"One Last Forever"
By RD Rivero
On one bright afternoon of a summer month of a year of no
importance, WileyKat and WileyKit
trekked about a lush clearing deep in the vast expanse of the central forests
of Third Earth. The two youths walked
wearily in the ankle-high grass -- their shins, unprotected up to their knees,
scratched and bruised from four days of hiking.
Although their fur was dense and covered-up most of their scars, on
occasion sharp, serrated leaves, unseen thorns or the startled thrash of small,
lowly creatures produced gashes deep or wide enough for dripping blood to be
noticeable. The grasslands upon which
they ran had dandelions and pussy willows that added an extra dimension of
discomfort to their exhaustion, chiefly itchy noses and watery eyes.
WileyKat heard a
slight whimper and looked back in shock for his sister had tripped and fallen
forward. "Hold on, WileyKit," he said, holding out his arm.
She grabbed his hand in her own and used the leverage to
prop herself up on shaky knees. "Do
you think we're safe here?"
He was about to speak but hesitated for a moment, unsure of
how to handle his newfound responsibility.
He had never expected to be a leader to anyone, let alone to his sister
-- no, not to her. As he looked into her
eyes he saw something in them, something almost akin to helplessness, that he
had seen from her only once before. The
effect was alarming, bone-chilling. As
if to divert his attention or to buy himself more time to think he looked up
above, to the glaring blue sky and the omnipotent sun that shone down upon them
mercilessly, unceasingly. Below the
great vault of the heavens, white-capped mountains, hazy and distant, crowned
the upper continents. At the level of
the ground were the trees, thick, green blurs that teamed with life.
The air attained a sudden chill -- a breeze brushed by his
mane across his face and, looking back on his sister, he drew his hair back.
"Not yet -- but we'll need to find a place to rest
soon." She nodded. He took her into his arms and whispered: "We'll be all right, you'll see -- we
don't need them anymore."
WileyKit
understood perfectly well.
Yes, the other Thundercats had made it more than quite
obvious that they did not want them or need them around. Busy with their adult lives, fawning over Liono's every word and command, fighting the Mutants,
Lunatics or MummRa, tinkering with the Thunder Tank
-- and on and on and where in all that were the twins? Always the last, always the forgotten,
neglected and, when by chance the adults remembered about their existence, it
was always with the excuse to do chores or work.
The two had had enough.
From the moment they had arrived on Third Earth they clung
to each other for they recognized early on that they had no one else, no one
else to trust, no one else to count on.
They learned the hard way what their 'position' was in that brave new
world -- and so they rebelled, they lived in a world all to themselves. Over the course of long, hard years they
trained themselves to be self-sufficient, honed their crafty abilities and
practiced to that point of perfection where they thought they knew they could
go on out off by themselves and never return.
What was happening, what they were doing was merely the
climax of a conspiracy that had begun from their earliest excursions into the
woods. Back when Snarf would let them
hike and wander about the outdoors unsupervised. As long as they stayed close to Cat's Lair
they allowed to camp the nights under the stars for days at a time. They learned how to make fire, build or seek
shelter, hunt food and prepare it, pick out the berries that were poisonous
from those that were not. WileyKat taught himself how to fish with spears. WileyKit practiced
the art of trapping small prey. All of
that and more right under the adult's unsuspecting noses.
On many occasions they stopped to think about what they were
doing but always their concerns over right and wrong turned into schemes
designed to better shape their plans for the day, the moment when they would
rid themselves of their uncaring tormentors at last and forever.
WileyKat and WileyKit continued to walk but at a slower pace. They treaded silently into the shade of tall
elms that lined the border of the grassy clearing. Under the chirping of birds and over the
rustling of bushes echoed the sounds of a running stream. They followed the beckoning call for their
sacks were half out of food and the night before they had drunk what remained
of their water. The idea of a stream was
most tempting and reassuring.
