Rkshas ki Mrtyu
Mammal Tafren, Intaki Liberation Front
Once there was a family who lived by a wide muddy river. The man had a pet, a tame Rkshas, of which he was very fond.
The Rkshas was brown and grey and standing on its hind legs, would dwarf the man by several feet.
The man had found the beast as a cub, with its ribs crushed, whining and bleating, wallowing in a hollow by the river. Against the advice of others, he had taken it, half-mad with pain, back to his home, where he had nursed it, feeding it sweetened milk, until it was well.
The creature grew, until it could no longer be kept easily in the house, and soon, it loped off in search of a mate, disappearing across the river and into the trees, dissolving into grey mist.
The man searched in the woods tirelessly for the beast he had raised, sometimes taking his six sons with him. One day, he simply did not return, but the sons returned fearfully, looking back at the jungle with haunted eyes and refusing to speak of what they had seen.
Years later, howling could be heard from the jungle which crouched along the left bank of the river, especially after the long rains of Ramacandra. In the grey mists which blanketed the river and sometimes drifted over to the town people would see shapes, shambling grey figures that were decried as the servants of death.
The Rkshas ki Mrtyu loomed over the town, and all knew that to see it was as a harbinger of some dark destiny.
Some claimed to see it once, when the mists of Vitkala were thick over the river, emerging from the trees to stare sadly at a departing shuttle, which traveled skyward, into black inevitability, never to return.
Others say that the Rkshas ki Mrtyu was seen by Saxon Hawke the day before his son, Ravi was killed. But many scoff, saying that myths and superstition mean nothing in this age of capsules and empire. No ghosts exist, they say.
But as the grey mist descends and a distant howling is heard, there are none who are immune to the paralysing fear that accompanies the scrabbling of great grey paws and the scratching at the door.