The
Coming of Meersha
By
Baby Fire Wolf
This is the tale of one lioness. Just one, who brought forth a
greater part in the royal pride. An anecdote, taking place under King Ahadi's
reign, but joined in the royal pride beneath the Kingdom ruled by Mufasa.
Part
I: The cub
OK, so there's a King named Mufasa. He has a son called Simba who is
the cub of a lioness named Sarabi. But later, Simba becomes a mate with a
lioness named Nala, who had grown up in the same pride...Now, either they're
half brother and sister, or cousins...so, whatever...But where did all the
other lionesses in the royal pride come from? They couldn't all have been
results of inbreeding...could they? Anyway, this is a story I wrote about just
one lioness who had joined the royal pride. Each lioness should have a story of
her own about how she came to be in the Pride Rock Pride, but this is only one.
In my fan-fictions, I try to make them, "Lion Kingy"...you
know, PG rated, in a way. Alas I cannot get past the dying of generations, (old
age, murders even, etc.) and other things such as hunting, eating, mating, and
more. But I try to be light in all the fan-fictions that carry on each
generation (for example, TLK V or TLK IX). It's the other short stories on the
side that I find I can use more of the "non Lion Kingy" ways. What
I'm trying to say is, for this story, as well as any other side stories, there
might be strong use of language or violent acts, ya know, stuff like that.
Anyway, hope you enjoy!
Note: The characters
Mufasa, Sarabi, Simba, Rafiki, Scar, Nala, Timon, Pumbaa, Zazu, Ed, Bonzai,
Shenzi, Kiara, Kovu, Zira, Nuka and Vitani have been created by Disney. The
characters Meersha, Kasha, Banjija, Kinara, Ashuma, Bayna, Lusala, Pashi,
Chusuka, Toga, Tambi, Shashi, Dashu, Kuda, Tanda, Helalu, Gatu, Tokto, Shap,
Daba, Naynana, Bondu, Kiku, Chaska, Gali, Unaro, Natira, Ahadgna, Yawnda,
Gonra, Bahashi, Ignu, Chioke, Kumba, Uhawku, Hawkna, Kikaru, Zarazu, Izegbe and
Rombu have been created by me and are not allowed to be used without my
permission. I appolgize if any are the same in other fan-fictions, so email me,
or I can do nothing about it. Any comments, then email me as well.
Warning:
You obviously won't get this if you haven seen Disney's The Lion King, (you should also watch The Lion King II: Simba's Pride and The Lion King 1 1/2 (A.K.A III).
Parts
I The Cub
Chapters
1. New Ones
2. Meersha's Name
3. Lions
5. Mud and Trouble
5. Benighted Water
6. Leader Stress
7. First Carcass
8. One Eyed-Freak
9. The Rogues' Revelation
10. Fleeing
II The Adolescent
Chapters
11. Deformed Elephants
12. A Cheetah's Weakness
13. The Dawn of Adolescence
14. Cubs Once More
15. A Free Ride
16. Because of Study
17. An Old Face
18. A New Journey to Start
19. Captured
20. Izegbe
21. Two of the Drie-Leeu
22. The Deal
23. A Hunt
24. What was Left
25. Killing the Killer
III The Adult
Chapters
26. A New Meersha
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
My Characters
Meersha (Daughter of Kinara and Ashuma,
litter-sister of Kasha, Banjija, half-sister -younger- of Chusuka)
Banjija (Son of Kinara and Ashuma,
litter-brother of Kasha and Meersha, half-brother -younger- of Chusuka)
Kasha (Son of Kinara and Ashuma, litter-brother
of Banjija and Kasha, half-brother -younger- of Chusuka)
Kinara (Lioness of White-Feather Pride, mother
of Meersha, Kasha, Banjija and Chusuka)
Ashuma (Leader of the White-Feather Pride)
Bayna (Lioness of White-Feather Pride, mother
of Lusala and Pashi)
Lusala (Daughter of Bayna and Ashuma, sister of
Pashi)
Pashi (Daughter of Bayna and Ashuma, sister of
Lusala)
Chusuka (Lioness of White-Feather Pride,
daughter of Kinara and Tambi, sister -elder- of Kasha, Banjija and Meersha,
mother of Toga)
Toga (Son of Chusuka and Ashuma)
Dashu (Once leader of White-Feather Pride,
father of Kinara)
Tambi (Once leader of White-Feather Pride,
father of Chusuka)
Shashi (Lioness-shaman of White-Feather Pride)
Kuda (Lioness of White-Feather Pride)
Tanda (Lioness of White-Feather Pride)
Helalu (Lioness of White-Feather Pride)
Gatu (Lion cub in White-Feather Pride)
Tokto (Lion cub in White-Feather Pride)
Shap (Lion cub in White-Feather Pride)
Daba (Lion cub in White-Feather Pride)
Naynana (Lion cub in White-Feather Pride)
Bondu (Lion cub in White-Feather Pride)
Kiku (Lion cub in White-Feather Pride)
Chaska (Rogue lion)
Part I:
The Cub
I
New Ones
The sun was shining high as a lioness poked her
head carefully out of a den in the swaying, yellow savannah. Her pink nose
twitched as she sniffed the dry air and her ears kept perked. For a few
minutes, she examined the enviornment, before climbing out and padding quietly
around. She sniffed the ground and the crisp blades of the long grass, feeling
more confident at the fresh scent of near territory marking. The lioness
continued to examine the surrounding land before coming back and looking inside
the den once more, smiling down at three little fur balls of gold. They looked
hopefull at her but she shook her head and replied warmly to their questioning
expressions, "Not yet, my loves." The litter mewed in protest, but
she hissed once, and they all fell silent. She turned back around and headed
straight for the middle of the territory. Atop a near hill sat a great lion,
his gold/red mane swaying freely in the wind. She climbed the Great Knoll - it
was called just that - and quickly and nuzzled her mate.
"Are they out? Is it time?" asked the lion eagerly,
turning his giant head to look at the lioness.
She shook her head and exclaimed gently, "Have patience,
Ashuma. They have yet to come." and she purred.
He nodded. "I've gone through this before..." Ashuma
heaved an anxious sigh. "And every time I feel they should come too soon,
Kinara."
"It's all right. A good father should be like that." she
exclaimed with a grin.
Before long, another lioness turned up, leading but two small lions
behind her. Ashuma jumped up and cried, "The first ones out!"
At this abrupt shout, the lioness crouched protectively in front of
her young ones, hissing out and growling warningly, fur bristling. The leader
shook his mane, and couldn't help a chill snake up his spine and the fur on his
back stand slightly. He growled an apology and waited. The slim lioness of pale
yellow soon accepted, and he walked slowly over to her and the other two, down
the giant hill and on flat land once more. Kinara watched her leader go to the
other mate and greet her with a warm, grumbling roar before picking up the
scent of the cubs. He sniffed them both and licked each one, finding out they
were each female. Proudly he stood over his offspring.
The lioness laid down and began to groom both, just as a third
female came up from a near hill, one small cub in her mouth and four others
toddling near her, nervously. Ashuma - taking more caution for his first
impression - carefully padded over and greeted them all into the world.
"He does that all the time," the first lioness said
annoyed, as Kinara came over to her and her cubs.
"He is just anxious each time." she exclaimed, with a
chuckle.
"Ashuma has done it two times...this is the third now. He does
it each time to me."
"And each time you're the first one out, Bayna."
Bayna shrugged, after grooming her second cub and asked, "Where
are yours? Waiting for the last moment again, I see."
"As always," Kinara said, with a grin.
"Actually," she then whispered, leaning down to Bayna's ear as it
twitched. "If this is Ashuma's last time in bearing cubs here, then we
must take extra procaution."
Indeed Ashuma had been leader of this pride for a few years now, and
this was the third time he gave cubs to his mates. He was almost over his prime
and zenith, but he still remained buff and strong, looking somewhat like a
cross between Mufasa and Simba. Bayna nodded, watching her little ones play as
they tumbled over each other, mewing and meowing.
"They're beautiful, Bayn. What do you call them?" asked
Kinara.
"I call this one," she nosed the first who came over to
suckle. "Lusala. And the other, Pashi."
Kinara nodded.
"What of yours, Kinara? What have you named them?"
"The first two were males. I named them Kasha and Banjija. The
last was female, and because these litters are probably Ashuma's last, as he is
getting old, I will let her father name her."
Pashi soon joined her sister as her mother nodded.
"When do you think you shall take them out?" Bayna then
questioned, curiously.
Kinara shrugged. "I'm not sure. Probably within a couple suns.
But look around you, lioness! More than half the pride's mothers have not yet
let their cubs out."
Bayna sighed. "Yup. I'm just an early one. Almost as excited as
Ashuma."
"And why shouldn't you be?"
Bayna smiled.
For the rest of the day, more cubs popped their heads out of the
dens for the first time. Another sun and the rest were out. All except Kinara's
cubs.
II
Meersha's Name
On the third sun, Kinara found herself near the
Great Knoll, where many lionesses watched their little ones play and bask out
in the sun.
"Cub?" a small voice said as she looked down to find a cub
in front of her. It was Pashi.
"No, not yet," Kinara answered, smiling. She looked up at
Bayna then, who was grooming Lusala upon a flat rock.
"Kinara, for Heaven's sake, the whole White-Feather Pride has
let their little ones outside." Bayna exclaimed. "When are you to let
yours out?"
Kinara sighed, then nodded and said, "OK, OK. I guess you're
right. I'll go get them."
"Good, 'cause my little ones are anxious to play with
yours." She chuckled as Kinara trotted off.
After turning right, on the other side of the hill, Kinara stopped
in front of a silghtly smaller and darker lioness, though her face resembled
something of Kinara. "Chusuka!" she cried in delight.
"Mother," the one called Chusuka purred, and they nuzzled.
"I'd like you to meet Toga."
Kinara leaned down to sniff a tiny, brown lion cub who sat at his
mother's front paws. He shied back, though.
"Toga, this is your grandmother, Kinara." Chusuka told her
little one.
"Well, Toga, nice meeting you." Kinara said. "Would
you like to meet your aunt and uncles?"