The breeze had settled and the air, that had been hot and
damp, turned into a refreshing mist.
Droplets of moister clung to bundled strands of their manes
and glistened in the weak rays of sunlight that filtered down through the
branches. WileyKit
reached up and patted WileyKat's head, trying to dry
his fur. The water was warm and the feel
of it smeared on her fingers made her mouth run dry. She shook her head and more droplets sprayed
out, falling onto the dark soil or hitting her twin's bare back.
It was her idea to leave that summer and in the four days
since the trek began she was sure, absolutely sure that she had done the right
thing. Neither of them fit in and,
besides, they were already at an age old enough to set out on their own and
make their own choices. Although she
shrugged off her anxiety to her lack of water, still, a sort of angst lingered.
"Kat? Do you
think they miss us?"
Again he stopped and again he looked back. Her eyes were open wide and despite her
dehydration her glossy, white-orange orbs were wet with streaming tears. He wiped her face dry with the back of his
hand.
"I don't know.
Maybe they're angry, maybe they're upset -- or perhaps they haven't
noticed -- but I don't care."
"I mean, Liono can use the
sword to find us. Just because we
destroyed our insignias --"
"That's the chance we knew we'd have to take. Kit," he kissed her and drew her into
his warmth. "I need you to be
strong, WileyKit.
Don't you understand? I can't go
on alone without you."
"I can't either."
She squeezed him tightly.
"We'll be strong for each other."
The fear of getting caught was always there, in the back of
their minds. He thought that getting rid
of their Thundercat insignias would help them evade the others but he also
realized that manufacturing an 'accidental ambush,' as he put it, would greatly
help them as well. His sister agreed
that his devious ploy made sense.
On the morning of their escape from Cat's Lair and the
Thundercats they took off on their boards and went as far as they could without
stopping. Following a course that they
had committed to memory, they landed near the Fountain of Youth where they
arranged for their vehicles to smash into pillars of rocks -- the 'accident.'
They scratched off each other's clothes, taking out on their
uniforms and symbols of their Thunderian past the anger and pain that they had
been put through for so long by those who were supposed to care for them, love
them. They threw the rags into a pile of
wood that was quickly set ablaze -- the 'ambush.' And to complete the illusion they left behind
bundles of decoy food stuffs scattered about the campground. A series of footprints, seemingly coming from
and to the outlining forestry, were the last details added by the wily pair.
The river babbled in a soft, low conglomeration of sounds
that at times gently and at times violently cascaded into one another. Its banks were rocky and coated by flapping
leaves, covered by brittle bushes. Its
rippled surface was overlooked by tall trees whose majestic green and brown
colored profiles reflected in trembling swirls upon the water.
The twins approached the stream unashamed, even at their
age, of the nakedness of their bodies.
They reached down and sipped handfuls of water. Setting their sacks aside they filled their
reserve bladders with that vibrant, life-giving substance.
"I feel like I could drink the whole river," she
said.
"Drink away," he said, offering his handful. She eagerly sipped with a few, stray
giggles. She was happy and smiling and
for the first time since that ordeal began, for the first time since they
landed on Third Earth, he was at peace too.
He sprinkled water in her face. She returned the favor with a splash. The simple game went back and forth, quickly
escalating, until, at last, she dunked him backward into the waters only to end
up falling on top of him.
Together they drifted gently away from the shore.
"Are you feeling better?" he asked.
"Lots and lots better," she answered.
"I like it when you're happy," he said, rubbing her
chin lightly.
"And I like it when you hold me," she said, taking
his hand below the surface.
"Hold you and never let go." He teased her hair with his free fingers.
"Never, ever let go." She wrapped her arms around him and drew him
to her body. Her eyes welled with the
tears of remembrance. It was the last
thing he had said to her just as they were being put into their separate pods
on the ship that left the dying Thundera.
He remembered, too, but more than anything it was his
sister's eyes that haunted him. Time
could never diminish how they stared into his.
