Daraquen was crouched on her hands and knees on the wooden floor of her father's kitchen. Her tiny hand held a glass bowl into which she peered with intense curiosity. Inside the transparent prison, a spider that had been unfortunate enough to have attracted the girls attention earlier as she played around the wash stand, scurried frantically from one side of the bowl to the other, tapping its legs on the cold clear material as it sought to find some crack or secret exit through which it could make it's bid for freedom, running up the sides but then sliding back into the bottom of the bowl. The antics of the spider brought shrieks of excitement from the girl as the spider continued to fail in its escape bid.
After a while the spider ceased in its attempt to escape and sat motionless on it long legs. Daraquen tapped the glass bowl vigorously in an attempt to induce some movement from the strange creature. The spider however, seemed to be defying all her wishes and continued to sit quite still before her curling its legs tightly beneath its body. After about a minute or so of tapping and jogging of the glass she decided that a new approach might be required. Carefully she flipped the bowl over with the intent of dislodging the small animal from the glass, yet to her astonishment it remained as if by magic glued to the bottom of the glass, defying both her will and apparently the laws of gravity. Tapping the glass still providing no effect, the girl sought more drastic measures and raising the bowl a few inches from the floor brought it down with a soft bump. To her delight this produced the desired result and she emitted a little squeal of pleasure as the spider tumbled to the wooden floor and immediately ran to the edge of the bowl. It started to scramble frantically at the edges lifting its body clear of the floor and reaching high up the smooth glass walls of its prison.
A large explosion emanating from her grandfathers workshop interrupted the game. Moments later the door flew open and an elderly man with a long flowing grey beard, rushed into the kitchen pursued closely by a large billowing cloud of blue smoke. He was obviously not amused by the recent events and was muttering under his breath as he hurried to the washstand and grabbed the water jug, He turned quickly, without a word to the small child who sat in silent amazement, returning quickly back into his workshop. Daraquen turning from her activities with the spider, almost absentmindedly lifting the bowl as she did so, watched the old man disappear through the doorway into the blue fog that swirled from it. The spider, seizing it's opportunity to make a bid for freedom scurried out of the glass and made a rapid dash for a crack in the floorboards, slipping successfully to safety.
Her curiosity now tingling, Daraquen quickly rose to her feet and edged towards the blue mist filled doorway of the workshop. Inside the old man was busy dowsing a small fire that burned happily on the wooden workbench. "Confounded nuisance, blast, blast, blast', he cursed under his breath. His grey moustache and beard twitching agitatedly as he muttered. Slowly the blue smoke fumes paled as the steam from the now damp smouldering contents of the silver crucible the old man had been working with became visible. The fire contended with, the old man bustled about frantically searching through some papers. Daraquen thought she heard him mutter something unintelligible about a dog, she watched as he paused, scratching his head for a moment then he picked up a pen and began scratching into a large red note book, crossing out a few lines here and there and adding a symbol or two there. Suddenly he let out yet another long exclamation of contempt, surprising the small girl and causing her to jump back behind the doorframe. Couching low and peering around the doorpost she watched to see what the commotion was about.
The old man was waving and shaking the pen in front of him. Apparently the pen had taken it upon itself to discharge a large inkblot in place of a desired full stop and was now in the process of being reprimanded. As the old man finished his admonishment of the pen, he discarded it deftly into the fire, thus ending it life with all the reverence afforded a traitor. As it crackled merrily in the flames the old man muttered a short eulogy, remarking on the 'shoddy' and wholly unsatisfactory service which the instrument had provided him over the years and then brushed his hands together in a gesture of that's put paid to that. Almost as if in answer to the old man's cruel words, the heat of the fire caused the pen spit its remaining ink, almost as an act of final defiance, narrowly missing him. Exhausted from his ranting and fire fighting activities the old man slumped into his rocking chair and sat despondently resting his cheek in his hand and emitting a loud sigh and a final 'blast'
Daraquen stood staring from the doorway, moving from her hiding place and looking at the old man. She was forbidden to enter this room by her grandfather and so remained motionless on the threshold gauging the situation. After running all the alternatives through her head she finally ventured.
'Grandfather, what was that big bang?',
The old man looked up as if disturbed from deep thought, 'Uh, oh what?', he started, 'Ah, Dara. Come here child', he patted the arm of his chair and rocked gently. Cautiously, Daraquen moved into the room. Her senses tingled with curiosity, there was so much to examine in this room of fascination. Her eyes followed small smoke rings which rose to the ceiling from a small tube bubbling on the bench beside her, whilst further along she could make out a glass flask with some strange curly tubing which glooped and popped rhythmically ejecting small jets of purple and orange vapour which swirled and twisted into strange shapes before dissipating into the air. Walking over to her grandfather's chair and climbing into his lap, she repeated the question. 'That bang grandfather, what was it?' It shook the whole house.'
Her grandfather patted her on the head and smiled. 'Oh that, that was a little project I was playing with', he paused thoughtfully, then shaking his head, 'you know I really thought I had got the calculation right this time.' He paused and looked down at the child sitting on his lap. 'Well young one', he said affectionately, 'and what have you been doing this morning. That poor spider you've been tormenting, did you learn anything from it?', he enquired.
'I didn't harm it.', Daraquen replied defensively, 'I was very gentle'. She wasn't sure how truthful that sounded remembering her vigorous attempts to stimulate it with her tapping and bang of the bowl. 'I just wanted to see how it worked. It was very little, but it seemed very clever. Almost like it knew that I was watching it and so it pretended to do nothing for a while and just sat very still.'
'I see', the old man replied, 'and what else did you discover about your little spider?' he asked.