Chapter Text
Born of Heaven and Flesh
Bring what cannot be bought
Give what violence cannot give.
*~*
Staring up at the smooth-bricked ceiling, Avaron still wasn’t certain what material it was made out of. Her gut believed it to be granite, but it lacked the speckling she would've expected. Iron bars reinforced the stonework, giving it that really gritty medieval sort-of-look. I can’t believe I’m reduced to this now, she thought with a humorless chuckle. Goodness, even in a world like this jails are incredibly boring.
At least she had a nice bed and some kind of beauty-station meets dresser. Small torch-holders lined the walls, carrying awfully bright, luminous crystals. A plain cream-colored rug covered most of the floor, while an iron-clad door adorned with silver filigree marked the only way in or out. It might’ve been a nice hotel room, if there was a window and wood walls. Sitting up with a huff, Avaron’s shimmering blue, plasma-like eyes fell down to her hands. The pale, white-porcelain of her skin sat in the bright light, odd stone-like blemishes here and there. Deep, darker blue veins crisscrossed beneath the ‘skin’, not a hint of red humanity at all to be seen. In some respects she felt like some kind of living mannequin or statue, but she was too squishy and pliable to be that, necessarily.
Was she like a doll? Her joints were exposed, if only a little bit. Her porcelain 'skin' looked more like segments of chitin or armor molded atop of the tentacle-like muscles underneath. Or, no, they're literally tentacles, but somehow wound together enough to work rather functionally. It was especially weird because her torso was mostly one contiguous piece of porcelain, and her boobs were definitely molded out of said porcelain, not tentacle. Although, her nips were a delightfully dark blue color, so that was neat. In fact, downstairs looked much the same. If it was chitin, why the hell was she so soft and squishy?
Human in shape, if not entirely in form. At least her face looked cute and normal still, even if it wasn't 'her' original face. Well, perhaps a bit more angular than before. That and the blue, mostly chin-length hair that she wasn't entirely sure was 'hair' or some kind of even smaller, smoother tentacle. It was both too defined to be an actual smooth hair texture, but too small for thicker, either. Wait, did she have a scalp? Avaron poked around her the top of her head, fingers weaving through her maybe-tentacle-hair, not entirely sure what she was feeling up there. It definitely wasn't her brain but it wasn't her porcelain skin, either.
I can’t blame them for freaking out. Not exactly human anymore, am I? she wondered incredulously. What the fuck is this?
Still, being a divine heroine, she half-expected more reasonable treatment. Then again, a few days ago she was in a boardroom for the annual wrap-up report. Reasonable was a very precious commodity all of a sudden.
Avaron sighed, flopped backwards onto the bed, and drearily looked up at the same-old ceiling again. “This wasn't part of the deal, Nex. What the fuck did you turn me into? How am I supposed to work like this? Plus, these people aren't exactly trusting of divine grace, apparently. I'm being serious here, this is a hostile work environment to say the least.”
It’s not like her ‘blessings’ would be of any help either. For want of any divine response, she looked instead to the computer-like screen that popped into existence in front of her. It came at a moment's notice and left just as swiftly, acting like some kind of terminal. A blue-backed panel, lined with a golden frame and flourishing flowery filigree, contained such helpful information like ‘skills’ and ‘inventory’. She even had a level counter and experience gauge, practically a complete set of features from some sort of RPG video game. I’m appreciative of it, at least, she mused, opening her skills and peering down the list once again. But what is this?
There were [skills] and [abilities] like [Primal Infusion], [Divine Blessing: Unity], [Divine Regeneration], [Hive Queen], and [Genetic Engineering]. Each one after another was just utterly wild for her to read. Even crazier, their descriptions really just painted into one specific, lecherous corner. I mean, sure, out of all of them I picked her because it seemed the best to work with, but changing me into a damn tentacle monster? Hello, that wasn't in the deal? Do I need a fucking terms of service agreement?
Well, tentacle monster so far called a 'tentradom'. The folk in the church’s summoning room freaked out when they saw her, screaming about a tentradom, too. Then the knights came, then the throwing into the jail room, and then her utter boredom. She hadn’t much of a time to get a word in, or talk with the other twelve people she’d ended up being ‘summoned’ with. Avaron sighed despondently.
The sound of metal sliding cut through the air, and her head lifted toward the door. More metal locks being moved, followed by the ever louder, frantic voices on the other side. Arguments, but too muffled for her to make out. Avaron watched bemusedly as the door opened, and a woman in knightly armor stepped in, followed by a man in priestly robes. Their argument seemed to die instantly upon seeing her sitting on the bed.
“You are her?” the woman asked, obviously dubious.
“No, the one you want is three doors down.”
The blonde-haired woman blinked, her blue eyes rather befuddled for a moment. She turned toward the priest, who whispered something to her. Then she turned back, rather annoyed looking with how her round face creased. “Your jest is ill-placed, tentradom.”
“Lady, first I landed in some strange room, get body tackled to the floor, clapped upside the head, then locked into here. Who even are you people?” Avaron demanded, throwing her hands up with exasperation. They all tensed at the motion, the knightly woman and the other female knights behind her edging toward their weapons for a moment. That made Avaron pause, the reflexive motion all-too-telling on its own.
I see. So I’m dangerous to them.
A commotion came from behind, the sound of a woman demanding passage. The knights parted in an awkward shuffle, only the woman and the priest left. Another priest?
Turning around, the knightly woman said, “It isn’t safe for you.”
“Mine flame decree it so!” The third party, definitely another woman, declared. Her voice had the air of one unused to speaking loudly, and an odd sort of scratching harshness to her tone. “Thy impertinence wears thin.”
“You were allowed as a courtesy, the Church doesn’t permit you to interfere,” the priest said with a dire tone.
“Thy Church already defies the covenant, yet hath the gall to put on airs?”
A loud scoff followed, and Avaron saw a rather curious sight force itself past the knightly woman and the priest. Another woman, maybe around five feet in height and the shortest person here, dressed in black, ashen-colored robes. A hood concealed her head, while motley bandages wrapped her hands and neck. Avaron gaze, most of all, fell into the sparkling fire she held in her palms. Larger than a bic lighter’s flame, it whipped and curled, brushing the bandages but never once igniting them.
The new woman paused, her visor-hidden face leaning in to regard the flame in her palms. She looked up to Avaron, then back to the flame, and then let out a long, pleased sigh. “Tis thee indeed!” she said, almost talking to herself. In stepping closer, the others at the door sharply let out warnings, but none were heeded. Avaron leaned back, angling to get up as the stranger came ever closer. She scooted across the bedding, coming to rest against the headboard, while the stranger stood at the bed’s end. “Mine pleasure to behold thy greatness!”
“Cool?” Avaron said, her eyes jumping from the dancing flame to the masked woman. “Who are you?”
“Oh! Mine apologies.” The woman bowed, clutching the flame against her bosomy chest. “Mine name be Gwyneth; I speak for the Eternal Flame.”
She practically radiated her excitement and Avaron half-expected glittering sparkles to shoot off of her. Ever leery, she nonetheless nodded. “Alright, a pleasure to meet you. What do you want?”
Gwyneth tried to speak, but the priest at the door cut in sharply. “That is quite enough. As you can see she is quite in health still, now it is time to leave.”
Hidden from their sight but not hers, Avaron saw Gwyneth gnashing her teeth. Then, her lips mouthed a word several times, one she pieced together as ‘Tonight’. Pulling away from the bed, Gwyneth let out a dissatisfied sound, but went back to the door. Everyone there filed out back into the connecting hall, only the knightly woman remaining for a moment. Their eyes met, but she had nothing to say save a disgusting scowl, and shut the door once more.
In the dead silence that followed, Avaron only stared bemusedly at where everyone had been.
What?
*~*
She jerked awake, the clack-clang-clank of metal parts moving all-too-loud in her ears. Avaron sat up from beneath the bed sheets, spying the metal door opening in the dim-darkness. A wrenching whine of the hinges filled the air, and from beyond the frame, a flickering light shined through. “Blessed heroine?” Gwyneth’s familiar voice asked uneasily.
“Hi?” Avaron asked uneasily. “What are you doing here?”
Gwyneth’s half-covered face peered around the door. “Come, quickly. Tis important, verily.”
Suspicious beyond measure, she nonetheless saw an opportunity to get out of jail. Hurrying out of bed, she folded back the bedsheets over her used pillows. At least, those who didn’t inspect the bed wouldn’t find out she was actually gone. Gwyneth showed no fear when Avaron approached the door, her demure lips even betraying a smile. “Why are you doing this?” she asked in a hushed voice.
“Thy fate,” Gwyneth said, just as hushed. “Mine flame bid me see thee set upon thy path.”
Did those goddesses really send a priestess for me? Avaron wondered with disbelief. Then again, it wouldn’t have been the strangest thing in her life thus far. Stepping out with Gwyneth, she saw the same dimly lit hallway, smooth-stone bricks and all. The priestess took the lead, her boots thumping and thumping against the carpet. Avaron hadn’t a clue where they were going or if the guards would appear, but she kept her mouth shut.
The stupidest thing to do in a breakout would be distracting the leader, after all.
Up one flight of stairs and then another; a central-staircase design, with each new floor leading to more ‘cells’. She counted at least four, although it went lower than the level hers was on. When they reached the top floor, a great pair of iron doors awaited, glowing as they were with white symbols. Gwyneth slowly stepped up to it, and knocked on a smaller iron plate. “Tis me.”
The plate slid open, and what looked like a knight on the otherside. It shut just as quickly.
A groan of metal signaled one of the doors sliding open, just enough a person could slip through. Gwyneth did so, beckoning for Avaron to follow. A silvery-armored looking knight stood on the other side, and when they were both through, he pushed the door shut again.
“You made good time, but hurry,” he whispered.
“Thank thee, noble Fernad.”
“Flame guide you, Gwyneth,” Fernad returned, and seemed to take up his post again, sitting down at a nearby chair.
Avaron spared it any thought as Gwyneth hurried along through the hallway again. I’m sensing a bit of a religious schism, she mused. What kind, however, remained elusive.
One hall after another; a storage room, then an empty dining hall of some kind. The final set of doors brought them outside, the light of a full moon casting the big courtyard in a pale light. Gwyneth cupped her hands together, hiding the flickering light of her flame fully. “We are nearly there,” she said, heading down a walking path toward one a great tall wall. It seemed part of a castle wall or similar fortification to Avaron’s curious eyes.
A passage through the wall soon stretched before them, its great iron doors already ajar. Another knight sat by, barely looking up at them as they sped past in their hurried walk. This can’t be the main gate. Why are we going … oh, a lake.
It made sense now, even more so as they stepped onto the docks themselves. To the left and right, a great array of docks lined up against the great wall, with a number of passages connecting them. Distant torches bobbed up and down, sturdy, armor-clad figures patrolling everywhere a guard could be. Except, interestingly, the section they were on. Gwyneth led the way down a dock that turned from stony-floor to wood, with a ramp leading up to the only ship still moored.
Avaron hadn’t a real comparison, but it had two decks and three masts. A river trading ship? Maybe? I don’t smell salt on the wind. And we’re going onto that ship now …?
They reached the empty deck, and hurrying through a cabin door, Avaron found herself moving into the bowels of the ship. It would be, at one final door, they both entered into a private room, with a hanging hammock of a bed, a bolted-to-the-floor table, and a chest of some kind. Gwyneth shut the door, sliding a bolt into place with a solid thunk. She let out a long, shaky breath of relief.
“Tis done, tis done,” she said, shaking her hands and flexing her fingers. The flame, free of her palms, danced across the tops of her hands, moving as a spider seeking its perch. “Ohh, mine heart cannot handle this rush.”
“What, never broke out of jail before?”
“No!” Gwyneth shot back with exasperation.
Avaron shot her a thumbs up. “Good job on your first time.”
“T-thanks.”
“So, why’d you do it?”
“Tis thy fate.”
“Lady, I’m not even one day on this world and I’m breaking out of jail. What fate are you talking about?”
“Let me, ehm, sit down,” Gwyneth asked first, already moving over to the hammock. It turned from bedding to chair in an instant, slacking underneath her weight. Her hands rested upon her knees, while her ever-present little flame sat in the air over her lap. “Tis the will of the goddesses, but thou wish for more.”
Shaking her head, Avaron made for the only other sitting-worthy surface, and hopped up onto the table. It creaked under her weight, but held up fine otherwise. “Let’s try with why we were summoned to this world.”
“Ah, that …” Gwyneth mumbled, sounding far more displeased. “Twas a scheme by the Church of the Everlasting Light.”
“For …”
“Divine heroines, blessed by the goddesses, appear throughout history. Most are summoned, as thee were, from other worlds. Normally, by the lands most in need.” Gwyneth’s mouth twisted into a scowl, and the flame in her lap took on an edged, serrated flicker. “But the Church sought more for itself; and so summoned heroines that were not needed. Not only that, but thirteen heroines! Tis unheard of!”
If these so-called heroines had great magical power or otherwise, Avaron could see how it’d be a bad situation. “So, they’re threatening the peace then, with all these heroines?”
“Thy insight is deep indeed. The Church has disturbed the delicate balance of the world, and such ambitions threaten us all.”
Rubbing her eyes, Avaron let out a long, deflating sigh. “Alright. So what do you want from me?”
“To realize thy fate.”
“… You don’t actually know what that is, do you?”
Gwyneth rubbed her ankles together. “Tis not mine place to know. The flame guides me, and I follow.”
Faithful people always had a sort of inscrutability to them that, in her life, Avaron took to meaning lying. In the world she found herself in, however, faith may have been far more real than she felt comfortable acknowledging. Shrugging her shoulders, she sufficed for a simple nod. “Fine, then. Do you know why everyone was so uncomfortable with me? Unless all the heroines were thrown into jail, too.”
“No, only thou,” Gwyneth muttered, her visor-covered face looking away. Nervousness, or something else?
Avaron stared, unwavering. Gwyneth started wringing her hands together, the flame bouncing over them. “I will find out eventually,” she said evenly. “It’s up to you if you want to piss me off about it.”
That got the priestess’ attention back, and she hurriedly shook her head. “No, no! Not at all. Tis, thou art a tentradom.”
“Which is … what, exactly?”
“The … the defiler of women? Ruiner of Wombs? Sire of Legions?” Gwyneth asked, even she herself rather uncertain. “A most rapacious monster whose hunger for young maidens has brought down many a lands?”
“I feel you’re making some of that up.”
Gwyneth shook her head, only in the way someone deadly serious could. “Tentradoms are from the olden times, and swelled mighty, almost swallowing the world. Now, few remain, broken beyond knowing, scarce able to survive.”
Starting to understand my skills a little bit better here, Avaron thought, her mind itching at the implications. Scratching at her head, she half-shrugged a shoulder. “Okay. And if any of that is true, why are you here? Or breaking me out of jail, for that matter?”
“Thy divine nature begets itself. None more than thee are so blessed. The heroines that remain are weak, infantile. Thou are … different.”
Someone was dancing around something and, quite honestly, started to grate on Avaron’s nerves. “Yeah, I got that. Why are you doing this?”
“Th-the flames guide me to do so …”
An even more unconvincing answer. “Do they guide you to hide from me too? Or is that just you?”
“W-what does thou want?!” Gwyneth shot back, fists balling up. “I hide nothing!”
“I’ve had all sorts of people lie, cheat, and hide from me, little girl,” Avaron shot back, her tone unerringly even by comparison. “I know when I’m being fucked with.”
No retort came, for Gwyneth sat on the bedding, red in her ivory-skinned face. Her lips twitched and teeth grit, but she remained where she was for a long few minutes. “T-tis not that I wish to lie,” she bit out each and every word. “But mine heart is not prepared.”
“If you keep it bottled up inside, it’ll only get worse. Unless this is something else entirely.”
“M-mine fate is tied to thee’s, is the … something.”
“… Oh?”
“I am to be thee’s.”
“To what?”
Gwyneth made a flustered noise, looking away from Avaron to the wooden wall. “Thy, ehm, to bear thy c-children …”
Avaron blinked, opened her mouth, then clicked it shut. Her hand made a little circular gesture, trying to connect the dots in her mind. “Sorry, let me just double check that. You rescued me so I could knock you up?”
Gwyneth nodded, her whole being uncomfortably tight and anxious. “If tho-thou wishes. Forgive mine humanness, paltry as it is.”
“I … what?” Avaron’s mouth moved faster than her brain, hardly able to process one idea after the other. Gwyneth jumped a little at the question, her fingers fidgeting together. “You rescued me, to knock you up?”
“N-not me, if thy finds it offensive!” Gwyneth hurriedly held up her hands in defeat.
Pushing her knuckles against her temple, Avaron found a measure of solace in the soothing pressure. She held up her other hand, and said, “Let’s just, put that aside for now. We’ll talk about it in the morning.”
“A-as thou wishes.”
“Where are we going now, on this mysterious ship of yours?”
“Fortune favoring us all, to the land of Ash.”
“… Ash, as in the stuff left over by fire?”
Gwyneth smiled, however demure it was. “Tis owned by the family of Ashmourn. Tis quite beautiful, or so I hear.”
“What do mean, ‘so you’re told’?”
The priestess reached up, and tapped on her visor over her eyes. “Mine eyes were lost when I was a babe.”
I’d wondered but I doubted it would be so literal, Avaron thought with surprise and sheepishly rubbed the back of her blue-haired head. “Forgive me for bringing it up.”
“Tis no trouble.”
And I guess that magic fire of hers has something to do with how easily she gets around. Magical eyesight? I guess? Not that she would ask; it wasn’t that much of a stretch to imagine now. But, if she doesn’t know what things look like, then how does she see? Her younger self might’ve had an idea or two, but she was coming up dry. That, and losing half her sleep wasn’t helping at all. The adrenaline had long faded away, and in the calm of a ship’s sleeping creaks and groans, tiredness took its toll. Avaron wearily looked around the cabin room, but only the hammock Gwyneth sat in stood out.
Her gaze wearily dropped to the floor. It wasn’t moldy dirty but being a ship, in probably medieval times, it wouldn’t be clean either. Coughing into her hand, Avaron said, “Well, then. Is there another room for me to sleep in, or?”
“Eh? Ehm … no, just this one.”
“… Guess I’m sleeping on the floor then.”
Gwyneth shook her hands hurriedly. “Thou doesn’t need to!” she chirped, and stood up from the swinging hammock. “Let I do so instead!”
The idea rankled Avaron’s sensibilities. “No, that won’t do either. Can that hammock hold two people?”
“It should be able to?”
That lack of confidence didn’t help, but Avaron wasn’t going to argue. Dressed as they were, they awkwardly climbed into the hammock one after another. It bulged slightly, but the tight ropes remained unyielding. Such as it was, the two were forced to cuddle together, spooning one another in the curvature of the bedding. Content that they weren’t immediately going to fall out, Avaron spared no time in going slack and enjoying the reprieve sleep would bring.
Notes:
12/21/2022 editoral: I've updated the first 5~ or so paragraphs to have a more concrete description of Avaron's physical body, and some contextual clean up.
3/31/2024 editoral: Minor change early on where Avaron is talking to a goddess; clarified as Nex and that the deal she got wasn't what she expected.
Chapter 2: Happy On Your Knees
Chapter Text
Caring is the hardest kindness, because we always give a little bit of ourselves away.
*~*
Something smelled delicious. It pulled her awake in the way only food could with that tantalizing temptation it brought. Taking one long, tasting inhale, Avaron found herself rather unable to pin the scent down exactly. The very first thing that came to mind was cinnamon rolls, a hint of sweetness in a perfume of warm cinnamon and bread. But, an undercurrent of something else added a sharp contrast. Barbeque, but more the smoky aftermath than the actual meat itself. It wasn’t unpleasant, but it certainly felt sharp on the senses.
Blinking her blurry eyes awake, Avaron hardly saw anything in the prevalent darkness. What light there was, oddly enough, nestled down by her belly. Her head cocked to the side, she saw a dancing flame sputtering between her and another body, throbbing like the pulse of a heart. Instincts fired up faster than reasoning, and she jerked away—or tried to, finding herself constrained. Rocking back and forth, a dim groan broke the air with its sweet, feminine sound. Avaron stilled then, the rest of her mind catching up.
Magic fire? Magic fire, right, okay, she thought, her racing heart calming down. That the flame brushed against her clothes so easily left her on edge, but it was what it was. Forget coffee, that shit wakes you right up.
Was it even morning? She hadn’t a clue at all. Well, she got some sleep, but it wasn’t great. Avaron let out a long, suffering sigh, relaxing into the hammock again, half her-face buried in the thing. Fine, whatever, not the first crappy sleep I’ve gotten.
That delectable scent remained, dancing up her nose with every long inhale she took. It almost calmed her nerves, but worse it left her on edge. A curious sort of nervousness in her bones, followed by a stuffy heat in her clothes. It wasn’t the hotness of stifling bedding, but something else—something terribly familiar she couldn’t name exactly. Growing ever more suspicious, Avaron lifted her head and looked around. No light under the door, no mysterious plate of food on the bolted table, nothing at all.
What is that?
Laying her head down, she took another breath in, and the scent grew stronger. A shiver crept down her spine and her skin prickled with goosebumps. An honest shudder crept through her belly, and her thighs shook so hard she squeezed them together to stop it. Her heart followed after, thumping with a wakefulness it really shouldn’t of had. Holy shit, Avaron thought, biting her lip. Am I horny? Why am I horny?
It’d been years since she had honest-to-anyone pussy wetting horniness. Her whole body sang with a need that felt almost alien despite its familiarity. Clutching a hand over her nose, she tried stifling out the smell, but it did little good at all. I don’t understand, there’s nothing in here but—
Her eyes crept down to the sleeping Gwyneth, her head resting on Avaron’s chest. Oh.
Ooooooh.
Everything the priestess told her yesterday came flooding back. A nervousness in her belly quickly outstripped her growing arousal, and she quickly opened up her info screen. It popped into existence, but not a hint of light reflecting on anything from it. Her eyes went up and down the menu, before she opted for the rather generic looking ‘profile’ option.
Her name, species, level, and various stats opened up. Hesitantly, she tried opening the species field, clicking it with her wary mind. A new screen popped open, split between a ‘description’ box and an ‘attributes and skills’ box.
Well, there it is.
Avaron really hated hidden fields, she’d have to crawl the info screen later on. Her eyes, however, were busy reading the description field.
[Divine servant, and the progenitor of all mortal life. It is the domain of tentradoms to make home and heart; to spread love and joy; to make the few into the many. Now few remain, and life struggles to prosper amidst evil greed], Avaron read in her mind, eyes squinting. Who wrote this, exactly?
She didn’t know about it at all, and so the theory that the info-screen was her own mind blew away like dust in the wind. Someone, somewhere, left her this knowledge. No other recourse available, she went down to the next info box.
Hmm. ‘[Rapacious Breeder], enhances frequent and … copious breeding … oh. Avaron squeezed her eyes shut, mouthing a few choice words. Okay, no point in turning away from it. ‘[Mating Pheromones], enhances sexual aroma, stimulating potential partners. Can induce a breeding frenzy.’
Don’t like the sound of that! Next one~
‘[Divine Nectar], cum and milk are nutritious and invigorating when consumed by others’. Oh, wonderful, just one more. ‘[Adaptive Physique], readily adapts to challenging physical stress to overcome it’. It’s the most normal sounding thing and I still don’t like it! Avaron wanted to laugh and cry, the sheer ridiculousness of the situation tickling her. Worst of all, she was still ‘level 1’. If she acquired new skills like any other RPG, what other horribly erotic skills would she get?
A movement startled her, closing the info screen as a sweet, feminine groan rumbled into her chest. The info screen shut swiftly, and Avaron looked down, for however good that did. Gwyneth half-twisted in the hammock, throwing an arm over the edge, while the rest of her angled up. The cinnamon-barbeque scent grew stronger, and Avaron’s heart refused to calm at all. Oh, this isn’t good.
Gwyneth’s sweet little breathing had taken on a hotter, huffing and puffing. A blush stained her lower face, and she subconsciously licked her lips. The flame itself changed, contorting into a pulsating … heart? Avaron blinked disbelievingly. It became a heart alright, that stylized, pulsating heart she’d seen in text emoji. You’re a treacherous thing, aren’t you? she wanted to say, eyeballing it.
Another groan, Gwyneth’s covered thighs rubbed together in a slow, grating motion. If Avaron had any doubts, they were all laid to rest. Not seeing much choice, Avaron started tapping Gwyneth on the shoulder. When that failed to work, she grabbed her shoulder and started shaking. “Hey, wake up,” she hissed.
“… Oh?” Gwyneth moaned, the word-half formed. “What is, mmm, what is …”
Please just be morning sleepiness.
The priestess suddenly stretched her whole body, half-pressing into Avaron with a long, sensual moaning noise. Avaron gulped nervously, the sound all too sweet in her ears. Gwyneth’s womanly weight against her proved almost as distracting as her distinctive aroma. A hand slapped into her face, the shock of it startling Avaron. “Hey!”
“Mm? Oh, oh! Forgive mine rudeness,” Gwyneth chirped, trying to sit up. In the swinging freedom of the hammock, however, her effort ended up with her coming to sit on top of Avaron outright. It didn’t escape either of their notices, especially how Gwyneth tightened her thighs around Avaron’s hips. “I am, unused to this!” she chirped, clutching her heart-shaped flame to her bosomy chest.
“I gathered,” Avaron grunted, teeth gritting. Something inside her was awfully happy at the position. A tightness she’d never experienced before became all too prominent in her abdomen, something that wanted to come out. An airy, hissing gasp escaped her lips, and she tried closing her thighs. “Oh, fuuuck,” she whined.
“W-what is wrong?” Gwyneth asked with worry.
Am I seriously going to piss myself?! Avaron thought incredulously, slapping Gwyneth’s side. “Get up, quickly!”
The priestess did so, stepping off to the side as Avaron shot out of the hammock. Without any ceremony, she unbuckled her pants and ripped them—panties and all—down. The pressure all but became unbearable, but however relieving it was, she wasn’t exactly peeing? Avaron fell against the hammock, her legs bowling open and it came out, splurting free of her nether lips in one long, relieving thrust out. All the pressure vanished, replaced by something new and wriggling, like an arm that’d she’d slept on and only just got working again.
Avaron and Gwyneth stared at the X-shaped, arrow-like tentacle head and its pale, blue flesh slick with juices. Soft, squishy even, and definitely something that once it went in, it really wanted to stay in. It twitched and throbbed, snaking around Avaron’s thighs with a mind almost entirely of its own. “W-what the fuck?” she chirped, staring at the appendage in bewilderment. Gwyneth, meanwhile, looked away, holding her hands up to her cheeks.
“Oh, forgive mine rudeness,” she whispered, voice tight.
Goddesses or what, holy shit, Avaron thought, bug-eyed at her own mating tentacle. Throbbing, pulsating; like a clitoris at full mast, but her pussy felt so oddly full in reverse. Hesitantly reaching out, she tried grasping the thing, the tightness of her own hand shooting through her in a bolt of lightning. Avaron pushed into the hammock, her hips reflexively jerking up, and the tentacle tightening with a toe-curling pleasure. A sharp, surprised gasp ripped out of her mouth, drawing Gwyneth’s attention.
“D-does thou require, attention?”
“Why, you offering?” Avaron bit out, her sarcasm cutting faster than she could catch it. Gwyneth nodded lightly, her flame brightening with its speedy, hearty thumping. Her little tongue swept out, rolling over her lips in a wettening lick, something Avaron didn’t miss at all. That mouth of hers seemed quite nice; her lips plump, but not overtly so, and her cheeks so smooth. She could, couldn’t she? Stuff her tentacle right into that priestess’ welcoming little ho—Avaron bit the inside of her cheek, letting out a grunt of pain as a delirious little shudder shot through her.
To her horror, Gwyneth stepped closer, that cinnamon-barbeque scent squeezing into every breath Avaron took. “Please, forgive mine unworthiness. Mine training for such is lacking, but …” She fell down onto her knees, hands still clutched in front of her in prayer. “Please, allow mine service? Thou needs relief.”
Or I could try j-jerking it, I guess? Avaron considered with a sardonic smile. Her tight hand continued sliding up and down her bulging tentacle, feeling the tiny ribs and ridges it had. Firm, yet soft, easy to slide, and so slick. She weighed the thought on her mind, but her eyes went to Gwyneth, staring at her parted lips, slick with spittle. Oh, what an inviting sight it was to behold, her tentacle twisted upright as a long, hip-jerking pulse traveled through. “F-fuuuck,” she whined through her teeth. The urge to thrust and plunge sang in her mind, her hips almost painfully clenched with how she held back.
Gulping spit down, Avaron kicked off her pants, sitting more comfortably on the ‘edge’ of the hammock. Which, really, just turned into a rope-like chair with how it dipped. She spread her legs wide and open, brandishing her tentacle in front of Gwyneth. “F-fine. If you want to impress me, just, suck my—my tenty.”
A pleased exhale left Gwyneth and she nodded with an unreasonable amount of enthusiasm. “Verily! P-please, be easy, let mine mouth comfort thou.”
Two warm hands on the insides of her thighs and Avaron nearly clamped down on Gwyneth purely reflexively. Gripping the edges of the hammock, she clenched—teeth, belly, legs and all, trying to keep her unreal urges in check. Her little tenty, however, had a different idea, and it whipped around before landing on Gwyneth’s half-covered face with a wet slap. The shock of something cold and hard, combined with soft and warm, made Avaron twitch and squirm. Oh, her little tenty wasn’t so little at all. The girth alone might stuff poor Gwyneth’s mouth to the brim, and the arrow-head would easily get lodged in place, unable to get out. And the length of it …
She might get stuck in that cute priestess’ throat at this rate. A needy whine hummed in her throat at the idea, her tenty brushing against Gwyneth’s face with a determined little wiggling. One way, than the other, it probed around with a minds of its own, slithering across Gwyneth like a predator on the hunt.
“O-oh, does thy, mm, ten-tenty enjoy mine?” Gwyneth asked shyly, confused if not endearing.
“Pl-please tell me you’ve done this before,” Avaron gasped out. “Because I don’t think it’ll be gentle.”
“W-well, mine—mmmphh!?!”
“Ooh mY FUCK!”
They both exclaimed at once, Avaron’s tenty heat-seeking every breath Gwyneth made until it found her mouth. It plunged in without waiting, bulging her lips around its girth to a tight, wet seal. Once the hot wetness inside enveloped it, the squirming thing calmed almost immediately, the flat of its bulbous arrow head brushing against Gwyneth’s tongue. The priestess’ surprised hum reverberated down its whole length, and Avaron’s eyes almost popped out. Head falling back behind, the whole world became just a single point: her big tenty and Gwyneth’s hot little mouth.
“Mph? Mumbem?!” Gwyneth’s half-formed words and moving lips pleasured Avaron’s tenty ever so strangely. The priestess started slapping Avaron’s thighs, seemingly trying to wrench her head away. The arrow-shaped head of her tenty wedged up against her teeth, and her jaw simply couldn’t open any more. Avaron hissed at the sudden, hard feeling of teeth and pulling, her hips jerking in rhythm.
“S-stop that!” Avaron hissed, sparkling little stars popping into her vision. In sitting up, she saw Gwyneth’s panicked expression, and her panicky breathing. More than that, she couldn’t noticing how much of her tenty remained out still. “You’re fine, just breathe through your nose,” she said, patting Gwyneth on her hooded head reassuringly. The priestess’ mouth shifted, her tongue slathering in curious flicks. Avaron’s eyes twitched, every little motion utterly electric to feel. “Y-yes, just like that, nice and easy.”
Goodness, feeling every breath Gwyneth took with her tenty felt surreal. The priestess took long inhales, steadying to manageable rhythm. “Good girl,” Avaron breathed out, patting her head still. A pleased little hum answered back, traveling all the way up her tenty’s length. “Goo-ood giRL!” A flick of a tongue on her tenty’s head shocked her awake with a chirpy pitch, her feet kicking up in the air on pure reflex. Pressure followed with a gulping suck, her tenty sliding deeper into Gwyneth’s mouth all on its own. Mouth falling open in a silent noise, Avaron gripped Gwyneth’s head harder.
“Oh, oh fuck,” she mumbled. “Just be caaarefulll!”
Gwyneth’s enterprising hands grasped the length of her tenty firmly, blissfully tight and pleasurable all at once. Avaron’s eyes crossed, sucking, pulling, groping, and massaging all at once slammed into her. Her knees jerked every so often, legs worthlessly hanging there under the priestess’ awkward ministrations. A little too rough there, a too tight squeeze, and even some teething; goodness it left her tongue stupid and drooling. She thought her clit was sensitive, until her squirming, thrusting beast of a tenty came into her life.
Avaron gurgled out a moan, tenty squirming in Gwyneth’s hands with a wild, bucking ferocity. She felt it, that tiny, hot hole deeper in, begging her to plunge in. Yet an infuriating thing kept licking back, squeezing against her arrow-head with fervorous abandon. Her knees pulled inward, one twitching heave at a time, her belly tightening with such anxious weight. “Just like that, just like that,” she whispered, every inch of her tightening with a heart-pounding feeling. Even her breasts throbbed in tune to the sucking, hand-jerking fuck Gwyneth treated her to.
Oh, that cute little face of hers was gonna get creamed.
Avaron panted at the idea, just thinking about unloading all her cum into that pretty mouth. Goodness, she’d have to choke down every shot or it’d just spill out! Oh, Gwyneth’s poor little tongue was gonna get blasted! Her tenty bulged, and a tiny, chirping moan leaving her parted lips, the dam in her belly bursting open. Avaron barely saw it so much as felt her load travel down in one great, tenty-bulging package. Then another followed, and then another; they squeezed through Gwyneth’s inexperienced hands before pressing up against the O-shaped seal of her lips. A surprised sound turned into a girlish, gurgling squeal when the first one slipped in. The arrow-shaped head swelled, gaping open as a creamy, syrupy cum squirted out.
“Sw-swallow it!” Avaron squeezed out, her whole body shuddering with each hip-jerking, pumping thrust of cum she made. A throaty squelch followed, the sound of a deep, full gulp, all of Gwyneth’s mouth moving and sucking to swallow. The priestess gripped her tenty tighter, but nothing stopped the cum from pumping into her mouth. Avaron’s mind turned into a mushy, happy blank blur, punctuated by the satisfying relief of just letting everything out. In a strange sense, she became even more aware, almost cognizant of her tenty’s ministrations to deliver every creamy load it could.
Poor Gwyneth soon met her match. The moment she stopped gulping the cummy meal, it backed up in her mouth almost immediately. Her cheeks bulged, and her throat shut tightly with a primordial fear. That left only one place out—through the tight seal of her lips. Cum squirted out in thick, ropy strands, dribbling down her chin, then flowing in a sticky river. It slid into the wrappings of her neck, pooling and staining it before overflowing down to her collar, splashing atop her clothed breasts.
She tried speaking, half-hearted moaning hums as they were. Avaron, too far gone, paid no mind, watching through hazy eyes as the priestess started becoming coated in her cum. The hands on her tenty flew away, Gwyneth desperately trying to pool the cum or stop it with her fingers. All she did in the end made a sticky, stringy web of wet liquid love between her soaking chest and her hands. Her only saving grace was Avaron’s receding orgasm, sputtering to a few long, thin pulsing strands. The weight in her belly felt so airy and free now, and her tenty’s unyielding firmness devolved into a softer, more malleable form.
All on its own, its deflated arrow-head suddenly pulled from Gwyneth’s mouth. The whole tenty fell limp before Avaron’s legs, while the priestess lurched forward, a hand flying to her open lips spewing the trapped cum out. She stopped some of it, but a good bit splashed onto the already-staining ship floor. One shaky breath and long, deep gulp later, she let out a groaning exhale, her mouth free at last.
“Oh, oh my, oh my,” she rasped out, a hand to her throat, the other on her knee to help balance her. “Mine apologies, mine apologies,” Gwyneth wheezed before letting out an unsightly belch. Her hand slapped over her mouth, and a pitiful little moan squeezed out when that cum-slick palm met her lips. “Forgive me, please.”
“Mmm?” Avaron scowled, disliking that desperate tone in her orgasmic haze. “For what?”
“I—I couldn’t—” she burped again, lighter this time, her cum-splattered cheeks flushing a deeper red, “—couldn’t drink it all! Forgive me, please!”
For a hot, fleeting second, Avaron thought she looked quite lovely. The sight of cum all down her mouth, neck, and chest in a sticky, creamy web tickled some part of her brain. It certainly excited her, a fulfilling sense of something swelling in her chest at Gwyneth’s situation. Then the rest of her mind caught up, and she coughed into a hand. “It’s—you’re forgiven, do not worry.”
“Thank thee! Thank thee!” Gwyneth returned hurriedly, bowing up and down. Her hands, meanwhile, were quite busy gathering up the sticky, hot cream splattered on her top. To Avaron’s incredulous surprise, the priestess gathered handfuls of it, before hurriedly slurping it up. Try and try as she did, so visibly forcing herself to, Gwyneth gathered up what cum she could, drinking it down in heaving gulps.
“W-what are you doing?” Avaron couldn’t help but ask.
Gwyneth looked up, her mouth hotly sticky and wet with the last load she gulped down, her hands cupped with another. “I mustn’t waste thy gift! Mine failure to receive it is so—” she didn’t bother finishing, bringing her hands up and slurping again.
Avaron had half a mind to say something, but she let it go, content to just lay back in her hammock. Her spent tenty receded inward with a most curious sensation of previously unknown muscles working. As simply as it had emerged, it retracted into her pussy, disappearing behind her deep blue, fleshy nether lips. So it came to be, that incessant, primal urge from earlier faded into a shimmering heat; not completely gone, but manageable. Gwyneth, meanwhile, seemed to have got up everything she could; the rest remain splattered across her frontside, dripping down.
Scratching the back of her head, Avaron looked away sheepishly. “Sorry.”
“For what?”
“The, uh, mess …”
Gwyneth shook her head. “No, mine thanks! Thy bounty is wonderful to receive!” she enthused, clapping her sticky hands together. “D-delicious, truly, beyond mine words to describe?”
“Uhh, alright,” Avaron returned, utterly beside herself at the idea. “It wasn’t, too, err, salty?”
“No! Savory, and a little sweet, too. Warm, and, ehm, filling, too.” Gwyneth looked away, her lower half squirming, knees squeezing together. “I—I quite enjoyed, receiving it.”
That didn’t sound right to her, nor really, did her cum look like, well, cum. The closest Avaron come think of was some kind of fluffy, mixed up cream cheese for a cake. Definitely more liquid-like, but it had the visual consistency of it. I mean, I’m not human any more, so … She wasn’t sure what to make of it. If Gwyneth was happy with it, then she’d have to trust her. “Alright. Uhh, we should clean you up.” Avaron looked around the dim room. “Somehow.”
Avaron leaned forward, and found her pants had met an unfortunate end. A creamy, white sticky end.
“Mi-mine chest hath some spare clothes,” Gwyneth offered lamely, gesturing at the chest in the room. “F-forgive me for not saving thy clothing …”
Sucking in a breath, Avaron pushed herself up and off the Hammock. Gwyneth chirped, her face all-but pushing into Avaron’s exposed crotch. “Don’t worry about it; come on, up, up!” she said, pulling Gwyneth by the shoulders. The priestess uneasily stood, her knees shaking precariously. At full height, she let out a surprised gasp, falling into Avaron—cum-drenched, sticky chest and all. Avaron caught her on pure reflex, realizing all too late what happened.
Her eyes shut with a tired sigh, while Gwyneth hiccupped, her voice cracking with a sudden high pitch.
“Mine, mine apologies!” she whined out, squirming to be free of the safety hug.
“It’s fine,” Avaron said, feeling almost automatic about it. “Why are you so shaky?”
“Mine, uhm, tis nothing.”
“What did I say before?”
A mumbling, nonsense hum came out of Gwyneth then, and she even tried hiding into Avaron’s chest. “There is, there is a fire in me,” she muttered, half-formed words Avaron struggled to make sense of.
“Is it your flame thing?”
Gwyneth shook her head. “No, in mine, ehm, belly, between mine legs.”
“Between, oh. Ohhh.”
“Is, is it bad?”
“Wait, what? No? It shouldn’t be?”
“Shouldn’t be?” Gwyneth asked, almost crying and hugging Avaron tighter. “Was thou displeased?”
“No? It’s … haven’t you been, err, horny before?”
“Horny? From mine head?”
“No!” Avaron snorted out, biting her cheek to stop from laughing. “Excited? Aroused?”
“Ehm, a few times? But this is quite, ehm, strong? Mine legs cannot stop shaking.”
A thought clicked into Avaron’s mind, one that suddenly provided a disturbing degree of clarity. My species skills! She’s being affected by them, right? The more she considered it, the more sense it sounded. “Okay, it is that, but my nature is making it much, much stronger,” Avaron said, looking into Gwyneth’s visor-covered face.
“Th-thy nature?”
“To help excite you. Listen, change your clothes quickly, and go get some fresh air, okay? And, uh, see if you can get me breakfast.”
“Breakfast, mmm, yes. Okay!” Gwyneth said with an airy, almost absentminded enthusiasm.
Avaron wasn’t willing to wait and see what would happen, and all but helped strip and send out the priestess before anything else had a chance to happen.
*~*
A fist slammed onto the table, rattling the glass drinking cups with its force. “Absurd! You, Artor’s greatest knights, cannot find her?!” Grend, Lord-Commander of Artor all but shouted. The assembled sub-commanders before him had the dignity to refrain from shrinking back, however down cast their eyes became. “The greatest prison in the lands and she just disappears?!”
“… We’re still assessing how she might’ve escaped, Lord-Commander,” the man at the front said, clad in a half-plate attire adorned with flourishing red capes off his arms. “None of the magical wards thus far have revealed anything. Nor have our knights on duty revealed anything out of the ordinary.”
“And yet she remains missing. Find something, anything! We cannot allow a tentradom of ANY creature under the gracious light to walk free from Artor!” Grend all but shouted, the firm rigidness of his aged voice resolute. All the knights snapped to attention and clapped a hand to their helmets, chiming a ‘yes, lord-commander’. Waving his hand in dismiss, they turned and left the room.
A suffering, terrible sigh left him, his graying beard trembling at the motion. “Forgive me, princess Arzha,” he said, glancing to his left. A woman sat beside him, dressed in a full plate armor of silvery color. A beautifully decorative cape of crimson color and gold threading hung off her shoulders, emblazoned as it was by the burning sword of Artor on the back.
Diamond-cut face peeled with a suspicious squint, her bright blue eyes peeked over at Grend, barely moving her head at all. “It is what it is, Lord-Commander. The fact no one has seen anything and the magics are undisturbed is most peculiar. If I didn’t know better, I would say we’re dealing with another country or the goddesses.”
“Yes, it’s looking like that, isn’t it?” Grend mused aloud before taking a sip from his cup. “All of it happening on the same day as the summoning … It is not my place to ask the will of the goddesses. The spies of mortal men, however, I would have words with.”
“Be that as it may,” Arzha said, pushing away from the thick desk and standing up. “I must have an answer to the nobility for the lockdown. I can buy another day, perhaps two, before the gates must be opened again. Make the most of what you can.”
Grend stood when she did, and bowed as she made to leave the room. “Thank you, your highness. I shall keep you appraised of the situation.”
“Very good.”
And so, she left the meeting room, coming into a long, stretching hall in the royal castle. Outside awaited another knight, clad in armor similar to her, and a bit shorter in stature. The brown-colored, bowl haired, and green-eyed Haleen snapped to attention with a salute, sharply attentive despite her cutely girlish face. Without a word, she fell in behind Arzha, close at hand and matching each step. “What is the word, my lady?” she asked, her incredibly serious, deep voice unbefitting of her demeanor.
“She’s still missing.”
“That is unfortunate.”
“Yes,” Arzha remarked dryly. She blew a strand of her V-shaped, platinum blonde bangs out of her eyes, before having to push behind her ear. “In truth, I am not too surprised. Have you found that Flame priestess yet?”
“No, my lady. The lack of the city guard has certainly made it difficult.”
“It is fine; that, in itself, is an answer.”
“I’m afraid I don’t follow?”
“The Church has ever kept an eye on other faiths,” Arzha said, and the two turned a corner, heading up into a spiral staircase. “If they have also lost track of her, then I suspect she has a hand in our missing tentradom heroine.”
“You … don’t believe she might be a heroine, your highness?”
“The ritual proved true; the goddesses saw fit to give her to us. Perhaps I’m the only one who knows why.”
Haleen hummed distastefully. “I must remind you, princess, that the Rite’s reading is not binding.”
“And yet the divine ordained it so. Who am I to defy them?” Arzha asked airily, her voice reserved and inscrutable. Her gloved hand moved to her belly, armored and protected as it was. A tentradom, though … I see now, why the Rite’s divination spoke of a ‘thousand arms’ for my destined love. It was not hers to be misled; the goddesses must intend something to orchestrate such a fate. Yet, to one of such great danger? A destroyer of women, turning them into slack jawed, glassy-eyed moaning sluts, heavy with babies for the rest of their lives?
Were she not summoned through the heroine ritual, Arzha would doubtlessly kill such a being.
Now, however, she wasn’t certain.
It was all but an arranged marriage, really. The goddesses have sent her fated suitor; it fell to her to commit the interview.
Her hand moved away, her face creasing in annoyance. Goodness, explaining that to the kingdom. I might as well start a revolution while I’m at it. Shaking her head, she pushed such sticky thoughts away. “Haleen, I have my orders for the sisterhood.”
“Yes, your highness!”
They reached the top of the stairs, one-corner and a short walk away from the main thoroughfare. There would be too many ears and eyes then, and so now was the time. “Arrange for a campaign, perhaps one or two months. We will be traveling north.”
“… North, your highness?”
“Consider it a hunch, but I believe I know where our missing tentradom is going.”
Chapter 3: The Land of Ash
Chapter Text
Everyone, and everything, want something. Selfishness can be a virtue, with the right intentions.
*~*
Stepping onto the ship’s deck, Avaron still felt itchy. Gwyneth’s set of spare robes and wrappings helped to hide her, but their size differences was a bit of a problem. The robe tightly squeezed against her, and she used up most of the wrappings covering her porcelain flesh it couldn’t hide. Poor Gwyneth herself had to wear her previously sullied robes, but they managed to sneak in a bucket and some river water to clean them. Trying to put that thought of mind, Avaron headed over to the guard rail, Gwyneth following closely beside her.
“Please, might we duel again?” the priestess asked, oozing competitive spirit, her hands pumped up close to her chest. The tiny, ever-present flame currently on her bosom flared at her words. “Mine poker skill sharpens every fight!”
“Sure, I don’t mind,” Avaron said with a half-hearted shrug. “When I have time to remember some of the other rules, there’s a lot more to do.”
“Verily? Wonderful!”
Thankfully Gwyneth had a deck of playing cards for their whole day locked in the cabin. The symbols took some learning, but they followed a basic one-to-fifteen system, so it wasn’t that hard to translate what rules she knew. Casting her gaze to the river embankment further ahead, she spied a rather sizable village—town?—coming up. “Do you, uh, know what that is?” she asked, rather uncertain how much Gwyneth actually knew.
“Mm, the village of Farlake. This river winds north, before coming down east. Tis the last stop one has before setting out to the land of Ash.”
“Is it, err, far?”
“A few weeks by foot.”
A terrified tremor shook down Avaron’s backside. “Oh, hiking.”
“What is wrong?”
“I’m, erm, not so good for long walks.”
“Really?”
“I never had to go around too much before. Sort of … one of my big regrets.”
“Tis no trouble, we shan’t have much trouble on the way.”
It’s more like I’m afraid of my legs giving out, Avaron wanted to say.
The calls of sailors and thump of feet on deck soon rocked the air. In time they would dock and disembark, and Gwyneth would buy all their supplies and goods. Avaron in turn became thankful at her rather expedient work. The sun hadn’t reached noon yet by the time they set out, heading down a long, winding dirt path. Patches of grass, rock, and debris dotted it; overgrown, but not entirely useless yet. Hefting the straps on her backpack, Avaron took in a breath, tasting the fresh smell of wilderness grass, pine, and flowers.
Really, really smelled them.
The freshness in age; the underlying layer of rot from dying flora. Tiny, sharp, prickly smells, her mind telling they were insects. Avaron snorted, but her next breath just brought it all back. Her snorting turned into coughing, and Gwyneth turned around to help pat her back.
“Art thou fine?”
“Ye-yeah, I think,” Avaron wheezed. “Good, fucking tits. My nose and this world don’t get along. One breath is fine, then the nex—” a ripping, nasty sneeze tore out of her, one that almost pulled her back. She doubled over, bracing on her knees. “This sucks!”
Little by little, she got used to it somewhat, but their walking certainly didn’t go far with a break every five minutes. Avaron’s pale white face stained in a dark blue blush, spilling across her nose and cheeks with a flowery bloom. Gwyneth, all the while, turned out to be a rather sympathetic soul. In the late afternoon, they reached the edge of the pine forest, filled with tall trees and thick enough one couldn’t see very far. Sat upon a big, exposed root, Avaron dropped her backpack between her legs, all slouching forward with a miserable sniffle.
Gwyneth sat beside her, a bit more elegantly. “Would thou, ehm, like something to eat?”
“S-sure,” Avaron returned, her voice stuffy even to her own ears.
Moving with a surprising fluidity, Gwyneth unpacked part of her backpack. From it emerged a loaf of black-colored bread, and a cloth wrapping around a suspicious looking cheese wedge. She pulled out a small knife, and balancing it all on her lap, broke the bread into more hand-friendly pieces. Then, unfurling the cloth and revealing a white, yellow tinged piece of cheese, she splayed open her hands with invitation. “Tis a lucky offering a breadmaker did give mine visit. Thou might find it quite tasty!”
Avaron tentatively took a piece and spread some cheese onto it, much to Gwyneth’s confused humming. “What?”
“Thou put the cheese on thine bread?”
“… Why not?”
“Tis strange.”
Avaron narrowed her eyes suspiciously. “Now you’re making fun of me.”
“Am not,” Gwyneth cut back, a little too quickly. The priestess picked up her a piece of bread and took a bite out of it.
In turn, Avaron took her own bite, finding it somewhat chewable. The cheese added a mild, pungent sort of flavor, but tasted utterly unremarkable. The bread itself certainly wasn’t soft, but it wasn’t stale, either. The whole of seemed rather flat—like a vital ingredient had been forgotten. This takes me back, she mused with a rueful, mouth-filled chuckle. What was it? The yeast, wasn’t it?
“What amuses thee?”
“Mm. It reminds me, is all.”
“Of what?”
“When I was younger, trying to make bread on my own. It came out like this, totally flat tasting.”
“Tis good bread?” Gwyneth retorted, despite sounding unsure herself.
Avaron waved it off. “It’s fine. I don’t think people have taken off using yeast yet.”
“What is yeast?”
“It’s an ingredient you add in to the dough. You, uhh, mix it in then let the dough sit, and it starts to rise up.” Avaron tried gesturing with her hands, but one holding a piece of bread made it rather useless. “Then you bake it, and soft, fluffy bread comes out later.”
“Thou were a breadmaker?”
“Oh, no, not at all. I tried it when I was younger … unfortunately, I’m quite the bad cook.”
“Verily? I do not mind cooking for thee.”
“… Thanks,” Avaron offered on reflex, rather uncertain how to take that directness of Gwyneth’s.
“Tis mine pleasure to serve.”
She was rather thankful right then that her allergies all but made her nose useless. If she picked up Gwyneth’s enticing scent again, her horniness would kick in with record speed. A small blessing, now that Avaron thought on the matter. “Do you, erm, always do that?”
“Do what?”
“Serve. That little flame on your chest, that is.”
Gwyneth held a hand to her chest, the tips of her fingers touching the base of the flickering flame. It wobbled, but ever remain as it was, seemingly unbothered by the wind at all. “Mm, verily. The Flame has always guided mine life, and I serve dutifully.”
“And now you want to serve me?”
“The Flame bids it, and I shall.” Gwyneth took another bite of bread before helping herself to a little chunk of cheese directly. “How ever thee desires mine services, thou need only say it.”
“… I feel a bit mean about it,” Avaron said lamely, wiping her mouth.
“Why?”
“You seem like a good person. Just, ordering you around is kind of …” she trailed off, face curling distastefully. It didn’t escape her notice how, at her words, Gwyneth’s flame flickered, a phantom of a heart shape appearing for a moment.
“Truly, thou art noble,” Gwyneth said airily, her voice a little high pitched. “Think nothing of thy requests. I live to serve thee, however thou desires.” Her implications were hardly subtle, and Avaron swallowed another bite nervously. “Surely thy virility will require such attention?”
Avaron damn near bit her tongue off going for another bite. Smacking her lips and doing a quick mental reset, she asked, “What?”
Gwyneth scooted closer on seating, bringing their hips firmly into contact. Their touching legs, too, came to rest against each other, with the priestess’ chasing Avaron’s when she moved on reflex. “Admittedly, mine knowledge of tentradoms is lacking. Thy needs are, frequent, are they not?”
All signs point toward ‘yes’, Avaron thought sardonically, the tight weight in her belly all too hard to ignore. After she blasted the priestess in cum last time, she felt lighter than a feather for the whole day. Then the next morning the tension had started again. If she hadn’t stuffed her own panties on her face to block out the scent, she might’ve endangered Gwyneth’s clothes that day. A hand on her knee drew her back to reality, its light weight almost crushing to feel. “Y-yes, but you needn’t worry.”
“I worry not,” Gwyneth affirmed with a nod. “Please, speak when thou needs it. I will relieve thee anytime.”
Her poor mind fried at the idea, sizzling further from the sweet, enticing image of Gwyneth on her knees again. That hot little mouth of hers yawning open, tongue out in a welcoming guide of her tentacle. Avaron almost forgot her stuffy nose with how incessantly tight her stomach churned, warming up to the idea alarmingly quickly. Finishing off her food, Avaron stood up hurriedly with a smile. “I’ll keep it in mind! Thanks for lunch, we should get a move on, right? Don’t want to be out in the open?”
Gwyneth seemed taken aback, but nodded at her words. “Verily, tis prudent to keep going.”
*~*
For how much Avaron hated walking, the burning pain in her thighs and glutes really did take her mind off everything else. A sort of singular, narrow minded escape from her nose and her own lewd mind. Fuck my life, I cannot stop thinking about her mouth, Avaron griped to herself. Am I twenty again or something? Sure she’d been turned into some kind of sex monster, but she’d be able to control that, right? A woman of her age, experience, and pedigree just wouldn’t start humping the nearest sopping wet hole she found.
Worse, she wasn’t at all certain how long she could go on before needing relief. Her belly grew ever more incessant, almost cramping with a rushing, hot flush through her whole body. If Avaron didn’t know better she’d think it period cramps, but the near constant horniness said otherwise. They’d gotten two days into the unending pine forest, which was around three or four days since the last relief. If she couldn’t even get to a week, her prospects looked dim indeed.
At least the air cleared up more and more; she could breathe in a clean lungful every so often. Stepping over a fallen branch, she kept behind Gwyneth, who always had a certain sense of where to go. “Soo, uhh, right. The Ashmourn family controls the land of Ash, hence the name. But why do the non-humans congregate there?”
“Tis oft called the land of demons by many humans. In the last war, many lands were burned to the bone, human and monja alike. The kingdom of Artor is supreme among human lands, the most prosperous one to rebuild after. The land of Ash is not so well by comparison, but many monja have resettled there to build again.”
“Calling it the land of Ash is a bit on the nose, isn’t it?”
“Tis the land of the Ashmourn,” Gwyneth said, a simplistic factuality to her voice.
“Fair enough. Are you really sure other monja are going to be accepting of me?”
“Ehm …”
Oh, she didn’t like that.
“Thy nature of a divine heroine will do much to endear thee to the people.”
“What your saying is, expect them to kick my ass.”
“No, no! Not—really?”
Avaron sighed. It’s not like I can fault them; my … kind’s, reputation seems a little deserved. It wasn’t as if she was unfamiliar a glass ceiling or people treating her differently. Par for the course, really; being in a world of happy-go-lucky sword wielding maniacs, definitely put a spin on it. Why am I even here? Seriously, goddess? Hello? How am I supposed to help like this?
Wait, that gave her an idea. “Say, Gwyneth …”
“Yes?”
“How does one go communing with the goddesses?”
“I’m … unfamiliar, with how others do so exactly. Offerings at an appropriate shrine may serve to entice their attention, however.”
“Okay … how do I get that flame of yours to offer some guidance then?”
“Oh! I shall commune if thou needs it.”
“Maybe? I figure I should learn myself at some point.”
“I shall look into it when we reach the city.”
“City?”
“Tis Shadowpeak, capital city of the Ashmourn family. Twas built in the far Silvervein Mountains.”
“I have a feeling it will take us a while to get there.”
“Only until we find a trade caravan. Tis a village a week’s journey once we break from the forest.”
A few more days through a forest, then a week to a village that may or may not have a trade caravan. Avaron could feel herself sweating at the idea. She might really have to take Gwyneth up on her offer, for better or worse. Trying to push that thought from her mind, she focused on walking.
And so, one more day later, they broke from the pine forest to a field of tall, wild grass and wheat. A gentle wind left it swaying in hypnotizing waves of green and yellow across the small, rolling hills before them. Avaron even spotted some wild flowers, be they in the sunny yellow, blues, and whites, clumped together in fluffy clusters across the fields. Gwyneth stopped ahead in their trek and turned around, opening her arms up wide. “I welcome thee, to the land of Ash! Or, tis border, rather.”
“… Huh. It’s beautiful.”
“Tis?” Gwyneth asked with a cock of her head, and turned around. “The grass is most comfortable to rest on.”
“Well, I’ll look forward to that then.”
“Mm! Verily,” Gwyneth chirped out with a surprising happiness. Avaron couldn’t help looking at her back suspiciously, but decided to let that idea rest.
They continued on, and as the sun slid past mid-day, Avaron saw a most peculiar sight. Seven galloping, brown and silver figures out in the distance. “Who are they?” she asked, earning a surprisingly sharp turn of Gwyneth’s head.
“You see someone?”
“Seven people on horses, by the count of it,” Avaron said, squinting at the sight. “They’re, uhh, heading this way?”
“Get down!” Gwyneth barked suddenly, and Avaron went down before her brain even caught up. Crouched low to the ground, the tall-grass around them all but enveloped them in a shifting wall. “Can thou see how they dress?”
“Errr … something silver, and red. It looks like plate armor?” Gwyneth’s teeth grit, her face contorting unpleasantly enough to worry Avaron. “Why, what is that?”
“Knights of Artor, most likely.”
“What should we do?”
“Stay low and hope they pass by.”
Oh, to be in danger! It didn’t feel all that different to her, a fact that rather disconcerted Avaron. She all-but-sat in her crouch, feeling her muscles strain more from the awkward position than imminent danger. Then again, it reminded her in its own way of a street fight she’d been in once. No one really knows what’s up until some jackass pulls out a knife in a surprise move. Feeling a little more uneasy, she asked, “Can we fight them? Or, out run?”
Gwyneth shook her head. “Mine skill is great, but seven knights is too much. Horses will out run us.”
“Ehh, why are they here?” Avaron more complained under her breath than asked.
“Patrolling, mayhaps.”
The knights continued to get closer.
“Looks like their patrol is going to take them straight into us.”
“Tch. Let us try sneaking away, then.”
All but crawling on all-fours, the two of them awkwardly shuffled onward, Avaron’s occasional checking guiding them. To her growing concern, the band of knights soon broke apart, seven of them spreading far and wide. As best she could see, there wouldn’t be any way to sneak by them at all. She kept that tidbit to herself, and so they continued on. The clopping of hooves against dirt soon reached her ears, and the knightly woman came into much clearer focus. They huddled down into the grass, all but flattening themselves to the dirt.
The rest was up to luck.
Avaron found a small measure in comfort she couldn’t scent the dirt all that well. Anxiety built in her gut, her hands and feet tingling, and a curious exhaustion from all the awkward movement settled onto her. More than anything else, Avaron just felt tired, she really didn’t have the fortitude to keep up something so stressful. Goodness if I survive this I’m exercising more. Ohh, don’t cramp on me now leg.
The clopping of hooves came distressingly close.
“You two! In the bushes!” called out a woman, and a sinking dread punched Avaron straight in the gut. Neither of them moved at the call out. “Cease this dirt lickery and get up!”
“… tis seems we are found,” Gwyneth muttered dryly.
“What should we do?”
“Negotiate.” Gwyneth rose up first, coming to her knees. “Thou aren’t a bandit?”
“Nay, I am ser Saryl of Artor. Who are you?”
At Gwyneth’s prompting, Avaron stood up with her, and brushed off her frontside. She pointedly kept her hood down, not seeing the knight or letting her own face be seen. “Alright so I thought they were bandits,” she said to Gwyneth immediately. “Who else would be out here?”
For the love of our lives please pick up on the cue.
“Who, indeed? I am Gwyneth, a priestess of the Eternal Flame. Of what business doth thou need of us?”
Why did you give her your name?! Avaron wanted to scream and throttle the priestess right then and there.
“We seek a dangerous creature, supposed to be running through these fields toward the north. Have you seen anything at all?”
They both shook their heads and Gwyneth said, “Nay, thou art the first we’ve seen.”
“Strange indeed. You are headed north?”
“To reach Greenshill village on our pilgrimage.”
“Mm, best be safe about it then. It is a long journey on foot and there’s no telling what is out here.”
“Thank thee kindly.”
“Fair travels, pilgrims!” Saryl said, and kicking her heels, set off with her horse.
Gwyneth and Avaron looked at each other when she was far enough away. “Tis good fortune for us?” the priestess said, sounding a little disbelieving herself.
“Let’s just, get a move on then,” Avaron said with a deflating sigh. The other knights, fanning out across the fields as they were, headed away from them. Avaron couldn’t believe what she saw, but there it was.
And so, they hurried on their walk, moving with a certain purpose to get away from the roaming knights.
*~*
With the sun falling to evening, the six roaming knights returned, and Arzha regarded their solemn faces grimly. Huddled in a circle with their horses, a few more lingered behind, laden with supplies. “Judging by all your faces, you didn’t find anything.”
“No, my lady.”
“Nothing but grass, my lady.”
And so forth answered back, until Saryl remarked on, “Nothing but two pilgrims.”
“… Pilgrims?” Arzha asked, her great attention turning upon the most comely of her Sisterhood knights. Saryl was upstanding to a fault, and the fair-faced, farm girl-like knight sat up straighter at her piercing gaze.
“Yes, my lady. Just two Eternal Flame pilgrims heading to Greenshill village. I ran into them around noon.”
“… What were their names?”
Saryl’s round, amber eyes shrank at Arzha’s frigid tone, her fluffy and messy deep, sea-green hair doing nothing to hide her from it. “Ehm, one was called Gwyneth. I didn’t get the other’s.”
Arzha closed her eyes and let out a long, controlled sigh. “That was one of the culprits, Saryl. Gwyneth of the Eternal Flame.”
“R-really?”
“It was in the meeting. You will receive a stern spanking when we return to the capital for forgetting. Go and tend the supplies.”
Saryl jolted in her saddle, the princess’ words striking her as lightning might. Her downcast eyes and solemn nod answered what her quivering lips couldn’t say. Kicking her leg, she turned around and went to guard the supply-laden horses.
“You five, with me. We’ll fan out again in the northward direction. I doubt they have gotten far enough to escape Haleen’s detection.”
“Yes, my lady!” the five remaining knights chimed, and turned around. Together with the princess, they rode to the north, while Saryl sadly trotted far behind.
Arzha, bouncing up and down with her white-haired horse, stared at the dimming horizon narrowly. The hour of apprehending the tentradom came closer, and she was still nowhere near an appropriate answer. There wasn’t a way to keep her under control and still be in Artor, any number of her rivals would find out eventually. On the other hand, she couldn’t exercise the power needed to keep a tentradom in check anywhere else.
Perhaps, in the end, it came back to her father’s advice on the eccentricities of diplomacy. Force is the easiest solution, but if it fails, try friendship, hm? She wrinkled her nose at the thought. Friendship meant trusting an uncertain future, and she despised uncertainty. The idea lingered in her mind all throughout the ride, until Haleen came careening toward her.
“I found something,” she said simply, a magical golden and white light surrounding her eyes. “Maybe a campfire about ten minutes ahead.”
“Good. Tighten up the formation just in case.”
Twilight crept upon them, and the chill of the evening loomed not far behind. If her wayward destined love had built a fire, it’d save her the trouble of making one. In mere minutes, the Sisterhood knights pulled in around her, marching as a proper military unit. The sight of a flickering flame amongst the billowing grass stood out almost painfully. Such was the problem of encamping in a field—hardly any cover whatsoever. Two figures became apparent when they drew closer, sitting around the small campfire between them.
Arzha and Haleen drew up next to the campsite, while the other four flanked in a circular enclosure. Two familiar faces greeted her, both equally shocked to see her given their slack-jawed, dumb looks. “Well well well. My prized guest and who else but you, Gwyneth.”
“T-tis good see thee again, thy highness.”
Arzha’s frosty cold eyes slid from Gwyneth to Avaron, who looked at Gwyneth in shock.
“She’s royalty?”
“I am the first princess of Artor,” Arzha cut in pointedly, drawing Avaron’s attention. “You may call me Arzha.”
“Oh, well, Gwyneth you know, and I’m Avaron.”
“Avaron …” Arzha said, testing the word in her mouth. A fitting name; it sounded proper at least. “We did not have a proper chance to meet, scrutinizing as the Church ever is.”
“We didn’t no. Forgive me for being improper or anything, but are you all going to kill us or something? You know, strong beautiful women in armor, and big swords on horses …” Avaron made a vague gesture at the encirclement.
“Hm, no. Haleen, go retrieve Saryl.”
“Yes, my lady.”
With her heading off, Arzha held up a hand, gesturing to dismount. She and her remaining knights hopped off their horses, and Arzha commanded, “Magna, see the horses tied off.”
“Yes, my lady.”
Gwyneth and Avaron both stood up at her approach, neither making any undo motions. It came to be that Arzha stood before Avaron, staring down the smaller woman-creature with an unwavering, even stare. In spite of her untidy state, she was no different from when she saw her in the prison. Gloved hands folded over her chest, she squinted, and Avaron continued to meet her stare. Funny, she thought. No one dares to meet my gaze and yet here she is.
It made the back of her neck feel quite itchy for some reason.
“Is there something you want?” Avaron asked wearily.
“… I am in need of a campfire this fair evening. I trust you do not mind.”
Avaron’s liquid blue eyes blinked, a flicker of confusion betraying her. “Uh, sure, I don’t mind.”
“Good.” Arzha turned to her other knights, standing at attention as they were. “We’re making camp here tonight with them. Setup when Saryl and Haleen return.”
“Yes, my lady.”
Satisfied for the moment, Arzha went and sat on the thickest clump of grass she could find nearby. Neatly folding her legs to the side, she went about taking off her plate armor herself, starting with the gloves. The breastplate and faulds could come off later. The process wasn’t complicated but it always took time going on, coming off, and the such. In the interim, the horses were secured nearby, and the Snowflake knights began winding down themselves. Their two errant hosts, meanwhile, sat quite comfortably together.
Too comfortably.
Arzha’s eyes narrowed at the sight. Being a tentradom … I wonder.
Would even a priestess of the Eternal Flame succumb to Avaron’s wiles? If she had, there wasn’t much of a hint. Magna’s approach caught her attention, and the knight bowed politely.
“Shall I help you, my lady?”
“Mm, yes.”
By the end of it, she was left in her silken white underclothes, shirt and pants as they were. The plate armor and its padded layers were set aside neatly along with the other knights’ doffed armor pieces. Arzha fluffed up her shirt, airing out the hot stuffiness she’d endured all day. A quick rub to her voluminous breasts left them pleasantly tingling and refreshed from the confining suffering of plate armor. Feeling far livelier, she joined Gwyneth and Avaron by the fire, and the two women jumped at her sudden presence.
Or perhaps it was her sitting next to Avaron; it mattered not.
Off nearby, Haleen and Saryl looked to be arriving, and the others went to help unpack for the evening.
“I hope you won’t mind me being direct,” Avaron said suddenly, and Arzha spared her a discerning gaze.
“It would depend on what.”
“… Mostly why you’re here, quite obviously chasing us. Or me.”
Why, indeed. Arzha rubbed her neck, stretching the slight kink threatening to form. “A problem I have given much thought to. I trust you have little awareness of the grander situation.”
“If it’s about the thirteen heroines, kind of, but not really.”
Arzha spared a dry stare at Gwyneth, who looked away bashfully. “The summoning of the heroines was an unexpected move by the Church of the Everlasting Light. Unfortunately, while my family is still gobsmacked, the Church is consolidating its power alarmingly fast.”
“Are they intending to rebel? No, more like dispose, isn’t it?” Avaron asked as much as mused aloud.
Oh, is she educated? The thought oddly uplifted her spirits about the matter. Arzha nodded once. “It is likely. With other nations aboard now turning toward us enmasse, we will have no allies and great demands being made. If the Church does not surrender the heroines to rebalance the situation, war will be inevitable.”
“And with how cordial you’re being, I take it you want my help?”
Arzha couldn’t help cracking a tiny, tiny smirk. “Funny. You are the unpredictable part in all of this, after all.”
“… How so?”
“A tentradom from beyond our world, blessed by the goddesses. A heroine can turn a battle that might win a war, but you—you could fight entire wars by yourself, couldn’t you?” Arzha asked lightly, gazing at Avaron’s inscrutable face. Unlike so many others, few gives betrayed her thoughts, or even her mood. How capable; a trait of tentradoms, or her?
“Perhaps, but it remains to be seen if I want to be bothered at all.”
“One cannot ignore the world, no matter how they try,” Arzha remarked, the acid in her own words surprising her. She made a show of giving a small smile. “What will you do, then?”
Avaron looked up toward the darkening sky, staring up for a solid minute. “Fight for the cause I can live with, I guess.”
Arzha blinked at the succinct answer. “Apt, in its own way.”
“I suppose then,” Avaron said, head tilting toward Arzha, “you want me to be your ally?”
“I’ve no interest in making an enemy for no reason,” Arzha said simply. “Consider my escort of you toward Greenshill as a gesture of goodwill.”
“It seems a bit much, but I won’t turn it down.”
The Snowflake knights had finished unpacking pots and pans, as well as their preserved supplies. The fire was appropriated into a cooking station, all the women cleaning up the space for better sitting and serving. Arzha found a few of her knights sitting close by, namely Haleen and Saryl. The former eyed Avaron and Gwyneth suspiciously, while Saryl looked disbelieving.
“Yo-you are a tentradom?” Saryl sputtered, poking at Avaron disbelievingly. In turn, the other woman grinned and rubbed the back of her hood-covered head.
“Not too surprising, I hope.”
“It truly is! I thought you would be, bigger, and fleshy, and lots of arms.”
“… The other ones might be, but not me. You know, being different.”
“Befitting of one summoned by the goddesses,” Saryl said, folding her arms with an understanding nod.
“Sure.”
Something about that dubious agreement tickled Arzha, but she had nothing more to go on. Magna and Elseh, working the cooking as they were, began handing out cups and sturdy dinner plates. Elseh soon followed with a tea pot and their provisional supply of tea for the evening. The honeyed aroma welcomingly wafted beneath Arzha’s nose when she took a dainty little sniff. One long, polite sip later, and the sweet liquid warmth spread all the way down her throat.
It didn’t escape her notice that her two unwitting hosts went deprived. “Elseh, serve them as well,” Arzha commanded strictly before taking another sip.
“Y-yes, my lady.”
It’d be improper otherwise, something she thought her knights already knew. Arzha sighed in her mind, dreadfully thinking of another full course of manner treatment for them all. Then again, it might be the last time in a long while they’d all be together. An opportunity to refamiliarize myself with all their exquisite bodies, mmm.
A rattle-snap of playing cards caught her attention, and she found Avaron and Gwyneth sitting to start dealing. Saryl suddenly seemed quite interested, scooting around Arzha to get closer to them.
“Can I play?”
“Do not bother them, Saryl,” Haleen called out suddenly.
“It’s, uh, fine.”
“Might I play as well?” Elseh asked over her fire tending.
“… Sure. If it’s going to be three or more, then Poker might be the best game to play.”
Arzha’s ears perked at the unfamiliar name.
“Poker? What is that?” Saryl asked.
“Okay, I’m going to need some space here. Does anyone have a bag of coins?”
A curious sight unfolded with Avaron directing the three other women. Sitting in the center, she had the other three sit in front of her in a half-circle. Saryl handed over a bag of coin, that Avaron then spilled out onto her lap. Rubbing her hands together, she started counting, and then dolling out stacks of coins to each of the other players.
“For simplicity’s sake, every coin is worth 10 points, no more, no less.”
Gwyneth seemed quite eager to receive hers, neatly stacking them in front of her folded knees. Saryl and Elseh did much the same, all of them having around fifty coins in total. The excess was kept beside Avaron. Coins issued, she then shuffled her deck of brown playing cards, then started issuing them out: two cards per player, face down in front of them. “Poker as a game has a lot of different rule sets. This one will be Texas Hold ‘Em. So you each have your own two cards, keep those private to yourself.”
The players picked them up and looked.
“Now, this part is a little tricky. In this game, I am the dealer; I issue cards and handle rules. To the left of the dealer—” Avaron gestured toward Gwyneth,”—the turn order goes left to right. Gwyneth, then, Saryl was it?”
“Yes.”
“And Elseh?”
“Yes.”
“Okay, once everyone has made a play, then that round is over and we go onto the next. The first two players must always put a bet in set by the dealer at the start of every round, or fold and quit until the match is done. Gwyneth and Saryl, go ahead and put in, mmm, 2 coins right here in the center.” Avaron adjusted her sitting, moving to a more comfortable cross-legged position. “This is important because if Gwyneth folds, then Saryl and Elseh would be forced to pay.”
“And that means points always go in until the … match, is done?” Elseh asked carefully.
“Correct. No endless loops here. Now, if you’re not forced to pay or fold, you can choose to pay, fold, or raise the pot here,” Avaron said, tapping the coins in the center. “Whenever a player chooses to raise, we start from left to right again—match, fold, or raise. This is the betting phase; when its done I … whoops, forgot a step.” Avaron quickly set down three cards of her own next to the ‘pot’ of coins, face down on the grass. “When the first round of betting is done, I’ll flip these cards. Let’s work through that—Elseh, what do you want to do?”
“… Match, is it?” she said, slowly setting two coins into the pot.
“That’s fine. Betting is now done, so I flip—” and so Avaron turned over the three face down cards “—and now, what the cards do. I will play a total of five ‘community’ cards. These five cards, plus the two in your hand, must make a winning combination. Whoever has the highest, wins.”
“What are the combinations?” Gwyneth asked curiously.
Arzha’s ear perked up as Avaron went on, and on, and on about different sets of ‘winning’ cards and their point hierarchy. It sounded far too much to her at first, but it had a certain structure about it.
“… Anyway, it’ll be easier to understand once we play. You’re all quite lucky I know these stupid rules by heart. Okay, the community cards are out, new round of betting. Gwyneth?”
“I-in?” she said hesitantly, offering two coins. Saryl matched, as did Elseh. Thus, Avaron played a fourth card. The next round of betting went much the same; the final card landed. As with the first, the final round of betting happened.
“There,” Avaron said with a nod. “Now, betting is done, all cards are played: lay your hands down and reveal.”
They all did so, a bit hesitant as they showed. Avaron leaned in, looking over each before tapping Saryl’s cards. “Winner, straight.”
“R-really?” Saryl squeaked with surprise while Gwyneth let out a grumbly sound.
Elseh, however, asked, “How so?”
“She has the cards three and five; the cards two, four, and six are on the table. Five in a row; a straight. It’s a middle-ranked score, but none of you have a higher combination.”
“… I see.”
Avaron gestured at Saryl. “Go ahead and add the pot to your coins.”
The knight was rather giddy when she did so.
“Now, in real betting this would go on until the dealer closes the game, or you decide to quit playing. Hand me your cards, please.”
A reshuffle and a reset later, Avaron started dolling out the cards again. “To really be in the spirit of Poker, though—” she tapped her temple “—mind games is a real thing, too.”
“Mind games?” the three asked in unison.
“Maybe you have a bad hand, but you act confident and so your opponent folds. Or you have a great hand and act like you’re gonna lose, so your opponent goes in with even more money. You two are knights, it’s basic strategy, is it not?”
They nodded, and Elseh seemed to have found a particular insight.
“Now don’t get rowdy or anything, but manipulating your opponents is all apart of poker too, you see …”
The longer Arzha watched, the grander the strategies of the game unveiled themselves. It wasn’t a perfectly controlled environment—the luck of the draw from the dealer could singlehandedly decide everything. Yet, on the other hand, different options existed to set the stage. Once, she saw Gwyneth win just because she went ‘all in’, and her two knights turned cowardly and folded. Saryl’s hand would’ve crushed them all, but Gwyneth’s ploy secured victory.
Standing up, she ventured over to the play group, who fell silent at her approach. In sitting beside Elseh, she stared expectantly at Avaron, who sheepishly grinned.
“… I can deal you in next match. We’re due a reset anyway.”
“Very well.”
So it would be, the five of them were joined by two others, and the rest remained on watch. It didn’t escape Arzha’s notice how much Avaron captivated everyone—not through trickery, but a sort of charming personality. She wasn’t harsh to listen to, nor unduly stupid, either. Had she been human, she might’ve been a fair force to reckon in the noble courts. They played and played late into the night, coins of all kinds flying between players in grand gestures or slow, glacial climbs.
Much to Arzha’s chagrin, she wasn’t winning nearly as much as she expected.
Chapter 4: The Land of Ash For Real This Time
Chapter Text
Fear’s greatest enemy is honesty.
*~*
Avaron feared she might blast her pants. A whole night of so many women around her, laughing and oozing the finest scents she’d smelled sorely tested her resolve. Forget coffee cravings and a shot of espresso, the sheer craving alone transcended need into painful withdrawals. Just moving around was starting to become horrendously agonizing, and were it not for Arzha forcing her to ride on the same horse, she might’ve dropped in the field long ago.
At least the trotting, no-suspension-equipped horse was distracting enough. That the living statue of an amazon snuggled behind her in a firm, unyielding security was the other distraction. Arzha deserved her position of princess, if not queen itself on looks alone. At least the uncaring, frigid disregard she gave everything put a dampener on that a bit. Pushing those thoughts aside, she instead said, “Right, so the different heroines will be split up?”
“Ideally. There is much they could do to help the many lands, but the problem ever remains the Church.”
“… If I might make a suggestion, perhaps unbecoming of my position?”
“I am listening.”
“You will want to knock the Church down pretty hard. Maybe not destroy the faith, but definitely remove its power.” When no real answer immediately followed, Avaron thought it might’ve been an overstep.
“Without the Church, how does one pay fealty to the Goddesses?”
“That is fair. The rules in this world are far different—but I can’t imagine the Church needs so much power on this mortal plane. If they wish to deliver fealty to the Goddesses, they don’t need armies to do so.”
“… How apt.”
That was the other problem; Arzha’s intense curtness made conversation quite one-sided. When the princess had an opinion, it came as a mighty statement and it was supported thusly. Otherwise, good luck. It reminded her of new customers of a high pedigree, in a way. They always wanted to be impressed, and their unspoken for expectations answered with a clairvoyant understanding. The mere thought of returning to that nerve-wracking hell reined in her mood quite well.
Instead, she leaned and look behind her, toward where Gwyneth rode in front of Saryl. “Hey, Gwyneth!” she spoke loudly, and the priestess looked up. “How long to Greenshill on horseback?”
“Two days, maybe?” Gwyneth returned.
“Two days on fair weather, four on bad,” Arzha instead said, low enough only for Avaron to hear.
“Oh? Erm, thanks.”
“Are you in a hurry?”
“… Forgive me if I might say something unbefitting to your royal ears.”
“Perhaps.”
“I am a tentradom, and I’m reaching my limit.”
“… Limit?”
Suddenly not too certain I should be talking about this, but … Avaron sighed, and thought of how to say it. “You humans have, well, sex when you want it. I do too, but I also need to. I’m nearly a week since last time and I’m in, incredible pain right now.”
“I—I see.”
The hitch in Arzha’s voice, however faint it might’ve been, didn’t slip past Avaron. Nothing more was said, and the minutes passed by in galloping-filled quiet. To her surprise, Arzha shifted, and she felt the princess’ head come alongside hers, warm mouth breathing onto her ear.
“So, you do it with that priestess then?” Arzha asked, and for however delightful her breath felt, her words were a chilling world apart.
“She’s quite eager to help relieve me, yes,” Avaron returned dryly, rather not in the mood for games. The arms beside her holding the reins tightened up, and a curious scent reached her. Stress; tension, of some kind, but she couldn’t figure it out anymore. Ah, prim and proper nobility, she thought with a sardonic smirk. “I quite don’t want to drop over in writhing agony, so she and I will need private time later.”
“… Quite.” Then, Arzha sat up straight and normal again.
As good an answer as ever she would get.
*~*
The mere thought of Avaron already committing such carnal activities left Arzha beside herself. She shouldn’t be surprised in the slightest, but it just got to her in a way she couldn’t name. The whole feeling vexed her terribly, and she kept a stiff lip as they rode on and on. To speak nothing of herself, there was the matter of the two having their ‘privacy time’. Arzha mulled over the thought for a long while, but ultimately brushed the whole matter aside.
It is no different when any of them want to, she considered, sending a sidelong glance to her Snowflake knights. They will not complain.
Still, where did that leave her?
The idea hung as a cloud over her, all the way until they found an ideal place to rest. A small cove of trees grew in the plains next to a river, knee-deep as it was and babbling away. The party pulled up and dismounted, her knights making camp with a pleasant expediency. Nothing too heavy; they’d be heading out in an hour or two. The crumble of river rocks sounded with each of her steps, Arzha looking around all the while. A comfortable thicket; prying eyes from afar would have trouble seeing in, and fluffy, bushy plants crowded around the trees. Unlike the pine forest they’d left days before, the oak trees here were a touch unusual. Such were the trees in the Land of Ash, any way.
Arzha held up a beckoning hand, and Haleen hurried over immediately.
“My lady?”
“Our two guests,” Arzha said with an appreciable hushness, “are in the mood for a flower dance. I’ll be watching it myself.”
Haleen jerked with visible surprise, almost uncharacteristically honest for a moment. “If—if you believe it prudent, my lady. But given the nature of that … woman …”
“I understand. My protective charms will be sufficient, I think.” Arzha waved her hand dismissively, though it was pleasing to see Haleen’s due diligence. “Furthermore, a rare opportunity to see one of these creatures in, mm, action, myself.”
“… All the same, I will be nearby should you need me.”
“Of course. I leave the camp in your hands.” That necessary task out of the way, Arzha walked over to Avaron and Gwyneth at the camp’s edge, who seemed to be in a hushed conversation. They skittishly looked up at her approach, Avaron most of all seeming ill-at-ease. She appraised them coolly, her nose upturned. “There’s a place nearby for your business.”
“Eh?”
“Oh?”
They both chirped at once, but Avaron recovered quickly. “T-thanks, I think?”
“Time is fleeting, get going.”
They followed her direction, heading off. In following them herself, Avaron looked over her shoulder once, then twice, almost doing a spittake. “We-we can find it ourselves, thank you,” she said with a skittish formality. Arzha met her wide eyes with a stern one in kind.
“You do need someone on guard,” she said, more as a statement than anything. When the two of them started to slow down and offer some half-hearted complaints, Arzha’s certain shove to their backs got them going again. “Be grateful I have deigned to do the duty myself.”
Ah, the icy cut of nobility served well when all others failed.
The three of them headed over, passing a fair way away from the camp. Not enough to be completely out of ear shot, incase something did actually happen. The ideal spot they found turned out to be a mostly clear spot near the base of a tree, flanked by a long, stretching bush almost too big to hold itself up anymore. The angled hump of the tree gave it a sort of seat-like holding, one Avaron quickly sat in. For her part, Arzha had another tree nearby she went and leaned up against. It offered a decent angle to see the impending event, or so she believed.
Arms crossed over her chest, she stared expectantly, meeting Avaron’s disbelieving glances every time she looked. “Ohh, fuck it,” the tentradom grumbled loudly, standing up right quick. The cord-like belt around her waist flew undone, her hands working speedily to rip it off and tear her pants right down. Arzha found herself rather at the sight: smooth legs so perfect they belonged on a statue, or a doll. A pleasant thickness to her thighs, a hint of muscles, and a rather shapely rear that’d fit nicely into her hands. Human, almost, until her eyes saw her knees.
A doll indeed, Arzha mused. There was Avaron’s ‘thigh’, then deeply blue, fleshy tendrils of connective tissue where her knee should’ve been. Below laid her calves, then the same for her feet. Everywhere there should’ve been bony joints there were flesh tendrils connecting it all together. The odd sight turned out more strangely titillating than disgusting. Sitting down again, Avaron spread her legs open, putting her shapely, immaculate netherlips on display. They shimmered in the dim light, already drenched wet and parted with a hungry, anticipating twitch.
Quite the lovely color. Really, a rather exotic blue—sharply bright, pulsating with turquoise hints. The shape and structure were all too familiar, the color made it fantastically surreal. Beautiful, in a sense that Arzha might appreciate. Then Avaron’s pussy lips twitched in a way they really shouldn’t have. Contracting muscles and a tight lower belly followed before a long, slithering thing emerged. Ribbed and ridged, its head flared in a fat X-shaped arrow-head, it twitched and twisted like a snake.
Arzha hadn’t a clue what face she was making right then before she mentally caught herself. T-that’s a … what is the word, tentacle? Eugh how does it move like that? Gwyneth kneeling in front of it obscured more from her sight, and she had to restrain herself from craning her neck. What are you doing? Wait, with your mouth?
That slutty priestess was going to service that big thing with her mouth?
Arzha couldn’t believe her eyes, watching Gwyneth lick her lips and open wide, tongue flaring out with invitation. The tentacle slapped against her face with a wet smack so audible Arzha’s fine hairs stood on end. Avaron, however, quickly grabbed herself, keeping the wriggling thing away from Gwyneth for a moment.
“Th-there might be more than last time,” she said, huffing and puffing. “M-maybe just use your hands?”
Gwyneth shook her head, surprisingly. “Mine duty is to take it all!”
“Are you kidding? We don’t have a change of—ah, ahh—clothes this time!” Avaron chirped at the end, Gwyneth’s demure hands wrapping around her tentacle. They barely managed it, and the head of the thing was a fair bit bigger still!
“Please! I—I’ve been thinking on how to handle thee.”
“Ohh, sweet, merciful fuck—okay, fine, just be careful cause I’m—” Avaron’s words disappeared in a large, O-shaped exhale when Gwyneth’s mouth swallowed her tip. The tentacle spasmed and in a great, bulging plunge pushed its whole head into her mouth. The very tips of its arrow-head pushed at her cheeks, leaving dents where they undoubtedly anchored in.
Nearly slack-jawed herself, Arzha hid behind her hand. That whole head went into Gwyneth’s mouth! The gagging, sucking slurp reached even her ears, punctuated by airy pops when the seal broke for a moment. D-doesn’t that hurt? she wondered, but Gwyneth seemed all too happy bobbing her head up and down. Barely any more of the tentacle went in, so it must’ve been all for that scary looking head in her mouth. Her hands, meanwhile, traveled up and down the length, massaging with deep, flesh-indenting jerks and rubs.
It certainly worked given how Avaron leaned fully back, legs cocked open and twitching. Her delirious smile almost looked like she’d cry any second, her tongue starting to loll out of her mouth. In fact, it kept going, hanging out with a drooling sheen nearly a foot in length. Arzha stared more at that than anything else, the incredibly long, and undoubtedly flexible thing just hanging there.
Suddenly, it made far more sense to her how tentradoms seduced women so effectively.
Sophisticated her own skill may be, such a fearsome looking tool would be the greatest challenger in her life. The mere thought of such a long, slippery appendage in her loins made Arzha clench her thighs together. Her mouth yet hidden by her hand, she licked her own lips. Oh, but how would it be to kiss, hm … She might very well lose in a battle there, too! Were there any of her knights who could stand up to it? That thought hung for a hot second in her mind. No, probably not.
Amidst her own thoughts and the sucking, slurping gulps of that slutty priestess, she smelled it. A scent, wafting in the air that had a homeliness to it, warm and rich. Before she realized it, a flushed, warmth of her own started in her belly, rising up with alarming quickness. The princess’ nipples tightened beneath her many layers, pushing stubbornly against her clothing. Worse, her pussy awoke with a thigh-clenching tingle, a sudden turn-on so quick Arzha stood straight up, at attention.
This—this is it, isn’t it? Arzha realized, ever becoming more conscious of her own breathing. Every lungful of that warm scent left her tingling and awake, her own blood rushing. Not quite adrenaline, but she’d had more than her fair of fun to recognize real, pussy-wettening arousal when it came. A blush came to her cheeks, one that wasn’t at all of her own making. What incredible effectiveness it has.
Even more distressing, her magical wards did nothing to stop it. Smoke attacks were always hard to deal with, but even a rudimentary ward of wind would be sufficient. What about it wasn’t seen enough as a threat? Or obstructive enough? Something about it the wards simply didn’t recognize. A rather useful bit of insight, and an alarming realization she could be affected. Then again, Arzha mused, seeing drool dribble down Gwyneth’s chin like a river. It’s not … unmanageable.
A stronger dose would be a problem, surely, but at her distance, she’d be fine.
That her whole body tingled with desire wasn’t too troublesome either.
She rather going at it, Arzha thought amusedly at Gwyneth’s vigorous working hands. Avaron’s legs lifted up somewhat, tightening at the knees as her face scrunched shut. Then, a most curious things—great, bulging lumps started descending down her tentacle. The first met Gwyneth’s lips, squeezing against them and the priestess let out the most girly squeal. Then it forced, and forced, and then plunged through, disappearing into her mouth. What followed was the loudest, gulping squelch Arzha had heard; like a parched woman finding water!
Bulge after bulge disappeared into Gwyneth’s sucking mouth, each one followed by a gulp. Already it outstripped anything Arzha had ever seen or heard of before, and it just kept going. Sheer awe soon followed the admiral sight of Gwyneth’s determined gulping, but it was not to be. White, creamy strands started sputtering out between her lips, followed by more, and more, and more. Her throat no longer drank, and all that kept pumping into her mouth left the only way it could. Arching herself in a strange curve, Gwyneth’s head hung in the air, all of Avaron’s inhuman cum drooling out and down to the dirt beneath. It pooled and pooled, growing steadily enough to start reaching Gwyneth’s knees.
Yet, at last, no more bulges came, and the dripping, drooling river of cum ceased. In its wake remained long, thin strands, stretching from Gwyneth’s cum-soaked chin and lips down to the earth. Just a few seconds, then they snapped, disappearing as gossamer in the morning dew.
How oddly poetic, Arzha wondered, beside herself. How did the priestess drink all of it? How much more was leaking to the ground still?! Enamored with the sight, she watched for a long, heart-pounding minute before Avaron’s tentacle twitched and pulled out of Gwyneth’s mouth with a squelching ‘pop’. The priestess’ hand immediately flew to her mouth, covering it but not before a glob of creamy cum spat out.
One last, throat-flexing gulp followed, and then Gwyneth broke the air with a sudden, airy inhale. “S-see?” she said, staring up at Avaron with flushed cheeks, all of her mouth splattered with sticky cum. “I—I drank more!”
“Y-yeah, yeah,” Avaron replied, sounding entirely out of her own mind.
The two sat there, breathing in huffs and simply existing.
Was it just her or was that warm scent getting stronger? Arzha felt her own mouth tingle and start to drool with each inhale she took. Gulping down her own spit, she found herself rather in her own body once again, taking a footstep. The shock of movement catalyzed everything: her throbbing pussy, aching for attention, and her painfully erect nipples squeezing against the unyielding wall of her chest armor. Even her butt felt needy! One, hard grope just to squeeze them so sweet and tight—she bit the inside of her lip, wrenching her mind awake.
Dangerous, indeed. It wasn’t hard to resist; no, it was easier to slip into the mindset. A good trick; but just that, a trick. Arzha stepped over to the two, who startled at her clanking, heavy-booted approach. “If you two are done, then,” she bit out, a frosty edge sharper than even she expected, “let’s get going.”
Oh, walking wasn’t at all safe. Her sopping wet panties were almost squelching on their own with her steps. If it weren’t for her armor, everyone else might very well hear it.
She had only seen so little, and still, Arzha found tentradoms all the more dangerous to consider.
*~*
“The village is just ahead. For your sake, we will ride on ahead and conduct our business separately.”
Avaron nodded at Arzha’s words, and sheepishly scratched the back of her head. The princess had ever remained stiff lipped since watching yesterday, not that she blamed her. Someone that prim and proper might’ve had a curious mind, and bit off more than they could handle. I really need to find out if jerking it is enough to calm this thing down.
“Thank thee kindly,” Gwyneth said, clapping her hands in prayer and bowing to the princess.
“I’m not sure how I can repay you,” Avaron remarked, shrugging with her hands open.
“Payment is unneeded. But, in the future, I would rather you think me your ally.”
“… Sure, that seems reasonable.”
“If you wish to get in contact, send a letter to Artor for the ‘Moonlit Rose Inn’, and I will receive it.”
“I’ll try to have instructions on where to send your response then.”
“Good. I wish you well on your travel. Knights!” Arzha thrust a hand up, and the many knights began trotting off ahead with her.
“See you again soon!” Saryl called out, waving along with Elseh. “Let’s play poker next time!”
Avaron blinked at the rather friendly departure, and waved back. “Sure!” she shouted, much to Saryl’s laughing joy.
When they left around the bend ahead, Avaron looked at Gwyneth. “Well, that uhh, happened.”
“One mustn’t question thy fortunes. Praise the Flame for this fortunate event!” Gwyneth declared, bowing her head to her hands, cupping that somehow still-alive flame in her hands. Avaron did likewise, though perhaps not as earnestly. “Let us continue on, to Greenshill village.”
They pushed on through the grass, climbing the nearby hill. Cresting the top, Avaron’s eyes widened at the sight of a large, sprawling village-slash-city. Although lacking in tall buildings, it had more than enough houses, roads, walls, and the like to be truly immense. Wind mills dotted the highest of hills, rotating with white-clothed blades, and she spied several interesting looking aqueducts snaking into the village itself. By all accounts, a truly medieval hub of activity from a distance. She didn’t see much for incoming traders or caravans; but that might be on the farside of the village.
Elated at maybe having an actual bed to sleep in, Avaron headed down the hill with a bounce in her step.
Life went grand, walking through the scenic grassy fields up until she hit the checkpoint gate.
At a distance it certainly fit a two-or-three story height, and a set of great, probably iron-bars blocked the way. Arzha and her knights were nowhere to be seen; probably already inside. The grass suddenly cleared away to a cobbly, gravel road, the first firm footing they’ve had since leaving Artor. The closer they came the greater the gate loomed, and she spotted two people sitting nearby at a corner. They saw them, and stood up, long, pointy sticks in hand.
Gwyneth raised a hand, waving in greeting, to which one of the guards did so as well.
“Ho there, travelers. What brings ya here?” one of them asked, a man with two fluffy ears poking out of his helmet and a long, orange-haired tail sweeping behind him. “Oh, is that you, Gwyneth?”
A cat? Or a fox? Avaron wondered, rather vexed she couldn’t tell the difference.
“Tis indeed, Ghen. Mine return from Artor.”
“Bleedin’ walked all the way did ya?” Ghen chuckled, scratching at his head with some disbelief.
“Even simple struggle can be virtuous.”
“Suit yourself. Whose this with ya?”
“I’m Avaron. Something of a scholar, you see, joining Gwyneth here.”
“Scholar, eh?” Ghen eyeballed her, but it wasn’t a suspicious gaze. A guard had to do his job, after all. “Fair ‘nuff. It’ll be the usual fee to get in, Gwyneth.”
The priestess pulled out four coins from a pouch, and Ghen took them, pocketing it himself. Nodding, he turned around, and the three of them headed to a corner of the big gate. By all accounts, a smaller door to let one through. “Nothing fancy here then. Ya best be careful, Gwyneth.”
“Why so?”
“Rumors abound of heroines being summoned, got everyone real tight all of a sudden. They say its in Artor, and some Artor knights just came into town.” He shrugged his shoulders. “Lotta noise going on, so people are edgy.”
“Bless thee, Ghen.”
He nodded to her, then to Avaron, as both of them passed through the door. It shut behind them, and they continued down the gate’s tunnel. Here, gravel turned to laid brick, uneven and bumpy, but not terribly so. The street they walked out onto already had buildings on either side, cramped together as they were. By Avaron’s best guess, the lots had once been neatly spaced apart, then new buildings built in the spacing. Rather than expanding the village, they tried to cram more into what they had. Her wandering gaze moved from them to the large wall they’d just left.
I guess in this world, walls matter a lot more and they aren’t easy that exactly to make. It’s not even concrete, is it?
How much of a pain in the ass was that to make?
To its credit the village wasn’t as disorderly or messy as her mind first conjured. Tight fitting to be certain, but the roads had space, and people moved about with a purposeful air that wasn’t at all downtrodden. For a place with no electricity, AC, refrigeration, or really any modern convenience, they seemed to be doing pretty well for themselves. It reminded her, in a way, of her rare visits to less developed countries when she had the time to bother her humanitarian companies. Just with a bit more of a history-channel feeling to the whole thing.
Her idle musing took a back seat when Gwyneth pulled her toward a big, reinforced-looking door. A sign jutted out above it, showing what must’ve been a cup, or tankard, or something drink-holding. A … tavern, I guess? she wondered, following Gwyneth inside. Warm air filled with a nose-cramming amount of scents slammed into her like an invisible wall, and Avaron nearly tripped over. Stumbling foot after foot, she brought up a sleeve to her nose, eyes watering. “Good, fuck, shit!”
“Is something wrong?”
“Damn this nose of mine. I—I’m fine, just what are we doing here?”
“Getting a room for the evening.”
“Cool, the faster the better.”
Gwyneth nodded, and moved on with a greater urgency.
She was right, all the same. They’d entered a tavern, richly full of noise and people chatting it away. All sorts could be found: humans, those cat-fox things, long-eared people with leaves coming out of them that might be elves, scantily dressed men and women ostensibly acting as waitresses, rather heavily armored looking folk too … One particular sight stood out, however. Sort toward the back of the whole expansive dining hall, a huge bubble of emptiness surrounded one person. Even at a distance, Avaron could tell they were huge, and something different. Armor covered them from head to toe, but just so many black spikes jutted out of them. Their head, their shoulders, their legs—it looked like a damn porcupine almost. She hadn’t more time to give it a look before Gwyneth wrenched her awake.
“Our room is upstairs,” she said in a loud whisper, still barely discernible over the noise.
“Okay!”
They headed up a flight of sturdy stairs, the noise and nose-clogging smells fading rather quickly. Avaron let out a sigh of relief when they slipped into a room, modest as it was with a large build, a trunk at the bed’s end, and a table for four. It even had a window with curtains! Glass, too, instead of wooden shutters. The twilight sun snuck in, casting the otherwise dark room in a warm, hazy orange glow. A snap-clank of iron behind her followed the door shutting and locking, and Avaron pulled back her hood immediately.
“Ahh, finally,” she said with relief, scratching her head and fluffing up her sweat-matted hair. “I would kill for a bath right now.”
“V-verily?”
Something about Gwyneth’s earnestly confused chirp drew her attention. “It’s a figure of speech. You know, not that I would actually do that.”
“… Why say it, then?”
“… To convey how important it is to me?”
“Oh. I shall inquire if thine keeper hath one to spare.”
“If it isn’t too much trouble.”
Gwyneth shook her head and bowed, then headed out of the room. Avaron locked the door behind her just in case. For the first time since being thrown into a jail, she had a semblance of solitude. Peeling off the cloak around her, she folded and set it on the table before falling onto one of the simple wooden chairs. The translation from feet to butt brought a wonderful, slow sigh. Sitting and sitting there, she remained without a thought, just relaxing.
I can’t believe I’m missing my office, Avaron thought incredulously. I’d take a stack of TPS reports right now. I don’t even handle those damn things anymore and I’d take them.
She had the presence of mind to know her habits, likes and dislikes. In spite of it all, the whole new ‘living in another world’ experience just didn’t sit right in her mind. Not to mention the fact she was a week in and already pumping cum in someone she barely knew. Not that there was anything to dislike about Gwyneth, at least yet. Avaron ran her fingers through her hair, slouched back and staring at the wood wall while her thoughts wandered.
… Actually, I should check that.
Her personal info-screen popped up immediately and she noticed a change right away. Level … 2? How did I go from 1 to 2? Why didn’t I feel anything either? Her eyes went down to a new button, ‘Level Up’. Starting to think whoever made this wasn’t that great at it. Okay, level up then?
A new window appeared, and she saw five stats, named: Vitality, Resilience, Recovery, Strength, and Magic.
Okay … now give me information but not picking one.
The screen, surprisingly, changed again. Avaron sat up a bit straighter, her intrigue piqued.
[Vitality: All physical characteristics, such as healthiness, stamina, endurance, and immunology.]
[Resilience: Ability to endure pain and discomfort; improves bodily durability against harm.]
[Recovery: Physical stamina and magical power recovery rate.]
[Strength: Physical power as expressed by utilizing strength to attack or carry things.]
[Magic: Proficiency with magical power.]
Oddly, Recovery was ‘grayed out’. She tried selecting it, but received a message instead.
[Your recovery is already max due to the skill ‘Divine Regeneration’.]
Alright? Neat? Avaron wondered with a dubious smile. Not really telling me where I’m at with these other ‘stats’. Then again, not like I’d know. Whatever, if it means I won’t have as much trouble walking, Resilience it is then.
The screen flickered, the word flashing green, then it returned back to her regular menu. Avaron looked around with a hint of superstition, then kind of pinched her forearm a little. Nothing really seemed all that different. A thought crept on her mind, one that made her pause. Wait, if my recovery is maxed … then, is that why I can take such short breaks?
Sure, walking burned her legs up fierce after a couple hours, but sitting down and it went away in no time at all. Her brow furrowed, the acute sense of a realization far too uncomfortable to ignore. It takes me a few minutes what takes people hours or days to bounce back from. Like … athlete, but better. That explained why she always ended up waiting on Gwyneth to start the march again. She must’ve been running the priestess ragged trying to keep up.
A pang of guilt struck, one she ever professionally set aside for later. There was another new field in the menu, one that really seemed quite out of place with its name. ‘Breeding Mates’. Really? Really? She opened it, eyes narrowed. The info-screen expanded, popping open a list of names; well, two names, in particular.
‘Gwyneth Flamestoker and Arzha Shieldcrown’. Hold on, what the fuck? She did a doubletake at seeing that princess’ name, of all people, show up in the list. It popped open another screen. ‘Current relationship: lukewarm’. ‘Desires fulfillment and purpose’. ‘Desires luxury and comfort’. ‘Her Snowflake Knights are a package deal’. ‘War looms on the horizon and her family’s incompetence has disillusioned her’. Anything else? No? Okay then.
Before she even gave it a thought, she opened Gwyneth’s info next. ‘Current relationship: cum slut’. Not pulling any punches today are you, info-screen? ‘Desires prophetic realization’. ‘Desires comfort and familial bond’. ‘The dying Flame worries her, and she fears failing her duty’. ‘She seeks to enkindle the heroine the Flame has sent her to’. Now see, that’s a lot to take in at once right there.
Wait, where did that little info button come from? A simple i-letter surrounded by a circle in the upper corner, an all but universal symbol. A new screen popped up over all the others.
[Breeding Mates: An enhanced party system unique to the tentradom. Form relationships with potential mates; as your bond deepens, more information will become available to help. A breeding mate can only be confirmed for party membership benefits once successfully impregnated. Party benefits include the normal party system benefits, in addition to any changes induced by tentradom breeding.]
One hand holding up pressed against her temple, the other strummed its fingers on the table. Avaron stared for a good long while, trying to process however many ideas just slapped her upside the face. More than anything else, a sort of ickiness settled over her; the feeling of encountering something most forbidden. Is it really any different from spying on someone? she mused, lips pursed tightly. In a world of goddesses influencing mere mortal people … hmph. Sounds like a police state more than anything else.
But, her sensibilities were another world’s.
Still, they were hard to let go.
A knock came at the door, jolting her and shutting all the menus. She crept up to next to it, and said, “Who goes?”
“Tis I,” came Gwyneth’s muffled voice.
Avaron unbolted and opened the door, and the priestess walked in with a rather large, rounded tub in her hands. She had to help her move it to the corner of a room before hurriedly shutting the door up again. “What in the world is this?” she asked, staring at the tub.
“Thy bath?” Gwyneth said, sounding suddenly uncertain. “I will fetch thy water now.”
She wasn’t sure what she expected, but it wasn’t that. Sheepishly scratching the back of her head, Avaron nodded. “Let me help, then.”
“Tis no trouble.”
“I’ll feel guilty if I don’t.”
“Verily? If thou wish, then.”
*~*
“Hey. Hey you.”
Nerg’s thick, spiny brow twitched, and she turned toward the noise. A small, stony-white human-looking thing wrapped in a cloak stood at the other side of her one-person table. She looked rather odd—definitely new, nothing Nerg had ever encountered before. “What?” she said as much as growled, her deep, bassy voice a bit metallic from within her iron helmet.
“Are you for hire perchance?”
An odd person and an odd question; it made her blink for a moment, the too-damn-small mug in her hand forgotten. “You’re asking me?”
“Well, yes? Biggest, strongest looking one here. Who else would be my first choice?”
“… Not from around here, are you?”
“Not at all. I’m Avaron,” the white-woman said, patting her chest. “A wandering scholar. I’m heading north toward Shadowpeak along with a priestess. Interested?”
At least she’s curt, Nerg mused. In sitting up, her immense, muscularly bulky frame and 7’9 height put the chair under her to its utmost limit. Even sitting, she remained taller than Avaron, who scarcely looked any bigger than an ordinary human. “That’s a long journey. Sure you got the coin?”
“What’s your rate?”
“How much do you have?”
Surprisingly, the woman held up a wagging finger. “Never reveal what’s in your pocket, that’s rule one. What’s your rate?”
At least she isn’t stupid. Pushing her knuckles against her chin, she popped her neck with a sickening noise. “On foot, or by horse?”
“Foot, most likely. I’d like to do horse but there’s no caravans.”
“Mm. Ten silvers a day, you pay for food and drink.”
Avaron looked up, seemingly in thought. “In that case, we’ll handle accommodations, and you’ll be paid when we reach our destination.”
It was the best deal she’d heard yet. With trade drying up there probably wouldn’t be anything heading north for a good long while. Getting paid to go somewhere she was already headed just added a nice bonus to it all. “Fine then, deal.”
“What’s your name?”
“… Nerg.”
Avaron held out a hand to her, and Nerg stared at it in confusion for a hot second. It hung between them. “Not the shaking type, are you?”
“… Shaking? Oh, that human thing.” Really, wanting to touch her? A harraxin? She reached out, and her enormous gloved hand enveloped Avaron’s completely, much to the woman’s queer laugh at the sight.
“Goodness you’re big,” she said with a smile, trying to move her arm up and down. Nerg, for her part, only offered the weakest of handshakes she felt she could do until they parted. “It must be nice. I get lost in a crowd in a heartbeat.”
“Hm. When are we leaving?”
“Tomorrow morning. We’re getting all our supplies ready today, so I suggest you do, too.” Avaron gave her a blatant up-and-down appraisal. “Honestly I don’t know what you eat or how much.”
Nerg, utterly bemused, couldn’t help a disbelieving chuckle escaping. “The same as everyone else, just much more. I hope you like fresh kill.”
“Oh, camp food. Yeah, I don’t mind.”
“Hm. Where tomorrow?”
“The north gate, we’ll be on the inside waiting.”
“I’ll be there.”
“Wonderful.”
Avaron left, and Nerg finished off her morning snack.
By dawn crack next morning, she found herself with a heavy sack on her back once again. Her dragon-like feet smacked the ground with every step, the scrape of thick, armor-rending claws quite distinct. Softer still was the rattle of her spines, protruding as they were from her shoulders, calves, and her mane of spiny hair. The bony-white, black-tipped things bounced with every step in a soft cacophony, a sound she’d ever learned to tune out in her life. Her Warhammer hung from her back, the two-handed steel weapon the only other thing than her leather body armor she wore.
Two cloaked figures stood on the road ahead to the north gate, one rather shorter than the other. One turned toward her, and she saw Avaron’s distinct white face peaking out. A hand shot up in a long wave, which caused the other to look as well. Unlike Avaron, they all but jumped on the spot, and hurriedly broke into whispers. The sight of a flame in her hands made Nerg pause for a step; but upon another look, it was too weak to be a dangerous spell.
Now, that was the more typical response she expected.
“—xin, art thou certain?!”
“Yes, yes, I hired her. What is the fuss about?” Avaron asked, their conversation just now reaching Nerg’s ears.
“Tis, well—” the other woman looked toward Nerg, then back again, suddenly bashful with how her hands fidgeted. By then, Nerg reached the two in all her imposing height, and she looked down at them with her expectant, brightly yellow eyes.
“Is there a problem?”
“No, no,” Avaron said, waving a hand dismissively. “We’re all ready. Are you?”
Nerg nodded, and Avaron clapped.
“Let’s get going then. This is Gwyneth, by the way.”
“… The Flame priestess?”
“Verily,” Gwyneth affirmed, sounding rather stiff. Nerg couldn’t help smiling under her helmet at the sound.
Human women were always so uncomfortable around her.
They departed without any fuss, heading up the gravel road that led north. Unsurprisingly, she hardly saw anyone in the surrounding fields or the road itself save messengers and a few patrolling guards. Greenshill had clammed up tight ever since the heroine summoning, but it surprised her how firmly it had done so. Supposedly caravans already enroute had suddenly reversed direction, or so some merchants griped about in the tavern. Really, she couldn’t imagine it being that big of a deal, but so it was.
The greater mystery in front of her was why Gwyneth was leading the way, while Avaron walked in the middle. Or, not so much a mystery as a rather funny sight. To her actual surprise, Avaron turned around, walking backwards while looking at her.
“Alright, I hope you don’t think I’m rude if I ask something.”
A reflexive tension arose quite sharply, and Nerg looked at the white-faced woman wearily. “What is it?”
“She—” Avaron jerked a thumb over her shoulder, “—was saying something about a ‘harraxin’, but I’ve never heard of that. Mind explaining it to me?”
“… I am a harraxin,” Nerg said, pointing at herself for added clarity.
Avaron held out her arms in a shrug. “Okay? What does that mean?”
“Harraxin are strong brutes,” Gwyneth cut in suddenly. “Rapacious and conniving, who often raid, rape and pillage others. Tis their cruelty that made many a war for the lands.”
Nerg’s eyes narrowed, her spines clacking up in a raised hackled. Surprisingly, Avaron gave an exaggerated roll of her eyes and a loud sigh.
“Thank you, Gwyneth,” she said dryly. “But what do you have to say?”
“… Hm, well, she isn’t wrong.”
That surprised Avaron apparently, who nearly tripped over backwards. Catching herself, she spun around into a rightward facing walk, but fell into step beside Nerg’s rather restrained movement. Walking at human speed was, after all, practically a crawl for her. “How do you mean?”
Actually explaining to someone who didn’t already know felt rather strange. New, but strange. Nerg scratched at her head, thickly clawed fingers raking through the spines. “We harraxin value strength. If you’re weak, you’re weak. No one respects that.”
“Sooo, a warrior race? Live for battle?”
“… No,” Nerg curtly said, finding the idea rather amusing. “War came to us; we didn’t go to war. Harraxin were always strong, but some got different ideas.”
“Different how?”
Nerg shrugged dispassionately. “Weaklings should belong to us, or some nonsense. It was the men who often thought that way.”
“Why them?”
The ceaseless questions were rather irritating, but she was being paid. Nerg held up an arm, and even covered in the light leather it was, her bulging muscles stood prominently—even more when she flexed, the leather all but creaking under the strain. “Harraxi women the strongest. Men are weak, but not weaker than others. So, men go and attack everyone else if they can’t win against women.”
“… For what? Loot? Gold?”
“Women.”
“… Oh.”
“Human women the best, supposedly. Many harraxi men raid humans for them, and so many wars happen. It was all very stupid.”
“What happened to end them, then?”
“After everyone or most everyone died, the other women started rounding up the men. Less of a problem giving them a pity fuck than dealing with human warriors all the time.”
“A … pity fuck.”
The way Avaron echoed her words sounded hilarious enough for Nerg to laugh in a deep, bass-filled laugh. “Exactly that. No woman wants to fuck a weakling, it’s not fun. And your children might be weak, too. If you can’t beat us, you don’t get to fuck us.”
“I’m amazed your species has survived at all.”
Nerg’s brow shot upward. “Ho? Why is that?”
“I mean, if the men have to leave to find other women so much, how did anyone make children at all?”
Giving it a hot moment of thinking, Nerg ultimately shrugged her shoulders noisily. “Pity fucking.”
“I—I guess?” Avaron said, and no more of her annoying questions came.
Walking in silence was going to be a luxury, Nerg suspected in the back of her mind.
Chapter 5: Blackwood Forest and Spring Baths
Chapter Text
Foolish is the one who believes might alone rules eternal.
*~*
“Starting to see why they call it Blackwood Forest,” Avaron remarked dryly, eye balling the oak trees around them. Although twisted and gnarled, their thick trunks were a deep, blackish color, cracks and grouts in them revealing a lighter, ashen gray interior. Their leaves, surprisingly, remained pretty green.
“Tis said when the lands burned, the forest remained, their trunks charred black. Every tree since grew just as black ever since.”
“… A bit strange fire could do something like that, but alright.”
“There is much power in Flame; more than simple heat.”
“Well, the heat is a good delivery vehicle. Depending on how hot it is changes how it can transforms everything.”
Gwyneth looked over, her mouth agape with surprise. “T-thou art quite perceptive!”
For a moment Avaron thought she heard sarcasm. Yet, Gwyneth’s earnesty made her believe it to be more genuine than mocking. “I … is that so surprising?”
“Few grasp that it is Flame which transforms, not destroys.”
“In fairness, if most things transform into something useless, it’s basically destroyed.”
“Ah, well …” Gwyneth seemed rather lost at that, and Nerg’s deep laugh from behind broke the air.
“She got you there.”
For as immense and foreboding as she seemed to be, Nerg turned out a rather comfortable addition. That, and Avaron felt quite glad to have someone that strong with them. Although her rampant curiosity wouldn’t shut up about trying to learn more about her at all. A tiny bit of guilt arose at such blatant interest of someone so ‘exotic’, a problem she thought she’d outgrown. Sighing lightly, she looked up into the canopy, thick as it was. The mid-day sun barely found anywhere to shine through, casting piercing rays of light all around them. Some plants always huddled around these light spots, greedily hogging the sun in an otherwise barren dirt field, strewn with tree roots and dead foliage.
Trees were vicious predators, after all.
“Huh, there’s a sign ahead.” Nerg’s call out made the other two women look. Further up their winding, uneven path, a distinct solid pole jutted up, something hanging off. Vines of a kind had overgrown it at one point before dying, leaving it all a crumbly, covered up mess.
“Is that part of the route?” Avaron asked.
“No. Tis quite curious,” Gwyneth returned.
The three of them gathered around it, with Avaron clearing away the debris. Nerg read aloud, “Katchin Springs.”
“… Springs?”
“A bath house?” Gwyneth mused. “Where doth it point?”
Avaron angled her arm somewhere off the side. “Seems like it might detour a bit.”
“That crappy sign probably means its abandoned,” Nerg said, rather aptly voicing the thought Avaron had.
“It’s a bit early, but it might be a decent place to camp out for the night?”
“Probably,” Nerg remarked nonchalantly.
“Let’s go take a look at least,” Avaron said, heading off with the other two toward the mystery place. Old cobblestone and wooden planks marked the path, upturned and broken as it was. They rounded a bend around an enormous black oak tree before it came into view before them. A large, three-story house with a brick fence surrounding its property loomed in the sun-pierced gloom. Surprising them all, most of the wood framing and brickwork stood without much issue, dirt and grime aside. It looked more abandoned than ruined. They came up to the ‘gate’, the iron-bars broken off their hinges and hanging on, if just barely.
“Strange,” Gwyneth remarked, drawing attention.
“What?” Nerg asked gruffly.
“A presence lingers here, one mine senses cannot pin.”
“Is it bad?” Avaron asked, trying not to think of ghost stories.
“No, but … off.”
A scraping of leaves off to the side made the three jump and turn in a mighty whirl. Four-legs, brown coated, and pignosed, a creature emerged from a thicket, snorting and sniffing the ground. By all accounts, a boar—if quite large in size. Avaron let out an angry sigh at the sight. “It’s just a stupid animal, goodness.”
The sound of a backpack hitting the ground made her look over. In the next few moments, Nerg went forward in great lunging steps, warhammer drawn. The boar looked up with alert at her sudden approach, only to find the long end of her huge weapon crashing onto its skull. The sickening crunch of bone and meat followed the thump of its body hitting the ground. “Hah!” she shouted in triumph. “A grand dinner tonight!”
Feeling rather queasy at the sight, Avaron turned around. “Uh, great! Wonderful. Can you clean it up while we go look inside?”
“Sure. Scream if you’re in trouble.”
Leaving Nerg to that rather disturbing sight, she ushered Gwyneth into the house’s courtyard. What might’ve been animal stalls or an unloading area, now only the bare remains of posts and half-broken sheds. And, thankfully, no other wild animals. Reaching the front door, she gave its iron handle a quick jiggle. Although stiff, it soon yielded, and a click sounded. It didn’t open on her first try, and so Avaron put her shoulder to the door, giving a few hearty hits. On the fourth, it cracked and opened, its hinges whining with a horridly awful screech.
The dark interior loomed before them, Gwyneth’s tiny flame barely lighting the floor beneath them. Avaron saw a vague outline of a front reception desk, and it seemed a hall to their left and right awaited. They slowly stepped instead, boots against wood echoing with every step. Reaching the desk, Avaron looked around, finding nothing left—no documents, no chairs, just the desk itself.
“Tis quite ordinary in here,” Gwyneth remarked.
“Indeed …” Avaron, eyes narrowing, wiped her hand across the top of the desk then looked. “If this place is abandoned, where is all the dust?”
“The dust?”
“This desk should be filthy. And so should the floor, for that matter.”
“I will trust thy eyes on the matter. Tis suspicious indeed.”
“… Too suspicious. Unless there’s some kind of cleaning magic I don’t know?”
“That would mean someone is here.”
Avaron nodded. “Right, let’s go then, we’ll camp outside.”
They turned around, and the door they came through slammed shut hard enough it rattled the air. Both women jumped, Gwyneth’s flame flaring to thrice its size menacingly, and Avaron hiding behind her. Then came the laughter; a high-pitched, haughty laugh of a woman well practiced with her voice.
“Ahu-hu-hu-hu, my, such lovely pretties!”
Avaron and Gwyneth looked up, and there she was. Shrouded in darkness, the light of a purple flaming candle betrayed a terrifying humanoid. Three pairs of ruby eyes crowned a chitinous face, a thin nose separating them from her enlarged spider fangs. Black hair, pressed flatly prim and proper, hung down her shoulders, half of it spilling down her low-cut dress onto her lilac-colored cleavage. In fact, to Avaron’s surprise, she was wearing a kind of kimono—the sakura blossom pattern on its pink and white fabric gave it away.
“Spoil my fun will you? I haven’t had guests in such a long time,” the spider woman cooed, her elegant tongue oozing with venom. “Stay a while at my lovely—”
The double-doors that had just shut slammed open in a thunderous bang, all of them jumping damn near out of their skin. Their many eyes turned to the side of Nerg setting her foot down, warhammer in hand. “What is all this?”
“M-my door! You broke my doors!” the spider woman screeched, waving four whole arms up and down incredulously. “Do you know how expensive that is?!”
“Uhh …” Nerg intoned, looking down at her two fellows. “What?”
“I think she was about to trap us before you broke in,” Avaron remarked, looking back up at the angry woman. “What do you—”
“Trap you?!” the spider shouted, her chitinous face contorting into a scowl. “Why would I trap people in my inn?! My first guests in years, nonetheless?!”
“You’re not helping the image with your scary antics!” Avaron yelled back, utterly incredulous. “Who shuts a door on people like that?!”
“I can’t have you just leave, now can I?! I clean this place and no one comes!”
“Clean? Have you seen the outside?!”
“Oh, well, I can’t get there,” the spider said, her anger evaporating instantly into a cool, evasive disregard. All her eyes looked away from Avaron’s and her party, rather quite bashful all of a sudden. “That’s not really my fault now, is it?”
“… How art thou cursed?” Gwyneth asked, earning a resounding sigh from the spider.
“It really isn’t any of your business.”
“If you say so. Let’s all go camp in the woods—”
“Wait, wait, wait!” the spider cut off Avaron quickly, her regal composure gone in a flash. “I may have done something to offend a certain mage. She cursed me to be stuck inside my inn as a result.”
“What did you do?”
“That—that is rather private …”
“Leaving seems like a good idea.”
Her face scrunching up, she let out a long, suffering sigh of defeat through her teeth. “The mage had a daughter, you see. A pretty little flower fresh in bloom who needed my guidance, after all.”
Two and two equaled four in this situation and Avaron’s cheeks puffed up, her laugh barely caught in time.
“It’s not funny!”
“It really is,” she said. “Why are you alone here, then? If this inn was prosperous.”
“… The customers stopped coming gradually, then the employees left. I can’t pay without coin, after all. No one comes here anymore, not even bandits.”
Something about her words tickled Avaron; a nagging desire to reassure the woman. Terrifyingly strange as she might be, to be trapped in such loneliness was all-too-familiar to her. Still, prudence. She leaned over to Gwyneth’s ear and whispered. “Is she speaking the truth?”
“Verily.”
Humming in understanding, she pulled away and looked up again. “So what’s your name? I’m Avaron, this is Gwyneth, and that’s Nerg.”
Clapping her hands together, they all disappeared into her kimono sleeves, save the one holding the candle. “I am Tsugumi, owner of Katchin Springs.”
“How’d you stay alive if you can’t leave?” Nerg asked suddenly.
“I’m quite good at luring in wild game. You stole that boar from me, as it happens to be.”
“Oh.” Nerg laughed at that and set her warhammer onto her back again. “Well, it’s bleeding dry out there.”
Gwyneth’s word proved as good as any in Avaron’s mind. “Well, if it’s no trouble then, we’ll stay the night at your inn, Tsugumi.”
“You will?!” Tsugumi smiled, her fangs quite prominent when she did so. Her hands clapped together then, and the darkness within vanished as torches came to life. Orange-colored, fiery torches flicked on in an instant, exposing the very Japanese-like interior them. Firm, evenly spaced wooden planks set against walls whose bottom halves supported the larger, cloth-like wall paper above. Different shoji sliding doors marked the hallways Avaron saw earlier. All of it, while clean, had visible marks of damage in tears, decay, or miscolorations.
Tsugumi herself dropped from the web-filled rafters, landing with the softest tap of her sandal-wearing feet. The eerie candle light snuffed itself out, and so all four of her arms folded together properly in a bow. “Please, be welcome! I will give you the finest rooms I have left.”
“Not to be ungrateful, but what’s your rate?”
Tsugumi straightened up, smiling ruefully. “What good is coin to me now? Let me be a gracious host, if one last time.”
Trying to remember the exact etiquette, Avaron bowed to a rather surprised Tsugumi. “We’ll be in your care.”
“You … are from Hashon?”
“No, but I’m familiar with some of the custom.”
“Ah.”
*~*
A knock came at the shoji, and Avaron turned around in the bedroom. It slid open, revealing Tsugumi kneeling on the ground.
“Honored guest, your bath is ready.”
“That was fast.”
“I shall take you there, if you are ready.”
Avaron looked down to her spotty bathrobe. The fine white silk had stained yellow long ago, but it still felt quite soft wrapped around her naked body as it was. “Uhh, should be. Please, thank you.”
Tsugumi stood, and Avaron followed by her, their feet quite loud in the utter silence of the inn. The thought struck another pang in her chest, one Avaron wasn’t readily able to ignore. She let out a despondent sigh while scratching the back of her head.
“Is something amiss, honored guest?” Tsugumi’s reply came immediate, half turned and three eyes looking back worriedly.
“I just, well, feel bad, is all.”
“What about?”
“Your whole situation. Being stuck here, that is.”
“Oh … It is kind of you, but do not be troubled. I’ve long resigned myself to it.”
“It’s because I know what it’s like, is all.”
“Do you?”
The frigidness of those words didn’t pass her by, but Avaron knew the sort of game it needed. “Yeah. Not exactly like yours, obviously. But being trapped, alone, and nothing you can do ever, ever gets you out. Just … all of it. I understand, even if I sound like a bit of an ass saying that.”
“Mmm.” Tsugumi’s throaty acknowledgement certainly agreed. “It is what it is. I but only pray, for I have nothing else left.”
“I don’t know about that, but if you want to talk, the offer is there.”
“… I thank you.”
Silence fell in the remainder of their walk through the dilapidated inn. They soon arrived at a buffer room, where the wooden floor led down onto smooth stone, and sandals awaited by the stairs. Tsugumi slipped hers on first, then Avaron. Sliding open the shoji, Tsugumi bowed and gestured at the entry. “The baths are through here. Please, relax and enjoy them to their fullest.”
Nodding, Avaron headed through, and found herself stepping onto a large patio of sorts. A spaciously tall, thin-looking roof covered it, stretching all the way ahead and over the bath spring itself. Wow it has the rock border and everything, Avaron thought with intrigue, stepping over. The cooler forest air disappeared beneath the quiet rolling heat of the spring—not quite steaming, but distinct. Crouching by the edge, she stared into the mostly clear waters, eying the pebbly bottom and smooth-sculpted stone seats. She quite liked the comely charm it all had.
Standing up, she spied the semi-private stalls off to the side of the patio, a series of wooden tubes over them. In going into one, she found some plain soap and wash cloths waiting inside a bucket. Hanging her robe up on a hook, she set about the ‘proper cleaning’ portion, getting all the actual dirt and grime off. Her skin actually changed tones somewhat, brightening up from the duller white it had become. Avaron stared at her half-cleaned, half-dirty body bemusedly. It’s like I’m washing a table, but I’m all skin still?
Such an odd thing to see; it entertained her the whole time.
Almost sparkly clean and feeling fresh, she pulled a string, and a pipe overhead washed her down with hot water. Shaking it off and wiping her eyes clear, she set sights on destination: spring. Standing at the edge again, she dipped her toes first, shivering from the rush of liquid heat. Hot, but not unbearable. Feeling rather giddy, she stepped in, hurrying down until the water rose just over her modest breasts. A pleasant sigh slipped out on its own, and she couldn’t help smiling.
Fuck the tub and rag, this is it.
Whenever would she have a full body bath again? Probably not for a long while once they left.
“Whose there?”
The deep voice made her jump, and Avaron looked over. Further across the spring, and once hidden by some fortunate bushes, was Nerg. The huge woman laid in the water, held up at the edge of the spring with her arms in one relaxed looking posture. Avaron’s eyes immediately fell to her huge, utterly impressive breasts, happily sitting half-submerged. Her dark olive skin and its bespeckled black spots oddly complimented the dangerous looking spiky spines coming out of her shoulders. Those yellow eyes caught her own, and Avaron sheepishly smiled. “I didn’t know you were in here already.”
“Been for a while. That tiny inn keeper was real adamant about washing me first though.”
“It’s … proper, for this sort of bath.”
“It’s big enough to fit me, I don’t really care.” Nerg simply shrugged and her head lolled back again, her two huge, bulging-if-tapered horns hanging up loud and proud. Avaron found them kind of cute, their intimidating nature aside—big, rounded bases from the side of her head above her ears, sweeping forward in a slight curving arc. Not at all like a bull’s, she had a hard time pinning an exact comparison.
A thought came, one of Nerg standing up and the water barely reaching her thighs. Avaron smiled and hurriedly sank deeper in the waters, trying to banish the idea. All the same, her eyes couldn’t quite keep away, glancing at Nerg curiously. Really she was just hired help so it wouldn’t be terribly proper of her. For want of conversation, she opted to walk around in a slow, crab-like walk around the spring, enjoying the hot heat and waters. Her eyes wandered to the edges, fairly barren save small rocks and some patches of dirt. I wonder if there were plants here, once.
Perhaps not sakura blossoms and those fluffy, thin bushes popular in Japan.
Her walk turned to sitting at a comfortably smooth spot, leaving her chin deep. It’s odd, though, she thought to herself, folding her hands together. For something this distinct from Earth to appear … hm. Summoned heroines have been happening for a while. Long enough to influence the world quite substantially? She hadn’t seen much out of the unusual in Greenshill. Nothing exceptionally modern, even in the upstanding inn they stayed at.
Logically, it meant either Earth-based knowledge hadn’t spread far, or hadn’t been terribly transformative. Not until Tsugumi’s inn, at least. Then again, if there isn’t a printing press or unifying power, it would mean most changes would be very local? One thought above all hung in her mind, a terrifying specter no sane person would ignore. “But without machinery they can’t really make guns efficiently … oh, there is flintlocks, isn’t there?”
“There’s what?”
Avaron startled and looked up, finding a very big Nerg standing nearby. Somehow that giantess moved nearby, standing up with the water at thigh-high depth. Her eyes fell upon her bosomy chest almost immediately, taking distinct notice of her fairly plump, prominent nipples. She wrenched her gaze upward, meeting Nerg’s difficult to discern expression. “Uh, a kind of weapon.”
“What’s it do?” Nerg sat down in a fall next to her, the sudden movement sending a wave that nearly ripped Avaron along with it. Barely catching herself in time, she smiled sheepishly when one big, wall-of-muscle arm came around her shoulders. Not quite grabbing onto her, but with all the subtlety of a teenager in a movie theater. Nerg leered down at her, the angles of her face and its fearsome features rather quite hair-raising to look at.
“Uhm, well.” Avaron looked away for a moment, brushing some wet hair out of her face. “It might sound ridiculous. Imagine a long, thin barrel—” she emphasized with her hands, “—that can produce a great flame instantly.”
“A magic weapon, then?”
Avaron’s nose scrunched up. “Kind of. You know how when there’s a lot of fire at once, it pushes things back?”
“… Sure.”
“The flame starts at one end of inside the barrel, then pushes a pointed metal ball out the end of the barrel. Really, really fast.”
“A metal ball?” Nerg repeated, her spiny brows furrowing together. Such a gesture made their relaxed, laid-back state flair up instead, pointing out with menace. “What for?”
“Imagine an arrow that flies six times as fast, and goes ten times as far, and punches straight through a knight’s breastplate.”
“Really?”
“Really.”
“It must be a difficult thing to control …”
Avaron shook her head, making Nerg appear disbelieving. “No. It’s far easier than a bow, and a peasant child of 10 years could wield it effectively in a few weeks.”
“Now you’re pulling my spines.”
“I only wish I was.”
Their gazes met, and Nerg scratched at her spiny hair with a distinct, raking clank of claws. “Where in the world does such a thing exist?”
“Not here apparently. Not yet, maybe.” Avaron looked away, staring across the spring waters. “But its power is great and terrible. In the lands I left, knights all but disappeared, along with swords, spears, and everything else. Only guns remained, and you never saw the person you’d kill or who might kill you.”
Nerg made a grumbling, irritable noise, but otherwise had nothing to say. A silence of sorts fell between them, and Avaron found herself rather fine to sit there—at least until a big hand landed solidly on her shoulder. In a combination move of being pulled and Nerg coming closer, she ended up against the big woman’s side. The thin veneer of soft skin didn’t hide at all the ripping-hard, defined muscles she felt, and a pleasant little shiver crept down her back at the sensation.
“Oh, my,” Avaron remarked, surprised even at her own genuine sound.
“I know what you’re on about,” Nerg said, oozing smugness.
“Do you?” Avaron asked, peeking up into that captivating leer. The hand on her shoulder squeezed a bit, almost massaging with how pleasant it moved.
“Only women who look at me like that want a fight or a fuck.” Nerg leaned in closer and grinned, showing her wedge-like yellow-tinted shark teeth. “And you don’t look like a fighter.”
“I’m tougher than I look,” Avaron shot back with her own smirk, which caught Nerg off-guard for a moment. The harraxin threw her head back with an earnestly deep, rumbling chuckle, jostling Avaron beside her. “You think I’m kidding?”
“Oh, no,” Nerg said, waving her free hand dismissively while she smiled sardonically. “You might be, for one of your kind. Mine, though. Different kind of toughness.”
[Divine Regeneration] don’t fail me now. Avaron reached out rather boldly with a hand, taking a good, appreciative grope of Nerg’s shapely abs. The bigger woman jolted a bit, all her spines standing up for a moment. “There’s only one real way to find out, isn’t there?” she said lowly, staring up with a seductive look. Nerg perked up at that, her fearsome face contorting with a bewildered excitement.
“Teasing me is dangerous, woman,” she rumbled out, the sound not at all threatening. “And I’d rather get paid before breaking you in.”
Avaron earnestly chuckled and moved, crawling onto Nerg’s lap and planting her butt firmly on those big thighs of hers. “Why, if I didn’t know better, that sounds like a promise to me,” she said, only just then taking in a real, appreciative view before her. Nerg’s lovely huge breasts, hung before her, an inviting amount of cleavage beckoning her face to explore. Further up, the warrior looked quite alert if not on edge, staring with those piercing yellow eyes. “Would you do that? Break me in?”
“Mmm,” Nerg throatily hummed, a sort of rumbling purr that sent vibrations in the water and up Avaron’s butt. “You won’t even walk for days when I’m done.”
Avaron smirked and held a finger to her lips. “Really? I was thinking that about you, trapped in my bed underneath me …”
“Big talk, woman,” Nerg said darkly, her spines perking up. “But I’m nice. You can take it back.”
“Hmm? Hm.” Avaron slowly sat up on her knees, bringing her more eye-level with Nerg, and leaned in. Those big breasts cushioned against her chest, a firm softness that felt heavenly to lay on. At such a distance, they were almost nose-to-nose, relative size being what it is. “I talk big because I walk big. How about you and I have a little bet?”
Nerg’s throaty chuckle bumped and vibrated through Avaron, the harraxin rolling her yellow eyes. Affixing them to Avaron with a pointed intent, she said, “What kind of bet?”
“If you can hold out from my womanly charms until we get to Shadowpeak, you can do what—ever—you—want to me for a whole week,” Avaron enthused, every word as husky as could be. Nerg went wide-eyed, almost taken aback. “But if I win, you become mine for a week. Sound fair?”
“And what is ‘holding out’?” Nerg asked suspiciously.
“Oh, let’s say, cumming? Or making you demand I give you relief.”
Nerg sucked in air through her nose, jaw clenching. All the spines of her upper body prickled and stood up, and for a hot second, Avaron thought she seriously misread the atmosphere. Then a big, grasping hand thickly firm grabbed her butt, and five powerful fingers sank in with the tightest grip she’d ever felt. An involuntary moan escaped, the sheer power of it utterly thrilling her. Nerg squeezed her like a piece of meat, feeling up her butt with frank appreciation. “Such an easy thing, it’s almost unfair,” she rumbled, smirking. “You think you can hide in Shadowpeak from me when you lose?”
“I don’t hide,” Avaron said with a hot tremble to her voice. “But I don’t think you’ll win that easy.”
“Oh? Fine, then, little woman. I’ll take your bet.”
Smiling secretively, Avaron leaned in, taking Nerg by surprise with a wet, full kiss. The difference in their mouths became apparent, but by far tasteful place as soft as it was firm. She held it for a moment, but it was Nerg who opened, and a hot, slippery wet thing slapped into her mouth. Avaron gasped as the sensation, only realizing when it plunged in what she’d done. Her tongue felt tiny under its immense size, barely at all able to match its tasting, swiping licks inside. Hot spit and Nerg’s own unique flavor filled her mouth so wonderfully her jaw tingled, salivating at the prospect of a fine meal.
It’s so big, she marveled, trying to take control. In failing, she grew frustrated for Nerg’s eyes crinkled with laughter, and her mouth smirked. Scowling, Avaron pushed in, forcing herself on Nerg’s lips harder, and her own tongue came to life. It grew in length and scope, swirling around Nerg’s own behemoth like a constricting snake. The harraxin sputtered in her throat, surprise overcoming her—opening a fatal weakness. Avaron pushed in, chasing Nerg’s retreating tongue into her warm cave of a mouth.
Avaron shuddered, hugging herself closer, and Nerg’s hand on her butt squeezed wonderfully hard. Without skipping a beat she took all she could, swiping and licking, plunging and sucking out, drinking every little drop she could. Nerg shuddered underneath her, a throaty, deep noise of some kind arising—a moan, from the huge woman? She tried fighting back, but perhaps off-balance, Avaron had free reign. Oh her teeth feel so strange, Avaron thought queerly. The wedge-shaped things, while quite pointed, weren’t sharp. A certain sense of danger settled on her mind, and another of Nerg’s hands came to her back.
She pulled away, breaking the mouth-fucking kiss with a gasp. Drool and spit alike followed, though whose was whose, no one could tell. Nerg, sitting back, stared wide-eyed and hazy, her mouth hanging open in a mix of disbelief and raw, flushed skin. Avaron wiped her own lips with the back of her hand, quite liking the sight before her. Something about it all tasted wonderful, like a fine meal with a perfect soft, filling texture to it.
“Well then, dear Nerg,” Avaron said, smiling. “I think it’s time for my bath to be over.”
“… Huh?” Nerg said, blinking and quite literally snapping to awareness. “Think you can run from me?”
“No, not at all.” Avaron set a hand against Nerg’s face, trailing her fingers from temple-to-jaw. The hardy bones underneath and soft, if tight skin, felt quite lovely to touch. The hardy black spots even seemed to be scales of a kind. “I can go and go and go … if you want to.”
Sucking in a breath, Nerg’s angry snorting huff of air blew Avaron’s face. “So it’s like that.”
Pulling herself back, Nerg’s hand fell from her butt, a red-definitive handprint marring the throbbing skin there. Avaron shuddered from the hot water touching it, a gay little smile on her face. Standing up in the spring, she made a show of grabbing her modest breasts, squeezing them up and tight in a presentation to Nerg’s captivated eyes. She hid her blue nipples behind her fingers, but let a little areola show just for a hint. “Mmm, yup. You can grab these any time you want.”
Letting them go with a playful flop, she spun around, showing her porcelain-white butt and big, proud handprint Nerg left on it. “And this, too,” she said, slapping her other cheek with a hand. The harraxin let out a frustrated groan at the sight, almost grabbing her right then. Her hand hovered just short of doing so, twitching with a grabby desire. “Maybe, maaaybe,” Avaron sang, and grabbing both her cheeks, spread them apart. “Have a little taste here? Drag me into your bed and have a good long slur—”
Nerg snorted and waved her hand as if to banish a bad spirit. “Fine, go! Go you, slut. I’ll break you in yet.”
“Aww,” Avaron whined, but let her cheeks go. Her heart fluttered at the word ‘slut’, a long-old delightfulness arising she hadn’t felt in years. Blowing a kiss to Nerg, she hurried out through the spring waters, leaving where she entered. With a spring in her step she retrieved her robe and rushed inside, feeling those yellow eyes raking her flesh every step of the way. Just at the door’s threshold she looked back and pried open her robe, flashing her tits with a smile. “Remember, any time!” she called out.
Nerg’s frustrated words turned into a nonsense noise, and Avaron fled inside.
*~*
Dinner that evening took place in a large, rectangular hall. Once it’d had a number of tables and chairs, but Avaron saw most of them had been stacked up or otherwise put away. The table they were to eat at sat in the room’s center, built around a firepit that currently had slabs of boar cooking over. Gwyneth already had her spot, wearing a loose-fitting kimono, and for the first time, showing her dirty-blonde hair. It curled the lower it went to her shoulders, offering a beautiful finish Avaron knew people would kill to have back on Earth.
Goodness, having someone as beautiful as Gwyneth suck her tenty dry! Her mind nearly left her skull before she caught it again.
At her approach, Gwyneth looked up, the firepit’s light casting her in a warm light. “Avaron!” she said, smiling, her ever present visor covering her eyes. “Tis almost ready.”
“It smells great,” Avaron said, her nose surprisingly cooperative. The rich taste of cooking meat and the acrid sharpness of smoke both encouraged her stomach to rumble. Hurriedly taking a seat at one of the padded, if somewhat flattened, cushions, she looked around. Their backpacks were nearby, some supplies hanging out—particularly spices and the like. “Is it just the boar, or …?”
“Tsu-sue-gumi,” Gwyneth said, tripping over the name, “said she has something to add. Rice, I think she called it? And some kind of sauce.”
Oh, steamed rice and boar sounded great. Avaron nodded. “I’m surprised she still has some.”
“There is a tiny garden in the back she can reach.”
“Ah. Say, that does give me a thought …”
“Speak thy mind.”
Avaron shifted, coming to lean on an elbow. “Is there someway for you to, I don’t know, cancel her curse?”
“Our minds think alike. I wondered as well.” Gwyneth took a moment to use a huge meat-fork to flip over a slab of boar meat on the grill. “Tis not impossible, but mine study of it is oddly difficult.”
“Why is that?”
“The lady’s curse is not on her. It would seem to be on—” Gwyneth pointed up “—the inn itself, and it chooses her, specifically.”
Avaron blinked. “Huh. Okay, is there something in the inn we can break? Dispell? I don’t know, throw holy water onto?”
Gwyneth giggled, an earnest, mirthful sound accompanied by a tiny snort. Her hand flew to her face at the sound, and Avaron stared, rather taken in by the suddenness of it all. “Oh, ehm. Tis possible; mine looking hath not revealed much yet.”
“… If it is not too much trouble,” Avaron started, taking on a serious voice, “it is something I’d like to deal with. Tsugumi shouldn’t be left to die alone in a place like this.”
No answer came immediately, Gwyneth staring at her all-the-while. For all her beauty, Avaron couldn’t help being a little unnerved—how did she see? And what did she see? It ever remained a mystery, yet somehow always reliable.
“Tis noble of thee,” Gwyneth said, nodding sagely for some reason. “Mine attentions will focus solely on it tonight.”
“T-thanks,” Avaron said sheepishly and scratched the back of her head. “I’d help but … no real power of my own.”
Gwyneth shook her head. “Thou have power, but tis yet to awaken. Trust in thine abilities.”
“I’m not exactly receiving divine guidance here,” Avaron remarked dryly. “Do you know what it is I should do?”
At that, Gwyneth looked down, almost bashful. In the firepit’s light, it became hard to see, but Avaron noticed it all the same—a blush spilling across her fair cheeks. The suddenness of it spoke all too much on its own, and Avaron’s throat became a little tight. “Wait, you’re serious. That? That?”
“Verily,” Gwyneth affirmed, hiding her mouth behind a hand. “Twas part of mine guidance to thee. Thy virility begets strength and power; thou must commit to it to grow.”
“I … guess. I kind of did already, a little.”
“Verily?”
“My level went from 1 to 2, uhh, after you—you know.”
An earnest smile overcame Gwyneth, and her hands folded together in a prayer. “Tis wonderful news! To progress a single level is most admirable.”
“… Is it?”
“Many spend years to do so. Only heroines or those of great gift progress so fast.”
“… Huh, okay. What’s the, I guess, max level?”
“Tis unclear; mine ears heard of levels exceeding 90. Some claim the goddesses alone can breach level 100. For many, they will spend their lives in levels 1 to 5.”
Avaron squinted, a fist curling under her chin while she thought. This level system is a little whacky. It doesn’t give me absolutes in anything except the actual level counter. So if the world isn’t driven by a binary number system, everything is relative … why have levels then? In the logic of a game, it didn’t stack up. Being a real world, however, that much was to be expected. “Say, are there tales of those who are lower level defeating higher levels?”
“Quite so, many in fact. Level is not everything to one’s own strengths. Mine own level can be considered quite low, at level 4.”
“… Doesn’t that make you a little amazing already?”
Gwyneth bit her lip, and shyly looked away. “Thy flattery is unneeded,” she squeaked out, much to Avaron’s glowing warm smile at the sight. All at once, however, Gwyneth looked up, her embarrassment gone in an instant. The sharp change jarred Avaron herself into sitting up. “M-mine level is 5 now?” she said, confusedly. “But mine trials were not …”
Avaron coughed into her hand, a sudden realization slapping her upside the head. “T-that might be me,” she said, fingering her dress collar at Gwyneth’s blind stare. Eyes or not, that woman bored holes right into her.
“How?”
“A skill of mine, [Primal Infusion]. Or so it says, anyway.”
“How doth it work?”
Avaron mumbled under her breath.
“What did thou say?”
“By taking in my cum and milk,” Avaron said, fanning herself with a hand.
“O-oh.”
“Yeaaah. I wasn’t too certain what the effects of it might be.”
“T-to raise mine level in such a short time, tis truly wondrous …” Gwyneth said, descending into a mumble of her own. She sank into her own little world, staring at her clasped hands in that thoughtful way of hers.
Avaron meanwhile, lost herself staring at the slow cooking meat. Alright so, I fuck women and they get stronger. That’s the vibe I’m getting here. Ho, boy, maybe I shouldn’t have brought back my college years in the spring there. Not that she minded; regret was a hard thing to come by sometimes. Goodness, she had been such a slut back in those days—not that there was anything wrong. It just became very hard to find people to open up to when she went corporate. Starting to kind of see why they turned me into a sex monster now, she mused with a wry smile. Never really stopped being one, just never had a chance to again.
Her gaze slid over to Gwyneth, who perked up at the recognition. “Well, let’s put it aside for now,” Avaron said, waving it all away. “Now, about the path toward Shadowpeak …”
They went over the details again, trying to account for their detour to the inn. In the end, Gwyneth knew the route, Avaron simply made sure she had a straight idea on where to go. Their conversation ended up being interrupted by the hall’s shoji sliding open, accompanied by a cursing Nerg. The huge woman had to angle herself very awkwardly to get through the ‘normal people’ sized door, grabbing the frame and sort of crouching through. Behind her, a very amused Tsugumi carried a wooden tray, lined with several—dare Avaron say, sake?—bottles.
Nerg settled in a mighty thump at the dinner table, her wrappings barely at all concealing her modesty. In the very Japanese inn they sat in, Avaron couldn’t help comparing her to some kind of oni—horns and all, if not being red or blue. Those yellow eyes met hers, and she noticed that Nerg still had something of a rosy red blush to her face. A scent soon reached her nose, one through the cooking meat and smoke. Womanly pungent and filling, with a most curious hint of citrus and … flowers?
Tsugumi cut in, coming to kneel at the table and deposit the tray. “I see the food is almost ready. I shall retrieve the others now, as well.”
Avaron popped the green bottle’s cork and gave it a whiff, almost immediately coughing and pulling it away. “Whew! That’s sake alright! Awesome.”
Tsugumi stopped by the door with a sudden halt in her step—a hitch that otherwise would’ve been missed. Avaron hadn’t a moment to consider it before the hostess left, and the other two nagglingly asked her what ‘sake’ was.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Lukewarm Intrigue
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights – Cordial Acquittances
Nerg (???) (lv.??) – Tempted Lover
Chapter 6: Blooming Sakura Tree (E)
Chapter Text
Life’s sudden trials come whether or not one is ready.
*~*
I don’t think I can get drunk, Avaron thought with detached horror, staring up at her bedroom ceiling. Two dim candles put on a dancing show of shadows above her, distracting her eyes. And that stuff knocked my socks off. Where’s the drunkenness? Hello? Body? Whether it was due to her inhuman nature or one of her skills, she hadn’t a clue. I guess it’s a good thing but still …
Ah, maybe she should go for a walk? Burn off some of dinner and tire out for bed at least. The thought weighed on her mind for a good long while until a knock came at the door. Avaron threw herself up into a sit and looked over. Through the thin paper of the shoji, a lilac glow outlined a familiar looking figure.
“Honored guest?” Tsugumi asked in a quiet, polite voice.
“I’m awake, I’m awake,” Avaron said, waving her hands for emphasis. “What is it?”
The shoji slid open, Tsugumi still in full dress. In one hand was her eerie candle, and beside her was a serving tray. Avaron spied another bottle of sake, and something else wrapped on a plate. The spider woman smiled, showing her fangs. “If this old hostess might partake in a visit?”
“Old?” Avaron echoed, scratching her head. “You would put the fairest maiden to shame, Tsugumi.”
Her six different eyes blinked in a rather disconnected way—though the shocked expression remained evident. Tsugumi looked away, hiding half her lower face behind a sleeve. “You flatter me, honored guest.”
“I mean it,” Avaron said quite seriously, but let it go with a smile. “Well, come in then, don’t sit out there in the cold.”
Tsugumi rose, picking up the tray. She shut the shoji behind her before shuffling in, the thump of her sock-covered feet loud in the nighttime quiet. Indeed, the rustling of fabric sounded loud too in Avaron’s ears as they both came to sit facing one another. A small gap in between them filled with the tray, and Tsugumi blew out her candle before setting it down. Unlike her more practiced kneeling sit, Avaron sufficed for crossing her legs.
Opening the sake bottle, Tsugumi went about pouring two cups. “I hope the honored guest is not too full.”
“Please, just call me Avaron,” the tentradom said with a smile. “Or Ava, if you like.”
Two of her six eyes looked up from her task, a rather disconcerting ability. “Of course … Ava.”
A shiver crept right up the back of her head at hearing that, and Avaron hid it with a head scratch and a smile. Goodness that voice is, ohh, it does work. Rubbing her chin, she said, “Well, I can’t get drunk sadly, but I do quite like the taste.”
“Truly? Perhaps you simply need more?” Tsugumi wondered, setting the bottle down before offering a cup to Avaron, cradling it in both hands. In kind, Avaron took it daintily, as much in respect as to not spill anything.
In taking a sip, the cool but stinging taste of the sake washed over her mouth. A flowery undercurrent lined the nutty heartiness of it, mixed in with a third bit she couldn’t quite name. Her mind thought it spicy but that sounded horribly off the mark. Avaron shuddered on reflex and let out a satisfying, airless gasp when she swallowed. “Oh, this is quite rich!”
Tsugumi, finishing her own sip with a refined elegance, smirked afterward. “A selection from my top shelf, as you may understand.”
“Oh, my.” Avaron smiled knowingly and bowed her head politely. “I shall savor it deeply, but not as deep as your loveliness.”
For all her pompous acting when they first met, Tsugumi blushed quite freely! Her cheeks darkened with a bluish hint, not all that different from Avaron’s in a way. “Really, has the world outside become so bold?” she asked lightly. In a curious move, two of her arms hid her lower face, while the other two held her cup perfectly. “Such honesty even in my sacred springs …”
Avaron snorted, and almost did a spittake while mid-sip. Luckily for everyone, she caught herself before disaster struck. “Ah, ahem, you know about that?” she asked with a sheepish grin.
“As the keeper of the inn, it is my duty to know all that happens within.”
“F-fair enough!” Avaron laughed with a light awkwardness before glancing at Tsugumi. “It’s not too, erm, off-putting, is it?” For a long moment, Tsugumi stared without saying anything, then took a sip from her cup, emptying it.
“… No, it isn’t,” she said airily, inscrutable enough to still cause wonder. “But the heart only has so much room, does it not?”
“Love can arise in many forms. Ah, but the room in the heart is trickier. Here, let me—” she took the sake bottle before Tsugumi could refill it. Her body may be new, but the training wasn’t: a simple grip at the bottom with one hand, her other hand on the former’s, and tipping the whole bottle. Tsugumi’s eyes popped open, damn near afraid of spillage, but Avaron managed a simple, easy stream. At three-fourths full, she tipped it up again and gently placed it back on the tray.
“… Pouring for me, my, do you know what that means?” Tsugumi asked and took another sip.
“Pouring for yourself when I’m right here, I would think my hostess doesn’t want hospitality.”
“To know of that—who are you, truly?”
It wasn’t asked in fear or concern, but a bewildered wonder that made Avaron’s eyes twinkle. “Take a guess.”
“A summoned heroine?”
“Oh come on, at least play a little!” Avaron griped jokingly, but Tsugumi’s face took on a deadly seriousness all of a sudden.
“Truly?”
“… I hope it won’t ruin the mood if I say yes.”
Tsugumi shook her head, but sit her third-filled cup down on the tray. All four of her hands came together in her lap, lacing together over each other. “No, but among my last few guests was a group of heroines. If you are apart of a new summoning, I cannot imagine how long I have been trapped here.”
“The forest outside is pretty different from in here,” Avaron pointed out, feeling rather unhelpful about it. “But other than that, I can’t help much I’m afraid.”
Shaking her head, Tsugumi smiled politely—the sort someone with nothing else to offer did. “Thank you, it is no trouble. Please, let me offer you these renkon chips. They are not elegant, but …”
Avaron eyed the unwrapping food with intrigue, finding they were, indeed, lotus roots fried in a crispy batter! Her eyebrows shooting up, she accepted one from Tsugumi’s offering hands. A most curious, crunchy flavor filled her mouth on a bite, complimented by the root-like texture lingering still. Mmm, missing something, but that’s only to be expected, she thought, wiping her oily lip. At the least, it tasted fresh and still warm from cooking. At Tsugumi’s uncertain expression, she smiled reassuringly. “It’s lovely. Another!”
“Oh! Yes.” Tsugumi smiled, and so Avaron ate and ate until the bundle in her hands emptied.
Yet, one more still remained.
Washing down the food with a fresh gulp of sake, Avaron let out a pleasant sigh. Patting the spot beside her, she looked sharply at Tsugumi, who remained in her spot. “Well? Get over here, my fair lady.”
Smiling at that, Tsugumi shuffled over on her knees. She moved to sit back properly, but Avaron looped an arm around her waist, and yanked her sideways. The spider woman chirped in surprise, finding herself half-laying on the ground, half-laying on Avaron’s lap. All six eyes blinked wildly, her shapely, straight-cut hair splaying out everywhere.
“Yeah, there we go!” Avaron laughed and smiled, patting Tsugumi’s thigh. “Take it easy, Tsu. You don’t mind that, right?”
“N-no,” Tsugumi mumbled, one pair of hands already covering her blushing face. The other pair fidgeted down lower, twiddling her thumbs. “It is not unpleasant.”
“Good!” And so Avaron retrieved the other bundle of renkon chips, unfolding it herself. The two highest eyes on Tsugumi’s face watched, and her hands slowly moved away. All six soon locked onto one chip being held out, Avaron angling straight toward her mouth. “Come on, have some!”
“B-but they are for—mhff!” a crunch followed, Tsugumi hurriedly inhaling the whole chip. Her eyes peeled in faux-annoyance as she chewed and chewed before swallowing. “I made them for you!” she chirped out angrily.
“And I love them,” Avaron cooed back, making Tsugumi be taken back with surprise. “So have some of them too.”
The spider woman pouted, puffing her cheeks up even when she still accepted another crispy chip. Avaron giggled at the sight, which only made Tsugumi pout more. A few more chips later and Avaron set the empty bundle down. She laid a hand on Tsugumi’s head, giving it a nice, long stroke down her scalp. Free of unsightly oils and residue, but lacking in care now that she felt along the woman’s hair. An unfortunate result of circumstance, yet admirable how elegant she kept herself. Above all, however, it had the airy softness she thought it too—a fineness pure and difficult to obtain. “Oh, my, how nice,” she said with a small smile. “Your hair is wonderful; I could pet it all night.”
“Av—haa—Ava is truly unfair!” Tsugumi complained, frowning and burying her face into Avaron’s belly. Back and forth she smothered herself, a rather ticklish sensation that made Avaron laugh earnestly. Just a little, Tsugumi’s prim and proper face cracked and showed her inner self. She kept petting all the same, raking her nails lightly along the spider woman’s scalp. Frustrated little sounds escaped her, an odd mix of coos and angry grunting. “I’m supposed to have my customer’s head in my lap!”
“Oh, do you hate it that much?”
Tsugumi stilled in an instant, and Avaron spied all four of her hands poking their index fingers together sheepishly.
“N-no …”
“Won’t you please your customer with this nice service, then?”
“V-very well …”
This, too, is quite nice, Avaron mused, sitting back and enjoying the petting. Guiding the fingers one way, then the other, feeling the strands of hair brush alongside, and the hardy scalp underneath. All of it to make Tsugumi squirm and coo, a pleasant gift to one so trapped. A scent, however, started to reach her nose—a pungent womanliness, caked in flowers and citrus. It had a lovely zing to it, something that really woke her up the more she breathed in. At the same time, she heard Tsugumi take in deeper, lung-filling breaths as well.
“Ava’s scent is … quite warm …” she whispered in a husky, throaty voice. Tsugumi nuzzled in again, her face angled more downward and into Avaron’s lap.
“Oh? Like it, do you?”
“Mmm,” came the guttural, throaty moan. “So warm …”
A hand crept up on Avaron’s butt, clawing at the smooth fabric for purchase. Oh dear, she thought with a gay smile. If Tsugumi was starting to feel it, she certainly was. That distinct tightness in her belly coiled awake, and her whole body shuddered. The latent desire kicked off with a sudden, sharp prickle of hair and a shiver of skin. It felt odd, in its own way, how distinctly it shifted from ‘lovely fun’ to ‘pin her down and fuck her’. The urge kept getting stronger over time, a rather concerning detail.
She hadn’t a moment to consider her wandering thoughts. Tsugumi grabbed the back of her dress, then pushed herself up with her other three hands. Half-dragging Avaron into her, their faces came nose-to-nose, Tsugumi’s round pupils wide as saucers, her mouth parted with tiny panting breaths. “F-forgive me, honored guest,” she whispered, licking her lips. “You are too beautiful for me to resist!”
“Hm-mmph?!” Avaron’s words disappeared in the hot press of Tsugumi’s mouth to her own. In spite of her chitinous appearance, her plump lips molded softly against hers, a tasty flavor of lipstick following. Avaron hadn’t a moment to respond under Tsugumi’s sucking kisses, desperately pulling, pushing, and molding to her own. Too fast—much too fast. She grabbed the back of the woman’s head, drawing a strong, paralyzing moan of surprise. “I’m not going anywhere,” Avaron whispered, drawing six lust-widened eyes to her own. “Enjoy it.”
Not that she fared much better—goodness, her heart already pounded in her chest. Tsugumi’s little whine of need made her ears perk, and the scent of desire clouded the air far, far stronger than anything before. She all-but-lunged in, capturing the regal hostess’ lips herself, taking in that cherry-like taste of lipstick. One hand on her head, the other went to her lower back, pulling her in flush and close. Four different arms wrapped around her in kind, two around her shoulders, two around her own back.
“Mmm!” Tsugumi moaned with such delighted joy, shuddering noticeably.
“Mm?” Avaron hummed back and smirked. Feeling a little bold, she snuck her tongue out, giving those lipstick-covered lips a tasting lick. Tsugumi twitched, her hands grabbing fistfuls of Avaron’s sleeping clothes. Always a bit tricky figuring out who likes ton-nngguee?!
Her first move met a counter of Tsugumi’s own probing lick swiping across her lips. Her inhuman tongue felt far different from Nerg’s, or any human woman she remembered kissing before. What is this? she thought, utterly bewildered by the parallel tasting. Nor could she quite just pull away either and be rude! Only one thing to do, then!
Opening wide as an invitation, she slurped up Tsugumi’s strange tongue. The hostess moaned with a surprised tone, but their tongues clashed together in a wet, muted smack. Avaron couldn’t help her own surprised jolt at the queer sensation of soft-and-hardness. A valley down the center, flanked on either side bow ridges and rows that felt like tiny, hooked-pyramids. They flexed and rolled, the whole maneuver one to suck her tongue in deeper and massage it in an undulating motion. Her whole mouth salivated, a leaping rise in pleasure so great her jaw started twitching.
Wait, something wasn’t right.
Avaron tried separating, but Tsugumi’s hold only tightened. The arms around her neck became hands holding her head, locking her in place. A pressure built in her chest, eerily familiar enough Avaron knew what was coming. “Hmmph? Mpmhfhf?!” she tried speaking, uselessly mumbling and moaning. Tsugumi hummed back in tune, hopelessly pleased with how satisfied she sounded. Avaron twitched, her eyes going cross-eyed as an entirely new sensation bubbled up her throat. A gurgling squelch followed, her own tongue bloating inside her mouth.
There was only one way what was coming would go!
Grabbing Tsugumi’s head hard, she thrust her tongue into the spider woman’s drooling mouth. The rush of heat and the surprised squeal that followed really just did it for her. Convulsing with a delirious, head-fogging ecstasy, Avaron’s tentacle-like tongue bulged from the big, great globs traveling up. Creamy, mouth-watering cum pumped out, one throat throbbing pulse at a time. Tsugumi quickly filled up, her six eyes opening with genuine shock. Yet, rather than let go, she grabbed even harder! A sucking followed a big, deep gulp right down her throat.
Avaron, all the while, looked stupid in the face, her orgasm-addled mind a haze of heat and sweet, cum-pumping relief.
Whether there was less, or Tsugumi possessed far more skilled than Gwyneth, not a drop spilled out. Each of those four hands kneaded and clawed, her lithe fingers surprisingly strong. Strong enough that a tearing sound filled the air, and air met Avaron’s backside. Whether intentional or not, Tsugumi tore open the night clothes right down the middle—the scraps only hanging on by the sleeves. All-too-quickly, Avaron’s sensibilities returned, her tongue-tentacle sputtering dry with a few hearty, twitching spasms. She pulled her head back, a curious resistance followed: Tsugumi greedily clamping her lips on the thing!
And, its X-shaped arrow-head seemed caught on her fangs.
A tug-of-war followed, Avaron trying to break free and Tsugumi trying to suck her back in again. Their struggling sent them rocking, and Tsugumi pushed Avaron into the flat bed behind her. In that brief moment, however, she gasped and her mouth opened just enough for Avaron to break free. In an audible, sticky slurp the plasma-blue tentacle withdrew hurriedly, disappearing back into Avaron’s throat. Now, Tsugumi loomed over the tentradom, her six eyes wide, her pupils alight with a heart-shaped pink glow to them.
W-what is that? Avaron wondered in her first, coherent thought. Her belly took that moment to churn, and her wet pussy throbbed with desire. Far stronger than even the near-week long pants-blasting wait she endured, in fact. A soft, confused moan slipped out, an all-too-keen awareness of her big tenty squirming out of her. “H-Hold on, Tsu!” she gasped out, and the spider woman smiled.
“Dearest customer, such a delicious treat, how can I repay you?” Tsugumi gushed, smiling large enough her spidery-fangs flexed out. They rubbed one another with a drooling anticipation, a rather frightening sight that only invigorated Avaron for some reason. “That thick, smooth cream, ohh, what was it? I—want—more!” she gushed in a throaty purr, leaning down until their faces squished together. Not quite a kiss, but her hot, panting breaths blew right up Avaron’s nose. The tentradom shuddered at the scent, a pure cocktail of hormones that electrified her whole body. “Won’t you share it with me again? I’ll do anything you want …”
Oh, her tenty was out now! Covered in pussy juice and glistening, its arrow-head pulsed and bulged in rhythm to Avaron’s thundering heart. Worse, she knew what it wanted. A part of her acting as it wished, in a way she knew she wanted it to. It twisted in the air, searching for a moment, before bending backwards, aiming squarely at Tsugumi’s covered butt. With a wet plap-smack it landed squarely in between them, pushing frustratingly against her covered rear. The spider woman gasped, a cooing moan escaping before she looked behind herself.
“My dearest customer! What is that?” she asked, her voice full of desire rather than concern.
“A big, fucking tentacle is what,” Avaron gasped out, clenching the bedsheets in her fists. “Tsu, be careful!”
“Why must I?” Tsugumi asked dryly, looking over just enough to convey her annoyance. She certainly could pull out a bratty attitude when she wanted to!
“Because I—ahh—I cannot really control myself!” Avaron whined, her hips squirming from side-to-side. Her tenty, all the while, kept slapping Tsugumi’s butt, seeking entry. “You don’t, mmm, you don’t want to-ooo do something regrettable, right?”
“Regrettable, hmm?” Tsugumi smiled and leaned in. Such a posture on her knees all but left her butt jutting out in the air, her face down and beside Avaron’s. “There’s nothing to regret by helping my customer enjoy their stay, is there?”
“I-I’m serious!” Avaron chirped, sweating with more than just nervousness. Pushing herself up, Avaron quickly found herself pushed down again, two of Tsugumi’s arms pinning her by the wrists.
“I am too,” Tsugumi returned, her voice darkening with her narrowed eyes. Then it broke with a lewd smile, and Avaron saw her two other hands. They turned back around, and ever so slowly hitched her dress up. Clawing up her thighs, then pulling over her small, if well-defined butt, before finally stopping all bundled up on her lower back. The plasma-blue tenty smacked against her butt then with a wet slap, and both women jolted. “Ohh, customer, it is quite big, isn’t it!”
Don’t sound too happy! Avaron wanted to say, too busy clenching her teeth in a grunting exhale. Goodness she could feel it, that hot spot, oozing with such wonderful scent. It screamed in her mind everything she’d ever wanted to know, willfully or not. Fertility; receptiveness; how gushingly wet it was. She didn’t need to look to know Tsugumi had to be soaked, dripping in rivets with arousal. How much was her own compared to that creamy cum she pumped into her moments ago? “Ohh, fine! Fine!” she barked out before another slap of her tenty jolted her. “You want it?! Take it then!”
Riiip. Something tore open behind Tsugumi, and the shreds of her panties left with her other two hands. “I intend to,” she purred and kissed Avaron’s cheek in a full, lip-popping smack. Then again, and again, and again. “I’m ready for you, most honored Ava. Come on i—iiiinnn!” her words turned to long, low keen when Avaron’s tenty brushed by. It plunged on target and missed, running its whole length down Tsugumi’s drenched pussy. Lip-to-clit it dragged, slickening itself with her wanton desire. “Oh! Ohhh, oh you missed!” Tsugumi complained, a bit of her shrill voice breaking in. “I’m right here and you missed!”
Nascent pride intermixed with determination; Avaron stared squarely into two of Tsugumi’s six eyes. A confluence of mind, body, and spirit aligned then—her tenty no longer some rampaging beast, but an extension of herself. It curled back, poised with the grace of a viper. Then and there, compelled with a single fucking goal, it lunged forward, plunging head-first into Tsugumi’s aroused pussy. The regal hostess’ cocky demeanor disappeared in a big mouthed, silent O-shape, her whole back arching. Her vagina bulged, contouring to the ridged, twisting and writing shape of Avaron’s tenty just a little—a beguiling sight to how much was in her.
Avaron gurgled, her eyes rolling back at the sheer, overwhelming feeling of pussy around her tenty. Constricting, pulsing, gripping and pulling, so many different sensations changing every other heartbeat. Her arrow-headed tip flared when Tsugumi moved, refusing with all its power any sort of budging at all. The hostess herself, however, about collapsed on Avaron’s chest, her eyes dumb-struck. Indeed, perhaps that tentacle kept her butt in the air all on its own now. Avaron pushed her hips upward, driving it deeper, and they both moaned in a delirious unison.
“Big! Big, big thing,” Tsugumi muttered incoherently, her vice-grip slackening noticeably. Avaron wrenched her hands free, flying down to grab the spider woman’s petite rear, one whole cheek in each palm. She barely reacted at all, only a long, ambiguous moan coming with her lazy-looking eyes. “H-hey …”
Avaron pulled her downward, their hips met in a messy, wet-smack of flesh and drenched cloth, the crown of their pussies a hair’s breadth from touching. An exhilarating rush shot through her at the sudden adjustment, a clarity of mind only pure adrenaline brought. “I warned you!” she bit out, meeting Tsugumi’s lust-stricken face. “Now I’m gonna, I’m gonna—ohh, don’t squirm like that!”
Tsugumi, all the while, moved her hips up and down, trying to get more deeper into her. “Please,” she whispered, before slurping up her own drool with that ribbed tongue of hers. “Please, don’t stop.”
“There’ll—there’ll be, ohh, consssequences!” Avaron said, finding words so damningly difficult to say. “Big ones!”
“I don’t caaare!” Tsugumi whined, burying her face into Avaron’s neck. Her tongue lashed out, licking in a fast, tasting swipe. “Let me have this, it’s been so long!”
She tried, she really did—but Tsugumi’s pleading and her grating hips all but blew away her reservations. Avaron pushed her hips up, but her tenty didn’t need at all, muscular thing it was. Thrusting in deeper, Tsugumi let out a sharp, keening moan, turning into a staggered pant when it started dragging out. With its arrow-head constricting just enough to be let out, it pulled all the way to her entrance, the barest hint of it beginning to show. Avaron squeezed Tsugumi’s wondrous little butt, gripping tight as she plunged in deep again.
Goodness the wet, squelching comfort of a pussy blew her mind away! A whole new world of sensation, guided by the strange tentacle that felt more like a super-clitoris than anything else. Her whole body moved almost on its own, pushing against Tsugumi in a mating dance of sweat-slickened skin and pussies drenched in juice. Avaron and Tsugumi panted and moaned, pressing their cheeks together as one sucked in the scent of the other. The scraps of Avaron’s night clothes and Tsugumi’s dress rattled and loosened, held on by the barest of holds in their rampant, hip-smacking fervor.
“You’re—so—fucking—sexy,” Avaron grunted out before latching her mouth on Tsugumi’s neck. She sucked and sucked, and all four of Tsugumi’s hands flew to Avaron’s neck. They kneaded and clawed, ostensibly to pull her way, but only massaging her so approvingly. Parting with a sucking pop, Avaron licked up her own spit and Tsugumi’s sweat, traveling up and to the rounded, curved if recessed ear that awaited above. “Great taste, miss hostess,” she breathed out and smirked at Tsugumi’s gurgling, embarrassed noise. “You really give the best service!”
“Oh! Oh, oh—you! You!” Tsugumi lust-addled eyes came upon her, creasing with a frown even as the hearts in them throbbed. She pushed Avaron back into the bed and sat up herself; a move that really just sent the tentacle thrusting in her as deep as it could go. They both shuddered, Avaron most of all left in a twitching, mouth-gaping spasm. “I—I am the owner of this inn!” Tsugumi growled, grabbing onto her dress with all four hands. “Dear customer must relax and—aaand allow me to work!”
Whether tearing it off or actually taking it off, Tsugumi’s dress came flying free, leaving her lilac-skinned nudity on display. Avaron drank in the sight of her finely small, rounded breasts, bouncing up and down with the hip-fucking strokes she did. One hand went to her pussy, stroking her spread lips and swollen clitoris; two came to her breasts, cupping them and tweaking her dark, dark nipples. The last pulled her hair into order, or tried to, at least.
Really, it looked like she just wanted to bounce on Avaron’s fat tentacle than anything else!
The new angle and the harder, determined grating of Tsugumi’s hips spelled a disastrous combination. However deep she had been before, Avaron felt even more of her tentacle wrapped up in that premium-grade pussy. Constricting; squeezing, pulling her in deeper. Something hardy met the tip of her tenty, a solid sort of barrier that sent a shock through both of them. “Oh, oh my goddesses!” Avaron hissed out, seeing sparkling stars and lights pop into her vision. Every thrusting bump made her jolt on the bedding, her tentacle-tongue lolling out along while her eyes went stupid. Tsugumi, all the while, chirped and twittered, working her hips harder and harder. “Tsu!” Avaron croaked out. “Oh, Tsu, keep going!”
“Yes!” Tsugumi returned, smiling deliriously. “Oh, yes, dear customer! Please, pleaseee!”
A contorting, spasming sensation shot through Avaron, the proverbial dam cracking. Eclipsing all two times before she’d blown her load, Avaron felt like her whole tentacle bulge, filling every little spot it could in Tsugumi’s sopping pussy. Then, the strangest thing happened.
A choice appeared in her mind; not really an info-screen, but an acute, utterly clear reasoning.
Babies, or drones?
Avaron went cross-eyed as her body spasmed, the mind-shattering beginnings of orgasm.
Babies she knew what would happen; more children like their dear mother.
Drones, they would serve her; the extensions of the Hive.
Knowing the perils of the former, Avaron chose the latter.
And thus, her mind swept away, her hips rising one last time to smack the underside of Tsugumi’s thighs. Her hands flew down, grabbing the spider woman by the hips, and her tentacle came. A great rush of creamy cum shot up, one heaping bulge at a time. More than that, a small gelatin ball accompanied each pulse, firing up the whole length and straight into Tsugumi’s spasming pussy. The hostess shook and trembled, her own hips rocking with orgasmic spasms, unaware of the egg-carrying bulges traveling up into her. Or maybe she was, feeling each bulge inside her, her own traitorous pussy gulping them.
The tip of Avaron’s tentacle molded to the entrance of Tsugumi’s womb, giving it a deep, unrelenting kiss. A little chemical signaling and tentradom cum helped to open it up, relaxing the entrance for its new filling. Thus, the first egg Avaron laid in another woman found its home, rising on a gush of nutritious, sperm-free cum. Then the second, then the third; one after the other, Avaron utterly out of her mind in a land of bliss. Tsugumi, still unfortunately rather mortal, felt the new residents taking home in her. One of her hands came over her belly, feeling the bumpy shapes growing and growing with her expanding stomach.
Her tongue lolled out, twitching with every smile she made. A predator, happy and satisfied beyond compare, her whole body shuddering with orgasm after orgasm. The bubbly-rounded bumps in her growing belly mellowed out, smoothing to a pregnant bump as cum filled every empty space it could. Neither fast nor outrageously deforming, by the end when Avaron’s tenty started spasming dry, one might call her two months pregnant. Her egg-filled womb jutted out, two of her hands coming underneath in a loving, motherly support. Thus the rather impressive sight of a nearly unconscious Tsugumi, held up by a tentacle in her pussy and her own locked legs.
Avaron came to her senses first, a primordial warning arising in her mind. More by instinct than thought, she dragged Tsugumi into her arms, laying the new-mother comfortably sideways. The two cuddled together, the after-cum of Avaron’s great deposit starting to spurt out. Her tenty squirmed and retreated, gradually pulling out with a gush not sealed in Tsugumi’s packed womb. The sticky mess gooped and drooled out of her pussy, splattering on Avaron underneath, binding the two in strands of their sticky love.
Huffing and panting, they laid there together, Avaron’s arms wrapped around Tsugumi, and Tsugumi grabbing any part she could hold onto. “Oh, oh my,” Avaron wheezed out, coming into a sort of awareness what had just happened. “You’re so good, Tsu.”
“Mmm, thank you,” Tsugumi purred out, utterly pleased. “Dear Ava, what is this in my belly?”
“Uhh …” Avaron hummed dumbly, suddenly and acutely aware of what happened. “… Congratulations?”
Tsugumi looked up, all six eyes peeled in a narrow look. One hand came to rest on Avaron’s neck, while another went to the splayed open folds in front of her chest. “What oh what does my customer mean?”
There really wasn’t an elegant way to say what needed to be said, was there? Avaron scratched at her sweaty head. “You’re gonna be a mommy.”
“Oh, good.”
“… Good?” Avaron echoed, confused.
Tsugumi giggled and, in a laborious heave, brought herself up. With her hands moving deftly, she pried open Avaron’s night clothes, forcing them off of her in an awkward shimmying of body parts. A hand went to her mouth, and Tsugumi hid her salacious smile. “Dearest customer, you will take responsibility, won’t you?”
“Of course.”
The flatness of her immediate response made Tsugumi stop. Then, all six of her eyes lit up, a wondrously joyful smile spreading as all four hands clasped together. “R-really?”
Avaron blushed at the genuine sight and looked away bashfully. “I mean, as long as you want me. There’s no—ahh?!” she gasped out in surprise, a sudden if soft slap across her tit jolting her. Avaron looked back at a deviously smiling Tsugumi, staring at her in a way that made her hair perk up. Thin, slitted eyes, full of an erotic energy that left the safety of her nakedness in question.
“I shall keep you, then. As it only proper, for the wonderful life you’ve given me,” Tsugumi said, a hand rubbing her bulging belly. “I expect you to take care of me, Ava.”
Bound to happen eventually, right? Avaron wondered with a pleasant resignation. She held out her hands, taking hold of two of Tsugumi’s. “I will, I promise.”
“Such an honorable woman … dear customer, you will not mind if I wish to be greedy?”
“… With what?”
Smiling ever deviously, Tsugumi shuffled down, two hands pushing Avaron’s legs open at the knees. The other two helped position her, precariously on all fours, staring at Avaron’s still-drenched pussy. Her ribbed, flexing tongue poked out, curling with an threatening lick of Tsugumi’s lips. “Tasting dear customer’s prized goods.”
“Oh. Ohhh.”
Goodness what was that tongue going to do down there? Shivering at the mere thought, Avaron reached down, a little surprised how wet she honestly felt. Getting a bit of a grip proved hard, but she spread herself open, feeling all too hot under Tsugumi’s piercing gaze. “Please, if you, erm, wouldn’t mind …”
The presence of a solid head between her legs arrived suddenly, accompanied by a wet, slurping lick. Avaron shuddered and squeaked, too unprepared for it. That ribbed and flexing tongue slapped onto one of her lips, dragging upward with such a queer, pleasurable sensation she couldn’t help moaning softy. Familiar, yet different, and she hadn’t a chance to get used to it! It swept up, then down, accompanied by a slurping gulp and a throaty swallow. She half-expected her nerves to be frayed, but even more surprising was how fresh she yet felt!
It wasn’t just enough for her tenty to be satisfied blasting its cum, her pussy needed its loving too, seemingly.
“P-please, oh goddesses, oh fuck I need it,” Avaron begged, her hips shuddering and desperately humping Tsugumi’s devious tongue. Worse was how familiar the spider woman moved, keeping her at distance, moving in when she fell, and licking just every spot the perfect way. Goodness she felt herself gush with wetness, far more than she ever did back on Earth. Avaron huffed and panted, her throat tightening with a keening moan when Tsugumi kissed her pussy. One deep, forceful kiss that pushed in, laying claim on a solid spot. One clean, slippery place to leave a mark of her own.
Avaron shuddered at the thought of a lipstick-imprint on her of all people. She looked down, and Tsugumi’s smirking eyes told her all she needed to know how intentional it was.
Then the tongue came, plunging inside of her in one long, smooth motion. Avaron went crosseyed at the gayest feeling of that ribbed tongue doing its work. Bump-after-bump-after-bump into her, warm and hot and squirming everywhere it pleased. “Oh, Tsu!” she hissed out, spreading her own knees open in such eager openness. “F-fuck your tongue is incredible!”
“Mm-hmm,” Tsugumi hummed knowingly. Not quite thrusting, she moved with a deft purpose, exploring as much as pleasuring. With a sucking gulp she pulled it out, licking the gushing juices in quick, hungry laps. Avaron’s warmly blue, plasma-colored lips quivered under the attention, twitching with her womanly desires. Once cleaned again, Tsugumi ventured upward, her quaint mouth wrapping around Avaron’s whole clitoral area. The tentradom’s eyes bugged open, an entirely familiar, knee-shaking surge of pleasure shooting right up her spine. She let out a grand exhale, her hips shuddering as Tsugumi’s soft mouth kissed and sucked.
Not quite touching, but oh so enveloping.
Then the fingers came, two in total, rubbing her quivering pussy lips.
You’re fucking good! Avaron realized, Tsugumi’s technique far too refined to be accidental. A long, deep moan let out at those fingers slipping inward, a tiny, sucky-sucking of Tsugumi’s lips accompanying them. Avaron’s hips jumped on their own accord, rising to her new wife’s hungry ministrations. Reaching down with a hand, she lightly grasped Tsugumi’s head, feeling her sweaty, yet oddly smooth and fine-feeling hair. The spider woman looked up for a moment, her head barely moving with how her two top eyes saw so easily. Pulling back with a quiet pop, a shock of cool air washed over her clitoral area, almost painfully cognizant of those lips leaving.
“Oh?” the regal lady asked, lips peeling in a smile, her fingers still moving in and out, slowly curling and thrusting. Not to please; certainly to tease!
“Please, holy shit, you’re so good!” Avaron begged, biting the knuckles of her free hand. “Do it more!”
Tsugumi chuckled and smiled, her lips glistening with all sorts of juices and sticky cum. “Dear customer, relax, and let me service you.”
She couldn’t relax if a gun was against her head! Avaron nonetheless nodded and laid back, almost chirping at the return of that scandalous mouth. It moved with purpose, a more certain speed and attention. Wet, sucking slurps and finger-banging squelches followed, an ear-clouding cacophony that danced with the hazy fog building up. Moaning and gasping, Avaron rolled her hips, desperate as her nerves came to life. A different sort of tension in her belly grew, gripping with a powerful need that she knew all too well. Humping her wife’s face, the tongue swept and swirled around her clit, catalyzing every hot fiber in her body.
“Oh, oh fuck!” Avaron squealed, her thighs clenching, belly tightening, and hips shaking as a cum blasting orgasm crashed out of her! The clear, but just as delicious syrup followed every shuddering pulse of her orgasm, splurting into Tsugumi’s waiting maw. Lick after lick, she broke to seal the two together in a lewd kiss, gulping everything that came out. Oh, how happy that made Avaron, feeding her wife just as she should! The thought of it struck hard in the orgasmic haze, a delirious pleasure that made her smile like an idiot.
She pulled Tsugumi’s hair a little harder, riding her slurping and licking tongue for all they were worth. Her wife had to drink everything! Not one drop, she had to fill right up! When it seemed Tsugumi might pull away, Avaron—all cumming instinct by then—locked a leg around her head, and held her tightly in place. Turning to the side, she all but deadlocked Tsugumi in a hold, hips spasming and rocking with an incredibly long orgasm. Her whole belly heaved, her pussy gushing into Tsugumi’s unending hungry laps.
How long they remained, no one could say.
