Saturday, December 12, 2009

Hooves: Introductions: Part Two

Tom lead Elsie down towards the Mercury Estate proper. It was not a long walk by any means. And even if it had been, Elsie would not have minded that. The trip in the trailer had left her feeling a bit cramped and claustrophobic. Being out beneath the open sky was doing wonders for her already. She had to remind herself to stifle a neigh down.

Tom looked over at her and cracked a huge grin as he walked alongside her. “Feeling good with all the fresh air?” he asked.

Elsie nodded in reply to him. She didn’t say much else though. Though she had met Tom earlier when he had come to get her, she hadn’t really felt the need to talk to him much. That lack of a desire for conversation had not really changed in the past few hours.

Tom nodded in return. “Good, that’s good,” he said. “I enjoy it too. Better here than Philadelphia, anyway. That city’s too dirty for me.”

Elsie looked over at him curiously. She assumed that he was from there, by the way that he inquired about it. Still, there wasn’t much of an inclination to talk at all. Not yet, at least.

Tom gave her a knowing look that seemed to say he realized what Elsie was doing. “So what’s it going to take for me to get you to talk?” he asked. Elsie shrugged and kept walking forward. Tom laughed. “All right then. Have it your way. It’s sure not any fun to just keep quiet though, that’s for certain.”

Elsie just shrugged her shoulders at this and looked at the countryside around the Mercury Estate. The rolling hills to her left gave way to mountains not too far away. Their snow-capped peaks looked down upon the collection of buildings. To the right, the green forest squatted like some small troll waiting for a thought.

“That’s the Arrow Forest,” Tom said. He pointed back towards the mountains. “Those are the Dior Mountains. You can visit either one, if you ever feel up to it. Just be sure to let us know before you go galavanting across the countryside.”

Elsie nodded. She did not know if she would be going to either one of them, actually. The forest looked to be too cramped for her to enjoy herself. The mountains were a little more inviting, if only because of the rolling hills between here and there. Already she felt an urge to go galloping across them and revel in the freedom that she knew she would feel.

“Got an itch to scratch?” Tom inquired, looking up at her curiously.

“Yes,” Elsie said softly, smiling longingly as she looked at the open hills.

Tom laughed. “There’s your voice.”

A breath was caught in Elsie’s chest and she looked at the ground. “Sorry,” she said, a bit of guilt in her voice.

Tom laughed again and shook his head. “Think nothing of it. I just like to hear my own voice, is all. I forget others aren’t quite as talkative as I am.”

The boy suddenly went flying forward and landed flat on his face. Elsie stopped suddenly and walked up to him. Tom rolled over on his back and laughed hard.

“That’ll teach me to watch where I put my feet,” he said, grinning up at the open sky.

“Are you all right?” Elsie asked, looking over him with a little bit of concern on her face.

Tom turned his smiling face towards her. “Why yes I am,” he said, propping himself up into a sitting position. For a moment, he rested his arms on his knees and caught his breath. Then he hopped back up and stood beside Elsie. “Just fine,” he said. “Shall we continue?”

Seeing that the boy was indeed rather unharmed, Elsie nodded her head and started to walk forward again. Tom followed alongside her, his steps bouncing as he hummed a mindless tune.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Hooves: An Introduction and Introductions: Part One

This is the first update of Hooves. Hooves will be a long ongoing story. I have no possible endings for it, and don't plan on thinking any up for a long time to come. I do plan on updating it every week on at least Thursday or Friday. I hope that you all will stick with it and enjoy it as I write it.

Hooves: Introductions: Part One

Elsie braced herself inside the trailer as the truck pulling it came to a stop. It wasn’t too jarring, but this was only the second time that the centauress had ridden in a trailer. She wasn’t exactly used to the sudden movements.

At least this would be the last time she rode in a trailer, hopefully. She had that much to be thankful for. Nothing much else was particularly enjoyable, especially the fact that she was here. The fact that she was here meant that her parents were unable to take care of her anymore. Though, perhaps the word unable was interchangeable with the word unwilling.

That wasn’t Elsie’s main concern though. Her parents had been distant from her for the past year and a half, and it was something that she had simply adjusted to. Her main concern was just what other beings might be living here. She had been told that the Mercury Estate took in all those fantastical creatures who, as the brochures she had been given said, “...are afflicted by conditions both physical and psychological that do not allow them to live among normal society.” She had also been informed that multi-limbed creatures such as herself would be kept apart from the more humanoid creatures, due to what the brochures deemed “...specialized care and a desire to keep similar species with other similar species.”

This worried Elsie. For all she knew, this could just be some vaguely disguised attempt at segregation of a sort, keeping it so that the more humanoid beings didn’t have to see the more animalistic ones. Still, it was something that she did not have a choice in. Her parents had chosen this place, they had already paid all the money and made all the arrangements. They had even paid the Mercury Estate extra to have them come out and transport Elsie themselves.

She remembered the last she had seen of them, looking back over her shoulder as the trailer was taken down the road. They had been standing in the doorway of the barn, watching as she was taken away. For the first time in forever, she had almost envied the two legs each of them had stood on. Then she might have been able to stand with them. But she had four legs, not two. And nothing could change that now.

The trailer door behind her clattered as the lock was turned. Elsie shook her head to clear her thoughts as the one who had come to get her, a boy about her age that called himself only Tom opened the doors.

“There you are, Miss Elsie,” he called up to her. “Just back up out of there all nice and straight like now.”

Elsie nodded as she slowly began to back out of the trailer. It was not a movement that was very easy for her. A horse’s body was not meant to move backwards at a very quick pace. At least she could look behind her. This was a luxury afforded to her that was not afforded to regular horses.

At last she was out of the horrid trailer. Tom walked up and shut the trailer again. He turned back to Elsie with a bright smile on his face.

“Well, that’s enough of that now,” he said, leaning back against the door. “Take a look around for a moment. Get adjusted before I take you to the multi-limbed quarters.”

Elsie quietly looked around at where she was. The Mercury Estate looked just like she had seen in the pictures that were in the brochures. The two main buildings, a pair of houses that resembled mansions, stood near the edge of a green wood. A little farther out, a collection of one story buildings stood, ringed by a large corral. All around, the countryside stretched. The nearest civilization, a town almost too small to be put on a map, was a good two hours away. This was home now, if only by virtue of there being nowhere else to go now.

Tom walked up beside Elsie and patted her on the back. He stopped and held his hand back almost as soon as he had done it. “I’m sorry, Miss Elsie,” he said as she looked to him. “I ought to have asked.”

“It’s all right,” Elsie said with a shrug. And, it really was. Even now she was tugging at the shirt she wore, wishing that it could be off. Whereas most humans turned fantastical had issues adjusting to the parts of them that had been changed, Elsie had trouble adjusting to the parts of her that had not been changed.

Tom looked her over carefully. He seemed like he was about to say something, but in the end he simply held his tongue. “Well, shall we go on down, then?” he asked at last.

Elsie nodded her head and the two of them began to head towards the Mercury Estate.