That he had seen it once was bad enough, he almost lost it when he saw
it again no less than an hour ago.
"I love you," she repeated, her voice drifting
into a whisper, into the softest timber that made even the flowered vines that
drooped into the waters tremble with passion.
Holding her tighter, closer with every syllable, he looked
out across the foamy crests behind her head and saw the reflection of his face
on the glimmering surface.
But he could not see the eyes -- glowing red with ire --
that watched just as closely, just as attentively from afar. Nor could he hear the intense laughter that
echoed through chambers that had themselves seen the passing of millennia. The ancient one waved his arm and at once the
frothing image on his cauldron faded and was replaced by the view of a second
scene.
"Stop, Panthro," Liono
ordered. The gray panther at his left
complied. "This is it, this is what
I saw in the sword."
From behind Cheetara ruffled out a hastily-folded map. "According to this we're less than a
half-mile from the Fountain of Youth."
"What a desolate place this is," Panthro said as
he stepped out.
The air was whipped by strong gusts of hot air, humid and
uncomfortable. The sky was grayed-over
with amassing clouds. Around the vehicle
the land was barren, its rocky soil infertile.
Tall monoliths loomed in the distance.
"Seems like it's going to rain," he added. "I hope the Thunder Tank comes out of
this OK. I had just slapped on a new
coat of wax yesterday."
Liono helped Cheetara out of the
vehicle. He took the map from her and
began to walk over to the imposing rocks as though guided by a force superior
to his own. She, too, was lost -- lost
in the senses that she felt coming out of the silent, tranquil scene in
torrents and floods that screamed out to her alone.
"Anger," she said, shivering, "can't you feel
the pain?"
"If you're cold, I could --"
"It's not that sort of cold, Panthro. Something happened here, something
dreadful."
Over by the gray-faced monoliths, whose forms were withered
with age, the Lord of the Thundercats fell to his knees. Panthro and Cheetara rushed up to him. He was kneeling next to a pile of burnt wood,
pulling up from its white ash the broken fragments of WileyKat's
tunic. Parts of WileyKit's
clothes, pink and blue, lay already shredded at his feet.
Panthro was not sure of what to say. Yes, the twins had been Thundercats but in
name only and out of respect for their parents at that. They had not earned their titles yet. To him their loss would be felt but easily
forgotten too. Odd that he had quickly
come to that fatalistic conclusion but then their deaths would -- he
gasped. The hover boards he had made for
the twins lay on their sides, crumpled and misshapen. He picked one up in his hands as gently, as
lovingly as one would pick up a child and watched in horror as it crumbled to
shreds in his fingers.
Cheetara noticed the red and black insignias -- although
still recognizable, the fire had melted and distorted their once symmetric
shapes. She felt another rush of
emotion, conflicted and indistinct. It
was not the sort of impression she expected to get from an ambush attack in the
sense that there was no terror. Rather
she felt a foreboding of things yet to come.
She could not be sure of their deaths.
Liono stood and without uttering a word
he stepped beyond the boundaries of the gray monoliths. Growing
up sheltered by his elders, the WileyKat and WileyKit had been his only friends. He had been very close to them -- once. And then he changed. He grew up and, suddenly, a gulf existed
between them that was not there before.
As he stumbled about, his mind reeling, he wondered how much of the rift
was his own doing. He could have gone on
their trips together. He could have done
this, he could have done that.
He stepped blindly on a pebble that was then sent soaring in
a flat arc. A mob of vultures before him
squawked and flapped their wings. Some
took to the air, some perched themselves on the rocks and eyed him keenly. Their pointed beaks bobbing up and down.
With a flash of lighting and the crashing of thunder a few
drops of rain splattered onto the grainy dirt.
"Who would do this?
Mutants? Animals?"
"Who ever it was they must have done it quick and
thoroughly," Panthro answered.
Cheetara was silent.