By the time Avaron finally eased up, unlocking her legs, Tsugumi’s once regal face had been splattered in sweet, translucent cum. Her own six eyes were in varying states of closed or rolled backwards, the lady herself in a cum-addled stupor. Neither was curtained who moved where or when, but they cuddled up together, Tsugumi burrowing her face into Avaron’s neck. The bump of her belly kept them from tightly embracing, but nonetheless their legs intertwined and their breasts kissed, getting to know one another.
Breathing in, and breathing out.
They drank the other’s scent, squirming and groping each other in a lazy, reassuring way.
Had tiredness finally settled in? Avaron couldn’t even think straight about sleeping anymore.
Nor, it seemed, was her tenty done. The churning of her belly followed the distending of the tentacle, once more slipping out. It whipped around, scenting the air before honing in on Tsugumi’s engorged, deeply flushed pussy. Slithering into the gap between her thighs, it sank in lower before curling, and then worming its way inside her once again. The lady let out a long, surprised moan, her eyes blinking awake at the intrusion. They shot open at the first great, earnest plunge it took into her, reaching an all-too familiar depth.
“You are insatiable,” Tsugumi gasped out before biting her lip, killing the wanton noise arising in her throat.
“And you are beautiful,” Avaron fired back and smiled. “Shouldn’t I indulge in it?” Without waiting, and feeling renewed already, she sat upward. It became Tsugumi’s turn on her back, her legs spread open. One might even call it missionary after a fashion, their womanhoods connected through Avaron’s thrusting tentacle. She grabbed Tsugumi by the ankles, using her own legs for leverage. A bit different from using a strapon but! So much fucking better!
“Dear customer,” Tsugumi gasped, clawing at the bedding underneath her. “Use my body to slake your desires! However you wish,” she said, the last bit coming as a purr. Two of her hands came to her bulging belly, rubbing over in a way that thrilled Avaron to see. Already the pinnacle of a regal beauty, and fucked full of brooding eggs; oh the thought tickled some primal part of her brain.
Smiling, Avaron laid a hand ontop of Tsugumi’s, feeling her pregnant belly with her. “Oh, Tsu, it’s not just your body I want.”
All six eyes blinked independently, confused.
“It’s you.”
“O-oh! Oh! Yes, please!” Tsugumi gushed, smiling with her fangs proudly on display. Such a wide, earnest look might’ve been scarier a while ago; now, it only stirred Avaron to really make use of her tentacle properly.
Needless to say, the two had wild sex the rest of the night. By the end of it, Avaron’s bedroom looked more like a warzone with how much cum she’d ended up pumping out, and Tsugumi became utterly drenched and bloated from how she kept drinking it whenever she could. Before finally succumbing to sleep, a curious Avaron opened up the relationships part of the info-screen again.
[Tsugumi Silkweave has agreed to become a breeding mate! She is your first party member; she will receive benefits. Continue to mate with her and feed her cum to improve your relationship.]
[Congratulations, you have impregnated her with eggs! They will gestate and reach laying status in [2] months. They will require an additional [2] months to hatch.]
[Tsugumi Silkweave. Current relationship: Brood Mother (lv.1). She desires companionship and love; once betrayed by friends, she shut her heart. Left to look after the family inn, she was punished for her transgressions and imprisoned with a curse. Now she is hopeful of a new future that she may not be alone in.]
Avaron stared at the wall of information, before shutting it and closing her eyes. I’ll deal with it tomorrow, was her last thought before falling unconscious.
Although tomorrow was two hours away with how late they stayed up.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Lukewarm Intrigue
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Nerg (???) (lv.??) – Tempted Lover
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Chapter 7: Coming to Terms
Chapter Text
Understanding and acceptance are two things.
*~*
Avaron stared at the table in front of her, face set in a dim-eyed daze. Dressed as she was in the ramshackle traveler’s attire Gwyneth got for her, one might think she hadn’t had a wink of sleep. She did, ostensibly. Her mind couldn’t help wandering to the rather involved exercise that had gone on. No, no, rather than be content, Tsugumi found a second wind—then a third, then a fourth. She wasn’t at all certain who would give out in the end.
The bed probably counted as first out, being nearly plastered in their collective cum. Mostly hers, but some of Tsugumi’s too. Waking up and extracting themselves out of that web-work of stickiness woke her up better than any cup of coffee could.
It also made her check out of reality completely.
I can’t believe I did that, Avaron wondered with distant, unearthly detachment from herself. Seriously, not even one week and I already knocked someone up. Or two weeks, actually …
Someone she met on the same day, nonetheless.
She might’ve been a bit of a slut in her younger years, but that still sounded a bit absurd to her. Avaron started rubbing her temples again, trying to find comfort in the numbing pressure. Of course it all now meant she had someone to earnestly take care of—as well as a bundle of little ones coming as well. Babies or drones? What? she thought exasperated. The differences between the two stood clearly in her own mind, but the understanding of why was mysteriously absent. Babies were children; drones were drones.
In some sci-fi sense, the drones existed to serve her; babies existed to spread the hive.
How this information just pops up out of nowhere is really pissing me off. Fuck, do I really have to wait around to see what happens? Her kind were hated and she had no one to turn to, bottom line. Unless the game-like interface told her something she was stuck slapping her head against a wall. Avaron inhaled through her nose and slowly, slowly exhaled.
Nothing to be done, nothing to be done … she thought again and again, laying her nerves to rest.
The sound of a door sliding open practically slid her fears beside her as well. Avaron frightfully peeked over her shoulder, spying Gwyneth and a bouncy-stepped Tsugumi entering the room. Not a hint of a mess to be seen on her; even her belly bump hid well beneath her fine dress, somehow. She spied the tray Gwyneth carried and the plates of modest food upon it. Ah, right, breakfast.
Gwyneth took to a spot on her left, while Tsugumi sat on the right. The spider hostess smiled at seeing her, far more glowingly warm than the first time they’d met. Avaron met it with a bashful smile and scratch of her own hair, all to hide her unease. “Breakfast smells great,” she offered meekly.
“A touch more difficult than I’m used to,” Tsugumi enthused slyly, hiding her mouth behind her sleeve. “But kind Gwyneth helped me.”
“Eh?” Avaron chirped and hurriedly looked over. Gwyneth, her eyes ever hidden behind a visor, was impossible to read. “That’s kind of you.”
“Verily, I did not expect to caretake another companion so soon.”
Wait … Avaron looked from Gwyneth to Tsugumi, a hair’s breadth from breaking out in a nervous sweat. It is not as if she could hide what happened, but wasn’t all of this a little too quick? Tsugumi started dishing out the plates and arraying the table, bumping herself into Avaron. Then, rather pointedly, pressing in against her, almost rubbing against the tentradom. Not quite blatantly but Avaron felt the sheer, overwhelming energy emanating from the hostess.
Goodness, she could smell the arousal clearer than the food itself. A heavenly beacon that dulled the agonized indecision in her mind, with all the comfort of something good and wholesome. Not quite like walking into a bakery of fresh bread, it was a little too stimulating to be that. Gwyneth soon pressed in against her other side, all but actually rubbing herself against Avaron. Together, the two women worked on setting food and laying utensils, rubbing against Avaron and squishing her in a sandwich of erotic pheromones and feminine power.
Avaron’s eyes wavered, swirls almost appearing at the heady aroma and tempting touches. I—I don’t have a refractory period at all do I? she thought, almost crying in incredulity. Her whole body neared waking up, that familiar need in her belly churning to life. Despite all that she pumped into Tsugumi the night before and blasted her with otherwise, she still had more? The food had been set, but Gwyneth and Tsugumi continued their game, now overtly rubbing themselves against Avaron. Hands splayed across her chest, groping with desire, their hips bumping and rubbing hers in a grating, hypnotic invitation.
Grabbing the backs of their collars, Avaron yanked them away, firmly keeping them on their seats. “W-wait just a second!” she wheezed, now earnestly sweating. “If you keep doing that we won’t be able to eat!”
“That is no problem, dear customer,” Tsugumi enthused, smiling with that cryptic, spidery smile. “Let me feed you.”
“M-mine help as well, feeding you!” Gwyneth mimicked, obviously taken off-guard but catching up.
“What has gotten into the two of you?”
They both immediately pouted, or at least it looked like it.
“Can I not enjoy our time together before you leave?” Tsugumi asked sourly.
“I wish mine services to be of use …” Gwyneth muttered sadly.
Avaron looked up to the ceiling, her face contorting with displeasure. She sucked in a breath and heaved out a huge sigh. Letting go of both of them, she turned toward Gwyneth. “I’m not kicking you out, stop acting like it.” She then turned toward Tsugumi. “And I’m not ditching you after knocking you up!”
“You intend to stay here?” Tsugumi asked wearily.
“Well, no, but—”
“My curse yet remains, as you so obviously forgot.”
Before Avaron could retort, Gwyneth spoke up. “Thy curse is no more.”
Both of them looked over at her with varying levels of incredulity. Gwyneth scratched her cheek and looked away, utterly bashful at their attention.
“What did you say?” Tsugumi asked, her voice devoid of inflection—frighteningly even in tone.
“I consulted the Flame the night prior,” Gwyneth said, sitting up a little straighter. “Thy curse was bound to this place—a statue in a room, near its center. Twas weakened from time and decay, and dispelled easily by mine attention.”
Tsugumi stared, all six eyes unblinking in their fixation. “That …” she started to say, but her words stopped just as quick.
Under such attention, Gwyneth rubbed the back of her head. “Twas quite strange.”
“How so?” Avaron asked.
“Twas not only mine power undoing it. A great force helped—nay, pushed it over. It might’ve broken the curse by itself.”
“That’s a little … convenient, isn’t it?” Avaron asked, not the slightest clue where such a mysterious force could come from. Clearly not her goddess, or whatever divine power Gwyneth carried with her.
The priestess merely shrugged. “Tis not ours to know all the secrets of the world.”
Tsugumi stood up without a word, the air around her quite strange indeed. She turned and quietly left the room, Avaron and Gwyneth watching her all the while. The two then looked at each other before Avaron stood up. “As much as I hate wasting food …”
Gwyneth shook her head, and so they hurried after Tsugumi.
*~*
They found her at the inn’s front entrance, the now barely-hanging on front doors opened. Tsugumi stared out through them, her face shrouded with an impassive façade. Avaron, not quite knowing what to say, came up along beside her with Gwyneth.
“It really is gone,” Tsugumi said, flat but not hollow.
“Verily …” Gwyneth started before trailing off, clutching a hand to her chest.
Tsugumi rubbed her eyes with two of her hands, the other two busy wringing together. Shaking her head, a new look came over her, one Avaron thought might be determination. The spider woman took a few tentative steps forward, crossing the threshold. Then some more, and more—she stopped half-way into the courtyard, looking around with amazement in her eyes. She waved her hands around her, almost as if to wave smoke away or dispel an illusion.
Then, her face started puffing up, darkening as tear threated the corners of her eyes. Avaron hurried over at the sight, just for Tsugumi rather grabbed onto her the second she was in range. Burying herself into Avaron’s chest and clutching tight to her, she rubbed and smothered her face, hiding it away. Shaky inhales and sputtering exhales followed, the half-formed sobs of someone trying rather hard not to. Rubbing Tsugumi’s back, Avaron laid her head on top of hers, doing all she could to give some comfort.
Sometimes saying something was more problematic than actually doing nothing. Ever understanding of this, Avaron opted for the tried and true. She muttered, “It’s alright,” and “You’ll be fine,” and other such reassurances. How long the two remained there, Gwyneth coming nearby to offer her own encouragement, she couldn’t say.
Tsugumi pulled away first, shyly hiding her face and rubbing her eyes. “How unsightly,” she muttered under her breath. A strong hug from behind by Avaron brought a surprised squeak out of her.
“Not to me,” she said simply, earning a throaty hum of an answer back.
“Mm. To think I can leave after all these years. I must be dreaming.” Tsugumi’s lower arms rubbed around her belly, pressing the dress enough it really showed the bump. “Especially with all these little ones in me …”
Gwyneth gave an airy gasp, her hands clasping together. Avaron realized all too late what happened, her head practically snapping off from how fast she whipped around. She opened her mouth, but to her surprise Gwyneth seemed delighted?
“Oh, she accepted you!” Gwyneth said with a smile. “How wonderful!”
“Indeed,” Tsugumi muttered, two of her eyes spying slyly at Avaron.
“Wait,” the tentradom said dumbly. “You two—”
“Had a talk between women, yes,” Tsugumi said with a sigh, and patted Avaron’s face with a hand. “At least you are cute.”
“I—No, wait. I’m going to eat breakfast first.” Avaron, having reached a brain dumping level of new information, turned around and headed back inside. The two other women giggled and followed behind her. When it was all said and done, they gathered around the lowly table again, and Avaron found herself squished between two conniving bodies. Sighing languidly, she opened her mouth, letting Tsugumi and her elegant chopstick work feed her another piece of meat.
I can’t really enjoy this, you know, Avaron thought, wanting to say it but really she couldn’t. Gwyneth had sent Tsugumi to her? Or had Tsugumi asked? The two conspired in some manner, and the fact Gwyneth was happy she knocked up Tsugumi was a bit of a mind-twister. Not to mention Gwyneth was still her cum slut, but the two had worked that out? Should she have Gwyneth do that still? The priestess was rather distraught in the morning—ah, she was afraid of Tsugumi replacing her?
Goodness she couldn’t ignore any of it at all. She might have an actual stroke.
Unfortunately for her, Nerg showed up. The hulking harraxin woman squeezed through the too-small of a door. Whether or not she noticed Gwyneth and Tsugumi ripping away and pretending to sit like normal people, and not plaster themselves to Avaron like fawning maidens, who knew? Nerg’s heavy steps punctuated the still air, and she sat with a falling thump. “Eugh,” she groaned, rubbing her neck. “That spring takes it out of you, doesn’t it?”
“… It’s supposed to help?” Tsugumi asked, sounding rather uncertain. “I’ve not had a harraxin before, mind.”
“Is heat a problem for your kind?” Avaron asked, grasping at the far simpler conversation like a lifeline.
“Huh? No. Not used to a bath that can fit me!” Nerg chuckled, and fluffing her spiny hair, surveyed the table. “Eh, did you all eat already?”
“Tsugumi was having us try out something,” Avaron said, jabbing a thumb at the hostess. “Checking out the flavors. It’s pretty good, though! Can we get more?”
Hopefully her eyes spoke what her words hinted at.
Tsugumi, all the same, nodded and rose up. “Of course, I’ll prepare a proper meal for everyone now.”
“It smells great,” Nerg remarked approvingly, angling to spy at the tray in front of Avaron. Understanding of the unspoken intent, Avaron pushed it over, and Nerg dragged it the rest of the way with her claws. Whether uncaring or unable to use the chopsticks, she picked up pieces with those impressive talons and ate.
It’d saved Avaron the awkwardness of being force fed her own breakfast. Yet she sensed the incensed aura coming from Gwyneth and Tsugumi. Whether at the food being handed away, or being interrupted, she’d rather not figure out which.
“We’re heading out after breakfast, then?” Nerg asked, surprisingly capable around the food in her mouth.
“Err, just about. I imagine Tsugumi will be joining us.”
“Ain’t she cursed or something to be stuck here?”
“Gwyneth found a way to break it.”
“Huh.” Nerg’s brows jumped up in recognition, then she simply kept eating. “Supplies will be tricky. Get as much as you can from here.”
The thought hadn’t crossed her mind fully—another warm body meant more to feed. Ah, right, Avaron scratched the back of her head. We’re in the middle of nowhere, despite this ridiculous spring. Okay, makes sense. Nodding her head, Avaron stretched her arms. “Right, got it! I’ll work it out with her what to take.”
“Mm.”
*~*
Setting out again from the inn felt far too mundane to Avaron. Just the day before she was enjoying a real Japanese-styled spring, banging the daylights out if its owner, and now she joined in on her—group? Party? On top of the fact she had a healthy little belly bump and a lot of growing young inside! Her young! She had to feed them all! And house them, and take care of them, and goodness her stress was just skyrocketing again.
Not even the damn chirping birds and forest sounds calmed her. Listening through her computer speakers was a far cry from being in the damn place. Ah, I can just feel all those years of personal therapy disappearing in front of me, Avaron thought dryly, huffing the sack on her back up again. They didn’t have anything proper, so a hobbled together mess of bed sheets and rope housed all the new supplies they needed with Tsugumi.
She needed a distraction and conversation wouldn’t do.
Oh, there is that.
Pulling up her personal info screen, she immediately noticed a new option appear on the list. ‘Hive Management’. Great, something new and it already sounds horrible. Oh hey there’s an info button.
[Hive Management allows for management of the hive. Your effectiveness will vary depending on your core skill, Hive Queen, and environmental factors such as distance. You can manage genetic information of the hive through this skill as well.]
[Drones that leave the influence range of the Queen will carry out their last orders before turning feral.]
[Brood mothers who are not selected for the Queen’s party will be regulated here.]
[You can level up Hive Queen through expanding the hive by birthing more drones, expanding the hive growth, and breeding women.]
[Queen’s party members will receive any benefits that drones do while inside Hive territory or within the Queen’s influence. Brood mothers receive their own benefits specifically to make living in the Hive more pleasant.]
Avaron smacked into a tree branch, letting out a surprised yell. Everyone else looked over at her sputtering and smacking the thing away before wiping her face. “I’m fine!” she groused. “Stupid tree.” Nerg, at least, seemed amused with her chuckle, while Gwyneth and Tsugumi nodded and continued on.
Hey now, this is getting a bit serious? Avaron marveled, staring at the help screen again. Of course there’s more. Hive population, brood mothers, drones, growth status, food status … On and on it went, a veritable wall of different subcategories. Her tentative explorations showed even more features buried deeper within. For the better part of the afternoon, Avaron dug through the management window, learning every odd and end she could. The party as a whole broke for camp to eat lunch while Nerg went out to find game.
It took two warm bodies squeezing against her before Avaron really paid attention to the world again. Tsugumi on her right, and Gwyneth on her left, both their chests snug against her arms.
“What has you so distracted?” Tsugumi asked, all six eyes peeled suspiciously.
“Thinking,” Avaron returned dryly.
Gwyneth shook her head. “Please, do not burden thyself! We want to help.”
“It’s not that much of a—”
“—Enough of one our talk about who you were to sleep with didn’t arouse you,” Tsugumi said, cutting down Avaron’s weak deflection.
Avaron blinked owlishly, not at all recalling that conversation. Was I that engrossed? she wondered, bashfully scratching her cheek. “I’m just thinking about the future, really. I’ve got you now,” Avaron said, and gave Tsugumi’s rump a hardy grope. The spider woman jolted and a pleased, throaty hum followed as she pushed herself appreciatively into Avaron’s hand. “And I can’t imagine you’re aiming to leave soon either,” she then said, doing the same for Gwyneth. Both women looked quite happy to be handled, however much their clothes were in the way. “But, there are some things we need to talk about.”
“Like what?” Gwyneth asked, her voice a little higher in pitch.
Might as well rip every bandaid I got while I’m at it. Avaron sucked in a breath and sat up straighter on the fallen log they all rested on. “Well, first is first—the royal harem.”
“… Royal?” Tsugumi echoed confusedly.
“I may not look like much, but I am a queen,” Avaron remarked, to which Gwyneth gasped earnestly.
“A queen heroine?!”
“In a sense. I’m more like a queen bee than a queen human.”
“Queen bee?” they both repeated confusedly.
“You know, queen bees, their bee drones, their bee hive … no?”
“Ehm, bees sound loud and their stings hurt … that is all I know,” Gwyneth said, turning away as her cheeks bloomed red. “Sorry.”
Tsugumi merely shrugged.
Avaron found herself in a rather odd problem. “Dear me, okay. She knows—” Avaron jabbed a thumb at Gwyneth, “—what I am, do you, Tsugumi?”
“That you are a tentradom? She confessed after my stern questioning …”
That mysterious smile and Gwyneth’s even deeper blushing promised all sorts of things. Still, it got over the biggest hump in the room. “Where to start … okay, babies and drones. Do either of you know what a drone is?” They shook their heads. “Babies are self-explanatory. The usual man-meets-woman, out pops a kid routine, right?” They both nodded. “Drones are different. They’re—ehm. Hmm. You two have thoughts, right? Thoughts, feelings, hopes, desires …”
“Doesn’t everyone?” Tsugumi asked dryly.
“Drones don’t.”
“Drones don’t think?” Gwyneth asked then, tilting her head.
“Precisely. Drones have no thoughts, no mind, no will of their own. They’re empty inside, soulless vessels. They’d be utterly worthless if not for the presence of the queen.”
“… The queen gives them thoughts?” Tsugumi ventured boldly, much to Avaron’s brow-raised surprise.
“Yes, but not to becoming people. Drones exist to serve the Queen’s will. Whatever she desires, they fulfill.”
“Then, a Queen commands lots and lots of drones?” Gwyneth said, surprisingly thoughtful.
“For a tentradom queen, yes. Bees not so much, but that’s another topic.” Avaron turned back to Tsugumi, her eyes briefly dropping toward that rounded belly barely bulging against her clothes. “The, ehm, well, the ones you’re carrying …”
Tsugumi giggled gayly, hiding her mouth behind her sleeve. “F-for one who made me like this, you are bashful!” she chirped, her own words making her giggle harder. Even Gwyneth smiled humorously, and Avaron sat there, roasted to a fine blushing blue.
“Fine, then!” Avaron chirped, sticking her nose up. “I knocked you up with a bunch of drones! Because, well, I figured you didn’t want the other one and—mmph!”
A finger pressed to her lips, shutting her up as Tsugumi righted herself upward. “I know,” she said, smiling with a fang peaking out. “The goddess’ message told me.”
“… Message?”
“Tis a pane of the finest glass that appears to only the ones chosen by the goddesses,” Gwyneth said. “No other can see another’s message, as much as no other can see another’s level, or skills, or other blessings.”
That sounds like the game system I’ve been using? Avaron wondered. “How long have the goddesses done this?”
“As far as history can tell, truly.”
That is rather telling. If it is the same thing, I doubt these goddesses came to the idea on their own. Did another one from Earth tell them? For as much of a slippery slope as that questioning was, Avaron set it aside. “What did the message say, Tsugumi?”
“My, how bold,” Tsugumi said reproachfully. “It is my secret to know.”
“I—Sorry?” Avaron said and scratched the back of her head.
“You are too kind,” Tsugumi said, her playful air disappearing completely. “If you want something, push to take it.”
Avaron waved her off with a dismissive snort. “If it’s that important I will. I’m not some asshole who needs everything.”
“Hmm. How astute.” Tsugumi leaned in, two hands coming to grasp Avaron’s face. The spider woman stole a kiss, planting her maw on Avaron’s lips with a warm, wet envelopment for a few long seconds. When they parted, she smiled and licked her lips. “Keep being cute and I won’t be able to resist.”
Avaron, having rather left her mind for a moment, snapped back to attention. “Yeah, well—yeah.” Gwyneth grumbled from beside her, rather pointed in her annoyed sound. Before she might say anything, Tsugumi reached over and yanked the priestess. All but dragging her onto Avaron’s lap, the two ended up in a rather awkward position, the spider woman smiling from beside them.
“The same can be said of you, Gwyneth,” Tsugumi said with a ‘tut tut tut’. “Such shyness is unbecoming.”
She’s the one saying that? Avaron thought with a mental laugh. It became rather hard to not notice how Gwyneth’s thighs snuggly squeezed her hips, or that butt firmly owning her lap space. Instinct spoke up before thought, appraising a rather fertile woman glowing with an enticing aroma. The scent alone invited her in, delightfully carnal and stirring her belly in that familiar way. Avaron coughed, suddenly feeling rather hot under the collar. “But, uhh, that’s the other issue,” she said, trying to get back on point.
“What is?” Tsugumi asked.
“The royal harem. Now that its begun with Tsugumi, she has a vote in who joins,” Avaron said hurriedly. The idea sounded good on paper and she really didn’t want the boat being rocked. “It wouldn’t be fair of me to, you know, do things unless she knew …”
“I’m starting to see why you spoke so highly of her,” Tsugumi said dryly, three eyes looking at Gwyneth.
“She is a good person! But, ehm, as you see …”
Avaron looked between the two of them. “What?”
Tsugumi brushed some of Avaron’s hair back, tidying up it a little. “My dear customers, I already agreed with Gwyneth. Don’t you want her for your harem?” she asked with a sly smile.
“I …”
“T-tis not mine place to ask!” Gwyneth sputtered, shaking her hands dismissively. “B-but rather, tis not mine choice to make. I must confer with the Cardinal in Shadowpeak’s temple.”
Two heads turned toward her, both staring at her rather owlishly. “What Cardinal?” Avaron asked first.
“Ehm. The one who presides over mine order. He is most wise, and gave unto me mine flame to keep.”
Ah, religious vows. That Avaron understood, and she nodded. “That’s fine, then.”
“I cannot take young as fair Tsu—sugu, erm … Tsugumi—“ Gwyneth tripped on the name for a moment, “—but mine mouth may relieve thee still! If thee, ehm, desires it.”
Tsugumi tutted again and shooed Gwyneth off of Avaron. She moved behind the tentradom, coming to hug her from behind as much as her egg-filled belly would allow. “Poor thing,” she whispered into Avaron’s ear. “She’s dripping with jealously that I got pregnant first.”
Huh? Avaron thought with a heated haze, all of everything going way too fast for her to keep up with. Two of Tsugumi’s arms came to her chest, groping her breasts with a tight, demanding hold. Her other two arms, meanwhile, went down to the rope-tied waist of the shoddy pants the tentradom wore. Gwyneth soon joined in, helping to untie and yank them down to Avaron’s ankles. “W-wait, what are you doing?” she sputtered, squeezing her knees together to hide herself.
“She told me all about you before I came in last night,” Tsugumi continued whispering, her words all but drowning out Avaron’s mind. How could such a sweet, crystal voice drip with such hot liquid honey? The spider woman could say jump and Avaron’s leg would go before her brain knew to. “I didn’t believe most of it, until dear customer ravaged me in my own inn. Pinning me to the bed sheets, plowing that big, throbbing … what is it called again?”
“A tentacle? Teeeenty!” Avaron chirped, the aforementioned becoming rather awake rather quickly! It churned to life, already wriggling its way out from deep inside her pussy. If she thought to get away, opening her knees might send the thing shooting out.
“Mm, that. The taste was better than anything I’d had before. Stupid customer, wasting all your cum on the bed!” Tsugumi’s sweet voice turned harsh, her fingers pinching Avaron’s nipples. The tentradom let out a chirping squeal, her modest chest trapped in Tsugumi’s unrelenting claws. Not even the shirt saved her. “All the delicious, filling cum. You wanted to know of the Goddesses message?”
Avaron sure wasn’t certain if she wanted to anymore. Gwyneth stroked her naked thighs, playfully trying to pry them apart. It wasn’t strong enough to budge anything, but just feeling those smooth fingers caress her! Her eyes crossed for a moment, and her escaping tenty bulged out between her pussy lips. Whether she wanted it to or not, the wriggling thing emerged, covered in sweet, slippery cum and flaring awake with its bulbous arrow-shaped head. Avaron exhaled mightily, her knees spreading open to let the pulsating tentacle rise up.
“They told me all about the young in me,” Tsugumi enthused, her voice shaking with a wonderfully pleased tremor. Was she getting excited, or just happy? Avaron could hardly tell the difference. “And how wonderful your cum is. Richer than the richest meals, not even a king could buy it … mm, and I agree. They blessed you, to feed us that delicious cum.”
Avaron’s words disappeared into a nonsense garble as Gwyneth grasped her squirming tenty. The damn thing knew where her mouth was already, angling with futile, thrusting jab to delve inside. Gwyneth smiled, licking her lips at the sight. F-fuck my life, Avaron thought deliriously. I painted that room last night and there’s still more?!
Her world tilted when Tsugumi pulled her head back. Balanced against the spider woman, she found herself staring face-to-face and those six beautiful eyes. Bubbly pink hearts floated in them, faint but ever distinct against the gem-like irises. Something was definitely happening there, but damn if she could figure it out.
“Dear customer,” Tsugumi breathed, her lips peeling open and showing her fangs. “Be good and feed us our lunch now~”
The hot prison of a kiss followed, swallowing up Avaron’s words into a slutty muffle. At the same time, Gwyneth’s lips kissed the tip of the squirming tentacle, her hands slackening just a little. It thrust with desperation into her mouth, and the wet, slurping cave of that mouth gulped it down. Such a tag-team effort revealed one daunting fact in Avaron’s mind.
She’d worried about her own talents, well, overwhelming women around her.
Now she wasn’t certain if she would survive the women overwhelming her.
*~*
First Princess Arzha stared out across the wide, expansive field surrounding her pavilion. The land of the Shieldcrown family ever remained rich in its beauty, dotted by careful pathways, flower gardens, and small coves. More to relax than train, it was an ultimate luxury in a kingdom otherwise tight on living space. Few had such a sight in the safety of their own home; only adventurers might find something comparable.
With a dreary sigh, she set her tea cup daintily upon the saucer held in her other hand. “I see, so it’s war then.”
Haleen, rolling up the paper message in her hands, remained tight-lipped. Her anxiety bled through even her stoic visage, a not inconsiderable fact.
“It-it’s not certain, is it?” Saryl asked, voicing the hopeless thought they all undoubtedly shared.
Setting the tea cup on the white-clothed table, Arzha kicked a leg up, folding it over her other knee. The nearly skin-tight, silk fabric stretched wonderfully to form, outlining her shapely muscles with the tiniest hint. “It became inevitable when the summoning succeeded,” Arzha said flatly, killing every hope any of them might’ve had. “On top of the aggressive movement of the Church, they planned fully for this. Now all of Artor is to be offered as sacrifice, we the scapegoats for their devilish plan.”
“What are we to do, Your Majesty?” Magna asked, admirably on form despite the graveness of their situation.
What to do …
Those three words had plagued her for months, never to be answered. She had warned her father, the King. She had tried to have the knights curtail the Church’s ambitions. She had moved to secure peace with the neighboring queendoms, promise them heroines and usher in fruitful alliances. All of it simply came out to be too little, too late.
Whatever she had control over was never enough. Whatever her brother wanted, he got.
In the end, her foolish father favored an idiot drunk on power since birth.
No amount of hindsight would change the ruin that would befall them all.
Arzha afforded herself one long, dragging pull of her gloved hand down her face. For just one moment, she let the frustration in her chest bubble out in the ugliest of scowls. Her blade-sharp face contorted, brow deepening, teeth clenching, her whole neck tight with raw, unfiltered anger. The Snowflake knights all shrank back, remaining where they stood even as their bodies screamed to get away. Planting both hands onto the arm rests, she pushed herself up, ever slow and proper. Ice, however, grew across the demure wooden frame, racing down with a crystalline crackle until the whole thing stood frozen straight to the ground.
Her eyes swept across the open field while she folded her hands together behind her back. What to do?
One queendom after another will come for them. They had no hope of defeating their neighbors in a collected war. Not unless the stupidest of generals led their armies, and she sincerely doubted that. The timing of it all may offer a way—if they focused one-by-one in enough time, they might be able to pull it off. Could their armies handle such a back breaking pace?
No …
No, none of that would work. To rely upon one’s enemies to make a mistake in order to win, she’d already doomed herself.
“I don’t know,” Arzha said simply, breaking the tense silence. “If I could go back two years and try again, I would’ve killed my brother and been done with it.”
“The time being what it is, my lady,” Haleen said, stepping in where everyone else kept distance. “What can we do?”
“… Buy time, we need to buy time,” Arzha muttered, thinking aloud. She turned around, and her knights snapped to attention. “More than anything else, we need to keep every queendom around us tied up. The merchants, the armies, the treaties; anything that will stall an invasion. Haleen, fetch my writing kit. The rest of you, prepare for your horses. We will be most busy paying visits to everyone.”
“Yes, Your Majesty!” the knights sang in unison, their long years of butt-slap training coming through then. They turned and hurried out to the larger estate home farther away. Arzha watched them move with purpose, determined in their own ways.
Diplomacy will have to suffice, she mused, going back to her frozen chair. Sitting down, she picked up her tea again, the cold not bothering her at all. Armies need time to form, money to pay for supplies, and supplies to feed. Our trading prowess is not for nothing. This … this can buy time.
As it stood, Artor would fall.
Only something she couldn’t see, some insane impossibility, might still save them.
The coming summer would be the defining point of her life, she knew.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Lukewarm Intrigue
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Nerg (???) (lv.??) – Tempted Lover
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Chapter 8: Shadowpeak
Chapter Text
The future that is not the present has not happened is not the past, yet.
*~*
“Could this place be any more of a downer?”
“A … downer?” Gwyneth asked.
“Look at it!” Avaron said, sweeping a hand in a wide gesture. Far, far away but ever coming closer was the fabled ‘Shadowpeak’ city. Crawling across the gray cliffs, ridges, and vertical faces of the mountains around it, the whole place sprawled as much as it arose to the heavens. Great spires and towers jutted forth, connected through bridges and arches of what she hoped were stone. Black and gray stones defined the architecture, but surprisingly a great deal of blues, purples, and reds accented it. She couldn’t tell why exactly, but it wasn’t a total gothic nightmare. “It’s so … so sad looking. Like a graveyard.”
“What graveyards do you go to?” Nerg asked incredulously.
“Listen, I’m just saying.” Avaron threw her hands up at the three incredulous pairs of eyes. “It’s not sunshine and rainbows where we’re going.”
“Shadowpeak is quite rich!” Gwyneth said, sounding almost offended. “Just wait, thy disbelief will disappear!”
It’s not the wealth I’m worried about, Avaron thought, but kept her words.
Their trek from then on, thankfully, was uneventful and pleasant. Despite the harshness of the terrain, a number of winding cobblestone roads had been built. While it wasn’t all sheer cliffs, caravans and pack animals wouldn’t fare that well outside of the roads. Nor, as Avaron looked around more, would people easily approach the city. I’ll bet money this used to be a fortress once, she mused. The whole place is perfect. Fixed avenues of approach, inflexible options to attack …
Of course, that cut both ways. Shadowpeak must’ve had some way to endure being cut off from its roads if the enemy chose to blockade, too. It would’ve been a great place for a beginner in an RTS game; or, the final mission of an epic campaign for an attacker. Nonetheless, the closer they came to the city, the more people they found. A trickle turned into a stream, and trade seemed quite happy for them indeed. Not quite jammed full, but every couple of minutes saw carts of some kind drawn by horses heading out or coming in.
A great gate loomed before them soon enough, one of dark stone, polished iron, and oddly angular geometry. The builders seemed fond of their triangles and sharp corners, perhaps as a measure of intimidation? Avaron had a hard time seeing it outside of the ‘evil overlord’ vibes it proudly gave off. At least the people fared better, dressed in their simple browns and grays as they were, jackets, coats, robes, and the like. They fell into a queue, where some guards dressed in plate armor awaited ahead.
“I shall meet them,” Gwyneth said, standing at the front of the party. Nerg took a few steps back, and Avaron thought her rather disgruntled at suddenly being kicked out of the lead. They all drew glances, or rather Nerg did.
Something something, racial discrimination and Harraxin, Avaron thought dryly. Not at all a hard stretch of the imagination, given what Nerg told her already. How rather blatant people were being about it was another matter entirely. They soon enough met the guards running the inspection.
“Oh? A Flame priestess?” the one in charge asked, staring at Gwyneth’s flickering flame. Which, as it ever did, sat over her noticeable chest.
“Mine name be Gwyneth. These three art mine companions.”
The guard looked over, his most suspicious eyes upon Nerg, but otherwise kept his peace. He waved over at another, who carried over some hefty, leather-bound tome. “Right then, we’ll check the registry. If you’re vouching for them, understand anything they do will be your responsibility.”
“Verily? Why such scrutiny?”
“You haven’t heard?”
“We’ve been traveling.”
“Ah? Well, seems like war is coming. The kingdom of Artor summoned a bunch of heroines, and they’re refusing to give them up.”
“The Ashmourn will war with Artor?” Gwyneth asked, sounding rather surprised.
The guard, however, shook his head. “I don’t know about that, but we’re doubling up and keeping our eyes open. Hand on the rune, if you would,” he asked, holding out the leatherbound book. Gwyneth planted her hand upon the arcane looking circle and its fanciful symbols. A tiny red light flowed out from her palm, filling the inscriptions to the brim. When she brought her hand away, he nodded, shut the tome and handed it off to his subordinate. “Right, a real and true Flame priestess. Welcome back to Shadowpeak, my lady.”
Gwyneth did a little curtsy, to which he nodded in kind. Shouting and waving, the guards cleared way for them, and Gwyneth led them through the impressively thick tunnel that the gate guarded. Nerg’s low whistle drew Avaron’s attention.
“What?”
“Never gotten through that gate that quick before!” Nerg laughed and clapped Gwyneth on the shoulder, all but knocking the priestess over. “Hire me more!”
“Eh? Eh? M-maybe,” Gwyneth said, rather rattled by it all.
“Whitey back there owes me on our bet, so I won’t be out of your hair yet.”
“… A bet?” Tsugumi echoed, the politeness of her tone striking a cold fear in Avaron’s heart.
“Ah, yeah,” the tentradom said, trying to keep a straight face. “She got me there alright.” Knocking up Tsugumi had thrown a wrench in that plan pretty badly. Now that she had her first royal harem member, she really had to consult Tsugumi on the matter. Need be she’d burn Nerg on the bet, for better or worse. If Avaron had any reservations about pissing off someone so big, Tsugumi’s sweet smile terrified her even more. “Before any of that, though, do you know an inn or somewhere to stay?”
“Mm? Yeah,” Nerg said, almost surprised sounding. “Decent place, fits me fine.”
“Well, we’ll stop there first and pay you. These two might want somewhere softer, though.”
Gwyneth puffed up her cheeks while Tsugumi only smiled coyly.
*~*
After everyone had settled in at Nerg’s (surprisingly comfortable) choice of inn, Gwyneth excused herself. A bounce in her step and a purposeful energy surrounded her, one that made any other on the street give her space. The flame above her bosom flickered and glowed, throbbing with her heart in a rhythmic pulse. Brightening and dimming, only she knew the divine language it spoke to her through.
“Verily,” Gwyneth muttered, unable to hide the smile on her face. “It gladdens mine heart to know thy pleasure. The others shall rejoice in mine success!”
The flame flickered, an unusual dimness overcoming it.
“Mm? Thy help truly made it possible! … No? That is not it?” Gwyneth, ever growing more confused, stopped for a moment and looked down. The flame had all but quieted then, assuring her it wasn’t seeking credit. Yet, in knowing its withdrawal, she wouldn’t have any answers. It would have to be enough to know she hadn’t offended. Setting her confusion aside, she hurried through Shadowpeak’s well-kept streets, heading toward a dauntingly large cliff.
A zig-zagging road built into the cliff defined the approach, a series of winding ramps. While newer elevator shafts suited more modern traffic, her order yet remained off the very winding road others disparaged at having to climb. Back and forth, back and forth, she walked and turned, ascending the winding path. Half-way up, a branching road split off, leading across a path snug up against the cliff. Wide enough for a cart, a stone wall guarded her left from falling off, while the cliff towered above on the right.
Such a familiar route, the age of it all weighing on her senses. The way her footsteps echoed, and how the wind blew in, sweeping into her front and cutting to the back—not quite a breeze, but like a great force suddenly rebounding. Others had told her of the sights the road offered, all of Shadowpeak on display. Or, most of it. She’d never seen it, her world ever the dim, flickering bubble that the flame illuminated.
Gwyneth had long stopped wondering what such a ‘view’ others saw might be.
Hers was to see what none of them saw; a fitting irony in her mind.
The road shifted to the right. A flight of stairs awaited, taking her up further and further, a whole two minutes of walking. Two great doors soon stood before her, their old, two-feet thick iron unyieldingly heavy. A faint hint of magic touched her senses, ever familiar in its indifferent inspection of her. Searching; seeing; judging. The magic withdrew, and a groaning whine of burdened hinges ripped through the air. The doors parted, just enough for her to walk through comfortably.
“Who goes there?” a cutesy, young voice asked from the side. A young acolyte soon hurried within range, barely at all fourteen years of age.
“Tis me, Gwyneth. I seek the Flame Seer.”
“L-lady Gwyneth?! Of course! Please, this way.”
The acolyte hurriedly bowed and gestured, something that rather surprised Gwyneth. Although blessed by the Flame, her rank truly wasn’t that high in the Order. Why bother with such grandiosity? They traveled up through the monastery, itself a multi-level, jagged construction. The smoothest areas were the ones they’d mined out themselves, supposedly. The rest had been built as-is into whatever space was already there. Gwyneth rather enjoyed the bobbing and weaving, moving through tight corridors and up spiraling staircases.
No place like home.
They reached the wood door to the Flame Seer, somewhere in the middle of the whole complex. The acolyte entered first, announcing Gwyneth’s arrival before she herself stepped in. The scent of musty tomes and incense enveloped her, a veritable wall of scent. Her nose twitched at the ever familiar, if intensely stuffy air. She stepped aside for the acolyte to leave, the door closing behind her.
Gwyneth bowed. “Mine return, great Seer.”
“It eases my bones to see you safe again, Gwyneth,” Flame Seer Harn said, his voice warm with age. “Tell me, what of your quest?”
“Most successful! Somewhat,” Gwyneth enthused immediately before catching her manners.
“Ah, it stokes the smoldering embers in my heart to hear.”
So Gwyneth conveyed her journey to Artor, then ascertaining the nature of the heroines that were summoned. In speaking of Avaron, she quite skimmed over details, especially of her faithful servicing of the divine tentradom. Yet, upon uttering the truth of the woman’s existence—that of a tentradom—the Flame grew cold and still, shockingly so. Gwyneth earnestly paused for a moment, the heat still there, but the fire the most distant she’d ever felt.
“Is something amiss?” Harn asked.
“N-no, just … recollecting.” Gwyneth smiled uneasily. Does he not know of the Flame’s disquiet? It wasn’t really her place to ask or question; Harn knew more of the Flame than her. And thus, she continued, filling him in on their stay at the inn, the harraxin mercenary guard, and their otherwise uneventful journey to Shadowpeak itself. When she finished, silence hung in the air, a thoughtful contemplation she undoubtedly believed.
“And this … heroine, Avaron, is at the inn now?”
“Resting, I believe.”
“I see. Good, good. Rest here, Gwyneth, I will send others to guide the heroine to us.”
Oh, a chance for Laura’s stew again! Gwyneth smiled and bowed. “Verily, Flame Seer. I believe thou will enjoy meeting her!”
“… Hm, indeed. Rest easy, Gwyneth.”
*~*
A meaty, banging knock rattled the room and jolted Avaron awake. Tsugumi grumbled from beside her on the bed, lifting her head to glare at the door. In the low light of a single candle, Avaron squinted, seeing a much brighter light outside the door. Petting Tsugumi’s oily hair, she shushed the spider woman and said, “I’ll get it.”
“Hmph,” Tsugumi grunted. When Avaron stood up, her hand went to the vacant spot, tracing aimless patterns in the stiff bedsheets.
The raw energy exuding off of Tsugumi made Avaron’s skin tingle and she hurried toward the door. Upon cracking it open, she spied a big woman and a heavy set of armor. She craned her head up, finding a certain someone leaning against the frame and looking down. “Nerg?” she asked uncertainly.
“Yup. There’s some priests who are here for you.”
Something about her tone of voice was off—something that stirred a distant, dangerous memory from long ago. Avaron blinked and made a show of seeming rather sleepy by rubbing her eyes. “Me, really?”
“They’re on Gwyneth’s behalf, supposedly.”
“Alright, alright, let me get dressed first.”
“Be quick.”
And so Avaron shut the door, her mind now sharply awake. She turned toward Tsugumi, and the spider woman’s lazy expectation vanished upon seeing her face. Avaron held up a finger to her lips before stepping over. “Can you get out through the window?” she whispered hurriedly.
“Why?” Tsugumi asked uncertainly.
“Call it a hunch. There was that other inn we passed, the golden bar?”
“The Golden Boar?”
“That one. Rent a room there and hide out.”
“… Is this about your bet with her?”
Avaron shook her head. “No. Trust me on this, some bad shit is about to go down.”
“Shouldn’t I—”
“—I don’t want to risk you or them,” Avaron said with quiet exasperation. In the time since the inn and their travel, Tsugumi’s belly had grown noticeably in size. Even her dress couldn’t hide it anymore, and she hadn’t a clue what might happen if she was in a bad spot. Tsugumi’s lips pursed together tightly, not at all happy. “On the off-chance I’m being neurotically paranoid, I’ll make it up to you.”
“… Just this once, fine.” Tsugumi huffed and got up from bed. The two went about dressing properly, and then met by the window. In opening it, the twilight sky blinded them both for a moment. They checked around to make sure no one was in the alley, or watching.
“It looks clear to me,” Avaron said, and Tsugumi nodded. “You—mmph!” A fat, hard kiss landed on her lips, a sucking pressure sealing them together in a jaw-tingling embrace. “Mm, mhmm,” Avaron hummed, rather caught off by how hard Tsugumi captured her. For all the sweet and tantalizing taste, it was the desperation it hid that spoke enough. In returning it, Avaron hoped it’d bring some comfort to her royal lover. When they parted, Tsugumi beat a fist on Avaron’s shoulder once, then twice—not hard enough to hurt, but it ever showed her frustration.
“I’m sorry,” Avaron said lamely.
“Come back,” Tsugumi ordered direly, then hefted herself through the window.
For all her worries of such a pregnant woman, her nimble movements and magical web threads rather dashed them. Avaron looked out of the window as the spider disappeared around the corner, moving with speed and grace. I know her level is the highest I’ve seen, but still … Avaron sighed and withdrew, quietly shutting the window again. I don’t have the slightest idea how that affects fighting at all. It might be total bullshit.
Nor, truly, was she willing to pay the price such a risk entailed.
Heading to the door, all dressed in her shoddy traveler’s clothes, Avaron opened it. Nerg, it seemed, waited a little bit down the hallway. Shutting the door behind her, Avaron made a show of yawning and shaking herself ‘awake’. “Alright, alright,” she grumbled. “What do they want?”
Nerg shrugged and fell in behind her, descending the stairs together. “Dunno.”
“Oh, this better not be something weird,” Avaron remarked dryly, much to Nerg’s amused snort.
The main hall of the inn turned out far quieter than when they first arrived. Aside from the working staff, what guests there were left sat in far corners in their own seclusion. It made the group of five robed figures all the more noticeable. Adorning the same style as Gwyneth, they had fanciful red-stitching and silvery drapes, uplifting them to some kind of new status. It would be their spears, however, she noticed the most. Black wood poles tipped by curved blades was not something a greeting party in a city should be walking around with.
Then again, different world, different customs? Avaron said to herself, finding it hard to believe. They turned at her approach, all of them wearing full-covering facial masks. The make was exactly the same as Gwyneth’s, save covering the lower half of their heads. “You all the people from the flame order or whatever?” Avaron asked.
“We are,” the leader-apparent said, moving to stand at the fore of the group. “You are Avaron? The one Gwyneth spoke of?”
“I mean my name is Avaron, yes, and I know Gwyneth. What do you want?”
The leader bowed slightly, hand over his chest. “The Flame Seer bids we escort you to the monastery. Please follow us.”
“Really? How come Gwyneth isn’t here?”
“She is resting now. It is … something of a walk.”
“Ah, man, but I already paid for our inn tonight!”
No response came, an uncomfortable air surrounding them all. Nerg shoved Avaron in the shoulder, coughing loudly. “No one refuses the Flame’s summons,” she said awkwardly.
“Fine, fine, whatever!” Avaron threw her hands up in the air. The motion rather unsettled the Flame priests, who jostled and almost took a step back. Rather unexpecting the motion, it betrayed what their clothes hid—raw nervousness. Perhaps that was the scent she picked up? The irritable, agitated feeling in her gut certainly felt appropriate to be called ‘nervousness’. There wasn’t any reason for that she could think of. “Well, lead the way, then.”
The leader bowed and together, the seven of them headed out of the inn and into the twilight-kissed city. They headed toward the huge cliff, one the city seemed to have built into somewhat. A winding, zig-zag path cut up through the cliff, perhaps mined out at some point in the past. She saw all sorts of rectangular columns lining the walls, lights moving up and down in a particularly familiar way. Elevators? Avaron wondered. They’d looked like support pillars earlier, but the lights inside the cages gave them away. It makes senses and all, lots of vertical spaces here …
She was a little suspect about the quality of such ‘medieval’ ideas, though. In a world without electricity, it rather concerned how they worked—or how safe they actually might be. In approaching, the residential-like area bled away into rows of warehouses, storage yards, and other worker-related functions. Most of it winded down for the night, all sorts laughing and heading toward the pubs and inns she’d just left. It would be they seemed to head to a smaller cliff, an outcropping where a platform had been built.
Plastered stone bricks, bound by wooden frames defined the expand. Iron formed the ‘skeleton’ it all built off of, a rather sensible choice now that she thought about. Thick, grid-like fences lined the edges, taller than even Nerg to keep people from yeeting themselves from the platform. Or, being yeeted, as the case may be. There was a particular hole in the fences, an iron-frame she thought might be the holder for the elevator. There really wasn’t a contraption at the top machine or anything to pull the elevator up, though. Do they … do they push them up? What? Avaron wondered, eyes squinted. That’s a little—
A gargling wheeze escaped the sudden, crushing force around her throat. Her hands flew up on reflex, grabbing the armored wrist of Nerg. Lifted from the ground, she quite became aware of gravity, her whole body wanting to go one way, and her head being pulled the other. Kicking her legs, she saw the Flame priests approach, brandishing ropes. They bound her ankles then her wrists, ensnaring her with such speed and efficiency they had to have done it more than once. Dumped unceremoniously onto the ground, Avaron’s head smacked the unyielding stone, not at all helping her choking coughs.
“W-what the FUCK!” she yelled, squirming futilely on the floor. “Nerg, you traitorous cunt!”
“The job was to escort you to the city, not guard in it,” Nerg said with all the ease of telling the weather, shrugging her shoulders. “Not my fault the bounty on your head is that great.”
“Bounty? What bounty?”
“Ours,” the leader of the priests said, his fellows falling into rank beside him. “I thank you, Nerg, for helping in this endeavor.”
“You got what you paid for,” Nerg said simply. She turned around and waved over her shoulder, leaving. “Have fun.”
“Fine, she’s a mercenary, that’s on me! What’s your fucking deal?” Avaron asked, scowling at the priests. They uncorked a bunch of gourds, and dumped a lot of clear, smelly liquid onto her. She spat and squinted, shaking her head to get the crap out of her face. The smell of it was all too familiar, if a bit more unrefined. “What is this? Lantern oil?”
They all clapped their hands together, bowing as if in reverent respect. “Oh, great Flame, we offer unto you this vile being, to redeem as only fire can. May its ashes enrichen the world, and bring prosperity in its passing.”
Wait—
Avaron hadn’t a moment to protest or think before, in front of the priests, roiling flames spat forth from their hands. The fires washed over her, igniting the oil, and so her spot on the ground erupted into a mixture of chemical and magic fire. The priests stood before the bonfire, muttering prayers to their great Flame, and observing Avaron’s body smoulder. Minutes passed and the flames began to recede, all that was left was a charred husk of a body, a not-too-unfamiliar sight to them. One of the priests unfolded a large, person-sized cloth, and with the help of two others, rolled Avaron’s remains up. Tying it off with some left-over rope, they heaved it up, and carried her to the open space in the platform’s fence.
One, two, three, and they threw her down the refuse shoot, letting the remains fall into the fetid pit so much other garbage ended up in. Wiping their hands with oil, they cleaned them off with a few rags in their pockets, and then arrayed before their leader once more. He nodded, and gestured to be followed. “Let us inform the Flame Seer. We have done well, our world is safe from another tentradom.”
They walked away.
In the few moments of them having thrown Avaron’s body and turned away, however, they never saw what followed.
Running and jumping across the sheer cliff, strands of web acting as swinging anchors, Tsugumi caught Avaron’s bundle mid-fall. With all the speed of a hunter, she rocketed past, disappearing into the crevices that so lined Shadowpeak.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Lukewarm Intrigue
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Chapter 9: Shadowpeak Part 2
Chapter Text
To survive is to struggle; to live, is to be.
*~*
A crinkling crack filled the room. The sound of something breaking, not quite stone, nor metal, nor wood. One might, if they knew, liken it to an insect molting—a wet, crunching sound. Slowly, a hand rose from the cold stone slab, blackened as the trees in a forest after a fire. It curled its fingers shakily, audible cracks of its charred flesh pointedly loud. A muffled sound followed, different from all the others: a voice groaning. The hand reached up, groping at its owners burned face. It scratched and clawed at the dried husk of flesh, before finally forming a solid, shaky fist.
One solid crack followed as it slammed into its own face, shattering the husk of flesh completely. Coughs and sputters followed, a shaky gasp of air breaking them. Wiping her face clear and spitting out the gunk in her mouth, Avaron’s eyes wearily opened, the candlelit dim light easy on her far too sensitive sight. She looked around, for as much as her unmoving head could look. Where … where the fuck? What the fuck? she thought groggily. The last bits she remembered was quite literally being lit on fire and then the rest blacked out from there.
Am I dead? Again?
Felt like a train had hit her, or something. In trying to sit up, the charred flesh clinging to her crumbled and shattered, breaking off in bits and pieces. Avaron looked down with disgust, patting at herself. Patting turned to clawing, and she ripped piece after piece away. Oddly relieving in a way, like removing a couple days worth of clothes or a bandaid off a soft but healed wound. In no time at all, she’d pried herself free and stood up, completely and utterly naked. Twisting her head, a sickening, crunchy pop followed, and she sighed pleasantly.
“Fuck my life. Okay, where am I?”
The stone slab she got off was there, as well as some shelves—or at least, cut outs in a stone wall that worked like shelves. Shoddy rugs lined the stone floor, and dimly glowing candles provided the only light, well on their way to finally dying. Eyeballing the shelves, she found flasks, beakers, tongs, knives, scalpels … Is this a surgery room? she wondered with a touch of horror. Goosebumps shot down her whole body at the sight, and she quickly averted her eyes to the door. A simple, wooden door with some iron reinforcement. Avaron hurried over to it and tried the handle, finding it completely unlocked.
Oho? she wondered, peeking around the creaking wood door. The sound must’ve carried through the narrow hall, but it too had dim, dying candle light. If she didn’t know better, someone forgot to put them all out. Evenly spaced iron bands seemed to act as supports, while tiny cubby holes held the candles. A simple brown rug ran the length of the hall, quite obviously patched together again and again multiple times. Feeling one direction as good as any other, Avaron sneakily left the ‘surgery room’.
To her dismay, her chosen path led to a storage room—a doorless hole filled with crates, vials, boxes, jars, and other things. Well okay then, she thought with a roll of her eyes, turned around, and headed the other way. The hallway bent around a corner, where another door awaited already opened up. The room there was rather quite large, a spacious living area that, upon examination, combined living, cooking, and storage all at once. To her left were some rather large, rounded cut outs in the stone wall, showing the night sky and its beauteous wonders. Avaron spied at the kitchenette on her right for a moment, before sudden movement ahead caught her attention.
A woman rose from a simple chair, covered in a white robe. The sheer and thin material hugged her shapely form, clearly leaving her large, bigger-than-Avaron’s-palms breasts on display. Her very movement carried grace and purpose, complimenting the flair of her hips with an eye-catching movement. In fact, were it not for her fluffy furred legs, Avaron wouldn’t have looked away. What in the world? she thought, her gaze going up and finding a round, cute face and shimmering gold eyes staring at her. Complimented by two smooth, ivory horns jutting out of her white-haired head, sweeping forward like two menacing spikes ready to impale.
Avaron shrank behind the door, and the woman paused, concern coming over her face.
“Are you alright?” she asked, clutching a hand and her far-too-big sleeves to her bosomy chest.
“I—” Avaron broke into a nasty, ragged cough that left her throat sore. “Ah, water?” she wheezed, rubbing it carefully. The woman nodded and hurried over to the kitchenette, pulling the lid off of a jug. Avaron couldn’t help taking note of the rather long tail jutting out behind her, full on furred with white hair the same as her legs and arms. Is she … is she some kind of sheep? It didn’t look right to her. Rather than the fluff thickness of sheep, it had wispy and air quality to it, being both full and cloud-like.
The stranger approached and gingerly held out a stone mug to her. Avaron took it slowly, eying her and her concerned eyes suspiciously before taking a sip. She hadn’t seen anything untoward go in, and aside from the raw taste of rock and mineral, it was water alright. One gulp after another, and her sore throat felt quite refreshed. “Ah, ahem, thanks,” she said, gingerly offering the mug back.
“How are you feeling?” the woman asked, wide-eyed and curious.
“Fine? Fine, a bit cold, and hung over. No, not really that one. Anyway, who are you?”
“I am Cecile. You are Avaron, yes?”
“I am.”
“Tsugumi was very worried about you,” Cecile said, brushing some of her inordinately long hair behind a pointed ear. The first thing that came to Avaron’s mind was ‘elfish’, but it was a firm, strong ear that while pointed, was stout looking, not long. “I bid her rest and took over watching.”
“Tsugumi is here? Where is here, anyway?”
“The mountains beyond the land called Ashmourn. Tsugumi carried your remain—erm, you, all the way here.”
All sorts of questions followed, but none of them were ones she really wanted answers to right then. With a dreary sigh, Avaron moved away from the door, standing fully apparent now. Cecile’s wide eyes went down to her chest immediately, staring with a wonder no woman with her figure should have. Really, it might’ve been flattering if she wasn’t so damn anxious again. “Alright, erm, thank you. Can you take me to her?”
“I-if you feel ready for a walk, then yes.” Cecile said, hiding her face behind a sleeve. The red, blooming blush she sported betrayed her snowy pale skin and white complexion quite terribly. Leaving the mug on counter at the kitchenette, she bid Avaron follow, and they moved into another tunnel.
One path turned into another, the whole complex feeling rather winding and complicated. The frigid nature of it became shockingly apparent, however, in spite of the candles lit everywhere. By the time they reached a door, Avaron’s feet felt like two frozen blocks, numbed to everything but the impact of walking. A wave of pure, relieving heat washed over her through the opening, immediately stirring goosebumps and post-warmth chills down her back. A fire burned at the center of the room, a chimney pipe coming straight down and catching all of it. Shutter-closed windows lined the walls, while all sorts of blankets, sheets, and pillows lined the stony floor.
Farther ahead and off to the side, she saw Tsugumi, sleeping on her side and facing the flames. And, despite the blankets covering her, rather obviously naked. “Is she alright?” Avaron asked in a low whisper.
“Hm? The snow soaked her clothes, but she found warmth before frost came,” Cecile said, looking rather reproachful. “To brave it as she is, is …”
“Believe me, I know,” Avaron said with a sigh, then waved it off. “But we’re all here now, at least. Right? Just the three of us?”
Cecile nodded with an agreeing sound.
That was one worry off her back. Heading across the room, Avaron gingerly approached Tsugumi and sat down by her. Running her fingers through the woman’s hair, the oiliness she remembered was gone and feeling rather fresh. At least you got a bath in finally, she mused, remembering the muttering complaints on their journey earlier. Ever capable of roughing it, Tsugumi desperately wanted baths the whole time. A groan broke her thoughtful reverie, and she saw two of six eyes open with a weary blink. Then the other four snapped open, and Tsugumi jerked upward.
“Hey, not so quick,” Avaron said, holding Tsugumi’s shoulders while her eyes drifted to something rather noticeable. Tsugumi’s big, plump pregnant belly had grown in size! Definitely bigger than a woman in her final months, but not offensively so to her frame. Compared to the small bump she knew of a two weeks ago, it’d grown in size quite incredibly. A sharp, stinging slap across her face with a cracking sound send her head in the opposite direction, bobbling with stunned surprise.
“Asshole!” Tsugumi hissed, pissed as all the Hells.
“What are you slapping me for?!” Avaron cried, recoiling and rubbing her cheek.
“Everything!”
If she might protest, Tsugumi yanking her into a side hug silenced it. The spider woman wrapped all four arms around her, the bump of her belly pressing in just as much. A kiss didn’t quite follow, Tsugumi burying her face into Avaron’s neck and breathing with loud, shaky breaths. Avaron, knowing well enough to shut the fuck up, returned the tight embrace, rubbing meaningless, soothing circles in Tsugumi’s back. She did spy Cecile, who stood by looking rather uncomfortable. A certain, third-wheel aura surrounded her, perhaps in a world yet to invent third-wheeling.
“Ah, ahem, right. What, uhh, what happened exactly?” Avaron said after a few minutes, regretfully parting from Tsugumi and her swelling bosom. The thought gave pause for a moment, for the spider woman’s breasts had quite delightfully grown in size too! Her modest chest before looked plump, nipples gorged and even while not erect, inviting in their swollen beauty. Tsugumi tutted at her staring, pushing her face away to avert her eyes.
“I caught you after the Flame priests threw you off the cliff,” she said simply. “Shadowpeak is their home. I had to sneak you out. I’d thought this village would still be here, ran by dorgians still … Hmph, to think they’d all left!”
“I don’t—how long was I out for?”
“A week, maybe.”
They’d be entering their second month soon, then, and still nowhere for Tsugumi to give birth. Avaron scratched at her head and set that irritable thought aside. “That long?”
“A rather impressive feat compared to dying!” Tsugumi remarked sharply and smacked Avaron’s shoulder. “How did you even survive?! They used holy oil in those flames!”
Avaron rather took the hits as they came, a preferable choice if it helped Tsugumi’s irritation. “That would be my skill. I’m rather hard to kill, you see.”
Although, for her own sake, she checked again, opening the menus quickly and navigating. A week is longer than I expected, though …
[Divine Regeneration: Personal healing power comparable to the goddesses. So long as even a drop of blood remains, your entire body can regenerate to a prime, healthy state of being.
Heal from mortal blows in a matter of seconds.
Limbs can regrow in as little as a minute.
Certain regeneration impeding effects are negated completely.
Food is not required to fuel the regeneration process.
Immunity to diseases, both as a victim and a carrier.]
… Maybe a combination of holy oil and fire did more damage than I can think of?
“That is quite the combination to shrug off!” Tsugumi said, looking incredulous.
“Well, I came back, didn’t I?”
Pursing her lips, she crossed two of her arms, even as the one nearest to Avaron grabbed onto her still. “Hmph!”
“Ehmm, would you two like anything?” Cecile asked, oozing discomfort. They both started a little at her words and looked over.
“That soup would be wonderful,” Tsugumi said.
“Right! I’ll go make some, then.” Cecile sped her way out of the room, shutting the door with her tail on the way out.
“… Who is she, anyway?” Avaron asked, now that they were alone completely.
“A dreary story,” Tsugumi said with a sigh. She moved to lay down on her side, facing Avaron, pregnant belly and swollen breasts alike. “And quite telling.”
“What about?”
“Before I, ahem, met that unfortunate curse, I adventured with some others. Some years before we disbanded, we helped out this village—” Tsugumi waved a hand around them, “—and defeated a mighty beast. The dorgians were most grateful, and promised us aide whenever we needed it.”
“And they did?”
“Cecile did. The dorgians vanished many centuries ago.”
Avaron squinted suspiciously, the gears turning in her mind. “Then …”
“The curse kept me out of time, or prolonged my life, or … something. I think I am the oldest tora to live still.”
“… Congratulations?” Avaron offered lamely, and Tsugumi chuckled before hiding her face behind her hands.
“Centuries old, and a belly full of … drones. Life is mysterious.”
“Yeah, it is,” Avaron said with a nod, Tsugumi eyeballing her with a funny look all the while. They stayed like that for a moment, drinking in silence and their mutual presences.
“What now?” Tsugumi asked, one of her hands going to her round belly. “These little ones are getting fussy.”
With a mighty exhale, Avaron fell back onto the blanket beside Tsugumi, staring up at the ceiling. “I don’t know,” she said before pinching the bridge of her nose. “Nerg betrayed me, so she’s gone. Gwyneth may have betrayed me, so I don’t know about her.”
“I do not think she did.”
“Why?”
“Woman’s intuition,” Tsugumi said with a secretive smile.
“… I’m gonna need more than that.”
“Trust me, as I trusted you.”
“I—ahh, blahblahblah, okay, fine. In that case, there really isn’t anything we can do to help her.” Avaron dragged her hands down her face, letting out a frustrated noise. “I’m not a fighter and there’s a whole city.”
“If the Order does not have her locked up, she may leave on her own?” Tsugumi offered, her many brows furrowing together.
“That … maybe? We can’t exactly wait to run into her again.”
“How about a letter?”
“A letter?” Avaron echoed.
“That is how my party coordinated when we split assignments. If we can find a postage business, I shall draft a letter for her.”
In the uncertain world where the stars aligned, the idea might work. Avaron kept her skepticism, however, rather not wanting to dampen the mood with her nay-saying. They’d have to find a postage office or something in the first place, and there was no telling when. The farther from Shadowpeak she got, the better. Staring up at the sloping ceiling, she watched the shadows dance across with their ever eternal partner, the firelight. A shuffling and rustle from beside her, however, drew attention.
Tsugumi wriggled across the gap between them, snuggling up and into Avaron. She buried her head into the crook of Avaron’s neck, threw a leg around hers, and squeezed tight in her four-armed hug. All of it, quite awkwardly compensating for how her big belly plopped on top of Avaron’s. Her toasty warmth and feminine softness quietly laid claim, something Avaron was all too glad to give up. Smiling, she kissed the top of Tsugumi’s head and gave her naked butt a hearty, possessive grope. “My, I’m lucky to have such an elegant, smart hostess.”
“Hm! Mmm.” Tsugumi purred approvingly, one hand running a finger on Avaron’s hips, the other coming to cup her breast. “Dear customer will have to pay up! Working this elegant me ragged, it’s impolite.”
“Sorry,” Avaron said, kissing Tsugumi’s head again. Bringing up a hand, she hesitated for a moment before laying it on Tsugumi’s belly, rubbing the taut skin soothingly. A girlish, pleased sound trilled out of the spider woman immediately, her whole body stretching in a preening, wanton desire. “Oh? Like that do you?”
“Your hand is so soft,” Tsugumi enthused with a low, purring drawl. “Unf, and warm! Really warm …”
Actually, maybe a little too warm as Avaron herself noticed. She lifted her head, in turn lifting Tsugumi’s, and the two of them looked down. There, where her white, porcelain-like flesh graced lilac-tinted belly, a soft, vibrant glow could be seen. Dragging her fingers and palm back and forth, Avaron couldn’t help notice how it seemed like one of those lightning ball toys. The ones that shot out of innocent electricity and followed your fingers when you touched the globe.
“Is something wrong?”
“Huh? No, no,” Avaron muttered, falling back onto the sheet. She started rubbing again just in case, squeezing Tsugumi’s pleasant little butt. “It’s fine. Do you, uhh, want a massage by chance?”
“Oh, do you offer one?”
“Can’t imagine your back is happy right now.”
“It … is, as it happens to be.”
Avaron’s brow curled upward disbelievingly. “Really?”
“Quite.”
“I’d heard pregnancy and all the, uhh, extra stuff really makes it sore?”
“I cannot move too quickly now, but no, I am not sore. Not as much as I thought I would be, remembering how my mother complained about my sisters …”
“Huh. Wonder if that’s one of my other skills.”
“… A skill that makes child carrying easier? Oh, I have one now! ‘Brood Mother’ … brood, mother … ?”
Avaron blinked, rather recalling how that title appeared in her ‘relationships’ tab before. “What does it say? Unless you’re going to hide that, too.”
“Hmm.” Tsugumi sounded rather undecided about the fact, her attention quite clearly busy elsewhere. “What an interesting skill you’ve given me, oh queen.”
“You tease,” Avaron growled, giving a light, painless smack to Tsugumi’s butt. The spider woman chirped and wiggled with a giggle. “I do need to know about it if others acquire it.”
“’If’? My, am I to be alone in the harem?”
“I would rather everyone agree with each other …” A sigh answered back, rather surprising Avaron.
“Not everyone will, or not always. But who are we to deny your desires, if you find someone new?”
“I’d rather not have constant fighting in my house,” Avaron said dryly.
“You worry over that which has not come to pass.”
“Worrying is like, everything I have to do,” Avaron griped, her free hand lifting up in a pointless gesture. “Don’t think you’re not telling me about that skill.”
“Dear customer is rather demanding,” Tsugumi remarked sullenly, but her fake act didn’t work at all on Avaron. A rather insistent squeeze on her butt continued until she finally spoke. “The skill [Brood Mother]. It says …
[Chosen by a tentradom queen to carry and birth her young. Babies and drones will inherit your combined strengths, but only babies will carry a will of their own as your mutual children.
Increased fertility and receptivity to impregnation from the queen; others can no longer impregnate you.
Your body will adjust to carry and birth young more frequently and with less side-effects. Higher levels will eventually negate all downsides, and decrease total gestation time.
The pains of child rearing will gradually transform into pleasure. The second greatest joy will be to give birth~
Your breasts will begin milking and never cease again. Feed the queen your milk, for it is vital to her and the hive. The quantity of the milk will depend on your breast sizes; the quality will increase with higher levels.
To level up this skill further, you must successfully birth the queen’s offspring repeatedly.]”
Two notable things stood out to Avaron. One, the game-like skill system was definitely something other people had. Two, like her, Tsugumi’s [Brood Mother] skill relied on sex, or at least getting knocked up and giving birth. A third realization came to mind, one that rather concerned her. I can give other people skills. Obviously it’s connected to me, but is it possible to acquire random sex skills?
There may be far more than she knew.
“Wait, what was it about the milk?” Avaron said, the rest of her mind catching up.
“Mm, once my little ones here swell up, won’t you drink it?” Tsugumi asked, a hand curling around her breast seductively. It groped lightly, distorting and pushing it with such blatant invitation. “I promise I will taste delicious.”
Avaron gulped nervously, rather finding the idea quite tantalizing. She wasn’t at all certain that was just her being excited—she hadn’t quite a milk fetish before reincarnating! “S-sure,” she sputtered out. “But, that other part … “vital to me and the hive”. It’s rather curious …”
“Is that not normal?” Tsugumi asked.
Oh. Right. Everyone thinks I’m a natural born tentradom. Avaron kissed the top of Tsugumi’s head again. “It’s totally normal. I’m just surprised your skill told you about it.”
“What is special about it?”
The door opened then, much to Avaron’s silent thanks. Cecile walked in, a big wooden tray in her arms. She paused mid-step when she caught sight of them, quite naked and cuddling as they were. “Oh! Oh, oh, umm …” she sputtered, her face reddening.
“Ready that fast?” Avaron asked, patting Tsugumi. The two rose up together then, simultaneously finger-combing their messy hair into place again.
“Yes! Yes, the food, it is ready. Umm, please, come,” Cecile stuttered, stepping all the way in. Her long tail shut the door, and she approached the toasty fire place in the room’s center. She cleared out a spot and set the tray down, before shuffling the blankets and pillows. In creating three distinct seats, she took one while Avaron and Tsugumi got up, walked over, and sat down on the other two. Clasping her hands in her lap, Cecile looked back and forth, her eyes rather betraying her constant looking toward their chests.
Or the womanly pace between their thighs.
Not quite seductively, she seemed more a squirrel with too many choices in front of it and no brain to figure out what to do.
“Bread?” Avaron asked, eying the round loafs of black-colored something.
“Oh! Yes. I figured something special, to celebrate your good health.”
“Thank you. Is it, uh, your custom for me to break it, or you?”
“It’s for you.”
“Mm, alright then!”
In breaking up the big loaf of black bread, Avaron handed off huge chunks to the others, somewhat evenly dividing it into the thirds. That left their wooden soup bowls, filled with a mysterious brown liquid that had a rather okay smell to it. Nothing fancy, but it tantalized her hungry belly all the same. In picking up a wooden spoon, she slurped up a mouthful of almost scalding-hot liquid. Quickly breaking away, she sucked and blowed, hurriedly cooling her mouth. “Hot, hot hot hot!” she whined, much to Tsugumi’s snorting laugh.
“Oh! It’s fresh, be careful!” Cecile said worriedly, her tail picking up with a quick flip-flop of its tip.
Aaand just like that, the pain vanished suddenly. Thanks, [Divine Regeneration]. Avaron kept blowing on it still, gently stirring the thick soup and the odd chunks submerged in it. Without anything to do, the silence between them felt rather awkward. Cecile, it seemed, was rather interested in her soup. “So! Uh, Tsugumi told me about this place a little, but I’m still curious. You live here, Cecile?”
“Hm? Oh, yes! Um, just me, I live here by myself. My home, that is.”
A cute, beautiful face, a bombastic body, and some rather exotic features. Ah, but a nervous girl underneath all of it. Avaron nodded. “It looks nice! The uh, few areas I’ve seen so far.”
“Mm, I try to keep it clean, but …” Cecile scratched her cheek, rather pointedly showing the thick, monstrous claw growing out of her finger. Maybe two, if not three inches, of a smooth, ridged weapon. “Sweeping is hard with the winds.”
“One does what they can,” Avaron said with a shrug. “So, tell me about it! Your home, that is.”
Cecile’s eyes lit up, and she started off. Throughout dinner, the back-and-forth of the village that once-was relived itself in Cecile’s words. Avaron didn’t hear anything especially amazing—hunting, mining, the old gripes she had with others her age. Still, the small talk being what it was, it passed the dinner splendidly, the soup and bread alike disappearing. By the end of it, the trays had been set aside, and Avaron was sitting in a nest of blankets and pillows. Tsugumi splayed across her lap, rather undignified if uncaring about it. Cecile seemed more comfortable with their nakedness, but her skin remained red-rosy and flushed.
“Are you alright?” Avaron asked, running her fingers across Tsugumi’s scalp. A rather soothing action, to both of them it seemed.
“I’m fine?” Cecile returned certainly.
“Your face has been red for a while.”
“Oh? Oh! Yes, it’s quite warm in here, isn’t it?” Cecile laughed, fingering the collar of her thin robe. “I should leave for you two to get some rest.”
“Before you do, there is something I’m curious about.”
“Yes, what?” Cecile asked, and goodness she exuded an adorable energy. It almost reminded Avaron of one of those peppy, always going college girls but far less experienced in living that way.
“It’s just, how long have you lived here by yourself?” Often she heard ‘the color drained from the face’, but never so literally as right then. All of Cecile’s bubbly hotness drained into a dreary, depressed smile. Realizing all-too-late how much of a sore spot it was, Avaron waved her hand. “Let me rephrase that. We’ll be leaving when the weather is good and I’m all together gain. Do you want to come with us?”
“L-leave with you?” Cecile chirped, her words dubious. She looked away and rubbed her arm, brow furrowing. “That’s, ehm, kind of you, but I cannot.”
“It’s not some magical curse, right? Tsu here—gack!” Avaron horked at the sudden, pierce jab of fingers into her side. “What?! It’s true.”
“Do not speak as if I am not here,” Tsugumi remarked dryly.
“It’s nothing of the sort,” Cecile said, smiling demurely.
“All the same!” Avaron said, throwing her hands up in the air at Tsugumi’s pouting. “You’re welcome to come with us. A good woman like you shouldn’t have to live alone.”
Cecile scratched her head. “Ah, thank you. I need to take care of these dishes! Mold is rather dangerous here.” Flashing a smile and moving with a quickness that betrayed her, the dorgian gathered up all bowls and leftovers onto her tray. “Please, have a good night.”
“We will,” Tsugumi said, smirking.
A little bit of color bled into Cecile’s cheeks again, and she bowed her head before hurrying out. In the silence of her departure, Avaron sighed and looked up at the ceiling.
“… In the time I’ve been here,” Tsugumi said in a low voice, “I figured out some things.”
“Oh?”
“The dorgians left to live in other lands. Cecile, however, did something bad enough to warrant exile. She’s remained here ever since, for hundreds of years.”
“Like, murder, or …?”
“I don’t know. She doesn’t give that impression, if she did.”
“Still, all the same. Hundreds of years in isolation is a harsh punishment in and of itself.”
“You don’t say.”
“Wait, ho—hurk!” Another jab right into Avaron’s side. Then another, and another. She bore it all, letting Tsugumi vent herself while she pouted rather adorably.
It would be, they eventually fell asleep with Avaron cuddling Tsugumi from behind, both too tired to try anything fun for the night.
*~*
Crunch, crunch, crunch. The snow underfoot, however light it was, filled her ears with its comfortable sound. At least that’s still the same, Avaron thought, hefting the sack on her back again. In her great kindness, Cecile had imparted upon them clothes, fabrics, a metal pot, bowls, and all kinds of very needed items for roughing it in the wilds. Although quite aged, they kept well enough. “You’re positive about our direction?” she asked Tsugumi, leading the way ahead.
“The village may be deserted but the roadways are the same. Descending in the east there will be a forest, and an old spring next to a cave.”
“I hope we get there in time.”
“… We should.”
Still, Avaron couldn’t help stopping and looking back, gazing at the stone buildings far behind them. Half-built into a mountainous face, it reminded her of Shadowpeak, if far, far more rustic. No lights to be seen, no movement, just a silent, lightly snow-covered ruin. Cecile’s sad smile lingered in her mind, and she grit her teeth.
“Avaron?” Tsugumi asked uncertainly.
“It just isn’t right,” Avaron said, turning back. She marched up to and beyond Tsugumi, heading down the roadway. “Leaving her there like that.”
For once, Tsugumi had nothing to say, her own eyes tight as any who would be stuck in an unsolvable situation.
They had their own problems to sort out first.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Lukewarm Intrigue
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Chapter 10: Hive Rising
Chapter Text
If a person lives for eternity without speaking, did they live at all?
*~*
“Please tell me this is it.”
“This is it.”
“Thank the goddesses!” Avaron enthused, falling to her knees and throwing her hands up in exaltation. “No more walking!
A rocky wall ahead of them, ostensibly a small cliff but more of a mountainside, gushed with a beautiful, sparkling river. The gaping maw of a cave loomed ahead, half of it spitting forth the river, the other half looking rather curious. Wooden support beams framed the entrance, and a smoothed out, compact dirt floor led the way in. Very much the aftermath of a mining operation, once-upon-a-time, hardly anything remained except wooden work stumps, some broken planks, and other worthless debris. The river pooled into a large spring—or a small lake—nearby, its edges lined with rocks quite deliberately put there for foundation. From the small lake, another river bled out into the forest they just now emerged from.
Truly, a sight to set her heart at ease.
“I cannot believe someone mined here!” Tsugumi said, shrill with anger. “What a waste of a good spring!”
“Look on the bright side?” Avaron said, drawing three dry looking eyes toward her. “The caves probably got sealed up or cleaned out of anything living in them.”
“If nothing moved in since.”
“I—right, yeah. Well, let’s, uhh, drop our packs off there by the entrance and take a look.”
The landing—or work area—was fairly spacious, if overgrown with grass and small plants. Between the mine’s entrance and the edge of the forest, she might two or three big houses, so it wasn’t likely anything could sneak across their new front yard. Avaron had an eye out for nails or other rusty pieces of metal, but the whole place seemed ‘clean’. Or rather, someone had cleaned it up at one point, and the debris piles were overgrown. More importantly, she didn’t smell anything except plants and water.
“It might be clear,” Avaron said cautiously. “I don’t smell crap or anything animals leave behind.”
“… Smell?”
“My sense of smell is, well, rather strong. It’s hard to explain, but I notice everything for a good distance.”
“I—I see.”
Avaron looked over curiously, but Tsugumi seemed far too busy fussing over her hair suddenly. “Still, might be something inside. How do you want to check it out?”
“Someone of my experience can clear out a simple cave without issue.”
“Pregnant and by yourself? Listen we both know I’ll survive damn near anything at this point. Can you do some magic attacks or something while I act as bait?”
Tsugumi puffed her cheeks up for a moment, but quickly schooled herself. Such a quick, jarring transition spoke well of her professionalism. “My webs can shine with light and carry a sharply bladed edge. It will be slower, but quite safe.”
“Your webs can make light?”
“The [Illumination] spell makes things glow brightly like a torch. A useful trick back when I had a party.”
“Yeah, for real,” Avaron said, her brows rising with a rather impressed face. “Okay, I’ll find a stick here, you wrap your webs around it and I’ll have my torch. I take lead, and you do your work from behind.”
“That should work.”
All their traveling packs and baggage off, Avaron felt rather light on her feet. She found a broken pole around four feet in length, and Tsugumi made the sticky, knobbed end of spider silk. Holding her hands near it, the silk came alive with a faint lilac glow that brightened and brightened. As painful to look at as any other torch, it seemed well even in the outside daylight. Nodding in satisfaction, she said, “Okay. I’m ready. You?”
“Ready.”
Avaron turned toward the cave-slash-mine entrance. A yawning darkness awaited, broken by the sound of running water. Not quite a roar, nor a babble, but one that would certainly hide other noises. She sucked in a breath and tried to steel herself. Can’t believe I’m fuckin’ doing this but, she thought, boldly stepping forward. Silk torch held in front, she looked around, only finding a tunnel straight ahead.
“Okay, so—”
Two strands of silk shot over her, plastering across the jagged ceiling. Lilac light soon followed, glowing bright enough the darkness disappeared for quite a way. Avaron blinked, staring at the dark cave turned hallway in front of her. She looked over her shoulder at Tsugumi, who remained keenly focused. Alright, that’s on me, Avaron thought before heading in deeper.
Some work had been done to smooth out the path. A small barrier guarded against the running water on the left. The floor and walls alike had been roughly sanded down, while the ceiling remained in its natural form. For a good minute at their pace, it was a simple way inward. However, a mouth in the wall appeared on her right, more wooden supports framing the entrance. Avaron squinted, keeping her distance but ever slowly peaking around the corner. “A tunnel,” she said in a low voice. One that had been mined at some point, the hallmarks of tools on every surface there was.
“Can you shoot that web down here?”
“A moment.”
Tsugumi came in close, and extending her hand around Avaron, aimed with her fingers. A magical light lit between them, and a long, jetting strand of silk shot out. It plastered across the ground, forming a long, luminous line that lit the entire tight space rather quickly. In all, just a tunnel that didn’t go very far, nothing at all to be found. “Looks clear to me?” Avaron asked.
“It’s clear.”
“Alright, onward then.”
They found another, similar tunnel not too far ahead. In repeating their routine, they discovered the same result. Then they found another, then another, and so on. “It looks like prospecting,” Avaron said between their tunnel checks. “Looking for shallow metal reserves or something.”
“They must’ve found something.”
“Why do you think?”
“If they didn’t the floor wouldn’t be this sculpted.”
“Ah, fair point,” Avaron conceded with a nod.
The mundaneness of the checking wore on, six tunnels becoming twelve. The deeper they went, the calmer the air became, the outside light all gone now. Only Tsugumi’s lilac glow illuminated their world, bright as it was in its purplish tinge. “How deep does this go?” Avaron asked.
“There is a waterfall inside, the path should end before it.”
“Mm, I see.”
A dull roar soon filled the air, the ever distinct sound of water crashing down from on-high. True to Tsugumi’s words, their path ended before a deep, watery lake within the cave. A mighty stream blasted down into it, foaming and churning a haze of mist. One last prospecting tunnel remained, itself no real different than the others. “Is that all of it?” Avaron asked in a yell over the loud waterfall.
“Yes, I think it’s safe!” Tsugumi returned.
“Let’s get out, then! Doublecheck as we do so!”
*~*
By the time they reached outside again, the sun had noticeably dipped from late afternoon toward twilight. Not quite orange heavens and looming darkness, but getting there. Avaron found some stumps, and with a bit of heavy lifting, brought them over to their supplies. The two then sat down, collecting themselves.
“Well, at least it’s clear. That’ll make the rest of this pretty easy.”
“The rest of what?”
“Err … building our home?”
“You’re a carpenter?” Tsugumi asked with a disbelieving look.
“No …? Oh, wait, the goddesses didn’t send a message about that, did they?”
“No?”
“Ah, wonderful, I can have some secrets of my own then.” Tsugumi wasn’t that amused even if Avaron couldn’t help chuckling. “We, uh, will have to figure out something in the short term here. But, don’t worry. Goddesses as my witness, I promise you’ll have a nice home and some real, good comforts.”
Tsugumi blinked all six eyes unevenly for a moment, her face darkening slightly with a blush. She hid behind her hands, knees locking together as she squirmed on the spot. “Oh, my own home! Really?” she asked, a touch high in tone and peeking out between her fingers.
Avaron rubbed the back of her head sheepishly. “It, uh, might not be as fancy as that inn of yours. It’ll take some work for me.”
“W-well!” Tsugumi crossed all four arms and stuck her nose up. “I certainly hope not! My family worked at that inn for … well, generations. Of which I’m the last, undoubtedly. Nevermind that!” She waved a hand dismissively. “We shall make a new inn out here.”
“Uh, would there even be other people out here?” Avaron asked. “Isn’t this kind of the ass end of nowhere?”
“Not quite. This spring borders elvetahn lands—” Tsugumi pointed out to the forest they kind of skirted the edge of. “They are reclusive, but they will trade for my silks. To the, hmm, south-ish direction, there was once the border city of humans that traded with them. Unless they all up and left like the dorgians as well!”
Avaron smirked seeing that pouting, irritable face. Then two plus two equaled five in her mind and she did a double-take. “Sorry, hold up. Elvetahn?”
“Hm? The humans called them elves but they hate that.”
“Uh, tall, skinny, beautiful? Big ears, ethereal air and stupidly long live-spans?”
“Yes? That’s them.”
Avaron squinted. Suddenly quite fearful for my tenty again. Oh, no, let’s not imagine what elven pussy is like. Nope. Not thinking about it. Noooot— “So, anyway!” she coughed out. “I’ll uh, get to work on some shelter here. I could use the help with your webbing, though.”
“For what?”
“Plaster, binding agent, reinforcement, that sort of stuff. There’s enough scrap wood leftover here I think I can make something.” Tsugumi looked at her like she’d grown a second head. “What?”
“… Using my webbing for that?”
“Can I—Can I not?”
Tsugumi hid her lips behind her hand, but her cheeks lifted in the most mysterious smile. “Such an odd idea. Go on, then, my dear queen, how shall I work?”
Goodness she was being teased and Avaron couldn’t help the delighted shiver down her back. The enthusiasm and sweet, submissive tone tickled some part of her brain in an oh-so specific way. A very primal way that was more about doing something unspeakable in polite company. Avaron quickly stood up and stretched, all-too-aware her once distant sex-drive quickly reigniting again. “Alright! I’ll start clearing out a spot here and …”
The idea started out simply enough in her mind, but two problems became apparent when Avaron started doing the work. One: she hadn’t gone camping since she was a kid, and two: only the goddesses knew if any of what she made would stick up. Thankfully, she had a lot of spare material laying around in reasonably ‘decent’ condition. Some wood was rotting and ended up thrown out, while all the leftover nails and such she carefully collected into a broken box. Still, perhaps Tsugumi’s webbing would be the saving grace.
Her chosen spot was next to the cave/mind entrance. The wall curved somewhat, enough that a good pole at a certain angle made a simple box layout. By using the web to connect the pole to the walls, she had a loose frame. The rest came down to stacking up the leftover parts into the walls, while leaving a gap for a ‘door’. By the time night fell, her ingenious design stood as a six-foot, walled-in enclosure and a gap against the stony wall for an entrance. She managed to half-cover the ‘roof’ with the big blanket she’d wrapped most of their supplies in.
Stepping in through the entrance, Avaron looked around the small enclosure, good enough for a sleeping area, all their backpack supplies, and a fire pit against the stone wall. Tsugumi followed in after, looking around inquisitively. “Now that the webbing has had time to dry …” Avaron muttered and gave the slapped-together wall a bit of a shove. It groaned and thumped, but surprisingly held up. A few more hits in different locations affirmed all of it holding up surprisingly well. Despite its completely ramshackle, woodplanks-at-odd-angles and gunky, solidified spider web gluing it all together.
“Awesome!” Avaron declared and thrust a hand out toward Tsugumi. The spider woman jumped a little and looked at it dubiously. “Uh, high five?”
“High what?”
“Slap your hand into mine.”
Half of Tsugumi’s brows rose up in perplexity, but she did so, their (dummy thicc) hands clapping together softly.
“Yay, we did it!” Avaron enthused with a smile that made Tsugumi snort-giggle. “Okay, it’s not the greatest, but it’ll do for now.”
“It’s certainly, uhm, interesting.”
“Yeah, yeah,” Avaron waved it off. “Go ahead and rest, I’ll make dinner.” A hand on her shoulder decided to move her from their backpacks to their bedding area. Tsugumi smiled with a look that brokered no argument.
“I’ll cook.”
“But—”
“Sit.”
Avaron plopped down onto a stump, now a shoddy chair/stool. “I can cook, you know.”
“I would do more than sit around and string my webbing everywhere.”
To be certain, Avaron did the vast majority of the heavy lifting. She had Tsugumi apply the material and shape it, but as far as moving parts or laying it down, that was all her. Blowing a gentle raspberry, she nonetheless kept her peace about the matter. Slouching forward, elbows on her knees and head resting on her hands, she stared at the ground. Well, now that this is all done, what is there to do … something, something, growing the Hive?
She opened her menu and took a look through the [Hive Management] section.
Hmm. [Growth Management]?
[There is no nearby Hive Growth to manage. To create a new Hive Growth, you must assimilate part of the local environment.]
Avaron’s brow furrowed and a helpful info box popped up.
[To begin environmental assimilation, deposit a Queen’s Ovipositor.]
Now hold up a second there, miss info-box. What?
[The thing you use to cum and knock up women with.]
Avaron did a double-take, but the window that had popped up vanished just as quick as it came. That … okay? She wasn’t too on the uptake how her tenty could do something like that. How do I even—A sudden, rather jarring squirm came from her belly. So strong was it she stood up immediately, a keen, instinctual feeling that told her something wanted out. “I, uhh, need to do something. I’ll be right back,” she offered lamely and hurried out before Tsugumi even said anything. Dead-ass sprinting into the cave-mine, the faint light of the magical webbing yet remained, although far dimmer.
Water, a lot of water. She needed that right now.
In reaching the end of the path, and the roar of the waterfall drowning out everything, Avaron stopped and climbed over the safety fence. The frigid water rose up to her tits, but solid ground met her feet thankfully. A churning, jarring movement in her guts followed, almost bucking her knees and sending her face first into the water. Avaron frantically ripped down her pants, barely getting one let out before another spasm came. Sucking air and huffing out every breath, she squeezed up against the wall behind her.
“Oh, sweet, merciful fuuuuuuuuu—” Avaron went cross-eyed as a mighty, lurching slither descending down her gut. It wasn’t just her tentacle anymore! Something bigger, bulbous and squirming followed after it. Never waiting nor pitiful, her pussy lips spread open as the tentacle peaked out. Wriggling with ever greater excitement, it extended, and extended, and extended. The bulge in her belly left out in a mighty, silent pop as the whole organ finally broke free. Avaron gasped aloud as it released, her held breath finally breaking. Even the frigid water felt hot around her, though the warmth quickly bled away in the current. Blinking her blurry eyes, Avaron couldn’t see anything of her tentacle anymore in the darkness.
A darkness she sat in and couldn’t see through.
Fear, more than any other overwhelming sensation, made her scramble up and over the wall. Falling onto the dry floor with a sloshing, wet-plop, she laid on her back, catching her breath. Thankfully, her pants remained hooked on one of her legs.
A menu popped up in front of her eyes.
[The Hive Growth will begin assimilating the local environment.]
“Cool, thanks,” Avaron said, panting. “I want a report on my desk before lunch tomorrow.”
No window popped up at that request. If the Goddesses really did speak through the windows, she found them rather lacking in humor.
Ah, but how to explain to Tsugumi why she was sopping wet?
*~*
Morning rolled around, punctuated by chirping birds and noisy insects, alive and well. Avaron blinked her sleepy eyes and reflexively stretched—or, one half of her did. The other half was buried under Tsugumi and her naked, if blanket covered, weight. Avaron looked around their enclosure, finding the slab-for-a-door was still in place and all their stuff was where it should be. This ‘go to sleep and pray’ shit is for the birds. I need a way better security system.
One more issue on her plate, she gently nudged Tsugumi awake. The two of them dressed, and while Tsugumi unpacked more of their food supplies, Avaron was busy striking stones at the fire pit. “Oh, come on,” she muttered under her breath. “I get it in the first two tries yesterday and this does fuck all?” She’d kill for a lighter or a box of matches. “Dry kindling, small sticks to start …”
Tink, tink, tink went the striking stones.
“Good morning!” came a man’s voice from outside their enclosure.
Their two heads snapped toward each other at the sound, both their brows shooting up. Avaron slowly rose up as Tsugumi lowered the food in her hands down, her fingers flexing awake.
“Now don’t be unneighborly or anything!” the man said with a gay laugh. “I’m just here to talk, maybe cut a deal.”
“And who are you?” Avaron asked back loudly.
“Name’s Tahn! Or so the small folk call me.”
“… Tahn, the father of the elvetahn?” Tsugumi asked, sounding rather perplexed.
“That’s right!”
Tsugumi looked upward and smiled bemusedly, and Avaron did the same. Over them towered a tree with a face, built with the body of a boyish looking man. Skin of bark, hair of leaves, but otherwise very much a person if one actually recognized him as one.
“Say, don’t I know you?” Tahn asked, curling a hand under his chin. “Don’t see much tora around these parts.”
“I’m Tsugumi. My party came by here a couple hundred years ago and helped kill the plagued beast.”
“Ohh, that’s right! I recognize you now!” he said, slapping a fist into his palm, rattling all the leaves on his gigantic frame. “Say, how are you still alive? Tora don’t live this long.”
“It’s a long-short story. Magic.”
“Ah, always is. Golly, this does make my request a lot more easy.”
The two women looked at each other, and Avaron asked, “What request?”
“Well, you see,” Tahn said, and leaned up against the wall their enclosure used. “I’m in a bit of a snare here. One of my daughters is being right unruly, really angry and just unpleasant to be around. And her whole queendom isn’t doing the best, either.”
“O-kay …” Avaron said, her gaze dragging toward Tsugumi. “Who is this guy?”
“Tahn, the all-father of the elvetahn. He’s a god.”
“Let me guess, fertility, nature, drinking and partying?”
“Hey, how’d you know?!” Tahn said with a laugh.
“Lucky guess,” Avaron remarked dryly. “So what do you want from us, then?”
“Ah, not her—” Tahn said, pointing with a big finger at Tsugumi, then toward Avaron, “—you.”
“Me?”
“That fine goddess of yours told me you’d be a real help. Now that I’m thinking about it, a week or month or two with a tentradom might be great for my daughter.”
“Why?”
“Fuck the anger out of her, of course! Who can be mad after great sex?”
“I don’t think that’d work for long …” Avaron said, with the utmost care and neutrality in her voice.
Tahn blinked and nodded, curling a fist under his chin. “Mm, no, you’re right. Ah, I know! A marriage!”
“You can do that?”
“I am Tahn. They will listen if they wish to remain in my forests.”
Seeing a bit of a subtle threat there toward me too, you know. Avaron hemmed and hawed before looking over toward Tsugumi. “Well, what’s your vote?”
Six eyes blinked and Tsugumi smiled warmly. “I adore your asking of me, dear customer. There’s much for us to gain from it, is there not?”
“I mean, maybe …”
“Let us meet her first and see.”
“Ah, that does give me an idea.” In turning back to look up at Tahn, Avaron saw him looking down quite interestedly at them. “Alright, so you want me to marry your daughter. Who is she, exactly?”
“Efval Gladestride, a queen or something with the others.”
Avaron rubbed her temple, trying to stave off that whole slew of problems she knew was coming. “Okay, what are you offering me in return?”
Tahn blinked and seemed a bit taken aback. “Is her hand not enough?”
“Going out of my way to marry your daughter for my whole life, here.”
“Oh, true, true,” Tahn said with a sagely nod, leaves falling off his head at the motion. “What do you want?”
The gay, whimsical tone flattened—not to be threatening, but whether it was seriousness or displeasure, Avaron couldn’t tell. Tapping her chin in thought, she stood for a moment, squinting and looking around, wracking her brain. Protection? No, his daughter might offer that along with her queendom. Riches, too. Something from him, something from a forest god … ah, actually! She slapped a fist into her palm, feeling a proverbial light bulb go off. “You’re a god, right? Can you grant skills?”
“… To an extent,” Tahn said, rather blatantly curious in his voice now.
“Okay, here’s my terms. You want me to marry your daughter; I want your botanical knowledge.”
“Botanical?”
“Err, knowledge of plants, fungi, trees. You know, what’s edible, what’s poisonous …”
“Oh. Ohh! Interesting!” Tahn laughed, the deep sound rattling their ears. “I didn’t think you an alchemist.”
“I’m not, I’m just stupid when it comes to living in a forest.”
“Ah? Ahaha!”
Avaron had to resist covering her ears at his laughing again. She worried their enclosure might collapse, but the walls just kept rattling. When Tahn finally quieted down, he seemed in high spirits. Or, something like it, with flowers literally blooming across his bark-like body and birds coming to eat out of them. He crouched down and extended his head toward them, his huge body creaking and groaning.
“It’s a deal then. You marry my daughter, I grant my knowledge to you.”
Avaron looked at Tsugumi, who nodded approvingly, and looked back to Tahn. She grasped his finger as best she could and shook, which was mostly just her arm moving up and down. As soon as the agreement was made, tendrils of spindly green light crawled through Tahn’s finger, racing down her arm. She reflexively jerked away and stared as they faded into her. Superstitiously turning her hand over and pulling up her raggedy sleeve, she found no marks or anything left over.
[You have gained Forest God’s Knowledge: Botany lv.1 (Special)]
[By observing plants, fungi, and other associated matter, you will come to recall vast knowledge concerning them. The level of this skill will increase with every observation, and all relevant knowledge to a specific item will become available upon observation. All previously observed items can be recalled with perfect memory.]
Oh, good, it doesn’t blast my brain with a huge download or something. Avaron sighed with relief and rubbed the back of her neck. At least I can forage now and find something that won’t kill us the second we lick it.
“Ah, wonderful!” Tahn said, drawing himself back. “I shall send your wife to soon! Maybe a few days, with how—”
“Ah.”
Tsugumi’s simple, dry exclamation accompanied a sudden dripping sound. Avaron looked over and found her legs suddenly soaked in something wet and odd smelling. All six of her ruby eyes were wide, and her hands were on her belly, no longer quite as round as it used to be. “Tsu?” Avaron asked hesitantly.
“My water broke.”
“Oh. Oh, shit.”
“And that’s my sign to leave!” Tahn said with a laugh, turning around and stepping away. Despite his enormous size, the earth didn’t move at all. “Best of luck you two!”
And so Avaron and Tsugumi discovered the joys of giving birth—or, more correctly, Tsugumi laying white-skinned, lilac veined eggs and each one triggering a mini-orgasm. You know, until she passed out ahegao style and Avaron was left with another traumatic experience since visiting this world.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Lukewarm Intrigue
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Chapter 11: Imminent Threat
Chapter Text
Life conspires always.
*~*
Richly bright mahogany eyes swept through the thinning forest, ever alert for danger. She need not to, for her elite guard did well in covering every possible angle of attack. Efval still did so all the same, ever more the warrior than any of her servants. It was she who led at the front, and she who yelled at them to march, after all. Were it not for her grand commandments, they would’ve lost more of their land—if not all of it. She clenched her teeth at the thought, shapely upturned, round eye convulsing with barely-repressed anger.
Not only did she have a war on her hands, her damnable forebearer turned up out of nowhere!
Praise Tahn, our great father, and spit upon his nonsensical decisions! she seethed in the refuge of her mind. A marriage? Now, of all bloody times? Worse, invoking his right as lineage bearer, she hadn’t anything to refuse! The priestess became ecstatic and her advisors all rather lively at the thought of a new king on the throne. Her throne.
She’d slit their throat on the spot if the All-Father hadn’t made it clear they were protected.
For how great an injustice it was, it wouldn’t be the first she endured.
In the name of her people, she’d sell out to ensure the All-Father’s blessings continued. They scarce couldn’t afford such great boons being taken away. It truly might spell the end of the elvetahn if he decided to.
Oh, but how she dearly wished she could kill them. It would be such wonderful relief spraying his putrid blood across the earth and feed the woods. The caribou underneath her reared back for a moment, a misstep of some kind. She turned a disdainful look upon the path ahead, rough and wild. It lacked splendor and beauty, befitting of the farthest edge of the great Alva Forest. Whoever lived out so far undoubtedly had to been an outcast, or some other undesirable unneeded in her queendom.
Then again, recluses can often sometimes be amongst the most powerful.
If luck favored her, Tahn found some hidden gem that would secure their borders and bring prosperity. Hopefully someone with enough sense to do what she said. Efval really didn’t care to let someone else cause a mess for her to clean up. She squinted, staring ahead at that ever-clearer view of a sloping mountainous face. The river they’d been following led into it, perhaps a hidden cave or something.
“Clemina,” Efval said, and the head of her guard headed up alongside her immediately. Dressed in a full-body light armor, the white-padded cloth sat snug beneath green armor plates, carrying a regal air befitting of their role. “What is this place?”
“The source of the Bahnda River. I remember the maps saying a human company tried prospecting here, but never found anything.”
Efval squinted. Who would live in an abandoned mine?
She really rather hoped the All-Father had the decency to find someone of some skill. Spending quite literally hours polishing her fine, richly brown skin, arranging her white hair into spiraling loops, and getting rare Eternium flowers to frame her moonsilver crown. Not to mention the fitting of the dress, which rather complicated the armor she absolutely must wear when leaving the safety of the palace. Only an idiot would walk out in an uncertain land without some kind of protection.
It truly tested her to not let her mind run wild with speculation.
Instead, Efval snapped her hand forward in a point. Much of her guard went ahead, scouting the area.
Hanging back at the edge of the clearing, she awaited their signal. A person, then another, left out of some sort of shack near the mine’s entrance. One was dressed in rather exotic looking robes—no, more akin to a dress, she realized. Squinting her sharp eyes, she found the other lacking in their own attire. Brown pants, shirt, and a cloak of some kind befitting a traveler or other nobody. Or, perhaps a servant? That fit the idea better in her mind.
One of the forward guards raised a hand, signaling the all-clear.
“I am rather curious as to who the All-Father found, your majesty,” came Bisnar’s remark as he putted his caribou up alongside hers. “I hadn’t thought there to be any talented people left we didn’t know of.”
Efval glanced at the queendom minister, dressed in his white and green robes of office. Ever the astute soul with a clean-cut face, his calculative expression hid behind a colorful pair of monarch butterfly-esque glasses. She’d rather he not accompany along, but his damnably long ears heard all the same. “That is all the more concerning,” she said after a moment, and then encouraged her caribou forward. The rest of them, likewise, followed suit. “That would mean someone not of the forest, and I doubt the people shall accept a foreigner.”
“In the past, perhaps not,” Bisnar said agreeingly in his round-about manner. “Perhaps it is what is needed now, however.”
“You dare to say we elvetahn need others?” Efval asked, the serenity of her tone dripping with acid.
“… We are being pushed back, your majesty. If there is not a dramatic change in course, then—”
“Enough.”
Bisnar quieted immediately, bowing his head even if Efval didn’t see it.
“We have no need of outsiders; least of all one lone person given something they do not deserve. We shall do as the All-Father bids, but it is our own strength that will see us through.”
“… As you say, your majesty.”
They collectively pulled into the clearing in front of the shack, her guard forming a semi-circle with her at the center. At the other end stood the two people, one of six ruby-colored eyes and lilac skin, the other the whitest shade she’d ever seen. In fact, the white one looked more like a statue that could move around than any person, especially with its bizarrely blue veins and connective tissues. A golem? Efval wondered, her narrowed eyes sizing up the six eyed woman instead. “You are a tora?” she asked.
“I am.”
“Strange. Your kind do not live in my forest.”
“No, we don’t,” the tora said with a rueful smile.
“What business do you have here?”
The tora bowed, hands in front of her thighs and reaching a modest 45-degree angle. “We aim to make a new home here, your highness.”
“… We?”
“Including me, I hope,” the golem said, rather startling all of the elvetahn.
Only Efval kept her peace, her eyes narrowing dangerously. “What manner of creature are you?”
“Something rather unique.” The not-golem said, infuriatingly evasive. “What is your business here, miss … what did you say her name was?” The not-golem looked over to one of her guards, who looked rather put on the spot now that everyone else did, too.
“Ahem, her highness, our queen Efval Gladestride,” he answered, dutiful if curt.
“Blessed is his name, Tahn, our All-Father, has decreed my betrothed is here,” Efval said, loud and commanding in her clarity. “I seek the man named Avaron. Where is he?”
“Oh, that does complicate things, doesn’t it …” the not-golem muttered, curling a hand under her chin.
“Do not waste my time with nonsense.” Efval quite detested how casually her words were waved away just then. Such blatant disrespect made her eye twitch on reflex and her jaw clench.
“This is Tsugumi,” the not-golem said, holding a hand out toward the tora woman. “And I’m Avaron.”
Silence wafted in between them all, and Efval for a brief, blissful moment, left her body with the power of sheer disbelief. It would be Bisnar who coughed into his hand and edged forward into the conversation.
“Forgive me, but you say Tsugumi … she of the band of six? The Dragonslayer Band, if I remember correctly.”
“Oh, how embarrassing,” Tsugumi said, covering her face with two hands while the others fidgeted. “I haven’t heard that name in a long time.”
“That …” Bisnar ran quiet, his brow furrowing. “I was not aware tora could survive for more than a century.”
“It’s complicated. You could see I ended up trapped out of time. I broke free some weeks ago, in no small part thanks to Avaron here.”
“I—I see. I remember the Dragonslayer Band coming to defeat the Plagued Beast when I was a sapling. We never properly repaid you for thus.”
“Oh, we did receive much, but the others were rather troubled by all the riches.”
“As heroes are wont to be.”
“Starting to think you haven’t told me the whole story, Tsugumi,” Avaron said, glancing at the bashful tora woman.
“Enough!” Efval said, the thunder of her anger quieting even the birds nearby. “You presume to tell me you—” she thrust an accusing finger at Avaron, “—are the one the All-Father betrothed me to?!”
“Yup.”
Her eye contorted, a reflexive spasm of pure rage slipping out of control for a brief moment. “You’re not even a man!”
“I guess you could say I’m a little of both but that’s a real technical argument. Listen, so I get that you’re angry—” all the guards and Bisnar conveniently took a few steps back with their caribou. A fact not quite missed by Avaron, who paused for one long, pregnant moment. “But, uhh, yeah. I’d go take it up with him.”
The sensibility of the idea disappeared beneath the indignity of being told what to do. “You—” Efval’s hissing words disappeared in a gust of wind, blowing across them all. With it came words, the whispers of Tahn himself right into her long, elegant ear. Seizing up with pure shock, the queen stared in utter disbelief, her ears twitching up and down. She couldn’t be hearing that at all! Her?! HER?! Efval’s grip on the reins tightened and tightened, hard enough the very leather of her gloves began to creak from the stress.
She refused!
Even from him, this was too much!
Turning her caribou around, Efval left into the forest, her tight face belying the rage underneath. She’d give the All-Father himself a great thrashing for such an indignity!
*~*
Avaron stared as most of the elvetahn left with their queen suddenly, only the one fellow in the funny glasses and his two guards remaining. He let out a long, suffering sigh, then dismounted from his deer. In approaching them, he held a hand over his chest and bowed.
“Forgive her highness, she is one to take difficulty with unexpected developments.”
“I’m seeing that,” Avaron remarked dryly. “Well, her poor reception aside, how might I help you, mister …?”
“Ah, a certain lack of manners on my behalf. I am Bisnar Treeshade, minister of the queendom in her majesty’s stead.”
“Minister?”
“When her majesty is away, it falls to me to tend to our forest.”
“Mm, I see. An underappreciated position in its great importance.”
Bisnar blinked, a moment of bewilderment cracking his otherwise impassive façade. “… Indeed, though it is not my place to say.”
“As someone who was in a rather similar position, once upon a time, I empathize with your plight. Now, how might I help you, good Bisnar?”
“I’d prefer to speak of your impending marriage to her majesty, and, as they say, work out the details.”
“I’m not too certain if that will continue on if she kills Tahn or something.”
“Kill the … ahem, no, not at all.” Bisnar coughed into his hand, and despite his certain words, his whole demeanor betrayed uncertainty. Efval very might well do so, and neither of them could refute it. “I have heard the words of the All-Father. I cannot imagine many will dare to stand against them.”
Their people’s reverence for that strange tree-man was quite concerning to her. Nonetheless, Avaron shrugged and made a sweeping gesture to her little crap-shack by the mine. “It’s not much, but come in and sit. We were making stew for breakfast.”
“My thanks for your generosity.” Bisnar turned to his guards, and ordering them to keep watch, accompanied Avaron and Tsugumi inside. He took up a seat on a turned over box as Avaron sat on a stump opposite of him. Tsugumi, opting to tend the food and fire, busied herself working out a ‘decent’ meal out of impossible ingredients. A not inconsiderable feat given their dwindling supplies.
“Right then,” Avaron said, and firmly setting her hands on her knees, regarded Bisnar. “Tahn propositioned this marriage to me although I hadn’t quite imagined it’d be this, well …” she trailed off, waving a hand toward where Efval had been prior. “You know.”
“Indeed, I do,” Bisnar said with a solemn nod. “The All-Father does liken to some, inscrutable, decisions, but his intentions are ever kind and noble.”
“He does give off that sort of feeling,” Avaron agreed with a nod, her words only a little truthful. ‘Crazy’ sat on her mind more than any other, but she wouldn’t let that little devil slip out. “For the sake of conversation, let us say this marriage goes through. How will that put me, you know, in your society?”
Folding his hands together, Bisnar kept a straight-backed posture and a dignified air, despite their undignified surroundings. “Traditionally, it is the queen who rules supreme, and her king acts as her voice at home while she is busy. The, ahem, role I’m currently occupying as minister would be one who serves the king in his domestic affairs.”
“I imagine that’s what I’d end up as, then.”
“For want of another idea, yes. I cannot imagine her majesty will delegate any of her personal duties to anyone, marriage or not.”
“What does she do, precisely?”
“Everything, in simple words. In more recent years, however, our war against the Arden Empire has taken its toll. She oft leads as a general, rallying our armies and keeping the forest safe.”
“Mmm, war time.” Avaron held up two fingers in front of her lips, pressing them together in a contemplative look. “It’d be best for her to handle that, I’m not much of a fighter.”
“Indeed? I am most curious as to what you would offer to us and the forest, if you do not mind my asking.”
She’d rather not go making promises about her Hive, or her tentradom nature. Too much of that was up in the air about what did what or how, but she did have something. Avaron smirked for a moment and sat up straighter. “Like I said earlier, I used to be in a position like yours. Honestly, I quite enjoy managing people—making sure things are where they should be, insuring production stays up, and expanding the organization. How well that talent works out for your people, I honestly cannot say.”
“Mm. As a practical concern, let us pick a problem, say—food shortage. How might you go about solving that?”
Avaron hemmed and hawed, her face contorting with thought. “Bit a big one there, but the problem is in the details. Where do you source the food from? How are they handling production? Doublecheck everyone who makes the food, then check how they’re shipping it. A lot of food gets lost in transit if you don’t store it properly. Then, once it gets to its destination, how do you distribute it? I think it is of concern to the government to ensure everyone can eat, so they need to step in—big power, big money. Anyone who wants to make money off selling food, they do it more as a luxury item, maybe.”
Bisnar’s brows crept upward and he seemed rather impressed. “Astute observations, without the specifics.”
“When you’re running a big organization, the details is what matters the most. The more you know, the better you can guide things.” Avaron gave a half-hearted shrug with one arm. “Sometimes a big problem is a simple solution, but that’s a good day.”
Bisnar cracked a smile at that and he nodded sagely. “Spoken as someone who undoubtedly has been in my place before. It does me comfort to hear of your experience.”
That’s good, Avaron thought with a mental sigh. No reason to go into their house and shit on the floor. Their shocked faces might be funny, though, and she had to push that idea out of her mind. “If it’s not too much trouble, can you bring me up to speed on this war with some empire?”
“Ah, you are unaware of that?”
“Let’s say I want your perspective on it so we’re on the same idea here.”
“Mm, reasonable. A few years ago, the Arden Empire elected a new emperor. Eager for glory and more riches, he has invaded many neighboring lands he considered ‘weaker’. Some fell, others resisted, then he came to ours. In truth, we were unprepared for the ferocity his soldiers showed.” Bisnar’s face tightened, and he slouched forward, balancing himself with his elbows on his knees. “We do not have many cities as the other races might. Those we lost devastated our defense, and it is only recently we have fought the empire to a stalemate.”
“A bad situation, then.”
“To put it lightly. It is of some relief we have found out they are diverting much of their attention away from us.”
“Why is that?”
“The supposed summoning of many heroines in Artor, who only has one queendom separating them from the Empire.” Bisnar furrowed his brow. “For the time being, it seems they will invade that queendom, then Artor, to steal the heroines for themselves.”
“I doubt it’ll be that easy.”
“It is as you say. Artor and its surrounding neighbors have long resisted the Empire. It’ll be an enormous war, but their misfortune is our gain.” The minister sat up then and stared at the sky over them. “We can rally our strength and avenge our fallen as the Empire looks away. A truly wondrous opportunity her majesty will, passionately, not squander. Still …”
“I’m sensing disagreement …”
“Not disagreement so much as … concern.” Bisnar adjusted his collar then. Were he about to say something, Tsugumi stepped into frame, a bowl of earthen-meaty soup and spoon ready. She handed one to each them before going to retrieve her own and sit on the stool beside Avaron.
“I thank you for the courtesy,” Bisnar said, bowing his head toward Tsugumi, who nodded in turn. Their conversation took a pause as tentative slurps and gulps followed, the soup hot but not scalding. He let out a dry chuckle, a sort of conversational noise more than an honest laugh. “Life truly is mysterious.”
“Mm? How so?” Avaron asked lightly.
“I hadn’t ever expected to have a meal with a heroine of the Dragonslayer Band.”
“Please, you flatter me,” Tsugumi said with a laugh, waving him off with one hand. “That was so long ago.”
“And yet no less important.”
“What did they do?” Avaron asked, quite curious up until an elbow jabbed into her side. “Hurk!”
“A story I shall tell one day,” Tsugumi said, her smile making even Bisnar recoil a little bit.
“Ah, ahem, of course,” he said, his one glance toward Avaron bespoke with his retreat.
“Fine, fine,” Avaron grumbled, rubbing her now painless side. “Since I already spoiled the mood, what was it that worried about you with the Empire?”
His good mood clearly bled away then, a sour look setting in heavily. “To speak as an arrow on the matter—their new weapons. They call them sparkblasts, and it stands to reason it is why the Empire is so aggressive now.”
“Some kind of magic?” Tsugumi asked, frowning.
“It may, or may not be. Some are affected by magic, but mostly, no.”
“What does it look like it?” Avaron, rather concerned by the name, couldn’t help ask.
“Ehm … a long metal tube, set in a wooden handle. There’s a slot at the back of the barrel, where they put blasting powder before shoving a ball down the tu—”
“—They have guns?” Avaron said with utmost incredulity, enough Tsugumi started a little. Bisnar looked takenaback for a moment before tilting his head curiously.
“I’ve not heard of that name before.”
“If a bladed weapon is a sword, then a gun is the thing you’re describing.”
“I see.”
“You’re quite right to be wary of it. They are by far the most dangerous weapons this world will ever see.”
Bisnar pushed his glasses up his nose, and handing his bowl off to Tsugumi, folded his hands together. “You speak with some familiarity with them.”
“More than I would ever be comfortable with. By the sounds of it, you’re fighting the first generation—the first real, working and combat-ready ones. They’re scary but the Empire probably isn’t used to them yet. It’s the second and third generations that will show their true, terrifying potential. Armies that know how to use them, and guns refined to be used even better.”
“A year ago I might’ve dismissed it out of hand,” Bisnar said and then shook his head. “Now, I only wonder how to defeat it.”
“… Magic complicates things,” Avaron said, not quite sure how to tackle that big unknown. “Some forms are more effective than others, but the weapons themselves can be made magic too. But there is one thing to know—guns changed everything forever, and I saw the death of the sword, shield, spear, and bow, for none of those could defeat them again.”
Bisnar nodded along with her words, staring at the ground in a contemplative posture. “You speak of them with great experience, that is something we are in dire need of.”
“Consider it a gesture of good will, as a neighbor if not your queen’s, ehm, wife-to-be or what have you. I shall tell you what I know of guns, even if is not the same knowledge the Empire uses.”
Bisnar lightened up at that, and he bowed more formally, saying gratefully, “I thank you. I can only hope we can make use of it.”
“You sound afraid of it.”
“Her majesty’s sister was … killed, by these guns at the hands of the Empire. Despite all her strong passion, I cannot earnestly say she hates anything more than guns.”
“It is a good to hate them, for they are destruction incarnate. But one cannot have the luxury of hating them, if they do not have the strength to oppress them.”
“Indeed. If it is no trouble, there are those I would like you to speak to. It may take some time for me to gather them.”
“I’ll be here,” Avaron said with a dismissive wave. “If at all possible, I’d like an alchemist or someone who works with exotic powders, potions, or similar. Oh, and a metal worker, as I’m not sure if wood can handle the power of guns at all.”
“I shall try to include those as well. Given your—” Bisnar glanced around, “—circumstances, what might you have need of here?”
“Oh? Err …”
“Clothing, food, and perhaps some workers to make us an inn,” Tsugumi said, stepping in with a decisive smoothness. “In tora styles, if you know them still.”
Bisnar blinked alongside Avaron and then chuckled. “Of course, it’d be an honor to build the home of a heroine.”
“I can’t exactly pay for it …” Avaron said sheepishly, scratching the back of her head and looking away.
“Think nothing of it,” Bisnar said, waving dismissively much like Avaron had. “I believe in the All-Father’s wisdom, and that which you have told me has laid my fears to rest. It behooves us to help an ally who has already done much.”
Kind of feel like I’m cheating here, just talking about guns and basic economics … but okay? Avaron couldn’t really spill that tidbit out, amusing as it was in its own way. Knowledge is power and I do have a couple thousand years of human history, if an abridged form.
With their discussion seemingly finished, the three of them rose and left the enclosure. The guards came at Bisnar’s signal, taking up their positions next to him. “I must go now and find her highness. In time I shall visit again, and so I wish you fair winds and good harvest.”
Ah, damn cultural differences. Avaron nodded. “Safe travels, and good luck with her, ehm, highness.”
“Yes, indeed,” Bisnar sighed, and bowing his head, mounted up with his guard onto their deer. Giving one final wave, they hurried out into the forest, bouncing along the deer in a rather unexpected manner. Avaron half-expected them to gallop like horses, but no, there they went, bouncing like deer.
This fucking world, I swear to the goddesses, Avaron thought, rolling her eyes. She looked over to Tsugumi, who seemed almost too innocent standing there. “An inn, really?”
“Do not fault me for starting up my family business again.”
“I mean, I don’t mind, but who in the world is going to come out here to do business?”
“Them, apparently.”
Holding up a finger, Avaron’s mouth clicked shut at the rather simple shut-down she received. “Alright, fine. Well, help me get some bags or something. I’m going to go forage in the forest for something fresh to eat.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Lukewarm Intrigue
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride – Enraged Queen
Chapter 12: Growing Pains
Chapter Text
Life is work and work is endless; work for yourself.
*~*
Cradled in a basin of spider silk, Avaron stared down at the eggs Tsugumi had given birth to. Now that they’d had a few days, the shells had hardened into a kind of white porcelain similar to her own skin. The key difference was the chitin-like overlapping plates, and the lilac-colored veins that undulated and pulsed every so often. They were otherwise ‘fine’, or so her instincts told her. Some bizarre, strange answer that came at her desire to know about them.
Setting the tarp back down over the eggs, Avaron sat on the nearby stump-stool and crossed her arms. Let’s give this a real look over again, she thought, opening her menu and heading into [Hive Management]. New addition had appeared named [Drone Management], and she popped open the info screen on it again.
[Management of individual drones, drone strains, and their overall state of being. The skill [Hive Queen] is utilized to actually command or manage drones on an order or objective basis.]
Of course, she hadn’t found where or how to do that yet. In all likelihood, she probably needed actual drones up and moving about to find out that information. Sitting on a stump-stool, she leaned forward forward and propped her elbow on her knee and her head on her hand. Seems reasonable, but all it says in the screen is ‘unassigned drones: 32’. How do I assign them? Pursing her lips, Avaron stared at the screen until a new one suddenly popped open.
Genetic engineering …? Oh, right, that still. Wow this is a lot of information. Sitting up straight, her eyes roamed with a mechanical precision back and forth. All sorts of knowledge arrayed before her, from individual DNA-sequences to genomes, cellular compositions, and even a predictive organism growth model preview. Stranger still, despite never having seen any of it before in her life, she recognized it. Understood what each part meant, and even more distressingly, grasped how to manipulate them.
This … this is it, isn’t it? she thought before chuckling into her hand. Fuck me, this is more than a damn computer. I’m really not human anymore, am I?
Was such an insane ability the power of the divine? More than simply surviving impossible damage or something else, the power to create and manipulate life? Menu after menu, field after field, she dug through all the options available to her. Glaring holes or other issues appeared quite regularly, while easy-to-snap-together pieces stood out like the easiest choice in the world. Oh, an inheritance section? ‘Contributing benefits from brood mother Tsugumi’ … Oh! I get it, the drones inherited some of her skills and genetic characteristics. So I could slap in [Silk Production] and they’d be able to make webs like hers? Avaron shifted on her seating, leaning on her other leg this time. I doubt they’d have that sword-like quality, that might be another skill or a higher level … hm.
But, to make more drones with [Silk Production], did that require Tsugumi to birth them, or could another brood mother’s drones also utilize it? Was there a collective memory now that she knew about the information, or was it stored in some manner that limited how it was used? Avaron scratched her temple for a moment before letting out a sigh. I have no idea how any of this works. Not at least until another woman signs up to get pumped full of eggs!
Ah, the tantalizing idea sent a shiver down her back. Shaking her head, she shooed that thought away with her hand. “Oiii ... this is rather bothersome,” she grumbled under her breath. Well, they won’t be born until I give them something to grow into. Ugh, do I really have to make the whole thing from the ground up? How long is this going to take?
She had an idea in her mind, an end goal that her work in minutia inched toward. Above everything else, she needed worker drones—cleaners, cargo movers, builders, ones dexterous enough to tend to somewhat sensitive tasks, and perhaps even do farming. Only one creature readily came to mind, though perhaps one biased by her very first brood mother’s exotic looks. Avaron diligently envisioned the form of a spider in her mind, and set about creating a template for the immature eggs to grow toward.
Of all of nature’s bountiful life, spiders commanded an impressive versatility. Ants might be closer to what she actually wanted, but Avaron had more in mind for quality rather than quantity. An individual spider could do more than a single ant, but a colony of ants eclipsed any spider that existed. With her command, and the power of the [Hive Mind], the quality offered by a spider-based body might be unparalleled.
At least, for doing work.
One thing at a time …
*~*
Three days passed in a blur, Avaron’s workaholic mind fixating on the gene-construction of her worker drones. Tsugumi remained busy enough, leaving often and scouring the forest for some reason or another. Twice she returned with wild boar, and some messy butchering got them fresh meat for the time being. Avaron tried making small talk, but the spider woman seemed quite focused on something or another.
So what you’re saying is, if I run the digestive tract in a loop I’ll get more nutrients out of it … Fuck, is there enough space inside the abdomen for that? Avaron squinted, staring at the info screen in front of her. One part after another; a body of countless thousands of little pieces that needed to work together. That she made such great strides toward macro-scale design came in part thanks to how Lego block-like all the information was. She couldn’t quite change individual genes, but she could slap sections of them together and affect a larger, if ham-fisted change. But as always, one solution beget ten more problems.
A sudden pressure on her shoulders snapped her awake. Looking over, she found Tsugumi leaning in, their faces almost touching. All six eyes half-lidded, her lips parted and wet, and her skin deeply flushed, a tantalizing scent slammed into her nose. The full powered ‘fuck me’ eyes and blatant, head-clouding scent of arousal blew away all of Avaron’s focus. “H-hey,” she said, gulping quite audibly.
“Dear customer,” Tsugumi breathed, enthusing each word with a long, sultry sound. “You’ve been very rude to me!”
“What did I do?” Avaron cried out in self-defense.
Tsugumi frowned, her aroused desire contorting into a flush annoyance. “Making me say it, how even ruder!”
“I’m not a mind reader,” Avaron retorted dryly. Ah, she shouldn’t have said that, Tsugumi’s cheeks were puffing up with annoyance. “Did you, ehm, did you get a new perfume or something?” That question, at least, made Tsugumi pause and blink confusedly.
“No?”
“Mm.” Avaron leaned in and brushed her cheek against Tsugumi’s, feeling her odd-if-ever inviting chitin-skin. The sheer potency of the smell really got her going! Every little inhale sent a tingle down the back of her throat, and her skin shivered with goosebumps. Tsugumi’s normal, floral-like color was there, but the new addition had something to it … something satisfying. Or tempting? Avaron hardly noticed how she rubbed against Tsugumi’s cheek all the while, until a hand settled on her back. She jerked with surprise, her mind snapping back awake.
Their noses touching, Tsugumi’s eyes narrowed with a pleased, if predatory, glint in them. She pushed in, kissing Avaron with a hungry, mouth-enveloping gulp. “Hm—mm?” Avaron mumbled, returning the energetic suckling. Tiny little pops and wet sucks followed, their lips parting for a brief, air-gasping moment before smacking together again. Avaron found herself rather on the backfoot with how Tsugumi pushed in, angling higher. If she didn’t do something, they’d both fall over! Avaron reached up, pushing against Tsugumi’s chest on reflex. As soon as her hand squeezed that hearty bump, the hostess ripped away with a hissing, surprised gasp.
“B-be gentle!” she demanded in a low voice, her whole body tightening up.
Eh? It’s just her … oh, wait a second.
One plus one equaled titties, now that she had the focus to work it out. “Are you, erm, swollen?”
Tsugumi looked away with half her eyes, the other half eyeballing Avaron. “Maybe,” she whispered, holding her mouth behind her hand.
“Perhaps a little full feeling?”
“Mhm,” Tsugumi answered with a bashful nod.
Despite the cuteness of her whole act, Avaron couldn’t quite shake how dangerous she seemed still. Such an odd combination, and so wholly part of Tsugumi’s charm. Ahh, I’ve never been into the whole milk fetish but … it is tied to my nature now. Disguising her thoughts behind a playful drag of her finger, she toyed with the top of Tsugumi’s dress. She pried at the fold, threatening to reveal her cleavage. Her deadly cute hostess squirmed, almost pushing herself into Avaron’s teasing finger. “As it happens to be,” Avaron said, sounding light and thoughtful. “I’m rather thirsty. What do you have on the menu?”
Tsugumi blinked before a dawning realization flitted across her features. She folded her hands together underneath her chest, which just happened to push her hidden breasts up. “As it happens, today’s special is … milk.”
Avaron prided herself on not laughing right then and there; Tsugumi was trying so hard. “Oh? Is it fresh?”
“For my most valued customer …” Tsugumi lifted a hand and pushed open her dress fold. First fold to one side, the second to the other, and so her breasts revealed themselves, one silent drag of cloth at a time. They’d plumped up quite nicely, her nipples and areola quite engorged and darkened. Pregnancy, it seemed, had been quite kind to Tsugumi—the roundness of being full complimented her modest breasts beautifully. “… a rarity: straight from the tap.”
Avaron hoped her unsightly gulping didn’t sound as loud as it did to her. The curious undercurrent to Tsugumi’s scent shot up, practically dragging her by the nose. Fuck my life, can I smell her milk? Really? she thought, incredulous even as her head leaned in. Yup, no doubt about it. Avaron laid her lips gently on Tsugumi’s breast, giving it a long smooch before parting gently. She kissed the other one just the same, her milky hostess shivering in her arms. Such small, simple movements, but how Tsugumi’s breasts jiggled ever so slightly—What a treat.
“Oh, it’s a superb quality,” Avaron said, looking up with her eyes at Tsugumi’s hazy, heart-tinged pupils. “If you’re offering this, I’ll accept it gladly.”
“Please, then, dear customer,” Tsugumi said huskily, every word riding her breath. She pushed her chest up, bringing her very erect nipples up to Avaron’s mouth. “Drink.”
Any thoughts of humor at the ridiculousness of their foreplay disappeared the moment Avaron’s tongue met Tsugumi’s nipple. Giving it one teasing, slow flick, the spider hostess jostled and let out a surprised chirp. More than that, a little of her glistening bounty leaked out, squirting with a tiny ferocity onto Avaron’s blue-colored tongue. The rich and creamy flavor shot down her throat in an instance, and she sucked her tongue back. Smacking her lips Avaron let the delicious taste wash down her suddenly salivating mouth. Tsugumi looked uncertain at the sudden motion, her nipple twitching on its own accord.
“Forget superb, this tastes incredible,” Avaron said, her playful ‘roleplaying’ tone now utterly frank and astounded.
“O—oh? I’m glad you—ouuoooh!” Tsugumi’s tentative words disappeared in a slutty, ecstatic moan when Avaron sucked her leaking tit right into her mouth. Tit, areola and all disappeared beneath the tentradom’s greedy lips, firmly wrapped with an air-tight suck. Avaron lashed out with her tongue, not at all subtle in her appreciative licks. Swirling around Tsugumi’s areola, she brushed the whole length of the flat side upon her nipple, dragging it up in one long, demanding lick. Pulling it back, her mouth sucked with a demanding pressure.
What was a few trickling drops turned into a stream, almost gushing out after a few seconds. Avaron let out a sultry, throaty moan alongside Tsugumi at the incredible taste. Hotly warm and with a certain thickness to it, she hadn’t quite a point of comparison in her old life. Store-bought milk suddenly seemed rather lackluster and watered down, at the least! Her mouth filled faster than she expected, and she paused for a moment before sucking her first load of milk down her throat. Goodness the sheer, unrelenting awareness of it traveling into her stomach made her head spin. A flushed heat washed over her, spreading through every corner of her being like fire roaring to life.
Pure, unrestrained arousal, and a deep-seated need for more.
Avaron licked and sucked again, slurping Tsugumi’s milk right out of her breast. She rolled her lips, sliding them for a new perch, a new angle to suck from. She bit gently with her teeth, squeezing the dark areola into a harder point, tighter and easier for her tongue to lash hungrily. Tsugumi jumped with a chittering cry, pushing her chest into Avaron’s face even harder.
“Oh, oh dear customer!” she whispered in a stuttering, pleased tone. “Drink me! Drink everything!”
She rather liked hearing that pleading and feeling the eagerness in her royal mate. Avaron obliged, only distantly mindful to not be too hard on Tsugumi’s ravaged boob. One gulp turned into three, and soon enough the stream trickled down to a few drops, until Avaron spent a good minute just sucking and licking a spent breast. Not that she minded, Tsugumi had such lovely tits and she quite enjoyed sucking on them. Especially given every other little moment, Tsugumi jerked and twisted, almost wanting to escape, but letting out ear-filling moans. Deep, throaty ones of someone far too into what happened to them.
A hand on her forehead started pushing away, and Avaron’s tight suction dragged Tsugumi’s boob with her mouth. A final, loud pop signaled their departure, the darkly flushed lilac-colored skin slathered in spit and drool. And, rather quite deflated looking, far closer to Tsugumi’s regular size even if her nipples were almost radiating heat off of them. Avaron licked her lips, catching any stray taste she could while Tsugumi heaved and huffed, rather out of breath. Their eyes met, and the spider hostess looked rather out of breath. Smirking mischievously, Avaron leaned in and planted a gentle kiss on the now-empty breast.
“Thank you for the meal,” she said to it, then leaned over to its full neighbor. “I hope you taste just as good.”
“W-wait,” Tsugumi gasped, two hands going up to her cheeks while the others remained propping up her breasts. “I—I’m not ready!” She said one thing, but her tone implied another entirely.
Avaron looked up at her, brow cocking curiously. “Ready for what?”
“T-to c-cum,” Tsugumi stuttered, a delirious-looking shudder crawling down her whole body at the words. “It feels so good …”
Ah, this teasing side of hers was becoming dangerous. Avaron mustered up an ‘innocent’ look. “What feels good?”
“The … the thing,” Tsugumi muttered, her blushing face looking away.
“What thing?” Avaron asked, lifting a hand up. She grasped Tsugumi’s spent breast gently, holding it possessively. Her poor mate, however, shuddered at the contact, a shaky exhale escaping her.
“P-please, I’m sensitive,” Tsugumi begged, rather oddly defenseless looking all of a sudden.
“I’ll be gentle,” Avaron assured her, still making sure she had a nice, controlling grip. “I just want to feel how lovely you are.”
“Mmm.”
“But what thing was it?”
“Mm, no! Don’t make me say it,” Tsugumi whined, looking away from Avaron’s innocent inquisitiveness.
Letting out a dramatic sigh, Avaron leaned in and kissed Tsugumi’s plump, milk-heavy breast. “I can’t—” kiss “—help if you—” kiss “—don’t tell me,” she said, peppering light, wet kisses all over that soft lilac skin. Tsugumi squirmed and shivered, somewhere between wanting to pull away and push in closer. Not getting anywhere with that technique, she ventured up, turning to harder, throat-sucking kisses. Tsugumi let out a giggly, whining sound of pleasure, oh so ostensibly struggling still. Avaron frowned a little and went up further, nibbling the underside of her jawline. “Come on,” she whispered, smiling into Tsugumi’s neck. “Tell me, you tease.”
“So mean!” Tsugumi grumbled, her fingers scratching along Avaron’s scalp. “Prying open a woman’s secrets is like forcing her knees apart.”
“Do you want me to?”
“Ehheheh?” Tsugumi chuckled nervously, now playing with Avaron’s hair in little loops and twirls. “Did I say that?”
“Maybe,” Avaron said evasively. Reaching with her free hand, grabbed at Tsugumi’s butt, getting a lackluster grip on it through her layered dress. “Some women like that sort of thing. But I won’t bother if you don’t tell me.”
“Eheh, I don’t want to … err, that is …”
It’d be a wall all the same, and so Avaron made the executive decision for a tactical withdrawal. “It’s good to be clear about it. Mmm, we can talk later though, I’m rather hungry again.” It was a little lie—one that justified her sucking that fat, engorged tit right into her mouth. Now that the exhilarating rush had passed, Avaron took a slower, methodical lick and suck. Tsugumi’s sweet, happy little gasps filled the air, her pounding heart oh-so-faintly noticeable. A rush of creamy milk followed, the uneven and unusual texture a bit clearer in her mind. Creamy, to be certain, but with tiny irregularities that made every part of the gushing stream feel different.
For the oddest damn reason, she thought of boba tea. Purely on the texture, it wasn’t as lumpy or big, but drinking and eating felt very much the same. Avaron smiled into Tsugumi’s plump tit. Boba tea? she mused before taking a big, throat-squelching gulp of milk. The ensuing rush of warmth left her fingers and toes tingling, her lower belly coming alive again most noticeably. Goodness she felt drenched! She didn’t dare move, lest Tsugumi fall off.
Not that that stopped the spider woman from writhing, squirming, and thrusting her own hips. Trying to force more of her tit into Avaron’s sucking mouth, she rocked back and forth, grinding on her lap. Her breathing soon changed from long, gulping motions to shorter, panting ones. “Oh, please, suck me, suck me,” Tsugumi begged in a babble, almost bouncing on Avaron’s lap by then. She had to take a firm grab to hold her down, but that only amplified Tsugumi’s incessant grinding. “It feeeels, ooh, it feels so, so—so good!”
Are you getting off? Avaron wondered with suspicion, her nose telling a story of growing arousal. Purer, stronger, the one kind that hinted at something great. She tweaked her fingers on Tsugumi’s spent breast, giving it the lightest massage. A sharp, keening exhale followed, not at all pained, but one rather unprepared!
“D-dear cuussss—”
Tsugumi’s pleading words fell away when Avaron sucked and tweaked, working both those milky tits at once. A brief glance upward revealed Tsugumi’s cute face mid-space out, her eyes unfocusing as she nibbled on her lips. On the edge and oh so ready to fly off, or so Avaron’s great experience told her. She kept suckling and tweaking, massaging both Tsugumi’s sensitive tits, coaxing her along even as the milk finally ran out. Tsugumi’s arms wrapped around her and squeezed the two of them together tightly, her face contorting.
Her tiny squeaks and spasms told all Avaron needed, even if the orgasmic release still rather surprised her. Unlike their times before, Tsugumi shuddered and cummed rather quietly. She’d drained both her tits quite thoroughly, the poor things blushing darkly, visibly throbbing. Most of all, she couldn’t quite deny enjoying it at all. The taste, the experience—Tsugumi’s sputtering orgasm—all of it soothed her, mind and soul. Smiling in her mate’s cleavage, she waited for the inevitable calm when all of Tsugumi’s steel-tight muscles turned to jelly.
Panting and blubbering, the elegant spider slumped against Avaron, giving off little twitches. Avaron rubbed her back and cradled her, their heads on each other’s shoulders. Mischievousness bit her in the ass, and Avaron nuzzled up to where Tsugumi’s ear was. “Thank you for the meal, miss hostess.”
“Oh, I’m—glad, I’m glad you’re pleased …” Tsugumi returned in a soft, staggered whisper.
“I hope you won’t mind if I drink your milk again.”
“Not, noooot at all …”
Avaron gave her a hearty, encouraging pat on the butt, making Tsugumi squeak and squirm on her lap. “Good.”
*~*
Fuck I feel like I drank a gallon of espresso, Avaron thought, walking through the entrance to the mine/cave. Once the arousal bled away, the sheer energy swimming in her body made her jittery and twitchy. Either something is up with that milk or how my body works. Goddess damn this! Holy shit! She whipped her hands up and down, working out the squirming-tingling sensation there. Despite all of it, she didn’t feel like something bad was happening. ‘Waking up’ didn’t quite suit it either, and for once she hadn’t a clue to consider something analogous.
Milk just supercharged her, it seemed.
Hello, info screen? Anything? Why is it so fucking dark in here? Avaron stopped, and realizing she’d forgotten a light, sighed. In going outside again, she picked up her ever-trusty silk-knobbed stick, asked Tsugumi to light it up, and went back inside. Running her hand up her bangs, she let out a long, deflating raspberry blow. It sputtered and died as she looked around, coming to a stop. Oh, hello.
Her hive had definitely grown over the last few days. Dark blue flesh stretched and spread everywhere, covering the floor, ceiling, and walls in a thousand little tendrils. Not unlike the roots of a tree, if a tree had way too many roots. Tentatively stepping onto the growth, it gave away oh-so-slightly, but felt rather firm otherwise. A wet, fleshy squish sounded, if rather mute in volume. Avaron looked up, then down, then walked over to the side rail where the river was flowing. The growth stretched over it and into the water, pulsating like a throat swallowing and swallowing. I guess it’s drinking that, then.
Come to think of it, how did it get its nutrients? The thought sat on her mind as Avaron looked down the way, squinting. I doubt the water has fish or anything … Algae? She weighed the idea, but shrugged her shoulders. Or some magic nonsense, I guess.
In heading deeper, she saw the environment change more. The tendrils became a lighter color, closer to her own body. More surprisingly, porcelain-plates started appearing, growing over the flesh like protective armor. She took a step upward, the solid plate under foot the firmest ground she’d walked on in weeks. Avaron jumped up and down on it, but nothing budged—even the flesh underneath at the edge held it firmly. “Now this is pretty cool,” she muttered to herself, bending down and running her fingers over the ground.
The tiniest hint of warmth rather surprised her to feel. At least, compared to the frigid stone at the entrance, it felt positively pleasant. Standing up and rubbing her fingers together, she didn’t see a hint of dirt or grime. Interesting …
The deeper she went, the more its nature became clear. The dark-fleshed edge of the growth and the healthier, lively area with the plates wasn’t too far apart. It seemed to mold itself to the terrain, then the plates gave shape to a tunnel inspired by the undergrowth. If the textures were far smoother and the blue flesh hidden completely, it might’ve been close to a starship interior. She reached the end of the walkway, but there wasn’t a roar of a waterfall anymore.
Holding out the magic-light torch, she squinted. The whole basin of water had filled in with flesh, winding through it in firm, unyielding cords. In fact, plates grew along the edge, turning the whole area into natural-grown water tank of some kind. Avaron stepped up, and incredibly mindful of her footing, edged her way across. Her back to the plate-covered wall, she shimmed forward while looking up and around. The hive had grown around the waterfall, forming a natural tube and a sealant at the top. In turn, it pumped into the basin-turned-tank, keeping the flow going but without almost any noise.
If those strands weren’t there, this water might still sweep me away, she mused. Crouching for a moment, she held her torch, illuminating the flowing surface. As water would in a pressure pipe, it moved, shimmering gently, but just stable enough not to make noise. It grew all of this by itself? she marveled, blinking confusedly. Odd, odder, and odder still, it didn’t make any sense. How did some natural growth know how to make such informed, organized design?
To her surprise, she found an opening in the wall on her side. This … this is new, Avaron realized. The waterfall-pipe she knew was opposite of the entrance she came in, and this new tunnel was just underneath it.
An unexplored part of the cave.
Peeking around the corner wearily, she saw nothing but her hive growth. It must’ve gotten there fairly early on, as it was all covered in plates and quite empty otherwise. Uhhh … Avaron squinted, weighing her options. Gonna do the smart thing, yeah.
She backtracked her way out slowly, and once she found solid ground again, left the cave/mine. Tsugumi, it soon became clear, was working on butchering and cleaning out another boar. The spider woman looked up at her approach, her face shifting from total focus to a maidenly, inviting smile. Which, would’ve been quite fetching if her hands weren’t drenched in blood and guts were slopped in a bucket at her feet. At seeing Avaron’s face, however, her gaze hardened.
“What is it?”
“I found another tunnel in the mine back there,” Avaron said, jabbing a thumb over her shoulder. “Past the waterfall.”
“You went swimming again?” Tsugumi asked, face scrunching up confusedly.
Swimming again … oh right, that excuse. Avaron coughed into her hand. “No, uh. Let’s say I had something working in the mine, and things are a bit different now. Do you want to go check it out?”
“I have to finish this boar. Go watch the entrance so nothing comes out.”
“Alright.”
Although, some minutes later she wondered how long it took to actually do. Time dragged on, Avaron’s task of a featureless wall remaining unchanging. Wait, what am I doing? she thought with a scoff and pulled open her personal info screen. Duh.
Opening up [Hive Management] suddenly showed her a lot of new things. For one, a screen acted as her awareness from the growth itself—she could see and feel it. Every rock and hardy surface, every odd clump of dirt or soil she could wriggle into easily; the very air itself, passing so, so slowly throughout her. Avaron shook her head, now rather firmly back inside her own body’s awareness. O-kay then, she thought, staring at her own two hands, turning them over and over. That, uh, will take some getting used to.
She eased herself back into it, trying to block out the things she didn’t need to know. It came surprisingly easy, the overwhelming tactile sensations dulling until only the certain information she wanted came to mind. First and foremost, the growth was healthy and growing, spreading down that secret tunnel she saw. Second, it had gone way, way further than she imagined—the damn thing must’ve been at least a mile in size. Avaron blinked and rubbed her eyes, not quite believing it.
So it’s not that slow, got it, she thought with a roll of her eyes, dragging her hand down her mouth. Can I … sense enemies?
The growth had an awareness of not only itself, but everything inside it. As far as it could tell her, there wasn’t anything significant—nothing like a bear or dog or any kind of life at all. That is, if what it told her and the reality of what was inside of it matched up. Avaron wasn’t too certain on what to trust there. Steeping her fingers together, she stared at the info-screen.
Now that I’m cleaning out all this unnecessary information, hm. Interesting. The hive has a sort of unconsciousness to it, like the autonomous system in the human body. I’m submerging my mind into it directly, that’s why it’s such a headache. Avaron tilted her head. But if I filter out a few things I want to know, it’s like opening up new tabs in a web browser. Each one is just a page that’s just beamed directly into my head.
As ever in life, control of information proved vital. In this case, filtering out garbage information for valuable stuff.
Time passed rather quickly, then, until approaching footsteps caught her ear. Avaron saw Tsugumi approach, cleaned up and dressed with her light armor. At least she expected it to be armor, given how padded and sturdy the cloth was. “Are you ready, then?”
“I am. Nothing came out?”
“No. So far I don’t think there is anything in there.”
“Why?”
“Come in, I’ll show you.”
They walked into the mine easily enough. Where as Tsugumi stopped upon seeing the edge of the growth, Avaron kept right on going.
“What is this?”
Looking over her shoulder, Avaron smiled and winked. “Me, in a sense.”
Six eyes stared back rather confused.
“Sorry, it’ll be hard to explain. Come on.”
Despite her tentative steps, Tsugumi marched up beside Avaron, and the two headed deeper. They reached the short guard wall that separated them from the waterfall tank, Tsugumi frowning curiously all the while. “Where’s the waterfall?” she asked.
“It’s there,” Avaron said, pointing in the general direction. “Just covered up in a pipe now.”
“A pipe?”
“Ahh … to be honest I’ve been thinking about this for a couple days. I still don’t know how to explain it properly.” Avaron laughed and scratched the back of her head. “This’ll sound dumb, but are you familiar with how tentradom, uhh, nests, I suppose, are made?”
“Hmm …” Tsugumi squinted and rubbed her chin, appearing deep in thought. “We never fought a live tentradom, but we’d gone through one’s nest before. All blackened, dried up, and dead.”
“Mmm. Ah, this really is such a pain! Let me put it like this, then. My kind lay an … egg, that then splits out and grows kind of like a plant. A fleshy plant.”
“And that is what this … is?”
“Basically. Other people build their houses and whatnot. We grow our homes.”
“Oh. Oh!” Tsugumi clapped two of her hands together. “Like the elvetahn?”
“Eh?”
“They grow their homes. There is also a lot of woodworking and carpentry.”
Avaron squinted and thought on it for a hot moment. “Kind of the same, a little. All of this—” she waved a hand, “—is still a ‘part’ of me, though. I can control it, feel through it, shape it …”
“I understand,” Tsugumi said with a dismissive look. “Where it grows, you know what’s there?”
“In essence. The hive is still young—I’m not entirely certain yet.”
“… Hive?”
“That’s what it’s called. At least, for me.”
“Ah. Let us go exploring, then.”
Avaron nodded, and holding Tsugumi’s hand, stepped up onto the water tank’s edge. They carefully shimmed their way across to the other end, the larger, once-hidden tunnel yawning before them. Covered in organic plate, it didn’t feel all that threatening. Empty, certainly, but that anxiety from when she first explored the mine wasn’t there. “Uh, right. If I’m understanding this, we got a straight shot path ahead, and there’s at least two or three branching paths. I guess the miners never got this far, being behind a waterfall and all.”
“Yes …” Tsugumi agreed lightly then clicked her tongue. “It must not be lived in if their prospecting didn’t meet anything to stop it.”
“Or whatever lived here took a while to notice them.”
“… That too.”
“Well, as long as we’re still in the hive itself, I can find our way out again. Let’s get going.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Lukewarm Intrigue
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride – Enraged Queen
Chapter 13: The Shadow of Guns
Chapter Text
Anger without purpose is a fire, burning all it can consume.
*~*
“The elvetahn have returned,” Tsugumi said, looking up from her work at the campfire.
Avaron blinked and superstitiously turned toward their enclosure’s shoddy door. “Not with a bunch of swords, I hope.”
“No … workers, they bring wagons and animals with them.” Tsugumi tilted her head, seeming thoughtful. “And that angry bitch.”
“Angry what?”
“Their queen.”
“Oh, I thought I heard—” Avaron’s stupid remark disappeared under the blare of a horn. Resonant, vibrant, and certainly attention grabbing. It went on for a few seconds before silence fell, and the two of them looked at each other dubiously. They headed out of the enclosure together, and saw a veritable convoy of elvetahn approach. They branched out all along the river bank, the forest’s edge, and closer still to their enclosure. Tents were being set up, areas cleared for pack-carrying deer, and supply boxes lined up for inspection.
A wave parted through the many elvetahn, making space for the ostentatious deer and their riders. Bisnar, their queen, and all the royal guards approached in full regalia. Some new faces lingered among them, dressed differently—no less fancy, but certainly of odder colors and thicker cloth. As they approached, Efval’s face became clearer, tighter than a statue etched with the utmost displeasure.
Guess Tahn said shit she doesn’t like to hear, Avaron mused. Bisnar took the lead in the approach, coming up with a greeting wave of his hand.
“Greetings, noble Tsugumi, and fair Avaron!”
They both waved back in kind while Bisnar came in close, the others yet remaining at a distance.
“A tent is being prepared for our meeting, if you shall join us now.”
“… Sure? The stew won’t burn will it?”
Tsugumi shook her head.
“Alright. Lead on, then.”
Not too long after, they were inside an airy, vaunting tent with a rectangular table smack in the middle. It had quite a nice design with smoothly rounded edges, a flowering and vine pattern on top, and the obvious joints connecting each section together hidden inside seamlessly. The chairs, likewise, shared much in the smooth glossy, polished look and flowery pattern. Stranger still was how wiry their frames were, full of decorative holes but still sold enough of a seating to actually sit.
I mean they’re beautiful but … Avaron shifted on her seat, eye balling all the elvetahn sitting at the table. Beside her sat Tsugumi, and opposite of them sat Efval. Three elvetahn sat on her right, while four—including Bisnar—sat on her left. She hadn’t much of a clue to their rank or importance, though Bisnar technically sat on Efval’s right-hand side. A not insignificant position, in a classical sense. Ah, it’s been a while since I sat at a high roller table. Alright, time to be a bit serious.
Folding her hands together on the table, her posture remained ever second nature. Squared up shoulders, straight back, knees and legs together underneath, hands delicately folded for an impassive façade. A cool look schooled her features, completing the entrance move to a potentially hostile negotiation. A fact that didn’t go unnoticed, judging by a few furtive glances toward her.
Only Efval remained indifferent, elegantly scowling the entire time.
Bisnar smiled, his unease quite evident in him pushing up his glasses and readjusting his sitting. “To begin, I’ve brought the workers for the inn that lady Tsugumi requested. It is no trouble for us to build such an accommodation, given our growing interests together.”
“I thank you,” Tsugumi said, bowing her head.
Bisnar nodded in kind and stood up, then looked at Avaron. “With us on this day is Daefin Splitleaf, our lead forger—”
He gestured to an elvetahn on Avaron’s right side, dressed in tight, dark leathers. His white hair was tied tightly back in a long, wispy ponytail, while he sported the biggest eyebrows she’d ever seen. They clearly shot off of his head and to the side, their tips singed in a black mark. Their eyes met, and she saw someone of a practical, wise experience. At least, one far more obvious than the baby-faced, super model elvetahn surrounding them. She nodded, as did he.
“—Aleesa Starseeker, our revered alchemist—”
What is with these last names? Avaron wondered, her gaze now directed to an elvetahn on her left. Dressed in a blue, enveloping robe, her voluminous attire rather obscured her body. Deeply dark green hair fell in a wild mess down out of her hood, and Aleesa had turn quite greatly for their eyes to meet. Unlike every other person, she wore a mask in the guise of an owl. While mostly a dark wood, feather-like flowers clouded the nose and mouth, gently billowing with every breath. Like Daefin, she too nodded, and Avaron returned it.
“—and finally, Nuala the Black, grand magi of our fair queendom.”
The last elvetahn certainly had an opposing color scheme to the others. Dressed in black robes, fanciful gold threading and strange, mathematical symbols adorned her attire. Strangely, she did wear armor of a kind, dark gray iron plating that covered her torso and lower legs snuggly, but not completely. Her angular features were creased in a visible annoyance, the kind of someone forced to be somewhere they didn’t want to be. Their eyes didn’t meet, the magi rather content to stare at the book in her hands.
“A pleasure to meet all of you,” Avaron said, bowing her head slightly in acknowledgement. If Eastern mannerisms were present in the world, she could do well to emulate them for the time being. That four others, dressed in military garb and armor not unlike the royal guard, sat but remained quiet, didn’t pass her by. Generals, or protectors? she wondered, but set the thought aside.
“I’ve informed them of our prior discussion, and they’re most interested in discussing what you know about—guns.” Whether unfamiliar with the word or nervous about Efval being next to him, Bisnar’s slight pause didn’t go unnoticed by her. The queen’s fingers tightened in ever so slightly, almost wanting to make a fist. “To begin, lord Daefin …” Bisnar swept his hand in a gesture, then sat down in his chair.
“I thank the minister,” Daefin said, his voice the gruffest out of any elvetahn Avaron had heard thus far. Still, it remained a far cry from the ‘human’ idea of gruffness. “Bluntly, I have no idea how the Empire is forging these weapons. Every barrel is perfectly smooth, as if done by a supreme smith. The same of the small, moving parts, few as they are. Yet their mere rank-and-file is allowed their usage? How is this done?”
Under his piercing gaze, Avaron nodded along, and then hummed thoughtfully. “To not know of it, either this queendom lacks spies to find out, or the Empire is guarding it greatly. Unless they’re doing something insane, they’re most likely using machines.”
“Machines? Some sort of magic?” Daefin asked critically.
“No, simply, but it wouldn’t surprise me if these ones were being run by it. Ah … let’s see, when you are forging a sword for example, you do much of the hammering, shaping, grinding, polishing, and so forth, by hand?”
“There are some tools to help, but yes. Any real blade is tended to by hand at each step.”
“Imagine with me for a moment, then. Think of the finest blade for the average soldier you’ve made.”
A silence hung at her open prompt, and Daefin cocked a brow. “Very well.”
“Good, think of each step you had to do. Now, take a machine at each step—you teach the machine exactly what you do, and it copies you perfectly. The only thing anyone has to do, is take that sword part, put it into a machine, take it out, then put it into the next.”
Daefin frowned, his hand coming to his chin. “You are saying these machines could copy my skill?”
“They can do whatever you teach them to do, however well you can teach it. So, these machines copy your skill, and any idiot who can move metal can suddenly forge a sword as well as you do, as long as they have that machine.”
“That—that sounds ludicrous.” Daefin’s sentiment seemed echoed in the eyes of everyone else, even Nuala who looked up from her book. Only Avaron kept a serious face and shook her head.
“It is very difficult teaching a machine to do this. But once you know how to, you just keep copying those machines again, and again, and again. Soon you can have a whole warehouse, all producing nearly perfect swords for the army.”
“… And these smiths, these idiots you say, they just move the metal from one machine to another?”
“Correct. If you do it smartly, you may not even need that. Each machine could send its part to the next, so you merely put the metal in at the beginning, and a sword pops out later.”
“Never in all my travels have I heard of such things,” Nuala spoke up, the sing-song tone of voice rather at-odds with her dark demeanor. “Such marvelous wonders wouldn’t be hidden for long.”
Avaron shrugged her shoulders. “Whether the Empire found it in ancient ruins, thought of it themselves, or had a heroine to teach them—the fact is, they probably are using them. In fact, they’re vital for the creation of guns.” She held up a hand toward Daefin. “As lord Daefin mentions, each weapon is nearly smithed perfectly. The violent power of guns demands such a thing, otherwise they’d just explode in your own hands.”
The tap-tap-tap of a gloved hand on the table drew all their eyes toward Efval, who straightened up from her grumpy, if dignified, slouch. “If these machines are destroyed, then the Empire cannot make guns anymore?”
How astute. Avaron did think on it for a moment, as much for presentation as to work it out in her mind. “Yes, but you would also need to kill everyone who knows how to make them. Otherwise, you’re simply delaying the Empire—which is useful, mind.”
Efval pursed her lips and went back to slouching. Perhaps her own thoughtful posture, in a way?
“Do you know how to make these machines, lady Avaron?” Daefin asked.
She shook her head. “While I know the theory on how they work, I am not skilled in making them. There is much they need in order to work, which will need time we probably do not have.”
“Do not think lightly of our forges, good lady,” Daefin said, a smirk cracking across his otherwise serious visage. “Now that I know how they’re being made, it is not so out of reach.”
“… I enjoy your confidence,” Avaron said with reassured look. “The body of the guns is one matter. There is the issue of ammunition, which has two components to it.”
Bisnar raised his hand in a signal, which Daefin took to sit down himself. “On that note, lady Avaron, we do have an example of the guns used by the Empire, if that helps.”
“It would, actually.”
Bisnar nodded to the guards by the entrance, and they left the tent. “It’ll be just a moment.”
“Wonderful. To be a little curt—is there anything magical in them, or their ammunition?”
Their eyes gradually crawled toward the alchemist and magi, who nodded somewhat.
“This is more your field,” Nuala said, gesturing to Aleesa.
Standing up with a rustle, Aleesa spoke, her voice muffled by her mask. “We know there to be a black powder, often poured into the gun from the end of the pipe. We do not know what it is made of, but we know there is crushed firasis in it.”
A flintlock? Avaron wondered to herself, but then said, “So we’re on the same idea here, what is firasis?”
Aleesa cocked her head like an owl. “A gem carrying fire magic within. It explodes when struck—very dangerous to mine.”
Avaron nodded. “Yeah, something like that would be vital. It’s probably there as a primitive blasting cap.”
“… Blasting cap?”
“It—”
The tent’s flaps pulled open, and the rustle of soldiers carrying a long box killed their conversation. Two of them dragged the rectangular container over beside Bisnar, and cracked it open. Avaron watched as a familiar sight was laid out on the table before her. In total, about four parts: the entirety of the gun itself, a bag of powder, a bag of rounded iron balls, and a plunger stick. The make of it wasn’t at all what she expected, being of a black iron and adorned in silver filigree, with an artisan’s flair of prominence on the stock.
The basic structure, however, was that of a flintlock. Minus the flint, which seemed to be a firasis crystal instead?
“If I might handle it here?” Avaron asked, hyper-aware of a deadly firearm in a room full of rather important people.
“Carefully, if you would,” Bisnar said with a tight concern to his face.
Turning her chair ninety-degrees away from the table, she picked the gun off the table, weighing it in her hands. “First rule of guns, kids, never point them at anything you don’t intend to kill,” Avaron said, bringing the stock up against her shoulder and pointing it at the floor. “These kind are a pain to load, but better ones later can load and fire in a couple seconds.”
“… A couple seconds?” Efval asked, echoing a disbelief every other elvetahn showed.
“Oh, yes. Depending on the gun, it can shoot a couple dozen times before needing to reload, too,” Avaron said, checking the cock of the flintlock. It had the same three-step procedure, and the flashpan was there as well, easy to open and shut. Rather than the firasis being on the cock like she’d expected, a tiny red gem in the flashpan greeted her eyes, and she was damn glad she hadn’t pulled the trigger. The rest of the loading looked empty, but an exploding crystal was entirely new to her. Holding the flintlock up as if to fire at the blank wall in front of her, she looked down the sight, squinting.
“Where’s the fucking gun sight?” she muttered, noticing how incredibly naked the barrel was. As far as she could tell, her only choice was to eyeball her target. Avaron ran her finger down the barrel, looking for anything to flip up, but there wasn’t anything. “Huh.”
Pulling it away from her, she set the gun on the ground, barrel up, and eyeballed the tip—mindfully, not putting herself directly in the way. “No rifling either, though I doubt this kind could actually do it.” She hefted it in her hands again. “The weight’s off balance, though not terribly. Barrel’s too damn heavy and thick, but not that surprising …”
All in all, it looked and felt like a weapon that had a guiding hand in making it. At some point, it got co-opted with other ideas, especially that firasis crystal. “Right, uh, I’m done with it. It’s half-cocked so be mindful with it,” she said, holding it out to a nearby guard. He took it gingerly and returned it to its container.
Avaron rotated her chair back, and regarded the other parts before her. “That’s the ramrod—” she said, pointing at the plunger, “just to load the weapon. These balls, though …” She pulled a few out of their pouch and scrutinized them. While mostly smooth, they had little nubs at the north-and-south poles she could feel with her fingers. “Made in a mold, and the pips were sanded down after being cut. Not a bad idea, actually.”
Setting the two aside, she regarded the powder bag last. It had a bit of a firm spout, undoubtedly to help pour into the barrel. In dipping it over, she sprinkled a little of black powder onto her palm. Avaron sniffed it daintily before jerking her head back. She couldn’t help a sharp, barking cough, and slapped her chest. “Oh, yeah, that’s sulfur alright. These red specks, though, that doesn’t look right to me.”
“It is ground up firasis,” Aleesa said helpfully.
“Hm, a bit out of my experience.” Avaron, carefully sliding the powder back into its pouch, set it aside too. A certain awareness struck her then, that of many eyes watching and regarding her carefully. She coughed into her hand politely and bowed her head. “Forgive me, I was absorbed in studying it.”
“Your diligence is appreciable,” Bisnar said, brushing past it. “What are your thoughts on it?”
“They definitely got a helping hand from somewhere,” Avaron said, frowning. “This ‘sparkblast’ gun is very similar to something called a flintlock. It’s not the very first kind of gun ever made, and it has some innovations no one would think of just starting out. That, plus the fact some basic parts like the weight, the gun sight, and the grip were so off-key tells me they didn’t spend time doing their proper work.”
“There is no other kingdom, queendom, or empire near us who sports such weapons or machines,” Efval said, her clear tone weighing down on the air with hardly any effort.
“With all due respect, you missed something somewhere. I’d suspect a heroine or the legacy of one, given this war of yours was started before their supposed summoning.”
“Why?”
“Flintlocks are a legacy of their world, from the dawn of guns,” Avaron said with a half-hearted shrug. “And they are something I have a familiarity with.”
“And how is that, exactly?” Efval asked, eyes narrowed suspiciously.
Avaron smiled and held a finger up to her lips. “That’s a secret.”
That impassive, disinterested façade cracked the moment Efval’s eye twitched. For a brief, fleeting moment, her anger showed itself honestly. Bisnar noticed it immediately, and moved up to draw attention to himself. “All that being what it is, lady Avaron,” he said. “How might we better fight against these weapons, in your experienced knowledge?”
“… Have you fought cannons yet? Uh, very, very large guns that are dragged by many people, or on wells. They shoot balls the size of your head, if not bigger.”
“We have not seen these weapons on the field,” one of the otherwise silent men at the table said. “The sparkblasts are the only new weapon the Empire has brought to the field.”
“That really just affirms the fact they probably got help from somewhere. If I had to guess, it was recent help and they haven’t spent a lot of time researching gun design yet.” Avaron sighed and sat back in her chair, steeping her fingers together. As she stared at the table in thought, the same man asked a question.
“What is this cannon you speak of?”
“A very large gun, designed to rip entire lines of infantry apart,” Avaron answered. “You can shoot it from thousands of footsteps away with pretty reasonable accuracy. It’s also pretty good at knocking down walls and castles, if you have enough of them.”
They all started muttering amongst themselves, a conversation at a speed Avaron didn’t care to keep up with. Only Efval remained quiet, pensive in staring down Avaron coldly. I’m sure you want to shout me down or something, she thought, meeting the queen’s gaze. But I am a little curious why you’re sitting there with a stick up your ass.
“That is a most concerning idea, lady Avaron,” the man said, scowling.
“It’s an inevitable one, I’m afraid,” she said and pulled herself up. “As to fighting against guns, I’m afraid it’s an unfair reality. Guns will soon eclipse everything, except perhaps magic that can fight at their range. The only real question is how long it takes for the newer, deadlier versions to start showing up.”
“You speak of such ill tidings but our magic barriers have already proven themselves,” Nuala said, rather distasteful in tone. “These ‘guns’ of the Empire cannot pierce them, and it renders their arrows useless.”
“How many of these barriers can you deploy?”
“Eh?”
“How long? How expensive is it? What is the stress on the magi doing it? Can you move while covered in the barrier, or are you stationary? Does it block air as well or can noxious fumes get through? What about …” One after another, Avaron asked question after question, all to Nuala’s flabbergasted pause. Seeing that she wouldn’t offer any useful answers, Avaron shook her head. “I’ve no doubt your magic has proven vital in surviving. But you are claiming superiority against an enemy who has yet to adapt to your method. Humor me, I’m certain there is some kind of material out there that interferes with these magic barriers?”
Nuala looked at Efval, who nodded once, and then said to Avaron, “There is.”
“Neat. So now the bullets of these guns is made out of that, so I imagine they can shoot through your barrier. Or break it. Right?”
“That …” Nuala’s brows knitted together, undoubtedly deep in thought.
“This is all presuming I, as an enemy general, even care about your barrier to begin with.”
“What?”
“If I build enough cannons, I can bury your army without even getting in arrow range. Now you have to come fight me, and I get to do whatever I want on the battlefield.” Oh, how their faces soured at that idea. Avaron made a show of waving her hand dismissively. “Of course, few generals are smart in that regard, but I digress. We’ve gone on about this for a while, and I am getting hungry for lunch.”
“… Indeed, it may be about that time,” Bisnar said, his ear still half-pulled toward Efval and her muttering.
“Before then, let me make something clear to you all.” Avaron smiled, captivating their attention with such few words. “I say and offer all this as your ally. I do intend to live here for quite a long while, and I’m not going to make enemies with my neighbors. I shall help you with all my knowledge on guns, to better defend yourselves and the forest with.”
She held up a finger.
“But! There is one important thing to remember. The world changes, and you must change with it. Guns represent the new future of warfare, however crude they are right now. If you do not accept this reality, and seek utter supremacy over everything related to guns, you will be crushed by those who do. Magic may yet offer a refuge, but I can scarce think of any that can keep pace.”
Avaron held open her arms in a wide presentation before folding her hands together. “That is all. The rest is up to you.” She had a lot to thank Bisnar for, as his standing presence certainly kept some choice people at bay. In leading the final words, at his gesture they all stood up, and Avaron was among the first to leave the tent.
“Sorry, that was probably boring,” she said to Tsugumi, smiling sheepishly.
“Not at all,” the spider woman said, hiding her mouth behind a sleeve. “Such dutiful behavior you have, I’m rather shocked.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Maybe I can take you outside after all.”
Avaron knew she was being teased, but for the life of her, she didn’t understand how.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Lukewarm Intrigue
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride – Enraged Queen
Chapter 14: Ill-Fated Winds
Chapter Text
A problem next door is a problem at your doorstep.
*~*
By the time night fell, Avaron was all too glad to retreat back to her enclosure with Tsugumi. In shutting the door behind them, she sighed, went over to their cots on the ground, and flopped over.
“Would you still like some stew?” Tsugumi asked, smiling amusedly.
“A little. Their kind of food is really rich, isn’t it?”
“It is. I am glad to see that hasn’t changed, at least.”
“Mm.”
Avaron rubbed her face and eyes, dragging her skin down before letting it snap in place. Not quite a high-stakes board meeting but seriously, their snooty snipping never ends. When it came down to her explaining the minutia, best she could recall, everyone was a critic at every step of the way. It wasn’t too different from when new products got brought out, minus the thin-veneer of cooperative intent. Daefin, at least, had the good mind to be interested in how machines worked and what he could do to make his own. The how and whys were tricky, especially since she had to assure him that yes, electricity could be made by wrapping copper around magnetized iron.
Aleesa wasn’t at all clear on how to create gun powder, but Avaron couldn’t fault her there. They had two different dictionaries for chemical ingredients, and describing the effects alone wasn’t enough. She’d sent her on a task surrounding sulfur and saltpeter, or their nearest approximates. While Avaron remembered those two and charcoal as vital ingredients to a proper mixture, she couldn’t remember their ratios at all. Letting out a tired sigh, she rose up at Tsugumi’s approach, accepting the simple bowl offered to her.
“Do you think it will work?” the spider woman asked, gracefully sitting down beside Avaron.
“If they all work together and do so seriously? Probably. If they keep disbelieving and trying to undermine the threat, then no, not really.”
“Mm. If they fail, what will we do? I doubt this Empire will ignore us.”
“… Flee, I suppose, or hide underground. We’re still on the edge of elvetahn territory, so we might not get much—if any—attention.”
“That is risky.”
“The whole situation is,” Avaron grumbled and threw up her hands, laying on the ground as she was.
“What about the—ehm, little ones?”
“… Hm? They’ll be quite capable once they start hatching and find their legs.”
“Oh? I was wonder—”
A knocking at their door made them pause and look over.
“Ahem, lady Avaron?” came an elvetahn’s sweet voice, one Avaron didn’t recognize.
“Yes, what is it?”
“Her majesty summons you.”
Avaron waited for anything more, but apparently that was it. Rubbing her eyes wearily, she sat up with a sigh. “What now?” she grumbled lowly, much to Tsugumi’s mischievous smile.
“Don’t sound so disappointed a queen wants you.”
“See I know you’re being cute but I’m not totally certain she won’t behead me still.”
“M-me, cute?” Tsugumi chirped, caught off-guard. She and Avaron blinked together before the spider woman hid herself away, working on the food as she was.
Just gonna, put that one away for later, Avaron thought with a smirk and stood up.
*~*
The servant pulled open the flap in front of her, bidding Avaron inside. To little surprise for her, the interior was rather quite detailed—a rectangular room, defined by comfortable pillows, hanging cloths sheer enough to see through, and all manner of flowering, colorful plants. Somewhere between a greenhouse and a drawing room, the only bed there was sat at the far end, nothing more than a pile of colorful pillows and blankets. Gently burning candles lit the tent, casting dancing shadows at the edges as much as lighting the path forward. The servant passed by her, heading up to the queen reclining on her bed with all the regality her position demanded.
That she wore such skimpy, teal-colored cloth didn’t pass Avaron’s notice. Hardly any of her remained secretive, her bosomy breasts spilling out, long and shapely legs curved underneath her, and the wildness of her blue hair splaying everywhere. Something akin to a toga, if its sluttier, pole-dancing cousin. Avaron rather quite envied her then—looks, comfort, the sheer haughtiness of those rich brown eyes leering at her. It oozed the atmosphere only one born into status and groomed with it over their life could have. Sipping from some clear glass cup, Efval waved her hand, and the servant departed, accompanied by six attendants.
All of them in rather skimpy, eye-catching clothes as well.
Her nose twitched at the thick scent of feminine presence in the air, intermixed with floral colors. It rather eased her nose, as much as excited her blood and set goosebumps across her skin. Avaron coughed and rubbed her nose, trying to keep those thoughts out of mind. The more mundane boxes and crates lining the tent-room proved quite distracting indeed.
“You may approach,” Efval said finally, quite clearly having downed half her glass.
This nose really acts up at the worse times, Avaron thought, wrinkling the orifice. She made a show of sneezing to cover up her awkward breathing while heading over. Not entirely sure where to stand, she kept a respectable distance from Efval and her pile of bedding. “You’ll forgive me if I don’t know the exact manners you expect,” Avaron said, even sounding nasally to her own ears.
“Are you sick?” Efval asked, her lip curling distastefully.
“No, I have a sensitive nose and these flowers are killing it.”
“Hm.” She sipped from her glass, seeming rather disinterested upon hearing the answer.
Avaron waited for a moment, but nothing else was said. “What did you need from me?”
“Hm.”
She rather didn’t have the patience to be fucked with. Jaw-dropping beauty and sensual invitation aside, Efval’s cold eyes felt more like knives vivisecting her right there on the spot. Avaron shrugged and turned around, “Well, if it’s not that important then …”
“I did not dismiss you.”
“I’m not standing here for you to gaggle at me, either.”
“I do not gaggle,” Efval said with a genuine taste of offense to her voice.
“Okay?” Avaron said, holding up her arms in a wide shrug. They continued to stare at one another, the whole time Efval even took another sip in before speaking.
“This marriage our estimable All-Father arranged …” Efval began, her nose curling with distaste. “It rather complicates things for me.”
You don’t say, Avaron wanted to whip out, the sarcasm dripping at the back of her throat. Still, professionalism won at the end of the day. “I wasn’t exactly given much time or choice in the matter,” she remarked dryly.
“That much is clear,” Efval returned, her own dryness a rather surprising rebuttal. “However, he has impressed upon me your otherworldly nature.”
“… Which one?”
Avaron’s suspicious question made Efval pause, perhaps blindsided by the prospect. “That of being summoned to this world, that is.”
“Oh, good. Is this the part where you try to recruit me to your cause, or …”
“What need have I of recruiting when we are already betrothed?” Efval returned, eying her nearly empty glass of probably wine or some other form of alcohol. “But that aside, I am certain my minister and the others would be delighted. It is that my potential marriages until now, you see, were important to keep certain families in the forest in line.”
“And if word get out that Tahn handed you off, they’ll get pissed.”
“Certainly not in a way to offend the All-Father, but I do not need them causing problems now of all times.”
“Yeah, I’m seeing the problem now. What do you want from me about it?”
“Your silence. Not a word to anyone, or anything, about the marriage.”
Ouch, lady. You might have broken a lesser soul with that sort of finality! Avaron nodded. “I get it. Alright, I’ll agree if you do one thing for me.”
Efval narrowed her eyes suspiciously, the ugliness of a scowl casting a shadow over her beautiful face. “What is it?”
“I’m going to be living in the area for quite a while. We’ll be needing supplies and the like—not too much, and nothing fancy. It’d be a real help if we got some merchants every so often.”
The queen’s suspicion turned to confusion, her brows knitting a thought in her mind. “It is one thing to send donations, but another to entice merchants. What do you intend to trade?”
“Silk.”
That caught Efval’s attention she sat up straight, her bosomy breasts swaying freely at the sudden motion. “Tora silk? Do not trick me!”
Avaron held a finger up to her lips and smirked. “Honest tora silk. Of course, starting out here it won’t be up to par, but imagine what can be done in a year or two.”
Falling back onto her bed, Efval laid her chin in her palm, her fingers tapping on her mouth. Her whole demeanor betrayed her interest, even if she seemed rather fussed by the idea. “… Very well. I will send a few personal caravans to ensure you are prepared before letting the merchants know.”
“Wonderful. And it goes without saying, I’ll keep helping in your war effort with my knowledge. I may not be much of a fighter, but I do know things.”
“As one from the other world, I have no doubt,” Efval said before setting her wine glass down on a nearby nightstand. “Your cooperation is certainly appreciated.”
I’m amazed at how unappetizing she makes that sound. Avaron gave a nod and a fanciful bow, sweeping her arms to the side.
“That is all, you will leave now.”
Avaron beat a hasty retreat, all too-glad to be gone from the tent. She still had to work out that letter to mail, after all.
*~*
A week later …
*~*
A light knocking came at the door, rousing her awake. She didn’t bother looking, simply saying aloud, “Enter.”
The squeaky hinge on the door whined, only softened a little by the open window in front of her. Cool air blew past her, sucking away the warmth of the candles that yet surrounded her kneeling spot. Her visitor’s light footsteps betrayed their feminine stature, along with the tell-tale rustling of baggy fabrics.
“Flamestoker,” the acolyte said nervously, standing nearby. “A letter has arrived for you.”
“A letter for mine eyes …” Gwyneth echoed, the gloom in her voice heavy for anyone to hear. She unclasped her hands and went to stand, but stopped. As ever, the darkness surrounded her wherever she looked, the guiding flame once there now long gone. Unsteadily returning back to her kneeling posture, she said without looking, “Read it.”
“Ah? Yes, one moment.”
Who would write to her directly? Any who needed of the order sent it to the monastery properly, where it then went up the steps to senior leaders. A Flamestoker she was, or used to be anyway, hadn’t much business there. Nor did she really talk with anyone afar, she hadn’t met many to care to keep talking to. That, and well, not knowing how to write made private conversations impossible. The unfolding of a cord accompanied the rustling of a leather-bound letter, a rather rich thing for her to receive.
“Ahem, it reads, uhh … ‘Dear Gwyneth, Sorry it took so long to write, I’ve been busy setting up my new shop. I hope you’re still not mad about that mess I made on the boat, I’m not used to sailing at night still. Thanks for the help crossing up to Shadowpeak, I’ve gone over to Alva Forest work with them elvetahn folk. Shadowpeak just about burned my ass off so no good for me. Hope you can come visit at some point, I’ll pay you back! Your friend, Tenty’.”
I haven’t been on a boat since … Confusion, disbelief, uncertainty; all sorts of emotions crept around Gwyneth’s mind. “I’m sorry, can thou read that again?”
“Certainly, it says …”
She listened again, the malaise in her mind ruthlessly slammed aside. It can’t be, it can’t! Gwyneth thought, her heart hoping what her mind struggled to voice. She’s—She’s alive?
When the warrior priests returned battered and alone, her heart gave out at their dreadful news. To think spies from Artor had been waiting to strike within Shadowpeak itself! The moment she’d let her guard down, Avaron and Tsugumi had been slain in a fierce battle. Even though their bodies were nowhere to be found, scouring the city revealed nothing at all.
But if someone knew something so intimate—it had to be Avaron.
There wasn’t any other possibility!
“I—I see,” Gwyneth croaked and slicked back her sweat-covered forehead. “I thank thee. May I have the letter?” she asked, holding out a hand. A weight fell in her palm, the texture that of leather. In bringing to her chest, she couldn’t help running her fingers along the edges, mindful just enough not to fold or crinkle it at all. “That will be all.”
“Of, of course, Flamestoker.”
The shuffling of feet followed the creak of the door, and she was alone once more. Gwyneth’s brows furrowed underneath her visor, lips pressing thinly together. Ah, Avaron, she thought, a warmth rising in her bosom. The mysterious heroine remained so elusive, even in spite of their shared intimacy. Warm, inviting, if a little uncertain in action—understandable, given her sudden arrival. What terrible misfortune she had, the rude Artor Kingdom, and then Shadowpeak’s troubles!
When I tell the Flame Seer, we can—Gwyneth jerked back as the Flame, once extinguished, roared to life in front of her. Such great, terrifying heat burned away any elation its return brought, only raw, roaring anger. She held up her hands in fear as much as appeasement. “Eh? Eh?! Please, forgive me! Forgive me!” she whimpered, shrinking away from the encroaching Flame. As suddenly as it appeared, it gradually calmed, hovering before her Gwyneth ominously.
Bringing herself forward and proper, she bowed her head before the Flame. “Please, what angers thee?”
She listened, as she always did, deep within her soul.
Such was the language of the Divine, and why she was a Flamestoker.
Still, Gwyneth tilted her head, having trouble understanding. “Do not … tell the Flame Seer?” she repeated under her breath. “I do not understand, is he not fulfilling thy will?”
The Flame churned and twisted, a hint of true, unbridled anger coming through. Rather than the shouting she received, it smoldered deeper—darker. The Flame did not like the Flame Seer. Gwyneth shivered, goosebumps crawling down her skin. She had barely a moment to contemplate why before a new impulse came; a divine edict.
Failing her first task, she was now to seek out Avaron again. If she succeeded, a newer task would follow.
The monastery—or, was it all of Shadowpeak?—was to be avoided.
“I—I understand,” Gwyneth said, her clasped together hands trembling. “I will go find her when mine supplies are ready.”
And so, the Flame that had left her returned, resting above her bosom. With it came the sight she’d lost, the world returning in its dim, ethereal way. Selfish of her as it was, she was most glad to see again, if through the borrowed eyes of the Divine. Even for the days she yet spent sightless, it had been the first time in her life the Flame had ever left her.
She wouldn’t give it reason to leave again.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Lukewarm Intrigue
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride – Enraged Queen
Chapter 15: Children and Parents
Chapter Text
We cannot change what we are born to; but we choose who our family is.
*~*
I think I messed up somewhere, Avaron thought, lips pursed tightly. This … isn’t quite what I had in mind.
The first of her drone young had hatched, crawling out of their little cocoons, each of them the size of a basketball. In designing their genome, she envisioned spiders, and she received something that only kind of superficially resembled them. They had eight legs, a central body, and that big bulbous thorax—abdomen?—at the rear, but it started to break down after that. The white-porcelain of their chitin encased a lilac-colored flesh, thrumming with her own distinctive blue plasma-colored veins.
To Avaron’s perplexity, their ‘head’ was, well, just a tentacle. Ribbed with a chitin-like plating, their circular mouths opened and closed as they tasted the air, looking around. No eyes to speak of, no fangs, no real weapons. It’s more like a tentacle that moved in and started piloting the stupid thing like a … what is it, mech? Robot? Sitting as she was, Avaron propped her head up on her hand, elbow on her knee. The other eggs further back were wobbling about and getting ready to hatch as well, she figured.
One of them looked over at her and trundled over. Each step wobbled its body, the legs still brand new, and the mind still unused to them. When it reached the bottom of her feet, it plopped down on them, lightly panting from its exertion. Avaron knew it to be tired not just from seeing it, but feeling it in her own mind. That, more than anything else, truly disturbed her.
An acute awareness of another in her mind. She had no words for the sensation, no comparison that felt right. A brand spanking new experience that only affirmed one core detail: it, like her, was apart of the Hive. Without a thought she moved the little tentacle’s front left leg, raising it like her own. Waving it back and forth, she stepped back from controlling it, and it curled up its leg like the others as it rest.
Such a small thing, she thought, looking up to see the other wandering younglings. A pressure squeezed in on her, not from anything special, otherworldly, or special.
How am I going to feed all of them? Avaron wondered, the stress only a parent knew bubbling up in her mind. They didn’t really have teeth so did they chew anything? Were they like spiders and liquified their prey? Did they eat flowers or something? Nothing about their biology told her because they came out in a way she simply didn’t understand. She started rubbing her temples, and soon enough the enclosure’s door opened behind her.
“I’m back,” Tsugumi said, stepping in with a box in her arms.
“Mm,” Avaron grunted, not bothering to look.
“A-are they hatching?” Tsugumi said, her question more like an accusation.
“Yeah, they just started.”
Hurried movement came from behind her, a loud clack following as Tsugumi evidently dropped the box. She came up alongside Avaron, all six eyes looking rather interestedly at the younglings bumbling around. “Why didn’t you tell me?” she hissed lowly into Avaron’s ear.
The exasperated queen squinted and waved off that aggressive air pushing in. “Because I wasn’t sure how you’d react.”
