((So, in our anticipation for what will inevitably be fun Final Fantasy RPz, Garaf and I have decided to write a series of stories about Garaf and Crawa as ~6-year-old children, as sort of a fun prologue to their adult adventures that will happen in-game. The time frame for these stories is directly after the events detailed in A Birthday Gone Bad. We'll be updating with a new episode every weekend until launch.))
The last few days had not been Garaf's favorites. He had spent them trying to avoid his hosts, particularly the girl Crawa. He didn't mind them personally, but Crawa was always shouting at him about this or that. "Don't make a mess!" she would say, or "Why are you dirty?!" or "Don't eat with your fingers!" or "Get off the roof!" All the shouting hurt his ears. But she was still preferable to the elderly man and the short servant-person. They kept giving him looks like they would put him to work any day now. So Garaf did the only thing he was prepared to do: He spent many hours on the roof and attempted to find a way to escape from the place that in his mind was quickly becoming an impregnable compound of doom.
The Compound consisted of three main buildings: a temple, a house, and a small warehouse, as well as a number of small buildings spread about the garden between the three larger buildings. Encasing the entire area was a circular hedge nearly as tall as the buildings themselves which somehow kept the forest beyond at bay. A large oak gate pierced through the hedge in front of the Temple and seemed to be barred much of the time, doubtless to keep the fierce beasts of the woods from breaking in and feasting on everyone inside the compound, or so Garaf figured.
Naturally, he knew escape would be his only option. The one called Esslar kept saying that there weren't any Duskwight Caves for many, many malms, but Garaf couldn't trust him. He was just the right size to be a goblin in disguise. In his child-mind, Garaf knew that there would be a Cave just a half hours stroll from the Hedge where he would be welcomed, handed a big piece of cooked Aldgoat meat, and never asked to do any meaningful work he didn't intend to do.
And one afternoon, while sitting on the shady side of the warehouse's roof, he spotted his chance. A scuffling sound lead him to a small rabbit's hole burrowed along the bottom of the hedge. He never would have found it without his Duskwight hearing, and as he bent down to push his way through he heard a shout that made him wince.
"Hey! What are you doing?" He pulled his head out of the brush and found the girl had come around the corner with a covered bundle in her hands.
"M'makin' my escape! There's a great big world out there 'n you can't keep me cooped up here!"
"It's dangerous out there, Stupid."
"I can take care of myself!" And with that Garaf threw his body into the hole with all the might he could muster. It turned out that he was a little wider in places than the rabbit who had been kind enough to form the tunnel, so he wound up doing some burrowing of his own as he went along. Just as he was beginning to think that the Hedge wouldn't ever end, his head pushed free into open air amid a burst of twigs and leaves. He squirmed the rest of the way and stood up, taking a big breath of 'freedom' before half-heartedly dusting the twigs and dirt from his clothing.
Just as he was finishing, he saw a blonde head of hair with a very disgruntled expression pop out from the hole by his foot. "You shouldn't leave the Hedge! It's dangerous. Papa says we're not allowed."
"So you stay here 'n I'll go." If Garaf had been more empathic he might have realized that his words stung the young girl but instead he wasn't paying attention and just shrugged as he started to walk off in a random direction.
He hadn't gone far when Crawa caught up with him, and he couldn't help but notice that she'd somehow kept her cotton dress clean as she went through the Hedge. "I'm supposed to look after you. Mama says! Now can we go back?"
Garaf kept walking. "She's not my Mama, sa why should I care?"
That earned him a bop on the back of the head and a shout of "errrr... STUPID!" Garaf grimaced and rubbed the back of his head before deciding to lose the girl in the brush. So he took off at a run, jumping and leaping through the brush and trying to outrun the girl who kept shouting at him to stop. He barreled through the tangled growth of tree and bush as best as his wiry frame could manage but he could still hear the girl keeping up and shouting names at him. And when he finally skid to a halt on the precipice of a slope that angled down into to a pit of mud, he got a jolt as the girl collided into his back at full speed.