"Mother, I'm sorry. But Toga was just going to get his bath and
then nurse."
Kinara quickly exclaimed, "No need to be sorry, my daughter! A
cub needs what he needs."
"But don't let me miss my brothers and sis," Kinara's
oldest daughter added with a wink.
Her mother nodded before continuing to the northwest.
"Ashuma," she said as she passed the leader. "Come. Follow
me."
For a while, the lioness and lion traveled out near the borders of
the large territory. Only a half hour later they came to a small den,
surrounded by rocks.
"Ashuma," Kinara stated as she sat down in front of it,
staring at her mate. "There is something special about this litter.
Please, I'd like you to name the female."
Ashuma blinked in surprise and tilted his head slightly, like a cub.
"What is it? Why would I do that and not you?"
"Because I already named my sons."
After a moment's hesitation, Ashuma asked, "Kinara, what is
it?"
"Huh?"
"Are you all right? Is there something you want to tell
me?" She shook her head, which just made the lion growl, "Kin, tell
me. As mate and leader, we must have honosty between each other. Now spill
it."
Kinara sighed heavily. "Ashuma," she whispered, gravely.
"I was the last in the White-Feather Pride to give birth, and in the last
litter born, the female was the last who came out into the world. Now I find
this special."
"How so?"
"Because, Ashuma...my leader...I fear that she will be your
last cub...ever..."
Ashuma blinked and couldn't help his head from tilting once more,
before he straightened up and chuckled. "I'm strong as steal!" And
his claws extended as he churned the dirt with them. "Is that it,
Kinara?" She nodded as he went on. "I shall name your cub, yet I see
no reason for it. You're the mother, it is the law in our pride for the mother
to name the cubs unless she is dead or if there is some special or important
reason for it. I really think you are overreacting, though. But if you see it
as this important..." and he bowed.
Kinara forced a weak smile on her face before stepping aside,
letting Ashuma crawl into the den. He nuzzled the three, picking up the scents
of them all.
"All right," he said, looking down at the middle fur ball,
who stared back up at him with baby blue eyes. He chuckled, before continuing.
"I shall call you...Meersha." and with no further thought, he licked
the single female.
Ashuma climbed right back out and turned to Kinara. "The law
has been broken." he stated.
She shook her head. "No...Like I said, this was important to
me..."
He blinked, then nodded and Kinara crawled into the small dirt cave,
only to come back out with a mouthfull of two cubs. Ashuma reached in with a
giant paw and carefully pulled out the last, fragile lion.
"Mama!" it called in fright, scrambling from his father's
claws and toddling after Kinara.
Ashuma didn't mind the fright in his son, but he carefully trailed
behind, keeping an eye on the family.
"Who is this young one, Kinara?" he asked, watching the
one toddle in front of him.
Kinara rolled her brown eyes as she sat her two down and looked at
the one behind her. "That's Banjija. The other male is Kasha."
Suddenly, the lion leapt to her, knocking Banjija over as he passed
him, and he began to nuzzle Kinara, which took her by surprise. "They are
beautiful!" he exclaimed.
Kinara soon returned his words with a warm expression, and they
licked each other...
An abrupt roar shot out from the distance. Quickly, Ashuma ran out
toward the center of the territory where the pride was bound to be. Kinara
stayed behind to hustle her cubs back into the den once more.
"Aw, Mama," cried Banjija. "We go outside-side?"
"No. Back inside. All of you." she ordered, nosing them
into the den. "Stay here. I'll be right back."
With that, she ran off in the direction Ashuma had gone.
III
Lions
Before long, Kinara found herself with the other
lionesses, who watched in horror as two younger males approached their leader.
"Who are you and what are you doing in our lands?" growled
Ashuma, taking guard of his lionesses.
The pride seemed cubless, as all the young ones had been put back
into their dens just moments ago.
One lion, who's head and body shape were the same as Kovu, stalked
forward, heavy muscles moving beneath his wheat colored coat as his gray-brown
mane waved in the mocking breeze. "We have come to take these
lands." he answered with a crude voice.
"Over my dead body!" Ashuma blurted, outraged as his fur
prickled and claws unsheathed themselves.
"Exactly." the darker of the two quickly replied. A smirk
had grown on his wicked face, which showed itself on what would seem Scar's
cranium.
With another roar, Ashuma dashed aside as the pair thrust themselves
through the atmosphere at him. Hastily raising a giant paw, Ashuma smacked it
down on the buffer of the two. The rogue's pained snarl was blanketed over by
the hisses and growls of the encouraging lionesses.
"Mother," said someone from Kinara's right as she sat
down. "What's happening?"
"They're rogue lions, Chusuka," exclaimed Kinara gently,
yet her desperate eyes did not detach themselves from the quarrel.
"They've come to take control of the pride."
"Why can't we do something to help?" the younger lioness
snapped with a strained voice.
"It's not that easy, my daughter. It's the way of life. It's
nature's law. We must let only the leading male fight the attempting
rogue or rogues."
"But it's so awful!"
Kinara quickly nuzzled Chusuka, putting a paw around her in comfort.
The fight carried on; loose chunks of grass and dirt flew out
everywhere as the lions tackled each other. Blood was lightly shed, and
struggling roars filled the air, like the exact music used from the wilderness
when there was a brawl.
Kinara squinted, attempting to hold her tears as she let her claws
gently kneed the ground. It was hard enough not to leap out and help her mate
as she felt her stomach tighten into a knot. The rest of the pride snarled out
for their leader, raising their forepaws to sweep the air.
Finally, Ashuma gave one last roar before jumping on one of their
backs and briefly burying his teeth into the skin, only to rip out skin and
blood, along with a part of the lion's mane. A cry of agony escaped the
stranger's saliva and blood crusted lips, and the two rogues were sent off
running with Ashuma on their tails.
Kinara heaved a sigh of relief as the White-Feather Pride roared and
cheered out. For now, experience triumphed over youth, though none of the
lionesses could put this memory aside...What if it happened tomorrow, when
Ashuma was even older? Or the next day? One thing was for sure: it would happen
in the near future.
"He did it!" one lioness suddenly cried in joy. "He
beat them!"
"I knew he could," someone else exclaimed with a grin.
"They're gone, Mother," Chusuka said, smiling.
"Yes. But they'll come back." Kinara replied with an
inward nod as she looked strongly, but hurt, at her daughter.
"Huh?"
"They'll come back. And eventually they'll conquer him...and
we'll be theirs."
Chusuka blinked in astonishment, before she hissed, "Mother!
How dare you? Don't say that!"
Kinara flinched, her own words slowly weakening her soul, as well as
the outrage in her daughter's tone. "Chusuka...it always happens."
"No!"
"It happened with your father."
"What?" Chusuka whispered in shock.
"Your father was Tambi. You were the last of Tambi's, just as
your new sister Meersha, was the last of Ashuma's...Your father was chased off
by a younger lion...by Ashuma...and Ashuma himself will be in the near
future."
"You're lying! My father wasn't Tambi! He was..." Chusuka
trailed off, and her eyes widened.
"Trust me. Tambi was your father."
"This can't be," the younger lioness suddenly sobbed, only
to bury her face into Kinara's fur.
"Why is this such a shock, Chusuka?" uttered her mother,
but Chusuka did not answer.
Before long, one older lioness leapt atop the great knoll and roared
out, "We must set up a nersery for our little ones...else I fear for them.
Those rogues...they will return some sun. We want to be ready."
The pride murmered to each other in agreement, and the lionesses began
to seperate, scrambling off to check on their cubs.
"Chusuka," Kinara then whispered. "You might not like
it. None of us do, but it is the way of life. It is a good thing. Otherwise
there could be inbreeding."
Chusuka's nod surprised Kinara, though, and her daughter stood,
wiping away one of her own tears with a forepaw. "Does that mean Ashuma
has to leave?"
"Some day..."
Just then, Ashuma turned up.
"Chusuka, go. Check on little Toga." Kinara ordered, and
again, her daughter nodded before taking off to the east. "Ashuma, are you
OK?" she then queried with concern, turning to her mate.
"Yeah. I'm fine. Those jerks didn't stand a chance!" he
answered, proudly. "I told ya, I'm strong as steal."
"Ashuma, go to Shashi and get some medicine for those
wounds," she adviced, wearily gazing at the many bruises, cuts and blood
splots which decorated his warn body.
"How are the cubs?" he quickly asked.
"Fine." was all the lioness could muster, before taking
off to the west to ensure her answer.
"Mama," said someone later on, and Kinara crawled into the
den, laying down and letting her body curl around her cubs.
"Yes, Kasha?"
"Why we no go out?"
"Because it's too dangerous out there right now."
"When can we go out then?" the girl suddenly mewed, hopping
up. "I wanna go out now!"
"Yeah, me too!" Banjija cried.
Kinara shook her head. "Maybe when the sun rises...at dawn,
perhaps..."
The cubs all huffed and their mother laughed, before huffing
mockingly back.
~~~
A week later, Kinara could be found, leading
her cubs out from the den and to the pride.
"We finally get t' get out," said Kasha
happily.
His voice was more mature, as was his slightly bigger body, and his
grammer was noiticibly advanced.
"Yeah, it's been forever, Mama! What took us so long? I mean,
why'd you keep us in?" asked Banjija as he toddled under his mother. He,
too, had grown.
Kinara sighed and replied with iritation, "You're out, aren't
you? You should be greatful."
"Why?" asked Meersha, curiously.
She shook her head. "Just stay near me, my little ones."
Before long, they met up with the pride.
"Kinara! I see you finally let them out," exclaimed
Shashi, the old, gold lioness who had been the one to announce the nersery.
"Yeah..." Kinara said and added, "After those
rouges...we have to be very careful."
The older lioness laughed and said, "Well don't worry. Bayna's
taking care of the cubs at the nersery. You might want to drop yours off."
"Good idea. Plus I've been wanting to speak with her...Oh and,
Shashi,"
"Yeah?"
"What of Ashuma?"
"He's all right. I took care of his wounds. In fact, most
should be healed by now, 'cept for a few scars."