“… What do you mean?”
Avaron sighed. “They’re, well, drones. Part of my kind, not babies or anything. Some women kind of, well, don’t like seeing that.” Tsugumi crouched near her, silent long enough that Avaron had to look over. It wasn’t disgust she saw in those eyes, but she didn’t know enough about a ‘mothers gaze’ to really say it was that, either. At the least, it didn’t seem bad?
The spider woman held out her hands, and scooped up the youngling sleeping on Avaron’s feet. In cradling it with her arms, it seemed quite large while on its back, wiggling its legs helplessly. She stared for a while, her face shyly smiling as her eyes held their piercing, critical look. “Maybe,” she said. “I understand why. It’s strange, knowing I gave birth to this—” she poked at its ‘belly’, and the tentacle youngling gurgled with a ticklish noise.
“Maybe it is an effect of my skill, but I do not hate it, if that is what you ask.”
“I wonder if that is a good thing,” Avaron mused aloud, her dry tone drawing Tsugumi’s eyes.
“Why wouldn’t it be?”
“Is that any different from forcing someone into liking something that they might otherwise not?”
“Mm. Not all mothers love their children, nor want them.”
“It’s not that, more like … in being a mother, your own mind tells you to love your children. You don’t ever have a choice.” Avaron lurched forward, a sudden chop of a hand connecting with the back of her head. She looked overly incredulously at Tsugumi, who stuck her nose up in the air haughtily.
“It is a gift to love,” Tsugumi said with a tone of finality. “One always has a choice in continuing to love.”
In thinking on it for a moment, Avaron rubbed the back of her head. It’s not like I don’t agree, but … In this sort of world, when your power of choice is taken away, that idea falls flat, doesn’t it? She didn’t have a clue on how to convey that to Tsugumi. Her royal mate seemed content with her answer, and she rather not rock the boat with half-assed philosophizing. Letting out a big sigh, Avaron set it all aside with a big shrug. “Well, it is what it is. The bigger problem at the moment is, uh, well, feeding them.”
“This one has an idea on what it wants!” Tsugumi said with a chirp, making Avaron look over.
The tentacle youngling had twisted onto its side in its mother’s arms, its head rooting around her chest. Sucking in great gulps as its way of ‘sniffing’, its mouth groped and sucked, trying to find something. Or, rather, to get to her lovely, milk-filled tits. Avaron smiled bemusedly at the sight, her shimmering eyes looking over to the still-hatching eggs. “Is there … is there going to be enough for all of them?”
“Wel—WELL!” Tsugumi giggled tickishly, trying to hold the youngling still while it tried to find a way past her damnable dress. “I shall make soup for them all then!” At the same time she spoke, Tsugumi balanced the youngling as much as undid the folds covering her chest. Avaron couldn’t help eyeballing those lovely, plump breasts popping out with a little jiggle and flop. The youngling honed in immediately, latching onto her engorged tit with a gulping swallow. Nearly half her tit disappeared in its mouth as it started sucking and gnawing with its gums.
Tsugumi jumped in her skin, visibly shuddering but smiling with bewilderment at the sudden chomp. “H-hey, be gentle!” she hissed at it, squeezing its ‘cheeks’ with two of her hands.
Avaron’s cheeks puffed up at the sight. When two of Tsugumi’s eyes shot toward her, she hurriedly stood up and went over to their supply boxes. “I’ll, uhh, lay out the soup materials and get some towels!”
“You do that.”
In the midst of her work, Avaron opened up her info-screen, heading over to [Hive Management]. You know, I’m a little curious now what it says … ah, there it is.
[Immature Worker]
[This drone is templated after a multi-purpose worker, but it is still immature. It will reach adult-size in approximately two weeks.]
And here’s a bunch of stats but I have no idea what these mean at all. Avaron rolled her eyes. Well, more to look into later, at least. Still, feeding all these for two weeks is kind of … eh. No, no I just can’t rest on getting food together, is all. Time to get off my ass.
*~*
Heavy thumps followed the rustling of heavier clothes, all hastened by Arzha’s great—if dignified—speed down the hallway. Haleen trailed behind her, almost in a full job to keep up with the first princess’ great strides. Across the carpet they sped, Arzha’s eyes locking onto a door that approached from on head. Two plate-equipped guards stood at attention, their heads turning toward her the closer she came.
“Open it,” Arzha demanded, coming to stand before the tall, oaken-wood doors.
A guard to the side said, “The King and the Prince are currently—“
“Did I stutter?” Arzha asked, her eyes sliding over to man, all but cutting him down where he stood.
He and the other guard bowed their heads, and in practiced unison, stepped in and opened the doors. Arzha spared them nothing more, walking in to the royal drawing room. To her immediate left and right, against the wall she now walked in from, stood a floor-to-ceiling set of bookshelves, filled with all sorts of books, scrolls, and other thoughtful trinkets. Further ahead sat a large, rounded table adorned with a dozen seats, while couches dotted the room surrounding smaller, cozier tables. Such a familiar sight, all cast in the afternoon light of the enormous glass window-doors sitting at other end of the room.
Her gaze couldn’t help locking onto the people who didn’t belong in such a room. Five of the divine heroines sitting at the round table, dressed in their strange and otherworldly attires. King Fornard and Prince Samuel looked utterly out of place, laughing and entertaining them as only the best dignitaries deserved. Arzha’s jaw clenched tightly, the only crack in her frigid façade. “My father, the King,” she said in greeting, only giving Samuel the most passing of glances.
If the room had quieted at the doors opening, dead silence soon filled the air. King Fornard straightened himself up in his chair, his grizzled visage sliding into a cool, regal demeanor in mere moments. In spite of his graying hair, he was yet a man in his prime, with all the imposing strength of a long-seasoned warrior. “Princess Arzha,” he greeted, the deep baritone filling the air as it ever did. “To what do I owe this pleasure?”
“They are not words for foreigners to hear,” Arzha said, giving the most pointed of glances at the heroines sitting at the table. None over twenty summers, and most far younger than that, baby-faced and dumbstruck. A mere look was all it took to make them shrink back and give ground, so utterly unbefitting of their status. “Might they be dismissed?”
“There’s no reason to be rude to my guests, sister!” Samuel cut in, smacking his hand against the table. “It wasn’t easy getting the Church to—”
“Did I ask for your opinion?”
Samuel sucked his lips in for a moment at the proverbial slap. Despite inheriting their father’s good looks, he still had an air of boyish youth despite the decorated uniform covering him. Indeed, Arzha couldn’t help noticing how much more out of the way he went to dress up and stylize, like a man dressed to impress. Her gaze swept over the heroines again, distinctly noticing how they were all actually women. Quite a number of men had ended up being summoned this time around, that she knew for a fact. The unsavory implication sat on her mind for a moment before her father raised his hand.
“It is well enough, speak, Arzha.”
“Why were my envoys to the Gern Kingdom and Burtar Queendom recalled by your order?”
“Oh? It’s about that?” King Fornard said, rubbing his short, neatly trimmed beard. “Given how matters are turning out, it is best if none of ours stood in foreign lands for the time being.”
“And how are we to assure our neighbors if our diplomats are not there?”
“I’ve already dispatched a number of official letters. If that is not enough to assure them, then that is their own trouble.”
Arzha couldn’t even believe what she was hearing. “What of the outstanding agreements yet to be signed? I had both of them ready and willing—”
“—All without my permission, is it?” King Fornard said, coolly giving Arzha a flat stare. “In spite of your rank you do not have authority to act so blatantly.”
She did, or did once, anyway. Was her father really going to deny the work she did while her mother yet lived? Utter, absolute madness. Samuel seemed rather amused by it all the same, smiling in the way only a gloating asshole could achieve. Still, she rose above him as she ever did. “I see. Then, I am to presume your letters are enough to stop them from raising their armies for war?”
“Watch your tongue, Arzha.” Fornard sighed despite the seriousness of his words, and gestured toward her with a roll of his hand. At the same time, he leaned over and spared a look to the heroines. “My daughter does take after her mother and worries too much, do not pay her any mind.”
“Ah, that is … alright,” one of them said, a tiny mouse of a person in a room filled with lions.
Pulling himself back properly, Fornard regarded Arzha. “If it sets your mind to ease, I’ve spoken with the Church and one of their armies is coming here to Artor.”
“… What?” Arzha said, experiencing a real, full out of body disconnection at hearing those words.
“It is in their interest and ours that our neighbors don’t step in and do unsavory things to the heroines. Really, now, Arzha, you should’ve known better about this.” He held a finger up to his temple and rubbed in soothing circles. “The matter is well in hand, so focus your efforts on working with the Church when they arrive.”
“I see. Then, how foolish of me. If that is all?”
“Mm, only one thing. Try not to act without my permission in the future, it does not reflect well on us. I know you meant well, but there are proper ways.”
“I shall keep it in mind, Father.”
“Then, you are dismissed.”
Arzha turned, the picture of a perfect turn and utmost straightened back, leaving the room. Haleen followed after her wordlessly, and the doors shut behind them, all the frost of her arrival vanishing. For long, silence-filled minutes they walked, Arzha mindlessly navigating the royal castle. Her destination lay in a particular passage, an open-air walkway that served as a lesser used service access between the main castle and the barracks. It was there that, if one stopped and leaned on the railing, they could see the interior gardens, filled with vibrant flowers and stylized bushes.
One of the few places Arzha could be and find some peace, in an otherwise hectic place.
The princess slouched against the railing, her tall physique making the whole angle rather unfortunate. Folding her hands together, she laid her chin atop them, staring out at the idyllic scenery without seeing any of it at all. “I think we’re doomed, Haleen,” she said simply.
“… My lady?”
“I can’t do any of my maneuvers anymore. No matter how highly regarded I am, I am still but the princess. Now my father is placing the neck of our entire country into the jaws of the Church. I just … I don’t understand him. Was he always this stupid?” Arzha spread open her hands, waiting for an answer from anyone, or anything. “Mother wasn’t a lovestruck idiot, she married smartly. Did her death strip him of all his sense?”
“It is not really my place to speculate, my lady.”
“I know.” Arzha let out a long, suffering sigh, burying her face into her hands. “It is just … funny, in a way.”
“How so?”
“How utterly powerless I am to do anything. I stand here, watching my entire country walk into its own destruction. What good am I as a princess if I cannot stop that?” Arzha stood up then, straightening on pure instinct to a proper posture. “I’m watching a great storm coming, and no matter how much I scream, I rage, I move to out run it, it will catch up to me. All I can do is pray that somehow we’ll survive its passing.”
“I wish I only had the words to help, my lady.”
“Mm.”
They yet remained there for a long while, the sun slowly inching across the sky. It would be the sound of heavy boots approaching that roused their attention. Arzha looked over and found Magna approaching, carrying two large, leather-bound letters under her arm. Reaching them, the prim-proper woman bowed respectfully, then held out the letters.
“News from afar, my lady. The post marks it arriving a few days ago, and having been sent long before that.”
Arzha took them both and gave their covers a once over. One was addressed to the Moonlit Rose Inn, the other without an address but a certain, circular symbol that her spies utilized. She opened the latter first and skimmed its contents. All the anger and indignation still within her dropped out underneath, a bottomless pit in her stomach swallowing it all up. Her hand yet remained steady even as her face creased with the utmost, naked worry either of her knights had ever seen.
“My lady?” Haleen asked uncertainly.
“The Empire is massing its soldiers on its southwestern border.” Arzha turned the letter over, but found no other writings. “Judging by their supply movement, it will be an enormous campaign to invade the Free Hardain State.”
“… Their arms are not so great as to need so many,” Magna said, curling a gloved hand under her chin.
“They won’t stop there. And who is on the other side of the Hardain?”
Both her knights blinked, and just like her, their faces darkened to a terrible frightfulness.
“The Church’s army will not be enough if the Empire and all our neighbors decide to have open season on us. Unless, somehow, we all come together to fight the Empire again.” Arzha shook her head and handed over the letter to Magna, letting her hold onto it. Turning her attention to the other, she opened it up and started reading.
‘Dear pretty blonde and blue eyes—’, Arzha blinked at the rather raw address. ‘I hope things are well for you. I managed to get up north toward Shadowpeak, but some bad business went down. Long story made short, we went eastward and I’m setting up shop with the elvetahn folk in the forest. Nice, if really stuck up and formal.’
Aren’t the elves at war with the Empire? she wondered, almost certain that they were actually. There wasn’t a declaration but the merchants talked about how sudden it was. Interesting?
‘Anyway I’ll write a return address at the bottom here. Now you’ve done right by me so I figured I’d try and give some help here. I don’t know if you know about this, but the Arden Empire has new weapons that have royally, absolutely kicked the life out of the elvetahn here.’
Arzha straightened up even more, her gloved hand crinkling the paper as she read the words. “You have to be kidding,” she muttered under her breath. The elves were, in no uncertain terms, an unassailable fortress. Attacking them, however much some have fantasized about it, was an impossible reality.
The Empire was winning against them?
‘The Empire calls them ‘sparkblasts’, but if you can, talk to the heroines about something called ‘guns’. They’ll know the theory and workings of guns first hand, and it might be vital to help you survive. On the next page is a breakdown of how guns work, so you can start figuring out how to deal with them and maybe make your own.’
Arzha looked on the next page immediately, seeing an incredibly dense and wordy page describing all sorts of things. She shook her head and went back, reading the rest of the letter.
‘For the time being things are pretty okay here. If you need somewhere to hide, come pay me a visit—fair is fair, after all. Good luck with your war, hope no one you like dies.
Sincerely, Your Ally.’
Arzha stood there, staring at the page for a long minute.
“My lady?” Haleen asked uncertainly. “What does it say?”
“… A ray of hope, in this dismal storm that is about to come. Summon the Sisterhood and be ready to reach out to my allies.” Arzha looked over to the instruction-filled page, ever so light in her hand, but worth more than all the gold in her father’s kingdom. “We have work to do. A lot of work.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride – Enraged Queen
Chapter 16: Vested Interests
Chapter Text
Fearsome is those who expect a return on investments.
*~*
The creak of iron-against-iron filled the air, a red-light spilling in through the sudden opening of a door. A figure dressed in black robes stepped through, shutting the door behind them just as noisily as it opened. The solid ‘thunk’ of metal coming to a rest masked their footsteps as they walked toward the small room’s sole table. Four tall, vaunting thrones awaited at the gray-wood table, three others sitting in them dressed in the very same robes.
“Forgive my lateness,” the approaching figure said, her tone lovingly velvety upon the ears. “I couldn’t leave the Empire just yet.”
“It is well,” one of the figures at the table said, a voice of masculinity and depth that commanded attention. “Your report was enough for us to conduct our review.”
“Ah, but I love hearing how you all are doing!” the woman complained as she took a seat. “How else am I going to know what is going on?”
“… The next meeting will be more interesting,” a third interjected, rasping with their words.
“Are we still on time for the Empire invading Artor?”
“Not quite,” the second said with a suffering sigh. “Even with the Church’s army coming to Artor, tensions are not as high as I would like. It’s challenging pushing those former friends to true conflict.”
“Ehh? I won’t be able to push the invasion back once we invade the Hardain, you know?”
“I know, I know,” the second grumbled and shrugged his shoulders. “We came to the decision to delay for a couple months and let tensions boil up more, if you can manage that.”
“Well, it’s a bit long but winter will come by the time we finish Hardain. I can probably make it convincing to launch a more earnest effort in fresh spring. That will mean nearly a year before we reach Artor, and those heroines might grow out of control.”
“Leave them to me,” the fouth, once silent, now spoke with her resolute words. “The Church is loath to leave them unsupervised, so it will not be difficult delaying their training. Although, there is a matter of the thirteenth one.”
“The tentradom?” the third asked. “Does it matter?”
“While you may not consider her that important,” the fourth said dryly, “it is the first time a non-human has ever been summoned. For that matter, such a dangerous creature walking around with the false gods’ blessings is rather … problematic.”
“Do you even know where she is?”
“I tracked her to Shadowpeak, but she disappeared shortly after. Supposedly, some Flame priests found and torched her to death according to an eye witness.”
“Is the matter not done, then?” the third asked.
“The priestesses in Artor never sensed her soul leaving. She is still alive, somewhere.”
“I don’t like loose ends,” the second interjected, laying a gloved hand on the table as to prove his point. “If you have the time, spend more in tracking her down. We all know what tentradoms can do, and it’s best if one blessed by the false gods doesn’t get a chance.”
The other three made agreeing sounds, in their own ways.
“Still,” the first one said, “I’ll be stuck with a lot of soldiers and nothing to point them toward in the Empire.”
“What about the elves?” the second asked.
“Holed up pretty tight, even after all their losses. I’m not sure I could take them out before we need to invade Artor.”
“You don’t need the whole forest. Break their back enough they won’t be getting up again.”
“… Easier said than done, but ahh—” The first sighed and leaned back in her chair, kicking her legs up over the thick and sturdy arm. Her robes hiked up enough to expose her bare feet and pale, moon-kissed flesh all the way to her mid-thigh. Thin, black fish-net stockings hugged her legs, offering a most tempting sight of luscious softness. “These guns of yours are pretty nice. If I can get the big ones out in the front lines, then their last fortress city shouldn’t be that much of an issue.”
“It’s good to get them working and vetted before Artor’s invasion anyway,” the second said, ever the professional. “There’ll be far more to fight if that whole group of kingdoms huddle together into an alliance again.”
“Okay. Nothing unexpected happens, I think I’ll still meet time. But if I get bogged down, what can you all do?”
“… I can have the Church intervene as a ‘human salvation’ measure,” the fourth said after a minute of quiet thought. “It’ll do well to fan the flames of hate and quite possibly keep Artor’s alliance from forming.”
“Mmm, okay, that should work. Worst case we might be delayed a year or two if things go really bad.”
“Do you expect them to?” the third rasped out with a notable tone of disbelief.
“Nooo, not at all!” the first laughed and clapped her hands. “But you all get on my ass about never meeting time! I’m working on it, okay?!” Despite their faces all be shrouded, the first one knew they were giving her the driest of looks. “How mean! I worked hard getting the new Emperor between my thighs and now look at what I can do!”
“… It is that you accomplish so much despite your youth I am glad to have you here,” the second said, ever gracefully dodging around the problem. “Still, now that the heroines are here, we don’t have time to spare. If they grow out of control, everything may fall apart.”
“Oh, don’t worry!” the first second, waving her hand like a cat pawing the air. “I got a look at some of them! Those kids wouldn’t know what to do if a real woman came by and ‘guided’ them.”
“I’d rather you left them to my guidance,” the fourth said with a terse annoyance. “It’s difficult enough as it is trying to handle their ‘otherworldly’ views.”
“I’m just saying!” The first held up her hands in appeasement. “Sex works wonders in making people do what you want.”
“Quite.” The fourth looked over toward the third. “How is the preparation going for the materials His Divinity requires?”
“Slow, but well. The rarest components give the greatest trouble, unfortunately.”
“Not unexpected. Do what you can with your people, I’ll have the Church intervene on whatever it is we are missing when the time comes.”
“Of course.”
*~*
“Seriously? You already have a working prototype?”
“If you mean an example piece, then yes,” Daefin said, elegant if not smug in tone.
Avaron still had trouble believing him, but merely shrugged. Led by Daefin and some guards, they walked down alongside the river, heading into a more open, cleared out area. Per her advice, it did resemble a gun range—firing line on one end, and mounds of dirt on the other to absorb shots. It ended up bigger than she expected though, probably longer than a hundred meters give or take. As they approached, she took note of Aleesa, Nuala, Efval, and that other elvetahn man who was at the meeting a while ago.
Well well well, high roller day today, Avaron thought as their two groups met. A few colorful looks went her way, probably eyeballing the elvetahn-styled dressed she wore. The white cloth was a shade darker than her actual skin, while colorful green and teal flowers adorned a tree-like embroidery. It was, ostensibly, a polite day dress, but the long slits up the sides and two-panel skirt somehow made her feel more naked. “So!” Avaron clapped her hands and rubbed them together excitedly. “I hear there’s a new gun for me to shoot?”
“Yes, there is,” the unnamed man said and, giving a pleasant-if-business-like smile, held out his hand to Avaron. “General Bladedance.”
“Avaron,” she said, returning the light-mannered handshake. “Is that a title or your actual name?”
Bladedance blinked and chuckled. “It is considered proper to have a warrior’s name. All the ills of battle follow that, than your own.”
“Sensible enough. What can I do for you, general?”
He held out his hand in a sweeping motion to the nearby table-bench, which had a rather curious arrangement on it. “I was hoping to have your wise opinion on our innovations.”
“That’s why I’m here … my, you actually made bullets!” Rather than the gun prostrated on a bunch of fancy sheets, Avaron immediately went to the trays of bullets beside it. They were made out of something silvery rather than bronze or brass, but the pointed tip was there, and the back end of it did have what looked like a rounded blasting cap. In picking one up carefully, she eyed and felt along it softly, noting its perfect smoothness and exacting dimensions. “There’s no way you made machines already!”
“We haven’t, no,” Daefin said, standing beside her. “It is an ancient technique involving metal when it is liquid. Our most prized weapons are forged through it, but such a method is most expensive.”
“Well, if you can find a way to do it cheaper, it’s a great working solution until you got machines going,” Avaron remarked, looking down the sight of the bullet. “Steel core and explosive powder on the inside, right?”
“Correct,” Aleesa said. “The mixture is one to send the core out, but I am not certain if it is strong enough.”
“That’s a bit tricky. Different cores and different bullet designs want different kinds of mixtures. The important thing is knowing what the mixture is and what that specific bullet and gun can do. If you want something different, make a new gun and a new bullet.”
“I shall keep that in mind.”
“Right, let’s take a look at this beautiful thing,” Avaron declared, delicately slipping her hands under the perhaps first-of-its-kind elvetahn made rifle. The polished, white-wood stock wove around the barrel as a tree would with its roots, the grip itself most exacting for a hand to hold. A silvery-gray barrel ran down the length and out further, perfectly smooth as it needed to be, embellished with teal filigree. It look rather like a painted pillar, depicting some esoteric piece of nature than a weapon made to kill.
Avaron looked at its sides before regarding the bolt and the rounded knob jutting out to the right side. She grabbed and yanked it open, then slammed it shut, then did so again and again. A frown creased her brow, and Daefin hovered nearby, a tinge of worry on his brow.
“What is the matter?”
“Is this just pure metal sliding against metal in here?”
“Yes, it should be.”
“Mmm, problematic. You definitely want a lubricant.”
“A … lubricant?”
Avaron hefted the weapon in her hands, testing its weight when held normally, then when butted up against her shoulder. “Metal against metal grinds down and distorts, especially when there’s a lot of heat involved. The gun barrel will get hot from repeat shooting and a soldier has no time to wait for it to cool down. And, as metal gets hot …” she looked over pointedly at him.
“… It can distort and damage easier,” Daefin affirmed, nodding with sagely understanding.
“Bingo. Lubricant helps the parts move against each other and keep the heat down somewhat. The weapon will still get damaged if you push it too hard. But! A really good lubricant will dramatically extend not only its life time, soldiers don’t have to worry about it breaking as easily.” Satisfied at how it felt when holding it, Avaron gave the bolt a few more snaps open and shut. “Aleesa over there might be able to help. A lot of good lubricants are found in different types of oils. You need one that can let the parts move easily, not gunk up the gun, and don’t ignite when it gets hot.”
“That is not an easy feat to achieve,” Aleesa remarked, the dryness in her voice muffled by the mask.
“Yet ever so important. Anyway, the weight balance is great, and the bolt works pretty well despite no lubricant. I’m noticing the iron sights here, they’re workable. Your eyes might be different from mine, so, I’d have elvetahn test out that detail.”
“Of course,” Daefin said, nodding.
“If there’s nothing else then, walk me through how you want me to load and shoot this thing.”
It was fairly straight forward, and Daefin had kept true to her instructions—bolt open, bullet in, slam bolt shut. Lacking the tools for clips or magazines, single-shot bolt action seemed the most usable weapon for her to suggest. With the elvetahn rifle loaded, she held it up against her shoulder, taking aim. Shuffling her feet and adjusting her posture, Avaron tried to recall the right stance, even if it’d been years since her last time at a gun range. A target stood down the field, the straight-cut board of some wood with iron plates dangling off of it.
Taking aim, she pulled the trigger, only to find it rather stiff. A bit more force and the gun fired, a distinct crack that had an odd color to its sound. Something different about it from what she’d expected; regardless, the bullet went off target, hitting the dirt far behind with a tiny dirt cloud indicating it. Half-nodding to herself, Avaron pulled the bolt back, and noted how the now spent casing ejected out on its own. “Oh, good, I was worried about that.”
“About what?”
“A spent casing in a gun can get hot and troublesome to get out. You always want to have the gun eject it when the shooter is going to put new ammo in.”
“When you mentioned how some gun could shoot multiple times quickly, I wondered how.” Daefin gestured to the bullets. “Upon seeing these, I thought that some way to make the casing, as you say, come out on its own would be good.”
“Yup. If the casings are designed for it, you could even refill them and use them again, but that’s a whole set of problems on its own.”
She went through a dozen more shots, honing in until she was hitting the iron plate by her last five shots quite consistently. Making sure the gun was clear, she set it down on the table gently. “The trigger is too-tight for me. Have the soldiers test that out to see what they’re comfortable with. You don’t want a tight trigger that takes so much force you end up aiming the gun wrong—even the slightest wrong pressure can ruin a whole shot.”
“I shall keep that in mind.”
“Some fine tuning and a bit of clean up work, and honestly, you have the first real, functional bolt-action rifle I think this world has ever seen.” She looked around to the assembled elvetahn, and for want of anything better, gave them a thumbs up. “Good job.”
They all kind of looked at each other, relieved but thoughtful in a way of people expecting more work.
“If it is no trouble, lady Avaron,” Bladedance asked, “there is another part of it I want your opinion on.”
“Oh?”
“Lady Nuala?”
“Hmph.” The stuck-up magi walked over and stood beside Avaron. In picking up a bullet, she held it in her fingers while her other hand faced it with her palm. She muttered something under her breath, and a strange, ethereal light started surrounding the bullet. Teal lines, like those on the barrel, soon wrapped around the entire bullet, glowing with magical power that tickled Avaron’s senses. “There. Use this,” she said, handing the bullet over like one would a disgusting insect.
Avaron blinked at the suddenness of it and looked over to Bladedance. “What is this?”
“A magical enhancement to the bullet. One meant to deliver more power and a straighter shot.”
“… That might not be a good thing, but alright. I’ll give it a shot. Anything special I need to do?”
“No, just load and fire as any other.”
Nodding, Avaron picked up the bolt-action rifle, loaded, and took aim. The rest of the weapon itself didn’t react or anything, and once the bullet was in, she couldn’t see anything different whatsoever. Confident all was well, she took the shot, and the crack that followed sounded far different than the ones from before. A sucking slash of air, as if it was cutting through the thinnest space possible, punctuated the crack. The rifle kicked a little harder into her shoulder, and the bullet vanished down range with its incredible speed.
The smack of something against iron rang out, and Avaron saw with stunned surprised how half the plate she shot had ripped off completely. Blinking, she stared at the rifle, then the broken target, before gently setting the rifle back down again. “That’s got quite the punch!” Avaron said with a laugh. “I’ll need a couple more to see how it handles, though.”
“Of course. Lady Nuala, if you do not mind?”
“It is why I am here,” Nuala grumbled, and set about enhancing another ten bullets. Avaron loaded and shot them all, blasting away the targets completely, then chunks of the actual wooden board itself. When she finished, she set the gun down finally and started rubbing her wrists. The pain of exertion, however, soon disappeared in mere seconds. She kept going, all the same.
“Interesting. Very interesting.”
“What are your thoughts, Lady Avaron?” Bladedance asked.
“Oh, there’s a couple. So, the straighter shot means more effective range—a soldier with this can be much farther away and still be lethal. I was worried about the punching power, but its so intense it’d rip a hole the size of a fist through someone. The gun itself kicks a bit harder, so a soldier might become more fatigued using such intense shots.”
“I see. In truth I would like to use such ammunition, but, as you can see, the magical enhancement greatly depends on those enhancing it. As our best, lady Nuala’s is understandably very powerful.”
The magi seemed to preen under the praise, even as she remained disinterested and looking into her ever-present book.
“I have an idea about that, actually,” Avaron said. “If you don’t mind me trying to give a general tactics.”
“My ears are ever open to your words, lady Avaron,” Bladedance said with a smile that definitely meant to be charming.
Uhh, okay. Avaron made a show of scratching her temple. “If you can take your finest shots, the ones who can hit at the best ranges and kill, you can make a kind of soldier called a sniper. By taking all that skill, if you send them after enemy leaders—generals, commanders, squad leaders, whatever …”
“It would allow us to kill otherwise difficult to reach targets,” Bladedance said, a fist curled under his chin. “We already employ such a tactic, our special archers meant to signal out high value targets. It wouldn’t be too difficult to equip them with these guns, I imagine.”
“That’s up to them and you. But until you have a lot more guns up and going, it might be the best gun-per-soldier use you can get right now.”
“Yes, yes, I’m seeing that now …”
They spent some time sussing out details, such as flanking, entrapment, and other applications a sniper might fall under. It was during this conversation that an elvetahn knight, riding on a hopping deer, came at them with all haste. All eyes fell upon him as he neared Efval, shouting, “My queen!” He held out a cloth-bound letter, which one of the nearby attendants took. In giving it to Efval, the attendant bowed away as the queen read the message.
Her face darkened by the moment, all the other elvetahn suddenly becoming tense. She spared a glance at the knight and said, “Leave.”
He nodded and did so.
“What is it, my queen?” Bladedance asked, his good humor gone in an instant of deadly seriousness.
“The Empire is massing on our border again. The troops from their southern reach have returned.”
“They intend to attack in winter?”
“Or do so before the cold settles in.”
“That …” Bladedance’s face contorted. “Even for the Empire, that is a reckless move.”
“Nonetheless it is the one they are making. We must return to Branchfall immediately to prepare.”
“I understand.” Bladedance turned around. “Lady Avaron, I thank you for your help. It seems this new gun of ours will be put into use soon.”
Avaron nodded. “I wish you luck in a sound victory.”
The many elvetahn bowed and politely excused themselves until all that remained were Avaron, Efval, and the queen’s guards, ever at a respectable distance. Half-ready start walking up the river bank again, Avaron paused when she noticed Efval standing by the new bolt-action rifle. From the side she saw, the queen had a pensive look on her face. Different from all the other anger-driven expressions she’d seen thus far. While she had the opportunity for a clean get away, it was poor form to leave a client unattended.
Drawing herself up properly, Avaron stepped over to the queen, standing beside her at what she hoped was a proper distance. “Is there something wrong with the gun?” she asked, a voice and tone practiced for a neutral, unoffensive opening.
“Hm?” Efval glanced at Avaron from the corner of her eye. “No, it performed as I expected.”
“You seem displeased with something about it.”
“It is not Daefin’s craftsmanship.”
Knowing the stonewall for what it was, Avaron wasn’t certain how to get around it tactfully. One last trick might work, though. “So it is. Well, if there is anything you’d like me to tell the others in your stead, I can.” Silence answered back, and waiting for few minutes, Avaron took the hint to leave. In turning around, she about took two steps before Efval’s voice caught her ear.
“Is the future truly filled with such dishonorable weapons?”
Avaron looked over again, but Efval yet regarded the rifle on the bench. “For this world, I’m not certain. Magic can enhance them as much as oppose them. Were it not for that … yes, the future is guns, and far worse.”
“… Worse?”
“In their pursuit for greater destructive power, humanity made ever more terrifying weapons. Guns that could lob explosive shots from across the horizon—artillery. That was not enough. They made bigger bombs, and then machines that could fly through the air to drop them. Soon enough, a single day of attacking could level a whole city.” Avaron knew they were not words one in disbelief wanted to hear, but she felt they needed to be said. “Will magic soften that terrible power, or make it even worse? Only time will tell.”
“There are some mages who claim power of that kind. They’re often called ‘queendom-level threats’, able to tear down a whole country on their own.” Efval reached forward, and with a white glove, traced her finger across the length of the rifle. “But you don’t need the lifetime of work they do for these. Anyone who knows how to pick it up, load, and shoot, can kill even a warrior with centuries of battle experience.”
“In fairness, the weapons I speak of take great innovation, and even greater support, to make. One needn’t fear some hermit of a mage showing up one day.” Avaron coughed into her hand, rather conscious of her own arrival all of a sudden. “If one knows their neighbors, they can watch for such terrible power before it comes true.”
“Something we are terribly poor at doing, it seems,” Efval remarked darkly. “For the Empire to build these weapons and catch us unaware … Baval will certainly find a way to kill me when I meet her.”
“Sorry, who?”
“My sister.”
“Ah.” Avaron wasn’t certain if that was the dead one or another one, given Tahn’s remarks about having ‘many daughters’.
“She was among the first to die to the Empire’s guns.” Efval looked up, staring at the blue sky and its few clouds. “We captured the one who did it—a farmer. A mere farmer who worked fields and couldn’t even do mathematics. My sister died such a dishonorable death.”
“If I, might speak out of place for a moment?”
Efval snorted, a rueful smirk adorning her otherwise sharp face. “Very well.”
“I do not think it was dishonorable. The way that guns change everything—I cannot blame those who have never fought them.”
“Then how would you say she died?”
“Fighting to defend her home and everyone in it, I would think. In time, that will be how everyone dies. The lucky ones will have enough of a body to be buried by the end of it.”
“Hm.”
Whether intentionally or not, Efval’s foreboding presence spoke well enough for Avaron to leave. She gave a bow even if the queen couldn’t see it. “Good luck in your coming battles.”
“Quite.”
And so, Avaron left, the queen remaining in front of the gun her people had made.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride – Foreign Queen
Chapter 17: Expanding the Hive
Chapter Text
Curiosity is a dangerous beast to leave unleashed.
*~*
“Why are we sitting in the dark?”
“It’ll turn on any second now. Aaaany second.”
“It has been several seconds now.”
“Listen, I know it’s working.”
“We are still sitting in the dark.”
“I mean, you can leave if you wa-aanT?!”
“Ahu ahu ahu ahu, what is this? So soft!”
“Coum, come on! Oh!”
“Mmm, you never let me play with these. How rude!”
“T-they’re not that grea-AT OW!”
“They are lovely.”
“S-stop pinching me!”
“Say it, they are lovely.”
“Come—ohh, ohh …” Avaron couldn’t believe Tsugumi’s rough groping was actually turning her on! Ten firm, hardy yet supple fingers sinking into her modest chest. In spite of the elvetahn dress, it rather felt like those chitinous hands were on her directly. She squirmed and twisted, trying to pull away with what futile energy she still had. “Come on,” she moaned out.
“Say it.”
“They’re really not though!” Avaron protested, only to find her two arms being forced behind her back. It was then she realized one distinct advantage Tsugumi had—two hands to pin hers, and two to do work. In the dark of the hive tunnel, the crafty spider hugged Avaron from behind. Tsugumi hooked her legs around Avaron, completing the pinning maneuver. “Hey!”
“I am not letting go until you say it.”
Avaron bit her lip as the hands on her boobs shifted from a wild, groping grab to something more methodical. Tsugumi rolled her palms and squeezed with her fingers, moving in a gentle but so very exciting motion. Her poor nipples were already stiffening up, only to be caught between two fingers. Push in, squeeze just enough her toes tingled, and then pull out, those fingers tight on her areola. The tentradom queen let out a long, hot moan under her breath, rather unprepared for how expertly done the move was.
Tsugumi’s head nuzzled in against hers, and her mate’s warm, velvety voice breathed into her ear. “Say it,” she sang ever so gently.
“Mm!” Avaron grunted in refusal, trying to wrench free. I’m the tentacle monster here! Where’s all my tentacles?! she thought while a delectable shudder crept all the way out from her chest and down her spine. Goodness she just wanted to push her tits hard into those delightful hands! Try as she might, she barely managed a wiggle, let alone moving her limbs. Avaron arched her back, her chest pushing forward as her head sank further into Tsugumi’s neck. A needy, moaning whine keened in her throat, much to her embarrassment.
“Ahu? What a sound—”
A light flickered to life above them, blasting both their eyes with the sudden brightness. They both reflexively jerked and covered their eyes, which meant Avaron could free herself from Tsugumi. For as much as writhing on the floor and rubbing her eyes counted as freedom, at least. “Ha—ha! It works!” she squeaked out, thrusting a finger up at the ceiling. “I knew you stupid proteins would work!”
“Pro-what?”
“A building block of life, don’t worry about it.” Her vision clearing up, Avaron stood, squinting and oh-so-mindful of her buzzing chest. The dress’ slightest movement on her nipples was gratingly electric, almost painful. Still, she pushed through. Down both ends of the hive tunnel they were in, more and more lights turned on. Soon they were completely lit up; so well in fact there virtually wasn’t any shadows left.
At the least, this experiment panned out. Nestled in the ceiling was a rectangular, natural grown ‘crystal’, filled with a highly reactive liquid-protein mix. In theory, it had an intensely high magic capacity—which, when combined with the magic spell [Illumination], created a light source. One that the naturally grown lamp could turn on or off as she wanted. Avaron spent a moment thinking, and the next the lamp overhead turn off. Another thought, and it turned on again.
“Is it broken?” Tsugumi asked, coming to stand up next to Avaron.
“No, it works perfectly. Turns off—” it went off, “—and on again—” you guessed it, “—just like that. There, now we won’t be blind down here!”
“How did you make this? Not even other magi can do so so easily.”
“Well, I half-expected it not to work. You might say I’m cheating a little bit.”
“Cheating?”
“The walls, floor, the lights—all of this is part of the Hive, one singular, living being. I simply want certain lights on, and they will come on.”
“Mm.” Tsugumi’s head tilted to the side, her six eyes squinting in thought. “That’s easier than some crystals, isn’t it …”
“Probably. Let’s uh, go take a walk and check everything. I want to check on the miners anyway.” Despite her words, Avaron couldn’t help noticing how Tsugumi leered at her chest. The lingering heat there suddenly became that much more noticeable, and she covered her barely hidden breasts with her arm. “Neh!” she grunted out in dissuasion.
“You won’t escape that easily.”
Tsugumi’s frightening talent to be scary when she wanted to do absolutely scared Avaron. She couldn’t help squeaking with a jump at that predatory smile, more afraid of what would happen to her tits than anything else. Four curling, air-groping hands reached toward her, and Avaron let out a chirp before running down the tunnel away from her. Tsugumi followed quickly, all-too-able to keep up with even scarier ease. Avaron’s playful tease turned into a deadass full on sprint, and the two of them raced through the smooth-plated hive tunnel.
At the least, all the lights they saw worked well! Avaron felt it was enough evidence to suggest all the lights sharing the same template were also working. It absolutely didn’t need any testing that would involve her trying to get past Tsugumi. Thankfully the miners were working closer to the surface entrance just past the waterfall-pipe! As she ran, however, a new sensation entered her mind—an unwanted feeling that set her hair straight up and her muscles tense. “Stop! Stop, stop,” Avaron growled out, gradually coming to a halt. A concerned Tsugumi soon stood next to her, looking with a wordless question.
Down there? Avaron thought, looking with her eyes as much as her mind down the tunnel they just left. It was the deepest tunnel, a ‘main thoroughfare’, but the intruder wasn’t there. The large organic door she’d grown as a kind of airlock was still shut tight. Another sensation struck, one of alarm and fear—this time, from the young tentacles mining at the entrance. Her head whipped forward on pure instinct, fists clenching tight. “Something’s invading at the front!” she snapped out before breaking into a for-serious dead run.
Tsugumi rocketed past her in a vaunting sprint that looked more like controlled jumps. “I’ll take care of it!” she shouted, already far, far ahead and farther still.
It didn’t pass by her how much Tsugumi had been playing around before.
That thought had little room in Avaron’s worried mind, though.
Until she got there, she compelled the young tentacles to flee down the tunnel toward her. In the nascent senses she felt, eventually their group and Tsugumi’s distinct presence crossed paths, while Tsugumi went on ahead. The intruder yet pursued them, and they undoubtedly collided already. Damn this, I can barely tell where they are, let alone what they’re doing! Avaron scowled. If this was the sort of alarm her Hive felt, it needed dramatic improvement.
The clak-clak-clak of chitin-against-plate sounded from ahead. Two dozen of their young tentacles, all relatively about the size of a large dog, came barreling toward her. As water would part in front of a rock, they divided for Avaron to run straight through. In turn, they stopped in a group, panting and wheezing as they recovered from their frightening flee.
Shouts and surprised yells echoed from ahead before suddenly being cut off entirely. Soon rounding a corner, Avaron saw the mystery threat—an elvetahn plastered against the wall, bound by Tsugumi’s webbing. The spider woman stood pressed close to the intruder, a single thread of silk laying on their throat like a garrote wire. The nearer Avaron came, however, the more she recognized who it was after all.
Nuala? she thought in great surprise, coming to a stop just in front of the scene. Robes, book, and all. The darker-skinned elvetahn and her white hair looked rather frayed, stuck to the wall as she was. Their eyes met in a passing recognition, her tell-tale irritation burying that fear in her amethyst-colored eyes.
“You! This is how you—nn, treat a guest?” Nuala growled out, ever mindful of the garrote pressing in.
“And I told you, your queen, and everyone else to stay out of this cave. Why are you snooping in here like a thief?”
“Where else am I to look when no one is in that disgusting shack you call a house?”
“Cute. Why are you here?” Avaron reaffirmed, her tone brokering no digressions.
Nuala, in spite of her restraints, stuck her nose up. “Her majesty has assigned me to be your guard.”
“The best magi in this queendom and you get the short stick for guard duty?” Avaron confirmed with a dry taste to her voice. Nuala, for a brief moment, looked rather concern—a reaction someone in her position shouldn’t be having. “I can smell a rat better than anyone I know. Why are you here?”
Even if she was wrong about her suspicions, a little bit of careful pressure could reap wonders.
“Hm. You are smarter than you look.”
“It’s a real burden.”
Nuala rolled her eyes. “It is true I am here to guard you. I just happened to volunteer to satisfy my own curiosity.”
“Curiosity is it?”
“Yes. Who are you? Where do you come from? And how do you know things not even my teachers couldn’t dream of?” Nuala’s gaze slid down the tunnel that Avaron just came out of. “And why, exactly, is the queen allowing a tentradom to nest here? With you sitting in front of its cave?”
Its cave … wait. Avaron’s cheeks puffed up from a barely-caught laugh. This gal’s curiosity is a real problem for her, isn’t it? Shaking her head, she waved at Tsugumi to come back. “Ease up on her for now, Tsu.”
“She is dangerous,” Tsugumi said without missing a beat. “Are you certain?”
“Enough to risk all our lives on it. Besides, her queen will rip her spine and skull straight out of her body if she does anything.”
Two dubious faces looked at her.
“She’s that kind of woman.”
“… She is,” Nuala agreed tepidly.
A few tense moments passed before Tsugumi sighed, nodded, and pulled away from the wall. With a flourish of her hand, a burning light ripped its way across her silky threads. All that which bound Nuala burned away in a harmless flash, every last thread gone. The grand magi made a show of straightening her robes and pulling down her hood to fix her hair. It was, in the tunnel’s blisteringly clear light, Avaron got a good look at her.
The rough sharpness of her face softened somewhat—still angular, but not one cast in terrifying shadows. Her ears, curiously, had been pulled back into the hood. As soon as it fell down, they sprang out with an almost audible ‘boing’, wobbling for a moment before straightening out. Or, as much as they could; their great length made them droop at the ends, far more than other elvetahn. Nuala caught her gaze and with a repressed start, made to pull up her hood again.
“Ah, sorry,” Avaron said with a—hopefully—disarming smile. “Your ears look really lovely, it caught me off guard.”
Nuala froze, her brow creasing as if she had trouble understanding something. “Hm. Such a poor jest to make.”
“I’m not joking?” Avaron looked taken aback before scratching her head. “Suit yourself, but a hood won’t do much good down here.”
“… Perhaps.” In the end, Nuala left her hood down, and all her shoulder-length white hair spilled out. Unlike every other elvetahn, she did little to style it save rounding them up into a dozen, barely-woven braids. Satisfied at her state again, she set a hand on the big, black book hanging off her hip, tied to it as it was with a chain. “Now, which question will you answer first?”
“What is this, an interrogation?” Avaron asked, now actually joking much to Nuala’s straight-faced displeasure. Waving a hand to clear the bad air, she shook her head. “Ah, dull. My name is Avaron, and I won’t tell you where I’m from yet. As to what I know … well, stick around. Maybe you’ll figure it out.”
“… Stick around?”
“I was in the middle of something which you so rudely interrupted. Tsugumi, do watch her a little bit.”
“Of course.”
With that, she moved the many young tentacles deeper in the Hive back up to them. The familiar clak-clak-clak of their ‘footsteps’ sounded on the walls, and Nuala tensed. One hand on her book and the other near a pouch on her belt, her whole posture screamed ready to fight. “Ah, don’t do anything, they won’t bother you at all,” Avaron said reproachfully.
Nuala looked at her as if she was nuts.
“I’m quite serious. If you want to know something, then be a proper guest and behave.”
Whether or not she would, Avaron couldn’t tell.
The young tentacles soon reached them, walking at more sedate pace. As they neared their group, the plopped down on the floor, taking a break for what it was right then and there. Squinting her eyes, Avaron stepped over to one of them, its white-chitin covered in brown, black, and grays of all kinds. She wiped and wiped, knocking off dust, dirt, and sticky mud alike, her face creasing with annoyance. “Ah, damn, I’m such an idiot,” she grumbled under her breath. “Duh!”
“What is wrong?” Tsugumi asked, straddling the awkward position of guard and worried mother.
“Nothing bad just, basic stuff I completely overlooked. Come on, lets go look at the mining site.” Smacking her hands together and cleaning them, she stood up. Despite Nuala’s disbelieving looks, they and the tentacles managed to walk up the tunnel, closer to the surface. As they did, the air became thicker, dirtier, and clouded with dust. Avaron had to pull up her shirt over her nose, until a gust of wind blew in from behind her. She looked and saw Nuala, hand out stretched with a glowing symbol in her palm, apparently making wind.
“Now that’s a neat trick,” Avaron said with frank approval. Despite that, Nuala looked at her with something near contempt.
“It is not a trick.”
“Ah, right, sorry. Bad turn of phrase. Anyway!” Shoving right past that awkward moment, Avaron turned her attention to the mining site itself. The wall had ‘peeled’ open, the flesh underneath receding as the plates stacked up on either side of the entrance. One might liken it to the petals of a flower in a sense, or so it seemed to Avaron. The overhead light shined in deep, showing jagged strikes, broken rock, and mounds of knee-high dirt everywhere. That, and the air remain clouded heavily with debris, stagnant as it was.
“Yup. Shit.” Avaron clapped the palm of her hand to her forehead. “That is going to be annoying.”
“What?” Nuala and Tsugumi asked at once, and the two looked at each other dimly.
“Underground mining is a whole beast of a problem on its own. First there’s structural integrity, then there’s the atmosphere, then there’s moving all this debris out,” she said, counting them off one-by-one on her fingers. “And if you find ores or gems you gotta handle those, which is another set of problems. Hnnn …”
“What is ‘atmosphere’?” Nuala asked.
“Hm? Oh, the, well air. Specifically the air involved in a living world, which can contain a lot more things than just air.”
“Air is air, what else can it contain?”
“I can’t imagine you haven’t seen pollen or other junk in the air, right?”
“Of course I have,” Nuala said with some offense. “But that is simply plant produce and other debris.”
“Yes, but what about the gases?”
“… Gases?”
“The air we breathe—” Avaron gestured with a hand between her and Nuala, “—is made up of different gases. Too much of one, or not enough, and we’d choke to death. Plus, there are some gases that are utterly invisible, yet can suffocate a person if they walk into it.”
“Suffocate a person … as in, a weaponized gas like smoke?”
“No.” Avaron rubbed her temple for a moment. “It’s hard to explain without all the background knowledge. One such gas is carbon monoxide, an invisible, tasteless, and odorless gas. There is almost no way to perceive it until you are already suffocating to death.”
“How is it made?”
“Normally as a byproduct of breathing and other things. Out in nature it’s impossible to find because the atmosphere disperses it so easily. Now, take a home, or an enclosed space like this—” Avaron waved around her head, pointing aimlessly, “—and suddenly it starts piling up. You can go to sleep one night and won’t wake up again.”
“That is … hm. I wonder,” Nuala trailed off, curling a hand under her chin and staring thoughtfully at the ground.
“What is it?”
“… Some years ago there was a string of infant deaths. We elvetahn rarely have children, and the mystery of how they died frightened us all. Despite looking over all their bodies, we never figured it out. They simply fell asleep and never woke up again.”
Avaron pursed her lips together. “If their homes were tightly closed spaces, monoxide poisoning would’ve built up far, far faster.”
“I do not think they were, but all the deaths happened in winter and stopped as soon as spring arrived.”
“Ah, fuck. I think I know why. Do you all burn firewood in your houses for heat?”
“Yes? The smoke is cleanly sent outside.”
“Yeah, but probably not the carbon monoxide. Let me guess, after the flames stop producing smoke, you shut the vents to keep the heat in?”
Each word drained the color on Nuala’s dark face until it seemed she saw a ghost. “Yes, we do,” she said, sounding beside herself.
“Yeah. As long as there is heat burning the wood, its producing carbon monoxide. Burn it long enough and in a tightly enclosed space, and that’s all you’re going to breathe in.”
“B-but surely not, or else we would’ve found out about it much sooner?!”
“Opening doors and windows can vent a room quickly. If all these kids started dying at once, then you all stopped doing something you had been previously. And children, much more than adults, are sensitive to these things,” Avaron said, waving off the conversation. “Anyway, looks like I’ll need to figure this out in the interim. Let’s get out of the tunnel for now, everyone.”
*~*
Nuala sat in the corner of the enclosure, staring at her book without really reading it. Avaron wasn’t certain to make of her, but for the time being she wasn’t terribly threatening. A dozen tentacles lounged around on the inside around them, sitting like dogs without anything to do, while the rest lounged around outside. With no compelling directive, their baser instincts left them in a passive, almost maintenance-like state. If they had no need to survive, they did almost nothing else.
While convenient, Avaron worried she’d have to be more hands-on to make the Hive function. I could load up their idle instincts to do stuff but … a robot left on a job will keep doing the job forever. They’re not quite that perfect but I wonder.
Did she actually have to make everything from scratch, or could she co-opt it?
Like borrowing the mind of a dog or something …
But if she did that, would all that loaded up brain juice conflict with the Hive Mind?
Avaron rubbed her eyes. It’s just one fucking problem after the next! she thought with utter exasperation.
“You …” Nuala’s sudden words drew Avaron’s attention. “How do you know all of this? These guns, this carbon mo-no-side, the atmosphere—it is knowledge of a kind completely out of tune with this world.”
“This world.” Avaron echoed and smiled at Nuala’s suspicious eyes. “Let me just say, if you are bored with what you know, you haven’t spent enough time looking into anything. Hell, play with some copper wire and magnets, watch it spit out electricity.”
“… Electricity?”
“Ah, you might know it better as lightning—but it’s nowhere near that powerful.”
Nuala head bobbled like a doll for a moment. “You know how to make lightning with copper and this … magnet?”
“It’s not lightning!” Avaron refuted in her own self-defense. “It’s very, very weak. But, yes, learning that sort of thing opens up all kinds of possibilities.”
“Do you even comprehend what that means?” Nuala asked with utmost seriousness. “Lightning magic is amongst the most dangerous for any magi to attempt. Even a small focus could amount to an entire breakthrough in magical spells!”
The thought hadn’t even crossed Avaron’s mind in all honesty. Magic yet remained so utterly unknown to her she was thinking more along industrialization. Scratching her cheek sheepishly, she tried to hide her surprise with a thoughtful look. “’Could’ and ‘will’ are two different things. You’re welcome to try, I’m sure it’ll put your name down in history.”
Nuala recoiled at the idea, blinking most owlishly. “That—I—there’s nothing here for me to work with!” she refuted in an instant, much to Avaron’s surprise. “How am I to conduct such experiments?”
“That’s your problem, isn’t it?” Avaron said wearily. “I’m not going anywhere. Either do the work at your own place or have the materials sent here. I don’t really care either way.”
Nuala seemed about to talk when Tsugumi returned, opening the enclosure’s rickety door. A diminutive sack hung from her hip, covered in dirt and leaves. “I think I found it, Avaron.”
Hearing her own name made Avaron’s neck prickle with such a delightful sensation. Tsugumi used it so rarely, and her wonderful voice just purred it out. Snapping herself back to attention, she smiled and nodded. “Did the youngling help?”
“Greatly. It … she?” Tsugumi paused, rather uncertain.
“She is fine, they’re all basically female too.”
“She found it like she knew where it was, yes.”
Oh, good, abstract orders do work. Avaron sighed with relief and waved Tsugumi over closer. Not sure how much I can stack up commands but we’ll see. The sack plopped down on the broken chest they used for a table. Ever so carefully, Avaron untied the cord and pulled it open, unveiling the wondrous little plant within. A single, thick stalk connected it to many spindly roots, while its turquoise leaves twitched and swayed. Little dots of red and blue covered each leaf, like droplets of paint. At the top of it awaited a glass-like bulb, translucent petals curled around a spindly, cord-like heart. Avaron couldn’t help marveling at its looks, a rather exotic specimen by all accounts.
“Ngh!” An excited, angry grunt from the side drew both their attentions. Nuala, otherwise reserved and condescending, looked damn near ready to explode. “W-where, where did you get that?!” she asked, somewhere between loud and hoarse with the raw exertion she spoke with.
“Calm down, it’s just a flower,” Avaron said, knowing full well how much it’d set her off.
Nuala’s eye started twitching violently.
I wonder if she’s related to Efval? Avaron mused.
“Just a flower—a Caged Sun, a mere flower! This—this is among the rarest of botanical ingredients in alchemy! Lady Aleesa would pay a queen’s ransom for just one of them!”
“Well, I’ll keep that in mind if I need cash at some point.”
“… What are you going to use it for?” Tsugumi asked, hovering above Avaron rather curiously.
“Ah, that.” Avaron smirked, her idle experiment seeming to become a lot more entertaining. “I have a neat trick one of my skills has given me. Here, watch.”
The two of them did in fact watch with rapt attention. Avaron carefully picked up the plant and over a few minutes, washed its roots clean of all the dirt it was in. Checking it over once for any unwanted bugs or otherwise, it did give her a chance to admire its beauty. No time like the present, she thought, folding up the leaves closer to the stem. The glass-like bulb bulged and warped under her hand, folding in like a deflating balloon. Compressed down into a more reasonable size, she up and took her first bite, swallowing the whole bulb in a big gulp.
Oh this is weird, it’s like one of those … Not cotton candy but it has that airy texture …
Crunch, slurp, snap and crack, piece by piece she chewed and ate the ‘Caged Sun’.
Nuala stood nearby, her face stuck somewhere between awesome amazement and utter horror. Hers was the look of someone experiencing something profound in their otherwise incredible life.
Tsugumi just looked bemused at the whole process.
Bulb-to-roots, Avaron ate it all in about a minute. She rinsed the leftovers down with some water, a gaseous blech coming out rather suddenly. “Oh, excuse me.”
The magi had checked out of reality for a moment, it seemed.
“Why did you eat it?” Tsugumi asked, smiling the polite smile of someone utterly uncertain.
“Mmm, ding, done absorbing it!” Avaron said, clapping her own hands in congratulation. “One of my skills allows me to absorb other skills from things I consume. That’s not how it works exactly, but you get the idea.”
“… That plant had a skill to absorb?”
“Kind of. It’s not a skill as recognized by the goddesses—more like a natural talent.”
“And you have it now?”
“At the moment it’s in my head, but I can’t use it yet. But what I can do is give the skill to the Hive.”
Tsugumi looked as if a realization came over her, and she perked up immediately. “Oh! I see. What will it do?”
“Solve that air filtration problem.” Avaron tapped her skull. “Tahn’s advice paid off here, he knew a wonderful plant that’ll do a lot of work for us.” She really hadn’t a clue how to explain genetics, splicing together genomes, and constructing life at such a basic level. It might’ve been high school science class for her but the world didn’t even know what microbiology was. Forget smaller stuff like DNA, RNA, or atomic particles. Nonetheless, it’d take her a little bit to build up something usable. “Thanks for going out and getting it.”
Tsugumi smiled, her hands fiddling together. “I am glad it was what you wanted.”
Ah, the air of someone expectant of something. Avaron reached up and patted her on the head with a smile.
However, that was the wrong response.
Despite her easy-going smile, Tsugumi’s eyes became dangerous. “As it happens to be, Gwyneth did leave me under an impression.”
Avaron froze, her shifty, sideways glancing eyes betraying her uncertainty. “What sort of impression?”
“That your needs would be, mmm, greater, than they have been.”
My needs … oh. Oh, that. She’d rather mercifully been able to put that out of mind for a while. Avaron took her hand back and coughed into her, looking rather caught. “The creation of the Hive took a lot out of me,” she muttered under her breath. “A lot, quite literally.”
“Oh really?”
“B-but it’s been getting better!” Avaron said hurriedly at seeing Tsugumi’s smile widen.
“Somehow I do not see how that precludes me.”
“I … oh. I—” Avaron, realizing all too late what was being said, hung her head. “Yes, dear.”
“Do not speak as if I am somehow a demon.”
“It’s not that! Just, well, everything else that’s been going on. I honestly forgot, but I won’t again.”
Tsugumi sighed, the sound thankfully not that angry. She rubbed her two of her temples with one hand, looking at Avaron rather amusedly. “It is not as if I expect it regularly … well, that is rather …”
Ah, even the impeccable inn hostess could jumble up. Avaron smirked, seeing the opportunity for what it was. “That being said, wouldn’t you want a proper roof over your head and a nice bed for it?”
“What in the world are you two talking about?” Nuala interjected with a question, making the two of them jump. “What does it have to do with eating a CAGED SUN?”
Saved by the idiot, Avaron thought, both she and Tsugumi looking over rather annoyed. “Stick around, miss magi. You might learn something.”
Nuala’s face soured instantly, and with a dismissive grunt, left the enclosure.
“… Is it wise to anger her?”
“She is a victim of her own curiosity. As admirable as it is, there is a point one needs to learn restraint.”
“It is hard to imagine lecturing such an experienced elvetahn,” Tsugumi remarked dryly.
“Age is a number; wisdom, something completely different.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Curious Magi
Chapter 18: Legwork
Chapter Text
Fundamentals are the difference between talent and hard work.
*~*
Standing at the entrance of the inn-to-be, Avaron looked around. “So they brought enough to lay the foundations but they need another round-trip?”
“It appears so!” Tsugumi shouted back, walking around in the interior frame. The elvetahn workers had dug out the ground, used their magic to ‘fortify’ it, and then laid a series of wooden slabs as its imminent foundation. Then, a series of twisting trees, cut wooden boards, and stone reinforcement formed the actual framework of the inn. Based on skeleton alone, Avaron felt it was already completely different from Tsugumi’s prior establishment. Her mate, however, seemed pleased. Like a manager walking in at an on-site job, Tsugumi spared no effort in examining every piece her eyes could find. The structure work was good enough she spent more time talking to herself about what room would do what.
“Do you really want a hundred guests exactly?”
“I worked in a larger hotel at a big city, once,” Tsugumi said, walking by Avaron to size up another room. “Despite its big name and popularity, it never filled five hundred people worth of rooms. Now, competitor much further away—one hundred rooms, always booked, always charging higher prices! Prices go too high, lower them down.”
“It’d be easier to change pricing than to build or remove rooms,” Avaron observed.
“Yes, exactly. Now, one hundred rooms very big for being out here—I’m not sure it will fill. But, if it doesn’t, more room for us to put things away.”
Pragmatic in a sense that Avaron could appreciate. Tsugumi knew her business well enough she trusted her judgement on the matter. “But there’s still the problem of the hot spring, isn’t there?”
The fluttering tora paused, her six eyes squinting irritably. “Yes. My prior inn had a natural spring. This one—” she pointed absently at the river, where farther ahead they could somewhat make out the cave entrance, “—cold. I could use wood to heat up the water but … very expensive.”
Avaron folded her arms together and frowned, not entirely certain how to address such a problem. It’s not like there’s gas generators, or like a heat pipe system to move heat around … Tilting her from one side to the other, an outlandish idea did come to mind. “What about magic? Like some sort of fire crystal or …”
Tsugumi giggled, the sound of someone earnestly surprised. “Nooo, no! Much too expensive. I could buy castles worth of wood for that.”
“Well apparently that Caged Sun is valuable,” Avaron remarked with a roll of her eyes. “We could trade a few for some.”
That did make Tsugumi pause, her face creasing with a serious thoughtfulness. “We could,” she echoed, her finger tips tapping together.
“Although I don’t know how many we’ll actually find, I can probably grow a few.”
“… Grow?” Tsugumi asked, looking around a support beam at her.
“I have to start farming at some point,” Avaron said flippantly, waving her hand back and forth. “Although it’s a really temperamental plant. Like, very fussy, I’m surprise it can grow at all.”
“Maybe that is why it is so rare?”
“Seems that way.” Her understanding of genetics painted something of a picture, but obviously not a complete one. The flower—Caged Sun, although that sounded ostentatious—was a victim of extreme over specialization. It needed a very particular soil mixture, then a high amount of indirect light as direct would incinerate it, and a gaseous, toxic air. Based on what her tentacle drone saw, it had grown amongst a bunch of putrid, awful-as-fuck pitcher plants filled with rotting insects underneath a big tree. Once it had all that, the damn thing sucked up the air and spat out pure oxygen as a byproduct of creating magic.
Although if I end up farming them I wonder if they’ll have the right qualities an alchemist would want? Natural grown specimens have their strengths until you can grow them well enough. Well, she’d find out either way. The Hive needed an air filtration system, and no one plant would be ideal for it. The Caged Sun at least made for a great start.
Reaching over head in a big stretch, Avaron yawned. “When did they say they’ll be back to finish this?”
“A few weeks.”
Avaron blinked, staring up at the big trees overhead, the sun dancing between their swaying leaves. Her big tenty would be back way, way before then and she couldn’t just leave Tsugumi hanging out dry. That and she did rather want to have her little spider snuggle-fuck now that she wasn’t so focused on working problems again. Ah, damn, this reminds me of college, she thought with pursed lips. Such a pain in the ass finding a good place … unless … Her eyes drifted toward the river, and the cave at the far end.
… Hmmm.
*~*
The rattle of the cart ever jostled and jolted her, shaking her bones and clattering her teeth. Gwyneth could find no peace of mind on the rough road, far rougher than she’d anticipated. Naught else to do but to bear it all, unless she decided to start walking around. The sound of clopping hooves and rattling cargo is all she had for company, cramped and packed in as she was. In spite of it all, Gwyneth ever did try to meditate and find her center, rattled as it was from an entirely different sort of problem.
Her very own order couldn’t be trusted with a decree from the Flame.
What was the point then, coming together if not to heed its commands?
Try as she might over the days in leaving Shadowpeak, no answer could be found. The Flame ever remained atop her bosom, silent and content to wait. The quandary, thus, fell to her and her alone.
Perhaps mine task is mine alone, she mused with a frown. If the others will not heed mine words, then tis mine responsibility.
In the end, perhaps the Flame would give unto them their own paths to its purposes, and this was hers.
Despite how reasonable it sounded, something yet remained off-key. The Flame ever directed them as a whole, and left them to discern amongst themselves how to handle a task. To offer her one purpose and the others something else was … different. Unusual. Atypical. For all she knew, it did not fit at all.
Then either the Flame had changed, or she alone now bore the weight of all its divine attention.
Neither left Gwyneth at ease in her heart.
Nor did the pain in her butt from such an awful ride help, for that matter.
Gwyneth ever persevered.
Minutes turned to hours, and the sun had left noon but yet to reach dusk when the wagon suddenly halted. The neighing of horses and surprised shouting of people woke her up as much smacking into the cargo did. More than all that, the raw, murderous intent weighing upon her senses spoke of a great danger most suddenly bearing down. Gwyneth clutched her hands to her chest, grasping the Flame yet sitting there. “Great Fire, that mine soul kindles, and mine flesh entreats, giveth light to cast out dark, and strength to slay that which mine eyes see!” she muttered in a feverous, yet controlled chant.
The little Flame crackled and popped, tendrils of fire and light alike slipping between her fingers. With it followed lines of burning heat in Gwyneth’s hands, traveling through her veins like worms into her arms. Disappearing into the sleeves of her robes, the power yet worked, filling her with the blistering comfort of the Flame, and the holy strength that infused her body. So it received her prayer and deigned to give her what she needed, now Gwyneth would fear no evil before her.
She strode forth, boot-against-wood in the wagon, throwing open the tarp that covered the rear entrance. The sounds of battle reached her all the clearer, swords against flesh, the screaming of humans and the cackling snarls of evil beings. Twas not bandits this day, but a different scourge from the bottomless well that was evil.
Gwyneth saw them as she always did such beings—twisting shadows, brimming with their foul life, ever at beyond the small radius that the Flame’s light touched. She knew them to be kagr, fetid creatures half the size of man, foulest of dark denizens who scamper in sewers and caves. In between them danced the figures of people, desperate to survive. It mattered not it was midday or the heat of the sun came from high above, such things like ‘day’ and ‘night’ never existed in her world. She only ever saw the truth.
One such person squared up against two kagr, wielding crooked spears as they were. His dagger and miniscule round shield betrayed him as a caravan worker than a guard, who seemed busier fighting more elsewhere. Gwyneth held up a hand, her fingers trembled as they spread apart. In between them arose sparking crackles and cinders, a tiny ball of flame snarling to life in her palm. She crushed it in her fist, the flame spitting out both ends like a spear. Rearing her arm back, she focused all of her onto the kagr, staring with utmost concentration.
“Oh, mine blessed spears,” she muttered, stepping forward in a lunging throw. “STRIKE!”
A single spear flew out, but split apart in the air. The [Spears of Incineration] screamed through the air, slamming into the chests of the kagr attackers. Such was its force they went sailing back several feet, pinned to the ground by the very fire now consuming them from the inside-out. Their wretched screams howled louder than all others, stunning the battle for just a moment.
The feeling of many eyes falling on her came, but Gwyneth stood tall, another flaming ball forming in her hand. “By the Flame!” she shouted, her demure voice gone beneath a scalding hot conviction. “Thy wretch be kindling! Burn all to ash and cinder!”
“Is that a Flame Priestess?”
“A priestess is here!”
“Men, the Flame is on our side today!”
All sorts of rallying cheers and enthusiastic cries filled the air. For many of the caravan, undoubtedly born or raised in Shadowpeak, her presence alone bolstered their shaken morale. Gwyneth spared no moment to enjoy such reverent respect; her gaze set upon another pair of kagr farther afield. They stood barely at the edge of her range, but the edge was not ‘out of reach’.
Another [Spears of Incineration] sailed across the grassy and rock-strewn earth, skewering two more monsters to the earth. If the kagr had any inclination on who to go for, many of them quite suddenly turned toward Gwyneth. The priestess moved herself away from the wagons, offering herself as a tempting target. Some of the caravan guard sped toward her, forming a loose line between her and the bulk of the kagr running with crappy spears, swords, and shields alike.
Despite their fury, the kagr had enough sense to not wade into melee recklessly. They jockeyed and probed at the front line, their shorter spears having trouble with the caravan’s normal sized swordsmen. All the while, Gwyneth had the luxury of free reign to spear any enemy she saw, cutting their numbers by two or three every time she hurled. Despite all of it, however, the kagr kept fighting, even as their ranks fell from dozens to single digits. The last few pockets died unceremoniously on the other side of the caravan, cut down where they were.
“We—we did it!” One of the guards shouted, much to his fellows’ agreeing cries.
Gwyneth frowned, something off on her senses. Although the kagr lay dead, she couldn’t help looking around, feeling with magic what eyes couldn’t provide. As she did so, a guard standing nearby asked, “What is it, priestess?”
The others who heard him quieted down, noticing as he did Gwyneth’s unease.
In the split moments of concentration, Gwyneth felt the difference she needed. A subtle flow, indicating a direction toward them. She held a hand up and shouted, “Tis not finished yet!”
Everyone else shut up rather quick, squaring up as they formed ranks again.
The minutes passed, their ears catching the sounds of something crashing through the trees. Gwyneth looked to the thicket off to the side of the caravan, across the small, mostly clear ground. The snarling sounds of kagr soon followed, then they appeared, running through the trees and toward them. As a dozen cleared the forest, the trees behind them bowed, shoved aside by an immense hulk of gray flesh and rippling muscle. Gwyneth could hardly believe how such a creature existed, oozing the same vileness of a kagr, but no such creature existed. Not even kagr kings were of such size; what in the world was it? Two arms, two legs, a distorted muzzle of a mouth filled with crooked teeth, and a body misshapen by the great strength it showed in every motion.
“What is that?” the guard near her asked, as much as exclaimed, with horror in his voice.
“Mine spears will pierce it!” Gwyneth shouted, even if she wasn’t utterly certain. “Take care of the little ones!”
“R-right!” he and a few others shouted back.
No moment to spare, their enemies did not stop to survey the battle. Like beasts they barreled forward, filled with rage Gywneth had no idea where from. Pulling on the great fire within her, another orb crackled to life, only to be crushed into a flaming spear. “Begone, foul one!” she screamed, lunging forward and hurtling another [Spears of Incineration]. Three flaming bolts flew out, one toward the abomination’s head, the other two to its chest. To her terrible surprise, it lifted a hand, guarding its head from a bolt by sacrificing its forearm.
All three sank into its flesh, eating away but it neither roared nor halted, taking the blows without faltering.
How terrible was it, to let its own flesh burn to blackened, crumbling ash, and yet not even feel it?
An undead? Gwyneth marveled in twisted wonder, yet her heart spoked differently. The rot of death was inescapable, but none could be felt here. What living being could resist fire so? She shoved the thought from mind, raising her other hand, and hurtling another [Spears of Incineration]. Three more spears impaled it, eating at its flesh with all-consuming fire.
Yet still it lumbered forth.
“D-dodge, dodge!” Gwyneth shouted, already moving out of the way. She and the guards all scattered, but some could only move so far. Kagr and guard alike were barreled into and knocked aside by the giant, trundling toward one of the wagons. With a loud, groaning exhale, it crashed through, ripping through its center as a knife through paper. Wood, goods, cloth and all ripped and broke open, spraying all around as it continued past.
A gargling snarl caught Gwyneth’s ear, amongst the screams of pain and rallying words of guards. Three kagr closed in, far too fast and close for her to spear. Gritting her teeth, Gwyneth pulled up the fire within, moving it from her arms and up her chest, into her throat. “Thou shalt NOT!” she yelled, all the flame spewing out as a mighty stream. The kagr let out squeals of surprise before the flamethrower blasted over them, drenching them head-to-toe in magic fire.
How merciful it was, to be consumed by it so fast they hadn’t a chance for pain to make them scream.
Gwyneth coughed and sputtered; the escaping fire harshly leaving. She stumbled for a moment, her very human senses rattled by such a quick and brutal show of magic. It did well in frightening the other kagr, who seemed uncertain of how to actually attack her. Such indecision gave the guards their openings, cutting down more of the attackers. So the battle went—the kagr fierce and screaming, but for as few good attacks they got in, many more of them fell.
The lumbering giant craned around, looking back upon them all with its beady, empty eyes. The spears continued to eat away at it, its very hand that blocked one now a worthless, curled in black stump. One earth-thumping step after another it moved back, brushing through the destroyed wagon like a man who walked through grass. Gwyneth marveled at the sight, her mind racing with adrenaline.
Mine flames burn but too slow! And mine strength is only so much more, she thought with clenched teeth. The greatest of magic she knew commanded the steepest of prices. If she had known so many would appear, she wouldn’t have so hastily crushed them.
“Priestess,” a new, feminine voice said from beside her.
Gwyneth looked over, utterly bewildered at the surprisingly empty spot beside her. A woman in form hugging cloth, shrouded by its purple sheen and dark, almost black-polished iron armor, kneeled near her. Much of her remain hidden, only two crimson, gem-like eyes peeking through her facial wrappings. “W-who art thou?” Gwyneth stammered, her heart thundering with renewed fear.
“Allow me to help,” the stranger said. “I shall turn the giant around. Can you throw more of those flaming spears into its spine?”
Spears to the spine would certainly do the job. Gwyneth nodded. “Only once more.”
“Strike true.” The stranger stood and broke into a run all in a single, fluid motion. Arms to the side in a most strange way, she ran through the fighting, hardly anyone who noticed her having time to do anything. Gwyneth watched with amazement as the woman reached the side of the giant, then vaulted up its towering, tree-tall body. Scaling it with disbelieving ease, she reached the head, and pulled out the oddest sword. It reminded her more of a knife, just a straight-cut blade attached to a simple rod of a handle.
Rearing it up, she struck down, ramming the sword straight through the giant’s eye socket. Such a deep blow must’ve surely reached its brain? Was that not enough to kill? The black-garbed woman wrenched the sword, jerking the giants head to the side. With but a simple blade she guided it into a turn, showing its back to Gwyneth.
Ridiculous! The priestess thought, astonished. Nonetheless, she moved the fire once more, bringing it to her arms and letting the flaming spears take shape once again. One final, exhaustive hurl with a great throw of her arm, the spears crashing into the giant’s spinal cord as a tight, close group. It stumbled forward, one leg catching it, but the other slipping as if it had gone limp. A gasping, exhaling groan followed its descent, slamming face-first into the earth with a leg-weakening tremor.
Almost falling butt first down, Gwyneth caught herself as a plume of dirt and dust blasted out everywhere. Though the battle may be stunned, the screams of kagr and guard alike continued. She saw through the debris with ease, watching the guards triumphantly cut down score after score. At seeing their presumed leader fall, many of the kagr turned tail, fleeing with such haste some tripped and fell.
A presence menaced from behind.
She turned and beheld a single kagr, leering at her with an unsavory salaciousness in its violent aura. It pointed a crooked spear at her, giggling and gargling with its sick-twisted laugh. Sparing not a moment it ran at her, spear at the ready. Gwyneth met it in full, staring down the kagr in its mad dash. A spear was a spear, despite its ramshackle and worthless appearance.
In making for a deadly thrust at her, Gwyneth dodged, sliding back in a diagonal angle with a quick slide of her feet. The kagr blinked and gurgled confusedly, but it too was already rearing itself back. The moments in between, however, saw Gwyneth sliding forward. She grabbed the spear just past the blade, yanking hard and sending the kagr lurching forward. Caught off balance, it had no time to stop her other hand from grabbing its throat with a murderously powerful grip. Its choked squeal accompanied its frantic clawing at her arm, trying to shove, slash, or crush it!
“Give in death what thou could not in life,” Gwyneth spoke, utmost warmth in her voice. At the same time, the flame in her throat-gripping hand poured forth. The kagr thrashed and twisted, its putrid, filthy flesh disappearing in a haze of fiery orange light and black ash. As a tree would succumb, the flame spread through its roots, consuming all in a rapid, blazing pyre. Gwyneth feared not, for the Flame would not harm her in spite of its greatness.
Straightening up, the half-burned corpse of the kagr hung from her hands. Skin, blood, flesh and bone; it all crumbled away, ashes to the floor, cinders and smoke carried by the gentle wind. Gwyneth looked around, and found the battle won in earnest this time. Those who yet remained fighting had assured kills, and so had no need of her. The giant, still alive as it was somehow, could do nothing more but flail uselessly as it too burned away.
What art thou? she wondered, lips pursed together tightly. Everything about the creature struck her as wrong, in spite of its still living state. More importantly, as Gwyneth looked around, that mysterious black-clad stranger was already gone. Given how little presence she had to begin with, Gwyneth sincerely doubted she had any ability to detect her.
That, too, was a disturbing question she couldn’t answer.
To hide from the Flame was to hide from the eyes of divinity.
It was not a simple matter.
“P-priestess!” one of the guards nearby shouted, waving her over. “We have wounded, if it is no trouble!”
“Tis not!” Gwyneth shouted back. In stepping toward him, she let go of the fist full of ashes in her hand; all that remained of the kagr. “Gather thy wounded, and have the able gather the bodies!”
*~*
By the time night arrived, the caravan had made comfortable distance from the sight of battle. Now more out of the forest, the watch could keep an eye out for quite a distance. The bemoaning tirade of the merchants punctuated their little circle around the camp fire, trying to recalculate profits and losses after a whole wagon was destroyed. After excusing herself, Gwyneth finally found some peace a bit farther from camp, near the edge where some guards were sitting.
Sipping at the mead in her mug, the warm, flavorful drink did well to soothe her nerves. Try as she might, nothing Gwyneth knew told her of what or where the giant creature from earlier should’ve come from. Asking around the camp revealed everyone else being just as confused. Legends were one matter; its eerie, distorted similarity to kagr made it stand far apart from them.
Gwyneth tapped her fingers on the thick mug, ever troubled but unable to answer it.
“Priestess.”
That woman’s voice from behind made Gwyneth’s soul damn near jump out of her body. Turning with a jolt, she regarded the void where that black-clothed woman kneeled, reverently respectable for some reason. “Thou …” Gwyneth started, rather uncertain what to say. “Thou rather hath me at a disadvantage. What is thy name?”
“I am called Kagura.”
“Mine name be Gwyneth. What is thy desires?”
“Forgive my impertinence, I have a task of utmost import. You arrived in Shadowpeak with a white-skinned woman, and a harraxin by the name of Nerg?”
A sinking feeling sucked all the warmth in her chest away, and Gwyneth regarded the stranger with utmost suspicion. “Mayhaps. Why does thou need to know?”
“Please, do not be alarmed. I mean no ill,” Kagura said, bowing her head. “If I may, I will explain.”
“… Well, verily.”
Kagura shifted from kneeling to sitting down cross-legged. “I was assigned to Shadowpeak to watch for the arrival of any heroines. In doing so, my mission was to make contact and convey the words of my Lord.” For what of her face could be seen through her wrappings, she frowned. “To my dismay, before I could, one of them was killed by your order. Or, so I thought.”
“Y-you mean she is alive?” Gwyneth stammered out, trying to ‘act’ surprised.
“Their body was taken away by another, who fled into the mountains. I could not follow their trail, but I believe they must be alive still, if wounded.”
“Why is that?”
“Heroines do not die easy, if the legends are to be believed.”
“Be that as it may,” Gwyneth said, feeling rather uncomfortable. “What doth thou want from me?”
“I believe you to know their whereabouts. I must implore your help in arranging a meeting between me and them.”
Whether or not she meant to deceive, Gwyneth couldn’t tell. The woman’s sheer lack of presence made any judgements on her basically impossible. “Thy request is no simple matter, especially when thy intentions yet remain mysterious.”
“Your caution is … admirable,” Kagura said with a begrudging nod. “I have nothing to offer in trust, save only Lord Honda wishes to work with the heroines.”
Honda, the supreme ruler of the far lands of Kitinchi beyond the Alva Forest. Although she knew little of their lands, his name and them were synonymous as the longest, and grandest, of rulers. A century ago he’d shut their borders in their entirety, forbidding any from leaving or entering. That Lord Honda wanted to speak with Avaron?
What in the world?
Could it be a trick?
If it was, it certainly stood out much too obviously.
Gwyneth chewed her lower lip.
“In truth, mine companion was not clear if mine heroine survived,” Gwyneth said carefully. “I left to find out in certainty. If thou wish, accompany me but I cannot promise thy desire will be filled.”
Kagura, after a moment, nodded solemnly. “Death, too, is something I must report to my Lord. I thank the Priestess for allowing my unreasonably selfish request.”
“… Thy talent with the monster certainly helped well. Oh!” Gwyneth sat upright. “Verily, doth thou know of that creature?”
To her dismay, Kagura shook her head. “I do not. Such a disturbing sight caught me unaware. It is not normal in these lands?”
Gwyneth, like her, shook her head. “No. As well-traveled as I have been, I have not heard of anything like it. Tis a foreboding omen, to be sure.”
“… My Lord will be interested in this too.” Bowing her head down, Kagura then said, “I shall help you as I can for the time being, Priestess Gwyneth.”
“Thank thee, fair Kagura.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Curious Magi
Chapter 19: Second Times the Charm (E)
Chapter Text
Success is born from the corpse of failure.
*~*
This is turning out rather well, Avaron thought, her eyes squinting. Too well. For how much some errant detail kept cropping up to bite her, she just wanted to know what it’d be this time. Especially, given everything, she rushed along quite a few parts of the project.
Lights? She looked up, seeing the gentler ceiling crystals glowing in the hive-plated ceiling. Unlike the rectangular slabs out in the tunnels, Avaron tried a bit fancier swirling, circular lines in nice symmetrical patterns. Table and chair? From where she stood at the entrance, an oval table and six chairs awaited off on the left. While the table was quite literally grown out of the floor, the chairs were elvetahn, fancy patterns, wood, and all.
Just beyond them, built into the wall itself, was a kind of water tank. A clearer, semi-transparent crystal showed the bubbly blue waters quite clearly. Different fleshy tendrils lined the bottom and top of the tank, functioning as the input and output for the rest of the hive growth to use. A rudimentary faucet—which she tested herself—worked for one to fill their cups from.
Shelves? I mean, kind of hard to fuck that one up, Avaron mused, glancing to the right and the shelf filled-wall, empty of any real content. Scratching her temple, she stepped into the ‘bedroom’, her gaze upon the bed that waited ahead. A small recess in the floor functioned as a gutter around the bed ‘frame’. Chitinous plating formed a snuggly protection around the much softer, pliable dark-blue flesh on the inside that was the ‘mattress’. Tiny, ridiculously tiny and fine hairs thick enough to form a layer of fur covered the mattress. Avaron ran her hand through them, their unreal softness almost like a cloud between her fingers. And this is okay too … I’m a bit worried they bruise easily, but …
She gave the flesh mattress a few hearty smacks, and it took them without complaint or damage. The fur bowed under the blow, but a few seconds of rest and they perked up again normally. “Hm! Hm, hm.” Nodding with a surprised if satisfied face, Avaron backed away. “Well, this close to the surface I can’t imagine air flow will be a problem toooooo much …”
It wasn’t like she knew for certain the specifics, but it never hurt to be careful.
Looking up, down, left and right, Avaron still felt something was off. I’m not one for interior decorating but ehhh … Nothing else stood out in her mind, and she wasn’t going to stand around fussing any longer. Heading to the great ‘door’ that functioned as an airlock, Avaron stood in front of its spiral-like interlocking plates. It opened with a sucking slurp of muscles contracting and hydraulic fluids decompressing. The blue flesh wriggled and the plates shook, then altogether pulled open in their uneven, wholly organic way.
Avaron, scratching her head and her eyes shut in thought, walked on forward.
“Ah?”
The womanly exclamation sent her jumping backward like a cat splashed with water. Good that she did, Tsugumi was on the other side of the door, carrying a pot in her hands with two bowls delicately balanced on top. The two stared at each other bemusedly for a moment.
“Hi?” Avaron said confusedly.
Tsugumi lifted up the pot a little. “Dinner.”
“Oh. Well. Perfect timing, I guess. Come on in.” Avaron bowed out of the way, gesturing to the room’s sole table. Tsugumi wasted no time in heading over, setting down the pot with a relived sigh, and then setting the dishes. Compelling the door shut behind her, the sluuurp of flesh came as the spiral clawed itself closed once more. “What’s for dinner?”
“Mm, meat stew with mushrooms, onions, carrots …” Tsugumi counted off absently. “I thought the children found wheat, but it was … not very good.”
“Ah, to make dough?”
Tsugumi nodded.
“Well, we can ask the elvetahn for some. Can’t imagine they don’t have wheat for bread at all.”
“Mm. I’d like to make more, but I need a real kitchen to work in.”
Her cute grumbling did tug at Avaron’s heart a little bit. Walking up behind her smaller mate, she laid her hands on Tsugumi’s shoulders, much to her confused look. “Now, errr … Pretty sure this works on your shoulders?” Avaron’s bold beginning turned to a slow, careful moving her hands. Tiny circles, squeezes with the fingers, and pressing in with the thumb, all to massage Tsugumi’s shoulders. A pleased, tiny ‘oh’ came out of the inn hostess, her shoulders rolling into Avaron’s hands. “Pret-ty sure …”
“Why would it not?” Tsugumi asked with a tinge of sarcasm.
“You know, two sets of shoulder blades,” Avaron remarked, eying Tsugumi’s back where her lower arms were. “Not too sure what to do there yet.”
“Mmph. Don’t stop up there, at least …”
Such a simple thing to do. Avaron moved her hands across the length of Tsugumi’s shoulders, pressing in with her thumbs strongly, while at the same time ‘pinching’ with her fingers. A very, very basic massage, but it always did so much on its own. A few rounds of going up and down her shoulders and Avaron heard—as much as felt—Tsugumi’s neck pop when she stretched it.
“Oh! Ooh,” the spider woman moaned with surprise, shaking her four hands to work them out. “I have not had that in a while.”
“Mm starting to think I should do this more,” Avaron remarked lightly.
“I would not complain …”
The sly enthusiasm made Avaron giggle and slide her hands down Tsugumi’s sides. Thin cloth covered her chitinous hips and their lovely, birthing-friendly flair. A tiny hint of her perky butt teased her fingers, the barest edges tempting her to grab them tightly. Looping them to the front, she pulled the smaller woman into close, smirking at her surprised gasp. “Good news then, my dear mate. It might not be much but here is our own personal bedroom,” Avaron said, turning Tsugumi from facing the table to facing the bed. “Where we can sleep together every night and I can do my tentacly duties …”
“Tentacly?” Tsugumi echoed with an amused, airy tone. “My, I wonder what that entails?”
“Night approaches and I can’t imagine there’s anything left to do …”
“Mm, Nuala might need to be put to bed,” Tsugumi remarked lightly.
“Pffffhtphptt,” Avaron blew a raspberry, choking back the laugh that almost got out. “She’s old enough to do it herself!”
Tsugumi laughed too, pushing her head back into Avaron’s shoulder. Her butt pushed into Avaron’s crotch, grating with an up and downward force in a slow, inviting dance. “Then I think there is nothing else,” she said airily, her two lower hands reaching backward to grab Avaron’s hips. “Nothing at ALL!”
Her raw confidence disappeared when Avaron reached up, grabbing her plump, milk-filled tits. Tsugumi let out a stuttering, pleased exhale, her whole body perking up tight and hard against Avaron. She, like Avaron, wore a thinner elvetahn dress, and it did little to shield her chest from those probing, groping fingers. A small, tiny barrier kept them apart, but not the power of Avaron’s grope. Leaning in, she nuzzled where Tsugumi’s ear was, buried in her short hair. “Let’s enjoy dinner together, then, hm?” Avaron whispered and smiled at the tiny coo she heard in Tsugumi’s throat.
In pulling away and walking to the table, she made sure to show off her gloating face. For once, Tsugumi seemed out of words, only able to offer up a faux-angry look and a crossing of her arms. Avaron, content with her utter victory there, sat down with a big smile at the table. Tsugumi pulled up a chair beside her, glowering with a hot blush and wide, saucer-sized pupils. With an undignified ‘hmph!’ she opened the cook pot and started spooning out the stew into their bowls.
Her salacious teasing aside, Avaron couldn’t help noticing all the more ingredients present. “Huh, they really helped out, didn’t they?”
“They did,” Tsugumi answered with a nod. “I had to make them web pouches to carry everything, but they learned well.”
It sounded so simple and yet Avaron found the idea rather odd. Other people can teach the Hive? Or, did they learn from her because she’s, well, a brood mother? A tightening of security would be needed so none of her own decided to listen to others without reason. Something like a security access list would be best … somehow.
Ah, there it was, that one thing that always came up. Now she could only wait for the second.
Their actual eating passed in silence, punctuated by slurping and chewing of larger, chunkier pieces. Half-way down her bowl, Avaron took a break, getting up to go over to the wall’s water tank. Tsugumi watched with utmost interest, her six eyes all locked onto Avaron’s backside. In a tiny shelf beneath the tank’s only faucet, small plate-grown cups waited, and so Avaron got her water.
“You’re drinking from there?” Tsugumi asked, her heated gaze broken by confusion.
“Hm? Oh, this.” Avaron patted the semi-transparent crystal ‘glass’ with her free hand. “Yup, water tank. Pumped straight from the river, cleaned by the Hive, and stored here. It’s important to drink up, after all.”
Tsugumi stood and moved over, taking a cup for herself. Avaron found her rather interested in pouring the water, then taking a sip, her eyes squinting thoughtfully. “What an odd taste,” she muttered before taking another sip. “It’s water but …”
“… But?”
“Like something is missing.”
“Probably because there is. It’s purified water with a small amount of mineral enrichment. Stuff this clean isn’t found in nature almost anywhere.”
“Huh. Water has taste? Because of … impurities?”
“Yup. Not everything in it is bad, mind you. Different impurities can actually be good, it’s just hard getting the right balance.”
“Huh.”
The two sipped from their cups, enjoying the cool and refreshing drink. A decent way to wash down the soup and cleanse the palette, all things said and done. Avaron, her mind on water purification, found her attention drawn by Tsugumi’s relentless eyeballing in her direction. What she did not speak, her eyes showed in utter clarity—a ravenous, predatory desire that might’ve been to eat her as much as fuck her where she stood. Either way, her skin shivered with goosebumps, her heart perking awake with an anxious anticipation.
And here I thought my water tank was pretty cool, Avaron thought, setting her cup down in the tray again. Tsugumi mimicked her, the two of them standing there staring at each other like a moment at the office. You know, before two people go into the conference room to discuss their bi-weekly performance analysis for athleticism. In a company that does software. “Alright, enough of that,” she declared, stepping forward. For what ever Tsugumi expected, being literally swept up into Avaron’s arms bridal-style caught her off guard. Her fearsome visage broke with a cute, surprised squeal, all four arms grabbing onto Avaron’s shoulders.
“Y-you—mmm!” Tsugumi’s disgruntled voice was swallowed up by Avaron’s heavy kiss. Lips against lips, the angle and strength of the tentradom more than enough to keep her down. Tsugumi’s fingers slackened, heart-pounding twitches going through them as her knees squeezed together. Step-by-step Avaron took her toward the gigantic ‘bed’, one more than adequate for a couple people. Their mouths parted with a sucking pop and sharp inhales, Avaron smirking rather triumphantly.
“Caught you,” she said with a wink, flustering Tsugumi. “Now you get to find out what happens to women …”
“… What?” Tsugumi asked wearily. Avaron moved up on a raised step, giving her a good, center-shot of the bed. In one smooth, delicate heave, she chucked Tsugumi onto the pillowy flesh and its soft fur, making her chirp loudly! Avaron followed after, climbing on top of her with all-fours, boxing in the fearsome spider. Those two lower hands grabbed onto her hips, with the upper pair clutched at Tsugumi’s chest—nervousness? An act? It proved hard to read, despite its vulnerable air.
“Mmm, you know,” Avaron purred and smiled. “Wandering into a cave at night, swinging those sexy hips, smiling the prettiest smile around …” she muttered, burying her face into Tsugumi’s neck. Giving that tempting lilac skin one long, tasting lick, she swept from bottom-to-top, stopping just underneath Tsugumi’s jaw. A stuttering little sound answered, her mate squirming with an aimless energy. “It’s bound to give sexy beasts like me a certain idea.”
“Sexy beast?” Tsugumi echoed for a moment, a rather dubious look in her eyes.
“Hey now …” Avaron remarked with a flustered disbelief.
Chuckling behind her hand, Tsugumi laced her fingers through Avaron’s hair using the other one. “And what does a ‘sexy beast’ do to, mmm, innocent maidens …?”
“If we like what we see, we snatch them up, of course.” Avaron leaned in, planting another, securing kiss on Tsugumi’s tasty lips. Just a short, sweetly heavy melding of their mouths, and the faintest taste of the other teasing the tongue. “Take them back to our little hovel, where they can’t escape from.”
“Oh?” Tsugumi purred with naked interest in the sound.
“Oh yes,” Avaron agreed, and planted a third kiss on Tsugumi’s mouth. She squirmed underneath her, so anxious and grabby with her four hands. “Nothing like having a sexy little maiden in our nest, just begging and begging …”
“B-begging? For what?”
Avaron chuckled darkly and leaned back, whipping her head to move all her hair to one side. Tsugumi stared up, all six eyes wide and curious. “Well, I think—” Avaron moved in, laying her mouth next to Tsugumi’s ear, “—you’ll figure it out.”
Whatever question she spoke disappeared in a womanly mumble of noise, every word gobbled up by Avaron’s kiss. Driven by desire she suckled and pulled, massaging Tsugumi’s mouth in wide, enveloping motions. The woman arched her back, pressing closer into Avaron as she too tried to return the gesture! Growling at the back of her throat, Avaron dropped her weight down, pinning Tsugumi to the flesh bed all the more securely. Before her deadly mate might think otherwise, she scooped up all four hands—gripping them two wrists at a time.
A rather awkward feat and not all that secure of a hold, it turned out.
Still, Tsugumi let herself remain there, much to Avaron’s silent gratitude.
Swiping her tongue across Tsugumi’s fair lips, she lapped and suckled with abandon, making sure slippery spit got everywhere it could. How cute her little spider turned from kissing to sputtering! Sheer annoyance and garbled words followed, ever trying to say something silly. Avaron pushed Tsugumi into the flesh bed, gushing out, “Mm, mm, I love your lips.”
Blinking her six eyes, her mouth shiny and slippery, Tsugumi whispered back lowly, “Do you, now?”
“Mmhm, now, be a good girl and open wide …” Avaron spoke, smirking as Tsugumi stared, momentarily confused. The bulge in Avaron’s throat traveled upward, squirming like a worm as it moved. Her lips parted in a spittle-strewn web as the pulsating, modest tentacle popped out. All six of her lover’s eyes widened at the sights, her tongue flicking over her lips subconsciously. Yet when Avaron leaned in, seeking that very same mouth to plunge into, Tsugumi pursed her lips tight.
“Nuh-uh,” the woman teased with a throaty sound, eyes peeled in silent laughter.
Plap, plap, plap, Avaron quite awkwardly slapped her tenty against Tsugumi’s lips. Frowning at her lover’s adamant stalling, they stared each other down. A game that, well, Avaron had trouble with when trying to figure out which six eyes to look into. Sucking her tenty back into her mouth, she kept it hidden just behind her lips. Humming in mock-annoyance, Avaron leaned in, gently kissing Tsugumi’s neck. Nipping and nibbling with her lips, the spider jerked and squirmed, now rather quite animated. I’d hate to let go, but … Avaron had to reach down, grabbing Tsugumi’s knees. Four hands quickly grabbed onto her shoulders and arms, lacking all the strength to actually do anything. Spreading those beautiful legs open, Avaron made herself at home between them, pushing her pussy flush against Tsugumi’s. A sound inhale followed and she smirked triumphantly.
Just a thin, unwanted strip of cloth between them now.
“You wouldn’t dare,” Tsugumi grumbled, her lewd, hotly anticipating look quite contrary to her words.
Roiling her hips in a long, pointed grind, Avaron quite blatantly made her point clear, rocking Tsugumi against the bedding with her thrusting. A mix of playful mocking and foreboding intent, Avaron quite enjoyed how Tsugumi futilely tried escaping, jumping with her hips, pulling her legs in Avaron’s hold … oh, it really got her blood pumping. Goodness, the way she moved and how hard Avaron had to hold her, keep that riley woman in place—lunging forward, she hurriedly brought their faces nose-to-nose, Tsugumi’s lips parted in a half-formed moan. Recognition flashed in those ruby eyes all too late.
“Oohhh—mnphf?!” Tsugumi gurgled as Avaron’s throat tenty thrust into her mouth. Avaron followed behind, their lips sealing into an O-shaped kiss, connected by the pulsing, squirming tentacle in both their mouths now.
The hot, wet warmth washed over Avaron, punctuated by that wriggling tongue and the hardy teeth she felt. Pure, sexual delight traveled down her shivering back, hitting square in her belly. Moaning deep in her throat, she pulled her tenty back, its arrow-shaped head wedging against Tsugumi’s teeth. With no ceremony she thrust forward again in a slow, pointed move, feeling every inch as she sank deeper into that wet hole. Goodness, how Tsugumi’s little tongue lashed against her! Whether to push her out or get a grip, it excited her all the more with every random and unexpected stroke.
Four hands grabbed onto her back, one of them scratching, two trying to grip, and the last wandering up and down. Tsugumi brought her into a hug as much as pushed up into Avaron, locking her legs around the tentradom’s hips quite pointedly. Rocking into her lover, Avaron perched onto her knees for angle, achieving quite the unintentional mating press along the way. Sinking one hand into Tsugumi’s lovely hair, she grabbed one of those milk-swollen breasts with the other. A hearty head-to-toe shudder passed through Tsugumi, her eyes heavy and pupils wide with carnal expectation.
Goodness how Avaron just wanted—needed—to do things to her. Fuck her full of cum, kiss her lips, lick her neck, bite her legs, drink her pussy, fuck that same pussy full of squirming little eggs—the rush of lust left her foggy in the head, their awkward kiss slurping noisily all the while. In and out she fucked her mate’s mouth, making sure to coat every inch of Tsugumi in its feeling. Subdued swallows followed deep, throat-wrenching gulps that drank spit and precum alike, a suctioning power demanding Avaron come inside deeper.
Oh, so much deeper.
A deeper, welcoming hole that teased her tenty’s head.
Still, Avaron held back, absently aware of that particular barrier. Yet Tsugumi’s helpless, throat-filling mewl reached her ears, a keening sadness that spoke of a deeper desire. Did she hear wrong? If she did, then she’d certainly get the daylight beaten out of her later. Ah, goodness, how Tsugumi clawed and pulled the two of them closer, grinding their whole bodies together in blatant desire.
Fine.
A dam that cracked soon broke beneath their lust, and Avaron pressed their lips that much tighter together. In one long, smooth thrust, her tenty plunged through Tsugumi’s mouth, sinking deep into her throat. One might see the very bulge of it traveling down her neck, accompanying all six of her eyes shooting wide open. The tora went rigid, both their writhing bodies flush and locked together in a single, shared moment. Avaron saw stars, her head boiling with the lush wonder of such a ribbed, undulating and yet invitingly smooth flesh around her tenty. Oh, sinking into it was a whole new world of sensation! She couldn’t help drawing out, pulling back into Tsugumi’s mouth with a suckling squelch.
Their eyes locked, and a hand on Avaron’s head nudged her in closer. Or tried to; they were already as close as can be. She got the message, though.
Taking her time, Avaron plunged in once again, reaching as low as the half-way point before drawing out again. One deep, throat-fucking-plunge at a time, Tsugumi’s tongue ever busy licking in long, sexual tastes. Tiny, throat-filling squelches followed the throat-bulging motions. She’s—she’s really—Avaron went crossed eyed for a moment, her own thoughts and Tsugumi’s lustful eyes spinning her mind. Despite being on top, she really didn’t feel it! Tsugumi devoured everything and more, grappling and holding firm like a predator and their prey. Rather than fucking her, Avaron felt more like everything she had was being sucked out.
Ohh, how the thought made her skin perk and her blood light up.
Goodness that cum hungry, salacious slut eating up her—Avaron’s eyes swirled, the lewd idea racing through her. Forget pushing over the edge, it damn near shoved her in one mighty, body-seizing spasm. Clutching tight as could be together, Avaron’s own throat bulged as pulsing, rounded shapes jerked up through it. Avaron’s cheeks bulged, then it pushed out, their jaws reflexively opening wider. For a brief moment she saw Tsugumi’s eyes widen, utterly caught off guard by the first load of cum passing through their lips. Oh the hot, tight tension of that mouth sucking tightly, and her throat gulping in anticipation!
A girlish moan reached her ears, echoed by another, their two sweet sounds intermingling. The first sticky load blew into Tsugumi’s throat, gushing warmly down to her waiting stomach. Then the other, then another, and still more followed in a hearty rhythm. Poor Avaron went out of her own mind at the hot, vice-grip of an embrace and the relief of unloading herself. All that building tension disappeared into long, jerking spasms down her tentacle, feeding her hungry mate. At least, it went well until Tsugumi suddenly shoved her sideways.
“Mhmm?!” Avaron squeaked, landing on the bed utterly bewildered. All of her tentacle followed, at least until the arrow-shaped head wedged against Tsugumi’s teeth. Reclining there, the tora woman smiled—as much as one could—while she grabbed the tentacle, holding it in all four hands. Slow, purposeful strokes and squeezes traveled along the pulsing blue-fleshed length. Not for pleasure, but to milk it and get everything out.
What a world of hard strokes and touches, soft lips and vexingly firm, wet tongues! Avaron barely made out Tsugumi’s throaty swallows, her cheeks bulging with each blast of cum before sucking it all down. How well she fared, barely any of it spilling out of her lips. Not quite liking the feeling of a bed away from Tsugumi, however, Avaron scowled. She scooted over and sucked her tentacle back down her throat, winding it up as one would rope. Wrapping her arms around the tora in a bear hug, their lips met again in a hot, sticky molding.
There they remained, groping each other’s backs and butts, legs intertwined in hooked-around-each-other grapples. Time proved rather hard to know, but Avaron’s deep, insatiable need to cum finally abated. When the tentacle deflated and pulled back, they both gasped for air in a loud, wet pop. Huffing and puffing, they stared into each other’s eyes, Tsugumi’s practically glowing with heart-shaped desires.
“Mmm, mhmhmhm!” she chuckled, licking her lips in a long, exaggerated motion. “I missed this taste.”
“Oh yeah?” Avaron said, brain still half-stupid.
“So filling … mmm, not quite sweet, as much as I want to call it that …”
For as much incidental tasting of her own cum she got, Avaron hadn’t a clue how to pin it down either. Perhaps it might be very different for than the women she’s meant to fuck and pump full of it? It made sense, in its own way. Gently combing her fingers through Tsugumi’s hair, she smiled as the tora arched into the touch. Just a soft touch upon the scalp, from top-to-bottom where the back of her neck was.
“Mm, that’s …”
“You’re so pretty,” Avaron said, dreamy eyed even as Tsugumi chuckled.
“Am I now?”
“Yes, damnit. I’d paint you if I knew how, you know. The way your eyes are all intent but you got these soft lips and that—that look.”
“’That look’?” Tsugumi asked amusedly.
“Yeah, one of those looks like you know what you want. It’s really hot, and cute, and sexy, and I’mmm drunk on my own cum I think?” Avaron said, turning to wondrous perplexity as her eyes squinted. “Or that sexy scent of yours or that … mmm, fuck.” Gay little giggles broke out of her then and Avaron blew up her messy, sweat-slicked bangs. “Fuck!”
“My, dear customer is so vulgar,” Tsugumi teased, pinching Avaron’s cheek lightly.
“Listen, I’m just saying.” Avaron held up a finger for emphasis before poking Tsugumi’s cloth covered boob. “It might be best if you don’t wear clothes when you’re underground.”
“And why is that?” Tsugumi asked, incredulity flavoring her amusement.
“’cause it's real hard to stop me from wanting to fuck anywhere and everywhere at any time?"
“That—” Tsugumi blinked unevenly before hiding her mouth behind a hand. It only made her conspiratorial thinking look all the more devious to see. “Mm, okay.”
Avaron did a double-take for a moment.
“Do not give me that,” Tsugumi hissed out, slapping Avaron on the shoulder. “I am merely saying, it may be prudent to have a ‘no clothes’ rule down here.”
“Wwwhhyyy?” Avaron said long and slowly, eyes suspicious.
“It would be less messy to clean up.”
She wasn’t technically wrong. Avaron still kept her airs for a moment before starting to paw at Tsugumi’s clothes. “Well, since everyone who matters agrees, this is now a ‘no clothes’ kind of underground.” Laughing, Tsugumi nodded and the two of them started to undress. Not in the ‘lets tease one another’ way so much as ‘get it off right now’. In no time at all they laid on the flesh-bed, utterly naked and slick with sweat. Avaron paused at the sight, unabashedly staring at Tsugumi’s fit, feminine body. With how quickly the first pregnancy came and went, one wouldn’t notice any real changes—well, aside from the milking breasts and slightly plumper hips.
Tsugumi made a show of hiding herself behind her four hands. “It is rude to stare.”
Is she for real? Avaron thought before making a great, heaving sigh and flopping beside her mate. “You know I’m going to be staring a lot, right?” she said, poking Tsugumi in the chest. “No clothes down here means lots of beauty for me to see.”
“Let me have my fun,” Tsugumi said, puffing up her cheeks annoyedly.
“Let me have my fun,” Avaron echoed mockingly, grabbing at two of Tsugumi’s arms. “Bashful maidens won’t last very long here!”
“Ehh?” Tsugumi squealed, deftly defending and grabbing Avaron’s own hands. The two tumbled over sideways, Avaron’s offensive maneuver putting her on the defense instead. Smirking triumphantly, Tsugumi straddle Avaron’s hips, petite butt making itself comfortable on her laps. Two hands kept Avaron locked down, while the other two rubbed together diabolically. “Tut, tut, tut, this maiden is not so easily beaten.”
Avaron couldn’t help her irritable frown. Always with the extra hands, her. Come on there has to be some way of … It really wasn’t that much of a problem, but she was a tentacle monster, right? Lots of, well, tentacles, squirming body bits, luscious pleasure waiting to be unleashed—more than just the fun packages in her mouth and pussy. Something that might—
A muscle somewhere in her back shifted, cracking with the lightness of cartilage. Avaron’s eyes shot open for a moment, the sensation utterly painless but completely bizarre to feel. Instinct pushed her upward suddenly, hugging herself to a just as surprised Tsugumi. “Don’t get cocky,” Avaron bit out, smiling with an exhilarating rush in her whole body. She didn’t need a mirror to see what had come out of her, and Tsugumi’s stunned disbelief spoke well enough. “You’re in my lair, after all.”
For want of any words, the palpable aroma of arousal wafted up, freshly strong. Poor Tsugumi sat there, her whole eyes betraying the lewd thoughts going on in her mind. For Avaron, she simply found a part of herself otherwise sleeping the whole time. A simple desire to change and her back porcelain cracked open, eight blue-fleshed tentacles jutting out. Unlike the arrow-shaped heads, theirs was a smooth, rounded flesh. A knobby joint at the end gave their thick tips a bit of a grab, not unlike a crab’s claw.
“I find myself under armed for this encounter,” Tsugumi said, quite clear in her tone. It surprised Avaron so much she couldn’t help a bark of a laugh escaping before slapping a hand over her mouth.
“Dork.”
“I am not a—” Tsugumi’s reflexive smack stopped midair. A tentacle wrapped around her arm, slithering across it with a viper’s striking speed.
They both stared at the binding, Avaron more surprised of the two. “Damn, I have reflexes,” she appraised with a laugh. Somewhere between thought and instinct, this new part of her felt ever familiar. Not unlike finding a muscle that was always there, but just unused until that moment. With her newfound tentacles, Tsugumi ended up constricted around her arms and legs. She squirmed and jerked, testing the bonds that only gave so much before tightening up. Oh, this is weird, Avaron thought. It’s really weird.
Still, she couldn’t give the game up. Cocking her nose upward haughtily, Avaron smirked. “I have you now.”
“Hmm.” Tsugumi’s eyes all squinted, her careful squirming continuing nonetheless. “I wonder.”
Avaron’s eye twitched. Using her tentacles and arms, she lifted Tsugumi up and rearranged their seating. Quite a lot of squirming and moving of limbs and she kept trying to escape but the tentacles never let go. Their slick, oozing wet flesh slipped and slid, groping Tsugumi’s limbs but never letting go. Avaron found herself even impressed by that, it certainly wasn’t like using a hand. “You’re not getting free,” she said darkly, making Tsugumi giggle lightly.
“Your hold is not so gr-greaaat—” Her words hung and choked when Avaron’s hands securely groped her milk-laden breasts. Tiny wet spurts leaked out right then and there, her nipples squirting between Avaron’s fingers. “Oh! Oh my …”
With Tsugumi limp enough for the moment, their new seating took hold. Avaron laid against her mound of ‘pillows’, Tsugumi’s back to her chest, and all those blue fleshy tentacles coiling around her arms and legs. It left her tight, petitely round butt right on Avaron’s lap, squirming and grinding against her idly. Letting out a pronounced, satisfied sound, Avaron rolled her fingers, squeezing more milk out in the process. Tsugumi moaned, some words dying noisily in her exhale. Avaron leaned in, her cheek rubbing against the top of Tsugumi’s head. “Caught you, little maiden.”
“Noooo,” Tsugumi whined pathetically, kicking her legs and trying to hit with arms—really it didn’t do anything at all. Somehow that squirming struggle tickled Avaron, her whole demeanor shifting for a moment. Her tentacles tightened and her hands gripped firmly, subduing the pitiful motions. She blinked, her mind righting itself again.
That … mm, oh dear.
She’d rather not deal with that right now. The bigger problem was the mass in her belly deciding it wanted out. Pushing open Tsugumi’s legs with her own, they parted open slightly and Avaron let out a long grunt as her business partner in crime rode on out. Tsugumi squeaked at the sight, the big arrow-shaped head of a tentacle looking even larger between her legs. Even Avaron thought so, staring widely at how it stacked up against her mate’s thigh. “So now, you must be wondering, what it is I do to sweet little maidens who wander into my cave,” Avaron said, gradually finding her ‘evildoer’ voice again. “Such a scary thing, isn’t it?”
For once she had some modicum of control over the damn thing. Careening upward in a U-shape, her tentacle softly slapped onto Tsugumi’s belly with a ‘plap’. The two of them watched as it inched upward, slithering from side to side. The length of it dug into Tsugumi’s soft nether lips, grinding against them as it extended more and more. She tried closing her thighs, but Avaron’s other tentacles kept her knees comfortably open, leaving her so terribly exposed.
“Whu-what is it?” Tsugumi sputtered out.
“You feel it, right? It’s size down there …”
“Y-yes!” she chirped when the tentacle flexed, pushing into her hard for a moment. “Oh, it’s too big! It’s too big?!”
“Oh it’s big, but I have a feeling it’d fit inside you just fine.”
“Inside me?!”
Avaron couldn’t tell if Tsugumi was acting anymore or not. “Mmhm. Hey now, don’t look away,” she demanded, grabbing Tsugumi by the chin. The tentacle had reached between her breasts, pushing through their soft valley with a determined jerk. When that failed, it tensed and thrusted through them, proudly hugged by Tsugumi’s soft skin. Goodness just feeling all that womanly softness against her length, oh it made her gut churn. A tightening anticipation underpinned by such frustrating need to feel more. The tip of her tentacle curled before Tsugumi’s face, hovering like a viper just in front of her lips.
They stayed there, Avaron’s blood pumping hard enough her whole body throbbed. “Give it a lick, will you?”
Tsugumi shook her head, however little she could. “Not in my mouth,” she protested through her clenched teeth and shut lips. Quite the prepared response.
“It’s not that bad …”
“Too big.”
Tsugumi wasn’t strictly wrong; Avaron’s size there relative to her mouth did even concern her. Hemming and hawing for a moment, she then said, “Just lick and suck it, then. I’m sure you’ll love the taste.” Avaron poked at those demure lips with her tentacle, its impressiveness all the more obvious then. For what leery look Tsugumi had, her naked interest won with a small, tepid lick. Such a cute little red tongue swept out, sliding upward in a tasting lick. Avaron’s face convulsed, her eye twitching and the other squinting, enraptured for a single, lightning struck moment.
That she didn’t gasp for air at the end was her only saving grace. Tsugumi let out a pleasant hum, her tongue licking again and again. Up then down, then around in a circle, all so tiny in her motions, but dutiful and diligent. Avaron couldn’t help sliding in closer, the fat head of her tentacle kissing Tsugumi’s lips. It twitched and pulsed, small trickles of savory cum spurting out. Tsugumi hurriedly licked it up, her wrapping her small mouth around the head and sucking it. A simple method of licking caresses, then slurping sucks to drink all the cum that followed.
Avaron slowly went cross-eyed, her nerves edging so hard it started becoming painful. Oh, to just explode at any moment, all the tension vanishing in pulsating waves—she could taste the blissful orgasm right there. “Gu—good, girl,” she said, catching her own salivating choke. “Good girl, drink it up. You’ll need it all.”
Tsugumi tried asking a question, but the tentacle between her lips refused to let it out. That cute sound really rubbed Avaron’s lustful heart and she reached down, groping at the tora’s flat and surprisingly firm belly. One really had no clue she’d given birth already, be it sight or touch. Running her fingers in long, stroking touches, Avaron found herself noticing the lack of roundness than anything. An empty space where she’d expected taut skin and a lovely, egg-filled belly. Tsugumi jerked in her grasp, heading pushing back and hips thrusting forward as much as they could. She inhaled hard, as if suddenly struck but an exhilarating sensation.
“Oooh?” Avaron cooed, tilting her head and watching Tsugumi’s bug-eyed, delirious look of pleasure. “Do you like this?”
Only swallowing gasps of air answered back, words themselves failing. The more particular Avaron moved her fingers, the faster Tsugumi squirmed. One part of her tried to get away, the other started grinding on the tentacle between her legs. I know they feel something when they’re pregnant, but even afterward? Avaron mused, poking and stroking without reason. It didn’t seem to matter where, as long as it was on the flat of her belly above the loins and below the breasts. Right where the … womb, is.
“P-please,” Tsugumi gasped out, the single request making Avaron lift her hands away. Falling limp right then and there, Tsugumi panted, her pupils terribly wide and half of them looking straight at her. “Please.”
“Please, what?” Avaron asked lightly.
“Inside me, inside me,” Tsugumi asked as much as pleaded, her knees trying to squeeze shut. “Pleeease, when you touch me …”
Her tentacle already withdrawing, Avaron made a show of humming thoughtfully. “I don’t know …”
“Ava!”
Such a cute little cry made her look over, Avaron and Tsugumi staring at each other. She knew well the look of demand and desperation, and an anger born of lust yet unanswered. What she didn’t expect was one of Tsugumi’s arms slipping free. How it bent that way and with such little effort just unnerved her to feel. A sudden, eye-rolling shudder of pressure around her tentacle blasted that sensation away. One yank and push later she felt the very familiar folds of Tsugumi’s pussy trying to suck her inside. Managing to wrap the tentacle around Tsugumi’s escaped arm again, Avaron tried chuckling with confidence. “Aren’t you eager?”
“Nnhh!” Tsugumi grunted, scowling as she bucked her hips. Up and down, side to side, any which way she could move to sink down onto Avaron’s throbbing tentacle. The more it didn’t happen the greater her thrashing became—Avaron’s real restraint on her being tested right then and there. Tentacles around every limb, she grasped Tsugumi by her tits, the hearty squeeze made her sputter some nonsense words. Everything coiled and tight, not an inch of space between them.
How Avaron felt Tsugumi’s whole body thunder, a tempting tempo her own heart started to match. “Fine, you want it,” she hissed into Tsugumi’s ear, flexing her business-dealing tentacle against that inviting pussy. “You get it!”
Both their eyes bulged and their mouths sucked in a gasp the moment Avaron pushed inside. Tenderly soft folds wrapped around vice-gripping muscles; oh how she remember the feeling. How very much it made her eyes almost roll back experiencing it again. “Fuuuuck meeeee,” Avaron bit out in a groan, her tentacle oh-so-happy sinking in deeper. Feel like a fucking virgin again! she thought with exasperation. If it wasn’t the tentacle, it was getting eaten out; oh once it started it just—
Tsugumi rolled her hips, and Avaron’s tentacle followed, softly arrow-shaped edges sinking in deeper. Thought gave way to instinct, and Avaron tightened against Tsugumi. The meaty tentacle connecting them thrusted in, a tiny slurping squelch to be heard. A soft, womanly chirp of excitement followed, and Avaron breathed in through her nose. The cocktail of pheromones took a baseball bat to the concept of rationality right then and there. “Oh, Tsuuuuu,” Avaron sang in a low, almost drunken voice. “I love your pussy!” Her hips perfectly molded to Tsugumi’s rear, only the tentacle moved in its depth-plundering plunge.
“Ah?!” Tsugumi chirped, her belly tightening and knees shaking. A noticeable if small bulge stretched her out, just enough one really could see how deep Avaron had gone.
“Sooo gripping and comfy and …” Avaron babbled dreamily. Her tentacle pulled out, the edges of its head dragging electric lines as it went by. As it withdrew, the sopping wet part on the outside curled into an S-shape before thrusting back in like a loaded spring. In and out, the rhythm made them both pant and moan, Tsugumi’s whole body jerking. Her muscles relaxed as it left, only to scrunch up as it plunged in again. Avaron’s hands kept fast to her tits the whole time, squeezing and pumping them. Even if she didn’t use that much force, tiny squirts of milk spurted out over her fingers and hands, dribbling uselessly downward.
A sudden and intense sensation jolted Avaron, her thick tentacle seizing for a moment. Vexing relief bloomed within her as spasming contractions sent her first load of delectable cum. Letting out a frustrated moan, she hugged Tsugumi as every lip-widening bulge sank into her, splurting the hot load with abandon. Familiar contractions gripped her, a hardy shudder shooting through Tsugumi as her hungry pussy clamped down. Oh the relief! For as much as it eased the nerves it left her needing more.
Deep-seated instinct to keep fucking.
And breeding and breeding and breeding—
Pushing herself forward, Avaron moved Tsugumi onto all fours—well, sixes technically—her hips glued to that woman’s tight butt. Burying her face into Tsugumi’s hair and huffing that wonderful scent of hers, Avaron’s tentacle started again.
“Ehh? Eh?” Tsugumi squeaked out. “Ava?”
“Tsuuuu,” Avaron sang back. Ah, to be mounted right on that tight butt, her thighs firm against Tsugumi’s. Every little squirm she made pushed back into Avaron, surely not to tempt her. No, any reasonable person would be getting comfortable on their newly found all-fours position. Avaron’s brain however, told her that Tsugumi was trying to escape. And escaping couldn’t be allowed. Arching her back and pressing in closer, every tentacle and hand she had grappled the smaller woman all the tighter. She growled, a sound closer to a whining squeak than the menace her mind imagined. “Tsuuu!”
“W-what?”
“Let’s fuuuuck, okay? I want to—to—oh, goddess my head.” A moment of lucidity, if drenched in horniness. “Fuck acting anymore.”
“No, do not ruin the play!” Tsugumi griped, shaking her hips. “The lustful beast captured the maiden and then what?”
Avaron couldn’t tell up from down anymore, the pussy-wrapped love her tentacle felt just fuzzying her mind. Nuzzling her head beside Tsugumi’s, their unevening breathing huffed and puffed together. “Oooh, fuck. The maiden fought the beast and lost, then got taken to court on breaking and entering charges.”
“What?” Tsugumi sputtered confusedly.
“Then she came back and they dated and now the kids are being made goddess above woman I’m going to explode,” Avaron said, hurrying words turning into a throat-strangled sound. Her tentacle flexed with a mind of its own, a rush of blood expanding it with a quivering intent. It withdrew with a slurp of hot cum and sticky wetness, little tendrils spilling down between their legs. One smooth, extra-slippery sliding thrust in and both of them gasped; Avaron loud, Tsugumi quiet. That was all it took, Avaron’s girthy tentacle sliding in deep, its head flaring and then pulling out again. Whatever load left inside splurted out as room for number two was made.
“Nnngggh your pussy is so fucking good,” Avaron said in a half-whisper.
“And you so deep!” Tsugumi returned, her voice peaking just as Avaron bottomed out in her again. “Deeeep inside me, kissing me there … Hnn, harder!”
Even if she strictly didn’t need to, Avaron couldn’t help humping into Tsugumi’s butt. The thick tentacle splitting their lips and legs sped up on its own, impressively louder in the mess it made. A quiet slap of skin-against-skin followed, Tsugumi’s whole body jolting from every intent-filled hump.
“Yes, yesss,” Tsugumi gushed warmly between moaning squeaks.
So it came to be that Avaron’s hands moved over ontop of, well, one set of Tsugumi’s. Their fingers kind of intertwined, as much as they could in such an awkward arrangement. The thighs tensed and pushed against one another, their toes curled while their feet thumped against the flesh-bed. A tiny duel, measured in inches of skin-kissing contact and followed by their sweet, carnal sounds. Avaron kissed the side of Tsugumi’s face, peppering her lightly as every nerve gripped and tightened with an electric tension.
The time came and so did Avaron when her thighs tensed and her tentacle made that last, final plunge in. Plump lumps crawled out of her and down the length, disappearing into Tsugumi with every hip-shaking convulsion. Avaron’s loud, groaning moan stifled Tsugumi’s quiet shaking, their mutual orgasms blasting the both of them right out of their minds. A delirious smile found both their faces as their bodies sagged, held up by their face-down, ass-up positions more than anything.
One-by-one Tsugumi filled up, her belly blooming gently in size as it got packed up.
Of course, what cum couldn’t fit inside anymore gushed out, a fresh stream leaking and squirting to freedom.
One of them started rocking side-to-side, and the other went with them. The two collapsed sideways, still connected and strapped together with Avaron’s tentacles. It wouldn’t be, until some minutes later, that Avaron spoke up first. “Tsuuuu, hey, Tsu?”
“Mm?”
“If you don’t mind me being forward here but my clit is throbbing like crazy and I’d love your lips on it right now.”
Tsugumi, pausing momentarily, started chuckling purely with her exhales.
*~*
Nuala stared through ethereal mirror before her, shimmering with blue-and-purple colored mists. Her dark-skinned face turned darker and redder, hot with the gayest blush she’d felt in many centuries. True to her expectation neither of them could detect her [Long-Sight Mirror] and its invisible eyes. But to discover an actual, living tentradom? One right in the middle of that—that woman conquering mating they were known for? That sticky, flooding cum and the wrangling and the pumping and the—
She jolted, a delectable pleasure shooting up from her core. Her knees had squeezed together on their own, a certain expectant tightness coiling between her thighs. There was no way in the world the tentradom’s profane nature could be affecting her, outside of its lair as she was. Coughing into her hand, she dispelled the [Long-Sight Mirror]; those two were asleep in that grotesque bedding. It didn’t seem quite so bad, being in the shoddy excuse for a hut outside of the cave.
The queen is … under its influence? Nuala wondered, chewing on her lip while she thought. No, I’ve not sensed anything of the like. Even here … but …
She had dealt with tentradoms before: finding, killing, and dissecting. Very specific peculiarities followed their kind, tell-tale signs an expert like her would never miss. While some of them did catch her notice, the dangerous ones were absent. The mind-fogging toxin clouds, the writhing, out-of-control flesh spreading like a plague, the roving, raving tentacles eating or killing whatever they found. The first being gone, the second and two remained present … oddly enough.
Very odd.
Nuala sighed and stood, moving out of the enclosure. A walk of the perimeter for security, as much as to clear her mind.
For now all she could do was take precautions and continue observing.
Why the Queen took business with such a dangerous creature yet remained a mystery—exotic knowledge or not.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Curious Magi
Chapter 20: Rapid Iteration
Chapter Text
Somewhere between dreams and practical reality, there is a road.
*~*
Okay, but why does it work that way? Avaron wondered, hands folded together, fingers pressed against her lips, and sat in a thoughtful squat. Before her, in a patch of blue flesh growth, sprouted out blades of turquoise-colored grass. They swayed as if blown by the wind, despite there being no wind in the underground hive tunnel. The swaying didn’t bother her, that was just the primitive sensory organs seeking out edible gases.
Rather, she quite wanted to know how the damnable grass grew already.
She just slapped together the Caged Sun and run-of-the-mill forest grass genomes from outside the cave. As soon as it became ‘workable’ in her [Genetic Engineering], the Hive began growing it everywhere. Well, mostly in the seams between plates, as well as the gutters running along the walkways. The specimen itself—working name ‘air filtering grass’—didn’t really have any problems at the genetic level. Technically that wouldn’t have been a bad thing.
But why did the Hive grow it so autonomously from her?
Avaron pursed her lips tighter. If I had to guess, it’s not just my conscious thoughts directing the Hive. The subconscious mind, and or the autonomous part of the mind, might be offering direction as well. She rolled her head. Whiiiich means unexpected behavior can arise. Wonderful. I really don’t need you doing something when I’m right in the middle of working on it.
Did it count as talking to herself if she scorned the unconscious part of her being?
Setting that thought aside, for better or worse her work was done for the time being. Once the grass spread appropriately throughout the Hive, unwanted gases and other noxious problems were taken care of. Sighing and shaking her head, Avaron stood up and stretched, her back suspiciously lacking the pops and creaks she expected. Ah, youth, she mused with a rueful smirk. Heading up the wide tunnel, she slowly made her way back toward the surface from the still-developing bowels of the Hive.
Living space, sanitation, air filtration, happy knocked up wife, younglings crawling out of my ears … She ticked one after the other off her fingers. What else am I missing? Food? Is it food?
Tsugumi and the tentaclelings were handling collection quite nicely—but that was a foraging way of life. To upscale the amount of warm bodies her Hive could support, she needed serious food production. Industrial-scale, even. Which meant not only farming, but food preservation as well. Holding her head in her hand, she ascended the sharp staircase before her with supernatural fluidity. Absolute certainty in every step, for she knew every tiny inch of her Hive. What to do, what to do …
The actual growing of plants to eat would be pretty simple. Good soil, sunlight, and atmosphere, then the plants will do the rest. Thanks to Tahn’s godly knowledge, she already knew of dozens of suitable candidates for a widely diverse, nutritious diet to live on. Actually, now that I’m thinking about it—Avaron stopped, taking a moment to reach out across the Hive Mind. The disconnect between her body and the mind ever proved disconcerting, like suddenly being yanked out of a car while driving. She honed in on the cluster of sleeping tentaclelings in the enclosure above; about sixteen, all around.
Wake up.
Go, find this plant.
You lot, go, find this plant.
Four groups were given their orders, as much as ‘thoughts’ as ‘desires’ as ‘words’, in the language that was the Hive Mind. Thus they stirred from their hibernation-like slumber, twitching and gurgling. The arachnid-like tentaclelings unfurled their legs and stood up, startling Nuala who sat at the other end of the enclosure. Avaron felt her accusing stare through her youngs’ senses, but paid her no mind. The tentaclelings scaled out of the enclosure, breaking off into their groups as they ventured into the forest around them.
Satisfied, Avaron pulled back to her main body, ascending the tunnel once again. She reached the top of the stairs, flattening out to a more sloped incline. Ah, and that reminds me! Avaron thought, Nuala fresh on her mind. That elvetahn mage might know something about ice and cold magic. If I can use that to make a freezer, it’d really help food storage.
*~*
“… Words of Power?”
“I told you the essence of magic was beyond your grasp,” Nuala said, wrinkling her nose. Really, tentradom or not, the woman had no talent whatsoever.
With a heaving sigh, Avaron made some flippant rolling gesture with her hand. “Just run it by me again. To use magic, I need to understand the Words of Power …”
Shaking her head, Nuala closed her book with a hearty thump. “No, you simple-minded … woman. Anyone can use spells or abilities, even skills if they possess them. Magic is the language of the Goddesses; it is formed upon their Words of Power. To use magic is to speak the Divine Tongue, and shape the world as one sees fit.”
“Okay I think I’m getting it now,” Avaron said, nodding for some reason or another. Sitting as the two were at the shoddy table in the sleeping enclosure, it looked rather dumb to Nuala. “We’re working on two different ideas here. Tsugumi can do all sorts of things, like make silk out of thin air, or make a stick turn into a magic light. To me, that’s magic, but what is that to you?”
“Spells or abilities,” Nuala remarked dryly. “Simplified, idiot-friendly copies of true magic, or a people’s natural born talents. Some call this magic, even though they are quite wrong about that.”
“That’s nice,” Avaron said, looking quite dismissive of Nuala’s refined opinion. Really, it quite rankled her to see it so blatant. “Let’s say I don’t need a Word of Power or the true essence of magic. In this case, I just need a way to make a room cold—like freezing water or colder, cold.”
“Then simply say that!” Nuala said, exasperated. “A talentless person like you will either need a spellweaver or an enchanter. If you intend for this example room to be cold for a long time, then an enchanter.”
“I see. Well, if you’re not volunteering, do you know of any enchanter who can teach me?”
“Such a thing is not simple to learn. It would be far easier to have one do it for you.”
Avaron stared at her with the flattest expression she’d seen yet. “I’m sure they’ll line up to walk straight down into that cave, huh?”
Oh.
That would be an issue.
Nuala, barely caught off-guard, shrugged her shoulders and adjusted her book on her lap. “If you are in utmost need of it, perhaps I can spare my talent,” she said, looking up at the sky disdainfully. “I am certain Her Highness would insist I do so.”
“I can’t imagine someone of your experience hasn’t worked on a freezer before, at least.”
“… A what?”
They stared at each other, Avaron now being the one caught off-guard. “A, uh, freezer. You know, for food …”
“Freezing food? To ruin it?”
“No?” Avaron said, her face scrunching up in a suspiciously cute confusion. “You do know cooling food helps preserve it longer, yes?”
“Of course I do!” Nuala bristled, straightening her back. “But it is common sense that putting it too cold will ruin it!”
“I have opinions about that,” Avaron remarked dryly before shaking her head. “Alright, putting that aside. I can carve out a room I want to you help enchant to freeze it. Can you … make it so I can adjust how cold the room gets?”
“It is not as simple as a fixed enchantment, but doable. Do you even have the magic crystals for it?”
“Ah.” Avaron’s surprised look told well enough on its own that she didn’t.
One’s weakness was ever an opportunity, however. “Magic crystals are not cheap nor easy to come by. I can procure some once I return to the capital … if you trade something of value to me.”
“Let me guess, one of those Caged Sun flowers?”
The sheer casual way she addressed such a novelty! Rich women truly do speak as if the earth moves at their whim! Nuala’s face contorted for a moment before she stiffly, if controllably, nodded. “One in intact condition is enough for, quite a few, crystals.”
“Alright, done deal. I’ll have one for you when the queen comes by to visit again. Or whatever convoy comes here.”
“… Very well.”
Their business concluded, Avaron rose and headed to the enclosure’s exit. Nuala stood as well, an indecisive thought on her mind. “It would do well to answer one of my questions,” she said, and Avaron glanced back over her shoulder.
“That depends on the question.”
So many to choose from; one idea, a hundred angles. Sometimes the right question in the wrong perspective changed everything. Or, that is how it went in magical study, at least. “I should like to study the tentradom, and its offspring,” Nuala said simply, ever elegant and straightforward in tone.
“… Why?”
“Is it not obvious? A slothful tentradom seemingly at ease with only two women, its young placid and simple, the growth tame and the fumes absent—” Nuala held out a hand in a sweeping motion, “—all right here. The world scarce knows about them save horrible stories. I would like to know the truth.”
Avaron ever regarded her carefully, a rarer expression than what she’d seen. The woman carried tight expressions befitting of one in control, yet so rarely exercised it. Not even in the presence of the queen did she stare so reservedly as she did just then. That, too, intrigued Nuala. “I think you will be disappointed by what you find.”
Nuala’s ears twitched, restrained as they were within her hood. “Why?”
Avaron turned back to the exit. “The tentradom that lives here is one of a kind. It is not like the others, because it is not like them at all. What’s the point in teaching the world about a one-off oddity?”
The idea barely had time to work over in Nuala’s mind before Avaron left, shutting the shoddy door behind her. The mage’s lips pursed together, her eyes narrowed in annoyance. It is not a rejection, but …
Avaron’s words held merit, on the surface.
But she would be the one to judge the worth of such knowledge.
At the least, she should seem ignorant of Avaron’s true nature for the time being.
*~*
“This sense of direction is most unusual to me,” Kagura said, breaking the quiet that otherwise pervaded their time together. Truly she was a woman of few words, as far as Gwyneth could tell.
“Mine Flame guides me, tis no reason to fear.”
“I do not doubt the divine. On this earth, I am more concerned about the elvetahn we trespass upon.”
“They will not harm us.”
“For what gives you such confidence?”
“Twas the elvetahn whom the Eternal Flame first spoke to in the world. They left it to answer the calls of other goddesses, but they remember.”
“I had heard the Flame first spoke to man, was that not true?”
“No, tis true.” She need not see to feel Kagura’s dubious looks, and Gwyneth laughed. “Tis the oldest of mine scripture, and rarely spoken. Many doth take offense upon hearing, and so the secret is kept. Elvetahn and man were once one; when man listened to other goddesses, they became elvetahn.”
“That is … quite remarkable.”
Ah, such a wonderfully neutral voice. A practiced politeness that disguised the speaker’s true thoughts. “Verily. The elvetahn remember better than man.”
“As you say.”
The forest around them yet loomed, grander trees coming to tower higher and higher. Their path laid out as much dirt as root, foliage, and other growth all vying for a spot of their own. They saw as far as they often couldn’t, a long stretch of an alley cut off by walls of wood on either side. On the occasion they might find a higher place and see the vast emptiness that hung between the massive trees. To her they seemed nature’s towers, all the wilds the castle they protected. A strange twilight held the air, dancing with dark and light wherever the canopy above grew thick or thin.
While by no means foreboding to her, even Gwyneth took pause at studying her surrounding. Creatures of dim light were more to her liking. In coming close, the veil they thought to be safe under only spelled their demise. She’d surprised Kagura more than once with a decisive fiery blast to an unwanted predator snooping around. They are well-fed enough, Gwyneth thought, sending another glittering spark at a loaming panther. The brown-furred cat dashed away quickly, disappearing with a rustle into the bushes. Running at the first sign of danger, hm.
An uneventful trip in a place such as this was a boon to be had.
So it was, they continued on their way until they found a babbling river cutting through. Grander than a creek but shallow enough one could cross, if at waist-deep depth. Gwyneth studied the waters as Kagura looked afar, using her vision to see what might be ahead.
“Tis nothing dangerous, seemingly,” Gwyneth declared, standing up.
“The area toward the mountains thins out from trees, but there are many bushes,” Kagura appraised, sounding unpleased. “An easy ambush location.”
“They cannot hide from mine gaze.”
“If they are close enough, as you say. Traps are a problem as well.”
“Tis thy specialty, no? We will pass through together.”
Kagura had the air of someone wanting to huff and fuss, but kept it to herself. Gwyneth rather hated indecision; if she wanted to go around, say so. Otherwise, the path ahead stood self-evidently before them. Drinking, refilling their canteens, and finishing up a short rest, they began their trek along the riverbank. Water ever drew life toward it, and all sorts of small and big creatures lurked around. Whether scattering at their approach or resolutely ignoring them, Gwyneth found no fear.
As they cleared the last of the towering trees, and a thick carpet of chest-high bushes awaited, however …
“What is that?” Gwyneth mused aloud, making Kagura jolt to a stop.
“What is it?”
“Tis a spider, larger than a dog, but …”
A quiet unsheathing of Kagura’s daggers followed, the woman quite alert. “It is best your flame be ready.”
“No …” Gwyneth mumbled, tilting her head. “I don’t think it means harm.”
“Why?”
Such an accusing way of asking, how unbecoming. Gwyneth brushed it off all the same, her mind far too confused at what she felt. The arachnid-like creature, with its tutbular head and circular mouth snorking along the ground, scrounging for food, was just so odd. So very odd. Some part of her mind tickled, reminded of Avaron in a way. A gut feeling that she then knew to be a divine sense at work. It would mean that, mm, fair Tsugumi hath given birth?
Oh, that did bristle her sensibilities. A primal reaction of hackling hairs and gritting teeth, minus all the malice. More than anything, Gwyneth found herself terribly frustrated by the idea! Unwilling to put such feelings to words, she stepped forward, bidding Kagura to stand at ease with her hand. “Watch for a moment.”
“… As you say, priestess.”
At the least, the woman did listen well enough.
Gwyneth approached, mindful of her slow speed and careful step. The closer she neared the more alert the arachnid became, until it ‘looked’ up. No eyes to see, no nose or ears, she hadn’t a clue how it knew of its own surroundings. Perhaps, like her, it had a special vision—a hearty explanation to how it zeroed in at her immediately. Gwyneth peeked over the bush between her and it, the two ‘staring’ at each other. A gurgling noise came from the arachnid, an undulation traveling up its under belly until it bulged out near its circular, nibbling-teeth lined pipe head.
“Bort?” it croaked out in a gaseous belch.
“Hello?” Gwyneth returned uneasily.
The arachnid-thing titled its head, the odd curvature of the tentacle disturbingly people-like. “Bort?”
One half of her thought it an animal, the other half thought it a person. Such a queer dichotomy on her senses, but befitting of a tentacle—a tentradom’s offspring, that is. Gwyneth nibbled indecisively on her lip for a moment. “Would thou knowest of mine friend, Avaron?”
“Bort,” the tentacle-arachnid answered, dipping its head up-and-down in a very nodding-like way.
“Oh! Wonderful! I am looking for her, doth thou know where she is?”
The tentacle-arachnid looked around, seemingly acquiring its bearings again. It then rounded around, turning upstream in the direction they had been heading in to begin with. Waving one of its forelegs/claws, it pointed with another gaseous bort.
Her sense yet remained proven right in its direction. Gwyneth smiled and bowed her head. “Thank thee, fair one.”
The tentacle-arachnid nodded and went back to huffing and puffing along the ground, scrounging up plants.
Gwyneth waved over Kagura. “Tis safe, lets continue.”
They passed around Avaron’s offspring, Kagura giving it quite the dubious look while doing so. “What is that?”
Gwyneth, half-opening her mouth to say something, clicked it shut. Unlike her, many others had never met Avaron—nor understood her charming uniqueness. “Belongs to mine friend, and the heroine thou seeketh.”
“I—see.”
Nothing more to be said then as Kagura held their peace. They continued up along the river, running across a few more of the tentacle-arachnids busy looking (or eating) plants. The last of the thicket faded away into a mixture of loose dirt, pebbly-strewn shores, and cleared away vegetation. For as sudden as it was, it couldn’t have been natural.
“There’s a house up ahead, it seems.”
“It seems?”
“The foundation is there, but no walls nor roof to be seen. Hm? There are two people approaching.”
Something about Kagura’s aura shifted, an unease entering it so blatantly Gwyneth couldn’t help asking, “What troubles thee?”
“Is that a tora?”
“Tis fair Tsugumi, I believe.”
“Tsugumi?” Kagura echoed incredulously, their walk coming to a sudden halt. Before Gwyneth might ask what, a new voice cut in.
“Gwyneth! You’re safe!” Tsugumi’s familiar voice called out, and she saw for herself the regal tora come fast-walking into sight. The two stopped short of embracing, sufficing for a clasping of arms and a patting of backs.
“Verily! Twas challenging, but verily,” Gwyneth said, nodding sagely.
“And who is this?”
Avaron’s luscious voice made Gwyneth’s skin prickle and perk up, even despite the cautiousness undercutting it. Separating from Tsugumi, Gwyneth waved a hand toward the woman beside her. “She is Kagura, servant of Lord Honda of Kitinchi.”
The aforementioned woman bowed, as was proper for her people.
Tsugumi started at the name, while Avaron’s brows furrowed curiously. “Honda is still alive?” Tsugumi asked with utmost incredulity.
“My Lord is not so easily undone,” Kagura replied coolly.
“He’s the ruler of Kitinchi now?” A pregnant pause followed that self-evident question before Tsugumi started chuckling. She hurriedly hid her mouth behind a hand, her giggles most unpolite. “Really, that doofy brat is a lord now … Incredible.”
“… Doofy brat?” Kagura echoed, eyes narrowing.
“Before we get into anything here,” Avaron cut in with a firm voice. “I take it she has helped you, Gwyneth?”
“Oh! Verily. Twas quite dangerous what we ran upon.”
“I imagine you have some business following her all the way out here, then?” Avaron asked upon turning toward Kagura.
“I am tasked by my Lord to arrange a meeting with you, the heroine called Avaron.”
Avaron looked over to Gwyneth, who nodded. With a sigh and scratching the back of her head, Avaron begrudgingly nodded. “I’ll hear you out about that, since Gwyneth approves. Come, then, we don’t have much but it is better than nothing.”
They headed past the construction site and to the sheer vertical mountain face beyond it. A cave entrance sat beside some rickety, slapped-together enclosure with a tarp for a roof, which Avaron led them inside. Or, rather, let Tsugumi and Kagura head in first. Gwyneth found herself stopped by a firm hand on the shoulder as Avaron hovered next to her.
“Your order didn’t do anything to you, did they?” she asked in a low voice.
Gwyneth smiled wryly at the concern. “No. They believed mine mind tricked; that mine Flame hath erred. Twas most ridiculous to hear! Their faith most obviously lacked.”
Avaron stared for a long moment before letting out a sigh. Leaning in, Gwyneth felt a warm, soft kiss on her forehead, covered by her bangs as it was. She let out a little trilling squeak, most surprised by such tenderness. “Alright. I’m glad you came; I did worry about that.”
Nibbling on her lip and wringing fistfuls of her robes, Gwyneth blushed hotly beneath her face-wrapping visor. To have a heroine worry for her! Strangers by time if not intimacy, and still worthy of such attention. “T-thank thee,” she mumbled out, shuffling her feet to relieve all the anxious energy bubbling up. A hand suddenly clasped her behind, groping right in the middle with a hard, possessive intent. Gwyneth jumped on pure reflex, rising up onto her toes and her thighs clenching tightly, all of her balanced on a tight point and thrilling sensation!
Avaron’s face nuzzled in beside hers, their cheeks kissing with a plush, hot softness. A hot breath followed the words spoken next, “Still want this?”
Had she impressed otherwise? Gwyneth barely gave it a thought while she nodded with a jerky, high-strung motion.
A throaty chuckle followed when Avaron pulled away, patting Gwyneth on the shoulder. “Alright. We’ll talk later.”
Something about that tone tickled her senses; something far different than luscious pleasure. Swept inside by Avaron’s shooing motion, however, Gwyneth hadn’t a moment to contemplate. Altogether, the four of them took seats upon stump-stools near the cold ashes of a fire pit. She rather found herself having trouble sitting properly—not for any fault of the stool! For all it occupied her mind, Gwyneth couldn’t ignore the rather plentiful amount of slumbering tentacle-arachnids. Or tentacles? Spider tentacles … There were over a dozen at least, legs curled up, undulating flesh coiled up or wrapped around themselves.
Quite peaceful in their nearly death-like stillness.
“They’re safe, please do not bother them if you can,” Avaron said, the dry request cutting the settling air. Gwyneth jumped, feeling rather called out; only to see Avaron and Kagura exchanging looks.
“As you say,” Kagura returned smoothly.
“Now, what is this about a meeting with your Lord?”
“I shall signal using magic; my Lord will signal when it is time to speak.”
“Is this a face-to-face meeting or magic?”
“Magic of a kind.”
“I see.” Avaron rolled her shoulders before crossing her arms. “Is that safe? No one listening in or anything?”
Kagura blinked owlishly for a moment. “It is not, but only if someone is looking.”
“I’ll be mindful of what I say then. You can signal your Lord in the morning, I imagine there’s a couple hours difference and he doesn’t want to do a call in the night.”
“… No, he would not.”
Gwyneth knew aristocracy and those trained in its ways—such people were never far from trying to earn favors from the Flame. It bemused her to no end to see such a stiffly formal exchange in location utterly unbefitting of it. More so how elegantly Avaron kept pace for being an otherworldly heroine! Many were the tales of new heroines and their rough, if sometimes offensive, ways. Did Tsugumi teach her? she wondered, briefly glancing over to the stoic and quiet woman.
They’d certainly have the time together …
“What’s theee, what is it, proper etiquette for addressing him?”
“As a foreigner, Lord Honda may suffice.”
“It wouldn’t be something like Honda-sama? Or Honda-dono, I suppose.”
Kagura’s head tilted, her gaze briefly jumping toward Tsugumi, who seemed just as surprised. “You know of the formality already?”
“I’ve had high-class Japanese clients before.”
“… Japanese?”
“Ahh, if you don’t know that—what about Nippon?” Avaron asked, rubbing her chin.
“I do not.”
“That’s a tough one. Ahh, the only other name I know is Yamato.”
Kagura’s cool façade, covered in her wrappings and secretive attire, blatantly betrayed a flash of surprise. “Truly, you are a heroine to speak in understanding of the Origin Land.”
“A rather modern form of formality to be a people from the age of Yamato,” Avaron noted, brow cocking upward.
“I know not of that difference, only that this is the proper form now.”
“Funny, that. Well, is there anything else I need to know?”
*~*
An honest-to-god ninja. A red-skinned, crimson-eyed one at that—she’s probably some kind of Oni knowing my luck! Avaron thought, utterly exasperated. This is ridiculous!
Yet, there it was. Tsugumi’s own nature had long spelled a bleed-over from Earth to this world. To some extent, she expected more of the same: eastern architecture, mannerisms, maybe some designs. An actual trained ninja was not what she had in mind. Sucking in a breath, Avaron deflated with a long, blown out raspberry. She continued to float along on her back, precariously stable atop the miniature-lake just outside of the Hive’s cave. The current threatened to suck her away with its slow flow, making her kick her legs every so often to resist it.
A calming way to end the day as dusk began falling and twilight covered everything.
Sadly, not even her wannabe pool did much to ease her nerves. Avaron rubbed her eyes, utmost careful to not capsize herself in the process. I know there was some crossover, but this much is unexpected. How in the world did they avoid guns until now? She squinted up at the beautiful sky, obstinately preening itself before her. Or rather, what happened to lead to such a pivotal surge? In world of magic she scarcely knew the extent of, divine beings—goddesses or not—running amuck, typical nation-state politics, and who knew what else, the whole thing turned out quite precariously.
Someone approached—a quick peek through the senses of a nearby sentry tentacleling showed Gwyneth coming. The comely priestess carried a shoddy box in her arms, something of a cloth and other toiletries poking out. Hmm? Bathing in the river huh?
She’d never been one for roughing it in the outdoors. Even just taking the skinny dip she was came along with seven posted guards watching the perimeter. With a grunt, Avaron righted herself in the water, the bottom of the lake quite a few feet under her still. She swam leisurely toward Gwyneth, meeting up with the woman just as the box was set down.
“Oh! Thou art taking a bath!” Gwyneth chirped, startled by Avaron’s sudden approach. “Excuse mine rudeness.”
If she weren’t so honest I’d think her being sly, Avaron mused and shook her head. “It’s fine, I’m just relaxing. I’ll get out for you.”
“No, no, thou need—needn’t …” Gwyneth trailed off as Avaron stepped up the gentle slope of pebbles and silt, rising out of the water. A deluge washed down her porcelain-like skin, turning to streams of droplets that hugged every curve they found. Her shoulder-length blue hair clung to the sides of her face and neck, oddly smooth looking. The priestess visibly tensed at Avaron’s approach, her cheek warming redder than the magic flame sitting on her breasts. Soon standing face-to-face, Gwyneth’s gaze sat upon Avaron’s chest with an unabashed fixation.
Or as much as Avaron could tell; the priestess’ visor made her inscrutable.
“It’d be rude of me not to help, wouldn’t it?” Avaron asked, her salacious smirk fighting her control. She probably still looked ready to eat Gwyneth alive despite the effort.
“Help?” Gwyneth echoed, sounding rather out of herself.
Chuckling, Avaron looped her arms around Gwyneth’s shoulders, but not quite squeezing the two of them together. “Unless you want to bathe alone, that is. Hm?”
“N-no! No, but, ehm. That is to say …”
“Come now, Gwyneth, we’re closer than that, aren’t we?” Avaron leaned in, the tips of their noses bumping together. “After all you sucked out all the cum from me with such devotion.” Goodness Gwyneth could turn red, couldn’t she? Perhaps being so forthright was too much for the priestess?
“I-I did! Twas, well, very lovely, and …” Gwyneth’s words fell into inherent mumbles, her hands coming to wring together in front of her.
Alright, too much teasing. Avaron pulled back, but kept her arms around Gwyneth still. “If you want to be by yourself, that is fine, you know.”
“Tis … not that.”
“Do you want to talk about it, or put it off for later?”
“Ehm … Thou will know, eventually.”
That was a damn ominous thing to say. Avaron looked on curiously as Gwyneth pulled away, her hands coming up to her bindings. The priestess made no show of disrobing sexily, going through the motions as ordinarily as anyone could. The sheer layers that went into her attire were quite something. Outer wear, a layer under that, then another for her actual comfort ‘shirt’ and ‘pants’. When the last of the black-and-gray robes came off, Avaron expected naked skin, only to see all of Gwyneth’s flesh wrapped up. She might as well have been a mummy—even her bosomy breasts were sealed! How big is she? Avaron wondered. If that is bound then fuck me she’ll be big …
They’d grow bigger and plumper once she got knocked up—big, huge milkers full of delicious tasting—
Avaron swallowed, her mouth already rushing with delirious hunger.
Yet, as Gwyneth undid the first of the wrappings around her arms, something unexpected revealed itself.
Her peachy flesh, if pale from a lack of sunlight, twisted in and tightened uglily. Scorched streaks wrapped around her whole arm, while others cut across in sharp, clean-cut likes. Some places looked to be torn out, whether by teeth or something else. Avaron’s rising horniness disappeared beneath a tide of stark awareness, the kind only brought on by seeing something incredible. Gwyneth continued on, ignoring or unseeing Avaron’s piercing gaze. Thus the wrappings came undone—her arms, then legs, and with some reservation, then her torso.
So it was Avaron saw naked Gwyneth, standing bashfully before her. The priestess hid her nipples and pussy behind her hands, all the more making her charms spill out. The damage to her body laid plain—the only part of her unmarred was her face, and even most of that hid behind her still-worn visor. A figure blessed by some fertility goddess or otherwise, wrapped in a skin of scars and old wounds long sealed shut.
“Ehm, as thou can, see,” Gwyneth muttered out, her whole being radiating discomfort. “M-mine form is rather—mmph?!” Avaron’s hand clamped over her mouth, stifling her words in an instant.
“Who did this to you?”
Her words came out far, far too strong—a taste of fear wafted into her nose immediately, Gwyneth nearly shrinking away. Realizing she still had shut the priestess up, Avaron tentatively pulled her hand back.
“D-did what?” Gwyneth asked, nakedly frightful.
“This! All these scars must be from torture!” Avaron demanded as much as proclaimed.
“… No?” Gwyneth returned for an answer, uneasy and uncertain. “I hath only fought in battles most nobly, if suffering grievous wounds.”
“What sort of battles leave those kinds of wounds?” Avaron couldn’t keep the incredulity out of her voice.
“I—Oh?” Gwyneth looked down, regarding the flame hovering above her naked breasts. It seemed quite comfortable resting in her cleavage! “Verily? Ehm—” she looked back to Avaron, “—I think thou art mistaken.”
“About what?”
“The Flame giveth great power—transformation, as thou know. Many think it only destroys, but it can heal, too. These—” Gwyneth moved her arm as if to gesture, only to catch it before she really showed off all her big tits. “These, erm, scars, are the leftovers of the healing. Tis not as gentle as other healing arts. B-but, much faster and more powerful!”
No shit, Avaron wanted to say, but kept her peace. Sweet Gwyneth, what had life done to leave such terrible reminders? Letting out a sigh, Avaron patted her on the shoulder, smiling uneasily. “Alright, as long as that is, well, what it was. If your order or whatever was doing it, they’d be number one on my shit list.”
“… Shit list?” Gwyneth echoed confusedly.
“The people I’m most definitely going to kill.”
“N-no! They hath treated me quite well!” Gwyneth refuted immediately, holding up her hands in appeasement. That did send her breasts bouncing out, hanging with a free, hearty weight and her cutely prominent vulva standing out loud and proud. While her chest bore the scars of damage, her crotch remained quite pristine it turned out! “A-ah?” she squeaked, realizing it all-too-late.
“Nice,” Avaron said, smirking with a thumbs up.
“I—I did not want thou to be, to be … oooh …” Gwyneth moaned pathetically, the distinct saltiness of tears and her distress slapping Avaron across the proverbial face. Before the first hiccup could come, Avaron gripped her in a fierce hug, their naked breasts squishing together. “Oh?”
“I’m not disappointed by you.”
“V-verily?”
“Mmhmm,” Avaron hummed in return. She weighed her words—calling someone beautiful who thought themselves ugly was always a gambit. It worked for some and not others. Well, if a direct approach doesn’t work, try others! Avaron pet the back of Gwyneth’s head, stroking her oily hair. “If these are scars from won battles, are they not something to be proud of? You won where others didn’t.”
“T-true, true,” Gwyneth mumbled, her voice teetering on crying. “Others hath told me twas an unbecoming sight; undesirable. I cannot, ehm, cannot see it …”
“Fuck ‘em.”
“Eh?”
“Sorry, let me rephrase that. Fuck them and fuck their ideas. I think you’re sexy and damn good at pleasing me, you know.”
“I am?” Gwyneth perked up, and then quite heartily jumped at the sudden, dominating slap on her butt. She chirped out a surprised, if pleased sound, and another followed as a second slap landed on her unslapped side. Her whole body pressed in against Avaron, hugging her tighter.
“Hiding a sexy body like this from me should be a crime,” Avaron muttered.
“Forgive me—” another slap followed, “—eeeep!”
“I think some training is in order,” Avaron said, staring down at Gwyneth and her parted, panting lips. “That is, if you’re going to stay with me.”
“Please! Mine desire to serve you, noble Avaron!” Gwyneth chirped immediately, nodding quite energetically.
“What about that Flame of yours? It won’t get jealous?”
“Nay, tis bidding me to serve thee as thou wisheth.”
“And is that all why you’re here? Because the Flame tells you to?”
Gwyneth paused, Avaron’s heated words belying the deep chasm of the question. She nibbled on her lip before slowly shaking her head. “Tis not the way of the Flame.”
“Oh?”
“Mine Flame guides, as it hath always. I could turn mine gaze away, if it guided mine path astray. But, it hath never done so, even now.” Gwyneth smiled lightly, rolling her hips side-to-side against Avaron. “Thy resolute nature, and thy noble soul—both are most, attractive. I feared what thou would do, but as mine Flame, thy path hath not led me astray.”
And what if the Flame wants you to leave one day?
Such a problematic question, but now wasn’t the time to be asking it. Instead, Avaron made a show of straightening up and nodding sagely, but turning a questioning eye upon Gwyneth all the same. “I am a tentradom, you know. How might you wish to serve me, beautiful Gwyneth?”
“Everything,” the priestess returned, breathing the word with such fiery warmth out from her very soul. It struck Avaron right in the heart, making her chest thump and her skin tingle from goosebumps. Both hands crept down Gwyneth’s backside, grabbing her plush butt, and her cheeks spilled bulged, threatening to escape such a tight confine. A soft, trilling coo hummed out of Gwyneth’s mouth at the forceful, deep-pressing massage.
“Everything,” Avaron breathed back, leaning in until their lips were scant inches apart. “Such a dangerous thing to give. What if I ask you to fall upon your knees, and give me relief?”
“I will,” Gwyneth answered immediately, and probably would’ve right then if Avaron hadn’t held her up!
“What if I ask you to strut around, naked in front of everyone? Make you say, ‘I’m Avaron’s cum slut’?”
“I—I will!” Gwyneth sputtered, but it was not from nervousness. Her courageous voice carried on in spite of her growing, blatant arousal.
Seriously? Avaron mused and let out a lowly chuckle. “Okay, last question. What if I want you, sweet Gwyneth, to spread your legs, and let me breed you? Fill you up with all my young, let your belly grow big and round, your breasts swell with savory milk …” Goodness she hadn’t even gotten half way before Gwyneth started panting in short, huffing breaths. The priestess practically glowed red and radiated heat, almost vibrating in Avaron’s arms. Such incredible energy, barely restrained.
“M-mine belly would bear all thy young,” Gwyneth gushed in a hot whisper. “I would slake all thine thirst! T-thy teasing truly is most unneeded!” she growled out, her faux anger disappearing when another slap smacked her butt again. Her face twisted into a long, opened mouth moan, all her strength gone in an instant. One might call her plastered against Avaron, one-step of full on humping her leg. “P-please,” she whined out, “accept mine devotion!”
Such a dangerous thing.
Absolute submission entailed absolute control—above it all, complete responsibility. By way of comparison, Tsugumi was a woman all of her own, ever befitting of a spider in a house. Whether or not she owned the house, she owned the space she lived in. Such fortitude was, indeed, most admirable.
Gwyneth demanded everything in her entirety. She was not weak, but for one who gave everything, the one who received it must also take care of everything.
It honestly sounded quite exhausting!
Yet, life was about such challenges.
“Mmm, alright,” Avaron said with a smirk. “I shall accept you, sweet Gwyneth. Become mine.”
What words might’ve been said disappeared when Avaron planted a heart, mouth-capturing kiss on her priestess. The soft, plump firmness she knew from her tenty now graced her mouth, oh-so warm and wetly inviting. A delicious tingle shot through her mouth and down her back at the raw taste of such a wonderful woman. Gwyneth’s hands grabbed onto her back, holding her in a desperate hug as their lips suckled and rubbed together. More than a graceful greeting, they went with a slow burning hunger, tasting what they could however they can.
“Mm! Mm,” Gwyneth chirped and moaned in her throat, their lips parting for the briefest, sharpest inhales. Delicate, slippery pops followed before they sealed together again. Avaron reached up, grabbing the back of her head to keep the wriggling woman in place. A firm hold, a strong kiss, and their lips parted from her tongue slithering in. Gwyneth jolted, undoubtedly tasting for the first time Avaron’s blue-fleshed tongue. A rush of flavors greeted Avaron, the familiar memory of women blasted away by the raw intensity of so much new taste!
Gwyneth and Tsugumi very much had different tastes, it turned out. The heartier, almost meaty flavor Gwyneth offered quite tantalized her belly, stirring a hunger as carnal as otherwise. A hearty thump in her mouth drew her back! Gwyneth’s own tongue awkwardly bumped and pressed into hers, stroking with wide, brutish motions. Such an innocent woman, Avaron thought, teasing her back with just a careful, length-long stroke with the tip of her tongue. A shudder rocked through Gwyneth, something Avaron quite clearly felt with how nearly-humping they were.
A writhing, squirming sensation churned in Avaron’s belly. Not quite the one lower, but upper—her other, newer friend.
Pulling back just enough to break the kiss, the two panted into each other’s faces, lips glistening wet and plump from their fierce exchange. “My, you do know how to kiss,” Avaron teased lightly, earning an enthusiastic nod.
“M-mine skill may not be, practiced, but …”
“And here I thought you a virginal woman.”
“I am! I, oh …”
“Naughty.” Avaron made certain to give her butt another slap, the thing undoubtedly quite red by now. Gwyneth let out a long, slow moan, biting her lip at the sudden strike. Goodness her mouth looked so inviting, partly open, glistening with their shared spittle, her tongue licking around with such tasting delight. Oh, how her gut churned at the sight! If she didn’t do something soon, they’d be far, far busier than she wanted at the moment.
Looking up to the twilight-hued sky, the encroaching night inevitably inched forward.
“We’d best hurry with your bath before night falls. I’d much rather be inside then.”
“V-verily!” Gwyneth agreed with a nod.
It took them a little bit to fully part enough to actually start bathing, though.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Curious Magi
Chapter 21: The War
Chapter Text
Life is a ripple in the pond of existence.
*~*
“Honda-sama will receive you now, Avaron-sama.”
“Right.” Avaron readjusted herself on the stool she sat upon. A ring of ash laid around her and a idol-like wood carving, small in stature but expertly made. Kagura had laid flowers, some sparkling gems, and other reagants around it ritualistically. If she hadn’t have Nuala double-check everything the ninja did, she would’ve expected it to be a far different operation. Having that snooty elvetahn around was quite useful, it turned out. Nuala, along with Gwyneth and Tsugumi, stood off to the side, watching with utmost scrutiny. Kagura, credit to her, worked under their pressure with an unflinching dedication.
The final preparations done, Kagura lit a single candle and stuck it in the earth before the idol. Kneeling, she folded her hands together, arranging them into four distinct patterns, muttering words under her breath. The tiny flame roared to life, burning down the whole stick and catching the offerings. As if the whole thing had been doused in gasoline, a bonfire erupted from nowhere, but Avaron didn’t feel any heat. Her eyes saw fire, her body felt cool winds.
That’s just freaky.
As the idol became consumed, the air around all of them shimmered. Like a mirage coming to life, the dirt ground and surrounding forest vanished beneath a veil of another place. Red-wood frames, covered in artful tapestries of every red, green, blue and gold color lined the expansive hall now around her. Tall pillars jutted up on either side of her, a long, crimson carpet stretching forward. It ascended seven distinct steps, reaching a dais at the top. There sat a man, red-skinned with great white horns jutting out of his forehead.
An honest, true-to-form oni, adorned by black robes lined with gold. Prayer beads hung around his neck, each engraved in some Japanese script Avaron didn’t recognize at all. He wasn’t at all rough looking; refined, and well-kept, but his brick-like physique held an imposing air. Beside the lord-apparent stood six guards, three on either side, all covered in implacable overlapping armor. In all, a place that looked as much a palace as a temple, many of its riches on display but not unduly so. Towering statues lined the wood walls, positioned as if they held up the roof—which they very might have.
Ah, focus.
Hands on her knees, Avaron bowed deeply to the lord-apparent.
“The one before me is the heroine?” he said aloud, his voice hard and clear, one trained for punctual commands. “She is not human.”
Not what I quite expected. Avaron, maintaining the bow, replied, “Greetings to Honda-sama. As to being summoned in a room full of strangers then thrown into a jail cell, I presume myself one of the heroines.”
“Ho? And why would they do so?”
“Because I am not human.”
“… So it is said. Of what can be offered for your sincerity?”
“The assurance of a Flame priestess, that of Nuala the Black of the elvetahn, and Tsugumi.”
Honda’s jaw tightened at the last name, his piercing yellow eyes narrowing. “You have done great research to know of my past, yet so poorly acted to invoke it.”
At that, Avaron sat upright on her stool, smirking. Holding up a hand, she curled her fingers in an ‘approach’ gesture. Tsugumi did so, stepping across the illusionary boundary. Honda recoiled when he beheld her, face aghast with incredible disbelief. The guards beside him seemed ill-at-ease, tightening their stances and weapons.
“What sorcery is this?” Honda demanded, his voice cuttingly harsh.
“Is that how you greet me, Ringo-chan?” Tsugumi asked coolly, squinting her four eyes.
“Tora do not live such long lives!”
“Hmph, of course. Do you remember when my inn was cursed?”
“How can I not?”
“It seems far more happened than just locking me inside.” Tsugumi shrugged her upper-pair of arms. “I know not how, only that it locked me out of time as well. I was trapped for hundreds of years.”
Honda stared, his stoic face working with tiny movements—that of an implacable man utterly bewildered.
Kagura took that awkward silence as a cue to move into the illusionary ring, kneeling before Honda. “My Lord.”
“Speak.”
“I can verify no necromantic trickery is afoot. The tora you see is most certainly alive.”
“… So it is said.” With a barely shaking hand, Honda waved her away, and Kagura bowed out of the ring once more.
“If you need proof, Ringo-chan, there is that time when you and Hanamaka had that interesting drinking conte—”
“Enough!” Honda threw up a hand, trying his loudest to speak over Tsugumi. He coughed into his hand, his red skin a hint darker. “I shall not doubt it is you, Tsugumi-san. Let us not speak such things through magic.”
Tsugumi, grinning and all too pleased with herself, nodded agreeingly. Avaron couldn’t help feeling her smug aura at cowing Honda in an instant. Clearing her throat, Avaron said, “As can be seen by Honda-sama, I speak with authenticity, if that is enough.”
“It shall be considered so. My mind wonders why the Goddesses have sent upon us a non-human heroine.”
“The world has need of my … unique, talents.” Avaron smiled. “And given the war breaking out around me, it seems all the more true.”
“You know of Arden’s ambitions, then?”
“I know of their invasion of the elvetahn—I have spoken with their queen on the matter.”
Honda’s brows crept up slowly. “A not inconsiderable feat, she is most—reluctant, for talk.”
“I’m glad my head is still on my shoulders,” Avaron remarked dryly.
“Such is her way. There are no other heroines with you?”
“No, we were separated immediately. At a guess, they are under lock and key in Artor.”
“Yes,” Honda hummed out, stroking his hairless chin in thought. “The war is most concerning. Were the heroines to side in the affairs of lands, all of the continent will plunge into conflict.”
“Forgive me, but is their role so great?”
“Your ignorance is understandable. Blessed by the Goddesses, heroines are tasked to bring peace to the lands. As such, all lands have agreed to the Heroine’s Convention. In return for disavowing involvement in a land’s affairs, they are granted free passage and lodging.”
“I cannot imagine it was that effective,” Avaron said, tilting her head in thought. “Domestic problems that would want a heroine is inherently political to begin with.”
“It is so,” Honda agreed. “Many have seen it as an excuse to prevent heroines from inciting rebellion. But, when the crisis is the rulers of a land, it is inevitable. The power of heroines is one that can shake the world, if allowed to grow. That thirteen—if only twelve that remain—now reside in Artor, it is unignorable. Their power must either be dispersed fairly or killed to prevent calamity.”
I don’t disagree, Avaron thought, but instead said, “If you sought my death, I’m sure your ninja would’ve done so already.”
“Your awareness is well suited,” Honda said, his compliment lacking the warmth one might expect. “I have need of your talents for Kitinchi in a matter of worldly importance.”
“I shall listen to it, but I cannot be certain I yet have the strength.”
“It is not imminent, for which I thank the Heavens. This way of speaking is too easy to hear, I shall send one of my greatest warriors to meet you. She will have all that is needed.”
Avaron nodded. “I understand. How can I help them find me?”
“Kagura.”
The ninja walked into the ring and kneeled once more.
“Your new mission is to protect Avaron and Tsugumi-san for the time being, with your life if necessary. Do all you can to aide Hanamaru in finding you.”
“I understand, my Lord.”
Honda turned to Avaron, regarding her coolly. “I look forward to hearing from you, heroine Avaron.” He turned toward Tsugumi and his stiff features did soften somewhat. “If you should find yourself in Kitinchi, you must come for tea.”
“I do not know when, but I will visit one day,” Tsugumi said, nodding.
“May grace bless you, Tsugumi-san. This meeting is adjourned.”
The illusion flickered and faded as quickly as it started. The idol and offerings were naught but ashes, barely recognizable if that. Avaron let out a breath, her shoulders slackening. Formal meetings are always so tense, she griped to herself, standing up and stretching. Kagura’s sour look, disguised as it was in her wrappings, caught her attention. “What has you so displeased?”
“Hanamaru is … a capable woman.”
“Oh?”
“Do not take her rough manners the wrong way when she arrives.”
“Ominous, but how long will it take her?”
“A few weeks, depending. I shall know more soon.”
“Alright.”
*~*
The woods rumbled, the air and earth shaking with tremors. Neither beast nor weather, such was the passing of people—many in number, great in strength. Distant shouts and punctual crack-pop of gunfire hammered her long ears, the foulest and ugliest of songs to hear. Day and night she had listened, hearing sisters and brothers shout in return, a splash of color in the mute. They faded in time, the burning battles carried farther away. She cursed her nose, for in her long slumber it still remained.
Blood-iron tasted all the fouler lined with the smoke of gunpowder.
But such told all she needed, waiting until the stench became stale.
It’s time.
The thought rang in her mind, a carrion call to the soul.
Her arms twitched, then her legs, the heart in her chest wrenching awake. It thumped more and more, and so too did the blood of people resurge in her sap-filled veins. Dressed in a cloak of feathers and leaves, adorned in the husk of an Ever-Tree, few would recognize her, and fewer still might find her. Lurching forward with a sudden, air-sucking gasp, she gulped air through the Owl-faced mask, a trilling whistle accompanying every breath. Twigs, branches, and vines alike fell off of her, even a small blue bird flew off with a surprised chirping.
The huntress grabbed at the vines wrapped around her arms, tearing them out with all haste. Sticky, pale yellow liquid sputtered out as they fell away to the forest floor before. Rising to a shaky stand, she braced against the trunk, her talon-gloved hand splayed in an adoring touch. “Thank you,” she whispered, the hoarse scraping of her voice barely a whisper. Thus ended her covenant with the noble pine, and so the huntress turned her glowing eyes away.
Two glowing eyes peered out of the pale-wood mask, their ethereal teal light eerily stagnant in the sockets. So it was, with her body born to live again, the huntress knew where the enemy had gone. As the Greatest of Huntresses had foretold, the Arden army had passed by toward the city. The sun hung high above, a favorite of humans when to wage battle. Her quarry may yet be easy to spot.
Flexing and tensing, she teetered on the edge of the branch, foreseeing the path to take.
Pivoting forward, where others would fall, she went sailing through the air. Arms spread as the mighty owl would in flight, she leapt from the branch to the next, her taloned feet grabbing onto safe perch. A tiny whistling of wind, followed by rustling feathers and leaves marked her passage—utterly silent beneath the rumble of war. Branch-to-branch, leap after leap, she vaulted through the infantile trees. Humans feared the deep woods, preferring such shallow parts to move through. Elvetahn tree farming and roadways were one and the same, even if they didn’t see it that why.
And so, how human armies moved through made them easily predictable.
In little time she came upon the invader’s main base, a long rectangular stretch marred with viciously cut-apart stumps. She vaulted up the tallest tree nearby, giving her the greatest vantage point. Even still, she yet remained hundreds of paces away from the nearest tent. Such precautions served well against elvetahn bows, who dramatically lost their power after such distance.
But not for this weapon.
Back to the trunk, one leg stretched ahead, the other curled underneath, she took up a stable position on the barely person-wide branch. Unholstering the long, narrow bundle on her back, she untied the sinew-string that kept the stitched-together leaves shut. There, the dirt-covered elvetahn rifle await, its near-perfect craftsmanship hidden beneath muck and grime. Such kept the sun from glaring off it and giving her position away. Wrapping the leather strap around her arms, she gave the bolt a quick pull and slam shut, affirming it was good to go.
The huntress looked up at the vast field before her, blackish-lips twitching beneath her mask.
A hit farther than any bow.
One to kill the greatest of human prey.
Truly a challenge befitting her.
The rifle cradled in one arm, she raised her free hand above it. Curling her ring and pinky finger, she stuck up the index and middle, focusing her attention upon it. “Great Owl whom stalks the night, death that follows in every shadow,” she rasped in her scratchy voice. “See through my eyes, the hunt to be.” Her teal-like eyes brightened, wisps of ethereal smoke bleeding out from her sockets. The world distorted before her, the eyes of the Great Owl magnifying all that which was far away. Such great focused vision left her blind otherwise, but surprise was on her side.
Arden’s soldiery had changed since the new Emperor took hold, something most obvious to her eyes. Those from the last emperor still bore the dark grays and blues, while the new blood harbored black and yellow. Most of the mundane soldiers carried the old, while the officers and nobility sported the new. It made them stick out like a naked babe screaming in the night.
Not you.
Her eyes scanned slowly, every human among the hundreds and hundreds there under her scrutiny. Patient looking and checking, patient checking and looking, then she found her quarry. Near the middle-back of the entire encampment, in front of a grand looking tent, sat General Hajon in his medal-bespeckled uniform. Other Arden nobles surrounded him, dining and laughing in their little gathering. All sorts of guards lined the perimeter, standing at attention but with the laxness of a long, boring watch.
Such tactless commitment to their purpose.
Then again, humans never had the lives to achieve true perfection of form.
The huntress watched, taking in the food he ate, the laughing he made, and the affluent he entertained. Such a clear sight, undoubtedly protected by magical wards. Not now.
And so, she waited.
The sun crawled across the sky, the festivities gradually winding down. She closed her eyes and peeked over slowly, almost a statue with her speed. A group of four lightly armored knights walked by, spears lax against their shoulders. Yet another patrol, one just as ignorant as the last. Some had looked directly at her, but as one so amusingly declared, “what a shoddy bird nest”. Her gaze snapped forward, watching as Hajon made to leave. Six other people accompanied him, all dressed in the same colors, all sporting their own glinting medals and other irritable insignia.
Reaching slowly into one of three pouches on her waist, she pulled out a clump of dirt and moss. Gingerly plugging her ears beneath her hood, the world became mute in an instant. Indeed, her own bloody sounded louder than anything else, pumping at its steadily unwavering rhythm. The time neared—Hajon and his fellows mounted their horses, seeming to be heading toward the front of the camp.
For what, she did not care.
On the move as they were, magical defenses were far, far weaker.
Ears plugged, she reached to another pouch, delicately unwinding the sinew-cord keeping it shut. Within sat a solid metal rack, filled with ten evenly spaced moonsilver-cast bullets. The green magic imbued within them pulsed across the vine-like filigree, casting an eerie light in their container. Plucking one with her claws, she reached up, slamming the bolt open with her wrist. In a smooth motion she slammed it shut with her palm, the rifle made ready.
The huntress sucked in a breath slow and controlled. Easing her muscles in a brief, leisure moment of relaxation, her eyes tracked Hajon and his slow ride. A clearing between her and them would soon appear—a roadway between all the tents and supplies. He disappeared behind a brown-cloth tent, and she pulled in one final breath, holding it deep in her chest.
Her clawed finger crept into the trigger guard, resting as gently as a feather.
Oh Great Owl, harken your eyes upon me.
Hajon and his retinue slowly inched into sight; her heart beating steady.
Grace this kill with your wisdom.
The angle made, the range estimated, the practice at the Queen’s gun range and a lifetime of hunting—all for this moment.
Eyes tight, sight true.
Ba-dump.
Her finger fell upon the trigger, and a mighty kick slammed into her shoulder. Air blasted out beside her, blowing open her cloak and blasting off all the loose foliage clinging on. Across the field sailed the bullet, nearly invisible to the eye save the green-hued glint. Faster than the beating of a heart it met the magical barrier protecting General Hajon, the briefest of flashes light following. The next, as if flicked by a mighty goddess’ finger, Hajon and his horse went sailing backward. His lower half yet remained in its saddle, his legs tight in place, his other flying in a meaty chunk into a nearby tent.
Ba-dump.
Hand flying the moment the shot was made, she slammed the bolt back and caught the ejected casing. In one motion she set it back to place and drew another bullet, loading the rifle once again. By the time any around Hajon looked to see what happened, her second shot was already lined up.
Ba-dump.
Their faces contorted with incredible awe, just then becoming abject horror. The second round blasted through a noblewoman, sending her remains and her horse toppling into another nearby.
Ba-dump.
The third round readied as the humans began panicking, instinct more than thought moving them. The third bullet killed the man leading the way forward, and his thrown-over horse made those behind him collapse in a pile of panicking animals. Such terrible luck might kill them on their own, but she took no such chances.
Ba-dump.
The fourth round took the head and shoulders off an officer of some kind, decorated as she was in medals. Perhaps a lower-grade commander or official; whoever Hajon treated with must be important. The huntress hadn’t quite aimed for the head, but the sheer destructive pull of the bullet did wonders on its own.
Ba-dump.
By the fifth round the group had scattered or been killed, her last confirmed kill a knight in ornate armor. Although his body remained yet together, a hole the size of a tree log had punched through his torso completely. Such wounds would be impossible to heal, if their souls had not already departed. Exhaling, she then took in a breath, filing away the last empty shell. In wrapping the rifle up again, she shouldered it and readied to move out.
Yet her eyes saw something that gave her, of all, pause.
The noblewoman who yet died on the second shot rose up, the left side of her upper torso gone in its entirety. Such would undoubtedly destroy the heart, an assured death. Blood and sinew regrew, flowing back into her with such audacious impossibility. Naked as she was with her destroyed clothing, in seconds she stood reformed, a black mist clinging to her pale skin. Their eyes locked—teal clashing against moon-glowing gold. The woman stepped over the screaming horse she’d fallen from, her every step sinking her lower into the earth. She disappeared into a puddle of shadows, ripping its way across the earth toward her very tree.
A nagraki highborn? the huntress marveled, stunned by a sight she had not seen in centuries.
Only, however, for a moment.
Pivoting off her branch, she vaulted away, fleeing into the forest far away. In the barely minute-long time from first shot to first jump, hardly any of the human army had realized what happened. Indeed, the crack-bang of her rifle might be thought as being from the frontlines not that far away. She didn’t fear them; the nagraki, on the other hand …
Tree-after-tree she leapt with speed and determination, all the grace of an owl not once missing a step or hitting a branch. Beneath her followed the nagraki’s wretched shadow, as fast as her but ever befuddled by the height of the trees. It could not reach her before she left it far behind, and its shadowy power kept its magic restrained. An endless chase she, however, was destined to lose. The huntress’ gaze swept through the woods, the earlier magic gone and her ears cleared of the plugs.
What to do?
She could not risk bringing such unfathomable danger to the Greatest of Huntresses.
Nor could she be captured, to suffer the damning fate of thralldom beneath a nagraki.
But her mission had been one of human prey, and she lacked the tools to deal with it.
Her mind raced with uncertainty, her feet and instinct guiding every fleeing vault. So it came to be they sped deeper into the forest, the canopy growing thicker, the light ever dimmer. Once her refuge, the shadows now turned into an enemy she couldn’t prevail against. With darkness, however, came an idea. A gambit that, even if she failed, her soul might still be saved. Decision made, resolve found, she leapt toward with renewed purpose in her flagging legs.
The boundaries that stood clear to her she doubted even a nagraki would notice. When the sun disappeared and the light of the fireflies prevaded, and flowers bloomed with petals of glass—one tread upon the Heartwood. Such might be forgiven if one left quickly, but to speed through it would incur the ire of those who loomed tall in this place. A clearing in the thicket presented itself, a circular area filled with purple grass and green flowers. The huntress landed with a soft grace, the force of it barely disturbing the foliage.
In all due haste, she unholstered the wrapped rifle and laid it across the grass. Kneeling down, she fluffed her cloak open and spread her hands, palms up and fingers at ease on top of her weapon. Head bowed and eyes shut, she waited.
Behind her, twisting shadows unfurled around the nagraki, strutting into the clearing with a satisfied smile. “Finally tired, little tree hugger?” she asked in a voice that didn’t want an answer. “I must say, as surprising as your assassination was, the run was the fun part!”
Such a grating voice.
Humans found that sort of thing attractive?
“Well? Nothing to say? No fun?”
What was to be said, wouldn’t be for her.
“Ahh, all your kind is like this! It’s so boring!” the nagraki whined before clapping her hands. “Well, no matter. We’ll have a lot of fun together. You broke my last pet, so why not become his replacement?”
The huntress saw, from the edge of her eye, pale-skinned legs covered in fishnet-like stockings pace around her. The nagraki’s attire had changed, no longer the noblewoman that would blend in so easily. She didn’t dare raise her head all the same.
“Mm, a bit gaunt, even for an elf. Well, at least you’ll fatten up easily, no?”
A snap of twigs echoed in the deathly stillness pervading around them, making the huntress’ ear twitch. “Great do I bow to you,” she rasped in as loud and clear a voice as possible. “Oh greatness that is before me.”
“Oh, flattery is it?” the nagraki asked with a pleasant purr.
“I know of my wrongs, for my hunt has taken me here.”
“You don’t have to recall everything,” the nagraki grumbled, coming to stand before the huntress. “Just show me how you killed him, and I’ll let you become mine.”
“I forfeit my claim upon this prey, offering it to you as due tribute.”
“What are you talking about?” the nagraki demanded, and the huntress saw a pale handing reaching to grab her face. “You insolent little—” With a sudden, grotesque hurk, the nagraki, her hand, and her legs vanished in a mighty, upward wrench. Pitiful, muffled screams disappeared into the woods overhead, and still she didn’t dare look up. Silence followed, and she heard nothing but her own breathing and beating heart. Her skin itched anxiously, uncertain of which two fates awaited her still.
A creaking groan came from overhead, and she beheld a gnarled fist of branches and leaves reaching down. Such was its size her whole body might be crushed in its palm like a bug, every finger and jagged cut sharper than a sword’s edge. With its thumb and forefinger, it plucked at her wrapped rifle, taking it gingerly up and out of sight. She, with utmost care, moved her hands and ever kept her palms up and exposed. The creaking disappeared into the distance, leaving the clearing solemn once again.
The huntress swallowed, her mouth horribly dry.
“Leave.”
Without a second thought, she sprang to her feet and turned the way hence she came. The huntress vaulted off, flying with all the speed her legs could still muster. In time, she found safety in the clearer forests where the sun still shined, and animals of all kind filled the air with liveliness.
The Greatest of Huntresses would be angered at the loss of the rifle, such was its unnamable value.
Perhaps she might be appeased, however, knowing the Heartwood have devoured a nagraki?
For now, she would yet live to see the stars at least one last time.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Curious Magi
Chapter 22: Hive Defense
Chapter Text
Animals and people have important common ground: their home.
*~*
Staring up at the plate-covered ceiling, Avaron focused nowhere in particular. The rib-like arrangement and crystalline growth for a ceiling lamp gave her enough to look at, really. On either side of her, two snoozing women lay, their slightly out-of-sync breathing the only thing to hear. She peeked over to Tsugumi, neatly curled up into her side, one long lilac-colored leg wrapped around her own. Her growing belly pressed into Avaron’s side, already taut and demanding of its space. Rubbing Tsugumi’s muscly, taut butt, Avaron looked over to Gwyneth, just as naked and plastered to her. Unlike Tsugumi, she laid almost belly down, sprawled out over the flesh-bed as much as Avaron.
Between the two, she was rather stuck.
I can’t complain, but …
Sweat trickled down her brow.
Fuck this gets hot.
Like having two little radiators strapped to her, and they weren’t doing anything!
Ah, but they did smell so lovely. The delectable aroma of two clean, fertile females, unmarred by stress. Thick as it was, her arousal surprisingly stayed quiet. Avaron’s senses certainly perked up and tiny, excited tingles thrummed under her skin, but nothing unmanageable. Kind of like drinking coffee without years of adjustment to the awful taste. I’m glad I can sleep at all, she mused to herself.
Although, sleep was a relative term.