The two went over the edge in a tumble of limbs and skirts and shouts to end up in a pit of thick mud that clung to them like paint. Garaf stood up and saw the both of them covered in debris and mud and began to laugh. Crawa rose from the mud with tears in her eyes and swiftly put an end to his laughter with a hand-shaped imprint in the mud on the boy's cheek. "Stupid! Now we're lost and I'm all dirty and my dress is ruined! All because you had to be stupid! Go ahead and go - I'm never speaking to you again!"
The Duskwight was dumbstruck as he watched the girl climb her way out of the pit with heaves and sobs. It was only then that he began to understand how upset she had been and he plopped down on a rock at the edge of the mud to try and figure out what he should do. His fantasies about goblins and spits of aldgoat and fortresses of doom didn't seem so clear anymore.
The girl disappeared over the edge of the pit before he thought of anything to say and he felt the heavy weight of guilt settle on his shoulders. A few moments later, though, she re-appeared at the edge of the pit; her fists clenched and tears running streaks through the mud on her face. "…Which is the way back, again?"
Garaf got to his feet. “I'll show ya.†He figured it was the least he could do. He scrambled up the slope like a bullfrog, and led Crawa along the trail of broken branches and trampled grass back to the Hedge. She sulked the entire way back, not saying a word the whole time. Garaf found that strangely uncomfortable. When they got back to the Hedge he pushed his way back through, trying to clear a more comfortable path for the girl, and came out the other side looking like some sort of tree-mud monster. When Crawa came after him a few moments later, she just walked off sullenly, forgoing even a “goodbye†or a jab about his dirtiness.
Garaf looked about and for the first time noticed the bundle that had been in Crawa's hands earlier. She had set it on the ground next to the warehouse wall, probably before she had followed him through the Hedge. Garaf pulled the wrapping off and started to use the cloth to clean his face. Once the mud from his skin was more or less transferred to the towel, he noticed what it had been wrapping: a plate with a still-warm leg of aldgoat meat. "Well... maybe this place isn't sooo bad...â€Â
Chapter 1
The last few days had not been Garaf's favorites. He had spent them trying to avoid his hosts, particularly the girl Crawa. He didn't mind them personally, but Crawa was always shouting at him about this or that. "Don't make a mess!" she would say, or "Why are you dirty?!" or "Don't eat with your fingers!" or "Get off the roof!" All the shouting hurt his ears. But she was still preferable to the elderly man and the short servant-person. They kept giving him looks like they would put him to work any day now. So Garaf did the only thing he was prepared to do: He spent many hours on the roof and attempted to find a way to escape from the place that in his mind was quickly becoming an impregnable compound of doom.
The Compound consisted of three main buildings: a temple, a house, and a small warehouse, as well as a number of small buildings spread about the garden between the three larger buildings. Encasing the entire area was a circular hedge nearly as tall as the buildings themselves which somehow kept the forest beyond at bay. A large oak gate pierced through the hedge in front of the Temple and seemed to be barred much of the time, doubtless to keep the fierce beasts of the woods from breaking in and feasting on everyone inside the compound, or so Garaf figured.
Naturally, he knew escape would be his only option. The one called Esslar kept saying that there weren't any Duskwight Caves for many, many malms, but Garaf couldn't trust him. He was just the right size to be a goblin in disguise. In his child-mind, Garaf knew that there would be a Cave just a half hours stroll from the Hedge where he would be welcomed, handed a big piece of cooked Aldgoat meat, and never asked to do any meaningful work he didn't intend to do.
And one afternoon, while sitting on the shady side of the warehouse's roof, he spotted his chance. A scuffling sound lead him to a small rabbit's hole burrowed along the bottom of the hedge. He never would have found it without his Duskwight hearing, and as he bent down to push his way through he heard a shout that made him wince.
