Don't go down to the water's edge/ You can't stomach what you're gonna see
It's down there, by the water's edge/ Wasted and bloated and waiting for someone else
The Vision
Crying Lightning had fished in this area before--many times, in fact. It was his favorite spot, really, in part because it was such a clear and peaceful little stream, flowing off a second, slightly larger one. Today he settled in to wait, ignoring the faint signs of danger at first--the whiff of decay, the silence of the woods, the sparseness of the fish...alarm didn’t strike him until he saw the first dead one. A little fish, seemingly long gone belly-up. He looked to the mouth of the stream, and he noticed a wisp of dark water, blacker than any silt he’d seen drifting through the swamp’s waters, flowing from the larger river into this one. Sunset’s hackles raised, a low growl signaling that the little wolf sensed something
bad. It looked like the whole upper basin was that toxic black.
That’s...that’s not right. I was just here. I was here yesterday and it wasn't like this. They’ve all rotted away. It looks like they’ve been this way for days. I was just here. He began to walk the river’s edge, Sunset stalking at his side. They saw more fish. The smell grew stronger as they followed the river, to the point where it made Crying Lightning’s head reel.
“Turn back, Sunset. Go home.” Staunchly, the wolf stood in defiance.
There was a sound from upriver. A deep, unsettling note--it resonated in his heart, sounding almost familiar and yet completely wrong. He flinched at it.
“Go!” This time, Sunset listened. He considered following his own advice, but he had to know. He had to see. This river had been perfectly normal...but that was yesterday.
Be safe, Sunset. I’ll follow you as soon as I can.
As he walked to the bank, the air felt more and more grim and heavy, and he saw the... former...river…
It was foul, bubbling, transformed overnight into a nightmare bog that seemed to exude an aura of pure death. Yet the greatest surprise was that he was not alone here. There was
something else at the water’s edge. He knew this was what had called to him--just like the voice, this creature was almost Kimeti--almost. He approached the bizarre, tar-rotted thing, and was about to ask it what this all meant when it spoke first. It spoke of ‘belonging to them’ (who?) ‘becoming something more’, but Crying Lightning drew himself up to height and demanded, mid-spiel,
”What have you done to the river?!” It paused for a moment. He felt a chill as it seemed to grin, sizing him up with a wolfish and mocking look.
”Who...are...what...ar--” It began to speak right over him, as though it was reciting lines, and his own voice shrank back.
It walked--maybe slid--to the rancid riverbank, watching him expectantly, mockingly. What was this place now? What had this monster turned it into? Would the Motherfather really allow the existence of something so...toxic? Questions buzzed in his mind, more loudly than he’d ever questioned anything.
“Only those unafraid of the unknown receive my boon.”
Was he afraid? What would this lead to? He felt unease begin to dissolve into something else, but the heavy atmosphere had already left his head spinning.
I’m not afraid. I’m not. As he joined the ghastly figure right on the bank, his head recoiled from the fumes with a grimace. His legs stood fast. His legs were numb. He could barely breathe...and then both his legs and mind gave out at once.
The steep hills towered over either side of him as he made his way back through the valley. It must have been a terrible dream he had, of black water and a ghoulish figure...he’d fallen asleep while out fishing. Sunset loped beside him, and he carried the few fish he’d gotten before nightfall in a tortoise shell. It wasn’t much, but there was always--
What was that sound?
He had no time to react. No warning before the mountain rushed down, bashing his legs from under him. No chance to pull himself up against the mud before he was swept away in a heap. There was chaos, crushing pain, and then...silence again. He couldn’t move. Packed into a twisted pile of limbs under the crushing weight of the mudslide, he could feel the pressure crushing his chest farther with each breath. Faintly...he heard a howl of panic...futile digging above him...he was terrified, until he heard Sunset’s footsteps retreating and the long sorrowful wail of his companion drifting away. Be careful, buddy...be good...I can’t...follow you this time… The world was crushing in on him, but as he put up a final excruciating fight against the inevitable he heard the rumbling, haunting cry of that thing by the river. It was the last thing he heard.