The Hive continued to be active, if subconsciously. The tentaclelings out doing her gardening continued as ordered, while the perimeter ones patrolled or sat by, watching the evening forest. An awareness of what everyone was doing continued on—if she focused just a bit, she’d leave her ‘sleeping body’ and start overseeing wherever she went. Technically speaking I guess my mind can always stay awake without being exhausted? she wondered, squinting. A bit like switching between computers, isn’t it?
A pulse shot into her mind, a hardwired trigger reaction from a sentry. Her consciousness moved more than thought, perceiving the incoming information—Kagura emerged near the Hive’s border, sprinting at all due speed. Such hurry could only mean trouble, and she tracked the ninja across the clearing in front of the cave. Per her instructions, Kagura came before the tentacleling guarding the entrance.
“Summon Avaron-sama,” Kagura said with utmost urgency. “There is danger approaching.”
It’s always something, isn’t it?
Untangling herself from the two around her proved quite a challenge. Grumbling groans followed, Avaron shaking their shoulders. “Wake up,” she said again and again, until at least Gwyneth’s head arose and Tsugumi spied at her wearily. “We’ve got trouble up above.”
“Trouble?” Gwyneth answered first, jolting upright.
“Yeah, Kagura looks like she found something is calling for help. Let’s get dressed.”
“There will be trouble if she didn’t,” Tsugumi muttered darkly.
The three of them climbed off the flesh-bed, picking up their clothes neatly placed on the room’s only table. In dressing quickly, they stopped for a fast drink at the water cooler in the wall, then followed Avaron out. They reached the surface entrance in short order, Kagura standing by the guard tentacleling. “I’m awake,” Avaron groaned aloud, shaking her hands. “What’s the problem?”
“More of those creatures are nearby, priestess,” Kagura said, regarding Gwyneth.
“Kagr? Here?”
“A large party, carrying supplies as much as weapons. Not a true warband, maybe settlers?”
“Kagr do not settle, they infest.”
“Sorry, what’s a kagr?” Avaron asked, looking between the two.
“Foul creatures of a bygone age,” Gwyneth said with a grimace. “They live in the refuse beneath people. What few there are remain as scavengers. We fought many of them on the way here—twas most surprising.”
“So they have someone they’re taking orders from?”
“I cannot imagine who kagr would listen to.”
Amidst their talking, the enclosure nearby opened up, showing a fresh-faced Nuala. She looked around at the group and said, “You know then?”
“Unless there’s something other than kagr nearby?” Avaron asked.
Nuala shook her head. “No. I shall do you the kind service of taking care of them. You can go back to sleeping.”
Avaron rolled her eyes. “No, not quite. Now that we’re all here, I hope you can help me.”
Curious eyes looked at her, before looking over to the enclosure Nuala just left. The mage hurriedly shuffled away as all the sleeping tentaclelings within began crawling over the walls. Nearly two dozen of them did so, gathering before the women in three neat rows. Avaron saw her children and through them saw herself in the ever confusing if manageable intersection of senses. Nuala and Kagura, especially, seemed ill-at-ease at the sight, for how reserved their expressions were.
“Help with what, exactly?” Nuala asked tersely.
“The Hive needs combat experience, and this is a good opportunity. These ones can go in first, and all of you will be a fall back.”
“Hmph, if you wish to dirty yourselves, so be it.” Nuala waved a hand dismissively, casting her gaze to the forest ahead.
“It won’t be simple,” Tsugumi said, an uncomfortable air about her. Avaron couldn’t help looking over at her, but the inn hostess had a schooled face. Upset? Uneasy? Something bothered her, but nothing Avaron knew offered a clue.
“How do you mean?”
“How will they fight? They are so small, and have nothing but their mouths.”
“Ah, it would look like that, wouldn’t it?”
“Hm?”
The tentaclelings lifted their forelegs—a mixture of ‘front leg’ and ‘pedipalps’—and scraped the undersides together. A metallic screech sounded, somewhere between knives and swords sharpening. Everyone jumped or tensed, perhaps caught off by their synchronized movement. “There’s that, and their [Silk] capabilities. Their mouths are quite capable too, but I don’t want them eating filth if they can.” Avaron patted Tsugumi on the shoulder. “Have some faith in their capability.”
Tsugumi pursed her lips for a moment. “It is as you say.”
*~*
Large-scale coordination had been one of Avaron’s practicing points in the weeks since finding their cave home. While the tentaclelings could be trained and left with certain instruction, it left them prone to their individual instincts. One may decide a different action from another if it believed it sufficient to meet the goal set. How it arose still mystified her; they were not sapient in any capacity—sentient, to be certain. When exercising the will of the Mind in an active sense, they moved as a great flock.
Beautiful, in a way, seeing such organized climbing, leaping, and running over the uneven forest floor. One fed another what knew, what it did, how it moved, and so that behind it moved in synch. Thus the chain continued, the frontrunner leading the few. Avaron and the others trailed farther away, keeping at the edge of visibility. The deeper they went, the fouler the air became. A stench foreign to the ones she’d long filtered out carried on the wind. It reminded her of old refuse, spoiled food and other unspeakable messes that’d been left to rot. Avaron and her tentaclelings collectively sucked their mouths at the stench, trying their hardest to avoid breathing it.
“Eugh, you weren’t kidding,” Avaron grumbled. “What an awful smell.”
“Thou can smell it from here?” Gwyneth asked.
“As much as I don’t want to, yes. Can’t you?”
“Nay.”
“Lucky. Oh, there they are.”
The others looked up, eyes sharp, but only the woods remained around them.
“They are not that close,” Nuala reported, ever haughty.
“No, not to us. Up ahead, in some dug out clearing. Wow they are ugly. Hold on, stop, stop!” Avaron called, and the group did so. Lifting an arm, she gestured ahead. “Alright, off to that side is a path, it looks like they used it to get here. They’re in a kind of depression, so uneven fighting ground. A lot of crap on the ground, probably to make camp for a while.”
“Can you … see, how many?” Kagura asked, seeming quite perturbed.
“Just about. A few dozen, though not all armed. If we move toward that path, we’ll have a clean way of fighting them I think. Unless anyone has a better idea?” Avaron looked around, but no one seemed willing to speak up. For a bunch of people about to do a life-or-death fight, they were awfully indifferent about it. Just me then? she thought with a sardonic smirk, wringing her hands. “Right, let’s get into position then.”
As the women did so, Avaron’s mind focused far more upon the swarm. A few of the kagr were fanning out in pairs, probably for guard duty. She wasn’t sure what to make of them, exactly. Her first instinct was ‘goblin’, and while they had the height and physique, they were quite different otherwise. Muscly bodies, sporadic fur and scales, a snout for a face that looked like a rat fucked a lizard and a dog joined in later. Functional, if hideously ugly to behold. Some had teeth growing out of their maws, blackened lips and pus-filled spittle for the obvious wounds it left.
Disease, gotta put that one on the to-do list.
The swarm fanned out, forming a loose half-circle around the kagr encampment. Their first targets ventured down a dirt path, cutting around a tree and some large bushes the tentaclelings hid within. Snarling, gurgle-like words passed between the kagr in some semblance of language. Their posture betrayed them, if she trusted her instincts—lax, unaware, if grumbling and annoyed. Aim carefully, she thought, the three tentaclelings around the kagr lifting their forelegs. Coordinating that alone made her head tense with strain, a rather surprising sensation. They fired quicker than intended, blasting the kagr in viscous, white threads.
Missing their mouths Avaron had wanted to seal shut completely.
The kagr growl-snarled with alarm and surprise, entirely taken off-guard. Avaron rushed the tentaclelings in, adrenaline pumping in their bodies as much as her own. Kill them! Silence them! she yelled within the Hive Mind, a flurry of six forelimbs stabbing into the trapped kagr. One gurgled as its lungs punctured, but the other let out a distressed, loud yelp. She hardly minded the vague feeling of a bladed limb skewering flesh; not that different from cutting up dead boar, really. It died with a leg right through its chest, blackish blood sputtering out, but the worst had come to pass. The encampment perked up, their scraggy ears swiveling with an alert perkiness.
Thankfully, only a few more seemed to get up and leave.
The Hive tentaclelings went back into hiding, lurking further away from their victims. Nnn, shit. Ok, let’s just kill the other patrols while we can.
Being flanked would be a stupider mistake to make.
Second verse, same as the first.
Whether from the trees they walked past, bushes thick enough to hide, or just plain jumping on them, Avaron tried webbing up the kagr patrols. Between her new attempts at aiming, and the terrible reach of the silk, she never managed to hit any of their mouths. Where that failed, however, brutal stabbings sufficed as long as she got their chests or throats. They’re so fucking noisy! Avaron gripped to herself, the camp becoming even more alert. More of the resting kagr had taken up arms, regarding the forest around them most wearily.
Then one saw her scout watching them, throwing a spear with a menacing heckle sound. To her startled surprise the spear landed with a solid thunk into the tentacleling, piercing right through its abdomen. Screeching like a cat and a gas-pipe about to pop as it fell, the sudden jolt of pain in Avaron’s mind stunned her—and all the other tentaclelings too. She clutched at her head, choking out a gagging cough loud enough to startle everyone around her.
“W-what’s wrong?!” Tsugumi demanded first, already bracing Avaron to stop her from falling.
“Y-you …!” Avaron growled out, eyes dead set forward. It took one hot minute for her to block out the pain of the dying tentacleling, an entirely new and unwelcome sensation. The poor thing’s organs were skewered and the fall broken its chitin, leaving it to bleed out across the ground. One shitty little spear that just happen to have enough of a point! Avaron grit her teeth so hard they cracked—and healed just as quickly. “You fucks!”
Two words bit out in a snarl that made everyone take pause at hearing. Farther ahead, the tentaclelings echoed her in a chorus of screeching howls, so discordant and disturbing in its echo through the woods. From anger bore the fruit of focus, and the swarm moved all the more as a single whole. They fell upon the kagr camp, rushing through foliage and over dirt, forelegs at the ready, their circular maws drooling rabidly. In turn the kagr warriors, for such had to be their shoddy spears and armor, cried back with their own disgusting noise.
They rushed to meet the tentaclelings that approached from the ground. Many more, to the kagr’s surprise, ran and leapt across the tops of their crates and shoddy tents. A two-fold pincer attack, with the ground ones spewing debilitating silk, and the ones above leaping upon their prey. The first wave fell in quick order, but one of them got smart enough to raise another one of those damnable spears. It stuck up and skewered the tentacleling falling upon it, puncturing through from bottom-to-top.
Although not imminently fatal, the tentacleling rather couldn’t move as well, if at all.
Avaron left it there, to retreat and tend itself.
The rest pressed on, the kagr quickly growing to panic. Some tried rushing forward, barely anything but a strip of frayed cloth and their clawed fists. They, unlike the ones wielding spears and shoddy, rust-covered swords, couldn’t do anything. Their fists bounce helplessly off the chitin, and when they tried grappling by the legs, Avaron used their flexible head to rip their throats out. Thankfully the taste of whatever they were didn’t reach her in the slightest.
More of the unarmed kagr came, while those who remained cowered far behind. So long as she treated those with weapons carefully, Avaron saw victory. Little by little, she pressured them, using spat silk webbing to restrict their weapons. A few grew smart, trying to avoid having their spears or swords get stuck to the ground. Yet they remained few, for as their fellows were skewered and ripped apart around them, their flanks opened. Even if they remained mobile, they couldn’t protect their rear all the time.
As the last of the armed and desperate guards fell, gutted like fish or stabbed to death, the remaining kagr screeched frightfully. One broke, then the another, then more; in the face of death, they fled. They took the clearest path, and the one she waited for them on. Leaving the tentaclelings to kill anyone who hadn’t died fully yet, Avaron found herself back in her body. Tsugumi remained glued to her, quite concerned.
“It’s fine—I’m fine,” Avaron said, patting her arm. “The survivors are fleeing here. I’ll leave them to all of you.”
“Finally, we are done wasting our time!” Nuala said immediately, throwing up a hand so gratefully. Taking the lead, her other hand balanced her book—spellbook?—which quite surprisingly opened on its own. Page after page flipped by, settling on some obscure part Avaron couldn’t see. “If you want to train, there are better ways.”
Avaron couldn’t work through the stuck-up logic she was hearing before the kagr showed. Their fear-stricken madness pushed them barreling straight forward. Flourishing her free-hand, Nuala’s gloved fingers began sparkling with a violent crackle. Blue electricity gathered around her fingers and wrist like a snake, barely restrained. Avaron squinted at the sight, the rapid flashing quite irritating to see.
“Hurry to your demise, vermin. [Leaping Lightning]!” Thrusting her hand forth, the lightning snake shot from Nuala in an instant. It struck one kagr, then another, then another, all the speed and frightful power of a true lightning strike. Avaron half-thought she could see it move through the air like some cartoon, but no; it went at lightspeed. The kagr jerked and spasmed, dropping to the ground. Those who had flammable cloth or otherwise ignited, starting small fires that ate up their bodies.
Nuala did in seconds what took her swarm minutes of fierce fighting.
Knowing what I know, but seeing this in person, is really different, isn’t it? Avaron squinted and nodded. “Good. Let’s go into the camp now, it should be ours but watch for any traps.” In passing by Nuala, the mage seemed almost expectant of something. For what, Avaron neither knew nor cared to find out.
They entered the camp, much of it strewn in bodies, blood, and destroyed or toppled containers. Honestly if she hadn’t known what they were before, the whole place looked no different than a crap heap. The tentaclelings moved at once from their ambient guarding, gathering into formation. Although she knew who had what damage, Avaron still inspected them herself. Hm, so what I know does match up with what I’m seeing, alright …
“T-this one has a spear in it!” Tsugumi called out, drawing everyone’s attention. Avaron looked over, finding Gwyneth already rushing to its side. The barely alive tentacleling sat on its side, just barely a step away from bleeding out totally. She hadn’t expected Tsugumi’s frightful eyes, looking at her dead-on for … help? An answer?
Did it matter that much?
Trotting over, Avaron called out, “Gwyneth, does your healing magic work on this?”
“Eh? Verily but this spear is in mine way.”
“Rip it out then.”
The two looked at her for a moment, then at the tentacleling. Tsugumi grabbed onto the shaft, slick with the blue blood of the tentacle. “I’ll pull, you start healing.”
“Verily, on thy count.”
“Three—two—ONE!”
“[Burning Renewal]!”
The tentacleling shrieked and kicked its legs, writhing on the ground as both spear pulled out and flames engulfed its wound. Avaron stood beside herself, treated to the unusual sight she saw, and the knowledge she felt of what was going on. Beneath the fire, the wounds accelerated with supernatural speed, stitching together as fresh blood appeared from nowhere. It did hurt to the high heavens, far more than the spear that had ripped through the poor thing’s body. That they managed to restrain it so well, too, was rather disconcerting.
Her perspective on power was all wrong.
The tentaclelings might be well suited to the hunting of before, but they never fought anything dangerous. Nor had they fought sapient beings, what with their weapons. Avaron’s gaze slid over to the spear discarded nearby. In the end, they are workers, she mused to herself. To fight in a war, I need warriors.
She’d been focusing too much on her at-home logistics.
If actual soldiers showed up on her door, she’d be done for.
But before then, she waved her hand. “Nuala, come here!”
The mage stepped over, rather sour in the face. “I am not some dog to be beckoned.”
“Cute. What the fuck is this?”
“A spear.”
“And kagr make a weapon of this quality?”
Nuala crouched down and stared at the weapon, her brows knitting together. Standing up, she went around the camp and picked up more spears, laying them all out in a neat comparison by Avaron. The differences became that much more apparent—some were wholly metal weapons, others ramshackle branches held together by hopes and dreams. Nuala daintily picked up one of the ‘cleaner’ metal spears, staring at the blackish iron and its uneven markings. While mostly straight, whoever had made it quite obviously was still learning their craft.
“No … not that I know of,” Nuala muttered, quite sour in the face now. “They are too stupid to make something like this.”
“Underestimating your enemy is a certain path to defeat.”
“I am not,” Nuala said with a roll of her pretty eyes. “Kagr literally are too stupid, they have no idea how to forge metal. We once tried to make them into slaves, but you could not train them to do anything. They just eat and make a mess.”
“Then something has changed,” Avaron said, looking around the camp they stood in. “Because they’re carrying metal forged gear and this looks like a supply convoy to somewhere. Obviously they are not that stupid anymore.”
Gwyneth took her moment to step in then, apparently done healing the tentacleling. A hole in its chitin is all that remained, exposing the soft flesh underneath marred with blackish burns. “Mayhaps the giant we fought is related?”
“Giant?” Avaron and Nuala said at once, their heads pivoting toward her.
Gwyneth started a bit at their unison, but nodded. In filling them both in on her encounter, Avaron grew thoughtful, while Nuala’s face darkened terribly.
“What is eating you?” Avaron asked
“There is something I need to check on. You will all be fine for today, won’t you?”
“If you mean we’ll survive, yes, probably,” Avaron replied dryly.
“Good. I will return later.”
Then without any preamble, Nuala just vanished into a puff of black smoke. No words, no book, nothing. Avaron looked around superstitiously, wondrous if she’d see anything at all. And now this? This is freaky, how do I even defend against it? she marveled darkly. Amidst her looking, however, she saw Tsugumi away from the camp, crouched down by a tree. A rather familiar looking tree, actually.
Avaron headed over, Gwyneth following behind her. The nearer she came, the more Avaron saw Tsugumi’s expression. In all their time together, she’d never seen such a look—that of someone caught by an incredible event. A sight that couldn’t be believed, or worse, their mind unable to understand. She’d seen it the most second hand, and it had been so long since it appeared in person. Avaron clapped Tsugumi on the shoulder when she crouched down next to her, startling the woman. “What’s on your mind?”
They looked at each other—Avaron ever struggling to figure which of Tsugumi’s eyes to look into.
“It’s … I do not know how to say it.” Tsugumi looked down, then dragged her eyes forward. Together they beheld the dead body of the scout tentacleling, curled up on its back like any dead spider might. “I’m sad, and I know I’m sad, but I … I should be crying right now, right?”
This is a lot more than a dead tentacle isn’t it? Avaron made a show of humming thoughtfully. “It wouldn’t be unreasonable, but you don’t have to do it right now, you know.”
“… Shouldn’t I?”
“Tsu—”
“I raised them, you know,” Tsugumi said, not at all looking at Avaron. “In my belly, then on my breast. And I taught them how to hunt, and how to make their webs, and …” Her face scrunched up, the bitterness of someone holding back. “It’s just—” Pulling Tsugumi into her, Avaron did her best to give her somewhere to bury her face. Thankfully Tsugumi took the offering, burrowing her face into Avaron’s neck and wrapping her arms around the tentradom.
Avaron, for all the answers she held, couldn’t think of a way to use them. She’d done more than one round of using the ‘correct answer’ and having that blow up in her face. For want an idea that might work, she rubbed Tsugumi’s back, looking pensive. Gwyneth hovered nearby, anxious and uncertain what to do, hands fidgeting together.
“Why not make a shrine?” the priestess asked, sounding quite hesitant.
“A … shrine?” Avaron puzzled, looking at her.
“Verily! For all the ones who died, and those who live. Tis good to rest the soul with prayer.”
Tsugumi muttered something into Avaron’s chest, too muffled to be heard very far. She, however, didn’t miss. The tentradom’s eyes narrowed in thought.
“I can’t tell them apart”. She isn’t wrong …
Every tentacleling was a clone of the other, save for whatever little scars they acquired on the way. She knew each and every one, but only because of the [Hive Mind]. For the mothers who birthed them, they would be a faceless legion. That served well for the endless swarm she needed.
But what of the mothers and their feelings?
The thought never crossed her mind—once they agreed to breed, then they knew what they were in for. Yet the story didn’t end there, and she’d neglected to do the caring that was needed. Avaron sighed, staring up at the trees and sky above. “Alright, we’ll make a shrine. For the dead and the living.”
“Oh? Oh!” Gwyneth smiled and nodded. “Yes! Mine Flame may help to sanctify it, too.”
I don’t even want to get into what the fuck that means right now. Avaron made an agreeing noise. “There is something else, though. About the younglings and me that you both should know.”
That made Tsugumi pull away, her darkened and puffy face furrowed with dubious curiosity. Gwyneth ever remained hard to read, half her face hidden by a visor. Avaron scratched the back of her head, squinting. “I’m not sure how to explain it easily. I don’t suppose either of you know what a collective consciousness is?”
“I know what consciousness is?” Gwyneth said, curling a hand under her chin. “But collective? As in, many consciousness together?”
“Yes. Many consciousness together, regardless of their bodies. It would be like if our minds were together, and we heard each other’s thoughts, knew each other’s memories.”
“I understand, but what for?” Tsugumi said, still suspiciously confused looking.
“This little one—” Avaron tentatively gestured to the corpse, “—is, well, alive. Within the [Hive Mind], all its memories, thoughts, experiences … the things that make someone, someone. The body is gone, but the mind still lives.”
“T-then I cry for nothing?” Tsugumi asked, her cheeks puffing up in an anger that made even Avaron sweat nervously.
“S-she’s really happy you did!” Avaron chittered nervously, trying to smile reassuringly. “The one who bore her caring so much, it is something she—all of them—felt. Even if, well, it does not seem that obvious.”
“Hmm.” Their eyes stared for a long moment until Tsugumi huffed and planted her face back. “A shrine, then,” she mumbled, if intelligible this time. “And we’ll bury her all the same.”
“… Alright. I’m, uhh, not sure how we’re going to build it, though.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.??) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Curious Magi
Chapter 23: Regicide
Chapter Text
No death is more celebrated than a tyrant’s.
*~*
“So I am a bit confused about some things,” Avaron said, drawing Tsugumi’s and Gwyneth’s attention. Nuala, sitting in her corner of the enclosure, also seemed to take note. Or, at least, her ears twitched a little; her eyes stayed glued to that book.
“What about?” Gwyneth asked first.
“The skills, abilities, and this whole leveling thing … How does it work, per say?” Even as Avaron asked, the three other women—Nuala too—looked at her as if she was insane. Which was especially remarkable when Gwyneth was concerned. “What?”
“You do not know?” Tsugumi asked like a person walking on eggs.
“I have an idea,” Avaron said with a shrug. “My skillset is really different so I’m not sure where I fit compared to you three, for example.”
“Oh, that is true …”
“For example, people have [Skills] and [Abilities], but what are the differences?”
“A [Skill] is something you acquire through effort,” Nuala said, shutting her book with a thump. “An [Ability] is a natural talent, be it your blood or otherwise.”
“So no amount of work could make someone acquire a new [Ability]? Or copy someone else’s?”
“There are some [Skills] that are close to what [Abilities] can do. There are those that are completely impossible to imitate.”
Avaron pursed her lips, hands folded together in front of her face thoughtfully. Her head tilted to the side. “Okay, I’m getting that. And [Skills] cannot pass down to one’s children?”
“Not in most situations,” Nuala said, sitting up straight. Tsugumi and Gwyneth, meanwhile, seemed content to sit back and observe. “It isn’t known how [Skills] are passed down through the bloodlines. Some have said the oldest of [Abilities] started off as [Skills].” She did that polite, barely-moving-her-shoulders shrug that was damn hard to see. “I have known a few, desperate souls to pass on their [Skills] try all manner of methods. Not one has worked.”
Is it a genetic component or something else? Avaron wondered. I know Tsugumi’s drones inherited some of her [Abilities], like [Silk] … I thought that was a [Skill] but apparently not. Or maybe it’s the base [Ability] but she has a [Skill] that changes it? Her eyes squinted. These brackets are annoying to think about. Nodding to herself, she said, “And [Spells] are just … learned [Skills] that work with magic?”
“It is frightening what passes through that hole you call a mind,” Nuala remarked dryly. Two pointed gazes snapped toward her—one hidden behind a visor—but she showed no sign of caring.
“No less incredible that your tongue is still in your mouth,” Avaron shot back, just as dry. Nuala recoiled slightly, as if utterly unexpecting the quip. “I get your idea about the Words of Power and ‘true magic’ and all that crap. Somewhere between that and [Skills] is [Spells], and I’m trying to figure that out.”
“It entirely depends on which set of magic we speak about,” Nuala said, nose lifted daintily upward. “Most as passed on as simple knowledge and theory, some work on rigorous physical training to ingrain a few specific [Spells]. Others are even more polluted in their convoluted attempts I can’t begin imagining.”
‘Knowledge and theory’. Then, once the Hive Mind becomes aware of this magic, we’re able to use it? As much as she wouldn’t say it aloud, Nuala was right. To know more about magic, she needed to learn specific kinds, top-to-bottom. Avaron pursed and wiggled her lips, feeling annoyed. “Alright, so let me guess here real quick. Gwyneth, your magic requires faith in your Flame, right?”
“T-that is, ehm, a part, yes!” Gwyneth chirped at suddenly be called out.
“And whatever you have was from your life adventuring, right?” Avaron asked, staring at Tsugumi.
“It is. Do you mean to learn magic from us?”
“The ivory tower over there wouldn’t be that illuminating, so, yes. It is definitely one of those things I need to get a grip on.”
“What is this ivory tower you speak of, looking at me?” Nuala demanded.
“What you seek is not easy to find,” Kagura’s voice cut in from above, making them all jump. The ninja, somehow, had a comfortable seat on a stump-of-a-rock jutting out from the cliff. “Nor easy to hold onto once found.”
“Doesn’t your ass hurt sitting like that?” Avaron asked, but the ninja merely looked away—ostensibly surveying their surroundings once again. “Alright, fine, whatever. You’re not wrong! Still something I gotta do, somehow.”
“Why?” Gwyneth, straightening up on her seat, perked with interest.
“See if I have any talent for it. Or if these girls can learn it,” Avaron said, jerking a thumb at some of the hibernating tentaclelings. “The real plan I have is for—”
A blaring horn, one awfully familiar in its sound, blasted the air and made them all wince. Avaron fingered her ear, looking up at Kagura. “Aren’t you supposed to warn us of people coming?”
“I guard against danger. They hold no killing intent.”
Oh no, just hide your killing intent then stab me with a shiv or something. Avaron rolled her eyes before watching Nuala stand up and head out of the enclosure. Clapping her hands to her knees, she too stood up. “Well, let’s go greet the elvetahn. Or whoever has their horn.”
They all ended up gathering outside the enclosure, watching as the elvetahn caravan came out of the forest. Whether the same people or not, they did take up the same spots around the under-construction inn. Tents popped up, crates unloaded from deer, and the forest people setup with an energetic air about them. Nuala hardly waited with everyone else, strutting off toward the approaching deer. Familiar guards surrounded an ever more familiar queen, Efval clad in glimmering armor. It did well to protect her from head-to-toe, ever as form-fitting yet unflattering as all others.
“Kagura, it’s best if—”
“I am right here.”
“Fuck!” Avaron jumped at the sudden voice from beside her, the ninja already at attention. “You’re going to need to wear a damn bell if you keep doing that.”
The ninja, for her part, seemed bemused at the idea.
“Oh, reminding me—” Avaron looked over to Gwyneth, “—long story short, Nuala is … something. I think she’s a noble but I’m not too sure. That one over there in the center is the elvetahn queen, though.”
“Noble? Queen?” Gwyneth did a double take. “Wait, Her Majesty Gladestride?”
“Wonderful, you know her already.”
“I—I cannot just meet her!” Gwyneth sputtered out. “I am not proper!”
“I hope we’re past that with her because if you think me and Tsugumi just had these nice dresses; hoo, ho ho, oh no.”
“What does that mean?!”
Whatever else might be said laid to rest as Queen Efval, her escort, and Nuala pulled up. While she wasn’t radiating the flesh-flaying disgruntlement of their first meeting, Avaron found the queen’s gaze rather cool all the same. Bowing her head, she said, “Greetings, your majesty.”
“Hm. A Kitinchi shinobi and a Flame priestess now, is it?” Efval asked, the aforementioned women bowing full-bodily. “What strange company you have now.”
“In fairness, I know the priestess,” Avaron said, then pointed toward Kagura. “She’s new.”
“Is that so? And why are you here, shinobi?”
“In due respect, Queen Efval, at the behest of Lord Honda.”
“And why has Honda sent you here?”
“… To pass messages between himself and the divine heroine.”
Nuala seemed surprised at that, doing a doubletake and looking between Kagura and Avaron. Efval, meanwhile, pursed her lips and narrowed her eyes. “Understanding that the heroine falls under my purview, I hope Honda does not mean to offend me.”
Kagura shook her head. “He does not, Queen Efval. I know my Lord to wish to speak with you in the future; of what, I know not.”
“He is ever punctual.” Turning to regard Gwyneth, Efval’s gaze did harden, much to Avaron’s concern. “As to a Flame priestess being within my lands … I wonder if you understand the offense that has done.”
“M-mine understanding is mostly clear, Your Majesty,” Gwyneth returned, admirably skipping a beat once but holding a strong voice. “Proper as it is, mine followership of the Order doth wane.”
“The Flame does not rest on the bosom of one who seeks to renounce it.”
Gwyneth nodded agreeingly. “Not renounce the Flame, but the Order. They hath strayed from the path, and mine Flame shows me where to go.”
“Oh? The Order strays enough the Flame has come to scorn it?” Efval said, mirth bubbling up until a cold laugh broke out. Earnestly joyful if frigid in the haughty pleasure one must feel indulging in such a display. “Fate truly is funny!”
Gwyneth said nothing, for however gloomy her aura became. A darkness the kind of which made Avaron speak up. “I should take it as a personal favor,” she said, flashing a smile, “if Gwyneth’s presence with me wouldn’t be a problem.”
Efval’s laugh ended in an instant, her face coming back to its perfectly practiced look. “I shall set it aside, for now. I doubt you understand slightly the depth of what you say.” Pulling the reins of her deer, Efval turned back to the caravan, her guard following after. “Come to me at dusk, there will be much to speak of.”
“As you say.”
*~*
Arzha, lips pursed, sat on the splendid couch, elbow on the armrest, head on her hand. It’d been weeks since she’d been in the royal palace and the air had changed terribly. At its surface nothing looked out of place, but the servants walked tensely, and armed guards were posted everywhere. Much of the artwork, statues, and once-displayed jewels had been taken down, sequestered in the castle vault. One might have thought the walls always barren if they didn’t know. Indeed, the waiting room itself had been stripped down to its barest bones, hardly befitting servants, let alone nobles.
He finally acknowledges the war that is coming, she mused, the thought so disturbingly light in her mind. That her father had summoned her so suddenly was itself a-typical. He hadn’t wrote to her with such urgency in years, forget the current problems. Maybe he finally came to his senses?
Hardly. Some hairbrained scheme awaited her.
A knock came at the door, and it cracked open slightly. Dutiful Haleen leaned through, her face concerningly cross.
“My lady, you have … visitors.”
“Who?” Arzha asked lightly, her gaze sliding over as the rest of her face remained static.
“Some of the divine heroines.”
Not her father, not her brother, nor even the Church properly.
Divine heroines?
“Let them in,” Arzha said, watching as the door swung open fully. Five children walked into her waiting room, hardly befitting of being called a heroine. They were all between the ages of fifteen and eighteen, adults enough but still baby-faced and sparkling eyed. Surprisingly they weren’t the ones she expected; four boys and one girl, none of which she’d seen before. They were all dressed in the acolyte robes of the Church, the white-and-gray attire with its black highlight rather distinct to see. Although entering the room, they stopped short of the two couches, staring at her uneasily.
Not even a proper greeting. What does that Church teach them? Arzha wondered, slowly lifting her palm in gesture toward the other couch. “Sit.” At least they listened well enough. Five people were a bit much to squeeze onto the couch, but they seemed fine doing so. “Why are you here?”
They looked at each other for a moment, silently nominating the boy at the far end of the couch with their gazes. Narrow-eyed and wearing glasses, his face was not one found in Artor, or any land she knew of. Perhaps he had elvetahn blood in him somewhere, if he had been born on her world.
“Respectfully, princess Arzha,” he said, quite articulate it turned out. “We are hoping you could help us.”
“Does the Church not do enough?”
“They have hosted us well, but …”
Articulate, but uneasy. A strict lack of confidence, really. “Wasting my time is far worse than speaking your mind,” she said coolly, pulling herself upright. Throwing one pants-covered leg over the other and folding her hands together atop her knee, she regarded them with all the strictness befitting a princess.
“R-right,” he sputtered out, pushing his glasses with a finger. “It is just, we are not told much about what is going on. We hear rumors of war approaching, and the Church does not say for what duty we were … summoned, for.”
“And so you are kept in the dark, waiting.”
“Yes, exactly!” one of the other boys exclaimed immediately, only to shrink back beneath Arzha’s glacial gaze.
“So you come to me. I thought the Church did not allow that?”
“That was always—well, it seemed …” Glasses tried to say something, his mouth slower than his brain. He coughed into his hand rather quick. “Despite what the priestess has said, the people of these lands speak highly of you, princess Arzha. A bad ruler would not have such admiration.”
How unexpected, but not unwelcome. Arzha tilted her head for a moment. “Peasants admire strength and safety, both I provide in excess. It would be poor to judge me on those alone, would it not?”
Glasses seemed caught off-guard by that, his brow furrowing as the others looked between them. “Perhaps, but it-it is much better than to hear worse.”
With some training he might hold a passable conversation one day. Arzha waved off his words with a hand. “Very well. What do you want from me?”
“The truth, if possible. What is going on? Why are we here? In this world, that is.”
“One woman’s truth is another’s heresy. The Church will be most punishing if you speak of this to them.”
“I …” Glasses looked to his fellows, and they gradually came to a begrudging, if worried, nodding unison. “There is no harm in hearing it, surely?”
How naïve. Arzha couldn’t help the tiny smile etching across her lips, one that made the heroines stiffen up before her. “We will see. To save myself the trouble, I shall tell you forthright, then. Artor is on the brink of war with all its neighbors, we only lack the declarations now.”
Their faces fell dark and grim as Glasses said, “Why is that?”
“Because of you.” Arzha waved her hand in a simple sweeping gesture. “You heroines are the spark to this linen-stacked fire. To understand that, you will need to know why heroines are so important in this world.”
“The Church—” one of them started to speak, his words dying the instant her gaze cut into him.
“I know not what they said nor do I care. The Church hides behind scripture like a pauper’s smile.” Arzha waited, and satisfied none of them dared speak up, started again. “Heroines are many in this world, great people entrusted to do heroic deeds. Divine heroines are different—you are direct vessels of the Goddesses’ divine power. This manifests many ways, from your talents to your skills, abilities, physical power, and more. Tell me, what level are you all now?”
“Erm …” Seeing that his comrades nodded, Glasses said, “Around level 5, some near 6.”
Incredible. Arzha hid her surprise behind a scowl. “There it is. Years of training, hard work, and near death experiences, and you reached it doing almost nothing. That is the true power of divine heroines, their frightening ability: you grow in strength by leaps unimaginable.”
“Ano, um,” the girl, once quiet, spoke up, “Is it, though? What level are you?”
Twas no secret, so if the Church had sent them to spy, their questions were worthless. “I am level 22, and I am the strongest in the entirety of this kingdom. Indeed, I stand above many of our neighbors as well.”
“That—it’s only … 17, levels apart isn’t it?” Glasses said, holding his chin in thought. “Is it not too small?”
“I have not the slightest inclination why you think that. Each level is born from hardship; some are faster, some are slower. To you it may seem—it may be, a small gap to cross.” Arzha smiled, the frigid frost of her aura undercutting it. “To us, it is a lifetime of meritorious achievement.”
Glasses bowed, hands on his knee, head low. “I meant no offense, princess. Forgive my runaway thoughts.”
“It is said. Now that you know the power of divine heroines, you may yet understand why our neighbors are utmost furious. In the past, scarcely four would be summoned to surmount the greatest calamities.” Arzha shifted her legs, putting the other on top this time. “There are five before me, and thirteen were summoned in total. Our whole world has been thrown upside down.”
“… Thirteen?” the loud-mouth brat beside Glasses asked. “But there’s only twelve of us?”
That was strange to hear. “Did you not see the … no, you must have. The guards pulled her away immediately.”
“Oh, that!” The brat clapped a fist into his hand. “That was just a monster. It happens sometimes in … summoning magic …” His words died beneath the heart-piercing glare Arzha almost killed him with.
“You speak as a puppet for the Church with how convinced you are. Summoning magic does not exist—the ritual to summon heroines is a lengthy, long process. Not once has there been a mistake.”
“Then, umm, who was she?” the girl asked nervously.
“The thirteenth heroine, and the first monja to ever be summoned. I know such for I made certain of her divine nature myself.”
“Why would the Church lie about her?” Glasses asked.
The briefest thought of trying to explain what a tentradom was gave Arzha pause. No, not that. Rather … Arzha held up a hand in a polite, noble expression of shrugging. “The Church despises monja utterly. They view humans as the one true people, destined to inherit the world. A monja heroine would undermine their entire belief.”
“That …” The brat and his fellows looked amongst themselves, very uncomfortable. “They’re people too, aren’t they?”
“Who?”
“The, uh, monja.”
Arzha regarded him, finding that despite his uncertainty he did not back down as before. “Indeed. There are many lands, despite the Church’s influence, that continues respecting its monja peoples. Make no mistake, if the Church had its way, they would see every monja dead however possible. It was this detail that, in fact, led to the schism between the Order and the Church.”
“Sorry, what Order?” Glasses asked, perking up.
“Yet again they lie by omission.” Arzha sighed, rubbing her temple with her gloved hand. “The Order of the Eternal Flame, an ancient religion that is often believed the source of all peoples—human or monja. It is from the Flame that the first creations were made, and so civilization followed. I do not remember much beyond that, but the schism is well known.” At seeing their expectant stares, Arzha felt an inkling of familiarity. It was, once upon a time, a look many of her Snowflake knights gave her.
I’m too young to be nostalgic yet, she griped before composing herself. Coughing into her hand, Arzha folded them together upon her knee once more. “The Church’s founder, Mikhail Altman, professed divine guidance, a power greater than the Flame. He claimed to foresee a perfect world, ones destined for humans alone.”
“That is the, uh, Everlasting Light?” the girl asked, perking up.
“So I presume. I have not deigned to read their scriptures beyond Altman’s bizarre fever dream.”
“Is—is it that strange?” Glasses pondered aloud. “There are goddesses in this world, after all.”
“I know not how it is within your world, but in mine, the divine do not bother hiding themselves. For all their prayer, ritual, and faith, no being apart of their ‘light’ has ever made itself known as all others have. Were it not for their continent-spanning size, they would be an insane gathering otherwise.”
“Uhh, are they really that bad?” one of the boys who had yet to speak, spoke. “The priestesses did help with the homeless …”
“Were any of them monja?” The longer the question hung in the air, the more uncomfortable the heroines grew. “Is that not an answer in itself? Even a—”
Her words disappeared beneath the sudden banging coming from the door. Arzha shot her gaze over as Haleen peeked through, flushed red and panting from exertion. “M-my lady!”
“Speak.”
“His, his majesty comes! He is most furious and followed by the Royal Guard!”
What? Arzha marveled, the thought catching her off-guard. Why would be with the guard? Nonetheless gesturing to open the door, she said, “I see. Let us greet the King, then.”
It did not take long for the thunder of approaching boots and the rattling of plate armor. Haleen stood by the now fully opened double doors, King Fornard standing at the threshold as a giant with his regalia. Arzha rose up, as did the heroines, but none of them had a chance to bow as he stormed into the room. “There you are!” he said, whatever relief in his voice buried beneath the raw energy. “Arzha, you must come quickly.”
“What has happened?”
“It—” his gaze crept to the heroines nearby, “—It is not a matter for the Church to hear. Come, quickly.”
“Haleen, see that our guests leave properly.”
“Yes, my Lady.”
And so Arzha left with her father, the King, keeping pace with his incredible steps as the two sped through the royal palace. The guard followed behind, unbothered by the hustle in their heavy armor. “What is it, Father?”
“Your brother—what an utter fool! A maddening, stupid, insolent child!” Fornard raged, his clenching hands and flushed face the lividest Arzha had seen in years. “I must have left my senses thinking to trust him at all!”
As pleased as she was to hear that, Arzha couldn’t help worry about why. “I do not understand, what has Samuel done?”
“He slew the King of Gebenheim at the meeting!”
Arzha nearly choked on her tongue at hearing the words. “He did what?”
“Exactly so!” Fornard roared. Not a guard nor servant dared stand in their way, heading toward the throne room now that Arzha recognized their direction. “He has fled back to Artor yet dares not come home? The Gebenheim queen is beyond furious; their army is mustering to march as we speak.”
This is it, Arzha realized, almost out of her own body at the thought. Gebenheim would invade in justified retribution, and every other nation would not wait to ally under such a cause. Worse, to break tradition of sanctity upon such tense meetings was amongst the greatest dishonors imaginable. It was, in every sense, a perfect casus belli. The political jockeying had come to an end in an instant all thanks to Samuel.
But they weren’t ready.
She had barely started building the guns Avaron’s blueprints told how to.
Arzha scowled and grit her teeth. “I’ll kill him myself, I swear.”
Fornard said nothing, his visage dark and terrible. “Even those we might have convinced stay their hand now ready as well. Every side, Arzha. We are being attacked from every side.”
Now you see.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Devout Cum Slut
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Curious Magi
Chapter 24: Blind Devotion (E)
Notes:
Due to the massive time delay in developing this chapter, some of Gwyneth's character changed. While it should be thematically on point, as I've gone over the rest of the story, it may read a bit strangely. This chapter was written months longer than the writing block it was supposed to be part of, and my skill has shifted somewhat as a result.
Also god, writing from a character POV getting fucked by tentacles lol
That's a new one off my list.
Chapter Text
Faith is one road amongst many others.
*~*
“T-thou mustn’t need do this!” Gwyneth protested for the fifth time, and ever as useless against Tsugumi’s insistence. Two hands pulled her by the arm through the underground Hive, hardly breaking pace at her attempts to stop. While the tora was strictly shorter than her, she remained far stronger.
“There is a time for a woman to stand up and do so herself, Gwyneth,” Tsugumi said with an air of know-it-allness. “She will not simply come to you no matter how needy you wait.”
“But surely she is most preoccupied and so—”
“Knowing her, she’ll drop anything to get between your legs.”
A hot heat shot up her cheeks, a tightness following her chest that left Gwyneth tongue-tied. Their naked feet slapped against the chitin ground, echoing in the otherwise stony stillness pervading around them. As much as she expected to get chilly, the air remained humid and hot. “T-tis not here nor there,” Gwyneth hissed.
“Mm. We are here,” Tsugumi declared without much fuss, stopping them in front of a teeth-growing door of flesh. “Now, you do remember what to do, yes?” she asked, patting Gwyneth on the shoulders.
“Thou art serious.”
“She accepts you and so do I. Why wait?”
“Ehm …” Some part of Gwyneth wanted to rebuke her. Nothing about the scheme fit how such a—such a salacious deed should be done. At least nothing she’d ever heard about from gloomy taverns and whispering maidens. “Mood?”
Tsugumi shook her head and audibly tsked. “The first time is always important but so is every time after that. It is how well you learn and apply, not unlike fighting.”
“Why doth men say that so much? Especially in the taverns …”
“… You will understand. Now—” Tsugumi clapped Gwyneth on the shoulders, “—you enter there a woman with all her charms. Empty your mind, think and feel solely what is waiting within. No one wants to hear anything boring when excitement is coming.”
Gwyneth’s mind whirled, trying to think of any which way to use such advice. She understood it, but goodness what to actually do? She nodded dumbly; Tsugumi in turn nodded and pushed her toward the door. It opened with a slurp.
“Now, go and enjoy being made into a mother.”
A sharp slap smacked her butt made Gwyneth jump forward on reflex. The door slurped shut just as she whirled around, Tsugumi’s vaguely defined face smiling. Thou—thee—nngh, she thought with a grumble, rubbing her sore spot.
“Yeeess?” came the haunting, if suspicious, greeting.
Gwyneth shot upright and turned once more, barely seeing Avaron at the edge of her Flame-given vision. “A-Avaron!” she chirped, her free hand half-hiding her breasts. Or tried to, squeezing the big things to her chest and they still almost spilled out. A slight twist of the hips hid her womanhood well enough.
“Hello, Avaron here,” the tentradom queen returned with a deadpan, half-cocked herself by the wall with a cup in hand. Oh, she was standing next to the water-bucket thing Tsugumi had shown her before.
“What art thou doing here?”
“… It’s our bedroom, Gwyneth.”
“Tis indeed!” Flushing with embarrassment, she squirmed from side-to-side. ‘Our’ bedroom. The words hung in her mind, not at all something proper to hear. Then again, she hardly was being proper either.
“Did you need something?”
Gwyneth puffed her cheeks when Avaron turned around, seemingly disinterested. There she stood, naked and tempting in the bedroom! Was that not enough or—Tsugumi’s words came back to mind, deflating her indignation. “Ehm, well, tis rather …” She poked her fingers together.
“I cannot hear mumbling from over there.”
The little tuft of flame floating atop her chest flickered, becoming slightly jagged. Gwyneth stomped her way over to Avaron, who looked up again. That dim-witted, cute looking tentradom sipped from her water cup even as Gwyneth stood chest-to-chest with her. “Tis—tis quite impertinent of thee!” she declared, hands on her hips, big tits smushed against Avaron’s modest ones.
“What is?” Avaron asked, looking rather caught out. Or distracted, given how she glanced downward.
“When a maiden enters thine room, and thy attention lingers anywhere but her!” Gwyneth said, poking Avaron in the chest.
“Oh! So you want my attention, is it?” A tentacle slithered out from the wall, swiping Avaron’s cup from her.
Gwyneth jumped as two hands wrapped around her hips, grabbing ahold of her butt. The tight hardness of such a feeling shot a delectable shiver up her back. Comfortable and possessive; it rather rankled the heat in her belly. “Yes! Verily,” she said with a huff, even if it didn’t have much energy. “If thou aren’t preoccupied, rather …”
“No, no, I can make time,” Avaron said, her hands inching upward. Light enough to move yet heavy in their salacious probing of Gwyneth’s backside. “All the time when someone so tempting saunters into my room, even.”
Puffing up, Gwyneth preened in spite of her anxious nerves. “Yes, well, tis time to relieve thee and do the …” She could recite nearly any sermon from memory but this really tied her tongue. Cheeks popping red in a blush, Gwyneth wasn’t sure which words to use exactly. “The thing.”
Avaron blinked owlishly for a moment before laughing and clapping Gwyneth’s backside lightly. “No reason to be so nervous! Which thing, by the way?”
Is she daft? Gwyneth wondered, rubbing her thighs together. “Thou knoweth the thing.”
“Do I?” Avaron mused, sounding perplexed.
For what Gwyneth could ‘see’ of her face, spectral vision being what it was, she had no decency being so cute. Such ignorance batting against her own luscious desire; it left her flustered. Then she remembered who Avaron was and smacked her on the arm. “Thine unscrupulous wiles doth raise mine ire.”
“Hey, if it helps,” Avaron said, lifting her hands away placatingly. “Even I like a little foreplay, unless I’m bursting at the seams.”
It wasn’t terribly hard to imagine what that entailed. Before she might say anything, Avaron tugged her by the arm toward the flesh-bed. They ended up sitting comfortably on the edge, hips pushed together. Gwyneth folded her arms in her lap while Avaron kind of leaned back. That one of her hands planted snug against Gwyneth’s bottom didn’t escape her notice.
“Trying not to kill the mood here completely, but are there any like, uh, vows or something about it?”
Gwyneth furrowed her brows and tilted her head. “Vows?”
“You know, rules or something about having intimate relations. As a priestess, that is.”
“Umm …” Gwyneth had to think for a moment, holding a finger to her chin and looking up. “Tis only forbidden amongst one’s faithful. They are to be thine flock as if one’s blood. In that, a priestess must entrust her children to another for teaching. Tis to encourage change, as thou see,” Gwyneth said, making a circular hand-over-hand motion.
“You get a better deal than most,” Avaron said, brows raised in surprise.
“Why?”
“Most religions I know force clergy to take vows of celibacy or restrain from intimacy. Some do it for purity, others for clarity of mind, removal from mortal vice … blah blah blah.”
“There were those in the Order. They held more concern over scripture than other affairs.”
“You sound unimpressed with it.”
Gwyneth grimaced slightly. “Not truly. To prefer old history to what is now, tis like preferring ash to flame. It teaches, but it doth not change.”
“There’s a saying, ‘those who do not know history are doomed to repeat it’. Time and again it has proven true. I wouldn’t say not spending time on it is a wise policy.”
Pursing her lips, Gwyneth did give it thought for a moment. Even coming from Avaron the whole idea sounded blasé. “Ast thou sayeth, but, mine curiosity lay elsewhere.”
“Hm?”
“The—the thing, but with the, erm, children?” Gwyneth said, trying to find the right words. “Tsugumi hath not been forthright about it. Only tis different than normal.”
“It is. How to say … You know about normal pregnancies, right? Baby pops out, there’s a mess and all that problems.”
“I hath helped more than once in such.”
“In my case this—goddesses, I sound like a stupid teacher.” Avaron rolled her eyes for a moment, exasperated. “Okay, so, fucky fucky happens and then eggs go into the belly. They sit there nice and happy before they’re ready to get laid. They pop out a few months later, and from what I saw Tsugumi rather enjoyed the experience. Out and done, up and about not too long after. Very easy.”
Something about Avaron’s hurried explanation tickled Gwyneth. She bit back the first giggles, but the mere words ‘fucky fucky’ echoed in her mind a bit too loudly. Spitting a laugh into her hand, she rocked back and forth on the bed’s edge. “T-tis not, tis not needed,” Gwyneth tried saying, but a look at Avaron’s sour aura made her laugh harder. She tried comforting the tentradom, half-smacking her on the shoulder in the process.
“Listen, I’m just trying to make this not sound weird to you,” Avaron said, shrugging heartily.
“I hath partaked of thy, ehm, essence?” Gwyneth said, not too certain which word to invoke. ‘Cum’ sat heavily on her mind with its imposing, wet stickiness. “Tis nothing so frightening.”
“… Most people wouldn’t be eager to, even with their goddess telling them to.”
The starkness of those words rattled Gwyneth’s mirthful mood, making her grow still. “Mayhaps,” she said, if only to keep the air lively. “But having made mine choice, tis not the Flame forcing me. One path among others.”
“Oh?” Avaron hung on the word, leaning over. Her very naked body pressed up against Gwyneth’s, and the priestess was all too aware of the warmth. A heat far from fire, but so terribly captivating all the same. “So you wanted to get knocked up, huh?” she asked, poking Gwyneth accusingly in the belly.
“V-verily,” Gwyneth said, her reflexive giggle at the ticklish touch burying her embarrassment. Really, having thought of saying such provocative words but actually doing it! It left her a bit tongue tied. Not that Avaron’s poking helped any. “Twas mine dream, one day having mine own children.” To her surprise Avaron pressed in, pushing her backward onto the bed. A leg went over her hips and two arms planted around her head, all but pinning the priestess. Her heart leapt as Avaron laid upon her, weighty but not crushing, their noses coming close.
“Now that’s an interesting idea,” the tentradom said lowly, her voice heavy with a husky purr. How she changed it so easily, Gwyneth didn’t know, but oh how she shivered at hearing it.
“Y-yes, tis,” she muttered back, her thighs rubbing together anxiously. A certain part of her had so much indecency with how excited it felt!
“You know, come to think of it,” Avaron remarked, sounding thoughtful. “We never kiss that much, do we?”
“K-kiss?” Gwyneth’s heated mind took a moment to catch up. “Ehm, mayhaps not much … nor at all …”
“Mmm, do you want to?” Avaron asked, leaning in and peppering light, little kisses along Gwyneth’s cheek. They came so close to her lips the priestess started to salivate, only for them to slowly dodge around her.
“Thy teasing doth try mine patience,” Gwyneth grumbled, groping Avaron’s backside. To her surprise, something moved under her touch. Not in any way a muscle should. It shifted around her probing fingers, pushing out against them. Then something started wrapping around her hands, crawling up wrists, and soon her forearms were ensnared by warm, smooth flesh. Tentacles emerged, pushing her arms to the side and pinning them to the bed.
Two curiously soft and firm hands squeezed her cheeks, drawing her attention back to Avaron’s very close face.
“Kissy kissy,” Avaron said, her breath hotly wet upon Gwyneth’s lips. For all the priestess expected, the enveloping warmth caught her notice. A pure and deliciously soft texture pressed in, her lips swallowed by Avaron’s. Goodness it thrilled her so much! Her skin prickled and a shiver crawled down her back. She pushed back gently, the pressure of Avaron’s kiss molding their lips into a silent caress. The soft exhale Avaron made with every breath—the smell of it was oddly sweet. Not in a sugary way, but one that made her perk up. The thought never crossed Gwyneth’s mind before, enjoying someone’s breath …
Avaron squeezed and pulled, using her whole mouth to suckle upon Gwyneth’s lips. A tongue darted out, brushing over them with a slow, begging caress. The taste of spittle snuck in, and Gwyneth gasped—or tried to. Her mouth parted, the flavor so intense it almost hurt. Worse, pure excitement shot down her throat and into her belly, every muscle there clenching with anticipation. Gwyneth squeezed her thighs tightly together on reflex, her lips not even pretending to try anymore. All she wanted was more of that taste, and she licked upward in search.
By the searing Flame she wasn’t ready for how Avaron’s tongue worked. They brushed against each other, tentative little touches as they met. Then it wrapped around her own, a mix of hardy muscle and soft, pliable flesh that became a coiling vice. It didn’t matter how far she retreated, it chased, throbbing and brushing in a hypnotic back-and-forth. Spit and drool alike slathered over her tongue, the intense flavor shooting straight down to her clit. Gwyneth’s whole body rose up on reflex, an arching of her back at the terribly strange pull she felt. Hunger for that taste, a need for more that made her suck and swallow greedily.
Gwyneth’s little moan gurgled in her throat, her hips shaking from side-to-side against the flesh bed. Wonderful spit slid down her tongue, and she gulped it with a noisy, squelching throat suck. Every drink disappeared inside her, an aimless stream of warmth that seemingly spread out from her belly. Her very toes started to curl, and her knees turned to jelly, yet somehow intent on curling upward. A part of her that wanted to spread open, present herself, offer herself. Avaron’s weight kept her pinned all the same, helpless in a way Gwyneth rarely ever felt.
Oh, how that thought made her slick pussy ache.
A sudden pulling on her lips wrenched her thoughts back. Avaron leisurely slid back, the two of them gasping for breath in unison. Her tentacle-tongue hung out, writhing in the gap between them, spit and drool the web connecting them both still. Gwyneth’s whole mouth turned to mush, all too empty and void of that meaty certainty that amazing tongue. She tried talking, really, but her mouth moved uselessly and her lips smacked and sucked clean with a mind of their own. Avaron’s far too hot mouth inched down, settling into her ear. “Such a good kisser,” she breathed out, just in the right spot to tease and not deafen Gwyneth.
Was I? the priestess wondered in the haze of her own mind, but if Avaron liked it then that’s all there was to it. Gwyneth gave an acknowledging hum, a sudden need to arch herself again arising. She pressed into Avaron, her arms and legs captive. Something had a mind of its own within her, a churning deep inside her belly. Deeper than her muscles, something far closer and terribly more intimate. It felt almost like a crackle before she arched again, pure intensity making her seize, her mouth slackening in a silent, breathless moan. For a single, brief moment her pounding heart matched the throbbing pulses coiling across her scarred skin.
For as fast as it came, it crashed. Gwyneth slackened against the bed, a gush of warm, liquid sex spilling out between her thighs. And still her body sang, that churning returning with incessancy. What is thy desire? she wondered, the flame inside of her restless. It raged without anger, eager for more, yet choked on nothing to sup. Its hunger was her hunger; no, perhaps hers loomed greater.
“Did you just, uhh …” Avaron trailed off, sounding surprised.
“Oh, Avaron,” Gwyneth enthused slowly as the Flame between her breasts pulsated. The traitorous thing sat there with a heart, showing her desires so nakedly. But, did she have anything more to hide? There wasn’t a scant piece of darkness left.
No, there was one place.
How it ached from emptiness.
Pushing herself up, the restraining tentacles did nothing to actually impede her. Gwyneth rolled over, straddling Avaron’s hips even as those same tentacles slithered further. From Avaron’s back to her limbs, an all too real, hotly wet and physical intertwining. Yet for the fear she’d ever hear when the name tentradom came, she felt none. How fortunate was she, then, to have such in her grasp? To be guided into an embrace of two loving arms and many more besides?
She wanted to cry, if she had eyes left to, the freedom she’d finally been given.
“Too much too soon, or something else?” Avaron asked, the banality of her caring question a salve to Gwyneth’s smoldering thoughts.
“Tis just, thou shouldst … ehm!” Another churning pulse from her belly, and Gwyneth arched, putting herself on display to Avaron’s salacious gaze. Her fingers and toes curling, Gwyneth eased with a shudder. She licked her lips, her salivating mouth spilling out and dribbling down her chin; strands of spittle falling to her luscious, fat breasts. Such envy others cast upon her chest, devoid of milk and nurture as it was.
Full they will be, once lust is slaked, Gwyneth thought, almost smiling with twitching lips. “T-thou shouldst unleash thy desires. I am prepared for them.”
“… It’s sex, Gwyneth.”
No, she wouldn’t tolerate it this time. Slumping forward, she planted one hand onto the bed, the other grabbing Avaron’s chin. “Thy impertinence doth sco-old me unduly!” Gwyneth hissed. The tips of her hard nipples grazed Avaron’s chest, their breathing and swaying breasts teasing each other. “Tis mine duty to receive, and I will! Countless eyes raked over me, desiring mine flesh. Some whispered it to me, vile tongues poisoning sweet deeds. Flame and scorn burned it away but I still desired!”
“What—”
“Am I not woman? Should not this flesh be grace and sense, to slake thirst and nurture lust?” Gwyneth asked rhetorically. “Ruined skin need not impede such—”
“Gwyneth, really!” Avaron said, trying to get up.
“No! Listen to mine words!” the priestess shot back immediately, trying to pin Avaron back down.
“Gwyneth, I’m serious!”
“Thou promised!”
Their struggle turned from her simply riding cowgirl into a full-on grapple. Hands grabbed arms, legs hooked one way or the other, and Avaron’s tentacles went from delightfully playful to cords of pure, muscular restraint. Still she fought, desperate to be heard, frightful of the lustful cup she could sup from disappearing. They neared the edge of the bed, and a flailing of limbs followed as they teetered over the side. Rather than slamming onto the floor, however, some much larger tentacles from the Hive itself sprung up and rearranged them.
In the head-spinning speed of it all, Gwyneth found herself thrown onto the flesh bed’s edge. Her bubbly butt sat exposed, her legs uselessly limp, and Avaron mounted onto her from behind. What could be said for her arms, if not held behind her back, and all those wonderful tentacles securing her in place. Huffing and puffing, she squirmed uselessly. Fear had only done so much to calm her body, and her belly remained the roaring hunger it’d become. Another deep shudder came, her pussy gushing a fresh coat of juice down her thighs. Thin strands hung like spider webs, provocatively inviting anything inside.
“What’s gotten into you?” Avaron demanded.
“Please, forgive me,” Gwyneth muttered, not at all certain of her words or breath. “So many cease once they—they scorn me, for temptation.”
“I promised, as you so said,” Avaron remarked, sounding dreary. “But you need to talk in a language I understand.”
Indeed, they spoke and heard each other’s words, but neither came closer to comprehension. It dawned on her then, a rather obvious detail that embarrassed her to think about. More than once she’d had to bridge the differences. “Tis, well, ehm. Thou will not leave?”
Avaron let out a long sigh before letting go of Gwyneth’s arms, letting them lay more comfortably at her sides. The tentradom queen pressed in on Gwyneth’s backside, an intensely close and heavy weight that thrilled the priestess. “Not unless you’re talking human sacrifice or something like that.”
“What?” Gwyneth asked, doing a double-take. The thought surprised her so much she blurted out, “No, I relieve people. Like, ehm, I do for thee. Or, did.”
“Oh, is that all?”
“Ehm …”
“Kinda did that one the first night we met, Gwyneth.”
She didn’t know what to make of anything, but defeat pervaded in her mind. There was nothing else to do but speak of it. “I was born and the Flame chose me. But in time I became a woman, after a priestess. Mine desires did covet greatly, but few wished to lay with me. Not when they saw.”
“Mm.”
Uncertain of what that meant, Gwyneth pressed on tepidly. “Desires, they art precarious things. Moderation, like flame in a pit. But mine have no pit, boundless, and the Flame scorns me from embracing them. I give mine self to men and women, whoever needs relief. Tis … not very respected to do so.”
“Are you ashamed of it?”
What an odd question. Normally people would blame her. Gwyneth actually had to take a moment to think about it before shaking her head. “Tis mine desires to do so. How great tis warming their beds, but many satiated with only mine mouth.”
“Mmm, so that’s why you’re so skilled with it.”
“V-verily …?”
“So why now? What’s the fuss about it now?”
“… The Flame bids me leave to embrace.”
“It’s letting you follow your desires?”
“Mm. To be a woman. Leave of being a priestess, and to be the woman I am.” Goodness just saying those words excited her, a fantasy so far buried only the coldest of nights stirred it. No responsibility, no duty, only the indulgence of her womanliness to its fullest. Gwyneth almost shied away from the thought, its brazen nature too brilliant.
“Sounds like abandonment to me.”
“No? I do return when mine desires fade.”
“I see.” With those words Avaron pulled away, the heavy weight of being pinned vanishing. How Gwyneth wanted it back, the comfort of skin and dominant certainty. Her place. For what she feared of Avaron leaving, the tentacles remained, connecting them. “So what is it then?”
“What?”
“Your desires, Gwyneth. Use that sexy mouth of yours and tell me.”
Actually speaking them aloud! Gwyneth sat dumbfounded, not at all sure how to say them. Nurturing such salacious, wanton desires for so long, they were old friends. Telling Avaron? Where do I begin? An all too new sensation came, a single tip upon the bottom of her neck. It trailed downward, sliding along her spin, weaving between the burn scars that marred her. A searing line followed after, a heat so far less than all the others, but it arrested her mind. The lower the finger went, the more her hips raised on instinct. It kissed the tip of her tailbone, teasing the divide’s beginning before vanishing.
“What is it you want, Gwyneth?” Avaron asked again, a lightness in her voice that made Gwyneth’s ears perk up. Her finger returned, sliding down the priestess’ back again. “This is our bedroom. I won’t judge what you say.”
“E-even then!” Gwyneth squeaked, folding her arms in front of her and burying her face into them. “I cannot find mine words!”
“Mm. Let’s pitch some ideas, then. Do you want to lift up this mouth-watering butt of yours?”
Was that a question or a command? Gwyneth couldn’t tell the difference, but she did so anyway. “V-verily,” she muttered, finding her footing. Now her rear was much less ‘hanging out there’ and more ‘on display’, Avaron’s presence became imposingly tall all of a sudden. Her naked womanhood presented right before a tentradom, the beast of legends that took women. Why does it burn me so? Gwyneth marveled at the thought, her pussy glistening with unending trickles of juice.
“I’ll take that as a yes,” Avaron said amusedly, her trailing finger going further. It swept down the smoothness of Gwyneth’s butt, doing a tiny, appreciative swirl. The globe indented and then lifted under her, jiggling back into place when she left. “Fuck, your ass is amazing. Like really, just the best.”
Gwyneth choked a moan at the sudden, hot press of two hands groping her. They squeezed in tight, almost lifting her hips with their grope. Oh, how those fingers moved, squeezing her like a piece of meat. Avaron’s thumbs sank in hard as her fingers splayed, a whole-handed, appreciative grab. Pushing her up, Gwyneth’s cheeks burned hotly when she was parted, everything exposed. Avaron held her for a moment, a lowly but appreciative sound coming.
“Mm, so nice.”
Gwyneth grabbed fistfuls of the fleshy bed, its pliable and odd fur not at all comforting.
“Look at how wet you are!” Avaron said with a tiny laugh. “Such a good woman you are for me, Gwyneth.”
Oh, no, she couldn’t hear that. She shouldn’t hear that! It made her belly tight and her chest gallop with speed. Gwyneth tried pushing her face into the bedding but her protective visor hurt far too much to do so. She bit her lip instead, gnawing at it anxiously. Please, she thought, pushing herself back, bouncing her butt invitingly. Pleaaase!
“I see you pouting there. Use your words, Gwyneth.”
“Ehmm … touch mi-mine, as thou knows …”
“Oh I know, I just want to hear it.”
Gwyneth’s cheeks puffed from her barely subdued annoyance. She tried bouncing her butt again, pushing into Avaron’s smooth, firm hands. They tweaked a little bit, just stopping short of that hardness she wanted. Oh, she’d have to say something wouldn’t she? Accursed temptress, Gwyneth thought, irritation winning over reluctance with alarming quickness.
“Mm, how about, ‘slap my ass’?” Avaron asked in a musing tone. Her hands almost, almost left, teasingly tightening and laxing. “You’d like that, right? I feel that’s your vibe, a little rough handling …”
“W-why doth thou think so?”
“Oh, no reason. But I’m not gonna start doing a bit of roughness if you aren’t asking for it.”
“Verily!” Gwyneth squeaked out eagerly, her heart popping into her throat. “Please!”
“Please what?”
Like a kettle going over, Gwyneth popped out, “Please slap me!”
The hands on her butt vanished, and she dropped slightly, barely catching herself. “Wh-AT?!” Gwyneth’s question turned to a chirp, accompanied by the solid slap on her ass. Jolting upright, she arched in pure surprise, the stinging pain far less than the exhilarating shock that raced through her. That one slap left her skin on fire and her pussy anxiously tight. Gwyneth hardly had a thought in her mind when the second slap landed, bouncing off her other butt cheek. She jolted again, deliriously tight all over and her nipples throbbing as hard as her needy clit.
“Like that do you?”
In the Flame’s name she hated that smug tone. Honestly; truly so. Gwyneth nibbled on her lip, and a third slap broke her stubborn quiet. “Verily!” she chirped in a rush, the word escaping as far as her breath. A fourth slap ripped a moan out of her, sweet creamy butt turning red and fiery. Avaron’s hands returned, slow and certain in their grope. A stinging sigh escaped her, half-way between pain and excitement. How very odd it was, to be held by such firm and hot hands, the slaps burning cold and her knees turned to honey.
Her thighs quivered, obeying Avaron’s massaging hands more than her.
“I’ll say, Gwyneth, I respect your Flame and your faith with it. But you know what it means when it gives you leave, right?”
“To be a woman?”
“Mm, to be a woman,” Avaron echoed, her tone so infuriatingly smooth. “And you promised yourself to me, yes?”
“… Verily?”
Hot, slippery wet and sticky tentacles came from somewhere, coiling up her wrists and to her shoulders. They pulled her back from the bed, her arms held out and her legs shakily holding her up. She found herself in a restrained posture, T-shaped almost. Avaron’s presence loomed behind her, two soft mounds pressing in as the tentradom gave her a hug. A hug with Avaron’s arms wrapping around her belly and damn those hands were getting close to somewhere. Gwyneth tried clenching her thighs shut, but somehow there were more tentacles? When did they arrest me? she wondered, her knees quite thoroughly ensnared.
Oh, merciful burns, the fingertips probing across her belly. Ten little hardy, yet soft points, stroking her muscles in lazy, nonsense circles. Almost touching the very flame beneath her skin, beckoning it forth. Her thighs weren’t listening but her hips still squirmed, shaking from side to side. Avaron pressed into her, securing her unruly bottom with a little bit of hip power of her own.
“So there’s a little thing you seem to forget,” Avaron remarked before snuggling her head onto Gwyneth’s shoulder. A particular move that left her lips right against the priestess’ ear. “About our arrangement.”
The fine hairs on Gwyneth’s neck stood on end, a visceral shudder creeping down her back. One hand disappeared while another traveled upward, curling under her jaw and grasping it. Neither firm nor tight, but she had no will to even think about pulling away.
“Every part of you is mine, Gwyneth,” Avaron said slowly, stroking the priestess’ jaw. A lone finger raised up, brushing her plush lips lightly. The firm touch surprised her with how tingly it left her mouth. “This cute little mouth of yours, whenever I need to dump my cum somewhere …”
That thick mass of meat in her mouth, oh Avaron used her for relief so much. The biggest she’d sucked upon, and the tastiest she drank. Just imagining the hint of that divine cum made her mouth water, clenching hard in hungry anticipation. Gwyneth had to suck her own saliva down in a gushy gulp.
“You like that, don’t you? Drinking my cum?”
“V-verily,” Gwyneth panted out, her mouth feeling too stupid to talk with. Avaron stroked her cheek, chuckling with mirth.
“And I love using you. You treat me right with that skill of yours.”
A small, prideful part of her perked up. Then the hand on her face vanished, only to appear upon her chest. Avaron cupped her breasts from underneath in a full, commanding grope that saw her nipples caught between two fingers. Gwyneth pushed herself forward on reflex, offering more to be taken, even when it all had been. Avaron’s squeeze tightened, unyieldingly firm and owning. Her very heart beat bounced between them, a curious sensation of being trapped in those smooth fingers.
“And these, mmm. I’m going to use them a lot. They’re already this big, and when your milk comes …”
“Mine milk …” Gwyneth shuddered at the thought. She’d been with Tsugumi during her milkings, be it feeding the younglings or satisfying Avaron. Pushed into position, her breasts bared, then grabbed. How quickly the tora woman turned panting and moaning, delirious from being made cattle. How satisfied she was when every drop had been drained, her legs a sticky mess, peaked with a woman’s pleasure. Jealously burned in Gwyneth’s belly as an ugly heat every time she attended, for she couldn’t indulge either. Her empty, useless bre—
Avaron gave her bosom a light, rhythmic pat. Hard, but not enough to be a slap, and certainly enough to jiggle and bounce her. “Mm, fuck. I’m drooling just thinking about it. We’re going to have to get you a new dress, though.”
“Mine dress?” Gwyneth asked, the idea totally out of nowhere.
“Yup. That robe of yours doesn’t have any way for me to pull these lovelies out,” Avaron said, squeezing Gwyneth’s tits pointedly. “And you know how hungry I get.”
“Thou will sup on me as thee pleaseth?”
“I’ve seen you bristle whenever I use Tsugumi. Jealous, weren’t you?”
Gwyneth squirmed, but there was nothing to do in Avaron’s hot embrace. “Mayhaps …” Avaron moved her head, plopping her lips next to Gwyneth’s other ear.
“Don’t be anymore. After all—” Avaron’s hands let go, sliding downward. In spite of the hot fire swallowing her up, Gwyneth’s tits felt cool when they left. Throbbing from the emptiness of that hold that felt so right and proper to have. “—You’ll be getting the saaaame treatment.” Ten little fingers probed her belly, running up and down as they inched lower. “A big, growing belly full of our young.”
Gracious flame, how she imagined it; how terribly hard her pussy tightened, a gushing trickle spilling out. An acute awareness of how very ready she was gripped her, an instinctual calling to get fucked. Gwyneth didn’t know how she let so much out; even her nights alone paled by comparison. One hand slid down between her legs, a vexing sensation of firm smoothness and foreign warmth. She exhaled in a long, satisfied sigh, her pussy firmly cupped in Avaron’s domineering grasp. A wet, sticky grasp that oddly felt cool and comforting for her aching lips.
“My, that excites you, doesn’t it?” Avaron said, almost laughing in tone. “Becoming my woman to breed is what you want, hm?”
“Veeeeerily,” Gwyneth cooed out, her hips pumping back and forth. Though Avaron didn’t move at all, that hand of hers was just so satisfying. Hard and firm between her wet lips, a cool relief and electric pleasure at once. “Pleeease, cease thy temptation. Am I not thy woman to slake thyself upon?”
“Almost,” Avaron said with a chuckle. “Is there anywhere else you want some roughness?”
A tantalizing idea but Gwyneth wasn’t sure what to make of it. Another round on her butt? Her musing skipped a beat as a hand crept down over her mound. Just a touch short—no, Avaron slid around her crown, coyly playing with the edges of her lips.
“Maaaybe here?”
“No!” Gwyneth gasped with a nervous laugh. “It would hurt!”
“Mm, not that bad,” Avaron remarked lightly. Her other hand groped at Gwyneth’s butt then, more to emphasize a point. “Every part needs a certain method. I’m a bit practiced with them, but it’s your choice.”
She places the burden upon me, Gwyneth grumbled to herself. Oh, how that hand’s tempting invitation made her thighs quiver. How badly would it hurt? Such a soft place met with such a hardy blow … Damnable Avaron, knowing her weakness with such ease. She trusted her own hands far more! But her touch is different, Gwyneth thought, pursing her lips for a moment. “A-as long as thy skill is utmost and perfect!”
“As rough as you need, as soft as you want,” Avaron said, her every word going straight through Gwyneth’s ear.
“Then, please …”
“Please what?”
Gwyneth’s cheek twitched from a hint of anger. “Please slap me!”
In the next moment, a light slap landed on her pussy. If the touch before left her electric, a shot of pure lightning blasted straight through. Gwyneth cried out on reflex, and another sticky, wet slap followed, her pussy alight with an altogether different flame. A burning that she couldn’t tell whether it was pain, pleasure, or something else. Each slap jolted her upright, her breasts bouncing invitingly, ass clenching tight even as her thighs refused to shut properly. Her knees grew weak, shaking inside their tentacle-wrapped prison, her sexual cries turning into half-hearted whimpers.
How different it stood, the purest of tastes without the muck. The others never cared in such ways, doing it to hurt her instead. Avaron’s hands squeezed in after another smack, cupping her so tightly her heart throbbed between her legs for a moment. The pressure disappeared, and in the void left behind, another body-jolting slap landed. Gwyneth swallowed the spit in her mouth, almost panting from raw exhilaration. No, this sort of touch, the pain left a sweet taste, a hint of its strong flavor in the pussy-wettening pleasure.
Avaron did it so she could enjoy it, not be hurt by it.
Was she close? That tempting peak she chased after when all others left her? She couldn’t tell anymore. Maybe she’d rode past it several times already.
“Gwyneth,” Avaron said, her tone comfort itself inside the priestess’ ear.
“Ah?” Gwyneth panted out, her tongue being a bit stupid. The hand on her pussy cupped firmly, all sorts of throbbing sensations competing for attention. “Mmm, mm,” she mewled weakly, her hips weakly humping again. Their lips met then, a soft kiss that grabbed her raging desires. Certainty in a world without any, it left her alive and so very there.
“I’m not like those other people.” Avaron purred out. “The Flame and others may have you as a priestess, but I will have you. A mother to my children, a meal of milk, a slut who relieves me … oh, you like that idea?”
Slut.
A cursed word that others spat upon her kindness to them. Yet Avaron spoke it without venom, instead a tenderness that bewildered her to hear at all. “D-do not scorn upon me,” Gwyneth whimpered. The hand cupping her pulled away, and Avaron did as well, if for a moment. The tentradom slid around to the front, their chests coming to squeeze together comfortably. She heard of a quick slurp and suck before two hands cupped her cheeks. Gwyneth’s mouth opened on reflex, her tongue darting over her lips with hungry anticipation.
But no tentacle came.
“I will never scorn you, Gwyneth,” Avaron said, her voice low but heavy, the weight of it pressing Gwyneth’s heated thoughts. “Nothing I say is to ever hurt or belittle you. And, if I do so, that little Flame of yours can quite gladly burn me.”
“Tis not mine expectation, but …” Gwyneth mumbled, biting her lip. “Why doth thou tease me? Deny me? It vexes me.”
“Because I want everything.”
“E-everything? What more hath I to off—”
“Your hunger, your desires, your hopes, and your dreams … Sweet Gwyneth, I’m not going to just fuck you.” Avaron leaned in, the tips of their noses touching. “I’m going to breed you, fill you with my young, eat your pussy until you can’t think anymore. I’ll teach your whole body to bear my children, you to feed me your milk, and drink all the cum I fuck down your throat. Everyone will know when they see your big, pregnant belly.”
Gwyneth’s heart thundered in her ears, every word bewildering and exciting at once.
“And I want you to be okay with that.”
“I am—”
“Then say it.”
“What?”
Avaron chuckled and pulled her head back. “Say them, Gwyneth; all your desires.”
The priestess’ arms moved then, pushed by the tentacles around them until her hands and Avaron’s met. She hurriedly grasped, and the two held hands in a warm, if slightly wet way.
“I want to be someone you can trust honestly. And I want you to be proud of what you want, not because this is something you do. Okay this all sounded a bit better in my head, but …”
“Thy meaning is, clear,” Gwyneth muttered. Truly thinking about something that complex all of a sudden rather irritated her horny mind, but she’d try. “Thy assumption is wrong. Mine gift of flesh is not done simply to do so. It is mine love and care, for worthy souls deserving of comfort.”
“I love that part of you. Not because I’m getting really antsy to fuck you, but because you are a caring person, Gwyneth. So be proud of it, okay?”
How strange. Those who took her offerings always enjoyed her, not unlike meat at a dinner. Of those who partook in the trade for livelihood, Gwyneth never met any who saw as she did. Now, she was to be proud of it? It all sounded so very strange to her. Shaking her head and bowing, Gwyneth tried to stifle her tiny giggle. “Now I know why Tsugumi spoke how she did.”
“Eh?”
“Thine concern doth show in the most mysterious ways, Avaron.”
“Thanks?” the tentradom returned, seeming a bit lost.
It remained to be said, the voice of her desires. Gwyneth took in a shuddering breath, feeling a bit feathery in the belly. A welcomingly different sensation to the unending, burning hunger churning away. “What I desire …” Gwyneth started, then trailed off, her mouth feeling cottony. “Oh, noble Avaron. Make me yours, use me as thy wisheth, however thine wishes desire.” She lifted their hands up, pulling them deep into her cleavage. “Burden me with thy young. Swell mine breasts and sup upon mine milk. Relieve thy cum within me, for I hunger to savor it always. Let all who see me know I am thine flesh.”
“A bit far, isn’t it?” Avaron asked, though her mirthful tone belied a coughing embarrassment.
Gwyneth smiled lasciviously. “Tis my desire, as you asked. To be a woman owned.” She looked away somewhat, wrinkling her nose cutely. “Mayhap to someone with the will to take it all upon thyself.”
“Believe me I def—definitely—” Her face contorting, Avaron’s shudder accompanied a wet, squelching sound.
Gwyneth felt something burrowing between her thighs. The hot, slippery wet mass of tentacle jerked and thrust, whipping with a wild energy none of the others carried. Familiar edges of that arrow-like head pressed across her netherlips, before pushing past them in a hurry. She stood up on her toes, her thighs uselessly clenching together, a terrible little tremble rocking her. As fast as it plunged in it stopped, hard, throbbing flesh parting her netherlips more incidentally than by intent. The fat head of the thing whipped around her behind her, smacking her butt. She gasped lightly, the echo of those slaps flashing across her nerves. Oh how it squirmed between her thighs, a wild beast seeking entry and that thought alone made her gush a little. Her sensitive flesh burned and cooled at once upon it, a maddening flavor that made her want to pull her legs far open. To let it in and—
“—going to need the bed now,” Avaron squeaked out, her whole being shuddering and twitching. “I’m gonna pop.”
The sharp change in tone made Gwyneth giggle, and Avaron’s desperate, deflating whine tickled her harder. She tugged her legs, the tentacles restraining her now more of a comfortable hold. Actually getting to the bed proved challenging. If she moved too far, the big tentacle that wanted inside very well was going to. Grabbing Avaron by the hips, Gwyneth swayed from side to side, mustering up a little shimming action. “Shouldn’t thy hunger slake itself? Tis simpler to approach the bed,” she remarked, amusement in her tone.
“Iiiii just want a taaaste,” Avaron groaned back, burying her face in the crook of Gwyneth’s neck. “Just a taste of that ffffffffff-uuucking delicious smelling pussy.”
Goodness the tongue-tentacle-thing slathering up her neck! She shivered and fought the urge to scrunch up, not at all an easy feat. Her thighs clenched around the writhing tentacle, something that made it jerk and spasm even harder. A throaty, garbled moan came from Avaron, her licking tongue going stupid and her head bouncing on Gwyneth’s shoulder.
“D-don’t squeeze mee, don’t squeeeeeeeze—”
Gwyneth couldn’t help herself, doing just that. The thick tentacle between her thighs just felt too good not to. It’s slippery texture, unrelenting strength, and wild movements rubbed her pussy so nicely. Whenever it pressed in hard, spreading her lips and pushing up against her clit her knees turned to jelly. That Avaron turned into a senseless blubbering blob was surely just a side effect. Her arms wrapped around the tentradom’s back, she hugged her soon-to-be breeder. A comfortable hug; a prison no lustful woman would ever escape from.
And she kept squeezing her thighs, tightening and loosening them, rolling her hips back and forth.
“Release thy tension,” Gwyneth whispered into Avaron’s ear. “Use mine fl—”
She hardly got started before Avaron let out a grunting whine. She jerked and spasmed, going slack in Gwyneth’s arms. Great bulges squeezed between the priestess’ thighs, pushing with such great pressure. Gwyneth salivated at the sensation, the ghost of an all-to-familiar taste on her tongue. Sadly, Avaron’s fervent thrusting wasn’t going down her throat. A thick, slurping slap of something sounded from behind, fat loads of cum splurting against the flesh-bed.
Such a waste.
Oh it irritated her; the smell of it all, teasing her nose with its inviting warmth. That unforgettable taste just sliding to the ground. By the Flame it pissed her off the more she thought about it. At least Avaron was cute, writhing and spasming with her tongue hanging out stupidly. She always made such tiny gurgling moans, right in time with each cum-pumping jerk of her tentacle. Mm, finally spent? Gwyneth marveled, perhaps a whole minute later of insistent cumming. Avaron slumped in her arms, even the restraining tentacles weak and stupid right then.
How much had been spent, that she could’ve savored?
Let not the embers catch thine skirt, Gwyneth told herself, moving Avaron. The thick tentacle clung to her thighs, curled like a lover’s arm. Together they shuffled around the bed toward a less cum-drenched spot. Rather Gwyneth just carried Avaron, laying her down gently. Gwyneth slid in beside her, locking a leg between Avaron’s, and offering a breast to that deliriously mumbling face. Though she had no milk, soft lips wrapped around her nipple immediately, suckling interestedly. “Oh!” Gwyneth breathed out, jostling a little from the intensity. She pushed her chest forward on reflex, giving more for that greedy mouth. “Doth thou enjoy?”
“Mmhmm,” Avaron purred, the flat of her tongue-tentacle swirling lazily around Gwyneth’s areola. Swirling around the nipple, then delving out, sweeping across her breast with a loving caress. Her lips squeezed in, pulling away with a sucking force that made a pop when they parted. “Oh yeah. I’m loving your taste.” She looked down back to Gwyneth’s tits and muttered, “Maybe I should just eat this tonight instead.”
Smiling demurely, Gwyneth lightly traced her fingers down the length of Avaron’s body. Smooth skin, connected with small gaps and strange tentacle flesh. Really, she was just going down to the thick tentacle buried between her thighs. Grasping it lightly, it stirred with a blood-thumping pulse, flexing between her thighs and smacking them lightly. “I hath not milk yet, but thou desired mine other offering.”
“Let’s be real, I’m going to eat every part of you eventually,” Avaron remarked with a laugh. “But yes. I just need to—need to—damn tentacles.” Lax as they lay there, they were bound in an unfortunate knot of flesh. To Gwyneth’s disappointment they stirred, slithering back over her and receding into Avaron again. All except the most dangerous one. “Alright, lay on your back please.”
Gwyneth had no trouble rolling over, her legs already spreading open. Yet as Avaron would’ve slithered down, she gripped the thick tentacle harder, jolting her. “Can thou not giveth the same?”
“Eh?”
“Mm, mine dues,” Gwyneth said, squeezing the tentacle provocatively. Her mouth couldn’t stop tingling at the thought, and the urge to salivate pained her. The smell of cum lingered in the air and she just wanted it.
“Mm, oh, nice. Sure.” Avaron laughed lightly, leaning up to her. A light, comforting kiss landed on Gwyneth’s lips, and for a moment, their two hearts beat together. The kiss broke, then another landed, and so it went several times, a tiny barrage of lip-smacking kisses. “I love your lips, Gwyneth.”
“Than—mm—thank—mm!” Gwyneth couldn’t say anything from each interrupting kiss and laughed in her throat. Avaron, however, sneakily leaned into her ear again.
“And I’ll love fucking them too.”
Sweet-to-carnal; how it stirred her blood. Gwyneth’s heart sped as Avaron sat up, stretching for a moment. To her surprise, Avaron grabbed her breast, giving it a hearty squeeze that made her arch on reflex. That casual, owning sort of way others had done to her before. But, it felt different; something purer. Gwyneth moaned pitifully when the hand left, her breast jiggling back, and her pussy drenching itself again. She hadn’t a moment to indulge in it, for Avaron rearranged herself. The heat and mass of something heavy slapped onto her face with a wet smack.
Finally, she had it. Right on her face, squirming, wet with Avaron’s juices, hard and unyielding. Gwyneth inhaled, drinking its scent so deep tingles crept down her throat. The very air of the thing filled her chest, a hot, spicy fire so very different from all the others. Her tongue crept out on its own, licking in a single, tasting slurp.
“Damn you’re wet down here,” Avaron remarked in a whisper, sounding impressed.
A hot breath blew across Gwyneth’s pussy, its own pleasurable anticipation she really didn’t care for at the moment. The thick tentacle on her face writhed impotently, its arrow-shaped head stabbing across uselessly. It wanted purchase, surely. It needed a hole. A warm, inviting, wet hole to suck upon it and love it and caress it and—Gwyneth panted the longer it teased her. “Here,” she whispered. “Here,” she tried again, licking it invitingly.
Whether Avaron listened or it did, that fat head soon dragged across her lips, poised like a viper still yet confused. Swallowing her spittle, Gwyneth opened her mouth as wide as she could, her tongue stuck out flat like an inviting carpet. “Here,” she breathed out, the hot, steamy air of her breath billowing over the tentacle’s head. It twitched, and twisted so slightly—such a perfect, little turn, its intent unmistakable. The thick tentacle pressed in, its precum dripping slit sliding down Gwyneth’s inviting tongue. That creamy, mouth-watering flavor made her salivate painfully the second she tasted it.
“Huugghlk—”
“Oh fuck!”
And it slid in, stuffing her mouth in one go, the edges of its head sliding past her lips. Down further it went, plunging even into the back of her throat, a singular, scalding mass of fuck that made her toes curl and hands ball into fists. She arched her back and angled her throat, the right position to keep air flowing. Every inhale and exhale, her mouth squeezed the tentacle on its own, every inch imprinting upon her. Ah, suck, suck it, Gwyneth thought happily, her spit-drenched tongue caressing the tentacle’s underside. She felt Avaron’s heartbeat, frantic, hard and heavy, throbbing right there on her tongue. Her lips tight, she sucked gentle and slow, the kiss she gave only to such a mighty thing.
Then her knees were pushed open.
“Mm?” Gwyneth hummed confusedly before a hot, steamy breath down her pussy. A heavy exhale reached her ears, a perverse combination that sent goosebumps up her skin. She squirmed her hips, but she remained exposed, the coiling slither of other tentacles wrapping around her legs.
“Oh, Gwyneth,” Avaron said, her voice piercingly clear and frighteningly arousing in its low tone. “I’m not going to let you wear panties ever again.”
Huh?
“A pussy this perfect should, hnngh—oh, fuck it—”
The presence of something between her thighs followed, and a wet, thick softness swept down her slit. Gwyneth jolted, her natural gasp stuffed with the fat tentacle in her mouth. It plunged at the invitation, delving into her well-used throat. The flat, tasting tongue on her pussy worked in long, slow motions, Avaron gulping and slurping every little droplet there was. Gwyneth shuddered, the idea of her own inescapability so deliriously wonderful. Her pussy nothing more than a meal, an offering to be taken. Her mouth, her sweet voice and sermons—
The fat tentacle pulled out before her breath grew heavy, pulling back almost to her lips. Its x-shaped head wedged against her teeth and cheeks, flaring out so strong and stiffly it couldn’t be pulled out. Tension grew between it and her mouth, a perfect seal. She licked its cum-dripping slit eagerly, swirling around the head, flicking it pointedly—give it to me, Gwyneth wanted to demand. It twitched and clenched, and offered up what it did so much before: a spurt of divine, heavenly cum.
A teasing little sample, but one she swallowed with a throaty gulp in an instant. The tentacle took that for invitation, plunging into her mouth once more, then her throat. When it drew back, there was no waiting again—it plunged, and fucked her mouth. Sucking down her throat, she dragged her tongue across as it retreated, cum and spit mixing together in one sticky embrace. The whole of her face became dedicated to a singular purpose: a fleshy fuck hole.
Gwyneth spasmed at the thought, a hot gushing squirt following. Avaron chirped in surprise, a sound that became a pleased hum and a loud, sucking slurp. A lovely sound, punctuated by the throat-gulching glurps of the fat tentacle fucking Gwyneth’s face. It ventured deeper, slower to be sure, comfortably in the depths of her neck, a bulge visible to the eye. As it withdrew, spit and cum alike splatted out between Gwyneth’s lips, dribbling down her chin, marring her cheeks, and staining her womanly features. How savage it must’ve seemed, if not for her excited squeals every time it sank in once more.
“Mm-mmh! Goddesses, Gwyneth!” Avaron cried out, arching up and away from the priestess’ thoroughly eaten pussy. Her eyes crossed funnily, her teeth biting on her lip erratically. “Work that mouth! Fuck you suck me so fucking good!?” The tentradom’s words turned into a chirp, her butt squeezing tight when a shudder crept down her back. “Like that, don’t you?” she asked coyly. “I notice that special little swirl you did.”
Gwyneth giggled and moaned at once, an impressive feat with a squelching throat-deep tentacle.
“I’m not kidding,” Avaron said, letting out her own little laugh. Gwyneth squeezed her whole mouth around the tentacle’s head, giving it a hard suck. The poor tentradom thrusted her hips on reflex, her laugh becoming a broken bark of pleasured surprise. “F-fucking, fuck. The best tentacle sucking slut in this whole place.”
There it was again.
That damned word.
Gwyneth humped at the air pitifully, her belly unbearably tight. If Avaron wouldn’t feast upon her, then Gwyneth reached between her legs herself. No rhyme, no reason, just fingers caressing fervently. Two rubbed her clit erratically, the other hand sinking three fingers in knuckle-deep with a juice-splattering fury. Oh, no matter how hard or fast she was, no matter how good it felt—her whole pussy a burning, sopping mess, she just couldn’t—just couldn’t—why couldn’t she—The fat tentacle shoved down into her throat, the deepest it’d gone by far. It drew out and fucked in again, possessed with a strength she couldn’t play with. Her head pushed back on its own, a purely mechanical motion of such powerful thrusting. The comfortable friend became a ravenous beast.
“You like that, don’t you?” Avaron’s words sounded so terribly clear. A voice alone in a cacophony of wet flesh and half-formed pleasured sounds.
Verily, Gwyneth answered, even if her own voice sounded so … other.
“Sucking my fat tentacle, gulping it like you’d die without it.”
I would. Something wrapped around her wrists, pulling them away from her manic masturbation. Gwyneth pumped her hips incessantly, humping the air, her pussy needing something.
“Offering yourself like that, really. You’d let anything inside, wouldn’t you?”
Only thou.
“Don’t worry, this—” A hand cupped her pussy, almost grabbing it wholly, “—is all mi-miiiiineeee—fuck you like it, I get it!” Avaron’s haughty tone broke into one of fevered hurry. “Stupid fuuuucking ssuuucking, oh, ooh …” She slumped forward, her legs around Gwyneth’s head quivering. “F-fine! You want it, fuuucking have it you sluuuuuuu—”
Avaron’s words vanished into a garbled mess, her fat tentacle throbbing with a hard, flesh-seizing twitch. Gwyneth knew that feeling so well, her belly tightening with excitement knowing what was to cum. Inhaling the head-fogging scent of cum, sweat, and Avaron, Gwyneth opened her throat wide, the tentacle head flaring right on her tongue. Its hardy edges anchored it firmly in place, just in time for the first flesh-quivering bulge to arrive. Pure liquid heat blasted across her tongue and smacked the back of her throat, a geyser of sticky cum that made her jump slightly. Every inch painted in toe-curling ecstasy, her throat guzzled it down.
Bulge through her lips, flaring head, geyser splurting into her mouth—oh, she knew the rhythm. When her lungs began to burn, Gwyneth timed her next breath. Just after a splurt, she swallowed and exhaled, then inhaled. Four quick lung-filling breaths, and her mouth filled cum so quickly. A salivating, divine taste that washed over everything else in its sticky embrace. Gulping it in a throatily squelch, she sucked it all down as another spurt shot in. A calming sensation bloomed in her belly, the stomach-filling cum and its warmth so very different. Her tense muscles eased slowly, her fingers and toes splaying out, knees relaxing onto the bed. Only the tiniest little jerks followed, an instinctual reaction to the cum blasting into the back of her mouth with a wet slap.
How her pussy ached; quivering with a need that stood over fire itself! The soft caress of a tongue, the hardness of fingers, and the raw, unyielding girth of a tentacle—her mind conjured so many desires, yet nothing happened. Gwyneth squeezed her thighs lightly, the very action making her squirt pure excitement out. Worse, her whole chest throbbed, breasts pitifully hanging unsqueezed, no pinch to her demanding nipples—The fat tentacle shoved inward, drilling through her cum-flooded mouth. Gwyneth gurgled, arching her back and straightening her throat to accommodate. Every bulge teased her tongue on its way past, a promise of taste she couldn’t have anymore. Tiny, gut-twitching pumps thundered down into her nearly full belly.
Then it withdrew before thrusting in again. Cumming and fucking all in the same motion, the sheer power of it making her head bob along. She squeaked and gurgled, her throat making sounds she wasn’t even trying to do! Gwyneth stole what breaths she could, the fat tentacle intent on its full-throttle face fucking. And she, fully intent on swallowing it all. Even as cum and spit splattered out of her lips, drawn out through sheer piston force, Gwyneth swallowed. She gulped, slurped, and tongued her tiny, pathetically small tongue against the immense mass plunging into her. Nothing else mattered; no other purpose in her mind but to suck.
No other reason to live than to drink Avaron’s cum.
By the time the tentacle calmed down, its throat-warping fucks easing, Gwyneth’s face was drenched in cum and spit. A web of white stickiness drooling across her cheeks, down her chin, and stretching across her sacred visor. It twisted from side-to-side, deflated in size to something far more reasonable. Her tongue followed after it uselessly, an insensate lump of meat. Her taut lips pulled upon its flesh, lovingly rubbing its whole length. Actually getting out of her mouth took a moment, it jerking from side-to-side, its hole-conquering head harder to get out than in.
With a pop, it escaped her lips, and a hot, steaming pool of cum remained in Gwyneth’s mouth. The last savoring taste before she had to drink it down. No matter how much there ever was, it always remained fresh upon her tongue. Her aching jaw closed slowly, sealing the hot mess inside, all for her. She couldn’t talk, but did she need to? Avaron used her mouth all it was meant for. That singular thought rattled around in her mind, a delirious pleasure creeping upon her.
Gwyneth raised a shaky finger to her lips, caressing the swollen flesh. Sensitive, almost painfully, but in a way that felt so good. A tiny swish could be heard, her mouth churning the cum slowly. Pouring it over her tongue again and again, filling every crevice in her mouth, staining her teeth, letting it seep in. She hardly paid any mind to Avaron moving around, their faces coming close once again.
“Fuck me I can’t feel my knees,” Avaron remarked with an airy, out-of-breath laugh. “Are you alright?”
“Mmhmm,” Gwyneth purred throatily.
“Looks like I made you into a mess.”
Gwyneth leaned into Avaron’s caressing hand, itself going to collect up cum from her face.
“Guess I’ll throw this away—“
Gwyneth never grabbed a hand faster in her life, not even when they smacked her butt. She meant to talk, but all that came out was a cum-filled gurgle. She hurriedly shut her lips, hotly embarrassed at her absentmindedness.
“Well?” Avaron said, her tone infuriatingly know-it-all. “Are you going to drink this or what?”
Gwyneth pouted, cheeks bulging.
“Use your words, Gwyneth.”
She shook her head.
“I won’t let you taste me again if you don’t—“
She’d never swallowed that fast in her life, either. The mere thought of ‘never again’ horrified her to the core. Gwyneth stuck her slightly sticky tongue, opening with an ‘ah’, and pointing. “I drank,” she said incessantly. Avaron’s finger poked in, gently running a circle around her swollen lips. The hardness of it comfortable to the swelled throb she grew aware of.
“Good slut.”
Gwyneth let out a tiny, frustrated sound. Not a moan, but something pleased if annoyed. “Thou art rude, deigning to degrade mine person—“
“If you weren’t panting it out every other night in our bedroom, I wouldn’t,” Avaron said, sounding flippant. Gwyneth couldn’t help gasping at the realization.
“Thou peek upon me!”
“Gwyneth, sweetie.” Avaron patted her on the sticky, cum-splattered cheek. “I can’t sleep when you’re moaning about being the town bicycle.”
She stared up at Avaron, stunned and mouth gaping.
“Mhm. Well, I hope someone here—“ Avaron leaned down, her whole hard body comfortably on top of Gwyneth, “—enjoyed some of that ‘rough handling’ she wanted.”
“M-mayhaps,” Gwyneth said lightly.
“Mm, well that someone can get a good slap whenever she wants.”
“… Really?” The mere thought of it excited her in a completely different way. No more one-night sparks, no longings for the next kindling for her to find, no wondering, no disappointment in their tepidne—Gwyneth felt an odd realization come over her. “Whenever I desire?”
“Did I make you cum drunk or something?” Avaron wondered with a laugh before rubbing Gwyneth’s head. A feat, considering the cum matting her hair there. A sticky, wet sounding feat. “Yes, sweetie. I’ll fuck you however you want, whenever you want. It’s not just me fucking you when I want to.”
“T-then, whenever I need it? Thy cum?”
“Right there on the spot if you want.”
“When I ache to be filled?”
“Yup.”
“Burdened with children?”
“Bingo.”
“Holding hands?”
“The most loving, warmest caress you’ve felt.”
To be satisfied as Avaron’s woman was one matter. To have her own desires slaked when she wished, she couldn’t help squirming on the bed. She hurriedly hugged Avaron, squeezing the surprised tentradom to her with all her strength. Avaron let out a gurgle, strained surprise at the back-popping force suddenly around her. “Mm! Verily! Mine thanks!” she said eagerly, almost whipping Avaron side-to-side in her half-rolls.
“You’re welcome,” Avaron bit out, almost laughing.
"T-then, then, please,” Gwyneth sputtered, tripping over her own fucked tongue and how tired it was. “Please, I want it.”
“Want what?”
“To breed,” Gwyneth breathed out, Avaron’s own salacious words so easy to say. “Laden with children, a heft of burden in mine belly, that—that, tis mine desire.” She didn’t have to hide it anymore, and Avaron’s knowing chuckle only thrilled her. “Will thou?”
“I will,” Avaron said lightly. “But how do you want it, sweetie?”
‘How’. Pinned to the bedding, her legs uselessly in the air? Ensnared by the flesh of tentacles, spread open and plundered? Her heart thundered in her chest, any possibility she could ask for teasing her tongue. Her slick pussy throbbed wantonly, demanding almost. “I—ehm, I …” Oh, Flame’s clarity an old fantasy returned to her mind. A fantasy that left her knees weak and her chastity in shreds to think about. She’d turned her womanhood raw many a nights with it. “I knoweth how,” Gwyneth squeaked out, sucking her lip nervously. “If—if thou not mindeth …”
“I’m listening …”
Gwyneth leaned in, whispering into Avaron’s ear. Her very heart felt as if it’d leap out from her throat with every word.
“Oh, my,” Avaron remarked lowly, intrigue dripping from her voice. “How naughty.”
“Do not tease m—“ A hand covered her mouth in an instant, muffling her words.
“I didn’t say no,” Avaron sang in return as she flipped Gwyneth over onto her front. From her backside emerged two meaty tentacles, ones that wrapped around Gwyneth’s wrists. She yanked the priestess’ arms behind her back, snuggly ‘tying’ them up in a cord of living flesh. A moment of adjustment, just to make sure it was as comfortable as it could be. Then she grabbed Gwyneth by the hips, pulling her ass up and putting her on her knees.
The mere act of her knees spreading open, her whole rear out on display made Gwyneth squirm. Face down, ass up, her tits smushed against the bedding, and Avaron looming behind her. She couldn’t help shaking her butt, a little side-to-side wiggle. Was it tempting to see? More to feel? Avaron’s soft-and-hard body hung just at the edge, teasing with its suggestiveness. Gwynth bit on her lip, trying just a bit har—a sharp crack sounded in the air, and she gasped at the flaring, wonderful sting. One cheek firmly smacked, another landed on the other, and Avaron grabbed her ass with two hard, possessive hands.
“Swinging that butt gives me ideas, Gwyneth.”
“Mm, verily,” she let out in a hot breath. Curiously, Avaron moved behind her—one leg over her own, then the other. A feeling of being enveloped almost, but she realized then what had happened. Avaron trapped her between those porcelain legs, their hips flush together, and her butt pulled into the tentradom. “Oh! Ooh …” She heard the squelch of something wet emerging, as much as felt it. Familiar contours and ridges, that mouth-destroying head pushing its way across her pussy. One long, slow grind, its length just going and going and going. It inched up over her belly, squirming up to the bottom of her breasts. Between her and the bedding, it burrowed further, comfortably deep into her squished cleavage.
Was it that big?
Such an awesome thing she took with her mouth. Ah, Gwyneth licked her lips at the thought of it. Another slap landed on her butt, making her choke out a surprised chirp. Such stinging, sharp pleasure and the burn of it on her cheek!
“I already drank you dry and here it is, even more …” Avaron mused aloud, appreciative given how she squeezed Gwyneth’s red butt cheeks. “This much already. I think you’ll be a great pair of milkers, Gwyneth.”
The sound of those words, just enough crassness that her chest tightened. Her hair pulled then, something rounding it up and grabbing the tail of it. Sheer force dragged her head upward, two tentacles slapping onto her shoulders to carry her weight. Prop her up. Present her. Keep her right there and—Gwyneth inhaled as two hands grabbed her hanging breasts. They squeezed, reacquainting themselves almost, stretching and pulling, the edges of those hardy fingers capturing her nipples. The tight grip on her hair left her hanging in a balance, her arms uselessly tied up.
“Goddess, fuck,” Avaron said with a disbelieving giggle. “You’re really perfect for me, Gwyneth. I’m not just saying that, either.”
Gwyneth smiled, preening as best she could. “Perfect for breeding?”
“Mm.” Avaron’s agreeing hum joined a tentacle slithering down Gwyneth’s backside.
A probing, touching thing that felt her up appraisingly. Unfettered by concern or thought, it caressed her so easily. Not unlike others who paused when touching her scars. Avaron rolled her hips, rocking Gwyneth in a slow, pointed hump. The fat tentacle down her frontside started slithering back. It shouldn’t have thrilled her so much, the unspoken intent behind it all. Gwyneth chewed on her lip, all too aware of her own smoldering wetness just waiting. Waiting for it. Wet, dripping, and so very, very reeeeeeeaaaadd—Her brain shorted out as the fat, angular head drew across her clit. Like a finger it dug inward, taunting her with its girth before flicking out. Knees spread open, angled almost on all fours, squirming remained her only option.
Squirm and throatily hum.
It rubbed down her lips, delving in just the barest inch before sliding some other way. Back and forth, back and forth and her whole bottom half felt uncontrollable in its quivering. Pure excitement gripped every nerve, her deepest instinct to simply bend over and let it inside. What held her hair pulled harder, arching her back, her breasts thrusted out and hanging in the air. Oh the tension of it, so terribly tight, on the cusp of uncomfortable but so very, very dominating. She couldn’t look anywhere else if she wanted to. Why was a hand curling up her throat?
One upon her throat, the other taking ahold of a breast. Gwyneth found herself pulled up even more, Avaron’s curious body and lovely tits pressing into her back. A soft, airy laugh wafted into her ear as the tentradom leaned in. The fingers on her throat pushed, and Gwyneth turned, a sweet pair of lips coming to capture her own. Wetly plump and warm, a flavor of heat delicate to feel, and tantalizing to the soul in its sweetness. Of all she’d experienced on this night, such a kiss made her whole body turn to mush. Warm, fluffy mush kept up only by the tentacles and hard hands holding her.
No one had ever really kissed her that way.
Not in the way husbands and wives did, when she presided over their marriages.
“Oh,” Gwyneth breathed out as the kiss parted, licking her lips. Avaron returned just as quick, enveloping her mouth in that belly-churning comfort. The warm, liquid cum still splattered all over her face and hair yet remained, sticky strands connecting the two of them. Avaron’s hand squeezed at her breast in a slow, leisurely grope. A touch itself that became soft in its appreciation, so much so her skin shivered with goosebumps. Avaron sucked her lips, parting again with a tiny pop and oh, how sensitive Gwyneth was. Her swollen lips snapping back to place shocked her with how nice it felt. Her tongue darted out on its own, licking the flavor of spittle and the heat of her own lips.
“I promised, Gwyneth,” Avaron said lowly, her voice drenched in a thick husk. “Everything and more.”
Sweet flame, the hand upon her throat, those hardy fingers and their enticing delicacy. Gwyneth swallowed throatily. “How terrible of thee, to draw mine flesh out utterly, willing it prostrate and submissive.”
“You love it.”
“Pffbtt.” Gwyneth, unwilling to answer such an idea, blew it aside. The hand on her breast let go, a cool after touch left where it’d been. Fingertips trailed down her front, electric trails that made her waiting pussy tense. At the same time, the fat tentacle pushed out, flaring through her legs like a menacing serpent. She hissed through her teeth, a brutish, sharp pleasure left behind as it rode through her netherlips. Avaron cupped her pussy after, cradling her sopping wet lips with a loving care. Or a domineering ownership; both thoughts blended together.
“To a new life together, hmm?” Avaron said, breathing every word into Gwyneth’s ear.
“Verily,” the priestess gushed out, her hips shaking from the anxious anticipation. The length of the tentacle vanished, its mass moving between her legs. Its all-too-familiar head pressed in, her pussy lips giving it a welcoming kiss of their own. Avaron’s own fingers helped a little, spreading her open for it. Now so clearly poised, it really did dawn on her how big it was. How very big and absolutely ruinous it would be. Well, not that big even if it felt like it.
“I liked that word, ‘submissive’. Fits you, doesn’t it?” The wildness in Avaron’s voice grew, a desperation of its own that made Gwyneth’s hairs stand up.
To surrender and give everything; oh, she’d offered. Avaron drew it out, ripping every cover Gwyneth could imagine and not. There wasn’t a thing left to hide behind anymore. “Verily,” Gwyneth breathed, the simple acknowledgement making her heart thunder.
“Tell me what you want, Gwyneth,” Avaron asked as much as demanded, fierce in the quiet, commanding tone.
“Breed mee-eeee?!” Her hips jerked forward, her whole body seizing tight, and Gwyneth’s voice cracking when that fat tentacle finally plunged inside. Netherlips bulging, the head of it squeezed inward as it sank, those terribly powerful edges snuggly inside. That awesome head that once went in, wouldn’t come out. Juices gushed down its leg, slathering it in lube, her very womanhood begging it to plunder. Gwyneth’s stunned exhale met with Avaron’s satisfied moan, the tentradom hugging her strongly. Still the tentacle buried in, farther than she ever expected; larger than she realized. In the fading fires of pleasures, it erupted a new flame, a searing one that brought her whole world to it.
Only then did she understand what Tsugumi meant. Why the tora laughed when Gwyneth talked about her prior experiences. ‘It is completely different’, she’d said.
It really was.
“Yeeesss,” Avaron hissed with a delirious sounding happiness. “Perfect, fucking pussy.”
The tentacle reached so deep Gwyneth didn’t know where it was anymore. When it pulled out, the whole of its throbbing length twisting and wriggling, she choked out a surprised moan. Her whole belly danced to its rhythm, sucking into her, and gripping it fiercely to stop it leaving. Nonsense noises left her mouth, womanly whimpers as the slight bulge threatened to retreat. The head of it nearly reached the exit, her pussy so terribly empty she tried sitting down; spreading her legs, falling forward. Gwyneth couldn’t move at all, and fear grew that it might really leave.
“Please, breed me,” she begged. “Deeper, deeper inside mine belly, deeper—“ Avaron bucked her hips, smacking against Gwyneth’s ass with a wet sound. The tentacle thrusted in deeply, sinking all the way back inside and blowing away her thoughts. Her tongue slithered out stupidly, some malformed attempt at speaking. Spittle and drool followed, dribbling down her gaping mouth.
“I will, sweetie,” Avaron gasped out, rocking her hips again. Gwyneth chirped happily, her breasts bouncing from the force. “I’ll pump—“ another rocking smack “—so fucking much into you—“ goodness her breasts could bounce, “—youuuu, youuu, fuck me …”
Gwyneth fell forward, tentacles supporting her, arms still tied up. Avaron’s hands grabbed onto her hips, almost painfully hard. The very next thrust turned to something different. Her whole body rocked with the ass-smacking force from Avaron’s hips, the tentacle plunging inside with a singular purpose. Gwyneth panted, tits swinging freely, her spit drooling to the bed underneath. Pure, carnal fucking—the savagery only few visited upon her. No escape, nowhere to be but surrounded by Avaron, her womanhood taken and fucked and—Sharp electricity shot down her whole body, making her cry out as her pussy gushed fresh excitement on the fat tentacle. Something tiny and so terrifyingly skillful caressed her clit. Undoubtedly a tentacle, cutely small and oh its tiny rubs made her whole body spasm.
Squelching slurps and womanly noises mixed together, her thighs a web of juice and precum. The sweet sound of Avaron’s cute grunting punctuated the air, erratic and out of step with her fervent thrusting. All that need pounding into her, hands desperately grabbing her hips, oh, Avaron just going wilder and wilder … Gwyneth shuddered, a gay satisfaction swimming around the immense roiling pleasure inside her pussy. All that everything Avaron was, hunger and love alike, desiring her. Needing her for the relief. So frantically using her.
The flame atop her chest throbbed with its heart-shaped glow.
“Goddesses you’re so wet!” Avaron gushed between breaths. “I thought you were a fire priestess, not water!”
Gwyneth snorted out a laugh, the idea so ridiculously stupid to hear. Her mirthful sound turned to a throaty, staggered moan, punctuated by the tit-swaying thrusts. She gasped aloud as the tentacle inside her changed—transformed into something so very different. It twisted and widened, its ram-rod straight body turning into a serpentine-S shape. One side of her pushed aside, followed by the opposite, that fat head dragging her pussy with it every inch of the way. The bizarre pleasure it wrought kindled something all too different, one that maddened her as much as pushed her to the brink.
“Ah—ah, mm, mmm oh! A-all for thee,” Gwyneth bit out, every word a lump of iron on her tongue. “Take it, take it, take miiiinneee offeringsss. Please, please, please, please …” A terrible shudder wracked her, a sweet release of even more excitement gushing out. She knew it for that and still, the height she craved remained just out of reach. A place at her very fingertips that she just couldn’t—
“I’ll take fucking everything,” Avaron bit out, letting go just long enough to slap Gwyneth’s shaking ass. The priestess almost screeched, her belly tightening like a fist around that fearsome fucking tentacle. No matter how tight she became, it continued, pushing her nerves to a boiling height. “This pussy is mine now!”
“Oh, always!” Gwyneth returned, her hot and heavy breathing matching Avaron’s. A tiny noise of surprise escaped her when two hands left her hips, only to grab her breasts.
“These and all your milk, mine!”
“Verily!”
Something yanked on her hair, pulling her up along with the hands on her chest. Gwyneth was squeezed against Avaron, the tentradom’s hot breath rushing past her ear.
“And you …”
Those two words made all the world shrink down, the firestorm in her body pausing; tensing, straining under the anticipation. Her arms coiled up, her legs trapped by Avaron’s, her pussy filled with the meat of a conquering tentacle, and a scream burned in her lungs to be free. Deep in her belly, between her legs, she felt so ready, so painfully open and vulnerable—sensitive more than most delicate of touches. The tentacles around her arms slackened, and she found them freed for some reason. Confusion ran through her mind, an unwelcome guest in her sacred rite.
Avaron’s throaty chuckle belied the desperation in her voice. Her hands trailed down Gwyneth’s arms, teasing them with a light caress. “You’re mine. Bend over, and accept the burden. Bear my children.”
Her whole body beat like a drum, the realization eating up every other thought in her mind. A choice then, however much of a false one it truly was. Gwyneth couldn’t help smiling, all the last ounces of her strength summoned forth. She leaned forward and bent over, her entire womanhood gushingly open, and her belly so very empty and waiting. One hand grabbed her hair, holding with such tight comfort, and the other grabbed her hip. It took only a few more body-rocking thrusts, a few slaps of flesh-against-flesh that rung her sanity dry. The nameless barrier that kept pleasure from its peak shattered when the first gut-thumping spurt of cum blasted into her womb.
Gwyneth’s mouth dropped open in silence, her voice as gone as her mind. The heat of cum, a taste she savored so greatly, now so much closer. Deeper. Inside her. Boiling in the sanctum of womanhood and igniting the cauldron. It gushed in as a flood, determined to conquer everywhere it touched. Yet still more came, but now of a pressure—a bulge pressing against her netherlips. It couldn’t enter, so great was its girth-expanding size. Avaron’s hips drew back, and in a mighty slap, thrust it into her in one mighty, pussy-gulping motion. Firecrackers popped off in her mind, her fingers curling against the flesh-bed, her ass perking up on its own to take more.
The bulge traveled down the tentacle, wormed into her with undulating thrusts. She knew it, somehow she did, every inch it traveled. Her pussy helped just as much, massaging it tenderly into her all on its own. Such was the gift of womanhood, the need to breed that filled every layer of her being. One final bit of pressure came, the bulge at the tip of the tentacle’s head, throatily kissing her womb’s entrance. It hung there for a tense moment, almost indecisive. Unable. Gwyneth pushed herself backwards, rocking into Avaron’s thrusts in the mightiest mating slap of skin the night had seen.
When the first egg popped through, sloshing in on a tide of cum, Gwyneth yelled her orgasm with the greatest of joyful triumph.
The fires devoured her body and soul, a bestial woman born to breed. To be fucked. To carry children. To nurture milk, and feed her mate. Her deepest seated desires to service such a being, slake all their lusts, take upon herself their burdens. The sort of woman who’d do that all and more, for that was her desire. Her purpose.
She’d do it all for Avaron.
[You have acquired the skill Brood Mother.]
[You have accepted your place as a breeder to service your queen. The quality of your skill [Brood Mother] will improve as a result.]
[You have acquired the skill Cum Slut.
You a patron of cum sluttery, finding utmost enjoyment in consuming, wearing, and playing with cum of men and women. Sex starved people will naturally be attracted to you. The less clothes you wear, the more appealing you will become. Imbibing or wearing fresh cum routinely will improve your magical power. The flavor of cum will improve dramatically, be sure to drink lots you slut!]
[You have accepted your intrinsic need for cum. Because of the skill [Brood Mother], this need can only be satisfied through intercourse with the queen or the Hive.]
[You have acquired the skill True Submission.
By willfully opening yourself in body and soul to the domination of another, you have found absolution. In service to that which you have submitted to, your resolve will become unbreakable, and all negative mental effects will be negated. No domination effects other than from your chosen one will work on you.]
[Because of your skill [Cum Slut], the magical potency of cum consumption is massively increased.]
[Because of your skill [Brood Mother], being bred by your queen will become immensely more successful.]
[You have acquired the skill Refined Soul.
By experiencing a mind-shattering event and clarifying your purpose of existence, you have obtained a stage of enlightenment. The brilliance of your faith will shine brighter, and all associated magic will increase in potency.]
Back in reality, Gwyneth’s great orgasm certainly hid the fact that Avaron kept working. The tentradom hugged the priestess from behind, humping her ass with almost religious devotion. Egg-after-egg-after-egg pumped in with hot, fresh cum. Gwyneth moaned and panted, her arms going stupid as she slumped forward, face down and ass quite happily up. Streams of white, sticky fluff drooled out of her pussy, pushed out by the next fresh batch going inside. A whole mess flowed down her thighs and between them, leaving no doubt as to how successful Avaron really was.
The tentradom queen, for her part, laid as a drooling mess atop of Gwyneth, her eyes rolled back into her skull. At some point the sheer pleasure of breeding her new priestess slut had flash-fried her brain. Yet still her hips kept humping, and her fat tentacle fucking in every new egg that belonged in Gwyneth’s belly. Scarred skin slowly stretched, a pool of cum and dozens of eggs stuffing into her submissive womb. Far more than the first time Tsugumi had been bred, to be certain. Gwyneth already looked noticeably pregnant, her skin drawn tightly over her new role in life.
These two idiots really did work out quite nicely for each other, didn’t they?
One of them eventually collapsed sideways, dragging the other with. The eggs had stopped once Gwyneth proved too full for anymore. The fat tentacle, however, was quite happy to keep drilling into her. Its frantic pace downgraded to a slow, slurping delve in and out. A twisting caress that made every cum-drenched corner of Gwyneth’s pussy stretch. When its next spurt came, it washed every cute pink inch of pussy with a fresh coat. A few unconscious minutes of fucking later and there really was a ridiculous amount of cum leaking out between her thighs. Down her thighs, across them, onto the bedding, over onto Avaron, dripping down the sides of the bed …
Gwyneth gasped so cutely, a semblance of consciousness returning as another hot, soft thump in her pussy jarred her awake. She reached down lazily, groping at whatever was there—only to find a tentacle still inside her. Her legs couldn’t shut at all, and just trying made it dig deeper inside. “Tis no trouble,” she whispered, her raw voice oddly painless, just tired. Gwyneth gave the throbbing tentacle a loving rub with her hands. “Stay. Tis safe there.”
Fire’s embrace it felt good, letting it thrust in and out of her so lazily. Good and spine tingling but a far, far cry from earlier. She made to stretch, but a hefty weight in her belly made her freeze. Hesitantly reaching down, she splayed her fingers over her belly bump, an all new kind of satisfaction rising within her. A deeper one, some part that’d never spoken before, now so very loud and proud. Gwyneth hummed throatily, feeling her egg-laden belly with a reverent awe. Did she feel of this? the priestess wondered, Tsugumi’s all-too-polite aura coming to mind. Little tingles jumped through her whole body, resonating out from her belly. Her ass, her tits, her hips, her thighs … every where a woman might have charm felt so alive.
They called it a glow, hm? For them, mayhaps. Gwyneth couldn’t help turning her head, regarding the conquering queen cuddling from behind. Her cross into motherhood; no, more than that. Breeder … dom? Breedom? Is there a word for it?
So many more to choose from, all of them her.
Tsugumi may have an idea?
Avaron grunted, her face scrunching for a moment before both eyes rolled back into place. “Ho-how long was I out for?” she groaned, clutching at her temple.
“Not long,” Gwyneth answered easily; she wasn’t counting.
“Am-am I still … oh, I am.” Avaron chuckled disbelievingly. “Sorry I’ll sto—“
“Do not.”
“Eh?”
“Slake thyself in me,” Gwyneth said, rolling her hip into Avaron pointedly. “It pleases me.”
“Aren’t you a little sore?”
“Mm, nay. Even tiredness is fleeting.” Gwyneth held a hand to her lips, her cheeks the softest burn of a blush. “And, tis comforting, thou being inside me.”
“Alright, as long as you want me in there,” Avaron remarked. She shifted on the bedding, stretching out and curling a leg over the priestess, holding her in place. Sneaking a hand in, she wove her fingers between Gwyneth’s, the two holding each other lovingly. Her next trick surprised Gwyneth, a plush kiss on the cheek that made her head turn. “I hope it was everything you wanted.”
“Everything …” Gwyneth echoed, a slow smile coming to her lips. “Truly. And now I carry thy burden, thy many, many burdens in my belly …” Avaron’s other hand dug around her side, slithering up until five hardy fingers splayed over her stomach. A flaring fire shot up through her at the attention, one that made her gasp sharply. “Oh! Oh, oh … oh, Avaron.”
“Like it?”
The comforting caress of the one who bred her; the mother of her children; her queen. That gentle touch turned her thoughts into a slurry of goop, adoration, and desire. “Verily,” Gwyneth breathed out, a trickle of excitement leaking out with another freshly fucked load of cum inside of her. One pleasure of many, but nothing against that touch.
“Tsugumi loved it too, and now you. Guess it’s a neat little benefit of me knocking you up, huh?”
“Tis great indeed, then,” Gwyneth mumbled back, half-twisting toward Avaron. Her gaze set upon the tentradom’s lips, and the promise kept within them. “Noble Avaron, I hunger.”
“For …? Oh. Oooh.”
“Feed me,” Gwyneth begged before licking her lips and opening her mouth.
Avaron laughed lightly before leaning in, nuzzling her nose against Gwyneth’s. “Anytime,” she whispered, her own lips opening.
The tongue-tentacle within peeked out, looking. Gwyneth breathed upon it, her hot breath washing over the tiny, arrow-shaped head. “Here,” she whispered, laying her tongue out flat. Its head brushed against her, and took the guidance into her hungry maw. Soon she’d have the cum she craved, another meal to nurture her breeder-purposed body. Or at least that was half the thinking; she just really wanted more of Avaron’s cum to eat.
Needless to say one thing led to another and they started to have some pretty wild sex again. With every pretense drowned in inches of hot liquid cum, they were far more into just fucking and pleasuring each other as they could. By the time Tsugumi finally entered the bedroom to go to sleep, a wall of air filled with sex blasted her face. Six ruby-colored eyes blinked in bewilderment at the carnal scene she witnessed. From the floor, to the bed, to the wall by the bed and the ceiling above, cum covered everything like an ice cream truck had exploded, stickily dripping down and flowing into the floor’s gutters. Gwyneth, riding atop of Avaron, begging for another load of eggs.
Needless to say Tsugumi didn’t get much sleep that night once Gwyneth invited her in.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.5) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Curious Magi
Chapter 25: National Business
Chapter Text
The business of nations is a microcosm of the nation itself.
*~*
Queen Efval’s tent was, much like the last time Avaron had been in it, surprisingly samely. Some of the crates had been moved around, and a modest table laid out beside the central rug this time. Spying at the semi-naked serving women, none of them met her gaze, moving with a purpose as they worked. Standing before the reclining queen, she met the cool eyes that’d followed her the whole way. It was almost impressive how such a warm mahogany color could come off as frigid and icy.
Yet, not hostile per say.
“Your weapon has served well,” Efval stated simply, all the voice of a leader who had to acknowledge something distasteful.
“I cannot take all the credit, but it is good to hear.”
“Hm. With it and your ‘sniper doctrine’, as you say it was, the Empire’s army was routed quickly. Their general and his co-leaders were even killed, a monumental change in this war.”
“You do not sound as happy as I’d expect.”
“Were it only humans and monja we still dealt with, I’d have a mind to celebrate.”
An unwanted development, is it? Avaron curled a hand under her chin thoughtfully. “What do you mean?” Efval motioned a nearby servant with her hand, and Avaron saw them approach, handing a large rolled up scroll. In unfurling it, she was surprised to see it was a map. It displayed the many lands around the Alva Forest, one meant to track nations and their borders than geological features. Taking in the highly valuable layout it presented, she said, “Alright, I’m seeing a bunch of countries here …”
“Now compare it to the other one.”
Another servant came, and exchanging maps, Avaron saw a stark difference. The empire, once of a decent size in the southwest, exploded across a number of territories. Virtually all its neighbors had been consumed, and several conflict markers indicated what had to be ongoing wars elsewhere. The general trend had it move west and north, keeping its borders on the east face rather stable. One cannot fight two fronts easily, Avaron mused and nodded. “The empire expanded quite aggressively, I see.”
“All in the span of four years.”
“I take it that is unusual.”
“Beyond a doubt. That much territory that quickly often leads to instability, then infighting and collapse. Those who seek to rule by conquest often over stretch—that the Empire had not concerned me greatly. I thought it to be the work of guns, but I know now that was only a small part of it.”
“Mm. Don’t like that. What did you find out?”
“A Nagraki Highborn was accompanying the Empire’s general.”
“That’s a new name to me.”
“Unsurprisingly. The nagraki had been, until now, dead for over half of a millennium. I’d thought all their wretched kind gone for good.”
“What’s the significance of it, then?”
“Speak to Nuala about the history of it. But for my concern, the nagraki are old enemies of all good and decent peoples. They delve into vile magic and arcana, abusing life for personal power. That alone is problematic, but worse is their faithful devotion to Haska, their evil god.”
“I’m getting the feeling this means they have to be a pervasive, in-the-shadows type of secret cult. You know, manipulating everything for their own end.”
Efval’s brow ticked upward, a fleeting look passing over her face. “That is the heart of the matter, yes. It would explain the Empire’s sudden and unusual change of behavior, as well as the worsening tensions in the lands. Humans and monja do not have the lives and memories of we elvetahn. They would forget the enemy, and so fall prey to the nagraki’s long-lived planning.”
“Convenient explanations are an easy trap to fall into,” Avaron said warningly. “It definitively proves their influence in the Empire. Becoming paranoid over every shadow wouldn’t do.”
“It is not unusual of them to do so.” Efval waved her hand dismissively. “That I now know they still live, however—the time comes for we elvetahn to stand up once again.”
Avaron’s brow furrowed. “You mean, leaving the Alva Forest?”
“And more.”
“Hmm …”
“You seem unimpressed by the idea.”
“It’s too obvious.”
“What is?”
“The once-reclusive elvetahn suddenly leaving their forest. It makes sense if you do so to attack the Empire—everyone would expect it. If you start branching out into other countries, however … They won’t care for your noble reasoning, they’ll see it as an excuse to attack them.” Avaron spread her hands in a shrug. “If I was a secret cult controlling things, it’d be an easy excuse to turn everyone against you.”
“You—” Efval paused, her face contorting with the mildest of sour expressions. Falling back into her pillowy throne, she tapped a finger against her lips, staring off into nowhere in particular. Such an elegant sight proved a little exciting, the queen’s sharp beauty and raw sensual, nearly-naked body teasing Avaron’s eyes. “It is not wrong, now that I think of it that way. The other peoples are too forgetful to honor the old ways.”
“I’ve opinions about that, but I’ll bide my tongue.”
“Do not be coy,” Efval said, the ease of her voice lining the sharpness of her words. “It dulls the mind and I care not for it.”
She stands on ceremony as much as she beats people with it, Avaron thought, exasperated. Shaking her head, she sighed and said, “Small, elite teams of people spread across the lands would do better. The problem will be figuring out which part is native politics, and which is nagraki influence. Without knowing their goals, we’re shooting arrows blindly and hoping one hits.”
“What archer cannot shoot blind and hit?” Efval asked dubiously.
“Most of them, it turns out.”
“They are poorly trained, then.”
“That is … missing the point.”
“Your point is understood, the archers are not. How would you diffuse these ‘native politics’ and nagraki influence?”
Avaron scratched the back of her head. “I’m not sure, every land is different. If you can work with the powers in the region, and gain their help, it may expose the nagraki. It might also expose your own investigation and send them into hiding again.”
“Nagraki are the most difficult of prey,” Efval said in a voice that belied agreement. “I shall take your words into consideration. Others will be handling them for the time being.”
It sounded like a dismissal but Efval made no motions to do so. Avaron straightened up a bit, bouncing on her feet. “Ah, well then, is that all, Queen Efval?”
“No. Nuala tells me that Lord Honda has made contact with you.”
A statement that brokered an explanation without question. Avaron narrowed her eyes a touch at the tone. “It is as you heard. For what he wants, I have no idea. His ambassador, or whatever, is apparently coming to me.”
“Hm. The quiet land stirring, how interesting.”
“He apparently means to also contact you, though I do not know what for.”
“… Is that so?” Efval mumbled, brow furrowing in thought. “You will keep me informed of what he wants.”
“As much as is reasonable to do so.”
They shared a look, the queen demanding utmost more in a response, and Avaron giving her the stonewall. Whether she thought it worth bothering over or not, Efval blinked first. “Hm. Have you made any tora silk yet?”
“Oh, that? It’s getting there. Tsugumi should be speaking with the weavers that came with you about the first batch. I’ll be honest, it’s not that great, we’re still figuring out some problems.”
“Hm. I am expecting better in the future. My seamstresses will need the finest quality to fashion my Spring Renewal dress.”
Nobility. Avaron hid her rolling eyes by bowing her head. “I understand. I cannot promise an exact timeline, but things are moving well considering we are starting from nothing at all.”
“So you say. Leave me then.”
Avaron did, all too glad to finally have an excuse to be done. Ahh, she’s easy on the eyes but no matter how beautiful the viper, she groused to herself. I can see why Tahn had so much trouble getting her married. If she is still even going to bother with that idea after all of this. She’d eat Tsugumi and Gwyneth alive if they were left in the same room together. Now if she could get her to eat them out, that’d make life way more fun. Yet for as much as she enjoyed that picture, a dark shadow hung in Avaron’s mind.
Haska’s servants … I didn’t expect to pick up their trail this soon. Where in the world did they find out about flintlocks? He knows nothing of them, yet the Empire is already brimming with firepower. Hmm. It’s not surprising an empire got corrupted so easily, but this picture isn’t lining up no matter how I frame it.
*~*
“Nuala.”
Stepping out of the shadows, the mage came before Queen Efval, kneeling on the carpet. “Your Majesty.”
Efval waved her hand and the servants filed out of the queen’s tent, leaving just the two of them. “Continue with your recounting.”
“That is …” Nuala had to think a moment where, exactly, she’d left off. After Tsugumi’s breeding, but before Gwyneth’s? Ah, right, the kagr confrontation. Starting from the beginning, she recounted her knowledge of it, Efval sitting by with attentively perked ears. The queen suspected some details were being omitted, chiefly around the more carnal activities. She cared not for such, no matter how long it took Nuala to tip toe around the details. “… which concludes what I know.”
“I see.” Efval tapped her cheek with a finger, lost in thought for a moment. “Then nothing she does aligns with tentradoms as we know.”
Nuala shook her head agreeingly. “If I had not known, I would regard them as two utterly separate ideas. Her penchant for … women, is markedly different enough that I have no idea what to expect.”
“A thrilling prospect for you, I have no doubt,” Efval remarked dryly. Nuala, unsurprisingly, had no decency to be caught off by such unsavory words.
“She knows so much, it leaves me in awe,” Nuala gushed out, clutching her face with her hands. “Just the other day, she muttered to herself about ‘ecological architecture’, which I have deciphered to mean shaping of the land. She means to do work that the druids themselves hold in secrecy!”
“You cannot allow her to do so freely,” Efval cut in sharply, her glare making Nuala recoil. “I will not let a tentradom grow as it wants into my forest.”
“T-t-that is the thing, Your Majesty!” Nuala hurriedly waved her hands, punctuating her words. “She does not mean to grow into the forest, but underneath. The rock and dirt, but also the mountain overhead—she will not bother the forest at all!”
“And how do you know this?”
“Her thankful penchant for muttering under her breath.” Nuala smirked and tapped the side of her head. “She talks to herself often when alone, and it is easy to overhear what she thinks.”
“And you believe she isn’t doing that on purpose?”
“Eh?”
Efval sighed, taking a moment to rub her eyes. “If she knows she is being watched, she would speak lies to throw off the listener.”
“Certainly, but I do not believe she is! I have detected no magic that would possibly learn of me—”
“And you are certain there is no special talents a tentradom might have? Some magical sensitivity?”
Nuala’s rapid-fire mouth clicked shut.
“Lest you forget, a Flame priestess is now in her thrall. One sanctified by the Flame itself, no less. Continue your observations but take everything you learn like a leaf plucked out of the air. She is not so simple.”
Nuala bowed her head slowly, her face all-too-sour. “Of course, Your Majesty.”
This stubborn splinter, Efval thought dryly, regarding Nuala and her unhappy atmosphere. “It is unlike you to be captivated like this. Why does she fascinate you so?”
“… Surely Your Majesty understands, my purpose is knowledge.”
“Have I not warned your flippant nature to plunge into the unknown will cost you? No, more to the point, it will cost me and my forest greatly.”
“It is why I proceed with all due caution, Your Majesty. All I do is so our people may learn more.”
“Not everything is worth learning.”
“Your Majesty understands if I disagree,” Nuala said, sweet in the airs but frigidly stern beneath.
Efval let out one long, heaving sigh. “You have ever been inscrutable since we were saplings. Everyone else followed the Paths, but Nuala stayed behind, reading her books. It would be much to our benefit later, of course.” Sitting up, the queen propped her elbows on her knees, balancing her head on her hands. That her bosom fell between them, tempting as fruits hanging from a branch, no one was around to appreciate. “But the path you walk is a lonely one, Nuala. Knowledge will give you no comfort in the final hours.”
A dry chuckle filled the air, Nuala righting up into a more relaxed, improper stand before the queen. “So you warned me, when you left to become a Huntress. But you understand, don’t you? What drove you to become the greatest of huntresses, drives me to be the greatest of magi.”
“To become queen was a far more reachable branch than what you aspire toward,” Efval returned, fair voice flat with self-aware obviousness.
“One day I’ll be the one everyone stares up to see,” Nuala said, smiling within her shadow-casting hood. “What greater pride, than being the tree that gives us all shade under her branches?”
“Even with all you have done so far?”
“The Empire has proven how pointless those accomplishments were.” Both their faces soured at the mention, the conversational air turning a touch fetid. Nuala spoke up first, “These new rifles and guns have bought us time, but it is not through my own effort. There is still so much more I need to learn, and that tentradom is a vault of secrets waiting for me.”
“It leaves me uneasy, for however much more of a person than an abomination she might seem. I do not want to be the one to chop you down like all the others who fell prey.”
“If I can learn just one thing that assures our survival, then it is good I am the one to pay the price.” Nuala smiled, a look between rueful and bitter. “I could never ask another to do so in my stead.”
“You speak ill of me for having you do so.”
“No. I admire your strength as I always have. The burden of leading has not bowed your trunk at all.”
“Were it left unscarred,” Efval said, not quite staring at Nuala anymore. “I might have a husband by now. Or a wife, for however hilariously problematic that would be.”
“I cannot help but wonder again at Tahn’s thinking,” Nuala remarked, rubbing the back of her head. “He is not stupid of what is happening.”
“No, but Father’s notions of fixing something has been out of touch with common sense for many centuries. I am hopeful a year or two may change his erratic mind enough to abolish the marriage.”
“If it does not?”
“Then I may have to ask Mother.” They both grimaced, a fleeting look of terror entering their eyes at Efval’s own words.
“But if she decides it is funny enough to support …”
“Then I am afraid we both may end up the seedbed of a tentradom’s garden.”
“Hey—what do you mean both of us?” Nuala asked, chirpy in tone as much as offended. A cool pair of mahogany eyes came to regard her, staring with an all-knowing depth to them.
“Oh, sweet Nuala, you’ll still let anyone sit on your branches as long as they say something interesting.”
“I—I do not! Stop looking smug!”
“A queen is not smug, she is certain,” Efval said simply, turning her nose up. “Even if I did not want to, it still reaches my ears.”
“Then stop listening about it! Who is telling you?!” Nuala demanded, nearly screeching with her flushed face and teary eyes, raw embarrassment blushing hotly across her cheeks.
“That is rather unmentionable right now,” Efval said, smiling coquettishly.
*~*
They passed through the rice fields, marching over barely-maintained dirt roads. Farmers and more watched from a distance, the most skittish of them scurrying inside homes. Simple folk of a simple lifestyle, they had no desire to stand before the plate-clanking, blazing red samurai armor of their great Lord’s own troops. Harraxin born, nonetheless! Four in total, well-aged in their incredible bulk and thick, unbreakable spines. That they wore any armor at all was more an indication of status than purpose; their skin dense enough even a steel blade couldn’t cut it.
The group paused when they reached the end of the road, leading out into tree-dotted wild plains that soon turned into a forest. The three—ostensibly smaller than their leader—looked up to the imposing woman. Her rough face twisted as a thoughtful scowl settled, beady blue eyes surveying the land. One wouldn’t be wrong for mistaking her for a warlady, her natural crown of two jagged, sloping horns accentuating the locks-tied gold-bespeckled black hair spilling down her shoulders.
“Hmph.” Snorting, she reached into the leather pouch hanging off her rope-tied belt. She pulled out a small, rounded device, setting it in her other palm with her horrendously dangerous looking claws. The small, mysteriously burning candle within the glass dome flickered, the wisp of smoke coming off flowing in the way ahead of them. Letting out a snorting growl—such was their kinds dismissive sound—she stuffed it back inside the pouch. “Still that way,” she said, her shoulder spines rattling when she pointed dead ahead. “No road. I’ll check every lunch and dusk. It won’t be long if that bitch ninja isn’t chin-deep in this place.”
“Will those elves really let us just walk in?” one of the harraxin, Kohana, asked, seeming ill-at-ease at the idea.
“Honda said they would. If they don’t, it’s his problem.”
“That doesn’t do us any good, Hanamaru,” the second harraxin, Mayumi, said, holding her hands out in a wide-armed shrug. “He told us that a few days ago. These tree humpers probably don’t even know we’re coming.”
“Then tell them off, or kill them if they don’t. Are you a coward?” Hanamaru, standing at the front of the ground twisted around half-way, staring with a scowl. The weight of her voice carried in the air with every word, deep in its guttural power and vexingly feminine tones.
“You know how hard it is getting their damn arrows out of here!” the second screeched, pointing at her own shoulder spines. “Those fuckin’ sap arrows stick for weeks!”
Hanamaru dragged her palm down her mature face, dark-motley skin dragging in an exasperated motion. “And I’ll dip you in vat of cheese if that’s all you’re complaining about!” she growled, then threw up a hand menacingly. “Get into formation and guard Amaya! The last thing I need is that stupid box being broken and we have to do all of this again!”
Really, errand girl for Honda of all things. Hanamaru couldn’t believe she had been given such a brain-dead task. The first time she’d left Kitinchi in decades and she was a delivery girl! Her blood had been boiling since they left Honda’s castle, and she just wished one of those elven stuck-ups tried something. One good swing and she’d rip them chest-from-legs in a damn—
“What’s that?” the first harraxin said, squinting and staring at the tree line.
“What do you see, Kohana?”
“A bunch of things walking toward us.”
“… Walking?” Hanamaru wondered aloud, staring in the same direction. Her eyes were not as good at long sights, much of the forest line and field farther away blurring together. If she stared and squinted for a long while, she started to notice something moving in the distance. “What are they?”
“Not elves, that’s for sure. Fuckers never walk normally,” Kohana muttered, scratching her chin with an audible dragging of claws against skin. “They look kind of short. Stunted, maybe.”
“… Humans?” Amaya, the most quiet of the four, asked. The other three started laughing then, Mayumi going as far as slapping her knee. In the time it took to regain their composure, the strangers crept closer. “No, they’re much uglier. What are those?”
“Ha-haha, ah, Kohana?” Hanamaru wheezed out, grinning stupidly. No answer came and she looked over, finding Kohana looking deeply cross in the face. “What is it?”
“Say, Hanamaru, do you remember Black Rock Ridge?”
It took her a solid moment to recall, the memory all too familiar upon hearing the name. Hanamaru’s jolly mirth bled away like a stuck pig, and she stared sharply. “I do.”
“It might be another one of those.” Kohana lifted a clawed hand, pointing at the strangers. “A bunch of kagr, and they’re being led by something human-sized in black robes.”
“A nagraki?”
“They have a Doomblade.”
“A what?” Mayumi asked, only to nearly jump out of her skin at how swiftly Hanamaru unholstered her own axe. One might be forgiven regarding it as a club with an edge, for the immense weapon was oversized even in a harraxin’s hands. For whatever Mayumi didn’t know, seeing Hanamaru’s face twist in the nastiest scowl she’d ever seen made her blood freeze. The three other warriors backed away from their leader, readying their own weapons in the process.
“Kohana, Mayumi,” Hanamaru said, her tone the example of command. “Guard the flanks around Amaya. Amaya, I need a [Soul Chains] talisman.”
“I can make one now, I don’t need the guards,” Amaya said, already reaching into the long, sloping bags hanging around her waist.
“No, after that, begin a [Reaper Summoning].”
“R-reaper, what? Are you—”
“Do as I say,” Hanamaru barked immediately. “Questions later.”
“Understood,” the three other warriors chirped in unison.
“Kohana, our backs aren’t to the wall this time. You and Mayumi be careful with the kagr. If they figure out what Amaya is doing, we may have to retreat.”
“Us? Retreat?” Mayumi sputtered out, looking at Hanamaru with incredulity. The lead harraxin, however, stared at the approaching enemies with utmost seriousness.
“You’re young. Nagraki are no joke, least of all one wielding a Doomblade. If it cuts you once on your arms or legs, chop them off immediately.”
“Chop them off? Just like that?”
“If you lack the resolve to survive however you can, then you will fail as a warrior.”
“Here’s the talisman!” Amaya chirped, and then slapped down a rectangular slab of thin paper in Hanamaru’s waiting palm. Red borders framed the creamy colored base, inscribed with written words and icons of holy meaning. Hanamaru nodded, and took up her enormous axe with both hands.
“Right then. Kohana is in charge if I go down. I’ll handle the nagraki and the center group. Understand?”
“Understood!” They sang out in unison again.
Walking out to meet the enemy, the air carried a particular stench upon it. Weak, yet familiar enough to harken her mind to a war hundreds of years ago. Hanamaru gritted her teeth, spines hackling with a rhythmic wave. Funny, in a way, how such a drab and boring day suddenly turned toward a brush with death itself. She hadn’t felt such a whiplash in mood in decades, such was the rarity of anything truly dangerous. There wasn’t any pleasure to be found in this battle, only a gnawing sense of dread.
Where did you come from? Hanamaru wondered, the kagr and their nagraki leader slowly coming into her vision. They made no motions to stop, the kagr themselves quite ecstatic and ready to fight it seemed. Such a familiar sight and smells, minus the vast hordes of old and the moving wall of flesh and steel of friends. Why here? Why now? It must be their first target, for the nagraki had no slain any yet with its vile blade. Not a single possessed or zombie to be seen, for however thankful she was for that.
Well, that’s that. Rolling her shoulders, Hanamaru set her idle mind aside as one might put down a pen. She took stock of the enemy, and found that none of the kagr had any exceptional weapons. Their peculiar ash-forged weapons were there, but they had neither spell nor enchantment upon them. She did not fear them, for such weak creatures had no hopes of piercing her skin, let alone her spines. Setting her feet apart with a hearty, ground-thumping stomp, she took a squatting stance, axe balanced in her hands.
“Alright!” Hanamaru growled out, rotating her head, flexing her shoulders, and limbering up. “It’s been a few hundred years, but I remember your kind.”
There was a technique to fighting Doomblade wielders, if one did not have the priestess blessing [Turn Away Doom].
“I wonder if you remember me?!” Hanamaru yelled out, laughing as the approaching enemies paused for a moment. “Come, nagraki! You stride so confidently before me!”
One could not take a flesh-cutting blow, or it would bestow the [Doom] curse. Thus, only three options were available, though most only believed in two of them.
Lifting a veiled, gloved hand, the nagraki’s distinctive throat rattling hiss-cry came, and the kagr answered in kind. They sped ahead of their leader, brandishing weapons and howling in hungry anticipation. Ah, the screams; the thunder of feet upon earth; the rattling of metal plates and bardings! Oh, her heart roared with blood and her spines sharpened straight up! Hanamaru laughed, her low-defensive posture ready.
“Come! Come!” she roared out, beckoning with her axe. “Today you die to Hanamaru, last chieftain of HARRAXA!” Her declaration joined with a grand, boisterous force, the raw power of [Roar of Triumph] turning a mere shout into a blasting force. A shockwave of raw air pressure blew out, flattening the grass around them in an instant as much as it sent kagr falling on their asses. Seizing the moment, she lunged forward, the earth ripping underneath her muscular legs. To fight enemies barely reaching her knees, she kept low to the ground, her axe angled in a scything sweep.
What few still stood pointed their jagged spears at her, terror all too evident in their disgusting faces. Tragically for them, even with their ‘long reaching’ weapons, Hanamaru’s imposing size outreached them completely. Rearing back, she swung her steel-forged axe in a grand, sweeping arc. Whether the bladed edge cut through them or the overwhelming force broke their bodies, every kagr she hit went flying off to the side. Quite the dozen in the first blow, and those just beyond fell on their asses again at the wind pressure from the swing.
Yet her eyes were not upon them, weak trash unbefitting of strategy.
The nagraki stood farther back, staring. Through the hood she saw what was left of a man’s face, half-twisted and contorted by a black, flesh growth covering him. Such looked much like vines or mycelium of mushrooms, expansive, thriving and alive as it consumed him. Her brow furrowed. Not fully converted yet. Strange.
It would make fighting him easier, comparatively.
Shifting weight and keeping momentum going, Hanamaru swung her axe again, clearing out another dozen in front of her. None could mistake her path heading straight toward the nagraki, and the kagr outside of the danger rushed to flank. In turn met by Kohana and Mayumi, they found (ostensibly) smaller harraxin warriors ready for them. Spear and sword alike pierced the kagr, who lost their wits now that they had no way to surround Hanamaru.
Among the three options, one must take blows to armor or clothing, but never the flesh. If one can avoid a blow, then all the better. The third is to take a blow deliberately to a leg or arm, so as to catch the Doomblade wielder off-guard. In killing the wielder, one then must immediately amputate their limb.
Towering amongst hundreds of kagr, Hanamaru strode like a giant, what blows that landed doing no harm at all. Whether broken upon her immense spines, deflected by the armor covering her skin, or just her skin at all—no kagr blade worked. Axe balanced on one shoulder, she beckoned for the nagraki, smiling with her boisterous taunt. Only then did the creature finally move, flourishing its burgundy-glowing iron sword. Doomblades thus were known not for the actual blade, but the enchantment—even a wooden sword, if it can withstand the spell, could be one.
It is not whole yet so it cannot disappear into shadows, Hanamaru appraised, ages of experience crashing together in micro-seconds of thought. It can move to the sides or underneath the swing. Knowing it needs only pierce my skin, the shortest route to doing so is …
Ah, to face an enemy not with a grueling battle of skill and physical might. It all came down to who made the right move in the first swing.
How horribly dishonorable.
Yet, entirely a nagraki way of fighting.
Hanamaru, snarling, reared her axe back as the two came within range. She swung at chest-height with the creature, denying it a sideways escape. The nearer she came, the more it began bending at the knees and belly. As a snake might contort itself, its whole body undulated beneath the axe’s blade. Such was its smooth, disturbing movement that it had already started angling upright, sword toward Hanamaru’s belly. It let out a screeching cry as its sword-arm was suddenly grabbed, engulfed by Hanamaru’s enormous hand. Its head, grappled by the other that contained the talisman.
Her axe went rocketing off, all the force of the swing carrying it into some nearby kagr with a mighty slam that buried it in the earth.
“That trick won’t work on me again,” Hanamaru enthused with a guttural laugh. The nagraki’s sword arm broke in her crushing hand, a sickening pop of bone and tearing of flesh. It kicked and twisted, desperately trying to escape. Muffled screams of the man who was the nagraki’s host followed, screaming into the growth that stole his mouth. “Now, come out, you wretched thing.”
Crushing the skull in her palm, the body spasmed and jerked on pure, instinctual reflex. Blood and gore of all sorts leaked out between her fingers, but Hanamaru cared not. A flare of blue light shot out, the ethereal light of holy magic as it worked. She pulled the body away with her other hand, the skull-holding one separating as it held onto something. A writhing mass of oily-brown shadows spasmed, peeling out off of its host like any other parasite. One might vaguely see it in a humanoid shape, but all sorts of mouths and gnashing teeth adorned its ‘skin’. A creature born of nightmares and unimaginable suffering.
Hanamaru’s nose curled distastefully, her upper lip peeling back enough to show her jagged, uneven teeth. A wraith. Young, too. A young wraith and a still-converting body. She looked around the field, but her poor eyesight meant she only really saw the battle that surrounded her. I do not feel its parent nearby, but still …
Something was very off about the entire situation.
Her two fellows continued on admirably. Kohana she expected to; a veteran warrior such as her dying to kagr would be laughed at throughout the ages. Mayumi, well, if it weren’t for her natural hardiness she might’ve taken a few bothersome hits. The kagr, for all their stupidity, rapidly became aware of how outclassed they were. That some shrieked and pointed at her, their leader-apparent now trapped in her hands, sent a ripple throughout the survivors. Those who didn’t catch on kept fighting and died, while the remainder soon turned and fled manically.
In the quiet that followed, punctuated by the pained moaning of what few survived on the ground, mist began gathering. An odd sight to see on a clear day, but Hanamaru had the misfortune of seeing it more than once. It grew steadily like a fog bank blowing in, soon drowning the sky out and leaving the world around her in a dim haze. Her three warriors soon gathered around her, Amaya’s hands wrapped in prayer beads that glowed eerily.
“It comes,” she said simply, her attention solely upon her meditative hand posture.
“Put your weapons away,” Hanamaru said, already hearing the ringing of a bell. Rustling beads and the tap-tap-tap of wooden sandals pierced the deathly calm air. “And try not to speak, unless you want to die.” They all nodded, a motion more heard than seen by her. She kept her eyes toward the approaching sounds, a dim light in the fog swinging back and forth. Soon a lantern peaked through the fog, held by a ghoulishly decrepit hand. Then the rest of it emerged, the fog flowing over its shambling form like water down a wall.
Adorned in the white robes of a priestess, the reaper’s face hid behind a terrifying mask of porcelain and red markings. Its teeth grew outward in a curve, two empty eye sockets full of darkness despite the lantern shining light upon them. Craning its head, it looked back and forth, surveying them all in its silent manner.
“Here,” Hanamaru growled out, holding the still-writhing nagraki wraith. “Something for you to take back.”
The reaper walked forward, shuffling as an old man near the end of his life. Rubbing its chin as it looked over the nagraki, the reaper sized it up no different than a cut of meat at the butcher’s. Nodding and nodding, it left the lantern floating in air, reaching into its vast robes. When it pulled out a simple brown jar, it slid open the lid, pointing the empty inside at the nagraki. A rush of wind followed, roaring into the jar as the nagraki’s whole being began to suck inside of it. Hanamaru let go, letting it and the talisman keeping it trapped disappear. As quickly as the wind started it stopped, the reaper closing the jar once again.
“You’ll want that sword, too,” Hanamaru said, pointing at the Doomblade still on the ground by her feet. “Not something that belongs in this world.”
Just as before, the reaper inspected the item before picking it up daintily. Stowing the blade away into its robes, it looked upon Hanamaru utmost expectantly. The chieftain, however, shook her head. Nodding and nodding, the reaper plucked its lantern from the air and walked away. Rattling beads and tapping sandals echoed in the air, the reaper disappearing into the fog once more. The air began clearing as the sounds faded, and soon they found themselves beneath the sun once again, the death moans of kagr conspicuously absent.
Amaya let out an exhale, breaking her meditative hands apart. “It—it didn’t want more?” she gasped out, sweat dripping down her fearsome face.
“No, it took plenty,” Hanamaru said, appraising the battlefield. “Do you see anything more, Kohana?”
“No. The runners concern me, but they’re long gone.”
“Mm. If more nagraki show up, we will not have much of a chance. Its concerning how they came out of the elves’ forest, but …” Hanamaru shrugged her shoulders. “We better hurry and find that bitch-ninja. We’re too far away to go back and warn Honda.”
“I agree.”
“Wait, hold on for a second!” Mayumi demanded, clapping her hands for attention. “Reapers don’t just show up and leave like that! Don’t they, take hundreds of lives and sate their—”
“Reapers were made to hunt nagraki,” Hanamaru said simply, leaving Mayumi and Amaya gobsmacked. “Such is Komaru’s great hatred of the nagraki, his spirits chase them through the darkness. Most people make the mistake of thinking they can have reapers do their bidding.” Scratching her head through her thick, lock-like hair, Hanamaru rolled her shoulders. “As long as you offer up nagraki sacrifices, they’ll be happy to work for you.”
“Is there anything you don’t know?” Amaya asked coyly, making the chieftain chuckle.
“How to keep a wife that lasts more than one night.”
The three warriors uproariously laughed even as Hanamaru sheepishly scratched at her cheek. A little depreciating humor always worked well for easing up the younger folk. Her mind yet remained on the disturbing appearance of her old, once-dead enemy. That the kagr had been enthralled was no surprise, they were ripe for such a thing. A youngling nagraki and a newly forged Doomblade—she hadn’t seen such since the end of the Ash War. Grinding her teeth together in thought, the audible, muted clicking drew Kohana’s gaze, who stared quite knowingly at her.
Letting out a huffing grunt, Hanamaru said, “Let’s go. Time is a problem now. Mayumi, get my axe.”
“Haa? I can’t lift that thing!”
“You are still so scrawny.”
“You’re too damn big!”
“Ah, so you want to carry it for me, then?”
Mayumi shut up and hurriedly went over, trying to wrench the enormously unwieldy weapon from the earth.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.6) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Curious Magi
Chapter 26: Conflicting Interests
Chapter Text
Most decisions are amalgamations of many smaller, competing ones coming together.
*~*
Genetics is kind of terrifying when you have magic powers and a super brain, Avaron mused, sitting on the hive floor. Her legs hung over the edge, kicking absently above the ten-foot drop. Blue flesh pulsed around her, inching and inching as it ever grew across rock and dirt. The amount of possibilities are truly endless. Blowing a raspberry and deflating, she fell backward onto the lukewarm floor plating.
Farther ahead, various drones scuttled about, scouting through different tunnels and passages. Although completely pitch-black, their echolocating clicks painted the environment. Those fancy imaginative representations in TV really didn’t do justice to ‘seeing through sound’. It gave her something of a headache immersing into that perspective, though.
Knowing that brood mothers contribute to the gene pool, and then I can select what the eggs grow into … mmm, it’s a very controlled process. Higher level brood mothers contribute stronger … genes, I guess. It’s not just genes but as I might as well call them that. Avaron scratched her head. I can see the positive feedback loop now, at least. It doesn’t make designing new drones any easier but oh well.
Time was the one thing she couldn’t cheat. Whatever she worked on, all her attention was stuck on that one thing. Combined with all the different parts of the Hive that needed juggling, she was quickly reaching her effective limit. I can kind of get around it by wiring more to the subconscious mind, but, Avaron thought, her lips pursing together. I’m hitting a glass ceiling here unless I start sacrificing priorities.
If she had to, she had to.
If.
How do they do it in sci-fi? Big spooky hive mind, fills every living creature in the hive—got that part. How does it think more? More brains? She paused on the idea, not really recalling anything new with the expanding drone groups. More information flowed into her, of course, but not necessarily more processing. All that stuff got regulated to the subconscious mind, with only the choice strategic or tactical bits coming to the surface. Not more processing, just different ways.
Ah, damnit. If I could just buy a bunch of server clusters, or a data center. Then I’d have Johnathon do that big template copying thing he loved so much. Avaron sucked in a breath and sat upright. “What was it called again? Ugh, feels like a life time ago … boxing? Docking? No, not that.” Huffing and grumbling, she then said in a higher, reenacting voice, “Jonathon we need another data center for the east coast. How long until you can setup?”
She lowered her voice next. “Once you have the hardware I can do full roll out of the cloning software and—”
Avaron blinked.
Cloning software.
Cloning.
Copying the template and making more of it.
Why hadn’t she thought of that before? She didn’t need brood mothers to grow the hive—well, she did, but not for the population. If she could take a working template and genes, then that could be slapped into any number of eggs. It wasn’t strictly necessary for eggs to go into women, either. That just acquired the genes they needed to contribute to the Hive. Avaron slowly cradled her head with her hands, eyes tight with deep, focused thinking. That’s it, isn’t it? That’s how I solve this bottleneck.
It seemed impossible to grow the armies she needed just off a handful of women. A simple calculation of numbers proved that, regardless of the ethics or morals in the most ‘optimal’ situation. But cloning—creating egg hatcheries enmasse and just applying a template to them …
The limiting factor changed from ‘number of birthing women’ to ‘available birthing space’ and ‘total food supply’.
That—that was just an economics problem. The expansion of the Hive without concern of moral quandaries or personal ethics to impede it. If she needed more birthing space, expand the hive growth. If she needed more food, create more farming space, or improve existing methodology. As each thought worked through her mind, Avaron smiled more and more. To any other who might’ve seen, it was a most terrifying sight. Not from any ferocity or animalistic sense of menace.
Hers was the face of one who might hold the world in her palm, and all the cold, calculative thinking that required.
But now, for the real question.
She slowly lifted her head up, staring at her own two hands.
Can I clone myself?
*~*
“Oop!” Gwyneth squeaked, catching herself on a nearby wall of—something. Avaron said it was a ‘hive plate’ but it didn’t look any different from other stone to her. It did feel really quite smooth, though! “I see what Tsugumi meant,” she muttered, pulling herself up again. Not even a week later and the bump in her belly made walking that more different. Not unfeasible or anything, but a constant weight she sort of forgot about taking into accout. Despite that, she couldn’t help rubbing her belly, the robes barely deterring her at all.
Ah, being so full left her body buzzing happily.
She hadn’t a clue how much was normal pregnancy or the effects of a tentradom. What few pregnant women she helped over her life really did find the weight of it quite burdensome. Then again, they were further along then her? No clear answer awaited, but she’d find out in time. Ah, her mind had wandered again. With a tiny bounce in her step she headed through the Hive, moving to the entrance. It really quite amazed her how warm and fluffy-comfortable an underground place could feel! If they hadn’t told her, she wouldn’t have known.
Oh? Who is this? Gwyneth wondered, the presence of a person waiting at the Hive’s cave entrance. Neither Tsugumi nor Avaron, they had the presence and figure of an elvetahn. The stranger stood up from the ground, patting themselves off at her arrival. A slim figure cut with a fine flowing dress, that typical of a servant.
“Priestess,” the stranger said, bowing partly. “Her Majesty summons you.”
The queen? She had no business with such a venerable figure. “I—I see. Lead the way,” Gwyneth said, stiffly formal. It was good she took the time to sort out her robes and clean them yesterday. Despite being summoned suddenly, it would invariably be her fault for not being proper. Such was the way of nobles. They went on their way, Gwyneth quietly fussing over her robes and tidying them up as best she could.
The eyes of others fell upon her, scrutinizing but cool and dispassionate. Elvetahn had little regard for outsiders, and they must’ve found her presence particularly queer. It concerned her, not for herself but for how it might reflect upon Avaron.
Thus Gwyneth resolved to be as proper as one could be. Not that she wasn’t going to anyway, but that bit of extra special attention was needed. Brought to a grandly tall tent in the middle of the elvetahn encampment, the servant ushered her inside. The hot, dense air of aromatic flowers smacked her nose, and she barely repressed a cough. She’d heard much of how intoxicating the elvetahn preferred their homes to be, but reality was certainly different. Through one curtain and another, she was guided across the tight interior. The final one saw her enter a rounded room, with a simple circle-table and two chairs at the center.
Pots with blooming flowers hung all over the ceiling, a clear opening above allowing sunlight down through a sheer sheet. The edges of the ‘room’ were lined with more tables, full of documents, scrolls, writing tools, and all the necessary tools of office. It came out as surprisingly modern to Gwyneth, who half-expected the elvetahn queen to be more traditional. Tis not very different from Shadowpeak, she mused. Efval herself remained busy with a document, reading it over and scratching out areas while writing in others.
A few minutes later, she set it down, looking up at Gwyneth without moving her head. “Sit.”
Moving to the chair opposite of the queen, Gwyneth did so, neatly, folding her robes in and squeezing her ankles together. Such formal posture felt all the more difficult with her pregnant belly pushing out, but thankfully it wasn’t too full. That the queen’s gaze raked over her midsection left her all the more uncomfortable, however. “Thy Majesty,” she said, bowing her head politely.
“A Flame priestess has not walked on these lands in nearly a thousand years,” Efval said, brushing past formality entirely. “I cannot imagine the Order has forgotten the agreement.”
“They have not, Thy Majesty. Tis imparted upon all members of the Order with utmost import.”
“And you, who disavows the Order, still dare to set foot upon my land?”
“The Flame bids mine service to the divine heroine.”
Efval drew up and sat back in her plush chair, prominent as it was in its elegant simplicity. “And if the Order is not commanded by the Flame anymore, then what are they now?”
“I—am most certain they are.”
“You are the Chosen of the Flame, little girl,” Efval said coolly. “Even if you do not understand what that means, I do.”
Gwyneth looked away, utterly uncomfortable. “Tis surely not something so grand.”
“Hm, they have not told you then. Perhaps it is for the best.” Efval waved her hand in a dismissive gesture. “You will tell me why it is the Flame bids you service the heroine. That heroine of all.”
“It simply does, Thy Majes—” An instinctual shiver crept down Gwyneth’s back, the primal part of her brain registering danger. The air felt normal as ever, but the queen’s glare upon her spoke more than what words could convey. “T-that is, ehm …” Gwyneth sputtered out, squirming in her chair. The tiny, heart-shaped flame atop her bosom wobbled for a moment, speaking as it always did. In its soundless words she found comfort and strength, enough to calm her panicking heart and ‘meet’ the queen’s eons-old gaze.
It still took the utmost effort to speak before a tree so truly, incomprehensibly massive.
“A new Age of Fire is coming,” Gwyneth said slowly, each word careful in its choice. “One that frightened the Flame itself.”
Efval’s face contorted with a brief flash of confusion. “The same Flame that seeks to make these ages?”
“Yes. The Flame transforms, and what is old becomes something new. But as all mankind knows, and perhaps Thy Majesty, tis a thin line between transformation and destruction.”
“They are arguably the same, depending on the intent.”
“… Yes. The Flame has ever sought to balance both. But, the new Age of Fire, it beckons only destruction. Rampant, unstoppable, unending destruction.”
“And this heroine can help stop it?”
Gwyneth nodded. “Tis the only hope the Flame holds left now. None of the other heroines are capable.”
Efval reclined in her chair, staring off at some flower while deep in thought. A low, dry chuckle soon escaped her lips, brows creeping upward. “Mother will not like hearing this.”
Mother? Gwyneth froze, struck silly at hearing the word. She knew well of Queen Gladestride’s mother, a being long buried in myth and legend. To hear that all but meant she still lived. A cold, clammy sweat threatened to break out, Gwyneth already feeling light-headed enough to clonk out on the floor. Efval looked over then, a brief flash of recognition passing through her eyes.
“You are not as stupid as you let on,” she said simply.
“Mine studious habits, Thy Majesty,” Gwyneth squeaked out. “I read deeply in the Order’s libraries.”
“As you say. I give you leave to remain on these lands, for the time being.” Efval picked up her wooden, branch-like pen from its wresting place. A white feather dipped in ink awaited at the end, fresh to write. “You understand I do not extend this to anyone else from the Order.”
“Certainly, Thy Majesty. Tis no other but me who should be with the heroine.”
“Leave, then.”
No more at any other point in her short life had Gwyneth been so overjoyed to breathe outside air again.
*~*
“Are you sure? If we rotate them so that every door is in the hallway, there’d be enough space for two additional rooms.”
“It’s important for the rooms to have that space, yes,” Tsugumi said, standing beside the elvetahn architect. “It helps to keep the noise of each room further apart. In the future, I am thinking about adding a patio. It would fit easily—” she drew her finger across the expansive paper before them, running it around the line-drawn perimeter of a housing floorplan. “—with the additional hallways.”
“I am seeing that,” he said, rubbing his chin. “If you plan on mirroring this whole area—” he circled the bedrooms’ entire housing block, “—you will end up using a lot of unnecessary ground later, though.”
“I cannot build an inn for customers I do not have,” Tsugumi said lightly, clicking her fingers together in a rhythmic tapping. “Which is more unreasonable: a large but empty inn, or a small one that must rebuild later?”
The architect chuckled. “I do not disagree, lady Tsugumi. It would be unkind of me to not ask the obvious.”
“It is good to be diligent. Let us proceed as we spoke on before with that in mind. I shall hire you again if I need more building done.”
“I understand,” he said and then gathered up the planning paper. “We’ll do what we can to finish the main building. The structure will be fine, but furnishings will have to wait until the next time.”
“It is what it is,” she said, folding her hands together politely. “We are not in a terrible rush yet.”
“Pleasant rains upon you, lady Tsugumi.”
“To you as well, Haeleaf.”
With the oversight part of the job done, Tsugumi made her way out of the still-building inn. Much of the skeleton had been placed, and they were just now sectioning walls for the main building. It looked so very odd to her how much it resembled tora architecture, but built with very obviously different methods. Much of the fine, seamless wood-joinery that defined a tora building was simply gone. It was not that the elvetahn were unskilled with it, they simply preferred using their wood glue far, far more. Its adhesive strength was legendary, forming a bond stronger than stone-and-mortar could ever achieve.
Nails and other metallic fixings were sparingly rare, if used at all. The elvetahn did not readily mine the earth, and so such things were not a common building component. The tora also did not use them that much, but by comparison they were utterly extravagant. Not only that, but the method of making shoji differed in the components! Rounded wood rather than clean-cut squares, and a paper more greenish in tint than pleasantly white. Sure it looked suitable enough for a shoji, but the aesthetic of it was just off.
Knowing she had no room to complain, Tsugumi couldn’t help pining for a more tora-like inn. In the same thought, her mind inevitably returned to her centuries-long prison and a disgusting, chitin-rattling shiver came over her. Perhaps different will be best, Tsugumi thought with a touch of sourness. Stepping through what would eventually become the grand front entrance, she paused at the freshly set stone path. “For one so disinclined to be here, you make an effort to stay,” she said simply.
“I am compelled to,” Nuala said simply, leaning against the wall next to the door.
“A disturbing thought. But now you are here, seeking me out.”
“Can I not enjoy the sound of labor?”
Tsugumi glanced at Nuala from the corner of her eyes, regarding her dubiously for a moment. Electing to call the bluff, she walked onward, heading down the path the workers had made. A simple arrangement for the time being, one that went to the flowing river and split into two directions. One went further down the river and into the awaiting forest, the other toward the river’s mouth. In heading up toward the river’s mouth, she eyed the cave entrance waiting.
Nuala’s footsteps hurriedly caught up to her. “You must tell me more about her.”
“Who?”
“The heroine.”
“’Must’ is a terribly strong word, do you not agree?”
“It is an imperative.”
“For you, I suspect,” Tsugumi said lightly, clicking her tongue.
“You do not understand—”
“—I understand completely,” Tsugumi cut in immediately, smiling with a razor-edged politeness. “Even in my time, Nuala the Black’s rapacious appetite for knowledge was known far and wide. I cannot imagine she has forgotten about the city of Gilgan and what happened.” The air changed as it always did when one was confronted with a sore topic. Tsugumi made a show of stopping and looking over, meeting the stoically stone-like gaze Nuala affixed her with. The inn hostess, still smiling, tilted her head. “You are a most brilliant scholar, of that I have no doubt. I am certain you understand why I keep your uncontrolled ambitions at bay.”
“You could not be alive back then to know,” Nuala said simply, appraising Tsugumi. Undoubtedly with some secretive magical sight, but such didn’t bother her.
“Life is mysterious, isn’t it?” Tsugumi hid her grin behind a hand, her cheeks still quite seen. “I was not involved directly. Or, well, all of us in Gilgan were that day, I suppose.”
They stared each other down for a moment.
“You know I will not stop then,” Nuala said, an awfully threatening manner that lacked the weight one expected. “What she knows is of vital importance to the Alva Forest.”
“And your great desires, I am sure. People like you all have the same eyes.” Tsugumi held up a hand. “I shall give you an offering, then. A token for you and your continued relationship with us.”
“Oh?”
“That mind manipulating magic of yours, it will get you killed. Avaron despises anyone who utilizes it, and she has the power to know when it is being done.” Folding her hands together neatly in front of her, Tsugumi schooled her face to a neutral look. “And no one will know for it is such a rare magic to have. If you wish to learn more from her, be prepared to do it more traditionally.”
“… I see.”
“Oh, perhaps there is a second offering to be given. She’s yet to take an elvetahn wife properly, and I am told all the women of your kind are irresistibly beautiful.” Nuala seemed quite taken aback, but Tsugumi already turned away, resuming her walk. The magi did not follow this time, and quite soon her presence disappeared.
Tsugumi sighed in her own mind, whole body anxiously taut. A little white lie, she mused, wondering how much Nuala actually saw through. Powerful people were always difficult to deal with. Not in so much for killing them—there were hundreds of ways to do so, even for someone much lower level than them like her. It was their whims and fancies, their self-centered view of doing what they pleased when they pleased. Much as one could trust their life to the wind, it was liable to throw them across the sky or be a gentle breeze.
Hopefully she might guide them to a more productive approach.
Even if it meant letting one of the most dangerous magi in the world fuck her wife. Or her wife fuck her.
Or add her to the harem.
Or something.
Tsugumi rubbed her temples with all four hands when she entered the Hive’s cave. How very troublesome keeping a straight household these days, she groused.
*~*
“Alright, now that we have some basic walls up to cut down the noise, how is everyone?”
“Great.”
“Fine.”
“About as well as you can expect.”
“God damn it is like having a mirror talk back.”
“Isn’t that my line?”
“No, it’s mine.”
“We’re not starting this shit again.”
An asynchronous chuckling filled the small hive room, eerily close but just distinct enough to be disturbing to hear. “Okay, okay, calm down,” one of them said, clapping her hands. “We need to start some productivity here.”
“Are we sticking with ten of us?”
“That’s about as much as we can handle right now. That splitting brain pain when the eleventh was forming was too much.”
“Do you think that’s our max capacity?”
“That or a limit of our skills.”
“Ten is plenty for the time being.”
“I’m surprised this worked as fast as it did.”
“In fairness this is one of our core strengths, isn’t it?”
“I guess.”
“So how are we going to work this out, exactly?” They each looked around the room. Although their minds yet remained connected, they were like many different trunks stemming out of the same root system. Thanks to some mental barriers, their idle thoughts weren’t flooding each other in a cacophony anymore. Yet, as far as Avaron was concerned, it was much like being a cubicle farm. A thin barrier separated the workers, but it was easy enough to get around, let alone hear the others working.
Intimate without being overwhelming for the time being.
“Well, we could start with names, I guess?” One of them said. “We all know each other because we are each other. Gwyneth and Tsugumi sure as hell wont, or anyone else for that matter.”
“Oh that does raise a question, doesn’t it?”
“One problem at a time until we get this parallel thinking shit sorted.”
“Fine.”
“I think names are good. If nothing else we need designations so we can make sure our workflow is in order.”
“Like a serial code?”
“Sure. A1, A2, A3, A4, A5, etcetra.”
“Even I’m going cross-eyed at the idea.
“So do the serial code and an identifying personal name.”
“I was just thinking that.”
“We all were, asshole,” the other nine Avarons chimed in at once.
“Tough crowd.”
“Let’s just get this out of the way. Do we just want to pick names or do it to purpose?”
“What do you mean, purpose?”
“Well the whole point of this is to specialize in different Hive tasks. Research, farming, drones, fucking …” one-by-one the Avaron speaking ticked off her fingers. “It might be easier to pick names based on task.”
“Won’t that mean we get stuck in those roles?”
“Tell me not one of us is glad to offload all that extra work.”
“I mean, fair, but …”
“No, I get it. It’s hard to tell right now because we’re all still so close together.”
“Do you think divergence will cause problems in the Hive Mind later?”
“It’s possible. No organism survives being stagnant, though. Diversity of thought, so long as we structurally coexist, should be fine.”
“I agree but we’re also thinking the same still …”
“It’s new ground for all of us. Let’s just take it one day at a time. We can’t really exactly break away from each other, either. Same foundation and all that.”
“Alright,” another one chimed in. “Let’s think of the broadest roles the Hive needs right now.”
“Let’s do it by pairs.”
“What?”
“Let’s pair off each other so at least two are working in an area. It’ll help balance workload; one works while another rests, or a complex problem, etcetra …”
A humming agreement filled the room, ten heads bobbing in agreement.
“Okay so pairing off means we split the Hive into five broad categories, yes?”
“Yes.”
“Okay let’s sort that out. I’m thinking … We have War plus Administration, Farming plus Hive Growth, Research plus Development—”
“—Isn’t R&D the same thing?”
“Shut the fuck up with that stupid joke, no it’s not. Then we have, uhh, Logistics plus Maintenance, and I’m … struggling with the last one here.”
“Fucking and Breeding?” one offered cheekily, much to some of them blushing at the idea.
“Do we, erm, do we really need a whole specialty for that?”
“Wouldn’t that be related to Hive Growth? You know, more drones …”
“No, that’s just the Hive structure itself, remember? That whole group is taking care of the buildings.”
“Right.”
“I guess this loops back around to that point earlier,” one of the less-spoken Avaron said. “How do we handle our harem? Or women in general, at this point.”
A contemplative hum filled the room.
“I doubt they would understand,” another said, much to a collective agreement. “So for now, we need to limit their awareness of us to just one Avaron.”
“So the rest of us can’t fuck?”
“Knowing how much we need to, it may not be that hard to switch places.”
“What, revolving door of Avarons?”
“Kind of. One of us was already plowing two of them silly and still had gas in the tank. Ten of us is just beyond any single woman’s ability to satisfy without going fuck-drunk.”
“Or passing out.”
“Yeah, or that.”
“So we need more women is what I’m hearing.”
“Crudely put, but yes.”
“I cannot believe sex is the spanner in our works right now.”
“Well I’m not fucking any of you.”
“Agreed,” the other nine chimed in at once.
“Plus we do have to masturbate to lay out unfertilized eggs. So that does at least take the edge off.”
“Yeah but I want pussy. Or Gwyneth’s tight little mouth.”
“Let’s not think about—oh, goddesses fuck that is hot. No, stop thinking about fucking them! We’re not gonna get fired up right now!”
“You know how hard it is!”
“Oh I’m definitely hard right now.”
“Fuck my life.”
A hand slamming the table drew their collective attention, some of them jumping in their fleshy chairs. “Enough fucking around. We’ll put that topic off for later. What can we do for the last area?”
“Errr …”
“Mining plus manufacturing?” one offered up.
“I suppose? What would we be making?”
“Well we had that idea about modular drone body parts. But, also, if we’re going to trade with other nations, we need to be able to make goods.”
“That is a fair point. If nothing else it might help R&D find new fields of research.”
“Yeah.”
“Alright, so mining plus manufacturing is the last one. All agreed?”
“Uhh, about administration …” one of them spoke up, “Do we really need it?”
“You know what we’ve been through, so, why wouldn’t we?”
“Well, we’re all part of the Hive Mind together. There’s no reporting, we just know what the other knows, experiences what they experience, pretty much in real time. Collective memory, right? So what does an admin do?”
“That—is a point, actually. But if we get rid of admin, it’s two dedicated to just war.”
“What about information?”
“How do you mean?”
“Knowledge is power and all that. Being able to scout, gather intelligence, process information …”
“That sounds like a war thing.”
“Well, yes, but also we need someone to keep in charge of our collective information.”
“Like a data center admin?”
“Yeah, like Johnathon. Remember that ransomware virus that hit the office? If he hadn’t kept weekly backups we would’ve been fucked.”
“You know, that’s a thought.”
“What is—oh, I see.”
“Yeah. Shared memory and shared experience means if one of us goes crazy, all of us might go crazy. Who knows what happens if one of us gets caught and tortured.”
“So some kind of … organic backup?”
“Yeah, somehow. Especially if one of us leaves the range of the Hive Mind and comes back all fucked up.”
“That’s a pretty important idea, actually.”
“See?”
A collective humming agreement followed.
“Okay, War plus Information, then.”
“Agreed,” the other nine said.
“Now that we have positions to fill, who wants what?”
A moment of silence.
“Well since no one is stepping up, let’s just do role of creation, top to bottom.”
“It’s as good as idea as any. Okay. You all have your roles now, let’s introduce ourselves with our new serial code, name, and job.”
“Guess I’ll start then,” one of them said, standing up. “Wait, are we doing greater number or first position?”
“Uhhh considering our number might only increase, probably greater number.”
“Alright, then I’m A10-Aegis, War and Information.” She sat down, then the next stood up.
“Wait are we doing mythological names now?” she asked, looking over at Aegis, who shrugged.
“Sword or shield, shield is way more useful. Plus everyone knows what the Aegis is.”
“What am I supposed to be then?!”
“Medusa? Or a Gorgon?”
Letting out a despondent sigh, she said, “Guess I’m A9-Medusa, War and Information.”
“Okay, we got the mythology twins over there. I’ll be A8-Reaper, Farming and Hive Growth.”
“Reaper, really?” Aegis asked dryly.
“Miss every shot you don’t take.”
“No, it just doesn’t sound sexy to read at all.”
“Mmm, shit, you’re right. What about Venus?”
“I’ll allow it but no more mythology,” the one who will eventually become A1 said.
“Fine, fine, I’m A8-Venus, Farming and Hive Growth.”
“I’ll be A7-Aphora, Farming and Hive Growth.”
“Hah, I get it!” Medusa called out.
“I’m A6-Cypher, Research and Development.”
“A5-Iris, Research and Development.”
“Look at these two joys over here,” Venus remarked dryly.
“Are you bullying me? Am I bullying myself now?”
“I don’t know, why don’t you research it?”
Cypher’s lips pursed together quite sourly as the others chortled at the table.
“Moving along on that one, I’ll be A4-Abyssa, Logistics and Maintenance.”
“Darn that’s a good name.”
“I know, right?”
“Then I’m A3-Corena, Logistics and Maintenance.”
“Ehhh …” the others kind of hemmed and hawed, much to Corena’s choking disbelief.
“Guess that makes me A2-Weaver, Mining and Manufacturing.”
“Tsugumi will kill you if she hears that,” Iris remarked.
“Or bang me!”
“Since the running theme is stupid names, I’ll be A1-Steak Sauce—”
“No!” the other nine shouted at once, much to A1’s laughter.
“Fine, A1-Prime, Mining and Manufacturing.”
“Shouldn’t that be A0’s name?”
“We don’t talk about her.”
“But …”
“Not yet.”
“Fine, alright.”
“Right, now that this is all done,” Aegis said, then clapped her hands. “Lets get to work.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.6) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Interested Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Curious Magi
Chapter 27: Elaborate Moving
Chapter Text
Animals live and die, drawn to the strengths that survive. Weapons are created to kill.
*~*
The slurping suck followed the flesh door opening. Avaron, or A1-Prime, as this one was known by, stepped through. She found herself rather impressed at the sight that greeted her. A cylindrical room stretched ahead, lined with a rib-cage of structural supports. Between these ribs laid benches, shelves, and even more surprisingly, large glass-like containers. Filled with a suspicious looking blue liquid—their own blood, her mind helpfully added—she could see some body parts and organs floating inside them. A webwork of veins and smaller manipulator tentacles connected or moved them, living specimens in half-formed states of work.
Prime let out a whistle, the door sliding shut behind her. (You worked damn fast in two weeks,) she ‘said’, her mental voice carrying across the Hive Mind. It felt more like a warehouse than a room in all honesty. “How the fuck did you do this?”
(Weaver and Aphora,) Cypher shouted from the far end of the lab. The slap-slap-slap of naked feet punctuated the otherwise still air, the naked Avaron approaching Prime. (You know we’re sharing the same mind, you don’t need to be here in person.)
(It’s best if we don’t overload anything. It was already enough of a problem when Venus tried pitching a ride on Medusa while she fucked Tsugumi.)
(Ehh, fair enough,) Cypher said with a shrug. (We’ll do it normally for now, then. Come along.)
The two of them went over to a space in the middle of the lab, where a ring-like cage awaited. Within it sat a tentacleling, or at least what might’ve been one once upon a time. Prime let out a whistle. (It’s the size of an SUV. How’d you get it this big?)
(My rebuilding the whole idea from the ground up,) Cypher said, rolling her shoulders to stretch her neck. (Such a pain to do. All the muscles, veins, heart, organs … everything needs to be different the bigger it gets. And the smaller, for that matter.) She jerked a thumb at the creature. (It looks like a tentacleling but everything under the hood is way fuckin’ different.)
(It’s quite impressive nonetheless.)
(I don’t need the pat on the back, boss,) Cypher remarked dryly. (Two weeks of nothing but digging through DNA, genes, and every other building block of life. Ughghghg, I close my eyes and I see protein chains still. Anyway, here’s the run down …)
The SUV tentacleling had been built for combat, and so had much stronger chitin, more powerful muscles, and redefined sloping. In an awkward fusion of post-gun armor design and natural-grown organics, it had sharp and sweeping angles to deflect incoming attacks. The thicker plating in turn deterred attacks that would penetrate, meaning the amount of force one needed to break through became quite comical. Its ‘head’ had recessed further into the torso, similarly armed with a more fearsome bite.
What really caught Prime’s attention were the forelegs, the most useful of the worker tentacleling’s appendages. (Why did you make them so much larger?)
(Eh? Ah, that. A couple reasons, but here, watch—)
The large tentacleling stood up, accompanied by a rhythmic thump of its eight feet. As it came to a rest, the difference in its posture stood out. The torso and its larger abdomen were on level with its oversized legs, which looked very much like tower-shields all of a sudden. Its front legs were especially taller and thicker, enough that Prime couldn’t see past them and most of the creature’s body anymore. (Natural shields,) she said appraisingly.
(That, and they double as blunt weapons. The two front legs can come down and crush a boulder of equal size. I have no idea how that’ll work in combat, but …)
(A much harder target than people.)
(Yeah. It also makes them a bit useful for heavy duty mining, since Abyssa was complaining about it.)
Prime frowned at hearing that. (It’s supposed to be a pure warrior, not a worker.)
Cypher scratched the back of her head. (Yeaaah, about that. Suffice to say this thing is a tiny tank, and it eats food like a monster. The problem is, it’s all stop-gap solutions.) With a theatrical wave of her hand, the heavy tentacleling sat back down again to rest. (I did a lot of what we already had, and fixed up the problems to make it work. It’ll help the Hive in the interim, but it’s a prototype at best.)