"Hey! What are you doing?" He pulled his head out of the brush and found the girl had come around the corner with a covered bundle in her hands.
"M'makin' my escape! There's a great big world out there 'n you can't keep me cooped up here!"
"It's dangerous out there, Stupid."
"I can take care of myself!" And with that Garaf threw his body into the hole with all the might he could muster. It turned out that he was a little wider in places than the rabbit who had been kind enough to form the tunnel, so he wound up doing some burrowing of his own as he went along. Just as he was beginning to think that the Hedge wouldn't ever end, his head pushed free into open air amid a burst of twigs and leaves. He squirmed the rest of the way and stood up, taking a big breath of 'freedom' before half-heartedly dusting the twigs and dirt from his clothing.
Just as he was finishing, he saw a blonde head of hair with a very disgruntled expression pop out from the hole by his foot. "You shouldn't leave the Hedge! It's dangerous. Papa says we're not allowed."
"So you stay here 'n I'll go." If Garaf had been more empathic he might have realized that his words stung the young girl but instead he wasn't paying attention and just shrugged as he started to walk off in a random direction.
He hadn't gone far when Crawa caught up with him, and he couldn't help but notice that she'd somehow kept her cotton dress clean as she went through the Hedge. "I'm supposed to look after you. Mama says! Now can we go back?"
Garaf kept walking. "She's not my Mama, sa why should I care?"
That earned him a bop on the back of the head and a shout of "errrr... STUPID!" Garaf grimaced and rubbed the back of his head before deciding to lose the girl in the brush. So he took off at a run, jumping and leaping through the brush and trying to outrun the girl who kept shouting at him to stop. He barreled through the tangled growth of tree and bush as best as his wiry frame could manage but he could still hear the girl keeping up and shouting names at him. And when he finally skid to a halt on the precipice of a slope that angled down into to a pit of mud, he got a jolt as the girl collided into his back at full speed.
The two went over the edge in a tumble of limbs and skirts and shouts to end up in a pit of thick mud that clung to them like paint. Garaf stood up and saw the both of them covered in debris and mud and began to laugh. Crawa rose from the mud with tears in her eyes and swiftly put an end to his laughter with a hand-shaped imprint in the mud on the boy's cheek. "Stupid! Now we're lost and I'm all dirty and my dress is ruined! All because you had to be stupid! Go ahead and go - I'm never speaking to you again!"
The Duskwight was dumbstruck as he watched the girl climb her way out of the pit with heaves and sobs. It was only then that he began to understand how upset she had been and he plopped down on a rock at the edge of the mud to try and figure out what he should do. His fantasies about goblins and spits of aldgoat and fortresses of doom didn't seem so clear anymore.
The girl disappeared over the edge of the pit before he thought of anything to say and he felt the heavy weight of guilt settle on his shoulders. A few moments later, though, she re-appeared at the edge of the pit; her fists clenched and tears running streaks through the mud on her face. "…Which is the way back, again?"
Garaf got to his feet. “I'll show ya.†He figured it was the least he could do. He scrambled up the slope like a bullfrog, and led Crawa along the trail of broken branches and trampled grass back to the Hedge. She sulked the entire way back, not saying a word the whole time. Garaf found that strangely uncomfortable. When they got back to the Hedge he pushed his way back through, trying to clear a more comfortable path for the girl, and came out the other side looking like some sort of tree-mud monster. When Crawa came after him a few moments later, she just walked off sullenly, forgoing even a “goodbye†or a jab about his dirtiness.
Garaf looked about and for the first time noticed the bundle that had been in Crawa's hands earlier. She had set it on the ground next to the warehouse wall, probably before she had followed him through the Hedge. Garaf pulled the wrapping off and started to use the cloth to clean his face. Once the mud from his skin was more or less transferred to the towel, he noticed what it had been wrapping: a plate with a still-warm leg of aldgoat meat. "Well... maybe this place isn't sooo bad...â€Â