A Cure for Writer's Block
I wrote part of this while stricken with writer's block (hence the title), so I apologize if this story doesn't seem like my best. Part 2 of the Reanimation is coming, I promise!
Also, this story is the first with my fursona, and it is a representation of where I was for the past couple of weeks in terms of creating things.
"I
can't do this!" My retort against my
usually creative instinct sounds into the hallways from the bedroom,
accompanied by the sound of a laptop slamming shut. Then, after several minutes
of silence, I stumble out into the hallway: a grey Manx bobcat with black
stripes on a mission. I brace against the right-side wall with a paw, the
muscles in my legs not being strong enough to carry me on my own. Usually,
people would think of that as a detriment. Not me; I'm just... used to it,
that's all.
I
look around now. The sunlight emanating from the living room ahead of me gives
contrast to the relative darkness of the doorway and the wheelchair that waits
in front of it, as if it is trying to warn me of the possible dangers of the
world outside.
Not
that I care. In fact, if I, say,
bruise my knee up out there, I'd just laugh the pain off. That's just the kind
of person I am.
Anyways, just as I drop to my knees, my father
calls from the living room: "Twitchy, where're you going?"
"Just
outside," I say, as I scoot towards my chair, both arms pulling my body forth,
my legs tucked underneath. For all of my life, that has been my main mode of
mobility throughout the house: push forth, stop, and push again. It's a steady rhythm
I have mastered, much to the chagrin of my tightened legs. As I reach my chair
and pull myself upright (with both paws on the armrests), dad calls me again.
"What
are you gonna' do?"
"I'm
just gonna'... go for a walk," I answer, turning myself around to sit on the seat
of my wheelchair. "It's just to clear my head." I spot my denim vest on the
coat rack nearby, the Metallicatz album cover (lightning chair and all) clearly
visible amid the sky blue of the garment's sides. The coppery tang of its buttons
makes me smirk in memory of all the concerts I've gone to over the years.
"Okay,"
I hear my father say, "Don't be gone for too long, alright?"
"I
won't," I reply. With a swiftness
of paw, I lean forward and snatch the vest, sliding it on over my evergreen
sweater. I leave it unbuttoned, since I figure that I look cooler like that
anyways. Deftly, I spin around and unlock the door, both feet firmly planted on
the footrests.
"See
you later."
"You
too, son."
I
wheel outside, shutting the door behind me with my right arm. Wait, I think then, what about my music player?
I
quickly check my breast pockets until I feel a familiar rectangular bump inside
my right one. Smiling, I unbutton the pocket and fish out the player and wired headphones,
the latter being tangled like a cluster of vines. "Ah," I say to myself,
untangling the puzzle of wires, "time to zone out."
After
plugging my ears in, I check the device's battery life. 76%, it shows beside the battery symbol on the top right. Good
enough to last a while. Satisfied, I set it on shuffle, wheeling down the stone
ramp into the open as thundering drums drown out my hearing...
What
I had told my father earlier was essentially a half-lie. Sure, clearing my head
was at least a part of why I was
heading outside, but it actually had more to do with finding an idea for a
story. You know the feeling when you sit down to create a narrative, but your
ideas run amok as soon as you've placed pen to paper (or, in my case, fingers
to keys)? Well, that's the feeling I'm having right now. Fortunately (as I push
forth on sidewalks, wind buffeting my whiskers), I have a plan to quash that
empty feeling, and it all starts with a short walk past the Wood of Legends.
The Wood of Legends (existing beyond the borders of my hometown) is so called
by locals because of the rare and splendid beasts that live there. Most people
assume that the beasts are pure poppycock, existing only in the minds of cubs,
kits and other young civilized folk. Well, I am here to tell you--as a visitor
to the Wood--that such things are not true, as the fauna are as real in fur,
flesh and scale. One of my dearest friends, in fact, is such a creature: a gold
Western dragon by the name of Aurelaxis.
The
last time I saw him, I was barely out of puberty, and that had been for just a
short little visit in the summer. This time, I need him more than ever. As I
stop at the point where the suburbs give way to thick, thick forest, I imagine
his great lustrous form from all those years ago, wise and careful words
delivered in his soul penetrating voice. For
what could inspire imaginative thoughts more than a dragon?