(I’m understanding that now. Do you have anything about the pure warrior?)
(… Yeah, at the back over here.)
Their next stop was a much larger liquid tank, one built with sturdier white-porcelain hive plating. Prime quite liked how the glass, as it were, was actually many layers of thin, semi-translucent silicate. Close, but not quite to the proper stuff, just grown on an organic frame. The hexagonal pattern looked rather sci-fi to her, minus the very obvious organic nature of it all. Cypher stepped up alongside of it, tapping a knuckle in the tank.
(Here she is, or the first parts of her, at least.)
(Just the organs?)
(Yeah. I’ve been playing with Gwyneth’s gene contribution. There’s a lot of common overlap with Tsugumi’s, but the differences start stacking up the more I build.)
(How so?)
(Remember that National Geographic documentary? The cheetahs and elephants one.)
Prime scrunched her face for a moment. (Somewhat, yes.)
(Common genetics being what they are, the specialties really start to stand out. Tsugumi’s kind just does not have the raw endurance humans do,) Cypher said before letting out a sigh. She aimlessly pointed from organ to another, a half-formed arm that was some bizarre fusion of chitin and flesh, an eye with seven pupils, and so on. There was no real rhyme or reason to the body parts, it didn’t even resemble a creature at all. (Right now I’m figuring out where to splice together new genes. The overall creature will probably be humanoid, though.)
(How come?)
(Completely different kinetics, physical performance profile, versatility … it’s ideal for an all-purpose fighter. The spider tentacles will most likely get converted into living vehicles; battering rams, gun carriers, that sort of thing.) Cypher stepped away from the liquid tank, moving to beside Prime. (More than likely there’s hardly going to be any roads. Dirt, maybe some stone ones for big cities, but nothing like asphalt or even concrete. Whatever they’re gonna lack in speed or physical profile, they’ll make up for in actually being able to work.)
(That makes sense, but I imagine we’ll need to do field testing.)
(Oh, it all needs testing. Half this shit is gonna break down the second it leaves life support.) As if realizing something, Cypher clapped her hands together. (That reminds me! I do have something to show.)
Prime, ushered along by Cypher, found herself in the middle of the laboratory, opposite of the heavy worker tentacle’s pen. A similar pen awaited, but this one marked by a crooked, tree-like growth in the center. Prime stared upon the creature sitting on a branch. Ostensibly a bird, like the others it had a white-porcelain look to it, but much softer and befitting of its many feathers. Larger than a big dog, it stretched its wings wide upon her inspection, revealing its monstrous underbelly. A dozen different eyeballs were strewn across its entire torso, looking every direction, always moving and squinting, taking what ever they could.
(What … is this?) Prime asked, squinting.
(One of the younglings ate a raven … or a crow, or something a week ago. I was picking through its DNA when an idea struck me,) Cypher said, holding up a hand to the bird tentacle. It extended its tentacly-head, opening its beak-like mouth to nibble. Somewhere between a bird and a shark’s mouth, something horribly unimaginable to find in nature normally. (You know how much fun there was with the drones? The robot drones, not the—)
(I get it. When I—we, technically, started putting them out around the warehouses.)
(Yup, same idea. Welcome to generation one surveillance drones,) Cypher declared, patting the head of the bird tentacle. (I call them Skeyes.)
(Really.)
(Works, doesn’t it?)
Prime rubbed the bridge of her nose, sighing. (What does it do?)
(Bird eyes are basically nature’s binoculars. There’s nothing really special, a single one can actively look around with about fourteen eyes. The rest is whatever you’re up to ordering it to do. I’m sure Aegis and Medusa will love them.) Cypher made a shooing motion and the skeye retracted, folding up its wings around itself to rest again. (To be honest, it was really easy to work on. The only thing it needs to do is fly, maintain height, and keep its eyes working. Compared to the war form back there, it was a piece of cake.)
(War form?)
(Working name.)
(What’s the big girl then?)
(Ehhh, crusher or something.)
Prime smacked Cypher upside the head.
*~*
Nuala, sitting within her private tent, stared at her magic mirror. For a brief moment, she thought madness had finally overtaken her, and so sought out the artifact. A simple thing of silver, lined with jade gems, the true treasure was the crystal pane. An ideal conductor for magic, and one that vastly amplified her magical sight to see better.
And yet, she still saw two of them.
How? she thought, gripping the mirror hard enough any other kind would’ve shattered. How is there two of her? That’s impossible!
It had been quite odd how Avaron suddenly became difficult to meet. The heroine showed up quite often around Tsugumi or Gwyneth, but otherwise disappeared into her underground lair. A rather expansive and growing layer at that, Nuala couldn’t just skip around in it without losing her sense of direction at all. The fact the whole thing was alive made it even harder to find her. Life, after all, lit up her life detection magic.
And the whole lair was alive.
Such a frustrating problem.
Then she finally finds Avaron, and there are two of them? The room there in certainly looked odd—some inordinately enormous alchemy room. The vials, beakers, and enormous glass tanks were full of strange liquids. Even more disgusting were the body parts inside them! She could hardly name half of them, let alone the rest. Are they not talking? Nuala wondered, angling her view around the two Avarons. The sound reading of her magic certainly worked, nothing at all about it was wrong.
But the two of them were looking and gesturing as if they spoke.
She even watched their lips, and not once had they moved except to sigh! Reveal your secrets! Nuala all but wanted to shout out. The two went around the room, continuing on in their nonsensical gestures and unheard conversation. The newer tentacle-like creatures she saw left her in disbelief. What is this place? It wasn’t here last time I checked …
For that matter, Avaron’s living lair had been much smaller a few weeks ago. Its sudden and incredible increase down into the earth hadn’t been clear until yesterday. Something must’ve happened, and two Avarons definitely made that obvious. Yet in her efforts to determine if something magical was at the roots of it, nothing came up. The whole area ever remained in harmony, if a bit fuller of life than previously. Letting go of the mirror, it hovered in the air as Nuala dragged her richly decorated, jeweled fingers down her face. Is this a tentradom [Ability]? I have never heard nor seen it, least of all in other tentradom nests.
So many questions, and so many more possibilities she hadn’t a clue where to start with.
I cannot let this grow out of control. I need more wards.
Tahn’s involvement or not, she had a duty to protect Alva Forest. A tentradom might consume everything if left unchecked.
Wait.
Tsugumi’s words came back to mind, and Nuala’s eyes narrowed dangerously. Mind magic. The two Avarons might be using it to speak? How did I not detect it? She was not so amateurish as to overlook it, either. Detection spells were only as great as the one who casted them, and she had much to her millennia-long life. Excusing for a moment that problem, it did nothing to answer a second Avaron showing up.
For as endlessly frustrating and dangerous it all turned out to be, Nuala couldn’t help nibbling her lip. Angling closer to the mirror, she drank in every sight her magic showed, all sorts of questions circling her mind. How did those new tentacle creatures come into existence? Why were there vats full of body parts? How did the whole place get made in the first place? Nevermind the obvious of two Avarons and their apparent mind magic, either. So many questions, such a vast and tempting unknown before her.
Divine heroines were nothing special to her; Nuala reached through the library that was her own mind. She’d met dozens of all kinds over time, but all of them fit into very predictable patterns. Those who accepted their fate or rejected it; those who took to the blade, bow, shield, or other martial weapons. Once she saw a few defining points, the rest of the heroine always became that much easier to figure out.
Not Avaron.
The woman-creature had a mannerism to her that defied expectation. Not a whimpering child, nor self-righteous fighter. She had a plan, and all sorts of unknowable knowledge to make it happen. The knowledge of another world and all its mysterious history.
Nuala let out a growling moan, squeezing herself tight and clawing at her face.
I could learn a thousand years from just her!
If the tentradom hadn’t already utilized mind magic, she might dare ripping it out herself. Alas, someone with that kind of capability would destroy themselves first. Killing them and no knowledge to be gained; there were simpler ways to do that. No, if she wanted Avaron’s knowledge, she needed another way to get to it. Something that would ensure all those wonderful secrets would be hers.
And so Nuala thought, long and hard, watching Avaron all the while.
*~*
It was funny how mundane it all felt. The horse beneath her, the rattling of armor both her own and others, the hot air, the wind that blissfully blew …
If one took the day for what it was and nothing else, just another day out on an excursion.
No matter how she tried to frame it, Arzha could not escape the dark clouds upon her. She and the rest of her Snowflake Knights continued on, accompanied by a fair couple dozen servants and porters. Their small caravan had been dressed in the greens and reds of the Holminster Company, a modest trade organization she’d long held control over. At the least, having business in many neighboring countries, they would not be immediately signaled out by the invading armies. Of course, that mattered little to those seeking riches, pillaging and raping as they pleased.
She could only hope their fortunes were just good enough.
For whatever good that counted for anymore.
Hands upon the horse’s reins, her gloves tightened, fists far too sore to continue white-knuckling as they had been. All the same her anger remained, the rage and nerve-wracking convulsions that left her light headed and ill in the stomach. Arzha reached up and scratched her makeup-free face, eyes sunken and visage terribly taut from sleepless nights. From the corner of her eye she caught Saryl coming closer, her own tired but worry-stricken face all too obvious.
“Your Highness …” Saryl started, but whatever nerve she worked up had evaporated.
“What?” Arzha said, the snappish bite even obvious to her. Saryl hardly flinched at it.
“There’s a spring nearby we need to rest at.”
“Very well. The usual watch and guard rotation.”
“Certainly.”
They all pulled up near in a reasonably clear area, trees offering cover in the sparse forest they moved through. Much of the way to the northeast, depending on the route, was grasslands or heavily forested areas. They’d snuck through the latter, until they were far enough away from the capital to afford the former. The signs of passing armies were everywhere, for so many soldiers and their supplies left long-lasting scars in the earth.
A constant, careful maneuvering around invisible enemies.
Arzha hadn’t gotten such scarce sleep since the fortress siege she was caught up in a few years ago. A proxy army attacking their allies in the south had meant to punch a hole in the line. Two whole months of blockading, catapults, sappers, and so much more. At least she hadn’t need deal with the stench of people trapped in a rock tomb.
Sitting on a crate of supplies, Arzha cradled her head in her hands, trying to find a moment of quiet for herself. Such were the whispers of her own mind she couldn’t help pulling up and looking at her hands. Powerful hands, well-kept though no one could see it in her gloves. With the right weapons she’d be a living weapon, fearsome enough to make an army pause. Indeed, her’s was the sword that would keep Artor safe and victorious.
And she could only walk away.
Her father was right, it was the smart move to make.
It didn’t keep the ulcer-forming acid in her stomach down any easier.
Approaching footsteps made her draw up properly, and she saw Haleen with two mugs in her hands. One was held in a silent offer, and Arzha took it. A simple tea drink, barely at all tasteful but enough to distract her mind. Refreshing warmth filled her already hot and sweaty body, the aches of constant moving all the more apparent.
“My lady …”
“What is it?” Arzha said, more controlled in tone.
“Forgive my insolence, but I still cannot support this idea.”
“I do not blame you.”
“Bringing these items with us to that … creature, it is …” Haleen, ever obedient, had trouble voicing her dissent against Arzha sometimes. In the wake of their entire kingdom crumbling, she came off as even more uncertain of her footing. The princess held up her hand, and as a dog would, Haleen bowed her head into it. Rub and pet; a simple, reassuring gesture.
“It was not my first choice, but it is the best among them,” Arzha said. “For how ever many cousins or families-in-law I may have, us and our artifacts will be cut up and sold like meat. At the least, even if Avaron does not want them, we can hand them over to the elvetahn.”
“To surrender the pride of our kingdom, though …” Haleen grumbled, utterly sour in the face.
“It is a burden I will bear, but all the better that none be allowed to use them. In this, our honor is kept even if no one is left to remember.”
They were all knights; their destiny was to protect Artor to the bitter end. But above all else, they served her, the first princess, and she had a noble duty to fulfill. Even if she, like them, belonged at the forefront of a hopeless battlefield.
In the end, everything that happened did so because she had been too weak to stop it.
And that fact would never change.
For better or worse, their journey to the northeast proceeded onward. Day and night, week after week, they moved and ate on the go, barely at all resting. The serving girls and boys loyal to Arzha, unused to such hardships, slowed them down the most. Still, she did what she could to keep their spirits going. Perhaps the goddesses were kind, at least enough to leave their journey uneventful. They ran across kagr roaming around, which was quite an odd sight in the woodlands to see, but nothing else.
Thanks to Avaron’s letter, she had a decent idea where the tentradom had setup shop. The river they now followed headed toward the ending reaches of a mountain range, straddling the border between the elvetahn’s Alva Forest and the northeastern-most human queendoms. Something of a wild land, it acted as a natural barrier between the two so not accidental contact happened. None dare offend the elvetahn, save the Empire and its overly ambitious aims. For a war that was supposedly going on so fearsomely, she hadn’t seen much evidence of it.
In all likelihood, it was farther away, though Arzha had no idea if it was deeper within the Alva Forest or the Empire.
A whistling sound ripped her back to reality, the distinctive noise of an arrow. It shot into the ground in front of her, the leader of the caravan, gleaming with a distinctive silver polish and opulent, iridescent feathers. She threw up a hand immediately, ordering a halt with her unspoken-for fist.
An arrow of a queen’s guard—the elvetahn queen’s!
What in the world?
Straddling the edge of a forest, there were few trees to hide in nearby, but she had no doubt that many elvetahn awaited within.
“What is your business?!” a boyish sounding voice came from the trees, hardened with experience such a sound shouldn’t have.
At the least, Arzha had a direction to shout in. “I am Princess Arzha of Artor, come to meet the woman Avaron who lives in a cave nearby!”
Her words hung in the air.
“You will wait there,” the hidden elvetahn said.
“So it is heard,” Arzha returned. Turning over her shoulder, she nodded to her knights and servants, who made themselves comfortable waiting on the spot. Try as Arzha might in the interim, she couldn’t see any of the elvetahn undoubtedly still around them. Whether through magic or skill, their reputation for being unseen in their forest was markedly deserved.
Movement from ahead caught her eyes, a bewildering sight skittering into view. An enormous, spider-like creature walked across the soft-dirt of the river bank, flanked by the opulently armored elvetahn guards. For what beauty they had, she found herself more concerned by the porcelain-like creature that dwarfed them! It made even her horses seem small by comparison! The closer it came, the better she saw its natural armor, finer in its smoothness and sharp curves than any plate mail she’d worn before.
“Oh, princess Arzha!” came a familiar voice from atop the massive creature. Avaron popped up, quite evidently riding atop the spider. “Fancy seeing you here!”
“You keep the oddest company, Avaron,” Arzha returned, having trouble believing what she was seeing.
“Oh you know, things happened. You look like hell worn over.”
“I do not know of this hell you speak of, but the journey here was not easy if that is what you mean.”
“Yeah, that. Captain, it’s not a problem if she and hers decide to stay here.”
A man beside Avaron nodded, his whole body shrouded in splendorous armor. “I understand. Princess Arzha, forgive the rudeness, but we will need to inspect you and yours thoroughly.”
“If it is the Queen’s guard who needs do so, I shall be glad for such experienced supervision. Know that the wagons behind us contain powerful artifacts of Artor, from the King’s Vault itself.”
“I must ask why you transport such dangerous items here.”
Arzha paused for a moment, the answer simple to say, but each word heavy like iron upon her tongue. “Artor has fallen; our neighbors invade and plunder our kingdom to the grave.” She smiled ruefully. “As First Princess, it fell to me by my father, the King, to see these artifacts spirited to safety. I am hopeful your graceful queen may accept them.”
“I cannot speak for Her Majesty, but I shall convey your wishes to her personally. Please, accompany me as we inspect these artifacts for Her safety.”
“I understand.”
*~*
Arzha knew she was in an inn, even if she didn’t know the exact style of it. Sharply defined spaces accentuated by curves, pristine, fresh oak-wood punctuated by light-green paper colored walls. It felt odd, like a mixing of two opposing forces into one queer harmony. The half-sunken tables and seats into the ground were definitely an eastern style of Kitinchi. She’d dealt with such once before, but seeing and sitting in it here had been most unexpected.
“Your meal,” the high-pitched voice of the inn’s keeper drew Arzha from her stupor. Dressed in the full-bodied cloth of Kitinchi, the white fabric was adorned in wonderful blue and red flowers, quite stark next to her lilac-colored skin. The tora woman easily set down three trays, containing bowls of soup, plates of thinly cut meat, and even … worms? No, noodles, they were noodles—another northeastern dish.
“Thank you,” Arzha said, bowing her head.
Really, the whole situation was just … odd.
Opposite of her sat Avaron in a sheer, but opaque elvetahn-styled dress. She looked no worse for wear, even expectant of the food.
To her left, however, sat a living legend. The ethereally beautiful elvetahn queen herself, Efval Gladestride, adorned in a blooming dress. The yellow petals surrounded her shoulders and dipped down her chest, grandly open in their inviting offer to gaze upon the queen’s pristine skin. A hint of modesty came in how they curved down her breasts, perfectly sculpting them in a plump, upward offering that anyone looking at would be compelled to touch. Or bury their face in. All this, to speak nothing of her smooth hair falling down either side of that fearsomely sharp face.
Arzha had been around beautiful women all her life—human women.
The queen was a world of her own, and Arzha feared she would stare too much and offend her.
Efval Gladestride, legendary queen of the elvetahn. Direct descendent of their own goddesses, and a warrior who had out lived more queendoms than Arzha could be bothered to name.
What was this table? What in the world was going on anymore?
“Thank you, Tsugumi,” Avaron said, flashing a smile at the tora hostess.
“Please, enjoy,” the tora, Tsugumi, said with a smile, her pronounced fangs quite at odds with her curling lips. With a bow, she stood up properly and shuffled away, her sandals inordinately loud in the deathly quiet air around them.
“I do love her cooking. She and Gwyneth have the oddest recipes but they always taste good,” Avaron gushed immediately, picking up a pair of sticks. Very smooth, neatly cut and obvious made sticks, but sticks nonetheless. Arzha had no idea how she handled them so deftly, moving meat from one plate to the noodles’ bowl. “Now I think it’s a bit too early to be drinking alcohol, but if you two want some …”
“I shall decline,” Efval said, polite in tone if not face. She was not one to smile at all, not even for conversational sake it seemed.
“I as well,” Arzha said.
“Fair enough. I really do need to make something better than just booze to drink. Never thought I’d miss soda of all things …”
“Soda?” Efval echoed, shapely brow curling upward.
“It’s—I don’t know how to describe it, actually. It’s a fizzy drink that’s sweet and has a lot of flavors. Much more fun than water without the problems of booze.”
“Sugar would certainly make it more expensive,” Arzha pointed out, much to Avaron’s sudden pause and look of realization.
“Oh, you’re right. Sugar is probably quite rare in this world still?”
Arzha and Efval nodded.
“Well, that’s an easy problem to fix at least.”
“… How do you mean?” Arzha couldn’t help asking.
“I know of some ways to make sugar cheaply, is all. Come to think of it that will make desserts much easier to make as well.”
“Were you in Artor, those words alone would throw all the merchants upside down,” Arzha said dryly.
“Life’s funny like that. Let’s eat a bit here.”
Both Efval and her used much more normal spoons and forks, delicately setting about their own food. Avaron, by comparison, started eating without any sense of proper manners. It wasn’t disgusting, but in the realm of courtly behaviors it was deserving of slaps from the discipline stick. But, if the queen did not claim, Arzha would not say a word about it. The food tasted different—wonderful in a way of eating something solid, covered in exotic flavors she wasn’t quite ready to contend with.
It offered a moment of reprieve, something to busy her mind on and shut out the world for a minute.
That, by far, was the most relaxing time she’d had in weeks. A shivering relief crept through her whole being, an ease of finally letting the tensions bleed out. Perhaps her sighing would’ve been improper to do, but Arzha indulged in her selfish desires just this once. Well, and the other times too, but she was eating at a queen’s table. Did it really matter anymore, when she had no kingdom to inherit? No throne awaiting her beautiful butt?
Ah, her frustrations were returning again.
“I was told of what you said, but I rather hear the words for you,” Efval said, setting down a soup bowl as she regarded Arzha. “About the fate of Artor, that is.”
“I understand. To give Your Majesty context, then …” Arzha started recounting from around the time of the heroines’ summoning, painting the very nervous behavior of their fellow queendoms. In a way, summarizing the most stressful moments of her life so succinctly really did sound surreal. Yet nonetheless she kept on, detailing her brother’s moronic regicide and up to the full-scale mobilization of their neighbors. “… and finally, my father, the King, ordered me to flee with our kingdom’s relics.”
“It is odd to me that I am the first one you consider giving them to,” Efval said.
“In utter fairness, Your Majesty, I considered Avaron first, for a divine heroine may find best use for them. In lieu of that, I believed the noble elvetahn to be best to safe guarding them from improper usage.”
“Knowing that even we, amidst our own war against a human empire?”
“The Empire’s odd behavior only tells me if sudden and dramatic problems within it. The emperor’s family was not so brutish when I studied there.”
“You studied in the Empire?” Avaron asked, cutting in.
“Indeed. They have—or had, at least—some of the finest schools to attend. A sentiment I can only agree with, for even in Artor, our education was quite poor by comparison.”
“Did you happen to meet the Emperor or anyone else?”
Arzha shook her head. “Although I met many children of nobility, they left to meet their families. Not much happened in the Academy otherwise.”
“Mm, interesting. Then, you have no clue as to why the Empire suddenly began its offensive?”
“I do not. It has always felt … strange. Although ruled by an iron-hand, the people of the Empire did not care for expansion or anything outside of its borders. If anything, like Artor, it was content to sit idly by and focus internally.”
“That keeps popping up whenever I investigate. How atypical the Empire’s aggression is.” Avaron looked over at Efval. “Based on what you told me about the nagraki, it remains an easy explanation but …”
“I begrudgingly acknowledge it may be simple human tendency as well.” Efval waved a hand dismissively. “More than once a peaceful land has turned to war because of a new leader. You cannot deny their aggression toward us—and the great overreaching they did—is not telling.”
“No, I agree. The nagraki would want to remove their greatest enemy first.”
“Until my spies uncover more, we remain where we are.”
“Forgive my ignorance, I do not know of these nagraki you speak of,” Arzha said, making Avaron do a double-take.
“Ah, right, sorry. They’re a super ancient race of dark and evil beings—”
“They are not dark,” Efval cut in.
“I’m sorry?”
“They are neither of the light nor dark. The nagraki arise from naki, the essence of their evil god.”
“I’m not seeing what the difference is here.”
“All life has its roots in the essences, of which light and dark are apart of. The naki is an invasive essence, from which nagraki are born of. It is not a natural thing in our world.”
Avaron squinted, brow furrowing. “Where did it come from, then?”
“Haska. Where Haska came from, not even we know.”
“… I see.”
Arzha sat up a bit. “And these nagraki you speak of, they are enemies of the elvetahn?”
Efval gave the slightest, regal nod. “Yes, our oldest of enemies since when we first became elvetahn. They seek to make our world theirs, utilizing corruption and vile magic. It is often their trickery to assume other forms, influence vulnerable minds, and manipulate people into a weaker, more controllable position.”
Never had Arzha heard of such beings, and the queen of the elvetahn was no liar or fool. Not unless the world truly made no sense at all anymore. Yet, if she took it utmost seriously, a disturbing number of things started clicking into place.
Like a puzzle missing a part she didn’t know was gone.
Holding a hand to her chin, she thought deeply on the matter.
“Princess Arzha, what weighs upon your mind?” Efval asked, her voice unyielding in its expectation.
“My brother, who committed regicide, remained missing even as I left.” Arzha looked up, regarding the queen. “What if it wasn’t him who did so?”
“You presume a nagraki impersonated him?”
“If these creatures had a goal to tear down Artor, they surely succeeded in doing so.”
“Forgive the undue harshness of my question,” Avaron said, “but if they wanted to, what would be the point? What is there to gain from destroying Artor?”
“We are the greatest human kingdom outside of the Empire,” Arzha said, no small amount of pride in her voice. “It is we who keep the peace and balance in our neighbors, so that no more wars have come.”
“Ah, then that makes you a perfect target.”
“Quite.”
“If the Empire is a thrall, then all the more,” Efval added, headed tilted as she held her chin contemplatively. “It would ensure any westward invasion would be that much easier. In the nagraki’s spitting-drool desire for domination, it fits their behavior quite well.”
“Ah, hold on, let’s eat some more. Tsugumi will kill me if we waste her cooking,” Avaron said hurriedly, already going to eat again.
Arzha, rather caught off by the suddenness of the suggestion, slowly nodded and resumed. A calm, quiet eating followed, until Avaron started slurping up the noodles. Like actually slurping. Loud, noisy slurping. In front of a princess; a queen of ageless wisdom, power, and beauty. They both stared at the tentradom, who looked up, noodles hanging out of her mouth like strands of rope. She hurriedly bit of and swallowed what she had, letting the rest back in the bowl.
“Ahm rught, huld on,” she said through a mouthful of a food before swallowing. “It’s considered good manners to slurp noodles, I’ll have you know.”
Neither she nor Efval looked at all believing of the idea.
“I’m serious! I’m not that thoughtlessly braindead, thanks!” Avaron chirped with indignation.
“Heh.” Arzha shook her head, finding contentment in just eating for the time being.
Later, when they’d eaten most of everything, Efval spoke up first. “In handing over your kingdom’s relics to me, you understand all claims upon them will be forfeit.”
“I do not have the means to protect them,” Arzha said simply. “At the least, this ensures the honor of our kingdom is safe in some way. Knowing now of these nagraki creatures, it does not escape me that perhaps they sought out some of them.”
“… Indeed, that thought occurred to me as well. Then, I shall accept all relics you relinquish to me, on behalf of the elvetahn.”
Arzha bowed her head. “I thank Her Majesty for accepting this burden.”
“We will all become comrades in arms once again, I suspect,” Efval said before taking a sip of her drink. “The return of the nagraki, a highborn nonetheless, heralds a new age. They will wage war upon our world once more.”
Arzha shifted uneasily upon her seat, but courage was ever in her reach. “Forgive my impudence beneath your unfathomable skill, but I want to be of assistance in this. It is my honor to fight those who brought my kingdom to ruin.”
“Mm.” Efval, inscrutable in her look, gazed upon Arzha. Whether for appraisal or something else, the princess was not certain. The queen then turned toward Avaron. “Surprisingly, it would be useful to me if the princess were to help you, Avaron.”
“Oh?” Avaron returned, sounding utterly suspicious. Whether of Arzha or Efval, no one could tell. “I had meant to lend her lodgings to repay my debt, but what gives you such confidence?”
“She is not incapable, and I will be taking Nuala with me for the winter months. You are in need of some guard before I return in the spring.”
“What a glowing review,” Avaron deadpanned, but nonetheless nodded.
Arzha, caught between queer jubilance at such praise and Avaron’s own brutish behavior, sat there stupid for a moment. She was nothing if not quick to recover. “I thank Her Majesty. I shall do my utmost to ensure Avaron’s protection until your return.”
It is also an opportunity for much needed rest and assessment, she thought, already working out what to do for the upcoming months. Although I will not hear much out here. If I increase trade to that nearby town, then I will still have ears …
“Ah, well, so be it. It’d would’ve been nicer for you to visit under better circumstances, princess Arzha,” Avaron said, a bit sheepish. “I’ll do my best to accommodate.”
“I thank you, Avaron.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.6) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Refugee Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.15) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Desperate Magi
Chapter 28: Level Up Schemes
Chapter Text
Growth can be measured in any number of ways.
*~*
Staring up at the dimly lit ceiling, Avaron let out a long, deflating sigh. A giggle sounded from her right, and a naked, scar-ridden body squeezed into her. That Gwyneth’s pregnant belly forced her angle to change did little to impede the lascivious cuddling she did. In the same stroke, the naked Tsugumi squirmed in closer, and Avaron found herself half-buried under squirming, lustful beauties who were doing the very opposite thing of trying to ‘rest’.
“You two,” she growled and grabbed their butts from underneath, squeezing heartily much to their happy little gasps and jerks. “You still want more?”
“Maybe,” Tsugumi enthused with a sidelong glance from some of her eyes.
“If thou wisheth,” Gwyneth echoed, rubbing her fingers in a tempting circle around Avaron’s breast.
It’s not like I can’t keep going, and that’s the scary part, Avaron mused. Her fleshy bed was strewn in puddles and strands of still-warm cum, Gwyneth and Tsugumi as well half-plastered in the stuff. Neither one could move without a little airy gasp and a squirt out between their legs, a river of flowing stickiness gushing out gently. Ah, stop moving like that! she wanted to say as her two mates kept rubbing up against her. Fuck, it distracted her something fierce.
“Give me a few minutes then,” Avaron said with a chuckle.
“Is the divine heroine tired?” Tsugumi whispered with far too much smugness in her voice. A squealing chirp escaped her at the sudden, gentle slap on her butt, and she stared at Avaron bug-eyed for a moment.
“Don’t even joke about that,” Avaron grumbled, one eye watching her lazily. “I’ll wear you out before I’m done.”
“Is that true?” Gwyneth asked shyly.
“Not you too.”
“I-if thou does not mind …”
What a problem to have, two insatiable beauties. If she had still been human it might actually have been an issue. Avaron rolled her eyes. “I don’t mind. Any time, any where. More importantly, I think I leveled up again.”
“Thou leveled up from …?”
“It’s what my kind does.”
“Oh. Interesting!” Gwyneth’s cute little exclamation followed her excited wiggling.
She really was just adorable in her enthusiasm. Ah, Avaron was thinking about those little squeaks from fucking her again. “Okay, okay,” she said, raising her hands and rubbing both their heads. “Give me a minute to see what is different.”
They both grumbled but, laying on her body and groping, they were content to be little perverts still.
Now, howse it going, info-screen I haven’t seen in a dozen chapters … Oh, I’m level 4 now. I jumped straight up two whole levels, how did that happen? No, wait, I knocked them up three times in total … huh. Every time she knocked up someone, her level went up? No, that would’ve ridiculous. Maybe it was an early starter bonus? Or everything else she’d been doing in the interim helped as well. Whatever. Two level ups is a great opportunity. Hey, everyone, get in here!
The weight of other minds suddenly pressed in, oogling her thoughts and senses as she did theirs.
(What is it, Medusa?) Iris asked the thoughts the other eight shared.
(Level up time, let’s see how it works with all of us.)
(It says I have two level ups waiting here,) remarked Weaver. The others affirmed the same.
(Then shall I do it, or one of you?) Prime asked.
(Let me do it,) Cypher said. (If it doesn’t share out evenly, I can make use of at least one of the attributes.)
(Alright. Magic, isn’t it?)
(Magic.)
(Go ahead and bump it up with one point.)
Medusa watched as her stat screen changed, her magical power raising from ‘nearly nothing’ to ‘a little bit’. All very relative, she had no idea what the stats actually meant still. (I’m seeing a change here.)
(As am I.) They all checked in, confirming the same.
(So we effectively share a single character sheet,) Prime said, followed by a thoughtful hum. (Interesting.)
(Because of our Hive Mind?) Corena asked.
(It is likely.)
(Hey, I’m seeing an upgrade for the Hive Mind skill.)
(… What?) The other nine asked at Iris’ sudden statement.
(There’s two branching options,) Medusa noted, staring at the screen. (You all switch over and look too.)
What awaited read to her eyes quite innocuously.
[Choose the Following Branch to level up your skill, Hive Mind]
[Hive Unity: A portion of the Hive Queen’s skills and attributes is dispersed evenly throughout the Hive.]
[Chosen of the Hive: A single drone may be selected to receive massive increase in power and attributes. This effect cannot be done more than once every few days.]
(This seems like a trap,) Cypher remarked after a brief silence in the Hive Mind.
(How so?) asked Aegis.
(Economies of scale. What good is a single super drone, compared to all our drones becoming stronger?)
(Keep in mind heroines and other wild shit exist in this world,) Abyssa cut in. (Our legions may not be strong enough, even with numbers, to defeat someone truly powerful.)
(That …) Cypher’s sour response petered off.
(I am thinking the Hive Unity branch is better), Medusa offered. (It would help us fight armies and larger groups, which has been our main concern from the start.)
(Hold on. Medusa, asked Tsugumi about branching paths in skills. She might know something,) Prime ordered.
“Hey, Tsu,” Avaron said, breaking the air filled with lovely breathing and squirming flesh.
“Hm?”
“Maybe Gwyneth too. What is a branching path in a skill level up mean?”
Tsugumi jolted and partly picked herself up, staring with incredulity at Avaron. “You have a branching path already?”
“Yeeessss?” Avaron said suspiciously, making all six of Tsugumi’s eyes frown. “There’s two options but I don’t know why they showed up.”
“That is … strange. A branching path is the result of intense training and focus, complete control over a skill. I have never heard of it showing up outside of such endeavors.”
“It isn’t possible for skills to branch natively?”
“I do not know of it.”
“Hmm. Gwyneth?”
“Tis as she says.”
“Alright, thanks. Guess I have to make a choice on it then.”
(So the obvious is, which path can we live with picking?) Prime asked the other nine consciousnesses.
(I think it will be Hive Unity,) Aphora offered.
(Why?)
(Think about it. The Hive Growth is also part of the Hive. If a piece of our skill, [Divine Regeneration], can work for it, and all our drones …)
A rolling wave of realization swept through the Hive Mind.
(Not only is our fighting power increased,) Iris said, (our healthiness, resilience, and everything else is strengthened.)
(Exactly,) Aphora said. (A champion of the Hive is great and all, but it’d be easier for us to deal with that kind of problem differently. Hive Unity takes off all the stress of health management, or at least a lot of it.)
(I’m concerned how much of our power transfers over, exactly,) Venus remarked. (But there’s no way to tell, nor can we see how much ‘massive improvement’ affects a drone, either.)
(A vote then, all for Hive Unity?) Prime asked. Despite the feelings of reservations some of them held, they generally agreed upon, and so Medusa selected the branching path.
(Although I am curious how this is different from just normal gene introduction,) she mused.
(It may not take up space in the DNA and let—) Cypher’s words cut out as a seizure gripped the entirety of the Hive Mind. Every Avaron grit her teeth and winced, a tremendous wave of something passing through them of the utmost discomfort. Medusa herself found a slap to the face and a startling awareness back in the bed, Tsugumi and Gwyneth looking at her.
“What happened?” she said, rubbing her cheek.
“You started trembling and shaking,” Tsugumi said, not at all in the cute fuck-me voice like before.
“Oh. Yeah. I picked that branching path and, fuck. I was not expecting that.”
Tsugumi let out a dramatic sigh. “You idiot. A branching path is a tremendous alignment of one’s internal energy. Some can render you unconscious for days.”
“Oh.”
(Everyone, how is everyone?) Medusa probed. Gradually, the rest of them started coming back into focus. Somewhere between black out drunk and a hangover, none of them felt all that pleasant.
(Ugh, what the fuck?) Weaver groused before the conversation with Tsugumi permeated the Mind. (Oh, that’s why.)
(Guess we’ll need to be careful about this in the future,) Prime mused, sounding tired. (If we go down then the whole Hive may go feral.)
(It doesn’t seem there is anything else for this level up,) Iris interjected.
(Should we do the next one now, then?)
(Might as well,) Abyssa offered.
And so, Medusa went back to the attribute screen. (Resilience still?)
(No, what about strength? The Hive shares in our stats now,) Iris said.
(Hold on, we should figure out how Hive Unity works exactly. That is a good point,) Prime said.
(Fine, you all work on it. I got pussy to eat here,) Medusa grumbled and ‘pulled out’ of the conversation. One could not truly leave it, but as one focused attention elsewhere, tuning out the noise was another matter. It was more a matter of the others not jabbing her mind suddenly than anything. Patting Tsugumi and Gwyneth on the shoulders, she said, “Sorry about that. Looks like I’m around level 4 now.”
“T-truly?!” Gwyneth squeaked, clapping her hands together. “Tis wonderous to become so strong that quick!”
“… Is it?” Avaron asked leerily. “I don’t feel that strong.”
“If you fought someone of appropriate level, it will become obvious,” Tsugumi said, finger-combing her messy hair. “I caution you from speaking of your level casually. It will invite danger.”
“I get it. It’s related to my skills, but have you two gone up in level at all?”
They both paused very much like people focusing on an item of interest. Tsugumi’s brows knitted together as Gwyneth giggled and clapped her hand. “Verily!” she gushed. “I am level 7 now! Oh, there is much for me to do!”
“I am … level 16 now …” Tsugumi said, sounding quite bemused by the idea.
“Isn’t that a good thing?” Avaron asked, only to find Tsugumi suck in a deep breath. The tora turned toward her, six eyes half-lidded but for how tempting of a sight she was, Avaron only felt danger. Two hands slapped down on her shoulders, the other two her arms. “Uhh—”
“Do you know how much I had to work! How much I had to do!” Tsugumi yelled, shaking Avaron like a tree knocker going for apples. “It took me two years to get from 13 to 14! You fuck me and now I’m 16?!?”
Back and forth Avaron shook, slapping against the bedding with wet smacks as her words garbled into nonsense.
“You! What kind of tentacle do you have?! Outrageous! Unfair! Cheater!!”
The two stopped at Gwyneth sudden squeal, an embarrassed noise accompanied by her handing her face in her hands. They looked over, the priestess practically in the middle of a full body blush. “I am not!” she whispered hotly under her breath. The bouncing flame atop her lovely tits sparkled and flared, as if speaking. “Tis not true!” she bit back.
“What’s wrong, Gwyneth?” Avaron asked, hair messy and all over her face.
“A-Avaron, it is not true, right?!”
“The who and the what now?”
“That—that I am, that …” Gwyneth sputtered, wringing her hands together.
“What, pregnant?” Avaron deadpanned, looking at the priestess’ comfortably round belly.
“No! A cum slut!”
“A cum … slut.”
“Pfft.” Tsugumi’s cheeks ballooned. “Did you really get that [Skill]?”
“T-thou knoweth of it!” Gwyneth screeched, pointing accusingly at the tora woman. Tsugumi, however, coolly looked at her own finger nails, suddenly interested in them.
“A skill called [Cum Slut]?” Avaron repeated dubiously, making Gwyneth try and curl up. Being pregnant, she ended up doing an odd curling of the knees and burying her head down between her arms. “Why would that even be a [Skill]?”
“If dear Gwyneth decides to illuminate us to it …” Tsugumi said, her factual voice undermined by the raw teasing it held.
“Noo!” the priestess squeaked, a near full body blush overcoming her.
I’m missing something here, Avaron thought, bemused by the ridiculous scene in front of her. With a dramatic sigh, she grabbed Gwyneth and dragged the curled up woman into her arms. Petting her head and rubbing her arm, she made an effort to comfort Gwyneth. “There there, it’s fine.”
The priestess grumbled and moaned out a whine.
“I don’t think any less of you for having it, if you’re worried about that.”
“Ah—oh, really?” Gwyneth asked lightly.
“No, some women are into that after all,” Avaron said with the utmost polite voice one could have. “Still, I’m rather concerned how it came about.”
“Is it not obvious?” Gwyneth remarked gloomily.
“Is it that important?” Tsugumi asked, which stirred Gwyneth to look up, for however impossible it was to see Avaron holding her.
“Somewhat. I would’ve thought it was a [Skill] I imparted, like [Brood Mother]. But you’ve encountered it before—” Avaron said, eying Tsugumi, “—which means it’s a normal [Skill]. I thought they were important things to gain?”
“They are.”
“Then how is something like [Cum Slut] significant enough to be a skill?”
“That … ehm, quite depends on Gwyneth telling us exactly. I never knew of what it entailed outside the name.”
The priestess grumbled and squirmed in Avaron’s arms, not unlike someone stubbornly refusing to do something. “It would help me, Gwyneth,” Avaron said seriously, rubbing her shoulders.
“Nnn!” Gwyneth growled in her throat, wriggling angrily. “F-fine! But thou cannot laugh at mine expense!”
“I won’t, promise.”
“Then, mine skill says …”
[Cum Slut
You a patron of cum sluttery, finding utmost enjoyment in consuming, wearing, and playing with cum of men and women. Sex starved people will naturally be attracted to you. The less clothes you wear, the more appealing you will become. Imbibing or wearing fresh cum routinely will improve your magical power. The flavor of cum will improve dramatically, be sure to drink lots you slut!]
Avaron sat there, utterly bewildered. “It says all of that?”
Gwyneth nodded demurely.
“What the fuck?” Avaron said, shaking her head. “That hardly makes any sense! How is that a [Skill]?”
“It is most likely the improved magical power and the, erm, seduction aspect,” Tsugumi offered, even her amused teasing sounding a bit stiff.
“Still … that’s … hardly useful?”
“It is, quite for—ehm, whores and the like.”
“This world has magical whores?”
“Although it is not considered a proper magical art, there are a variety of seductive powers out there.” Tsugumi gave Avaron a boring look. “The strongest of which your kind are known to have.”
“That—alright, fair enough.”
“Tis most likely a boon from a goddess of lust and desires,” Gwyneth interjected with a tired voice.
“… Oh really?” Avaron said, eyes narrowing.
“Some divine beings are known to bless mortals, yes,” Tsugumi said in an agreeing tone.
“… What about negative ones?”
“I do not understand?”
“Suppose someone was afflicted with a negative skill,” Avaron said, adjusting her sitting to be more comfortable. “An evil god doing it, or someone suffering the utmost horrible treatment for a long time. Would they get a negative skill from it?”
Tsugumi frowned, seeming quite thoughtful on the matter.
“I know of some curses,” Gwyneth said, becoming a bit more upbeat. “But such afflictions are temporary. A [Skill] that remains harmful to the one who has it is … I have not heard of it.”
“But it’s not impossible, either,” Avaron pointed out. Neither of the two women really disagreed. “That is what concerns me about this system and how it works. For as much as it can help, it seems like it could harm too.”
“It is how life is,” Tsugumi said matter-of-factly.
For you, Avaron wanted to say, but kept the words to herself. But I know better. Shifting her weight, she coughed into her hand politely, staring at Gwyneth from the corner of her eye. “Sooo … I take it you want to suck my tenty a little bit?”
The priestess let out the cutest, frustrated whine—a mix of lighthearted anguish, desire, and begrudging acknowledgement.
*~*
The hot sun overhead shined down brightly, still air and cloudless skies giving that beautiful summer-esque day. A tinge of cold hung nonetheless, a hint of where the weather would go. Avaron found herself rather curious at the idea of approaching winter. Does it snow here? Probably, this environment is pretty temperate.
(Hey, Iris or Cypher) Venus asked.
(What is it?) Iris answered first.
(How resilient are we, and the Hive, to freezing temperatures?)
(The underground portions should be fairly resilient, it’s a self-contained environment. Everything else … I’m not sure. The tentaclelings will probably freeze to death,) Iris said, musingly. (We’re not very insulating, no fur and a lot of exposed muscles. It keeps us cool very easily but almost no heat retention.)
(We should work on that immediately,) Cypher cut in. (It’s a serious weakness.)
(I agree,) Iris and a few others chimed in. (Well, more genome studying then, I guess. I’ll take a look at the wolves and boars we’ve been eating.)
Of course there remained the problem of their farming attempts. They were heading into a freeze and nothing they had would grow, which meant that whole job was on hold. In theory it meant more time for R&D on potential plant crops, but that required live testing—
(I can still do hydroponics down here, you know,) Aphora cut in.
(Not exactly indicative of a workable product though, is it?) Venus shot back.
(Well they’re not going to be normal regardless. We might be doing hydroponic just because it’s crazy efficient.)
(Can we even support something that complex?)
(It’s not actually that complex. The Hive Growth lets us cheat on it anyway.)
(Alright, whatever,) Venus grumbled. (I’ll look at it when I get inside.)
The sound of exertions reached her ears, women grunting and yelling in unison. Avaron looked over, staring down the path of the river. On the one side was Tsugumi’s work-in-progress inn, the other had something of a training field. The elvetahn workers had cleared it out, apparently. It must’ve been quick, the place had been a wild mess yesterday. Something of a bridge spanned the river, a quickly thrown but not inelegant solution spanning the waters. Avaron gave it an eyeful as she approached and stepped over, finding the wood quite smooth, the fitting perfect, and it felt most solid.
Arzha’s seven knights were arrayed before her, dressed in padded clothing and light chain mail. A training attire, perhaps, for Avaron had only ever seen them in their distinctive iron plate mail and its white and blue colors. They were practicing positions and maneuvers with long poles, a seriousness to their faces only soldiers wore easily. How unusual of her, Avaron mused, thinking of Efval at the sight. For one so angry she had surprising cordial behavior yesterday.
Why, she might never know.
It made being around her almost pleasant.
Arzha, who had been coordinating the maneuvers, looked over at her knight’s prompting. Their eyes met—insofar as eyes could at such an inconvenient distance that romantic comedy movies always ignored. Giving some commanding gestures, she then headed over, marching with that formal, dignified posture Avaron remembered seeing months ago. Despite the heaviness to her face, Arzha was quick to bounce back it seemed. Avaron gave a polite wave at her approach.
“Lady Avaron,” Arzha greeted amiably. “How are you on this day?”
“I am doing well. I was going to do a walk around the perimeter, see how things are.”
“I shall accompany you, then,” Arzha declared simply.
“Please, don’t let me interrupt your training.”
“It is no bother.”
Avaron resisted the urge to scratch her head. “Very well. Come along,” she said, beckoning. Together they headed out farther, toward the very distinct perimeter between cleared out land and wild nature. For Avaron, she already knew of the sentinel tentaclelings stationed around, watching and observed like unmoving cameras. There also remained the skeyes above them, a fair few couple dozen flying in large, sweeping patterns. Still, her information network was not perfect—it ever had gaps someone like Kagura could easily slip through.
The main virtue was the fact no one in the world had any idea she had such power. They wouldn’t hide properly from it as a consequence.
But only an idiot didn’t take precautions.
“How are your accommodations?” Avaron asked, looking out into the trees, shrubs, and other foliage.
“Refreshingly welcome. It has been weeks since we had a roof over our heads.”
“Mm. I am sorry you all have to cramp together in the main building like that.”
“It is no trouble,” Arzha said, though Avaron had trouble telling if she was just being polite. “Although I am concerned by one detail.”
Ah, there it is. Avaron looked over. “Oh?”
“That … water fountain, as you called it …” Arzha said, quite obviously choosing her words. “It does not taste like normal water.”
“Mmm, because it is pure.”
“Pure?”
Avaron gestured toward the river behind them. “That water, for the most part, is pretty clean. But it’s still full of things that affect its taste, and may also carry sickness. Not as much as others, so it’s ‘safe’, but not pure.” Pausing for a moment, she held her chin in thought. “I suppose you know about boiling water to help make it safe?”
“Of course.”
“The whole process of cleaning water is filtering, and while you can’t see it, there’s a lot of filter work going on underneath our feet. The result is the pure water, so you don’t have to waste time constantly boiling it to avoid getting sick. The reason it tastes funny is because its lacking the things you normally drink in it.”
“I … see. I thank you for such a luxurious offering,” Arzha said, hand over her chest in a polite bow.
“It is no trouble. I am hopeful it’s something I can teach the rest of this world to do one day, but, alas.”
“Is it not terribly difficult to do?”
“Mmm, yes and no,” Avaron mumbled out, tilting her head side-to-side in thought. “The biggest problem is education. From what you said about Artor and the Empire, I take it only nobles know how to read and write?”
“There are the merchants and many shop owners, but it is not something taught to peasants or the poor. They’re not capable of learning it.”
“Ah, ahaha,” Avaron chuckled and slapped fist-to-palm. “I’ll have to disagree on that. It is difficult, of course. Not impossible, and not many are willing to invest into it.”
“What would be their purpose?” Arzha asked, lacking in the malice Avaron for some reason expected. “They have neither wealth nor land. They lack allegiances and connections, and offer nothing but taxes to the throne.”
“It is hard to imagine, I suppose. This world is very undeveloped and amidst uncertainty, you cling to what you know.” Avaron held up a finger and smiled at Arzha. “It is what is unknown that makes so much possible. But, more to the point, the mind is an intellectual field, one that does not care for wealth or connections. In my world, much of what we achieved came from the poor and the peasants.”
“… Truly?”
“Indeed. You are only one person, one mind. You can only think so much.” Avaron held her hands out in a wide, embracing gesture to the forest in front of them. “But a thousand minds all thinking like yours—perhaps better in some ways—and then so much becomes possible.”
“And how would that not bring a kingdom to ruin? A thousand more nobles with neither wealth nor power, coveting those who do …”
“You think ill of people, but in your kingdom as it stayed, it would bring ruin, yes. From the fires of revolution is a new kind of life born, one that can fit more educated people.” Avaron waved to move on, content with what she saw. “For example, in my world, the ways of kings and queens eventually fell into history.”
“Why is that?”
“As the lands expanded and swelled, the nature of power changed. A handful ruled over hundreds of thousands, then millions. They cared not for the many, and the many grew desperate, then overthrew the few. You see, they no longer wanted kings or queens they could not trust. So, they came up with a new idea—one where the many people ruled the land.”
“But if the greatest among them could not rule to their satisfaction, how is a mob any better?” Arzha asked, sounding quite at odds with the idea.
“Honestly it would take me weeks to really explain it, but … The many held a vote, and they chose one to lead them. Then, these newly elected leaders formed cooperative groups, and focused on ruling the land. If one of them failed those who elected them, they would be voted out and a new person voted in.”
“That is even madder! How can one lead if their ill-taught peasants decide they don’t fit? They cannot understand the complexities of noble business. It would be like walking on glass!”
“That’s the point. If every leader is acting truly on behalf of their people, they will fear disappointing them. Thus, the will of the people is represented.” Avaron made a show of shrugging. “But you are right, some countries did not adopt it fully. For example, terms—once voted in they would stay in until the term was up, unless they did something criminal.”
“Now that does make far more sense …”
“As a princess yourself, I’m actually quite interested in knowing what you’d think about future forms of government,” Avaron said, looking over at her. “It might prove quite helpful in rebuilding your kingdom.”
“’Rebuilding’, as you say,” Arzha echoed, a rueful smile shadowing her grim face. “I am not so certain there will be a land left to do so.”
“I would like to believe so. So long as there is a powerful will like yours, and the desire to see it done, don’t be defeated yet. More than once in my world people in your circumstances have come back, far greater and grander than what they were before.”
“I shall take your words to heart, even if I struggle to believe them.”
Avaron chuckled. “I appreciate your frankness.”
*~*
“… thus, it seems Lilian has perished at the hands of the elvetahn,” came the rasping gasp, its voice ever rattling through the tubes and metals in its throat. In throwing a raggedy scroll of human-flesh across the table, the item unfurled fully, leading its cryptic words for all to see. “She is a miserable failure.”
“I don’t understand. Your bodies are virtually immortal!” another interjected, throwing his hand incredulously. “How can elves do anything too—”
“Your ignorance is horrendous to listen to,” the third cut him off, her scathing words colder than the stone around them. “Of all peoples, the elvetahn we fear the most. She was given ample power to subdue their weak forest, and now failing that—they stir once more!”
“If they are so dangerous, why did you not send me after them?”
“Because your talent is needed in the west still,” she said with a sigh. “Jorkof and Lilian in the east is more than enough with the Empire under control. Now she is gone and our control over the Emperor has vanished.”
“There are still powerful forces loyal to us,” Jorkof rasped out, raising a crooked hand gloved in black-leather. “I am salvaging who remains, but many were enthralled by Lilian.”
“Not to mention over NINETY PERCENT OF HER ARMY DYING!”
“Language, Pushey,” Jorkof rasped out, before a chortling laugh shook the entirety of its body. “It was not the enlightened who died. Our hold on the Empire is shaken, not lost.”
Rattling her fingers atop the meeting table, Pushey let out an exasperated sigh. “We have been exposed, Jorkof. Our plans are completely different now.”
“Enough is in place that even knowing us, the elvetahn cannot hope to succeed,” Jorkof pointed out. “I agree. We must move quickly and begin. If we do not, they will begin rebuilding their power once more.”
“At the least, Artor and its neighbors are no longer a problem.” Pushey looked over. “I will need you to see to the new heroines personally, Steven. Moving them out of that war zone is proving more of a problem than I expected.”
“Did you not send an army there?”
“Yes, I didn’t expect the Ashmourn to intervene in the conflict. The Church was obligated to confront them, and they did considerable damage. I’m moving more armies in to crush them, but I have few on hand to protect the heroines.”
“It isn’t a short distance getting there!” Steven said, throwing his arms out. “How am I suppose to—”
A flash of blinding white light enveloped him, and in the next moment he was gone.
“You know he hates that,” Jorkof said, ever difficult to discern in its inflections.
“Centuries later he is still slow on the uptake,” Pushey grumbled. “The other world truly creates bizarre people.”
“It does.”
“How did Lilian die, exactly?” she asked. “He was soft on her, but I have no care for his heart on this.”
A hissing suck and exhale followed before Jorkof said, “Her essence was broken. The direction she left behind tells me she went into the Heartwood.”
“Then we are in a much more serious problem if that woman stirs.”
“Yes. It is inevitable at this point.” Jorkof stood up from its chair, heaving form rustling and jostling beneath its cloak. “Sooner than I wished for, but not unexpected. I will need to handle her remains before Steven discovers what happened.”
“Be mindful, Jorkof.”
“She and I have old debts. You know how much I enjoy counting those.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Refugee Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Desperate Magi
Chapter 29: A Villainous Act
Chapter Text
Rare are those who are so luxuriously pure in their evil.
*~*
Tsugumi had never been summoned to a meeting in, well, such a place before. They were still in Avaron’s hive, but deeper. The pressures of the earth around them increased, at least enough for her to notice. Gwyneth apparently felt nothing different, which sounded quite odd to her. At the least, it was much cooler, with the heat venting out of the fleshy walls in much more noticeable ways. Such was a very typical thing of surface mines, in the few times she’d gone down them.
But why had Avaron grown the hive this deep? And what room were they standing in front of now?
Staring into that lovely face revealed nothing. No, more than usual was a suspicious lack of anything.
Avaron hid behind an implacable façade, staring at her and Gwyneth without really seeing them.
It left her ill-at-ease in the heart. “Well?” she asked, breaking the silence. “We’re here now. What is it?”
The verbal shove jostled Avaron, enough she seemed to be more in the present. “Ah, right. Sorry, it’s just … figuring out how to say it.”
“Say what?” Gwyneth asked, perhaps sounding as ill-at-ease as Tsugumi felt.
“Let’s, uh, go inside and I’ll start somewhere, I guess.”
The sucking-slurp of the door opening followed Avaron’s words. Unlike all others, the meat and muscle of it was profoundly thicker; sturdier, even. It seemed less of a door than a fortress gate. Avaron stepped through and the two of them followed into a … bedroom? There was another one of those flesh beds, table and chair, the water cooler in the wall that Avaron liked so much … While arranged differently, it wasn’t that different from the bedroom they used further up.
A bedroom? Tsugumi looked over to Avaron, who stared out against the far wall. She’d opened her mouth to say something, but something about her air touched wrong. It was one matter for Avaron to stonewall herself, but another to—show that kind of face. A very troubled face that really didn’t fit her in the slightest.
The heroine turned around, regarding both of them seriously. “So, Gwyneth you don’t know her, but, Tsugumi—remember Cecile?”
It took a moment, given the months it’d been since then. “I do.”
“Right. No good way to say so here it is: I’m thinking about kidnapping her.”
Tsugumi sure just did hear those words right then. She and Gwyneth looked at each other. Despite the priestess’ facial mask, she felt they both understood each other quite well. They turned back to Avaron.
“No, not for any bad purpose. Or that. It’s just …”
“Why doth thou wisheth do so?” Gwyneth asked, a surprisingly clear and strong clarity to her voice.
“To save her,” Avaron said simply.
“From what?”
“Herself.”
“Why do you think she needs saving?” Tsugumi asked next. “She is content to wait there for her own reasons.”
Avaron scratched the back of her head, looking down at the ground. “That … it’s—” she looked up at the ceiling, her face contorted with vexation “—it’s not that simple.”
“Why doth thou believe so?”
“Ahh, fuck.” Avaron let out a long, deflating sigh. The agitation that’d just overtaken vanished, and a different look overcame her. One that harrowed Tsugumi, for it was the eyes of someone who bore tragedy. She’d seen it before, in the many destroyed villages—those who yet lived when others did not. A pang shot at her heart, but she held fast. “Guess I’ll just, explain it all. I grew up in the hood, you see.”
“The hood?” Gwyneth echoed confusedly.
“Sorry. Uh, the poorest of the poor neighborhoods, run by gangs and thugs. Everyone watched out for themselves, and you did what the ones in charge wanted.”
“I understand.”
As do I, Tsugumi mused. She herself didn’t grow up there, but she had gone through such places more than once.
“Anyway, I had a friend. My best friend for when I was a kid. She and I did a lot together; kept each other safe, from the gangs and our own families. It wasn’t easy, but a lot of folk didn’t mind kids that much.” Avaron’s gaze slid away, staring long and far into the wall not really that far away. “One day I got my chance to get out of that Hell. A real, fucking stroke of luck and nothing else. I was probably about fifteen, then. I promised her I’d get her out too, it’d just take me a year.” A rueful smile came over her, a slow and creeping one that showed only bitterness. “Last time I ever saw her alive was on my ride out.”
An uncomfortable silence hung in the air until Tsugumi asked, “What happened?”
“Drugs.”
“What is that?”
Avaron scratched at her head irritably. “You know, crap you snort, burn in a pipe and smoke, gets you high and fucks up your head so you can feel good?”
“Ah, that … sort of thing.”
“Yeah. See, she’d been on drugs since we hit double-digits. She had all sorts of problems at home, always blew off her shakes and seizures as some excuse … but you live in the hood. You know what that shit is. I never brought it up because I never wanted to ruin our time together.” Avaron’s gaze fell down to the ground, something or nothing holding her attention. “Never pointed it out, always helped smoothed it over, pretended like we were fine. Six months after I leave her dad calls me tells me she OD’d. Uh, overdosed—took enough drugs it just up and killed her outright.”
The chuckle that followed wasn’t something she expected, and the fine hairs on her body stood on end at hearing it. She watched Avaron lift a hand, holding out a pinky.
“Just a tiny amount—tip of this finger. A bit too much and then pop goes her brain, done for good. All an accident, of course, a party gone too wild. Someone slipped her something a bit much. Whatever fucking excuse they thought was good enough, but it ain’t what she deserved.” Avaron shook her hand like someone trying to get something off of it. “Anyway, fact is I’m a coward. I coulda do more to help her; we could’ve ran away together, gone somewhere in another state, done fucking ANYTHING AT ALL!” Her sudden shout boomed in the tiny room, face contorted in utter anger as she clenched her hands together.
“But I didn’t, and she died because I was too damn scared. Ain’t nothing ever going to change that.”
Paralyzed on the spot, Tsugumi jumped when Gwyneth grabbed her hand. The priestess tugged, and the two of them went over to Avaron, who stood in her own little world. Gwyneth hugged first, taking up one side and Tsugumi clued in, taking the other. Despite their warming embrace, Avaron seemed far too up her own business still.
“Anyway,” the heroine said, “that’s why I want to save her. If I have to be the villain she hates her whole life, at least she will have a life to hate me with.”
“Even though she is not thy friend?” Gwyneth asked, probingly. “Thou cannot save all damsels in such ways.”
“No, you’re right and I know that. But, I … just this once. I could do it just this once.”
“And if it doesn’t work?” Tsugumi asked, the heaviness of her question weighing upon the air.
“… I’ll cross that bridge if it comes.”
Funny. Tsugumi wanted to sigh and shake her head. All the centuries apart and completely different people, but they act so very similar. It must be something all divine heroines have. Setting a hand on Avaron’s head, she gave it a scalp-reaching rub. “I will agree, just this once. If you think to save more like this, you will have to find a better way.”
They both looked over at Gwyneth.
“Tis as Tsugumi says,” the priestess remarked slowly. “Thy noble intent doth not sooth thy actions. But, if thou believe it will work this time …”
“That’s why I need you two,” Avaron said, shrugging her shoulders. “If I’m the villain in this act, you two have to become her friends. It’s not like I’m doing this cause I want to fuck her or something.”
“Then what do you want from her?” Tsugumi asked suspiciously.
“To grow a damn spine and find her own future. If it means helping her for a while and then she leaves, so be it.” Avaron grumbled under her breath but Gwyneth jabbed her in the side. “I said! I know I’m being selfish about the whole thing. Believe me, I know. But now that I can do something, I won’t live with not having done anything again.”
Tsugumi made a show of sighing dramatically, but nonetheless laid her head on Avaron’s shoulder. It was not if she didn’t understand—she did, both herself and having seen it in others. “It will not be that simple,” she remarked. “None of us know how Cecile will become.”
“Not until we try,” Avaron said.
Such a bothersome problem, Tsugumi thought, but she would just have to expand her menu to include another person. I really need an assistant. Four hands can only cook so fast …
*~*
(Can you do anything, Medusa?)
(I am digging through the sensory feed as fast as I fucking can, thanks.)
(This really is …)
(We all knew what were getting into,) Prime said solemnly. Still, the woeful wailing and raging of a woman was that much harder to ignore. Although Cecile made no moves to try and escape, her loud anguish rattled Avaron’s entire mind. Being hyper aware of her entire hive as if it was herself had a distinct downside, it turned out. Prime, who stood outside staring at the sun with her eyes closed, tried so much more to focus on the warmth and cool breeze.
It was funny, in a messed up way. She’d ruined all sorts of lives maneuvering her businesses, but Cecile’s crying rattled her something fierce. I wonder if this is how mother felt, some days, she mused, looking back on her adolescent rage with a much different eye. Tough love required a much sterner approach, after all. Still, what is done is done. Capturing Cecile hadn’t been that hard with the new crusher tentacles, not even the frightening power of a dorgi could stop them. Still, she ended up losing one completely, which surprised her.
The crusher was no pushover; no human could’ve done that sort of damage to it.
This world, it really does keep surprising me.
“Avaron.”
Said woman still jumped in her skin at the sudden voice from behind her. “Yes, Kagura,” she bit out, “what is it?”
“The envoy from Honda-sama approaches.”
“Oh good, I needed something to distract me. Go get them then, I’ll ready things on this end.”
“Hoh.”
And as quick as Kagura appeared, she vanished again. Magic of some variety, but Avaron had no idea. It was befitting someone specialized in stealth moved with such little fanfare, after all. Brushing the matter aside, she ventured over to Arzha’s camp, where the princess and some of her knights awaited. As ever they rose up, coming to regard her properly, though not all their faces with quite as respectful. Not that she blamed them; nor, really, did she care.
“An emissary from Kitinchi approaches,” Avaron said to Arzha. “Please have you and yours ready to receive them as guards.”
“Do you expect trouble?” Arzha asked.
“Every day I wake up there’s something troubling me. I hope these people don’t cause anything.”
“… I understand. Haleen, Magna, assemble everyone and prepare as quick as you can.”
“At once!” the two chirped out, and they went about gathering up the disparate knights.
“I’ve already told Tsugumi and Gwyneth, who will hopefully have the inn ready in time.” Avaron turned around and made her way back across the area toward said inn. Arzha, it turned out, felt ready enough to already accompany her.
“Who is expected?” the princess asked.
“I have no idea. Honda told me he’d send someone named Hanamaru, and that was it. Couldn’t risk more details, I guess.”
“Mm. It is good the elvetahn have already left then, their guard would’ve made quite complicated.”
And Nuala isn’t breathing down my neck anymore, Avaron wanted to say, but bit back those words. The mage was useful, but in the same way a cactus was. There just wasn’t a painless way to handle her without a lot of effort involved. She and Arzha made their way to the front of the inn, denoted for the big doors and patio-like slab of wood at the front. Some chairs and a lot of construction supplies awaited them, the latter neatly squared away, the former just hanging out. Avaron plopped down in one of the chairs, letting out a sigh.
“To be honest I’m a bit concerned about my clothing,” Avaron remarked, picking at the simple green-tinged white dress. It felt great and looked nice, but it really speak money or power. Very practical, according to the one elvetahn she asked. “Kind of hard looking like I matter when I’m in a sleeping gown.”
“… The clothes do not necessarily make the person,” Arzha said after a moment. “While it certainly helps to impress the peasant folk and obstinate nobles.”
“Speaking from experience?”
“One cannot stand on decorum in the middle of a battlefield. Only those safe at home in the courts care deeply about appearances that much.”
“How surprisingly pragmatic of you,” Avaron said appraisingly, making the princess look over at her straightforwardly.
“Have I impressed otherwise?”
“I do not know what to make of royalty in this world, is all. They were quite slovenly in mine.”
“You should meet my brother, then.”
“Ah, I see.”
Arzha’s knights wasted little time in arriving, decked out in their full armor as they were. Avaron couldn’t help raising a brow at the sight before giving Arzha a long look. “Wouldn’t a bunch of people in combat gear be intimidating?”
“It is proper when receiving those sent by a foreign lord,” Arzha said simply.
“My lady,” one of the knights said—Haleen, if Avaron remembered. “They’re here.”
And so Arzha looked at Avaron.
“I’m up, I’m up,” Avaron grumbled, rising out of her chair. “Let’s see what Honda sent me.”
Something very big, it turned out.
Arzha and her knights behind her, Avaron walked away from the inn, standing in a cleared area. From the tree line emerged five figures; Kagura seeming absolutely small beside them. Their hulking masses, spine-covered bodies, and intimidating horns marked them clearly as harraxin. Avaron pursed her lips at the sight. Let’s not let past prejudices stir up, now! she told herself, even if they were being a little stirred up.
The smaller ones were closer to how Nerg had been, in terms of size and spine thickness. Their leader apparent, however—if she’d been Nerg’s mom or something, Avaron would’ve believed it without hesitation. Nearly a quarter in size larger, her spines thick enough to punch a hole in a tank, and proud horns that must’ve never been broken. The samurai armor adorning her looked more like a suggestion than anything she actually needed! Avaron’s head craned upward as the group approached, finding herself dwarfed by the huge harraxin.
“So I take it your Hanamaru?” Avaron asked.
“Hm. You’re the heroine?” the harraxin who was probably Hanamaru asked back. Her deep voice almost made pebbles on the ground shake it carried so much energy.
“That I am.”
“You are weak,” Hanamaru belted out immediately, sounding like an inspector with the utmost disapproval.
Avaron’s eye tweaked slightly. “Well, I’m sure you think anything that can’t bench 4,000 pounds is weak. That isn’t my job in the first place.” Hanamaru’s face twisted, seeming as if she wanted to be offended but wasn’t too sure on why. “Lord Honda told me you’d be his emissary.”
Hanamaru snorted. “Mayumi, the backpack.”
One of the harraxin stepped forward, unslinging a pack off their shoulder. Like Hanamaru they wore samurai-like armor, far more complimentary to their (relatively) smaller stature. Mayumi chucked the backpack before Avaron’s feet, a thing large enough she could fit in if she tucked herself.
“The package that man wanted to give you,” Hanamaru declared and rolled her shoulders, the spines upon them rattling at the motion. “Hmph, she’s weak, but you look fun.”
Avaron followed her gaze toward Arzha, the princess a veritable wall of ice in her picturesque stance. “I shall take it as a compliment,” the princess said evenly.
If nothing else to move things along, Avaron picked up the backpack. Heavy, certainly, but not as much as she feared. Unwinding the cords tying it shut, she peeked inside, beholding a particularly large scroll and some smaller, normal books. In taking an awkward look inside one, she saw a whole bunch of written characters that made zero sense to her. Letting out a deflating sigh, she shut the backpack again. “Kagura.”
The ninja stepped around Hanamaru, bowing. “Yes, Avaron-sama?”
“I think I will need your help in reading whatever this says. I don’t recognize the language at all.”
“Of course.”
“Weak and stupid,” Hanamaru’s cutting remark butted in, sounding even more disappointed.
“Don’t talk down about yourself like that,” Avaron shot back faster than her brain could think. Pausing just as the realization struck, she found Hanamaru a bit taken aback. One of the harraxin next to her started a snorting laugh, quite obviously trying to keep it down. The other two, however, looked horrified. Or as horrified as they could look with those damn scary faces of theirs. “Anyway,” she said, sidestepping the atmosphere completely. “I imagine you all came a long way. We just started cooking lunch and all that, so you’re welcome to come inside.”
Before Hanamaru could spit anything else, Kagura said, “It would be our honor to do so, Avaron-sama.”
Even if the huge harraxin bit her words back, her glare at Avaron spoke all of its own. The battle would be for later, undoubtedly.
“You’re all due for lunch too, I imagine,” Avaron said, looking at Arzha’s knights. One of them nodded, even as the others remained politely firm. “Well, let’s give Tsugumi some help, or she might kill me for this big of a food order.”
*~*
In the end, some of the knights went to help Tsugumi, in either the kitchen or hunting fresh meat. The rest loitered around the inn’s interior, ever at ease as they offered their silent guardianship. Avaron, sitting with Kagura at one of the main floor-tables, was quietly listening to the ninja translate Honda’s letter to her. He ultimately sent much more than a diplomatic agreement: information on the surrounding lands, the nature of their political situations, major figures and names to remember, and so on. She had the impression it was fairly common knowledge for anyone in nobility, but utterly precious for her to acquire.
(I am impressed he sent us this,) Cypher remarked.
(Why, though?) Iris asked. (I mean, aren’t kids typically the ones who end up summoned?)
(Maybe we acted with inspiring confidence?) Cypher offered. (Or Kagura impressed it upon him.)
Avaron, beholding the spread open books and unfurled scroll before her, shook her head. “I’m impressed Lord Honda thought to send all of this to me. It’s exceptionally useful, but …”
“… But?” Kagura prompted.
“I am curious how he thought I’d make use of it. I imagine he awaits to be impressed by what I’ve learned.”
“I dare not claim to know Honda-sama’s mind.”
Dutiful to the point of obnoxiousness. Still, Avaron couldn’t blame her. “Mm, so it is. Tell me about this Hanamaru woman now that she’s here and trying to cut me apart with her eyes.”
Indeed, the harraxin warriors had taken up a corner, waiting peacefully there with their drinks and snacks. Hanamaru, whether pretending to sleep or otherwise against the wall, had long kept her gaze upon Avaron.
“That is …” Kagura blanched for a moment before recovering just as quickly. “She is a powerful warrior whom Honda-sama defeated in battle long ago. As honor dictated, she now serves him, but has ever been … well.”
“A sore loser?”
“In not so staining of words, but yes.”
“I don’t see why she doesn’t defect, then.”
“Honor is everything to her. It is, if nothing, her most respectable quality,” Kagura said, the word ‘respectable’ sounding quite out of place. “Until she defeats Honda-sama, she will not leave.”
Wow people like this actually do exist, Avaron couldn’t help thinking, her mental brows shooting up. Then again I grew up in the west, so, you know, different worlds and all that …
(I like how you talk to yourself when we’re right here,) Aegis remarked dryly.
(Shut up!) Weaver chirped back.
(Keep working the documents already,) Iris grumbled.
So she did. The knights in the kitchen—thankfully out of their armor—were busy sending food everywhere as it got done. To their credit they were not skittish around the harraxin, but they definitely perked up whenever going by them. Racism was a multi-headed beast, and it was one Avaron dealt with every day of her life. The context here might’ve been completely different, but not that much.
Just one more thing to figure out.
(Hey, Corena,) Weaver asked.
(Hm?)
(When we’re done tonight, give Tsugumi a hearty massage.)
(Why? Oh, right. I see.)
(Yeah.)
(Sure.)
(Thanks.)
At least one of her might not die tonight if they worked hard on that front.
In the time that passed, a realization came over Avaron. “This is going to be more than a one-sitting job, Kagura … san? Kagura-san, right?”
“… If you wish, Avaron-sama.”
“It’s not like I’m nobility or anything,” Avaron remarked dryly, setting down a book. Something of a map had been drawn across two pages, referenced by notes she couldn’t read at all. “If it’s not that troublesome, we’ll have to spend a few days going over it.”
“If that is what you need, Avaron-sama,” Kagura said, bowing her head.
“Speaking of that, isn’t it troublesome wearing your attire like that constantly?” Avaron asked. “Don’t ninja have normal clothes in this world?”
“Magical eyes may be prying without warning. It is for my own safety that I remain concealed.”
“… Wait, what’s that about magical eyes?” The weight of nine other consciousnesses pressed in, all of them peering through Avaron’s two eyes.
“It is a form of magic used to spy upon one’s enemies, or otherwise,” Kagura said, rather matter-of-factly about it. “The elvetahn are notorious for doing so to secure their borders. Theirs is quite advanced, and nearly impossible to detect from within their own lands.”
“Oh really?”
(Son of a bitch,) Aegis swore immediately.
(How do we even know what they’ve seen? If anything?) Medusa asked with a hot, angry energy.
Avaron did a double-take, shutting out those voices for a moment. “How does one go about … protecting themselves, from that sort of spying?”
“I know not the details, such is the purview of mages and priestesses.” Kagura bowed her head. “What charms I possess were given to me for such a purpose.”
“… I might ask Lord Honda for some help in this respect,” Avaron said, all-to-conversational.
“He may oblige, for I know he does detest such a problem.”
Anyone who leads would, Avaron thought and with a definitive slap against the table, rose up. “Right then. I’ll leave these to you for the time being. I need to speak with miss tall dark and spiney over there.”
“As you say, Avaron-sama,” Kagura returned dutifully.
In walking across Tsugumi’s inn toward the harraxin, Avaron couldn’t help recalling a similar scene not so long ago. The end of that whole shebang saw her burned to death, and that was quite a hard memory to forget. Well, near death, at any rate. Stopping by their table, everyone but Hanamaru looked over at her, their dragon-like gazes staring with inscrutable hostility. Their whole species might very well have a case of angry asshole face—not that Avaron would say that aloud.
“Yo,” she said simply, holding up a hand quickly in greeting. “It looks like it will take a few days to work through Lord Honda’s package. Was there anything else he wanted you to do?”
“No,” Hanamura rumbled out an answer. “Give it to you, take it back when you’re done.”
“Alright. As you saw outside we don’t have a lot of rooms actually built, but I’ll help you get something comfortable until you leave.”
“Anno, um,” one of the harraxin spoke up, the only one of the four not dressed like a samurai. Avaron hadn’t given her much thought at first, but the longer she stared, the more confused she became. A Shinto priestess? No, a monk? she thought, brow curling speculatively. Some kind of fusion of the two, made for the very obvious concessions of the harraxin body-type. She shrank back slightly at Avaron’s look, making her blink.
“Sorry, your attire just looks familiar to me,” Avaron said, waving off the awkward air trying to form. “What is the matter?”
“The first snows are due to arrive soon. It will be much harder returning to Honda-sama—”
“—We can make the journey,” Hanamaru cut in with a definitive tone.
The meekier-seeming harraxin, however, didn’t relent. “I mean no disrespect, but it is a winter through the Alva Forest, Hanamaru-sama,” she said, spines perking up. “And we already fought a nagraki coming here.”
“You—” Hanamaru, who was in the process of sitting up like an angry parent, got cut off.
“You fought a nagraki?” Avaron asked immediately, her voice cut to the business tone immediately.
“Hm? Yes, a nagraki with kagr who were trying to attack a border village.”
Avaron rubbed her face. “Fuck me, and the elvetahn already left. You’d think they would’ve left a way to message them.”
“You sound familiar with this problem,” Hanamaru observed aloud.
“Yeah. The elvetahn killed a highborn a few weeks back.”
A thunderous bang shot through the entire inn as Hanamaru’s massive hands came down upon the table. Such was their force the wood cracked and splintered, nearly shattering outright. “A WHAT?!” Hanamaru roared, setting everyone on edge. Some of the knights even moved to stand, reflexively at attention and ready to draw weapons. For Avaron, she bore the burden of two great fiery eyes piercing through her, burning alight with an energy that sent her primitive animal brain on high alert.
“A nagraki highborn,” Avaron repeated again, mindfully overlooking the nearly ruined table. “It was leading the armies of the Empire attacking the elvetahn. They killed it in a major battle.”
“You cannot simply kill a nagraki! Let alone a highborn of all!” Hanamaru spoke, her angry-sounding words rattling the walls. “It is still out there!”
“No, it’s not,” Avaron said, her own voice rising to match Hanamaru. “I don’t how they did it, but their queen herself assured me the highborn is dead. I trust you do not doubt the words of Efval Gladestride?”
Hanamaru paused, her great brows knitting together a thought quite visibly. “No. No, I do not,” she said, the rising energy simmering off as she sat back down properly again. “But a highborn of all things; it is much worse than I thought.”
“Why do you say so?” Two dismissive eyes regarded her, irritable at some indiscernible fact.
“It is just as it was during the Ash War. The nagraki we slew carried a newly forged Doomblade. Now, a highborn walked the world! This audacity is not that of a dead or dying enemy. The nagraki are returning.”
“You speak as if you’re quite familiar with them.”
“More than anyone would want to be.”
“Then as repayment for the table you just destroyed, I shall ask you to tell me all you know about them,” Avaron said, smiling good-naturedly. “Or I shall press Lord Honda to pay your debt instead.”
Hanamaru looked down, just now realizing what happened to the table. The harraxin growled, her spines rattling while she ran her huge fingers through her rough hair. “Tch. Fine.”
*~*
Gwyneth felt herself up and down, taking note of her priestess robes. They were as they ever had been, and she’d set them on as normally as any other day. “Mine attire is not unseemingly?” she asked, looking over at the tentacleling beside her. With two of its legs carefully balancing the porcelain tray on top of itself, its tentacle-head cocked curiously.
“Bork?” it answered back in that strange, but quite funny way of speaking. None of the tentacles she’d talked to really ever spoke back, but they always seemed to understand her questions.
“I suppose mine attire is not so different,” she muttered, running a hand over her pregnant belly. Oh, how it swelled up so fast over the weeks! It left her feeling tight in her own clothes, and she understood why so many expectant mothers complained about their attires. Surely it wasn’t that bad, she thought once. No, it was that bad.
Avaron’s rule of “always be naked underground” certainly had helped. Going outside proved that much harder, but Gwyneth chose not to fret. She’d get herself more appropriate clothing for when Avaron made her into a mother! Holding her own belly, she unconsciously licked her lips, the terrible phantom of that wonderful cum teasing her tongue. Nearly two days since the last time Avaron came to her for relief! Oh, she couldn’t stand—
Her mind betrayed her, flashing that awful and embarrassing skill.
[Cum Slut].
The world itself conspired to brand her with such an—such an outrageous lie! Gwyneth’s cheeks puffed up angrily at the mere thought! I am no slut! she thought hotly before taking the food tray from the tentacleling. “Thank thee for thy work,” she said, giving a little curtsy to the tentacleling. It mimicked her in kind, obediently waiting. Turning around, Gwyneth regarded the very large, living flesh of a door that marked rooms within the Hive.
“Open please!” she asked cutely.
It took a moment before the flesh started quite audibly contracting, slurping, and sucking as it moved. It pulled open like a ringed mouth, the teeth that secured it shut hanging at the sides. Her skin prickled at the sound. No matter how much she knew what it was for—even Avaron’s deadpan explanation couldn’t make it sound less disgusting. Still, Gwyneth pressed on, stepping into the room.
Well, prison cell.
“Hello!” she greeted. “I brought thy dinner!”
A figure at the far end shifted, two gold eyes peering at her through the dim darkness. “W-who are you?” she asked unsteadily, her voice hoarse and terrible to hear.
“Gwyneth! Priestess of the Eternal Flame,” she declared, doing a curtsy.
“P-priestess?” the woman asked unsteadily. “But why are you here?”
Gwyneth looked down. “To give thy food?”
“I meant, here—in this awful place!?”
“Awful?” Gwyneth chirped, jolting at the idea. “Tis quite lovely! Unusual, certainly, and with a lot of … flesh.”
The rustling of clothes against skin followed, and the dorgi prisoner rolled over onto the bed. She was quite a big woman, but her miserable aura made her seem all that much smaller instead. “So you’re a prisoner too?”
“No?” Gwyneth chirped back. “The Flame bid mine help for Avaron, is all.”
The dorgi’s face darkened with a scowl. “Go away.”
“Thou must eat!” Gwyneth insisted, holding up the tray with all of Tsugumi’s hard work on it.
“Go—” the dorgi shot up, standing at her full height, “—AWAY!”
Perking up at the rather dangerous vibe she sensed, Gwyneth shook her head. Rather than say anything, she walked over to the cell’s only table, setting the tray down. “Thou must eat!” she declared. “Tis good food, and will help thee.”
The meaty thump of naked feet followed, the dorgi coming at her with glowering eyes. Yet in stepping into the brighter light of the room, she came to a pause, staring at Gwyneth with confusion. “You’re … blind?”
“Oh!” Gwyneth touched her visor and smiled ruefully. “Verily. Tis quite troublesome moving around.”
“I …”
They stood there, not in arms reach but awkwardly close considering the air. A few moments later, an audible growling of a belly started up, and the dorgi shrank away. Gwyneth waved her hands insistently toward the meal tray. “Come! Tsugumi cooks well! Tis delicious.”
“You know her too?”
“Verily! She is quite nice. A bit—stand offish, but nice.”
Gwyneth stood there for what felt a while, but the dorgi gradually came out from her end of the cell. In taking the seat at the table, it turned out to be too small for her to really use properly. Humming in disapproval, she made a note to tell Avaron later. “I did not know thee knew of her! How did thou meet?”
It took much longer before the dorgi decided to answer. “She was in trouble, near my—my home, and I helped her.”
“How kind.”
“But I spit on myself for doing so!” the dorgi bit out immediately, fists clenching in the air. “That—that woman kidnapped me! She brought monsters and wrapped me up and brought me here and—” The dorgi devolved into a spitting, angry and crying ramble recounting her tale of meeting Avaron again. Gwyneth, having already heard it from Avaron, nodded along as she had to. A priestess must always let grievances be aired before speaking her words. By the end, the dorgi’s face had puffed up again, blistering with red-hot energy.
“Tis most strange,” Gwyneth said, rubbing her chin. “Avaron told me she did it to help thee. But, thou had not needed it?”
“No!” the dorgi said, somewhere between a tearful screech and sob. “It’s my home! I’m waiting for my family to come back!”
“Oh, they left? Why?” Gwyneth asked, tilting her head.
“That—they had to go, it was important they did.”
“But why did thou remain then?”
“I—I had to. It was my responsibility.”
Gwyneth scratched at her head. “Mine mind struggles. They left thee to thy responsibility and departed. Then, why doth thou believe they will return?”
“B-because they will!” the dorgi insisted, yet her voice lacked all the fire she had earlier despite its loudness.
“Oh, forgive me! I had not heard thy name!”
The dorgi did a doubletake before bashfully lowering her head. “Cecile, I’m … Cecile.”
“Tis good to meet thee, Cecicle—Ceceel—Ci …” Gwyneth held her hands up to her cheeks and turned away. “Oh, forgive me.”
“It’s—It’s alright!” Cecile insisted, waving her hands dismissively. “Southlanders have trouble with northern names!”
“Tis most rude of me!” Gwyneth insisted, bowing repeatedly.
“Please, stop!” Cecile begged. “A priestess should not bow to me!”
They went back and forth on the matter a couple times, until Gwyneth finally broke with a grumbling acceptance. “If thou insist.”
“I do!” Cecile said, a genuine taste of good energy in her voice finally.
“As thee asks. But, if thou insist thy family will return, when doth thee expect them?” Gwyneth asked. “Mayhaps Avaron misunderstand completely. She doth not know dorgi as I do.”
“That, well, it is as you say …” Cecile said, her voice turning into mumbles in its poor attempts at evasion. “I believe it will be soon.”
“Verily? When did they leave?”
“D-does it matter?”
“Tis helpful to convince Avaron?” Gwyneth offered, seeming thoughtful. “Her mind vexes me so.”
“Uhmm, they left, well, umm …” Cecile squirmed indecisively, her big body threatening to destroy the porcelain chair she sat on. That it endured so well beneath her plush butt was quite the feat. “I don’t … remember, exactly. It was after the ash rained from the sky for a whole winter. It covered the whole mountain we live on! And they got really fussy about it, then I—” she cut herself off sharply, eyes going downcast. “Well, you surely remember it, right? The skies covered in black clouds for many weeks?”
“Mine blood be human,” Gwyneth said sheepishly. “Tis not likely. Thy words sound of the Black Months, the ending of the Ash War.”
“O-oh? Do, erm, do humans not live long?” Cecile asked uneasily.
“Verily. Between sixty and eighty summers, if one is most fortunate.”
“But that is … that’s rather unfair!”
“Tis life?” Gwyneth said lamely, shrugging her shoulders. “But thou say thy family left shortly after the Black Months?”
“It sounds right?” Cecile offered lamely.
“Tis most difficult to believe! The Ash War ended hundreds of years ago. Thou hath been waiting this entire time?”
At that, the anxious Cecile froze, her aura that of one being struck by an uncomfortable truth. Gwyneth had seen such many times in those she went to, or came to her for, help. Such moments meant she had to push or wait; and waiting felt to be appropriate here. An old truth had been dug up, and it would not be answered quickly. “Ah, please be at ease,” Gwyneth said, holding up her hands appeasingly. “Let it not trouble thy mind. Enjoy thy dinner, I shall speak with Avaron and learn more of her intent.”
“R-really? Thank you. Mother always said priestesses were nice and …” Cecile’s heartfelt words turned back into nonsensible mumbling.
A pang of genuine guilt struck Gwyneth’s heart, but she kept it inside as she ever did. “Rest easy. I see thee for thy next meal.”
Bowing out of the prison cell, Gwyneth left Cecile, and started up the spiraling staircase that led back into the main Hive areas. As she did so, her mind busied itself with a heavy realization. True to Avaron’s instruction, by playing up certain acts and sidestepping others, she managed to pull Cecile from out of her corner. Never had Gwyneth had such an easy time speaking with someone to bring them forth. While half of what Avaron told her to expect didn’t appear, what did appear did so almost perfectly on cue.
She knows the mind well, Gwyneth thought. Perhaps better than me.
It remained to be seen how much of this “good girl/bad girl” act, as Avaron put, would reap in the end.
But one thing remained absolutely clear to her.
Avaron was not a simple person, even for a divine heroine.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Refugee Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) -- Desperate Magi
Chapter 30: In the Dark of Winter
Chapter Text
Is life cyclical because it is, or we believe it is?
*~*
The soft thump of shoes broke with the occasional crunch of dead foliage. Efval made no effort to move through the tree tops, nor quiet her approach. Looking up, her gaze aimlessly wandered, taking in the thick branches, twisting trees, and their unsightly trunks. Snow sat heavy upon them all, yet the canopy till thick enough it was snow, instead of leaves, blocking the sun. Where it failed, piercing beams of sunshine broke through, blisteringly bright. Such befitted the Heartwood, intense in its secrets and tempting of those foolish enough to enter.
To think that huntress was allowed to leave, Efval mused. Mother must be losing her touch.
That astounded her more than anything else. For once, the ancient law of the death penalty for trespassing in the Heartwood had been invoked. At least the war with the Empire gave her plausible excuse to waive it this time. There were simply not enough of them left to afford such a punishment. What bothered her more, however, was the fact the huntress’ weapon had been taken.
Such a tiny thought compared to all the rest she dealt with.
It bothered her far more than any of them combined.
Her trek deeper into the Heartwood continued, a path quite literally forming before her. Trees bent away, roots lifted or flattened, and all of the forest conspired to see her safe passage. Mother wants to see me as well, Efval thought, a chilly shiver going down her spine. Ah, dearest mother, what churns within your mind?
Only when the sun disappeared fully, and darkness surrounded her, did she know she neared. Small plants and vines grew along the towering trees and their trunks, shining eerily. Blue hues and red glows, green shimmers and yellow glitters; such marked the difference between the outer trunk and the true center of the Heartwood. The cold blew in, columns of freezing air winding through the woods like death’s own fingers. Her skin prickled, the warmth of the woods teasingly fleeting against it.
She found no relief in reaching the end, a simple round disc of stone set in a bed of flowers. The carnivorous things were already asleep, shut into bulbs in the ground. Withered vines wormed through the cracks, grasping rock like a hand ready to throw. Her shoes clicking shoes echoed in the still air, not even chittering bugs or rustling leaves to be heard. “I am ever surprised you are still awake, dear mother,” Efval said, her words spoken out but no echo followed. The very woods around them ate the sounds right up.
A crinkling twist of wood, the snapping of branches and twigs, rattled the air. The different jagged trunks around the disc moved as snakes might, slithering against one another in a mockerous imitation of laughing. “Dearest daughter of mine,” came the guttural, deep sounding words. “I am always awake.”
“So you say,” Efval remarked dryly. “I have come to speak.”
“And speak you always do, soon to leave as a leaf on a breeze,” her mother grumbled, the flower bulbs flexing like shrugging shoulders. “It is so much like your father to do.”
To say her mother was a bit thorny would’ve been a kind gesture.
“Forgive me, then,” Efval said, her long ears barely twitching. “But it is a direly important matter.”
“Important enough to visit meee?”
“I am sure you already know.”
“There is much I know and care not to otherwise, dearest daughter. What troubles you is hardly a trouble for me.”
“Then I am most interested in how you might worry over the return of the nagraki.”
The woods went still for a moment, not out of surprise but of the fun being taken away. “I worry not,” her mother twittered, “they are no different from before. Be they lowly or highly, they are all mine to eat.”
A shifting noise overhead made Efval look up. Branches reaching down as a hand would twitched and cracked, growing as much as moving toward her. Sword-like fingers unfurled, and a most familiar sight awaited in its palm. The missing bolt-action rifle from the huntress.
“But I am most curious as to what this is. It is no bow nor sword, neither spear or javelin, or anything of the woods. Why does a huntress carry it?”
“It is a gun.”
“A gun?” her mother asked, the woods around Efval rattling. “What does it do?”
So even you do not know, Efval thought, unable to help the smirk that came at the thought.
“It is an ugly look to see upon your face, dearest daughter.”
Efval’s smirk left as quick as it came. “It is a strong weapon, mightier than any bow. A child of two weeks training can kill a warrior of four hundred winters in an instant.”
“Ridiculous!” her mother hissed, all the woods pressing in closer to Efval’s little platform. In spite of the terrifying pressure, Efval remained standing, undaunted and unafraid.
“It is how Baval died.”
“… What?” her mother asked, her whole demeanor changing in an instant. “Baval—”
“Killed in an instant, right through the heart,” Efval said, the words feeling far too easy to say. She pointed at the rifle held in her mother’s tree hand. “By guns made in the Empire.”
No words came, and the air held a stillness more solemn than death itself. Her mother’s hand curled inward, trembling; rattling with its intensity. The gun twisted in her grasp, the delicate craft work bending into funny, broken shapes. The trees cracked and groaned, ripping their roots from the ground and slamming into each other. A sound of anguish and raw rage followed, a hoarse scream from the mouth of an animal pretending to be a person. Efval had no choice but to cover her ears, but even still, it reached into her very bones.
Two more hands reached down from the canopy, followed by a third arm that held a face. Like mother as daughter, but hers was a face of bark and wood, eyes of tourmaline gems and starlight, hair like ten thousand daggers. Efval jerked as her mother grabbed her shoulders, their faces brought nose-to-nose. “You let her die?!” her mother hissed through splintering teeth.
“Do not spit in my face as if I am stupid,” Efval bit back, baring her own teeth. The front facing ones, for how smooth and quaint they were, hid the dagger-like ones in the back. “A thousand battles together and not once did I falter. You think me a fool but you are the foolish one! That—” Efval thrust a hand toward what was left of the rifle, “—is the new age of fire that comes.”
“There is NO FIRE!” her mother snarled as two more hands erupting from the ground. They grasped Efval by the neck, tight enough to make her feel her own heartbeat. “It faded for the last time amongst the ashes!”
“There is a new Chosen,” Efval squeaked out, speaking that much harder. The tightening grip froze, her mother’s eyes staring with an intensity that bordered on madness. “I have met her myself.”
“You have been most busy, my ill-respecting daughter.” Her mother’s teeth ground against each other, a grating sound of wood upon stone.
“Heh. And thirteen divine heroines are in this world now.”
In an instant Efval was thrown to the ground, her mother recoiling with a disgusted groan. “This! This what I get for birthing such ill-grown children!” she yelled and lamented all at once. “Tahn! You impotent shrub I will strip your bark and make you into a bird feeder!”
Whether or not her father might hear that, Efval didn’t know. Coughing and clearing her throat, she rolled onto her butt and sat, hunched over. “A new age of fire is coming, mother,” she spat out, her good humour truly fucking gone at that point. “But it is one that the Flame fears.”
“How can the Flame fear its own creation?!” her mother screamed, thrusting her face back into Efval’s. “It exists solely for it!”
“How would I know?” Efval snapped back. “But it is so. The Chosen of the Flame endeavors to stop the coming age of fire. For, as the Flame fears, it will be the last one upon this world; the end of change itself.”
Her mother drew back, clawing at her own face with a frustrated, hissing snarl. Bark split off and darkly green, sap-like blood spilled out. As it did, tiny plants grew immediately, bushes, shrubs, and flowers of all kinds sprouting up. It had been the only green plants Efval had seen since the snows fell. “Aaaaand, what of these, divine heroines?”
“One lives on the southern border of our forest. The other twelve were in the human kingdom of Artor. It fell to war, and I do not know what has become of them. The Church of the Everlasting Light might have snatched them up.”
“Thirteen! Thirteen of those vile creatures!” her mother hissed, staring up at the canopy-roof. “One is bad enough. Now I see why the Flame fears the new age.” In an instant her head snapped toward Efval. “You said one lives on my southern border?”
“Yes,” Efval said slowly. “One that is, erm, rather complicated.”
“Complicated.”
“Father has betrothed me to them.”
“Did he really now?”
There were few times in Efval’s life she felt fear intense enough it might be called terror. Yet her mother’s smooth, elegant voice and unerringly even tone made even her want to run out of the Heartwood. “Y-yes, he did,” she affirmed, sweat dripping down her face.
“My, my, my. And what about this heroine caught his eye?”
“I have not the faintest idea. She is different from the rest, I know that much.”
“Different … how?”
“She is a tentradom.”
Her mother’s head twisted from one side to the other, trying to work that thought down like food stuck in the throat. “A tentradom? A divine tentradom?”
“Quite so.”
“My, how long has it been?” her mother mused aloud, scratching her chin. Slowly her gaze turned downward, a look of utter disbelief showing. “Mm, your father betrothed you to such an exquisite creature and you’re still not pregnant?”
“Of course not!” Efval screeched back, rising up to a stand quickly. “I have no interest in such a thing!” As soon as the words left her mouth, one of mother’s large hands swooped down, grabbing Efval by her entire torso.
“Did I birth you?” her mother asked, squinting suspiciously. Efval tried to speak, only to ended up turned sideways, upside down, her legs and arms moved by another tree hand. “Is it broken?” she asked, spying down the length of Efval’s legs and into her crotch.
“I AM QUITE FINE, MOTHER,” Efval shouted, trying to cover herself up. “There is not a man that catches my eye!” Ending right-side up again, her mother’s dry looking face bored into her.
“Dearest daughter of mine, you are the youngest and have stayed so long in my home. Isn’t it time to make a forest of your own?” she asked drearily. “These rules and conventions of yours, how tiresome indeed. Do you not remember the beauty of frolicking naked and free? Oh, I am getting old, rhyming again like this.”
“That was then, mother. Times change.”
“All things change but not all change is good. Daughter of my fruits, I grow tired of sheltering your senseless thinking. In thousands of winters not a man has caught your eye?” she asked, a third hand waving beside her head in a grand, disbelieving dismissal. “Such a ridiculous idea. Why not be like your other sisters, and find someone pretty and fuck them? It is the seed you need, not their silly … whatever else there is.” She then leaned in like a conspirator. “Unless it is women you seek, but I care not about that.”
“I have responsibilities to more than just having children,” Efval hissed and squirmed, but her mother’s hold remained unyielding. “Without me, the elvetahn you do not care about would have died!”
“Just so, it is the way of the weak to feed the strong,” her mother said matter-of-factly. “Wasting your time trying to keep them, really. Did you learn nothing from me?”
“I learned enough to know that is not my way.”
A loud, disappointed sigh sounded, her mother’s hand sagging enough to drop Efval back onto the platform. “Daughters! So be it, silly as it is. But you must find seed soon and bear your own forest. This is truly ridiculous to stay here for so long. Why, the bees will laugh their stingers off when they hear this!”
“I’ll try, Mother.”
“And you’ve said that so much the frogs croak it!”
“Putting that aside,” Efval said, desperately trying to move the conversation. “What will you do? The nagraki are coming.”
“Slowly, it seems,” her mother remarked, and with little ceremony, all her limbs and face receded into the woods again. “It has been so long since I have had a good hunt. Mmm, oh, I just cannot fit into this tight body anymore—”
Something like a bulb wrenched and squirmed through the canopy, drooping like an apple about to fall. Its fleshy petals peeled open slowly, a gurgling suck of fluids and muscles sounding. A body dropped out, landing on its feet and knees despite the rest of it slumping forward. Efval watched, a captive audience to the bizarre spectacle before her. The woman-creature before her rose up, each step like a faun finding its own legs. For what passed as skin were leaves and bark, smooth and supple with a feminine power beneath them. Cloven hoofed feet clopped with each step, and two muscular arms reached up. With a great heaving through, a wild mane of stickily drenched hair—vines, plant leaves, flowers and the like—slapped onto her back.
“Mother,” Efval greeted when the creature turned toward her, each eye blinking independently from the other. “To what is this occasion owed?”
Despite the inordinate stretching and flexing she did, no bones popped—rather it sounded as sinew and tendons were being stretched. “I wish to see this tentradom with my own two eyes,” she said, gathering a slop of juice and flicking it off as filth. “Mm, oh, the cold of winter. It has been so long!”
“But, why?” Efval puzzled. The clop of hooves punctuated her mother’s approach, and a hand laid upon her shoulder. In spite of the clothing there, she still felt the sweat-inducing heat.
“Dearest daughter, a treasure unlike any other is sleeping on your branch. If you do not want it, I shall take it.”
“I must ask your due consideration,” Efval said hurriedly. “She is proving valuable to saving my people!”
Her mother tsk’d and tutted, looking utterly disappointed. “Oh, you can keep those trinkets. It is not as if you wish to marry her, no?”
“Not at all.”
“Then tell that firewood that I’ve annulled this marriage. The one he made without my permission.” Her mother smiled, showing a neat row of teeth lined with bladed edges made of iron. “I shall pluck this little flower for my own keeping.”
“Y-you …” Efval stammered, brushed aside as her mother walked toward the exit. The very definition of a woman in her prime, hips swaying and breasts jiggling—oh, no. “Mother? What are you going to do?” she asked, even though she knew already.
A rich, sonorous laughter followed, all-too-much like a person in its loving pitch and haughtiness. Her mother disappeared behind a tree, and even though Efval raced over, she knew. The woman was already gone, her laugh echoing in the still woods, that much colder and lifeless in her absence. Efval found herself struck stupid by the idea, the mere notion of her mother going out on a hunt once again. Worse, something had caught her fancy—something enough to leave the Heartwood and take for her own.
Freed of her father’s stupidly arranged marriage, but now with such a worse problem on her hands.
Ah, the anxiety.
She felt like puking it was so terrible.
*~*
Discordant screaming, thumping, and meat rolling around filled the underground laboratory. At least, up until the flesh door, which proved quite good for sound insulation. A5-Iris, a hand cupped under her chin, looked down at the other Avaron from her chair, studying with a scrutinizing gaze. The other, being A6-Cypher, was a bit too busy writhing impotently in pain. Panting, wheezing and drooling, Cypher laid on the ground, her face blisteringly dark blue, tears streaming down her cheeks, and her whole mouth about a one extra size too large.
All for about a minute, then the regenerative powers overrode the problem. Honestly it very much looked like one of those creepy 3D projects tweaking settings in real time. Cypher returned to normal without much of a fuss, even if she seemed rather irritable still.
(Too intense?) Iris asked.
(Way too intense,) Cypher wheezed out before thumping her chest with a hand. She ended up spitting out a wad of phlegm and rising up to her shaky feet. (That’ll probably kill a normal person.)
(So do we keep it for lethal application or …?)
(Let’s file it away under lethal potential. Do you think we can dilute it further?)
(Maybe. Do we want to keep trying the gas form or go back to liquid spraying?)
Cypher busied herself for a moment splashing her face in a water basin. (Ugh, I don’t know. I think liquid will be more immediately useful, especially if we start arming the tentacles with it.)
(I’m pretty sure weaponized pepper spray violates the Geneva Convention somehow,) Iris remarked dryly.
(A pity this world didn’t sign on for it,) Cypher returned just as dryly. The two ended up laughing for real before shaking their heads. (We’ll need a gas weapon eventually for indoor fighting. But, priority list and all that.)
(Yup. I’ll work on diluting the mixture and running the tests. Still, we’d be done if we were fine with the lethality of it.)
Cypher scratched the back of her head. (Going lethal is easy. I’d like to get something disabling but not crippling, non-lethal, so on.)
(Short of actual live human testing, I’m struggling to think of an effective gauge. We won’t really know until we go to war, I suspect.)
(We won’t know how any of this stuff works until it gets put into action. Just gotta do the best we can.)
(I’m not exactly itching for bloodshed but it would certainly help make this work a lot clearer.)
(You might get your wish,) Cypher remarked. (I had an idea about dungeons I was going to ask the ones up stairs about.)
(… Dungeons? Like video game dungeons?)
(Yeah. This world is bound to have ruins and old monsters, it’ll be useful exercise.)
(I don’t disagree. Well, I’ll be here working on the mixtures.)
Throwing on the elvetahn dress, Avaron left the laboratory, beginning the long walk up to the surface entrance. Worker drones passed her by and followed up, moving between the different levels of the Hive. There were so many now she had to designate lanes of traffic to make things move along. It rather reminded her of a roadway system; drones driving on the right, making turns into their respective areas, watching left-hand incoming traffic, and so on. With no concept of free will, they never got into roadside accidents or logjammed the incredibly tight system.
Ah, the tip-tap-tip of arachnid legs moving as a great whole.
Not quite musical but the rhythm of it rather soothed her ears. A gentle rustle underlined the sound, that of their densely haired bodies. She hadn’t thought it could actually make a distinct noise, but there it was. The newer drones were all covered in such hair, providing incredible insulation they’d otherwise die without. Another purpose suited them, however. The hair upon their heads had specially different colors, arranged into useful information. These numerical markings denoted genome, respective brood-mother, cloning serial, and some randomly chosen unique identifiers.
While she could instinctually track each drone perfectly, the system was more for Tsugumi and Gwyneth. It was a simple, functional way of giving each one a fingerprint for ‘individual identity’. She meant to experiment with different colored hair and patterns, but that’d be a next generation feature. Finally reaching the last flesh door, Avaron took note of a drone nearby. A crate of porcelain-chitin sat on its back, sealed tight with what she just then discovered to be fresh fruits.
“Oh, everyone will enjoy that, I imagine,” she muttered, popping open the lid and eyeballing them. Oranges, apples, peaches, and some others she only knew through Tahn’s knowledge. All edible and healthy, so that was all that mattered. Closing the lid with a slap, she turned toward the door. It slurped opened and another awaited on the other side. Such was the simple insulating airlock made for the front door. Sucking in a breath, Avaron braced herself.
The moment the outer-facing door opened, a blast of cold, freezing air smacked into her.
“I hate this, I hate this, I hate this,” Avaron muttered, hurrying along with her fruit-carrying drone. The outside of the cave was snowed in, the flowing river frozen over, and everything blanketed in white fluff. Constant going and coming from the Hive’s cave, at least, kept a relatively clear path to Tsugumi’s inn. The snow still reached up half-way on her shins. “Stupid fucking winter and its stupid f—”
A surge of primal instinct rattled her mind. Avaron, her drone, and all the surrounding sentries’ heads snapped in unison to a single location. Barely a baseball’s throw away stood a creature, ostensibly a naked woman. Pearlescent green skin and its odd hues wrapped around limbs, intertwining with roots and vines. In one breath she was beauty incarnate—a wild fertility goddess of the most reverent imaginations. Yet the slightest change of angle turned her into terrifyingly alien, something that wore the facsimile of humanity.
The stranger seemed as surprised as her, if those widening, almost-too-large tourmaline-colored eyes indicated.
How did she get in?
Hundreds of flying eyes in the sky, hundreds more on the ground, clicking teeth reverberating like sonar pulses, the raw sensation of living organisms, sound itself—nothing at all registered her presence until just then. One moment she didn’t exist, then she did. Avaron’s eyes narrowed, her hackles rising on pure territorial instinct.
“Oh my,” the stranger said, her smooth voice disturbingly sensual. “I hadn’t expected that.”
“Who are you?” Avaron demanded, no pretense of courtesy.
“I am Nahtura,” she said, flourishing her hands widely open in a grandiose presentation. It also happened to jiggle her impressive, naked breasts, their undersides coated in a bush of leaves and small flowers.
“Cool,” Avaron deadpanned back. “What do you want?”
“Tch.” Nahtura’s smug face turned into a scowl with alarming ease. “My ungrateful daughter has kicked me out, of course. Me, in the middle of winter!”
Avaron’s dubious eyes wavered for a moment, unable to recall anyone that would fit such looks. “Who?”
“Efval, of course.”
“… The queen?” Avaron asked, her head cocking to the side. “You’re her mother?”
“Do your ears not work so well?”
“Ah, so you are.” Avaron rolled her eyes. “Then, that makes you Tahn’s wife?”
Nahtura’s head twisted, an unnatural motion of someone shuddering with the deepest of angers. It lasted for but a moment, her whole demeanor snapping back to that eerie pleasantness she kept up. “That, mm, no. He is simply a nice little pollinator. I’m sure you know how it is.”
“I have an idea. Why’d the queen kick you out then?”
“Such a rude daughter I raised,” Nahtura complained, dragging her hands down her face. “Always fussy and wanting things her way. Well, she insisted I go back home, but as it is winter, there is not much home to go back to.”
It made sense, for a creature of the forest as she appeared to be. “And she told you about me?”
“Mm, the little divine heroine, a tentradom of all things, and that wondeful gun you helped her build.”
So either she is what she says she is or has a compromising amount of information, Avaron appraised, already feeling wary.
“Do you have somewhere warm?” Nahtura asked, wrapping her arms around her naked self. Whether to actually protect her skin or emphasize her obvious assets, not even Avaron knew. “I cannot stay in this cold for long.”
“Ahh, yeah,” Avaron grumbled and scratched the back of her head. “You’re welcome to stay, just don’t make any trouble.”
“Me? Trouble?” Nahtura responded with offense.
“You’ll understand when we get inside.”
Whether or not that placated the strange woman, Avaron started toward the inn again. Nahtura approached with a hop and a skip, her faun-like legs making her walk more of a gallop. Whether to walk or get through the snow, Avaron didn’t quite care. The closer the woman came the more alert her senses perked up, some inner part of her animal brain registering danger. Instinct was a funny thing and easy to confuse; still, Avaron made certain there’d always been one drone watching her at all times.
At least she was quite easy on the eyes.
I need to increase surveillance, she mused, reaching up to the sliding front doors of the inn. Pushing the heavy frame open, a blast of sweltering hot air blew washed over her in an instant. She and Nahtura stepped in, the drone pulling up the rear and shutting the door with a hindleg. “I’m back!” Avaron called out in the expansive, noisy central hall. Her words were swallowed up in the dull roar of people working and talking, barely anyone acknowledging her arrival. The whole of the interior had been turned into a makeshift bunkhouse, flimsy walls of tarp and cloth serving as dividers for private areas. It rather impressed her how so many people could fit into one building.
“What is this?” Nahtura asked, looking around with a note of disbelief.
“The only warm house you’d find for miles!” Avaron said, louder to be heard, and beckoned. “Come on!”
She led the way through the somewhat cramped aisles. Arzha’s servants and knights looked up as they passed by, giving her a familiar look, but a much longer one on Nahtura. Not every day a half-woman, half-tree thing walked by completely naked, granted. Toward the back of the hall awaited a wall, cut open to serve as a dinner and seating area. The scent of cooking foods teased her nose on the approach, heavily laced with meat and not much else. Gwyneth and one of Arzha’s knights—Saryl, now that Irs reminded her—were busy handling the food orders. Empty plates went in, full ones came out, all sorts of people coming and go. Arzha herself and one of the Harraxin, Amaya, were actually seated at the counter.
Well, one had a seat, the other a crate.
“Avaron!” Gwyneth called out joyfully, nearly dropping a stack of empty plates with her enthusiastic bounce. Saryl saved her, if just barely. “Who is that?” she asked, recovering with a bashful smile. The others nearby turned, all their gazes falling upon the naked woman behind her.
“This is Nahtura,” Avaron said, jabbing a thumb over her shoulder. “Queen Gladestride’s mother, apparently.”
Arzha started choking on the food in her mouth. Amaya smacked her heartily, a gentle motion that still almost sent the human falling to the ground.
“The queen’s mother? Here?” Gwyneth chirped, and Saryl wisely took the plates from her before they fell again. “How wonderful to meet you!” she said, bowing hurriedly.
“So you’re the one,” Nahtura said, an appraising tone to her voice.
Amidst all the noise and people, Avaron simply turned her head. A tiny glance from the corner of her eye, enough to stare straight into Nahtura’s own. To any other it looked nothing interesting; but between them, a wordless intent was communicated. All of Avaron’s keen, hyperaware focus poured into that one look, a flexing of her vastly quiet presence that made magically sensitive like Amaya perk up on reflex. Nahtura seemed taken aback, if only for a moment—her following smile oozed satisfaction and terrifying pleasure.
“My daughter mentioned her, is all,” Nahtura said simply, waving her hand to clear away proverbial smoke. “Priestesses of the Flame have a bad relationship with us.”
“Something I keep hearing but no one ever tells me,” Avaron remarked, turning back to Gwyneth. Clapping her hands, the cargo-carrying drone hustled up, slapping the porcelain crate onto the wooden countertop. “Here’s the fruits, at least.”
“… Fruits?” Nahtura wondered aloud.
“Really?” Gwyneth asked. So it was Avaron slid off the lid, and they all peeked at the gleaming oranges awaiting within.
“Yup. They’re about as good as I can make them. Bit odd a forest has orange trees, but whatever.”
“We shouldn’t,” Nahtura remarked, blinking owlishly. “They have not grown here for … a long, time. Where did you find these?”
“Hm. Grew them myself,” Avaron said, sticking her nose up slightly.
“I don’t feel any magic in them,” Nahtura pointed out.
“Eh? No magic, really. It was pretty tricky, admittedly, but I mean—” Avaron picked out an orange and held it out to her, “—taste for yourself.”
Nahtura took the offering suspiciously, rolling the orange over in her hands. She gave it a sniff and a careful, thinking look for a moment. Satisfied or not, she nodded and pressed in her two thumbs, breaking into the orange’s flesh. Far easier than anyone had a right to, she split the thing in half for the most part, a gush of sticky, sweet smelling juice spilling out.
“Tsugumi’s gonna kill me,” Avaron muttered dryly at the sight.
Giving the innards a sniff and a lick, Nahtura’s face contorted into a tight expression. She took a mighty bite out, flesh and sweet insides alike, chewing with absolutely zero manners at all. It rather surprised Avaron that this woman claimed to be Efval’s mother at all. Before she could say a word about it, Nahtura started tightening, a quiet squeal arising in her throat. Just after she swallowed, she jumped up with her hands launching outward.
“Incredible! It is!” her yell filled the hall, accompanied by an explosion of magic. Green-and-blue colored wisps shot out in every direction, hitting all kinds of surfaces randomly. With a flashing pop, flowers, small bushes, and little trees sprung into existence. Surprised yelps and yells filled the hall as everyone found themselves dodging or being hit by the wayward magic. For those it hit, the plants turned into wreaths of themselves, beautiful looking if quite sudden. For as quick as it started, it ended, the last of the magic fading as all sorts of plants now dotted the insides.
Avaron, half-ready to shoulder-tackle the strange woman, gaped at the sight. “Wh-what did you do?!” she said, her voice cracking and turning the yell into a squeak.
“Hm?” Nahtura looked away from her orange, taking in the mess she’d made all around them. Hiding her face behind the fruit, her Cheshire smile could just barely be seen. “How embarrassing. Seems there’s a bit of spring in me still.”
“What does that—”
“What happened in here?!”
Avaron’s sucked her lips in as her accusing finger wilted like a dying flower. (Hey, so does anyone want to change place—)
(We’re good,) the other nine cut her off immediately.
Turning around, Avaron regarded Tsugumi, decked out in a cooking apron and four eyes demanding an answer. “Alright, so I can explain.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Refugee Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Desperate Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Mysterious Mother
Chapter 31: Military Exercises
Notes:
As a general heads up to prior readers: Chapter 24, Blind Devotion, was just released. Some people may be confused at why the story updated but the chapter count was still at 30 ... so, releasing this one for free as some more reading, and an advisory update. If you haven't, go read about Gwyneth enjoying herself.
Thanks for reading.
Chapter Text
Is life cyclical because it is, or we believe it is?
*~*
“Such a strange tentradom you are. All these women and you have only taken two?”
An assorted amount of choking and not-so-surprised looks shot around the table. Avaron, staring with a weariness not unlike a solid 24-hours of work and no sleep might convey. “Oh, sure, just blurt it out. Do you want a megaphone? The ones in the back didn’t hear.”
Nahtura blinked as slowly as a cat who didn’t care. “What?”
“You’re a tentradom?” Hanamaru asked, leaning in over the floor table. “You’re too … together, to be one.”
“What does that even mean?” Avaron asked, waving her chopsticks incredulously.
“Tentradoms grow everywhere like bad weeds,” Hanamaru said, wrinkling her nose. “Smell bad, flesh looks bad, just bad. Those spiders look like tentacles now that I think on it …”
“Wow what a high bar to pass,” Avaron remarked dryly before letting out a big, heaving sigh. “Yes, I’m a tentradom. No, I’m not going to go around raping people. Yes, Tsugumi and Gwyneth are my wives at this point.”
“I am a wife now?” Tsugumi said amusedly.
“Oh, a wife?” Gwyneth jumped in at the same time, looking—well, bouncy.
“If you two can think of an easier way to explain it, I’m listening.”
A moment of silence passed over the table. “It is not … wholly, inaccurate,” Tsugumi said slowly while Gwyneth nodded along.
Avaron, her hands full of chopsticks and a bowl, had to reach for her temples with a small tentacle from her backside. The bulbous thing rubbed in a soothing circle, all kinds of eyes falling upon it immediately. “I’m getting such a headache. Where was I?” She stared up for a moment. “Right, there. So you two are telling me—” she waved her chopsticks between Nahtura and Hanamaru, “—there was a huge war with the nagraki a couple centuries ago.”
“The ‘when’ is different,” Nahtura said. “For me and those of my forest, the war had only ended a few centuries ago when we found no other nagraki again. The humans and shorter lived folk counted it over many, many centuries before then.”
“Tis true,” Gwyneth said with a nod. “The end of the Ash War came when the skies cleared in earnest. To me, that sounds as if twas much, err, further back than thy mark.”
“Not as much as you say,” Hanamaru pointed out. “It hasn’t been as long as what she says—” a thumb jabbed in Nahtura’s direction, “—I’m still of fighting age, after all.”
“Mmm, this different lifetime thing is a real headache. What caused the skies to blacken in the first place?” Avaron asked, already giving up on that historical timeline idea. “To cover the whole continent for so long, it must’ve been immense.”
“The nagraki had long rooted themselves within the Old Mountain,” Nahtura said. “Not one of us could break their fortress. So it came to be if we could take it, we would destroy it.” She held out her arm, gesturing from the elbow to the tip of her wrist. “They drew upon the blood of the earth, sapping it to strengthen themselves. With my roots, we descended deep and stirred the blood mightily.”
“A volcanic eruption,” Avaron translated, mostly for herself. “It’d have to be pretty serious to do that sort of damage.”
“It was.”
“I see. Still, without dealing with Haska, you were only delaying the inevitable.”
“He is ever impossible to find,” Nahtura remarked, eying her finger nails with a hint of boredom. “Such a tiresome man-thing, always slinking around. We only saw eye to eye once, then never again.”
“Strange he’d give someone like you so much trouble.”
“Do not confuse insufferable boredom for inability.”
Arrogance never helps, Avaron thought, but elected to keep those words in check. Rubbing her mouth with the back of her hand, she spied at Hanamaru for a long moment. Long enough the harraxin perked up with a bit of irritation. “Changing topics here, but I was wondering if you’d help me with something.”
“Hn?” Hanamaru stared, somewhere between intrigued and annoyed.
“A real simple military exercise. You against one of my big crushers.”
“Ho? You wish to pit a spawnling against me?” Hanamaru cracked a smile before chuckling and shaking her head. “Such a pitiful enemy, it’d be a waste of my time.”
“Alright, well if you’re not going to I’ll ask one of the other—”
“—I did not say ‘no’,” Hanamaru’s remark cut in, curt and low in the tone as if not to be heard by others. “But there is not a point to doing so.”
“Why?”
“You and them are too weak.” Hanamaru scratched the side of her head, her great claws raking from top to bottom. “It is like asking a baby to wield a club. There is nothing to train.”
“That—is a fair point now that I’m thinking about it,” Avaron said, crossing her arms thoughtfully. “If I do nothing then there is no growth, though.”
“Find weaker prey, then come back to me.”
“Mmm,” Avaron grumbled, face scrunching up. “Would anyone happen to know about ancient ruins, or dungeons, or something filled with evil things?”
“Those I could speak of are guarded for good reason,” Nahtura said, throwing the remains of an orange rind on the ever growing pile beside her.
“If I might, Lady Avaron,” Arzha said, looking quite pointed. “Why not spar with my knights?”
The thought earnestly hadn’t crossed her mind, but Avaron sure wasn’t going to say that. “Considering all you’d gone through, I was not certain it would be polite of me.”
“We have had time a plenty to rest and regain our strength. I should be glad to put them through something appropriately challenging.”
“I don’t know about challenging, but if you do not mind, then sure.”
*~*
“My lady, we’re going inside there?”
“Yes, Haleen,” Arzha remarked in a voice that brokered nothing further. Even if she, herself, felt a tad bit of apprehension heading into the mysterious cave Avaron lived inside of. Still, she had her sword and magic, and her knights; she feared nothing. Not even the ominously legendary prowess of the tentradom and its women victims.
Stepping into the cave, Arzha was not sure what she expected. Something, suitably horrible looking or smelling, certainly. Not the rather odd stone and blue flesh growing beneath it. She couldn’t help looking around and stepping over to the guard rail on her left. The flowing river had frozen over, even inside the cave, beneath a pane of … glass? While see-through, it looked off, not quite perfectly clear, nor quite like any glass she’d ever seen.
Not to mention the crystal lights embedded in the ceiling and walls. A cave it was not—she found it more like a natural grown castle.
“Right, so!” Avaron said, slapping the wall with teeth in front of her. A wall with teeth.
Arzha did a doubletake.
“The drones are always busy working but they’ll stop if you need to get by. Just be polite about it and they won’t be fussy.”
“We are the epitome of gracious guests,” Arzha declared.
“Believe me, I’m thankful for it,” Avaron said, rubbing her forehead for a moment. The teeth behind her wiggled and moved, then a sucking slurp of flesh contracting followed. A hole opened in the wall, becoming a great yawning maw that the tentradom walked in through.
Arzha did as she ever had: lead by example. In striding forward, her knights hurriedly caught up behind her, though she heard their mumbling misgivings. The teeth-door slurped shut behind them, and the next one in front opened. A belch of terribly hot and humid air washed over her, suspiciously absent of any untoward smells. “Oh, it is warm,” she remarked, a bit disconcerted by the temperature. It stood above Tsugumi’s inn past the point of comfortableness.
One could not wear full armor for long in such heat.
“Yeah it has to be pretty hot down here—” Avaron paused when she looked over her shoulder. “Ah, right. Full plate armor.”
“Indeed,” Arzha returned dryly.
“Let’s hurry to the testing arena then. It’s somewhat cooler and you can take off some of the armor.”
“W-we have no need for removing our armor!” Haleen protested from behind Arzha. “Least of all in this place!”
Avaron’s face contorted with confusion for a moment. “If you want heat stroke that’s your problem.” She turned and headed in, and Arzha waved for the rest to follow.
Aside from the uncomfortable heat, the inside was not that different. Not until they started downward, heading on a sloping staircase. A dull noise began, the rhythmic tap-tap-tap of something ahead. It became louder and louder, and Arzha saw why when they reached their first intersection. Tentacle-spider creatures moved with a purpose, broken into two distinct streams of passage. One went in one direction, the other the opposite. A clean empty space in the middle kept them apart, and it was through this they walked.
In going deeper, the few became more, and soon there were dozens upon dozens of the creatures at any one time. To her surprise, two whole new paths opened up, with the creatures now walking on the ceiling! Those that carried crates, boxes, web-wrappings, or otherwise proceeded along the floor. They did so unendingly and unerringly, moving with a purpose Arzha had never seen before.
No, rather, they remind me of ants, she mused. Almost entirely so …
Minutes more they ended up in front of another teeth-door. The air had simmered down a bit, but Arzha couldn’t tell if she wasn’t simply more used to it. It yawned opened before them, and in stepping through, Arzha found a rather different place awaiting. An enormous hall, almost like a cathedral, stretched before them. Sloping roof supports and pillars of white stone and blue flesh held the roof up. She paused upon looking, taken aback entirely by the sight of such immense flesh tendrils writhing in the ceiling.
That alone disconcerted her. The hundreds upon hundreds of egg sacks connected to it, filled with tentacle spiders, disturbed her far more.
“Okay—” Avaron’s clapping hands drew all their attention to her, “—Snacks and drinks are over there in that rest area. I can’t do much about the heat since I don’t have cold magic or anything. Feel free to drop whatever gear you want.”
Arzha appraised the area, little more than some large couches, chairs, and one of those pure water holding crystal tanks. The crates laying around probably had the foods. Turning toward her knights, she said, “Go ahead and inspect it.”
The nodded properly and headed over.
“And what would you have us do?” Arzha asked Avaron.
“To be frank, a battery of tests. Your knights look like they have a good range of weapons.”
Spear, sword, warhammer, bow and arrow, Arzha thought with a quick mental inventory check. “They do.”
“Then I’ll have them do a series of one-on-one drills with my training drones.”
“… Training drone?”
“Ah, yeah. Here, take a look.”
Avaron led her over into an area near the center of the immense hall. A ring of four circles encompassed a large portion of it, clearly marking the borders of an arena. Arzha saw one of the tentacle-creatures strut out from its spot near a wall. In fact, now that she looked, many dozens of them seemingly slept along the walls at the hall’s center. She hadn’t even noticed them at first at all.
Unlike all the others, the creature bore a look similar to the larger-than-horse sized ones she’d seen briefly. Its chitinous shell was angled and sloped, overlapping and protective like natural plate mail. An oddity came in that its forelegs were blunted and round, not a single bladed edge for cutting. Avaron stepped over and patted the thing on its back, her hand slapping the chitin. Side-by-side, the new creature was larger than the workers by almost twice their size. “This girl here is a training drone.”
Girl? Arzha wondered briefly. “I see. It may be a difficult creature to contend with. It is rather … new, for us to fight.”
“That’s also something I’m curious about. Anyway, you lot got done quick over there,” Avaron said, looking over. The Snowflake Knights indeed had gone over the rest area in quick order. Haleen’s rather tight expression left Arzha a bit ill-at-ease. “If it’s not too much trouble, I’ll give you the run down.”
The knights exchanged looks rather stiffly.
“Run down?” Saryl asked first.
Avaron scratched her forehead. “Right. I’ll explain what the actual combat training is.”
“Oh,” some of the knights said in unison.
“For this phase, one knight and one training drone. The knight may fight to kill the training drone; however, if the drone is able to what would’ve been a fatal blow, it wins,” Avaron said, lifting up one of the tentacle creatures forelegs. “These are normally like swords, so they will act like it. Is there, uhh, a healer among you?”
Magna raised her hand silently.
“So long as it is not fatal nor a limb removed, Magna can heal it,” Arzha clarified.
“Alright. Things being what they are, you can go all out against the training drones. It doesn’t matter if they die or get crippled.”
“… Shouldn’t it?” Arzha asked, brows knitting together. Avaron’s two proclaimed wives were quite obviously pregnant, and probably had given birth already. That they birthed so many truly beggared disbelief, but she wouldn’t know better.
“It probably sounds strange, but don’t worry about it. They’re disposable.”
“Then what is the point of this training?” Haleen asked, shrugging her shoulders and hands rather rudely. “We train them just to kill them?”
“What? No, that … Oh. Right, you wouldn’t know about our [Ability].”
“It would be unbecoming to ask it, but Haleen raises a point,” Arzha said.
“For you, I do not mind. You all understand it is important to keep what you hear to utter secrecy, yes?”
Arzha made a point of looking over her knights, and the seven of them did nod with solemn seriousness. Some more meaningfully than others. She herself also did so.
“Good. The ability is called [Hive Mind]. Everything you see here, every drone, every strand of flesh, it is all connected together into a single unified mind.” Avaron tapped her temple, her face far more serious than Arzha had ever seen. “What one sees, we all see. What one feels, we all feel. This is our great power, the unity of many different bodies into one living whole.”
“But, how does that solve the problem?” Arzha asked, hardly at all able to start figuring out such a complex idea. “If they die, does that not hurt all of you?”
“Not in the way you’re thinking of. To say it differently, the skills, combat experience, and understanding one drone learns is shared amongst them all.”
A prickling, skin-tingling sensation crept down Arzha’s back at the words. Her throat became dry for a moment, a certain difficulty in swallowing as a prelude to a nervous sensation. “Then, even if one dies, its skills live on.”
Avaron smiled. A simple gesture, but the longer Arzha looked, the more unnerved she felt. Something was off—an inkling of familiarity drenched in an unknowable way that made her hair stand on end. “Correct. So long as the [Hive Mind] exists, the Hive grows stronger in its experience. Whether it is ten drones or a thousand, eventually we will develop the skills to defeat any enemy. We have all the bodies we could ever need to do so.”
Not a trained warrior, nor an accomplished adventurer; not a single person of great renown or skill. The first ones may be dumb and stupid, but as they learned, those who followed in their steps built off of them. It was an army—no, a fighting force of a kind Arzha had never even imagined facing before. If one did kill them all quickly and decisively, they would be overrun. No trick could surprise them more than once. No tactic could punish them without great effort the more it was used. No queendom could replenish the losses in trained troops fast enough.
The inevitability of it all yawned in her mind, a terrifying chasm she suddenly felt dangerously close to falling in.
“I see,” the princess said, all the practiced grace of royalty. “And you need our expertise to help get this experience.”
“Exactly. The Hive is still young, little more than a baby. We’ve already fought the kagr once and it was just so, so sloppy.” Avaron shook her head, the phantom that awful expression already gone. “As it stands we couldn’t take on any serious army if we tried. So, there it is. Shall we begin?”
*~*
It naturally fell to her to be the first of the knights, something Haleen was all too glad for. Training exercises? Helping improve this ‘hive’? The ridiculousness of the idea rankled her sensibilities. For whatever safe harbor Avaron provided, Haleen knew there had to be ulterior motives. A tentradom of all creatures couldn’t be trusted, no matter how cordial she acted.
Haleen watched the training drone strut into the marked arena, opposite of her. Avaron, Arzha, and some others sat nearby, having moved those disgusting flesh chairs over, while the rest stood. “Alright, fairly straight forward. I give the signal then you two start fighting. Haleen’s goal is to kill or subdue the drone; the drone’s goal is to hit a vital weakpoint or knock Haleen down.”
“Such a task makes the point of plate mail useless!” Haleen barked out, scowling over her shoulder.
“I wouldn’t send sword drones after plate mail to begin with. That’d be the job of the bigger girls to deal with.”
The bigger girls—ah, those larger than horse monstrosities. Haleen’s face soured at the thought and she turned back to the drone. “So you say. Whenever you are ready,” she declared, drawing her sword. Gripping her rounded buckler in the other hand, she did feel a bit out of place for armament. Hers was the weapons to duel civilized people, not whatever that thing was. Still, one did not always have the luxury of choice.
Years of training were not for nothing, and Haleen’s mind cleared, her gaze deadly serious. She’d decisively end that thing’s life as a certain tribute for Lady Arzha.
“Aaaaand, BEGIN!”
The word hung in the air for a moment, then the creature sprang into action. It skittered toward her with a speed that caught Haleen by surprise.
It’s fast, she mused, already stepping sideways to manipulate its angle. In doing so, her shield would deflect most of the attacks from that angle, while leaving her sword room to work. No grace, no methodology, nothing of skill—it rushed straight at her. It reared up its forelegs, angling for a strike; two weapons at once. Haleen lunged sideways, evading one blow and parrying the other. Yet when her sword swung at the thing’s legs, a long clang of shaking metal vibrated up her arm.
It’s hard?
The tentacle went skittering sideways from the blow, clearly off balance, but unharmed. Haleen checked her sword and found no real damage done to it. That look isn’t for show, she mused, squinting at the tentacle. The two of them circled the arena, staring each other down. I can’t cut through it, not without magic. But it has little weak points except the joints and that … mouth. The underbelly should be thinner in its armor, but that would involve knocking it over. Or somehow raising it up from its lower position than her.
Fine.
She stepped forward, a careful approach with a stab at the ready. The tentacle raised its forelegs in anticipation. In this she had the advantage of reach, a longer arm and a longer blade still. She feinted a thrust toward its face, one of its arms predictably going for a parry. Yet its put too much into that motion, an over extension that left its other readied arm worthless to use.
There.
A clean opening, fleeting as the tentacle tried to pull away. Haleen stepped forward, her sword thrusting with deadly focus. In spite of the creature’s softer, flesh-like mouth and ‘face’, it took effort for her to ram the sword straight down its head. There was no scream, no pitiful struggling of limbs, just a singular shock of its body seizing. Without wasting a moment she kicked her boot against its body and wrenched her sword out.
The tentacle, for its part, fell to the ground.
“Hmph.” Haleen stepped back, swinging her blade to try and get some of that icky looking dark blue blood off. “Hardy but inelegant.”
“It’s not dead.”
Haleen would’ve looked over her shoulder if it weren’t for the tentacle rising up again. Despite the deep gouging wound hemorrhaging, it still yet lived. I did not hit its brain? she marveled. Such a blow would’ve been between the eyes for a person. No, something was off. The opening of the cut visibly stitched itself back together again, even if it took dozens of seconds to do so.
“It regenerates?” she said with some surprise.
“They have a mild form of regeneration. Enough that blows like yours aren’t immediately fatal, at least.”
That made it so much more complicated to kill; at least, in ordinary circumstances. “So be it,” Haleen said, giving her sword one last good flick. In holding it poised for another lunging strike, she instead chanted sharply, “Great winds, speed my [Soaring Blade]!” The air around the actual blade of the sword twisted and churned, vibrating along it with a keening whine.
“Oh ho?!” Avaron cried out excitedly.
Again Haleen went in, and again the tentacle raised its forelegs. This time her aim was them, not the creature’s body. With a strong, level swing she cut through the one coming to deflect her. Carrying speed with grace and purpose, she swung into one of its walking legs, cutting it in two just as easily. When she ended up on its other side, the tentacle was left writhing on the ground behind her.
At that point, cutting apart its central body was easy enough, even if she had to dismember it somewhat to do so.
“Interesting!” came the response she definitely didn’t expect to hear. “Interesting, that is wind magic?”
Haleen stared at her, and so Arzha instead said, “It is, one for enhancing a blade’s strength.”
“I see, I see. And you couldn’t get through its armor without that?” Avaron asked Haleen.
She wasn’t sure what she expected, but that woman-creature didn’t have a loser’s attitude at all. “No,” Haleen said slowly. “Against its armor I’d prefer a warhammer or an axe. Knowing that it can regenerate, fighting one with a sword is simply too slow.”
“Even with that magic of yours?”
“Not all knights or fighters can use magic,” Arzha said. “At least, not strong enough to be worth fighting with. A traditional army is built with non-magical soldiers protecting the magical ones.”
“Hmm, funny business that,” Avaron said, looking thoughtfully downward.
A skittering noise drew her attention, and Haleen watched as some other training drones came in. They hauled off the dead one to the far end of the hall, its blood leaving a long trail across the floor. In turn, a new drone stood on the other end of the arena, no different than the last one she just killed.
“Okay, let’s begin the second round then, if you’re still up for it, Haleen.”
Hearing her own name in that voice really did leave a bad taste in her mouth. Nonetheless, Haleen turned and faced her next enemy. “Ready.”
“Aaaand, BEGIN!”
*~*
Over the course of the day, Avaron found all sorts of interesting experiences in the exercises. Chief among them was the surprising resilience of her drones. Perhaps as a result of the newfound [Hive Mind] branching path, they could take hits, regenerate, or shrug off blows the first generation never survived from. In fact, Arzha’s knights needed varying forms of magic or special tactics in order to really defeat them. Bladed weapons otherwise just couldn’t do anything. The bow and arrow itself was comically useless, even in a situation where the drone just stood still and got shot at.
The hardest opponent had been Saryl and her warhammer, as a good blow was still enough to cripple or kill outright. That, however, was not out of expectation. Such a weapon traditionally countered basic armor, and so her drones had to use more evasion than durability to fare against them. To her chagrin, however, none of them really managed a ‘killing blow’ on the knights. Their defenses were exceptional, and their awareness of how the engagement would go far surpassed her own.
At the cost of dozens of training drones, she’d found invaluable insight all the same.
A loud exhale of relief came from the rest area.
“It’s so hot in here!” Saryl complained, her vambraces and gauntlets already coming off. “Maggie, come help me take off this breastplate.”
I’m more impressed it took them this long, Avaron thought dryly as the knights worked on taking off their armor. Except for Haleen, who made it a point of remaining in hers. The outer shell of iron armor came off in a hurry, and even the under armor of … padded cloth and chain mail, apparently? I know layering the armor is a thing but chain mail?
Hmm, layering armor.
In the end they remained in another layer of cloth, one looser fitting and obviously more for comfort than defense. Through that sweat drenched fabric, however, she saw it. Their beautiful, muscular bodies, defined with a thickness of firm excellence and sculpted aesthetic. They weren’t that far off from Greek statues almost! Real, bonafide human women in the flesh with such incredible—
Oh, the smells.
Right, the smells.
The scent of prime, breeding worthy women.
Goodness the colors of what she scented, so close together, yet distinct. It reminded her of wine tasting almost, a heady, sense clogging experience but a skilled tongue picked apart the peculiars. Her mouth tightened, a prelude to the salivating desire waiting to drool right out—
“Your eyes have a most unwelcoming look,” Haleen’s biting remark cut in.
Thank you, secretary, Avaron thought, rather snapping back to her senses. “It’s not that,” she said, dismissively waving off Haleen’s too-accurate remark. “Rather, it’d completely skipped my mind about making layered armor.”
“How do you mean?” Elseh, one of the quieter knights asked quite curiously.
“The outer layer of the drones—their carapace, connects straight to the muscles,” Avaron said, trying to demonstrate with her hands by making one layer over the other. “There’s nothing in between. If I can grow a new layer there to attach their armor to, it would …” she trailed off, her other selves already busy toying with the idea.
“What would be the purpose?” Arzha asked, brow creased in thought. “They carry themselves as if wearing plate armor.”
“Oh, it’s not to increase that part of their durability, but rather—” Avaron frowned, her hands playing with themselves while she thought. “A layer between muscle and carapace would let me enhance some of their regenerative power. It might may make growing that carapace far easier and cheaper …” At Arzha’s inscrutable look, Avaron caught herself. “Anyway, it’s just a way of doing it I hadn’t thought about.”
“You can change how they grow?”
“As their queen, yes,” Avaron remarked simply. “I change their blood and in turn, change how they grow.”
Arzha looked quite thoughtful for a moment before her eyebrows shot upward. “Most incredible. I have not heard of anything having that sort of [Ability].”
“If I couldn’t, none of this would be possible,” Avaron said, waving a hand at the hall around them.
“… Can you change other people’s blood?”
Blinking at the question, Avaron scrunched her face up. “Mm, no. I could take their blood in and learn from it, but not put any changes into them. I can only affect those who are apart of the Hive.”
“I see. Forgive the, unsavoriness of which I approach the topic from, but I would like to learn more of how tentradoms work. Our understanding of them is, in essence, almost nothing at all.”
Avaron shrugged. “I’m not sure how much it will help. I’m very different from the other kinds you know of.”
“That much is clear. But, if it is apparent that tentradoms are no different from other monja, then does that not mean they can be reasoned with?”
Haleen looked ready to pop with how much she wanted to speak, judging by her intense looks. Avaron paved over that, rather not trusting whatever words would come out of her mouth. “Based on this world’s reputation with them, I wouldn’t be the first one to take that risk. It is entirely possible they’re outright broken degenerates, little more than animals.”
“I do not disagree, but the mind does wonder.”
“Granted. I’d put the thought out of mind unless we actually do ever find one.”
“Indeed.”
Arzha proved herself to be an interesting and vexing woman. Commanding in presence, refined in stature and handling, and inscrutable in how her thoughts worked. In all respects, Avaron was quite glad to have her in good company than as an enemy. The differences of their upbringings notwithstanding, she found more of a kindred understanding in their thinking. For the most part, anyway. Avaron blinked as a thought came to mind. “Actually, that does remind me. Did you want to try an exercise?”
“I am far more powerful than my knights. As Hanamaru said, it would be pointless for me to do so.”
“But you can use magic, right?”
“I can.”
“It’d be useful to me to see how it’s done,” Avaron said pointedly. “Of everything, magic is my weakest area, so anything at all is useful.”
“… If that is what you need, then I suppose so.”
A clapping of hands followed with an excited squeal. “Oh, we get to see Her Highness’ magic!” Saryl chirped. The other knights perked up at that, all of them becoming rather lively and interested.
Is it that special? Avaron couldn’t help wondering as they all headed back to the arena’s edge. A new training drone skittered over into position as Arzha herself took her spot. “Well, go ahead, it’s just a standing target.”
“As you say.” Arzha held up a gloved hand, stained as it was from weeks of overuse. Unlike all the other knights, her poise held a natural, calming grace. A certainty of purpose and intent unburdened by frivolous issues. If Avaron hadn’t seen the difference herself right then and there, she wouldn’t have believed it.
That talk of being stronger isn’t for nothing.
Peculiar blue light gathered around Arzha’s hand, rapidly turning into a frosty covering of ice and freezing air. Avaron blinked with utmost surprise at the sight, her mouth opening to say something. In the next instant, Arzha snapped her hand, a motion from her shoulder out to the front like a sword. Crinkling and crackling ice filled the air as a lance as big as a sword suddenly snapped into existence. It shot forward and skewered right through the training drone’s carapace, sheer force sending it sliding backward.
Avaron already knew it to be dead, for the blow struck deep and deadly. It was less of a sword and more of a spear in function, an extremely long spear. “Incredible,” she breathed out then clapped her hands. “Wonderful! You know ice magic?! Nevermind, obviously you do.”
Arzha looked amused, if that small, wry crack of a smile gave it away.
“Do you know how to enchant with it?”
“… Enchant? No, my skill is made for battle, not craft.”
“Ah, there goes that idea. Can you teach me how to do it?” Avaron asked, strutting up to Arzha quite excitedly. “I just need somewhere to start! Nuala is being stubborn and not helping me.”
“I—” Arzha, quite obviously caught off guard, blinked owlishly. “I am not certain I can. However, it would be interesting to try.”
“Yessssss!” Avaron clapped her hands and hopped on the spot.
“That aside, what did you learn?” Arzha asked, sounding far more in her element.
Pausing, Avaron gave it a thought. “Some very interesting things happened. The way it cut into the drone was markedly different from an actual bladed weapon. The carapace ate some of the damage, but you're so strong everything that did go through was pure overkill.” Her head tilted, hand rubbing her chin. “I have no idea how to understand how this damage actually killed it. Would you mind doing it a few more times?”
“If you believe it useful.”
In the end, Arzha worked through the rest of the training drones Avaron had prepared. A small pile of bodies soon amassed once again, waiting to be shoved into the digestion stomach vats beneath the arena. Only when all the others had left, of course. No reason to disconcert them with that business. Once everything was done, and the knights rested up, Avaron stood off to the side, thoughtful.
In terms of economics, a mage-fighter like Arzha is an oddity. She is all quality, no quantity. But suppose there is someone with enough quality to overwhelm my quantity … Avaron pursed her lips. I suspect this will be my glaring weakness. I can blanket the land, but a spear will rip my side open.
If she could not defeat these incredible individuals, she needed some way of containing them; stopping them, sidestepping them, ignoring them. I’m already in deep on quantity, so why not go further? She mused, her eyes sliding downward, staring at the floor. There’s a whole new world for me to build in, right here.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Refugee Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Desperate Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Mysterious Mother
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Chapter 32: Unwanted Guests
Chapter Text
To help for self-satisfaction is to be mortal.
*~*
A few days after the training exercises, Arzha found herself in Avaron’s company again. Now she and her knights moved along the divine heroine, trudging through the snow-caked forest. At the least the weather was calm despite the overcast skies and dim light of a blocked afternoon sun.
“We’re near the clearing they’re heading into,” Avaron said.
In coming alongside a large, hibernating oak tree, Arzha peeked out. A clearing or field of some kind yawned long and wide through the forest, perhaps clear cut out at some point. With how wide open it was, archers would have clear shot all the way from the tree lines, if they were skilled. Turning back to Avaron and her knights, Arzha couldn’t help seeing the several dozen warrior drones awaiting silently. “And you are certain there are … how many?”
“Six now,” Avaron said. “After tracking their camps for the last few nights, there’s about six. I can see five together, so we have someone missing.”
“Hm, someone with a specialty in stealth. Haleen?”
“I can barely sense this approaching group. If the sixth has broken off or is hiding, they are capable enough to evade me.”
“I should’ve brought Kagura with,” Avaron groused. “What do you want to do?”
“Hm. All of you, cover my flanks. I will go out and meet them personally. Can your drones be ready to flank as well, Avaron?”
“Yup. Give the shout and they’ll rush in to body guard for you.”
“That will do. How far away are these people?”
“A couple minutes.”
“Then get into positions everyone.”
Her knights fanned out, with Haleen and Avaron keeping her back area covered. The warrior drones as well stretched out farther, their white fur giving them a disturbing amount of natural camouflage. I wonder if she can make us coats out of that? Arzha mused, staring down at the raggedy cloths they’d wrapped themselves in. There was no hiding the sound of plate mail, but they didn’t need to give away their identity, either.
Arzha waited, hand resting on the hilt of her sword, peeking out around the tree. True to word, the strangers approaching broke through the farther away tree line. Their formation was nonexistent and their equipment visibly shoddy; ragged, even. They moved either as complete incompetents or incredible assassins who could hide their natures. The latter made no sense at all; but still, she only saw five of them. Where the sixth could be in a bare, open field rather disconcerted her.
Invisibility magic? Or stealth skills?
One hid from light, the other hid from people. Still, she had no means of dealing with either yet. A wide area ice attack would catch anyone if the fighting broke out, at the least. Arzha moved when they reached half-way into the field, a position of absolute exposure. The fact they hadn’t stopped immediately when she exposed herself—they had to be rookies. Even a veteran would have a hitch in their gait when something entered their field of vision.
No, unless they already knew everyone around them?
Hmm.
They stopped, hands flying up to point at her. She too stopped, half-ready to dodge an incoming magic attack.
“Ah! Someone is there!” a voice shouted. A familiar one that tickled Arzha’s mind.
Yet, no attack. Arzha, stiffly standing up and ready to pivot, shouted back, “You trespass on protected land! Who are you?!”
The group seemingly talked amongst themselves for a moment. One at the front then turned in her direction. “We, uhh, mean no offense!” he shouted. “We’re looking for a friend of ours!”
Arzha squinted. “And who is that?”
They debated amongst themselves for a moment. Their leader then shouted, “The, uh, proprietor of the Moonlit Rose Inn, if you know it!”
A trusted if unverified source, is it? Arzha mused over the code-speak of her secret messages. Raising a hand, she made a large, sweeping beckon. “Come, I know her! Let us speak.”
In their bumbling approach, they betrayed their inexperience. Arzha knew beyond a doubt, then, they had to be something odd. When they came close enough, she saw their faces through the wrappings and hoods, poor as they were for such weather. A skin-tingling realization overcame her, one that made the ever-present cold disappear.
“You are the divine heroines I met.”
They all stopped, Glasses at the front. “Eh?” he sputtered out.
Arzha simply unwrapped her head and lifted the visor protecting her face. The heroines all let out startled sounds, pointing at her as if she’d become a ghost. Her sour expression quickly made them all straighten up quickly. “What are you doing here?”
“That—“ Glasses pushed up his glasses on his nose, “—is a long story.”
“Give me a believable short one, then.”
“… After going over what you said, we did our own looking into the Church. It wasn’t for us at all, but we couldn’t escape. Not until the Ashmourn invaded Artor.”
Arzha almost did a doubletake. “The Ashmourn are invading now?”
“I don’t know fully why or how, but the Church sent nearly everything they had to stop them. Thanks to Hoshi-san’s skills, we managed to escape.”
“Who?”
“He’s right—Hoshi-san, stop hiding!” Glasses demanded.
“Fool! There are more of them behind her!” came a boyish sounding voice, but no body to place it to. The other heroines did turn back to Arzha at that.
“My guard,” she said simply, then raised a hand to beckon them. Haleen and Avaron did emerge, the rest remaining in their positions.
“Oh, Knight-san from before!” one of the girls exclaimed, clapping her hands.
“… You are the heroines?” Haleen asked confusedly.
“You cannot deceive me!” Hoshi declared, “I know there are more hiding off to the sides!”
“Hoshi-san!” Glasses all but yelled. “You are being rude in front of a princess!”
The words hung in the air for a moment before something … distorted. As if the very fabric of the air twisted and crumpled, smoke filled in the void left behind. With nary a sound a boy appeared out of nothing at all, dressed in a black cloak and wrappings not that different from Kagura’s own attire. A sharp bark of laughter from behind caught them all by surprise.
“Are you fucking kidding?” Avaron spat out, nearly falling over face first. “A Naruto headband! Are you serious?!”
“Y-you!” Hoshi pointed accusingly at Avaron, his whole body poised in some dramatic posture. “How do you know of Naruto?!”
“Because everyone was into that shit in college! Do you know how many headbands there were?!?”
“College?” Arzha echoed, a tad uncertain of what was going on.
“Impossible!” Hoshi declared, striking a pose with one hand going straight up and the other guarding his face, or something. “This world does not have anime yet!”
“Oh geeze, you’re that too?” Avaron, shaking her head, reached up and removed her head coverings. “Putting that aside, pleased to meet all of you. I’m Avaron, a divine heroine.”
“You—you were the one that got taken away,” Glasses said, rather matter-of-factly.
“Yup, locked up in jail before I knew ass from face at that point. It turns out some people in this world aren’t that friendly.” Whether stunned or in disbelief, the heroines didn’t say much at all. “Now, why are all of you here? This place is in the end of nowhere for a good reason.”
“There were just telling me that,” Arzha said, emphasizing a choice word to draw the heroines’ attention.
Glasses sighed, his breath visible in the air. “It was King Fornard. He caught wind of our escape and bid us to find Princess Arzha.”
“For what purpose?”
“To help her, however we can,” he said simply, a weight to his words belied by his young voice. “’If anyone can do what needs to be done, it is her. She can use your strength most righteously and in the name of justice’, so he said.”
Although he said they were the words of her father, Arzha found herself so terribly hard pressed to believe them. That he would venerate her now, in the fall of his kingdom, felt too hollow. Too little, too late. The bitterness tasted like acid on her tongue, and she tried ignoring it. “So it is said. Let us continue this conversation back at the inn.”
The group of heroines lit up at the mention of an inn.
In rounding up her knights and Avaron’s drones, however, she had to spend most of the walk back placating the heroines. At least they had a rather normal response to such spider-like creatures.
*~*
Being in one corner of the inn, care had gone into walling it off as a private meeting place as could possibly be done. The six divine heroines and Arzha fit in the reasonably cramped space. The princess elected to sit beside Avaron, their sides touching. Surprisingly she wasn’t actually made of ice, and had a pleasant heat to her. Firm of body with a hint of appreciable softness, if it weren’t for her clothes.
“Okay, let’s do a roll call here so I got it all straight in my head,” Avaron said, looking around the floor table. Her eyes then settled on the boy from earlier, his messy shoulder-length black hair and brown eyes the epitome of a Japanese. He had a bit of a punk look to him, and might’ve even been a ruffian if not for his extremely nerdy atmosphere. “Naruto boy there is Takahari Hoshi, from Japan, seventeen years old high school student?”
“It is rumored to be true,” Hoshi said, trying to look unnecessarily serious in the cramped seating he had.
“And your specialty is [Stealth] and associated skills?”
He nodded.
“Alright, next then is Nakamura Katsumi, from Japan, sixteen years old high school student?” Avaron asked, looking at the Japanese girl who held herself a bit on the portly side. Rounded in the face and clearly struggling with puberty’s burdens, she looked quite skittish and drawn into herself. That thicket of black hair let her hide her lightly brown, almost hazelnut eyes.
“Yes,” she said, bowing her head. “My specialty is spear-based martial arts.”
“Some people say the sword is the best weapon, but the spear is what wins on the battlefield,” Avaron said, tapping her temple meaningfully. “Ok, then we have—” she held a hand out to the boy wearing glasses, “—Hwang Chul-soo, from Korea, nineteen years old, graduated but haven’t enrolled for mandatory military.” Really if he hadn’t told her that, she’d think he was military. Clean black hair cut, straight back, brown eyes with a narrow focus to them and the sharp, box-framed glasses that were clearly getting worn in.
“Correct,” he said, bowing much like Nakamaru. “I am blessed in using magic power, principally fire kinds.”
“Interesting. I’d like to touch up on that later but for now, let’s move along.” Avaron adjusted her sitting a little bit. I feel like I’m interviewing interns again, she thought wryly. “At number four here we have Eberhard Schmidt, from Germany, seventeen years old and in high school.”
“Yes,” he said, his Berlin accent rather distinct even with the author’s unexplained translation magic. The blonde haired, blue eyed boy had clearly done some manual labor. He carried himself with a degree of power, one only earned through such strenuous work. Surprisingly he had a bit of a pony tail going on, neatly tied back as it was. “I am skilled in the bow and tracking animals.”
Not the read I was getting but alright, Avaron thought, nodding. “So far this composition is pretty balanced.”
“I’m the only one doubling up,” one of the unnamed boys said with a sigh.
“Amir Kamal, from Seattle in America, sixteen, still in highschool,” she said, giving the Egyptian boy his introduction. The son of immigrants, he bore his sun-kissed tan skin well, his hair cut with that sort of boyband look to it and bright, almost gem-like clear green eyes.
“Much like miss Katsumi over there, I use the spear. I’m a bit quicker on my feet than her heavy hits.”
“My hits are not heavy!” Katsumi protested immediately, scowling at the recoiling Amir.
“But you strike so well!” he said, rather confused at her flustered look.
“Moving right along,” Avaron cut in before the two could have an even worse breakdown in communication. “Last one up is Amelia Clarke, sixteen, from Jersey in America, still doing high school,” she said, looking at the goth girl. Avaron wasn’t sure how she still kept up the black eyeliner and makeup, smudged into a barely discernible mess. Oddly out of the six she had something of a purple color to her black hair, but not in any sort of hair dye Avaron could remember.
“Yeah,” Amelia said dryly, boredom oozing out of her voice. “I can use magic.” She waved a biker gloved hand and little sparkles shot out, some combination of light and color. “It’s not the greatest.”
“I do not recognize that kind,” Arzha said, sounding rather befuddled.
“The, ehm, Church was most interested in it,” Chul-soo remarked. “They believed Amelia to be a chosen of their Light, since she uses light-based magic.”
Avaron frowned and stared at the girl. The intensity of her gaze made Amelia sit up and recoil, shying under it with an ugly scowl and wrapping her hair around a finger.
“Listen I’m not part of some fuckin’ church, alright?” Amelia bit out. “I don’t even know what this crap is, so don’t go—”
“Watch your language,” Avaron said curtly, making Amelia shrink under the authority it carried. “Your magic is not part of their Light, specifically. In that you have nothing to fear, but never, ever, allow their Light into you. Do you understand me?”
“Y-yeah, I get you,” Amelia said, rather unconvincingly.
“I am deadly serious. This is not the world you left behind, your lives are on the line.”
Chul-soo sat up and down in that quick, attention grabbing way. “With all due respect, Avaron-nim, we have already fought our fair share of battles.”
“Against people, or animals?”
“… I would not call them animals, but I hesitate to say monster, lest it offends.”
“A wise decision. I say this not to lecture you all but only to reiterate its importance. You will be fighting people, and you will have to kill them. If you do not, then a much worse fate awaits you than death,” Avaron said, her voice brokering no talk back. In the ensuing silence that hung, she waited for a moment before clapping a hand against the table. “Now that that is off my conscience, let’s move on. Lady Arzha?”
The princess sat up a bit straighter in her seat. “It is as Lady Avaron says, in so succinct of words. The lands are consumed in the wars of peoples. Behind them, however, is a far more evil power. They are called the nagraki, an enemy many thousands of years old.” Arzha paused, perhaps to take stock of their attention; Avaron saw that all of them listened attentively. “They are the ones who consigned my father’s kingdom to history, and the ones whose hands have innocent blood. Make no mistake, evil finds friendship in those who seek power, so our neighbors are just as much to blame.”
“Surely not all of them?” Eberhard asked, face scrunched up in a difficult thought.
“No, but enough. We may never know the true extent of it all. If you choose to serve me, I will forge you into great and just weapons. In kind, I will turn you upon the greatest evil my world has ever known. That is the path I walk now, to avenge Artor as much as commit due justice. Are you certain you wish to follow?”
Arzha’s question hung in the air until Amelia broke it with a scoff and a raspberry. “Oh, please. Do you think we’re just gonna not fu—” she paused mid word, though whether from Avaron or Arzha’s look, no one could tell. “—That we came out here just to turn you down?” she finished a bit more tepidly.
“It is as Amelia-chan says,” Katsumi added in, looking a bit energetic. “We are here in this world to help save it, right? Then, it is these nagraki we must defeat.”
The others made agreeing sounds to varying extents.
“The road ahead will forever change you,” Arzha said, the solemnness of her words crushing their budding enthusiasm. “Make no mistake about that. It is my hope that you take hold of this change, and use it to better yourselves. Unfortunately, I do not have the means to swear you in as tradition dictates. I shall suffice for your spoken promise, and a proper ceremony can be observed later.”
The different youngsters looked at each other, perhaps for comfort as much as reassurance. One by one, then bowed their heads to Arzha and swore their loyalty to her, for a just and better world. Avaron found the whole affair very awkward, because all she saw were children signing up for a cult. I don’t even know what the legal age in this world is, she thought dryly. Ugh, am I a baby sitter now?
“The oaths are made and I accept them. I shall introduce you to my Knights proper tomorrow, and we will begin assessing your training schedule.” Arzha turned toward Avaron. “If it is no trouble, I imagine they want to eat.”
“Hm? Yeah. I’ll go work it out with Tsugumi.”
*~*
“Right, I tell everyone this—don’t mind the drones, they’re doing their own business. If you need to get by, wait for them to stop.”
“You are telling me to wait?”
Avaron resisted the urge to sigh and roll her eyes. “Yes. They’re not people, they do their work as they are told to. It would be like blaming ants for walking in a column.”
“The ants know to stay out of my way,” Nahtura remarked airily.
Neglecting that colorful idea, Avaron had the flesh-door open, and the two of them went on through the airlock. A rattling of leaves accompanied by a delightful, and far too sensual moan, made her turn around. Avaron, against her own judgement, looked around and found Nahtura cradling herself. One arm under her bosom while another hid her loins—no, wait, she was rubbing herself.
Right there, right in the airlock.
“Are you okay?” she asked wearily.
Nahtura gathered herself up, at least enough to look arrogant with that blushing, lewd smile of hers. “Terrible creature, thinking to assault me with this kind of presence …”
“I’m not doing anything.”
“Swallowing me up with your aroma, it is so daring to try—”
A simple mental command opened the airlock door behind Nahtura, blasting her entire backside with frigid winter air. She let out generous scream, jumping like a cat splashed with water. All the plants and flowers that’d been expanding suddenly shriveled up. “Y-you!” she sputtered, face contorting with anger. Contortion did it little justice; her whole expression warped as if her skull itself changed to exaggerate it.
“Mind your manners,” Avaron said tersely and waved a hand, opening the air lock into the Hive proper. “And don’t say I’m doing something I’m not.”
“Hm! You are dumb to your own nature, then.”
“Out of every woman that’s been in here, you’re the first to act like that. Seems more your problem than mine.”
“Dumb women.” Nahtura let out a rather undignified snort, the crinkling of leaves and squirming plants accompanying it. Whether from her arousal or the much hotter, humid air in the Hive, they seemed to like waking up. “What is with the peoples of this time and age? A succulent meal is right here, waiting to feed and breed them, and they remain out there!” Nahtura clawed at her face, sounding exasperated. “And a tentradom stands there, denying my own offering! The world has gone mad!”
Avaron rather felt trapped in an elevator there at the moment. She couldn’t kick Nahtura out, but nor could she get away from the crazy woman. “You sound as if you met my kind,” she noted absently.
“Hm? Of course,” Nahtura said, her voice uncannily snapping back to a pleasant, conversational tone. “I spent many winters in their lairs, making all their babies and mine.”
Avaron did a mental doubletake. “I … see. You seem unharmed by the experience.”
“Harmed? Why would a tentradom harm a succulent piece like me?”
“Everyone else I’ve talked to regards them as ‘women destroying’ nowadays.”
“Ridiculous!” Nahtura said with a snarling hiss. “Tentradoms bring life where they go, they don’t hurt others.”
Pausing at the first intersection they ran into, the drones skittered on by, doing their work as ever. Avaron turned a curious gaze upon Nahtura, staring at her dubiously. “Since you’re Efval’s mother, I take it you’re also super long lived or immortal?”
“As long as there is a sun in the sky and rain upon my breasts, I shall ever remain.”
“And when was the last time you met a tentradom?”
Nahtura tapped her chin, eyes squinting. “Hundreds of hundreds of winters ago, by now.”
More than a few centuries, I suppose? Avaron mused for a moment. “Well, the tentradoms on this world changed, apparently. They grow like a sickness, consuming land and women alike to simply grow more of itself. Whatever you experienced then is not what they are now.”
Her head twisting from side to side, Nahtura looked like she wanted to argue. Her teeth grit together and her jaw audibly clicked as it ground back and forth. Yet there was no real hostility; it was more a terribly unwanted thought had been forced upon her. “That I do not know myself, concerns me,” Nahtura growled out. “For yours is like the ones I knew, loving and all encompassing. I will find these others you speak of.”
“Let me know what you find out. Anyway, the hydroponics area is not that much farther ahead.”
The twisting and turning tunnels suddenly morphed into a smoothed, flattened out approach. Unlike most of the initial hive, which grew in a cave system already there, this area had been dug out. Rock and dirt alike mined out to make an exacting specification, which made it feel all that more homey to her. Neat corners, straight-forward layout, and an almost modern aesthetic. If she had plaster or whiteboard it might even be a low-end type of office.
The flesh door they stood in front of was, unlike the others, a rectangular one. The teeth aligned vertically from floor to ceiling, pulling in sideways when it opened. When it opened up, a rush of air equalization brought a face-blasting amount of moisture into her. Avaron coughed and rubbed her eyes, stepping in with Nahtura quickly following. “Mind the air, it’s like a jungle in here.”
“Ohh it is!” Nahtura gushed. “It’s been so long!”
A neatly arranged rectangular room, its large size fit in the many aisles of flesh-grafts that plants grew from. A solid porcelain pipe ran through the grafts themselves, offering spigots for watering purposes. In turn, earthy soil formed the growing medium, letting their roots grow as needed. Larger ceiling lamps lined the ceiling in rows, their [Illumination] and special proteins turning them into heating lamps. All kinds of fruit and vegetables grew, the one room holding dozens she’d collected with her drones. Avaron watched wearily as Nahtura literally frolicked past her, humming and beaming at whatever she saw.
What a strange woman. Terrifying creature, haughtily arrogant noble, then a kid in a candy store. Nahtura changed faces on a whim and at break-neck speed. Smiling and sniffing, she rubbed her face against some growing peaches, then skipping over to a yellow, spongy fruit shaped like a tear drop.
“My, my!” Nahtura said, letting out a low, interested moan. “Such an old smell on this one. My youngest daughters wouldn’t know it!” Her head pivoted in a way that, in spite of its human-like neck, would’ve broken a spine. She smiled at Avaron, but such a look made her perk up instinctually. “Where did you ever find it?”
“If I wanted to answer it, I couldn’t,” Avaron offered up with a shrug. “The drones scour the forest for materials. Whatever they eat is what I end up making.”
“How do they eat for you to make?” Nahtura asked, turning on a hoof toward Avaron in full. “Do you steal from their bellies?”
Cognitive sharing, shared communal memory, the dissection of genetic materials—however rudimentary, still worked. Avaron scratched her cheek and looked away. “No, not quite. Not unless you know what DNA is.”
“Dee-enn-nay, you say?” Nahtura echoed, stepping in. In approaching Avaron, Nahtura’s taller, distorted proportions became that much clearer. “What is it?”
“Mm, what about bacteria? Atomic theory? Particles? Not even gravity?” Avaron asked, but each question earned a dubious look and a slight shaking of the head. Unable to hide her slight disappointment at that, her skin prickled when Nahtura fastened a nasty look upon her.
“Do not set me aside so lightly,” the dryad said. “Little tentradom, I will not be made fun of.”
Scowling, Avaron stood up, pressing her nose into Nahtura’s. That those big, flowery-covered breasts squished into her chest was beside the point. “I’m being real courteous about all of this. Don’t start giving me a reason to not be.”
“Hooo?” Nahtura exclaimed in a loud, hot exhale that blew across Avaron’s lips. “You are threatening me?”
“Threats are for people who don’t intend to do what they say,” Avaron said, meeting those tourmaline eyes straight on. Nahtura’s were definitely different—in fact she didn’t seem to have a pupil at all. Just a ring of white sclera encircling a sea of tourmaline; it hid her soul as much as made her that more alien. Nahtura pushed her chest in, forcing Avaron to step backward. She ended up stepping onto a growth bed, her back against the flesh-racks and the plants growing off of it.
“Heroine from another world, you have no idea … no idea …” Nahtura looked over, her hand clawing at the air fruitlessly. The plants and vines just in front of her sat there, doing nothing. For as quick as she seemed ready to devour Avaron, it turned to unabashed confusion. “Why do they not answer me?”
Avaron chuckled, flashing a smile at the confused woman. “I take it your power is over nature.”
“From the tallest of trees to the smallest of shrubs, I am the forest,” Nahtura declared in kind, her gaze utmost serious.
“These look like plants, but they’re not wholly them anymore.” Avaron winked. “They’re part of me, and you cannot command that.”
“Ridiculous!” Nahtura hissed, drawing back. Whether to hit or do something else, Avaron wasn’t sure—nor cared to find out. An audible crack sounded in the ceiling, the sudden displacement of the organic plate grown there. Two meaty tentacles lunged down, wrapping and coiling across the length of Nahtura’s arms. As snakes around prey, they constricted tightly, their bulbous, arrow-shaped heads coming to brush up against her bosomy tits in her jerking struggle.
“Never thought I’d end up using them like this,” Avaron remarked dryly. “But I take it you’re just being cute and pretending?”
Nahtura’s squirming stopped, and despite her being the one restrained, she rather didn’t give that feeling at all. “Me?” she said in a sing-song voice. “Why, I am completely trapped and utterly at your mercy …”
“I doubt Efval’s mother is that weak, but thanks for humoring me.” Avaron tried retracting the tentacles back, but Nahtura grabbed them right beneath their heads. Goodness her grip would’ve made steel seem pleasantly soft by comparison! They squirmed and jerked, trying to free themselves to no avail.
“Come now, am I not desirable?” Nahtura asked, her voice gloomily dark in its taste. “Is this not what you want?” Using Avaron’s own tentacles as anchors, she leaned back, half-laying down in the air, legs spread open. It left her plump pussy on display, a tiny sheen nestled in those inviting lips that probably wasn’t sweat. Avaron felt quite glad the overbearing stench of fruity plants clogged her nostrils. Oh how Nahtura swayed her hips though, rocking back in forth with a lip-biting smile. “It’s right there, all for you,” she sang in an inviting song.
“When you’re doing this much it really starts to sound like a trap, you know?” Avaron remarked incredulously. “Are you gonna suck my soul out or something?”
“… No?” Nahtura said with a bit of perplexity. “I want your seed.”
“Whyyyy?”
“To breed!” Nahtura cried out in exasperation. “Am I speaking to a sapling?!” She righted herself up, letting go of the tentacles, who quickly slid back into the self-correcting ceiling. Her clopping footsteps echoed in the room, every hoof closer to Avaron betraying her anxious energy. Shoving her hands into Avaron’s armpits, she yoinked the tentradom right up into the air. “Am I too old?! Is that it?! A withered tree only good for chopping now?!” she asked—as much as screamed—shaking Avaron like she owed money.
“No—I—think—you’re—quite—beautiful,” Avaron choked out in between every whipping back and forth motion. At the last word she was finally stopped, albeit still hanging with her feet dangling.
“Then why not breed when we will both enjoy it?” Nahtura asked, perhaps finally out of even her own energy at this point. “I shall spare the … what is it, a few dozen winters. That’s enough children for you, isn’t it?”
“It’s really not a matter of how many kids I pop out,” Avaron said dryly.
“Then what is?”
“I’m not a fuck-and-go kind of gal. If I’m gonna be that serious to have kids, we’re sticking together.”
“… How long does your kind live for?” Nahtura asked airily.
“Others might die, but not me.” Avaron jabbed a thumb at herself. “I’m immortal.”
“Impossible,” Nahtura shot back in an instant, dry as a summer wind. “Noone but those snooty, stuck up, mud-water drinking know-it-alls are immortal.”
Not even sure who that is, Avaron mused. “Well, technically I am biologically immortal. I will never die from age or getting older.”
“Oh, I see. I see. Mm, you presume to conquer the forest, then?” Nahtura asked, lifting her nose and preening with a decisive air of arrogance. “Not even Tahn could do so despite his efforts.”
“Lady, what do you even mean?” Avaron asked, shrugging her shoulders—as much as she could, anyway. “I mean, if he didn’t satisfy you that is one thing …”
“In not so many words. Perhaps it is hard for one not of the earth to understand.” Nahtura rolled her shoulders, squinting as if in deep thought. “To let one’s self grow grand, to be in and feel very wind, to listen and know the skitter of so many below … To take claim over the great forest itself, is simply not possible.”
“It’s not really that hard.”
Nahtura’s head lowered in a slow, pointed look that spoke the question she wouldn’t voice.
“Alright can you put me down first, my legs are going numb.” She got put down. “Thanks. So let’s make two things clear. It’s incredibly easy to destroy the forest—pick any kind, I got a hundred ways of doing so. Now, living with the forest—” Avaron was, pretty certain it was a euphemism for ‘nature’ at this point, “—that’s trickier. Here’s the thing, is the forest the greatest thing that can ever be, or a stepping stone?”
“It has always been and always will be,” Nahtura said, matter-of-factly, “even if killed it will return. No life can exist without it.”
Avaron couldn’t help chuckling, the sheer certainty of that belief just tickling her. She tried covering it with a hand, for as poorly as that went. “Oh, dear, are you ever so wrong. Believe me, it can be killed for good.”
“How, then?”
Ignoring the ever changing tone Nahtura never decided on, Avaron straightened up. “Nuclear weapons.”
“What are those?”
“In my world, humanity discovered the power of the sun, a process called ‘nuclear fusion’.”
Nahtura jerked, shuffling her hoofed feet on the spot. “Impossible! The sun is above all others.”
“Oh no, it very much happened. They weren’t able to weaponize it, though. As far as I know, they still don’t know how. But they did find another aspect, a weaker portion called ‘nuclear fission’. It is with that they made nuclear weapons. You know what a bomb is, right?”
“Of what kind? The glass jars or the metal balls?”
“Either or. Now, imagine this for a moment. A bomb the size of a big tree, dropped from the sky by a flying monster. The bomb falls—” Avaron laid a hand out flat like ground, her other falling into it, “—and when it hits, it explodes. In an instant the power of nuclear fission destroys the entirety of the Alva Forest. It is so great, it blasts open the earth underneath by hundreds of, well, me for a height comparison, I guess.”
“That—that would still not—”
“It gets much worse.”
Nahtura shut up, her lips tight and her eyes widely watching.
“After the explosion, invisible poison rains from the sky. No sight, no touch, no smell, no feel. The ultimate poison, virtually undetectable. Anything exposed to it becomes a carrier, unwittingly emitting more of the poison around themselves. Eventually, by the time you notice the symptoms, your blood and organs are basically turning into flesh-pasty water. This poison can linger for years and years, so even long after the explosion, it remains, killing everything.” Avaron stepped up, coming chest-to-chest with Nahtura, who had lost all of her spritely energy. “Now imagine there are thousands of these bombs, and they’re dropped all over the world within a single day of each other.”
“Yo-your point is understood,” Nahtura bit out, looking as if she wanted to run away. “It rather sours the mood, doesn’t it?”
“I haven’t even explained how nuclear winter works. Suffice to say, this was the great fear of my world. A final war, the war to end all others, and our planet—every land, every sea, and the sky itself—would die. It is a miracle we hadn’t already when I got taken to this world.”
At that, Nahtura shuddered and jerked, as if overtaken by a sudden realization. Her mouth even opened to speak, but she clicked it shut, rather taken with a thought. In waiting, nothing more was said, and so Avaron spoke again. “All that out of the way, there’s the other bit to say. Living with the forest is what will change.”
“… What do you mean?”
“Let’s sit down here,” Avaron said, gesturing for a follow. She ended up plopping her butt on the dirt, kicking her legs out onto the plate-grown walkway. Nahtura did much the same, if sitting was ‘laying sideways and propping herself up like a concubine’. It might’ve just been how she did so, given her leg shape. Avaron coughed into her hand, rather trying not to pay attention to the alluring posture. Or how close she was. “Anyway, the idea is simple. Animals show up in the forest, and eventually become people, right?”
“Not always.”
“Of course. Then people start taking things around them and making stuff.”
“Yes, their rules and restrictions and clothing and other silly things.”
“Now there’s a long period here—” Avaron held up two hands apart as if measuring a length, “—where a whole lot of mostly nothing happens. But, you see, people pass down knowledge, and it builds up like a pile of dirt. Eventually they get a whole mountain of knowledge for all their descendants. I’m sure you’ve seen that with your daughter.”
“Regrettably.”
“Is it so bad?”
“They turn away from me! I raised her and her sisters well. Then they leave to build these lands and their ten-winters-long peoples,” Nahtura said, incredulous. “Why waste your time pretending?”
“Ah, that is where you’re looking at it wrong. Knowledge is the greatest thing to grasp, for it gives you the tools of the universe.”
“What tools?”
“DNA, bacteria, atomic theory, all of that—these are the fruits from the tree of knowledge. The building blocks of life and everything else.”
“… The realm of divinity.”
“That is one way of looking at it. Such work is hard, long, and many lives can be spent with seemingly nothing changing at all. But imagine this: one day, humanity invented a way to fly without magic. A true, soaring through the air way.”
“I would say that is impossible but you remain ever infuriatingly true in your words,” Nahtura observed dryly.
“Thanks. Now, this world has two moons, right? In less then one hundred winters later, humanity found a way to set foot on the moon of my world.”
“They breached the sky?” Nahtura asked, squinting and squirming with all the disbelief she radiated. The shock of horror from before vanished utterly, nothing more than a wide-eyed wonder at something unfathomable.
“Into and beyond, to the great starry sea outside every world. It took all their efforts and more to do so, but they did. Many thousands of winters of nothing—” Avaron’s hands moved out, then closed in quickly, “—to less than a hundred, and they sailed the star sea. Right now this whole world is, or was, in the boring part. Things are heating up, and the next hundred or so winters will probably see a lot of great change.”
“But how does it lead to living with the forest?”
Avaron frowned for a moment, trying to piece the thought together. “As humanity gained more power through knowledge, it gained more control over the forest. Some took this to great harvesting and ransacking. But, the longer it went on, the more we all realized how important the forest was to us. In coming from the forest, humanity could not abandon it. Nor could they live without it.” She shrugged her shoulders. “So they took it in. Not as children and parents, but more like equals. One needs the other.”
Nahtura scoffed. “What does the forest have need for?”
“Can you go the rest of your life never talking with anyone again?”
The dryad tilted her head side-to-side, rather caught up with the idea it seemed. “I did before.”
“Do you want to?”
“… No.”
“Then there it is. Both need each other. So both must change to live with each other,” Avaron said with a declarative tone. Really, she rather hoped any of that made sense. Trying to translate environmentalist ideas and modern problems to a living embodiment of nature was rather absurd. In fact, she felt a headache coming on, and so patted her knees, making to stand up. “It’s food for thought. Now let’s head back up to the inn.”
“I would stay here.”
“Eh?” Avaron looked down at her. “Why?”
“The heat and wetness is to my liking,” Nahtura said, turning her nose up. “Fresh, warm dirt, and soft plants. That hot light in the ceiling warms me nicely.”
“Wouldn’t it be boring down here by yourself?”
“You will visit me, won’t you?” Nahtura asked, running her fingers lightly across her naked breasts. “I desire your sticky seed after all …”
Avaron scratched her head. “Yeah, well, I’ll think on it. I’ll leave a drone outside the door to guide you whenever you leave.”
“Tch,” Nahtura clicked her tongue and looked away. “All flowery words but no meat to give.”
“Oh yeah?” Avaron asked, already stepping over. She crouched down just as Nahtura looked at her, rather surprised looking. Grabbing onto the sides of her head, Avaron leaned in, planting a kiss right on that prideful dryad’s surprisingly firm lips. Far more commanding than sensual, she left a solid, lip-wetting taste behind before pulling away. Nahtura blinked unevenly, her pink tongue darting out to lick her taken lips. Avaron, standing up, said “Stick around until the spring, and I might take your offer seriously.”
“Spring is it?” Nahtura said, her thighs rubbing together. “Then I will wait.”
Stroking the dryad’s odd plant-leaf-flower hair for a moment, Avaron smirked and headed out of the hydroponic room.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Refugee Princess
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Desperate Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Chapter 33: The Value of Springs
Chapter Text
The self is an amalgamation of many others.
*~*
The flesh door slurped opened, a blast of steamy air washing over her. Avaron let out a loud, disgruntled sigh when she stepped through and it slurped shut again. (What a day!) she whined, already stripping off the dainty elvetahn dress.
(Tell me about it,) Aphora said. (Figure of speech, that is. I already know.)
(I bet you do,) Venus grumbled. (Really, you all go in before me?)
(Who died and made you queen?) Corena asked.
Venus held her hands up in defeat, wandering over to the shower alcoves. They were little more than just that, a pipe of porcelain that poured over a grate with hot, cleansing water. Stepping in, she picked up the cleaning cloth—itself a piece of flesh with bristly fur growing out of it—and yanked the tendon cord hanging in the air. The blissfully hot water and a bit of elvetahn soap, she went to work. Maybe a bit too hot, for she yelped in surprise. In a few dutiful minutes of hard scrubbing, she got off as much as one reasonably could.
Stepping out of the alcove, the expanse of the bath floor awaited. A row of ten lawn chairs awaited on the other end, ostensibly for laying down in. The real glory of it all, however, came in the form of the immense bath. A figure 8-shaped area, with two heat-transmitting pillars running through and underneath. Venus stepped over, daintily dipping her toe in at the edge. Then, stepping in, she sank lower and lower. The lowest depth of the bath came up to just above her breasts, and on those same steps she found a pleasant seating.
“Ah, finally,” she exhaled out, deflating as the warmth surrounded her like a hot snuggie. (Nothing like feeling it yourself, is there?)
(More like relaxing these meat suits we call bodies,) Aphora said dryly. (But I feel you.)
(I hope so because—)
(Not in the bath,) Weaver interjected drearily. (Now that all of us are here, let us enjoy it.)
A collective sighing happened then, ten different Avarons squirming and enjoying their latest creation.
(It’s a been a while since we all were in the same room,) Prime remarked.
(I suppose,) Iris said. (It is not like we need to be.)
(No, but it is nice.)
Some of the others hummed in agreement.
The humidly hot air continued on with its gentle breeze, sucking into the breathing flesh slits of the porcelain walls.
(Say, how did you get this working?) Abyssa asked.
(It’s, uhh, basic heat transfer. You know, the copper pipes thing,) Aphora answered, sounding rather relaxed. (Except using the grown chitin and some carefully pressurized liquid.)
(… Where’s the heat coming from?)
(Not to put a damper on this or anything, but I’ve had a thought,) Weaver interjected. (We might want to bring the women in on this.)
(For the bath?) Medusa asked groggily. (When we’re done, of course.)
(No, while we’re all here.)
A palpable silence came over their collective mind at the suggestion.
(We already know it’ll be a problem,) Prime said. (Why suggest revealing it?)
(It’ll be much worse if we delay it. Also, the more we bring into the Hive, the greater chance of them learning about it anyway. Plus, we don’t know if the elvetahn haven’t already figured it out or not,) Weaver pointed out. (It is not as if we will announce it to the world. I just want to keep peace in the home.)
(Well, we might as well call a vote on it,) Abyssa offered. (I don’t disagree but it’s going to be an issue to navigate.)
Their reservations were shared quite self-evidently, but they all eventually agreed in doing it.
(Alright. Now who wants to go get them?)
(Not it,) the other nine called out simultaneously. It was then that the peaceful quiet of their bath disappeared, ten pairs of eyes opening and regarding each other with a sharp, competitive glint. They all stood up and dragged themselves out of the bath, forming a small group huddle on the landing. In pairing off, they each held a palm out flat, and a fist above it.
“One, two, three—” Ten hands simultaneously rocked up and down, before snapping out a sign.
So it was, in a quick, brutal competition of rock-paper-scissors, they decided Iris would be the one to go out and get them. The defeated Avaron walked out of the bath, grumbling and cursing about having to put clothes on again. The remaining nine gladly went back to the waters, sinking into the soothing heat once again.
(At least we can enjoy this for now,) they thought even as Iris cursed them in the back of their minds.
*~*
“I mean, are you sure?” Avaron asked again.
“That you wish to withhold a working bath from me, the princess of Artor, is most insulting,” Arzha bit back, her tone the utmost polite despite its cutting edge. The tentradom balked under it and led on through her Hive. She heard Gwyneth giggle behind her while the ever noble Tsugumi remained stoic.
“I didn’t mean it like that but whatever,” Avaron grumbled under her breath.
Perhaps it was a touch selfish of her, but she didn’t care. After all she’d been through, Arzha was not passing up the chance for genuine luxury. She’d even brought along the small basket of soaps and oils, the very last stock from the royal palace itself. The bittersweet aura around it made such a light weight far too heavy. When they came upon yet another flesh-door, Avaron turned to regard them. Her skin prickled at the sight, picking up for the first time a severe hesitation from her.
Oh? Arzha mused, quite intrigued.
“Alright, so you all are going to be seeing something quite new on the other side.”
“This better not be another Cecile,” Tsugumi cut in with a swift, exact choice of words. Avaron wilted under the tora’s gaze, sheepishly scratching the back of her head.
“No, but now that you mention it, this is going to seem way more tame by comparison,” Avaron said, chuckling nervously.
Cecile? Arzha took note of, the name utterly foreign to her.
“Let’s just, go in before this sounds worse than it is,” Avaron said, gesturing to the flesh door as it opened. Hotter and even more humid air blew in through the opening, the telltale signs of a bath. She ushered the three of them in, and Arzha felt rather burdened by even her modest dress shirt and pants. The room itself appeared unremarkable—as much as a naturally grown flesh cave in the earth could be. Some hovels on the left rather looked like toilets to her, but when she beheld the expansive bath straight ahead—
“Avaron?” Tsugumi asked, looking from the bath to the Avaron beside them.
“Mine eyes—Avaron?” Gwyneth asked next, scratching her head rather confused.
“Hi girls,” the nine Avarons said, leaning onto the lip of the bath like a gaggle of seductresses. Their synchronized voices rattled Arzha’s ears, a queer and unearthly sound to hear!
“There are … ten, of you?” Arzha asked incredulously, looking to and from them. “How—no, this [Hive Mind] skill of yours, isn’t it?”
“Got it in one,” the Avaron beside them said, pointing her fingers oddly at Arzha.
“What do you mean?” Tsugumi asked, looking at Arzha. Thus the princess did explain, as she understood, from the training exercise they’d done a week prior. “I see.”
“You do not sound surprised,” Arzha noted aloud.
“One must have an inkling for this sort of thing,” Tsugumi said, hiding her mouth behind a sleeve. “But I will admit it is beyond even my imagination somewhat.”
“I thought you’d be more freaked out about it,” the ten Avarons said in unison.
“When you say it like that …” Tsugumi trailed off, looking rather pensive.
“Okay, so one voice at a time then,” the Avaron by them said. “Gwyneth?”
“Mm? Oh! Verily, tis, ehm, unsurprising.”
And why do you sound out of breath? Arzha wondered. The Flame priestess might, ironically, have trouble with the heat. Her face was alight with a blush and she squirmed on the spot, looking utterly uneasy. “Should you be in here?” Arzha couldn’t help asking. “Will you not faint?”
“Faint? Me?” Gwyneth squeaked, jumping upright in an instant. “No, no. Tis no trouble.”
