I have become a brother of jackals, a companion of owls. Job 30: 29
He yelped up the moon
using the ancient calls known only by his tribe. This was his privilege and his duty – though why
the regular calling up of the moon should have been entrusted by the First
Father to such a tribe of tricksters and malcontents as the Jackals was never
understood by the other tribes. Why had
the duty not been entrusted to ones such as the Owls? Or to the Elephants, who were both solemn and
sage? Or even to the Lions who were
kings and princes over most everything else in the First Father’s creation?
But the First Father, in his wisdom, had given that sacred duty to the Jackals. And he gave to them, and them alone, the magic calls necessary to bring up the moon. And, for the most part, they had not failed the First Father; they had kept the sacred trust.
But the First Father, in his wisdom, had given that sacred duty to the Jackals. And he gave to them, and them alone, the magic calls necessary to bring up the moon. And, for the most part, they had not failed the First Father; they had kept the sacred trust.
His name was Tann,
though sometimes he was called ‘Ochim because he was one of the doleful
creatures. But few would dare use that
name in his presence.
When he’d howled the
moon up over the horizon and sent her safely on her journey across the sky,
Tann set out himself, to prowl and to hunt.
His strong legs carried him quickly over the sand and rocks. The calloused pads of his feet kept his
motion silent, stealthy. He could read
the scents in the cool nighttime breeze.
One of the Ibex had come past hours before. A few Hares were nearby but
not worth the effort to chase. Not when
there was… yes… he sniffed again… blood.
Something wounded. Something already dying. Tann barked once in
excitement before letting it trail off into a muted whine. He did not want to
draw others to his kill. He ran now, following
the odor of blood.
For the most part Tann
and his fellow tribe members had kept their sacred trust and had called up the
moon for her nightly course across the sky with the necessary regularity and
precision. But the Jackals are
tricksters and devious too, so there had been a number of occasions when they’d
used the incantations and songs given to them by the First Father in order to manipulate
the moon as she travelled. On a few
occasions they had sent her off course, giving her a song filled with bad
directions. The Jackals would do this in
order prolong the night and to give themselves more time at the hunt. But they knew that the other tribes would
complain to the First Father if they were caught misusing the secret moon
songs, so they did this infrequently and only when they were convinced they
would not be noticed.
But as Tann cut his way
across the rocky plain he wasn’t thinking about the moon or her nightly trek
across the sky. It would be hours before
he would think of her again. As he ran
he had only one thought: meat. He
would soon be eating meat, meat and blood. The carrion was close. And fresh.
It was an Antelope, a
young one that had fallen off a rocky ledge and snapped its neck. Tann
snapped his jaws the few of the Vulture tribe that were already encroaching on
his dinner. They squawked angrily at
him, but flapped away, fearful of his teeth.
He pushed his snout into the carcass and began tearing out hunks of
flesh.
Later, after he’d eaten
his fill, Tann loped back towards his cave, satisfied and filled. He would sing another song for the moon to
guide her towards morning.
This is part of April Anomalies A-Z, a creative writing exercise and
not intended to be an altogether accurate picture of the creature described
above. .
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