Category Archives: Literature

Catania’s Forest ~ Part Seven

Catania’s Forest: The Little Drummer-boy in Narnia ~ Part Seven

~*~

Catania followed the creek east, upstream. Its shallow course grew deeper as she went on, until the elf walked at the bottom of a low trench beside the water. Finally she reached an old ash tree that grew at the very edge of the ditch, with its roots straggling over the edge and poking out of the earthen walls. Its thick trunk split into many branches, not high above the top of the defile. Much of its bark was scored with shaggy moss and sea-green wheels of lichen. In the shadow of its heavy canopy, Catania felt along the dirt wall, which was thick with moss and skinny roots—plantation the young elf had planted there herself, to disguise her house. Her practiced hand found the rough wooden handle, and pulled open the small door. It was made of wood, but covered with dirt on the outside, in which Catania had buried the small plants to cover it. Inside was the small dirt cave she called home, dug out between the great tree-roots, supported with rocks. Inside were her tools, lying in an orderly line, against one wall; and her small bed of heather and ferns. She tossed the rolled up hide beside her bed, and fetched the wooden spoon and fork she had carved with her knife, and went back to cook her dinner.

~*~

After eating a small portion of the venison at her kitchen, Catania stamped out the dying fire and took her cutlery home. Twilight was fading around her by now. She hurried back to the old ash tree and lit a small fire outside it, in the mud by the creek. She filled a clay pot with small, amber grains from a sack inside her cave, and cautiously scooped up a little water from the stream in it, not letting it down so far in the current that the kernels washed out. She nestled the pot carefully into the coals of her little fire and crawled inside. It was safe to cook such things so close to where she slept—as far as she knew, elves were the only creatures on the planet foolish enough to try and eat the rock-hard grains. They would be soft enough to eat for breakfast after boiling all night.

It was completely dark in the cave, but the elf-girl knew every inch of it by feel; and she had done the same routine almost every night for all four years she had lived in the forest: she unstrung her bow and laid it down against the wall, put her quiver beside it, added her knife and belt. She pulled off her tunic and laid it beside her, smoothed the sleeveless shirt she wore beneath it, and let her hair down tumbling about her shoulders. She stretched out on her bed and twisted her shoulders and squirmed until the heather shifted into a comfortable couch, blew the ferns out of her face, and relaxed. Every day ended like this: the warm smell of earth and dry leaves, the soft crunch of the foliage beneath her, her tight muscles at rest, pitch black darkness before her chestnut eyes.

Catania’s Forest ~ Part Six

So. . . I haven’t been doing the greatest job keeping up with my schedule. :-/  If the worst comes to the worst, I guess I’ll just post twice the last couple days.

In other news, I’m turning sixteen today (like, when did I get so old??), and I got my first present yesterday–part of which was The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien.  I started reading it almost as soon as I got home, and I’m loving it.  I must say, I’m kind-of proud of myself for being enough of a geek to read something by Tolkien besides The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. 🙂

Catania’s Forest: The Little Drummer-boy in Narnia ~ Part six

~*~

The trouble with centaurs was that they could not help you get things on their backs. It always took a lot of tugging and arguing on Catania’s part to get her burdens where the centaur could safely carry them—but somehow they always managed it.

They pushed their way through the underbrush to Catania’s “kitchen”. She called it this because it was where she butchered and cooked her quarries, so the smell would not attract wild animals to where she slept and kept her gear. It was really just a clearing in the forest, just South of a small creek, that filled it with a clear, tinkling sound. When they reached it, Tyre flopped the stag down on the ground, which the elf’s many light steps had worn clean of any grass or weed.

Continue reading Catania’s Forest ~ Part Six

Catania’s Forest ~ Part Five

Catania’s Forest: The Little Drummer-boy in Narnia ~ Part Five

~*~

Catania could not remember her mother. She had died long before the young elf could recall. In her oldest, haziest memories, she was living with her father, and her grandparents, and her widowed aunt.

Her father had hated humans. They had taken Syrelia over slowly—more and more of them coming, imposing more and more of their rules on other races. When Catania was fourteen, her father had been killed in a street fight with a dozen Men. When the governor, Haken Daniel, had come to the city and ordered the building of the wall, she had left her kin and fled. Her father had hated Men, and they had killed him—they would never be her master. Her father had always been quick to speak and act, and her admiration for him had made her leave behind her own quieter nature as best she could.

Continue reading Catania’s Forest ~ Part Five

Catania’s Forest ~ Part Four

So I was making up part of a story, earlier this week, about a warrior coming back to consciousness after being knocked out, and I managed to make myself feel so dizzy I fell down a flight of stairs.  It was special.  Embarrassing definitely, but still rather amusing.

Sometimes, my imagination works altogether too well.