Something to watch for, all the same.
“Well, this went better than expected,” Avaron remarked dryly. Turning around, she waved a hand. “Alright, you six, come over and help them.”
Six Avarons did rise up, sounding rather excited at the prospect. Arzha, having never quite gotten a look at the naked tentradom before—well, got a lot of it right then. Six naked, lean beauties, in her own monja way, coming straight at her. The closeness to human form, markedly different with that oddly snow-like skin of hers, and those blue veins. Not to mention, where was her knee? Or her elbow. They were just tendons, or some equivalent with that worm-like look they had.
So familiar, yet so different.
Arzha watched keenly as one took either of her arms, much like they did for Tsugumi and Gwyneth.
“Come, come, let’s get you cleaned up so you can bathe.”
“Should we not be going to the bath, then?” Arzha asked, noting how she was guided toward the … toilets?
“Heavens, no!” Tsugumi cried out with offense. “You scrub off and clean, then relax in the bath! Who wants to sit in their own muck?”
“That is why you have the water changed out afterward,” Arzha said matter-of-factly.
“Who taught you this? An idiot?” Tsugumi asked, looking at her bewilderedly.
Before she might offer retort, Arzha found herself inside the toilet room. With two Avarons in there with her, it felt a bit more cramped than it should have.
“Okay, now do you actually want us to help wash you?” One of them asked, eyeballing her. “You know, not being apart of the harem and all that.”
“They are in your harem?” Arzha said, bemusedly. “You call it a harem?”
“Never heard of it?”
“No.”
“It’s a kind of gathering of concubines and sexual spouses, but it can encompass important stuff like state leaders.”
“… Huh.” Arzha’s brow crept upward. “To answer the question, of course. You expect a princess to tend herself?”
“Some do,” the other Avaron said. “Then do not mind our hands as we strip you, Princess Arzha.”
How did she make such a straight-forward statement sound so … foreboding? Arzha merely nodded, her face set forward. “I trust you know how to remove this attire.”
“It is not so different from what I used to know.”
Thus the buttons came undone, followed by the waist-cord. Despite the mundane nature of it all, Arzha couldn’t help becoming that much more aware of who was doing it. Two sets of hands flew across her chest, then her waist, and as one went to unbuckle her boots, the other slipped off her shirt. Maids were always a bit, well, uneven about it. They were people. Avaron’s precision and speed just felt slightly different. More methodical, and unerringly in synch.
Or was it her own mind playing tricks on her?
“Bleh, I need to invent detergent in this world,” Avaron noted, audibly disgusted as she peeled off Arzha’s shirt.
“What is this, detergent?” Arzha asked, kindly overlooking the unbecoming tone she heard. At a slight prompting she stood up, one foot then the other, her boots slipping off.
“A … kind of soap, really. It’s made for cleaning clothes thoroughly,” the one down below said.
“How is it any different from regular soap?”
“Well, a person couldn’t use it,” the one taking off her shirt said. “It’d burn their skin off or actually blind them.”
“And you would put it on clothes?” Arzha asked incredulously.
“The clothes can take it. Hence, it is called detergent.”
“Make me some!” Tsugumi’s shout came from the side, though it sounded like behind.
“I will!” the Avaron beside Arzha shouted, before doing a visible doubletake. “Pure reflex, that,” she said, grumbling. “Oh my, look at this!”
Arzha rather didn’t like how sudden Avaron looked at her naked chest. Yet she stood undaunted, meeting those lecherous eyes that roamed across her splendor. She had the good decency to not try and grope her, lest those wrists end up broken.
“My compliments,” the one in front of her said. “You cut quite the figure here.” As if to emphasize, she hovered her hands and traced over Arzha’s sides. Arzha opened her mouth, only to feel her pants being pulled down unceremoniously. Habitually stepping out of them, she found herself rather naked in her entirety, an Avaron on either side of her. “Wow look at this ass, Aegis.”
The Avaron in front of her went behind her, and Arzha felt two pairs of eyes on her butt.
“If you are quite—”
“Noo, don’t grope there!” Gwyneth’s laughing squeal broke the air, followed by two ominous giggles.
“Squishy squishy,” an Avaron farther away said.
“Squish those boobies.”
“A-Avaron!” Tsugumi’s voice cracked with a sudden jump. “Not now!”
“I’m just washing you, Tsu,” another, more different Avaron responded in a sing-song voice.
It didn’t pass Arzha’s notice how the other two women chirped and moaned, leaving little doubt to their fates. She looked over her shoulder, giving both the monja behind her a piercing look. “I trust your hands are tamer than that.”
“Please,” they said in unison, rolling their eyes. “You got an amazing ass and a killer body, but we’re not sleazes.”
Arzha’s brow cocked upward.
“Now if you want to join the harem …” one of them offered with a wink and a smile.
Arzha found herself rather caught off by the offer and turned herself forward again. “Continue your work.”
“Alright, alright,” they said, moving in front of her with the basket in their hands. “Now, uhh, which one of these things is the soap?”
Rolling her eyes, Arzha plucked out a golden-yellow block and dropped it into their hands. “This one. The others are for massaging.”
“Oh, oils or something?”
“Quite.”
“Mmm, interesting,” the Avaron holding the basket said before placing it out of the alcove. “Let’s lather up, then.”
Arzha had no idea what it is Avaron actually pulled out of a socket in the wall. It quite looked like a white-furred clump stitched together with darkened, dried flesh of some kind. As soon as Avaron pulled the cord holding the pipe above shut, water splashed down in front of them. When she washed the furred thing, it puffed up immediately. For as much as she wanted to believe it was a wash cloth, Arzha still leaned away when it came closer to her.
“It’s not the prettiest cloth but it works pretty well,” Avaron said dryly, pushing it toward Arzha. “But if you prefer I use my hands …”
“So long as it does nothing else.”
“Oh, sit down for me. You’re too tall to wash your hair,” the Avaron from behind remarked.
A sickening, twisting rip-tear of flesh followed, and Arzha hurriedly looked beneath her butt. Tendrils of blue flesh grew with alarming quickness, stretching out from near the drainage grating. It curled into a loose C-shaped chair, one just wide enough for her to sit on. A weariness hung about the idea, for Arzha wasn’t sure if she wouldn’t slide off its armless seat all the same. Two hands settled onto her shoulders, pulling her into the chair.
“Come on, come on, sit down,” Avaron said. “A princess needs a bit of royal treatment, doesn’t she?”
Arzha narrowed her eyes suspiciously. She couldn’t help squirming, the odd texture of the flesh chair quite different against her naked skin. Warm, a bit smooth but with a coarse feel to it. Not unpleasant, certainly bizarre. Avaron lifted one of her legs, kneeling on the ground in front of her with the flesh-cloth in hand. Leg tense from anxious anticipation, the texture of the cloth surprised her. Soft, warmly wet, and encompassing across her peachy skin as Avaron rubbed and down her shin and calf. A clear contender for the cloths used even back in the royal palace.
“Oh!” An unbecoming sound escaped her the moment Avaron’s washing hands reached her feet. They swept over in a quick lather, but the cloth was laid upon her ankle. Two hands grasped her foot, thumbs pressing in on the bottom with a pointed intent. Arzha’s leg twitched on reflex, rather unable to escape the deep, probing work of those fingers. Thankfully Avaron didn’t hear the sound she just made. Still, the princess nibbled on her lip, the troublesome sensation of almost painful, but relieving, fingers working on her.
Then the hands on her shoulders started moving.
Arzha’s icy eyes popped open at the fingers there pressing in, thumbs strong into the muscles while the fingers rubbed. Hardy, and perhaps inexperienced with how painful some efforts were, but welcomingly refreshing. Easing into the chair, she found herself content to lay there. “I do-on’t think this is quite a simple cleaning,” she remarked, smoothly cool in her voice.
“No, but you are a princess,” Avaron from behind said, moving her hands up to Arzha’s neck. “If I rub my wives but not you, isn’t that an offense?”
“A maiden might fear for her chastity with such thinking.”
“If it bothers you that much …”
“I did not say stop.”
She wasn’t one of her Knights; Arzha wasn’t too sure what to make of Avaron’s intent. An invitation to join her harem—bloat her belly with tentacle spawn, laden her breasts with milk for the rest of her life … what a ridiculous notion. To her even greater annoyance, it didn’t even sound bad; merely burdensome and annoying to deal with. Arzha frowned while staring up at the ceiling. I wonder if this is the sort of effect she has?
As much of a person as Avaron appeared, she wasn’t human. More than any other monja, she was a tentradom. Her very presence alone would weaken resolve and draw women into her. Not any different from a drug-induced haze, really. Yet for as much as Arzha scrutinized and looked for such telltale signs, she couldn’t find them. Suppose she is too weak to overpower me, and that is why, then one day she will?
If her assumption of ill-intent was correct at all to begin with. A tentradom wouldn’t see spreading more of itself as a bad thing, to itself.
“Do you, uhh, want me to wash your front?”
Arzha looked down, her muscles pleasantly buzzing and achy in a relieving way. Avaron had avoided her belly and chest, and quite tacitly skimmed over her hips. Her darkly blonde brow arched upward. “Do you leave your work half-finished?”
“Just so we’re clear, I’ll enjoy doing it.”
“How vulgar,” Arzha retorted, making no moves to the contrary. No sense of décor is theeeee—It took all her control to not respond to the slippery, hot wet grope that grabbed her breasts. Not too hard, certainly not soft, taking her like some common servant girl. A titillating thought that left as soon as it began when Avaron’s hands went lower. From the exquisite, firm softness of her breasts to her iron-hard abs, every inch stood out in Arzha’s mind. An acute, almost hyper aware feeling of every stroke. The shocking clarity of it surprised her despite how mundane it all really was. How heavy the heated air became, a warmth that clouded the mind while those hands guided her every thought. Almost; if she were a lesser fool she might’ve even started moaning.
She’s washing me and not even they excite me this much, Arzha mused, her Knights would’ve been devastated to hear such a thought. A [Skill]? No, an [Ability] most likely …
What a scandalous way to cheat.
It suddenly made Gwyneth’s and Tsugumi’s indecent sounds that much more understandable.
“Geeze, you’re human, right?” Avaron asked, sounding suspicious.
“As my parents and their parents were, yes. Why?”
“How are you this buff and still have such big tits?”
All sorts of names were sung to praise her, but the crassly simple ‘tits’ wasn’t one of them. The flavor of it hung on her ears with how slovenly it felt. Avaron’s belly rubbing hands swept upwarding, cupping Arzha’s considerable bounty. Hers wasn’t a reverent hold, nor a lecherous one, but for want a name to call it, Arzha settled on ‘appraising’. How else could such careful fingers squeezing and displaying her be called? The other Avaron in front of her, still minding her legs, looked up appreciatively. Two fingers each wrapped around her nipples, stroking and pulling as to make them plump and pop out more. “You act as if that is a surprise,” Arzha said unwaveringly clearly. The rest of her quite happily let such scandalous touches in like a traitor.
“Kind of. Granted, I know being muscular doesn’t make your tits grow smaller or something stupid like that,” the Avaron at her legs said, waving the washing cloth flippantly. “But seeing it myself … Well, there was Nerg—“
“Who?” Arzha inquired, tilting her head. A slight way, one that always made her sharper to stare at. Avaron only shrugged, unfazed by such regal demeanor.
“A harraxin who betrayed me. Really strong and buff, nice tits, but proportionally uhhhh smaller, let’s say.”
“You’re being an idiot again,” the Avaron behind Arzha said.
She’s talking to herself? That is what this is, right? Arzha’s intuition, however, spoke differently. It wasn’t an act; no, something else was going on. Something that made Avaron’s [Hive Mind] skill sound all the stranger. A thought struck her right then and there, a realization that made her sit up straight on reflex. Skill. The [Hive Mind] skill. Not ability.
Avaron’s [Hive Mind] wasn’t a tentradom ability, it was unique to her.
“See? You pissed off the princess now,” Avaron said with a sigh. “Now how can I feel her up?”
“Weren’t you the one saying we weren’t a sleaze?”
“There’s nothing sleazy about appreciating a woman’s hard earned beautiful body.”
Arzha cleared her throat, as she ever did to catch her Knights’ attention. “Hurry and wash me before you squabble.”
“Y-yes,” the two of them intoned as one.
While her body protested at being untended again, and her everything hummed with warm arousal, Arzha locked it up. She hadn’t trained for nothing; such impulses were lovely dalliances, but nothing more. Still, the freshness of skillful hands, hot water, and soap was hard to beat. It wasn’t home, but of everything since Artor fell, it came closer than most. Stepping out of the alcove, Arzha found Gwyneth and Tsugumi also following shortly after. Unlike her, they were all blushes and smiles, the Avarons around them being handsy with gropes and salacious touches. They hardly paid any attention to her as they spirited into the huge, hot steaming bath ahead.
“Oh, it’s warm!” Tsugumi gushed.
“How hast thou fired it?” Gwyneth asked.
And so they fell into pointless little conversations.
Hmph, those girls would enjoy this as well, Arzha mused, the likes of Haleen and Saryl in particular on her mind. One of the Avarons next to her started toward the bath, the other looking at her sheepishly.
“Shall we?” she asked, curtsying with a wave of her arm.
The one behind me, or in front? Arzha wondered. Behind, perhaps. That Avaron seemed to have more manners, even if she liked groping Arzha’s tits. “Hm.” Arzha went on, Avaron following behind her.
While the Hive itself looked unusual and familiar in all sorts of ways, the bath turned out mercifully simple. The rough-hewn stonework around the edge gripped her feet, and shallow steps awaited like a staircase. Arzha dipped her ankle in lightly, the hotness refreshing in its intensity. To her surprise, the deeper she went in, the hotness remained unwavering. Such expansive baths usually had a cold spot or two, and the center always ended cooler than the shallows. Not, however, this one. It went as deep as her collar bone, and Arzha took a languid, lazy swim across it. The blissful freedom of such hot water and calm airs really did work its way into her weary body.
Her escorts had left elsewhere in the bath, but she found another Avaron waiting at the other end. This one seemed content to sit there, half-laying in the shallow steps with her eyes closed. Others dotted as well, though at least six crowded around Tsugumi and Gwyneth. Three sat in another group, and the one she neared remained by herself. A curious detail but she hadn’t a clue what it might mean. Arzha braced up against the shallow steps, balancing herself on her arms as the rest of her floated in the water. Her taut butt just barely broke through the surface, two happy mounds in a calm lake. She stared upon the ‘sleeping’ Avaron, scrutinizing such simple but detailed features in her face.
Cute, almost.
“… Something the matter?” Avaron asked, cracking an eye open. A blue eye that seemed warm and alive, almost a liquid fire to Arzha’s own frozen ice.
Yes, a bard singing about fire melting ice. Damn their stupid inanities, even now they plague me. The princess wanted to sigh at thinking of such a stupid comparison, her face instead scrunching in a frown. “I am simply curious as to why you remain alone, while the others are … preoccupied.”
“I like to rest,” Avaron said simply, shrugging.
“Even though you are all Avaron?”
“Imagine a single tree, but ten branches come from it,” she said, holding a finger up from the water. “The tree is called Avaron, we branches are the different minds of Avaron. Both her, and not. That’s the best explanation we’ve come up with so far.”
“The mind wonders where one begins and the other ends,” Arzha said.
“You have a hand, but it is connected to your arm, then connected to your torso, isn’t it?”
“I see your point, but my hand does not talk nor have thoughts.”
“I’m sure if you tried it could.”
Arzha almost snorted, merely letting out a particularly loud exhale instead. “It would trouble me if it started spilling the deeds to which I use it for.”
“It would make for a great autobiography.”
“A what?”
“Err … a novel, where someone writes about their life’s details in depth. You know, tell the world how they lived and what they know.”
“Who would believe anything that someone would just say that happened?”
“’Truth is stranger than fiction’, as I’ve heard many times,” Avaron declared simply. “Besides, a princess’ life is bound to make great sales.”
Arzha squinted for a moment before turning herself around. She hefted herself onto the shallow stairs, laying on their rough-hewn steps leisurely. To the delight of any who might look, her hefty breasts happily breached the water, floating proudly as her nipples hid just out of sight. She fluffed her wet hair, pulling it from around her shoulders and behind her. “Be that as it may, should you not entreat me as is your duty?”
“… With what?” Avaron asked wearily.
“How am I to relax against hard stone? Do you not have anything to offer?”
Avaron stared at her in surprise before begrudgingly nodding. She shuffled over sideways across the shallows, coming up behind Arzha. At her prompting, the princess reclined into the tentradom, her wet and squishy body far more comfortable than it had any right to be. Two legs became her arm rests, and with a careful balancing, Arzha could float her lower half in the water without issue. Luxurious softness, hotly refreshing waters, and a peaceful calm punctuated by lustful giggles and slurping kisses. The other two women were certainly indulging themselves freely, weren’t they?
“Sorry about, uhh, them. This. All of what they did,” Avaron said before sighing.
“Why is that?”
“It’s a bit awkward, isn’t it? And you’re a princess, so, I’m sure there is some decorum about public affection. Nudity. Hot sexual groping disguised as bathing … so on.”
“I would surmise you are one to take a more proper and cautious approach.”
“At least that seems obvious.”
“You are not wrong,” Arzha said simply, staring up at the strange but otherwise unremarkable ceiling. “It could be said I am a strange princess, to those who know my proclivities.”
“Such an interesting thing to say.”
“Being coy is not something I expect from you.”
“What else am I to do?” Avaron asked.
“Mm. There’s many things I might say, though perhaps you would be most interested in the prophecy.”
“Oh those always end well.”
The scornful tone made Arzha smile tightly, her eyes betraying laughing mirth. “Yes, indeed. It is custom to seek fortune seers and far seeing people, and to determine one’s course in life. A silly thing that is almost never trust worthy, but weak people are drawn to them like moths to fire.”
“I don’t disagree.”
“In my youth, on the eve of my induction to high society, my mother secured such a seer. One well revered and often told to be quite accurate in his readings, so my mother’s people found out. Imagine his horror and my surprise when he foretold a tentradom would be my future husband.”
Avaron went rigid underneath her, a not too-unexpected reaction. Her next words, however, caught Arzha by surprise. “Oh god damnit, not again,” she muttered under her breath, dark and foreboding.
“… Again?” Arzha asked wondrously.
Avaron sighed angrily and said quietly, “You got a fortune teller saying shit like that?” She pinched the bridge of her nose. “Sorry, putting out moves like that and there’s that baggage, it’s inappropriate of me.”
A bizarre turn of events Arzha couldn’t make sense of either way. “Your concerns truly mystify me.”
“I’ll probably sound crazy, but I know what I am. So when I hear goddesses conspiring to send women to me, it really fucking pisses me off.”
“Even among humans, I would think they would be overjoyed to receive that blessing.”
“People aren’t objects or things,” Avaron said, exasperated. Not at Arzha, seemingly. “On Earth, we never knew, objectively, if divine beings existed. We had the illusion of our own free will. Here? How much is the person, and how much is some goddess telling them what to do?”
“These same people can defy that,” Arzha returned coolly. “They are not slaves.”
“Slave implies they’re forced to but would rebel otherwise. What if a goddess could convince you to do something with your very own thoughts?”
“That—hm.”
“Yeah.”
“I cannot speak for others, but my own fortune has never once controlled me,” Arzha said. The difficulty of Avaron’s ideas were simple to behold, inscrutable to work through. Something for another time. “The future is ever uncertain, even with their talents. ‘Is this a warning of my own possible doom?’ I wondered. I worked harder and greater than I ever did, to avoid such a fate. Would you say that is controlling me?”
“… No, not in the sense I think of.”
“It has changed me, of course. That much is obvious, but the spark of it is what has led me to greatness in Artor.” Arzha held up a hand, staring down her sculpted arm and its regal splendor. Muscular and firm, a soldier’s arm first, draped in the guise of feminine beauty. Her detractors called her a misshapen man more than once, too tough and hard to be the delicate flower they wanted to plunder. “Without it, who would I be then?”
“Mm.” Avaron’s arm returned underneath Arzha, keeping the princess comfortable on her Avaron-shaped chair. “Still, you can imagine my discomfort.”
“Obviously. I cannot help but note your arrogant assumption you will be the one to conquer me,” Arzha said amusedly, making Avaron choke.
“I mean, well—“
“Be assured if that time comes, I will teach you your place with exacting instruction.”
“Ahaha,” Avaron laughed nervously, for once her façade exposing a nervous energy. The kind a woman caught between attraction and embarrassment always exuded; Arzha knew it intimately.
“I presume you enjoyed such frivolity with them,” the princess said, and she couldn’t help leaning onto her commanding tone. “But everyone who serves me does so as I order. Understand?” She raised a hand, reaching behind her to pat Avaron’s cheek. Not soft, not hard; a message of its own.
“Yes, ma’am,” Avaron croaked.
Not quite a usual address she received, but Arzha found hearing it from Avaron quite enjoyable. “Good girl. Then for your first task, make yourself useful as my chair as I relax.”
Nothing more was said, Avaron being the living comfort that dutifully let Arzha lay upon her. Perhaps leading on the tentradom would be a problem in the future; she wasn’t at all certain what to make of her. I suspect she will want everything, Arzha mused, closing her eyes. The heat of the bath did well to dull the senses, a comfortable equilibrium between wakefulness and slumber. Well-spoken and divine as she is, she is still a tentradom. Hmm, thinking to turn me into one of her breeding mares, no doubt.
Rather than excite her, the idea’s banality surprised her much more. A piece of a simple puzzle, one Arzha solved again and again. She, who had trained her Knights to service her exquisitely, taken to bed fine noble maidens and trained them, even disciplined a promising servant or two—how could any woman in Artor not know of her exceeding talent? Now she stared down a creature of legend, the arch nemesis of women the world over. Taking such a beast to task and taming her … mmm, the idea proved tantalizing.
But all things required maneuvering, no less so in the bedroom. Arzha had to take the initiative to keep such a daunting foe under control. If Avaron was yet a woman in her heart, then Arzha would win, undoubtedly. There wasn’t a woman alive she couldn’t make fall to her knees in grateful servitude. She was the princess; no, the future Queen of Artor, after all. Such a thing was to be expected of her supreme talent and heritage.
Hm. Rebuilding Artor, was it? Arzha mused, her own lascivious thoughts stark against such a coldly calculative one. Doing so, no one would doubt throughout history that I am its rightful queen. A daunting, impossible task, but strangely enough, it does not sound out of my reach.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Desperate Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Chapter 34: Misguided Righteousness
Chapter Text
One can see while still being blind.
*~*
Darian sucked in another breath of cold winter’s air, his exhaling mist bleeding out through the slits in his helmet. Truly the northern reaches are desolate, he mused, not for the first time. Dead and sleeping trees alike stretched around him, the ground covered in snow, not a life to be seen. The clank-and-clatter of his fourteen armored knights behind him echoed through the forest. Were there any bandits lurking, they would certainly have the element of surprise. He looked up at the sky, checking the cloud-filled heavens for any sign of the sun. A few birds yet remained flying far away, quite an odd sight to see.
Either something died or their nest got disturbed. Mmm, must be miles away still.
Nearly tripping on a hidden rock in the snow, his metal-clad boot clanked loudly as he hit, then skipped on one leg over it. “Bloody stupid thing!” he hissed under his breath, a few errant chuckles reaching his ears. Letting them slip aside, he instead said, “Prioress, how much farther is it?”
“It will not be long now,” Prioress Haelfha remarked. “The light of divinity awaits beyond those trees.”
“Is there anything else waiting for us?” Darian asked wearily.
“I sense many around them, and some more I do not understand. They may be prisoners.”
“Right. Everyone! Eyes sharp as we enter this next clearing. Looks like we’ll be finding out who took our divine heroines pretty soon.”
Affirmations followed as he and his knights took up a spearhead formation, with the Prioress shielded in the center. As Captain, Darian stood at the center front, sharply watching for whatever it was they were to meet. The helping church porters stayed far in the trees behind them, watching from a safe distance. As they moved into the open, empty field, a sinking feeling crept up his stomach.
No cover anywhere. Archers won’t hit us from too far, at least. The snow’s slowing us down but horses can’t flank too fast, either. Darian scowled. This is a terrible place to fight.
If they were lucky, they’d get to the tree line again. At the least, trees made funneling enemies much easier to do.
“You are trespassing!” came the shout of a woman from ahead.
Darian and everyone else froze up, many eyes casting forward. Now that he looked, he could see a figure donned in a white furred cloak from head-to-toe. Unmoving as she was, she blended in with the snow around and behind her. Only the slight breaking of her outline gave her away, a camouflage nearly perfect in execution. He held up a hand, staying his knights from drawing weapons. “Who goes there?!” he shouted back. “Name yourself!”
“I give no name to trespassers,” the woman declared. “You must leave this sacred land at once or face the consequences.”
Turning to the Prioress, Darian asked, “Surely we haven’t stepped on elven land?”
“No,” Haelfha said sternly, her mature face contorting tightly beneath her warm wrappings. “Not at all. That woman is no elf, I know that much.”
“Seems we found our problem, then,” Darian said, turning toward the front again. He then shouted, “You offer no name and threaten us! Knights of the Everlasting Light abide no threat! We know charges of our Church are in your hands. Release them to us at once or face our justice!”
“The warning has been given,” the woman said with finality. “Continue forward and all you will find is a miserable death.”
“So be it,” Darian said, lower in voice but enough for the others to hear. “Knights, an enemy has appeared before us! Let us march to meet them! Draw weapons!” For him and four on his sides, that meant brining forward spears. Those behind the spears drew swords, while the last four unholstered their bows. “Archers, shoot that woman!”
In mere seconds, the delicate sound of four arrows ripping through the air flew past him. True to their skill, all four slammed into the woman’s chest, skewering her where she stood. It always took a few seconds for someone’s legs to give out, but to his disconcertion she yet remained standing.
“So be it,” the woman returned in mockery, her voice unwavering despite the arrows. “Death it is.”
An awful sound followed her words, like the screaming of a cat as it was being skinned alive. It wasn’t only just one voice or two, but many, and Darian saw the edges of the field around them move. Spindly creatures of white fur and eight spidery legs sprung up from the snow, their eyeless faces nothing more than mouths with far too many teeth. There’s dozens of them! he realized, seeing them almost everywhere. “Guardian positions!” Darian shouted, “Protect the Prioress! Kill these things!”
Arrows shot forth as they all huddled up in a defensive wall.
“The arrows do nothing!” Hannibal shouted.
“What do you mean?!” Darian asked.
“I think they’re armored!” Mark interjected. “They bounce right off these things!”
What sort of abominations are these? Darian marveled. Between the snow and their fur he couldn’t see how well armored they were, but their arrows were no jest. He himself watched as one deflected off, a flashing glint of a scrape as it redirected somewhere else. Not even kagr are this heavily armored! He spat to clear his mouth and shouted, “Forget the bows! Hammers and axes if you have them!”
The way they ran through the snow very much looked as if they were spiders of a kind. Eight legs skittering back and forth, their forelegs raised slightly. It was that detail that caught his eye, for unlike the other six, the front ones appeared to have an edge. “Watch their front legs! I think they’re bladed!”
“Right!” the knights answered back.
Shoulder-to-shoulder the monsters pressed in, reaching the tips of Darian and his knights’ spears. No matter their number, physical space caroled them into only so many ways of attacking. Darian thrust forward, his spear hitting center mass—then skipping with a screeching clatter. He ripped it back on pure reflex, thrusting again to another spot that met the same fate. Despite the ineffective hits, the monster reeled backward, afraid for its own life enough to use its legs as parrying blades.
These spears can punch through plate armor! he thought with utmost incredulity. Where can I hit?
He didn’t have the time to figure it out. While one recoiled to save itself, two more pushed in, angling for him. A maw of open teeth and blue flesh presented itself, and he thrust the spear in without a second thought. Right before his eyes the creature’s entire head just moved. It twisted to the side and wrapped around his spear’s shaft like a snake, using its own teeth to bite into the metal for anchor.
“What—” his incredulous shout disappeared into the mighty, thieving yank the monster gave. He made to pull back, but caught sight of the other one rushing in, bladed legs at the ready. Darian let go then and there, drawing his sword in time to meet one of the leg blades. A ringing scream of metal-against-metallic sounded, and in that stunned moment, he kicked it right in the face. When it recoiled, he followed up with a thrust, sliding into the crack between armored plate and fleshy maw.
It screamed and writhed, pulling away as blue blood splurted out. As it left, another stepped in, filling the space with fresh teeth and slashing claws.
We can’t fight like this.
A quick glance to either side showed his knights suffering even worse than him. They held their line, but not for long.
Then, they had to switch tactics. “Rond, Josef! Burn as many as you can!”
Darian busied himself with the next one coming into range, one that tried thrusting at him in turn. Not quite as long as a sword, the fact two arms existed made it the problem. In deflecting one, the other followed up to his opening. He slammed his forearm into its blunt side, shoving the leg into the ground. Before the other could angle to get him, he used that same free hand to grab it at the joint. Clenching his hand, it crunched and crushed underneath, but not nearly as easily as he expected. The monster yanked away and retreated, its blade leg bent at a funny angle if still somewhat twitching and moving.
The rushing billow of heat and the roar of flame blew out suddenly, caking their flanks in roiling fire. Where the front wave of the monsters was only blackened husks remained, most fallen to the ground, some still yet standing. Those behind them, having caught some embers, ignited on their own. Although their fur burned like a flash of light over them, they neither screamed nor acknowledged the pain at all. It was then Darian saw their armor for real, sloping, angled plates of terribly thick chitin.
We don’t have many hammers and axes, he thought grimly. Blades were best against beasts and humanoids, but not these things. They’d grown specifically to defeat that weapon, he’d bet. In the lull the magical attack gave, he shouted, “Hannibal! Hammer!” Thus his sword left his outstretched hand, the hefty weight of a warhammer replacing it. “Listen up! Your orders are to retreat with the Prioress, she must escape! I’ll cover you all.”
“Captain?” Mark asked, “What about you?”
“I’ll be fine. The longer we fight on their terms the worse it’ll be. If it’s not too much for you, Prioress …”
“I understand,” Haelfha said, stepping over to Darian. In laying a hand upon his shoulder, her hand began glowing with a warm, sunny light, pure of fiery inflections. “Estimable soul, receive the Light’s benediction and embolden yourself with [Pure Courage]!”
The light upon Darian’s shoulder spread then, flowing through the tiny arcane etchings in the iron plate mail. A warm, enveloping strength surged into his body, shaking off all the weariness of travel and battle. The weight of both armor and weapon turned lighter, almost as if both were but feathers now. Hands tight and his stance strong, he nodded. “Hannibal, you’re in charge. See to it.”
“I will, Captain.”
“Are you quite finished?” the woman asked from afar, her voice entirely smug. “None of you will be escaping here.”
“Your boasts are as empty as your words, monster!” Darian returned, throwing an accusing finger at her. “By my hand I will show you justice this day!”
The chittering spider creatures stirred to life. Even those mostly burned picked themselves up off the ground, their blackened chitin and flesh no impediment to them. For as many as he thought the magic fire had killed, only so many remained on the ground, dead for good. Such resilience, Darian mused grimly. Then I will not be coy.
With the power of [Pure Courage], he drew upon his own vast physical skills, surging with strength and stamina. Darian shot out in a run straight into the enemy’s line, his speed four times that of any other man. The creatures barely had a moment to start moving before he swung his warhammer, slamming into one. It carried one into the other, sending two of them blasting off sideways from the fury of the blow. In turn, many more of them flattened to the ground as they piled up together in a heap.
One blow became two, then three. Darian cleaved into the swarm barreling down onto him. Many of them did as he needed, converging onto him as he tore open their line. Thus his men began their retreat, easily fending off the ones still harassing them. With that worry at ease, he continued on his unrelenting momentum. Animals they were, he still found an inkling of cleverness. If he remained standing in an area, they would rush his blind spots. They didn’t need to cut him apart if they buried him under their weight.
But he wouldn’t fall for that simple trick.
By the time he worked through a good two dozen of them, he’d lost track of where his men were. Undoubtedly safer beyond in the forest, lines of dead creatures dotting the snow. It heartened him to see such a sight, for many of the ones he hit himself seemed to get back up again. Only the one directly hit hard enough to shatter its chitinous body stayed on the ground, bleeding out to death. The rest, stunned or not, clambered up to their feet and chased after him again.
It must be Beast Magic, he thought with a realization. A practiced one, at that. Its been a while! Ah, he hadn’t fought a Beast user since the excursion to the Far South. If the logic held, then he needed to focus on the beast tamer themselves. Darian’s gaze flicked toward the mysterious woman, still standing there. The arrows once in her chest were now in her hand, plucked like annoying hairs.
You.
His path clear, he surged forward, breaking through the encirclement. Breaking out into a full sprint, he vaulted across the snow-strewn field, the ankle-high slush hardly an impediment. Behind him, dozens more of chittering, screaming maws chased after, kicking up a flurry in their wake. Even better for doing so, for none would bother breaking off anymore.
“It is not a terrible idea, coming for me,” the woman said, a high note of amusement to her words. “Even if it is fairly pointless.”
He chose not to dignify such flippancy with an answer.
The ground beneath the woman erupted as a creature emerged. It towered over its kin, and indeed, its central body alone would make a horse feel small, nevermind the legs. Every step it took righting itself thumped on the earth, a hefty presence of weight and power even he couldn’t ignore. Yet as it emerged, the ones chasing him from behind slowed down. An alpha male? he wondered, brows furrowed. Lessers wouldn’t dare offend it or such a creature might eat its own kind.
Not even a Beast Tamer could undo that natural order.
If I kill that, then the rest should scatter, he surmised. Darian held up a hand, curling his fingers in a taunting wave. “Come then, fiend! Feel the righteous weight of the Light itself!”
“How cute. Go, crusher,” the woman said, jumping off the hulking monster as it moved forward.
Its forelegs, unlike the others, were blunted and weighty. At its size, the raw hitting power of a club certainly made more sense than a cutting edge. Thus, Darian believed dodging and outmaneuvering would do better than trying to deflect. His buffs only did so much for combat, and weighted attacks were a dangerous thing to contend with. Brandishing his warhammer, he stood before its heavy stepping approach.
True to expectation, it raised a leg up to try and smash him. The slow ascent belied its thunderously fast fall, and Darian barely leapt aside as it slammed into the ground. What speed, he thought, pulling his warhammer into a swing. Passing the frontal armor of the leg, he landed squarely on the thinner portion behind. The sheer force of the blow made the creature bow sideways, almost falling to the ground.
He saw movement from the corner of his eye; the other leg coming in with a sheer horizontal swing. Leaping backward, an ear-splitting crack sounded as the creature’s legs smashed into each other. It buckled under its own attack, stumbling sideways on its legs. There! Darian saw his opening, rushing in. With both clubbing legs out of the way, he landed a solid blow on a walking leg’s joint, breaking it right then and there. Retreating from a retaliating swing, the monster’s entire body threw itself around.
Huffing and puffing, the cold air seeped into the sweltering heat of his armor. Darian continued on, breaking two more legs in much the same method. The creature had to use its front legs to keep up, wearily maintaining a distance from him. Its swarm lurked around the edges of their battle, watching in pensive silence. I cannot fell it in a single blow, Darian thought, swallowing his dry mouth. But no mountain comes down so easily.
He spied movement, his eyes locking on the woman approaching. She looked over the damage he’d done, inspecting the creature’s legs thoughtfully. As much as he wanted to lunge in for a blow, he still might get hit by one of those club legs.
“I see,” the woman remarked airily. “So this is the power of a higher level specialist.”
“Your beast is no match for me!” Darian declared, standing with confidence.
“Mm, not quite. I didn’t account for that magic buff the priestess gave you. If I had to guess, it strengthens and provides endurance, isn’t it? [Pure Courage]?”
“A virtuous burden that I shoulder with ease,” Darian returned. “It is not a blessing many can endure.”
“No, that parasitic light is not so kind. I suspect a few years of that magic and you’ll turn into a withered, old husk of a human being.”
He knew not how she knew of the effects but not the magic’s nature. Darian scoffed all the same and said, “Let it not trouble your mind, you will not be around to entertain it that long.”
“It is a fair point. Tell me, what is your name?”
He blinked at the question. “Darian Greenfield, knight-captain in service to the Church of the Everlasting Light.”
“You strike me as a virtuous man, captain Darian. I will honor your name as the first human I have murdered in this world.”
There wasn’t time to give her words consideration as the snow around them erupted. More of the hulking, enormous monsters appeared then, five in total. The one he’d barely begun breaking down retreated, a fresh one standing in its place. Those behind him perked up, brandishing their bladed legs once more. Darian took it all in, an overwhelming realization yawning before him as an endless chasm.
He inhaled and let out a long, shaky breath. “Then might I ask the name of the one to kill me?”
“Hm. Know that I am Avaron, the divine heroine sent to save this world.”
There were no words to the nameless anxiety in his nerve, thrumming with the heavy beats of his heart. He had heard many lies throughout his life, and knew well enough that no lie had been spoken. “If you are a heroine, then why do you not help us?”
“I am. It is simply the Church you serve is one of those trying to ruin everything.”
Skittering legs and erupting snow, punctuated by the thumping gallop of those enormous monsters. All around him the swarm closed in, and Darian gripped the warhammer as mightily as he could. Drawing in a breath, he bellowed out a mighty war cry, thunderously echoing as he refused to fall quietly in the hour of the end.
*~*
“Will you not become frigid sitting out here?”
Avaron looked up from the snowy ground, seeing Arzha in all her insulating furred clothes. Giving the question a moment’s thought, she shrugged. “Maybe. I regenerate faster than coldness can hurt me.”
“I doubt it is pleasant.”
“No, it is not.”
The sounds of people talking and laughing continued on, muted behind the comfortable walls of Tsugumi’s work-in-progress inn. With night coming, few bothered going outside at all, busy with enjoying themselves however they could. Avaron sat up straighter on the tree-stump she used for a chair, regarding the princess properly. “Why are you out here, anyway?”
“You seemed troubled,” Arzha said succinctly.
“… I suppose.”
“Was your first real battle against enemy knights that much?”
“No. The warrior tentacles and crushers all did mostly what I expected them to. Adjusting on the fly to the enemy’s tactics was an issue, but that’s easy to work on. The losses are no problem to replace. A few months and a new batch will be out and going.”
“A sound tactical victory, yet your face remains dark.”
“Mm,” Avaron made a non-committal, if slightly agreeing, sound. “Old habits are hard to break.”
“I offer my peerless capabilities in assessing that problem.”
Avaron couldn’t help chuckling; for as sardonic as the words were, Arzha said them entirely seriously. “As you say. It is hard for me to put it into words, though.”
“Without words, how can one lay their worries to rest?”
Princesses and their haughtiness, Avaron thought, trying not to roll her eyes. Arzha made the effort, and she couldn’t turn it down without souring things. A rock and a hard place, one anyone with social skill could pincer easily. “I suppose,” Avaron began begrudgingly, “I thought I’d feel something about it all. Killing humans, that is.”
“You do not?”
“No. It’s easy to say ‘they were my enemy’ or ‘they would hurt my loved ones’. But I can feel everything the Hive does. I felt their bones snap, their skin tear, their last screams before being cut open. The smell of blood and the moans of dying people, too. I felt it all and yet it was just, sensation.”
“… You were not a fighter in your world, were you?”
Avaron, her gaze having trailed downward, snapped up again. “Ah? Gave it away, did I?”
“Quite,” Arzha remarked dryly before shaking her head. “These are all things anyone who kills must overcome. My first time—” she held up a hand, clenching it into a fist, “—I threw up at the stench. Death’s own smell is the hardest for me to endure.”
“I see …”
Arzha sighed, looking off to the horizon. “Artor became as great as it did, because we chose to rise above slaughter. The people counted on our honor and righteousness to see a proper justice done. It was not easy, and there were many who chose to use our own principles against us. We had to change, in ways we both wanted and didn’t. Through it all, we never forsook what we were, and that was ever our strength.” Avaron’s meaty chuckle filled the air, the woman shaking heartily. Arzha looked down upon her sharply. “What is so funny?”
“The thin red line, is it?”
“What?”
“Sorry.” Avaron waved her hand, thumping her chest with the other one. “The thin red line. The one you can never cross because there is no going back.”
“Apt words if strangely spoken.”
“Haa, yeah. I’m familiar with it. In my world I was—well, I’m not sure what the equivalent here is. A business woman, and I had millions of employees.”
“That is more than all of Artor and its neighbors put together,” Arzha said dryly. “What company is larger than that many queendoms?”
“One that spans an entire world. Plus, humanity ranged upward of eleven billion people.”
“… Billion?”
“About eleven thousand million.”
“The mind struggles.”
“I know, right?” Avaron asked with a wry smirk. “But, in business that big, one has to make all kinds of choices. You’re not a nation, no one voted for you, no one wanted you as a leader. Yet there you are with all those riches and power, more power than the people they voted for. Eventually you start wondering what the difference between ‘business woman’ and ‘ruler’ is.”
“Weak rulers are doomed to be taken over by their nearest rivals,” Arzha said. “It is why my mother, then father, worked to keep the nobility in line.”
“Just so. I’ve always wanted to do things the right way. Unfortunately, the right way kept changing every day. Aaand, when a single footstep can destroy thousands of lives, ruin their homes, and bring all kinds of despair …” Avaron shrugged. “You figure out there are just some things you never, ever, ever do. Anyway, the point is I understand where you’re coming from. You could even say I’ve killed lots of people before, indirectly. Not ever, erm, with my own two hands, though.”
“You take responsibility you have no power over?”
“What choice is there? You do, or do not. The latter is certainly easier on the conscience.”
“I do not disagree. The former you postulate is a path of unending hardship.”
Avaron smirked with a speedy, almost laughing, reflex. “Life’s funny like that. I always end up taking the hard way.”
“Hm. Be it as it may, you did kill the runners, correct?”
“Them and that priestess, yeah.”
“Then you have bought us time. The Church will be sending out scouts to find a lost Prioress and her knights. I know not how much speed they will take, but …” Arzha glanced over to the inn. “If she was in charge of finding the heroines, then it will be their highest priority.”
“At a guess, the scouts come out in the spring and find us either then or in summer. The Church musters a force to assault and meets us in late summer or fall.”
“That is exceedingly fast, but not out of the realm of possibility. Depending on the route the Prioress reported, they may be faster or delayed. Undoubtedly by the summer after next winter, they will have a force approaching here.”
“A year is more than enough time, but that is still biting it close.”
“Your confidence is amusingly difficult to understand,” Arzha remarked lightly.
“What, me?” Avaron asked, scratching her frosty cheek. “Why is that?”
“It goes without saying they would send their most capable to secure the heroines. You struggled with a small knight detachment.”
“Did that look like a struggle?”
“What else would you call it?” Arzha asked, the harshness of her voice belying her conversational spirit. Avaron rather didn’t mind it, such was a normal if not expected trait in the echelons of corporate diplomacy. If anything, it rather refreshed her to hear despite the circumstances.
“Experimentation. Learning. If I wanted to kill them immediately, I would rush everything into them. Or use chemical weapons.” Avaron waved her hand dismissively. “The Hive needs more experience. I must train wherever the opportunity appears.”
“You are not as terrible at tactics as I first expected.”
“I do have an unfair advantage in that regard. Everyone underestimates what I bring to the field.”
Arzha blinked, a rare showing of genuine surprise if for a moment. “It is not a bad way of seeing it.”
Looking up at the darkening sky, Avaron stared at its gloomy depths. No stars to see, the faintest rays of lights fighting against the clouds that choked them out. Maybe they were closer to night than she first realized. Ahh, I really hate winter, Avaron grumbled to herself, shaking her still-numbing fingers. “I guess, if nothing else, I still feel bad.”
“What for?”
“In their own way, they were righteous people. Some even had lockets and names in them. The good men and women you wish well, defending your home against evil.” Avaron scratched at the back of her head. “I don’t know.”
“In having a choice to let them go, you chose slaughter,” Arzha said with unerring accuracy. “Why second guess that decision now?”
“It’s so easy, isn’t it? Kill them now to buy time to kill the more that will be coming later. It all just—” she slotted her hands together, “—fits together in this convenient package. It makes sense. Good people die because of it and more will join them. I don’t know. I appreciate your humoring of my moral crisis, quaint as it is for you to see.”
“More than any thing I might say, your concerns are not so dissimilar to mine, all those years ago.”
“Eh?” Avaron perked up, regarding Arzha who, herself, stared off into nowhere.
“The answer I found was to honor their memories and what they stood for. To right the wrongs that made killing so necessary to do. That I had to kill at all, only spoke of how weak I was to prevent it.”
No more words were offered, the weight of what was spoken heavy enough in Avaron’s ears. The surface of it made sense, but the depth would be far more than a single night’s thinking. She nodded all the same, for however weak it felt in the face of such spoken clarity. “It is not a bad answer. Something, perhaps, worth thinking greatly upon.”
“I should hope so.”
“Ah, well.” Clapping her hands to her knees, Avaron stood up, a crack-shatter of sheet ice that had formed on her in some places. “I’m done regenerating frostbite. I’ll head inside now.”
“Good. It appears the fair Tsugumi owes me on our bet.”
“What bet?”
Arzha, smiling with that stuffy know-it-all energy, said nothing as she headed back to the inn.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Desperate Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Chapter 35: The Refugee Crisis
Chapter Text
To lead is to shoulder all burdens.
*~*
(Seriously? How many are there?) Aegis asked incredulously.
(Several hundred, at least. With all the carts and tents and moving around it’s hard to get an exact count. Upward of 700?) Medusa offered, hemming and hawing.
(It’s too soon to be the Church. We’re barely half-way done with winter, or so the women tell me.)
(… They might be refugees.)
(From Artor?)
(Or elsewhere. Here, take a look.)
Aegis found her senses pulled by Medusa. The two of them stared through a skeye flying near the edge of their usual patrol route. Its camera-like eyes rotated and squinted, focusing with an eerie magnification. In a snowed-in field clearing, all sorts of tents, temporary huts, and hovels had been thrown up. No rhyme nor reason, they huddled closely together with cramped walking paths. Being a mostly clear mid-day, it proved easy seeing the people working about to clear snow or gather up wood.
(Where did they come from?)
(Giving how suddenly they appeared, I think they were running during the blizzard.)
(… And they didn’t die?)
(Or these are the ones that survived.)
Aegis pursed her lips. (That is … well. What do you think we should do?)
(Why did you think I woke your ass up?) Medusa asked. (A half-day’s walking and they’re on our doorstep. What do you think we’re supposed to do?)
(Ahh … fuck. Well, I doubt the Church is sending homeless after us. We don’t exactly have the resources to help them, either. Most of the Hive is hibernating at this point to stretch out food.)
(What about the hydroponics area?)
(Still being worked on. Venus and Aphora have their first growth tests but that’s not ready for something like this.)
Medusa made some indecisive grumbling sound. (We need to figure out what they’re doing. Let’s go out and talk with them, I guess?)
(Oh because that will go over so well.)
A half-hour later, Avaron found herself walking with Arzha and her Snowflake Knights. “—that’s about the situation.”
“I doubt they are from Artor,” Arzha said, the crunch of snow underlying her words. “But, with where we are, why they would choose to flee here is concerning.”
“How do you mean?”
“You nest against the Silvervein Mountains, a great and insurmountable barrier north of Artor. Leaving Artor and heading northeast, you will pass the Free Hardain State, the largest land between Artor and the Empire. Crawling up against the mountains, you will eventually meet the Alva Forest and the elvetahn. Head westward and you will meet the Ashmourn. If one must flee, they do not flee toward the Silvervein Mountains.”
“… Meaning the Free Hardain State is probably in chaos, if not gone outright.”
“Precisely. Either the Empire invaded them mid-winter, bandits are rampaging, or something else happened.”
“Time for them to tell us which, I suppose,” Avaron said wearily.
Despite the weather, a lively sound of conversation and busywork filled the air as they neared the encampment. To her chagrin she didn’t see any real attempts at posting guards or even a watch. In fact, the first people to notice were workers on the fringe. They shouted and pointed immediately, drawing more eyes and curious people. Avaron held up a hand, her group coming to a stop as the strangers pulled into their homes or ran farther into the encampment.
“I suppose they know now,” she said dryly. “Recognize them at all, your highness?”
“Peasants, steel workers, lumberers; the usual workers. There’s no markings of a territory.”
“Mm. Not all of them are human.”
“No, there is quite a lot of monja for people supposedly coming from the human territories.”
While she still didn’t know if the term itself was derogatory, it did suit for the moment. Avaron stared over the cat-like ears of some folk, the foxy ears of others, their bushy and varied tails, and even their paw-like hands. A certain theme matched some with others, but other differences kept them apart. I don’t think this counts as different races, but, I can see why some would think that way. Avaron squinted at their wary looks, some standing on by as guards. As much as one could guard with a shovel, anyway.
It wasn’t long before a group emerged from the encampment. To her surprise, their leader-apparent was a fairly tall woman with long, sweeping horns growing out of her head. Not unlike Cecile’s, they grew from the back and swept forward, but the tips curved upward and slightly back. Rather than a bull’s horns they were more a goat’s ramming shield, if she had to guess. Goodness that is a lot of hair. Seriously how long did it grow? Avaron marveled, staring at the encompassing mane of black, greasy hair falling all the way down her back.
“Strangers,” the woman called out, her voice unerringly smooth and velvety to the ears. “Who are you to visit our camp?”
“Oh, well, I’m Avaron, these are my helpers,” she said, waving to Arzha and her knights. “I live over there up against the cliff. Who are you people and why are you on my lawn?”
The woman looked amongst her group, exchanging words that couldn’t be heard. She then looked back and said, “We had not known a lady owned these lands at all.”
“It wouldn’t be the first time. It’s lucky you stopped here, because that forest over there is elvetahn territory.”
“… It is?”
“If you don’t believe me you’re welcome to walk to your deaths in it.”
That drew some uneasy murmurs.
“More to the point,” Avaron said. “Why are you all here to begin with?”
The woman stood there for a long while, her pensive air clear even at such a distance. “Our villages were all pillaged and ransacked. The wars around Artor spread far and wide, and we’ve fled farther to escape. This is all that is left of us.”
“You come here to the base of the Silvervein Mountains to run? Where do you plan on going, exactly?”
“Our goal was to cross them during the spring or summer, if fortunes are willing.”
“You will all die,” Arzha interjected, the clarity of her voice cutting the tense atmosphere. “The Silvervein Mountains are much larger than any map would have you to believe. Not even the Ashmourn who live in them dare make such a journey.”
“Where else are we to go, then?” the woman asked, holding out her arms. “The wars of the south will not end, nor will they leave this land untouched.”
“Ahh, before we get into all of that,” Avaron said, waving her hand to draw attention. “It’s best if we sat down somewhere warm. I’m going numb in my feet.”
“… You are right, of course. We don’t have much, but please, come this way.”
*~*
The tent they ended up in was a huddled, cramped and dirty place. The table itself was a shut up, shoddy crate, and stools sufficed for the only chairs. Two stools, and a bunch more crates for other sitting spots. An oil lantern cast the dark hovel with a single, flickering light. The refugee leader sat at one end, Avaron on the other, while Arzha and her knights filled the flanks with their spots. As all their outer coats came off, the stranger jerked noticeably when she saw all the knights.
“You are, quite well armed,” she appraised evenly.
“Oh, them?” Avaron said, half-twisting on her seat to take a look. “Yup, fully trained knights.”
“… What land is it that we have stepped in?” the woman asked.
“Mine. Before we get into that, though, I didn’t quite catch your name.”
The horn-headed woman bowed slightly. “Forgive me, I am Raina. The, well, leader of everyone here.”
“Hm.”
Arzha’s throaty hum perked up Avaron’s ear, but she let it slide. “I take it you speak on their behalf, then.”
“I’ll need to make sure they agree, but yes.”
“Reasonable enough. So before we get into where you’re going, it’d help me to know why you’re here in the first place.” Avaron waved a hand flippantly. “We’ve been shut up here for a while so, the rest of the world is a bit unknown at the moment.”
“Surely you have not missed the summoning of the heroines?” Raina asked incredulously.
“I know about that, and a war that came kicking down Artor’s door. Not much else, though.”
“… That is most of it. Artor’s prince killed their ally king, and their queen raised war banners in vengeance. I’m not too familiar what happened otherwise. The fighting spilled out into the other lands quickly, former neighbors turning on each other. Then, the … well, the Ashmourn started invading, too.”
“The recluses up north? Why bother?”
Raina smiled with anything but happiness. Her eyes were that of someone burdened with weight beyond their years, even in spite of their inhuman look. Black sclera surrounded golden irises, slightly rectangular pupils making Avaron’s mind perk up when she looked at them. “It is old history, not well known to others anymore. When Artor first lifted its banners, we earthly peoples—what they call monja—were forced out. In the wake of the Ash War, no less. Thus we retreated north, to the barren wastes of the mountains, and called ourselves the Ashmourn.”
“Artor does not discriminate,” Arzha said, her fierce gaze meeting Raina’s unyieldingly wary eyes. “There are many monja in its lands still.”
“Ah yes, the work of Wilhelm the Savior, is it?” Raina said, smirking sardonically. “Isn’t it funny how he only invited in the peoples who he thought were good bed warmers?”
“You—”
“Sorry this is all history I’m missing here,” Avaron said, waving her hands. “I’m not human, as you can tell, but I keep my head underground. What’s all this then?”
“It is what I say. Wilhem the Savior, as he is called, made history for opening Artor’s borders to the monja again. He only selected the most humanlike of the peoples, the ones that were ‘cute’ or ‘sexy’ or ‘desirable’. Those like me were too ugly to be allowed in.”
Avaron turned and looked at Arzha, dark in her face as much as pensive. “Well?”
“I cannot deny what she says, though I did not live at that time at all.”
Shrugging her shoulders as she turned back to Raina, Avaron said, “It wouldn’t surprise me, but what it is what it is.”
“A good way with words. It is all history now, few bother to remember it. Tell me, I don’t mean rudeness, but I don’t recognize which of the peoples you are,” Raina said, staring at Avaron.
“I’d be surprised if you did. I’m a bit one-of-a-kind.”
“The last, then?” Raina asked with a heaviness of what might’ve been sympathy.
“Maybe. I’m a tentradom, you see—”
“A what?” Raina asked, her whole face slowly contorting from sympathy to confusion.
“Tentradom? Are you the first one to not know?”
“No, I know of them, but they are not like you at all.”
“Oh, please.” Avaron rolled her eyes and held up an arm. Pulling the heavy sleeve back, she showed off her porcelain-like arm and its tendril-joints. Curling her fingers into her palm, her wrist jerked, a crack of stiff flesh suddenly loosening up. Like a surgeon slipping out of a glove, the tendrils left her hand, stretching out in a dozen small, writhing tentacles. At such a sight Raina sat back and upright, stiff at the spot with her hands on the table. Her eyes locked on the sight, pupils constricted to tight pinpoints. The guards behind her—if that counted as such—stood up straighter, their own hands white-knuckling their impromptu weapons.
Such a genuine reaction of unfiltered fear and anxiety.
Avaron slipped her tendrils back into her hand, affixing the porcelain glove back where it should. “Now, do yourselves the courtesy of believing my words. I’m not some wanton beast going around raping any woman I find. The rest of my kind, probably, but not me.”
“H-how, ehm, how …” Raina sputtered, her pale cheeks flushing darkly with red blood. A bit strange to see but Avaron wagered it was her species’ reaction to fear.
“That’s a long and boring story to tell. Suffice to say, you can understand why I say I’m unique.” Avaron smiled with a roll of her eyes. “The only tentradom in the whole world that can hold a conversation.”
Raina held up a gloved hand to her mouth, doing a visible double-take. Although her eyes remain alight with tight anxiety, she seemed more in control over her flight response. “I—I see. Then they are …”
“Guests of mine,” Avaron said quickly, the weight of many accusing eyes rather unwelcome to feel. “I have wives, but they’re back home. These knights are a bit like you, they lost their lands. Showed up on my door and I gave them a place to stay, provided they helped me.”
“I see,” Raina parroted out again, this time bowing her head. “I understand now.”
“Not to be too cutting to the point here, your situation is pretty grim. You don’t seriously expect to cross those mountains, do you?”
“What else is there for us?” Raina asked, holding open her arms in a welcoming gesture. “We have no home and war will bring unspeakable evils upon us. I must find somewhere safe.”
“Hm.” Avaron rubbed her chin, then scratched her head. “You know, I have a bit of a curse myself.”
“A … curse?”
“Yeah, this wretched thing called a moral conscience. It makes life way too hard for me sometimes. Alright, okay!” Avaron slapped her hands on the table, making everyone jump in place. “I have an offer for you and your people.”
Raina, a hand to her chest from pure reflex, looked quite dubious. “What is it?”
“You’re welcome to stay on my land until you feel you need to leave. Obviously, don’t go into the elvetahn forest—they will kill trespassers on sight, no warnings. Now, here’s the offer. If you want, live on my lands as my vassals.”
“Your … vassals?” Raina asked, thick, bushy brows furrowing. “What need has a tentradom of vassals?”
“To entertain my wives, and keep myself from being bored.”
Raina blinked, a dubious look shared by those behind her. “What do you mean?”
“I’m fairly strong, you see. A small army isn’t that much of a problem. What is a problem is that there’s just so few of us to have conversation with. People enrich the soul, after all. What better way to have more people, than to have a nation they work for me under?”
“Such a desire is rather … that is …” Raina scowled, visibly at a loss as much as vexed. “To have us be your entertainment is unbecoming.”
Avaron smiled at the obvious mix-up she led the woman to. “You misunderstand. I’m familiar with the ways of people. They need purpose, hopes and dreams, a home to return to, friends and family. I want to build a nation that can provide all that. Like a gardener, turning barren earth into a mighty forest, rich with life and wonder. I am not greedy, I have no need to cut down the forest I make. So, you benefit, I benefit.”
“I admire your words, but if you have no strength to protect them, it is pointless.”
Pausing for a moment, Avaron nodded. “True. Unlike you, my situation is different, however. I cannot leave here.”
“You can’t?”
“My nest is here. My wives, my children, my home. I’m much more apart of this land than a house someone slapped down on top of the dirt.” Avaron leaned forward, regarding Raina with a straight, piercing stare. “Come whatever storm does, I must stand before it and scream with all my rage. Do, or die. Rest assured as my vassals, it becomes my responsibility to extend the same protection to you. No more, no less.”
Raina sat there, her eyes busy with a thought yet unspoken. She then slowly nodded, clapping her hands on her pants-covered knees. “I have heard your words. I must speak with my people first before I can offer an answer.”
“It is good, I have no need to force an answer yet. If you follow the frozen river up to the cliff, you’ll see an inn being made. That marks the entrance of my nest, should you wish to come speak to me there.”
“I dare say I will visit in a day or two, Lady Avaron.”
“Then I await your decision. I shall be courteous and leave so as to not bother you all too much.”
Pleasantries observed, Avaron and her accompanying knights left the refugee encampment. Raina and her people saw them off, waving before heading back in to do whatever they needed. Free of the formal air, Avaron let out a long, deflating sigh, the crunch of snow a welcome ear-filling noise. “Oh boy, this is gonna get messy.”
“… Why do you say?”
“Because when they decide to set roots here, I gotta start feeding and getting medicine for all of them.”
“A not insignificant task.”
“No, not at all. Say, why did you choke at Raina’s name?”
“I do not choke.”
Avaron gave Arzha a dubious look. The princess sighed in turn.
“I suspect she may be the Raina Ashmourn, the queen-candidate who vanished some years ago.”
“… Ho? Queen candidate?”
“The Ashmourn observe succession through strength and influence. The actual family Ashmourn have maintained their power through their incredible prowess. Those who succeed are adopted into the family as the new head, making it rather … mixed. Raina Ashmourn was a promising candidate for the succession trial who vanished one day.”
“I’m surprised you know about it.”
“It was a grave matter of import during my coming-of-age years. Oarin Bloodspiller succeeded in her place, becoming the new King Ashmourn, and vastly escalated their military power.”
“A conqueror in waiting.”
“Yes. Raina was fairly typical of Ashmourn conservatism, so we expected her to be a stable presence in the north. We’d long suspected Oarin had her killed or captured to secure succession for himself.”
Medieval politics, Avaron thought with a mental laugh. On her much more serious outside, she said, “And now this mysterious woman bearing a familiar name makes you think she is the Raina Ashmourn?”
“She has the horns of the Ashmourn purebloods. To your eye, her posture may have seemed rigid, but she displayed many noble qualities. In the proper clothes and setting, she would be no outsider at all.”
“I’ll take your expert word for it. That leaves a question, though. Why is she here with a bunch of a refugees?”
“A disturbing thought I have yet no answer for,” Arzha said, sounding quite sour.
*~*
The hustle and bustle behind the door made Nuala scowl. Tapping her staff head once more on the door, no one answered despite her third attempt at doing so. Sod manners, it’s cold out here, she thought sourly, then ripped open the sliding door herself. A rush of heat proved little comfort to the roiling noise that slapped into her sensitive ears. It stunned her only for a moment before she stepped inside, shutting the door behind her. What happened here?
The spacious inn she’d left had packed full of crap and humans. Floor-to-ceiling cloth walls, boxes stacked up along walkways, and grungy, dirty clothes as far as the eye could see. A few walking by gave her a glance, nothing more than a passing regard before they slipped into some other area. Pulling in her comfortable winter’s robe, Nuala hustled through the narrow passages. The mere idea of cleaning off such garbage from her attire made her nose wrinkle.
Thankfully the straight path went all the way to back, where a serving counter waited. A human with purple hair stood there, taking empty plates as much as putting out ones with food on them. “You there,” she said. “Where is Avaron?”
“Who are you?” the woman asked, tilting her head up with air of aristocratic arrogance.
“I speak for the queen of the Elvetahn,” Nuala bit back, her own glower far surmounting the other woman’s. They stared at each other for a moment before the woman rolled her eyes off to the side.
“In there,” she said simply, pointing at a corner that had shut curtain.
Nuala turned on her heel, heading over immediately. In so short a distance, her eyes saw something. A glimpse into the magical forces of the world, second nature to her. Yet where Avaron’s presence was, there were others of a similar ilk. Divine power? she realized with a start, hustling over that much faster. Using the tip of her staff to pull open the curtain, she stared into the corner-seating booth, filled with Avaron and some other humans.
“What is this?” Nuala demanded, amethyst gaze sharply narrowed.
“Shit you just crawl out of the wood work don’t you?” Avaron asked, half-twisting in her floor seat to look over. “What are you doing here, anyway? It’s not spring yet.”
“I sensed the presence of evil light and came as fast as I could,” Nuala said simply. “Why are there they here?”
“Because they fled the Church and joined up with me, obviously,” Avaron retorted boredly.
“That …” Nuala’s brow furrowed. “This is a problem.”
“Please, enlighten me as to how.”
“Divine heroines have an unmistakable presence, and now there are seven of them here. In the middle of nowhere. It is like a bonfire in the black of night, no one can miss seeing it.”
“Yeah I figured something like that when the Church sent a knight squadron here.”
“The Church sent … knights?” one of the heroines asked, a black-haired, young looking human.
“Hm? Oh, yeah.” Avaron turned back to them with a shrug. “I persuaded them to leave, but I suspect they’ll return soon enough.”
You’re lying. Nuala wasn’t sure why, but that was a problem for later. “Be that as it is, my presence is obviously required here now.”
“Suit yourself, there’s probably a bunk somewhere in here you can have.”
A disgusted shiver crawled down Nuala’s back. “I will not be sleeping amongst humans and their filth.”
“Oh, do you want to try outside?”
“Your humor is as dry as a fallen walnut.”
“You may notice I’m not spoiled for luxury here,” Avaron bit out with a tired sigh. “It’s either going to be in here, or down underground in my Hive. The wet, sticky, hotter than a jungle Hive.”
That was an opportunity she couldn’t afford to miss. Nuala nonetheless lifted her nose up, huffing dismissively. “The latter then, since I have yet to try it. There can be nothing worse than this unsightly mess.”
“What crawled up your ass and died, bitch?”
Nuala blinked, visibly doubletaking as Avaron snorted a laugh, desperately trying to stop. Her gaze crawled over toward the obstinate human. A smaller, portly looking woman, with black smudges on her face and an unreasonable amount of grease. Her unsightliness spoke for itself, but a different sensation caught her attention. An inkling of light, burning within her soul. “You—” Nuala lifted her staff, pointing it toward the foul-mouthed woman, “—have the light within you.”
The air grew deathly still around her words, only broken by Avaron making a dismissive grunt. “It’s not that kind of light, so don’t worry about it.”
“And how would you know?”
“Because I do. I’ve already given her the rundown on not accepting the Church’s Light.”
“What does that mean?” one of the human boys asked, a blonde-haired looking one. “Magic being magic, that is, I don’t understand.”
“Well let’s ask our resident magi here, miss I know everything about magic,” Avaron said, gesturing toward Nuala.
Suffering to suck in a breath and exhale slowly, Nuala rubbed her forehead irritably. She stepped in enough to let the curtain close behind her, but remained standing. “You hardly comprehend the Words of Power, let alone the nature of magic. What hope do they have?” she asked drearily.
“Humor me.”
“It is bad humor, but I shall deign to try.” If only to own your debt. Tapping her staff against the floor, Nuala pointed it toward the center of their floor table. “Dok, rhen, tier—” As Nuala spoke the Words, a surge of magical power came from within her, traveling through the staff. First was a spurt of dirt and rock, coalescing into a floating sphere. Then came water, splashing around until it formed a flat, spinning disk around the sphere. Fire followed, intersecting water with steaming geysers and roaring flames. Wind punctured in, driving them all in a greater roiling hurry. Others too followed, and all who were there beheld the sight with astonished eyes.
“A galactic disc?” Avaron asked incredulously.
“I know not what that is,” Nuala said lightly, filing away another idea to investigate. “What you see is the essences of creation, the very fundamentals of our world. Engrave the sight upon your souls, for this is the culmination of thousands of winters of knowledge.” Using her staff to point to different parts of the large, rotating disc and its many elemental parts, she said, “The largest are plain to the eye. Fire, water, air, earth, and so forth. There are many more, either combinations or solitary things with special natures. Chief among them would be these—”
From the sphere at the center of the disc arose a north and south pole. The north glowed with a bright, white incandescence, while the south sucked in everything like an unyielding void. One could only see it for the event horizons that bordered all around it.
“—the elements of light and darkness. Everywhere, and nowhere. To understand this, you must know the nature of divine beings, that which we call goddesses and gods.” Nuala waggled her staff, and a part of flame shot out. A thin line connected it to a disc, while at the end of it was a bubble of roiling fire. “The Eternal Flame, also sometimes called the First Fire. It encompasses fire, but it is also a being of change. It consumes, to change. Compare to Lernkar—” another bubble arose, a copycat of the first, “—the Forge Mistress, whose divine wares are unbreakable in their strength. They both command flame, but each does so to very different ends.”
Nuala waggled the staff some more, all kinds of bubbles popping up with different elements within them. “So it is all sorts of divine beings claim domains across creation. In drawing upon magic, one has two choices. They reach into creation themselves, or do so on behalf of a divine being. The latter is more of a mistress and slave relationship. The slave has little say, as you can surmise.”
“Wouldn’t that mean going for the former is better?” Avaron asked, some of the heroines nodding with her.
“If one has the talent or skill to do so. It is far, far more difficult reaching into creation by one’s self. That what you call faith and religions, often is simply a vessel for weak people to acquire power. They pray to a divine being, do their bidding, and in return can do some magic through them.”
“If I may,” the black-haired heroine with glasses said, holding up a hand.
My, manners. Nuala inclined her head ever so slightly.
“What you say is most hard to swallow. Does that not mean those who die end up slaves to their gods as well?”
“An astute observation, and usually the first one people run into. The answer is: sometimes.” Nuala waved her staff, letting the elemental bubbles recede before they started bursting out and killing people. “It entirely depends on the divine being’s whims. If a soul is part of the contract, then it belongs to them. Some have found this troublesome, and so death goddesses arose, collecting wayward souls for some end or another.”
“That …” He faltered for a moment, adjusting his glasses. “Then does that not mean there is no end to the struggle, if one dies?”
“You mean, ‘why do I not go to paradise when I die’?”
“… That is another way of saying it.”
“It is a common one you divine heroines spit out before your minds twist.” Nuala shrugged her shoulders lightly. “Life and death have no concept of ending in our world. Dying here just sets you onto another journey. That is our ‘after life’.”
“I … see.” He deflated into his chair, preoccupied by a simple thought too grand for his small mind, undoubtedly.
“What’s this got to do with me?” the disrespectful cur from earlier asked. “What about my light magic?”
“Your voice could cut glass, it seems,” Nuala observed aloud with a dry boredom. Nonetheless, she made a show of tapping her staff atop the pillar of light coming from the disc. “There are no divine beings who claim domain in light or darkness. That is, none that have survived for long. It is difficult to garner faith in an abstract idea. Light is bright, but it is also hot, so it is heat, thus people believe in fire. Hence, most followers of light are actually faithful fire worshippers.”
She lifted her staff, stretching the column of light upward. “I have seen this myself throughout the ages. That is what makes the Church of the Everlasting Light so peculiar. They worship a divine being who does not exist, who is unnamed, unknowable, and yet gives them strength beyond reason. It defies common sense.”
“Doesn’t that just mean you don’t know everything?” the cur said, sticking her nose up with a smug look. “You cannot grasp God’s existence that simply, after all.”
“… God?”
“Ah, sorry,” Avaron cut in, waving a hand. “Amelia, are you Christian or Catholic?”
“Catholic. My parents are, that is.”
“Right.” She turned toward Nuala. “Their faith believes in an almighty God, the creator, ruler, and supreme being of everything.”
“This is not too unknown to me,” Nuala said with some thoughtfulness. “There have been attempts in the past. In the end, such a divine being cannot manifest. The others would destroy it before giving up their domains.”
“B-but that doesn’t mean it can’t! God would simply be in control of this universe too!” Amelia said.
“If it does, it is so far removed from us all as to not even matter anymore.” Nuala thumbed her nose, mostly to get rid of the odd itch there.
“There is a divine being in the domain of light, though,” Avaron said.
“… What?” Nuala asked, her voice decisively clear in its power. “What do you mean?”
“Her name is Nyoom, she’s the sister of Haska.”
Such incredibly simple words spoken with no care at all to their value. Nuala couldn’t tell if her stomach was going to fall out or fiery acid would spit from her mouth. “Y-you … that—you withheld this knowledge from me?” she sputtered, pointing an accusing finger at Avaron.
“Withheld? Nooo … it was more like, I wasn’t sure. Then I saw the Church’s knights and their magic for myself. That confirmed it.”
“That—THAT—!”
“I don’t mean to interrupt,” the blonde-haired heroine interjected over Nuala’s rising shout. “But who is this Nyoom, and Haska?”
Avaron sighed and rubbed her eyes. “I better start from the beginning. Haska is …”
Nuala heard nothing new from Avaron’s explanation, detailing Haska, his naki, and the nagraki as a whole. It was all very par for the course, and she wanted to throttle the tentradom to hurry up.
“You all got that, right?” Avaron asked, and the heroines nodded. “Good, the readers can go back if they forgot. Here’s the important bit. Haska is a very physical god. His naki corrupts bodies, ground, all that stuff. You could say he seeks to convert everything more into his naki. Souls, however, are something he’s at odds with. That’s more his sister’s purview than his.”
“How do you mean?” the same heroine asked, eyes keen on Avaron.
“Nyoom’s domain concerns souls, consciousness, hopes and dreams, fears, illusions, all that. She hungers for the things that make us different from animals; the stuff that makes us people. Haska takes our mortal existence, Nyoom devours our ethereal one. As she consumes souls, she gains in power but much, much slower than Haska.” Avaron scratched her head. “Putting it another way, Haska could take the world in a few years if unchecked. Nyoom would take centuries, if not millennia. She is very slow, and that is why she hides so much.”
“That is why she is so unknown to us,” Nuala said, her eyes darting back and forth, staring at nothing as her mind shot off at full speed. “Other divine beings would destroy her if she was found out.”
“Precisely. Nyoom grants power to her followers, in return for portions of their souls. The more you draw upon her, the more she consumes you. If you die in her name, you are nothing more than a hamburger happy meal going straight down her gullet.”
“A what?” Nuala asked even as the other heroines chuckled uneasily.
“Nevermind,” Avaron waved the question off. “This is why I warned you, Amelia. You are naturally aligned to Nyoom’s domain, and bristling with power yet untapped. To her, you are a fat pig at a stock show, ready for slaughter.”
“I’m not fat!” Amelia yelled, slapping her hands against the table.
Avaron rolled her eyes. “It’s a metaphor.”
“It fucking blows!”
“Sit your ass down,” Avaron said, a surprising force of power that made Amelia, ready to stand up, freeze. “Because no matter how much you hate it, you need to listen.”
“Don’t call me fat then!” she hissed out, sitting with a huff and crossing her arms.
“I think I follow,” the blonde-haired heroine said with a heavy sigh. “It is a lot, but I think I do. Then, we must defeat this Haska and Nyoom?”
“Thank you, Eberhard. Yes, that’s the plan. The reason we’re all here, why the summoning happened—we must destroy the two evil goddesses, Haska and Nyoom. Until we do, this world will never know peace,” Avaron said, a clarity of voice not unlike Queen Efval’s. Nuala almost found herself impressed with it. “Unfortunately, killing goddesses isn’t exactly simple business, and Haska is already gearing up for war again.”
“Time is not on our side, then?” Eberhard asked.
“I’m not sure. If there is one thing we can do, it is that we grow in strength with unfathomable quickness. We need to become stronger, faster, and not blow ourselves up doing so.” Avaron sighed and looked at Nuala. “Can you get rid of this light show? Thanks.”
The culmination of her knowledge being disregarded so easily—Nuala did so, rather unwilling to grapple the intense outrage her heart wanted to let loose.
“For now, there is one upside. Nyoom is slow, and Haska still needs to do things by the book. The world isn’t going to end in a year, or even a few, but it will eventually. We have time, but we can’t squander it.”
“That is good, at least,” Eberhard said then sighed. “A not so insurmountable challenge.”
“You speak so easily of killing divine beings,” Nuala observed tensely. “You will find it is any thing but.”
“I know. But we must, all the same.”
There it was—that certain confidence. The thing divine heroines had that let them do so much in the face of overwhelming odds. Although his voice was younger than she was used to, he wouldn’t be out of place amongst the heroines she’d met. Nuala regarded the one named Eberhard carefully, for his quiet presence stood apart all on its own. Only when Avaron stood up did she look away, regarding the more vexing of the heroines she’d ever met.
“Alright, I’m parched and dinner still isn’t here. You all sit there and take it easy after that big brain dump. Cute ears here still needs a room.”
Nuala’s head bobbled like an owl as Avaron headed out, and she followed along. In heading across the inn, once they were far enough away, Avaron let out a disgruntled sound and dragged her hands down her face.
“I hate children,” she grumbled. “Eberhard is alright. Chul-soo, too. At least they have brains to keep them alive.”
“It is as you say,” Nuala remarked airily. “I trust you understand we will be talking later.”
“Yeah, yeah, I get it. Anyway, there’s a drone out the front door that’ll take you into the Hive. Since you’ve been such a good sport, I’ll even let you use my bath.”
“A … bath?”
“Oh yeah. It’s real nice. You’ll thank me later.”
For some reason Avaron’s conversational tone left Nuala ill-at-ease.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina (lv.??) – Refugee Leader
Chapter 36: Our Long Laid Ashes
Notes:
Content Warning: Direct referencing and dialogue concerning past sexual assault experiences.
Chapter Text
Truth is stranger than fiction, for reality doesn’t care what you think.
*~*
The messenger pushed open the flap, letting Avaron walk in. The meeting hut was, unlike last time, far less cramped with just her and Raina inside now. A few more lanterns lit up the dark interior, making it modestly seeable. “Well, well, well,” Avaron said, clapping her hands and getting the snow off the gloves. “I await with baited breath.”
Raina blinked, sitting as she was. “If you prefer standing to sitting …”
“Either works, but I’ll sit,” Avaron declared, taking up a seat. She held out her arms, looking expectant. “So, what will it be?”
“My people expect certain … conditions.”
“I’d be disappointed if they didn’t.”
“I wish to say no insult is meant. Few of them are elegant in word and so speak, bluntly.”
“I’m rather prideful on taking negotiations seriously. If two parties cannot speak honestly, then is it good business?” Avaron asked, her questioning hanging in the air longer than she anticipated. “As it is, speak them, then.”
Raina looked caught out then, sheepishly glancing away for a moment. She coughed and, perhaps finding her courage, met Avaron’s eyes once more. “Understandably, they will not offer up their daughters or wives as sacrifices. Nor will they abide any, ehm, wanton raping.”
Even expecting the words, hearing them directed toward her still rather left a mark. Avaron nodded. “Of course. Ridiculous as it sounds, I prefer women to want to be with me rather than, you know, forcing or drugging them into submission. Plus my wives will kill me if I ever do that, so, you all can rest easy on that front.”
“Ehm, kill you?” Raina asked, the picture of someone caught in a place they didn’t want to be. “You said you can handle a small army, did you not?”
“Oh, yeah. How to explain … You don’t mind if I speak a little bluntly myself?”
“I don’t.”
“Well, it’s pretty straight forward. I have a wife, we do our business, out comes the kids months later. But you see, a tentradom’s offspring is only ever as powerful as the mother who births them. So, my kind have a special [Ability]. The women we reproduce with become stronger. Hence, stronger mother, stronger children. Eventually they get much stronger than us, to the point they can kill us without much trouble. I’m saying this and you look like a ghost is crawling out of your body.”
Raina’s whole aura twisted the longer Avaron spoke, contorting into some ghastly, pale looking person. Someone in the midst of a world changing revelation, but not one all that pleasant. At her words, Raina visibly shook her head, letting out a shaky breath and smiling uneasy. “No, it is just … that is to say—ehm.” She coughed into a hand. “You have helped answer a great mystery in my life.”
“The mind wonders at what it could be.”
“I am fearful of saying it lest it harm this, negotiation, as you say it is.”
“Unless you’re raping people, killing children, eating the flesh of innocents, or something equally abominable, I’ll be hard pressed to be bothered.”
“… I appreciate your welcoming clarity,” Raina said, an unease still to her dry voice. “Then, it may help to understand me. Me and my sisterhood, that is.”
Oh boy, a cult, Avaron thought, face the picture of thoughtful listening. “Go on.”
Raina looked down, her brows knitting and her eyes burdened with some unspeakable thought. She scratched her cheek before reaching up and raking her nails on her horn. The rather grating, clacking sound was loud in the small hovel. “Long ago, I was betrayed and cast into a lightless pit. One that an old tentradom had been nesting inside of.”
Oh. Ooooh. Fuck. Avaron sat up a bit straighter, her playfulness switching into professional mode at an instant. Raina startled at the sudden movement, seeming rather ill-at-ease, her golden eyes widely frightful. “Sorry. Go on, I’m listening.”
“Y-yes, quite,” Raina said, biting her lip. She scratched her other horn. “I was trapped there for many years.” She shifted on her seat, maybe trying to get more comfortable. “It broke me into little pieces. But, one day, I just got … angry. So very angry. The beast that’d ensnared me suddenly wasn’t so strong anymore. So I ripped it apart, tore my way out from the inside.”
“That sounds rather harsh, saying it broke you. Here you are all the same.”
“Your kindness is unneeded. That is the truth of it, even if words do not tell it that well.” Raina glanced away, the air becoming quite awkward. “On my way out I found others and freed them. Altogether, eleven of us escaped that horrid place. We banded together as a sisterhood, for we had no families left to turn to. That is it, really. I had wondered how I found the strength to free myself.”
“Speaking, factually at the moment—yes. You are vastly more powerful than you were before.”
“It does explain some things,” Raina said, smiling ruefully. “It’s hard not to notice.”
For want of any idea on what, if anything, she could say, Avaron shrugged meekly. “Still, it is quite the burden to live through.”
“Don’t be ill on our behalf. It was years ago, even if we bear the scars to this day.”
“I’d hate to put my nose in where it’s not wanted, but that is a curious thing to say.”
“Surely you must know of it,” Raina asked, a touch incredulous.
“Nnno, not quite. What I do is very different from the wild, ravaging broken creatures I could call ‘kin’.”
“That you are cordial after so sordid a tale, I am thankful. Perhaps another day I will explain the scars, but we do stray from the point of this.”
Avaron knew a retreat when it happened, and she nodded understandingly. “It is worth talking about, if only I might find a way to help.”
“To … help?”
“I cannot promise anything. Merely that if I can examine what was done, there might be a solution out there.”
“I—I see. I see.” Raina covered her mouth and rubbed her face, wiping away whatever expression she was about to show. “A talk for later, then. To state your position on their first condition, you will not be raping or taking women unwillingly.”
“Absolutely not. If I do, I invite anyone with the strength to do so to kill me then and there.”
“That will relieve them to hear. As to their second condition …”
The incredible and unbelievably awkward first condition and Raina’s story aside, the rest went much more normally. Peasants wanted land divisions, they had to know how much to pay in taxes, and what their tithes as vassals was to be like. For as complicated as it all could be, it only took Avaron a minute to explain her position. Raina, however, looked utterly bewildered.
“No, no, that cannot be,” she said, shaking her head and hands. “That is not how it is done.”
“In your lands, I imagine. Not mine.”
“You misunderstand. It is not traditional anywhere. They won’t grasp your reasons for wanting to do so.”
Avaron rubbed her temple. Right, basic education doesn’t fucking exist in this world. She brought her hand down and tapped on the crate-table for a moment. “Right. Let’s frame it this way. The first step is, I’ll divvy up land to those who will farm, and then to those who need somewhere to live.”
“Sensible.”
“The second step is, I will not have taxes until the town is developed. I cannot tax the dirt, after all.”
“But you will put them in eventually?”
“After I see what can be taxed, you, the people, and me, the lady, will negotiate a fair tax rate.”
“And what will be a fair tax rate?”
“Whatever we negotiate,” Avaron said finally. “If no tax can be established, then there is no tax.”
“There must be a tax! Who ever lived in a land without tax?” Raina asked, looking flustered. “Why would you not want to collect your tax?”
“I have no need for earthly wealth or possessions. Even if I collected tax, it would not be to fill my coffers or make me rich. I would spend it all back on you, the people, to enrichen the town and its future.”
“I don’t … understand. You would tax us, then spend it back on us?”
Avaron grumbled and rolled her head. “Let’s, put it like this. Not all lands are equal, some farmers will have greater harvests than other, yes?”
“That’s true.”
“Then, I tax the richer ones, to invest into the poorer ones. In this way, everyone works hard and can be assured it will be spent to help everyone else.”
“I understand, I fear they will not.”
“Is that not your job, to help them to understand?”
Raina chuckled dryly. “I never asked to lead them. I’m simply the strongest one here.”
“All the better then. A leader who endures responsibility they do not want is often more suited to the position.” Two golden eyes blinked incredulously at her, rather stupefied by the idea. Avaron made a little, flippantly waving circle with her hand. “Anyway. Here’s the bottom line: no taxes until the town is built enough to have anything to tax. When that times come, we’ll have a meeting about it.”
“… Very well. As for the other matters, there is …”
The rest of it was necessary, if rather mundane details. What food could they eat, where was water, where was the dumping ground, how might they arrange the village’s basic shape, what neighbors they would have, and so forth. Some of the questions caught out Avaron, but they did fit the needs of a basic town. One fact did arise that concerned her above everything else.
I need a water and sewage system something fierce, she mused, staring at the table deeply. Most of the health problems of old towns came in the form of bad meat handling, bad sewage, and a lack of cleanliness. If I can head this off at the pass before it gets entrenched, it’ll save me a lot of trouble.
“Were their demands undesirable to you, Lady Avaron?”
Avaron shook her head, pulling out of her reverie. “No, it is not that. I am being mindful of what first needs to happen. A town requires meaningful infrastructure to work with.”
“… Infrastructure?”
“A sewage system, namely. Did they not have one in Shadowpeak?”
“Oh, there was one that ran underneath the—” Raina froze, a dawning realization as she looked up shakily at Avaron. “You—” she licked her dry lips, “—you knew.”
“I had an expert give me their opinion. I didn’t know until you confirmed it for me.”
“Haa, haha …” Raina laughed lightly, wiping her sweatless forehead. “Such an old trick and I went straight into it.”
“It is no trouble,” Avaron said dismissively. “Only that I know who I am dealing with for certain.”
“Then, I shall introduce myself properly. I am Raina Ashmourn,” she said, bowing her head. “Former successor candidate for the head of the Ashmourn family.”
“From what I know, it was Oarin Bloodspiller who did the crime, then?”
“Although he orchestrated it, he alone was not enough to defeat me then. My guard turned upon me, none other than Aleena Rainfinder, my former captain, doing the deed.” Raina’s face turned to one of stone and scowls. “I’d never expected her to do so. She was not an ambitious soul, and so perfect for such a position.”
“People change, or there are circumstances that forced them to. Either way, Oarin Bloodspiller and Aleena Rainfinder. I shall remember their names.”
“Why?” Raina asked, tilting her head.
“If you are to be my vassal, it falls upon me, your queen, to avenge the wrongs you have suffered.”
“I …” Raina’s words died off, a stupid look of stunned surprise and disbelief over coming her darkly regal features. She scratched one of her horns before averting her eyes, almost looking like she wanted to crawl inside herself. “Vengeance does no good for me,” she said, her silky voice cracking from the heat in it. “The lady should not concern herself.”
“It cannot undo what was done but it can lay to rest the evils that sprang from it. A nicety that helps the healing, in my experience.”
“Surely there are others who—”
“One evil at a time,” Avaron cut in, smiling. “But I’ll account them all, eventually.”
“You … you really are quite …” Raina shook her head and stood up with such force her chair scrapped across the ground. Avaron couldn’t quite see her face from how fast the woman turned on heel toward the door. “I will convey your words to the others, and our final answer will be tomorrow.”
“I await with baited breath,” Avaron declared, watching Raina leave far faster than perhaps was proper.
*~*
“Squish squish.”
“Really.”
“Squish squish the booby.”
“Oh my …” A long, exasperated sigh left Tsugumi. “You’re insatiable.”
“Forgive me for indulging in my wife’s godly body,” Avaron returned flatly, her hands still wrapped around Tsugumi’s milk-filled breasts. “I can hardly hold myself back.”
“Your words would flatter me if I wasn’t so big.”
“Hey now,” Avaron bit out, reluctantly dragging her hands away from those divinely soft, plump tits. She laid both her hands upon Tsugumi’s big pregnant belly, heavy with the eggs ready to lay any day now. The snappish tora cooed at the touch, arching her back and pushing herself into Avaron’s hands. “I like how you look.”
“Fat?” Tsugumi asked dryly. A particularly firm press of Avaron’s hands made her suck in air, a teetering moan in the back of her throat. “H-hey!” she protested, Avaron’s lips nipping at her ear canal. A tiny bit of a blue tongue licked around the edge, making her shiver and squirm. “H-hey …”
“I love you, and our babies do too,” Avaron breathed out. “These ones are getting eager to be born, you know. Any day now …”
“I can tell,” Tsugumi said, her smug voice that much lighter from Avaron’s insistent teasing.
“Oh really?”
“A mother has her secrets, you know.”
Avaron blinked and chuckled. “Yeah, yeah.”
And so they remained there on the flesh bedding for a while, soaking in a quietly comfortable air.
“There’s something I was wanting your thoughts on …”
Tsugumi’s six eyes cracked open, squinting at the far wall. She has the worst timing. Stretching herself in a long, mighty stretch, she sat up, turned over, and propped herself up sideways on the bed. Avaron looked rather caught out, uncertain of what at all was going on. “Well, let’s hear it then.”
“Oh. Oh, right. Um, well, you see …” Avaron recounted her meeting with Raina, her demeanor noticeably becoming quite awkward. “… And that is about it.”
“And you’re worried over how Raina and her sisterhood will be around you?” Tsugumi asked, finding her question right on the mark when Avaron jumped.
“W-well, yes, but also, you know. Tentacle sex creature and lots of sex happening. I don’t want to, you know—that is, Gwyneth already got a [Skill] that I hadn’t expected. I don’t want to—”
Tsugumi planted a finger on Avaron’s lips, trying her hardest not to roll her eyes. “You have been kinder than many others I could speak of. Do not let this silly fear into your mind. Or do you harbor some secretive desire to do that to us?”
“N-no, not at all. It’s just—this world is different from mine,” Avaron said tepidly. “If some kind of other [Skill] shows up and starts doing something bad, I wouldn’t know how to stop it.”
“I am sure you would find a way,” Tsugumi commented dryly before her shaking her head. “If you cannot, ask the Goddesses. Gwyneth could help you with it.”
“I hear what you’re saying, it’s just—” Avaron scratched the back of her head. “It doesn’t feel like enough. I could do more, just in case.”
“Are you that afraid of your own self?”
Avaron, rather taken aback, laid there, wide-eyed and wondrous. Tsugumi feared she might’ve stepped a bit too far, but such words did need to be said. A clean slap across the face did more than pointless caresses. The tentradom looked away, her fingers aimlessly rubbing together. “I suppose it sounds that way, doesn’t it …”
Tsugumi sighed. “Far be it from me to accuse my dear customer of strange manners, but it does make me wonder.”
“Ahh, right. Well. You can say I was raised among humans in my entirety. I never really did the—tentacle sex thing.”
Like a log jam in a river, a slight kick freed the dam and the thoughts flowed once again. Tsugumi sat upright a little, cocking her head interestedly. “That explains it.”
“What?”
“Your very human manners,” she said, poking Avaron on the nose. “But you should not worry about Raina or her sisterhood.”
“… Why?”
“If they wanted to, they would not have been peaceful. Whether or not they like you, they have to live here. If they stay.”
“I’m not sure that is a good thing.”
“Do you expect everyone to like you?” Tsugumi asked lightly.
“No,” Avaron said with a shake of her head. She let out a raspberry while rolling onto her back, staring up at the ceiling. “I suppose it is silly when you say it like that. There’s a saying among the rich and powerful. Or, not a saying, more like a philosophy and shitty attitude married together. You can’t please everyone, you can’t be everyone’s friend, you can’t be there for everyone … it’s a very human limitation.”
“Human and more. But what is your point?”
“I’m not human, nor like anyone else. I can be all of those and more.”
“Because of the [Hive Mind]?”
“Precisely. Every body, every set of eyes, nose, ears … I can be everywhere all the time. I can be everyone’s everything, if I need to be,” Avaron said, holding a hand up and staring through her fingers. “I guess it’s just hard realizing that and not, well, thinking like a human.”
“Mm, I wondered. Seeing ten of you in a bath together made my eyes spin,” Tsugumi said, drawing her fingertip across Avaron’s chest. As much as she wanted to grab those supple breasts, her tentacley lover would just make a fuss. Not that she didn’t stop from tracing around that loving swell, her thumb teasingly close to that dark blue areola. Avaron’s pointed look made her smile, fangs and all. “But, my dear customer, do you know the most important question of all?”
“I have a list,” Avaron remarked dryly. “But which one?”
“Do you want to?”
Their eyes locked—at least, Tsugumi bothered putting two of her own to Avaron’s, the other two watching her chest rise up and down. Such a lovely thing, beautiful eyes and breasts together in one mouth-watering treat. Another flavor underlined it all, one that she’d only taken note of over time. Really, how busy your eyes become with those heavy thoughts, Tsugumi mused. Avaron put attention to the point of excess in anything she did. Even the nonsense busywork no one else put that much into. To have her words given such heavy consideration—it lifted her heart in a way hard to speak of. A far cry from the party she once worked in, for how ever many years of her life that’d taken away.
“I think I’d have to all the same,” Avaron said, half musing out aloud. “But, you are right. I do want to. If I didn’t, what’d be the point of being this capable?”
“Acquire wealth beyond knowing? Endless halls full of the finest women to sink your tentacles into? The richest of foods the tongue has ever—” Tsugumi smiled as a hand playfully pushed into her face, her words turning to mumbles.
“I get it!” Avaron laughed and giggled.
“—luscious lips singing endless praises—mphf!” Tsugumi gurgled as a sneaky tentacle lunged from behind, wrapping around her head and popping right into her mouth. The velvety softness of its petal-like folds wrapped her lips in a wet, hugging kiss as the core of it squirmed around. Their eyes met again, one quite dry, the other smirking.
“I think someone’s luscious lips will be a bit too busy to sing,” Avaron said with a haughty know-it-allness tone. That more of her white-sleeved, blue-fleshed tentacles sprung up, from both her and the bedding, didn’t help the scene at all.
Oh my, Tsugumi thought, her knees weak from anticipation.
*~*
What is this? How much did she make? Why is it so deep?! Nuala thought, her every look through magical sight that much more bewildering. In the short time she’d been away, much of the Hive that Avaron grew had expanded, changed, and become that much more. Tentacle creatures worked endlessly throughout it, carrying silk-wrapped supplies, refuse, and stuff she couldn’t at all identify. These tireless workers stretched the breadth of the Hive in its entirety. Their efficient and disturbingly synchronized movements alone rattled her.
The whole of it had to be something like a large town.
And yet, so many more were just … there. Sleeping inside alcoves along workways or inside large chambers, far, far more awaited. Death-like stillness, not even a breathing throat to be seen, and Nuala knew they were still alive. It wasn’t that different from what she saw when she first met Avaron. Their numbers defied belief—Two women alone couldn’t bear this many offspring, surely? Nuala marveled. I do not see any others, no prisoners, no slaves … nothing at all.
And there were still more Avarons!
She must’ve found at least eight of them.
Standing in the bedroom, or so Avaron told it was, Nuala kept looking through her magical mirror. As much as she wanted to guess as the purpose of some places, the whole situation sat wrong in her mind. Like a familiar puzzle except everything connected in the most bizarre ways. The mirror flickered to yet another scene, the sight rather surprising Nuala. A long rectangular room, filled with fruiting flesh-grown trees, flowering beds, berry bushes and more. She is making a garden? A garden of … flesh.
The actual food looked pretty normal; what it grew out of, not so much. In spying at them, she saw something move amongst the foliage. A woman sat up from a crushed bedding of leaves and flesh, hair full of leaves and her body wrapped in vines and fur and she had cloven feet … Nuala stared, a ringing sort of pressure in her ears from her blood pressure sky vaulting upwards. No … no, what are you doing here? she thought, clenching her shaky fingers. The woman stood up, standing on two cloven hoofs, staring at Nuala.
Throughout the space and magic between them, their eyes met, and Nuala swept her hand to dismiss the mirror.
“How rude you are,” a smooth voice, aged as the finest wines, breathed into her ear. The heat of her breath hotter than the already hot Hive room she stood within. Nuala swallowed, long, lithe fingers wrapping around her wrist. Another hand reached up and brushed its fingers along her cheek. “Mm, this smell, the little sapling who lives in my daughter’s shade. Why are you here?”
“On behalf of her majesty, your daughter,” Nuala hissed, all too aware of the lushly feminine body pushing into her. Two big, soft mounds tight into her back, and just a hint of hips far more blooming wide than her own. “She had not told me you would be here. Do pardon my rudeness.”
“Hm, hm, hm, little sapling hiding in my daughter’s shade, spying with an eye upon me,” Nahtura said low and articulately. Her brushing fingertips pushed in, the sharp bladed edges painfully dragging across Nuala’s soft cheek. Not enough to draw blood, but painful all the same. “I don’t appreciate you interrupting my hunt.”
She is hunting? Now, of all times?! HERE?! Nuala all but screamed in her own mind, her face stoic and tight as stone. “Be that as it is,” she said, all the care a living person could muster in her words, “that is not my intent. Nor am I allowed to leave.”
“Ho? Did I say you had to stay?”
There are ways to handle a beast as dangerous as you, Nuala thought, millennia old skill pushing through her heart-thundering panic. “Duty dictates me to. I am sure you felt it, that rotten light.”
“I did. And watched it, I have. How beautiful a sight, and how wonderful a song,” Nahtura said with such a pleased, throat-thrumming sigh. “Screaming humans, screeching bugs, snapping sinew and crunching bones. She killed them all, begging or not, fleeing or fighting. Ahh, it overwhelmed even me.”
That Nahtura sounded so pleased, it bordered on the lecherous. “Then you know, the Church will come,” Nuala said. “I must be here to protect Avaron.”
“… Church?” Nahtura asked curiously, her tilting head bumping against Nuala’s.
“The Church of the Everlasting Light? The ones who split off from the Eternal Flame?”
“Mmm, the ones harboring the rotten light is … that is their name now, is it?”
The disgusting gurgling slurp of the flesh door wrenching open drew both their attention. Nahtura yanked Nuala around with her, planting the magi straight between her and the door. On the other side stood a rather confused looking Avaron. “What is this?” she asked, gesturing incredulously.
“A friendly conversation,” Nahtura said, the air of a laughing trickster around her.
“Real friendly,” Avaron echoed and shook her head before stepping inside. “Is that why you’re a hair’s breadth from ripping her arm off?”
“You do speak so sweetly.”
Nuala desperately hoped her eyes conveyed the ‘do not encourage her’ words she didn’t dare vocalize.
“If you think so. I’d appreciate if you don’t kill her for the time being. I need someone to teach me magic.”
“You—”
“Why bother with that?” Nahtura asked, stepping over Nuala’s words in an instant. She lifted her cheek-caressing hand, sliding it down Nuala’s robe covered side. The strength of it all too obvious in how much it drew attention to her figure. “Isn’t she that much more appetizing?”
“It’s frightening I can’t tell if you mean eating her alive or not,” Avaron said with a flat stare.
“Even I think that would be wasteful,” Nahtura said, clicking her teeth. In letting go of Nuala’s wrist, she used both her hands to grope along the magi’s body, squeezing her figure and putting her on display. “Tch, I can tell my no-good daughter impressed you. A bountiful little garden right here, untilled, seedless and empty …” Nahtura looked away, regarding Avaron again. “Why not use her?”
To have her secrets spoken of so blatantly—the rage in her veins boiled. Yet no fury would stand against Nahtura, nor was she that foolish to try. Still, to have Avaron stare upon her with such thoughtful intrigue, it truly left a lead weight in her gut. Humiliation that left her anxious and desperate for any way to escape Efval’s dangerous mother. Her hands clenched in shaking fury all the same.
“That’s like five counts of sexual harassment and a meeting with HR, I think,” Avaron said and shook her head.
“The who and the what?” Nahtura asked, her head tilting so much it nearly went upside. “Strange woman you are. I offer myself and this passably fine little sapling and still, not one inkling to claim either?”
“I’m picky. More to the point if Nuala wants to get plowed she’ll tell me in her own way. And I told you to bug me about it in the spring.”
“Cannot blame a woman for trying!” Nahtura said with a singing laugh, letting go of Nuala with a shove that sent her to the ground. “This little sapling, curious and spying she is, always looking at what you’re doing. Antsy and anticipating, squirming and hungry herself.”
“… Spying?”
“Magical sight, through dirt and walls, thick and thin.” Nahtura rubbed her throat. “A typical trick of people like her.”
Gathering herself up, Nuala’s eyes darted between Nahtura and Avaron. Her staff laid across the bed, the mirror in the air, and she held no strong position at all. Nonetheless she scowled and stuck up her nose. “Hmph, it is nothing of the sort.”
“Do you make a liar out of me, who tells no lies?” Nahtura asked, the warm sweetness of her voice a deadly poison. Nuala’s ears instinctively twitched and lowered, trying not to let the sounds in at all.
“I figured the elvetahn were spying on me already,” Avaron said, her bored voice that much more relieving to hear. “Thanks for catching her, at least. The better question is, why are you doing it, Nuala?”
“You are unlike any other to have crossed my path. Heroine, tentradom, knowledgeable and more. Why would I not do all I can to learn what you know?” Nuala said, an immediate answer all too easy to give. Not entirely untrue either, but not the whole truth.
Scratching the back of her head, Avaron sighed and rolled her shoulders, stretching where she stood. “I get it. Understandably I’m a little pissed all the same.”
“Shall I punish her for you then?” Nahtura asked, hands clasped together. Her posture was one of an eager maiden, naked breasts pushing out, ass hanging in the air with a sway of her hips. Nuala wondered, if for a moment, she’d slipped into some other world. Some bizarre place where the mother of the Heartwood acted like a perverted youngster!
“Mmm,” Avaron hummed, seeming in thought.
Oh, no. Sweat gathered upon Nuala’s brow. Anything but that. She couldn’t let Nahtura—oh, no. “W-wait, one moment!” she all but yelled. “You wanted to learn magic. I can teach it to you!”
“Won’t you offer more for your grave offense?” Nahtura asked, smiling sweetly. Her head looked at Nuala, but her body was busy being eye candy for Avaron. “Such a paltry thing, a little bit of magic …”
“P-Paltry?!” Nuala almost screeched, pointing at herself. “I am the greatest magi on this entire continent! There is no magic I cannot teach!”
“Alright, alright,” Avaron said, clapping her hands and drawing their attention. “Enough goofing around.”
You call my life goofing around?!
“Bluntly, I do need magical training, Nuala. That you are spying on me for whatever reason, I can let slide. My Hive and your forest are allies, in a sense.”
“It is not her forest,” Nahtura quipped with acid.
“… What’s the difference?”
“That only I let my daughter and her insane ideas live in my home. Really, she could have made her own forest by now.”
“… My Hive and the elvetahn people are allies, I presume,” Avaron said with a self-correcting air. “How nations keep each other in check is no mystery to me. As I have helped you in your war, now will be the time to help me.”
“As you say, my queen will still need to be informed.”
“Please, it’s not like I’m cutting and running. We’ll have a chat in the spring when she arrives.”
“Very well. W-wait a moment!” Nuala chirped, waving her hands. “I cannot just give my knowledge for nothing! There is so much you know, you must tell me some of it!”
“Do I?” Avaron said in a musing way. “Well, there are parts I can tell you, I suppose. Your people will need to know it eventually.”
Nuala, eager as she was, didn’t like how that was worded in the slightest. By now the foreboding aura Avaron brought out so easily wasn’t so surprising. No, the more she thought on it—the more it seemed she was being led on. A scheme not even her vast years could pierce.
It was unwelcomingly frustrating.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Refugee Leader
Chapter 37: The New Queendom
Chapter Text
It is easy to rebuild from nothing; to change what is there, much harder.
*~*
The hustle and bustle of hundreds filled the air with a low, rumbling drone. It’d been so long since she’d been around so many it caught Avaron off-guard. A familiar sound, that despite all the time and distance from Earth, remained near and dear to her. I really am a city dweller aren’t I? she mused before shaking her head.
“Is something amiss?”
Raina’s worried question made Avaron look over. Raina, her helpers, Princess Arzha, and Haleen who always stuck to her, all awaited Avaron’s words. Like having a bunch of interns again, she thought with a wry smile. “No, just being nostalgic in my old age. Is everyone here?”
“That can be, yes.”
“Right. Let’s get the show on the road then.” Avaron, flourishing her winter jacket open, ascended the boxes in front of her. Raina had laid out a series of crates like a staircase, the top of which was a particularly large tower of crates. Although maybe only ten feet up in the air, it put Avaron cleanly above everyone else. She squinted, the mid-day sun blissfully warm feeling in the still winter air. Hundreds of people, human and not, arrayed before her in the large clearing that’d been prepared.
“Avaron,” Arzha’s voice came from below.
Looking over, the princess held up a strange crystal-and-metal rod to her. Avaron laid down on the crate, awkwardly scooping it up. “What’s this?”
“A voice loudener. It is useful when addressing crowds or armies. Speak into the top of it when you twist the metal to activate the magic.”
A microphone? Avaron marveled, staring at the peculiar thing. Same idea, completely different designs it turned out. “Right, thanks.” Standing up, she regarded the crowd for a moment before looking at the ‘microphone’. A metal rod encased an opaque, blue crystal that had obviously been cut and smoothed out. Is … is this a microphone or a dildo? she wondered, staring at its cutely diminutive make. A small metal ring at the bottom was lined with what looked like a person and some check marks. As one rotated clockwise, more check marks appeared next to the person. Oh, volume control. She rotated it to the first setting, and the cut crystal lit up with a humming blue glow.
(It’s a vibrator), Venus said with a laugh.
(Shut up!) Weaver shot back before she, too, would start laughing in front of everyone.
“Testing, one, two, three …” Avaron spoke slowly into the magic-mic, her voice definitely becoming louder. Not painful to her ears quite yet, but up there. A number of people looked over, dozens of curious eyes settling upon her. “Hm, seems to work. Saryl? Saryl can you hear me back there?”
The knight hardly moved at all.
Avaron ticked up the volume counter one more time. “Saryl, hello?”
Nothing, and so a third time. “Saryl, hello?”
The knight finally looked over, waving her arm. Being the farthest away helper at the back of the clearing, it seemed setting three was needed. Almost everyone was looking in Avaron’s direction at that point. Avaron clicked it off quickly and looked over the crate’s edge. “That’s not too loud, is it?”
Arzha shook her head. “No, the magic in that one prevents the voice from harming the ears. Some of the loudeners are not so expertly made.”
“Oh, I’m going to need more of these, they’re pretty great. Okay, places at the front, everyone!” Avaron said, making shooing motions with her hands before standing up. Raina, Arzha, and their helpers all did so, and Avaron turned on the magic-mic once more. “Ahem, attention, attention everyone!”
The idle conversations in the clearing died down, the sudden quiet almost eerie to hear.
“Hello, I’m Avaron. The meeting will be starting soon, but let us all get comfortable. Will my helpers out there light up the campfires?” The rest of Arzha’s other knights, clad in their plate mail, moved with a purpose. Torches lit pre-built campfire sites, lighting up a grid of fire spots that dotted throughout the crowd. As they did so, Avaron said, “Wonderful. Now, over there—” she pointed with her free hand off to her right, “—you can see some food kitchens setup. My wives and their helpers there will give everyone a meal to eat, if you’re hungry.”
That got some attention, people already moving past one another to get there.
“Ah but but but,” Avaron tutted. “Do so in a calm and orderly manner. We’re in no rush, and there’s plenty of food going around. If you make a fuss, the knights you see will deal out punishments. Calm and orderly, people! Form up lines and wait your turn, there’s plenty to go around!”
Her announcement turned into shepherding the crowd. True to her orders, they did form up mostly neat lines of somber, shuffling feet. Gwyneth, Tsugumi, and many of Arzha’s servants hurriedly issued out wooden bowels and spoons, dispensing soup, a choice of fruit, and even some fresh flatbread. With how many there were, it took nearly an hour before the crowd settled in again across the field. While it wasn’t the most filling of meals, it was the best option Avaron had with her already near breaking-point supplies.
This is going to be a trick to pull off, Avaron thought with a sigh. Holding up the magic-mic again, she said, “Good, I’m glad you all got something to eat! Now, introducing myself again, I am Avaron. I believe Raina down here has spoken to many of you about me already? Ah, raise your right hand if she has.”
A fair number of people did so, after shuffling food around to free up that hand.
“Alright. Then let’s start off the meeting here with some straight facts. I’m Avaron, the tentradom queen who owns these lands.”
A fair number of people started at the word ‘tentradom’, looking up sharply.
“Yup, tentradom, you heard that right. The big, monstrously scary rape monster of legend. That is how most people know my kind as, anyway.” Avaron made a show of flippantly waving her hand dismissively. “Let me be clear about it, I’m not like that at all. Tentradoms who do that are criminals by our own standards and believe me, I’d be right there with you killing one of them.”
For as much as they started up, a rumbling conversation and mostly agreeable airs followed. They weren’t pitchforking yet, at least.
“With that out of the way, Raina has told me of your plight. As much as anyone may or may not believe this, I rather like to help people. Most of them just end up lighting me on fire, but you know, I try.” Her humor wasn’t really reaching anyone, as best she could tell. Unfortunate, but manageable. “That being said, the two choices before you all is to continue migration northward, or stay here and become my vassals.”
Whether done with their meals or not, the crowd regarded her all the same. Hopeful, disdainful, weary, old and tired, young and scarred—so many faces, so many familiar expressions. The time and circumstances were different, but it all reminded her of humanitarian work long, long ago. Avaron found some measure of steel to resolve herself with.
“I am all too aware of the wars in the south and west. Terrible business being what it is, I have no choice but to gird myself and prepare. For you see, this is my home. I cannot leave it even if I wanted to. We tentradoms become attached to where we settle, and to leave is almost worse than dying. My nest, my wives, my children—it is all here. Here is where I will meet whoever dares to harm them, with all the strength and fury I can muster.” Avaron swept her hand in a wide gesture. “I see some nods and understanding looks. I do not blame those who chose to run. I am certain if you had the strength, you would have fought to the end.”
Letting the words hang for a moment, she took a breath and continued on. “Now you understand. I raise my armies to defend my home, for there can be no retreating, no running away. Here you stand at the choice of fleeing through the Silvervein Mountains, or settling here as my vassals. For, as my vassals, you apart of my land, and I would defend you all with the same fury and strength.”
The crowd spoke amongst themselves, but an old man holding a staff spoke up. He waved the rattly thing around, drawing attention as he spoke. Despite their relative distance, he had a surprisingly clear voice. “You talk of armies! What I see is snow! How do you protect us, then?”
“What you see is indeed snow! But now turn, and see what laid hidden beneath it!” Avaron declared, grandly gesturing with her hand. Everyone turned around then, a complete 180 turn to regard the barren snowfield farther away. Rows upon rows of warrior drones erupted from the snow, soon followed by the immense crushers. Dozens upon dozens of smaller drones formed columns, intersected by the crushers large spacing. She’d moved the entirety of her war-capable drones to the field, all told a small force ranging in the hundreds. “Gaze upon these beasts, my drones, who protect my Hive. What you see is just one army, for many more slumber deep beneath our feet. They dream a dreamless sleep, waiting for anyone foolish enough to attack us all. This, respectable old man, is what will defend you.”
“So it is!” he said, a loud, gruffy hrumph of a noise before sitting down. Avaron rather couldn’t tell if he agreed or scoffed at her at all.
Another person drew attention, a woman of some middling years. “What of food and water?” she demanded.
“There is a river that flows from the mountains! Come spring it will melt and water in abundance. As for food, hunting is plentiful in these lands, and mighty beasts roam that offer great meat. I cannot speak for the dirt; there is much but I have not farmed it myself. I rather, well, do not know how to, you see.” Avaron snapped her finger. “That is a fine idea, respectable woman! Who among you are farmers, familiar with plant and dirt? Raise your hands!”
Some did so. “Wonderful. Now, carpenters and woodworkers?” Some did so. “Now, masons and stoneworkers?” Less than the others, but there were some. “Clothworkers and fine artisans?” The smallest group by far, but more than a few dozen at the least. Avaron chuckled and held out her hands in a large, welcoming embrace. “I see we have many talents here. I have lands to farm, stones to work, houses to build, and so much more. You all have these skills, while I have all the means to protect you.”
Another, more different person drew attention, a man who was from the mason group. “And what do you want in return?” he asked, gruffly spoken. “Every king and queen, lord and lady; they all want something from us.” That garnered quite a lot of agreeing nods, everyone coming to regard Avaron carefully.
“It is true, everybody wants something. I believe you speak of taxes and tribute?”
“I do.”
“Know that I am a tentradom; I regard the world very differently from other peoples. I see before me opportunity, but not one of you have anything to offer me. What is there to tax, when there is nothing? Should I draw blood from a stone?” Avaron asked, her question hanging in the air. “To answer your question: at the moment, I want nothing. In time, as the village grows like a mighty forest, we will speak again on taxes. After all, I cannot tax what you do not have. I am certain many of you have once served under someone who tried.”
That so many nodded in agreement rather disconcerted her. Avaron couldn’t help chuckling in disbelief. “So it is there. Take this as a time to recover, to find your strength again, and look toward the future brightly with its new opportunities. Are there any more questions?”
If there were, no one really stood up to voice them.
“So it is,” Avaron declared. “I shall leave you all to discuss which path it is you want to take.”
“There is no need,” Raina said, rather surprising Avaron and making her look down. The dark and gloomy woman stood there, tall amongst everyone else, and surprisingly firm in her eyes. “We have reached our decision already. Your words have only assured us of what that decision is.”
And here I am, putting all this effort in, Avaron thought, nearly rolling her eyes. “So it is. And what is your decision?”
The refugees all looked at each other, for one reason or another. Those who sat stood up; those with food in their hands placed it at their feet; those busy talking fell silent. Avaron watched the invisible wave pass through them all, each and every person coming to regard her, eyes unwavering. She found herself a little put out by the intensity of their gazes. Still, she kept her ground. One by one, they bowed their heads, arms outstretched, palms flat up and facing the sky. From the men, to the women, to the children, they all did so, as if offering a prayer to her.
What the … Avaron blinked as a screen popped into existence before her eyes.
[You have earned sufficient loyalty from many people to gain access to Sovereign Power. Be aware that loss of faith, loyalty, or respect amongst your people will dramatically affect your Sovereign Power, even removing it in the worst case.]
What is this? Avaron marveled, reading the rather dense screen quickly. The weight of nine other minds soon pressed in, the entirety of the Hive Mind beholding the scene.
[Sovereign Power: Hive Vassalage
By assigning vassalage status, a person or group will be accepted as a proxy extension of the Hive itself. They will be an autonomous segment, independent of the Hive Mind, but recognized as low ranking members of the Hive. Instinctual behavior and automatic defenses will include them in the event of being assaulted.
Hive vassals may revoke their status at will but reacceptance in the Hive will become that much more difficult.
The Hive Queen may assign or revoke vassalage status at will. Those who do not accept vassalage status will obtain no benefits from the Sovereign Power except recognition as a proxy extension.
The benefits of Hive Vassalage will diminish the farther one is from Hive controlled territory, regardless of political boundaries.
Benefits will increase or change as more vassals are acquired or lost.
Benefits may take up to half-a-year to take full effect as the body undergoes changes.
The following benefits will be given to willing Hive Vassals:
Self-correcting genes which will repair dysfunctional genetic information. This change is permanent and cannot be lost.
Physical healthiness, robustness, sexual sensitivity, and sexual satisfaction for adults will increase. While these changes will affect the baseline properties of a vassal, they can be greatly enhanced by wearing less clothing. This increase will continue until less than 10% of the body is covered in clothing.
Physical healthiness for children will increase significantly to better ensure their survival. They are not affected by the clothing bonus system.
Milk producing women will now indefinitely produce milk.
Significantly increased nutritional value for milk.
Sexual products are now nutritionally viable but only to a supplementary degree.]
Avaron stood there, still as a statue, reading the unbelievable list in front of her. The presence of hundreds of eyeballs that weren’t her own stared back at her, boring into her very soul. I want to die, she thought. Do they know about this list of effects? Do they—she clicked off the magic-mic real quick. “Hey, Arzha, I got a question.”
“… Yes?” the princess asked from below, sounding wary.
“The thing about [Sovereign Power]. Do the subjects see the effects of it as well?”
“Of course. It is an important measure of a queen or king’s rule over their subjects. Although it is largely a formality, a recognition of ruler over peasant.”
“… So most [Sovereign Powers] do not grant benefits or anything to their subjects?”
“They do. Most are fairly typical in granting increased fervor in battle, better work when in the fields, and so forth. The exact nature of the blessing changes from ruler to ruler, which makes succession a messy affair.”
“I see. I see. Well. Thanks. I’ll take that under advisement.”
(Hey, so, I’m not saying I want to skip on out of this life but if any of you wanted to try a lethal experiment …)
(Pay attention,) Iris said, her voice rife with laughter. (They want an answer from us.)
Avaron clicked the magic-mic back on. “Well. There it is. You all see what there is to gain from becoming my vassals. I can see some of you are rather confused by it—” she didn’t actually but it was time for conversation control, “—so I can help explain some of the effects.”
Someone did speak up then, a man in his probably twenties. “Uhm, this ‘gee nee ticks’, what is that? The rest I can understand, but that …” Quite a lot agreed with his confusion, judging by the rolling mumble.
Avaron blinked. Coughing into her hand away from the magic-mic for a moment, she gathered herself. “That is … tricky to explain. Everyone has blood, right? Inside that blood contains knowledge—who you are, who you parents were, who theirs were, and so forth. It is how family lines are made; why you look like your parents, or your siblings look like you. Makes sense?”
“Ah, yes, it does!” the man said, nodding.
“Not all the knowledge in your blood is passed on in the right way. Sometimes it forgets something, or writes down an idea differently. This can be good or bad; it’s random. What my [Sovereign Power] does is correct the bad knowledge, which can give you awful health, weak knees, bad muscles, stuff like that.”
“Ohh, really? And my children, they’ll be helped by it too?”
“Yes?” Avaron said, uncertain if there was a trick to that question. “It’s not something easily seen or felt, but it does make a difference. This is very important to we tentradoms, we have an eye for it. And now, you all will gain its benefit as well.”
“You need to tell them if you accept their loyalty or not,” Arzha chimed in, smirking. For one so stoic, to be so blatant in her enjoyment rather rankled Avaron.
“I get it,” she griped then sucked in a breath. “As you all see, the benefits are there. If you will accept a place as my vassals, then I accept you,” Avaron declared loud, reaching out with her arms in what she hoped was a suitable grandiose pose.
“You have seen and heard the words!” Raina shouted, her voice commanding even without magical help. “Those who will stay, join me, and praise our new queen Avaron!”
“Praise, our gracious queen Avaron!” the crowd said, not as a great unison or whole, but by many different people going out of order. As they repeated the words, they found a harmony, a singular voice in their reverence for Avaron. A warm and quite odd feeling filled her then, distinct enough almost like a hot ray of sunshine. Before her very eyes a blue-golden light crept through the air, coating them all in a fine dust—or, a warm blanket. In the light of an afternoon sun, set against a wintery backdrop of snowy fields and sleeping trees, the sparkling sight left her in awe.
Is this magic? she wondered. It spread beyond just those who praised her name, covering the lands themselves and more all around the refugee camp. Maybe it was just her eyes that saw it? Avaron couldn’t tell. A slight elation arose in her chest, lightness in spirit long since gone. She only knew the feeling for what it was, from someone dear and familiar to her. That thought made her chuckle and shake her head. She was a whole world away from the American ghetto.
Amanda, I think you’d disapprove of me starting a cult like this, Avaron thought wistfully.
*~*
By the cloudy afternoon of the next day, Avaron was entering into Raina’s meeting hut once again. Some effort had gone into cleaning it all up, with actual chairs, a real table, carpeting, and some better lantern hanging spots. While wear, tear, and age had done its work upon everything, it remained quite the step up compared to the other times. At her entry, Raina and two men who sat at the table stood, bowing their heads.
“I must admit this was quicker than I expected,” Avaron said, brushing a light dusting of snow off her shoulders.
“Everyone is quite eager to do work, my queen,” Raina said, smiling uneasily. “As you requested, here is Dorin Haeldone, the elected leader of the masons and artisans. Beside him is Jaera Badn, elected leader of the farmers, gatherers, and clothiers.”
While they were both head-to-toe in their ramshackle winter clothing, Dorin was quite the chiseled, idealistic man perhaps in his late forties. With a face like his, Avaron half-expected him to be a soldier of some kind, for he’d certainly fit the picture. Jaera, by contrast, was far older and not even human—some monja that looked like a fox with red hair and fur, graying at the tall, fluffy ear tips. Whether or not he was actually an ‘old person’ or not was quite a mystery to her. “I see. Let us sit and begin the first proper leadership meeting, then.”
They all nodded and Avaron headed over to the table. To her surprise, Raina made an effort to pull out the chair, smiling demurely. “Thanks,” Avaron said simply, sitting and scooting in. A particular scent tickled her nose, one that, amidst all the grime and filth she tried blocking out, stabbed deeply. Fruity and flowery all at once, a flavor that changed from woman-to-woman, but always tickled that exact same spot. Fertile, receptive, hungry, anticipating; all sorts of erotic implications.
Avaron huffed and cleared her nose. Seriously? She is right now? The thought bewildered her, enough to not look that much at Raina for the time being. “There’s a lot to go through, so before I start on my list, do you two have any immediate concerns?” Avaron asked, looking at Dorin and Jaera. The two men regarded each other for a moment before Dorin bowed his head.
“I do not wish to speak unbecomingly to our new queen,” Jaera said, his ears flicking. “But it is a matter of great import.”
“I should hope to be one who never turns away her advisors. What is the issue?”
“It concerns your [Sovereign Power]. That is … if I may speak bluntly?”
“Speak as you need to.”
“Ahem.” Jaera sat up in his seat somewhat. “It concerns the nature of, milk. Although we understand your highness will not debase the people, the women are … concerned. If they do not stop making milk, then they must deal with it. Some have spoken a fear of being turned into common cow cattle, forced to eat grass and such.”
“I see,” Avaron said, fingers on her temple as she leaned onto the armrest. “Not … unexpected. I trust you will convey my words to them?”
“As you wish.”
“Milk is important to we tentradoms; it is the greatest food in the entire world. That being said, the milk they make is their milk. They may give it to me, to their husbands, children, friends, or whoever they feel worthy of it. Should I ever make an attempt to force their milk from them, you are all welcome to kill me.”
“I—see,” Jaera said, his fiery orange eyes blinking slowly. “That will ease their hearts, but, there is still the issue of, well, milking. Many of them do not know what to do.”
“Errmm … I suspect their husbands should help in that regard. But, that leaves those without husbands, or unwilling husbands, doesn’t it?”
“It does.”
Avaron scratched her temple. “I’ve been meaning to work on a new way to, bluntly, draw out milk. Plus, we’ll need bottles or buckets or something to store theirs in.”
“We will, yes.”
“For the time being, they will have to make do with whatever they can. I’ll put some effort into figuring out a, clean and safe, way of drawing milk that won’t humiliate them.”
Jaera bowed his head. “I shall convey your words.”
“Do you think that will handle the situation for the time being?”
“It should, but, it is a matter close to the heart of women. I cannot say what they will demand.”
“My ears will be open. Dorin, you had something?”
“Ah, right.” He, too, coughed into his hand, his cheeks dashingly red from the conversation. Not that Avaron blamed him. “There was concern on where to gather wood and stone. Being near the elvetahn’s Alva Forest, many of the woodsmen are leery about trespassing.”
“We are fairly close. My nest’s entrance is right on the border. While I have some dealings with them and their queen, their borders are still closed. I cannot imagine they will look kindly on any sort of overtures.” Avaron rolled her shoulders, frowning. “I’ll do what I can to mark the border clearer, so no one accidentally wanders in. Generally, look toward the south or west for wood needs. The northern mountains are good for stone, but obviously a bit of a trek.”
“I hear you. There’s the wildlife, as many of us haven’t any idea what to expect out here. The Silvervein Mountains are notorious for all sorts of dangerous stories.”
And you people thought to cross them somehow? Avaron wanted to ask, but kept that nice piece of acid to herself. “It’s a bit troublesome. The Hive’s food stores are reaching dangerous levels—most of it has to go into hibernation to survive. Until spring arrives and food starts jumping up, we can’t be too risky. Otherwise, I’d send some drones to escort the workers.”
“I do wish to speak about that,” Raina said after Dorin bowed to her. “The words you speak. ‘Hive’, ‘drone’, and such.”
“Mm?” Avaron hummed, glancing over. “What about them?”
“What do they mean, exactly? There has been some talk, with most everyone thinking you are a bee hive, my queen.”
The way she said ‘my queen’ had a little too much warmth underneath it. A word being rolled on a tongue with a certain emphasis. Avaron’s ear itched at the tone, something she tried to put out of mind. “It’s not incorrect. Bees are actually quite close to how we tentradoms work.”
“They … are?” Jaera asked, ear twitching.
“Sure. There’s the queen who births the drones—the bees you see flying about. They do all the work, from getting food to actually building the Hive. The big bee nest, being the hive of course. Now we tentradoms are a little different, its our wives that birth our drones, and we can have many different types of workers. Some are born to be soldiers, who guard the hive.”
“So like bees, then? Everyone will understand that, I think,” Raina said, a hand curled under her chin.
“Why call the bees ‘drones’, though?” Dorin asked.
“Because they don’t … think. They have no minds of their own.” Avaron entirely expected their blank faced looks. “Alright, it goes like this—” she stacked her hands flatly on top of each other, “—drones, animals, people. Some animals are awfully people like, right? You’ve all had pets or seen them once?”
“Like dogs, sure,” Dorin said.
“Yes, and people are people. Thinks, thoughts, dreams, hopes, talking to one another …” They nodded. “Drones are way below both of them. They have no thoughts of their own at all. Each one of them is an extension of their queen, existing solely to enact her will, whatever it is. So, if I die, all my drones just drop to the floor and die right there with me.”
“The mind struggles,” Jaera said with a whimsical chuckle. “If they have no thoughts, how do they move? Thinking outloud, of course, my queen.”
“It’s complicated,” Avaron said with an understanding shrug of the shoulders. “But that’s why the distinction is there. My tentacles you see walking about or doing work, all of them are drones. Mindless creatures who exist to fulfill my will. Their bodies are alive, of course. It’s not necromancy or anything.”
“I think bees will be most understandable to everyone, my queen,” Raina said, smiling lightly.
“As you say. I think we’ll be stuck waiting until spring comes to do any serious work. But, while we’re here, I’ve been wanting to start plotting out how the village will be built.”
Actually talking construction was by far the most normal thing Avaron had done all year. Sizing up what land, how to arrange houses, how to sculpt out the streets, where the warehousing will go, and such wonderfully mundane things. Resources, knowledgeable workers, and circumstances all being what they were, she wasn’t going to have much for a while. Despite all that, the plotting and planning brought a peace in its own way.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Subject
Chapter 38: Thawing Cold
Chapter Text
Good intentions can justify anything.
*~*
“Once you have the loop firmly around the thumbs, pull the thread through.”
“Right.”
“Twist the arm, then pull with your elbow to the shoulder.”
“Alright.”
“Whip it out, twist, and fold.”
Avaron, having done so, followed Tsugumi’s lead. Placing a thick chunk of silky webbing in front of her self, it was starting to take shape. Once an amorphous blob, repeated stretching, flipping, and folding had done much to change it. The lump now had neat ridges spanning across it, indents where prior folding did their work. Although Tsugumi’s silk lump looked far better than her own, at least there was a resemblance now. The pile of failures far in the back of the weaving room haunted her mind.
“I’m surprised this is the method to do this,” Avaron said, clapping her hands clean before rubbing her own shoulders. In a few moments the regeneration would take away the aches and pains, but she did it anyway. “That is, I kind of know, uhh, cotton fabric a tiny bit.”
“That would not work at all,” Tsugumi said, smiling as any professional would. “Remember, this is only the first step. Now the silk must settle and find its strength again. Otherwise, cutting it open would only spill it out everywhere.”
“Hopefully this batch does better. I’d rather not Efval crawl down my throat if I have nothing to show,” Avaron said, her words becoming a gripe, hand whipping back and forth with irritable energy.
“For what did you promise her?” Tsugumi asked. Clear of her own silk work, she reclined back in Avaron’s latest attempt at furniture. A single stalk of flesh and bone connected a swiveling pod, cozy enough to lay in with legs hanging out over the edge. At their normal sizes it was a comfy thing; someone like Hanamaru would crush it.
“Ahh, just tora silk to weave with,” Avaron griped, kicking herself into a slow spin. The pod-chair didn’t actually turn 360-degrees properly, but close enough. Half-way turned from Tsugumi, a rope of sticky webbing suddenly shot across Avaron’s vision. It grabbed the side of her pod, yanking it back until the two of theirs were face-to-face. Without missing a beat, Tsugumi vaulted out of hers and onto Avaron’s, toes and hands gripping the edges. Now quite definitely not pregnant with another batch of eggs, her sleek physique rather stood out.
Not that she could appreciate it. Tsugumi’s scary eyes were cause enough to not look away.
“You promised the queen of the Elvetahn bolts of tora silk?” Tsugumi asked, not even smiling with predatory glee.
“Yeeeessss?” Avaron said even if she rather didn’t want to.
Two hands gripping the edges for support, Tsugumi used her other two and dragged them down her face. “You stupid customer of mine,” she squeezed out in a groan. “The cutest tenty for miles but there’s still vacancy on the second floor.”
“Hey now—” Those two hands on Tsugumi’s face slapped right onto Avaron’s cheeks, gripping tightly. Rather unlike a human’s, their angles were sharp while the bendable areas remained soft. A vexing mixture of familiar comfort and unusual hardiness.
“Hey now,” Tsugumi repeated, her voice rather serious. “You promised a queen something. Not only that, but the queen of the Elvetahn. The one woman on this entire continent that should not be disappointed.”
“And I should deliver a product of exceeding excellence for her usage, is what you’re going to say.”
“Good girl,” Tsugumi said, patting Avaron’s cheeks and smiling. Just as quickly she squeezed them in her hands again, glowering. “Do you have any idea how hard it is to make a bolt of that quality?!”
“Ow, ow ow ow!”
Amidst Tsugumi’s painful pinching, the slurp of a flesh door opening sounded.
“Gwyneth! Save me!” Avaron called out.
“Do not help her, Gwyneth.”
“… Uhh?” The naked priestess stood at the door, fingering her hair anxiously. “Art thou busy?”
“As much as I enjoy Tsugumi riding me with wild abandon,” Avaron quipped, “no, we just got done making some silk things. What do you need?” Oh, how Tsugumi gave her a dirty look. Quite the feat with only two eyes, the other four watching Gwyneth.
“Oh! Nothing, nothing really …” She obviously wanted something but made a show of trying not to be needy about it. “I do not wisheth an intrusion.”
Avaron spied a glance at Tsugumi and whispered, “I mean, is she?”
“No?” Tsugumi returned just as hush.
“It’s fine, Gwyneth.”
“M-might I stay with thee, then?” the priestess asked with an unabashedly hopeful voice.
“Yes? Of course?” Avaron answered, sharing a dubious glance with Tsugumi. “Sweet Gwyneth who sucks my tenty any chance she gets. Why are you being bashful now?”
“N-n-not every chance!” Gwyneth sputtered and stamped her foot. “Tis only that, would be unbecoming to intrude on Tsugumi’s time with thee …”
“Alright,” Avaron said, curling her fingers commandingly. “Walk that sexy butt over here and park it right in my hand.”
Whether to protest or not, Gwyneth did so, a distinct bounce in her step. Not the alluring swagger of a seductress, though she had the body for it. Such lively energy lent more of over excited energy, blissfully pure in its intensity. Avaron couldn’t help enjoy watching those milk-heavy tits bounce, nearly ready for their first session. Ugh, yup, that’s a thought. Fuck me it’s hot but still, really?
Ah, the her from before might have opinions about it.
Such concerns flew away the moment Gwyneth arrived and turned around, awkwardly planting her butt in Avaron’s waiting palm. A softness of flesh tinged by the scars of skin, but still her fingers found a delectable treat. Gently squeezing and quickly finding that firm muscle, Avaron enjoyed herself for a moment. “And now why do you think you’re being intrusive?”
“Tis fair Tsugumi’s time with thou. If I intrude upon it—”
“It is not,” Tsugumi said with a theatrical sigh. Climbing off of Avaron’s pod, she came alongside Gwyneth and swatted Avaron’s hand away.
“Hey!”
“And you are welcome around unless I say otherwise.”
“T-thy kitchen is quite—”
“What did I say about the kitchen?”
Gwyneth let out an uneasy sound. “What happens in the kitchen stays in the kitchen.”
Avaron rotated her pod away, rubbing her smacked hand. Ah, yes, welcome to Tsugumi, she thought with a tinge of sympathy. No sooner than she’d rotated out of sight than a chitinous hand grabbed onto the edge with a smack. Her face contorted to one of pure terror as her pod rotated back toward her wives. No, please! When she faced the two of them again, the flesh door slurped open. Another Avaron entered then, the three of them regarding her almost owlishly.
“Uhh … am I, interrupting?” the second Avaron asked.
Gwyneth and Tsugumi both looked back and forth for a moment.
“No, you’re not,” the first Avaron said. “What do you need?”
“While you’re busy playing grab ass, I’ve put the finishing touches on the new EBS. I take it you’ll do the honors of taste testing it, Iris.”
“… Iris?” Tsugumi asked, inclining her head.
“Yes, Cypher, I’ll eat it,” Iris grumbled and stood up, patting her naked body for no real reason. “Besides I like playing grab ass,” she muttered dryly.
Cypher carried in a box of hive chitin, heading over to Tsugumi’s now vacant pod. In sitting it down, two Avarons, Gwyneth, and Tsugumi all stood over it, staring down. A veritable sludge of green-and-yellow liquid awaited, robust and set enough it didn’t slosh at all. Cypher reached in, scooping out a handful with a hard, grunting exertion. Thick strands connected handful to box, then snapped, peeling away and falling like dying tree vines. “Of course, it’s like taffy at this point, but still chewable I think.”
“What is it?” Tsugumi asked wearily, leaning away from Cypher.
“EBS, Edible Biofuel Source,” Iris said from the other side, taking the handful Cypher gave her. She rolled it in her hands, smoothing out the edges until it took on a nice, mostly clean rounded shape. “The future of food for the Hive. Not you two, you’ll be getting actual food. This stuff is really different.”
“Different how?” Gwyneth asked, leaning in toward Iris. She sniffed and sniffed, her lips turning into a frown. “It smells … sweet?”
“It comes down to nutrients,” Iris said.
“Nutrients?” Tsugumi echoed, her six eyes rather interested looking.
“Ehm. Well, you probably know certain kinds of food are better for you; too much sugar ruins your health and makes you fat, that sort of thing.”
“I do. Any chef should.”
“That is what nutrients are. The actual ‘stuff’ inside food that your body uses. This crap is pure nutrients in one heaping sludge,” Iris remarked, throwing the EBS ball up and down in her palm. “In theory it’s pretty good for feeding the body and keeping it going.”
“The problem being,” Cypher said next, “is that it’s really crudely made. If any normal person ate this stuff, they’d shit themselves to death trying to get it out again.”
“Tis poison then, verily?” Gwyneth asked nervously.
“To anyone that isn’t a tentacleling, yes. The idea goes we can use this to feed the Hive, and it’d solve a lot of our food problems.”
“… How is it made?” Tsugumi asked, her arms crossing. With both sets snug beneath her milk-heavy breasts, she really propped them up as delectable eye candy. “If it is nutrient rich, as you say, where does it get them from?”
“Reprocessing and some natural additives.” A flat look stared back at her and Cypher coughed into her hand. “Right. So the base component is honey, then we add in all sorts of foods before smashing it together. The exact combination is still being worked on.”
“You can make honey?”
“Yeah we found some bees—”
(THE BEES!)
Cypher and Iris winced from Aphora’s terrified scream. (Shut, up!) they snapped in unison. (You weren’t even stung!)
“Is something amiss?” Gwyneth asked.
“No, just Aphora screaming like an idiot,” Iris grumbled.
“Why doth thou use different names for thyself?”
“Yes, why?” Tsugumi jumped in as well. “You act as if you are two different people.”
The two Avarons regarded each other for a moment. “That is somewhat true and not at the same time …” Iris said tepidly. Seeing Tsugumi’s intense stare and Gwyneth’s angling, she sighed. “When there was one of me, I made nine others. We are all the same Avaron. Sort of like, a single set of roots under a tree that has ten trunks. One trunk and a bunch of big branches coming out of it. The names are a way for us to understand which of us is which, to ourselves.”
“But to everyone else, we are the single being, ‘Avaron’,” Cypher added in. “It is not like we stopped being her.”
“Tis much to think about,” Gwyneth said, rubbing her chin. “Thy soul is certainly different from all others. I cannot read it very well.”
“By using different names, what is the point of it?” Tsugumi asked.
“To better assign work and know who is doing what, namely,” Iris said before gesturing between herself and Cypher. “We are Iris and Cypher, in charge of Research and Development. We spend most of our time in the bottom of the Hive working on new ideas to make everything work.”
“Tis troublesome isn’t it?” Gwyneth asked. “Thy, ehm, needs are most demanding. Aren’t they?”
“Oh, they are,” Cypher remarked amusedly. “There’s a way to mitigate it so we aren’t in a fuck frenzy every three days. We take turns on who gets to have fun time, though.”
“… Verily?”
“We kind of have to,” Iris said, scratching the back of her head. “There’s ten of us and our sex drive is the same as ever. If we didn’t space it out neither of you would be leaving here with how much we need to fuck.” The way Gwyneth stood there, her face blooming red and her thighs squeezing together, gave her away. Neither of them needed to smell that sweetly inviting scent, a perfume of arousal and desire that spoke an invitation all of its own.
“I—I see,” Gwyneth said, a little high in the voice. “But, thy needs are, ehm, great, surely tis our purpose to relieve thee …”
“I’d rather you want to because you want to, not have to,” Iris remarked dryly before catching sight of Tsugumi. The tora woman had a hand under her chin, her three others fiddling together aimlessly in that thoughtful way of hers. “And what has you thinking so hard?”
“… Hm? An idea occurred to me, about the royal harem you said you wanted.”
“Want is a strong word but go on?”
“There are ten of you now, as you say. Does that not mean there cannot be one ‘Avaron’ for each person?”
“Thou say, we’d have our own Avaron?” Gwyneth asked confusedly.
“In other words, yes.”
“That idea had come to us before,” Cypher said with a touch of trepidation. “The problem is we weren’t sure how to make it work nicely.”
“How do you figure that?”
In the background, Iris made an effort to take a nibble out of the EBS lump in her hand. Thankfully no one noticed her nearly vomiting expression or uneasy queasiness.
“Imagine seeing an Avaron that you think is ‘yours’ but is with another woman,” Cypher said. “Our bodies are identical and we don’t actually spend that much time in them.”
“’Spend time in them’?” Tsugumi echoed.
“We can move our minds from one body to another. So, if one of us needs to do something on the surface, we change places with whoever is up there at the time. Now we have rules about when we do that, so no one is swapping out in the middle of something important. But, to get to my point, there’d also be fighting over which of us Avaron’s ‘belongs’ to someone. It’d be like someone fighting over if I or Iris could only be with that someone. Tell me that wouldn’t be a troublesome issue.”
“I do not disagree,” Tsugumi said lightly, scratching her throat with her fingers. “But it looks to me as if it offers a solution to this problem.”
“Oh?”
“What if that same someone saw an Avaron with another woman, and simply asked for an Avaron to come attend her? You are, after all, the same Avaron, just with ten bodies.”
“… Oh. Oooooh. Hm. That is a thought. Iris what are you doing over there?”
“I’m dying,” Iris squeaked out, licking her arm desperately. “Oh this tastes bad. Fuck my life it tastes so bad.”
“It’s not supposed to taste good!”
“Oh goddess I want to pu—”
And so a new rainbow-colored mess appeared as Iris unloaded whatever was in her stomach onto the floor. While Gwyneth and Tsugumi tried to comfort her, Cypher ran out of the room with the box of EBS testing food. Once emptied out and half-dead on the floor, Iris found herself pulled away from the mess. The very floor itself cracked open, some tentacles coming out to slurp up the mess until only a vague stain remained behind. Blinking her blurry eyes, she noticed two rather distinct things. One, her head was on something wonderfully soft and warm, and the other was the overpowering feminine scent filling her nose. The actual queasiness vanished quite fast, but she made no unneeded moves. Gwyneth had gone through the trouble of giving her a lap pillow, after all.
A flat, scarred belly on one side of her head, and two big breasts hanging above her, almost within nibbling distance. Avaron made a pitiful sounding moan before nuzzling her face into Gwyneth’s stomach. Oh, a hand combed through her hair! Goodness that sent a shivering tingle down her back, the light scratch of fingers going into her very skull. Then four other hands found their way onto her body, two rubbing her belly, one her shoulders, and one her … butt? It seemed Tsugumi took up the bulk work today.
“Sorry,” Avaron muttered, her mouth filled with that horrid aftertaste still. “I’ll be fine in a moment here.”
“Tis no worry,” Gwyneth said warmly.
“Do you always do this?” Tsugumi asked.
“It comes with the research.”
“Hm.”
*~*
The imposing double doors groaned as they opened just enough for a servant to slip through. The lush carpet muted their steps, but the elderly woman at the desk looked up all the same. In the afternoon time, sunlight spilled in through specially treated glass, turning its fiery hues into blissfully pure rays of gold. All the better to accentuate the white stone and red tapestry, a simplistic harmony of three powerful forces.
“Grand Seer,” the servant said, bowing. He held out a thick envelope, its tanned hide and leather binding rather odd-to-see in such a sophisticated place.
Hm? Pushey reached out, her white-gauze wrapped hand taking the parcel delicately. “From where does it come?”
“A report from the Abbess overseeing the Artor situation, so the courier says.”
That cannot be good, she thought, giving a dismissive wave. He left, and the shutting door’s heavy metal lock clicking shut echoed in her venerable office. Pushey stared at the parcel, light in her hand if unduly burdensome in other ways. She began unwinding the cord, pulling out the papers and arraying them on her desk. In reading them, her weathered face creased into a deeply concerned scowl. Pushey leaned back in her overly ostentatious chair, its comfortable embrace a small joy to have right then. Throwing the papers in her hand onto the desk, she started rubbing her temple irritably.
“Unbelievable …” Pushey muttered under her breath. ([Message]. Jorkof, are you there?)
It took a few minutes before she heard a response.
(Should I not be?) Jorkof’s rasping voice answered back.
(There is a situation near the Alva Forest.)
(Speak.)
(A group of heroines snuck out from their Church guard. Their presiding prioress chased after them, but she and her knights were killed on the forest’s border.)
(The heroines fled to the elves?)
(It seems that way. The prioress’ last report indicates it was not only six heroines, but seven distinct presences. The others are accounted for still in the Church.)
(The tentradom,) Jorkof rasped in its long, punctuated way of speaking. (The elves have that creature as well?)
(It seems so. I am not sure how they managed to sneak off with six heroines out from under me. As it stands, they have seven in their domain at the moment.)
(Ksssssh. This is a problem. You cannot send anyone?)
(No,) Pushey said, her actual mouth letting out an irritable sigh. (The Ashmourn are rampaging throughout the heartlands. They must’ve been preparing much longer than I gave them credit for. It’s not unmanageable but I am tied down dealing with them.)
(The Empire may yet be willing to assault the elves once more. Heroines will not grow that strong in a single year. I will motivate what I can to doing so.)
(If worse comes to pass, we will need to send Steven in.)
(Too dangerous. He cannot speak with those from his world.)
(He will not turn against us, unless you doubt your god’s own leash that much.)
(I do not. It simply invites more problems in an already unstable situation.)
(Be it as it may. Among them is Amelia, and Her Illuminance has demanded that heroine be made ready. Recovering her above all else is of vital importance.)
(It will be kept in mind.)
Jorkof’s presence faded, ending the bidirectional communication spell. Pushey gathered up the various papers from the satchel before standing up. Shuffling the old body she puppetted, Pushey went over to one of the stained glass windows that lined the stone wall. With a grunt, she threw her papers into the light, where they disintegrated into smokeless ashes in seconds. Not a trace remained, a clear disposal as ever.
Seven heroines under the domain of the elves, she thought sourly, squinting at the floor. They know the time of our return is coming. It is a potent weapon to wield, to be sure. How did they get them? The timing of this is … off.
From the escaped heroines to reaching the Alva Forest, right after Lilian’s demise, it made little sense. The timing was too exact, to the point of absurdity. Foresight was not something the elves bothered themselves with, leaving no reason to suspect that trickery. No, they would’ve needed to send agents immediately after Lilian, and even then, her security around the heroines had been exceptional.
And yet they still escaped somehow.
The one with shadow powers was amongst the group, and he had to have been how they managed. There was no other tool in their arsenal otherwise. But where is the connection? Isolated heroines, sudden escape, goes to Alva Forest …
Without knowing how they were drawn away, she risked losing the other heroines in her grasp.
No, they’ll be out of the heartlands soon. I’ll simply prepare more tracking methods on them to ensure they cannot escape. Hm.
Turning back to her desk, she shuffled over and gingerly sat down in her comfortable chair once more. The aging body ever protested, but she had long dulled out its useless notions of ‘pain’. Pulling open a drawer, she reached in and pressed a panel hidden inside the top of it. A small compartment clicked open under the desk roof above her knees. From there she pulled out a small, rectangular device fashioned from a single cut of an exceptionally large, white clear crystal. The size of a cell phone, she ran her thumb in a circle around its flat face, sparking to life glyphic symbols with comfortable glowing light.
Another minute of waiting before a tiny chirp sounded.
“What does the Grand Seer have need of?” a masculine voice asked, an irritable echo and scratch overlaying his voice.
“There is a critical situation on the border of the Alva Forest. I need your Lance to head there immediately.”
“I shall have them ready as spring dawns, but it will take us time to travel such a distance.”
“It will do. Seven heroines have defected and fled to the realm of the elves. Your mission is to kill all of them except the one named Amelia, for she is chosen by our venerable Light. She must be brought back to us at any cost.”
“Hm, the realm of the elves. I do not think we can be quiet about what we do.”
“It is inevitable that we will wage war with the elves. It does not concern me if they find themselves the first ones hit.”
“As you say, Grand Seer. It will be done.”
The crystalline device dimmed and Pushey slid it back into its hidden place.
At the least, Jorkof will handle the larger issues. It cannot hurt to insure the smaller one is taken care of.
*~*
End of Year 1
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Subject
Chapter 39: Springtime Hazards
Notes:
Content warning: Direct referencing and dialogue around past sexual assault.
Chapter Text
To suffer and bleed, so that others laugh and smile; is that virtuous?
*~*
The heavy thwack of metal slamming into wood snapped in the air. Once, then twice, then more and more. A creaking groan of wood followed, breaking into snaps and wails as the tree finally fell. Avaron, sitting on the nearby stump of another felled tree, took a bite out of the peeled orange in her hand. “You know, I didn’t think a battle axe would be used for lumber like this,” she said, surprisingly legible for a mouth half-full.
Hanamaru, righting upward and hefting her ridiculously sized weapon on her shoulder, huffed. “It is still an axe. I have others.”
“Honda pays a pretty penny then?”
“That man complains if a link needs replacing. Asking him for a weapon is stupid.”
Or he’s just stingy with her, Avaron mused.
“Why are you out here, queen of this land?”
Avaron took another bite. “Why are you out here, chopping trees, warrior of another land?” It really did prove hard for her to tell if Hanamaru gave her a stink eye or not. Harraxin faces were just raw power and rough expressions all the time. Given the air between them grew stale, Avaron waved her hand dismissively. “You seem a straight forward person. Can’t imagine you care for intrigue or something.”
“I care for a lot that isn’t your bother,” Hanamaru retorted, turning to fully regard Avaron. “Should you not be grateful I help your pitiful lumberworkers?”
“I hate free labor.”
Hanamaru blinked.
“It always has these unspoken debts and ambiguous promises,” Avaron said before taking another bite. “People have a habit of thinking they’re owed more than they actually are. So why is a great Kitinchi warrior out here chopping trees down for me?” They eyeballed each other for a moment.
“I had not planned on staying through the winter,” Hanamaru said, her tone far more even than biting. “We eat much, that I know. There is a debt to be paid for that.”
“As you say. But is it not up to me to see how I want that debt collected?”
“Tch. If you are that stingy.”
Avaron rolled her eyes. Reaching into the pouch hanging off her waist, she threw an orange at Hanamaru, who caught it easily. Hanamaru eyed the offering for a moment before biting literally half of it in one go. “I can be. Rather, you could say there’s something I need to know, and I’m hoping you could help me.”
“… Oh?”
Avaron threw up her orange in the air, caught it, and pointed at Hanamaru. “How does one go romancing a harraxin woman?”
“Haa?” Hanamaru did a doubletake. “Romance?”
“That’s right.”
“A weakling like you?” Hanamaru asked, pointing incredulously and looking nearly ready to laugh. “You’re weaker than a man! That’s not even a good pity fuck!”
“Ow, my pride,” Avaron deadpanned. “Is strength the only thing your people care about?”
“Of course not,” Hanamaru scoffed. “But how would any weakling survive a good fuck? It’s hardly worth doing it when they scream about their hips breaking.”
“… There’s ways to have sex that isn’t physically threatening, you know.”
“Not for us.” Hanamaru rolled her shoulders, spines clacking against one another. “You must be strong to fuck, or no ride. Until you can show that, no harraxin would spare a glance.”
“I’m a tentradom, you know?” Avaron said incredulously, pointing at herself.
“Yeah, and?” Hanamaru asked, brow cocking upward. “My people hunted yours because we heard how good you were. Turned out to be a bunch of crap.”
“… Seriously?”
Hanamaru shrugged before setting her huge axe down onto the ground. “So I heard. Couldn’t find any when I went looking. Then there’s you …”
I have this suspicion all their native cultures are just cuttingly to the point, Avaron thought dryly. Shaking her head, she finished her orange and threw away the peels. “So what you’re saying is, if I prove myself stronger, harraxin women would fuck me?”
“It’d be a good place to start,” Hanamaru said with a chuckle. “It’s not a problem of winning in battle. Countless ways to do that. It’s proving you can survive in bed and pleasure us.”
“I hear you.”
“Besides, why do you care? Looking to try something different?”
“I guess?” Avaron rubbed her chin. “Sex is great and all. I really just want a strong woman to mother my children. Plus, someone that strong among my wives would give me a lot of peace of mind in protecting them.”
Hanamaru scratched her forehead and one of the great horns jutting out there, quite obviously bemused. “Wouldn’t weak women be easier? You’d have no trouble with them, right?”
“I don’t go around raping people if that is what you’re implying.”
“… You don’t?”
“No, it’s pretty pointless.”
Leaning backward with a barking laugh, Hanamaru slapped her hands together. “Pointless! A tentradom telling me rape is pointless! What?!”
Avaron sighed and simply waited for her to calm down. “For one who expects me to do so, you’re awfully at ease with it.”
“A fight is a fight,” Hanamaru said, mirthful in voice. “Always be ready or lose to those who are.”
“Hm. Well, that aside, you’ll be leaving soon?”
“Another week and it may be warm enough.”
“Your kind not do well in the cold, I take it.”
“We are from the lands between rain and sand. Snow never fell there,” Hanamaru said simply, hefting up her axe again. “How you people survive in it is crazy.”
*~*
In a broad sense, her ability to conceptualize so much space really defied imagination. Through her drones she had a bubbling awareness of what was around them and how things went. The skeyes provided incredible sight range all around her surrounding land, letting her easily isolate prey deer, boars, and other creatures. The hunter drones would go out and acquire the kill with little fuss or mystery. The Hive itself had frozen its growth to conserve energy, but it remained ever aware and alive. That, and the ten of her going about their duties. Distinct minds working and working, the thinnest veneer of separation that existed only to prevent thoughts from being mixed or lost.
Such a bizarre life she led now.
Avaron looked up from the floor, regarding the flesh-door before her. She rubbed her eyes for a moment, more of a habit than a need. Well, let’s get this shit show over with.
The heavy and thick door slurped open, and she stepped through. The tall woman on the other side jumped in her seat before quickly standing up. And so, Avaron and Cecile came to regard one another. An indifferent gaze meeting one with visible anxiety. As useful as letting the silence carry on might’ve been, Avaron made a show of coughing into her hand first. “Gwyneth tells me you want to speak now.”
“Ah? Y-yes, I do.” Cecile said, energetic one moment and then retreating the next. “That is—well, that …” She slapped her cheeks and took in a breath. A surprising degree of clarity followed, her eyes sharpening up in an instant.
Oh?
“I want out of here,” Cecile declared.
“And what will you do?” Avaron asked simply.
“To—ehm, to find my family.”
“And why is that?”
“I … I don’t know. But I need to.”
At least she isn’t still spouting off going home or anything. Avaron, for as much as she listened in during Gwyneth’s visits, hadn’t felt Cecile really made that much progress. Literal centuries of isolation in her own little box, surely a few months couldn’t undo all of that. She held her elbow in one hand while tapping her forehead with the other. “I see. And how do you plan on doing that?”
“Err … somehow.”
“Have you ever fought in earnest before?”
“Beside when you kidnapped me?”
“Yes,” Avaron said amusedly. “You didn’t look at all capable doing so.”
“Here and there,” Cecile muttered under her breath, her determined eyes looking away.
“Then let me get this clear. You intend to go out and find your family, with no equipment, no preparation, no plan, no training for battle, or anything for survival in a world outside your little mountain. Is that about right?”
Cecile grabbed one of her own arms in a pitiful way of retreating into herself.
“I’m not saying this to be an asshole. The first step is understanding what you lack, and where you are weak.”
“I’ll do something about it! I—I have to.”
“Well, I’m not going to throw you out there without helping,” Avaron said, drawing Cecile’s surprised attention. “I told you, my goal is to save you, whether or not you believe me. So then, Cecile. I will help prepare you for this task of yours. But, it would be remiss of me not to ask—it has been centuries. Your family could be dead, gone, and no trace of them left. They might have a paradise of their own they won’t want to let you into. What will you do?”
“… Gwyneth asked me that as well.”
“She’s surprisingly insightful.”
“Mm. I just want to know. If they are alive. Or not.”
“Then I hope this isn’t some newfound excuse to go outside and then run back to your hovel.” Avaron tapped her temple. “I have eyes watching that place. As much as to stop any looters as to keep you from hiding there again.”
“I do want some of my belongings, you know!”
“Then it won’t be a problem getting it, will it?”
“You—” Cecile made an odd growl and groaning sound, stamping her foot. “Why are you doing all of this anyway?!”
At the least, she seemed to have the spirit needed. Where it’d go was another matter entirely. Avaron turned around, leaving her back to Cecile. “I had a friend, a long time ago. She was in a situation a lot like yours. I didn’t do anything, and so I had to watch her die a slow and miserable death. No one remembered her; in fact, she almost didn’t have a funeral until I paid for it. And I was still the only one who showed up.” She glanced over her shoulder, taking in briefly Cecile’s stunned look. “Now, come along. I’m sure Gwyneth will be glad to have your help up on the surface.”
“R-right …”
The dorgi’s heavy steps followed behind Avaron, and the two made their way up from the Hive’s bowels. For her part Cecile remained quiet if wary, especially when drones started heading by. Ever more curiously, however, was the fact Gwyneth and Raina were heading toward the Hive entrance. I know I haven’t forbidden the villagers from coming here, but … She couldn’t help squinting, a taste of suspicion upon her mind. Coincidences are for desperate disbelievers.
Their two groups intercepted at the mouth of the Hive, Gwyneth clapping her hands in delight at the sight. “Oh, Cecile! Thou decided, then?”
“I did,” the bashful woman said, scratching the back of her head. “Somewhat.”
“We shall speak upon it as we figure out thy lodgings. Ehm, Avaron?”
“Yeees?”
“Raina here wished to speak with thee.”
“So I see. Shall we exchange guests, then?”
“Verily. Come, Cecile, thou shall enjoy fair Tsugumi’s inn.”
The dorgi tepidly headed over, giving one brief glance at Avaron as she did so. Waving her away, Avaron herself focused on Raina, who looked rather bemused. “What is on your mind?”
“Is she one of your wives as well?” Raina asked when the other two had gotten out of earshot.
Avaron snorted. “No, too young in the mind for me. She’s a troublesome girl I’m bothering myself by saving.”
“My mind wonders at the reasons.”
“A story I’ve told way too many times as it is. For the time being, only Tsugumi and Gwyneth are my wives. I’ll make an announcement if there’s any more joining.” Avaron ran her fingers through her hand, finger combing it real quick. “Anyway, what is it you needed?”
“I have come to speak about the … village,” Raina said, smiling lightly. Despite the broad daylight around them, she stilled carried a dark atmosphere and shadowy visage. Nothing dramatic, but she’d be right at home in a gothic scene or one of those vampire movies Avaron couldn’t remember the name of. It might’ve been her black sclera and golden goat-like pupils. The raggy cloak and oily, overly-layered crappy clothes sort of conflicted with her ethereal image.
“You don’t seem happy about it.”
“Eh?” Raina chirped, her gloomy face breaking with genuine surprise. “No—rather, that is, I’m honored to be of such service.”
“Hm. Shall we head to the inn then?”
“It is not a conversation for anyone’s ears to hear, I fear,” Raina said, intertwining her fingers together in some idle manner.
Oh, I just love the sound of that. Avaron’s face remained perfectly stoic. “Walk it is, then, I guess. At least a good deal of the snow has melted.”
“Should we not …”
Avaron looked over at Raina’s furtive glancing at the cave mouth. The exact nature of who was suggesting that idea didn’t skip her mind. “I mean, we can, but I’d rather not force you into somewhere uncomfortable.”
For her part, Raina looked taken aback and held up her hands placatingly. “It doesn’t trouble me! Were I to be, surely I’d complain before vowing myself to you, my queen.”
Even self-sacrificing heroines can have their weaknesses, Avaron wanted to say, but held her tongue. Shaking her head, she said, “Suit yourself. If it becomes too bothersome we’ll simply go for a walk instead.” She led the way into the cave, Raina’s clopping steps behind her. What was it, not having the language to speak of trauma? Hysteria made up to accuse women rather than solve the issue? Damn, it’s right there, tip of my tongue. What was it called …
She really didn’t get anywhere with that idea. Setting it aside, Avaron combed through the Hive’s internals real quick, sussing out a decent room. Oh, that failure of an office is still there. Mm, not too out of the way either. Off we go.
“Oh!”
Raina’s chirp made Avaron look over her shoulder when they passed through the front airlock.
“It’s quite warm in here.”
“It’ll get much warmer the deeper we go,” Avaron remarked, continuing on the way. “Half the reason the ‘no clothes’ rule exists is because of it.”
“N-no clothes?”
Ah, she wanted to pinch her nose. “You’re exempt, obviously,” Avaron said, waving her hand dismissively. “But the Hive is kept both warm and humid to a high degree. Do let me know if it becomes too much of a problem.”
“Of course, my queen.”
That’s going to take getting used to hearing.
Not wanting to choke on another guffaw, Avaron expeditiously zigged-and-zagged toward her office. The flesh door slurped open, showing a room defined by half-complete furniture. A desk at the back sat with a high-rise chair behind it, half-finished bookshelves standing on the walls at either side. Two chairs on either side of a furred floor rug sat in the room’s middle, completing the seating arrangements. Simply seeing it again stirred nostalgia in Avaron as much as revulsion. I miss you, my interior decorating team, she thought whimsically. Her own efforts to recreate her once-beloved high-rise office led to such a disappointing product.
A room from a half-remembered dream, barely at all in the shape with none of the detail.
“Sit where you please,” Avaron said, setting down on one of the four middle chairs. After a moment’s contemplative looking, Raina sat opposite of Avaron. Unlike all the other chairs in the Hive, these ones were closer to a voluminous, heavy-set design than spindly wireframes. Their filling being flesh, of course, made actually sitting on them somewhat interesting. “Now then, what is this business of the village?”
Raina drew her knees in and let her legs fall to the side, a rather formal posture to be taking. In fact, her straight back and hand placement on her knees were pretty on point as well. Such natural motions to that sort of position undoubtedly affirmed her noble upbringing. “Principally, it concerns food, housing, and, well, the women’s milk.”
“Food should be handled with the hunting, I’d think?” Avaron asked, leaning forward, elbows on her knees, chin on her hands.
“It is helping, but from experience, more varieties will be needed. The fruit your highness provides every so often is especially desired.”
“What was it, scurvy? That lack of vitamin C disease?”
“Vitamin … C?”
“Nevermind. You’re correct, but at the moment my hands are tied. I’m already making as much fruit as possible. Until I speak with the Elvetahn about their forest, we absolutely cannot do anything there.”
“We’ve endured thus far. A while longer shouldn’t be a problem, but it is something I am concerned over.”
“I agree. I’ll do what I can but at the moment, there is a lot of nothing to be done.”
Raina nodded. “Then, the matter of housing. We’ve started gathering lumber and the like, but I was told you’re having us hold off?”
“It is a bit complicated to explain. You’re familiar with infrastructure like sewage, water, etcetra?”
“I am, though not with its construction.”
“At the moment, groups of drones are tunneling from this Hive to near where your encampment is. The tunnel will host future underground access for sewage and water. Once it’s out far enough, I can branch off of it to individual homes.”
“You plan to run sewage and water to every house?” Raina asked incredulously.
“Is that so surprising?”
“Only the richest houses in Shadowpeak afforded such a luxury. To undertake an endeavor of that nature was always seen as impossible.”
“I have a feeling the rich folk were lying,” Avaron said dryly, making Raina blink. “Sure, it can be expensive, but you gain far more value in a healthy and happier population. But of course, if it isn’t coins lining the purse it’s too expensive to do, right?”
“There is perhaps … something, to what you say. No matter what it will take time for this tunnel, will it not?”
“It’s nearly done, another week or two and then houses can start getting laid down.”
“On that, the carpenters wanted to know what sort of houses they’re allowed to make.”
“Ah. I do need to sit down with them. Is Dorin heading them up?”
“Yes.”
“Then let him know I need to talk with whoever will do house planning and construction. I have requirements in their sizes, dimensions, and what each house actually provides.”
“Such as?” Raina asked, tilting her head.
“Three bedrooms, two bathrooms, two utility rooms, a kitchen area, a living room, and maybe a storage yard but probably for later,” Avaron said, counting off her fingers. “And you’re looking astonished again.”
“I don’t mean to be rude, my queen, but your ambitions for common people certainly does … outpace, rationality.”
Avaron sat back in her chair, taking a moment to stare up at the ceiling lamp. “I believe, the greatness of a nation can only be measured by how well treated its poor and common folk are. A revolutionary idea, I’m sure.” She looked back down, finding Raina’s face doing … something. Not surprise, nor great shock; some sort of intrigue mixed together with unbounded curiosity. “I’m sure you can understand how easy it is for the rich or powerful to acquire wealth.”
“Of course,” Raina said, smiling a bit. “My family was the wealthiest in our lands.”
“Now how much harder is it to make everyone else that wealthy?”
“There isn’t enough for that to happen.”
“What if there was?”
“Naturally everyone would be that rich and wealthy then. But if that is the case, then who is rich or poor anymore?”
“A natural thought to come to, and in isolation, will go that way. Reality, though …” Avaron tapped her temple. “That’s the trick. Rich people have an easier time acquiring riches, empowering themselves while denying others the same. When there is nothing left to take, they spend all their time protecting what they took. The hows and whys change, of course. Water is worth less than dirt if you have rivers and rainfall. Gold is garbage if you’re sitting atop the world’s largest reserve.”
“I struggle to see how this relates to housing, as interesting as it sounds.”
Avaron shrugged her shoulders. “No, that’s fair, I’m getting off point. What’s rich or not, there’s two ways to measure it: what you own, and what you need. A person who has a home, good food, clear weather, and a peaceful place to crap is probably pretty rich, no?”
“By your logic, yes.”
“Compared to the person who has a mountain of gold, they’re much richer. Now think about it. My aim is to give everyone the richest living quality, and to that end there is no reason to not spend every resource I have.”
To her credit, Raina did seem to give it thought, her eyes eventually widening. She started chuckling then, hiding her mouth behind a hand and struggled to contain herself. “I—I must say, such an idea is so very odd,” she managed to sputter out before calming. “But you do not speak with madness. I shall be most interested to see how you manage it, my queen.”
“It won’t be easy, that’s for sure,” Avaron remarked dryly before leaning forward again. “Anyway, what’s this about milk?”
“Oh! Ehm …” Raina started a bit, her pale cheeks flushing with a deeper warmth than laughter’s. “It’s quite the topic amongst the women. Those who have young or husbands are certainly pleased, as you can imagine.”
“Right.”
“The issue is, well, for any one reason those who cannot be helped. It is quite involved trying to … milk, yourself. Some are growing to hate it, though I can tell they’re doing it in the wrong manner.”
You know out of every problem facing me, this one really is … something, Avaron thought, wanting to laugh at the ridiculousness of it all. Then again she had quite the growing taste for the stuff. “Wait, what do you mean, ‘you can tell’?”
Raina smiled then, a mysterious look belied by its sultriness. “It’s a problem I have had since I escaped. This ruined body of mine never forgot the feeling.”
And there goes my leg, blown off from that land mine. Only Avaron’s eyebrows shooting upward betrayed her otherwise professional visage. “I don’t mean to speak lightly of what happened, but, if you’re not adverse to it …”
“What has happened has, my queen. The others in the Sisterhood aren’t as at peace with it as I am.”
“I understand. Then, if you could describe the symptoms of what you’re still afflicted by?”
“Mm, let me think upon it …”
I really don’t like how I’m starting to smell her arousal. Hello? Raina? Why are you getting horny?! The worst part was how pleasant her scent was, too. Every woman had a slight difference in flavor; noticeable but distinctly unique. Hers carried a thickness that filled the nose especially with its pungent attitude. It wanted to be the center of attention and oh dear did it get her blood pumping.
“Cravings, I suppose?” Raina mused aloud, a single finger upon her lips as she looked up in thought. Her other hand crept down to her belly, rubbing in a provocative circle. “Emptiness, craving, hunger.” Her whole face contorted slowly, the dark regality fading into something different.
Avaron hadn’t a clue if she was looking at someone reliving trauma or possessed of such thirst a demon would be scared to death. The signals were terribly mixed and she wasn't at all sure what was actually going on. Her skin prickled at the look being sent her way, one that wasn’t a predatory warning. Avaron knew a lustful beckoning when it showed up, a wanton offer with glazed eyes and parted lips. “I—see,” she said slowly. “So even long after the fact, you’re tormented?”
“My body is,” Raina breathed out, her knees rubbing together. “Every day and night. My breasts swell for young no longer there, my legs quiver, and my belly is so empty. It aches, my queen, it aches so terribly and I’ve endured it all. Not even men can satisfy me, no matter how brutal they are …”
(This is getting dangerous,) Prime said, jarring Venus. For once, the intrusion into her own workspace was a welcome one.
(I agree,) Venus returned before shaking her head. “And its not a [Skill] or anything?”
Raina blinked, perhaps catching up with herself in the process. “Ah? There are some [Skills] it left me. The richness of my milk, the litters in my womb, that sort of thing.”
“… Do any of them explicitly affect you this way?”
“I—don’t understand your question?”
“A [Skill], presumably, doesn’t negatively impact its owner. It enhances them, no matter how much they may not want it to, but it does not harm them. So you’re telling me, after all these years, these cravings still plague you?”
“I wouldn’t call them a plague, but … yes, they are still there.”
“Hmm.” Avaron rubbed her chin, brows knitting together in thought. “I wonder if it did genetic alterations,” she muttered under her breath.
“Altered what, my queen?” Raina asked, her whole aura contorting from sloven desire to worry. Once her dark and mysterious glamour wore off, she had a way of expressing herself whole-heartedly. Not the same as Cecile, but getting there.
“We tentradoms have natural [Abilities] around manipulating blood. The knowledge in it, specifically.”
“Ah, you speak of family lineages?”
“It’s the same idea. Every drop of blood is like a tiny library, holding all the knowledge of who you are and who came before. It is how our bodies are made—” Avaron tapped on her own chest as she spoke, “—and by altering it, we can change how a body behaves. That creature may have altered yours while you were captive.”
Raina looked down at herself, thoughtful and vexed altogether. “What you say makes sense, but …”
“… But?”
“To think it violated even my very blood, it leaves my heart unsettled.”
“Ours is a great power, and so it is easy to do harm as much as good.” Avaron bowed her head. “I am sorry this happened to you.”
“M-my queen!” Raina sputtered before going into a sort of sliding forward step. From chair to kneeling in front of Avaron, she grabbed her shoulders. “You mustn’t bow to me over such a trifling matter!”
“Do you value yourself so little?”
“Eh?”
Their faces were much closer then, perhaps more than what was proper. Avaron stared down at Raina, taking in the sight of her wanton expression and lustful aroma. Yet the body had a way of betraying the mind, acting on instinct the soul didn’t care for. Her wide eyes spoke well enough of her own true thoughts, from what Avaron felt in her heart anyway.
“I have placed great faith into you,” she said, placing a hand gently upon Raina’s head. “So value yourself more, if for no other reason.”
That and I doubt this world has a lot of codified writings about self-value and worth but …
Raina stared and stared before looking down and doing a tiny, if subdued, nod. “As you say, my queen.”
“Regardless of what has happened, you are alive and free to do as you wish. Rise from the ashes like a new fla—wait, that was probably a bad metaphor.”
Raina snorted, her hand clapping over her mouth.
“Listen there’s this bird called the phoenix and its made of fire, it burns out when it dies, then ignites again in rebirth. Not whatever reason the Ashmourn are called that.”
“There is a similar saying in my homeland, yes,” Raina said, face puffed up with a repressed smile. “’From ashes does life grow again’. It’s funny hearing that again, all the way out here.”
“Well, it is true,” Avaron said, feeling rather lame. So much for that grand uplifting. Tapping Raina on the shoulders, she made a ‘get up’ motion, and the two of them stood. “I cannot make any promises about fixing your altered blood. Know, however, it is something I would like to do. My talent with blood changing is, unfortunately … well, lacking.”
“Where there had been no hope before, I do not mind waiting for this next ray of sunshine,” Raina said, standing far too close to Avaron and smiling. “Please, use me as however you desire, my queen.”
Oh, I don’t like hearing that. Avaron patted Raina on the shoulder, briskly brushing past the implications hanging in the air. “I shall. As to the issue of women’s milk … I hate to say it, but at least for the next week or two, if it can’t be used normally then throw it out. I need the tunnel finished before I can do anything else. Afterwards, it wouldn’t be hard making ... errr, a stall, I guess?”
“A milking ranch, perhaps?” Raina asked, smiling.
“… Sure, or something. A nice place to relax and get milked, nothing more. We’re going to be very busy this spring, Raina. There is a lot of work that needs to be done.”
“I shall help guide it as best I can, my queen.”
In leaving her office, Avaron escorted Raina out and as far as the inn before heading back. Tsugumi, she knew, would be in the Hive still working on the silk bolts for Efval. Avaron walked with a stiff back and her legs tight together; some might even call her sauntering. It was more she was on the cusp of blowing her lid and dearly hoped Tsugumi was in the mood for a hard pounding. Ohh, she could go for getting eaten out, too.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 40: Eden
Chapter Text
How we long for a perfect place; how much we suffer trying to find it.
*~*
“First time I’ve seen this place clear in months,” Avaron said after letting out a low whistle. Spring and warming weather finally let out all of Arzha’s servants back into their tents. A good day of clearing out Tsugumi’s inn and cleaning up the aftermath, it felt positively cavernous to stand inside of. Not to mention the air, frankly, being breathable again. “So you still think the size is enough or—” A hearty thwack hit her arm.
“I shall have to bother with more rooms and accommodations, I think,” Tsugumi said, surveying her inn’s interior seriously. That her one arm almost automatically slapped Avaron hardly phased her it seemed. “The insulation is not so good either. It concerns me …”
“Did they finish this whole building or just the shell?”
“Mm, it is not finished that is true …”
“If they don’t do it properly when it’s actually done, I could try buffing up the insulation.”
“… How?” Tsugumi asked, tiltering her whole head toward Avaron creepily.
“I’m not completely certain on it yet—work in progress. There’s a couple plants from the forest that have very bizarre properties. In theory, a wall made out of them could be about this thick—” Avaron held her hands about three inches apart, “—and it’d be pretty impressive. I’m talking a fire on one side and an ice cube on the other.”
“Ridiculous, but every idea you talk about always seems to work somehow,” Tsugumi said, both speedy and precise.
“… Not every idea, in fairness.”
Tsugumi waved her words away dismissively. “If it is so good, how do you cool down in such a room?”
“Opening a window, I imagine.”
Tsugumi blinked, taken aback enough Avaron started laughing.
The nearby sliding door opened before another smack landed on the tentradom queen. “They approach,” Arzha called out, peeking inside.
“Shall we?” Avaron asked, flourishing her arm for Tsugumi to take. Her wife took it, smiling.
Heading outside, Arzha and her knights, as well as the other divine heroines, awaited. A familiar tooting of horns signaled the elvetahn approach, their deer-galloping knights at the vanguard. Larger wagons and coaches followed behind, workers and servants walking alongside them. Nuala rode with Efval, given she’d left yesterday to meet with the queen. Some of the heroines let out excited noises at the sight, which jarred something in Avaron’s mind.
“Right, before I forget, you lot,” she said, looking over at the heroines. “This is important, so remember well: never, ever, call them ‘elves’.”
“Why not?” Katsumi asked before pointing at herself. “They have the ears?”
“It is a dreadful insult to their people,” Arzha cut in, her commanding voice grabbing their attention immediately. “They are ‘elvetahn’, in all spoken ways. Do not misspeak on this, for your words will come to reflect upon me.”
“Yes, princess Arzha,” Eberhard said, bowing his head. The others followed his example, for however lackluster they were in the effort.
“… On that matter,” Arzha said, sounding rather perturbed. “Knowing you are not from this world, do not speak until spoken to. Doing so is disrespectful of proper etiquette, no matter what you feel in your heart. Remember this well.”
“Yes, princess Arzha,” The heroines were a bit more meaningful in their acknowledgement.
As they had before, the elvetahn caravan went about unpacking across the unfrozen river bank, its surrounding clearings, and the forest around the inn. A particularly small group headed toward them, that of the royal guard, Nuala, and Efval. Arzha went down to one knee and bowed her head, knights and heroines alike following with. The group pulled up, one coming forward as the rest remained at a comfortable distance. Avaron waited standing with Tsugumi, coolly meeting the guard captain’s eyes as he appraised them all.
“Lady Avaron,” he said.
“Honorable Captain,” she returned.
“There are far more people here than before the winter. What is the story of this?” he asked.
“Princess Arzha and her knights, as you know. The youngsters behind her are divine heroines.”
“… Truly? That they are here concerns my heart.”
“They have pledged themselves in service to the princess. I am sure she will compete with you to strike them down if they do anything.”
“As you say. And of those farther away to the west?”
“Refugees from the wars. I’ve graciously accepted them as my vassals, and none of them should approach this place during your visit. If they do, I understand any practical measures you must take.”
“As you say. I see nothing untoward for now, my queen,” he declared, turning back and rejoining Efval’s retinue.
Only then did the queen herself approach, riding a mightily impressive stag. The smooth armor upon it served to protect as much as flourish an artsy, dignified air. Quite the compliment to Efval’s heavy winter clothing, a thick furred coat and an under pelt of different skins. Trophy clothing or just aesthetic? Avaron wondered. Form overrode function seemingly, becoming a tapestry of different animals, Efval herself the center piece the eye was drawn towards.
“Much has changed in the span of a single winter,” Efval said, appraising them all with her piercing stare. “I feel I cannot let you out of my sight for a day, Avaron.”
“I’m sure Nuala is fine breathing down my neck in your stead.”
Efval looked caught out by the idea, a fleeting smirk almost escaping her indifferent façade. “Yes, she has regaled me with the more important details. Still, I am left caught out by seven divine heroines on my roots now. Tell me, Arzha, they fled from the Church?”
“It is just so,” Arzha said, not looking up. “I met most of them myself in Artor before the capital fell. They escaped the Church in the winter, and found their way here.”
“Along with a squad of knights, if I’m not mistaken.”
“Correct. I handled them,” Avaron answered.
“Hmph, at your strength? A difficult thought,” Efval said with a dismissive sneer. If she hadn’t known the queen’s prickly nature, Avaron might’ve been offended. Almost.
“Levels are not everything, your majesty,” the tentradom said, smiling with a conspiratorial air. “But before that tale, please come inside and make yourself comfortable.”
“Hm. Come, Nuala,” Efval said, dismounting in one smooth motion. Some of her guards and all her servants did so, and the group of over twenty filed into Tsugumi’s inn. Avaron, Efval, and Nuala settled at one of the floor tables while Tsugumi went with Efval’s servants to prepare food. Arzha and her lot took to sitting on the floor nearby, neatly lined in rows and patiently observant. The elvetahn had shed their coats, delightfully sheer and completely opaque clothing hugging their curvy forms. Not enough to be salacious, but it definitely stood apart from their summer and fall attire.
Reading the obvious here but I guess spring fertility rituals is the underlying message? Avaron wondered, a sentiment her other minds echoed.
“Out of everything bothering me, the Church is paramount,” Efval said, wasting no time in taking over the table, folding her hands together on it. “Discarding you as a loss, six human heroines is not something they will abide. They will come in force to take or kill them.”
“Even knowing they may have to invade your forest to do so?” Avaron asked, the thought seeming quite absurd.
“If the Empire hadn’t ripped our side out, they would not dare. As it stands, a properly aimed spear may cause even us trouble.”
“Assuming they are appraised of the situation.”
“Even if they are not, they soon will be with their mage armies.”
“Mm, true, but I feel they will be stopped before getting here. The Ashmourn have joined the war in the southwest: every surviving queendom against each other and them.”
“I have heard of this, but it is foolish to rely on that entirely,” Efval said, staring pensively at the table. “The Ashmourn may just as likely retreat to their strongholds after the pillaging. Worse, it’s hard to say if the nagraki will not change the situation to suit their goals, either.”
“They are a bit of a wild card at the moment,” Avaron remarked with an agreeing air. “Without getting a lead on them, though, it makes matters troublesome.”
“Quite. I might wager a year or two before the Church attacks in earnest.”
“… That late?” Avaron couldn’t help doing a double-take, met by Efval’s dubious stare.
“That is quite fast for armies of that size.”
“Right, undeveloped world here. Pff, a whole extra year. That’d make my life real easy,” Avaron said, almost outright chuckling.
“You believe you can fight the Church’s armies in a year?” Efval asked, her disbelief apparent.
“Oh, sure, lots of stuff could happen between now and then. I just have to remind myself this world doesn’t move fast at all. Let me say, I’d be enough of a problem in a year’s time no one would want to attack me.”
“Were you not a divine heroine, I would doubt those words.” Despite Efval’s congenial attitude, her eyes betrayed a much different message. One of assessment and harshness, befitting of the circumstances. “I understand it to mean you will be vulnerable until then.”
“I must rely upon your majesty and whatever help you can offer until then,” Avaron said agreeingly. “But, hopefully I am able to offer more in return.”
“As interested as I am to hear about that, this situation with ‘refugees’ concerns me more.”
For want of any better way, Avaron explained what happened, arraying the refugee’s plight and her own acceptance of them as vassals. Minus the sexy details of her new [Sovereign Power]. Tsugumi and the servants intervened then, bringing refreshing drinks for everyone. Efval, for her part, remained oddly quiet during all of it. So much so by the end of it she still hadn’t said much of anything.
“I dare break the quiet for your thoughts, queen Efval,” Avaron said, utmost mindful of her tone.
“Hm? Yes, there is that, isn’t there?” Efval remarked, drawing out of her reverie by straightening up. “Strictly speaking, there are ancient laws forbidding the settlement of other peoples upon our border. Your Hive was excused because your domain is underground, and thus not in conflict. These new vassals of yours, however, are.”
“Ah.” Avaron’s brows crept upward, realization clear as crystal. “That is a problem. Ignorance being what it is, though I make no plays for that as an excuse.”
“I am understanding of why, in your case, but the fact rem—”
“Tut tut,” a voice interjected, sounding utmost displeased. Avaron blinked, a shadowy figure appearing suddenly behind Efval. It wrapped its arms around her neck, face leaning up against hers, accompanied by the rustle of leaves and flowers. “Dearest daughter of mine, what is with these silly rules of yours?” Nahtura asked.
All the elvetahn save Efval and Nuala froze, the guards especially in their reflexive reaching for weapons. Without missing a beat, they fell to the floor upon their knees, foreheads and hands to the ground, palms turned upward. In the span of a few short seconds, the air choked with the overwhelming stench of fear—nevermind the primal reflections of it on their faces. Avaron and everyone else looked around, caught off by the immediate reaction of them all.
“Mother, how kind to visit me,” Efval said, stiffly unwavering.
“A little skitterbug told me what was going on in here … mmm, you’re not suggesting you’ll try pushing her away?”
“There are laws—”
“Ah but but but,” Nahtura tutted disapprovingly, straightening up as she patted Efval on the head. “I choose who lives or not in my forest. Sweet, succulent Avaron there is certainly welcome to.”
“But the others—”
“And everyone she keeps in her little pen, too,” Nahtura said with a smile, jerking Efval’s head side-to-side playfully. “Besides, take this.”
Avaron really didn’t know where Nahtura got that orange out from behind herself. A pocket dimension? Or, like, something else? Another question in a mountain of them. Efval, for her part, startled at the offering. She took it in hand with a disbelief of someone afraid it’d disappear.
“This is … no, it can’t be,” Efval said, staring at the fruit.
“Oh, but it is. And Avaron here grew it!” Nahtura said, jerking Efval’s head again. “And she won’t tell me how. I cannot even figure it out! Me! How ridiculous!”
“… Is that what you were doing in there?” Avaron asked. Not that I’m sure I want to know but …
Pushing herself off of Efval, Nahtura let out a dramatic sigh, bending over backwards in some striking melodramatic pose. That her tits went bouncing out to the sides with a suggestive bounce of her chest couldn’t be accidental. Turning on a hoofed heel she spun around and caught herself before sauntering over to Avaron. “Sweetest smelling tentradom,” Nahtura sang, sinking herself low into the booth. An interesting maneuver of somehow walking and sliding onto Avaron’s lap while laying sideways. “However did you do it?” she asked, arms wrapped around Avaron’s shoulders, lips peeled in a smile, her energetic air simply thrumming.
Avaron, for her part, found herself supporting Nahtura’s back and under her thighs. “It’s hydroponics. I put the plant there and feed it a controlled solution—”
“Not that, anyone can grow a stupid plant,” Nahtura said, rolling her eyes and kicking her legs. “The fruit. From where did it come?”
“Uhh … the forest? Literally that is where I found the DNA for it.”
“… DNA?”
Efval broke the air by placing the orange onto the table. “It is not clear, since it is very old history, but fruits like this have long left this world. The nagraki unleashed a plague that ravaged our food in a bid to starve us. Some trees suffered worse fates than others.”
“Would you say this is thousands of years ago we’re talking about?”
“Broadly, yes.”
