Itzel's Flight (5 minute read)
Itzel stepped forward and let Quetzal
enfold the command couch around her body. The nictitating membrane of the canopy
snicked closed as she grasped the controls and shuffled the big bird off of the
ledge. For a moment, her sensations were confused, latent human body image
merging with the biomechanical ornithopter as it fell towards the jungle
canopy.
She had done this hundreds of times before
though, and even through the conflicting signals she was able to spread her
wings and arrest her flight before it became terminal.
She felt the hot thermals coming up off the jungle as they buoyed
her wings, lofting her upwards. Men had once built a city down there, and the
ruins were still to be seen. You couldn’t survive for long without a suit or
body modification now though if you wanted to slog through that jungle.
“Get back here sister! You won’t beat me this time!”
Akna’s voice intruded in to her inner monologue, broadcast from her
own ornithopter, several hundred meters up and falling. The words dropped in to
her mind as clear as if her younger sister were standing at her shoulder.
“Try to follow me down sister. I’ll show you what I found. Don’t
fall behind!”
Itzel swiveled the great head of her ornithopter around from side to
side, trying to get her bearings. Past the great wheel of crumbling apartments
that ringed the lake, beyond the shattered domes of the archology and near the
foot of base camp, the ruined luxury hotel
that had once housed prospective tourists, come to try and climb the tallest
waterfall in the world.
There it was! A disturbance in the canopy. Something was going on
down there that shouldn’t be.
“What is it sister? I see something moving down below.”
The great birds circled the new clearing, necks extended and
canopies pointed down, so the two girls could see what was happening.
Some men in crude suits were dragging caged animals towards a big
machine. Itzel took a moment to recognize it from her studies of the history
books.
A helicopter. Such a brutish and ugly thing.
“Be careful Akna, those men are up to no good.”
As she overflew the clearing the men pointed up and started waving
their arms. A couple pointed metal sticks in to the air which spat flame. Quetzal
responded instantly to her thoughts, quickly avoiding the clumsy projectiles
that climbed lazily in to the air on streams of smoke.
She dived towards the clearing, extending her talons towards the
metal beast parked below. The animals had not been loaded yet, and if she could
cripple their transportation, they would be trapped. Capture these ones and no
more would come.
She felt the rotors of the machine come apart in her claws as she
tugged the great metal beast over on to its side. Some of the men were firing
smaller weapons now, and she felt sharp impacts against her skin.
“It’ll take more than that to wound me, little men.”
The ornithopters were vat grown from materials strong enough to withstand
the powerful thermals that swept up Angel Falls. They could survive a high
speed crash on the jungle floor and the protective cocoon of the command couch
would save her from anything short of a direct hit with a rock wall at full
speed.
Something burst in the downed chopper and an oily, smoky fireball
erupted behind her. The men fell down and tried to burrow in to the rich jungle
soil. She felt lacerations all across Quetzal’s back as debris from the explosion
peppered its rear flanks. Tough as the ornithopter was, it couldn’t handle much
more of this.
Suddenly her sister cried out. “Careful Itzel, there’s another one
coming in from the East!”
This was trouble, a helicopter on the ground posed little threat,
but in the air it could be a real problem.
She beat her wings to gain height, Akna right behind her.
The dull gunmetal of the second chopper stood out stark against the
rich green of the jungle canopy. Smoke bloomed from its stubby wings and two burning
arrows shot out towards them.
Itzel dodged her projectile, but Akna was a little slower. The thing
burst right next to her left wing and she folded and fell down towards the
ground.
“Akna!”
She pulled around in a tight spiral and dived, her talons sweeping
Akna’s wounded bird from the sky. She supported it as she glided down towards
the canopy, putting the bulk of the ruined hotel between her and the metal
beast which hunted them.
“Akna! Are you alright?”
There was no reply.
Itzel didn’t have time to wait. She lowered the
damaged form of Akna’s ornithopter down to the ground and immediately started
to climb. She had to get above the helicopter first and assess her options.