My wheels crunch and tread over leaves and dirt
as I enter the Wood between two giant maples, both ribald in shape but bursting
at branch-ends with color. In fact, this whole forest has the sky dominated with reds and oranges in autumn. A
path shaped like an 'S' winds through this area, and if my memory is correct, this
time of year is when the indigenous unicorn tribes begin to prepare for the big
migration southward. Many of the tribes of this area know me pretty well,
especially the Dadaelians, whose leader (a friendly chestnut giant by the name
of Kothar) has taken me up as a trusted friend and ally. Unfortunately, none of
them appear to be in the forest today, so I trudge on, brushing away my dark
bangs whenever I stop to rest my muscles. After several minutes of stopping to
probe for nearby sounds, I emerge into a clearing, having seen nor heard any
traces of beasts thus far.
However,
I know for a fact that the wait is over, because about thirty feet distant from
me exists a towering cavern, jutting out of the verdant grasses like a towering
teethed monument, its top not too dissimilar to a sharp-peaked mountain (or, if
you're a metal-head like me, the cover for Death's The Sound of Perseverance album). This, I remind myself now, is
where Aurelaxis resides. Pushing myself forth, I take note of how difficult
it is to move forward: each push feels like treading on a carpet--albeit chilled
and natural--making it harder and harder for me to reach the grotto. After about
what seems like fifteen more minutes, I give up, my paws slick with dampness
and cold. I unbuckle myself and leap down. I am careful not to land on my tiny
little stub of a tail.
My
dash to the cave takes longer, but each time I look up to catch my breath, I
see it ever closer--a sign of my resilience. Once my path takes me over the
familiar stone stalagmites, I freeze, my heart racing with feverish
anticipation towards conversing with Aurelaxis. It is that first jolt of
excitement that always gets me: the chance to talk to a magnificent creature
full of wisdom and majesty. After that, I usually fall into the loop of the
conversation, treating him just as if he were a civilized species; in other
words, plain good old respect.
I
hear a clinking and the soft, slow padding of talons against stone, accompanied
by the sight of lustrous blue eyes, their oval slits haunting in the darkness.
Then, an arrow of fire alights a beam-sized scone on one of the lair's smoothly
carved walls, revealing the dragon once and for all. He is just as I remember
him: middle-sized for his kind (about the weight of three elephants) and
gorgeous, his scales gleaming like the gold he sometimes hoards. As I take in
more of his utterly magnificent form, I notice that he's holding a great mug of
coffee in his left claw, finely crafted out of china. Wisps of heat-smoke
stream from the mug, and the strong aroma of fresh cocoa is everywhere.
"Thaddeus,
my friend," the dragon starts with a smile, "how good is it to see you once
again!" The hugeness of his voice makes my ears twitch back a little, but I
remain calm, returning the grin on my shorter, more rounded muzzle.
"You
too. How have things been?"
He
settles down with a heavy sigh, drawing his long spiked tail closer to his
hindquarters.
"Over the past twelve years? Up and down." He
sips, and then drums his free claw against stone. "My mate--you know,
Dilanna--she passed away last fall."
My eyes widen in shock. "Really?" I scoot
towards the dragon's prodigious arm, touching the warm scales of its crook in
compassion. "Very sorry to hear that."
Aurelaxis looks down at me for a second, his
blue eyes glimmering with hints of firelight, before taking another sip of his
coffee. "It was a very peaceful passing, though." Setting down his mug, he eyes
me, left ear flicking expectantly. "Do you know what the term respiratory pneumonia means?"
"Yes," I say, nodding, "She died from that?"
Aurelaxis returns my gesture.
"Oh," I then say in response. My eyes lock on
to a tiny crack in the cavern floor, studying it. Maybe it's time to tell him why
I am here.
"Aurelaxis," I begin, not taking my eyes off of
the fissure, "there's a reason why I stopped by..."
"Mr-hm. What is it?"
I stop my studying to gaze back up at the
dragon, a sigh escaping my lips. "Well, I'm having a lotta' trouble with ideas
for my story." My heart pounds as I say this, making my fur prickle in
timidity.
The dragon gets up, a sudden lurch that
startles me greatly. "Yes? And?"
I watch him as he whirls around, padding away
into another more crudely carved chamber with the mug in his fore-claws. "I was
wondering if you could, y'know, inspire
me. Give me some... ideas."
I hear the gentle clink of china against
granite from the chamber behind me. After a second, Aurelaxis reappears, his
great winged form rejoining mine. Having heard my call, he answers, "How could
I do that, Thaddeus?"
My mouth opens, hesitates for a split second.
"I-I don't know. Magic. Um,"--I gulp
down, remembering that dragons never do such things--"telling a story, maybe?"
