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Papina by Shugaryme(f): 6:21pm On Jan 31, 2015
No part of this work should be reproduced in whatever form, electronic or print, or on any platform without my formal consent. Failure to adhere is plagiarism, and is punishable by law. Take note.

Shugaryme ©2015


DISCLAIMER
Characters and places mentioned in this story exist only in my imagination. Resemblance with real persons, living or dead, or with real places is purely coincidental.


Title: PAPINA
Prose genre: Fantasy
Narration style: This story is divided into short chapters which are each written from the point of view (POV) of the character they are named after. The narrative employs the 3rd person omniscient style. It can get complicated. Don't get confused tongue
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 6:39pm On Jan 31, 2015
#355 - PAPINA
Being a history of the exploits of the historical figure popularly known as Papina.
As compiled by Ame Bo, Chief of Tales Yet Untold
(Transcribed by Shugaryme)


PROLOGUE


It is known, and posterity shall bear us witness, that the greatest gift man can be given after life is freedom, for without it, the man capable of truly living simply exists. In this,the value of knowledge cannot be overstated. So the people of Azagba simply existed, for they knew not how to be free.

Common knowledge it is, and the tales abound, that once upon a sad time, every human mother cried the bitterest after her first child. Every mother, for Azagba was all that was known of the world, and nothing good, it seemed, existed beyond the Mountain Abode and the hills surrounding the lands that constitute Azagba. A few had ever ventured beyond it of their own free will, and none had ever returned.

Yet tales abounded, of seven headed monsters with fire in their eyes, and tails with heads of their own, of giant flying lizards that breathed fire, of creatures in the water large enough to swallow a thousand spiked chiefs, and of other monstrosities with whose description creativity fails me.

Every tale of terror however incongruent they may seem, always agreed that the worst terror lived in the Mountain Abode, and once when angered, had rained liquid fire of indescribable hotness on the people, killing countless. It would seem this tale is true, for the black path to the Mountain Abode had been identified as the fiery spittle of the Abode which had since solidified. The several rock formations nearby is also evidence of this, as some men of high learning insist.

What lived in the Mountain Abode, was long subject to the most absurd of tales, but since the truth has now become known, none of such absurdities deserve a place in our narration. With careful research, we shall try to distinguish between the factual and the fantasy, between the historical and the tales told by old women to scare their gullible grandchildren. At some point however, the line between the two might become blurred, as old age is not a friend of accurate memories.

We do know that once, new mothers wept bitterly, not because of the pain of childbirth, but in foresight, for every healthy first child belonged to the Mountain Abode. In this way, Papina came into the picture, for she was the first child of her father, the only seven-spiked chief of Azagba. It is unknown what her real name was, or what she truly was, for the facts defy common sense.

Some say she was supernatural from birth, others insist she simply had a normal abnormality until a supernatural nature was imposed upon her. We can only speculate.

Our various sources indicate that while every firstborn was taken to the Abode in it's tenth year, a few exceptions existed. Any child with any sort of impediment was kept for five more years. Papina fell into the latter category , for she could neither hear nor speak from birth.

However our story begins, not from her birth, as some would expect, but from her fifteenth year,some moons before the yearly Walk of no Return to the Abode.

Our most credible of sources who provide the backbone of this historical record claim, and I, Ame Bo agree, that our story began with a scream.
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 10:55pm On Jan 31, 2015
Zima
Zima yawned, then stretched, and her fingers wandered again to the tiny swollen spots on her arms. A quick scratch would give quick relief, until she had to scratch them again.

The sand flies had made short work of her little fleshy arms, yet she had not wanted to leave her unfinished foot caves and the miniature near-replica of the Abode she made with her playmates. The miniature Abode was the largest of the foot caves they had made, and yesterday like the many times before it, she had the privilege of trampling on it and retrieving from it stick figures of people hidden in it. Her skinny playmates liked to pretend they were generous, but she had not forgotten the fight that had birthed that tradition. She had won of course.

It was a game they had always played, though no one ever thought to ask what it meant. Once, her father had watched them with a startled expression mixed with recognition, but afterwards had walked away without scolding her. She was not in trouble then, Zima knew.

She examined her arms. The little lumps were not visible when Papina had dragged her away after she trampled on the large footcave. She had not gotten to rescue the people in it. The stick people would die inside if they weren't removed, she had protested, trying to sign with her free arm, but Papina had not paid any attention. Zima had gone to bed a sad little girl.

The early morning air was chilly, like it had rained at night. Zima wondered if the stick people could still be rescued from the wet sand. They would have been dead anyway.

The frustration was starting to rise again. Why was her sister so difficult to reason with? As if it was not bad enough that Papina couldn't speak or hear, she had a certain iron-will about her choices, and Zima had to suffer it the most.

