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| #Post#: 16574-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Never Underestimate | |
| By: Spotteh Date: August 4, 2013, 10:04 pm | |
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| [center][Size=16pt][font=harmond]Prologue[/font][/size][/center] | |
| Someone once told me that rabbits were viewed as peaceful. As | |
| weak. That creatures known as humans once viewed them as pets, | |
| for they were cute and harmless, and coddled them. They were | |
| referred to as 'bunnies' because they were so cute and helpless. | |
| Rabbits were viewed as nothing more than innocent prey, meant | |
| for eating. That rabbits were thought to have no power and | |
| because of that, other animals could do whatever they pleased. | |
| That rabbits were cowards and the cruelest insult was to be | |
| called a rabbit. Though they were fast, it was only an | |
| overwhelming sense of fear and desperation that drove them. | |
| Someone told me rabbits were raised as food, because they were | |
| docile, breed quickly, and, most importantly, were easy to | |
| control. Would you like to know my answer? | |
| "Those creatures were fools." | |
| [hr] | |
| Now this is from an idea I've had for a while. I can promise | |
| you, once I'm done with this, you will never look at a bunny the | |
| same way again. Never underestimate. You're free to leave | |
| comments if you'd like, just dont spam. | |
| #Post#: 16579-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Never Underestimate | |
| By: puddincat Date: August 4, 2013, 11:10 pm | |
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| track, this looks interesting | |
| #Post#: 16670-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Never Underestimate | |
| By: dawnfire111 Date: August 5, 2013, 8:07 pm | |
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| /is already sucked in/ | |
| i can't wait for more! 8D | |
| #Post#: 16721-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Never Underestimate | |
| By: Spotteh Date: August 6, 2013, 12:06 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [center][font=harmond]Chapter 1[/font][/center] | |
| Our kind has always followed the same traditions. As if a | |
| methodical schedule was written in our minds for us to follow. | |
| Each morning was spent on the surface, eating as much as we | |
| could before it was no longer safe. The days were spent in the | |
| tunnels, just high enough to enjoy the warmth soaking into the | |
| ground, or just far enough away to avoid the biting sting of | |
| frost and snow. Then when dusk fell, we returned to the surface | |
| for another meal. And then it began. | |
| Each night, the lower tunnels filled with small bodies. Each | |
| belonged to a family. And each family was forever locked in a | |
| battle for territory, for honor. For survival. Some families | |
| were new, nothing more than a few generations, fighting for a | |
| place in this world. Others had been there since the dawn of | |
| time. The Arnab Bari family was one of these. Each night when | |
| the moon rose, we fought beneath the ground, blanketed in the | |
| darkness and silence the tunnels could provide. Our only truth | |
| was the unexcapable stench of blood and the sound of pain. | |
| Each morning was a blessing. A celebration. You had survived. | |
| And each night was the end. If not of your life, then of | |
| something else. Each night in the tunnels, something was chipped | |
| away and would never return. Our lives were short, shorte still | |
| with the fighting, and the elderly were revered as much as they | |
| were hated. This world we knew had no place for the weak. The | |
| weak died. You're only option was to be strong. And yet... | |
| Through all the years. Through all the blood shed and fighting, | |
| no one ever thought of change. | |
| I can remember the day I was named, though I barely remember | |
| what that name was. It was my first glimps of the world. The | |
| world I knew at least. As per tradition, none of us were named. | |
| We were merely numbers. We would receive our names after our | |
| first trip to the surface. If we survived. | |
| The surface was amazing. The sun was blinding, but we could have | |
| stood there and stared at it for hours. If our mother hadn't | |
| pushed us forward, we very well might have. The entire world | |
| glowed with life and color for the first time of in our lives. I | |
| can't remember a time I was happier. My siblings and I ran | |
| through the tall grass. It was a color I would later identify as | |
| green. We took turns describing ourselves to each other, though | |
| it wasn't much use as well looked very similar. One of my | |
