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| Starting [[Statpack]]: Agile | Starting [[Statpack]]: Agile | ||
| ==The Origin of the Rajamala People== | |||
| As told by Klaana: | |||
| It was the time of the great unknowing when all was without intellect but | |||
| guided by instinct and blood and hunger. The Itzatl was but an empty plain, | |||
| home only to scuttling beetles and the birds that hunted them out of | |||
| desperation. Some say it was a dark time, when we came to be. | |||
| We looked to the other creatures to understand how to eat and behave. We looked | |||
| to the creatures best suited to our interests. We looked to the lion and the | |||
| panther and the lynx. The Pantheon looked upon our ignorance and our beastly | |||
| ways, and most were displeased. Yet there was One that smiled and delighted. In | |||
| the rhythm our blood, spoke the Divine, urging us towards hunt and flight, | |||
| chase and kill, camouflage and survival. And we began to change. | |||
| Shorter our fingers became, and between them grew curved claws for ripping and | |||
| tearing. Powerful became our legs, and sharp our senses. The hiding became | |||
| easier, as did the leaping and the devouring. With tail and eyes and paws | |||
| granted by the Divine, we were every bit as much as cats as the lion, and we | |||
| were greater! More cunning still were we, and less merciful. | |||
| Our fur was the color of hunger, and from it did mortals learn the color | |||
| orange. There were no stripes, nor other interruption in its glory; that | |||
| tragedy would come later. From our pelts came the hues of the sunset and the | |||
| summer blossoms, for our cunning inspired all the world. | |||
| "You shall be called Tiger," said the Divine pulsing of our blood. | |||
| So did we live for many years, in a pure state beyond happiness and knowledge. | |||
| Then came the Other, whose roar was one of intellect. "These were once mortals | |||
| and now prowl the lands as beasts? What are these misshapen creatures, and to | |||
| what purposes do You pretend? They were to have wit, and clarity of mind! This | |||
| was not how it was meant to be!" said this Other, and it has been forgotten if | |||
| there was a reply in words, for the agony that followed swallowed all sound and | |||
| sense. | |||
| We were ripped apart, from the inside out. Divided in half, as surely as a | |||
| blade through the stomach, were we cut, and the cut was jagged. We looked at | |||
| our selves, and saw that we had become two. One retained the shape of Tiger and | |||
| one had regained two legs and stood upright. The pure sunset orange that had | |||
| blanketed us was haphazardly ripped, shared between our two bodies, the rest | |||
| streaked with the black of loss. | |||
| We have never found a way to reunite our divided halves. One half we still call | |||
| tiger, though most forget to call them brother. The other half, retaining tail | |||
| and fur yet lacking so much of what we were, endowed eventually instead with | |||
| capacity for thought and speech, came to be called the people of the Curved | |||
| Claw, or the Raja Mala in the Oldest Tongue. No longer do we approach the | |||
| Divine with claws sheathed. Perhaps one day we may again discover our purity of | |||
| color and purpose, and perhaps even repay the Other for Their tearing us in | |||
| two. | |||
| Until then, in roar and tooth, in stripe and stalk, we are Rajamala and we are | |||
| proud. | |||
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