Her gaze was fixed on a series of footprints that stuck out dubiously
from the others around them, a trail that seemed to snake off into the
surrounding country. But then the
splattering rain turned into a violent down pour and the trail and the feelings
once embedded in the scene were washed away.
"Now I know what Tygra felt when he found what was left
of Bengali and Pumyra. Come on,
Cheetara," Liono said, nudging her arm,
"come on, there's nothing more to see here."
Refreshed from their dip in the stream, the two youths
walked by its banks arm in arm -- faint smiles painted across their faces --
eager and willing to deal with the dreadful, uncertain future together. According to their map, whose every detail
they had memorized to its minutest detail, they were still only halfway away
from Cat's Lair. At their pace they
estimated another two day's walk before they would reach the Etreum Basin, the last of the lush, fertile and unspoiled
land left on Third Earth. The crater was
dotted with the ruins of ancient civilizations, ruins in which they could make
their home in peace. The area was so
remote, so under-populated that no one would ever recognize them, know them for
brother and sister or even that they had been Thundercats.
In the meantime the sun was setting, the day was
ebbing. Soon, very soon they would heed
to find a place to sleep. A warm, quiet
place. In the nights past they had often
found caverns or deep, empty dens in which to pass the howling night
hours. Now they looked for such a spot
again.
A bolt of lightning streaked down from the night sky and hit
an object that until that moment had been unseen between the trees. The object -- a brick and mortar construction
-- exploded in smoldering shards that tumbled to the ground around their
feet. A small fire ensued in the forest
and they followed its warm, yellow light through a thin path the led them to a
terrain nestled just next to the river -- a clearing cut out of the thick woods
many ages ago.
In the center of the up-sloped land was a small
cottage. Its straw-topped chimney had
been the mysterious object hit by the flash from above. The embers of the fire were fading. The stone masonry that supported the arched
roof around the chute was shattered and the open holes let partial views of the
darkened interior.
They walked through the leaf-covered landscape to a door
that was half-on, half off its hinges, its wood shredded by time.
"Looks like no one's home," WileyKat
said as he eyed cobweb-encrusted windows.
Thunder resounded in the heavens -- the storm had found
them.
She smiled:
"It'll do for tonight."
WileyKat and WileyKit stepped through the open doorway into the shadows
of the cottage's interior. They felt
along the walls for the entrance only led them to a rough passage. The smell of wet wood permeated the silent,
still air. All the while they thought
about starting a fire, eating food and making sure that they would be safe
inside for the night.
One room was large but windowless -- or if it had windows
they were completely blocked. The second
room was equally as big but its two, open windows let in a dim, gray- blue
light from the starry sky. Intermittent
flashes of lightning brightened the chamber at random intervals. Chairs and tables lay in a corner, crumbled
in piles of worm-eaten wood. Dust
covered the spider webs that hung from the logs of the ceiling. The fireplace was unblocked -- a slight
breeze echoed up its chute.
"Get me some wood," he said to his sister.
She was looking out a window, sniffing the air in a manner
akin to her wild ancestors. She heard
her brother and turned her head to the side, to the pile of scraps at the far
corner of the room. There she gathered
together dry stalks in her folded arms.
She brought them to him and helped the wood chunks in the fireplace.
From his sack he pulled out a pair of flints. She shielded one of the logs with her cupped
hands. He struck the rocks, sending
sparks down on the extremely rotted, blackened wood. It caught on fire quickly and in a moment the
light and heat thrived, crackling in its pit.
The sudden and abrupt flood of light lent the room a breath
of life that had been denied it for innumerable years. The glow from the fireplace brought out a
plethora of details that the darkness had veiled in shadows. Books were scattered on collapsed
bookshelves, oil paintings lay across the floor -- their once vibrant colors
had dripped and distorted with age. Momentos and trinkets, once invaluable to the cottage's
original inhabitants, had at last been reduced to forgotten, meaningless
trivialities through the irreversibility of time.