| sisters had darker fur than the rest of us, something that was | |
| rather fitting as she also had a darker nature. As for myself, I | |
| was a bit more unique, but not outstandingly so. Rather than my | |
| sibling's mud brown eyes, mine were blue, or so they told me. My | |
| dark sister tried to play it down but the others said they were | |
| the color of the sky. I could see the jealousy burning in my | |
| sisters eyes as they told me this. I also had a birth mark, I | |
| suppose you could say. Four pure white dots sat near my rear. I | |
| could see them for myself if I turned just right. Those spots | |
| fascinated us, even my dark sister. White was as new to us as | |
| everything else, but we couldn't understand how the glowing | |
| white from the sky was also on me. We couldn't help but wonder | |
| if this made me special. Our mother only said that it made me a | |
| target. We spent the time playing, chewing, and eating whatever | |
| we came across. Did green taste the same as blue? And what about | |
| brown? Did it taste the same as the black of the tunnels? We | |
| even bit each other, just to see. We decided rabbit didn't taste | |
| good. We wove through the looming shafts, but kept a safe | |
| distance to our mother if anything went wrong. We rolled through | |
| mud and water and grass and returned to our mother looking like | |
| some sort of tiny twig monsters. Then we had to lick ourselves | |
| clean. That wasn't as fun. Through all our joy, we never noticed | |
| the long orange shape moving towards us. | |
| Our mother froze. Not knowing what else to do, we did as well. | |
| Silence fell across this new world of ours. Silence and a deep | |
| rooted sense of something wrong. The animal waited us out. Our | |
| mother relaxed once more and so did we. But now she knew | |
| something was here. She began ushering us towards the tunnel | |
| entrance. But this world of light and color and sound had | |
| trapped us. We did not want to go. We only wanted the freedom of | |
| the surface. Each of us hopped the wrong way, as though we had | |
| forgotten and were trying to find it before anyone else. And | |
| then it came back. That horrible feeling came back. My sister | |
| was the first one to react, and froze. We quickly followed suite | |
| but she couldn't do it. She had the instinct, but she didn't | |
| have the practice or stamina to stay that way. She moved too | |
| early. While the rest of us were watching our mother for her | |
| signal, our sister had her rear towards us and could not see. So | |
| she turned her head. That's when it jumped. | |
| The orange lunged forward and we scattered in fear. Our mother | |
| seemed to know what to do but we didn't. The fear raged through | |
| our minds, clotting out anything of sense or even instinct. But | |
| gradually we made it into the tunnel. Almost all of us at least. | |
| As I shot down the tunnel, I saw my sister rip her hind leg from | |
| the mouth of the beast. It must have been her swift instincts | |
| that saved her from immediate death. She thrashed through the | |
| tunnel mere seconds after I had entered. Her speed was | |
| incredible, as well as her demise. In her panic, she ran head | |
| first into the tunnel bend. All I heard was a crack. And then | |
| nothing. The orange had not followed us and the sudden silence | |
| was deafening. Our mother shoved passed us to get to my sister. | |
| She leaned down and at first I thought she would pick her up. | |
| Until she bit too far and the scent of blood filled the small | |
| area. | |
| My siblings stood frozen, too shocked to do much else. I did not | |
| have this hesitation. I ran to my mother. I begged her, I | |
| pleaded, for her to stop. I cried that our sister wasn't dead. | |
| She had only hit her head and was sleeping. That she would wake | |
| up any second now. If only my mother would stop. Each second was | |
| sickening and that sound etched itself into my skull. I can | |
| still count how many bites it took until my sister was nothing | |
| until bone. When that had happened, I did the only thing I could | |
| think of. I threw myself at my mother, calling her a murderer, a | |
| carnivor, a cannabel. She threw me off and pinned me down. | |
| "I have honored your sisters death." She hummed. "You should | |
| have done the same." I could still smell my sisters blood on her | |
| breath. I wanted to throw up. She got off and waited for me to | |
| get up before lining the three of us up. We were getting our | |
| names. My dark furred sister became Monkshood. My brother was | |
| named Cauliflower. As for myself, I was named Clover. For those | |
| four white dots. | |
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