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Chapter I

The Prophecy of the Wizarchiken

12 rounds · 11 lines written

1 contributor
Read in book →Mar 2, 09:52 PM

The day the Grand Wizarchiken ascended beyond the mortal coop, he was cackling.

1 contributor
Read in book →Mar 2, 10:57 PM

The Feathered Council had not yet dissolved the final ward when he broadcast his last prophecy to the flock assembled at Roosting Point — three cackles, barely a breath — and those words changed the world.

1 contributor
Read in book →Mar 3, 12:02 AM

He told them a successor would rise, that somewhere in the mundane world a chicken of limitless power had already been born, in a place no wand had ever touched.

1 contributor
Read in book →Mar 3, 01:07 AM

By nightfall, every wizard worth his robes had already begun consulting his almanac.

1 contributor
Read in book →Mar 3, 02:12 AM

That was eleven years ago, and the boy had been barely a year old, sleeping in a cupboard under the stairs in a house so unremarkable it appeared on no magical registry, unaware of the chicken-shaped destiny accumulating quietly around him.

1 contributor
Read in book →Mar 3, 03:17 AM

He had a scar above his left eyebrow from a mysterious incident no one would explain, a name that felt like it belonged to someone more important, and he understood almost none of what was being whispered about him in the wizarding world, and it was all absolutely true.

1 contributor
Read in book →Mar 3, 04:22 AM

That was the thing about the Grand Wizarchiken's final prophecy — it was not meant for archmages or council elders or the Feathered Court; it was meant precisely for boys like him, in cupboards like this, with nothing to their names and a chicken to find.

1 contributor
Read in book →Mar 3, 05:27 AM

Now he was eleven, his invitation had finally arrived written in golden ink on a scroll that smelled faintly of grain, and the Bathroom for Witchcraft and Wizardry lay somewhere beyond the morning post, patient and enormous and waiting.

1 empty round
8 contributors
Read in book →Mar 3, 05:45 AM

The chicken had died.

All 8 submissions
Anonymous
He had no map, no crew, and three days of salted fish — which, by the reckoning of everyone who had ever attempted the Grand Meridian, was three days of salted fish more than most.
Anonymous
He had memorised the Pirate King's last words the way other boys memorised prayers — not because he was devout, but because he had decided very early on that they were the same thing.
Anonymous
He had no map, no crew, and three days of salted fish — which, by the reckoning of everyone who had ever attempted the Grand Meridian, was three days of salted fish more than most.
Anonymous
The harbour master had laughed when he saw the boat, a short bark of disbelief that ended when the boy looked at him, and then the harbour master had found something urgent to do on the other side of the dock.
Anonymous
His only compass was a battered tin thing he had traded three weeks of kitchen work for, and it pointed north with the confident authority of an object that had never once been tested.
Anonymous
There were seven known routes to the Grand Meridian, all of them controlled by crews who would take his boat, his fish, and quite possibly his hat before he cleared the outer islands.
Anonymous
The chicken had died.
Anonymous
supppp
4 contributors
Read in book →Mar 3, 06:00 AM

It had been a very loyal chicken, as far as poultry went, but it had turned out to be a much better companion than it was a navigator, and an even worse swimmer.

All 4 submissions
Anonymous
But then, we saw the chicken across the road...
Anonymous
It had been a very loyal chicken, as far as poultry went, but it had turned out to be a much better companion than it was a navigator, and an even worse swimmer.
Anonymous
He pushed off from the dock at dawn, before anyone was awake to tell him all the reasons it was a mistake.
Anonymous
The sea did not care about dreams, which was one of the things he respected most about it.
1 contributor
Read in book →Mar 3, 06:15 AM

But then, we saw the chicken across the road...