Tama’s breath hitched as the sky darkened; something vast blotted the sun and the forest fell into a shocked hush. A monstrous shadow moved above the canopy, and every bird and insect froze in its wake. He had come for a deer, but the world had come for his attention instead.
In the untamed valleys of Aotearoa, the Pouakai was a name that warped the air around it. Not a simple bird, it carried the weight of old power: wings wide enough to swallow the sun, talons that could rip saplings from the earth, and a cry that bent the hills. People spoke of it behind closed doors and hurried their children away from exposed ridges when the wind changed.
Tama returned to the village pale and raw with what he had seen. He told the elders about the shadow and the deer taken in a single sweep. The elders listened, faces like weathered stone; their silence said what their tongues would not.
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Villages that had kept separate fences and separate fires now sent messengers; the calls gathered a strange kind of purpose. Warriors sharpened bone and wood; tohunga read the lines of tide and wind; women and children offered food and songs. Among those who stood ready were Tane, who moved like a river—steady and inevitable, and Waimarie, a tohunga whose hands could steady a fever and whose voice could call wind into stillness.
They spoke in low tones of mana and the land’s memory. Waimarie said the Pouakai was not merely a creature of hunger but a thing bound to old grievances. The plan they made mixed muscle and ritual: traps where the bird hunted, chants to tether it, and a spear blessed from a creature the Pouakai might recognize.
The ascent to the lair pushed them so high the clouds felt like a low ceiling and the stone tasted of cold iron and old rain. At dawn the thin air pinched their lungs; each step was a small fight. Frost rimed the grass at higher ledges, and the men hunched against wind that wanted to pry them loose. They moved as one shape on the mountainside, breath and footfall measured and deliberate, and when the Pouakai opened its wings the sky itself seemed to compress.
The bird struck with the quickness of thought and the patience of a hunter that remembered centuries. Tane’s spear sang through the cold and nicked the beast’s wing; the impact sounded like a tree snapping far below. The Pouakai answered by slamming wind into the slope and sending Tane skidding across scree.
Spears and stones met feather and muscle; the air filled with a rain of feathers and dust, and a metallic tang—old blood—hung on the breath of those who watched. Each exchange stripped the world’s birdsong down to a raw, ragged rhythm. A warrior’s shout cut like a knife; boots slipped, hands found footing, a spearhead bright with sun and shadow.
Waimarie stayed at the edge, palms raised in chant. Her voice wove with the wind; the trees leaned as if to eavesdrop, roots shifting underfoot, branches reaching like hands to catch the falling world. For a moment the land responded—vines and low branches braided up to snag a wing, loose rock tumbled to trip a talon, a gust turned against the beast.
The Pouakai fought with animal fury, shaking free, claws tearing at air and stone. The mountain answered with noise: a roar of wind, the crack of splintered wood, the crying of birds gone silent then startled into flight. The battle felt less like two sides and more like a place rearranging itself around a new wound.
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