Kinara nodded, before leading her cubs further east. The trio
waddled under her, eyes wide and ears perked, as they had never seen another
lion before. Shashi, the one which they now spotted, was obviously experienced,
as her muscles looked used, bones seemed ached in trembling athiritus, and eyes
were droopy with wrinkles below them. Of course, past the tattered ears, she
seemed almost youthful in her own way, at least in spirit.
The elder couldn't help but chuckle at the young ones.
"Kin! You finally let them in the eyes of the pride!"
called Bayna.
Just a couple minutes and a few pawsteps later, the family was in
the east of the territory, where several lionesses thrived. The cubs grew
nervous and so huddled closer together, as their mother smiled at her friend.
Bayna was lying down, letting a small cub suckle at her stomach.
"Toga," Kinara smiled. "Why don't you go play with
your aunt and uncles?"
Toga looked up and mewed, "Are you my mama's mama?"
"Yes I am, little one. Now, go play if you're done
suckling."
They were at a place where the ground sunk slightly as the adults
sat on the edge of it, above the cubs who played in this small bowl of land.
Toga nodded and he scrambled back into the nersery. Kasha, Banjija and Meersha
were hesitant at first, but with Kinara's constant nosing and proding, they
toddled after to meet the other cubs.
"I knew you'd be the nersery guard and nurse," Kinara
exclaimed, smiling at Bayna.
"You know me all too well, Kin." and she rolled over to
paw up at her friend playfully. "I love cubs."
"Don't we all...Listen, Bayna." Kinara then said, leaning
down and lowering her voice. "I've seen the rouges stalk us. They're
always at the borders these days."
"Not only them,"
"Huh?" she asked, surprised.
"There's another rogue who seems to have made his home near the
western edges of our pride's territory." Kinara gasped, but Bayna went on
before further reaction. "And there's also a pregnant lioness traveling
with a young lion. They might take us over as well...I guess word's gotten out
of Ashuma's lack of youth."
Kinara nodded gravely. "First Dashu, then Tambi, now
Ashuma."
"It's all right, Kin."
"But our cubs...I mean I knew my sons would have to go some
time, but now I don't even know if I get to keep Meersha."
"Look," Bayna exclaimed, sitting up and watching the cubs
with her friend, tail swishing in the grass, expression distant. "If
Ashuma is able to keep us until the cubs are adolescents, then you know Meersha
can stay. And if he's able to keep up even after that, then perhaps Kasha and
Banjija can stay as well...if they're willing to take over the pride."
"But," Kinara said, but Bayna interrupted. "And," she went
on. "If they must leave, then maybe one sun they shall come back and take
over, which would be even better. You know, when you stop producing cubs
yourself."
Kinara nodded once more, feeling better at her sister's reasurence.
"I'm sure they'd find their own pride, though," she then
said. "Probably far from here."
Bayna rolled over on her side as a couple cubs came to suckle
hungrily at her stomach. Before long, more joined.
"Mind lending a paw?" Bayna asked, giggling now. "Or
a belly, I mean,"
Kinara laughed and laid down, allowing the others, as well as her
own to nurse, assured by her friend's sudden calmness.
IV
Mud and Trouble
When the cubs were older, they would be found
outside much of the time; playing and pouncing each other and the rest of the
little lions, and taking naps, being groomed and watched over by anyone who was
at the nersery at the time. Soon they were nearly twice the size than they were
when first introduced to the outside world.
Meersha was a small puff ball, but a wild and strong one at that.
She had a beautiful golden coat, the same as Simba - if anything, she looked
like a girl Simba. Brave and mischievous as him, too. Her eyes were still a baby
blue and developing a perminant color, but she - more like Nala - was the best
at wrestling, and so easily pinned her brothers and other cubs. Usually, her
playfullness ended her in trouble, having pounced someone while one of the
elders were telling a story, or having been discovered rolling about in a near
puddle of mud.
Kasha, the oldest, looked much like his mother. Like her, he was
slim and tall, especially for a male cub. His eyes had already turned an
unusual crimson-brown, and the tuff of his tail was the same mixture. This
little one, blanketed in thin, golden fur, could always be seen as the leader
of the trio. He was the one to hault a fight in its tracks. To stop an argument
before it started. Of course, most of the time one could and would easily spot
the blanket of his presumptions that so wrapped him up at the thought of being
the future leader of the White-Feather Pride.
Banjija was a brownish gold, but resembled his father in many other
ways. The most distinct feature of his physical form were his ears; both
circlular, but instead, ending in a strange point where a few red strands would
stick up in the air, making him look similar to a bob cat or lynx. Indeed his
personality was different than that of a normal lion's. Like his sister, he
caused much of his own trouble. Unlike Meersha, though, he was keen to getting
his own way, even if that meant cracking the rules of his parents, and the
pride itself. A troublemaker, but one who loved it, and was generally not sorry
as his sister usually was.
Normally, the siblings would be found together in a game of tag or a
fun wrestle, but all three had made friends with the other cubs as well.
"How far d' ya think it goes?" asked Pashi, who had become
one of Meersha's best friends.
Lusala shook her head and suggested, "Why don't you stick your
paw in and find out?"
Squealing, the little cub leapt back replying, "Ah, no!"
Lusala as well, had been a great friend of Meersha's. If Meersha
wasn't with her brothers, then she was most likely with the twins. In fact, it
was that day that Banjija and Kasha were off with their mother and another cub
named Bondu, at a water hole in the south. Meersha decided to stay with her
friends, scrambling around in play, just a few yards north of the Great Knoll.
A lioness called Kuda was watching them, while the twins' mother kept at her
spot in the nersery. It was a rare moment for any of the cubs to move from that
nersery actually, even with a protector, and just for a temporary time.
"Please," Lusala had begged her mother.
"Yeah, please? We won't go far," Pashi had gone on.
Meersha had said to her own mother, "And Kuda said she would
watch over us."
Bayna sighed as Kinara looked curiously at her.
"Weeell..." Bayna had finally thought aloud.
"I think it'd be all right, don't you? Then I could take the
boys out to the water hole they've been wanting to go to." Kinara had
replied to the word.
Having overheard the conversation, Banjija and Kasha scrambled to
the edge of the nersery where their mother stood, Banjija pushing over a cub as
they did so.
"Yeah!" he had cried. "Please? And Bondu gets t'
come, too!"
The parents had given in, but that was then. Now the females were
romping in the savannah's overgrown yellow and gold blades, laughing and
meowing, before stopping yet again at the mud puddle they had been at before.
"C'mon, let's roll around in it!" Meersha then suggested.
"Oh no," Pashi said. "I don't want to get-"
But she was interrupted as a big ball of wet dirt had splattered in
her face. As her sister sputtered and coughed it out, Lusala just laughed,
rolling onto her back and sweeping the air with her paws. Meersha smirked at
what she had done.
"Pff! Yuk!" the cub cried, managing to shake the rest off
her face. "Why'd ya do that?" she growled.
"Because," Meersha simply said as she shrugged, looking to
the puddle again.
"Now let's see how far it goes," Lusala then exclaimed,
sitting up, the laughter now absent.
As she glared playfully, Pashi aburptly took a paw to splash the mud
up at Meersha's face.
"Take that!" she yelled, and Lusala was howling with
laughter once more.
"Ah!" Meersha cried, before leaping into the puddle
completely.
"What are you three doing?" they heard a voice call,
jerking their heads up.
Kinara was walking over to them with Bondu and her two sons trailing
behind her. Kuda had lifted her skull as her gaze fell heavily on the lioness,
and her face looked worried as she stood.
"Mud!" screeched Meersha's mother after a loud gasp, and
the explanation caused Kuda to flinch, her expression now hurt as she padded
over to her friend and half-sister.
"I am sorry," she uttered, ears low. "I had been
dozing off when..."
"It's all right," Kinara quickly replied, shaking her
head, before she looked up at Meersha. "She knows she's not supposed to be
getting dirty anyway."
Meersha looked almost the same as Kuda, before she slowly walked
over to Kinara, auds, tail and cranium lowered. "Aww, c'mon, Mama. It was
nothin'." she said, cheekily.
Banjija and Bondu just snickered at her, and she returned them with
a glare. Kasha sat down, a look of strong pride on his face as he curled his
tail around himself. Why pride? Perhaps because he was the one following the
rules, and his younger sister had not.
Kinara raised an unseen brow as her daughter looked up at her, baby
blue eyes showing innocence, except of course, the muddied coat.
"All right. Lusala, Pashi, come. We'll take you back to your
mother for a bath and you, too, Meersha...Let's get back to the nersery,"
she stated, nodding to the south where the Great Knoll was, and the nersery
itself.
As Bondu and Banjija followed, they seemed disappointed that Kinara
had let Meersha go off so easily.
Kind of a boring chapter, I know, but I had to
add someting to their cubhood.
V
Benighted Water
One sun, when the three siblings were growling
and meowing, rolling around and batting at one another, Kasha squealed,
"Can't catch me!"
"Wanna bet?" Meersha replied, excitedly as she leapt from
a large rock, landing on her brother and they tumbled around sideways.
"Ha! Got'ch ya again!" she cried, standing over her brother
trumphantly.
"Pinned again by your own sister!" Banjija laughed as he
pounced from a near tuff of golden grass.
"Yeah? Well you try pinning her!" Kasha snapped back.
Meersha only giggled as she scrambled off her brother and began to
charge at the other one.
She was a small puff ball, but a wild and strong one at that.
Meersha had a beautiful golden coat, the same as Simba - if anything, she
looked like a girl Simba. Brave and mischievous as him, too. Her eyes were
still a baby blue and developing a perminant color, but she - more like Nala -
was the best at wrestling, and so easily pinned her brothers and other cubs.
Usually, her playfullness ended her in trouble, having pounced someone while
one of the elders were telling a story, or having been discovered rolling about
in a near puddle of mud.
Kasha, the oldest, looked much like his mother. Like her, he was
slim and tall, especially for a male cub. His eyes had already turned an
unusual crimson-brown, and the tuff of his tail was the same mixture. This
little one, blanketed in thin, golden fur, could always be seen as the leader of
the trio. He was the one to hault a fight in its tracks. To stop an argument
before it started. Of course, most of the time one could and would easily spot
the blanket of his presumptions that so wrapped him up at the thought of being
the future leader of the White-Feather Pride.