Her great wings beat again and again, the shimmering pearlescent
coating which absorbed the powerful rays of the sun glittered in the bright
sunshine. She climbed upwards until the chopper was far below.
As she had guessed, the machine couldn’t tilt up to bring its guns
to bear on her while she lofted above, and its own flight was slow and
graceless. It was ignoring Akna’s downed bird and was heading towards the clearing.
A knot of worry burned in her chest. Itzel hoped that her sister was
unhurt. She meant much more than the world to her. The canopy had looked
undamaged but the great bird wings had been ragged and torn.
How to deal with the threat?
If one of those things hit her, she would do no better than her
sister had.
If she attacked from above, the spinning blades might tear her
apart as they shattered. She had no weapons of her own. The Ornithopters were not war machines;
they were simply tools for shepherding the renewal of the jungles.
Itzel thought of the caged animals and the cruel men who had come
again to plunder the jungle. There were none of her own people close enough to
lend a hand. The duty of care of the falls was for the two sisters alone. She
had to do something fast. Akna couldn’t survive the heat of the jungle long if her
canopy was breached, neither of them had that adaptation. If the men got away,
they would bring more and more to plunder the wild creatures the sisters had
reintroduced to the jungle eco-system. They probably hoped to learn their
genecode and reverse engineer their secrets for their own twisted ends as they
had during the bad times; a new generation of genebeasts to terrorize and hunt
the sisters through dark jungle trails. She couldn’t let it happen.
Itzel/Quetzal dived as one, not a shred of difference between the
two beings as the SQuID cap relayed sensorium data to the girl’s mind and back
to the muscles and sinews of the great artificial beast. She aimed a few hundred
meters short of the deadly metal machine as it hovered over the clearing
looking for a place to set down. It seemed to notice her as she sped earthwards,
turning to bring its guns to bear. Flames and smoke shot from its weapons,
streaking around her, flashing to the trees and rocks, a few stray rounds
scoring her false flesh. An explosion behind her, a burst of rocky rubble
spurting up from below. She was now much lower than the chopper, but swooping
low over the trees.
Suddenly she jack-knifed. She put out her broad wings and spasmed in
the air. Rolling over and raking her talons on the underside of her enemy. Time
seemed to slow to a stop and she saw the shocked O’s of the crew’s open mouths
through the canopy as she ripped away the bottom of the ugly machine. Their
plastic faces and shining artificial eyes betrayed their inhuman appearance and
their machine origins.
She kept pulling and the tail came completely away, sending the helicopter
in to a tight spin. She didn’t look back to see it crash to earth. She was already
winging her way quickly to her fallen sister.
Later she would patrol for other men and machines. The ones on the
ground wouldn’t last long without their vehicles. For now she had more
important things to deal with.
“Don’t worry Akna, I’m coming as quickly as I can!”
“Don’t worry sister, I’m OK. I just blacked out for a second. Hey,
there’s a jaguar down here and she’s got cubs. Can you believe it? It looks
like we got the code right this time. The new animals are thriving just like we
hoped.”
“That’s great news sister! Are your wings healed yet? We need to get
up and do some patrols. The council will want to know all about this latest
incursion. It was a breach of the PostHuman Treaty and there will be consequences.”
“That’s right, let’s get back to the aerie right away.
The other sisters must be told, and something needs to be done. We can’t let
them come back and undo all our work again.”
Itzel watched her sister’s Ornithopter as it
struggled up from the top of the canopy. Its wings looked almost pristine already,
the self repairing materials drawing from onboard feedstocks to fuel their
healing processes.
“Don’t worry. Let them come. We’ll be ready for them.”
this is brilliant. it just doesn't say enough about how this world came to be, and how we go about creating it.. ;-)
ReplyDeleteThanks! I may write some more fiction in this setting. I had a whole story planned out, but I didn't get much feedback, so I put it on the back burner...
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