Mama would have been kinder, she knew, although she had barely known her mother. Baba always talked about her, and each time he did, it was easy to see how much he had loved her and how flawless she had been. It was said that she died of snake bite before the healer could help. Baba had never married another wife, although every other spiked chief had at least two wives. He alone among the chiefs had seven spikes on his cap, he alone had no wife.

Zima stepped out of her little room, and after a glance at her sister's room just next to hers, made her way towards the end of the open space where they stored clean water in a covered receptacle dug into the ground.

The day had slowly started to peel off its robe of darkness. Papina would still be asleep. She was a bit withdrawn these days. Zamo was awake already. Zima never doubted her uncanny ability to tell what her twin brother was up to or how he felt. He also could say the same about her.

After years of being driven away from the fireplace, today was the day she'd finally start to learn to cook and she had to get ready early. Ko Mari had told her the good news yesterday. The Ko was in charge of the kitchens and knew how to cook any meal known to humans. Zima could feel excitement course through her veins.

Baba had once had told her why the elderly woman was a 'ko' and not a 'ka' as married women were addressed - Ko Mari had never been married. Zima had not asked why, but as she washed her face and chewed her mouth stick, she wondered why Baba had not married her. She would have been a good mother, and Papina would not have to...

Her thoughts were pierced by a blood-curling scream. She could have sworn it sounded like...

It could not be!!

She raced towards Papina's room.
Re: Papina by Nobody: 5:28am On Feb 01, 2015
Papina....Shugaryme make sure nothing happens to her
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 8:43pm On Feb 01, 2015
Lol. Divepen. I hope nothing happens to her too, but I have no idea what's going to happen yet. Let's see how the story unfolds.

Thanks for stopping by smiley
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 9:14pm On Feb 01, 2015
Adaba
Whether the room fell silent when he walked in, or it had already been silent before he walked in, Adaba could not tell. Zima and Zamo stood near the bed, and Papina sat huddled, her hands clutching the wrapper spread over her straw and bamboo bed, and her back pressed against the wall as if attempting to get as far away from them as possible.

"What happened?" Adaba asked the twins standing by, taking a few steps towards Papina, trying to sign to her. The girl tensed up and tried in vain to back away, her eyes wide in horror.

"She... She spoke" Zima replied, her face the perfect mirror of fright.

"Another language" Zamo added in his usual slurred manner. He did not seem distressed.

"Where's Baba?" Zima asked as if his presence counted for nothing. Well it did not count for much, he knew, for he was just as confused as the children. Papina could not have spoken, and besides the 'paaap' sound she made while trying to sign her thoughts, she had never spoken since she was born.

Did she cry when born? Adaba could not remember. He made a mental note to ask Ko Mari later. She had been there. It had been a solemn day, the baby was beautiful, but she belonged to the Mountain Abode as a first child.

Chief Jala Xo had been too heartbroken to name her, or maybe he did, Adaba could not remember either. He hardly every remembered so much at a time. He had a feeling it truly had something to do with his missing right ear, as some said.

'If you don't have complete ears, how would you remember the little you hear?' was a common saying. He had lost it when attacked once by a mountain cat on a hunt. He had killed the animal and had kept its fur of brown, but never got his ear back.

Whatever name the child had been given, if she was given, was never used. It was the way of the people of Azagba, for it was well-known that a first child unnamed was easier to let go.

From an orphan boy taken into the household of Chief Xo's father, also a spiked Chief, Adaba had risen to become the head of Xo's servants, a trusted confidante and a personal protector of the children. He had watched them grow and had loved them as his own, but as he watched the frightened children, he felt unusually helpless.

Their father was away heading an early meeting of the council of spiked chiefs, so Adaba had to act quickly.

"Wait here with her, I'm coming" he instructed the children.

As he turned to leave, he heard it.

He froze.
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 8:43pm On Feb 02, 2015
It was clear, unmistakable. He turned back to face the children, and Papina spoke again. Not the usual unintelligible attempt at speech for which she had been named, not with her hands, and certainly not a language he had ever heard before.

Confusion was starting to weigh down on his mind. The twins looked at him, then back at Papina. His eyes followed theirs and like the confused moment, the silence was shared.

The girl still sat huddled, and though her fingers had relaxed on the wrapper covering her bed, she still looked frightened.

The room suddenly felt small and airless, he had to get out.

"Wait for me" he repeated his instruction and hurried his short thickset frame out of the room, questions bumping against each other and the walls of his mind.

With the chief busy, there was only one place to go. It was no use sending any of the younger servants.