The Offering
In the fog of fading sleep, he felt a pawing at his shoulder. He jumped as he blearily realized that...he was alive. The mudslide wasn’t real. It felt too real, it left him feeling sick. Numb. He felt as though he wasn’t real. Then there was a cold and damp touch against his nose that pulled him back...Sunset? His vision steadied as Sunset nipped his face affectionately. Nuzzling against his trusted familiar, Crying Lightning steadied his mind. He looked around. That thing...was here. It was still here. Reality hit him.
He looked up. He was under a tree that had been grand and beautiful, alive, a shelter on the riverside...but that was yesterday. Maybe longer, now...how long had gone by? The poison had drained it of life. It belonged to this twisted river. The Kimeti had begun to speak again, its words barely reaching him yet their meaning etched into his mind. Sacrifice something.
Crying Lightning was done with this game. Understanding why this had appeared might be impossible, and so he left the bog and resolved to let it be. He was done making it his problem. It was officially too much. He found another place to fish, far away from there, and arrived home as night fell. He spent the night outside with friends, drumming on his favorite log and singing as they roasted fish. He wanted to laugh, to sing, to forget. Yet, he was afraid to sleep. But as they all parted after the night of fun and the moon began to sink, he let himself rest.
Rest never came. Nightmares plagued him. The mudslide, the poisoned river, the dead trees. The danger where he had always found sanctuary. Why? Why? What was the meaning of it? He drifted in and out of sleep, for a day and an evening, waking hours spent pacing and staring towards that cursed river. He felt a weight of profound loss...but a thought occurred to him among all the sleepless fog.
Someone else might stumble on it. He needed to know what might happen, needed the answers that Kimeti may have. Nobody should be plagued the way he was.
An object that means something to you...Discard that part of your life.
What if he took a simple turtle shell? He tried, he brought a shell he carried fish in. He hurled it in, watching it sink. The Kimeti said nothing. Nothing, for a very long time. Crying Lightning quietly went home. It’s over, he thought. Over and done.
He awoke in the night, coughing, vividly feeling the crushing weight of mud and stone. Stamping his hooves, he screamed in anguish. Sunset whined, pressing his nose against his companion’s ear, attempting to comfort him. With a deep breath, Crying Lightning stood. He couldn’t keep on like this. Cheating didn’t work. Somehow, it knew. He looked at his log--it had accompanied his songs for years ever since he found it as a foal, and here he was...thinking about it. It was his prized instrument. All the nights of revelry and days of song would never be the same without it. It felt like throwing away a piece of his childhood.
It had to go.
It had to go. With a heavy, heavy heart, with a face of cold stone, he brought it. His real offering. He wasn’t going to betray how much it hurt to do. That Kimeti smirked. Crying Lightning closed his eyes as he kicked it into the murk. He couldn’t watch that thing’s grinning face...and couldn’t watch his beloved drum sink into the dark muddy unknown.
Judgement
”Obedient,” it said, and he nearly snapped. Only Sunset’s exhale beside him stopped him from going off.
I’d have never done another thing for you if you’d just shut up and taken that damn shell! It kept speaking, but its words were nonsense. What would find him? What was he bound to? There were no answers, and before he could ask questions, it had sunk into the murk.
He felt as though he had just exchanged one weight for another. He returned to the little camp he called home, as his neighbors invited him to feast on fruit. For the first time any of them could recall, he turned them down. Slept badly last night, he told them, sorry. They understood and wished him a comfortable rest, and he finally--blessedly--settled into a deep and dreamless sleep.
When he woke up at last, he heard a growl first. It got his attention quickly, and he looked around. Sunset stood, hackles up, staring into the corner, and in the corner was...a bright purple...blob? It seemed to cower from them, naturally he thought. Nothing without teeth would be bold when backed into a corner. He poked the sticky thing with a hoof, trying too late to back away as it climbed up his foreleg. He had a feeling this is what was supposed to find him. Well, no give-backs, he supposed.
It took some time to get used to the weird little thing, but he realized slowly that it had its uses. It could carry two shells worth of fish--he had a feeling it could even hold more. The swamp had spawned a bizarre danger, but perhaps this was also supposed to be. He realized he’d never understand any of this. Maybe in a way he’d had the right idea all along. Roll with the current, and maybe it will be fine. He took it on himself, however, to warn any kin nearby of just what they’d be walking into if they sought out the decaying Kimeti in the deep woods.