Banjija was a brownish gold, but resembled his father in many other
ways. The most distinct feature of his physical form were his ears; both
circlular, but instead, ending in a strange point where a few red strands would
stick up in the air, making him look similar to a bob cat or lynx. Indeed his
personality was different than that of a normal lion's. Like his sister, he
caused much of his own trouble. Unlike Meersha, though, he was keen to getting
his own way, even if that meant cracking the rules of his parents, and the
pride itself. A troublemaker, but one who loved it, and was generally not sorry
as his sister usually was.
The three were playing near the southern borders of the territory.
Luckily their mother was near by, basking in the sun alongside Bayna and
Chusuka - whos' cubs were back at the nersery - and a cubless lioness named
Tanda.
"I'm surprised you let your cubs out this far," commented
Tanda, tail swishing in the overgrown grass.
"Yeah, especially 'cause of the rogues," agreed Bayna as
her ears twitched.
Kinara rolled her eyes as Chusuka nodded. "I remember when you
wouldn't let me out of your sight," she recalled.
"Oh c'mon, they're right over there. And they're in my sight."
Kinara growled, a tone of annoyance overlapping any warmth in her voice right
then.
Those few yards away, down a small hill, the cubs continued to romp
and play, kicking and pawing at each other with an ocassional nip. It was
Banjija who then whispered something to his brother, and the two nodded. Before
Meersha could react, they bounded away, their cackles filling the air. She
snarled and ran after, only to see each of them sitting upon a flat rock, near
yet another hill - or small cliff was more like it, since the land behind the
rock dropped straight down a few feet.
"Can't get us!" she heard Kasha call as he stuck his
tongue out, blowing a rasbery.
"Yeah, slow poke!" Banjija meowed out.
Huffing, she abruptly leapt, only to fly right passed as they each
ducked. The cub went tumbling through the air, down the back of the cliff
behind the rock that her two brothers had been on. Before anything else
happened, her face met the ground with a hard smack. Getting up, she staggered
with blurred vision, only to shake it - as well as the throbbing sensation in
her skull - away and look clearly up at her siblings who were now bawling with
laughter, rolling over on the rock. Once more, she huffed and started away,
further south, leaving Kasha and Banjija behind as she reflected on hurt
feelings with a few mumbles.
"Oh, c'mon!" yelled Banjija. "Don't be such a
zebra!"
"Meersha, wait!" pleaded her other brother.
Meersha ignored the insult, plotting her revenge, when suddenly, her
ears perked and her eyes landed upon a large patch of green grass. She tilted
her head at the sight for, in all of her short life, she had only seen blades
of gold and yellow. Quickly snatching this rare opportunity, she crawled into
the green tuff curiously, her nose twitching. What lie hidden in this patch,
made her gasp. Right in the cub's view, was a small, swirling pool of crystal,
clear water. Perhaps it was the cool shivers this pool seemed to coerce down
her spine which caused the intake of breath. Or the fact that it had not rained
lately, and with no mud encircling its fine borders, it was made clear that
this was not an ordinary piece of nature. Whatever it was that made her gasp,
she placed her small paws on the edge of the puddle, gazing in awe and
fascination at its presence.
"Kasha! Banjija! Meersha!" her mother's voice rang through
the night air. "I told you to stay in my sight! Come back this
instant!"
But Meersha ignored the lioness's verbal distress, now gentling
nosing the surface of the cool liquid. Shivering, Meersha could feel a second
chill creep up her back as her fur bristled - something she had never done
before. The young lion could do nothing else while the water began to spin and
swirl, churning even faster than before. For a moment, she even thought it
produced light, yet it soon turned dark, giving the puddle a bleek, eluminating
sensation that came right into her, causing her heart to race and her breathing
to increase.
"Meersha!" Kinara roared out, closer now, a tone of
urgency in her voice.
Still, the cub watched. A second later, something happened: a
picture appeared in the water. It was of a frosty night, out in a far off
savannah land where the clouds seemed to dip down to accompany the grass. The
moon was high and full, though, and somehow was able to shine its reflecting
light from the sun, slicing right through the fog. Then, without warning, there
was a cat-like creature. Black as the night itself, it snuck around, in any
bush, behind any tree it could. Meersha gulped and quivered at the moving
pictures in the water, yearning to take a step back, yet her legs wouldn't
listen. Suddenly, the unusual animal looked to her! It was as if the whole
thing was taking place, right in the water itself. The crimson eyes narrowed as
it creeped closer and closer to the surface where she herself was exposed...
"MEERSHA WHITE-FEATHER!" someone abruptly snarled behind
her.
Meersha jumped in surprise and tumbled backwards, only to find
herself staring up at the angry face of Kinara as she landed on her back. For a
moment, the young one pondered about what was scarier: the eyes of the creature
in the water, or the eyes of her own mother right then.
"Mama, I - " she started desperately, scrambling to find
words. But Kinara grabbed her and turned around, heading up a sloping part of
the small cliff and padding up the knoll behind it, muttering muffled words
about how her cub's father was going to hear about her wandering, and how she
should be ashamed.
~~~
"Meersha," her father growled lowly.
"I cannot beleive you wandered away like that."
"But, Dad," said Meersha, defensively. "It was Kasha
and Banjija's fault!"
Ashuma sighed and shook his head, before replying, more calmly,
"How so?"
"They, um...They made me fall down the cliff!"
Ashuma blinked and looked to Kinara, who sighed as well, turning to
look down at her other cubs.
"What?" they both asked at the same time, innocently.
"What happened?" Ashuma firmly questioned, demanding an
answer.
They were all now at the den, away from the pride. It was near
evening as the sun began to fall, leaving streaks of red, orange and pink in
the darkening sky.
"This was so not our fault," growled Banjija,
glaring at his sister.
"You didn't answer me." his father replied.
"She was being annoying so we led her near the cliff."
exclaimed Kasha, quietly. "She jumped and fell down it...But!" he said,
before his parents could react. "she was the one who wandered off!"
Kinara and Ashuma both turned to Meersha, who's ears drooped.
"But...but I saw something. I saw grass that was green!"
Her mother, for a second time, sighed and leaned down to nose her.
"Yes. Once in a while you'll see patches of green, honey. But you don't go
wandering off!"
"But," she went on. "It was in the green
grass!"
Ashuma asked curiously, "What was?"
"I...um..." she attempted to the best way to describe it.
"Water...Uh...it was like showing me something...!"
"Look, you just don't go off by yourself." Kinara stated.
"You don't believe me, do you? !" she cried, frusterated.
"Why would we believe a zebra?" Banjija laughed, though he
quickly regretted it.
Ashuma snarled and nipped at his son, and the cub instently fell
silent as his siblings smirked.
"Even if...water shows you something, you don't go off by
yourself." Ashuma then ordered. "Is that clear?"
Meersha gave up in trying to argue and convince her parents, and
instead nodded, trying to look guilty as she stared at the ground and pawing at
a pebble.
"Good."
With that, the leader began to make his way back to the pride. It
was at the top of a small hill that he haulted in his tracks, looking back at
them, questioningly. Kinara nodded.
"Let's go," she said to her cubs.
"Huh?" asked Kasha. "But what about the den?"
"It's time to move to the main den in the middle of the territory,
with the rest of the pride. All the cubs are moving there now," she
exclaimed, voice now warm as she grinned.
The three excitedly trailed behind their mother, who followed
Ashuma. When they arrived at the main den, perhaps an hour or so later, they curled
up with each other to keep warm, surrounded by the other lionesses and their
cubs. A choir of crickets sung outside, and there was a light breeze lacing
through the lands, only to be stopped by the den itself. This den was more of a
cave, and was dug out of the easternmost part of the great knoll in the middle
of the territory.
VI
Leader Stress
The pride's cubs all slept in the main den from
then on, each always nestled into their mother's warm coat. It was Ashuma who
always laid at the enterance, and for the mostpart, was found only half-asleep.
Rumors spread about the two rogues, as well as others who kept an
eye on the pride, just waiting for Ashuma to lose his guard. But no one ever
struck...yet. The thing was, each day this lion grew older, as did the
offspring. If someone didn't challange soon, then the cubs would grow and
become an addition to the pride. Which some would find appealing, as that would
mean more mates, yet others found more threatening, for if they decided to
break the White-Feather law, that could also mean more protection for their
leader.
Yes, every lioness in the pride knew it was to happen soon. The
tension had increasingly grown, seeming to choke everyone in an ongoing
sentiment, whether that be fear, or perhaps anger. Even the cubs stirred at the
unseen emotions of their parents as they pondered to each other. Older
lionesses had seen it happen in their life, if not once, more. It was to happen
again. Some silently grieved and even feared what was to come, while others yearned
for it to get over with. Still, others felt that it was the right thing to do,
for those were the lionesses nearing the age of reproduction, and they did not
want to mate with their own father, fearing the results of inbreeding.
Ashuma growled to himself. He continued to age, and the fear of
losing the pride climbed higher for him as it began to flow through his veins.
Soon, wrinkles below his eyes took place as his fur and ears became tattered,
always twitching, always perked. Streaks of gray barely began to show through
his mane, caused both by the decrease of youth, and the stress. Sometimes he
would be found muttering to himself, about how this was always his pride. At
night, he rarely caught sleep, and when he did, he was usually half-awake. Any
time he got it fully, the lion dreamt of the days he had conquered the last
leader of this pride; Tambi. More often than not, he snarled and growled,
kicked and twitched in his rare sleep.
The present leader soon became so paranoid, that he did not talk to
anyone, just watched them from atop the Great Knoll in the heart of his
territory, which he went on to marking every day. More than once he did so, and
in the same places. He stalked the borders, the grounds and the plains, the
hills and much more, leaving his scent and scaring off any near animal, even if
it was wandering and easy-to-catch prey. Every time anyone went off to the
water hole, Ashuma followed. He would always glance behind his back, before
moving forward once more, warn muscles rippling beneath his thin coat. Now, he
sat on the Great Knoll, watching, waiting for anything and anyone. His physical
image appeared wary and old, even when he attempted to seem strong. Ashuma
never allowed anyone to wander, always keeping every lioness in his sight.
