User:Najawin/Sandbox 4

=Against Nature=

East
Primo Acamapichtli Isleño de la Vega stood at a fountain in San Miguel Coatlinchan and thought about water, how both science and faith had come to agree that water was the source of all life. Vehicles began to fill the square around him, and he thought back once more, to time spend at Rudolfo's place. And then, harder, to caves and lakes. Rudolfo had told him to see Ultima. And the rest of his memory was out of place. Acamapichtli, the first Tlatoani of Tenochtitlan and the founder of the Mexica dynasty hid in a cave, thinking about the world and the world beyond, and those points where they would meet. Primo turned and walked the streets towards home, and he sees it still in his mind's eye. A man comes to him, sensing he is troubled, which Primo assents to - the idea of becoming full Tlatoani for the Mexica, in his memories, discomforts his remembered self. And it discomforts him now, the realism of these visions, of a healer, a stranger coming to him, with a name of Serpentine Fire. The Primo of his visions explains how he has been cursed, and the healer extracts a tool from his robes, shaking Primo from his vision. A few minutes later he finds himself at his house, and walks in to his mother watching her telenovela. After reheating dinner, he tells her he's going to see Ultima.

Characters
Acamapichtli was the first Tlatoani of Tenochtitlan and the founder of the Mexica dynasty.

Concepts
Tlatoani - Acamapichtli was the first Tlatoani of Tenochtitlan.

Items
"bolt of stone with four hollows carved into its length. Its face was inlaid with an equal number of silvered thorns stood in a row, each projecting outwards like the needles of a young mizquitl tree." Ask around if anyone knows if this is a reference to something (maybe Nate, could be just a generic biodata tool).

Locations?
San Miguel Coatlinchan - a city (in Mexico?) with a status of "Chalchihuitlicue, the River Goddess"

Tenochtitlan - Acamapichtli was the first Tlatoani of Tenochtitlan.

http://onereed.blogspot.com/2013/08/against-nature-nahuatl-glossary.html