about his eyes. He was squinting too much.
           Inali hesitated. ââŚKheel was mistaken. We had a disagreement, yes, but Iâm not going anywhere.â She looked back and forth at the Zora and the smoke. âWhat is the⌠what is that?â
           The Zora beckoned to her and started walking, in the opposite direction from whence he came. âPlease, we need to get back to camp. I donât think youâll survive out here alone.â
The black fog remained. What was going on? Inali stared at the smoke in bewilderment and no small amount of fear. What was worseâthe thing itself, or her inability to understand what it was? She didnât know what to think.
           The Zora paused and stared at her for what felt like an eternity. âYou donât look well. Are you alright?â He moved towards her.
           Inali was almost hypnotized by the eldritch, inky blackness. She was trying to make sense of what was happening and what this thing was.
           And then, the Zora had her arm in a grip so tight she yelped in surprise. One tug sent her stumbling to the side, too distracted to maintain her footing and too waterlogged to tap into the physical grace she normally relied on. She crashed into the Zoraâs side. She instinctively pulled her blade out from her hip and plunged it into the Zoraâs scales. He twisted his shoulder as quick as the wind, and the blade glanced off his hide with a clink that made Inaliâs heart jump into her throat. Her thoughts came at a million miles a second. âNatural armor? Aim for the belly!â
           Alas, she got no chance to change her tactic. The Zora threw his arms around her and trapped her in the tightest hug sheâd ever experienced. He tipped her further to the side, moving with the momentum already pulling them down, and fell to the ground. Inaliâs head hit, not hard enough to hurt, but enough to daze her for one second.
           And one second was all it took for the ugly red eyes in the smoke to open, and for the smoke to blast forward to where Inali and the Zora lay.
           And then, everyone was gone. The only trace left to suggest a brawl had ever taken place was quickly brushed away by the weather.
âď¸âď¸âď¸
Uh ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!!!! THE PLOT THICKENS!!! I hurt my arm and I'm finding it much easier to type than to draw, tragically. So here you go... giving some writing the good old college try... if you see typos please scream at me.
Anacharsis is an old Scythian (modern day Eastern Iran) philosopher, so, no made up quote for today. I think it's a very fitting one for this chapter though.
Kass started playing on his accordion. Everyone seemed to recognise the song almost straight away except for 8 of the goddesses heroes, most assuming it was written after their time. Turns out, they were right.
-
If you want to know what song they are singing, itâs called âfallenâ from a fan-made breath of the wild musical called âsongs from the wildâ. I highly recommend all Loz fans to check it out!
âWelcome to Rito Village!â Wild declared proudly, arms spread wide. He gave the others a minute to take it all in, most gazes drawn to the giant bird perched at the top of the village, before bounding up the steps.
The others followed him up the winding platforms around the village, and he quickly payed for beds at the inn for tonight, (they would have to double up to fit) then the group followed him to a platform which stretched out into the open sky.
A rito with blue feathers sat on the edge surrounding by a group of younger rito girls.
âKass!â Wild cheered.
The rito turned at the noise, smiling as soon as they recognised Wild.
âLink! Itâs good to see you!â
The younger rito all ran over, bouncing and demanding hugs.
âLink! Link!â They chirped.
Wild turned back to his brothers.
âThis is Kass.â He introduced. âAnd these are his daughters, Kheel, Notts, Kotts, Cree, and Genli.â
âYou and your friends should come here tonight, Link.â Kass said to Wild.
âYeah!â His daughters cheered.
âWeâll be performing with Papa!â The rito with purple feathers, Kheel, said excitedly.
Wild laughed. âOk then, weâll have to see you then.â
-
That night, the rito and the chain gathered at Revaliâs landing to watch Kass and his daughters perform.
âLink!â Cree, the oldest of the daughters hurried over to them, quickly followed my her sisters. âWe want you to choose the song!â
Wild raised his eyebrows. âMe?â He replied, laughing.
When the rito girls all nodded determinedly, he paused to think. His gaze travelled over his brothers, before he smiled and whispered something to Cree.
They ran back over to their father, telling him Wildâs song choice.
Kass started playing on his accordion. Everyone seemed to recognise the song almost straight away except for 8 of the goddesses heroes, most assuming it was written after their time. Turns out, they were right.
Wild, the little shit, grinned at them with a knowing look.
âSo a long time ago, when our people rode high, and we lived with the goddess way up in the sky-â Cree sang.
âWell, even back then,â Kheel joined in. âWhen an evil arose, every instance was thwarted by Hyliaâs heroes.â
âAnd there was a sword,â Notts chirped. âWhich shone like the sun, and one slumbered for seven long years but, when done-â
Kotts began to sing the next part. âThe hero would use it to vanquish each foe! Or, at least thatâs how I heard those stories all gooo.â
Wind grabbed Wilds arm. âThey wrote songs about us?!â He exclaimed, eyes shining.
âJust wait for your part.â Wild laughed.
Wind gasped. âI have a part?!â
Wild nodded, smiling, then put a finger to his lips.
The sisters all sang as one. âHylia, answer our call.â
Then it was Kassâ turn. âAs long as our kingdom has prospered and thrived.â
âHup!â
âThereâs always been times when weâve scarcely survived,â
âHup!â
âBut the goddess, she sends us a gift from on high: A hero, a princess-â
The family all sang: âA power diviiiine.â
âThe stories all tell of a hero, that comes to the call of the wild. We wish someone knew if those stories are true, but the fun is in waiting around.â
The chain were all smiling and elbowing each other.
âSo we sing of their triumphs and all thatâs beside them, as we hear our destinies calling, and we⌠we remember the fallen.â
âDoes anyone else have a story to tell?â Kass asked.
âOh, Iâve got one!â Genli chirped, before starting to sing. âThere once was a hero who fought with the dark.â
âAnd returned light to Hy-rule.â Her sisters sang.
âOoh!â Notts exclaimed. âAnd he sailed the oceans with dolphins and sharks!â
âAnd the seas drained and life moved on..â The rito chorused.
Kree sang next. âHe washed up on an island, then he shrunk down in size.â
âSo we sing of these heroes, courageous and wise, and we pray that one will come to ensure our own evilâs demise.â
5 little rito then ran to Wild, asking him to sing with them. He shook his head, but own can only resist the young girlsâ begging and Wind and Legends calls of âcuckoo!â for so long.
He looked nervous in front of the crowd, but he quickly grew in confidence.
âThe stories all tell of a hero, that comes to the call of the wild.â He sang. âWe wish someone knew if those stories are true, but the fun is in waiting around.â
Wild grinned as he began to dance with Kassâ daughters, all of him joining his voice with their own.
âSo we sing of their fables, and through every tale, we can feel all our worries are stalling.â
Wild looked over at his brothers, who were all cheering him on.