Before long, he neglected the cubs, though. If one came to play with
their father, he would either pad away or bat them off, even if his cuffing was
hard enough to make them bleed. Soon, the White-Feather Pride feared for their
daughters and sons, always watching their leader stalk back and forth in the
same place, or sitting upon the hill, following a lioness, scaring off a
vulnurable antelope, marking the territory not once, twice, but at least three
times in the same spots.
It was when a little cub named Gatu, snuck over to him playfully,
and pounced his father, did the lionesses' fear shoot up. The results of Gatu's
motion, had led him to be without his left eye. Ashuma had just hissed at him,
and walked off, ignoring his son's cries of agony.
After that, Ashuma was not allowed near the nersery.
"If this goes on, then Ashuma will just leave us himself, he's
that insane," growled one of the lionesses.
"If he doesn't, and no one else takes over, then we'll chase him
off." Tanda replied, haughtly.
"What are those rogues waiting for?" questioned another,
who was grooming her sleeping litter.
The pride - all except Ashuma, who was out marking the territory for
the fifth time that day - was in the main den, while the night took over.Their
cubs slept, curled up by their mother's stomach, or resting in their forepaws
as the lionesses discussed the pride life. All were exausted from the hunt
earlier, but none could not let these incidents pass.
"He's just distressed," Bayna said, finishing up cleaning
Pashi and Lusala.
"He's just crazy!" Tanda went on.
Bayna shook her head. "Put yourself in his paws; he's about to
lose his family."
"But we can't go on like this," said someone.
Another exclaimed, "But if someone else takes over, then our
cubs are dead!"
"With the way it's been going, I wouldn't be surprised if our
cubs die if Ashuma stays," said a dominant lioness called Helalu.
This surprised everyone, as she was the closest to Ashuma, due to
her over powering ways. They all looked at her for a moment, and then the
debate went on.
"I don't think Ashuma would do anything to our cubs...purposely
that is." said the young, naive Chusuka, curled around her sleeping Toga.
"But remember the Night-Myst Pride in the far east?" Tanda
aburptly brought up.
They all perked their ears and listened intently. No one knew, but
Meersha peeked out of one eye, before quickly shutting it as she eavesdropped.
The female cub laid between her brothers, right at her mother's right side.
"What about them?" Kinara asked, curiously, after no one
said anything.
"Well," Tanda continued. "They were a nice pride like
us. Their leader was a great lion, but one day, a rogue tried to take over his
pride. He didn't allow it. He couldn't. As ignorant as lions are...Anyway, they
faught almost every day. Finally the rogue decided to stop, and sneak up on him
later, when he was most vulnerable. This is when the present leader began to go
crazy, some said. Others in the pride didn't like the idea of it, and so pushed
it out of their minds, until one day, the leader became as paronoid as Ashuma
is now. Soon, he was so eager to keep his rank and status, that he began
killing off the cubs to get his females to mate again."
The cave was instently filled with a rush of gasps. Meersha had even
joined in, but kept convincingly still when her mother had blinked down at her.
A father, killing his young ones? Rogues did it to other cubs, sure, but the
father of the pride itself? It wasn't right. That was breaking the laws of
nature. The words of this terrifying story seemed to send shivers down the
lionesses' backs.
"I heard it was just a myth," Helalu quickly said.
Tanda shrugged. "It's what I've heard from wandering
animals."
Kinara continued to look down fearfully at her little ones, and
licked them all. In fact, the whole pride did it, nervously keeping an eyes on
their cubs and each other.
"Shashi," a lioness then exclaimed, and they all looked up
at the older lion with questioning faces. "What should we do?"
Shashi stayed on the flat rock she had been laying upon as her old
eyes fell on everyone in the cave. She seemed so calm, and even yawned once.
Shashi was old, and had seen many days. Because of her intellegince, born from
her experience, some even thought of her as a mandrill or shaman.
"Ashuma has been our leader for some years now," she
explained, sitting up stiffly, due to arthritis and cramped muscles. "And
ever since he joined, we made a comitment to be loyal to him."
"But look what he's done to my little Gatu!" cried a
lioness, nuzzling her little one.
When people began to argue, Shashi hissed, and they all fell silent
once more.
"Please, think of the cubs. You'll wake them up." a
lioness pleaded.
"Now, anyone else feel like arguing, or do you want to hear
what I have to say?" Still, there was silence. Shashi took a deep breath,
before going on. "We keep our word and vow. After all, he gave us our
cubs."
"And he's going to soon take them away!" Tanda blurted,
only to feel a sence of regret as the shaman glared at her, and her ears
drooped as she looked like a naughty cub right then.
Shashi nodded to herself and said, "In letting him be our
leader and cub-giver, we made a deal. Now, his time is soon to end, which is the
most important time for us to be with him and encourage him. He was, after all,
a great leader in his prime. Ashuma has given us three great litters. Now, as
the leaders before him, we are to be a loyal pride. As we were to Tambi, Dashu,
and all the others."
Everyone looked up to Shashi, listening to her carefully, for she
had seen the several leaders in the White-Feather Pride, having even born into
it. It was a wonder how she was still alive. In fact, no one knew how old she
really was.
"I agree," Kinara then said, and all eyes turned to her.
Meersha shifted uncomfortably at the feeling of all stares, even if they
weren't looking at her, and she could not see them anyway as her eyes kept
closed. She ended up burying her head into her mother's fur, still trying to
act asleep as Kinara continued. "Ashuma has been a great
leader. He's just nervous, and taking his end to our pride very seriously.
Which is what we wanted for a leader: a serious one. Right? This just proves
how important we are to him."
"I don't think clawing out the eye of a cub is the way to show
it," snarled Gatu's mother's sister.
"Look, you don't have to like it. Even protect your cubs from
him if you wish - heck I'm doing that! But still, he does not have very many
suns left with us anyway," Kinara exclaimed.
"Who?" asked someone.
Everyone gasped in surprise, turning their heads to see Ashuma
entering the den. All the lioness curled protectively around their cubs, but
Ashuma didn't crawl very deep in. Instead, as he had been doing for about a
month now, he continued to lay at the enterence, gazing out into the distance
of the night. "They're coming," he whispered to himself, before
resting his giant cranium on his massive forepaws.
All that night, he muttered to himself, his presence causing the
lionesses to stay up as well.
In the morning, Ashuma was gone.
"Mama," said a small voice, and Kinara looked down to
smile at her daughter.
She licked her. "Yes?"
"Is Daddy OK?"
Kinara blinked in surprise, then sighed. "I...I think he just
needs time to himself, Meersha."
"How come he took Gatu's eye?"
Kinara nuzzled Meersha, but did not answer as Banjija and Kasha both
awoke. Half of the pride was outside, and the rest was still sleeping, their
cubs at their sides.
"C'mon. I'll take you three to the nersery. Then you can have
your breakfast there. The party caught a wildebeast lastnight." she
exclaimed.
The boys jumped up in excitment.
"My favorite!" Banjija said.
Kinara led them outside into the bright morning, yawning and
stretching in the warmth of the bathin sunlight, before dropping them off with
Bayna, Tanda and a couple other lionesses at the nersery.
Banjija and Kasha scrambled over to the cubs, growling and whatnot,
before pouncing at the remains of a wildebeast carcass. But Meersha sat down at
the edge of the sunken land, watching her mother pad out into the grasslands.
She glanced at Bayna and the others curiously, before climbing out of the
nersery and crawling on her tummy through the crisp grass. Meersha blended
right in, but was quickly caught as she accidently hit her head at a lioness's
back left paw. The lioness jumped and turned around, staring down at the cub.
"Sis!" cried Chusuka.
"Hiya, sissy," Meersha said innocently, sitting up.
"What are you doing out here?"
"Uh...well..."
"Meesha, did you sneak from the nersery? You know you're not
supposed to be out here." her older sibling stated firmly.
Meersha grinned cheekily, but Chusuka picked her up and began
carrying her back. "Have you even had breakfast?" she asked, muffled,
with a mouthfull. She nodded in responce, only to have the lioness hault in her
tracks immediatley set her down and lightly paw at her. "Don't lie, I can
smell your hunger."
The little one just rolled over and pawed up at Chusuka.
"Chusuka, what is wrong with Daddy?" she quiered before her older
sister would have time to scold.
Chusuka blinked, having the same expression as their mom, having not
excpected this question. "Well, uh..."
Meersha continued to peer up at her, lying on her back still.
"Well...You need your breakfast, Meersha."
"But I wanna know!"
"Don't worry about it. Now, go have some of that
wildebeast."
Chusuka nosed her sister back into the nersery and turned around,
walking away.
Meersha huffed.
VII
First Carcass
Before long, the cubs were allowed to be
escorted into the savannah. Scorching grasslands and plains would have each one
panting, but of course, the aroma of a freshly killed zebra, antelope or
whatever nature could dish out for the hunting party, would keep the little
ones's ears perked and noses twitching anxiously. They were the last ones to
fill their bellies, but the offspring still enjoyed the walks to the carcass.
Soon after that, they were even brought on hunts.
The hunting party was led by Helalu, who was now stalking a zebra
herd. In fact, the group had been tracking the family of striped equines for a
couple suns now.
"Mom, I'm hungry," complained Banjija to Kinara.
These days, the young were supposed to follow in the tracking
process, so that they could watch the action of the kill itself.
Kinara nodded. "Sometimes it takes a while to get our
food."
"What if you don't get it?" asked Kasha, curiously.
"Sometimes we can scavange," his mother responded, eyes
half closed as they padded through the stiff, golden grass, trying to keep up
with the rest of the group.
Meersha flinched as her stomach seemed to twist in pain, hunger
eating her up inside. Luckily the yearning for water had been satisfied just a
few minutes back at a small water hole.
Suddenly, the cub blinked, as if what she was seeing was a mirage.
But all the cubs of the pride were gazing up at them now, eyes widened in
curiousity. The adults just carried on, though, staring ahead, as if what they
were passing was nothing but normal.