“Huh. I wonder if the environment changed that heavily.”
“What do you mean?” Nahtura asked, squeezing her cheek against Avaron’s. “The forest has ever remained the same.”
She really had a luscious smell to her breath. Different from other women; lacking the meaty thickness, but heavy in another way Avaron couldn’t name. “Not quite. Some plants are especially sensitive to what goes on. Oranges, for example, need particular humidity and soil. The rest of the forest survived but what it grew and lived in did not. Hence, I think the remains of the oranges have always been in the forest. Its simply changed too much for them to grow again.”
“If they were there I would know,” Nahtura said, but her words grew suspiciously curious. Tilting her head back, she stared at the ceiling with ever growing vexation. “Unless …”
Then, as quick as she came, she was gone. No dramatic effects of any kind, save the sudden vanishing of the hearty weight Avaron had felt. She superstitiously groped the air and waved her hands, finding Nahtura truly left. “Does she always do this?” Avaron asked, only to find Efval sighing tiredly. The elvetahn who remained bowed on the ground rose up, a collective relief going through them.
“Where there is wood, trees, sky and dirt, there is my mother. It is her way.” Efval took up the orange again and started opening it with her fingers, almost exceedingly careful in doing so. “As it stands, she has decreed this settlement of yours is to stay. I can only imagine how much the council will not believe me, but oh well.”
I don’t blame her for being frustrated, really.
“Nonetheless, in recognition of that fact, what is the name of your land now?”
Avaron held her chin, squinting in thought. (That’s a good point, actually. What do we call this place?)
(Uhh, I dunno, Bakersfield?) Aphora suggested half-heartedly.
(That is seriously the first thing you think of?) Iris asked.
(Well there are those mountains behind us. Something rock related?) Abyssa offered.
The Hive Mind mused upon the matter, but not for long. Avaron winced, then scowled, her face contorting in a half-formed pained look. She slumped forward, gripping the table with one hand, the other grabbing her temple. Pure muscular impulse reacted to an intense, overwhelming signal—pain itself in every fiber of her body suddenly and without warning. The pressure leapt with terrifying intensity, not unlike being ripped under water into dark depths. She saw, and knew she saw, but she had that much more trouble seeing, let alone recognizing anything as the world warbled around her.
A voice spoke a single word; not with sound, but with a thought. A will impressed upon her entire being, conveying meaning in a far more direct manner.
(EDEN.)
The presence vanished as quick as it weighed in, and she couldn’t help gasping for air. Ringing filled her ears, fading by the second, all sorts of pins and needles in places she didn’t even knew existed. The flesh of hers that’d vanished with it regrew in seconds, thankfully nothing too visible to everyone else. So many different areas twitching alive again certainly felt strange.
(W-what was that?) Corena sputtered, sounding as fucked up as everyone else felt.
(Was that A0?) Weaver asked even as they all came to the same conclusion.
(Why would s—)
“Does something ail you, lady Avaron?” Efval asked, and Avaron’s bloody eyes snapped into focus to regard her.
“I … yes, somewhat,” Avaron said and smiled uneasily before sitting back. She rubbed her temple, for however little that did. “I think I’ve been working too hard. Wives to please, Hive to grow, food to find, just—a lot. Sorry about that, you wanted to know our official name?”
“Yes,” Efval reaffirmed, her courteous expression poorly disguising her invasive intrigue. A huntress looking for weakness.
“Ah. It’s a bit grandiose but no one in this world would know its meaning. I’ve taken to calling it, ‘Eden’.”
Efval’s eyebrow ticked. “A pleasant enough—”
“Surely not!” someone shouted.
To Avaron’s annoyance she realized it was Amelia. It didn’t surprise her at all Arzha looked pissed in that politely reserved way nobles managed when she looked over. Although sitting still, Amelia looked ready to leap to her feet. I wonder if she stopped when the guards started reaching for swords? Avaron mused dryly. “And why are you squawking about it?”
“You—” Amelia paused, quite obviously taking in all the eyes staring at her. “You cannot just use a name like that for this place! It’s uncouth.”
“Uncouth?” Avaron couldn’t help chuckling disbelievingly. “Coming from the girl who probably has fun at satanic parties?”
“I do not go to those!” Amelia nearly shrieked back, pissing off Arzha’s knights in the process.
“How intriguing it sounds for another heroine to object,” Efval said, a commentator to something she probably found amusing. Her careful dissection of the orange didn’t help either. Finger tips sliding in like knives, running along, and then delicately ripping flesh apart. “Why is that?”
Rolling her eyes and visibly dismissing Amelia, Avaron took a moment to readjust on her seat. “It’s nothing particular. In a certain faith on our world, Eden is a paradise of an almighty god. A veritable garden of life in all its flavors, untainted by evil of any kind.”
“An estimable ideal to take for your own, is it not?”
“If you are going to aspire to something, why not reach to the greatest height?”
“Mm. As you say.”
Far be it from her to look opportunity squarely, but Efval’s oddly ambivalent nature unnerved Avaron. The queen sat there, calmly eating the orange piece by piece. Neither slow nor fast, her hands worked with a particular care to detail. It honestly looked far too much for just an orange, but she wasn’t going to say anything. Whether serendipitously or not, Tsugumi arrived with the elvetahn servants, carrying healthy servings of lunch. “Putting that all aside for the moment, shall we eat?” Avaron asked, wordless agreements coming as the tense atmosphere eased up.
*~*
(Ugh.)
(Ugh.)
(Ugh.)
(What are all of you, cave women?) Cypher asked incredulously. Although, like the other six Avarons present, she too was just laying on the ground.
(Is it windy up in that tower of yours?) Venus retorted dryly.
(Oh yes, my skirt blows everywhere.)
(This is becoming a bad habit,) Weaver mumbled.
(What is?) Corena asked.
(Talking to myself like this. Fuck me, I forgot what genuine pain felt like.)
(An adequate reminder from her, isn’t it?) Prime said.
(Now of all times, of course. Given she hasn’t deigned to interject further, I suppose it’s business as usual again.)
(Goddesses, where even are we on this stupid project?) Medusa asked wearily.
(Corena, I think that’s your area,) Prime said in a prime example of passing the buck.
(I don’t wanna—yeOW!) Corena recoiled from Venus’ immediate smack against her boob. (Aim better, you bitch!)
(Just get on with it.)
(Fine, fine,) Corena grumbled. In the end neither of them moved despite the ‘meeting’ going on. (Since civil development has fallen into L&M’s purview, we’ve chopped up the immediate problems into four areas. They are: food and water, city planning, sewage treatment, and domestic security. Aegis and Medusa are handling all the exterior threats while we’re working on solutions for police work.)
(Is that something we should even do ourselves?) Venus asked wearily. (Eyes, ears, senses and more everywhere all the time, of course, but … you know, privacy.)
(Our near omniscience aside,) Corena said, (we’re limited by the capability of the Hive Mind. At the moment I’m planning on a mixture of our CCTV-like memory and some vassals as our enforcers. We’ll need to involve them in this somehow, anyway.)
(So, what. We watch for the crimes but they handle the enforcement?)
(For the most part. They’ll be given directions to do patrol work themselves and the like. That’ll be more community management and problem solving than proper crime suppression.)
(How are you planning to do the surveillance though?)
Corena rolled onto her side, ostensibly trying to get comfortable. (That’s what I’m having R&D figure out right now. There’ll always be the drones, of course. The skeyes will be there, but they’re too big of a lens for what we need. But of course, there’s the supply problem.)
(Supply problem?) Prime asked.
(Imagine a fixed sentry, like a camera or something. It’ll need food, water, cooling and heating, and waste, however miniscule. The skeyes themselves froze to death a lot in the early winter, so can’t really afford to have these do the same. Anyway, once we have them up and going, it won’t be hard to have permanent watch over the vassals.)
(Now you’re making us sound like a police state.)
(We are a literal Hive Mind.)
(I know,) Prime groused, scratching her head. (Still, privacy for their sake is important.)
(I know. It’s not like we’ll be spying inside their houses, and we can probably designate a few areas as surveillance-free. Pretty much everywhere public will be watched, though.)
(I am a bit curious how we’ll manage telling them. This world probably doesn’t even know what a police state is, or all the horrendous problems it has,) Cypher pointed out. (For that matter, freedom as a concept is most likely completely different to them than us.)
(Then it falls to us, all the more, to live up to our modern sensibilities, wouldn’t you agree?) Corena asked. No one really disagreed at that, even if the obvious problems bubbled just beneath their thoughts. (Anyway, that aside, there’s the underground tunnel infrastructure. The first phase is nearly done, I was going to talk with the carpenters to start working out a house design.)
(In that respect, I do have something,) Iris interjected across the Hive Mind.
(Oh?)
(I’ve figured out a chitinous brick design. Something we can grow and build with kind of well, actually.)
(How did you manage that?) Corena couldn’t help the incredulity in her voice.
(A combination of bug chemicals, all that stone and dirt we’re piling up, and a whole bunch of experiments. I’m not saying it’s concrete, and I have no idea if it’s better or not. But it is very useful for taking care of some waste materials we’ve been stocking up.)
(What’s the scalability like?)
(I wouldn’t want to build Manhattan out of this stuff, but it’s basically gold for our current needs.)
(Sounds like we got our housing material,) Prime noted airily.
(Well, shit.) Corena laughed in the Mind for a moment. (Load up a hauler and I’ll present it to the carpenters, I guess. It’s not toxic or anything when it gets broken, right?)
(Not that I can tell. If it is it’s nowhere near as bad as asbestos or that other crap old houses used to use.)
(Guess we’ll see what they can do with it in a week or something—)
*~*
“You people work fast,” Avaron said approvingly, looking at the ‘house’. While her first instinct was European when she saw it, Tsugumi’s ‘advice’ in the construction clearly stood out. Somewhere between Western and Eastern sensibilities, the house had a triangular roof and a long, rectangular body. A corner-portion had been cut into for decking, while the house as a whole stood off the ground clearly by a couple feet. The walls were made of her chitinous blocks—white, porcelain looking chitin that had a tiny, sloped angle to it. Reminds me of shingles almost, in a way.
Although it was hard to shake the alien vibes she felt.
“We hope to impress, my lady,” Dorin said amiably. Although not himself a carpenter per say, he’d acted as the team lead and coordinator for the project. “These fine men are eager for the work.” There wasn’t a doubt about it—a group of around twenty workers stood behind him, plus another ten in under agers who were basically apprentices.
“So I see. Well then, Dorin, walk through the house with me. I already have an idea of the insides but one last check couldn’t hurt.”
“Of course, my lady.”
They walked up the worn-in path before walking up the front steps. The chitin bricks being utilized as the ‘shell’ of the house, the entirety of the flooring and framing remained wood. Avaron found herself quite impressed with its shaping and quality. Despite their lack of tools, and perhaps owing to [Skills] or magic, they’d done a marvelous job of cutting and joining wood. It lacked the distinctiveness of machined perfection, but a manga artist would draw it that way all the same most likely.
“Let’s see. Front porch, then to the sliding door here … Don’t mind me, thinking aloud.”
“Of course.”
Avaron insisted upon all the inside-outside doors being hardy and solid rather than paper-lined as Tsugumi preferred. Sticking her hand into the handle slot, she pulled it open, then shut it, then repeated again. “Nice and smooth, let’s go inside then.” A quick shuffle later and they were in the interior landing, a small area to take off shoes and outerwear. In the case of snow, it’d let the water drip off and run out without causing a problem. After checking the front door’s lock and finding it reasonably sound, she headed further inside.
Mostly smooth and even floorboards defined the spacious living room. Central pillars went up into the rafters, connecting into a crisscross support structure for the roof itself. Such a vaunting ceiling made the big room feel even more spacious, something that she frowned at. “Even knowing its insulated and good design practice, it still feels like it’ll get cold in here easily.”
“The fireplace will be more than enough, my lady,” Dorin remarked, gesturing to the stone-framed furnace. Built into the ‘middle’ of the house, in a sense, its heat would pump into the living room and all the shut off rooms in the hallway next to it.
Avaron spied at the windows and their sturdy wooden shutters. Yes, I suppose, and there’s enough ventilation to stop monoxide poisoning … hm. She nodded. To the left of the entrance stood the kitchen area, complete with a spot for a stove, a sink basin, and cupboards. Far too bare to her tastes; extravagant by theirs, apparently. A quick check through the empty rooms and bathrooms affirmed they were all quite squared away. Although I want to do toilet and bath rather than two toilets and one big bath/shower split into two rooms … eh. I have no idea how to clean effectively in this world to begin with.
Soap did exist but the real nasty stuff that did proper work didn’t. Or if it did, she hadn’t found any yet.
Maybe I can engineer a solution myself? she mused, waving for Dorin to follow her on the way out. Walking down the steps, she saw that Raina and another group of people had nearly arrived. “What’s all this?” she asked.
“They were interested in the completed house, my queen,” Raina said dutifully.
“So I see. Well I was going to get opinions on it anyway, so go and take a look everyone.” Avaron stepped out of the way for the newcomers shuffling by. They nodded their heads respectfully, even if all of them weren’t on the uptake for manners. Avaron herself took a seat on the front porch corner; Dorin and his workers talking amongst themselves nearby. It didn’t skip her notice how Raina gravitated over, moving alongside her while standing up straight and proper.
What are you, a secretary? Avaron wanted to ask, but let the matter be. In a few short minutes, Jaera’s animated group exited the front door, talking amongst themselves.
“Real water straight in the house, just like that!” one of the women said incredulously.
“And water doing the … toilet, right? Isn’t that just wasteful?” another asked in much the same voice.
“Well, it is a noble’s house after all,” an older man said, a gruffy finality to his words. “Of course it’d have something amazing like that.”
“It isn’t a noble’s house,” Avaron cut in, all their heads turning toward her with dubious looks.
“It’s … not?” the same man asked, looking disbelieving.
Oh boy. Climbing up onto the porch proper, Avaron clapped her hands. “Alright, everyone, form up in front of me, if you would.”
They did, of course.
“By now you’ve all seen and gone through the house here. It’s quite barebones, but does anyone notice any problems with it? Like bad wall placements, or awkward room designs?” No one really spoke up, which surprised her. “I’m not going to bite your head off if you say something bad about it.”
Jaera coughed into his hand. “It is not that there is anything bad in what you ask for, my queen. The walls are solid, the roof is high, the fireplace good, and plentiful rooms abound. Running water with a simple turn of a handle alone is quite amazing.”
“… Really?” Avaron asked dubiously, but most of them did nod.
“My family worked on a farm for many generations, uhh, good lady,” the same older man said, scratching the back of his head. “Minding my manners. We still had to go bucket from the well, and the walls held up alright. Had to fix ‘em every odd summer, but it kept the cold out. This—this is mighty solid. And the water thing, like Jaera said.”
Others agreed with him in their own ways.
Avaron blinked before rubbing her eyes. “I see. Then to live in a house such as this might be quite the luxury?”
“’bout what I’d expect a noble to have, aye. Not one of those rich city kind with the big mansions. Out in the farms with woods and crops? Yea it’d be right at home,” he said, crossing his arms and nodding. “Course I hear some do the mansion thing anyway but I ain’t never seen one myself.”
To me this world is an undeveloped footnote in a history book. Obviously it’s different when this is all you’ve known. Ah, she wanted to laugh at it all. Knowledge and experience, ever at odds with each other. Avaron clapped her hands again and spoke louder. “I understand now. Then, everyone, hear my words. This house—” she raised her arms to gesture, “—is the example by which I want all future houses built by. To me, what this house provides is the bare minimum; a starting point in this queendom. It is not a noble’s house—it is a house for you, the people. And yes, I do mean to make more, and not stuff 500 something people in there.”
Her joke fell flat against their amazed looks, many them clearly doubting what they heard. The silence dragged on long enough it started becoming awkward before Raina spoke up. “You mean to make houses like this for all of us, my queen?” she asked, speaking as a voice on behalf of them all.
“I do. My people need good homes, and it is unfortunate that this is the best I can provide right now.”
“I-It’s already quite a lot!” Raina said hurriedly, she herself earnestly surprised and making placating motions with her hands. “We couldn’t ask for more!”
“It is not that you must ask. It is my duty to provide it. Perhaps this was different in the lands you came from, but that is how I am. Dorin, how many of these houses could be built a week?”
“A week? Err …” Dorin scratched his head, visibly thinking. “Two, maybe three. Assuming we had all the materials on hand regularly and weren’t waiting.”
“Nah, more like five ain’t it, Dorin?” one his workers asked, jabbing a fellow in the chest with an elbow. Others followed suit, seeming to believe they could do much more.
“Then let this be my first command to you, my vassals,” Avaron said, authoritative tone drawing all their attention. “Let this house be a model example. Understand how it was made, then make more houses like it. I want this whole field to be one grand housing area, so that all of you have a roof over your head.”
Her words breathed a liveliness into them, excitement bubbling in the younger people. Its infectious energy worked even in the jaded and hardy folk around them. “But, uhh, do we all need that sort of house?” one of the middle-aged men asked, drawing quite a number of stares immediately. “All I have left is me. Something this big would just feel empty all the time.”
“A fair point,” Avaron said, pointing at him briefly. “I in fact have a second type of housing in mind. A smaller one for folk in your situation, or those seeking to live on their own. We’ll get to building some of those after these big ones are done, so all the families and their children have somewhere to stay.”
“Aye, makes sense,” he said back.
“My goal for this year is simple: good housing for everyone first, then workshops and farms. Seeing how eager you all are, I think we’ll make good progress on that.”
“Uhh, just a question,” yet another man said, further in the back and raising his hand. “What’s that white tower there for?”
Avaron looked over. The aforementioned tower stood at the border of the housing area, four angled legs with crossing bars in between for reinforcement. A bulbous sphere of a tank sat on top, connected with heavily fixed porcelain pipes. Like the ones in the underground tunnel and housing, they were an inventive product. A tubular tentacle grew to position then gradually metamorphed into a solid, pressure-tight pipe. The problem being if it broke the pipe would have to regrow again, but breaking the thing was a bit ridiculously hard. “Uhh, that. It’s a water tower.”
“Water tower?”
“So say you drop water down near at the ground, it kind of spills right?”
“Aye.”
“Now if you drop the same water from higher above—” Avaron lifted a hand for emphasis, “—it splashes everywhere harder, right?”
“Right.”
“So that water tower, I put water way, way high up there. The water wants to fall down, but it can only do that through the pipes that come out of it. Now these pipes go down into the ground, then run underneath our feet into the house here. I’m sure you all wondered how the water worked in the basin or toilets, right?”
Agreeing murmurs broke out amongst the crowd, curious eyes regarding the water tower. “How do you get the water up there?” the same man asked, scratching his head. “Seems like a lot of work.”
“It is and isn’t. At the moment I only have the power to run that one water tower. So, it’s important for all of you to be a bit careful with the water in your houses. Don’t leave faucets running, try to flush the toilet smartly, and don’t flood your baths.”
“Aye, not having to yank a bucket up a well, I can do with being a bit tight, my lady,” he said with a laugh, something the others joined him in.
“That about covers it then,” Avaron said with a nod. “Dorin, get me something to write with and write on, I’ll show you how the residential planning will go. Also, instructions on how to use the toilet properly, because we don’t have plungers to unclog the things.”
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 41: Sapient Ranching
Chapter Text
Greatness is borne upon mundane backs.
*~*
Tsugumi sighed, looking out over the empty hall. From a jam-packed, crammed floor-to-ceiling mess to a space so vacant her voice could echo. Just like the old days, she mused. The way of the inn was that of tides: ebbing and flowing, always. She longed for quiet, but when it came, she desperately needed something to do. A full feeling in her chest ever hung on her mind, her two milk-laden breasts swollen and ready. Goodness just shifting the wrong way excited her plump nipples, and she became rather glad for the extra padding there. Avaron, you idiot.
Well, it is not as if the tentradom could suck her dry every hour of every day. Her tits might just fall off if she did. Although, the idea did sound a little fun. The sliding open of a door shocked her awake, and she bolted upright. All four arms superstitiously patted down her white kimono, and by the time someone stepped through, she stood prim and perfectly proper. One of the refugee men she didn’t recognize entered, looking around sheepishly.
“How might I help the customer today?” she asked, smiling lightly. Too much and her mouth would curve open and human-folk found that terrifying. Tsk, even just using ‘customer’ feels strange now, Tsugumi thought wryly. There remained only one dear customer in her heart, and even if that word worked, it became odd to say. Now I understand why grandmother had that way of speaking.
“Oh! Uhh, not here to buy or nothing,” the man said, rubbing his head sheepishly. “Came to pass a message on to her highness, that is.”
“I can do so. What is it?”
“Lady Raina is workin’ on a problem for the women folk. Wants her opinion on what she’s doing; see if it’ll work. That’s it, really.”
"I will tell her," Tsugumi said, bowing her in polite acknowledgement.
“Right, I’ll be off. Uh, nice place ya got here!”
“Thank you.”
The door slid shut and silence returned. ‘A problem for the women folk’? What is she doing? Tsugumi wondered, eyes narrowed. Something about the woman left her ill-at-ease, doubly so after Avaron spilled her story. Her fingers tapped together thoughtfully, a muted clicking sound from her squishy chitin. Avaron, at the least, had spoken about being busy for most of the day. An unusual occurrence, as she almost always had attention to spare. That intrigued her, but she’d find out eventually.
Raina, however …
Tsugumi clicked her fingers together.
I think I will take a walk.
She locked up the counter, cleared her departure with the kitchen workers, and left. The specially-made geta on her feet remained odd to walk with. Avaron, in her own words, had ‘grown’ the sandals, from the blue fleshy-rope cord to the white chitinous body. It fit perfectly, and it had a nice squish to it that made it surprisingly comfortable to walk with. Still, odd. The clonking of her steps carried in the calmly warm air, hardly much of anyone around. Queen Efval’s visits came and went without warning, and Arzha’s people were content to live in the under-construction inn.
A palpable wall existed between them all and the refugee village. No, Avaron’s vassals, would be a more appropriate way to frame it. Tsugumi squinted from the bright light, the sparse forest opening fully to the open fields. Homes of brown timber and white chitin awaited, arrayed in perfectly cut rows, shaped by clear lines of roads. Such an intensely neat and organized manner surprised her to see the first time. What was it, her ‘zoning laws’? Tsugumi mused. Houses in one place, workshops in another, straight and curving roads between them … For what Avaron lacked in basic architectural knowledge, she had planning down to an absurd degree. Honestly, she won’t need my advice anymore some day.
The difficulty of the idea made it a thorny one to hold onto. Pride at Avaron’s growth mixed with embarrassment at her own useless. Great people are burdened by even greater work. Tch, it is no different from the first heroines I worked with. Tsugumi indulged in the acidity of her own mind for a moment before shaking it clean. No, I have her now, and all our children. She’s much better than him. I simply need live up to that standard now.
How simple it was to visualize; how much harder pushing herself toward it was.
Stepping onto the dirt path of a ‘main street’, a few villagers noticed her approach. They bowed in their different ways, regarding her with respect. For, a symbol of status was emblazoned across her kimono, that of a very curvy, golden letter ‘A’ within a circle. Avaron’s terribly simplistic mark of office. Tsugumi found the whole affair unusual; strange, even. Once people had bowed to her for her accomplishments. Now they did so because she was a queen’s wife. It all felt too easy.
Too lacking.
So she kept a straight back, and as much of a dignified air as could be mustered. At the least, she could not let anything stain the face of such a position. Worthiness could come later, with certain accomplishment. To think I might have to adventure once again, ugh. Tsugumi found the idea incredibly dreary. Still, there must be something I can do.
She asked around, and finding where Raina was proved simple enough. Away from the residential area, and down the road to where ‘farming’ territory began. While it was subject to change if the soil was too terrible, many of the villages were breaking earth there. It ran along the still-unnamed river, so she expected there to be some results. Actual houses hadn’t been laid down, instead rickety fences roughly denoting separate lands. That made the one actual building she saw all the more suspicious. A single, lonesome figure in a vast field.
That and a fair few dozens of women lining into and out of it. All of them women of maturity, some with babes on their hips, many more with especially endowed chests. Very milk-laden ones, judging by how some stained their fronts. Those who left looked utterly relieved; ecstatic, almost. Tsugumi recognized that look well enough. She walked past the line, some of the women recognizing her and bowing.
“Oh, it’s her!”
“Look at that.”
“She’s not human?”
“No.”
“She’s quite dignified!”
They all ended up looking at her while she passed by. Tsugumi, once used to such gazes, found them a little harder to stand under. I am out of practice if this much ruffles me, she thought, lips pursed together. The building itself was fairly large, with a large off-shoot disturbingly reminiscent of a stable or barn. Its form stood as a complete mess, some fusion of Avaron’s chitin bricks and natural woodwork. Stepping through the wide open doors, she already heard something rather obscene. Distinct moaning and womanly chirps, punctuated by giggling and light chatter.
The smell of it, too. Milk wasn’t a terribly offensive thing, and she’d dealt with actual cows more than once. A mixture of feminine excitement and cream, however, stuffed her nose. Tsugumi looked around, trying not to think too hard on it. A reception room? Stools lined the floor and walls, a large open-air hallway off to the side, and some closed doors on the other. Entirely barebones otherwise, and most of the women waiting inside looked up at her arrival. One of them, who stood by the hallway, hurried over, dressed in some black and white-frilled mess of a cloak and coat. Awfully reminiscent of Raina’s original attire, the more she pondered on it.
“L-lady Tsugumi!” she said, smiling nervously. “What a surprise! How might we help you?”
“Where is Raina?”
“W-well she’s, ehm, helping some of the women and …” The freckled, sunset-haired mouse of a woman looked ready to fall apart.
“Bring her here.”
“Of course!” she almost shouted before hurrying down the hallway. The idling women looked toward each other, the eyes of many curious people falling upon Tsugumi.
She merely stood there, arms folded together in her kimono’s sleeves. The issue being what it was, it more concerned her how Raina might want to spin it. Tsugumi’s eyes narrowed when that dark haired beauty stepped into the room. The gloomy aura around her swallowed the atmosphere, captivating in a way even she had to be grudgingly acknowledge.
“Lady Tsugumi,” Raina called out smoothly, smiling warmly while her eyes remained implacably stony. Her hoofs clopped on the shoddy wooden floor, silence the idle murmurs around them. It didn’t help she seemingly found a dress, if it could be called that. An enveloping, figure hugging white-fabric stitched together with all sorts of parts. Her cloak hung off her shoulders, accentuating the enormous cleavage slit showing off her fat tits. “To what do I owe this visit?”
“Queen Avaron is preoccupied, I came in her stead,” Tsugumi said, practiced refinement in every word. She had to tilt back slightly to regard the taller woman when she arrived. “What is it that you needed?”
Raina wasn’t at all pleased, but she had good control over her face. Tsugumi doubted anyone else might’ve noticed. “If that is the case. Would you join me?” she asked, waving a hand demurely to the hallway.
“Mm.”
The two of them fell in step together, Tsugumi having to walk twice as hard to match Raina’s long gait. For her, who had to keep pace with far worse, such a simple tactic had no effect. Leaving the reception room behind, they walked down the equally shoddy floor of the large hall. No, rather than a hall, it’d become a barn in proper, with stalls lining the sides, separated by cloth or wood as either seemed available. In them were stools, buckets both metal and not, and balancing bars for someone to hang off of. Her jaw set tight at the sight, an uncomfortableness of ages past creeping through her mind. “You know this is exactly what Avaron did not want.”
“Unfortunately, my queen’s suggestion included the most apt way to handle the problem,” Raina said, folding her hands together much like Tsugumi. Though, she balanced her fingertips against each other, forming a stressful triangle. “The women need relief, and we do not have the luxury of choice. It is only a temporary solution.”
“Temporary has an awful habit of becoming permanent without anyone telling it to.” Tsugumi took note of the sunset woman of earlier trailing behind them. Not an ambush, but a witness, obviously.
“With your concern, I wouldn’t worry about that,” Raina said lightly before stopping next to an occupied stall. A comely woman, perhaps in her thirties, accompanied by one of Raina’s cloak wearing associates. The woman used her arms on the balancing bar, sticking her butt out, foxy tail curled erotically upward, and her big tits hanging lovely in the air. She cooed and moaned as the associate stroked her milk-laden breasts, coaxing the liquid gold out of her fat, plumped up nipples into the bucket below. To Tsugumi’s surprise it really wasn’t a tiny stream or a trickle; not enough for a proper cow, but way more than a woman should have.
And very, very similar to how much she put out when Avaron was hungry.
I think, dear customer, you do not realize your influence yet, Tsugumi thought, pursing her lips and waving to continue. Raina smiled in return, and they started walking again. “Nonetheless, the whole point was to avoid women thinking they were becoming cattle.”
“I wouldn’t fear that. After all, they are the ones coming here on their own.”
“Those without a choice seldom appear unwilling.”
“Please,” Raina said, her voice disarmingly dismissive. “It is not as if we do not teach them. We milk them, and teach them how to do it themselves.”
“YES!” an ecstatic shout broke in, accompanied by a sexual panting. “Keep going! Right there! Riiiiiight, riiiiii—“
They stopped in front of a ‘closed’ stall, modesty preserved only by a thin cloth sheet. Tsugumi shot a suspicious look at Raina and her innocent smile—A woman like you should not look like that. Raising a dainty hand, she pulled back for a peek. Another woman hung off a balancing bar, three buckets full of milk underneath her enormous breasts. Yet another one of Raina’s associates tended to her, this one quite eagerly eating her out from behind. Far less romance and love, and more tongue-slurping, mouth drinking ravenous hungry. She groped the woman’s butt hungry, stretching and mauling it until red imprints remained. Tsugumi couldn’t tell who was more into it, and the brazen passion of it stirred even her heart.
“And also,” Raina’s voice suddenly whispered into her ear, hot breath far too close. “We pleasure them, if they need it. A happy cow is a productive cow.”
More than once someone far bigger has tried cornering her. Tsugumi smiled, but only a fool wouldn’t see the predatory glint in it. “My, not a ranch but a whorehouse, Raina?” she asked sweetly, their lowly conversation hidden by the carnality in front of them.
“Whores do it for money,” Raina said, her breasts pushing into Tsugumi’s backside. “Sluts do it for free, and I’m not charging anyone.”
For a brief, fleeting moment, Tsugumi forgot about their little contest. How is she this big? the tora couldn’t help wondering. Two very big questions rubbing up and down into her back. She could fall asleep on those pillows comfortably! Letting the cloth fall back, she turned around, forcing Raina to back up. All the noble air of someone with high blood, but even her face stained red. Lust, in its purest and raw form churning in those gold eyes. Tsugumi knew better, even if Raina looked quite inviting. “My, Raina,” she said, hiding her mouth behind a hand. “A woman might think that an invitation.”
The gloomy beauty chuckled and leaned in. Her move made Tsugumi back up, and Raina planted an elbow on the support beam behind her. At such an angle, her voluminous tits almost hung free, just barely held up by her inadequate cloth dress. The slightest hint of a move and they’d pop right out, something at least two of Tsugumi’s eyes noticed. She watched Raina’s leering smile with the others.
“Isn’t it?” Raina asked, dragging her tongue slowly across her defined, tasty lips. “I’m not ashamed of being the greatest slut in this queendom.”
Gwyneth’s adorably cum-covered face flashed through Tsugumi’s mind right then and there. She couldn’t help the tiny laugh escaping, something that made Raina recoil with surprise. “Ah, there is another with that title,” Tsugumi said, waving her hand dismissively.
“It-it’s a bit cheating to call our queen that, isn’t it?”
“Queen—what, no. No!” Tsugumi snorted, that idea sounding ridiculous. “That idiot would sooner cripple herself from pain than let anyone in.”
“Really?” Raina asked in disbelief. “Then why does she—“
“Hey.” The two of them jumped and looked over, the associate from earlier peeking around the curtain. Her whole face drenched in feminine juice, and perhaps a little bit of milk she herself drank. “We’re busy in here.”
“Yes, of course,” Raina said, her face contorting to a polite, noble smile that existed purely for social convenience. “Lady Tsugumi, this way.”
Toward the end of the barn wasn’t any different from the rest of it. The stalls were emptier, and soon the busy sounds of the milk ranching behind them turned dull. Two large, unhinged slabs that might be doors waited at the ‘end’. Tiny rays of sunlight peeked through, cutting in the warm glowing interior with the harsh brightness. Tsugumi glanced at the woman following them, and she sheepishly didn’t meet any of her eyes. “Regardless,” Tsugumi said, grabbing the conversation by the throat. “I will have to tell Avaron about all of this.”
“Surely you will speak kindly of my idea?” Raina asked, the first crack in her implacable façade. Nervousness didn’t suit someone of her standing, even if it served Tsugumi in the end. “I have only the best intention to help our queen.”
“And how many times have you heard best intentions being honest?”
Raina let out a suffering, long exhale through her nose, closing her eyes for a moment. “Yes, I am aware of how it sounds. And how it usually sounds. But, please understand!” Raina tapped her fingers together, making a bizarre triangular pointing gesture. “This is the future of our queendom! Women will mother children, and their milk will never end. Their husbands and wives and whatever else can only drink so much. We put our hearts and souls into our milk!” She groped her breasts for emphasis, jiggling them. “The answer can’t be to throw it all away!”
A problem that Avaron bemoaned and looked forward to in equal measure. Long had they talked in bed together, unhelpfully fueled by Gwyneth’s unrelenting desire to offer herself up. Tsugumi pinched the bridge of her nose, wanting to peel her very face off for a moment. “I am all too aware of that,” she bit out before pointing accusingly at Raina. “But your answer cannot be to turn it into a business! You of all people should know exactly how merchants become.”
“I do! That’s why we have to be the ones to control this!” Raina said, jiggling her tits again for a moment—something that looked genuinely on accident. “We have to make this perfect. A ranch that women can come into, relieve their milk, and then go about their lives. No forcing them, no slavery, nothing of that sort that Avaron hates so much. This! This—” Raina waved a hand toward the barn, “—isn’t the end solution. It’s a step toward that.”
At least she’s aware of the problems, Tsugumi mused, lips pursed tightly. “So how do you stop it then? When all those greedy bastards start sniffing around, looking for opportunity—“ She poked Raina right in the middle of her chest, her chitinous finger disappearing into that pillow-worthy cleavage. “—What then?”
“I …” Raina scrunched her face up, appearing at a loss. “It would take our queen to do that. Laws, enforcers. No moral will stop the power of coin. It hardly stops to throw a collar on someone’s neck!”
“Lady Raina!” someone shouted, running down the barn.
“What now?” Raina growled out, turning her piercing eyes upon the approaching associate.
“We need your help,” she said hurriedly. “There’s a mother giving birth.”
“And no one noticed?”
“It might be premature.”
“Oh, damnit.” Raina looked to Tsugumi hurriedly. “I’d rather we—“
“Just go. Think on a solution to that problem, Raina. That is what Avaron will want to hear.”
“… I’ll remember that.”
Tsugumi watched the two of them hurry off, the pained sounds of labor becoming noticeable by the moment. Raina did cut such a lovely figure, from her determined expressions to her goddess-like body. Avaron certainly would not complain fucking her, she thought amusedly. Holding a hand to her cheek, she sighed. Dear customer, you are rubbing off on me in all the wrong ways.
“Umm …”
Two of her eyes glanced toward the sunset-haired woman beside her. “Yes?”
“It might not be my place to say this, but …” She looked around conspiratorially for a moment. “Lady Raina does have good intentions. It’s just, she’s, well, taken with pleasure a lot.”
“What do you mean?” Tsugumi asked, leering with every eye she had.
"Well, you see ..."
Although having heard the tale from Avaron, hearing another’s firsthand recounting of Raina’s and her sisterhood’s tentradom nightmare proved chillingly awakening. Icy water thrown onto her face, as it were. “… I see.”
“B-but, the thing is,” the woman said, fluffing her curly hair nervously. “The rest of us found peace. Not, perfectly. Not me, anyway. Our bodies remind us of that every day. But we live and enjoy life now. Raina, she—she didn’t really leave that place.”
“You fear she’s still trapped in her mind?”
“No. It’s hard to say. If we went back to who we were, I’m not sure Raina ever did. Not that I knew who she was before, or anything!” The woman waved her hands, flustered. “It’s more, she’s looking to fill the void left behind. Not heal or move on. Just replace it.”
“… Like a folk drowning in their cups.”
“Yes, precisely!” She smiled, relief coming over her. “Like drowning in cups. But whatever it is she wants, she hasn’t found, and it’s … eating, her alive. Or it was, until she met Avaron. Now all we hear in the sisterhood is about serving Avaron.”
That is way worse than I expected, Tsugumi thought, not even close to starting to untangle that silkball of a mess. “And that is not going so well.”
“Mm, it’s not. We all want to find husbands, you know. If that’s even possible with our bodies.” The woman smiled ruefully, the heaviness of her words not weighing on her at all. “Not Raina. I don’t think ill of her, I just wish she’d find peace.”
“Avaron has a kind heart. One too kind, some may say.” Tsugumi patted her front down, clearing away invisible dust. “I think she will find a way that isn’t giving Raina more cups to drown in.”
“I’d like to think so, my lady. I should get going, and help with the birth.”
“Go on then.”
Tsugumi watched the woman run down the barn, carnality filling the air with the chorus of motherhood. A mixture of a kind she never imagined once, and found far too strange hearing herself. As ever, I am handling peoples’ problems, she thought, wanting to laugh as much as bemoan her fortune. Shaking her head, she backed up a few steps into a darker, dimly lit corner. What a tangled web this will be, she thought before vanishing into the shadows.
On a lonesome tree outside the ‘ranch’, resting high upon the thick branches sat a bird. Its dozens of eyes across its body ever scanned its surroundings, looking, studying, looking some more. Those of its misshapen ‘head’ watched Tsugumi leave, tracking her keenly. It turned back once she was well on her way down the road, gazing through the barn windows. It saw all that went on through such measly portals, studying Raina the most of all. A slithering tentacle left its broken beak, slapping away a fly that was irritating an eye.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 42: The Nature of Genetics
Chapter Text
Born of the universe, unaware of what is outside.
*~*
(Hmm.)
(Your incessant humming is driving me nuts,) Iris bemoaned as the flesh-door slurped open. The new ‘central laboratory’ that Cypher lived in almost exclusively stretched before her. Far less of a cave and more like an office, it wouldn’t have been out of place in a sci-fi movie. Clean, crispy smooth white chitin, punctuated by grouts filled with fleshy tendrils. Cabinets, pseudo-glass beakers and vials, and even simple four-legged chairs. Work stations with tentacles of all kinds, encircling flesh-wombs full of biomass rich fluids and genetic information. Iris walked across the large room, heading to a mass of tentacles that had formed an egg-shaped chair. Cypher sat in it cross-legged, hands cradling her chin as she stared into … something. A pseudo-glass container as big as a head, full of cum, suspended by more tentacles. (What are you even doing?)
(Thinking.)
(Don’t make me come in there.)
(It’s not worth the bother.)
(You dumped your whole load into Gwyneth and left her a quivering mess. I don’t think she’s going to eat anything for a week.) Iris sighed and smacked Cypher upside the head, almost knocking her out of the chair.
(… Sorry,) Cypher muttered, an inkling of genuine regret emerging in the Hive Mind. (I’m just preoccupied.)
(With what?)
(Thinking about what even genetics actually is.)
(That doesn’t even vaguely make it alright. Are you high?)
(Can we even get high?) Cypher asked wryly before scowling thoughtfully. (We should test that at some point.)
(Not the point right now.)
(No, no. I’ll make it up to her later. Listen, just—okay, sounding board time. Think about it. What is genetics?)
(Less making it up and never doing it again. Anyway, it’s a bunch of DNA, RNA, and other junk in sequences that contains the blueprints for an entire body,) Iris echoed a bastardized recollection.
(Sure. Stupid but it works. Now, remember atomic theory? Atoms, molecules, all that.)
(Sure.)
(Somewhere between atoms and microbiology, there is genomes. Cellular life. Our [skill] lets us peer into this world, navigate it, instinctively know what is bad and what is useful. Everything we’ve made—) Cypher waved a hand flippantly over her head, (—is a result of us using our naturally provided blueprints, and hacking together every other gene-sequence we ‘learned’.)
(Right.)
(Despite all that, our [skill] for [Genetic Engineering] hasn’t improved. I know it hasn’t because there’s this area that’s so tiny, once I start looking it just fuzzes out entirely.)
(You’re saying that’s the limit of our [skill]?) Iris asked. (I mean, didn’t we recognize we need more DNA before it improves?)
(Do we, though?) Cypher retorted. (Think about it. We already have these tools, DNA just lets us shortcut the process more. All we’re doing is appropriating blueprints, not necessarily making them.)
(Pedantry aside, you’re saying the way to improve is to understand how this shit actually works?)
(Precisely. I can’t, for the life of me, remember anything about proteins from the science channels. But I do remember that one protein, the really simple one, the one that fuels everything for life to happen.)
(I don’t remember that discussed with proteins, but sure. That super molecule that’s used for everything.)
(Whatever,) Cypher said. (Now, that thing is complex. Simple, but complex. Reliable. Does everything. But it’s not perfect, right?)
(Sure.)
(Now here’s the crux of the matter.) Cypher shifted in her seat, kicking her legs out and slouching back. (Evolution isn’t a guided process. It’s not intelligent, it doesn’t pick what’s best with what its got. If you survive, and reproduce, you win—full stop. This keeps going on until you can’t reproduce, then it’s game over. Right?)
(Pretty much.)
(So all of life is based on survivors. Everything we’re using, from start to finish, is defined by that. But if we really want to engineer something—) Cypher clapped her hands together, (—we need to understand the tools. What if we made a protein-molecule-thing that could handle that job even better? Twice as efficient? Four times? More? What kind of cells could we make? What kind of lifeform would arise? That, that’s the real ticket here. Not slapping together stupid shit and calling it a day.)
(And looking at big glass jar full of our cum is going to do all of that?) Iris asked wryly.
(THIS! IS! GOLD!) Cypher yelled, jumping out of her seat and shaking the container. (It’s not fucking cum!)
(Course it’s not, we just call it that.)
(Precisely!) Cypher thrust a finger menacingly at Iris. (We jumped the gun! Screwed the pooch! I took a peek inside and even I don’t know what this is!)
(Uhh …) Iris squinted, not sure what to make of that.
(This stuff, it’s like a primordial slurry. A sludge of chemical energy and nutrients and I’ve been staring at it for like five days straight now.) Cypher sighed, running her hands down her face. If she had a more normal body, her eyes might’ve been bloodshot. (I can’t think through this stuff fast enough. Like I’m one computer trying to work on a hundred computer problem.)
(We can’t exactly make more consciousness.)
(I know,) Cypher bemoaned, deflating onto the ground as if all the strength left her body. (But I cannot work fast enough. Not with just you, but if all of us sat around on this, it’d take forever.)
The two of them sat/stood there, humming in unison.
(It’s not as if we can just ask others to help, or even use computers,) Iris remarked. (This relies fundamentally on our [skill].)
(Yup.)
(But we can’t make more of ourselves. I doubt a breakthrough would let us do the work any faster, either …)
(It might but who knows.)
(… What about brains?)
Cypher lifted her head, squinting suspiciously.
(I’m serious,) Iris returned, staring back. (Remember that data center thing Johnathon was doing? Where we needed more computers to work on that one stupid problem?)
(Yeah.)
(And the science channel mentioned brains are basically organic computers. Now that we have Gwyneth’s DNA, couldn’t we just, make a bunch of human brains?)
(Why not include Tsugumi?) Cypher asked.
(We can. It’s just, different species, different brains, right? With their two DNA sets we can see which one is better at doing what.)
(Feeling like that might open a can of worms.)
(I mean there are going to be differences. Tsu’s got like, six eyes. Human brain is only meant to work with two and under. Her visual cortex or whatever it’s called is going to be way more serious. Doesn’t make her any less of a person.)
(But you picked Gwyneth first.)
(… Ingrained bias, I guess. Earth only had humans so I know more about the human brain.)
They both hummed in thought.
(Wouldn’t that mean we could just use all the brains in the Hive?) Cypher postulated.
(No, because a lot of them are busy running autonomous functions. Maybe we could scrap out a spare neuron here or there, but it’s a bit of a pain.)
(So, what, a giant vat of brains all stuck together? One giant super brain?)
(It’d help you think faster, wouldn’t it?) Iris said, throwing her hands up into the air.
(… I hate that this idea sounds pretty good.)
(I hate that we’re going to have brain vats now.)
(Alright, here we go doing something ethically dubious again.)
(Mm.)
(Oh, what now?)
(I’ve been thinking.)
(A dangerous hobby,) Iris remarked dryly.
(Quite,) Cypher returned just as dry before sighing. (It’s hard not to.) She ended up walking over across the ‘lab’, Iris in tow. They stopped before a cylindrical vat of organs, fluids, and other parts of a body. Its hexagonal, semi-translucent glass left everything inside hazy, though markedly much clearer than earlier versions. Such holding tanks were becoming increasingly common, for organs had to be grown at steady and stable rates. Even with her [Abilities] helping to accelerate them, too much would cause cancerous failures to begin. This particular tank held various ‘next generation’ improvements that would eventually be incorporated into the Hive.
(When we use this power of ours, [Genetic Engineering], it has all sorts of implications,) Cypher said before tapping on the glass. Thakfully the organs weren’t frightened by it. (Changing the fundamentals of life, through our specific intent and direction. When we do it just to ourself, we are changing ourself, but if we start doing it to others …)
(We walk firmly into the realm of eugenics, no matter how noble.)
(Yeah, and we are already having an influence on people. Even if it sounds nice, ‘cleaning up bad or junk DNA’.)
(Well, that and all the permanent titty milking the women have going on now,) Iris pointed out, much to Cypher’s pained and embarrassed expression.
(Tch, yeah. We can shortcut all the philosophical responsibility by saying ‘we won’t use it on anyone else’, but, it’s too late. What else will start happening the stronger we become? I mean, we have that aphrodisiac nature we locked away, but if it slips out …)
They stood there, both their minds heavy on working their thoughts. A strange sensation of nearly knowing what the other was thinking, but a thin, opaque sheet of paper kept it from spilling over entirely. (The closest my five-second napkin scribbling says, it comes down to: intention and responsibility.)
(Oh?)
(Sure. Consider the sword: it can kill innocents as much as protect them, right?)
(We’re oversimplifying the nuance here but sure, go on,) Cypher said wearily.
(The sword is a sword. A sharp piece of metal. What you do with it, and how you own the responsibility of what happens, is what defines the sword user.)
(Geeze.) Cypher scratched at her head, looking vexed. (The difference here any little ‘fuck up’ is going to be carried throughout the generations.)
(Until it’s randomly sequenced out or the bloodline ends. Really, that’s the flaw of anything about DNA.)
(What, the reproduction method?)
(Yeah. Even if you end up with some stupid ‘perfect’ creature, the very nature of DNA means something, somewhere, is going to fuck up eventually. Or cosmic radiation does it, or random viruses, or you know, anything else.)
(I’m not disagreeing but it can’t be that simple.)
Iris slapped a hand on Cypher’s shoulder, looking at her like she was stupid. (Of course not, idiot. What do we intend, and how do we own the responsibility of it? Even if we put a mountain of work in, all to justify one tiny strand of DNA change, we have to take responsibility. It’s not like we’ll foresee everything.)
(No, but we have to try.)
(Of course, that’s the paperwork part of everything.)
*~*
Cecile glanced around nervously. Her height really made the whole idea of ‘practice’ really just kind of impossible. She felt like a tower over the humans, the tallest of them barely reaching her chest. Which meant her much longer steps and reach gave her a much different reality when ‘fighting’. “Ehhmm, sorry,” she muttered, bowing to the heroine she’d just flattened with her training staff.
“It’s fine,” Chul-soo wheezed out, trying to catch his breath while on the ground.
A sharp crack broke the air and Cecile jolted upright, a stinging touch burning on her butt.
“Do not apologize for winning!” Arzha barked out.
“Yes, ma’am!” Cecile replied on instinct.
“Both of you, return.”
Shuffling over, Cecile tried not clenching her sore rear. Every time she made a mistake, Arzha’s thin whip found it somehow. Just standing made her butt throb. None of the other ‘trainees’ were laughing about it, though. They were getting strikes on their butts too. Chul-soo recovered cleanly, patting off his bizarrely straight and neat clothes. She’d not seen such attires before; nor much of anyone’s really. Fabric that clean cut and smooth looked unreal to behold. He bowed to her, and she hurriedly mimicked it.
“As Cecile has shown us, I will make a point of explaining it,” Arzha said, stepping in. Her whip had returned to its ‘normal’ state of being like a long, thin stick. With it, she pointed at the ground, then to Cecile, then back to Chul-soo. “In battle, the only thing that matters is your area control. There are many ways to describe this, but it all returns to the same idea. Cecile, sweep your tail slowly as you just did to knock him down.”
She did so, her long tail covering an expansive reach around her.
“Although Cecile is lacking in training to use her tail, this is her area control utilizing it. By engaging her and disrespecting this, Chul-soo was swiftly defeated. In proper combat, Cecile’s staff and her tail enables her a robust area control, as she has two tools to enforce it.” Arzha tapped her whip into her open palm. “The spear is the queen of the battlefield, because it offers ultimate area control. The safety to strike without being hurt; the threat of danger without being in danger. In this respect, even a peasant becomes exceedingly dangerous when wielding it. Cecile.”
The dorgi jumped. “Y-yes?”
“Assume a defensive stance. Chul-soo, you will try to break through; striking anywhere except her tail will count. Cecile, you must strike anywhere in retaliation. I will explain the reasons after.” Arzha stepped back, crossing the line drawn in the ground. “Begin.”
Cecile stiffened at the suddenness of it all, cradling her simple wooden staff. Chul-soo, sizing her as he was, didn’t immediately attack. Instead he approached with his staff at the ready, seeking some sort of weakness. She mirrored him in kind, her tail curling behind her in the air with instinctual readiness. The human stepped in sharply, jabbing with his staff, and she met in kind—her tremendous strength blowing it out of the way easily. Unlike the first times they exchanged blows, he wasn’t rattled anymore by their differences. Again he went, aiming low, and there she met him in another loud ‘clack’ of wood against wood.
Training. Such a strange thing; she saw her brothers and their friends bother with it, long ago. Mock fighting against enemies unseen; preparing for things no one ever wanted to. Father had never liked her icicle heart and its fragility; mother was even worse about it. Now, she was training not among her people but heroines from another world.
In the end, her story would’ve been one to make them red with jealously.
The wistful distraction costed her dearly. In another exchanging blows, Chul-soo met her staff with surprising force. It stunned her arms for just a moment, and right then he lunged further in. Abandoning the staff, he struck forward with a fist, solidly landing right into her unyielding stomach. His determined face contorted with pain, a deep, exhausting ‘ah’ escaping while he dropped his staff and clutched his wrist. Cecile blinked confusedly, the slightest strangeness of warmth on her belly all that remained.
“Match set. Chul-soo wins this time,” Arzha noted, a thin veneer of amusement beneath her stoic façade. “Magna, his hand.”
“Yes, princess.”
“Eh?” Cecile chirped. I lost? How does that count? She hardly felt a thing!
“The purpose of this exercise is to explain the motions of combat. How to read area control and determine how it is dealt with,” Arzha said, and Cecile worried her very mind was being read right then. “Concentration is everything in battle, but so is keeping an awareness. These are two evils always at war with each other. Focus too much on one problem, and you are vulnerable to others. Do not focus enough, and the danger in front will destroy you.” She made a show of tipping her hands together, as if on a scale. “Balancing these is the mark of a skilled warrior.”
“Yes, princess,” the other heroines acknowledged.
“In Cecile’s example then, her defense remained solid against Chul-soo until her attention wavered. For what, I wonder,” Arzha remarked, glancing over coldly. The dorgi straightened up on reflex, her butt already frightful of another whip. “Chul-soo recognized the lapse, and having learned his prior attacks would not work, used something different. Recklessly suicidal, but simply because it is suicidal does not mean you will not face it in battle. An enemy committed to the death will not be afraid of using their own life as a weapon. It is nearing noon now, we will break for lunch.”
Relieved sighs escaped all the trainees, including Cecile. They dutifully handed off their staves to Saryl before heading over to the ‘rest area’. Arzha had taken a strip of land near Tsugumi’s inn, converting its relatively flat self into a sectioned off training grounds. The rest area, nearest to the heavily trodden dirt path, had stumps, broken over logs, two campfires, and some basic chairs and tables. Cecile took one of the broken logs for herself, the human-sized chairs too small for her to sit in comfortably. Although, she had to sit up and a little bit forward to not put too much pressure on her butt.
Actually training is harder than it looks, she thought, weary in her face. Watching others doesn’t show it at all. Sure, the moving and the hitting and all that body work was one thing. That didn’t bother at her at all. The prospect of constantly being aware and predicting and moving before they moved wore her down quickly. So much guess work; so little time to guess in. The faint memory of Chul-soo’s hit weighed on her mind, and Cecile pursed her lips. If that had been a sword, it would’ve gutted me.
Fighting was far harder than she ever imagined.
*~*
“In regards to the Empire, we’ve managed to toughen our bulwark,” the elvetahn nobleman said, reading from a sheet of yellow-wood paper. “Liberating many of their slave camps, it’s hard to say how many we’ve rescued in total. It is notable that a lot of noble elvetahn are not among the camps, and some records indicate they were moved deeper into the Empire.”
“Did they hint as to why?” Efval asked, drumming her fingers on the arm rest of her throne.
“No, but it is not hard to imagine why.”
“Indeed. Bisnar, send summons to the Shadow Watch. We must rescue these elvetahn first, and learn of any other slaves located in the Empire.”
“As your majesty commands,” Bisnar said, seated beside the queen at the table, bowing his head.
Efval sat back, staring up at the domed ceiling in contemplation. The clear-cut glass let in the bright afternoon sunlight, immense branches and their voluminous leaves dancing in the light. Hours upon hours of meetings in the council chambers, not even its fanciful white and brown oak that comforting anymore. Before her sat a large table cut in the guise of the crescent moon, the twelve heads of the queendom sat to her flanks. Given it was a closed meeting, the moon table was closed inward so that they could all regard each other better. She dearly wanted to open it up so some sneering faces wouldn’t stain her eyesight. “Based on what I hear, our situation is righting itself, but we have not seen the Empire’s reprisal.”
“The introduction of bolt-action snipers to our quiver has changed everything,” general Bladedance said, his serious face the most business-like of them all. “The Empire is losing commanders in every conflict. I have already seen several times inexperienced leaders sent out, much to their demise.”
“If we are wounding the Empire so grievously, we must continue to bleed them,” Efval said. “How are they moving?”
“They are returning to the old Impasse Line, and reinforcing their already immense fortresses in the region. If I were to surmise, they’re looking for a counter strategy before committing again.”
“… How are the new cannons developing?”
“Considering the new ground we are breaking, quite remarkably.” Bladedance sighed, looking terse. “Not fast enough to take against those kinds of fortresses.”
“And the Empire’s gun production?” Efval inquired, glancing over to a figure of leaves, owl-feathers, and a black wood mask.
“We destroyed several workshops,” she answered, a tweetering chirp beneath her oily smooth voice. “But we keep finding more. They are splitting up their locations to make them harder to find.”
“To be expected. The more we hamper their development work, the better we’ll be.”
“I must say,” Heoan interrupted, his irritating mannerisms ever present. “Why not go on the offensive now that the Empire is retreating?”
“It is a simple matter,” Bladedance interjected before Efval might cut the nobleman apart with her tongue. “Although we’ve reclaimed our borders, the Empire still has a spear aimed at our side. Until we undermine that, it is too dangerous for a full offensive.”
“It is just those fortresses, isn’t it? We’ve destroyed such things more than once.”
“It is not as if we cannot. It is simply we cannot do so fast enough. I understand House Leaftip’s insistence on the offensive, make no mistake, I would do so before you even knew we could.” Bladedance smiled thinly. “But until that moment comes, we must be the clever hunter.”
“Hmph.”
“Nuala, you are reluctant to speak,” Efval said, glancing over to her left. The greatest of magi, seemingly absorbed in her own thoughts, jolted upon her hearing her name.
“Yes, well.” Nuala straightened up in the tall-backed chair. “I am concerned at what the nagraki are up to.”
“Has something new happened?”
“No, which is just as troubling. The presence of a highborn in their offensive was no coincidence. It seems insane to me that they would be that bold to do so. They know we can easily find them in our home. To say it another way, assuming they are still as capable as ever, it is a taunt. Showing to us they control the Empire, and perhaps goading us into attacking it.”
“You think it is a trap?”
“Let us consider the situation.” Nuala held out her hands, gesturing figuratively as she spoke. “We are overcoming the Empire’s invasion; in time, we will be poised to strike at the Empire. Artor to the southwest summoned thirteen divine heroines—something I now know to have nagraki machinations for.” Some murmurs spurred up then, concerned glances passing around.
“The nagraki?” Aleesa asked from the far end of the moon table. “How are they involved?”
“… Haska has a sister,” Nuala said, those four simple words striking them all, even Efval, like lightning. “The evil goddess of light, Nyoom.”
“Where did you learn this?” Efval’s heavy demand silenced the rest, and Nuala gazed upon her with a wearily familiar look.
“A certain divine heroine who has experience in the matter. After considering her words and doing my own investigation, I can confirm it to be true.”
Efval squinted. Why would Avaron know of this? Divine heroines received some guidance from the goddesses; always related to their summoned task. Nyoom was an existence not even she or the elvetahn at large knew about until right then. Efval rubbed her chin, resisting the urge to grind her teeth together. If those goddesses told Avaron, then she must have something to do with Nyoom and Haska.
The implications of that disturbed her beyond description. She held up a hand, silencing anyone else from saying anything irritating. “And this Nyoom was involved with their summoning?”
“It appears so. The ritual itself wasn’t a normal one. Perhaps she was looking to summon a heroine to do her bidding. We know Haska has tried in the past.”
“And we stopped him every time. But, ignorant of this Nyoom …”
“… She could succeed and harness incredible mortal servants,” Nuala finished the thought. “There is some evidence the other goddesses caught onto this scheme. By forcing their own summonings during the ritual, they shoved through thirteen new heroines into this world.”
“All to stop Nyoom, but now we have far more problems as a result.”
“When do we, those of the Origin Lands, not have problems?” Nuala asked dryly. “From us all others across the world sprung; to us all of them will return. But this time I’m … concerned.”
Efval stared. You, of all people, concerned? Goodness she thought her mother waking up would shorten her immortal life. Nuala being worried shortened it even more. “Why is that?”
“If, up until now, we have only dealt with Haska and his nagraki–what, exactly, is Nyoom going to bring out?”
The weight of that single question loomed over the council room like a mountain. It recontextualized the entirety of their struggle since the ancient times. The nagraki always came, seeking to make everything into Haska’s naki. Every time they were beaten down; destroyed beyond count. Every time they came back, even if Haska himself was sealed away. It was a maddening mystery Efval could remember as far back as a being a young girl.
And the one behind their constant returns, was that Nyoom?
Was she the secret power that kept Haska enduring?
If she was, what else was she doing?
A whole world of possible answers that made so much more fit together sensibly. Efval felt weary enough to peel her face off at the prospect. “Then the obvious is that the Church of the Everlasting Light serves Nyoom.”
“It does.”
Efval’s lips twitched and her thin veneer of calm shattered apart as her hand slammed onto the moon table. The wood cracked underneath, an imprint left deeply at the strike. “RIGHT IN FRONT OF US? THE ENTIRE TIME?” Her shout made everyone flinch, their ears peeling back, down, or anywhere they could go to hide. “HOW DID NO ONE FIND OUT?”
“… Nyoom has hidden herself since the very beginning,” Nuala spoke up, the only one brave enough to do so. “Even other ‘secretive’ goddesses can’t resist having their influence known. She is an exception. She alone hid away deep enough, biding her time.”
It made sense; of course it did, coming from Nuala. Yet the raw anger in her veins made Efval scratch her filed-down claws on the wood, slowly ripping it apart.
“But what of the Empire, then?” Heoan inquired boldly. “Troubling as this is concerning Haska, this Nyoom hasn’t done anything overt yet.”
“Yet,” Bladedance echoed. “No, perhaps she already has. Artor was destroyed by all its neighbors almost entirely over one season. Now they are feuding amongst themselves, and the Ashmourn pillaged them. They were once a unified people who took the Empire head on. In such disarray, the Empire has no immediate threats except us. Looking upon it now, the timing of it all is as precise as a bear trap.”
“Nyoom’s Church arranged for the destruction of Artor and throwing the region into chaos,” Efval surmised. “The nagraki use the Empire to invade and control. All of this under the guise of human affairs, such that others wouldn’t pay it any special attention.”
“Thus returning to my original point,” Nuala interjected. “What exactly is their next move? If the alliance of old returned to fight the Empire, it would make sense to bait us. The alliance could be convinced that after we destroy the Empire, we will come for them next. Yet there is no alliance, and the Empire is heading toward destruction. All that will be left is a bunch of disparate humans and monja, and no singular power to unite them against us.”
“… Not in this part of the lands,” Efval remarked, sitting back in her throne.
“You don’t mean—“
“They will come in with something else. Perhaps using the Church to justify doing it.” Efval’s face tightened. “Everything up until then, including the Empire, will look like a flash of fat in a fire by comparison. Aleesa, send word to the other forests aboard. Inform them of Haska and Nyoom, and make it clear the situation is rapidly turning toward the worst.”
“My queen,” Bladedance spoke up then. “Surely it is not that—“
“Pride has no place where these two evils are concerned,” Efval cut in brutally. “You are doing well for mother’s forest, make no mistake. I will not stare into the eyes of death and think to myself, ‘Maybe I should’ve asked others for help’.”
It would be a stain upon their honor, but such things could be washed away in time. They simply had to be alive to do the washing away with. Haska has a sister, Efval thought, beside herself as the council room broke into all sorts of discussions. Another elder goddess lived the entire time. How did mother not even know about her?
The council’s discussions went on until the great doors swung open hurriedly. A guardian rushed in, barely proper at the breakneck shuffle-speed he walk-ran with. “Your highness!” he called out, drawing all eyes to him. “There’s a visitor and her retinue here to see you!”
Efval’s brow cocked upward. “Who?”
“The—the—“ he took a moment for his breath, the elvetahn just out of his mind as he spoke. “The imperial crown princess of Arden, Kaelara Arden.”
Efval’s other eyebrow joined its sister in climbing up her forehead. All eyes shot towards hers, mirroring her shock. “What?”
Another one?
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 43: Lance of Dawn
Chapter Text
Faith begets purpose without doubt.
*~*
“That way, huh.”
“Yeah. Seven presences, surrounded by … I’m not even sure what,” Helena answered, crouched down to the ground as she was.
He tried scratching his beard, but the armor was in the way. Gebb merely sighed instead. “I am seeing that as well. It’s nothing we can’t handle, but …”
“Surprises are a problem,” Helena finished, standing up and cradling her spear.
They’d tracked the renegade heroines to a strange area. A place on the border of the Alva Forest, cradled up against the Silvervein Mountains. Hardly a defensible position; they could retreat into the forest, but they were far from any elven city. Gebb and his Lance of Dawn all stood a safe distance away, scrutinizing what their senses told them. Woe be to the one who saw such iron-and-gold plated splendor, their bodies enveloped in the greatest of armors the Church could fashion. With their training, skill, and grace, they were less people-like knights than avatars of the righteous light. Minus the splendor of their power, subdued as it was to hide from elven eyes.
“So it’s a trap,” Gebb surmised, the other eight Lances agreeing with him. “The question is, who will jump us?”
“There’s a couple elves I can think of,” Jerema remarked, idly balancing his enormous hammer’s shaft on his shoulder. It might tip over at any moment, given how lightly he played with it. “Since it’s heroines we’re talking about, we can’t rule out that bitch queen or that psychotic magi of hers.”
“Considering how badly they are faring against the Empire, could they spare those two?” Helena mused aloud.
“Probably not,” Gebb wagered, shrugging his shoulders. “These are fresh heroines. Not one of them is war-worthy yet, so I doubt the elves would spare that much. The smart thing would be to send someone capable, but disposable. Otherwise the Empire would rip into them deeper.”
“Well, if not those two, the other three I can think of have all died in the war,” Jerema said, shrugging his free shoulder. “Unless there’s some new upstart we don’t know about.”
“We’ll assume some confidant of the queen is here,” Gebb said, voice reaching a tone of finality. “If for some reason the queen or the magi is here, we’ll withdraw. I can’t shake the feeling this is a trap of some kind.”
“It does look bad,” Jerema agreed.
Divine heroines were the most valuable thing in the world to have. One simply didn’t leave them outside the castle gates for anyone to pick up. Despite all his years, Gebb couldn’t exactly figure what the elves hoped to ensnare. Maybe draw the Empire’s attention, but … That sounded foolishly stupid. And if he, of several decades, found a plan foolishly stupid, someone as timeless as the elven queen undoubtedly did as well. No matter how abominable they were as a people, he acknowledged their aptitudes. I’d rather withdraw and use scouts, but the Grand Seer expects results.
It wouldn’t be the first time they had to walk head first into a terrible situation.
“Right,” Gebb said, stamping the butt of his spear against the ground. The eight Lances all straightened up, straightening their heels together and becoming picture-perfect. He then pointed his enormous spear forward, declaring. “My fellows! Wedge advance, cautious spread. Kill everything we meet, and secure Amelia for Her Eminence!”
“As the Light wills, it shall be!” the eight Lances echoed in chorus before falling behind Gebb’s lead. A vast plain awaited them, the stumps of trees laying ahead where a forest or cove might’ve been. It wasn’t hard making out the outline of huts, houses, and a small village of sorts standing against the looming Alva Forest. Their speed made even the fastest of horses whine at their ineptitude, their strides breaking the earth with every shattering step. Concealments undone, they shone as the morning dawn, trails of sparkling white light following like a snow flurry.
The instant their advance began, the fields ahead sprung alive. All sorts of terrible creatures sprung up from the ground, howling with terrifying screeches. Mounds of dirt and rock blew open, even larger, heavily armored creatures following after. The empty plains filled in seconds with an army of spider-like monstrosities, but the Lance of Dawn didn’t falter. They continued undaunted even as they shouted between each other.
“What are those?! Spiders from the forest?!”
“No, can’t be! They look like them though!”
“They have swords for legs, beware!”
“Ugly looking fucks!”
For them, who had gone into the darkest of holes to route the vilest of evils, such creatures were nothing. With this many, the elves were expecting a considerable force, Gebb thought, keen mind working while his spear thrusted forward. One, two, four, eight—even after the weapon itself stopped, its piercing aura shot straight through. Sheer force blew apart flesh, chitin, bone—or whatever these creatures were made out of. They blasted into the ground or into the air, carried by inertia. All around, the Lances achieved similar results, their most standard attacks devastatingly powerful. The waves of spiders broke upon their unyielding front, enveloping every angle as they continued. Nothing like us, though.
Perhaps their goal was to bait the Empire after all.
They’re tough, Gebb realized after his third strike. Befitting of monsters, even if he blew through several, it took a great deal of power doing so. Worse, their numbers meant their pace slowed considerably. Rather than being dangerous, they simply had so much meat to work through. The longer the fight went, the more he realized ‘killed’ spiders were rejoining the fray. Missing limbs, bleeding copiously, or even their bodies partially broken, they returned to fight. Their behavior changed in real time from a reckless swarm to a sacrificial shielding. The broken ones died upon his lance, occupying it so healthy ones could come closer. Their pitiful sword legs couldn’t puncture even his cloth, but that they reached at all alarmed him.
“Listen up,” Gebb said, the magic within his helm triggering the others. It would dull the outside screaming and allow them to actually talk coherently. “Someone is guiding these things. They’re adapting to us.”
“Their chitin deflects bladed weapons. We’ll need the hammers to do more work,” Kol remarked.
“Don’t we always?” Jerema asked wearily, his side-swinging sweep sending a dozen flying into the air.
“They’re not that resilient,” Helena interjected, seemingly having no trouble thrusting through one after the other.
“Heads up, big one coming,” Gebb ordered, drawing their attention. In the endlessly churning sea of chitin, blades, and screaming maws, a divide opened up. The lesser ones parted for a big one, its thick and enormous body oozing physical might. Jerema chuckled at its approach, coming to meet it as he brandished his hammer.
“Oh, I love the big ones,” Jerema said, the enormous creature snarling a roar as it sped toward him. Unlike the bladed legs of the lesser, its forelegs were perhaps hammers or clubs in their own right. The Lance hefted his hammer upward, laughing as he stepped forward and vaulted into the air. “Gracious is the Light’s crashing comfort!” he roared back, the hammer enveloping in a fog of blistering brightness.
The rest of the Lance hurriedly grouped up in the angle directly behind him.
In a manly shout he brought the hammer down on the creature’s armored head, and it instantly crumpled. Blasted into the ground, its whole body slammed with a stone-shattering smash. Jerema’s blow went into the very earth itself, and soon all around him, immense shockwaves shot out. Ground and stone alike erupted upward, almost like a hammer in their own right as they smashed into everything in their path. Wave after wave after wave decimated the nearby spiders, sending their smashed bodies flying backward through the air. As fast as each wave came and struck, the ground reverted back, almost entirely normal and undisturbed. So it was, his [Earth Hammer] skill ever caught foes by surprise.
The swarm reacted instantly by making space, keeping a wary distance as they slowly walked around in circles. Looking, perhaps, for weakness or some opportunity against the Lance’s obvious superiority. For as many as Jerema undoubtedly killed, that many more filled the ranks, and Gebb looked around.
“This is becoming ridiculous,” he remarked. All at once the swarm stopped its movements, coming to a standstill. Their screams ended, their shifting legs silent, and an eerie void filled the air around them. Gebb squinted at them suspiciously.
“Gebb, there’s some people approaching,” Helena said, her words accompanied by some of the spiders shifted. Like the greater one earlier, they parted a corridor, at the end of which stood two people.
“… A Flame priestess?” Gebb wondered aloud, the distinctive robes and that accursed Flame itself hovering before her. The other person he didn’t recognize. Tall, horned and obviously a monja of some kind, but she wore the crappiest looking armor he’d ever seen. Plates, chains, and cloth all stitched together in some ramshackle job that no knight would be caught dead in. The oversized battleaxe she balanced on her shoulder, however, looked completely different. Black with a purple sheen, enshrined in a silvery metal, its make was worthy of being an artifact in its own right. Something so pristine in the hands of someone so filthy just looked absurd to him.
“An Ashmourn?” Helena remarked with surprise.
“What? That monja?”
“That’s an Ashmourn pureblood from the royal family. Horns like that don’t grow anywhere else.”
The Ashmourn are working with the Elves? Gebb marveled, the mere thought sounding insane. He trusted Helena’s wisdom, but the most obvious conclusion had to be wrong. Oarin’s too busy with being a terrible conqueror than a clever schemer.
“In ashes we art found,” the priestess chanted, her lyrical voice thick with an accent. “In Flame we art remade.”
A shock of cold realization shot through Gebb and he hurriedly thrust his lance toward her. “KILL THAT PRIESTESS! NOW!”
The Ashmourn monja readied her axe, standing in between his Lance and the priestess. At his words, his Lance moved, and so did the spiders. They closed in clawing and slashing with a desperation unlike any he’d seen thus far. Bogged down in meat and suicidal bodies, their advance crawled forward. Gebb took the lead, swinging his deadly [Sweeping Arc] all the while. Spider legs and bodies split apart, cut as clean as if a sword itself had done the deed.
“Terrible our flesh is, burdened by impurity,” the priestess continued, and a flash of red-hot light swept across the ground. The arcane symbols of ritual glowed, magic given form by the incantation. “Wonderfully we sear, burning them away.”
“BEGONE!” Gebb roared, thrusting his lance toward the Ashmourn waiting. She swung her axe, using the weight of it as a counterblow. To his stunned surprise she not only succeeded, but his arm tingled from the incredible force. She’s stronger than I am, he realized in an instant. Planting his boot into the ground, he skidded to a halt and hurriedly leapt backwards. The others of the Lance made a clearing for him, as they ever practiced to do so. “Jerema!” he yelled. “She’s strong, take care of her!”
“On it!” he shouted in return, taking the opening lead Gebb had made. The rest of the Lance covered his approach, keeping the suicidal spiders at bay. Compared to the others, he was a hulking man, easily towering over them all. His armor only enhanced that fact, and there were many who thought him an inhuman monster on the battlefield. Gebb had no second thoughts calling him the strongest of the Lance, no one could beat him in a one-on-one fight.
The Ashmourn met Jerema head on first, swinging her axe in a horizontal slash. He blocked it in turn, using the incredible head as a temporary shield. Gebb couldn’t believe he saw Jerema struggle to shove her off. The raw force pushing the hulking Lance made him readjust his footing, or get thrown over sideways.
She’s stronger than Jerema.
Her mocking laughter broke the scuffle of combat, dignified in its haughty emphasis. “How wonderful! My queen will surely reward me for killing such strong humans!”
Queen? One of her confidants? Gebb realized, all the strange pieces of the puzzle snapping together. If Efval herself had sent the Ashmourn woman, that made her danger exceedingly clear. It didn’t surprise him at all anymore that she was so strong. Unfortunately, their attempts on the priestess had been stalled long enough.
“In this [Kiln of Temperance], be remade.”
The ritual symbols across the ground flashed and faded away. All the spiders around them began glowing at their edges; fiery cinders crackling to life and flickering away. The edges of their sword legs caught aflame directly, bristling with a fire that didn’t harm them as it should’ve. Gebb grit his teeth and shouted, “Regroup! Defense!”
All sorts of enchantment buffs existed, but nearly all of them relied upon the skills of the caster. A certain finite limit existed—even the greatest could only buff a handful to a meaningful, combat-ready level. Flame-worshipping priestesses had a nasty technique, one that circumvented this limitation. By casting the enchantment on their allies, it burn their bodies to fuel its power. Any number of them could be buffed, then, and it came down to how well they endured the burning than the priestess having supreme skill. In ordinary combat, a suicidal last ditch move that was more effective than it had any right to be.
Against these already suicidal, self-sacrificing monsters, Gebb saw the terrifying potential the two possessed together. It made even a veteran of his years and ability pause in careful deliberation. Not that they gave such opportunities. The flaming-armed spiders rushed in, frantically slashing their burning sword legs. Newfound strength made their blows rattle the Lance, and all of them clued in on the danger surrounding them.
A trap worthy of the elves, Gebb begrudgingly admitted to himself. But if the confidant has revealed herself, then we must respond in kind.
“Their trap is revealed!” he called out, hefting his lance into the air. “Let us meet them in kind! No more holding back!”
“BY LIGHT’S GRACE!” the others yelled in joyous excitement, their bodies glittering with surging magical power. All combat is based on deception; strength is to be hidden until the right time. Otherwise, a foe would run away to fight another day or use something special to counter. By wading headfirst into the trap and making them overly confident, Gebb would force them to show their hand first.
And he knew they could win now. There was always something extra, but it would come to their enemy to decide to fight or flee.
“Finally!” Kol shouted, sheathing his sword and drawing backward. In doing so, the vast magic within the white sheath surged around the blade, and its hilt would’ve rattled weren’t for his hand. “Let’s cut you down to size with a [Light Slash]!” his mocking words turned into a shout, and Kol drew his blade in a flashing swing. All the magic boiling to release flooded out, and a thin, crescent wave shot through all the spiders. No bang, no explosion, not even a sound; just a light wave. Limbs, bodies, heads, and whatever else simply fell away from each other, immaculately cut in two. The entire flank he guarded cleared up in an instant, hundreds of the creatures dead right there.
No fear, no hesitation, nothing except a frantic drive to surge forward answered back. The spiders rushed forward, meeting the Lances’ vigorous and newfound power with desperation. Their flaming legs met sword, spear, axe, and hammer, finding little purchase for damage, and dying in the process. Step-by-step the Lance widened their perimeter, cutting uncounted numbers as they did so. Gebb, Jerema, and Helena stood before the Ashmourn, the four of them staring each other down.
“To think one of the Church’s venerable Lances would come here,” the Ashmourn said, sounding amused. “That old bag of bones must be really terrified.”
“Your provocations are as cheap as your attire,” Gebb refuted in an instant. “I had not thought the elves so poor these days!”
“Elves?”
“Begone!” Jerema roared, shattering the taunting conversation as much as the ground underneath. The full force of the blow sent columns of erupting earth outward, blasting spiders at the sides as it went. The Ashmourn, however, stomped her foot, counteracting the extreme force with her own shattering impact. In the moments between action and reaction, Gebb and Helena took their opportunity. They vaulted ahead, lance and spear piercing toward the Ashmourn—and two different spiders jumped in the way. Unlike every other, they hadn’t even tried attacking, sacrificing themselves outright in defense. Their attacks faltered, and the Ashmourn righted up her axe with a spinning flourish.
"My thanks, my queen!" she shouted before swinging her axe into them. Her speed rivaled theirs as much as her strength overwhelmed them, truly. When one blocked and was turned away, she struck at the other, dancing back and forth for just the right opportunity. It beggared disbelief how such an immense weapon could move so fast. Worse, Gebb found the spiders just didn’t ever stop. It took everything in his ability to keep up against their insistent suicidal attacks and the Ashmourn’s overwhelming strength.
Is Efval controlling them? He could see the end to their numbers, even if some hundreds more of them yet remained. No, if she was here she would not waste so much. We can win once their swarm is done but we are wasting so much time doing this.
“W-what is this?!” Jerema stammered. “String?!”
Thin, almost invisible wires had wrapped around his limbs, restraining even his remarkable strength to nothing. His hammer fell from his grasp, lest his arm break from the awkward angle and weight. Gebb did a double-take, bewildered at the sight. Spider monsters and webs went hand in hand, but it looked completely different—the finest of threads a seamstress might’ve used. He couldn’t see where they were coming from at all, as if they simply materialized out of nothing after a certain point. A corpse on his lance and Helena’s spear, he saw the Ashmourn vault over his head in a grand jump.
“Hahaha!” she laughed, rearing her axe back. Then her whole body moved, inverting through the air faster than anyone should normally fall. Her aim was Jerema, and her magnificent weapon thrummed with intense power. “[Grand Execution]!”
A [skill] at the pinnacle of axemanship, a reckless attack overly empowered to deliver a killing blow. Gebb felt his heart drop out, and threw away his lance. “Jerema!” he shouted, and drew from the Light within him. Helena graciously covered his flanks as he prepared a spell. Combat went at a speed faster than seconds, and even his movements couldn’t exceed time. By the time he was ready, the Ashmourn and her insane axe would win first.
“D-DAMN YOU!” Jerema shouted with all his might and wrenched himself sideways. The wires that he struggled to break out of stretched and whined, but he did move just enough. A scream of metal, rage, and mocking laughter all came together as the axe sliced through his shoulder. The sudden tension of the wires failed as his severed arm went flying, and Jerema used his freedom to jump backward. Despite the pain and his blood-gushing wound, he yet remained standing and cognizant. Truly befitting of a Lance. As the others converged on the Ashmourn, she escaped into the chittering swarm.
For every attack or defense, they were always interrupting somehow.
“Loana, check his arm!” Gebb shouted, cancelling his spell and retrieving his lance. A few spiders had tried taking it away when he wasn’t looking.
Jerema would be out of action, if for a moment. He hadn’t lost his dominant arm, thankfully.
Where did those threads come from? Gebb wondered, his mind racing. Something strong enough to restrain them, and without any indication of where or who made them.
“Ah!” Helena’s sharp scream cut out, and Gebb saw her bound in wires just like Jerema. Unlike him, some found their way around her collar guard, constricting her throat. Kol hurried to hear, trying to cut the threads, but sparks of fiery metal screamed as the blade crossed them. The Ashmourn didn’t dare advance, but neither could Gebb or his Lance handle the insane threads.
He grit his teeth, his mind made up. “Everyone, defend me!” Gebb shouted and raised his lance aloft, welcomingly almost to the skies above. The others did so, two keeping Helena safe from opportunistic spiders. “Gracious is the Light, vast is Its reach!” Gebb sang aloud, the air around them all thumped soundly as it came to a standstill. Those within still moved, but a presence had suddenly weighed down upon them.
“Oh! Raina, Tsugumi! Hide behind mine shield!” the Flame priestess called out.
So you know, too.
“Let no corner remain unseen, and all who stand within be accounted!”
The swarm frenzied, pushing in so hard they tripped over each other in a writing mass of legs, chittering teeth, and screaming howls.
“Hallowed is Its name, just is Its verdicts, and to all who embrace It, the [Light Salivates]!”
A spell of profound ability, by simply using it Gebb felt years of his life’s vitality draining away. Such awesome demand, he might collapse to his knees at any moment. Yet he endured, standing in defiantly as the skies above came alive. A column of purest white light shot down, illuminating the surrounding battlefield. It shone clean and clear, painting everything in a pearlescent brilliance. All across the spiders grew spindles of purity, splitting open their putrid flesh and chitin. Some would call it like fire consuming wood, but there were no ashes left behind. They crumbled away into nothing, unworthy of life. All around him the spiders vanished, dead or living, until only the silent field remained.
“And to all who shan’t stand in it, repent unto death,” Gebb finished, and the spell closed. The pure column of Light flickered away out of existence, and he fell to his knees finally, gasping for life. Now nothing of the attackers remained, save the three women. A tora? he realized through pained breaths. One of the extinct? Of course the elves would have one still.
The Flame priestess had collapsed, blood gushing from her face and cinders burning her body. She’d thrown up a barrier of flame, only just enduring the Light’s overwhelming presence. Perhaps not perfectly, judging by some of the white-stained marks of holy damage. The tora talked to her frantically, while the Ashmourn remained standing if much of her clothing gone, and Light-touch wounds upon her body.
"Gebb, you didn't need to," Helena said, coming to his side and helping him to stand.
“Time is of the essence,” he bit out. “We are on the elves’ front gate. Kill them, then kill the heroines. I’ll, eughh, hang back here. Loana, howse Jerema?”
“I’ve stabilized him and his arm but I need a healer’s room to reattach it.”
“Get to work then—“
Andar and his ever reliable shield stepped in, slamming it into a massive ice-shaped arrowhead that nearly pierced Gebb. Deftly send sideways, the ground shook as the icy projectile shattered against it. Gebb did a double take, his rattled senses springing alive. A mage? he wondered, peering ahead. Eight figures approached on horseback, something distinctly not an elven way of doing things. Their leader-apparent bore plate armor with a distinctive blue emblem, something that surprised him to see. “Knights of Artor?” he said, “Am I seeing that right?”
“You are,” Helena remarked, sounding just as surprised. “That’s the Shieldcrown emblem if I’m not wrong.”
“Royal knights??”
Why do the elves have them here?
The leader held aloft a sword, another shard of ice forming before firing toward them. Andar deflected that as well, and perhaps she clued in on how pointless that attack was. They arrived quick enough, bolstering the three remaining enemies.
“As I live and breathe, Arzha Shieldcrown didn’t die after all,” Helena said.
“You are outmatched,” Arzha declared, her voice cutting the air in its commanding authority. “Leave at once.”
“If you were confident of winning you would’ve attacked,” Gebb retorted, rolling his lance-holding arm.
“An easy mistake to assume.”
“Hm.”
The sounds of distant howls caught his ear, and he saw from where the knights came, more spiders followed. The horizon writhed with their numbers, perhaps as great as those that were just destroyed. Gebb grit his teeth at the thought of more of them showing up. This is absurd. The three women were in terrible shape, but now the Arzha Shieldcrown and her Snowflake knights impeded them. Worse, more of those spiders and their insidiously dangerous suicidal attacks. It wasn’t an unwinnable battle but the cost of doing so rapidly shot upward the more he worked it out.
Worse, now that he’d used such powerful Light magic, the elves undoubtedly would notice. If their scouts were not already monitoring the battle, they would be arriving soon.
"Gebb, I'm sensing someone powerful coming from deep in the forest,” Jolar informed, the Lance’s resident magi sounding concerned. “It’s not even trying to disguise itself.”
“That’s that, then. We’re withdrawing,” Gebb declared, and not one of them dared to suggest otherwise. To use such intense magic and then end up retreating all the same, he wanted to spit acid out. But at least they would all have their lives to complain and find vengeance later. He thrust his lance toward his enemies, and said, “You have won the battle but the war rages on, and the Light will have its justice. Lance, fall back!”
As a group they utilized their armor’s built in teleportation crystals, burning their emergency escapes to vanish in a sparkling flash of light. Moments later, the Lance of Dawn was gone from the battlefield and far across the lands, back in the safety of the Church.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.9) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.18) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 44: Anxiety
Chapter Text
Fear is the world’s oldest, and most effective, poison.
*~*
Avaron sat hunched over, her elbows on her knees, her head upon her folded together hands. In the bright lit, almost sterile environment of the underground Hive, she might’ve seem dignified sitting on the ‘bench’. As soon as one saw her face, their hearts may turn with fright, if not their very feet freezing to the ground. Her nasty scowl remained fix and unwavering, something even Tsugumi beside her made an effort to not look at directly. Only then would anyone begin to fathom the festering anger that leaked through even Avaron’s great control.
They had remained and would remain there, sitting in tense silence as time passed.
Until the flesh door in front of them slurped opened. Nuala, wary in the face and wearing a grass-and-flower covered robe, walked through. Eight pairs of eyes looked up, and she stood before them with her own pensive gaze. “She’ll live,” the ancient magi said simply. “No long term damage, but her recovery will take some time.”
“… I see,” Avaron said simply before letting out a long, deflating sigh. Her face softened, but the acid in her gaze remained. “I owe you a great deal for this.”
“We are allies, are we not?” Nuala said in turn. “Let us not split hairs over who is owed what.”
“Mm.”
“Thank you, Nuala,” Tsugumi said, standing up just to do a full bow properly. Nuala bowed her head slightly in acknowledgement.
“It perhaps goes without saying, but the Church sending an entire Lance here is deeply troubling,” she said, refined and politely formal in voice. “That Gwyneth managed to protect you and Raina from that level of spell is quite incredible. Tsugumi, I understand to know the significance of it, but not you, Avaron.”
“I can gather how powerful it is,” Avaron said. “Having hundreds of my Hive evaporate in seconds has that kind of impact.”
“Yes, but I will press that is only one half of the effect.”
“… One half?”
“The spell [Light Salivates] has two effects. The first is ‘destroying’ all those who have not partaken of the Light. I suspect now ‘destroying’ is rather ‘consuming’, as it now seems quite similar. The second is drawing the attention of the Light to wherever the caster is,” Nuala explained. “We’ve long thought this second effect was to bolster additional Light-based casters, as it behaves that way. However, knowing now that an actual Goddess is present, it means her gaze is now fixed upon this location.”
Avaron’s eyes wavered as her mind worked through the implications. “So she can spy upon me and inform her followers.”
“That and other things, such as sending calamities. If she were Haska or a more upfront goddess, that’d be a concern. Right now I would presume she does not yet know we know she exists thanks to you. As it stands, my wards and Nahtura’s presence will dissuade her from lingering.”
“Such a pain. I’m afraid I’ll need something to handle that if I keep running into these Lances.”
“Yes, but you will not be for the time being. I will impress upon Efval the importance of bolstering this place,” Nuala said. “For what I expected of the Church, sending actual Lances was not one of them.”
“Considering the divine heroines they came to kill, is it that surprising?”
“Yes,” Nuala remarked dryly. “Lances are the Church’s answer to serious problems. They are never sent anywhere on a whim. By doing so, the Church has sacrificed significant ground elsewhere in order to make gains here.” She made a show of balancing with her hands as she spoke. “I’m not sure where, but this obviously means the heroines are worth making that sacrifice. The Church will not simply stop after being rebuffed once.”
Avaron blew out a lazy raspberry, burying her forehead into her hands. “Yes, that does put me into a bind, doesn’t it?”
“Fortuitously they are still afraid of me, considering how they teleported immediately. You will have time to recover.”
“That time won’t matter if I don’t have the power to stop them.”
“That is where our help comes in, is it not?” Nuala shrugged, blatantly uncaring.
“Perhaps a topic for another day,” Tsugumi interjected, smiling thinly. “Can we see her?”
“She is sleeping. So long as you are quiet and do not disturb the medicine, it should be fine.”
“Very good. Let us know what Queen Efval thinks when you can,” Tsugumi said, and Nuala wearily nodded before leaving.
Avaron couldn’t help marveling at Tsugumi’s efficiently polite dismissal. A hand looped around her arm and pulled her along. Cluing in, Avaron walked with Tsugumi into the impromptu medical room. The hastily grown flesh cabinets were still solidifying, burdened as they were with Nuala’s bags of medicinals. At the center of the room sat a U-shaped bed cradling a sleeping, naked Gwyneth covered in patches of green and brown mixtures. Avaron thought to dim the lights, but then the priestess’ blindness came back to her mind. Ah, right. Right.
The two of them stopped next to the bed, staring down with heaviness in their eyes. Right. At least all the blood had been cleaned up. Oh, she didn’t like remembering that part. As soon as she remembered Gwyneth covered in blood, she remembered the sensation of her health dropping rapidly. A feature of her intimate bonding, of course. Avaron couldn’t fault the party/wife/breeding/whatever system.
But the harrowing experience of knowing Gwyneth was dying in real time wouldn’t ever leave her.
Avaron grit her teeth. Her head itched. A persistent, unending need to scratch and rip and tear and—“My name’s Aegis, by the way,” she said quietly, desperate to distract herself.
“… Oh?” Tsugumi looked over, brows curled interestedly.
“On Earth, it’s a legendary shield supposedly used by two big name goddesses. Well, one god, one goddess. When I split myself up into ten Avarons, we picked names for what jobs we were going to do. I picked Aegis, to be the shield that protected everyone.” Maybe she’d give it a little scratch—no, she crossed her arms and fisted her hands. “Can’t even do that right apparently.”
“She isn’t dead,” Tsugumi said with a heavy bluntness.
“No, but now I know in no uncertain terms how incredibly incapable I am.”
“You have us.”
“And that wasn’t even barely enough. Without Nuala scaring them, would we be talking like this?”
Tsugumi’s lips pressed together thinly.
“I’m not like you, or anyone else born in this world,” Avaron said before sighing, the weariness of it all weighing down. “I wasn’t raised to fight or struggle this way. I thought I was adjusting well, but …” She shook her head. “Apparently I’m not.”
“You speak as if that is a weakness, when it is not.”
“How isn’t it?”
“Innocence is rare gift in a world of struggle and violence,” Tsugumi said lightly.
“I don’t—“
A light groan caught their attentions, Gwyneth twitching and half-moving on the medical flesh-bed. “A-Ava …?” came the wispy-light voice of the priestess.
“Right here, Gwyneth,” Avaron said, hurriedly moving in before delicately touching Gwyneth’s open hand. “Tsu too.”
“Oh. Mm, thirsty,” Gwyneth whispered.
“Uh …” Avaron looked over to the water-cooler in the wall, but Tsugumi was already doing the work. The tora shuffled over with a porcelain cup of water, and gingerly let Gwyneth sip from it. When it was all done, Gwyneth groaned, gently lifting a hand to her forehead.
“Um … everyone?” she asked.
“Fine, your barrier saved Tsugumi and Raina,” Avaron explained, “Nuala came in and fought off the attackers.”
“Oh, good.”
“Just rest now, okay? Nuala did some healing magic stuff but it’ll take a while.”
“Mm, hurts,” Gwyneth whined out, an honest sound that cut into Avaron deeply.
For all her supposed ability, relieving pain wasn’t one of them. Not one chemical nor [skill] nor [ability]. Not even something as stupid as a basic painkiller pill. Aghast at the realization, she looked to Tsugumi, who shook her head just as troublingly. “You, uh,” Avaron stammered before swallowing and speaking clearer. “You’re tough, okay? Here, I can rub your head …” It took a few moments of light touching before she found a comfortable rhythm, and Tsugumi joined in on the otherside. The two of them held onto Gwyneth and petted her, the priestess’ unease and discomfort seemingly abating. Not as much as Avaron knew it could, but somewhat. She hoped so, anyway. What light conversation they made died down when Gwyneth’s breathing evened out, and so they continued on silence.
(R&D, we’ll need pain killers or some methodology like it.) Aegis’ request sounded more like an order.
(Roger,) the two in charge responded, no fuss at all.
For the time being, this and that were all that Avaron, the Hive, could do. The rest would be up to Nuala’s medicine and Gwyneth. Avaron’s face twitched, somewhere between anger and dismay, neither staying for very long. Self-pity was an easy trap she knew how to get out of. The frustration of her daunting tasks ahead, however, was an old friend.
Avaron knew her ineptitude toward warfare; she’d lived a soft life compared to the battlefield. Even at the heights of Earth, other people always did the work she couldn’t be bothered with. The Hive, seemingly, let her capitalize on that strength even better than she had. But it wasn’t ‘other people’, even with her ‘other selves’, doing anything. It was all her—her hands, her work. She had to do it from start to finish. The first few times she fought, that realization had been a daunting one to work through. It had all worked out, regardless of [skills], [abilities], or even [magic].
Now, she hadn’t a clue. The ‘Lance’ wielded power that defied belief. No matter how much greatness she herself knew, it didn’t matter. She didn’t have that greatness in reach. Knowing about nuclear weapons meant fuck all when she’d never have one. If her enemies were going to be people like that Lance, she honestly didn’t know how strong the goddesses themselves would be. Haska and Nyoom had to be a world apart, something so unfathomable she couldn’t begin imagining it.
Maybe even the greatest things she knew would pale against what they really were.
Her skin itched so horribly, but she resisted scratching, instead tending to Gwyneth.
I’m out of my depth, Avaron thought, the stark experience of the idea deeply unsettling in how real it finally felt.
*~*
Even as one of her bore the weight of such heavy thoughts, the others worked under it. No, thanks to Aegis’ burdens, Medusa could better focus on actually handling the problems. “I see, that is putting into some perspective, but I am still lacking in the experience,” she said, running a hand through her hair. “Experiencing it is more useful than hearing about it, but, you see the problem with that.”
“Indeed,” Arzha remarked lightly. “Experience is the best teacher, and the most costly.”
“Yeah.” The two of them sat at a floor table in Tsugumi’s inn, empty as it was of anyone else. Some of the Snowflake knights were preparing food, while others tended to their gear outside. Avaron grumbled in her throat, some half-formed thoughts trying to piece together still. “So the best way to deal with this is to level up, then.”
“It is … natural, to us, to think that way,” Arzha said. “Levels are not everything and they are. I suppose it could be said like sword smithing: a thousand smiths can all make good swords, but only a great smith can make great swords.”
“So there’s a ‘quality’ to levels outside of just being stronger.”
“In essence. When I say the Lances are made from the best of the best, they are analogous to divine heroines. As best as can be without actual divine support, that is.”
“And they’re great and all, but Nuala is so far beyond all of them they have nightmares about her.”
“… It would seem that way,” Arzha said, her stern face rather bemused. “I have only met Lances during ceremony. Nuala’s age and wisdom perhaps sees them very differently than me. If it is as she says, without embellishment …”
The idea hung between them, both becoming rather vexed by it. Avaron made a circular, dismissive gesture with her hand. “Putting that aside, I suppose increasing my level will be the important thing to focus on.”
“It cannot hurt, though I am not certain if a tentradom will follow the same logic as we humans do.”
“How do you mean?”
“Specifically toward [Jobs].” Arzha lifted her blonde hair, combing it back behind her shoulders real quick. Smooth and free flowing, she struck an imposing sight even while relaxed. “A [Job] results from great work, time, and effort in specific matters. My knights earned the job of [Knight], which is a progression from [Cavalry], which progresses from [Soldier].”
Avaron did a double-take. “What the hell is this? It’s the first I’m hearing of it.”
“If you do not know your [Job], then either you cannot have one or you have not earned one yet,” Arzha said, sounding thoughtful. “I know monja do not regularly acquire [Jobs], but it has been random who does or does not. Ah, but you are also a divine heroine, which may change things.”
“This is sounding like a real pain. What do these [Jobs] do then?”
Arzha tapped her chin, eyes narrowed in contemplation. “Earning a [Job] bestows benefits related to that [Job]’s [Skills], or even [Abilities]. Imagine two knights together: one without the [Job], one with. The differences in their strengths will be not only noticeable, but imposingly difficult to cross.”
“So people are born with these?”
“No, they are always earned. A [Job] results from hardwork and dedication, nothing else. This is why many queendoms and kingdoms are especially keen on rewarding and retaining such people.”
“Naturally, these Lances all have [Jobs].”
“I would be surprised if they did not,” Arzha said. Some of her knights emerged then, carrying trays of tea and salted bread that might’ve been a form of cracker. Or crumpet. Avaron couldn’t tell it apart. The two of them spent a moment sipping lightly and nibbling, busy with their own thoughts.
“… Wait a second,” Avaron said, jerking to a stop before taking another sip of tea. “Is that how people know I’m a tentradom so damn much? This white skin and blue flesh can’t be that distinct.” She waved her hand up and down herself for emphasis.
“It is the tentacle-like … muscles, the most. But, there are some who have [Skills] that identify a bloodline,” Arzha informed, looking amused. Well, as amused as someone with such stiff expressions could be. Maybe Avaron was imagining that mirth in her icy blue eyes.
"My muscles?” Avaron looked down at her hand and the connective tissues. Superficially similar to human hands, just with the fact her porcelain skin was ‘attached’ to the underlying tentacle flesh.
“The saying is, ‘ropes for muscles, skin that writhes, nearer is the tentradom’. Or, some slanged idea of that. It is the iconic appearance of the tentradom, no matter what its body actually looks like.” Arzha took a dignified sip. “Perhaps because you seem human, many would overlook it at a first glance. The tentradom of legend and you are, ah, quite different.”
“I could disguise it, but then those special people would still see my bloodline.”
“Monja assassins and their ilk have a method of doing so, though I do not know the specifics. If you did, and someone used a method to break the illusion, it would be an effective first layer of defense.”
Hm. The strange part is my level hasn’t really increased all that fast. After fucking Gwyneth and Tsugumi enough it did again, but … Hm. All the animals I’ve been hunting down haven’t done anything for me. The kagr didn’t. The knights didn’t; the Lance might’ve but they ran away. Do I not level up through killing, or is it simply too slow compared to fucking? Avaron frowned. “How fast does it take to raise someone to being a [Knight]?”
“From childhood? Ten to twenty years, depending on their aptitude.”
“So the death of one is quite a serious matter.”
“Yes.”
“Hmm.”
“Why do you ask?”
“Trying to figure out my own level up routine. I’m already level 5 but …”
“That is quite fast,” Arzha said, almost exasperated. “For peasants that is a lifetime of work you have done in the span of a single year.”
“But it isn’t fast enough.” Arzha stared disbelievingly at her, but Avaron met her eyes with an unwavering seriousness. “I have to kill actual Goddesses,” she said resolutely. “I have to be stronger, faster, or things like those Lances will come. I won’t always have Nuala or Nahtura around to scare them away, either.”
“I understand, but the task of which you speak is beyond unfathomable to me.”
Avaron shrugged lightly. “Welcome to the club.”
*~*
A tall ceiling, supported by evenly placed columns of solid red wood enveloped her. Fine tapestries covered the walls, painted with scenes of beautiful locations, from vistas to rivers and even the oceans. Between them sat many rows of spindly lamps, gently alight with magical crystals. Being the ‘front desk’ area of the inn, all sorts of hallways branched out of it, and a staircase wound around the room up to a tall, almost third-story high second floor. Hanamaru sighed while she entered, the quiet ambience a welcome reprieve. Not long after returning to the capital, she dealt with Honda and his overbearing attitude for the entire day. The mat floor sank under her immense weight, and the awaiting servant at the front desk bowed at her approach.
“Hanamaru-sama, welcome.”
“Yeah,” she grunted. “Is the room ready?”
“Your usual room is ready, yes.”
That phrasing caught her ear, but she showed no expression. And which kami sent them upon me now? Hanamaru wondered with exasperation. “I skipped lunch, so make the dinner harraxin big.”
The attendant bowed. “Of course.”
Grunting, Hanamaru turned and trudged up the stairs, the wood frame creaking under her weight. Even without all her armor and weapons, dressed in the flimsy tapestry of a ‘dress’, she exuded power and pressure. The uniqueness of a harraxin body meant clothing was more ‘strips of tied together cloth in particular ways’. Hers, at least, denoted her respectable rank and achievements with stylized wordings of victory in certain battles. Those who were about to go downstairs wisely went to the sides, waiting for her to pass instead.
The rich part of the inn she usually lived in ended up blissfully empty of people. Servants quietly flitted from room to room, gathering orders or dispensing novelties as clients needed. Such expansive rooms were the only ones remotely comfortable for her; not out of any sense of luxury, just the size. Rolling over and tearing down a wall in the process got old, terribly quickly. Her ‘usual’ room stood at the far end of the inn, at the corner of the floor where a big window could overlook the gardens below. Staring at the paper-sliding door, Hanamaru daintily used a single finger to push it open. She had to bow slightly to pass through, lest her spines rip at the edges.
“How wonderful for you—“
“—to finally come, Hanamaru.”
Just hearing that sentence beginning-and-ending duo made her want to leave right then and there.
In the middle of the grand room sat two women, their white snake-tailed lower halves curled under and around them. Tints of sea green hued their otherwise homogenous scales, offering an almost iridescent sheen. Beautiful kimonos of lilac and emerald colors adorned them, one of theirs embroidered with that of a flowering tree, the other of a flowing, grassy field. Thin ropes tied their clothing to their body, while voluminous sleeves hid their folded-together arms. Two pairs of brilliant scarlet eyes stared into her, so powerful in their prominence the eye couldn’t help fixating upon them. Hanamaru, long since used to the twin’s deceptively captivating beauty, scoffed. “Not like there’s a choice.”
“Even a dog can be disobedient sometimes,” one of them said, smiling politely. With their straight brow-cut, flowing black hair and imperiously nation-ruining beauty, the act might’ve seen flirty almost.
"But you would never bite us,” the other remarked.
“I’d break my teeth on those scales,” Hanamaru bit back dryly, making the two of them gasp and cover their mouths. Stepping into the room and shutting the door, she soon plopped down onto the extra-sized cushion, flattening the poor thing under her steel-hard butt. “What do you two want, Taiyoko, Tsukiko?”
The twins smiled together as they ever did. They were virtually impossible to tell apart when they tried, but Hanamaru knew them well enough. That and of the two, Tsukiko had a tiny mole on her left brow, which was a dead give away it was her. Together, they were one of the five pillars the held up Kitinchi, the esteemed ladies of the Celestial Sanctum.
“A bird flew onto our window and told us of your meeting with Honda,” Tsukiko said.
“Were you not going to come to us first with such important matters?” Taiyoko asked.
No amount of alcohol could bury the headache Hanamaru felt coming on. “Tomorrow, obviously. Can I not get a night of decent sleep?”
“No,” they said.
Hanamaru scratched at her face, her claws and tough skin making a distinct noise. “Yeah, well, whatever you heard is what I’d tell you. Honda made contact with one that seems smart, by the name of Avaron. A tentradom, no less.”
“A tentradom?” Taiyoko echoed, her brows disappearing into her hair. “Heroines are always humans.”
“Not this time around. Honda’s real eager to win her over to his interests.”
“It would be a problem if that flower picker did so,” Tsukiko said gravely. The implications of it turned their good natured jabbing sour, and their faces all turned serious. Well, theirs did—Hanamaru was always serious. “How eager is he?”
“Enough to put Kagura on dog duty and give out decades worth of knowledge on worldly affairs,” Hanamaru said. “Avaron quite liked that but it’s not sold her over, yet.”
“How can you tell?”
“What does she want?”
Their tandem questions always proved the most tiring. “She’s weak, but smart. Maybe smarter than Honda. I spent the winter over there and watched her all the while. Not even the other heroines were—“
“There were more?” they asked together and Hanamaru rolled her eyes.
“Yes, the princess of Artor showed up, and then six more followed after her. When I left, seven heroines were all camping together.”
“That is a problem.”
“This is bad.”
“Honda won’t get a grip on them just yet, Efval already has.”
“Really?” Taiyoko asked, tilting her head. “The elvetahn queen has personal interest?”
“Enough to put Nuala on dog duty and give Avaron a bunch of help in making a crappy village.”
Tsukiko’s head tilted then. “A village?”
“Avaron’s on the other side of the Alva Forest, toward what used to be Artor. All kinds of people are setting up on her house, and none of them are small deals.”
“Hmm.” The twins hummed then turned to each other, lifting their sleeves to hide their faces. So they went into a private conversation, speaking hushed but rapidly.
For as eccentric as the two of them were, they proved steadfast allies. Them and Hanamaru constituted two of the pillars of Kitinchi, and the other three were firmly within Honda’s grasp. The political stalemate left them neutered, and Honda has been content to sit on the throne, enjoying his profane tastes and exorbitant luxuries. Despite all their maneuvering, they hadn’t managed to dislodge the other pillars or gain a meaningful foothold. If Honda secured the help of divine heroines, they’d be swallowed up entirely by his slovenly rule.
An imminent, existential threat they had to answer, one way or another.
If they could secure the heroines, however, saving Kitinchi might not be such a feverish dream anymore.
The twins pulled out of their discussion. “This tentradom, Avaron,” Tsukiko spoke up, “what can you tell us about her?”
“She’s got quite the bark,” Hanamaru remarked, smirking with stupid amusement. “Like I said, smart. She’s aware of her strengths and weaknesses, and how to handle them. Unlike every other tentradom, she’s got her lust in check, too. Two ‘wives’ already, but that’s it. I don’t know if Efval has a sword to her throat or not, but she behaves.”
“And what kind of strength does she have?” Taiyoko inquired.
“Strange one. She is weaker than a human, almost. But, all her tentacle children …” Hanamaru frowned, thinking for a moment. “From what I figured out, she’s like a bee queen, and the children are the bees. She’s making an army, slowly but surely. I’d handle them no problem, but thousands of them attacking …”
The tips of the twins’ tails wagged back and forth, betraying their excitement even as they stared stoically at her. “Such interesting potential,” Tsukiko said. “We have to meet with her.”
“Yes, we do,” Taiyoko added on.
“I can’t go there without Honda ordering me to,” Hanamaru said dryly. “It’d look real bad.”
“We know that,” the two said, staring at her like she was an idiot. “Write a letter for us,” Taiyoko ordered. “Introduce us on your behalf. We will meet the tentradom ourselves.”
“Kagura is there. If Honda catches wind—“
“It is no issue,” Tsukiko said, smiling and showing her fangs.
They were making a stupidly bold plan, but they weren’t idiots. Hanamaru shrugged, spines cackling together in the simple motion. “Anyway, that’s that. There’s a real problem that’s come up.”
“What?” they asked.
“Honda’s being quiet about it, but I met a newborn nagraki with a doomblade.” The two looked at her as if she was crazy for a long moment.
“Tell us what happened,” Taiyoko demanded first.
And so Hanamaru recounted her brief exchange, itself unimportant save the two details she just mentioned. “More than that,” Hanamaru added on, “I heard the elvetahn killed a highborn of all things.”
“And you believe that true?”
“If that was a lie it would be a damn strange one to make.”
“It would be,” Tsukiko agreed. “Then, we must assume the nagraki are returning in full, and are prepared to do so.”
“Honda cannot stand against them,” Taiyoko said pensively. “He has fallen too far from glory. No, worse, he is susceptible to their influence.”
“If he hasn’t been under it already,” Hanamaru remarked.
“You believe so?” Tsukiko asked.
“It’d be the only redeemable thing for what he’s done.”
The three sat there, all sorts of implications heavy in the air.
“We will handle Avaron for now,” Taiyoko declared. “Get everything in order on your end, Hanamaru. Tides of change are coming, and we must swim better than Honda.”
“Yeah, I know.”
All things said and done, the twins bowed and then slithered their way out of the room. Alone at last, Hanamaru sighed and flopped down onto the floor, chest-side first. It squished her boobs terribly but it was better than ripping open tatami mat with her spines. Letting out a long, groaning sigh, she deflated, and scratched her ass. War again, huh? Hanamaru mused, chewing on her fat tongue. I lost before to you, Honda, but you’re not the same man anymore. No, the kami will be on my side this time.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.9) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquittances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.18) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Lustful Dryad
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 45: An Unchanging Fortress (E)
Notes:
(See the end of the chapter for notes.)
Chapter Text
Even the oldest growths can still bloom.
*~*
A whistling wind swept through the forest, brushing along every leaf and branch. The rustling canopy danced to tweeting birds, bravely chirping insects, and the solemn, muted crunch of paws. Sounds so familiar and dear to her, unoriginal in their make, but always different in how they played. Spring approached, and with it, the warm airs. Cold thawing to warmth, invigorating passion and desperation together.
The sudden, immediate heavy buzzing beside Nahtura’s ear made her closed eyes twitch. “Oh?”
Turning her head slowly, she regarded the hummingbird beside her as it stared at her. Nahtura reached over and daintily grabbed the tiny thing, letting it rest in her hand. It ruffled about for a moment before settling down, content to be held. She relaxed onto her back, the tree branch beneath as unyielding and stiffly comfortable as ever. The burning sun, too, as bright and eye searing as ever.
Just another day; another spring among countless others.
The hummingbird made the tiniest of keening, air-whistling chirps.
“How cute,” Nahtura remarked. “She cannot evade me forever.”
Her senses remained everywhere and nowhere; as far as she could see, as forever as she wanted. Through roots and dirt, worms and grubs, birds and beasts, Nahtura peered. Seeing, feeling, hearing; listening with everything. Thankfully, the one she looked for wasn’t that hard to find. In the vastness of the forest, such otherliness stood out. It’d take more work to not notice the intrusion than otherwise.
Such white, stone-like creatures meandering through the woods were truly an odd sight. So close to being like spiders, so different in the places where it mattered. Differences Nahtura recognized as being a tentradom’s, even if no tentradom she remembered lived with such bodies. It’d surprised her in an unimaginable way the first time she beheld them. Beings of change, confined to solidity.
Only the woman that walked amongst them that seemed far more natural.
Sweet, infuriating Avaron, a supple and lithe womanly creature bristling with tentacles and flesh yet hidden. Beautiful in a way Nahtura wanted between her legs as much as ripped apart with her hands. She couldn’t get a single moment’s indulgence with Avaron no matter how she tried. For one who ravaged her wives almost every night, that tentradom left nothing to spare at all.
Not even a single droplet of morning dew, for trees’ sake.
Nahtura smiled, her lips curving upwards as her eyes betrayed a vexed anger. Should I love or rip her apart? she wondered, not for the first time. It’d been forever since a contradictory problem like Avaron wormed its way into her woods. She truly hadn’t a clue how things would end, an exciting difference unto itself. Mayhaps rip her apart after one birthing?
Oh, what a nice thought.
She couldn’t remember the last time something living squirmed inside her belly. A certain weight that made every other part of the body change, however slight it may be. The more she thought on such delightful ideas, the more Nahtura twitched. An itch of need that agitated her enough she knew she couldn’t lay about anymore. That, too, she’d long gone without. Many springs were just the same as winter to her, but not anymore, it seemed.
Laboriously sitting upright, she opened her hand, letting the hummingbird flutter up into the air. It regarded her for a moment before buzzing off, searching for small bugs or bountiful flowers. Nahtura stretched her arms out, pulling muscles and bark wonderfully tight before easing up and sighing pleasantly. Scratching at her flowery hair, she finger-combed it into a fluffier, plump arrangement. Something she soon needed both hands to do properly.
A few ladybugs buzzed out of her hair, and Nahtura gave them a half-hearted wave good bye.
Licking her lips and feeling more awake, Nahtura simply sat on the branch. Staring out at everything and nothing, a moment of indecision lingered on her mind. She glanced downward, regarding her bountiful beauty and luxurious sensuality that was so apparently undesirable. Or at least, not something Avaron regarded as wildly as her ‘wives’.
Her tourmaline eyes narrowed irritably.
Nahtura plucked at her breasts, a listless dissatisfaction in her mood she found hard to name. Well, nothing to do here, she thought and pushed up into a stand. Spring time had come, and so too her time to collect on Avaron’s promise. The rest were all nonsense details that wouldn’t matter. Looking off to the side, she ‘gazed’ where Avaron would be, and then vanished into thin air.
In the next moment, she appeared on another, different branch. Down below, Avaron and some of her ‘tentaclelings’ meandered about. The tentradom herself crouched low, wearing a lovely dress that had a split-open skirt. Elvetahn make, though perhaps made out of tora silk. It wouldn’t surprise Nahtura; Avaron bred that four-armed chef relentlessly.
What are you doing? she wondered, squinting. It wasn’t like Avaron to be picking through foliage so particularly. Obviously looking for something, but Nahtura couldn’t imagine what. A tentacleling followed behind, baskets draped onto its sides. For what plants Avaron seemed to like, she chucked them into the baskets and kept searching. As to the other tentaclelings, they either stood watch or tried picking through plants themselves.
Nahtura watched them all for a few minutes, until Avaron seemed ready to move on. Taking a step forward, Nahtura pivoted off the branch and fell toward the ground. She landed in a solid, weighty thump, making everyone jump upward.
“FUCK!” Avaron yelped as she sprang into the air, then landed into a bush. The tentaclelings all snapped toward Nahtura, baring their legs menacingly before some semblance of recognition passed through them.
A predatory satisfaction rolled through Nahtura, their sheer surprise all too wonderful. Something she might’ve let out too much in her teeth-baring smile. “Hello there,” she purred, watching as Avaron spat leaves out and shoved the bush aside.
“You—you’re a real asshole, you know that?” Avaron huffed out, pointing accusingly at the surprised Nahtura. Relaxing into the bush, Avaron rubbed her eyes, seemingly taking a moment to relax.
How amazingly such one little line sucked all the mirth out of Nahtura. She pressed her lips together thinly, a rancorous irritation trembling through her leafy hair. “I am not.”
“Really?” Avaron asked dubiously. “Ambushing someone and scaring the life out of them is something nice to do?”
“If you are caught unaware, you will always be in danger.”
“So far you’re the only one who can slip past me,” Avaron retorted. “And I’d rather not look over my damn shoulder every second to see if you’re sneaking up.”
Perhaps, like some tiny, infinitesimal speck of dust, maybe Avaron was right. Nahtura remained unconvinced of the tentradom’s awareness all the same. There were plentiful enough beings out there who were even better at stealth than she herself. Straightening up and rolling her shoulders as to brush off the conversation, Nahtura looked around Avaron inquisitively. “What are you doing in my forest anyway?”
“On a picnic,” Avaron remarked, flippantly waving her hand around.
Nahtura would only accept so much sass before something should be done. She stepped over, her cloven feet sounding distinct on the ground. Planting one leg on either side of Avaron, she squatted down, comfortably sitting her butt on top of Avaron’s thighs. The tentradom let out an ‘oof’ at the sudden, heavy weight pinning her down. “Then if you aren’t busy, entertain me.”
Avaron gave her a look that answered everything before her venom-spitting mouth even opened. “Actually, there is something I’m busy about.”
“And what is that?”
“It’s a plant that’s most likely anti-septic in nature.”
Nahtura stared, hearing some familiar words and others that didn’t fit. “And what is that? ‘Anti-septic’?”
“Uh … medicinal?” Avaron offered, face scrunching up in some thoughtful confusion. “It’s an important feature of certain kinds of medicine.”
“Then simply say so. I know every little sapling in my forest,” Nahtura said, jerking her head and throwing her leafy hair over her shoulder. “What does it look like?”
“Ah, it’s—a somewhat long, thin stalk that goes up. The head of it droops down and starts curling in on itself, and there’s these fluffy, furry little hairs growing out of it?” Avaron gestured with her hands, vaguely outlining the details.
Nahtura’s brows furrowed together and she slowly glanced off to the side. “If it is what I think it is, then that way. A long walk, at that. They grow in the damp, still soil near springs.”
“Well, that does speed things up, thanks. Can you get up, please?”
Hearing even something remotely kind from Avaron surprised Nahtura enough she did stand up. The tentradom followed after, patting herself clean on the front and back. It seemed fussy and pointless for one digging through the earth, but somehow Avaron looked cute doing it. Really cute. Especially how her blue, floofy-and-fleshy hair moved when she finger-combed through it.
“I don’t know why I bother,” Avaron muttered under her breath, seeming finished. Only after that did she look up and regard the slightly-taller Nahtura staring down at her. “I have to get back to work collecting samples. If you’re, uh, wanting fun, the other me at the nest are being pretty randy right now.”
Nahtura blinked, caught off entirely by the idea. More than anything else about the ‘many’ Avarons, it was the feeling of being brushed off that rankled her leaves. Even if all the Avarons were the ‘same’, this one had quite the gall. Or, did all of them? She didn’t know, nor did she care. “You’ll do,” she said in simple, self-assured certainty.
Avaron’s face scrunched up in confusion. “I’m working, so whatever you want will have to wait.”
“Not for long.”
Avaron sighed, shrugging. “Suit yourself.”
Turning around, she and the nearby tentaclelings all started moving in unison. An eerie, symmetrical movement that tickled Nahtura’s instincts. Nonetheless, she walked alongside Avaron, easily matching the woman’s slow and careful steps. The tentradom moved with purpose, even if clearly out of her element. A tinge of confidence that her whole being showed, and something Nahtura rather liked as well.
The path ahead through the forest stood with all sorts of tall trees; some thicker than a house, others their young competitors. Crushed and flattened dirt paths marked the beast trails, while wild growth vied for everything else. Those places where sunlight slipped through the canopy were most fiercely fought over, and quite dense as a result. The likes of moss, lichen, and small growths vied for space on the tree’s great roots and unyielding ground.
“Do you intend to farm them?” Nahtura asked, watching Avaron. Every so often the tentradom paused and bent over, fingering one plant or leaf with an inquisitive gaze.
“No, more like assimilation.”
Nahtura squinted. “I truly despise these mysterious words of yours.”
Avaron, crouched down, looked over her shoulder, cocking an eyebrow. “Why?”
“It is hard to not feel stupid.”
Avaron seemed taken aback and visibly thought on her next words. “Well, it’s not like I don’t understand that feeling,” she said before turning back to the flower in front of her. A yellow-and-red colored thing with nine petals, and otherwise utterly unremarkable. “I feel stupid every day here. Magic, levels, systems, goddesses; you all know things like it’s the time of day. One day something I thought I understood behaves completely differently, and then I’m left being an idiot again.”
“And yet that is something you can learn. How am I supposed to understand what you say?”
“… By asking, I suppose?” Avaron offered and stood up. Unlike others, she passed over the flower and continued her walk onward. “It’s not like I mind.”
“It’s unflattering for me to ask questions,” Nahtura shot back hotly.
“In whose book?” Avaron looked at Nahtura dubiously. “Why wouldn’t I enjoy talking with a beauty like you?”
Nahtura’s eyes widened just the tiniest bit, surprise in her tourmaline gaze. There wasn’t anything heavy or remarkable in Avaron’s tone; no, it was that certainty in what she said that really struck home. Her wide, wedge-like ears wiggled on their own. She nearly grabbed them when she realized what they were doing. “Ah—me? Beautiful?” she asked, using scorn as her veil to hide surprise behind. “And here you seemed to have no regard for me at all.”
“Because I don’t know you.”
“What does that have to do with anything?”
“Everything?” Avaron remarked, sounding as if it was the most obvious thing in the world. Their trek ran into some large, winding roots of a great tree. Thankfully not too big they had to climb or go around. Avaron, grunting with exertion, hefted up onto one root then another. Nahtura simply hopped alongside her, bouncing from one spot to the next without an issue. “It’s not like—hnng—like you can walk up, say ‘let’s fuck’, and then I’ll get to doing the business.”
“And what is wrong with that?”
Pausing for a moment to exhale-and-sigh at once, Avaron braced herself on her knees. “I’m so out of god damn shape. And, what’s wrong with that is that’s not how I work!”
“You’re a tentradom,” Nahtura stated matter-of-factly.
“Thanks, I hadn’t noticed that,” Avaron bit back. Their eyes clashed for a moment before she went to surmounting the next couple of tree roots.
Trying not to roll her eyes indignantly, Nahtura instead asked, in the sweetest of cutting tones, “Fine. Why do you not want to have sex?”
“Because there’s a lot of necessary qualifiers to that idea. Yes, yes, I’m a tentradom—hnngg—and my sex drive is through the roof and into the stratosphere. I spend most of my time jerking off in a corner or fingering myself until my pussy glows like a lighthouse. Believe me, I’d love to have unrelenting sex every night—and you!” Avaron, having reached the top of the roots, pointed at Nahtura accusingly. The dryad, half-way to saying something, held up her hands like she’d been ambushed.
“The reason I’m so particular about it is because I need to have control. I can’t just go wild. The second I start slipping down that slope, every woman in Eden is going to end up a piece of breeding meat at auction. And maybe—just maybe, a tiny bit—” Avaron pinched her fingers together, “—I want to know who I’m in bed with. I want to like them enough to make them happy. I don’t want to just treat them like a rag whenever my endless needs flare up.”
A pregnant pause hung between them, but Avaron broke it first with a shake of her head. “Sorry. There’s a lot more frustration behind this than you need to deal with.”
Nahtura stared for a long, piercing moment. Something that made Avaron visibly uncomfortable, but to her virtue, she hadn’t wilted. “Why are you so afraid of yourself?” she asked, tilting her head, leafy-hair rustling.
Avaron chuckled, running her fingers through her loose bangs. “I have a list a universe long for why I should be.”
“But how will you ever learn to control yourself, if you do not embrace what you are?”
“Carefully. Or enough I don’t have to ‘embrace’ myself.”
“You talk like a fish who doesn’t want to swim in the river,” Nahtura said.
“Yeah, it’d be a lot easier if I didn’t care as much. But here I am, caring too much. Doesn’t matter which world I’m in, apparently.” Without missing a beat, Avaron sucked in another lungful, then started climbing down across the roots again. While the height of it all was perhaps no more than a small hut, the uneven footing and slippery angles were still dangerous if one went too fast.
It seemed terribly trivial to Nahtura, but if Avaron wanted to, she could only watch. What an inane way of thinking, she mused. To think even a tentradom would be trapped in the ways of people. How utterly ridiculous.
But, that was ever the problem, wasn’t it?
The forest of old was long gone. Only she remained; Tahn, her nearest companion in time, hadn’t been there at the beginning. Her children vanished and different creatures that looked like them took their place. Tentradoms, once lost, carried on in one misshapen mockery of what they used to be. Yet, of all things that could harken to the old times, Avaron appeared by far the closest. Even she, however, remained trapped in that ephemeral nightmare called civilization.
She jumped down after Avaron, landing beside her. The two continued onward, Nahtura following wherever Avaron’s wandering eyes took her. Particularly mindful in everything she did, Avaron only took the seeding or fruiting parts of plants. The ones that couldn’t, or didn’t, she ripped up from the ground outright. The silence that fell between them proved a stagnant and uncomfortable thing, but one Nahtura found hard to pierce.
Still, she had to try.
“What is this ‘assimilation’ you mentioned, then?” Nahtura asked, even her most curious of voices sounding harsh and testy.
“Something, something, DNA,” Avaron muttered. She’d crouched next to a bush and plucked a fistful of yellow berries out. Eying them critically, she seemed unamused by what she found. “These are poisonous little bastards, aren’t they?”
Nahtura leaned over Avaron, gazing down inquisitively. “Ah, lung-chokers. Only birds may feast upon them.”
“Hmm. Well, dangerous stuff will be for another time.” Avaron chucked her handful back into the bush and stood up. A motion that almost sent her colliding with Nahtura straight on. She awkwardly craned away just in time, briefly surprised by how close they were. “Uh, right, what was it? What’s assimilation?”
“Yes,” Nahtura said slowly, tilting her head until it was almost half sideways. Despite their closeness, she noticed something–or rather, its distinct lack of presence. Avaron had no real scent. Everything stuck to her clearly enough, but once she worked through the grime of the forest, nothing distinct remained. Completely and totally absent; not even traces like in her nest.
“Well. Did you hear anything about how genetics works?”
“The tiny books inside blood, was it?”
“Yeah, sort of. It might be a little hard, but—“ Avaron scratched her forehead for a moment, then swept her hand in a wide gesture, “—all living things have DNA. It’s the building blocks of life. The books that have everything that life is, and ever was.”
“You speak so easily of knowledge that Marual herself would die to hear,” Nahtura said observantly.
“Who?”
“An old goddess of life who ended her own after one too many wars. The mysteries of the living ever fascinated her.”
“Oh.” A pause hung between them, Avaron visibly uncertain what to say. “A pity, I think. Anyway, all this has DNA. As a tentradom, I have not only an awareness of it, but the power to interact with it. To study, change, and create it on my own.”
She stepped away from Nahtura, leaving a void of presence the dryad certainly noticed. Avaron, oblivious, went beside one of her basket-carrying tentaclelings and gestured toward it. “By eating these plants, I can assimilate their DNA into myself. All their strengths, weaknesses, and everything else about them. It’s how I’ve been able to make changes to the rest of the Hive.”
“In another tongue, that would sound like theft of a sort,” Nahtura mused aloud. The whole of it seemed quite novel, but Avaron ever carried sincerity to her insane ideas. It wasn’t that different from the tentradoms of old, but the phrasing of it all was … strange. Tentradom spawn, no matter what form they took, carried on the blood of their parents. The oldest truth of life itself: the joining of two or more, to pass on what they were. Yet, Avaron suggested something … else. “So why mate at all, then? Or breed? Or have children? If you can take in ‘DNA’ like that.”
“It’s—complex. Right now I’m a dumb monkey banging two rocks together. Mating and popping out kids is like a blacksmith hammering out iron. If that makes any sense.”
“And what happens when you are better than that blacksmith?”
“Not a clue.”
They stared for a moment before Avaron motioned with her head to continue onward. Their trek through the forest resumed, Avaron and Nahtura falling in pace alongside each other. It’d been slight, but not long after, the air grew ever more humid. A telltale sign of great water nearby, at least.
“There’s nothing more to it than that? Guessing?” Nahtura asked suspiciously.
“I have plenty ideas of how things might go. I won’t know for certain until I get there.”
It wasn’t an original thought; no, she’d heard similar over the eons just the same. Some nebulous idea, concocted from insanity into some purpose or goal. The simplest were ever ‘I must become stronger’ and their like. Those made sense enough. The rest Nahtura only bothered to understand by necessity, no matter how much she rather didn’t.
“You seem upset.”
Avaron’s remark made Nahtura jerk and touch her own face, feeling how it was arranged. Contemptuously neutral, as it should’ve been. “And why do you say that?” she asked, casting narrowed eyes at the tentradom.
“It’s the only time you’re quiet.”
“It is not.”
“We don’t exactly hang out enough for me to know otherwise,” Avaron said dryly.
“Hang out what?”
“No, no, it means ‘be together’. You’re either prowling in my hydroponics rooms or about to tear my head off.”
Avaron had such a succinct way of saying things it both charmed and vexed her. Nahtura simply huffed, stretching her arms upward, and not giving any real acknowledgement. The tentradom regarded her for a moment before letting out a snort and smirking.
Not all silences were terrible, and this one proved blissfully quaint.
In some time, they reached the marshy-like lands of Avaron’s quarry. Humid air hung heavily, a stench of mire and foliage quite unlike the rest of the forest. It wasn’t a full and complete marsh, but something in between. The soil, soft and malleable, proved to be something Nahtura dearly hated. Her hooves sank slightly with every step, triggering some instinctive discomfort about losing her footing. Not to mention how it just stuck to her in that suffocating, muddy muck.
“Over there,” she barked out irritably, pointing. “Some of it is there.”
Avaron, her sandals making a disgusting suck and plorp with every step, headed over. Nahtura followed from a distance, trying to keep up by walking along solid roots and hardy patches of soil. She ended up beside the tree Avaron’s quarry grew by, while the tentradom crouched down in front of it.
“Hmm, yup. This seems to be it,” Avaron mused aloud, fingering the fluffy head of the plant. Her hand soon traced down the stalk itself, going to the base, where she sunk her fingers into the ground and ripped it up entirely. Throwing it into nearly full baskets of her tentacleling, she ripped up a few more before finishing. Patting her hands clean, Avaron regarded the tentacleling for a long moment.
Then it simply turned around and headed off back the way they came. Some others, also laden with harvested plants, joined it. No speech, no motions, nothing at all for communication, just action. An uncanniness, if for a moment, that struck Nahtura at the sight of it all. So very much like animals, yet so distinctly different from how tentradoms used to be.
“… You never said why you needed to ‘assimilate’ in the first place,” she said, slowly turning her gaze upon Avaron. “Can I not see that as trying to take nature’s power away?”
“Take? No. Copy? Yes. All of this is—well, I don’t know how old this world is, actually.” Avaron clapped her hands together, frowning irritably at the dirt still clinging on. When that didn’t work, she shrugged and started pointing randomly around them. “All of this has history, and that history is maintained in part within DNA. By assimilating and copying that, I acquire that history for my own use. Even if I don’t need something right now, that doesn’t mean it won’t be useful later.”
There were many people Nahtura met over the course of forever, and those with ambitions were always memorable. Whether insane or possessed of vision only they understood, they had a presence that commanded attention. The world changed around them, however minutely, and things wouldn’t be the same. For better or worse, they always did something.
Compared to them, Avaron was a small, flickering firefly in a vast forest. Ignoble and unremarkable, but it was then that Nahtura felt her gut was wrong, for once. Avaron carried a confidence and knowing to everything she did, even the uncertain parts of it. A plan built piece-by-piece, fragmented in a way no one could discern its true form. But, Nahtura, ignorant of what it may become, could recognize its potential. The shadow of its presence that so many others may have overlooked.
“You are exceedingly dangerous,” she surmised, her thoughts slipping out of her mouth.
Avaron blinked and slowly looked down at herself. “Am I?”
“Someone like you could devour this whole world.”
“Oh, well, that’s the easy part.”
“’That’s the easy part’,” Nahtura echoed with a laughing chortle, something Avaron didn’t share in the slightest. That straight-laced, unwavering stare certainly drained the fun out.
“Yes, it is.”
“And you, who sweats in nervous fear about confronting goddesses, say the world is easy to devour?” Nahtura said, stepping down from the root and into the awful muddy ground again. She soon stood before Avaron, peering down at the shorter tentradom with unwavering eyes. “Are you a convincing liar, perhaps?”
“The mere mention of nuclear weapons made you recoil,” Avaron returned smoothly, the hint of a smirk on her lips. “You haven’t even asked what the other methods I know are.”
“Would you tell me if I did?”
“Maybe,” Avaron said, her whole expression one of coy teasing and mysteriousness.
Nahtura smiled more and more, her black, sharp teeth revealing. She leaned down and cupped Avaron’s cheeks, each individual finger clamping onto her skull. Four cradled Avaron’s jaw, both back and underside, while Nahtura’s thumbs gently massaged just underneath her eyes. How peculiarly soft and warm the tentradom felt; no, perhaps the truest, first time Nahtura had a chance for a good feel.
How delightful.
How vexing.
She couldn’t really deny how intriguing and infuriating Avaron could be; how mysterious and how banal she was. A curious mixture of so many little things into one living contradiction that Nahtura found captivating. She squeezed a little bit tighter, Avaron staring at her with an easy, normal expression. Not a hint of fear or concern, even if from an outside perspective, Nahtura seemed ready to rip her head off.
“I think,” Nahtura purred out, “your work is done now, isn’t it?”
Avaron squinted and slowly said, “Ssssure?”
Slowly sliding her hands down, Nahtura felt every inch of Avaron’s smooth skin and supple neck. There were no muscles underneath, only tentacles and tendrils stitched together in one squishy tapestry. It wasn’t at all like holding any other person in its uniquely strange way. Ah, but she did love the feel of it. Such an old, familiar feeling from long ago, something that might’ve been lost forever.
Giddiness crept in her chest, a pure joy Nahtura had long gone without.
When her hands reached Avaron’s shoulders, she quickly reached done with one, and grabbed the tentradom underneath her butt. In one smooth, hauling throw, she slung Avaron over her shoulder.
“W-what?!” Avaron squeaked out, legs kicking and hands flailing to grab Nahtura’s backside.
Ah, how wonderful, Nahtura thought with a teeth-showing smile. The feeling of a maiden upon her shoulder, too, was something she hadn’t indulged in a long time. She did love how they all struggled the same. Hooking an arm around Avaron’s knees, and placing a hand on the tentradom’s back, she made to carry her squirmy prey. “Then let us play as I wish!” Nahtura declared, crouching down, and then leaping forward.
She ran like a deer, bouncing across the ground from spot to spot, leaving behind the other tentaclelings and the dreary marsh.
“Guess I’m going this way now,” Avaron remarked dryly, bouncing like a sack of potatoes on Nahtura’s shoulder.
*~*
A babbling brook ran through the forest; wide, but shallow, and barely to one’s ankles. The surrounding banks were a mixture of gravel and mud, the aftermath of what’d once been a much larger river. Smaller trees, still bigger than houses but not quite the ancient elders of the deep Alva Forest, ran alongside the banks. Nahtura’s tourmaline eyes honed in on the scenery, captivating her toward to it. The whole of her bouncing and running body pivoted after, seamlessly finding new footing in her sudden turn.
In a final, pronounced leap she sailed through the air, Avaron flapping on her shoulder. Slamming into the gravel, pebbles shot up in the air from the force of the impact. What few animals dare brave such open grounds snapped awake, fleeing with instinctual fear. A rain-like sound accompanied the pebbles falling, and Nahtura stood up straight, inspecting her choice of land. When all had settled, and the sound of a gentle brook could be heard, she huffed with satisfaction.
“Here will do,” she said, as much as thought, aloud.
“Ugh—for what?” Avaron grunted, sounding exhausted for some reason.
“Fun. What else?”
“’Fun’. On gravel?” came the incredulous question.
“Of course not. A lush and comfortable growth will treat us!” Nahtura said, finishing in a declarative sweep of her arm. The surrounding area, for a moment, simply existed. Then it continued to exist, doing nothing at all. Although Nahtura couldn’t see Avaron, she felt the tentradom’s eyes boring into her. “I said GROW!” Nahtura roared, slamming her hoof down into the ground.
A shockwave rippled out, pure physical power underpinning the surging wild energies. Wisps of green, orange, and blue came on invisible gusts of winds, sweeping across the gravel. The ground trembled and shook, rattling the tiny pebbles. Then, from between those pieces of rock, roots grew. Tree branches, wafting in the winds, suddenly snapped alive. Blades of grass soon followed; as if the entire area had come alive, it all grew with increasing speed and frightening rampancy.
The roots underneath erupted in size, brushing aside the gravel to intertwine with each other. The trees grew overhead, becoming a single shared canopy that suddenly blotted out the bright sunlight. A pleasantly warm hue swallowed the once sunny area, easy to see in, but not offensively blinding either. Vines of a kind soon fell from the canopy, beautiful blue and yellow flowers popping alive across them.
“What the fuu-UUCK?” Avaron’s dubious question turned into a whelp when Nahtura suddenly yanked her forward. The tentradom ended up bridal style across the dryad’s arms, blinking with alarm. Nahtura, however, simply smiled toothily.
A root grew up underneath her hooves, lifting and moving the two of them along with. It met with the others, all of them coming to form a log cabin-like floor arrangement. As all the other plants grew into place, it took a shape that suddenly made more and more sense. The vines above wove together into a lattice, upon which flowers and great leaves filled the empty spaces between. The roots made the floor, while the walls became dangling lines of tiny berries and nuts.
It wasn’t a proper house, rather more like a gazebo than anything else. As all the sudden growths finally calmed and slowed down, a rustling sound came. Soft, fluffy grass sped across the root floor, tiny dandelions, sunflowers, and other cute plants popping up afterward. Then and only then did peace return, and Nahtura set Avaron down gently. The tentradom held her hands out, stabilizing for a moment before patting herself down.
“Okay, I’ll admit, that was pretty cool.”
“What is ‘cool’? It is not cold here.”
“Uh …” Avaron paused, seeming vexed. “It was awesome but in a subtle sort of way. Amazing without being loud.”
Nahtura mulled the idea over; in some ways, perhaps it fit. Avaron, meanwhile, busied herself with looking around at the various plants. In fact, she seemed more attentive to them than Nahtura herself!
“Most of these I recognize,” Avaron muttered, rubbing her chin. “They’re all fairly mundane.” She glanced at Nahtura. “How did you make them grow like that?”
“I am the forest,” Nahtura said, a hint of indignancy to her words. “Why would it not answer my command?”
“So like a [Hive Mind]?”
“A what?”
“Err, well, never mind.”
Avaron headed over to the edge of the abode, seeming like she was to leave. However, the tentradom stopped at the edge, instead looking up at the sky expectantly. Nahtura crept over and looked upward too, spying through the open passages in the overhead canopy. Nothing untoward appeared, nor did she feel anything of note.
“What is it?”
“Trying to coordinate some ground-to-air communication here,” Avaron remarked. She suddenly perked up, smiling wryly. “Ah, there we go.”
Nahtura hadn’t time for even annoyance before the sound of heavy beats reached her ears. A gruesome creature resembling a bird, and somehow suffused with far too many eyes, dived through the canopy. It swooped by, throwing a large basket at the ground before Avaron, then hurriedly sought to fly away again. The dryad recognized that, to some extent, it too was a tentacle creature, but far more mutant and strange than any other she’d seen.
Avaron hopped down to the gravel floor and went to pick up the basket. She hauled the surprisingly large thing over toward Nahtura, setting it down on the freshly-grown gazebo floor. “Here it is.”
“What is it?” Nahtura found herself echoing, craning her head with interest. The yellow-straw woven basket had a cloth covering the top, one that Avaron opened up. A bucket, some bottles, cloths, and other things all filled the interior. It reminded her of bathing supplies, at least the ones Efval preferred so much. “Oh?” Her head tilted to the other side.
“Since you’re bringing me back to your place, I figured I’d have a few extra supplies air dropped in,” Avaron said, rustling around in the basket. Her goal seemed to be the bucket everything else was inside, which made getting it out a pain. “Creature comforts are one of my guilty pleasures, after all.”
“… If you wanted something, you could ‘ask me’,” Nahtura said, smiling with pointed intent.
“I wouldn’t want you to think I can’t do anything, you know?” Avaron retorted and finally got her bucket cleared out and ready. “Can you put all this inside?” she asked, nudging the basket toward Nahtura. “I’ll be right back.”
Unbound curiosity gripped Nahtura, and though she picked up the basket, she simply stood by a wood rail to watch Avaron. The tentradom hustled out to the brook nearby, filling the bucket with clear waters. Something about it struck Nahtura, the sight somehow … cute, and endearing? Evocative, at least, of a time long ago. Times of having to bucket her own water, when only nature ruled the world. She wearily scratched her head, a sudden feeling of age she loathed to ever acknowledge.
Avaron returned, and with some exertion, climbed up onto the grown floor. “Oof—okay. Is there a chair or something you could sit on?”
The two stared at each other for a moment before looking further into the abode. Although Nahtura commanded it to grow, the interior was auspiciously empty of anything. She squinted her eyes, and the forest wisely understood her intent. The floor cracked open, newly grown branches taking shape right in front of them. A round spiral-shaped table, accompanied by two chairs fixed to the ground.
“That works, I guess. Come on,” Avaron said, heading over with her water-laden bucket. She set it down heavily on the ground while Nahtura set the strange basket on the table. “That’s that. You sit down now. Sit, sit.”
A bewildered Nahtura found herself being ushered into a chair and made to sit down. “What are you doing?” she asked with a hint of exasperation.
Avaron, retrieving a bar of soap and wash cloth from the basket, started lathering them up in the bucket of water. “Making soap. Also, lift up your leg.”
“Why?”
“Come on, lift it up.”
Nahtura was starting to think something weird was going on, but her damnable curiosity made her lift a leg up. Avaron held Nahtura up by the calf, while her other hand carried the soapy washcloth. The tentradom’s critical eyes swept over Nahtura’s hoof of a foot, something that made Nahtura even more leery.
“So I don’t know if this will tickle, but just bear with it?” Avaron said flippantly, then got to work.
“Tickle? N-no, but—why are you doing this?” Nahtura found her own voice jumping unexpectedly. The whole feeling of a cloth on her hoof, someone else doing all the work, and just having to take it really unsettled her. She fought the impulse to kick her leg straight into Avaron’s face, barely suppressing the tremor of twitching muscles.
“All the mud seemed to bother you,” Avaron remarked with casual flippancy. “We’re not in a rush or anything, so, I figured cleaning it off would help.”
Oh, no. Avaron’s steadfast gaze, her unwavering hands, the solemn practicality of cleaning off Nahtura’s hoof—the dryad felt herself becoming itchy by the moment. A heated sort of itch, one that crept under her skin and bark. It even burned inside her face, and she found it that much harder to look down. Averting her eyes, Nahtura leaned onto the table, using her hand to cover as much of her face as she could.
Nahtura refused every ounce of the embarrassment that tried creeping through her.
Refused it with all her being.
“I never really look at feet if I’m honest,” Avaron said. “But yours are pretty nice. Smooth and sturdy and—“
Nahtura sank her face into her hand as deep as she could go. The flowers and tiny buds on her whole being curled inward, each of them sporting little anime blushes. Nonetheless, a certain sense of frustration crept up from within. It wasn’t her bosom, nor her womanliness, nor her beauty, nor any other measure that drew Avaron to touch her. The tentradom contended with cleaning Nahtura’s hooves and the dryad found it pissed her off something fierce.
Worst of all was how nice it felt—not in any overtly sense of carnality or pleasure, just comfortable.
A feeling she would never give the words to speak about aloud.
By the time Avaron finished with both hooves, Nahtura’s red face would put apples to shame. The blush crept down her neck and to the top of her bosom, a fiery wash any stupid idiot could understand. Avaron, however, simply cleaned her hands, then poured the rest of the bucket over Nahtura’s hooves. The grown floor wasn’t entirely sealed together, letting the water fall down below instead of making a mess.
“Well,” Avaron remarked, getting ready to stand up. “How does that fee-EEL?!”
Nahtura, moving faster, lifted Avaron up under her arm pits, leaving the tentradom’s legs dangling in the air. Even with both of them at their full height, Avaron’s feet still couldn’t reach the floor. “You’re so irritating,” the dryad grumbled out, her teeth audibly grinding together in a bone-chilling crunchiness. “Inconsiderate, dull-edged, selfish …”
Heavy thuds sounded from Nahtura’s every stomp as she crossed the gazebo. The corner she sought was much more rounded and bulbous, like a comfortable cave inside a tree more than anything else. Dense moss grew on the ground, creating a unified foundation that larger flowers, sweeping leaves, and obstinate bushes sprouted out from. One could even generously call it a bed.
“The fuck does that me—“ Avaron’s incredulous words disappeared in a grunt when Nahtura set her on the natural-grown bed. Not quite throwing the tentradom, but not so gently setting down, either. Two thuds sounded when Nahtura’s hands slammed into the bedding, gripping everything as if she might tear them out in the next moment. Straddling Avaron’s thighs, Nahtura leaned in, the sheer difference in their sizes all the more punctually clear. Her tourmaline eyes, wide yet creased with unbridled intensity.
“Teasing me day after day, first in winter, and now here?” she asked rhetorically, a lyrical sweetness to her bladed tongue. “Even the most patient of huntresses will take her shot.”
Avaron squinted, some semblance of suspicion to her expression—then it suddenly started draining away. Replaced, if little by little, by a creeping look of knowing. Some sort of clarity that made Nahtura’s leafy hair and flowers bristle. No, that smug, self-assured gaze on that demure tentradom meant something unnerving. “And how,” Avaron asked with exceeding slowness, “would you like to ‘take your shot’, hm?”
“By—“ Nahtura barely got a word in before something slithered up alongside her hips. Avaron’s tentacles gripped firmly all of a sudden, and then pushed strongly. Nahtura flipped over sideways, Avaron going with, the two reversing their positions. It would be that Avaron then leaned on an elbow, propping herself up to stare down at Nahtura with an expectant gaze.
“And why, perchance, does it involve thanking me for cleaning your feet?” she asked, almost as if it were a whimsical thought. “Surely Efval’s mother and a woman of such commanding status wouldn’t be ungrateful by calling me irritating and inconsiderate …”
Nahtura wilted underneath Avaron’s unrelenting words, an edge of steel to them Nahtura herself so easily spoke with, but never received. It left her a bit speechless, a sense of incredulity so powerful she didn’t know what to make of it.
Am I … Am I being scolded? she asked herself, utterly bemused.
“… and certainly not with the expectation I’d fuck her and do all the work myself …”
“That’s—that’s rather—“
“… and busy myself thinking up all the ways to please someone I barely know except how much she wants me to fuck her, day after day … eating my food, taking up space in my house for free, lounging around at my expense …”
For someone smaller and lighter than her, the weight of such accusations proved unbearably heavy. Nahtura half wanted to throw Avaron off and run away, but the much stronger thinking part of her knew that would be a terrible idea. Still, she hadn’t anywhere to escape save turning her head to the side, evading those piercing blue eyes and their expectancy. She almost felt a sweat coming on from the anxious nervousness boiling out of control. Nahtura’s racing mind couldn’t settle on one thought or another, and her traitorous lips mumbled out some nonsense.
“What was that?”
“… Sorry,” Nahtura grunted through her gritted teeth. She couldn’t even indulge in the acid of such an admission before a hand gripped her mouth. Slowly turning her back toward Avaron, the tentradom stared with the same eyes.
“I don’t want ‘sorry’,” she said, not an ounce of venom to her suspiciously kind voice. “Try ‘thank you, Avaron’ while looking into my eyes.”
The twig in Nahtura’s mind blew back and forth, incapable of landing on one decisive path or another. It wasn’t even the supposed act of ‘thanks’ that bothered her so much as being expected to do so. Cognizant of that fact, she nonetheless found a certain measure of resolve. No one, not even Avaron, would back her into a corner.
No, only one person could ever do that to her.
“Thank you,” Nahtura said, peering into those burning blue eyes deep enough to rip her smug little soul out, “Avaron.”
A tense moment’s silence wafted between them.
“I’m not a mind reader,” Avaron said, almost sounding bored all of a sudden. “Nor do I know you too well. Sincerity will be what tells me if you’re some asshole or not.”
Nahtura blinked, watching as Avaron rolled off to the side. She turned Nahtura’s arm into a pillow of sorts, propping her head up on it leisurely. They both ended up laying on their backs, or perhaps partly on their sides, looking at one another carefully.
“So, me telling you to be sincere is not me saying you’re an idiot. If you don’t talk to me in a way I understand, then we’re only going to have problems.”
“… Your penchant to go from enticing to aggravating is endlessly infuriating,” Nahtura retorted coolly, her irritable anger feeling rather put out. Like she wanted to just go off, but it wasn’t really happening the way it should.
Avaron closed her eyes, breathed in, then sighed slowly. “See, that sounds to me like an insult, but I gather you don’t mean it that way.”
“No.”
“Alright then, progress.” With a grunt, Avaron turned onto her side, facing Nahtura. It was almost a cuddle, what with the two of them right next to each other, but not quite on each other, either. “Since I don’t know how you like to talk, I’m still guessing a little bit,” Avaron remarked, gesturing from herself to Nahtura. “So, mind if I touch you?”
It would’ve been elating to hear if it wasn’t so … odd. Nahtura’s face scrunched up. “You already are.”
“True, but I mean more sensually.”
“Is that not what I’ve been asking for?”
“There’s a difference between forcing yourself on someone and actually courting them, you know?”
It seemed a pedantic distinction to her, but Nahtura simply scoffed. “Then touch me, so long as I might touch you.”
“Sure.”
Of everything Nahtura expected, such a simple affirmation wasn’t one of them. The sensation of a naked hand gently laying on her hip felt so incredibly foreign her skin immediately prickled. Smooth and curvy, almost to a polished perfection, and at the same time, very warm. A whole handprint’s worth of heat that set her skin tingling. Her attention narrowed to that one little spot, acutely aware of how slow and leisurely Avaron caressed upward.
Just a gentle touch; barely a doe’s lick at that.
Why did it make her antsy?
“You’re a tease,” Nahtura said as much as accused, her leafy hair fluttering in a wave.
Avaron smirked. “Nooo, I’m no-OT?”
Sliding down Avaron’s side, Nahtura’s green-colored skin-and-bark hand snaked its way down through the waistband of her pants. Nahtura’s palm took hold of Avaron’s plump, cute butt, each finger sinking into that porcelain-like skin. Not too hard, not too soft, and really felt those squirming tentacle muscles underneath. Oh, how Avaron jolted beside her, letting out the tiniest chirp.
It almost made that agonizing winter worth it.
“Did you know?” Nahtura asked, her smile widening more and more—how sultry it should’ve been, how terrifying it became.
“K-know what?” Avaron retorted, squirming under Nahtura’s hand as if she wanted to escape. The urge to grab her even harder felt so wonderfully tempting.
“Your weakness.”
“I don’t have any,” Avaron said in such a snooty tone of voice. An obvious and cheap provocation that almost made Nahtura laugh.
But, something about it tickled the back of her head. A tiny, prickly wave that crept down her neck, down her arms, down her back, and all the little planty growths along her perked up as it did so. Nahtura’s other hand moved with a mind of its own, reaching up through the air, fingers splaying open like a snake about to bite. It trembled for a moment, the pure natural urge to strike colliding with her own sense of not-so-fast.
Poor little Avaron never saw it coming even despite the hesitation.
Nahtura’s fingers slid through those curiously thick strands of ‘hair’ atop Avaron’s head, her hand wrapping around the back of the tentradom’s head. A tiny little ‘eep’ escaped, and Avaron oh so tried escaping, but against Nahtura’s strength? The sun would laugh itself dark at the mere thought, let alone the attempt.
In one smooth motion, Nahtura rolled over, her body’s weight pinning Avaron underneath her. Whatever sound left Avaron disappeared between Nahtura’s ravenous lips, her sensual kiss just as much a voracious bite. Hers wasn’t a gentle, massaging thing, but a sucking and tasting gnaw. Her tongue whipped around, pressing against Avaron’s succulent lips with a determined, invasive intent. If for the moment Avaron tried closing her mouth, a hard squeeze on her ass made her gasp.
Or try to, at least.
“Mmgulp?!” Avaron grunted in a squelchy sound of surprise, almost swallowing Nahtura’s invading tongue in one go.
Nahtura’s throaty laugh answered in kind, her whole body shaking with mirth and delight that rattled the tiny leaves and branches all over her. Not only did Avaron have such enticing, prey-like squirms, her mouth had such a unique … feeling. A tentradom in the shape of a person seemed funny enough, but the insides were very much like one as well! Teeth, cheeks, gums, a roof and a bottom—Nahtura recognized all these very well. But it was where the ‘tongue’ should’ve been that she found something very new.
A tentacle, one with a fleshy, textured topside, and a sharp, arrow-like head with in a sort of T-shape.
A tongue tentacle?
It squirmed fiercely when she licked along and tasted its smooth, but so very slightly segmented flesh. It wasn’t something one could ever see, they had to feel it; tentacles held all kinds of secrets, and she knew most by heart. To Nahtura’s surprise, the squirmy little thing shot forward, coiling around her own tongue like a viper. Maybe Avaron even sought to slip inside her mouth instead, but not today.
Nahtura smirked, and flexed her dexterous tongue. The would-be retaliation froze in its tracks as Nahtura’s dark-green tongue tightened like a vice around Avaron’s. The tentradom jerked underneath, her eyes bolting open in shocked surprise! She even grabbed to Nahtura with a desperate hope, or perhaps foolish naivety. Nahtura jerked her head, pulled away enough her spittle-strewn lips finally parted from Avaron’s. Drool dribbled down between them both, far less of a kiss than perhaps two predators that tried very poorly eating one another.
A column of blue, squirming flesh stretched out between Avaron’s lips, her very tongue wrapped by a dark-green serpent. Nahtura snorted, smirking for what little of her lips could with her own tongue stretching out. She tilted her head to the side and moved so slowly away, drawing more of Avaron’s tongue-tentacle out. Her tourmaline eyes squinted, pleased with her prized kill more; an owl that caught a fat, juicy worm.
Poor Avaron looked out of her mind with how she twitched and squirmed so impotently.
It seemed a bit odd to have a mating tentacle in one’s mouth, but Nahtura rather didn’t mind then.
Having one of them in her grasp again made her so giddy that horniness kind of fled from her mind.
How wonderfully fun it all felt; so familiar, but so new and different.
And … a bit lacking? Lacking in … something.
Like an ingredient was missing.
Her brows knitted together, and Nahtura flexed her over-extending tongue up and down, caressing Avaron’s. Flesh and spittle alike were definitely there, and even the unique feeling of tentacle, but not the … thing. The one thing.
The important thing.
She knew what it was now that she thought on it a bit more.
Nahtura sucked Avaron’s tongue-tentacle right out of her mouth like she’d spear fished the poor thing. Grabbing ahold of it, she glared down at the twitching tentradom. “Where’s your taste?” she demanded, sounding a bit slurred.
“Muhhh whut?” Avaron gurgled out, her eyes having remarkable difficulty focusing.
With an irritable huff, Nahtura sat up, which involved her butt comfortably squishing onto Avaron’s thighs. With the tongue-tentacle in her hand, she jerked it upward, practically dragging Avaron into sitting up as well. Clearly she’d never had anyone really work her tentacle like that before; the most indecently pleased sound she’d heard yet squealed in Avaron’s throat. The dangerous thing in Nahtura’s hand whipped around, trying as much to thrust forward as to escape.
“Your taste,” Nahtura repeated, clearer sounding. “Every tentradom has one, but not you. Where is it?”
“Hmmnn mhum letm ghuh,” Avaron grunted, smacking Nahtura’s side with one hand, and pointing her tongue-tentacle with the other.
As fun as it was to hold onto, Nahtura let go, and an audible slurp followed its lightning-fast retreat back into Avaron’s throat. “Holy shit,” Avaron choked out, bug-eyed and panting. “I’ve never wanted to cum out of my mouth that bad in my fucking life.”
“Really? With just that?” Nahtura asked, smirking. She wasn’t sure if she should be pleased or concerned a tentradom of all people got so close to the edge so fast.
“Yo-your tongue can, uh, really do some work. Sorry, I’m just—very surprised,” Avaron chirped out in a sweet sounding mix of embarrassed happiness. She leaned backward, and Nahtura wrapped an arm around her backside lest she try to escape. A nonsensical impulse, but a powerful one all the same. Those burning, fiery blue eyes peered up at her, smirking with a womanly intent that Nahtura rather liked to see. “So what’s this about my taste?”
For a hot moment Nahtura wasn’t even sure if she should keep asking that question. It’d been so long since she flirted with anything that she’d rather forgotten how to play off it properly. At least, flirt in a method more complex than ‘presenting one’s self’. Her leafy hair shuddered in a wave as if a pleasant breeze had blown through them. Holding up her other hand, she rubbed a finger over Avaron’s plump, slightly darkened lips. “Your taste,” she said for yet a third time. “Something every tentradom has, but not you.”
“I don’t know what you mean?” Avaron answered softly, her head trying to follow along Nahtura’s gentle finger.
What word is there for it? Nahtura wracked her mind, trying to remember. Taste, scent, presence; there were many other words that often sufficed, but not something specific. Her Avaron-rubbing hand went to her own chin, every feature on her face contorting into something contemplative. “Nex called it the … what was it …?”
“Oh, you know Nex?”
Every other thought in Nahtura’s mind skittered to a halt, and she fixed her gaze squarely upon Avaron. “What do you mean?”
Avaron, busy fluffing her messy hair back into order somehow, said, “She seemed like kind of a shut-in, so I didn’t expect anyone else to know her.”
In a flash, Nahtura shot forward, bringing her nose to Avaron’s and wrapping her hand around the tentradom’s throat. “You mean she’s alive?” the dryad snarled, each word turning into a rumbling, world-shaking vibration that made every plant around them shrivel up in fear. The very woods around them creaked as they arched away, for what little movements they could do.
Avaron simply froze and took stock of the sudden change with a cool, indifferent look. “Yeah, sure. You two hate each other or something?”
Nahtura’s eyes wavered, the sheer shock of such simple words nearly sucking the strength from her body. “No … No. Where—how is she?”
“No clue where, but she seemed alright. Very fussy and annoyed about doing anything, from what we talked about. You look like someone just came back from the dead.”
“… She might as well have.” Nahtura wasn’t sure where to look anymore, her gaze drifting to the side, her mind’s eye busy racing through very old, long forgotten memories. “She disappeared one day. I thought she died. I—“ Nahtura released Avaron’s throat and covered her mouth, almost ready to puke out strawberries from the gut-wrenching churns that ferociously wracked her. “I—“
“Deep breaths now,” Avaron said with a surprisingly firm, but not unpleasant, tone. “In through the nostrils, out the mouth. Yup, like that. One in, one out. Two in, two out.”
Why she bothered to do so eluded Nahtura, but it did seem to help do something. She wasn’t sure what, but something. “How—how did you talk to her? Find her?”
“Do you not know how Divine Heroines meet their patron Goddesses?”
“Through rituals of some manner according to the Goddess.”
“No, I mean, when we first meet them.”
Nahtura’s head slowly tilted to the side. “What are you talking about?”
Avaron’s brows popped up. “And here I thought you’d be one of the people to know.”
“I’ve never bothered with them in the first place. Not until you, at least.”
“How flattering. Alright, well get off my legs before they go numb here.”
For what there was to do, Nahtura shuffled over a bit. It mostly ended up with Avaron sitting cross-legged, and Nahtura wrapping around her, the airs of passion completely gone at that point. Not that Nahtura could mind at all; something even more important made itself evident.
Avaron coughed into her hand then said, “Technically speaking, what I’ll say is a secret, so don’t repeat it to anyone.”
“Who would I bother telling a secret to?” Nahtura asked in amusement.
“Alright. You’re a super ancient Goddess and everything in the first place, so whatever. When Divine Heroines are summoned, the first place their souls arrive at is at the boundary of the world. A nowhere and everywhere place, outside of life and death. In order to enter the world, they must choose a patron Goddess who grants them passage.”
Nahtura’s head tilted again, this time to the other side.
“Until they do, they’re stuck there. So Divine Heroine souls loiter around until any kind of Goddess comes by who’ll give them passage. The summoning that went on this time around was very unusual and very interfered with. When I arrived, there was a plethora of Goddesses there waiting to make the deal. Nex among them.”
“She has never bothered with Divine Heroines either, but you are a tentradom from another world …” Nahtura started to argue, then came to a realization just as she did so. Avaron, however, made a difficult expression that seemed somewhat unusual in the moment.
“Yeah, pretty much. I had my pick of the litter for which Goddess to choose from, and ultimately I chose Nex as mine. She was reluctant to do so, but we made an accord of a kind.”
There were so many questions to ask, but one most of all gnawed at Nahtura’s mind. “I’ve never heard of this.”
“That doesn’t surprise me.” Avaron shrugged. “Divine Heroines don’t remember this first meeting. It’s something to do with the mess involved in the summoning process.”
“But you do.”
“Because I’m super-duper special. The Goddesses all screwed with the summoning ritual going on this time to try and change things around. Instead of a bunch of heroines, they wanted one in particular they could trust. I’m the lucky bitch who won the lottery on that one. When I showed up, we all had a nice chat about the mess I was going to step into with Haska and Nyoom.”
“Be wary of speaking their names so blatantly,” Nahtura said gravely. “It can draw the attention of anyone you speak of.”
“What, like they can spy on me?” Avaron asked, blinking incredulously.
“Not so immediately. It is a bird call in a noisy forest. If that Goddess is listening for the call of their name, they will seek out the little bird who made the noise.”
“Oh, that’s annoying,” Avaron remarked, then slapped a hand to her forehead. “Wait, isn’t it incredibly annoying if a bunch of people just speak your name all the time?”
“One learns to ignore the noise and pick out the ones they want,” Nahtura said with a careless shrug. Though she should’ve felt satisfied, some restless, anxious energy coiled inside her. Something irritable enough that Nahtura stood up and threw her hair back into place. “Wait here.”
“The history lesson was fun and all but the uhh, you know, the fun stuff …?” Avaron asked smiling in a dubious expression of anticipation and uncertainty.
Cute, the dryad thought, shrugging her shoulders with a small smile only a hopeful soul would call ‘playful’. “You will need it.”
“… Need what, anyway?”
“An oil. A special oil.”
*~*
Well, that was awkward, Avaron thought, staring up at the wood ceiling while she laid on her back. A ceiling that was still growing to some extent, at least with little leaves and stems popping out in odd places. Not as bad as college, at least.
Whew that one, she couldn’t leave her dorm for a month after that fiasco.
At least it’s less me having the wrong ideas and more like not knowing what she wants this time, Avaron mused. Woo, look at me, trying to bed an ancient goddess and all that …
Avaron jerked upward, half-sitting up as she angrily glared at her stomach. Can you stop churning for ONE MINUTE?
Naturally, it wouldn’t; or couldn’t.
Once she got riled up it’d be a fussy little bitch until she finally blew her loads or got eaten out. One or the other. Either sounded nice right then, really. Letting out an insufferable sigh, Avaron laid back down again. She folded her hands together and literally started twiddling her thumbs for something to do. In such a state, seconds felt like minutes, and minutes felt like seconds.
Anxiousness did terrible things to one’s sense of time.
So I know she isn’t going to just ditch me, Avaron thought, but seriously, how long does it fucking tak—
“This world’s in terrible shape,” Nahtura’s dry remark suddenly cut through the air.
“What makes you say that?” Avaron, however, tried to keep her face somewhat civil as she looked over. I hate how I don’t even react to her sudden appearances now. The dryad had ‘left’ the room by simply disappearing earlier, and just as much returned the same way. Except now she held some sort of brown, glossy, and possibly porcelain jar in her hands. It wasn’t too big, nor too small, something that’d fit easily on most shelves.
“I go to sleep for a while and suddenly the Arches of Kelonna have collapsed, the Eternal City is a smoldering ruin, and who knows whatever happened to those damned woods,” Nahtura griped, stepping over to Avaron. She nudged the tentradom in the side with her hoof pointedly. “Roll over.”
“Nnnggghh,” Avaron grunted with terrible strain. It took all of ten seconds for her cataclysmic flop to fully complete. The so-called ‘bedding’—or whatever the hell she was laying on—wasn’t that uncomfortable, thankfully. Weird, definitely, what with the moss, tiny plants, and other growths covering everything. The texture felt utterly wild, which the more she thought on that idea, the more it kind of seemed … self-evident. “Well, that uh, sounds bad.”
“Few alchemists made spirit oil even before I slept,” Nahtura grumbled. “There may not be any left now at all. It was good of the ants to point it out to me.”
Avaron’s brow popped upward and she tried looking over her shoulder. Kind of troublesome to do, what with her laying down on her belly. A sucking sound followed Nahtura twisting the jar’s lid, and a plume of yellow smoke wafted up and out. It wasn’t any regular smoke, but rather sparkly and wavy in a way that wasn’t just air moving it around. She wasn’t really sure what she was looking at, if it was even smoke at all.
Nahtura squinted, her lips pursed together and twisting from one side to the other on her mouth. After a moment, she let out an ‘eh’ and shrugged. “It’s still usable enough,” she muttered with a flippant, careless tone, and turned the jar over. A stream of somewhat viscous golden-and-green liquid poured out, slopping onto Avaron’s backside. The moment it hit her skin a shower of twinkling lights shone as if firework sparklers just lit off of her.
Hello?? You’re pouring it on me?? Avaron almost yelled, but despite her tensing and fearing for the worst, nothing really happened. At least, until a burning sensation started. It wasn’t a painful one, or perhaps even truly a ‘burning’, but it felt awfully similar.
Whatever did it mean?
Avaron’s face scrunched up in perplexity while Nahtura simply set the jar aside. She pressed one set of knuckles into her palm, then the other, making the woodiest-sounding bone cracks Avaron ever heard. A darker green, yet oddly vivid and ‘bright’ looking liquid started leaking out from between her knuckles.
“Uhh, are you bleeding?” Avaron asked suspiciously. “Or is this some tree thing?”
Nahtura, however, smiled.
Not a malicious look, or a predatory one, or even something particularly conniving.
It looked way too fucking normal to be on her face.
Avaron squinted.
“A gift of blood is the most sincere one that can be made,” the dryad said with a matter-of-factly tone, and then reached downward. Her bloody hands wove into the mess of spirit oil on Avaron’s backside, pressing down into the tentradom’s porcelain-like flesh.
Avaron and all her smart ass words simply slumped to the ground. A sudden, intense bolt of something shot through her with such a bang it felt like she’d been hit by lightning. Yet, no pain nor discomfort of any kind followed, except the fact she couldn’t move any part of her body anymore. Her eyes, at least, whipped back and forth in a panic at the sudden change.
She couldn’t see anything except half her face being smothered in moss and only part of Nahtura’s head visible. It’s the god damn acupuncture all over again! Minus the baijiu and add in a literal goddess sliding her fingers inside her—back? “W-what the fuck are you doing?” Avaron stammered out.
“Mmm, now I see why you are like this,” Nahtura remarked in a voice that really didn’t sound like an answer. “Focus on your core. The part of you that really matters.”
Avaron’s first thought was her head, where something like a brain surely resided.
“No, not that.”
“What do you mean not my brain? My heart?”
“No. You are a tentradom. There is only one part that really matters.”
“What, my huge, throbbing tenty-yyyyyyyyy—“ Avaron had never felt her own eyes separate into different directions before. The very core of something big and important in her gut clenched under a squeezing sensation. Not a hand, surely not any of Nahtura’s because Avaron still felt those up in her back somewhere. No, something very fiery and lightning-like, surging with a presence that made her knees tremble. Involuntary movements, muscles clenching on their own, and a scalding hot burn that oddly didn’t really feel painful. It should’ve been, but wasn’t, and it really tripped her out.
Oh, cool, the world was melting around her now too.
“There it is.”
“Nnnhh—fuck,” Avaron let out the most disgustingly sweet sounding moan and chirp she’d ever heard herself make.
[You are being infused with Divine Power.]
Avaron clenched her teeth and grabbed two fistfuls of something on the ground below her. The very real, very physical sensation of her own insides writhing around made everything else that much harder to focus on. Sure, she’d some understanding of her own body and its weird nature—but not like that. Not like everything was suddenly moving with its own idea of what it wanted to do.
[Warning: Divine intervention is being rejected by outside entity A̷̺͂̅̓v̶͇͔̇͗̆a̷̞̭̾̒r̶̗̺̂ò̵̪̳n̴͈̳̲̐̿. Attempting negotiation.]
Now it felt like stomach acid.
Avaron hurriedly swallowed the unreasonable amount of drool pooling in her mouth. Don’t throw up, don’t throw up, don’t throw up—
It took a remarkable degree of sheer focus. Pure concentration on making sure her gut stayed down in her gut, and not erupting out of her mouth. Something even more difficult for the fact Nahtura’s hands were stroking something inside her. Something very big and very angry with its throbbing neediness. For however pleasurable it might’ve been, Avaron found it surprisingly easy to ignore.
[Negotiation complete. A fundamental flaw in your physical existence is being forcibly corrected.]
A gradual seizing up coursed through Avaron, everything muscular or resembling a muscle clenching with tight, almost painful, anticipation. A burning, pure white sense of fire that should’ve been painful surely but really was more overwhelming than anything. Her foot was twitching, right? It felt like it should’ve been. Or maybe that was whatever resembled her spleen was. Avaron couldn’t really tell which part was which all that well anymore.
And the most peculiar sensation of … stretching and growing, but not in the usual sense.
Like muscle fibers being pulled in that tiny way where she felt every fiber.
Maybe the sensation of pulling, breaking, and growing wasn’t supposed to happen like that.
It spread throughout Avaron’s whole body, worming from the inside out in a webwork all its own. She felt parts of her she didn’t even knew existed in the first place. It all had a certain sense of direction, too. Something that was trying to come out of her.
Avaron’s awareness slammed into her, and all at once she knew everything, everywhere all at once. She was on the ground of Nahtura’s self-growing hut, laying on her back—not her belly?—and staring up at the ceiling. Two tourmaline eyes stared down at her, inquisitive and thoughtful at once. Huffing, puffing, and sweating like she’d ran until all the water had been squeezed out of her like a dish towel. When their gazes met, Nahtura’s indifferent expression literally contorted into a smile.
Her lips went to her ears, her long and rather sharp teeth on prominent display, and her eyes squeezed into horizontal slits. It would’ve been extraordinarily frightening if Avaron had anything resembling a sense of fear. “T-the fuck you smiling at?” Avaron wheezed out, her voice airy and wispy. She meant to be rather loud, but even that much seemed suddenly impossible.
“There you are,” Nahtura purred with utmost satisfaction. “Now, you’re a proper tentradom.”
The fuck does that mean—Avaron frowned, and two orbs suddenly dipped in front of her eyes. They bounced with a certain freedom, going up and down and connected to some kind of stick. She squinted at the sight, trying to focus on them. Yet, as her brows moved, the two orbs wobbled up and down. So, Avaron popped her eyebrows up and down, and just as she expected, the orbs kept wobbling.
A sense of annoyance arose first and Avaron reached up, grabbing one of the things. The second her fingers pinched the bulby tip, a flash of sensation shot down from her forehead, to the back of her neck, down her spine, and right into her loins. It proved so terrifyingly powerful she gasped on reflex and let go, her traitorous hips jumping with an eager anticipation.
Then she noticed something else.
There was fur coming out of her hand.
Oh, what the fuck? Avaron marveled, her eyes locking onto her now rather different appendage. Her fingers and palm and wrist were all there, sure, but now there was some kind of fur coming out of the joints. Or maybe hair? It was certainly dense and soft looking, but not quite like a fur. Something similar to what she put onto the tentaclelings, maybe? Avaron clenched her hand into a fist, relaxed it, and then wiggled her fingers.
The fur-hair-whatever felt rather smooth and soft, for what she could feel. It also flowed very easily in the air, as if it was light and fluffy as a cloud. It had a nice looking gradient color, too. The base of it that went inside of her was a darker blue than her actual tentacle flesh, and it became lighter as it went outward. The tips were a contrasting snowy white that matched closer to the porcelain skin she wore.
And it had some kind of oily sheen?
There was definitely a sheen of some kind.
Avaron lifted her other hand, and yup, that too had the same thing going on. Her gaze crawled up to the orbs bobbing up and down over her eyes still. Now that she had some presence of mind again, they were much easier to understand: antennae. Two decently sized antennae had sprouted out of her forehead somewhere and hung about like they paid rent. Did I turn into a bug?
Actually, it made a bit of sense if she thought about it. She seemed really damn similar to one of those fuzzy little moths she saw on the internet sometimes.
Tentacles are bugs? Or bugs are tentacles?? Avaron puzzled to herself.
“Have you never seen yourself before?”
Nahtura’s question had that scathing tone, but not as sharp as it usually was. Avaron spared her a withering glance. “This is where I’m a wise ass and say yes and then you say something stupidly insightful, I’m sure.”
“Is it?”
“If only I had a library from Earth. Do you even read books?”
“I cannot.”
“What? Read?”
“No,” Nahtura said in an air of dismissal, looking up and stroking her neck almost boredly. “One set of scribbles changes from the other. It’s too bothersome trying to remember them all.”
There were a couple ways that one could go, but Avaron figured Nahtura was more the ‘immortal who didn’t care about mortal things’. It seemed very much her sort of behavior by far. Even if she seemed dismissive of the fact, Avaron couldn’t help staring for a long moment. The weight of such words grew heavier the longer an idle mind rested upon them. “Well,” Avaron started off simply, “I’ll teach you mine then.”
Nahtura’s head tilted and turned toward Avaron, pivoting as if her neck didn’t care about her shoulders at all. “You teach me something? Why should I bother?”
Avaron shrugged carelessly. “As long as I’m alive it’ll be used, so at least it won’t disappear easily.”
A strange, rippling wave passed through Nahtura’s hair and leafy growths, accompanying her wide and blinking eyes. Then she laughed, rich and sudden with an uneven tempo to it. It actually sounded rather nice, when it didn’t have that acidic tone underneath. No, more than that, the plants around them bloomed alive? Avaron jolted and sat upright at the feeling of something poking into her. Nothing more than a stubborn stem that opened into a flower, of course—something that happened everywhere.
Flowers, tiny bushes, moss for some reason, and others all crept alive. Tiny still, but visibly moving with growth and deep, healthy colors to their leaves and fruits. To Avaron, they were such simple things, and yet she found it so mesmerizing. Almost like a scene from a fairytale made by a sanitized corporate media empire, not the actual folklore fairytale full of questionable carnage and horror. Although, given Nahtura’s nature, that didn’t feel too far out of expectation with her, either.
I must be going crazy, Avaron thought, she’s actually pretty like this.
Physical attractiveness was its own thing, like a sign that advertised one’s status and stature. More went into it than just ‘looking good’: self-care, attention to detail like clothing or presentation, posture, and so on all communicated things. Nahtura, for all her beauty that very well might’ve been like a goddess’, was completely different on the inside. That was only something Avaron figured out when she spoke—a scathing, brutal callousness toward everything and anyone. To be honest, it’d been the biggest reason Avaron never wanted to bother with her.
If someone shows what they are, trust what they show the first time around.
Only an idiot would think there’s something underneath it that somehow could be ‘fixed’.
Avaron, however, felt she might become that idiot despite knowing better.
Fuck me, am I blushing? she wondered, touching her cheeks curiously. It felt like a typical warming blush but there was a weird, prickly wriggliness underneath it too. The one time in her life she actually wanted a mirror to check herself in, there weren’t any.
“So even you can make such a face toward me.”
Avaron’s inner flesh damn near hatched out of her body from the sheer fright that shot through her. In the brief moment she’d stopped paying attention to Nahtura, that sultry dryad closed the distance between them. Sitting as she was, Avaron leaned back on her hands as Nahtura, crawling on all fours, pressed in. Their noses touched. Avaron’s deely bopper-like antennae touched Nahtura’s head and hair.
That blush in the tentradom’s cheeks writhed with a pain that felt almost agonizingly pleasant. A voice that spoke without words; an awareness that knew without knowing. A feeling that told her much, without even saying much. She knew these things from before, but now they’d become so clear. So painfully clear it made her feel dizzy. Perhaps she might’ve fallen over if not for Nahtura’s tourmaline eyes boring into her, commanding attention even Avaron couldn’t deny.
Oh, such wonderful agony.
The pressuring presence of a woman in her solid body and enveloping softness.
The pulsating throb of need, twitching and jerking alive with a singular purpose.
Avaron, caught in between both within her own mind, carelessly squeezed and crushed by them both. It almost might’ve been enjoyable if it didn’t feel like her loins were going to explode. Something she felt when she’d not relieved herself or mated in a while—something not unlike that first night with Gwyneth, in what felt like a lifetime ago. Avaron’s pupil’s dilated even as pressure mounted, pressure increased, pressure squeezed—
“W-what about my face?” Avaron asked.
“Eyes of desire, not scorn. Whatever made you see me that way?” Nahtura asked, her voice low and vivid as every breath blew across Avaron’s lips. That warm and humid air sent tingles straight down Avaron’s tongue in a most craven hunger. An instinctual urge to lash out and impale—
No, Avaron’s mind conjured images of a woman splayed across the ground, her legs parted as she panted for breath, the slurping-squelch of a tentacle furiously moving at speed inside of her. She needn’t imagine such things, she’d been intimate enough times already, yet her mind kept going. Was it instinct telling her what to do? A yearning she otherwise could’ve ignored before? Something so more powerful and different than what she’d ever been before. Impulses, instincts, compulsions all together in one mixture that went on and on and on and on.
“You sounded nice,” Avaron said simply, her mouth remarkably dry despite how much drool she kept swallowing down. “For once.”
“A little bird, eh?” Nahtura’s words might’ve, dare Avaron say, sounded actually playful. Not that made her any more understandable. “But, how sweet are you truly?”
Firm and soft lips, so familiar yet so markedly different, planted themselves upon Avaron’s own. In an electric wave throughout her body, every roiling tentacle nerve in her body snapped to attention. The indecisiveness, the yearning, and everything in between stilled for a moment to relish that supple womanly taste. Something that pushed in firmer, taking more and more in that delectably wet heat.
Nahtura kissed with a tentativeness of one a little hesitant, but by the moment, her brazen confidence grew. A simple lip-lock became sucking and nibbling, intermixed with her haughty, throaty giggles. Her giddiness proved palpable, and something that made Avaron a bit more forgiving about the dryad. For all her abrasiveness, she also had an earnest simplicity in surprising places.
Yet, for every woman Avaron kissed—in her current or past lives—they all had a different sort of feel, flavor, and texture to them. Something that, despite all their similarities, made each of them uniquely desirable. The strange problem for Nahtura’s case of unique flavor: a firm yet crumbly texture in many places, strongly stiff in others, but easily succumbing to a little force of her own lips pressing back. It really did feel plant-like, and at the same time, meaty and enticing. A part of her brain kept saying ‘is this lettuce?’ and wouldn’t shut up either.
It was such a bizarre combination that Avaron couldn’t help kissing just to try it more. Or, rather, ended up the one kissed. Nahtura pressed in closer, and Avaron braced further on the ground. The tension in her arms held tight even as the nerve-dancing tingles shot down from her lips. Such a strange predicament that tore her mind into two very different directions.
At least, until a different flavor reached her tongue.
Avaron licked her lips, then blinked. “What the hell?” she mumbled, then licked her lips again. Nahtura froze, about ready to kiss again, her eyes staring.
“What?”
“… Is this mint?” Avaron wondered, a peculiarly sharp and almost-burning-but-fresh taste on her tongue. She smacked her lips together a few times, and for the life of her, it felt damn familiar. Whether or not it was actually mint, her tentradom-senses might never fully understand properly. “Tastes pretty go-oo-od!”
Her guts literally churned, and a rushing force of muscle and speed pushed its way out. For a split second she feared shitting herself, but all that really happened was her little self decided to come out on its own. A wet squelch announced its liberal freedom in the world, a mighty and wriggling tentacle that was rather angry at not getting the attention it deserved. Avaron and Nahtura craned their heads, regarding the third party interloper.
“Of course, you changed too. What hasn’t changed about me at this point?” Avaron griped, slapping her forehead.
Her implement #2 of sexual fun underwent some changes. The main body of the tentacle had become a bit sleeker, strengthened almost with tighter muscular control. At the same time, in erratic places from just under the tip to even the part of it still inside Avaron, there were little antenna-like feelers. Unlike the ones coming out of Avaron’s forehead, they were more a central stalk with branches, and those branches had sticky-wet feeler hairs wriggling about.
Strangely enough, she wasn’t really getting any new information from those feelers, either. They were definitely there, definitely doing stuff, but all that her brain registered was ‘huge throbbing need to bury into something very wet, tight, and warm’.
“Ooooh,” Nahtura purred. “Aren’t you a beautiful flower?”
Avaron let out a ‘hurk!’, suddenly dropped onto the bedding as Nahtura crawled away on her knees. Having been quite literally abandoned, the tentradom stared disbelievingly with a gaping mouth. Her not-so-little tentacle, spying around like a snake looking for something, twisted toward Nahtura when she neared. Whether it flew into her cleavage or the dryad pulled it there, the two embraced like long lost lovers.
The delightful softness of a woman and her two mountains embracing her tentacle proved quite shocking. Avaron jolted, the sensation so familiar and so … slightly different. It kind of annoyed her because she really couldn’t pick out the differences when Nahtura’s decidedly firm and surprisingly rough fingers grasped her mating tentacle. The dryad made a pleased little hum, holding the tentacle between her breasts and stroking along its length. Avaron’s left leg started twitching entirely on its own, and not from pleasure, either.
It felt closer to the actual controlling nerves responding to Nahtura’s touch.
Oh, what the hell? Avaron wondered. I get used to being a sex monster and now it’s sex monster 2.0?
Nahtura shifted positions, laying herself on top of Avaron’s legs and propping herself up with her elbows. Not only did it trap Avaron’s lower half, it squished her mating tentacle between herself and the dryad’s delightfully weird body. The tentacle squirmed between Nahtura’s breasts, slithering through her cleavage. It bumped interestedly against her chin, not unlike a snake seeking out something.
“How bold of you,” Nahtura purred, her hot breath puffing with every word onto the bulbous tip of Avaron’s tentacle. A shiver went shot down the tentacle, turning into a thought-scrambling anticipation in the poor tentradom. “Marking me with your scent like this … I know what you’re doing.”
Hello? I’m up here? Avaron wanted to ask, but by all accounts, Nahtura’s intense gaze sat squarely on her mating tentacle. Sometimes her wives fixated on it when they really got into the mood but this sure felt different from that. The way Nahtura and her tentacle happened to bump against one another certainly felt odd. It probed around her chin, its arrow-shaped head flexing with penetrative intent, while Nahtura ever so slightly planted her lips upon it. Only the tiniest, skin-tingling sucks betrayed her tasting kisses.
The term ‘stars exploding behind the eyes’ really took on a new meaning for Avaron right then. The hazy warmth of skin and soft boobs wrapped around her tentacle carried lecherous comfort to it, and the hint of Nahtura’s fingers gave a rigid firmness. Those, perhaps literally, flower-like lips had a soft-firmness that’d make velvet horny with jealousy. A tiny chirp escaped Avaron, her fingers curling on reflex, and all her attention trying to not make a stupid pleasure face.
Nahtura moved at a leisurely pace, pleasuring Avaron’s tentacle as much as enjoying its presence. A fool might think it something done for Avaron’s sake, but she knew better! That dryad had a damned devious look in her eyes! No, Avaron’s little tenty was a prisoner in the claws of a terrible schemer who’d eat her alive.
She still moaned like a sweet maiden at how great it felt.
Avaron’s face flushed and she held a hand to her lips to try and muffle it. Gwyneth and Tsugumi were one thing, but exposing any weakness to Nahtura felt like a death sentence. Oh, damnit, those tourmaline eyes were looking up, lips still sucked tight on the head of Avaron’s tentacle. Something very warm and wet peeked out, slithering over her hypersensitive flesh like a crackling trial of fireworks.