Out of all the things Aurelaxis could do, a simple tale telling was what
I remembered him doing best. He had an old storyteller's voice, the kind usually
accompanied by a fire and a nice cup of boiling hot tea. However, the dragon
isn't up for it at the moment, as he tells me that he is tired of repeating
tales that have already been told.
"C'mon," I plead, lacing fingers together as
kits do to their mothers, "just do it. You know
you're good at it! Just one story for me, please."
The dragon, having just plopped down beside me,
considers, rubbing his chin with the thumb of his talon. "Alright," he says,
standing up once more, "it shall be done." He cranes his neck around to spy me.
"Which one do you want to hear?"
I blink, not thinking for a moment. "Oh! Ummm..."
I rub my muzzle in contemplation, fingering my whiskers softly. There are so
many tales to take inspiration from, all great in their morals and adventures.
My personal favorites are (naturally) the ones with dragons as the
protagonists. As it happens, my mind focuses on the image of a familiar red
wyrm, his claws sharp and striking, descending upon a wooden ship, bearing a
vulpine rider on his back.
"Tell me of Thanos the Scarlet," I say,
snapping out of my reverie, "and his pact with the foxes of Thumbria to
overthrow their Daelan overlords." A smile breaks on my lips as I remember
flashes from the tale's plot: Thanos' speech to the citizens, his ambush, the
Great Battle that occurred thereafter. The dragon grins as well.
"You have always loved that tale, have you not?"
"Yep."
"Alright, then." He takes a few steps forward,
unfurling his wings, which veil the sun, itself smothered by the clouds hanging
over the clearing and the surrounding Wood. The last thing he tells me before
he takes flight is a confirmation that yes, he is indeed going hunting, and yes, he will
tell the tale when he returns. I nod at the news, smiling, and watch him glide
far, far above the treetops, wishing that I could be a dragon myself.
"Ahem,"
the dragon starts later on, having brought me dinner: a freshly killed rat,
along with an ox for himself. He stops, eyeing me sinking my canines into the
grey furred carcass. "Are you enjoying that?"
I rip off a piece, chewing and nodding. "Yesh,"
I say, spitting inattentively, "go on."
Aurelaxis clears his throat again, and promptly
starts his tale. "Long, long ago, there was a drake named Thanos. His scales
were the color of blood and war, and his eyes shone like the stars and the
land's twin suns. Despite his scales, he was a peaceful sort of fellow..."
Before I know it, my eyes are closed, the fur
and whiskers of my cheek planted into the stone floor. But another story rises
in my dreams: one of a similar-hued drake rising out of a pool in his lair,
scales dripping as he ventures out, catching sight of a raccoon standing far
below, looking a lot like my friend Dashaen, red hoodie and all--
"Thaddeus!"
I am shaken awake, my head throbbing from the sheer cacophony of Aurelaxis'
call. I look up; he is staring down at me, his brows furrowed, his lips
slightly parted in annoyance. "Why did you doze off, my friend? Do you not want
to hear the tale, or what?"
I exhale a breath, half-realizing my heart's
violent thudding. "I did," I say
after a moment of silent hesitation, "but I only wanted to draw inspiration
from it."
The dragon scanned me, as if I were suddenly a
thing to be eaten, then sighed. "So has it been renewed?"
I get up to my knees, a grin forming across my
muzzle. "Yup." I rub my eyes, yawned before looking at the outside world: the
sky was darkening, I realized, into a navy blue. "I should really get going," I
say, partly to myself, "before my dad scolds me for being out too long."
"Truthfully, I don't think that will happen,"
Aurelaxis replies, "and here's why." His sigh catches my attention, holding it
there as he explains. "Your father... he is an intelligent feline being. He knows you are more mature now than when
I last saw you. So I say this," he
offers with a claw outstretched: "Tell him where you have been. It never hurts
to do so." The dragon nods, emphasizing his point.
"Really?"
"Of course."
I turn and bid adieu to my good friend,
Aurelaxis the Golden, before making the long crawl back to my wheelchair. My
fur suffers a few cuts and scrapes along the way, but in the end I make it. My
paws caked with grime, I unlock my brakes and head back, keeping the dragon's
suggestion in my head all the while.
When I make it home, it is half past midnight.
The house is silent and dark, but the door to my room is still open. So I push
valiantly onwards, wheeling myself into the chambers of my own personal domain.
The laptop is there, closed. I venture up to the desk and open it. Light floods
from the device; apparently I had left it on. I sight, purring slightly, and
start typing, full of fresh ideas. I type about the rising dragon, the familiar
raccoon, all of it.
As for my father wondering about me, I reminded
myself to inform him tomorrow morning, with renewed confidence.