Anyway, tell me what you think of Tyre. *nervous smile*

Catania’s Forest: The Little Drummer-boy in Narnia ~ Part Four

~*~

The centaur towered above Catania by more than a head and shoulders. His glossy chestnut sides glistened with sweat in the westering sun, and his velvet shirt was stained with it; he never moved slower than a trot. His course, brown hair splayed across his green-clad shoulders; and his short, dark beard masked the lower half of his sun-tanned face.

“I need your help, Tyre.” They never wasted time on greetings.

The centaur drew himself up to his full height and squared his shoulders. “I don’t have time to help little girls.”

“I have an offer to make you,” Catania corrected herself impatiently, turning to walk back towards his tower beside him. She had to move quickly to keep his pace, but she was accustomed to brisk walking.

They caught up to Jéru and his charge, and moved passed them, Tyre shuffling disgustedly around the swine. The pipe music had begun again. The herd moved slowly, and soon fell away behind them. Catania itched to explain herself, but she could see the centaur had other things in mind.

“Why were you talking to that renegade, Catania?” he finally asked.

Catania was surprised he had had the decency to wait until the swineherd disappeared behind the bend in the road. They had almost reached Tyre’s tower now. Catania had never been inside it. Guessing from the gold embroidery that often curled its way across the centaur’s clothes, it must be a magnificent place.

“Is it a concern of yours if I am polite to him?”

“It’s my concern if you sympathize with cowardly rebels.”

“Look, Tyre, I’m out here risking my life. I’m not their slave. What do you want? I can’t start a revolution. How far would I get? A little elf-girl with a knife and a bow?”

“You would get farther than you’re getting mooning around shooting naught but deer,” Tyre said authoritatively.

“I have to eat,” Catania snapped. “It’s not like you’re laying siege the city either.” She was not one to pick a fight, but something about the arrogant centaur always managed to make her especially snappish. “Now, look. I just shot a deer, and I need you to help me get it back to my kitchen. I’ll give you a third of the meat?”

The centaur hesitated, then shrugged. “Very well, don’t just stand there then. Where did it go down?”

P.S. Make sure you didn’t miss my last Cat’s Forest post!  I’m going to be posting very often to get all the parts in, because I want to post the last one on Christmas Eve.  I’ll have it on the Stories page afterwards, if you would rather read it then at your own pace.

Catania’s Forest ~ Part Three

My last post is probably the most personal thing I’ve ever posted on here.  Parts of it might not have made sense for some of you who didn’t know my grandpa, but I thought I should share it.

All of you sweet Omaha people have been amazing through this.  And being able to text with a couple of my amazing friends, within hours of hearing my grandfather went to heaven, was such a blessing; and probably one of the most healing and comforting things I could have done just then.  A special thank you to all of you!

That said, I am excited to keep posting my story!  Y’all get to meet Tyre in the next part.  I’m both excited, and kind-of dreading it.  Tyre has been the trickiest character!

Catania’s Forest: The Little Drummer-boy in Narnia ~ Part Three

~*~

Catania smiled politely. “Hello, Jéru.”

“I haven’t seen you in the forest much,” he said, walking up to her. His charge began to wander about and sniff at weeds poking between the flagstones of the road. Catania knew he would be beaten if he lost them—she still remembered the day he had taken off his belt and tunic and showed her the stripes on his back. When she had asked him why they had done it, he said he came home late.

So why is he so bent on speaking with me? she wondered. Am I the only creature who is civil to him? Judging from the life she knew he led, she probably was.

She tried to shrug off his remark, which she knew was more of a question. “I don’t go southeast of the city—it’s dangerous.”

“Because there are creatures there besides wild beasts?” he said, sarcastically.

“I would prefer wild beasts,” Catania said bitterly. “If you would rather humans, I would still rather deer.”

What about wolves?” Jéru said pointedly. “Or werewolves. What if you’ve shoot a werewolf?”

“I haven’t.”

“How do you know? Haven’t you shot a wolf?”

“Yes, I have. Sure I have. Not by moonlight. Don’t be absurd, Jér. I sleep at night.”

He gave her a quizzical look.

“My life is not half so exciting as you make it out to be.”

“You think it’s dull?” He spat into the underbrush. “Try my life.”

“Why do you do it, Jér?” she pleaded, unable to swallow the pain and bitterness that welled up at his unpleasant references to elfin life in the city.

“Do what?” he asked, bemused.

“Stay here—like. . . this.” She gestured vaguely towards the pigs, as if they were all the problem.

A shadow clouded his merry face. “What can I do, Tanya? They kill escaped slaves.”

Kill. Slave. The words grated on her ears. Looking up, she was suddenly confronted by Tyre, trotting around the bend. She was jittery from standing in the open road so long and sorry Tyre had caught her talking to Jéru. She was often uncomfortable under the glare of the centaur’s stern, blue eyes, but especially so when he found her associating with what he would call rebels.

“I’m busy, Jér, leave me alone,” she muttered and walked off to meet Tyre.