"What about those?" Kasha finally asked, pointing a paw to
the near group of elephants.
Kinara shook her head. "No. We never hunt those. Unless
one is by himself, and usually it has to be really young or old or sick."
"Have you ever had elelphant?" questioned Meersha, trying
her best to ignore the hunger deep in her belly.
Kinara then nodded. "Yes. Once, when I was your age. We were
tracking down a sick baby bull. He had wandered off from his mother and the
group...That just proves to you, always stay close. Got it? All of you."
"We're not babies anymore," huffed Banjija.
The lioness chuckled, watching her growing cubs. They were about a
third her size now. Kinara was greatful she got to stay this long with her
little ones. By now, she was sure that the rouges would've striked.
"Stop blabering back there!" called Helalu. "I can
see them over this knoll! Hurry up!"
"Here comes lunch." Banjija muttered to himself, a
satisfied smirk upon his face, fur bristling.
The little family trailed behind the group up the hill, only to look
down at the many zebras. This was the first time Meersha and the cubs had ever
seen prey whole and alive. She licked her lips, staring at them, carefully
lying on her stomach and copying her mother, who began to crawl forward.
"Mom," whispered Banjija.
"Shh," Kinara hissed at her son.
"Where's Helalu?" he asked, despite her shush.
She snapped at him once and he became quiet. "Just watch."
Meersha stayed yards behind her damè and three other lionesses who
were sneaking up on the zebras, inching closer. She felt the thrill and
adrenaline rushing through her veins as she attempted to hold her breath. Even
if Meersha was meant to only watch, the cub and her siblings, as well as the
others focused, copying exactly what their mothers did. Helalu, and about four
other lionesses seemed to be missing now, though.
Finally, Tanda leapt out, and the startled zebras rushed out over
the plain like a disturbed river of black a white, thunderous hooves pounding
against the dry ground. Meersha jumped up from her spot, trying to get a good
view, but, like her peers, was coerced to follow instead, in order to keep the
hunting party and prey in sight. Just a few moments into the chase, Helalu and the
other three missing lionesses had come from the south, on the other side of the
running herd now. Eyes from each member of the pride fell onto each other,
before looking to the dominant female, and Helalu made a gesture. Suddenly,
they quickly seperated an old zebra from his family. Meersha could hear his cry
of agony shoot through the atmosphere, bucking once as he struggled to catch
up, but the seven hunters were on all sides of the prey now, and the many cubs
were not too far behind, romping through savannah.
Meersha kept one paw after the other, growling as she listened and
watched with fascination, even licking her lips once. She was the first of the
cubs, just a few yards behind her mother and the others. And then...
Helalu pounced. She was able to slow their potential meal, allowing
the others jump on it, and they soon brought it down. The party dug in, just as
the rest of the family was walking slowly from the hill, including Ashuma and
Shashi. All the cubs came running eagerly to the carcass, endaevouring to get
in and snap at the meat. The lionesses either ignored them, shoved them away,
or hissed at the young ones. For once, they were regected and even neglected
when it came to the food.
"What's with this?" asked a cub, plopping down, hurt in his
voice.
"I don't know," growled Banjija. "We should have
first pecks."
"Cubs are last," someone stated firmly. Ashuma. He came
stalking over and pushed away some of the females, digging in.
"He didn't even hunt and he gets it first!" complained
Kasha.
"Lions don't usually hunt. The lionesses do." advised
Meersha as she gazed warily at her family. Kinara had explained this to her
just the day before while still tracking.
Banjija questioned, "Then what's the point of us guys learning to hunt?"
"Yeah," Toga said with a huff.
The cubs were soon attempting to grab their fill again, all except
Gatu and Meersha. She sat, tail curling around her body as she watched her
family chow down, and the younger ones try to eat. Meersha sighed, knowing her
time would eventually come to dig into the meat. Poor, little Gatu would've
been with the rest, if he had been so frightened of his own father now.
"What is it?" she asked Gatu then, paws shifting in the
dirt curiously. "Why aren't you with the rest?"
Gatu looked at her with his right eye.
"Oh," she said, regretfully as she inwardly cringed.
"Why aren't you eating? Or trying to?" he then replied.
The female cub shrugged, staring at the brown-gold one.
Finally, the lionesses finished, along with Ashuma. They laid down,
tummies bulging in the sunlight as they waited for the cubs to finish. Soon,
the scavangers closed in, and the pride headed back.
Each time they hunted, it was the same thing; the cubs watched and
coppied the tracking and stalking, only to run after their mothers who were the
ones to get the prey. Then the little ones would try and eat, but were left
last, even after the paranoid - and even sometimes frightening - Ashuma. Of
course, Meersha and Gatu waited patiently together. Sometimes the pride was not
successful, and so would have to turn back. Other times their tracking lasted
for days, and still, other hunting nights they were left to eat what was left
of a different carcass, temporarily turning into scavanagers. But the pride was
greatful that their cubs were growing, without being interrupted by the rogues
or even their own leader.
Soon, the cubs themselves were able to help bring small prey down.
But always with the grownup lionesses doing most of the work. In fact, a cub
sometimes only managed to jump up on a falling denizen of the savannah, that
had already been struck by the hunting lionesses. On their own, back at the
Great Knoll in the territory center, cubs tried hunting birds and rodents. At
the water hole, they occasionally caught a fish. That didn't last long, though,
as two cubs were taken by the crockadiles, and one was killed by an angry
hippo.
By then end of the next month, another had been sick and died, even
with the help of Shashi. Still, a week after that, the only remaining cubs were
Meersha, Banjija, Kasha, Toga, Gatu, Pashi, Lusala, Tokto, Shap, Daba, Naynana,
Bondu and Kiku.
IIX
One Eyed-Freak
Life went on, but it seemed to be more daunting
each day, and each of those days, Ashuma was growing sicker with stress. The
pride had barely seen him for some time, except after successful hunts, or when
the lion was atop the Great Knoll, eyes scanning the horizion.
It was only when the growing cubs were near early adolescence, did
the leader begin to reveal himself again. Banjija, Kasha, Toga, Gatu and Bondu
would some day, soon show signs of a tiny mane. But, compared to the adults,
they were still small, and definitely considered cubs. In fact, most were only
half the size of their damès.
Ashuma was now seen frequently again. He snarled at each of his
passing sons. His last two litters, he didn't take too kindly to his adolescent
sons either - then again, most lions didn't. But he had never shown the deadly
threats he was now using upon his third litter. It was even more astonishing
that he would act like this, as none had not yet started adolescence. It was
different with these cubs now, though.
The nersery was rarely needed anymore, and they would almost always
go on the hunts. Each one became slightly independent, and the females looked
more like their mothers than ever - just half the size - of course, signs of
cubhood still decorated their faces and bodies.
One day, Meersha would be found in the shade under an acarica, tail
swishing back and forth as she laid next to her mother, for she - like the
others - was still tentative, even though they had grown much. In fact, more
than half the time they would be found around their mothers, and the rest of
the time away, yet in the eye, saftey and protection of the pride.
"Mother," Banjija said one day as he padded over to Kinara
and Meersha. "Kasha's being annoying. He won't shut his mouth about how
he's gonna take over the pride and whatnot!"
This was just another sign showing how their cubhood was almost
completely still present, as it should be.
Kinara rolled her eyes and got up, shaking off a few twigs and
pieces of grass.
"If he doesn't shut up," Banjija went on. "I'm gonna
let 'im have it!"
"No one's letting anyone have anything." growled his
mother, sternly.
Meersha sat up, watching with curiousity, eyes sparkling as she
attempted to surpress a smirk.
"Then just tell him t' shut up!"
"Why don't you shut up?" suggested Meersha, and she
grinned.
"Meersha, hush," Kinara demanded, glancing down at her
daughter.
But Banjija hissed and growled, pointed ears folding back while
glaring at Meersha, who just snickered back.
"You two!" snarled Kinara, just as her other son came
running up.
"OK, I've got it! When Dad let's me have the pride," he
exclaimed, but Banjija smacked him with a paw, scratches left on the male's
face due to extended claws.
"Ah!" and Kasha pounced his brother with a thrusting hiss.
"ENOUGH!" Kinara cried, and pried them away from each
other with her forepaws. "If you're going to act like cubs, then I'll
treat you like them! Kasha, enough with your talk about taking over the
pride."
"But-"
"I said enough! And you, Banjija," she turned to the brown
cub who shyed away slightly. "I don't ever want to see you raking your
brother like that! Understand?"
"He didn't rake me!" Kasha defensively yelled, trying keep
the tough act. "That was a baby scratch!"
"Do-you-under-stand?" Kinara asked, almost threateningly,
though doing her best to hold her temper.
Finally, the two settled down and nodded, saying quietly,
"Yes." as they blushed, feeling the eyes of giggling young lions
around them, including Meersha. Both felt like tiny cubs once more.
"Shut up," Banjija muttered to his sister as he and his
brother padded to the other side of the Hill.
Kinara heaved a sigh and sat down by her daughter again. "I
don't know what I'm gonna do with them."
Just then, Shashi came over. She smiled and Kinara returned the
expression.
"Having a mother and daughter kinda thing?" she asked.
Kinara shook her head. "My sons still act like little
cubs."
Shashi chuckled. "But you've forgotten, that's what they
are."
"I'm gonna go get a drink," Kinara then said after an
iritated mumble, getting up and padding off, leaving the shaman and her cub to
chat.
"So, what's been going on in your life, young Meersha?"
Shashi warmly asked.
Meersha shrugged, before aburptly gasping. "I just
remembered," she said, more to herself.
"What?"
Ever since the night, a few full moons back, she had seen the
picture in the water, Meersha had forgotten about it, especially with the way
her father was acting.
"Shashi," she hesitantly exclaimed.
"Yes?"
"What does it mean if you see a picture of a...uh...the
night...?"
The old lioness raised an unseen brow. "What do you mean?"
"OK. Say you were looking in a puddle of water and suddenly
there's the picture of something."
"Like a reflection?" Shashi suggested.
