In the beginning, there was darkness. It surrounded him, comforted him. 
The dark was everything. It filled time and the Space around him, along 
with a bright, soft lump. It was hard to say how long he remained 
huddled there in the darkness, but he knew what he heard and smelt 
outside him as he grew older. He could discern more about the dark 
around him as well, and learned that it hid a curving barrier that 
encompassed his entire world. Outside the Barrier, though, was 
everything else. He could see periods of dark and not-dark that went on 
there—he chose to sleep during the not-dark because it was  painful to 
look at—and detected other happenings as well. He could see shapes in 
the not-dark when the noises woke him, and smell more things outside: 
sharp, woody, musty, acrid. There were also, he found, more lumps 
outside that smelled the same as the one in his Space. It took him a 
while to realize that the lump was him. It moved when he told it to, and
 grew as he grew. It was beginning to take up too much of the Space 
after a while; crushed against the Barrier, he could see that it was 
only a thin layer between him and the Beyond. He could watch other 
creature-shapes come and go around him, their size unfathomably large. 
They were always nearby, and kept his Space warm for him. They would 
leave sometimes, but always came back before the light changed. He was 
watching one of the shapes when it left him, moving beyond his range of 
sight. He squirmed to try and see, but all he could do was hear: roars, 
snarls, groans, and screams from the Beyond. They stopped after a while,
 and he was glad, because they were not pretty sounds and made his head 
ache. He was happy when one of the creature-shapes came back to him. It 
stayed crouched a little away from where he was, but he could still feel
 the warmth from it. Then it came over to him and breathed on the 
outside of his Space. The heat intensified, and he could hear crackling 
and popping from where it touched the Barrier. It stiffened around him, 
and clouded up until he could no longer see through. He didn’t mind, 
though; he knew the creature-shape was still there. He closed his eyes 
and sank into sleep, and when he awoke, the creature-shape was gone. The
 comforting warmth had left with it, and he was afraid. He thrashed 
around, struggling to see through the Barrier as he once could. It was 
no use, but he heard it crack as he fought it, and give a bit when he 
touched it. The Barrier was going to let him out! As he continued to 
claw at it, he could hear similar struggles from next to him. Another 
must have its own Barrier and Space in this very cave. Maybe they could 
help him. He redoubled his efforts, and at last he struggled right 
through the Barrier, out of his Space and into the Beyond.      
The
 two dragons were all alone when they hatched. They had no one to feed 
or nurture them, no one to shelter or protect them. There was no parent 
to comfort the hatchlings when they wailed when the too-strong smells, 
too-loud sounds, and too-bright light overwhelmed their senses. They 
were far too frightened and weak to venture outside of their cave and 
forage, too helpless to survive for very long. They would have been dead
 by the end of the week had it not been for the birds. They had seen 
everything from a safe perch in a nearby tree. They’d seen the two adult
 dragons dart into the hidden cave with their immature eggs in tow. 
They’d seen the creatures that had hunted them finally catch up. They 
could do nothing but watch as the dragons were finally brought down by 
those fearsome creatures. The mother was able to return to the cave 
after the father drew off the creatures. She breathed fire onto the 
eggs, causing them to expand and turn brittle so the hatchlings could 
escape, a process the dragons called Namabrok (“fire shaping”). She was 
dragged away from the eggs and presumably killed along with her partner,
 but she had fulfilled her duty: the hatchlings had survived. Not for 
much longer, though, at the rate they were going. The birds did not 
quite understand why predators stayed away from the cave; what did they 
have to fear from two helpless newborns? However, the dragons’ scent 
would protect them, and they could prove useful later. So the birds 
patiently looked after the two dragons, bringing them scraps of meat and
 roots to eat. They soaked moss with water, too, and the two quickly 
recovered from their malnourished state, growing at an alarming rate. 
Talons lengthened, height increased, scales hardened, muscles 
strengthened. To the birds’ astonishment, the two nubs that the dragons 
had borne on their backs since hatching grew into feeble wings, not 
quite suited for flying just yet. They soon learned to speak and hunt 
for themselves, so the birds had less to worry about after a few years. 
They called the male Feirog, for his flaming set of scales that 
glittered in the sun; the female was Jura, for her coldly gleaming blue 
ones. Neither bird nor dragon knew that this fulfilled a prediction that
 had been made centuries ago. But one day, Feirog and Jura spoke in the 
language of man. At first the birds tried to convince themselves that it
 was a simple mistake, but they soon had to face the truth: these 
dragons were as cunning and resourceful as humans, a bridge between the 
feral and civilized worlds. Who knew if they were as vicious, as brutal?
 Not wanting to be eaten in payment for their services, they flew off 
one day and never returned. Accepting this new development—they’d known 
the birds would have to leave some time—the two dragons continued to 
fend for themselves until their wings were strong enough to fly.
(Lecturer: DEVI ARYANI/Subject: Tulisan 4) 
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