Unbeknownst to them, as they merrily explored their
temporary shelter, a large, husky animal, with glowing, red eyes and flaring,
smoke-fuming nostrils peered at them from the bushes into the open
windows. It stalked nearer and with
each, advancing step it drew its plans against them. It reached the door but, having been propped
up by the twins, it had to wait patiently for the next pang of thunder loud
enough for its crashing timber to mask its abrupt intrusion.
The sharp crash shook the cottage and knocked the two onto
the floor.
"What was that?" WileyKit
asked completely startled.
"Just thunder -- the storm must be closer
now." He helped her up. "I'm sure it'll pass soon."
The sound of the heavy downpour that followed, the constant
drip of the large pellets of rain windswept into the room, dampened the
telltale chatter of the red-eyed beast's lurking in the dark passage.
"I'm sure it's not them, Kit, or else by now for
certain they would have stormed in."
"What if they have found us and are just playing
games?"
"They'd be too mad at us to do that."
The shaking of the cottage had loosened a part of the room's
ceiling. A trap 'door' hung down at an
acute angle. Beyond it was the open
emptiness of the shack's attic. They
jumped as high as they could and grabbed onto the edge of the slowly-swinging
cantilever. With the pull of their
weight, it arched to about forty-five degrees when an iron ladder, sturdy
enough for them to climb, unfurled to the screech of oil-hungry gears.
She took a long stick of wood and wrapped the canvas of a
fallen painting about one end. The
colored inks and rubbish on the heavy, crusty cloth retarded the fire's
appetite when she lit it over the cackling flames.
Driven by an unyielding curiosity, armed with a makeshift
torch, they climbed the iron ladder, deciding to explore that upper part of the
house. Up above the air was cold. Rain water from the raging storm outside
entered through gashes that had been blown into the side wall by the earlier
lightning strike. Smoke from the chimney
blew into the room on occasion.
The pair found the remains of a bed that had been formed
from straw and hay. Carved into one of
the supporting beams was a small, thin closet.
WileyKit reached into the small, storage
room. WileyKat
secured the torch on a large, pottery vase.
He walked up to her.
She turned to him wearing a bright smile that he thought was more
beautiful than all the stars in the night.
"Look what I found," she pulled out a pair of
green shirts and threw one of them at him.
"Clothes?" he asked. "What are we going to need these
for?"
"Silly, Kat," she giggled. "We need them when we meet other
people. We can't be naked all of the
time."
He looked at his shirt, crumpling it in his hands. "I'm afraid, Kit."
"I know," she said with a low, long sigh.
"I'm afraid of what it'll be like to be alone. It's never been just you and me before. Why, we'll have to do --"
She buttoned his lip with but a gentle press of her
finger. "I know, Kat, I'm afraid,
too. But we can't turn back now."
He looked up to see that not only was she wearing one of the
green shirts but that she had shorts on as well. He stood, approaching her softly, thinking
thoughts freely that he had been wrestling with for quite some time. She pulled off the clothes, staring at him in
the way she had been catching herself doing lately.
"You are so beautiful," WileyKat
said, his voice trembling with anxiety.
WileyKit sensed
his retreating self-assurance, taking comfort in that she was not alone in what
she was feeling.
She took his hand and pressed it onto her warmth, until his
palm was at that point where he could feel the beat of her heart. He smiled with a nervous, playful
giggle. He took her hand and placed it
firmly over his heaving chest, panting out of breath. Together their bodies throbbed in harmonic
unison.
A strange sort of clanging noise broke through the
oppressive silence that had fallen upon the twins -- the sound came and went
quickly and would have gone unnoticed had it not been for their heightened
sense of perception.
They looked across at the head of the hanging ladder -- the
flickering light of the fireplace lent an eerie glow to the arched ceiling and
the rectangular hole. They approached
the gap in the flooring on tiptoe, their eyes fitfully picking out the various
details that were emerging from below.