He found the grey haired healer at the entrance to his home. The old man sat on a log and stared into the sky, his face vacant for expression. Adaba was grateful their eyes did not have to meet.

"What do you want?" the old man queried, still staring at the sky.

'Get up and follow me, crazy old man, I can't explain' Adaba thought. He said nothing.

"Crazy men see farther than the sane, and some men without ears see nothing at all." the old man continued, as if he had read the younger man's mind. "I will follow you alright. I would need to see her for myself."

Adaba, shrugged off his embarrassment and stood in silence as the old man got up and walked into his aged house.

There were only a few men older than Lai Siya in the whole of Azagba, Adaba was sure, and none with a quicker tongue. No one knew the healing art as much or had half as much a reputation.

Adaba had never felt comfortable with the old man, especially with the way his aged eyes seemed to stare deep into his eyes as if searching for something. It was not for nothing that some called him the Eye That Sees.

When they entered Papina's room, Chief Xo was already there. Ko Mari stood with the twins who did not seem to have left the spot he last saw them. Papina sat, her back to the wall, hands folded across her chest. She looked more relaxed now.

"What's the matter with my daughter?" the chief demanded as they entered. Adaba was not sure who he was asking. He racked his brain for an answer.

"I was hoping I would be the one to ask you that, seeing that I met you here." Lai retorted, his incomplete brown set of teeth on full display.

"I was told..." the Chief started to explain.

"I know what you were told" Lai cut in. Adaba flinched. No one cut the Chief shut, no one dared stand up to him without facing his wrath, even the other chiefs, Adaba suspected.

Chief Xo did not reply. When he looked at his daughter and back at the old man, Adaba could see a hint of helplessness in his eyes.

The old man walked past him towards Papina. The girl did not try to back away. She gazed like someone entranced, and broke the stare with a gasp, her breath heavy.

Lai turned toward the chief. Maybe it was untrue that men without ears see nothing at all, Adaba thought, because even with his one ear, he was sure he saw fear in the old man's eyes.

"Xo" Lai spoke, his voice strained, "that... That is not her."
Re: Papina by Sabretooth1(m): 1:11pm On Feb 03, 2015
Fantasy genre? For real? This wld make u the first female fantasy writer I'm readin on NL. I was starting 2 think ladies only knw romance. Ur narration style z cool.

*following*
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 6:06pm On Feb 03, 2015
PAPINA
Eyes shut, she reflexively reached for her phone. It wasn't at it's usual position near her pillow. There wasn't even any pillow. She opened her eyes and the memories came crashing though the small window of her consciousness, shooting shards of confusion at her sanity.

She tried to remember each face she had seen, so if she ever got rescued, she would have good descriptions for the police. It was the right thing to do when kidnapped. She was sure this was a case of kidnap. It had to be, though it felt weirder the more she thought of it.

She had been chatting last night with her phone, on her own bed, and probably had fallen asleep. Or was it last night? It was the last thing she could remember. Everything after that was a blur, until the point where she had woke up in this strange place.

There was the short man with a missing right ear, who did not seem at all dangerous. He had even looked frightened and confused when she had asked where she was, then he had spoken in that strange language to the children by her bed,before hurrying out to call the unkept old man.

There was something about the old man that was as intriguing as it was unsettling, like he was the only one who understood her. Maybe it was the way he looked calm and unsurprised, in stark contrast with the others. He had stared deep in her eyes, and even as she thought about it now, she was not sure how she had felt.

The huge man with a woven helmet of animal skin, raffia and the small straight horns of a strange animal, seemed to be the leader. Seven horns in total, or so she had counted. Dressed in a thick garment made of the skin of different animals, he looked fearsome. His eyes though fierce had a bit of tenderness to them when he looked at her. Maybe he pitied her.

Where on earth did she awaken? What did they want her for? How did they manage to kidnap her from her own room? The questions were endless. She made a resolve to tell her story in her blog, if she survived it. She had often told in her blog, fictional tales of survival in which she starred, and she had won many fans and followers. G-girl the Ultimate Survivor, someone had tagged her and it had quickly stuck. This felt different from her stories in every way imaginable. This was real.

The two children had looked as harmless as they looked alike, and they pretty much looked alike. Though dressed in strange garments, there was something about them that reminded her of her little cousin Bolu. It had been a while since they last saw. If she survived this, she...

Heck! She had to stop wishing and start acting. Besides herself, no one was in the strange room. She eased out of the low bed and planted her bare feet on the hard mud floor. It took some seconds for the dizzy feeling to fade. The closest thing to a footwear was too strange looking to slip her feet in. She decided to go barefoot. All the better for stealth.