Catania’s Forest ~ Part Two

Guys!!  It’s snowing at our house!!  And some of it–just a little–has been sticking!  I have been staring out the windows, and skipping with happiness, and dreaming up snow fairies since it started.

I ♥ snow!!

Anyway, *cough* here’s the story:

Catania’s Forest: The Little Drummer-boy in Narnia ~ Part Two

~*~

Catania gutted her quarry and set off towards Tyre’s tower, just outside Syrelia’s wall—at least two miles from her hunting-ground. The tower was built on a high thrust of wooded land, over-shadowing the curving road that curled in a rough circle around the city wall. The young elf scrambled easily into a tree, and from its branches onto the tor. The tall tower was made of stone. It was crowned by a wide battlement, open to the sky, from which Catania knew Tyre watched the stars. She climbed into one of the trees that stood around the tower on the ledge. From one of its high branches she could see a long stretch of the road. She sat down on a high branch, and dangled her legs while she waited for Tyre to appear on the road below.

Finally she saw him come trotting around the bend—the centaur’s tall form was unmistakable. She swung herself down and started for the road. She stepped cautiously out into the open when she reached it. The flagstones felt—like always—startlingly smooth and hard under her feet, after the rough tussocks of the forest-floor. Tyre—in exchange for meat, of course—had procured her boots several years ago; but she had decided shoes wore out or were grown out of too quickly, and were too hard to come by. The young elf simply wrapped strips of untanned leather from her game around her light elf-feet to relieve the first bite of thorns and stinging bugs. She did the same around the first three fingers of her draw-hand to keep her bowstring from giving her blisters, but she still wore on her arms the bracers Tyre had procured for her.

Continue reading Catania’s Forest ~ Part Two

Catania’s Forest ~ Part One

I always said while I was writing Catania’s Forest that it would turn out to be the best thing I’d ever written, or the greatest fail in the history of my pen-and-inking.  I believe it has turned out to be neither.  I like to think it’s rather a nice story, but it’s definitely not my favorite thing I’ve written–and most of the characters did something that made me broiling mad at them, sometime during the process.  But here I am, with a fully written and somewhat edited story. 😉

Picking favorites of my writings aside, I’m quite happy.  And I’m quite excited to have a new story to post!

This story is more intense than most things I usually write, so younger readers should probably discuss it with their parents before reading it.  If parents would like to read about the content, they can click on the link below.  It does include some spoilers, but not very big ones.

Parents, Click Here for Overview

Why do I always end up rambling on and on like this, when I start posting a story?  Well, without further ado, here it is.  I’ll be including two maps I drew at the end of all the posts, if you get confused.  Click on them to see them bigger.

Catania’s Forest: The Little Drummer-boy in Narnia ~ Part One

~*~

Catania hardly dared to breathe as her brown eyes unblinkingly tracked every move of the unknowing stag. She slowly drew her arrow back to her pointed ear. The stag remained unmoved, listlessly grazing. He was almost invisible in the dim, leaf-choked light of the forest at what must be nearly twenty-five yards. The young elf had never shot a deer at such a distance, but she was afraid to move closer.

Continue reading Catania’s Forest ~ Part One

Writing

So earlier this week, I finally decided it was time to buckle down and finish Catania’s Forest.

I decided to make up a posting schedule starting next week, hoping that would motivate me to finish writing by the weekend.  And then I figured out I was going to my speech club’s practice tournament tomorrow, and. . . needed to finish my speech.  I decided to go ahead and try to do both, and write myself off a cliff, because I’m just like that sometimes.  I’m happy to say my speech is going fine (and I have the excuse that I just got home from China and am “technically” still jet-lagged, if it goes terribly), and (drum-roll please) Catania’s Forest went to the editors today!!  That sounds awfully official.  It’s really just my parents–but they’re awesome proofreaders.

So, all that to say, I’m done writing Cat’s Forest, and it should make it’s appearance on here. . . soon.  We’ll just play it safe, and not say anything more specific than soon. 🙂

Image result for the lord of the rings movies well i'm back

Thought I should stop in and let you know we got home safely and on time from our great adventure.

My brain is still indecisive about whether or not it’s going to be functional today, so I won’t try anything more profound.  Except that your comments on my last post gave me all the warm fuzzies!  I love you girls so much!!

P.S. ^ Guess what I watched on the airplane. . . ??

The Kingdom of Light

“For this reason, since the day we heard about you, we have not stopped praying for you and asking God to fill you with the knowledge of his will through all spiritual wisdom and understanding.  And we pray this in order that you may live a life worthy of the Lord and may please him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of God, being strengthened with all power according to his glorious might so that you may have great endurance and patience, and joyfully giving thanks to the Father, who has qualified you to share in the inheritance of the saints of the kingdom of light.  For he has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of the Son he loves, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.”

-Colossians 1:9-14