"What do you think that was?" she turned to him
and asked.
"It sounded like an arrow hitting a target."
She held onto his arm:
"I remember those stories Tygra used to tell us, about the time he
went to see Willa when those terrible things happened to Bengali and
Pumyra."
He patted her mane, leaning her head onto his shoulder.
"That won't happen to us. We will live forever." He pulled up the folding, metal ladder,
locking it tightly with a restraining bolt.
Secure in that it would not open, he led his sister back to the straw
piles under the dying embers of the little torch.
By the next morning the summer storm had passed and the
soaked earth glistened in the shine of the rising sun. The young adults awoke from their makeshift
bed. They stretched their scratched up,
bruised legs and shook off the dust that had collected in their fur.
The two formed new uniforms for themselves from the
cluttered shards of the closet. WileyKat was very happy with his shorts, they were not
pants but at least it was better than the tunic he had worn up until then. WileyKit's outfit
was much like her brother's but the color scheme was reversed.
The ladder's restraining bolt was removed and with a slight
nudge it arched down, the metal frame extending itself. WileyKat was quick
to descend and, making sure that the way was clear, he motioned his sister to
follow him. They grabbed their sacks
that they had left by the fireplace. The
flames had died earlier that night and that morning all that was left of the
wood was a pile of white ash.
The passage was aflood in the
morning light -- and, thinking for a moment, they realized it should not have
been that way for they had securely fit the front door in place. They stood aghast -- on the wooden floor was
a trail of mud marking the distinct forms of hoof prints. It lead to the second room whose door was
only partly open and into which only a little light entered. No second trail lead back out of it.
Silence permeated the cottage except for the hard and
pronounced beating of their hearts. As
they stood there it felt as though time was slowing down, as though their
actions, reactions, movements and thoughts were sluggish, arthritic. They were utterly helpless in that lethargic
state that had suddenly and unexpectedly overcome them.
"No!" she grabbed her brother by the arm and
together they rushed out of the shack, trotting over the battered door upon
whose boards a sword had embedded a torn sheet of paper.
WileyKat stopped
to look at the sheet. He held it up in
his hands, its loose, torn edges flapped in the breeze. He tried to read it but the rain from the
night had eroded the printing. The paper
turned into a slimy, mush in his fingers -- he threw it aside with disgust as
soon as he saw that maggots and grubs crawling in the pulpy goo.
"WileyKat, come on," his
sister implored.
He scurried up to her, wiping his fingers on his shirt,
securing his sack over his shoulder. He
ran his hands down her back, feeling her spine, rubbing the back of her
ribs. "I don't know what's in store
for us, WileyKit, but I'm not afraid anymore."
She hugged him from the side, reaching up his shirt. "You feel that, too -- oh, it's
exhilarating! I've never felt so free,
so at ease with myself before."
The twins kissed softly as they walked back to the side of
the babbling river. They turned east to
where the sun was still rising, to where their Eden lay in wait. Without another word, the ex-Thundercats went
on, secure in the knowledge that they had won their freedom from Liono and all the others.
MummRa, to whom the passage of a day was a
meaningless triviality, watched with a mix sense of unquenchable anger and
deep-secret delight as WileyKat and WileyKit continued on with their lives unaffected by his
plans to destroy them. He rubbed his
chin in thought -- soon the beast would be on its way back to its master, soon
the elements of nature would erode the cabin, its ancient stone masonry would
crumble to the ground.
"Yes," he said aloud, pleased to have found the
slightest gleam of hope in failure.
"Yes," he continued, "one day even the Thundercats will
be forgotten but I will always be here.
I am forever, eternal."
The image on the pool faded just as the twins could be seen
heading toward the delta of the river, passing by mounds of rocks upon which a
speckled snake slithered in the shade.
The magical waters of his cauldron evaporated into a thin mist with but
a wave of the mummy's arm. He turned and
limped to his coffin.
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