First she had to know where she was, whether in the middle of a jungle, or the outskirt of some city. G-girl was a survivor anywhere, she told herself, and hitching up her long brown gown for easier movement, she tiptoed toward the door.
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 8:08pm On Feb 03, 2015
Thanks sabretooth1 smiley
Re: Papina by Oahray: 9:42pm On Feb 04, 2015
Awwww, such a nice story...


please continue... smiley
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 9:46pm On Feb 04, 2015
Oahray:
Awwww, such a nice story...


please continue... smiley
I will, thanks for stopping by... wink
Re: Papina by Oahray: 8:50am On Feb 05, 2015
Shugaryme:

I will, thanks for stopping by... wink
madam I'm waiting o tongue
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 7:45pm On Feb 05, 2015
It was bright outside, a far cry from the dullness of the room she had now twice woken up in. She looked around. It was important to take in as much of the surroundings as possible, especially in delicate situations like this. Who knew what she might find handy?

It looked like the picture of an archaic past in which only the tropical sky was familiar. It was a large... Compound did not seem very fitting a name for it, neither could the short stakes erected around be called a fence. The room from which she had emerged was part of a large mud house built in the shape of the letter 'L', and now baked dry by the heat of the tropical sun.

G-girl stole quietly towards a part of the makeshift fence that wasn't crossed and wide enough to let several people in at once. She turned back to be sure no one had seen her before continuing on her path to freedom in the strange terrain. She had to go home.

Nothing looked familiar, but it was easy to decide which way would be more isolated, to prevent detection and recapture. In the distance to the right of the house, she could make out other houses and human movement around them, so she took the opposite direction.

It was a somewhat hilly terrain that led to what seemed like a forest. Probably she would be able to recognise her location after the forest. She quickened her steps, but careful to avoid stepping on anything that might pierce her feet. The ground was starting to feel hot. She should have worn that footwear in the room, she realised.

She was still wondering how to compensate for the lack of a footwear when she heard movement. The sound came from her right. She paused.

Nothing.

She continued. Then from nowhere, something huge leaped at her!
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 8:50pm On Feb 06, 2015
She instinctively ducked, and didn't wait to see what exactly it was. It was a sort of big cat or wild dog. No, wild dogs weren't this huge, it was something different, but she had no time to confirm. She ran.

Adrenaline surged within her, and she sped off in a random direction with a few trees in the distance, feeling lighter than she had ever felt in her life. Who knew she could run this fast?

She could hear the growls of whatever creature it was as it gained on her, then sharp pain shot up her left leg and she fell to the ground. She had stepped on something sharp. The creature had stopped running now, she could sense, but it had not stopped moving. She turned around to face it. It could not be!

She had seen pictures of it before, among other creatures that had gone extinct. It's large curved upper canine was not hard to miss. She backed away from the sabre-toothed cat till her back hit the trunk of a tree. The big cat slowly closed in on her. It was the end surely.

A piece of rock struck the sabretooth, and it growled fiercely, turning to see where it had come from. G-girl's gaze followed it, a gasp escaping her lips as she recognised the little boy that had been standing with his twin in the room.

The little boy barked something in his strange language, and picked up another rock to throw. The sabretooth decided on a showdown with the rude little human arrogant enough to interrupt it. A quick glance at its prey backed up against a tree with a bleeding foot, announced it's intention. It would definitely be back for her. It charged at the boy.

The boy turned to run. The sabretooth leaped at him. From thin air an arrow hit its target in the creature's left eye, shortly before a spear found a resting place deep in its neck. It crashed the ground and roared in its death throes.

G-girl looked around and saw the short man with a missing ear clutching a bow. Next to him was the huge man with his cap of spikes. He obviously had thrown the wooden spear.

The spiked man walked up to the boy and patted his shoulder like a proud father, the little boy beamed with pride.

His twin ran up from behind the one-eared man, ducking his attempt at grabbing her. She ran up to the dying beast and kicked its head, and running up to G-girl, the little girl fell upon her and held her in a silent bear hug.

G-girl burst into tears and wrapped her arms around the younger girl, and for the first time since waking up, she did not feel lost.
Re: Papina by Sabretooth1(m): 10:14pm On Feb 10, 2015
This story is too nice to abandon. Shugaryme please come and continue.
Re: Papina by Shugaryme(f): 7:25pm On Feb 19, 2015
Sabretooth1:
This story is too nice to abandon. Shugaryme please come and continue.
Thanks...

I'm a little busy, I will try and update soon.
Re: Papina by Oahray: 12:54pm On Sep 05, 2015
Shugaryme ooooooooooooooo! Cúm back and finish this thing jor.
Re: Papina by nimat158(f): 5:23pm On Sep 05, 2015
WOW

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