She shook her head. "No. It wasn't my reflection...and it
moved. It was a whole different place."
"You saw this?"
Meersha inwardly gaped at her own words. "Uh, no...but I had a
dream about it," she quickly lied. "So what does it mean?"
"Hmmm," Shashi thought aloud, before saying, "It
could mean someone is trying to tell you something. From faraway."
"But how? I mean, I didn't even know it...in my dream."
the cub added.
"Meersha, did you really dream it?" a tone of suspision
overlapping her voice.
Meersha nodded. "But, whatever. It was probably nothing."
and she padded off.
"Whatever it was, Meersha," Shashi called. "Don't go
back to it! When it's benighted and unknown, it's never good!"
~~~
"H-hey, st-stop!" someone cried.
Meersha, now on the other side of the Great Knoll, was cocking her
head, gazing at a group of cubs, two of which were continuessly headbutting
Gatu.
"What's wrong?" one called Bondu said. "Don't like to
play?"
Another said, "Maybe this'll teach 'im to talk right,"
The group laughed as the two carried on with their actions, causing
the cub with the one eye to fall backwards in the grass.
Meersha's fur bristled in the golden sunlight, before she haughtly
snarled, "Hey!" jumping between Bondu and Gatu. "What are you
doing to him?"
"Trying t' teach him how to talk!" and they laughed again.
"Toga, shut it," she snapped. "I'll tell my sister on
you."
"Aw, ya wouldn't Meersh? I'm your nephew!" Toga insisted.
Meersha rolled her eyes as Gatu looked fearfully at them. A couple
cubs had gone off, but Bondu stayed.
"Where ya goin', Toga?" Bondu asked as Toga padded away,
glaring at nothing.
But Meersha hissed and batted at Bondu. "Leave Gatu alone. He
can't help the way he talks!"
"But he's a freak! Look, he's got one eye!"
"It was Dad's fault,"
"Y-yeah," Gatu then huffed, puffing out his chest as he
staggered up.
"Shut up, one-eyed-freak! You deserved it,"
Meersha started forward, toward Bondu, who took a step back. The
remaining cubs were watching, half heartedly waiting for a fight. Bondu hissed,
and Meersha returned it. Not just her brothers knew how good of a wrestler she
was. Bondu finally shook his head, before solemly walking away. While the
others groaned at the absence of a brawl and began to scattered, Meersha
smirked, then turned to Gatu.
"Are you OK?" she asked.
Gatu nodded and replied, "Yeah. Th-thank you, M-meersha,"
"You're welcome,"
As she turned to go, Gatu said, "You-you didn't have t-to do
th-that,"
The female cub shrugged as she continued on her way.
IX
The Rogues'
Revelation
Meersha sighed. It was night and, whenever the
cub was able to find sleep, she'd dream about the creature in the water, and
would always awake with a start, breath thrusting out uneasily as beads of
sweat decorated her fur in the glittering moonlight that danced around on the
cave floor. One question always popped into her mind, though: why did she now remember about
it?
Finally, in the middle of the night, the little one gathered her
wits and growled to herself, "I have t' go back..."
With that, she got up, and very slowly crept around her family and
the pride. It was a good thing Ashuma was still out that night, doing the Great
Kings know what. She would not notice that Gatu opened his eyes as she slunked
past...and he followed...
~~~
Meersha stalked out into the cool night air,
letting the swaying grass brush against her legs. She padded quietly
around the hillside, eyes carefully glancing about in case she stumbled in the
presence of Ashuma. Minutes later, the small lion found the familiar cliff she
had pounced and fell over a few months ago. Meersha smirked to herself,
recalling how big it had once looked. She leapt down, paws easily finding the
ground. When she was once more at the tuff of green, the cub stood there,
watching it with awe. Finally, she stepped into the patch of long grass, and
found the puddle. There, Meersha let her eyes wander down into the water.
~~~
Gatu trailed just a few yards behind, sneaking
on his belly, the way his mother and the other lionesses had shown him and the
cubs.
His ears and nose twitched, but he was careful, even with one eye.
Soon, he came near Meersha, and sat up to cock his head, for Meersha
was facing the other way, watching something. In fact, it looked as if she was
frozen like a statue. Slowly, he inched his way over to her, only to hesitantly
whisper, "M-meersha?" No answer. She didn't even look back. "Meersha?"
Taking a deep breath, he reached out a paw and lightly batted it at her.
"AHH!" Meersha's voice suddenly rang out, causing Gatu to
jump back in fright.
"Meersha! W-what's wrong?" he cried.
But Meersha stayed in the same place, paws planted to the earth.
~~~
Back at the den, Banjija had been awake, gazing
at the den wall, when he looked up, hearing the scream. As the cub's ears
perked, he found his sister was gone. Taking a quick gasp, He was about to wake
his mother, when a thought rushed through his head. If
something's up, I better check it out. After all, I'm almost an adult, and
this'll show Kasha that'd I'd be a better leader anyway, so I better just take
care of things myself. Quickly, the ignorant cub snuck past the
sleeping pride, and out into the night.
A cold of rush made him shiver, but he sniffed the ground, quickly
discovering his sister's scent, and following it. But, as he started out, he
stopped and blinked, finding another familiar smell. For a moment, he pondered,
then snarled to himself.
"Gatu!" he furiously hissed, before taking off the way his
sibling had gone.
~~~
Meersha gasped as she peered down into the
water, watching it swirl as it had done when she was younger. As it did so, it
caught her gaze, and would not let it free while a frosty night took place
again, where the same creature was creeping about. Desperately, she attempted
to go, but found herself captive by an invisable force. What was it? Fear?
Suddenly something touched her back and she screamed, for, right as that
happened, the creature, as black as the night itself, came out from behind a
baobob. It moved swiftly, but before she could study it anymore, or even move,
it began to charge towards her.
"No!" she cried, right as it leapt.
Suddenly, Meersha was pounced. But not from that animal. For a split
second, she could see the moon and the stars lighting up the sky, before her
cranium was coerced against the earth, along with her torso as she and the
pouncer went tumbling. The body was small and covered in fur, but she could not
find who it was until they finally - and greatfully - came to a stop. When
Meersha's vision stopped swirling, she looked up into the frightened face of
Gatu, who stared down at with his one purple eye.
"M-meersha," he finally said, relief overlapping the terror
in his voice. "W-what h-happened?"
She blinked, and before she could say anything, there was a snarl,
and Gatu was thrust sideways.
"Get off my sister!" yelled Banjija, outraged. He turned
to Meersha and exclaimed, "Are you all right?"
Meersha quickly staggered up and batted at her brother. "I'm
fine. I-"
"You!" interrupted the cub as he glared at
Gatu, taking a step forward.
Gatu got up, taking a step back in reaction to his.
What had happened? But Meersha could not ask the questions she
yearned to find the answers to, not right then, when her brother was going to
tear Gatu's throat out."No, Banjija!" cried Meersha before she could
help it, pushing herself between the two. "It's not what you think. I
had-"
But before she could explain, her brother had leapt over her, and
landed on Gatu. "I'll rip your other eye out!" he snarled, abruptly
raking his claws against the other cub's face.
"Banjija!" Meersha snarled, and headbutted her brother
hard in the ribs.
He went rolling over. But, before anyone could do or say anything, a
roar shot through the atmosphere, causing all three cubs to look up
frantically.
"What was that?" asked Banjija, sitting up quickly.
"Dad!" Meersha instantly cried.
It had come from near the den. The trio scampered up the sloping part
of the cliff, then up the Great Knoll, only to set eyes upon three quarreling
lions.
"W-what are th-they doing?" stammered Gatu.
The young ones stood on the top of their beloved Great Knoll,
watching with horror.
"The rogues," exclaimed Banjija. "They're
fighting!"
Yet they did not fully understand how life threatening this was, as
he yelled, "Go Dad!" and Meersha cheered, "Yeah! Ya can beat
'em, Dad!"
At the den, Kinara heard the yells and gasped, finding that only one
of her cubs was in the den. The lionesses had been at the enterence, watching,
but now she was passing it, looking up the hill to see her son and daughter.
Glancing at the deadly fight, she quickly ran up the hill.
"Mom?" Kasha warily asked as had she run by, leaving him
in the back of the den.
The lioness pushed herself up sloping land, panting, but she did not
allow herself to take her eyes off her cubs. When she finally made it to the top,
she quickly caught her breath before yelling in both in fury and relief,
"Banjija! Meersha! My cubs. Come, we must leave."
"But-" her son started.
"Now!"
She began to usher them down the hill to the east, where the main
den was. But, as she glanced at the fight again, the lioness inhaled deeply,
stomach filling up with knots.
Ashuma and the two rogues were caught in their brawl, dust and
chunks of the ground flying out. It didn't last long, though. The rogues easily
got him, smacking him hard in the jaw. He roared in pain - or tried to it. It
was a sort of roar and whimper, due to the agony of the now-half-connected jaw.
But Ashuma, choking in his pride and blood, did not give up quite yet.
Kinara did anything she could to take her eyes off the fight and
push her little ones into saftey, but if her mate did not survive, then there
would only be danger. She barely move as her body did not listen to her brain.
Ashuma was able to snarl, blood dripping from his mouth as he threw
off one of the lions, causing it to roll into the other, and they both fell.
The rogues shot up again, when suddenly, the one who looked like Kovu, was once
more on the older lion's back, digging teeth into his neck. Ashuma fell. The
leader was dead.
X
Fleeing
"No," Kinara cried.
Her two cubs and Gatu stopped suddenly as she did, causing them to
fall over. Her body was shaking as she watched the lions devoir her loving
mate. Something touched her back leg, and the lioness finally looked back at
her young ones, expression full of regreting shock.
"What...happened to Dad?" asked Banjija, a look of pure
terror on his face right then.
She nosed all three forward, proding them to go faster, but the
other way now, and replied, "Keep going. Go to the west, all of you."
"But-but why?" Banjija coughed as he was pushed.
"Just go. You remember your old den?" Meersha and he
nodded. "Good. Go there and hide. I'll meet you there later. And whatever
you do," she hissed as the ushered them along. "Don't go
outside."
