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                            Lionbirds
                    by Martin R. Crim (1994)

This is the rationalist view:
     The lionbird is a species of eagle which travels and hunts
in prides.  Prides take prey of all sizes from pigeons to bison,
and also eat carrion.  Each pride has a king, or alpha male,
several subordinate males, and many females.  Many young males
leave the pride to travel in bachelor packs, and eventually join
prides other than those of their birth.  Their secretive breeding
habits have led to the legend that they hatch their eggs in
heaven.  This legend is disproved by the occasional sighting of a
lionbird in Fire Season, when they supposedly are all in heaven. 
Their plumage is tawny.  Males have golden crests, and the king
always has the largest crest in the pride.  Kings live only a
year, worn out by monopolizing the mating.  Lionbirds have a
group song, sometimes heard by humans, which is alien but
rhythmic.

This is the theistic view:
     The lionbird is one of the oldest children of Vrok.  It was
one of the favorites of Murharzarm and he often hunted with it. 
The lionbird pride emulates the divine order of Yelm, with a
king, several subordinates, and males over females.  The male's
golden crest is a special blessing from Vrok, and sign of his
favor.  It is regicide to kill a king lionbird, ignoble to slay
any male lionbird, and bad luck even to disturb a pride.
     The sky gods use lionbirds as messengers to mortals, for
they travel to the sky once a year, in Fire Season.  Outlaw birds
must remain behind on the earth.  When the prides reach heaven,
old kings retire there forever.  One male in each pride finds the
divine meal which makes him the new king.  The females bear the
new king's eggs and hatch them near the end of Fire Season.  The
eggs are gold in color, but not metallic.  Fed on fire berries
and the meat of heavenly animals, the young grow fast.  At the
end of Fire Season, the females push the young out of their
nests, and the fledglings must learn to fly as they plummet
toward the earth.  The pride follows, calling out instructions to
the young ones.  Those who learn to fly join the pride.  Those
who do not, plunge into the sea.  This represents the virtue of
Justice.
     The lionbirds sing, representing the virtue of Harmony. 
Their song often reveals messages from heaven to those with the
wisdom to understand.  To hear their song is a blessing, and
bound to bring the same joy of the heart which the sun brings
when he bursts through clouds.
     Sheng Seleris was accompanied in much of his career by a
pride of lionbirds who brought him messages from the sky gods. 
They sang to him each morning, and he interpreted their songs to
his companions.  Other solar heroes, mostly of the Golden and
Silver Ages, had friendly lionbird prides. 
     Lionbird feathers are good for many Light, Fire, Harmony,
Life, and Death magics.  Crest feathers are best.  Pentian kings
need lionbird feathers for their head-dresses.

This is the game view:
Lionbirds are medium-sized eagles.  Their keen sight and high
intelligence would make them good familiars and allied spirits,
but they grow lonely away from their pride and sometimes pine
away and die.  A lone bird lives no more than five years in
captivity, less if caged or wing-clipped.  Allying an entire
pride is possible, if one gains the friendship of the king. 
However, the whole pride then flies away in late Sea Season.  The
king does not return, so neither does the pride (in most cases).
     An adventurer can use Falconry (a/k/a Hawking) to train a
lionbird.  Training is easier if the trainer wears a yellow
feather crest on his hat or helm.  The lionbird song is
instinctive, however, and training cannot change it.  Using
Falconry on a king lionbird carries a 50 percentile penalty.
     The statistics below are for an average male, which is about
.8 meters long, beak to talons, and has a 2 meter wingspan (about
the size of a bald eagle).  The king has a SIZ of 4 (1.1 meters
long and 3 meter wingspan--the size of a California Condor).  The
king has a STR of 18 and INT of 5, and POW above 12.  Average
females are .7 meters long, with a 1.8 meter wingspan and STR
2D6+4, but are otherwise the same as average males.  The smallest
young observed are SIZ 2 (.6 meters long, 1.5 meter wingspan).

characteristics     Average
STR  2D6+5            12           Move: flying 12, walking 1
CON  2D6+3            10           
SIZ   3                3           Hit Points          7
INT   4                4
POW  3D6             10-11
DEX  3D6+18          28-29

Hit location        Melee (D20)    Missile (D20)       Points
R Leg               01-02          01                  0/2
L Leg               03-04          02                  0/2
Abdomen             05-07          03-06               1/3
Chest               08-09          07-11               1/3
R Wing              10-13          12-15               0/2
L Wing              14-17          16-19               0/2
Head                18-20          20                  1/3

Weapon     SR       Attack %       Damage
Dive      Special   45+10          2D6
Claw        7       60+10          1D6
Peck       10       45+10          1D3

Note: Lionbirds Dive to kill small prey or to wound larger prey. 
Lionbirds attack large foes (SIZ 4 and up) in a group, with some
distracting the foe while others Dive and then claw and peck. 
The distraction subtracts 5% from the target's skills for each
lionbird in the attacking group, up to 75%.  Each lionbird that
closes gets a Dive attack.  If the prey does not effectively
attack back, the lionbird stays near it and gets Claw and Peck
attacks in the next round.  If the prey tries to attack back, the
Lionbird wheels away, climbs, and gets another Dive attack on the
sixth round after the last Dive.  Lionbirds never suffer a damage
penalty for STR + SIZ when using natural weapons.

Skills: Dodge 80+19, Scan 100-6, Search 100-6.
Armor: 1 point feathers on abdomen, chest, and head.


Random note: The mongols used Golden Eagles to hunt wolves, and
the weight to strength ratio of raptors is much higher than
represented in the RQ rules.  Change the Hawk stats on page 24 of
the RQ Creatures Book to STR 2D6+2 for hawks and STR 2D6+5 for
eagles.  The strength of raptors is concentrated in their talons
and flight muscles, however, and a normal human could wrestle one
pretty easily as long as he guarded against the beak and talons.