Kinara turned back around, heading down the hill again, to the main
den.
"Wh-where i-is she going?" Gatu asked.
Neither of the cubs answered, nor did they know. They just obeyed
their mother's demands, and continued west, down the Great Knoll and into the
flat plains.
~~~
Kinara frantically tore into the den, pushing
passed the crestfallen lionesses and their terrified offspring.
"Mom!" cried Kasha as he looked up.
"My Kasha," she said, relieved, but she knew the escape
wasn't over. "Hurry, Kasha."
"Where are we going?" he asked as she led him to the
enterence of the den.
Kinara halted, though, seeing the two rogues heading over to the
enterence, blood hanging from their flat muzzles. Kasha shyed back, behind his
mother, as did the others. Kinara snarled protectively, just as the rest of the
pride did, desperately trying to keep themselves between the new leaders and their
cubs. Even Shashi joined. But, because there was half of the pride outside now,
the one lion who looked like Scar stayed out of the den as his companion
stalked in.
"Hello!" called the one who was now in the cave, almost
happily, ignoring the stains on his own lips and fur. "I am Chaska, your
new leader! And, as your new leader, no little cubs are allowed in my
path...that aren't mine that is."
Right then, Chaska snatched a near cub and snapped its neck with
ease, before even his mother could do anything.
"Bondu!" cried the mother. "My little...You!" She jerked
her head from Bondu's lifeless body to the killer, and before she could stop
herself, the lioness pounced, raking his face with her claws.
Every cub was now watching, innocent eyes wide, for they had not
experienced this before, nor had they even expected this. The ones outside were
having their part as well.
"Kin," whispered Bayna in fright. "What do we
do?"
"Mom," mewed Kasha, just like a baby again, the leader in
himself gone.
Kinara was now backed against the wall of the den, gaping at Chaska,
who went after each cub, no matter how many wounds were added to his body. She
had gone through this once before, and suddenly the memories flashed back. It
was her second litter she had had with Tambi. Chusuka had been one of her cubs.
In fact, Chusuka was the only one in her own litter who had survived the day
Ashuma had taken over.
Suddenly, Kinara shook her head, before swirling around and pawing
furiously at the back of the den, chunks of dirt and loose rock falling. She
could not let this happen again.
"Where's Chusuka?" she finally asked Bayna, quietly, while
she worked.
Bayna turned to her, tears in her eyes. "Outside," she
managed to choke.
Lusala and Pashi were under their mother, fur bristling as they
endeavored to, if anything, push themselves into her leg.
Finally, Kinara had made the hole big enough for Kasha and the
others to climb through. "Go," she hissed at her son, and nudged her
head under him, helping him through. His large body strained her neck, for over
the months, he and the others had grown much, but she would do anything for
them. "Go to the north, where your old den is and wait for me there."
The cub nodded when he had climbed out. As he began to run, Bayna
and Kinara pushed Lusala through, only to have the female cub cry out. Right
outside, the other rogue had pounced upon Kasha, easily breaking his neck,
before turning to Lusala and padding forward.
"No!" Bayna cried, and the lioness pushed herself against
the den wall, thrusting a paw through the hole and outside, claws extended as
she slashed at nothing.
Lusala was able to pass right under him as he was destracted by the
pathetic attempts. But Pashi had gotten through the hole much too soon and,
instead of going after Lusala, who was now running west, she was raked in the
face.
"Pashi!" Bayna and Kinara both yelled.
With anger and rage, the two lionesses tried to strike up at the
lion through the den, who just turned around to stalk off to any other cubs.
"Kasha!" Kinara sobbed, seeing her son's limp and bloodied
body, lying there in the cold night.
~~~
"No." growled Meersha firmly.
"But if we just peek..." suggested Banjija.
"Mom said t' stay here! No matter what!" Meersha hissed.
"But why? I mean, why did we have t' leave?" he asked.
"Maybe you didn't get it straight, but Dad died! Now...now who
knows what's gonna happen t' us?"
At first, the cubs had been choked in their shock at the sight of
their father dying, but it had not been as bad as it would've been if they had
not gone on so many hunts. After all, they watched death almost every
week...though not from their own family. It was the journey to their old den
that let each think about Ashuma and the brawl that had led him to his early
demise...Or was it early? Was it not fate that led him to it? The other cubs?
The chase of every lion who had become a leader, and every cub born from him?
Meersha had kept her eyes forward, and all were silent. The
bloodshed was being left behind at the Great Knoll while they had traveled out
to their birthing den. She recalled the times when she was younger, when she
felt scared from the night - a thunderstorm, perhaps a sound outside - and she
and her brothers would always find relief in the warm saftey of that den,
nuzzling deep into their mother's coat, listening to her purring lullabies. If
she and her siblings had been in a fight, then they would seperate themselves
from each other there, each one finding a place near the dirt walls to mumble
angrily under their breaths. The main den at the Great Knoll was great, but
their own birthing den was something very special. In fact, Kinara - who had
given birth to every one of her cubs in that exact den - had been born there
herself, carried out into the world by a lioness who was now gone from age.
Nevertheless, memories would be held from the den each cub was born into from
every pride...from all prides.
The mourning in Meersha's soul, had soon be soothed by that special
den that she had not been to for months. It was in there, where the three
huddled together, fighting the agony, fright and the cold. Now, it was morning.
"B-but," Gatu said. "W-what about M-mom?"
"Yeah, and our mom," Banjija said.
Meersha shook her head sadly. "Mom said she'd come back to us,
remember?"
"B-but wh-what about m-my mom?" Gatu questioned with fear.
Banjija hissed and smacked him across the face. "You're lucky
you're even in here with us!"
"Banjija!" Meersha was about to yell that, but instead, it
wasn't her voice.
"Mom!" she and Banjija cried out.
Kinara came limping over to them, her fur matted in crusting blood
and her left ear slightly torn. The two ran out, but she hissed, and so they
climbed back into the den. Kinara climbed in after them. Now that they were
bigger, the den was more cramped than it had been before.
"Banjija, don't you act like that," she grumbled,
obviously not in the mood to put up with foolishness from her cub.
"Mom," said Meersha, rubbing up against her mother's leg.
"What happened? And where's Kasha?"
"A-and my mo-mother...?" Gatu purred.
Kinara sighed and shook her head, expression now distant as she
gazed at the floor of the den. There was silence. Finally, she laid down.
"We've been waiting here, just like you said," Banjija
exclaimed. "All night!"
When Kinara looked at them, she tried to find the right words. What
she said was, "I need you two - and Gatu - to stay here some more."
though her mind was not yet made up.
"But- "
"No, Banjija." and she licked him.
"But we've been staying here forever!" he complained.
Meersha hissed, but Kinara just shook her head. "Yes...you're
right, my son. So, actually, now," and she looked up,
sniffing the air and her voice grew frantic. "Now you must leave."
"What?" they all yelled.
"Now. All of you. The three of you have to leave and never come
back."
"But-" This time it was Meersha.
"Meersha, no. You, Banjija and Gatu have to leave." Yes.
This was it. The lioness had made up her mind now.
"Why?"
"Because...We have new pride leaders now. They wouldn't want
you to stay..."
With that, Kinara couldn't help a small tear trickle down her face
as she whispered to no one, "If only they could've come later. Just a
little later, then at least I would've still had my daughter."
Meersha blinked as she tilted her head, before rubbing against her
mother again. "Mom. What are you talking about?"
"Things happen, my little Meersha. Now I need you to be
strong...You shouldn't have to do this as well, like a male, but you haven't
even started adolescence yet. There's no reason for you to stay if you're too
young to breed...without being forced." she added. "Now, I want all
three of you to listen to me. I love you very much," She nuzzled them all,
even Gatu. "Gatu, your mother loves you, too. But you cannot be with her
anymore. Don't ask why. When you're old enough and have your own pride - you
too, Banjija - then you'll understand."
Banjija couldn't help a proud grin at the thought. Would he get to
have a pride before Kasha? That would show him...
"Grow strong, all of you. You can't stay with us anymore. So,
go off and find another life."
"But what about Kasha?" Banjija then questioned, tail
swishing to a fro as he still imagined the look on his brother's face if he did
get a pride first.
"Do you remember the stories I told you, about how the lions of
the past are up in the stars?" Meersha and Banjija both nodded. "Well
Kasha, and your father, and the other cubs are up there now."
Meersha gasped, as did her living brother. The color drained from
Banjija's face, and he was once more struck in emotional pain. His brother was
dead, and all he could think about was getting a pride? And his father as well
was gone...Regret made him flinch inwardly.
Kinara licked her two remaining cubs. "Now, leave...But,
Meersha," she then said. "You might be able to find another pride,
once you're just another month or two older."
"Huh?"
"When one or two more full moons has past, then you can join a
pride...a different pride." she added.
"Why can't I be with you? And Bayna, and Shashi and the others
in this pride?" Meersha asked, vision blurred with tears as she
swallowed the forming lump in her throat.
"Our new leaders came just a little too early," her mother
answered, but knew none of the cubs would understand. Not now at least.
"The White-Feather Pride doesn't need you anymore. Now, be off."
As Banjija and Gatu staggered out of the den, Meersha said,
"But why did Chusuka get to stay?"
Kinara shook her head. "Fate has a different path for you, my
little one."
She helped her daughter out of the saftey of the den. All her
memories of cubs were being coerced from her - cubhood itself was torn from
Meersah, her brother and Gatu.
"I'll lead you to the northwestern borders. Then you must be on
your own...Quickly."
The four of them began northwest, leaving the White-Feather Pride
behind...leaving their family behind. Soon, they came to the invisible borders.
Kinara sniffed the ground, now smelling the scent of the new leaders instead of
Ashuma's.
"This is it," she warily stated, before licking all three
of them. "Goodbye..."
"Mom!" Banjija suddenly yelled, right as something came at
them.
Kinara swirled around, calling over her shoulder, "Go! I'll
stall him!"
With those words, Kinara pounced Chaska, snarling. Luckily he was
the only one who had followed. The other was still back at the pride.
To Be Continued - Part II: The Adolescent is being revised and
Part III: The Adult is still being written.