Avaron’s eyes almost crossed.
Nahtura throatily hummed a laugh, her tongue ever so slowly adventuring across the plump, spongy softness of Avaron’s tentacle. That bulging, writhing tendril of flesh jerked in the dryad’s grip, fierce with intent but completely trapped all the same. The fingers wrapped around the base of the tentacle’s head kept it from going forward, and those lush breasts kept it from leaving at all.
“I’m gonna explode,” Avaron wheezed out, not even really sure if she should be holding back at all. Why, she could just blow her load all over that damn smirk and give her a facial she’d never forget—
Oh, that hand tightened. Avaron’s hips jumped upright, her whole tentacle seizing in a delirious balance between almost painful and trying to unload right then and there. Nahtura’s unyielding grip, however, simply stroked up and down, a sinister pumping motion that brought hell as much as relief. Avaron’s whole gut churned, angrily full and bursting at the seams. She might very well sprout a second tentacle.
“A little teasing is all it takes?” Nahtura asked, her voice sweeter than poison-filled honey. She kissed the tentacle’s head a few times, her wet lips making loud, wet smacks; exaggeration for show as much as effect. “You’ll need to last longer than that for me.”
“Long enough,” Avaron quipped, her mind racing at the speed of a rubix cube at a world record contest. Then, one flat, long length of wet heat plastered against her tentacle and dragged upward in a slow lick. A lick so detailed and vivid in Avaron’s mind she felt and saw and knew every crevice, taste bud, odd muscle group, and more. Her muscles rippled involuntarily, a surging firecracker erupting through her. Every semblance of self-control blew away in a tide of orgasmic pleasure, punctuated by her gut clenching, seizing, and squeezing out a gallon’s worth of cum.
Or more.
She didn’t know, her eyes filled sparks and colors and that slutty sounding, choked-gasp of a moan that escaped her.
Nahtura, half-way through her teasing lick, blinked as the tentacle in her hands spasmed. Rushing blood and convulsing muscles gave the briefest of warnings before a stream of syrupy white, fluffy goodness blasted into the air. Impressively so, maybe a couple of feet in a beautiful arc that deserved a painter’s rendition. Still, it nonetheless came back down in a splattering, sticky deluge. As the first streams landed, another geyser erupted, and Nahtura found herself paralyzed with indecision.
Not that Avaron’s tentacle cared, it just kept cumming.
Whether it landed on Avaron, beside her, or even Nahtura, the mess it made just spread in a sticky web. Quite a fair bit just plopped onto Nahtura’s head, creating white streaks in the branchy-thicket that was her hair. The heat of it tingled the skin and excited the breath, every inhale she took laced with an aroma of meat and sensual, sharply perfume-like taste. In some part of Nahtura, long dormant and slumbering since ages ago, these sensations stirred awake something even she’d forgotten about.
Now that Avaron was done cumming her brains out, she panted for air, chest rising and falling in heavy breaths. The antennae on her forehead bobbed up and down, and all the furry-tentacle hair-whatever across her had grown two whole inches. She’d even felt it somewhere in that orgasmic nightmare, her body changing again in some inexplicable way. “Holy shit,” Avaron breathed out, slapping a hand to her forehead.
An unfortunate choice as it smacked her antennae and really rather hurt her. She flinched from it, gritting her teeth and hurriedly trying to rub the pain out of them. These things … oh, what the fuck? What is this?
The whole room looked like it’d aged a million years or something. The moss thickened up, patches of grass with long, seeding stalks popped up here and there, flowers in full bloom of every color—even pure black or white—littered the floor and walls like a confetti bomb went off. An array of vivid color and sheer life that felt like a pristine, primal part of nature no one’s eyes had ever sullied before.
“Mm,” a throaty, delighted moan sounded along with a neck-tingling gulp.
Avaron, propping herself up on her elbows, looked down. There laid Nahtura still, one hand holding Avaron’s tentacle—flopped over like a dead fish as it was—while her other scooped up some of the sticky-fluff of cum that’d splattered around. It clung to Nahtura’s fingers in globs, sliding out slowly between them as she lifted it to her lips. That same dastardly tongue snaked out, piercing through and around the fluffy cum like a viper. She leaned forward, inhaling through her mouth just before her lips met it, and it sucked inside her mouth in a gulp.
The sight made Avaron’s spent tentacle twitch and her hard nipples ache rather pointedly. Both, it seemed, wanted to get sucked pretty badly.
An even more terrifying sight greeted her: Nahtura’s eyes looking up, even as her head remained fixed to drink another handful of cum. Dangerous and narrowed eyes, yet her pupils were as wide as a doe’s, disarmingly adorable. Were it not for the tiny, throbbing pink hearts in those pupils of hers, it would’ve been endearing.
“Hi?” Avaron asked, uncertain if Nahtura was really listening or in ‘people mode’.
A pertinent slurp signaled Nahtura’s latest meal disappearing, and she simply remained there, staring. Avaron, however, heard something peculiar, and the closest her mind thought of was ‘wood growing’. At least, it sounded an awful lot like those sound effects in movies despite being as quiet as it was and Nahtura started moving. She sat up on her knees swiftly, both her hands just above Avaron’s knees. Not quite expecting such a firm grip or sudden motion, Avaron chirped in surprise.
“Hey now,” she said swiftly, “my tenty is great but it needs a minute.”
“Does it?” Nahtura retorted in a breathy exhale, sitting on her knees. One would think if she had a strap-on or something, she’d just about mount Avaron then and there.
A cute thought that became much less cute when a weirder sound reached the tentradom’s ears. A very wet and slippery sound and what the hell was that hot and wet thing pressing against her? Pure instinctual fright made Avaron’s exposed tenty seize up and then swiftly slither back inside of her. At the same time, she sat upright on her elbows and went bug-eyed at the sight between her legs. “Why the fuck do you have a tentacle??” she asked in exasperation.
“Mm, it’s not,” Nahtura answered, smiling some coy look between smugness and hunger. Despite her words, the surprisingly thick-feeling mass of dark green flesh gently caressed—or slithered—against Avaron’s pussy lips. The texture of it was rough enough to have some real drag to it despite the lubrication, making sure every part of such sensitive skin felt its presence.
“’It’s not’ my ass,” Avaron shot back, a creeping sensation crawling at the back of her head. It was starting to feel an awful lot like college again. “Is that thing gonna get me pregnant or something?”
A rich laughter followed, Nahtura’s lustful possession disappearing beneath loud mirth. Even the many flowers around them opened and shut their petals, as if in silent laughter themselves. “Just me,” the dryad said eventually, smiling with her sharp and black teeth. “I’m all woman. Yet, you seem afraid of me now?”
“Of you? No …” Avaron glanced away and twiddled her thumbs, rather uncertain what to do with her hands. “Bad experience, I guess.”
“Oh?” Nahtura’s head tilted in a very owl-like way, three-fourths the way to going upside down. Honestly, the weirdness of that was comforting in its own weirdness.
“Girlfriend in college I had one time.”
“Girlfriend?”
“A kind of courtship. Anyway, she was really big on strap ons and I hadn’t been a receiver before, so, there I go. Let’s just say three days of pain and a little bleeding led to a messy break up afterward and uhh, yeah …” Avaron hadn’t really noticed her new ‘fluff’ receding slightly as she spoke, not unalike an animal curling defensively. Not all the way back to her statuesque-like solidity, but not as comfortable either.
“Hmm.” Nahtura’s head righted itself, and she seemed thoughtful. Or fixating on Avaron’s face for some reason.
Oh, that very firm and hotly wet thing pressing against Avaron’s pussy really was …
“Anyway,” Avaron said, a touch lighter in voice. “New world, new experiences, all that. I’m sure it’ll be—“ Wanting to move things along before her own anxieties came up again, she reached down to gently grasp Nahtura’s totally-not-a-tentacle, “—fine?”
A soft, but sharp inhale sounded from above, accompanying the twitch of muscle or whatever it was Avaron grabbed onto. Somehow small, yet intimidatingly large in her hand, quaint but imposing in what it promised. Whatever cute remark Avaron might’ve spat out died in her throat as she looked down, gazing through the small space between herself and Nahtura. Oh. So this is how Gwyneth feels, huh? Avaron wondered, suddenly gaining new insight to her fiery wife’s remarks about ‘size’ and ‘girth’. Yeaaah, huh, how about that …
Nahtura reached down, gently tugging Avaron’s arm up. The dryad soon grabbed the other, then pinned both to the ground beside the tentradom’s head. Her weight pressed in, firmly securing their bodies together in a way that ensured one very specific thing was going to happen. That dastardly not-tentacle rubbed up and down against Avaron’s darkly flushed nether lips, its own firmness feeling increasingly slicker. Too soft to match the hardness of a finger, too structured to be a tongue, and with peculiar ridges hidden within only pressing close revealed …
Oh, yes, Avaron got a graphic idea of what it looked like in her mind’s eye.
Her actual eyes watched Nahtura’s leering smile spread wider.
“Be a little gentle at first?” Avaron asked, pinching her fingers together for whatever good that would do.
“Don’t worry,” Nahtura all but sang with the grace of a seasoned huntress, “I’ll train you well.”
That tone made the fine, furry fluff coming out of Avaron’s neck shiver. And, for whatever wariness she herself had, it extended out slightly more, almost tasting the air with curious intrigue. The moment the squishy ‘head’ of Nahtura’s tentacle pressed into Avaron’s pussy, all the tentradom’s fluff froze stiff. The delightfully weird sensation of being spread open much more than any finger or three had done before swept away every other thought for a moment. It commanded the totality of her attention as another entered into her with an undeniable presence.
Her toes tingled as much as the antennae on her head twitched.
She stopped herself from biting on her lip lest she draw blood.
It wasn’t bad … no, not like she feared.
Weird, more than anything.
Weird in a fun but itchy way? No, more weird in the funny bone muscle sort of way—
Avaron bit her lip, catching the sound that almost escaped her. At some point the disagreement between her interior muscles and brain brokered peace, and a pleasurable little jolt shot through her brain. It definitely wasn’t the semi-firm, unyielding mass of a dildo; no, no no, too undulating and twitching and squishy and maybe Gwyneth was getting the better end of the deal, what the hell?
“Oh, aren’t you a gripper?” Nahtura purred, a shiver passing through her that made all the odd leaves and branches shake.
“Plea-aaase, don’t call it that,” Avaron breathed out, her pussy very happily discovering how to fold and tighten in new and different ways. Nahtura’s not-a-tentacle responded by turning like a screw, or bending at funny S-shaped angles, and goodness the way Avaron’s guts moved. Her knees wanted to clamp shut on the dryad’s hips something fierce. “Say I’m tight or something.”
“Tight is not gripping?” Nahtura asked confusedly.
“Oh, fuck me,” Avaron groaned, not even wanting to start on that topic when her insides were finding new dimensions.
“I am?”
Nahtura’s lustful look of perplexed intrigue and trying to understand looked rather … cute, in a way. It didn’t help Avaron, whose face scrunched in a complexity of ironies and the complicating sensation of something big going up her pussy. Or how Nahtura suddenly shifted. She laid herself atop of Avaron, flesh-to-flesh and that weird barky texture of those other parts as well. Most of all, however, was her weight. Not crushing, nor smothering, but there, heavy and unyielding.
I hope I’m not that fat, Avaron thought, wondering if Gwyneth felt as—pinned in, as she did right then. Nahtura’s hips bucked suddenly, not a hard motion but one that made the tentradom chirp reflexively. As her disjointed insides got used to something inside her, the more it started to really … do something. Pleasure, maybe, after a fashion.
The anxiety made it hard to enjoy, even as her own body and mind went in two different directions.
At least, they did until Nahtura’s nose bumped into hers. Avaron went crossed-eyed for a moment, surprised.
“You think too much,” the dryad purred with a certain know-it-all tone. “Stop that.”
“Do you have any idea how hard it is to?”
“More than you’d understand,” Nahtura retorted easily.
A crinkling, crackling, weirdly wet nose followed, and Avaron felt something tentacle-like slither up the side of her head. A vine, actually, much to her perplexity as it crept over her eyes. “A blindfold, really?” Avaron muttered, her vision very much blocked out then by something soft and disturbingly warm. “Do I get the ballgag next?”
“Shush,” Nahtura said, giving a quick peck of a kiss on the lips with an audible noise. “Stop thinking. Start feeling.”
Feeling is half the issue, Avaron wanted to retort, but another kiss caught her lips. Without sight, feeling and pressure truly were all she had to know anything. Nahtura suckled with a gentle forcefulness, guiding in a way that demanded acceptance. The tenseness of soft muscles melded with the heat of a flower’s fragrance in each suckling pop and kissing caress. The invasive presence of something deeper inside Avaron’s gut remained there, unmoving. Such a vexing, conflicting arrangement.
A hand slid down her side, eliciting a salacious little moan Avaron couldn’t stop. Her skin tingled and that protruding fluff bent from one direction to another. Somehow combining both the electric delight of skin and her hair being ruffled in that oddly stimulating way. She shivered slightly, unused to it at all as that hand gripped her hip. A hardiness of flesh and wood, plush and textured in a way she’d never truly experienced before. Five solid, unyielding fingers sank into her, not too hard, not too light. Her hip became much less hers and more Nahtura’s to play with.
With a firm push away and a lifting of her hips, Nahtura drew back, her not-tentacle-thing withdrawing with a squelching slipperiness. Avaron, used to it not moving, gasped at the sudden change bolting through her nerves. Her little noise barely escaped the seal of Nahtura’s lips, and the dryad grunted as she resealed them together again. A heated wind blew into Avaron’s mouth, replacing the air she sought with Nahtura’s own salacious breath. Avaron, grabbing onto Nahtura’s shoulders from behind, wasn’t sure to brace, hug, or push against her.
Those firm and soft and barky hips pressed forward, driving that not-tentacle inward again. Nahtura’s kiss joined with a firm, squeezing handful in a purposeful trifecta. For one used to being the lead for her wives, Avaron found herself rather unprepared to be on the receiving end. And, much to her conflicted feelings, found herself starting to enjoy it. Avaron’s antennae started to curl and flex open, an entirely automatic response to the pleasurable little jolts shooting through her.
Can I not make these chirps? Avaron wondered, the involuntary noises really too embarrassing to hear. That full, hip-to-hip contact and deep penetration shot the funny bone in her mouth and the tiniest, yet sharp, sound escaped. Nahtura must’ve heard. She sped up a little bit on those sinister thrusts of hers!
Avaron scowled and hooked a leg around Nahtura’s, trying to pin her. Or get better support. Or something, but the change of angle suddenly made the not-tentacle feel incredibly more vivid. The sudden switch from standard picture to high definition made Avaron moan in a long, dumbfounded noise, her face scrunching up slightly. Her antennae twitched in opposite directions, one being smooth, the other jagged.
Nahtura, predator she was, didn’t miss the opportunity.
The tempo wasn’t any harder or faster, but instead a definitive shift toward using it better.
Avaron wasn’t sure how, or why.
Those deliriously mind emptying thrusts really did convey all feel and no think in a way she found hard to capture. Or stop. Her pussy gripped fiercely to no avail, the very effort itself making her knees tighten in wanton desire. Nahtura’s lips slid down Avaron’s cheek, burying into her neck with a succulent softness and fierce suckle. The dryad’s surprising strength truly surrounded Avaron, inflexible in its feminine power and hardy, wild texture. Ah, those sharp teeth grazing her neck, reminding Avaron of their very deadly nature.
A mouth that could suck her tentacle like a maiden, as much as tear her throat out with beastly glee.
The mere thought of someone so primal hungering for her, thrusting into her, gripping everywhere, it rather made her belly clench and her pussy gush delightedly. Avaron wasn’t even sure where those thoughts came from or how they pieced together and god damn the wet slapping sound of hips-against-hips really sounded nice. She liked it when it was her against Gwyneth or Tsugumi but being the one it got made against was something else.
No, she had to get them strap ons of some kind. Maybe teach them how to pound her if it actually felt this good for once.
The oddest thing happened when the crushing wave of orgasm set upon her, exploding through her veins and up behind her eyes in a shower of stars. Nahtura’s shuddering form pressed in tight, keying off of Avaron’s all-consuming clench, and then that not-tentacle thing went deeper? It met with Avaron’s own tentacle, snuggly happy deep inside her? They started to kiss? Or her tentacle got sucked into the other one?
Whatever happened, the very strange sensation of both her mating tentacle and pussy enjoying action about fried her higher thought processes. Quite literally a pure overload that made her let out a girlish scream and hug Nahtura with a back-crushing tightness. Or would’ve been if the dryad wasn’t so damn tough. Avaron’s squishy juices gushed out as Nahtura’s devious not-tentacle supped on a fresh load of cummy goodness straight from the source. Something that very much made Avaron’s instinctive need to breed let out her precious queenly eggs in the process. For the one getting pounded, it would be Nahtura getting impregnated.
Isn’t nature just wonderfully queer?
[Due to the extreme level difference between yourself and the potential brood mother, your offspring will receive minimal benefits.]
Avaron had never seen that message before. She might’ve even had a comment about it if her face wasn’t scrunched in a stupid post-orgasm look of ‘that just happened’ and freshly fucked delirium. Her blue, fleshy tentacles within the porcelain shell of her skin twitched erratically, clenching and writhing in a way that almost seem like she’d start changing shape. No, it really just let the fluffy, flesh-like grass grow out further, extending several inches in an impressively soft looking coat. Not one that covered her fully, mindfully, but it did well to cover her joints and other exposed areas.
As the two of them eased onto the plant bedding, Nahtura’s throaty chuckle reverberated through Avaron’s boobs and right into her chest. The dryad’s hand crept up from Avaron’s hips and onto her belly, probing with intent that wasn’t just to be sexy. “There’s more still, isn’t there?” she purred with a voice that promised something.
“Y-you’re fucking me dry here,” Avaron gasped, her insides very aware of how much just emptied out.
And how much was left.
“Mmmm. You give so much to the others, now you find yourself shy?” Nahtura asked, but her kind voice carried such a terrifying threat to it. She shifted slightly, getting onto her knees proper while remaining hunched over. Avaron, however, found herself grabbed by the shoulder and then turned over. The tentradom inhaled sharply at the very three-dimensional sensation of that not-tentacle-thing rotating her insides.
Face first into the plant bedding, Avaron found herself keenly aware of her ass being lifted up. She knew very well of such a position, mostly by fucking Gwyneth silly in it. Now, it seemed, was her turn. “You can’t be serious,” Avaron chirped, her thighs quivering with frightful excitement. “I just came, lady! F-five minutes?”
She couldn’t see Nahtura behind her but she sure damn felt that tall, imposing creature of a woman looming over her. Two hands slid up her backside, coming to rest on Avaron’s tight and cutely-sized butt. Hands that wasted no time in squeezing in, denting that porcelain flesh around their hard digits with a certain possessiveness. The not-tentacle inside Avaron twitched and flexed, stiffening in a weird, snake-like way that made her toes curl.
Slapping her hands onto the grassy bedding and grabbing fistfuls of something squishy, Avaron scowled. Two heavy thumps sounded when Nahtura leaned forward, bracing herself on either side of Avaron’s head. Her luscious, barky hips pressed into Avaron’s rear, oh-so-gently forcing her cheeks forward and really, just really pressing in close and snug. A shower of leafy hair fell down Avaron’s head, flowers bristling with dancing petals.
“You seek excuses, to deny what you are,” Nahtura breathed out in a husky voice, her lips approaching Avaron’s ear. The tentradom froze, some primal thought in the back of her mind like a deer in headlights. “You think one way, but are another. Flesh unbound becomes you, spreading and growing.”
“Oh, yeah, I’ll spread and grow alright,” Avaron grumbled. While she could try extending some tentacles out in certain places, it really wouldn’t give her leverage. No, rather, she feared them gripping harder inst—
Nahtura’s hips rocked back and forth in a sharp, audible plap of skin-against-skin, and Avaron’s brain fried out. Her ass raised up on its own, pressing against Nahtura with an eagerness for more the rest of her hadn’t even thought about yet.
“Your voice leaks your thoughts, destined toward contempt and hatred. If love it is you must feel, then love you will be made to feel.”
There was a weird diction to Nahtura’s speech, something that merely hearing did funny things in Avaron’s head. It didn’t help that sexy goddess of a walking plant breathed right into her ear. Seriously, it would melt chocolate.
“Thought is a lie, the self beneath it stirs. Do not think, only feel.”
Avaron certainly felt that thrust going into her again. The angle itself had a certain funniness to it: Nahtura’s loins lined up nicely with Avaron’s rear in a cushy, womanly hug of hips-against-butt. Something like that wouldn’t be quite possible with a strap on, but a flexible not-tentacle-thing? Why, it was the same trick Avaron herself pulled out nightly.
“G-gonna see how much lip you go-ot when I’mmm the one fucking you!” Avaron quipped while Nahtura’s back-and-forth thrusting slowly but oh-so-agonizingly-wonderfully-increased. Steady. Inevitably. Her thighs kept trying to clench shut, but her knees were pinned to the ground. Her feet kicked a little, uselessly smacking the bedding. She struggled, but got fucked anyway. Oh, her breasts were so squished against the bedding. Her nipples sang with electric itchiness, going back and forth along with the rest of her against that soft-and-firm grassy growth.
“Hmm, hmm,” Nahtura laughed in her throat. “Fuck or be fucked. Mate, or be mated. What is yours is mine, mine becomes yours!”
It made as much sense as it didn’t.
Nahtura sped up further, reaching that brisk, hip-jolting pace of hers, Avaron’s mouth snarky mouth took a job as a moaning machine instead. The passion of holding became that of dominance, Nahtura pointedly making sure Avaron stayed in place. All of it went at the dryad’s pace, and everything exuded an unflinching certainty. Even that not-tentacle thing felt sharper; pointed, even. Purposeful in reaching deeper, sucking the head of Avaron’s receded tentacle, and engulfing that thing too.
The plapping of flesh-against-flesh joined the squelching, slurping suck of pussy juice splattering out. The speed and force of it destroyed any thought Avaron might have, her mind’s eye enraptured by that pistoning invasion. Nahtura’s weight pinned her in place so pointedly that even her squirming tentacle flesh didn’t have much desire to escape. The long, extended fluff coming out of Avaron shook with every meaty impact, going back and forth in a rhythmic wave. Perhaps that, more than anything, betrayed how powerful Nahtura was right then.
An inescapable predator who’d caught her prey.
Such a vexing feeling, but one that oddly didn’t bother Avaron.
A certain purity of purpose pervaded; or was it that Nahtura wasn’t as craven as others?
It felt odd to consider such a mysterious woman-creature and her brazen ways as ‘pure’.
Purely carnal, maybe.
Avaron’s eyes crossed a little, and she really was glad no one could see her stupid expression. Her wishful thoughts of revenge were quite literally pounded into submission, if only for the time being. Goodness that firm and slippery thing sliding in and out of her couldn’t be stopped no matter how hard her pussy clenched it. Frankly, her tentacle starting to thrust out of her and into Nahtura’s whatever-the-fuck-it-was didn’t help things either.
Oh, fuck, what was brushing her clit? As velvety soft as a tongue and as brain-blastingly delicate as a kiss and—
Tentacle, pussy, and clit all together and Avaron literally started drooling like an idiot, chirping with every butt-slapping smack of hips. A warmly wet and thick thing probed into her ear, licking around the edge with indecent intent. Two hotly firm lips followed after, their soft impact a scratchy reverberation of pleasure in a growing cacophony of them. Avaron, tentacle monster she might’ve been, would be the one undone by a plethora of lustful attacks.
Her belly visibly contracted, seizing up as her thighs clenched the hardest they ever had. In one heart-pounding moment, her pussy gushed a river of delicious flavor right down her legs. It sputtered out, creating sticky-wet webbing that drenched the grassy bedding underneath. In the next moment, her tentacle contracted, precious queenly cum blasting out into an eager, gulping maw of a not-tentacle-thing. She wasn’t sure if it counted as a mouth or some kind of tentacle pussy, but it sure had suction and grip.
For the first time she recognized it, Avaron heard Nahtura’s own moan rather clearly. It wasn’t a huff, puff, or grunting noise of exertion, but a certain trilling, pitched sound she wouldn’t hear if it hadn’t been directly into her ear. It reminded her of a bird, except woman and sexy and cute. A mixture of a high-pitched sound and the throaty purr of pleasure, and it really made Avaron want to hear it more.
Hear it more and louder.
Maybe that sense of desire is what Nahtura wanted to fan awake. Lust wasn’t new to Avaron, but always in a controlled sense. Something to be worn like a suit when convenient, then taken off when it wasn’t needed. Yet, the more she envied thoughts of touching, feeling, kissing, eating out, drinking, licking …
Those desires slipped through her grip like oil, slathering her in the process.
It didn’t come off as easily as it used to.
She wasn’t sure why that was anymore.
But, as something resembling consciousness returned from her post-orgasmic blow out, Avaron felt determined to truly, utterly fuck the dryad pinning her into submission. To breed her with a lot of eggs and get her knocked up and tits milking so she could suck on them and play with them and fuck that sharp-toothed mouth until Nahtura’s eyes rolled back into her fucking skull—
That slippery oil of lustful desire found ignition.
*~*
Bang, bang, bang.
“Your Highness! Your Highness, please open the door!” a servant called on the other side, muffled by the thick slab of tree trunk that was the door.
Efval did as she ever did, and laid in her bed, staring at the ceiling. An audible creak of something snappy-and-barky continued, low but continual, as vines grew across columns, and leaves sprouted from stretching branches. Her potted plants, small gardens, and other niceties of her bedroom grew with freakish abandon. They seemed much less like plants and more like living creatures come to life in a sudden, inexplicable motivation.
Ah, but she knew.
Bang, bang, bang; the servants kept trying to get in.
Efval stared at the ceiling, her eyes bloodshot.
The Solemn Flowers, rare to bloom and rarer still to see in number, were vividly alive and awake. Everything sprouted flowers, even those not of their original species. The scent of pollen accompanied the wistful hint of fruitfulness in an intoxicating mixture.
How long has it been? Efval wondered, not truly able to remember at all. She knew well what it all meant, but it’d been so long, she’d earnestly forgotten it.
“Your Highness! This is a crisis! No one knows what’s going on! The growth is going wild!”
And you think I do? she wanted to spit into their faces acidly. She did, of course. She did and that’s why she pulled a pillow out from behind herself, and then buried her face with it. Maybe she’d die, if she was lucky.
Mother, please. This is indecent! MOTHER! STOP!
Her mother was the forest, and the forest was her mother. Whatever she felt, the forest became. For many eons, it’d been dormant and idle, growing with a laziness many mistook for its natural state. Only the oldest of elvetahn, like Efval herself, knew otherwise. Remembered the true forest as it had existed, back in the resplendent ages. Or at least, the era of Tahn. The legends of times long before that Efval barely recalled anymore. Little tangible evidence remained to make sense of anymore.
Not even Efval knew her mother’s ‘original’ form, whatever that was.
But, there were a few times Efval could remember seeing the wild growth bloom, but never in such a … vivid, way.
And with a passion far stripping that of whatever happened with her father.
Her mother was having the time of her life and the entire forest reflected that fact.
How was she to explain that to her people? Worse, what would happen now that her mother was motivated?
And so, Efval laid in her bed, suffering.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.7) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquaintances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.16) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Notes:
A year of struggle with this chapter and I'm still not sure about the end result. I think it serves its narrative purpose, but I explored too many different (and opposing) ideas at once to really nail the erotic aspect of it. I think some people will still enjoy it, though from a design perspective it feels pretty weak to me. Still, with Nahtura's character now more established, future content with her should be much easier to work with.
Chapter 46: Learning to Think
Notes:
Chapter 45 is currently being worked on, if it's still not visible in the chapter list when you read this message.
Chapter Text
The beauty of synchronization is the orderliness to which it lives by.
*~*
In the anxious days that followed, with Nuala offering direct protection, Avaron could afford to push her development further. Winter’s thaw into spring brought all sorts of food, and Nahtura’s gushing enthusiasm certainly helped there. While the war capacity of the Hive had been wiped out, it hadn’t needed to use workers for emergency defense. Thus, the many hibernating tentacles warmed to life and were put to work.
(Right, now send up the other drill tentacle,) Venus said, standing in an open grass field. A crunching, dirt-moving sound soon followed off to her side, and she looked over. A spire of blue flesh, bladed in a conical manner, erupted out, a jet of debris following after it. Venus leaned back, squinting from the midday sun. She looked over the other way, staring at another drill tentacle, then another. Then she checked the ground around them, where small wooden stakes stood. (Right. Okay we’ve lined up the underground frame with the above ground markers.)
(It only took seven tries,) Aphora remarked dryly.
(There’s probably a faster way but, ya know, starting somewhere.) Venus habitually waved a hand, signaling the awaiting worker drones. The so-called modified excavation drones, bulkier, muscular, and armed with various specialized forearms. Their heavy-set steps were more thumps than skitters as they took up their positions.
Of the ‘square’ that was the work area, they took two sides, such that as one side started, the other could cut across, doing work in a checkerboard-like manner. Venus watched as the first wave of chitin-grown shovels, rakes, and hoes started up. The area, already cleared of small rocks and the like, came alive with the sound of shuffling chitin and ripping ground.
(Is it really worth us building like this?) Venus asked, arms crossed with a vexed look. (Shouldn’t we just dig deeper underground?)
(No,) Abyssa interjected. (Aside from the logistical problems of that, it’ll help to deceive the enemy.)
(I mean they’re going to know we have something underground.)
(Not all of them. The less incentive there is for them to build underground attack techniques, the better.)
Venus pursed her lips, not at all convinced.
(Besides,) Aphora said, (It’ll be easier to have multiple access points to the surface. These hydroponic towers are going to be the most meaningful ones for us to make.)
(I just hope they actually work. We’re kind of taking a leap with them as it is.)
(Well, we’ll be using the first few for the Hive, so at least there won’t be a chance of public outbreaks.)
Sewage was one of the greatest problems for a functional settlement. Popular media and television never talked about it, because shit is disgusting, but a city lived or died by how well it treated sewage. Mindful of this, Venus and Aphora had spent much of their time studying bacterial samples, plants, and various other ‘natural’ means of processing sewage. Their results were formulated into an engineered, semi-living sewage processing system.
This carefully worked on but deliberately vaguely explained system would be installed underneath every hydroponic tower. Sewage lines would feed the towers, and the processing systems would convert all the crap into variously useful fertilizer products. The problem mainly was human sewage was terrible to work with and monja probably wasn’t any better. If they couldn’t ‘clean’ the raw materials well enough, using it as fertilizer and soil feed for hydroponic plants would lead to all sorts of diseases breaking out.
Well, if that is the case, we could just refine it all down into EBS.
Amidst her musing, the excavator drones had done well to strip down the top layers of soil. Hammer and pickaxe equipped drones went in as needed, shattering and destroying solid rock. Haulers followed after, picking up the debris. As they went deeper, a ramp of dirt lined the edges of the growing pit. The crisscross sweeping soon turned into straight digging, ran by dutiful workers who had no concept of tedium or boredom.
(I still think we should just focus on the nutrient solution idea,) Venus remarked, coming to sit down on the edge of the pit. (We wouldn’t have to bother with soil at all, then.)
(You figure out a way of tracking nutrients directly and you can do that,) Aphora shot back irritably. (Besides, what are we going to do with all the crap?)
(Ritually sacrifice it to Haska?)
A sort of stupefied silence followed for a long, solemn minute.
(You know,) Prime chimed in, (I wonder if we can actually—)
(We’re not thinking about this anymore,) Aphora said, all of them feeling her exasperated dismissal.
(You don’t want to send bags of flaming shit to the doorstep of a god?)
Corena, busy getting sucked off by Tsugumi, broke out into distressed laughter. Halfway between pleasure and knee-slapping mirth, she was soon busy trying to placate her irritable, tentacle-between-her-teeth wife.
Venus sat there, tuning out the jeering laughs and jests. The ‘bottom’ of the tower wasn’t terribly deep, but the hole itself was starting to exceed thirty feet downward. She saw edges of the white hive chitin of the underground sewage system starting to make itself known. Not metal machines, and nowhere near as efficient, but ever unrelenting, aren’t they? she mused. They had to eat and rest still, but further improvements could be made. Less time to digest, less rest needed; more action per energy spent. The more the Hive changed, the less ‘animal’ and more ‘machine’ it started to seem.
Perhaps the differences between the two would simply come down to semantics, ultimately.
I wonder if we can expand into becoming metal? Venus wondered, kicking her legs idly. But wouldn’t that just be putting metal around frames of tentacle flesh? That’s just armor, at that point …
Not, in itself, a terrible idea, but nowhere close to a ‘robot’.
Well, I’m sure Iris and Cypher will figure out something insane.
(YOU BET YOUR ASS WE DID!) a thunderous voice ripped through the Hive Mind. All at once, everywhere in Eden, drones and Avarons alike shuddered and twitched. They shook themselves, scratching irritable itches and just getting their wits back about them again.
(What are you doing?!) Aegis demanded.
Cypher’s presence in their collective mind felt far too large. Where they’d all been relatively equal before, and blissfully unaware to the contrary, now they all seemed terribly small by comparison. The mere thought-speak Cypher used proved deafeningly loud in how much raw signal strength it possessed. Before their very minds, Cypher’s presence shrunk, and her next thoughts were far more normal. (Okay, so that does happen that way, neat.)
(To answer the question,) Iris said in a tired, I-Was-Up-All-Night voice, (we’ve figured out how to expand our mental capacity.)
(We noticed,) Aegis said first what the others all thought. (What does that exactly do?)
(It’s amazing but it needs time to grow more,) Cypher cut in, way too energetic for Venus’ liking. (Basically, by stringing up more complex brain stuff and ‘connecting’ to it, mental expansion happens. It’s not just tweaking instincts or teaching the drones to behave autonomously. It expands us.)
(Reading our own memory here, but it’s not even been a week. How do you have working brains already?) Medusa asked.
(You don’t want to know how many are growing down here. Like, it’s a lot.)
Venus rubbed her eyes, dreary keeping away from any thought that might actually answer the amount. (That’s neat and all,) she said, (What’s it going to do for us?)
(What isn’t it?) Iris asked rhetorically. (Thinking faster, calling up memories quicker, more parallel thoughts … it’s crazy. Like absolutely insane. We don’t need more of ‘us’ in the Hive Mind. We can simply upgrade ourselves. But I just burned out the test brains, so, we’ll need to wait.)
(… Burned them out?) Prime inquired.
(Too much growth acceleration. Between the presence of the Hive Mind and all the cancer spreading in them, they just up and turned into sludge.)
(These are human brains, right?) Weaver asked. (Are you just making people and killing them?)
(Nooooooooo, no … not that I’ve noticed, anyway.) Cypher’s uncertain tone didn’t inspire confidence. (As best as I can tell, because they’re growing from the Hive, they’re already ‘apart of us’. Our consciousness is already there taking up that space. We’re just not ‘using’ it yet.)
(I’m getting a headache just thinking about that,) Abyssa groaned and then receded from the group conversation.
(Well, regardless, they’ll need time to grow properly, so we won’t be at full power with them just yet.)
(How are you accelerating their growth anyway?) Weaver inquired. (We don’t have an [Ability] or [Skill] like that.)
(Welcome to what I’ve been figuring out,) Iris answered dryly. (It is something we can do, but it’s wildly uncontrollable. I suspect its part of [Genetic Engineering], but I’m not 100% certain on that yet.)
(Mm, well—)
Venus gradually tuned out of the conversation herself. While there wasn’t much to directly do with her work, the matter was ‘solved’ as far as she cared. The neat benefit of having ten of her was she could trust her other minds to actually do their own work. If they couldn’t, there wouldn’t be stupid office politics in people hiding their ineptitudes or threats of firing. Really, the [Hive Mind] was a pretty sweet deal in having a work team with damn near perfect efficiency.
*~*
The flesh-door slurped open in front of her, and Nuala saw with her own eyes the expansive workshop for the first time. Unerringly clean floors and walls that were set against insectoid looking furniture. Shelves, tables, enormous glass vats of fluids and flesh; Avaron’s mysterious place of creation. The tentradom herself waited on the other side of the door, staring boredly at her.
“I don’t know why you insisted on doing this down here, but I’m gonna be real annoyed if you sneak magic in,” Avaron said immediately.
“Is it not enough to see it with my own eyes?” Nuala shot back immediately.
“When your eyes may have magic spells that let you see more things than normal, yeah. I don’t need you freaking out over a work-in-progress piece you just happen to see.”
“I do not ‘freak out’.”
“I’ll be the judge of that,” Avaron said and with a weary sigh, turned away. She swept her arm in a beckoning gesture toward an innocuous looking table and set of chairs.
Avaron was correct, of course: Nuala had various visual augmenting spells that could inquire secrets on anything she looked at. The problem was Avaron, and everything related to her, always returned extraordinarily mundane answers. ‘Flesh’, ‘meat’, ‘heart’, ‘lung’, and various other bodily related items. From the walls to the floor to the ceiling and everything in the very room. Despite its pristine nature, her eyes told her it was essentially a butcher’s shop. Yet, as her eyes only told her what she herself could conceive of, that meant all of Avaron’s true work was thus unknowable.
It drove her mad.
Together they went and sat down, and Nuala beheld various papers neatly arrayed before her. Not made out of any woody pulp basis that she recognized; no, rather than paper, parchment was closer.
“What is this?” Nuala asked, carefully elegant in voice even as eagerness danced in her ears.
“What I remember of the Periodic Table of Elements, and Atomic Theory.”
She understood some of those words, but definitely not their arrangement. “Oh?”
“Out of everything I could give you, these two things should keep you busy for a long while,” Avaron said flippantly as she went about arranging the papers. “We’ll start with Atomic Theory. What do you think everything is made of?”
“Elements. Earth, water, fire, air, the sub-elements thus from them, and the many more besides,” Nuala answered. “It is more complicated for some beings than others, of course.”
“Correct, I presume. But let’s say you take something, anything, and then cut it in half. And then cut that in half. You keep cutting it in half, as much as you can. What will happen?”
“Ah, this is the fly’s wing paradox, isn’t it?” Nuala said, holding her chin thoughtfully.
“The what?”
“Something a swordswoman once talked about. She could cut the wings off a fly, but to cut the wings, she needed a smaller sword. So she’d cut the wings again, and then need another, smaller sword. Eventually one cannot make a sword small enough to cut the even smaller wings; the so-called ‘smallest thing possible’.”
“I … suppose that’s not wrong. It all boils down to the same idea, really.”
“Which is what?”
“The existence of atoms, as the Greeks called the idea. The smallest, non-divisible piece of matter in existence. The foundations of Atomic Theory.”
“… You’re saying such things are possible?”
“Possible? They are what we’re made of. You, me, this table, the air—everything,” Avaron said, waving her hands in some grandiose gesture. “At the smallest still observable parts of universe, there are atoms. The tiniest building blocks of existence itself.”
The level of detail and control such a perspective could afford made even Nuala’s mind wrench in a painful twist. A mistress’ talent came from the detail work, and the finer the details, the greater the work. A small, invisible flaw in some piece of metal would mean that would be where it’d fracture later on. If one could observe the entirety of a work to its smallest parts, all flaws could potentially be removed. It was the mad dream any elvetahn artisan pursued, if they sought to be a true mistress.
And Avaron had the key to a mystery thousands of winters old.
Nuala flushed at the thought, a warmth of excitable possibilities that nearly made her lick her lips. “And how do you, study these blocks?”
“A couple of ways. We struggled to do it properly even in my old world. Our science’s cutting edge was just finishing ways of seeing it properly, but we figured out all sorts of ways to work with them long before that.”
“Really? How?”
“By understanding the rules,” Avaron said before leaning over. She brought up a smooth, featureless white ball from the floor and set it on the table. Then, pushing out a piece of paper with rings upon it, she arrayed them before Nuala. “This will be a little complicated. Okay, so, this ball—“ Avaron held it up, “—let’s say this is the atom. Everything that is a part of the atom is inside this ball. In fact, try to think of everything so far as balls.”
“Very well.”
“The atom itself is made of a few parts. Its ‘heart’ is the nucleus, which is made of the positive-charge protons, and the neutrally-charged neutrons. The negatively-charged electrons orbit around the nucleus, which sounds real weird at first but hold on for a minute. Atoms are always neutrally charged, so however many protons there are means the same amount of electrons balances it out ..."
The lesson continued on. The ideas themselves were entirely simplistic, but certain. A handful of simple rules defined the corporeal material laws of existence—it sounded utterly insane. Yet, simple elegance could confer so many countless possibilities. Atoms, their orbits, the various parts of them all, were perhaps only a handful of such things. Nuala rubbed her temple by the lesson's end, brow furrowed deeply in thought. “Then, let us say I wish to create an iron atom. I would need, according to this chart, at least 26 protons, their electron counterparts, and some assortment of neutrons.”
“Exactly. No more, no less, or its nature changes completely.”
“Yes, while electrons are how atoms form or break bonds to form complex structures.”
“Correct,” Avaron said with a nod. “There are more rules and quirky things that can happen, but this will get you started.”
“What you’re saying is difficult, though. Then I, as a person, am composed of millions of these atoms?”
“Millions or billions, but yes. A single grain of sand alone contains easily thousands if not more.”
“And so the bonding behaviors of these atoms is what constitutes existence itself …”
“It might help if I had a microscope or something, I could show you bacteria. That’d probably help a little bit.”
“… Bacteria?” Nuala asked, leaning forward.
“Between atoms and us, there is a whole world of life called microbiology. You could call it the origin of life, in a way. It’s also where all diseases originate from.”
Such world-shattering knowledge in so mundane a voice. The prospect of such new frontiers sent a wave through her whole body, a skin tingling, hair raising anxiousness that even brought on some light headedness. Nuala had to brace against the table, holding her forehead and actively try to not let her thoughts race. “The origin of life and disease, is it?”
“Yeah. Unlike these little stand ins—“ Avaron slapped the balls, “—I can actually show you them. Making a microscope is pretty hard, though.”
“We possess the greatest craftswomen in the known world,” Nuala said matter-of-factly. “I am certain they could create it.”
“Maybe. It’ll take some doing. But!” Avaron stood up and stretched. An almost cute motion, her little grunts as she lifted her arms overhead. In the sheer cloth of an elvetahn nightgown, however, Nuala’s eyes couldn’t help taking in certain details. For not being an elvetahn, she certainly had the beauty of a lithe maiden and her supple bosom. She averted her gaze when Avaron started picking up all the display pieces. “You can keep the papers, or destroy them, I don’t care,” Avaron remarked. “Anyway, I say all this but the rules of this universe may be completely different.”
“How so?”
“Magic doesn’t exist in any form on Earth. Not that I knew of, anyway. Is magic here a new fundamental force? An existing change to the current laws?” Avaron shrugged, then headed over to one of the cabinets. “I don’t have a clue, so you’re going to have to do a lot of work in figuring out what is what.”
“That is the life of a magi and any professor worth the title.”
“Sure. Just don’t complain to me if what I tell you doesn’t work out.”
“If nothing else, the perspective alone is worth the price.” Nuala stood up, neatly sliding the parchments into pockets inside her robe. She couldn’t help taking a furtive glance over at Avaron. Funny, in its own way, the long-forgotten feeling made a comeback so suddenly. Desire, in a small, tiny bud even the sharpest eye would have trouble seeing. For all its enticement, though, beneath Nuala’s immense experience, it wouldn’t ever bloom.
I wonder if this is some [Skill] of hers, Nuala mused, resisting shaking her head. Instead, she fiddled with her robe and made it neat again. ‘Beautiful fireflies, dancing in the air, even if I held you, death is still there’.
An old poem, and one that stuck like a thorn in her mind ever since she heard it. Nuala rather envied those whose hearts were so free and unburdened, capturing fireflies and holding onto them so dearly. No matter how beautiful, one day they would go still as time’s weightless death crushed them. She’d seen so many weep bitterly, pine for untold winters, and carry the weights of the departed evermore. More, still, who once professed the greatest and mightiest of loves, only to do the same once again later on.
All set to go, Nuala turned toward the door. “If that is all, then?”
“For now. I gotta get to working on the sewage systems again, so let me know if you run into any problems.”
“I will. If you have the time, an area to begin magical practice and crafting in would be useful. If you still want to learn, that is.”
“Oh, believe me I do, but I’m juggling so many things at once.” Avaron smiled, half staring at Nuala, half burdened by work. “We’ll see how things go, but I’ll try to make more time in the summer.”
“Very well.” Nothing more to say, she left the workshop. A drone waited outside to guide her back to her quarters. The walk, in spite of the noise of shoes and tip-tapping chitin, remained heavily silent.
She knew herself well; she had to, to be the greatest magi. The likes of romance and the heart were insidious, and hers would undoubtedly be the former of the two. Someone who’d lose too much of herself when her partner died. Of course, no end of people, including Efval, tried convincing her to the contrary. Failing that, why not suffice for an elvetahn anyway—never actually thinking romance could bloom elsewhere. Those answers might work for them, but they wouldn’t for her. And Avaron, even if Nuala indulged in the insanity of that choice for a hot minute, was still mortal. A beautiful firefly that would fade away when winter came.
But, that was fine. She was used to it. The reminders were irritating wounds, but they too came and went just as much.
After all, she was Nuala. Her people did not call her the ‘lonely tree’ for nothing. It’d just be a day as any other, ultimately.
*~*
Little by little, spring crept by. In the span of seven days, hundreds of worker drones skittered across the entirety of Eden’s claimed land. They cleaned out the rough and wild earth, then graded it for future construction. The fields some of the farmers had begun on were finished at such alarming speed they quickly found themselves done with the initial plantings.
Similarly, construction accelerated quickly with the drones doing the bulk of tedious labor. Hauling materials to and fro, dispensing food, and even pulling carts for people workers. Dorin and the others, flabbergasted initially, soon became quite glad to make use of their unwavering ability. They focused that much more on actually erecting the houses and doing the fine, technical work the drones were ill-equipped for. All of the refugee tents and temporary huts were broken down and scrapped by the end of the third week.
In the night, when all others had gone to sleep, the drones kept working. Mindful of the noise, it was chiefly tasks further away from, or under, the housing zones. Still, people woke up to all sorts of changes every morning. While Avaron had thought to lay down the foundations for a wall, she quickly realized how useless it’d be. Either the problems that a wall would stop would overwhelm them, or her drones would catch and kill any significant intruders. At the least it’d been shelved, though Raina insisted one would eventually be needed somewhere.
It is difficult to overstate the effectiveness of a relentless working force. Eventually, all needed projects hit their various roadblocks, waiting on either further design or the people of Eden. Yet, Avaron and her Hive continued on. Dirt roadways were sculpted leading to the Hive’s proper entrance and Tsugumi’s inn. Once done, teams of drones went further aboard, heading to the southwest and southeast. In a world without GPS, cellphones, or even widespread maps, a road meant one thing: people were at one of its two ends.
So it was that Eden’s main street stretched out into the wildernesses. The drones went as far as the Hive Mind could reach before turning back; a distance of many miles. Despite that, Eden’s remoteness became that much clearer in how Avaron never saw nor encountered other people. Not even the ruins of old settlements, for better or worse. Sign posts were planted evenly, pointing in Eden’s direction, and so the Hive went about its other tasks.
More refugees may or may not come to the settlement; but it was a planned for eventuality. Hiding was pointless, as Avaron’s enemies already knew her location.
Satisfied, Avaron set her gaze upon the Silvervein Mountains next. What actual ores it had was a complete mystery—if nothing else, it had rock. A roadway was sculpted up to a plateau, upon which a new mining facility would be erected. Lacking in any of Eden’s infrastructure, supplying its amenities would be more of a challenge in the future.
As it stood, drones would cart workers as needed, so no one spent the night nor lived near the mining sites. Something Avaron would come to insist upon, as she knew how devastatingly polluting and dangerous mine work was. If not from her knowledge from Earth, then having to do it herself with excavation drones. A few old miners and their apprentices went about surveying the lands, but it’d take a while for them to definitively find useful locations.
By the time of mid-spring, arguably closer to summer than winter, most of Eden’s pressing work was done. The people rested easy as they sought to rebuild their lives. The commercial zone, as Avaron tried calling it, started popping up with new buildings. Bakeries, butcher shops, clothiers, and other industrious pursuits were slowly revitalized.
Avaron felt the idea of ‘commercial’ and ‘workshop’ got mixed up at some point, but she let that problem lay easy. Raina’s milk ranch, as people had taken to calling it, was torn down and relocated to a commercial zone properly. Thanks to the sewage system, it wasn’t hard running a parallel pipe network specifically for milk. The problem of excess waste became resolved as the milk was simply pumped into the greater Hive directly.
As a whole, Eden’s layout could be described thus: industrial zoning toward the Silvervein Mountains, residential toward the open plains and forests, and commercial sandwiched between the two. Farming zones were put beyond the houses, ultimately as it would be easier to expand housing onto them as needed. A huge swathe stretched around the northeastern side, an untouched forbidden zone that kept Eden away from the Alva Forest at large. Only Tsugumi’s inn really stood out, becoming quite the attraction. That it also happen to have Eden’s only bar certainly helped drive traffic as people came and went for booze and fun.
A town hall was eventually erected as well, placed auspiciously further toward the southwest side of Eden than its current ‘central’ area. It would invariably grow in size, and its location kept that problem in mind. With it completed, the first building of a solidified government stood, a quaint square and its large bell tower without a bell. A second entrance into the underground Hive was secretly created there, and so Avaron’s drones quite commonly went in and out regularly. Eden’s people insisted on decorating it elaborately, and helping to make more fanciful architectural choices. It was, after all, their queen’s place of work for the time being.
Thanks to Nuala’s protection, no attacks came, but perhaps their enemies were yet recovering or planning to attack. As for Avaron, she had a sudden issue with Gwyneth, who had just only finished recovering. A rather interesting issue, at least for the two of them …
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.9) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquaintances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.18) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 47: Purpose
Chapter Text
Purpose begets need; need begets purpose.
*~*
Smooth.
Too smooth.
How could she be this smooth?
Gwyneth frowned, daintily feeling her arm again. What she expected and what she found remained two entirely different things. She couldn’t remember feeling herself that way, ever. It almost made her itchy, or want to be anyway. She stretched overhead, an aimless energy boiling inside she didn’t know what to do with. Just moving alone did her good, especially since all her wounds had cleared up and she could walk again.
Honestly, even with Avaron’s ‘helper tentacles’, as she called them, Gwyneth was going a little stir crazy. The constant massaging and tender care certainly helped stave it off, though. A slurping suck of the door opening caught her ear, and she looked over. Avaron’s familiar outline stood there, coming into sight of her spectral vision.
Gwyneth turned toward her, a half-formed impulse to cover up her nakedness. Not that really mattered; she’d already given everything and more. She couldn’t help perking up, standing a little straighter and making sure her chest was really out there. Two milk filled breasts hung happily, swaying a little carefree at her movement.
“How are you feeling?” Avaron asked, stopping in front of her.
“Fine. Tis the same as thee asked this morning,” Gwyneth said, giving a coy little smile.
“Can’t blame me for worrying.”
“I do not.”
“Mm. Howse your, ah …”
There it was.
“New skin?” Gwyneth supplied, much to Avaron’s begrudging nod. “Smooth. That is, tis rather smooth and … even.”
“Is it bad?”
“Troubling, would be mine choice.”
“Well, if it’s not a problem me asking about it … That is, rather—“ Avaron scratched the back of her head and looked around, “—ah, you know. I just want you to be happy, you know.”
What troubles her? Gwyneth marveled, her tentradom lover practically squirming out of her own skin. Not literally yet, at least. “I do not mind it, if thou mean such. Tis more, mmm, vexing.”
“The change? Or …”
“Mine gift in Flame. It doth heal strongly, but at a price. The scars left behind are the proof.” Gwyneth looked down at her arm again, flexing her fingers. “Now I am … healed, I suppose. Mine scars are all gone, but to use mine Flame again, they will return. Little by little, but they will.”
“Surely you won’t have to? I mean, isn’t there a better way?”
Gwyneth shook her head. “Not with mine talents. Tis how the Flame is. If I am wounded, I must heal myself.”
“Then, I won’t let you be hurt again.”
The priestess smiled ruefully. A promise she’d heard before, from others who’d long since departed the world. None quite so intimate and warm as Avaron’s, though. The sincerity of it all rather touched her, even as experience told her to expect otherwise. She reached up and cupped Avaron’s cheeks, giving them a gentle squeeze. “Tis the way of things. That I yet live is all that matters.”
“Living and surviving are two different matters,” Avaron said before letting out a sigh. “There just has to be a better way. You shouldn’t have to do it like that.”
“Shouldn’t, yet we must all the same. Do not let it weigh upon thy heart so heavily.” Gwyneth knew enough even simple truths wouldn’t dissuade someone as intense as Avaron. She had another way, however. Licking her lips and smiling much more invitingly, she reached down. Gently grabbing Avaron’s hands, she brought them up, then gently placed them upon her sensitive breasts. The slightest squeeze shot through her like a flash in the sky, and Gwyneth gasped lightly. The fullness in her own tits stood out that much more sharply, an altogether very new sensation. “Please, doth thou not like mine appearance more now?”
“Gwyneth, you were always sexy to me,” Avaron said, sounding a bit exasperated.
It warmed her and made her want to laugh altogether. Avaron spoke true as much as so very desperately tried to tiptoe around the issue. “I shan’t think ill of thee for preferring me now. Is that not what many would covet?”
“It’s more … the you before, and the you now, are both attractive. I’m desperately not saying that because I’m, you know, a creature of pure sex. It’s more, well, the ‘you’ before is what I knew. Now I have to change ‘you’ in my mind to what you are now. If that makes any sense.”
It took a moment, but the idea did sort of piece itself together. Gwyneth found it odd, nonetheless. So many spoke of how beautiful she could be without her scars. Many more fantasized, openly or not; saying as a woman she’d obtain allure and seductive attraction otherwise denied. That Avaron didn’t care for it—no, rather, the change itself seemed to disconcert her the most. What was once familiar, had become different. To thee, I am already a woman most sublime, is it?
She reached out, laying her hands gently upon Avaron’s shoulders. “Then, prithee learn of this new flesh of mine, as tis thine.” Avaron stared at her then, seemingly a bit stupid for a moment before grinning. The hands upon her breasts vanished, their comfortably gripping warmth vanishing. Goodness the ache of their absence just irritated her immediately. Before she might dwell on it, a hand gripped the back of her head while another looped around her waist. In a determined tug, Avaron pulled her in flush and close, their two naked bodies molding together.
The sensual feeling of her lover so close made her heart race. A flush heat of contentment bristling with excitable energy, something she’d hadn’t felt for so many weeks. Raw, sexual instinct tickled her mind, a hyperawareness of the woman she cuddled against; everything she could do, everything that’d happened. Gwyneth let out a hot, stuffy breath, audibly gulping. “Avaron,” she breathed out, every part of her feeling more alive than ever. Rather than anything else she expected then, Avaron simply leaned in and laid her head upon the priestess’ shoulder.
“I’m glad,” she said lowly. Her unwavering voice, for once, turned weak and quiet. “I’m just, so glad you’re okay.”
The tonal whiplash was something to behold as Gwyneth’s horny mind warred with the overwhelming emotion suddenly bubbling up. A war between a body that wanted to be fucked pregnant and a heart that grew three sizes and a chronic condition of concern. “Ehm, Ava—RON!”
The hand on her waist gripped her ass, and the one behind her head shot down to the mid of her back. In one heaving motion, Avaron lifted her up, squeezing her almost painfully tight. The tentradom spun in a circle, whirling them around with an almost manic energy. “Ahh, I don’t do crying! I grew out of that years ago!” Avaron complained loudly, almost a mantra. As fast as it all started, she jerked to a stop, the sudden exertion leaving them both out of breath. “Sorry, that’s out of my system now.”
Gwyneth looked at the tentradom, not at all certain what to make of her right then. “Tis well, then,” she said, for want of anything better.
“As much as I can smell how ready you are, a hospital room is a huge turn off for me,” Avaron said. “Do you want to go for a walk? See Eden and all that?”
“What doth thou mean by, ‘smell’ my readiness?”
“I am a tentradom, Gwyneth. My nose is the strongest sense I have.”
“… Oh.”
She knew, but the realization hadn’t come together until just that moment. An embarrassed flush rose over her now pristine skin, easy to see across such a creamy expanse. The thought of it was terribly exposing, knowing that even without words, her body might betray her intentions. Speak, as it were, without her speaking.
And for some reason it really made her knees that much weaker.
*~*
In the quiet forest clearing, she stood, eyes closed. Eyes were creatures of deception, and so not everything they saw could be truth. This was the first lesson passed down in the Hinaro Clan, simple on its surface but ever impossible to understand. It is the way of people to over rely upon their eyes, for indeed it does confer strength and power. However—
Kagura lashed out with a hand, a firm chop that slammed into something invisible in the air. A surprised scream followed, and with a sudden poof of smoky blackness, a boy fell to the ground beside her. He groaned irritably, clutching his forearm where she’d struck.
“How do you even know?!” Hoshi grunted, simply too expressive in his young face for being a divine heroine.
Kagura wanted to sigh, but that’d be improper. “You exhaled as you went in, and I heard it.”
“I held my breath!”
“The very motion of moving can cause air to escape the lungs. It is a rather distinct sound.”
“Seriously? You can hear something like that?”
Why do you look at me like that is amazing? Kagura wanted to ask, her skin prickly and irritated. The heroine ever gazed upon her with admiration for some reason, and not the salacious kind. It was plain to see he fancied himself a ninja, but his ideas of what that was were a far cry from the truth. “Humans do not have innately strong senses, not like my kind or even others,” Kagura said instead, voice all the firm and unwavering tone of a teacher. “This path is not an easy one for you to walk without comprehending that. Those you try to sneak upon may easily know where you are without giving it away.”
“Well I can’t know everything, so it just means I’ll have to get better.”
To ‘get better’ involved knowing something at the least. Kagura shook her head and stared up at the sky. “I do not know why you insist on learning from me. I am not a grand mistress in the shinobi arts.”
“You’re better than me. As they say, ‘a true master is an eternal student’.” Hoshi pushed up from the ground, jumping to his feet.
Despite his obvious youth, he had a conviction that bewildered her to see. Knowledge, insofar as what other great people had said, and at least the wisdom to try and apply it properly. The heroine was a vexing problem that refused to be a single, easily handled idea. That and he spent weeks pestering her while she was on surveillance, and Honda-sama wouldn’t permit her to deal with him appropriately. In the end if all it took was a few hours every so often to keep him from interfering, it’d do.
Kagura stepped over to a small rock where they’d left gear and supplies. She picked up two shaped wooden sticks, vaguely reminiscent of a sword. The carpenters of Eden had made the training weapons at her request, surprisingly capable despite lacking their tools. Throwing one to Hoshi, the two of them took their positions facing off each other. “You do not serve any lord or lady, so how can you hope to achieve anything?” Kagura demanded, straightening her posture and angling her sword. Hoshi tried much the same, for however many flaws his form held.
“I don’t need a boss. Doing the right thing is just inconvenient to them.”
A sliver of anger shot through her, such a pure and primal reaction that Kagura lunged in. A sharp crack sounded as her sword collided with Hoshi’s, the raw force of it driving him backward. “A ninja is only anything because of their lord. We are their extension, their will! What they want is our purpose!”
“Sure. Like a samurai serving their lord,” Hoshi returned simply, unfazed even as he had to retreat. That infuriated her even more, for he showed less surprise and ineptitude every time they ‘trained’. His movements, while irregular, weren’t uncertain. If she didn’t know better, he’d trained with another weapon instead of a sword. “That doesn’t mean it’s always the right thing to do.”
“You—“ Kagura twisted her two-handed swing, cutting in sharply through an obvious opening. A meaty thunk followed, Hoshi grunting in pain as she struck his side cleanly. “—speak with such luxury. A tool is only as good as those who wield it, no more, no less.”
Having fallen to his knees for a moment, Hoshi grunted out something ineligible, rubbing his side. “So what?” he bit out instead. “Your lord dies and you die with him? Give up living or serve the new lord taking his seat?”
“It is our honor to die in service to our lord. What higher purpose can there be than that?”
“You’re the real deal, huh?” Hoshi muttered loudly before standing up with a grunt. Rather than try to imitate her form, he hoisted his sword up on his shoulder like a club. The sight of it struck her, for if he had been an oni, his posture, look, aura—everything, would’ve been perfect. Kagura froze for a moment from stupid disbelief. “I don’t blame you for being loyal. Nothing wrong with that. But loyalty’s got its limits, or that precious honor is worth jack shit.”
His whole demeanor is different now, Kagura realized, squaring up again. Although he didn’t take the posture, his intent to fight stood clear enough.
“What nonsense,” she retorted, stepping in with a swift stab. Hoshi stepped out of the way as he should’ve, and brought his sword down with pure, blunt force. Against her own strength it failed to make her budge, but the rattling force of the blow trembled up her arms. A decision, she realized, to continue the ‘training’ rather than take the chance to strike her for petty points.
They backed away, squaring up again.
“Sure. Probably is.” Hoshi rolled his shoulders. A motion Kagura found eerily reminiscent of her own way. “Used to run with a gang. Not sure what you’d call it in this world. Me and my boys, we were tough. No one messed with us in our school, and we taught the other one’s well enough to respect us.”
“Thuggery, is it?” Kagura said as much as accused. Hoshi made an indecisive look on his face.
“Sure. We didn’t do anything real wrong. Roughed up other punks, maybe shook down a shut-in for a free lunch. No one respected us, so we made them.” He bounced the training sword on his shoulder, ruefully smiling. “Little slugger and me did some work together. Ya know, it all just worked for a few years. We still did our schooling mostly, and got our respect. But then it all fuckin’ changed, ‘cause a new boss came to town.”
For the first time, Hoshi took the initiative, swaggering toward her with that sword of his. A posture and mannerism that spoke of its own experience, not the awkward fumbling she’d dealt with before. Even worse as a martial arts form, it seemed solely to be for intimidation. He swung with speed and strength, a blow she met easily with an ear-splitting clack.
The training sword would fail before his pitiful strength came close to hers. Again and again he moved in, pushing her back as he swung with a methodical, precise aim at her joints. By the ninth blow, she countered by sliding the sword along his, turning momentum against him. His arm flew away as her weapon came to his throat, a killing blow in other words.
“Times changed,” Hoshi said, unfazed by the exchange. “Yakuza started sniffing around, wanting to recruit us. ‘More of what you want’, ‘youre already good at it’, and all that crap. They talked a real big game but in the end they’re still yakuza. You go down that path, and it is hell trying to come back from it.”
“So is the fate of all criminals and their ways,” Kagura answered simply, backing away. They squared up again.
“Yeah. I tried convincing the others to do the right thing. We weren’t in it for that. Or I thought we were. Some of them though, they liked it a lot.” Hoshi shrugged and ran a hand through his hair, staring off to some far away land that Kagura couldn’t see. “We had a big blow out. Gang fell apart, ‘cause it turned out doing the right thing didn’t really matter that fucking much. I lost all my friends, became a shut-in like the ones I used to rough up, and now here I am. A whole other world with magic, actual ninjas, a real breathing oni right in front of me!”
He took the training sword up again properly, gripping it with two hands and back into that poor imitation posture of his. “So yeah, I don’t have a lord, lady, or boss. Or family, or home, or anything anymore. All I got left is doing the right thing. And there’s one thing I know for certain, Kagura-sama.”
“And what is that?” Kagura asked, meeting his determined eyes with her own. Young as he was, opaque and unknowable, what awaited was a conviction someone of his years shouldn’t have. Not the fool she took him for at first, at least.
“We all die some day. One way or another. And whoever I meet on the other side, I am damn sure going to do with my head held up high, and my honor intact. ‘Cause either the dead know everything, or I have to live with what I did. Only one good way to meet that head on.”
“… The weight of your words, I don’t think you appreciate what they mean.”
“Maybe not. But I sure live them as much as I hold this stupid stick. Believe it.”
Their training continued on, even as conversation simply became short exchanges of when to start and stop. Kagura knew well to close out her heart, and keep such frivolous thinking away. One had to, to keep a steady hand as it slid through the darkness. Yet Hoshi’s words loomed, no matter how simple-minded they were. Perhaps because of their simplicity, she simply couldn’t cut it apart and be done. No, no matter how much the blade of logic came down, she found it infuriatingly difficult to cut. She refused to call it ‘impossible’.
For the honor of the fallen Hinaro clan, it was her duty to continue her service. Even as she knew the evils Honda committed, as the last of the clan, he was her sworn lord. How could she meet her ancestors otherwise, spitting in their face by defying one of their most sacred oaths? She couldn’t shame them with something as flippant as a noble cause or some transient virtue. They already did what others called evil in the pursuit of their work.
Good and evil didn’t have a place in the way of the ninja.
There was the will of their lord, and their ability to execute it.
No more, no less.
And yet …
*~*
Something was amiss.
Haleen felt it in her gut, and instinct rarely proved wrong. Throughout their time at the tora woman’s inn, and now the ostentatiously named Eden, she’d kept vigilant. Watchful, not only for the enemies outside, but in as well. The addition of unknown refugees, human and monja alike, posed an ever present threat. She sincerely doubted any capable actors were among them; but traitors ever waited to be made. Dissent and discontent were simply the forewarnings of such acts. Princess Arzha didn’t think much of her scrutiny, but then again, her highness was focused on larger problems. It fell to Haleen to handle the smaller ones.
From atop the small hill she stood, Haleen stared out across the burgeoning village. Despite its size, both in people and otherwise, it had the hallmarks of a larger city. Better, perhaps, in its careful layout, particular ‘zoning laws’, and considerations. Avaron was building something to a scale far beyond anything she could envision. The tentradom had a plan, and everyone around her was drawn into it. She smiled, though anything but kindness or humor could be found in it.
It is very much like her kind, to undermine and ensnare, Haleen surmised. Rarely was violence or threats needed, Avaron could beguile others in with sweet words and reassuring logic. A plan, a vision, a purpose; the hallmarks of greatness that so many lesser people looked toward. Princess Arzha wielded it with grace most sublime, better than even the other royals Haleen had seen. Avaron … to be sure, was smart. Haleen wasn’t sure how much was her intelligence or her unspoken for [Abilities].
A creature of subterfuge that had intelligence; it was a nightmare to consider.
Without knowing the true extent of Avaron’s [Abilities], Haleen was ever left on the backfoot. Worse, the less she could do, the more she could only watch as others fell in. She’d insisted Princess Arzha keep a distance, but even that fell by the wayside. Her highness’ prowess was nothing if not legendary, and so Haleen couldn’t fault her. She could wade through a tentradom’s nest with nothing but her fists and emerge victorious, of that Haleen didn’t doubt. Still, the uncertainty fueled fear, and she remained leery.
After all, if she cannot win through overpowering, she will choose another way. That thing already had a Flame priestess of all people under her control …
Pleasure and delights became a dreadful collar with disturbing ease. Pain kept the soul vigilant, even as it broke apart.
Haleen looked off to the side and saw Saryl approaching. The unarmored knight carried a basket in her arms, while something white and round stuffed her face. At their eyes meeting, Saryl waved an arm overly excitedly. Ever carefree, aren’t you? Haleen wanted to sigh. Of the Snowflake Knights, Saryl was the … simplest. And the only common-born, for that matter. Then again, the two went hand-in-hand, who was she to deny that?
“What are you doing up here?” Saryl asked. “It’s lunch time.”
“Patrolling,” Haleen said easily enough. “What is that?”
“Oh! Lady Tsugumi made them,” Saryl said, trying to balance the basket on one arm while opening it.
‘Lady’ Tsugumi. Hm.
“They’re, uhh, buns! Steamed buns. It’s an Eastern thing, apparently. Here, try one.”
She dearly wanted to turn it away, but an unbecoming food seemed a simpler prospect than Saryl becoming fussy. Haleen sighed and unfastened her glove, holding onto it while she took the surprisingly squishy thing. Its pale white visage and distressingly soft plumpness certainly left her ill-at-ease. “What are they even made out of?” she asked wearily.
“Dunno. Bread, I think,” Saryl said before taking half a bite. “Anhd shum meut tuh.”
Haleen took her own bite, face souring as she ate the thing. More than anything else, she wanted some genuine bread and cut steak, not whatever the goey mess was. Ah, it’s so tacky.
“So why you so glum?” Saryl asked, trying to offer another bun that Haleen turned down.
“It’s nothing,” she insisted, putting her glove on.
“Whole lot of nothing yer carryin’ there,” Saryl quipped, an ease to her swiftly drawn words that even caught Haleen off-guard.
And with how much you get on with them, I can’t speak ill, now can I? she wanted to say, but practice kept her tongue in place. Haleen scratched her head, sour in the face. “It is simply everything. Artor is gone, and we barely lifted a hand to defend it. Now we are here, guests of some monja, watching—this,” she waved a hand at the expanse of Eden before them. “I don’t know what is happening anymore.”
“Doesn’t really matter, does it?” Saryl asked, looking at Haleen as if she were stupid. “We follow her highness, wherever she leads us to.”
“She’s leading us into the arms of a tentradom,” Haleen remarked with exasperation.
“So? We had a court with the Queen of the Elvetahn, and she’s more important than the King ever was.” Saryl shrugged. “If she’s wrong about Avaron, I don’t know what is right.”
The steadfast certainty of that insanely simple logic actually dumbfounded Haleen for a moment.
“Besides, never took you for one to doubt her highness’ judgement.”
“It is my purpose to make sure everything goes according to her highness’ judgement,” Haleen defended sharply. “I am the one who has to double check everything, even when I can count on one hand the number of things wrong I ever found.”
“Yeah. But this is a lot simpler than anything we ever did in Artor.”
“What?”
“Follow her highness, protect her with our lives, serve her as however she demands us,” Saryl said as if telling the very weather. “It doesn’t matter if Artor is here or not. Our enemies got a lot simpler and there’s less to be worried about for right now. Do you need anything else besides that?”
Perhaps it was her common-born upbringing that made such a straightforward way of thinking so attractive. Blissfully ignorant of what moved in the shadows, unaware of the greater forces that ever controlled everyone. The realm of nobility and beyond was that of immense beings, their very musings enough to raise hopes and crush lives. Wars were fought long before any swords were drawn, and such was the world Haleen fell out of. Only by Arzha’s recognition did she still keep a purpose and not a doomed life in exile.
“It is,” Haleen said after a moment, “not enough to just accept what is in front of me.”
“Yeah, I know. You all worry about stuff that hasn’t even happened yet.” Saryl shrugged and turned to head back down the hill. “I’m just saying. If all you can do is worry about nothing, then there’s nothing to do, so why worry?”
“Blissfully insightful as ever.”
Saryl waved a hand flippantly over her shoulder, already heading down and back toward Eden.
Haleen remained on the outskirts a while longer, burdened by the uncertain future yet to come.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.9) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquaintances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.18) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 48: Industry (E)
Chapter Text
We create to fulfill, and find fulfillment in creation.
*~*
“I know the chitin isn’t a wonder do everything material, but it sure looks like it sometimes,” Avaron remarked.
“It certainly surpasses wood and softer metals, my queen,” Dorin said, sounding just as dry witted about it.
They both stood at the front of a construction site; a new blacksmith in the making, the first for Eden. A lonesome looking project all by itself, admittedly. Various stick markers dotted the grounds, denoting the different areas each part of the blacksmith would be set down. The actual location itself followed the main street of Eden that led toward the Silvervein Mountains. At such a distance away from the housing zones, the cleared out lands made it seem a very spare place to build. Still, as a location of future heavy industry, Avaron had a mind to keep its mess in its own corner as much as she could.
“At least it’ll get us started, though I imagine having real iron or steel would be an immense improvement,” Avaron surmised.
“A tool to the purpose. If these, erm, chitin tools suffice and they are easy to repair or replace, then all the better.”
Avaron hummed noncommittally as she looked back down to the ‘blueprints’. On a parchment of pale white flesh sat the plans for the new blacksmith. A result of multiple ‘veterans’ competing over what the best idea is, including everything from furnaces to ore sifting. Dorin himself wasn’t immediately familiar with the smithing ways. He’d talked with and lounged about plenty, but not done the work himself. Still, if the queen hadn’t immediately rejected it like others, it would do for now. If nothing else, he found her efficient handling of any given problem rather admirable.
Her persistent perturbed look, as a result, left him ill-at-ease. “I wonder.”
“I am ever at your disposal, my queen,” Dorin offered simply.
Avaron looked up from the blueprint, staring at the construction site. “Strictly speaking the Hive doesn’t need metal works of any kind. It’s ridiculously tough, but we can grow metal into ourselves when we need it. Ah, you know, like a natural grown sword or something.”
“I boggle at the thought, but as you say, that is quite something.”
“Sure. So I wonder, if the Hive improves at utilizing natural grown metal, we don’t need a metal works, right? But that puts all the metal workers out of work, and it furthers how much Eden as a whole will rely on the Hive to work.”
“Not to speak jestingly, but are we not relying upon your majesty’s Hive to survive anyway?”
“Sure, for now. The—balance of power, you could say,” Avaron said, moving her hands up and down in some strange emphasis, “is important to maintain. Give and take, in relatively fair and equal ways. If this isn’t maintained, then we end up in a situation like your previous lords or ladies draining you all to death.”
He’d never dealt with royalty or any of such folk, though plenty of minor nobles. The difference in her approach and theirs left him stupefied more often than not. A grandiosity to vision, and a wholesome purpose to everything that wasn’t constrained by coin or vice. That Avaron counted him as an important voice in the management of Eden—the burden of responsibility tempered his every word. “It is as you say. But, what is there against doing both at once?”
Avaron hummed and hawed before letting out a huff. “Nothing major that I can think of. Priority of workforce, maybe. Why train new workers in something that I can make redundant? Why grow the Hive to do something Eden can handle?”
“Ah. True,” Dorin said, stroking his chin in thought. “That will take a longer perspective to consider, I think. The ebb and flow of a village’s needs, let alone a city’s, are ever changing. I can say that keeping a readiness for both will help endure whatever is to come.”
“Oh?”
“From my experience, needing workers and not having them is much worse than having workers with nothing to do. It is not great to be in such a position, but from the readiness of your majesty’s needs, I think it is something to consider.”
“Mm. Most likely. As it is there just isn’t enough clear yet to make a decision in one way or another.” Avaron whipped out the blueprints again, looking at them intently. “Still, I’d rather not parasitism set in.”
“I’m afraid I do not understand, my queen.”
“Ah. Errr …” Avaron lowered the blueprints again, seeming vexed. “You know about parasites, I think. Ticks, mosquitoes, that sort of thing.”
“I do.”
“Parasitism is just that way of life in a broader scope. Ah, that look. Okay.”
I do not think I have such a look? Dorin marveled bemusedly.
Avaron rolled up the blueprint, tucking it under her arm while she gestured and spoke. “Most of my kind become parasites. Abducting women, forcing them to breed, stealing their milk—taking the strengths of others to empower themselves.”
“I hear you.”
“I’m symbiotic instead. Symbiont, even. Rather than take for myself, I give to others, so I can then profit from their success. It forms a circle—” her hands looped over themselves, “—they succeed, I succeed, they succeed more, and so on.”
Dorin folded his arms together, tilting his head as he frowned. “I’ve heard plenty of parasites, but not these symbionts. Such animals really exist?”
“It’s stupidly rare and often usually a temporary thing. The problem is the backslide into parasitism. One side starts to take from the other without giving anything beneficial in return. So, the more my Hive gives, the more people rely upon it, and reliance becomes demand. Now reverse it.”
If anything, she had a way of explaining things simply but the grandness of the scale often left him humbled. He had little choice to go for the obvious answers; but often that is all it took, in his experience. “A balance, then. Not only in word, but deed, so that one doesn’t have to—or can—take from the other that much.”
“Mm. I agree, but the reality of it is … hard, to navigate.”
“That is the burden of those who lead, is it not?”
Avaron snorted a laugh, leaning back with a dubiously amused look. “Yes, I suppose so!”
“Your openness in both talk and manners has done much for the people, my queen,” Dorin said, smirking a tiny bit. “As long as that can been continued, I think there will be little cause for concern.”
“You’d be surprised.”
Despite her mirth moments before, the seriousness that suddenly fell upon them almost made Dorin blink. He regarded her that more carefully, and even in that strange posture, Avaron had a stern look as she stared at the sky.
“Simply because something is thought up as ‘good’ and becomes ‘solved’ doesn’t mean it’ll stay that way. Things are nice and cooperative for now, but I’ve seen evil people slither in and corrupt a good thing. You never win, you just keep fighting. Always fighting.” She stood up straighter and sighed. “I just don’t know how to keep it all together for our children and the future they’ll be given.”
That was something he felt far more confident on speaking for. “One day at a time, my queen. Then a week. A month, if you have that kind of luxury. No one knows the future, but we can have a pretty good idea about tomorrow.”
“You’re right. I just wish I could stop trying to think so damn far all the time.”
For whatever he might say, a loud ‘Hey!’ cut across the air. The two of them turned toward the road, where a drone-driven cart wobbled and rattled. Aboard it sat the older folks who’d be working in the blacksmith. Ostensibly blacksmiths in their own right but Dorin neither knew where they came from or what skills they actually had. They were part of the refugee caravan by the time he joined up, and they didn’t talk much about anything.
“Oh, good. Maybe they can explain this stupidly strange design we’re having to build,” Avaron said, holding up a fistful of the blueprint in a grand welcome. At her beckoning, Dorin joined beside her and they headed toward the arriving cart.
*~*
“Something’s smelling good,” Avaron remarked.
Gwyneth superstitiously took a sniff, the delectable aroma of bread wafting by. A familiar scent, one happily at home in the western reaches. Lacking perhaps in the acrid after taste, but close enough. She couldn’t help perking up in her step at the thought of something fresh to eat. Pleasantly enough, Avaron herself turned off onto the side street the scent came from. She and Tsugumi shared a glance, though Gwyneth ever had to turn her head ‘enough’ to imply the glancing.
“Doth thou desire it?” Gwyneth asked lightly.
“It can’t hurt to see how that bakery Evalya wanted is going, I suppose.”
“… Evalya?” Tsugumi asked with a firm curiosity.
“Er? Oh, right. You two don’t know her.”
“Should we?”
“No?” Avaron mused, seeming puzzled by the tora’s obvious probing. “Sorry, [Hive Mind] stuff. Now that I have time to improve my memory, everything is just sticking in there quite well. I got a list of everyone’s names, faces, and anything else I’ve seen or heard.”
“Tis not a burden?” Gwyneth inquired, the idea sounding quite hard.
“Not really. You two have never seen a computer before but the basic idea of folders and stuff isn’t that far off.”
“If we’ve never seen it before how do we know what these ‘folders and stuff’ are?” Tsugumi asked amusedly.
Avaron sighed and held up her hands in defeat. “I’ll show you two at some point, I’m sure.”
If tis something mine eyes can see, Gwyneth wanted to say, but kept the thought to herself. It may yet, or not. Her sightless eyes always remained, no matter how much others forgot about them. To be burdened with it throughout her life was her lot; and more still, the scars. That they’d healed, and she felt the smoothness of her skin scratch against her now rather uncomfortable robes, well. That’d be surprising, but skin was skin. In the gloom of her spectral sight, a chitinous wall soon emerged clearer. Windows and a double door awaited, and probably what was a sign above it but she couldn’t see any meaning from it.
Avaron stepped up and parted the double sliding doors a bit. “Hey, are you open?!” she yelled inside.
Some sort of voice answered back.
Avaron pushed the doors open fully, and they slid into the walls. “She’s open, let’s go.”
The interior proved itself different than she expected. Bakeries were often homes as much as shops, and Evalya’s stood immediately different. Tables were lined against the exterior wall, while a long countertop bisected the room itself. Smooth racks held loaves of bread at one end, and the other held a bar door. While not all of it had a chitinous look to it, the uneven oddities she did see weren’t all wood-working related. She caught onto a woman coming out of the back, brushing past a curtain of some kind.
“Welcome, my queen,” Evalya said, the older woman bowing from behind the counter.
“It looks like everything is settling in nicely,” Avaron said.
“It is, thank you for everything.” Evalya bowed again. “I didn’t expect to bake again after Gerlan was … well.”
“Just doing what I should be,” Avaron said. “Did the elvetahn yeast prove useful at all?”
“It has. This yeast of theirs certainly changed what bread I can make!” Evalya said with a smile. “I’m still learning its temper, but so far everything has been very edible.”
“Please let me know how that goes, as I’m interested in the results.”
“I will, my queen.”
“Now then can we get—err, oh, right.” Avaron had reached for her hip, groping at something that didn’t exist. The tentradom scratched at her temple with a vexed grumble. “I don’t have my purse. For that matter we don’t have money at all in Eden.”
“I—I couldn’t imagine asking for any!” Evalya chirped and waved her hands in a panic. “Please, you need only say what you’d like!”
“If it’s no trouble, I’ll pay you back later. Just three loaves, if you would.”
The sudden awkward air aside, Evalya did prepare a simple woven basket with Avaron’s order. Bidding the baker farewell, the three of them left, and headed back out onto the main street of Eden. Gwyneth became quite curious where exactly they were going, as Avaron seemed to be leading them back to Tsugumi’s inn. Or was, until they got half way there and she asked, “Do you two want to go sit by the river?”
“Ah? Verily.”
“Very well.”
The spot Avaron took them too looked as if it’d been cleared out at some point. A taller tree, bent halfway up its trunk from some old wound, hovered over a grassy patch. Soft, pillowy grass Gwyneth knew the most from rivers and lakes, making it quite easy to sit upon. While she couldn’t see the river properly, the rushing water and trickling sounds offered a soothing treat to her ears. She set out her cloak on the ground as a cover, one expansive enough she and Tsugumi could sit on it mostly. Avaron ended up wedged in a comfortable place on them as much as the ground.
“I’ll have to put a picnic basket on the list to do,” Avaron said with a sigh. “Sorry about your, uh, coat, getting dirty, Gwyneth.”
“Tis what it was made for,” Gwyneth said, a touch bemused. “Not properly, mayhap, but …” She couldn’t help fidgeting with the edge of her robe, the coarse fabric a bit too hard to ignore.
Avaron looked down conspicuously for a moment. “Do you want some new clothes?”
“Eh? W-well—“
“She will need some,” Tsugumi interjected, sounding critical. Gwyneth knew it wasn’t meant badly, but she couldn’t help scrunching up a bit. “To speak nothing of it fraying that badly, it is beyond worn-out.”
I know, Gwyneth wanted to quip back, but bit her tongue. “I would not mind a new attire, yes,” she said instead, practiced in being more helpfully vocal. “But I would keep this robe of mine.”
“Religious stuff, right?” Avaron asked, attention upon the basket in her lap. She went about ripping up a loaf of bread into three relatively equal sections.
“That, but, tis what I have worn for a … long, time.” Gwyneth chirped and took the offered bread piece, finding it rather curious. A firm but crumbly soft exterior, and the insides were as light and fluffy as moss. Her thoughts kind of blanked at the odd texture, and she poked at the fluffiness with disbelief. “This is bread?”
“Yeast is a miracle worker,” Avaron said before taking a bite and ripping off a section. Crumbs be damned, apparently, as they went everywhere.
“Huh,” Tsugumi mumbled around her own bite, all six eyes peeled in curious thought.
“Anyway, that’s fine. I’ll make a sealed bag so insects and rot doesn’t get inside,” Avaron remarked, gesturing aimlessly with her food. So many crumbs.
“Oh! My thanks to thee.”
Some more eating.
“You know this bread really isn’t bad at all,” Avaron said, giving her half-eaten loaf a critical eye. “Some butter or cheese would be great with it.”
“Hard commodities to buy this far away, I would think,” Tsugumi said.
“Oh, sure. We’ll have to make our own.” Avaron paused, a hard enough motion that the two of them looked at her. “Damn that just gave me the best idea.”
“… What?” Tsugumi asked.
“Butter and cheese come from milk, right?”
“I hope that is still true, yes.”
“And you two are gonna be making a lot of milk, right?”
Gwyneth and Tsugumi alike jerked on the spot. “S-surely thou jest!” the priestess sputtered out, the very thought itself an incredible one to behold.
“What?” Avaron looked at each of them with incredulity. “Think about it! Gwyneth and Tsugumi flavored butter. And cheese! Imagine the flavors!”
“I am not eating butter or cheese from my own milk!” Tsugumi all but threw her hands up, her very voice that of ridicule and disbelief.
“No, of course not, that’d be silly. But you can eat hers—“ Avaron jerked a thumb toward Gwyneth, “—and vice versa.”
“I—goddesses who listen,” Tsugumi said, deflating with an exasperated sigh, “what has my life come to? Is this happening right now?”
“What?” Avaron asked with a skeptical tone. “This is what you think is weird?”
“Yes,” Tsugumi answered with an alarming speed.
Avaron blew a raspberry and looked over toward Gwyneth. “Sweetie, I’m not crazy, right?”
Oh, such a lovely word and spoken with such ill-intent. Gwyneth squirmed as eight eyes stared her down, and she nibbled quaintly upon her bread. “W-w-well, tis, not so terrible,” she said slowly. “I do like cheese and butter.”
“See? Just imagine the flavors, Tsu.”
“Don’t ‘Tsu’ me, Avaron,” Tsugumi said with a half-cocked frown. Though, as far as Gwyneth’s ear told her, it wasn’t a posture of genuine anger. “What is next? We get put into stalls like cows?”
“No?” Avaron returned confusedly. “I won’t lie that does sound a little bit sexy but if you don’t like it, I’ll leave it be.”
“Calling me a cow is sexy?” Tsugumi asked with an amusement that belied the edge beneath her words.
“I’ll have you know there is a complete subset of fetishism dedicated to that in my old world,” Avaron said, sticking her nose up before blinking and then turning thoughtful. “Actually, I’m not sure how well that makes sense here. It’s—“ she waved her hand in some aimless gesture, “—women wearing scanty clothing with black and white cow print. You know, saying to drink their milk, or breed them like animals. Goddess this sounds stupid the more I talk about it.”
“A tiny bit.”
“Mayhaps not so much,” Gwyneth remarked under her breath. The other two seemingly didn’t hear it at all. Then, mine desires are not so unusual? If they existed in the world of heroines, it certainly gave her heart to hear.
“My point is,” Avaron spoke up and slumped over with a sigh. “I just want to do more with what you two are going to give me. It sounds dumb but butter and cheese came to mind. And now that I think on it more, cream would work too …”
After a long moment, Tsugumi herself seemed to deflate. “It is not that I mind. We are bound to make milk for you, after all.”
“Then why do you sound so pissed about it?”
“Because I don’t want other people eating what comes from me.”
“Oh. That’s no problem at all.” Avaron gave her a thumbs up. “It’ll be the queen’s special reserve.”
“I am as elated as I am distressed to hear that,” Tsugumi said dryly.
“What? What??” Avaron demanded, leaning into the tora and poking her.
The two of them rather made a cute sight and Gwyneth couldn’t help giggling. On the surface, they cut close being both stiff in posture and mannerism. Yet as so many times before, Gwyneth saw Tsugumi wrench Avaron out, turning the tentradom into an energetic, almost spritely, woman. Not that the tora herself acted all that different. She knew how reserved she could be, but in so swiftly clinging to Avaron (literally or not), it gave away Tsugumi’s big heart. In these sorts of moments, she found contentment in being a spectator to their love. It would be, however, some minutes later that Avaron’s freely spoken mouth opened up again.
“So, that’s one new priestess robe, and some new slut wear to go with it.”
Gwyneth and Tsugumi both choked on their next bites, the tora faring far better of the two. A tentacle extended out of Avaron’s back, giving a meaty slap on Gwyneth’s own back to help her along. “A-Avaron!” Gwyneth squeaked out, her cheeks lighting up red. “We art outside!”
“Yeah? And? No one is around,” Avaron said with a dismissive shrug. “I have guards everywhere and Nahtura is busy getting railed. The other two problems already know, so …”
“… Railed?” Tsugumi wondered aloud amusedly.
The self-assuredness of that logic certainly felt grating to hear. At the same time, the scandalous words hit a weak spot so sensitive she couldn’t help squirming. An irritable feat from how much her robes scratched back. “Nnn, mayhaps,” Gwyneth muttered.
“If they are that uncomfortable to wear, Gwyneth, take it off,” Tsugumi said firmly.
“Eh? They—well, tis not so terrible.”
“Sounding like we have to get naked here, Tsugumi,” Avaron remarked.
“Yes, I concur.”
Gwyneth watched with astonishment as the two of them pulled away. Not fully standing up, they started peeling off their outer wear, going about it with a certain speed. By the time her brain caught up they’d already taken off most everything, and some creative shimming helped Avaron get her skirt off. We’re outside, she wanted to refute, but the sight of their two lithe bodies (un)fortunately hit her right in the gayness. The priestess’ mouth went dry as their supple beauty unveiled, hand-filling breasts, taut butts, and by the Flame Avaron must’ve gotten a little bit meatier. She and Tsugumi used to be fairly equal, but now the tentradom had … plump?
Must’ve missed that change during the hospital stay.
Thankfully her hand’s reflexive clench kept the bread chunk from falling out. The two of them gave each other a little grope on their butts, but Tsugumi’s extra arms let her grope Avaron’s tits. Neither said a word, both of them smiling and letting out a pleased sound. Gwyneth instinctually grunted at that, the raw desire to get involved far stronger than thought. All their eyes fell upon her, and she froze.
Three pairs of arms reached out toward her, their fingers squirming like tentacles.
“It’s time, Gwyneth,” Avaron said with a voice far too menacing for how sexy she was.
“Remove your clothes,” Tsugumi said, sounding just the same.
Gwyneth, who backed up against the tree they sat under, found herself with nowhere to go. She waved her hands frantically. “W-wait, I shall undress! Verily! Wait?!” She didn’t know why, but as they grabbed her hands and legs and wrenched her into their controlling arms, raw excitement shot through her. Its sudden intensity made her knees weak and she babbled out gibberish until Avaron’s lips claimed hers. A fierce suck that sealed them together even as they squirmed and jerked about. Avaron grabbed Gwyneth’s arms, keeping her under control as Tsugumi went about rolling the robe up. An over the head style of clothing suited best for combat in her experience, but right now made it infuriatingly problematic.
“Auhhro,” Gwyneth mumbled around the kiss, pushed back onto the hardy ground and its soft grass. Damn that cloak, for it did nothing. Avaron’s tight grip planted her arms over her head, keeping her in place. Tsugumi, all the while, just slowly pushed and rolled up her robe. She didn’t dare actually kick lest she hit the tora, but she wouldn’t go down easily! At least, that was her defiant desire until something bulbous pressed against her mouth. A gut-churningly familiar, arrowheaded tentacle asking for entry, and her traitorous mouth gave in immediately.
That slippery, spittle-slicked head stroked down her tongue, almost plunging straight into her throat. A glaze of cum smeared over her taste buds, and Gwyneth’s whole body spasmed as it clenched hard. Raw, overbearing taste splattered over her thoughts in a sticky splurt, her jaw clenching from the intensity. The heady flavor she’d been denied so much in the hospital; that wonderful, skin-firing meal she’d fantasized over. Gwyneth grunted angrily as it started withdrawing, smashing her lips in a tight seal around it. Avaron’s throaty chuckle followed, and that cum-giving tentacle slithered in further. Not to fuck her throat; no, it was slathering itself all over her tongue.
She hadn’t even realized Tsugumi had pushed her robe up and over her milk-laden breasts. Modestly hidden by her blouse, the sudden push up and resulting plop of them dropping made her gasp. In that split second moment, Avaron’s lips still upon hers, that tentacle slurped back out like a flash of lightning. She hadn’t a moment to be indignant before Avaron jerked backward, their mouths audibly popping. In a whoosh of four deft hands, her robe flew over her head and off to the side.
“Slutty priestess, captured,” Avaron said triumphantly, sharing a fist bump with a bemused Tsugumi. It took a moment for the intent to translate before they did it, anyway.
“How rude thou art!” Gwyneth fumed, though her words held no venom.
“Me? You damn near sucked my tentacle out of my throat,” Avaron quipped, one brow cocked upward.
“I—nngh!”
Tsugumi laughed behind her hand, a gay little sound light on the ears.
“Shall we take off your underwear too?” Avaron asked far too sweetly.
“No!” Gwyneth huffed and shot upright. With a grumble she went about shimming off her bloomers, and then wrenched her blouse off over her head. If her big tits plopping down the first time hadn’t excited them, the fabric sure did. Two tiny white trickles snuck out of her plump, prominent nipple and the juicy areola around it. With it came the acute understanding of how very full she actually was, and how eager it was to get out. She laid an arm under them, propping up the heavy things. “Look upon thy fault!”
“Now that does look nice, doesn’t it?” Avaron hummed appreciatively, leaning in.
Her half-hearted indignation evaporated and Gwyneth became all too conscious of what she was doing. Practically offering her hard-earned milk, at that! Not that she minded the thought the more she lingered on it, but—Avaron’s face gently brushed up against her swollen nipple. An electric jolt shot through her whole breast, making her jump slightly and sending both boobs jiggling. “A-Avaron!” Gwyneth chirped, shyly shielding her leaking nipples.
“What?” the tentradom asked with confusion.
“I—“ Gwyneth hadn’t a clue, “—well, be careful! Mine bosom is most … sensitive.”
“As hard or as soft as you want,” Avaron chimed back, rubbing her nose in a dainty kiss against Gwyneth’s nipple. Her taunting expression quickly flickered to one of puzzlement, however. Taking one sniff, then two, the look only deepened. “Cinnamon?”
“What?” Gwyneth and Tsugumi asked at once, both sounding rather different.
“I …” Avaron leaned in again and took another long, scenting sniff. “Yeah, I’m smelling cinnamon. Tsu, do you smell it too?”
“No?” Tsugumi returned. “You mean her milk?”
“Yeah, come smell this.”
“Are you quite serious?”
“What?” Avaron looked over her shoulder. “I’m not saying to drink it.” A pregnant moment passed. “You can if she lets you but I’m just saying …”
“I—nevermind.” Tsugumi rolled her eyes and scooted over before she too leaned in.
Gwyneth felt herself more on display than something … attractive. Erotic? Alluring?
Slutty?
Her lover and her not-lover-or-wife-but-something-close took turns inspecting her milking tits. Weighing her, almost, like two handy scales seeing how much she had.
“No, I don’t smell cinnamon.”
“Really? It’s pretty distinct.”
“I’d recognize cinnamon.”
Avaron’s head tilted. “Is it just my nose then?”
“Ehm, I do not smell it either,” Gwyneth offered.
“It can’t just be my damn nose,” Avaron remarked, exasperated. “Gwyneth, can I have a taste real quick?”
How many times had she seen Avaron drink from Tsugumi? The envy every time it happened; and now, her turn had finally come. Gwyneth almost shoved her leaking tit straight into that smug woman’s maw. She barely caught herself, instead pushing her breasts up much more temptingly. “Art they not thine to taketh as thou wish?”
“Listen, I’ll love walking by, grabbing a whole handful and having a drink.” Avaron lifted up both her hands, coming to cup one of Gwyneth’s breasts like a fine prize. “But it’s fine asking too.”
The mere thought of such a rough-handling made her thighs squeeze tightly together. It was one thing to have her kisses taken or body groped; plenty had done so with liberty. Her hard earned milk, however—Gwyneth jolted when Avaron’s lips wrapped around her areola in a warm, sucking seal. A delirious mixture of suction and hot wetness that made her mouth go stupid and fall open in a soundless exhale. Gwyneth’s whole body tightened up, the slow suck pulling on her very heart almost. A squeeze from Avaron’s hand and the two intense pressures made a throaty little whimper of a moan escape her. “A-Avaron!” she wanted to hiss, but only sounded like a whisper.
“Hm?”
Avaron’s hum’s soft buzz turned into vibrating little jolts right through Gwyneth’s swollen nipple. The priestess clenched her fists as it traveled right down the very tips of her fingers. Flame’s burning heat what was she supposed to do? Push Avaron deeper into her chest? Grope her? Is this what they meant, a feather’s touch could set me alight? she wondered, her very thoughts nearly blazing. She glanced over at Tsugumi who sat beside her, the tora smiling at the sight of them. Touching herself, even! That saucy inn keeper massaged her own plump tits with two hands, and another coyly nestled between her legs.
“Don’t mind me,” Tsugumi said, noticing Gwyneth’s look.
“W-were thou as light to touch as me?” Gwyneth stammered out, her tongue being rather uncooperative. “It feels so-oAH!”
“Good?” Tsugumi purred and then let out a giggle at Gwyneth’s angry head nodding. “Oh, it’ll get better. Gwyneth, we’re brood mothers now. Remember how laying our eggs felt?”
How couldn’t she? The slight bumbling in her belly as the muscles contracted, and feeling each round, plump lump squeeze its way out. Every time one plopped out, her mind blanked out from how great it’d felt. She could still feel it when she thought about it! A tiny sensation popped inside her breast. Minute; miniscule, tinier than tiny but it remained distinct.
A wave passed through afterward, beckoned by the sucking pull of Avaron’s hungry maw. If she’d thought herself leaking before, the raw sensation of flowing kicked in right then and there. Every nipple-pulling suck and milk rushed out, the tiniest sensation of release following every long, milky-white squirt.
Gwyneth’s mouth fell open in a near silent ‘ah’, her cute squeak the only thing to be heard.
“There it is,” Tsugumi said, her smirk damn near audible.
Were Gwyneth to say anything, another suck jumbled her thoughts and practically slapped her pussy awake with the intensity. Her laden breast pumped splurt after splurt, whether by suction or its own need for release. “Ah, Avaron!” Gwyneth squeaked, one hand coming to grabbing the back of the tentradom’s head, the other bracing herself to stay upright. A look peaked upward from her breast, cheeks curling in obvious amusement.
That devious mouth changed right then, sucking and sucking and sucking in an endless series of little motions. The edges of her lips tightened just before each one, a soft tender that became hard and set her heart alight with anticipation. How easily they softened again, leaving her whole nipple hanging in blissful, warm suspension. Tiny, gasping moans escaped Gwyneth at every one, her breast pushing up and pulling inward at Avaron’s hungry demand.
I’m feeding her.
Different, in its own way, from the pleasures of being fucked, or sucking tentacle. Oh so very enjoyable; a womanly delight Gwyneth had never once experienced herself. Even those who satisfied themselves on her breasts before never stirred such wonder. It felt wonderful, and with every squirt, a newer desire crept into her heart. A need to feed that hungry mouth, to satiate the one drinking from her. Not as one would a child, no, such desire carried carnal lust with every beat of her heart. She wanted Avaron to feast upon her milk, and Gwyneth pushed her breast harder into that sucking mouth. “D-drink deep,” she hissed and breathed out all at once.
The hand cradling her breast squeezed, and any clear thought she had faded away. The tightness of pressure and the intense gush of her milk spilling out made her head roll backward. A chirping, womanly sound of delight escaped her throat before Gwyneth started huffing and puffing. Flame above, her belly wanted release as much as to be filled! Such a contradictory need that clawed at her pussy with a ravenous insistency. One part of her thirsted to be mounted; the other, to have everything in her breast squeezed out.
“It’s great, isn’t it?” Tsugumi asked lightly for the side. “How much her lips just do all that on their own.”
Some hands were helping too, but Gwyneth rather didn’t care. Goodness did her own breast stretch that much? Avaron gently pulled it to her mouth, lifting it like a fine cup to sup from. With all her fingers she squeezed in a rolling wave, from base to tip, practically pumping her. The priestess squeezed her thighs together tighter and tighter, almost on the verge of cramping.
Then, with a long, nipple-pulling suck Avaron pulled her lips off finally. The air touching Gwyneth’s hypersensitive skin made her chirp on reflex, a shock of cool coldness to the mind-numbing heat. She found herself panting for air, as if her whole body suddenly slammed down from a high she didn’t know was there.
“Fuck me you taste so good,” Avaron gushed, smacking her lips with an appreciative look. One others Gwyneth told her meant she must’ve been blushing. “I’ve never tasted milk like this before.”
“Oh? And how might we differ?” Tsugumi asked with a sweet purr.
“Mm, wine and beer, perhaps?” Avaron said, frowning thoughtfully. She did a double-take and quickly leaned in. “Oh no you don’t!”
That devastating tongue swirled around Gwyneth’s nipple, lapping up a few errant drops trying to sneak by. She let out a tiny yelp at the sudden in-and-out slurp that set pumped-out breast buzzing. “A-Avaron!” she hissed out without a hint of malice. “Don’t be swift!”
“I’m not,” the tentradom returned, and leaned in again much more slowly. She planted a big, soft kiss atop of Gwyneth’s breast, giving it a delicate touch before pulling back. “You worked so hard for me, why would I let it go to waste?”
“That—ehmmm …” Gwyneth wasn’t sure why she wanted to say something about it. Some reflexive need to refute that honestly had nothing to begin with. She really did bear the burden of pregnancy for her; to let her breasts fatten with milk to feed her. It is what she wanted to do. “G-good! Good then,” Gwyneth said at last with flushed cheeks and a difficult tongue.
“Ah, is that why you so furiously devour mine?” Tsugumi asked lightly. “I fear I might start leaking myself, dear customer.”
Avaron looked over, an odd look of self-assuredness to her. “Oh, is it time already?”
“Ye—es?” Tsugumi and Gwyneth both watched as two tentacles grew from Avaron’s back. A contortion of flesh into two smooth porcelain beasts and their plasma-blue veins. Unlike all the others she saw, however, their tips were very different. Bulbous heads, almost like those of flowers, rather than the smooth nubs they used to have. “What are those?” the tora asked with a cautious excitement in her voice.
“Mm, this angle isn’t so good. Come here, Tsu. Gwyneth, you too. Both of you lay down.”
She found herself and Tsu being placed together at an angle, one that let Avaron kneel between them. The tentradom loomed over them both, smiling salaciously as two tentacles lazily curled in the air behind her. Rubbing her hands together, she quite obviously leered between them. “Today’s meal, my two sexy wives,” Avaron purred, licking her lips. “And all their milk.”
Oh, that hunger.
A beastly desire that lay hidden beneath Avaron’s bosom. Gwyneth knew it well, how secretive it could be and how much coaxing it took. All sorts of people had such a thing within their hearts, Gwyneth saw them first hand more than enough. Yet Avaron’s towered over them, an all-consuming presence of such unfiltered desire it left her starkly naked beneath it.
No amount of clothes could disguise a gaze that saw her womanly offerings, pure in the intent to take them all. Her heart sped at the thought of it, the fire between her legs melting her knees into a puddle of submissive goop. Twas quite good she laid down, or she’d be on her knees right then and there. Not a single bone left to even think of doing anything else, really.
“You will treat us well, will you not?” Tsugumi asked, a finger to her lips and her face coyly seductive. Or so she sounded, Gwyneth couldn’t see her exactly. “We are but two fair maidens beneath you, oh great beast.”
Does she know, too? Gwyneth marveled, her very thoughts echoed out of Tsugumi’s cute mouth. “V-verily, be gentle,” she offered alongside the tora.
Avaron chuckled and rolled her eyes. “’Be gentle’, these fair maidens who utterly howl for me to fuck them pregnant.” She leaned forward, planting her hands atop their two flat bellies. They inhaled sharply, a tinge of raw desire and surprise mixing together as their hips lifted up entirely on their own. Their legs kicked funnily in response, a helpless squirming that gave silent voice to their wanton struggle. In spite of both of them birthing so many, their bellies had firmed up again nicely, pleasantly soft and full of hardy muscle. “Mm, you’re both feeling a bit empty to me, aren’t you?”
“A-Avaron!” Tsugumi hissed with a sound anything but protesting. “You fiend, that is s-s-sensitive!”
Gwyneth could only grunt her agreement. Her whole belly throbbed with a carnal need that spoke with an unmistakable, insistent demand. One that her womanhood became very eager to let happen, practically gushing itself as heat filled her loins. Five smooth fingers rubbed her abs, sliding over her sweat-slicked skin in between every little crevice. Burned? Electrified? No, something else commanded her, something without words but told her exactly where Avaron’s fingers were and each loving stroke they made.
“Don’t worry, we’ll make more babies soon. I have enough for both of you,” Avaron purred, and the tentacles upon her back whipped to life. They slicked over to her side, both of them sliding toward Tsugumi. The tora’s six eyes all watched, and Gwyneth too beheld as those bulbous tips bloomed open. Five fleshy petals with some sort of drool stringing between them, each one lined with countless nubs. A mouth by another name, complete with a set of clasping lips at the heart of the bulb. “But I’ll need a good drink first.”
“W-what art thine doing?” Gwyneth asked, even though she already had a very good idea.
“Yes, Tsugumi, what am I doing?” Avaron sang, looking over curiously.
“Huh? What is that suu—oAH!”
The tora’s cocky tone broke into a shrill squeal as the sucker tentacles clamped down onto her swollen breasts. A wet smack of two mouths slapping onto her sounded, engulfing her lilac flesh in throaty gulps. Gwyneth saw for herself how between the petals of the suckers, Tsugumi’s tits bulged out. Her six eyes bulged open as a stupid sound escaped her mouth, her back arching submissively to the hunger visiting her. A slurping suck followed, the bulbous heads squeezing and pulling in a gentle but purpose-driven motion. They eased, then sucked, then eased, then sucked, and Gwyneth knew Tsugumi really was getting milked.
“It’s different!” Tsugumi spat out in a rush between staggered breaths. “It’s different ohmyheavenstheysUCK!” Her four hands flew to the sucker tentacles, almost reflexively trying to pull them off. Or hold them? Gwyneth couldn’t tell, but when Tsugumi tried, they sucked harder, pulling her supple bosom with them. The more she ‘struggled’, the greater her eyes went crosseyed and the stupider the sounds spilled out of her lips. Heaving breaths set her chest rising up and down, her legs twitching below, and her hips rocking in a provocative gesture. “M-my tits, you beast, you’re—is that a TONGUE?”
Gwyneth winced at the shrill sound that followed, somewhere around mind-melting ecstasy. Before her very eyes, her most trusted friend-wife-maybe turned into a gibbering, moaning puddle on the makeshift blanket. She wouldn’t be giving out any more sassy commentary, that was for sure.
“Oh Tsu, I love the sounds you make,” Avaron said, warmth from her very heart as she leaned in and gave Tsugumi a kiss on the forehead. “And I love your milk too. Be sure to pump out a lot for me, okay?”
“Gree-gree-greedy!” Tsugumi sputtered but everyone could see her giving up as the suckers slurped her tits. Gwyneth couldn’t see the milk coming out, but she did start hearing the gulp each one made. A throaty, sticky and wet sound that wasn’t at all different from how Avaron made them.
Gwyneth looked over, a tinge of womanly nervousness in her bosom. Avaron’s face leaned in to her breasts—wait, breasts.
She had two of them.
That’s right.
Oh, no.
And that evil mouth hovered near the one yet untapped, filled with milk, hopes, and dreams.
“She enjoys her acts, but honestly, she loves being sucked dry more,” Avaron commented, rubbing her nose against Gwyneth’s plump and very full feeling nipple. “Her tits are so sweet, and yours are so heady … mmm, goddess, having more than one mouth is really wonderful.”
“V-verily?” Gwyneth asked before taking a throaty gulp.
“Mmhmm, with these girls I can suck you dry and fuck you. Maybe let you drink my cum while I drink your milk?” Avaron asked, looking up with a hopeful glint. “That would be fun.”
She was going to do it at some point, Gwyneth knew. A promise as certain as the sun rising every day. “Verily,” she answered with far more enthusiasm than she herself expected. “I fear thy talent will drive mine mind to madness.”
“Oh? Am I that scary?”
“N-no. But what doth await but madness beneath thy supreme skill?” Gwyneth asked, increasingly aware of the hand coming to cup her full breast. Avaron’s hot breaths in and out spilled over her nipple, a very clear scenting taste as much as loving appreciation. Really, having someone nuzzle her breasts with such affection, she just wanted to bury Avaron’s face in them all the more.
“A life of happiness, I would hope.”
A dream often spoken, but so rarely realized. Gwyneth wasn’t sure if they’d achieved it yet, but right then and there, she had a certain kind of happiness she needed. Grasping the back of Avaron’s head, she nudged those frighteningly soft and destructive lips upon her awaiting nipple. “Then drink deep of me, for tis thine to take.”
“Then, my sweet Gwyneth, feed me well.”
Oh, those words were going to ruin her.
Those three little words, spoken in a hushed voice of husky desire both carnal and otherwise. Avaron’s lips sealed upon her, and Gwyneth’s thoughts melted into a lust-stricken haze even stronger than the first one. Only then did she understand how quickly Tsugumi collapsed into a mewling, milk-splurting squirming mess of a woman. Did she, too, feel the need to give in?
To offer herself and let it all be taken by a ravenously soft, loving mouth? To know that her body worked hard to fill her bosom, all to feed the one who burdened them in the first place? A belly that would grow round and heavy, make them wobble, give them to birth again and again and again? Mayhaps she would ask later, but even after her other breast had been so lovingly devoured of all its milk, she had only one goal in mind.
Avaron nudged had her legs open, that thick tentacle worming out of her with a slurping announcement. If Gwyneth had any muscles left that would listen, she would’ve spread herself open all the more. “Please,” she begged with cheeks darkly stained red, all of her healed skin slick with sweat. “Breed me.”
“Oh, Gwyneth, give me strong children,” Avaron begged.
“Always.”
She wasn’t sure when they finished, for the haze left such a time a blissful color of pure sex. At some point when Avaron was done pounding her into submission, she went onto Tsugumi. Gwyneth definitely remembered some kind of undignified, wanton mewling going on before she started moaning and screaming in pleasure. That and Tsugumi had been moved on top of her.
Each time Avaron finished, a gush of cum flowed down onto her already considerable amount. Really, the two of them always ended up covered in that delicious stickiness. All she’d done was hug the tora, cradling her as another belly-expanding clutch of eggs knocked her up.
So it was, on that peaceful day the two of them would be mothers together again.
Although, as Gwyneth felt slumber come, an irritating notification interrupted.
[You have leveled up! You are now level 11.]
... Again?
[Your skill, Brood Mother, has improved. Your young will grow faster, produce better quality milk, and recover from post-birth difficulties better.]
Oh. Tis good.
Avaron would have a lot of children, so Gwyneth felt from the bottom of her heart.
She couldn’t wait to give her more.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.11) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquaintances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.18) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 49: Foreigners
Chapter Text
Those who are not like us show the world is yet mysterious.
*~*
(Another refugee caravan?) Medusa mused.
The large, bulbous eye in the belly of the skeye rotated and contracted. High in the air, it saw the world better than most birds, while scant few things might see it in turn. While it couldn’t make out individual faces, tracking movements of any kind would suffice. With such ability, the large herd of people, caravan animals, and the like caught its attention immediately. Far to the south of Eden they traveled over rough and untamed terrain. At least, until they found the road.
(It seems that way,) Aegis said, the two of them sharing the skeye network’s visual senses. (They were originally going past us, errr, west to east, as it were. Some of their scouts found our extended roadways and now they’re following it.)
(What is going on that much people can just up and leave?) Medusa asked. (Displacement is one thing but unless there’s an active purge going on, most would try to adapt to the new regime, right?)
(According to Earth’s sensibilities, yes. Considering there are entirely different species sharing the same world, sectarian violence could be absurdly high. If not the norm of ‘kill everyone that is not us’.)
(I don’t think it’s that bad, but who knows. What is the plan?)
The sound of papers shuffling filled their connection in the Hive Mind. A strange feat considering no actual papers were involved.
(Try and recruit them, I suppose,) Aegis said after a long moment’s thought. (It would expand Eden but there is the issue of insurrection.)
(Yes, I don’t think many will willfully accept a tentradom queen and all that … entails.)
(No, and in such large numbers it will be easier to believe they can rebel against us. So how do we let them immigrate while maintaining security?)
(With the drones it will be simple to suppress them, but now I sound like a fascist saying it that way.)
(Perhaps we should ask our local experts,) Aegis suggested.
(Oh?)
An hour later, princess Arzha, and Raina, were summoned into Avaron’s office within the Hive. She awaited them, sitting in her faux-office chair as the flesh-door slurped open. Arzha entered first at Raina’s deference, tight in posture and tall with a straight back. Despite their casual clothing, it didn’t pass Avaron’s notice how the two were … posturing. Provocatively so, if she was to guess. No, she must be imagining things, they were just standing there. “Thank you for coming so quickly,” she greeted them as they stood in front of her desk.
“Your summons were urgent,” Arzha said without missing a beat, “what is the issue?”
“There is another refugee caravan approaching by the roads. Unlike yours, Raina, this one is in the high hundreds, if not a few thousands.”
They both had their own ways of surprise; Arzha’s brows inching upward, while Raina’s eyes widened. “That many at once?” the princess asked, her face contorting to a dire thoughtfulness. “That is more than a few hamlets. A whole region, at least, must’ve been affected.”
“Or they are fleeing from their new lords,” Raina interjected, folding her arms under her heavy bosom. Avaron’s eyes ever locked onto such motions, a pure, instinctual reflex she struggled to stop. Something all of them noticed but no one commented on. “Are there pursuers chasing them, my queen?”
“No, not an army or anyone with enough power to detain so many people.”
“Do not forget it does not take much,” Arzha interjected. “A handful of knights is enough to subdue thousands of peasants. Killing a few hundred to frighten the rest into submission is even easier to do.”
“The voice of experience you carry with such a statement is a somber thing indeed.”
“It is one of many burdens needed to rule,” the princess said before folding her hands behind her back. In the form-fitting shirt she wore, her bosom pushed out in a comfortable, round plumpness. Prominent without being salacious, easy for the eyes to rest on. For being one without making milk, hers most impressively stacked up against Raina’s.
Avaron’s eyes moved again, and a sweat threatened to form on her brow. What are these two doing? she marveled to herselves. “Be that as it may, there is a possibility to let them immigrate into Eden. The natural problem is, our population will explode in size, and I have no idea if they will be peaceful in joining.”
“It is possible they may try rebelling, but, simply leaving seems more likely,” Arzha mused aloud. “If they are a people who avoid conflict, then it will make it a simple matter to deal with.”
“The princess is largely correct,” Raina added on. “Between your highness’ Hive and our own abilities, Eden will be kept safe. I would be more concerned about lodgings, food, and taking care of their needs.”
It was good she heard her thoughts echoed in their sentiments. At least she wasn’t completely off the mark yet. “Assuming they will join, but I suppose we have to see. Arzha, their previous route was heading from the west to the east, where do you reckon their destination might’ve been?”
“If they are this far outside the normal routes, then they are going out of their way to avoid danger. I trust you have not encountered bandits yet?”
“No.”
“Then, in normal convention, local armies are still engaged in war or posturing for it. An eastward direction implies the Free Hardain State or even the Arden Empire, which is quite the journey to make.”
“Mm.” Avaron tried to lean back, but her chair was a fixed creation. An old habit, once-forgotten but so very easy to slip back into. Slumping instead against the back of the chair, she steepled her fingers together. “The logistics is an issue but a fairly solvable one. The bigger problem is I need to know what I am working with. Arzha, I will need you and your knights. Raina, you and Dorin. Let us meet with these people and see what they have.”
“As you say, my queen.”
“Of course.”
Why are they putting themselves on display this much anyway? Avaron wondered, eyes falling to their butts as they left the office. Their attires were much less flattering there, something that actually annoyed her more than she expected it to. Then again, maybe she was just looking into it too much.
*~*
“I’m going to invent suspension next, I swear to—FUCK!” Avaron swore as the shoddy cart underneath hit a rock, jostling straight up into her ass. It’d been a side-project from the larger ‘chitin materials program’, an attempt to make easier to maintain transports. Not being an engineer herself, it was a copy-cat piece of work with even more problems than the originals. Which was saying something, because it was just a box with straight-rod linked wheels.
“Suspension?” Arzha echoed amusedly, riding beside the cart on her steed.
“A useful little trick where the wheels absorb the shock instead of my ass.”
“That would improve carts quite significantly.”
“What, yours don’t have them already?”
“A well-made carriage could offer padding to absorb the shocks, as you say, but a better road was always the best solution.”
“Might as well solve the problem on two fronts,” Avaron remarked dryly. “Your knights are coming back.”
“So I see.”
Raina smiled, keeping to herself politely on the other side of the cart. Dorin simply kept his peace.
Further ahead, the Snowflake Knights in their full retinue did indeed head back up the road toward them. They pulled off the sides and looped back, synching up alongside the cart in a way that reminded Avaron of fighter jets. “There’s a nobleman who will receive us, my lady,” Haleen dutifully informed.
“Oh? Who?” Arzha inquired.
“Gleo Sternbuck. His family were lesser officials under the broader Abbenfield family.”
“Ah, the northeastern territories.”
“His accounts so far align with serving under the Abbenfields, so either a convincing liar or someone who knows too much.”
“It will be interesting to hear his accounts then. Still, this does pose its own problems, Queen Avaron.”
Hm, so Arzha is using that title now then? Avaron mused for a moment. “The human racism, you mean?”
“In so succinct words, yes.”
“I don’t need everyone to like me. I do need them to engage honestly with Eden. Do you think it can work?”
“When one has worse alternatives to choose from, suddenly some ills they despise become quite palatable indeed.”
“You’re not wrong,” Avaron remarked airily. The ‘welcoming party’ was coming closer and closer, an assortment of people, horses, donkeys, and caravan wagons. Not the bulk of the body, according to what the skeyes saw, but definitely the advanced leaders. I don’t see anyone setting an ambush per say, unless they do not need to …
Fifteen men awaited, two dressed in furred, open overcoats showing their tan under shirts. Noble wear, embellished with frills and fine stitched filigree, but not resplendently expensive. Suitable for a rough outing without seeming like a poor pauper, undoubtedly. The other thirteen were in various states of armor, with two being full plate and the others being chainmail or half-plate. Despite their disheveled state, they remained largely clean for people fleeing for their lives. As her cart approached, the soldiers-apparent grew alarmed at the crusher tentacle dragging it along.
Arzha kicked her steed forward, riding ahead as her knights naturally folding into ranks after her. “Stay your weapons,” she commanded, an authority to her stern voice Avaron hadn’t heard yet. “The ruler of these lands approaches upon that cart.”
They seemed wary enough, but nonetheless complied. It would be one of the nobles who stepped forward, a man in his probably late twenties-early thirties. “I, Gleo, of the family of Sternbuck, pay respects to the first princess,” he said, bowing his head with an arm across his midsection. The other fellow beside him and some of the guards did the same themselves after a moment.
“Artor is no more, for what am I a princess now?” Arzha asked, probably rhetorically.
“The titles may change but your elegance remains the same, your highness.”
Amidst their small talk, Avaron’s cart pulled up nearby. She stood and brushed off her vestments, a bit superstitious about them. While she had the elvetahn dress, Tsugumi had actually made her a silken, gray half-coat to go along with it. To her surprise it certainly kept her warm despite its simple make. “Well, let us greet them,” she said. Raina and Dorin joined her in dismounting, and all eyes turned to them as they approached. Some surprised, most confused; all of them wary. Arzha herself dismounted while the knights remained ready, and so the four met Gleo together.
“If I may introduce Queen Avaron, the ruler of these lands,” Arzha announced, gesturing with a sweep of her hand toward the tentradom. “Your majesty, this is Gleo Sternbuck.”
Gleo gave a half bow, while Avaron simply nodded her head; the proper decorum, so Arzha had told her. “Your family worked in the … northern half of Artor, I believe?”
“The northeastern, toward old Woodfall, your majesty.”
“That is not too far away, all things considered,” Avaron remarked, folding her hands together idly. “What brings you to my lands?”
Gleo smiled tightly, polite in form but certainly troubled. “Sadly, Woodfall was overrun by Irongorge, and we were forced to flee for our lives.”
“Terrible business, that,” Avaron said, herself in a professional voice she hadn’t used since arriving on the world. “My lands are quite out of the way, though, and I cannot imagine you are going to the elvetahn. The Hardain Free State, is it?”
Gleo nodded. “I have a distant cousin there, and his family have lands for us to work on. In truth, we discovered this here road and it wasn’t on any of our maps. We were hoping to make a stop before continuing on again.”
Not quite what she wanted, but it could still be a useful advantage. It would spread word of Eden further aboard, and with the southwestern areas a war-torn nightmare, the Hardain were her only other opportunity for trade. Avaron made a show of appearing thoughtful. “It does not sound difficult, though Eden is still yet small, so we lack proper inns and the like.”
“Truly?” Gleo sounded taken aback. “With such a grand road, I thought a city yet unknown to my family.”
Is it really that good? Avaron wondered, glancing at Arzha and her unamused expression. That icy woman really didn’t bother trying to say anything at all with her face. “Since we are planning for merchants in the future, a fine road for them seemed adequate enough,” Avaron said, steering back to the conversation. “I am willing to welcome you and yours as guests on my lands, but … I trust you understand we are a monja queendom.”
“Think nothing of it, queen Avaron,” Gleo said, immediately appeasing in both voice and stature. “We need only a camping ground, fresh water, and where we might hunt. Even as we are, we are still people of Woodfall, and the forests have ever been our home.”
“I see. Then it is simple enough to arrange, though you will need to know the boundary of the Alva Forest. The elvetahn do not tolerate trespassers, especially now of all times with their war going on.”
“A war?”
“The Arden Empire invaded their territory some time ago, and they have been fighting ever since.”
“A frightening thing to hear!” Gleo said, though Avaron wasn’t sure how genuine his shocked surprise was. “Who would invade the elves?”
“… They also tend to come here for trade, so I will warn you to watch your tongue about calling them that name.”
“I—I see, forgive my rudeness, queen Avaron.”
“They are estimable visitors on the regular, so ensure your people understand that thoroughly.”
“I shall.”
“Good. Then, accompany me back to Eden, it will be easier to explain where everything is when you can see it.”
*~*
Leaning forward onto his knees, sat upon a small wooden crate, Gleo Sternbuck stared into the small camp fire in front of him. Despite dusk falling and night following, he found himself terribly awake and wide-eyed. Not the first time since they fled from Woodfall, but still, the world ever reminded him of how vast it ever was. The heavy-set steps and clanks of plate armor drew his ear, a distinct sound against the chirp of crickets and bugs. Gleo glanced over, seeing Ser Cerral approach.
“Gracious evening, Lord Sternbuck.”
Gleo smiled sardonically. “Yes, good evening. How does everything look?”
Cerral took up a seat on another crate opposite of Gleo, their makeshift seats for the time being. It groaned under his weight, but otherwise held. “Calmer and quieter than anything I’ve ever seen in Woodfall. These ‘drones’ that queen Avaron employs are meticulously careful things.”
“Oh? How so?”
“Well, it isn’t much when you look out there, but sentries are posted at even intervals. They don’t waste time patrolling around, just sitting and watching. More of them sleep nearby in some pits, probably the garrisons,” Cerral said, gesturing a vague representation of their positions with his hands. “They get tired often, or, at least rotate who is own sentry duty pretty much hourly. They seem to ignore the deer and sheep wandering around, can’t really speak if they will boars or wolves.”
“It seems wasteful to have that many on duty, isn’t it?” Gleo wondered aloud.
“For us humans, maybe. Considering this town doesn’t have walls, I’d say it’s prudent.”
“I agree. That said—“ Gleo sat upright, letting out a weary sigh, “—I hadn’t expected to find princess Arzha here at all.”
“Quite the surprise,” Cerral agreed demurely. “On that, I might have to pry for your thoughts, Lord Sternbuck.”
It would take getting used to having his father’s title, more than Gleo expected. “About what?”
“Whether or not we will uphold the covenant of arms to the Shieldcrowns.”
Ah, the big problem that landed in his lap as soon as he saw the Snowflake knights. Gleo nodded grimly, lips pressed tight together. “I am afraid it is hard to find a good answer to that. As honor dictates we should fold underneath princess Arzha’s leadership as the last Shieldcrown, but … by her own admission, Artor is no more.”
“The covenant has ever been to the Shieldcrowns, not Artor,” Cerral said in a reminding sort of way. “Others may have done it differently, but we of Woodfall were the first to pledge to them on our blood.”
“Suppose we had skipped by this place, Cerral, and gone to meet Fennad. We, who would leave for the Hardain Free State, would we be bound to leave again and serve the Shieldcrowns?”
“Honor says yes, but life would spin a different tale,” Cerral said and shook his head sourly. “It is a vexing problem.”
“It is.”
The two of them sat there, heavy in their thoughts. After a while Cerral leaned over and picked up a chopped piece of wooden log. He gave it a good bang against the side of his crate, knocking the loose crap off the wood before chucking it into the fire. Embers snapped to life and spat out, a fresh scent of burning wood igniting the dying flame. “It’d be uncouth of me to ask so directly, my lord, but I’d like the permission to do so.”
“You are among the few whose council I can trust, Cerral. Speak your mind.”
“Thank you, my lord. I don’t wish to sound ill-begotten over it, but this ‘queen’ Avaron is a tentradom. How much can we really trust its influence?”
Ah, the other big problem he had to deal with. Gleo rubbed his temple for a moment, indulging in a blissful closure of his eyes. “Yes, there is that. It is even harder to imagine if princess Arzha fell under the influence of such a creature.”
“If she hasn’t, then that would mean there is truth to its words.”
“… Yes, it would. Even were I to accept that madness wholly, there are over two thousand souls behind me who very well might not.”
“As much as I hate to say it, my lord, there are talk among the peasants about settling here. ‘Out of the way’ and ‘safer now than walking to Hardain’, that sort of speak. Especially now that they know princess Arzha is here.”
“Already?”
“The people are quick to look for opportunities.”
“If we warn them about the tentradom then that is no different than slinging manure across princess Arzha’s face.”
“I would agree,” Cerral said simply.
“It feels like we’re walking into a trap, doesn’t it?” Gleo wondered in a darkly dire voice. “Getting to Fennad is enough of a challenge, but now this …”
“We do have some days more, my lord, it need not be decided tonight.”
“No, but the longer we wait the harder it will become.”
“Indeed.”
“What would you do, Cerral?” Gleo asked, then gave a half-hearted shrug. “Give me a blunt answer, the kind a man leading a charge might do.”
Cerral chuckled heartily at hearing that, shaking his head. “Even without the covenant, my sword would follow the princess. It’s … well, I have fought in campaigns beside her. Of everyone I have served under, she alone had vision deserving of a queen’s status. No, perhaps more than that. If a tentradom could subvert her, then I am afraid there is no human alive who would win against it. We would already be deep into its trap, unable to escape.”
“Then, believing the princess is yet true, that would be all the more reason to seek serving her again.”
“It is a sense one gains when fighting. At the edge of life and death, a stark understanding of who is strong, who is weak, and what will happen. As we are now, my lord, we are weak and subject to the whims of powerful people. Perhaps that will be our lot until we die, and the burden to overthrow them shall fall to our children. It is not a great thought, nor an honorable one, but it may be what we live with all the same.”
“A wise view, I think. It is still so endlessly frustrating,” Gleo griped, folding his head into his hands.
“Aye, that’s life, my lord.”
“If I might be selfish, I simply do not want to be the lord that ends the line of Sternbuck with one stupid decision.”
“No one would, my lord.”
*~*
A particular drone in the bowels of the Hive went about on its way. It had the distinction of being the proverbial ‘third generation’ of worker drones, integrating Gwyneth’s DNA into its composite makeup. As a result, it was overall larger by about 25%, making it almost a very short human in height, and significantly bulky in body.
The tentacleling itself sported a new white fur, concealing their blue flesh beneath its fluffy and terribly comfortable looking coat. A more rigid chitin shell protected its tentacle body properly, and one might consider it almost like a spider-turtle in nature. Its six walking legs and two manipulator legs could extend out safely while the bulk of its body hid within a segmented, armored shell.
At the layer it worked in, the Hive was predominantly cooler and more stagnant. Heavier, in a sense, as the deep underground pressure wore in, but not unbearably so. Dimmer, less-resource consuming lights lined the porcelain tunnels, and few other drones worked so deeply.
Its principle job was simple material management, moving food to new growth while shunting tunneling debris further up for processing. Like all the others, it had no name; who would name the individual cells of their body? It simply existed as an extension of the Hive, ever apart of it.
But then it heard something it shouldn’t have heard.
A sound very familiar upstairs, that of footsteps.
No one with feet should be that deep in the Hive.
It looked around, sweeping its ‘gaze’ up and down the tunnel. No other sounds existed in such a perfectly sealed environment. Indeed, it only heard its own blood pressure and breathing more often than not. Yet that invasive sound did, in fact, exist. The drone walked up and down the length of the tunnel, looking around from one pressure door to another. If the sound was in the tunnel and the doors did not open, then whatever made it should also be in the tunnel.
Despite how long it looked, it never found the source.
What is down here? Aegis’ thoughts echoed through its clump of neurons. Her thoughts were its thoughts; the very concept of a distinction simply didn’t exist. The drone purposefully fulfilled them as much as its installed instincts allowed it to. We didn’t break into any kind of cave system, so it’s not some bizarre underground creature …
Since nothing could be found, the presence of the Queen soon departed, and so the drone went back to its work once again. It walked to a pressure door, waited for it to hiss and slurp open, then step through. As it did, those same footsteps hurriedly followed after—fast, quick, and then gone on the other side. The door shut behind the drone, and the Queen almost instantly returned.
Someone is in here.
The Queen did not change its orders, so the drone continued on.
They can evade all our senses except sound … but only until no other sounds existed to cover it up. How interesting.
The tunnel was a bit long but nothing remarkable.
Can they go through solid matter? Or do they simply slip through each door with a drone moving through? Are they an assassin, or a spy?
The drone reached a door and went through; the footsteps followed after just like before.
So you need doors open which means you’re solid. If you’re solid, I can catch you.
Something stories rarely mentioned is how extensive a maintenance network could be. The drone had a while to go.
I hope you like pepper spray.
The Queen’s will changed the hub ahead of the drone. Such rooms were simple connection points between different pathways, but served as vital security and pressure buffers. The ‘exit’ doors were hardening shut, reinforced on the other side by new growth. Gas spewing tentacles pulsed awake from the walls, their guts churning with chemical delights. All of it, utterly unknown compared to the tranquil solitude of the drone’s tunnel.
It kept walking along, a slight pap pap pap to its tentacle legs. It could be said to sound very cute for something walking along. When it reached the hub door, it was business as usual: it went in, the footsteps followed. When the door shut behind it, emergency growth on the other side sealed it with alarming speed.
The drone stepped to the center of the hub, a five-way intersection between other tunnels. There wasn’t anything special about it, really. Only then did the Queen give it a command, pulling a tentacle up to its ‘head’ and looking around as if lost and confused. A distraction to the silent release of the toxic gas seeping into the room. It, and most likely like the intruder, would succumb to the painful, debilitating exposure, but as far as the Queen cared, its job was done.
A minute later, a womanly cough broke the air. A staggered, hoarse inhale followed, and then more, terrible coughs followed. The drone joined her in sputtering uselessly, writhing on the ground as the chemicals invaded its advanced senses like a raging fire. It had no choice but to withdraw into its shell, and seal itself inside. The Queen merely observed through the Hive’s other living senses, watching the hub as the intruder came into sight. Black shadows contorted into existence, gathering like smoke from a fire that didn’t exist. A body emerged from it, seemingly transforming from the very darkness itself.
A ninja? No? Maybe. She’s not like Kagura. Then again full body wraps is not exactly a unique idea, either …
The black-clothed intruder fell to her knees, hacking up nothing and desperately trying to breathe. She did have two unique features, though: a pair of tall, triangular ears coming out of her head, and two tails coming out of her butt. Head-to-toe, however, she was wrapped up. A dark, bluish-purple color peeked through from underneath the outer black layer, perhaps her underclothes of some manner.
“Not—like—this,” the intruder sputtered, shakily reaching into her black vestments. She drew out a rectangle of paper, inscribed upon with some strange letterings the Queen didn’t recognize. Reaching up, she slammed it onto the ground, and a hexagon of light shot out around her. In a flash, pale blue glass walls surrounded her, a sort of barrier that seemed to isolate her. Another paper with different lettering followed, and a rush of wind whirled around the hub. In the end the intruder remained, but Avaron suspected she’d sealed herself off from the gas.
Magical tools to isolate and remove the gas. Well, it’s not a gas mask but it is still quite irritating to see it countered so easily. At the least, the intruder’s eyes were bloodshot and weeping, and drool darkened her facial mask. The pepper spray seemed to impede her still. For what remained of the gas, the Hive sucked it through into its natural ventilation. After all, having a gas weapon meant having a way to clean up after it as well.
The drone hiding in its shell slowly emerged again. For what it suffered, the [Hive Mind]’s shared recovery power already shrugged it off. Up and awake, it turned toward the intruder, and one of the other newest features of the third generation came into play. “Little girl,” it snarled, a distorted voice that sounded more bestial than person. “You invade my Hive and skulk through it like an assassin. I do not take kindly to that.”
“W-who are you?!” the intruder demanded, a stammer born from pain than nervousness. Her stance, though, spoke of practice and readiness for combat.
“This little one serves as our voice, and you will know I am the Queen of this Hive.”
“Tch.”
“You will tell me why you are here, ninja.” She was right on the money if how that intruder seized up was any indication. Then you are from Kitinchi or some knock off branch.
“If you know what I am, then you know we ninja never speak.”
“And will you die with a closed mouth?”
The intruder simply laughed a quick, sharp chuckle. “Dare to hurt me, and my mistress will cast you into Yomi.”
Avaron deigned to laugh with the drone, a gurgling, guttural sound that was closer to throwing up than anything. “We, who will kill gods, should fear such a woman? You are too small to threaten us.”
“If you could walk so greatly, you would not need to goad the truth from me.”
“Consider it a courtesy to Lord Honda. We expected more from his ninja.”
“Do not dare say I serve him!” the intruder all but roared, a presence of pressure great enough the drone stepped backwards. All the same, she remained in her glass chamber of light, not daring to leave it.
“Oh? You serve someone other than him? Are you not Kagura’s underling?”
“Tch. So that two-faced slut is here too.”
“My my, disharmony in Kitinchi, how interesting.”
“And you didn’t know, oh great god killer?”
“We have not killed them yet, operative word.” The drone lifted a tentacle as one would a hand in a conversational offering. “But this is interesting to us. We can tell you are not lying, so perhaps rather than your mission, explain the disharmony instead.”
“… How much do you know?”
“Let’s say nothing and go from there.”
“Hmph. Then I will wash my eyes before telling you.”
“Go on. We already know how to defeat you.”
A small satchel at the ninja’s waist seemed to hold all sorts of odds and ends. She took out a glass vial of what indeed looked like water and splashed her eyes, helping to clear away the lingering pepper spray. It took some minutes more, but her breathing seemed to stabilize as well. Folding her legs underneath her, she sat cross-legged, and regarded the drone through her facial wrappings sourly.
Rather remarkable recovery speed, considering how intense the pepper spray itself was. Actually, the fact the ninja herself remained upright and capable suggested she had some sort of resistance to the gas in the first place.
“Hmph. A lot of places to start in history, but only one really matters. Honda was once our great lord, that much is true,” she said with a disgusted tone. “He brought peace to Kitinchi on the wake of the Ash War, unifying our lands, and expelling the evil gods. Great beyond compare, but without war, he became a monster who hungered. Lavish meals, grand performances, blood duels … Honda kept his vices to the capital, turning it into his own den of pleasure.”
“And for such a problem, no one overthrew him?”
“Of the five pillars, three joined him in his debauchery, and only two remained true to our ways. Kitinchi has been lost ever since.”
Rulers descending into hedonism wasn’t a new gimmick; a fairly regular one throughout history, in fact. Still, in a world of magic and people who could have more power than entire armies, it proved a horrifying prospect. Avaron lingered on the thought for a while, making an effort to have the drone show it was ‘thinking’. “And you serve one of these two pillars, I imagine.”
“Wow, such powers of observation,” the intruder remarked dryly.
“It is a simple thought. You have learned of our interactions with Honda, and now you are here to assess us. Perhaps kill us. After all, if we helped Honda, it would weaken the two pillars even further. Am I wrong?”
The ninja didn’t say anything.
“There is no reason in being coy about it. Tell us, where is Hanamaru in all of this?”
“You think she’s a pillar?”
“If she isn’t, your land is not even worth thinking about anymore.”
“Her? A harraxin brute? Why, do you like her?” The ninja blew a raspberry, throwing a hand up in a grand dismissal. “Of course you would, a harraxin and a tentradom would be the best of friends.”
“Your tone is unwelcome.”
“Blah blah blah,” the ninja waved the words off. “So I came to see what Honda’s newest pet could do. I must say the acid gas was a real surprise.”
“It is not acid. If we wanted you dead, you would be.”
“Uh huh.”
“Someone like you must be a useful tool for how irritating you are,” Avaron’s drone remarked drearily.
The ninja held up to fingers to her face with a cute sound. “At least you recognize my best qualities.”
“Then we will send someone sufficient for you.”
The ninja’s bratty energy evaporated and her red eyes grew sharp and fierce. “What does that mean—“
One of the hub’s doors opened with a slurp, having been unsealed over the length of their talk. Through it walked a woman in floor reaching robes, a dark aura around her against the pristine porcelain of the Hive. The ninja hurriedly stood, and a look of recognition came over her features. She pointed accusingly and said, “What are you doing here?!”
“Oh, it’s this one,” Nuala said with a bored inflection. “Of course, it’s this one.”
“You recognize her?” Avaron’s drone asked, turning toward the elvetahn magi.
“… You sound horrible talking through that thing,” Nuala remarked, staring down.
“It is a work in progress.”
“Hm. But yes, I do. She is one of the regulars Kitinchi uses to spy upon our forest with.” Nuala stepped forward coming up to the light barrier the ninja had made. Tapping her wooden staff on it, a clinking sound answered each strike. “Isn’t that right, Koya-chan?”
“L-listen here, Nuala-sama, you do not want to interfere in my m-mission!” Koya said, only the slightest of stammers as she tried to remain strong.
“You keep her on the regular?” Avaron’s drone asked.
“It is easier to predict someone you know than someone you don’t. I’d rather not waste my time chasing every ninja that crawled out from under a log,” Nuala asked with a bored air to her.
“Fair enough.” Avaron’s drone shrugged carelessly. “Strip her naked and bind her in the prison block, if that isn’t too much trouble. I’ll decide how to deal with her later.”
“Wait, what?!” Koya screamed in disbelief as Nuala tapped her staff again, and the barrier of light crumbled away as if it were dust. “N-now wait just a moment, I’ll come along quietly! You don’t need to—“
Nuala waved her staff, and all the clothes covering Koya exploded into nothing. It left her pristine, moonlight-white naked body on full display. Of all peoples, it seemed Koya was a kind of fox-girl, complete with raven-black hair and orange tufts inside her big triangular ears. Her tail itself looked a bit fiery, with streaks of orange running through its shiny black fur. No doubt a woman in her twenties, possessed of a comfortably smooth figure more athletic than anything else. Her demure bosom bounced free at once, jiggling with its jubilant freedom and showing off her perky, pink nipples. The ninja stood there, rendered stupid for a moment.
Avaron’s drone gave a proverbial thumbs up with its tentacle. “Nice.”
“I-I-I’ll kill you!” Koya screeched, her skin turning red from her face to her hairless loins. Sadly, all her metal tools were now on the ground around her than at her sides. Nuala waved her staff again, causing a sudden eruption of ivy vines from the floor, which swiftly wrapped around Koya. The poor ninja fell to the ground, bound in a way that awfully reminded Avaron of shibari for some reason.
“Anyway,” Avaron’s drone remarked, “just follow this drone, it’ll take you to the prison block.”
“Very well,” Nuala said, picking Koya up from the vine-made handle at her backside.
The naked and bound ninja spat curses and hollered the entire time.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.11) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquaintances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.18) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 50: Empire in Flames
Chapter Text
A mountain falls and the world shakes; but there is still a world after to observe the silence.
*~*
When the queen of the elves herself said she had a safe place to stay, Kaelara imagined some sort of seclusion. Maybe in a tree, or in a mountain side—something suitably strange and esoteric. The elves of the Alva Forest were those of direct line to Nahtura herself, so it stood to reason they had something grand. They were, after all, the most elite of their kind.
As their caravan left the forest, however, and headed toward a small, inconspicuous looking inn near a cliffside, only confusion awaited her. I suppose if it’s outside their forest, no one would think to look for it? she wondered, then why is it on the edge instead? And where did that town come from?
Elves ever thought in strange ways, but somehow always produced something terrifying from it. Kaelara admired as much as hated that part of them.
In time, they arrived to the front of the demure inn, Efval’s advance guard keeping a comfortable perimeter around the area. The queen dismounted from her deer, and so Kaelara followed after as well, albeit careful and slow. Although she’d acclimated to the deer’s manner of riding, her body protested at any semblance of life. She let out a low, grunting hiss when even the demure shock of stepping onto the ground jolted through her.
“I cannot turn my gaze from this place for a single day,” Efval muttered, a fierce and dire cut to her tone that set Kaelara’s burned skin prickling. “Really, what is that woman doing now?”
What? Kaelara wondered, if only for a moment. The large double doors to the inn slid open, and several figures walked out. A taller elf in black robes—the titular Nuala the Black, if Kaelara recalled—followed by a much shorter, white-stone looking monja. She didn’t recognize the species, but no human being had that sort of complexion or doll-like physique. The third to follow, however, made her do a double-take. Although her attire started to show wear from overuse, the posture, that look; everything about her, Kaelara had long seared into her mind. Arzha Shieldcrown, who had quite clearly survived the fall of Artor!
She almost called out, opening her mouth, but the pain of her jaw flexing was enough to stop that reflex. Kaelara inhaled stiffly, and with some effort, shuffle-walked over near Efval. To the side and slightly behind, of course, nothing as presumptuous as beside her. It took a modicum of effort to resist rubbing her arms through the elven robes covering her.
“My greetings to the elvetahn queen,” the white monja said, spreading her arms open in some jovial welcome. “What brings you to my corner?”
Kaelara felt like sweating simply from hearing such a casual tone of voice. If it didn’t pain her even more, she would’ve gotten away from the elven queen.
“You grow like a mold in my cupboard. Every day there’s just something new festering in this place.”
The monja simply laughed. “I aim to impress. How can I help this time around?”
“This—“ Efval waved a hand without looking, “—is Kaelara Arden, the Crown Princess of the Arden Empire. I have need of your hospitality on her behalf.”
Nuala tilted her head somewhat, while the white monja’s brow cocked upward. It would be Arzha, most of all, who showed a stunned surprise. She almost moved from her very spot, but decorum won out in the end. “Kaelara? What happened?” she instead demanded, fastening those cool, icy eyes toward her.
She had to talk, didn’t she? Use that awful voice of hers, and worse of all to Arzha out of any person. Kaelara slowly lifted a hand in an impolite wave, managing a half-hearted back-and-forth. “I—“ just hearing the pitch made her nauseous, “—It’s, good to see you alive, Princess Arzha.”
Her face showed her thoughts clear enough, that awful recognition only Arzha would understand. For a moment, Kaelara had expected it to sting in some way, but nothing at all stirred in her heart. Maybe that was even more disconcerting.
The white monja said then, “I see. Well, come inside. I’ll tell Tsugumi to prepare something befitting.”
“I am starting to like that sauced chicken she makes,” Efval remarked.
“I’ll let her know.”
Everyone started filing inside, and Kaelara shuffled after them. To her chagrin, Arzha stood waiting for her, then simply fell in beside her. She didn’t want to look up, and so kept her gaze to the finely graded ground below them. A gloved hand, stained with use and obviously wearing down, nonetheless extended before her.
“Let me help, good princess,” Arzha asked gently.
For the first time since she left the Empire, someone was reaching out for her. That it was Arzha, once again, seemed so cosmically hilarious Kaelara couldn’t help chuckling. A throaty, pained sound, but a chuckle nonetheless. She slowly took hold of Arzha’s forearm, and if it didn’t actually help, leaned onto her all the same. “Life is, aha, funny, isn’t it?” Kaelara asked lightly, the two of them shuffling along toward the entrance. “Just like back at the academy.”
“Were it under better circumstances,” Arzha said. “But you can always have my arm, Kaelara.”
“… I hope you will still say that after I’ve said my piece,” Kaelara remarked in a resigned sort of voice.
The inn’s interior certainly reminded her of Kitinchi, of a sort. The architecture seemed similar, but the interior lacked in the grandiose paintings or bizarre statues. Kaelara wasn’t certain how much was simple aesthetic choice or something else, since she’d never visited the closed country. The floor certainly matched at least, what with its soft and oddly firm texture underneath. Certainly better than hard stone, at the least.
They all ended up at a larger table, which rather than having chairs, seemed to have a pit underneath that they sat around. Queen Efval took to one side with Nuala, while the white monja sat opposite of Kaelara herself. Though it’d be improper usually, Arzha did sit beside Kaelara.
Your steadfast resolve can be just as bothersome, too, Kaelara wanted to say, instead smiling bitterly beneath the healing wraps that covered her face. It wasn’t a grand hall in a palace, nor something to dine upon that was more than five hundred years old, but, it was something at least. Far better than the wilderness struggles it took to get to the elven lands in the first place.
“Right, manners,” the white monja said suddenly, rolling her eyes. “I’m queen Avaron, owner of the lands right up until the Alva Forest.”
No matter how it pained her, Kaelara resolved to at least act as her station demanded. It took a moment to straighten up and find the will to speak. “Forgive me, I am not familiar with queendoms this far away from the Empire.”
“That’s fine. Tsugumi will have some snacks in a short bit here. To stop this from being awkward, I’ll say that since the crown princess of the Empire is here, there’s a good reason she’s not dead or in jail, right?”
“I do enjoy your quick grasp of the situation,” Efval said in a warm, honeyed tone covered in bladed edges. “It makes getting to the point so much simpler.”
“Well, hopefully I’m important enough for the story, or we’re all going to be sitting here awkwardly.”
Who talks like this? Kaelara marveled. Not even queen Efval’s closest aides used such flippant language, at least from what she saw.
“I already know it, but it is not my tale to tell first,” Efval remarked, casting a sidelong glance toward Kaelara.
There wouldn’t be any preamble for her, it seemed. “I—that is …” Kaelara stared down the prospect of reliving her shame once again. It’d been terrible enough doing it before a timeless queen of peerless qualities, but again and now in front of Arzha? A hand groped along her leg, seemingly trying to find purchase on her knee. Despite the impassivity of her face, Arzha found her own ways of speaking—something very much like her.
Kaelara almost snorted at how shockingly unreserved Artor’s first princess had become. “It would be best to start from the beginning, then. To understand why I did what I did, you will have to know something about me. By the sound of my voice, you most likely know me as a man. That is how I was born. It is how I lived. It is what I resigned myself to be, even as I wished to slice my own skin off. Eight years ago, after I graduated from the Imperial Academy, I met a … scribe. Sorcerer. A strange woman with stranger magic by the name of Lilian. She said she could change me, make me who I really am—I do not know how she found out in the first place.”
Kaelara sighed and slowly breathed in.
“Be that as it may,” she started again, scrunching her eyes for a moment. “I had not trusted her at first, but she brought knowledge from afar, and then other people like … me. It worked; convincingly so. If I might turn back the clock and beat myself senseless, maybe I would’ve saved Arden from what I did.”
“What did you do?” Avaron asked like an idiot.
“Gave in, of course. Listened to her, let her use that magic, and got what I always wanted. For the first time in my life I became me, but the price of it was everything else.” Kaelara grit her teeth, slouching even as impotent rage gripped her heart once again. “Through me, Lilian found my father, my brothers, my servants—she twisted them slowly, year by year. By the time I realized what she’d done—what she could do, they were all her thralls. Husks of what used to be my family, played on strings they couldn’t escape from.”
She clenched her hands clenched into fists, the searing pain of aching muscles giving little respite. “I saw the strings she had on me, too. She knew it, too. Lilian stopped pretending, turning into some wretched monster. Or, no—showing me what she’d been all along.”
“Was she a nagraki?” Avaron asked, somewhat smarter this time around.
“Based on the story and the name,” Efval cut in then, “she would be the highborn that we encountered in one of our, ah, sniper attacks. She pursued the sniper into the Heartwood, where Mother gave her a most warm welcome.”
That was new to Kaelara, and she jerked upright, looking at the elven queen. “She’s dead? That monster is dead?”
“Highborns do not die as most other beings do. But, largely, yes.”
“Good. Good! Good.” Kaelara nodded and nodded, her hands easing up. Those words, they were so simple on the ears, and yet so relieving to feel. A small ray of justice, in the ever-sinking quagmire of the Empire’s rotting corpse. “I cannot thank you enough in this lifetime.”
“Mm.”
“Well, this explains some of the plot the nagraki are doing,” Avaron remarked aloud, holding her chin thoughtfully. “We’re not lucky for that to mean the war is over, right?”
“Another one of these ‘nagraki’ came when Lilian departed. A hulking creature of more flesh and bodies than I’d ever seen,” Kaelara recounted. “My father—the Emperor, and everyone else fell under his sway. Before he could grab me, I fled, and warned those not yet under their control. As far as I know, a civil war is erupting right now between the nagraki’s thralls and my people.”
“The Empire is imploding,” Efval added in succinctly. “They’re falling back to old fortresses and then even abandoning those. I’ve yet to find my eyes in their lands to see what is happening, but it is not hard to imagine.”
“No, it’s not,” Avaron agreed before raising a hand toward Kaelara. “So, where’s that leave you, then? I cannot sense any naki infecting your body still.”
Kaelara gave a meaningful glance over at Efval, and the elvetahn queen deigned to answer. “She hadn’t been corrupted beyond saving, but the healing used for it was … extreme. It’s remarkable enough she can still walk and move.”
“… Did you use the [Cauldron of Rebirth]?” Nuala, long silent, interjected.
“We did.”
“And the Flame agreed to it?” Nuala echoed, even more incredulous.
“… It did.”
“Sorry, what?” Avaron interjected, looking between the two of them.
“It is a ritual that priestesses of the Eternal Flame once used,” Nuala explained. “In some ways, their ultimate healing art. While it’s horrifically crude, it is uniquely powerful against naki corruption, far more than most others. The price it extolls on the body borders on cruel, but if it succeeds, a person will undoubtedly be cleansed fully.”
“How can you use a ritual involving the Eternal Flame?” Avaron asked incredulously. “Don’t you two hate each other?”
“It is complicated,” both Efval and Nuala said at once, making Avaron purse her lips sourly.
“Right. Well, I’m satisfied enough if the princess here wants to stay in Eden for the time being.”
“I fear I have nothing to offer anymore,” Kaelara said as eyes settled upon her, and she bowed her head. “Not even my strength remains.”
“Why’s that?”
“The [Cauldron of Rebirth],” Nuala interjected, “consumes one’s [levels] in order to fuel the ritual. If one is too low in their [levels], they die outright.”
“Oh.” Avaron held a fist up to her mouth, coughing into it. She glanced about, her gaze shooting beside Kaelara—undoubtedly toward Arzha herself. “Well, that’s not a problem. There’s plenty of space for you here, princess Kaelara. I imagine you won’t be the only one with this kind of story soon enough.”
A dreadful feeling consumed every other in her gut, and Kaelara looked up wearily. “What—what do you mean?”
“You don’t know the history about the nagraki, do you?”
“… No.”
“We’ll be here for a while. Hey, look at that, snacks are arriving too.”
*~*
Recounting the truth about the nagraki, Haska, and Nyoom took the better part of their table time. Avaron didn’t mind, retreading old grounds had a comfort to it even if the context remained stressful. Kaelara, for her part, became studiously quiet—certainly keen in her eyes, for what could be seen of them. Like Gwyneth and how she wrapped herself when she had her scars, Kaelara seemed closer to a mummy than a person. Her scent alone spoke of all kinds of problems: pain, suffering, mixed signals, and everything else that screamed someone needing help. Distress as a scent wasn’t new to her, but Kaelara’s had an overpowering despair to it.
The history lesson, strangely enough, seemed to help alleviate it a bit.
Food came and went, plates of Tsugumi’s fine cooking filling the air with deliciousness that sometimes felt hard to enjoy. Efval most of all seemed to pack away the most of it, a fact Avaron couldn’t help noting. Still, eating kept the peace enough for them all to get by. Kaelara, however, slipped into a stillness no more than her just staring at the table, almost in a daze. It dragged on and on, and finally Avaron couldn’t politely ignore it anymore. “Princess Kaelara?”
It took Arzha poking her side to jolt Kaelara alert again. “I—yes?”
“Are you alright?”
Kaelara looked at her hands then, scrutinizing them. “It’s strange. I’m responsible for it all, and yet my foe is some timeless horror older than the oldest of nations. How was I ever supposed to stop it? How can any human do so?”
“Together,” Avaron interjected.
“Eh?”
“Humanity isn’t something made by any one person. Our—that is, history, is written with bias. We think, ‘oh this great leader did so much’ off of one or two pages. Maybe a book, if they’re worth it.” Avaron put her chopsticks down before she kept gesturing with them. “But there’s countless moving parts around them. It’s not a matter of pinning success or failures on one person, even if we like to do so. Think about how vast your empire is, and how much was there in the leadership. It is not solely your fault.”
“Is it not all the more horrifying, then, that so many were deceived?”
“Maybe. But being together is more than just a single nation. It’s all of us. The nagraki have failed time and again because of that fact. They want you to feel and believe you are small, and that is how they win. I don’t mean to sound like some rich spectator in the face of what you’ve suffered through, mind.”
“Then what do you want to sound like?”
Avaron liked hearing that acid; at least it meant some spirit was left. “That it’s not over yet. You’re alive, and as long as you’re willing, something can be done. It’ll be hard, unfair, and all sorts of things we can curse until our dying breath. Still gotta do something all the same.”
“Your attempts at being supporting are deplorable,” Nuala remarked dryly.
“I’m not that bad.”
Efval and Arzha, as well, looked unconvinced.
“Hey now …”
“If it is no trouble, I would like a room,” Kaelara asked tiredly.
“… Sure, Arz—“
“I will show her,” the princess of Artor said almost immediately.
Avaron watched as the two of them climbed up and shuffled out from the main dining hall of the inn. She wasn’t sure if she would call Arzha’s attentiveness love per say, but certainly a great deal of caring. Intimate, but in a way that wasn’t easy to pin. The two had history such a mannerism betrayed immediately. It would, undoubtedly, be a matter for later if it was to bother concerning her at all. Kaelara’s fate, all the same, weighed upon her mind heavily.
“I am unsurprised at how that story went,” Efval remarked, balancing a tea cup quite expertly with just the tips of her fingers. “There is always someone who ends up being the weak link in the chain.”
“A fact I was trying to be diplomatic around,” Avaron remarked, giving the elvetahn queen a cool regard. “But I understand we see it differently.”
“Do not mistake simple truth for malice.”
“And a lack of tact can be downright beastly.”
Nuala looked amused at the whole exchange, keeping her mouth shut with an orange. Efval, for her part, narrowed her eyes.
“More importantly,” Avaron said, “as Nuala has undoubtedly told you about the Lance’s attack, there is now this matter. I would say it’s not too far of a stretch the nagraki are confident enough to make overt moves.”
“One might think so, but even with this, their behavior is strange.”
“Is this not a bold declaration that they are here?”
“No. Lilian and the Emperor’s corruption we found out accidentally. They weren’t making a message, we uncovered them mid-action. They’ll be busy covering their tracks, and possibly rushing to meet we elvetahn now that we are aware.” Efval took a sip of her tea. It was, in such a way, more like her craning the cup up and then daintily sipping from its tipped edge. A bizarre, and until then, unseen manner of the queen for Avaron. “The Church of the Everlasting Light is desperate for their heroines, but they don’t know we know of Nyoom now. For once, we are in luxury of advantages against them.”
“That is … one, way of putting it, I suppose,” Avaron begrudgingly agreed. Indeed, simply that she knew their plans didn’t mean the enemy had thrown the veil off yet. “I would say I’m more concerned about what we can do about them than simply let them get away for free.”
“You can do little. Even for a divine heroine, you are not yet powerful enough to fight them properly.”
“Your assessments are cuttingly reassuring.”
But that means you are doing something without saying so, Avaron thought. Whether or not that ‘something’ is enough for everyone else, I suppose I won’t know for a while.
“On that matter, more must be done,” Nuala interjected. “The sooner the heroines are up to some fighting strength, the better we can maneuver against the nagraki.”
“… What do you suggest?” Avaron asked, giving the magi a long stare.
“Divine heroines excel in combat. They are, almost to a fault, empowered to do so. We need only find suitable candidates to help train them.”
“They’re children, Nuala.”
“And all children grow up at some point.”
“Cute, but there’s a proper way to do it or you’re going to make a loose cannon instead of a heroine.”
“Of course. Who do you think I am?” Nuala asked rhetorically.
Talking with immortals is such a pain in my ass. Fucking damnit I better not turn into this later on.
*~*
Pursing her lips, Gwyneth stared down at the construction plans in her hands. At least, thanks to the magical ink, she could sense how the actual drawing looked, though that didn’t make the decision any easier. A single row down the middle evenly allows for the fire, but divides the congregation. She looked over to the other side. But, a row against each wall frames the congregation and envelops them in fire, no? The latter sounded better every time she came to it, but there had to be a certain safe area between sitting and the fire troughs. Otherwise, peoples clothes’ could ignite, their skins would burn, and the heat would be too unbearable.
“Hmm.” She looked up from the plans and to what parts of the hall she could see. It had a good size, but Avaron had clearly built it in mind with the benches going from wall-to-isle. Workable in some sort of manner but for the fires she needed, the interior had to be ripped out. What she couldn’t tell at all was if there would be enough room left once the fire troughs were put in. “Tis not that I mind her efforts, but this is … hmm.”
Her plump and lovingly round belly was telling her some serious reworking had to be done. Although it’d only been a short while since their passionate breeding, the swell of eggs within her had caught on much quicker than before. Nowhere near full size, but well on the way. Really, she went to sleep and woke up even bigger sometimes; not that Gwyneth could mind.
Seeing as she’d stood for so long already, the priestess took a seat on one of the chitinous benches of the shrine. Perhaps somewhat unbecomingly so, Gwyneth leaned back, kicking her legs open and just giving herself a comfortable, open posture. Her hand, almost on pure habit, settled atop her growing belly. Although, with her robes in the way, she couldn’t enjoy stroking herself as she usually did.
But if I ask to make the hall bigger, more rows could be added? Gwyneth wagered, trying to arrange it in her mind. Mayhaps trough, bench, trough, bench, trough, but that would be very wide …
How very troublesome to work with.
The audible scrape of the shrine doors opening broke the stillness surrounding her. Gwyneth jerked reflexively, sitting upright and far more ‘properly’ shutting her legs. Looking over her shoulder, she barely made out the sight of someone peeking through the door.
“H-hello?”
“Greetings!” Gwyneth greeted.
“Ah!” the woman screamed, jerking back behind the door.
Eh? Gwyneth became taken aback at such a fearful response. The woman, slowly, peeked around again.
“S-sorry! I didn’t know anyone was in here!”
“Tis no trouble,” Gwyneth said. “What doth thou need from me?”
“O-oh, you’re the, uh, priestess, right?”
“Verily.”
It seemed to inspire some confidence in the woman, and she slowly crept through the door. Looking around, something must’ve displeased her from such a sour expression on her face. “Sorry, it’s just so dark in here that—“ she snapped her fingers a few times before a magical light popped into existence beside her. Cold, lifeless, but radiating its subtle presence; a sun without fire.
“Thou art the heroine of light, I see,” Gwyneth remarked, pushing herself up to stand.
“Yeah, that’s me apparently,” Amelia remarked dryly. “Damn, this really is a church.”
“Shrine,” Gwyneth corrected, smiling pleasantly.
“… What’s the difference?”
“Churches are of the Everlasting Light. Shrines are where those, like the Eternal Flame, worship instead.”
“Seems a bit pedantic. I mean, no offense or anything but …”
“Words have power despite thy beliefs.”
“Yeah, heard that before too.”
Something about Amelia’s flippancy certainly had a way to grate on the nerves. Gwyneth had dealt with her kind time and again, though. “Hath thou cometh to give before the Goddesses?”
“Uhh—maybe …” Whatever bravado the heroine had dried up in an instant. “I mean, should I?”
“Tis not something done frivolously.”
Amelia crept further inside of the shrine. She looked around quickly, perhaps untrusting of what she saw, but nonetheless did approach Gwyneth. Unlike many others, her blatant gaze raking up and down the priestess’ body certainly lacked mannerism. Those eyes did linger on her belly longer than polite, something that rankled Gwyneth’s nerves much more than she expected. Heroine or not, a guttural urge to smack such attention aside arose in her hand something fierce. That, in itself, did surprise her somewhat though; an invasive thought she’d not had before.
“Are you—uhh, you know …” Amelia pointed at her own eyes, gesturing strangely.
“Blind? Verily.”
“Oh. Sorry. Everything’s so fuckin’ weird in this world and … I probably shouldn’t curse here.”
“No. Being ill-mannered before the Goddesses is most unwise.”
“This’ll sound dumb but are they really that attentive here? I mean, being goddesses and all that.”
“Some are. Most are busied within their realms while others answer those who call their attention. Mine Flame is of the former,” Gwyneth said, holding a hand to her milk-laden bosom. The ever present flame there wiggled at the motion, but otherwise simply kept burning on.
“… That thing’s a goddess?”
“Part of one, yes.”
“Oh.”
Perhaps, if Gwyneth saw her as a child, ignorant of everything, it’d be far more excusable. Although nearly a grown woman as she was, Amelia simply wasn’t from the world. A fact she had to remind herself of before common sensibility won out in the end. “If thou wisheth to know more, shall we sit?”
“S-sure.”
Amelia radiated all sorts of discomfort for some reason as they went about sitting. Whether because of Gwyneth or something else, the priestess hadn’t a clue. Mindful of the heroine’s powers and their origins, though, perhaps that would offer some insight. Proper in posture even though her belly pushed out all the more because of it, Gwyneth smiled pleasantly at Amelia beside her. “Tis nothing troublesome, even if thy nature is of another than mine Flame.”
“Isn’t it, though?” Amelia cut back with a sharp bitterness. “Avaron makes it sound like I’m some damn freak.”
Her lover’s biting choice of language popped up first in Gwyneth’s mind. “Verily tis a … talent, of hers. But, nay, tis not thy fault nor of some discord. Thy gift is of the Light, no matter who among the Goddesses lingers there. Prithee heroine shalt give it due consideration.”
“Been doing that all my fu—life,” Amelia cut herself off sharply. She shook her head, kicking her legs out aimlessly in front of her without hitting the bench there. “My parents are Catholic, wanting me to pray to God, follow the bible, all that crap.”
“Thou speak ill of it.”
“’cause they’re crazy,” Amelia remarked with a shrug. “They don’t read half of it and only use the parts that support what they want. Take a minute to read the thing and oh look, more contradictions!” She threw her hands up. “What a shocker. Except, you know, our God doesn’t exist so … Or at least, I thought he didn’t.”
Gwyneth knew a boiling pot when it was in her lap, and oh dear was Amelia going to pop at some point. “Now thou art uncertain? Twas not obvious if he was or was not there?”
“This—“ Amelia waved her hand, creating a rainbow of sparkling lights in a trail, “—doesn’t exist in my world. None of this stuff is real. Not the freaky people, that flame on your chest that somehow isn’t burning your clothes, this magic. It’s all nonsense fantasy and now here I am.”
“There aren’t monja?”
“The who?”
“Err, people like Avaron?”
“Hell no. It’s humans everywhere, all the time. Stuff like her only exists in books.”
Gwyneth’s brows shot upward. It wasn’t a lie; or if it was, something so self-convincing it didn’t rankle her sensibilities. Clearly Amelia wasn’t that well informed, but it wouldn’t surprise her if the girl had grown up in a seclusion. Actually, the more that realization worked its way, the more it started to make sense of things. Mayhaps her family were of the rejecting kind, then, she mused. “Some of them,” Gwyneth started slowly, “but if thou weren’t well-traveled in thine world, would it not be mysterious?”
“I’m sure someone would’ve said something on the internet about it.”
“A fool’s words sometimes shine like gold.”
“Yeah. I guess,” Amelia grumbled. “But if god was real then he should be able to do something. Literally fucking anything at all, if he was so great.”
“I cannot speak for his reasons, unknowing as I am of him, but …” Gwyneth cast her gaze forward, where a simple lectern awaited. “Tis no simple matter with our own Goddesses. Many conspire in one manner or another, against one another or with them.”
“So there’s assholes on earth and assholes in heaven. Great. Wonderful.”
Crudely spoken but succinct enough Gwyneth couldn’t help admiring a little bit of it. “Life is both vast and grand beyond knowing. True, it doth little to give comfort, or food in thine belly. We art mortal, born in struggle, suffering every day to keep going. Anyone of worth would spit and curse such a fate.”
“So why go begging to these goddesses then?”
“Thou carry a strange view of them without having met them,” Gwyneth said with an observational air. “Indeed, tis prudent to ask, ‘mayhaps the goddesses, too, struggle’.”
“How can they struggle? They’re gods!”
“A queen’s struggles are different than a pauper’s, no?”
Amelia pursed her lips, looking as if she’d eaten something terribly sour. “Then what’s the point?!”
“Doth there need to be one?” Gwyneth asked, having trouble following the reasoning at all. “We struggle, but find hope in one another. Those that might giveth more await us, if we wisheth their patronage. Some demand loyalty, but more understand how it is to live. If thou seeketh respite, the Flame would giveth. Tis not demanding to stand before all others.” She held a hand up to her mouth, smiling coyly behind it. “Pray forgive mine words. There are no other priestesses here that might offer their own goddesses.”
“Yeah, I get it,” Amelia said, sounding dreary. “The whole thing just doesn’t sound right in my head.”
“How so?”
“Goddesses being fancy kings, not having a good afterlife when people die here, struggling in some fuckin’ game of life—howse any of that any good?” Amelia’s face scrunched up, her whole demeanor warping to some frustrated, nameless anger.
“A fair portion tis not. Tis not any less that we strive against it, all the same; indeed, we change the world, as the Eternal Flame itself changes all things.” Gwyneth pushed herself up, and then offered a hand to Amelia. “Thou art a divine heroine, blessed with great potential. If thou wisheth to change the world, verily thou might. But, prithee come to understand what our world is, such thou might know what should be changed.”
“… Yeah, alright, I guess,” Amelia remarked begrudgingly, taking the hand and standing up.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.11) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquaintances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.18) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 51: Politica
Chapter Text
Life is just an argument between people on what to do.
*~*
That damnable witch, Koya thought, patting at the walls of her prison cell. Thus far she hadn’t found anything loose whatsoever, but that didn’t mean there wasn’t something. None of it resembled brickwork in the slightest; the closest that came to mind was some kind of ribcage, but only because of the flesh look. Shimming sideways, she kept probing, feeling the hardy, solid white bone and the hardened, fleshy tendons interweaving underneath it. It’s bad enough trying to get into Alva without her crawling up my tail.
Said tail, both fluffy and beautiful, whipped back and forth with great agitation. Coming out of her buttocks, it slowly swept out, gentle furs forming a black-to-orange gradient that almost seemed like the fins of koi fish in a way. Despite its angry movements, the wave-like follow behind it could truly captivate the eye. Not that Koya cared about that detail, being completely naked in some prison cell. At least the air was so hot and humid she didn’t want for clothes. Just imagining Nuala blasting apart her prized attire made Koya’s tail and ears stick up in rage.
What is this crap anyway? she wondered, picking at the flesh-wall with her claws. It neither bled nor chipped, but was clearly warm and alive in its own way. Koya half-thought she’d been infiltrating some beast’s great stomach when she first snuck in. Whatever she was actually in simply didn’t make any sense. Worse, being undoubtedly underground, even if she did find a fault, it’d be unlikely to lead outside. A service tunnel or something would be her only hope of escape.
A sickening crunch sounded behind her, and Koya whipped around at light speed. The huge, teethy door twitched and yawned before spiraling open as its flesh receded. A monja, as white as the bone architecture around them, entered with a serving tray. Koya recognized her immediately—the one called Avaron who was everywhere on the surface. “You!” she pointed accusingly.
“Lunch time,” Avaron said simply, holding up the tray for emphasis. It, like everything else solid, was made out of that smooth, stone-like bone material. Koya watched suspiciously as Avaron entered and set the tray upon the room’s sole table.
“You won’t trick me with—are those noodles?”
“I wasn’t sure if you wanted noodles or rice so …” Avaron lifted a lid off a bowl, and white, fluffy rice awaited.
Koya had to suck her saliva down her gullet. Strips of meat—maybe pork—arrayed on a plate, along with prepared onions and some round, orange-looking fruit. Goodness there were even buns; it might’ve been imbalanced but they were all delectable staples of Kitinchi she hadn’t eaten in months. She squeezed her knees together, angrily jumping from one foot to the next, tail swishing in the air. “I can’t be bought with your tricks!”
“… It’s lunch.”
“I’m onto you! There’s something in it, isn’t there?”
Avaron looked at her with a sort of dismissive, wary boredness. “Do you really think I would bother with that?”
As much as acting might be useful, it wouldn’t help if her jailor decided to be less cordial. Koya snuck her nose up. “No.”
She swept across the room, taking a chair without a further peep. That Avaron sat in the other chair opposite of her wasn’t confidence inspiring. Koya glanced, but paid no real mind–she’d even provided chopsticks, certainly the quality effort to fit her own sensibilities. Her ear flicked on its own while she went about setting up her plate. Being watched all the while certainly seemed curious, but the eyes upon her weren’t lecherous nor condescending.
Observing, and nothing more.
In itself that was somewhat suspicious.
People who hid their intentions were much more of a problem.
“So are you a cat or something?” Avaron asked, gesturing with her hand flippantly.
“Kitsune.”
“… Wait, from Japan?”
“I do not know this ‘Japan’. I am from Kitinchi.”
“Out of curiosity, does the name Yamatai or Yamato ring a bell?”
Koya paused, her brows knitting together. “Why does that sort of history matter to you?”
“Because those are very specific places from Earth, where kitsune like yourself are supposed to come from.”
Damnit, she wanted to eat so bad—but someone with that sort of tongue about the Origin Land really rankled her fur. Koya pursed her lips sourly, idly tapping her chopsticks on her plate. “I’m not from there, if that is your angle.”
“No. It’s a much greater mystery.” Avaron sat back in her chair, slouching with an ease no one in her position should’ve had. The sheer cloth of her dress hugged her lithe form eagerly, showing off her simple yet alluring curves. She wasn’t half-bad, if Koya wanted to admit anything. “Kagura is an oni, another type of Japanese yokai, and generally one of the oldest ones. Supposedly she’s not from there either, yet she uses that name, and you use the name of kitsune. Why in the world are there beings of myth and legend from Earth in this world?”
Koya opted to eat a bit before trying to engage in fussy interrogation. “Dunno.”
“Here’s the funny part. You know about the rules around summoning divine heroines, right?”
“Maybe.”
“One of them is they’re only ever ‘human’. Only humans are supposed to be summoned, at least as far as even the elvetahn know. So, how do non-human people from one world end up here?”
History wasn’t her specialty so whatever point Avaron was reaching toward, Koya couldn’t figure out. She gave a half-hearted shrug while chewing on another bite. “Dunno. Maybe during the Age of the Goddesses?”
Avaron squinted her eyes. “What’s that?”
Koya scratched her cheek with her thumb for a moment. “Way back whenever, before the Ash War and all that. The Age of the Goddesses was when all of them lived upon the world. There was a lot of wars and other stuff but barely anyone remembers why they all happened.”
“But surely something happened worth remembering?”
“I mean, most of them left to go the heavens up above. Whole bunch of them disappeared after that, except funny ones like the Eternal Flame.”
“Might want to mind calling that one funny, since a Flame priestess is my wife,” Avaron remarked dryly.
“I know,” Koya said simply, almost on reflex as she went for another bite but paused. “Wife?”
“Yup.”
“Were you not married to that woman with four arms?”
“Both of them.”
Koya made an expression.
“Don’t look at me like I’m a pervert.”
“You’re the one who has me naked in this prison. Shall you come ravage me when they’re not putting out?”
“Isn’t that what ninja are into?” Avaron mused aloud, stroking her chin.
Koya damn near spat out her rice, half-way to doing so before she started choking on it. “W-w-we’re not into that!”
Avaron’s head tilted to the side, a disbelieving look overcoming her. “But every ninja is big on sex fighting, aren’t they? Dominating their captor with their charm and raw feminine prowess?”
Her choice of words is twisted but—Koya slapped the bone table with both hands. “Who in the world is slandering us with that sort of nonsense?!”
“… Isn’t that common knowledge?”
“No!!”
Avaron rubbed her chin. “Mm, that’s strange.” Her head tilted to the other side, an annoyed look overcoming her. “Damn, I was hoping to try it out, too.”
“The whole point is to win! It’s not some game!!”
“… Losing can be fun too?” Avaron said, holding a hand as if offering something. “Anyway, if you’re not into that, let me know what you actually want. I don’t know how long it’s going to take your boss to come rescue you.”
“Hmph!” Koya’s tail and ears shot straight up. “You think you can keep me here that long, huh?”
“Easily, if Nuala’s expertise is anything to go by.”
Damnit, that stupid witch! Koya couldn’t give up; any sign of weakness and she’d be done for. She jabbed a thumb toward herself. “Don’t underestimate the Black Shadow of Kitinchi! There isn’t a prison in the world that can hold me!”
Avaron looked even more unimpressed. “Really, black shadow?”
“Yes, really!”
“That’s not that unique, though. Why not like ‘dark moon’ or ‘dancing ghost’ or literally anything cooler sounding?”
“It is plenty ‘cool’!”
“That’s something you’d call every ninja, though.”
An audible crack broke the air—not from Koya snapping her chopsticks, but from the angry vein ripping across her temple. Her pupils constricted and dilated disjointedly, narrowed in a way some might call crazed. She let out a low, controlled laugh, punctually perfect in its ‘ha ha ha’. “You think just anyone can be the Black Shadow, huh? Want to trample on me like some rug, huh?”
“I’m just saying—“ Avaron held up her hands placatingly, “—it isn’t that grand sounding. Like a low level goon, at best.”
Koya, meanwhile, tore through her food as fast as a hurricane. She didn’t even stop to taste the cooking, devouring rice, noodles, and everything in between a furious determination. Her angry eyes locked dead onto Avaron all the while, quite the feat managing to eat without actually looking. When it was all done and eaten, she slammed her chopsticks onto the tray. “Thanks for the meal, cunt.”
“You’re welcome,” Avaron said easily and as charmingly as a maiden.
Another ripping crack broke the air; Koya had two veins now. “Think to keep me here, huh? Let me show you how damn foolish that is!”
The eating wasn’t just to fill her belly; it let her own shadow inch its way across the floor. Slow, careful, and unobservable to almost anyone’s senses. As soon as it touched Avaron’s, it connected like two droplets of water merging for the first time. Koya gave another haughty, punctual laugh as black ink shot across her naked whiteness.
It swallowed her whole, and a moment later, Koya’s figure dissolved entirely as she ventured into the shadows. In such a place, the senses distorted, but time and practice let her keep her wits about. They became her body and limbs, a powerful form few had the wits to contend with.
Leaning over on her chair, Avaron looked down, inadvertently meeting Koya’s ‘eyes’, even if there wasn’t anything about her to actually see. “Oooh, so you can do shadow magic. The name’s still kinda dumb, but I guess that makes sense?”
If she had a physical body, another vein might’ve appeared. “Foolish woman!” Koya said, her voice distorted to an echo of what it used to be. “Now there is nothing you can do! Take me outside or I shall gut you where you stand!”
“Ya know, I’m used to voices in my head but this is a bit weird even by my standards.” Avaron stood up, moving around a bit. Her shadow did indeed follow normally, but with a bit of a lag as Koya’s presence lurked within it. “Hey, can you see my pussy?”
“Ye—NO!” Koya’s non-existent eyes nearly shot out of the shadows. This slut’s not wearing anything down there?!?
“Does it look cute from that angle? I can’t see, obviously.”
“You’re crazy! Take me out of here, right now!”
“Mmm, no. Come on, give me your review.” Avaron squatted down, spreading her legs and just hiking her dress up her legs. It unabashedly left her on display, juicy thighs to plump pussy and the tiny gate behind it. Koya’s first instinct was, indeed, to appreciate such a fine and exemplary sight—statuesque, in a literal way. Smooth outer lips folded neatly around tiny pleats of blue flesh, bright in color and inviting in temptation. She could even see a bit deeper, where darker, heartier womanliness awaited. Indignant rage quickly returned, however.
“You shameless slut!” Koya screamed, lashing with the very essence of shadows themselves. Tendrils of pure darkness bulged and launched forth like a hungry octopus. Racing toward Avaron’s loins, their furious speed slowed and slowed until they landed like gentle love taps pelleting that soft, womanly place. Avaron let out a surprised chirp, her knees shaking as her delicious thighs tensed. Koya, rather than seeing the vicious restraint she tried, only ended up perversely petting her.
“Oh! That’s nice. Strange, but nice,” Avaron cooed.
“What the fuuuuucckKK!?!?” Koya desperately tried to escape her shadow form, but like her tendrils, only bulged out obscenely. Every effort felt like shoving a fist into honey, furiously sticky and slowing down until she could go no further. That’s not how anything about her magic worked! “What did you do?!?”
The sound of a chain unfurling caught her attention, and Koya watched as a medallion dangled from Avaron’s fingers. For the first time, something akin to sinister glee spread across Avaron’s face. “Oops.”
Koya knew that medallion. She knew it’s simple, wooden circle and green glowing markings far too well. “GODDESSES DAMNIT!” she screamed, raging inside the shadows like an impotent sea anemone. “NOT THIS AGAIN!”
“You’re awfully cute when you’re mad, you know,” Avaron said, face the very thought of an endearing woman.
Koya might have a stroke if her blood pressure went any higher. “You and that damn witch tricked me!”
“You’re the one trying to threaten my life. Here I am offering up my body and you want to kill me?”
“You’re crazy! Who does that?!”
“Say, I do have a question though.”
The sudden change in tone made Koya pause. Something about it wasn’t ominous, but all her years warned her. “About what?”
“Can you feel anything while you’re like that?”
“… Why should I answer that?”
“Well, let’s find out, then.”
Some form of attack came to mind; torture, undoubtedly. Koya, who was busy trying to steel herself, instead saw Avaron’s butt lowering down. Like priceless porcelain shattering, she witnessed in terrifying slow motion as that comfortable softness approached. Indeed, perhaps her bulging eyes, long with disbelief, made contact first before the softest of squishes planted onto her ‘face’. Being nothing more than shadows, all of her and none of her was everything at once. Such a simple sitting was a pressure her whole being everywhere felt. The shadow-form Koya writhed, dozens of inky tendrils jerking underneath Avaron’s butt. “G-get off of me!” she hollered.
“Oh that feels so weird!” Avaron laughed, holding a hand to her mouth. “For once it’s not my tentacles!”
Sadly, taste and smell wasn’t something Koya retained in the shadows. It made feeling a womanhood against her face all the more agonizing; so very there but lacking in those delectable qualities. She desperately tried to stop from accidentally going inside, but the way Avaron squeezed her thighs together made it so hard. Oh, how soft she seemed, hardy with a firmness underneath that gave it such a lovely supp—Koya jerked harder, practically clawing at the floor trying to escape. “Get off, get off, get off!”
“I might if you keep moving like that!” Avaron said, just before Koya’s sudden movement jerked her. “Woop!” She fell over backwards, half of shadowed Koya still underneath. Before the crafty ninja could escape, Avaron twisted her legs in a spiral, pinning the shadows between them. A gay little laugh escaped her at Koya’s furious squirming, as mirthful as it was a bit heated. “Now this is crazy! You feel amazing, ninja!”
Never in her life did Koya think her thirst for women would come to punish her so terribly. Trapped against a beautiful body, pinned beneath her bottom, and further ensnared between her thighs—truly, the goddesses found a fitting way of punishing her. She jerked to one side, and Avaron held on; jerked to another, and much the same.
No matter how she dragged the woman across the floor, those legs coiled like serpents around her whole shadowed body. Worse, she couldn’t even feel the heat from them! She was suffering a heavenly prison without one ounce of being able to enjoy it! “Let me out!” Koya hollered, bucking wildly, sending Avaron bouncing up on and down on the floor. “Cease this you crazy slut!”
“Wrestling is way more fun than I thought it would be!”
Meanwhile, elsewhere in the Hive …
Two other Avarons were busy slapping their knees, almost falling over from laughing. Another at a work desk laid bent over it, slamming a fist into it with incoherent giggling.
(I think this counts as torture, right?) Medusa mused aloud. She, along with the others, were watching Abyssa’s hog-wild ‘wrestling’ with their ‘captive prisoner’. The sight of it looked beyond ridiculous, and Koya’s incoherent screaming made it even funnier. (Right?)
(… Maybe?) Weaver answered, the only other Avaron involved in the farce that wasn’t laughing crazily. (Why’s Abyssa so horny for her anyway?)
(She’s on like, week two, of not relieving herself.)
(What? Why?)
Iris’ presence leaked in a bit just then. (We’re testing personal endurance limits again. Abyssa’s the control, while Cypher is busy chugging milk.)
(Are you two nuts or something?)
(It’s only fucking around if we don’t record the results. Plus, isn’t she cute?) Iris said flippantly.
(Lusting after a hot ninja that’s our prisoner is a bit … I mean, isn’t that a bit much …?) Weaver trailed off, the unspoken obvious enough among their minds.
(Consider it a ‘enhanced interrogation’ technique,) Iris said. (Nuala said she’s weak to women and we’re just using our charm, right?)
(I’m not sure this is what would come to mind but sure, whatever.)
Meanwhile, back at the cell after some time …
Koya was never more thankful to be on her hands and knees, sweating profusely. She almost kissed the ground, even as she barely kept herself up as it was. Avaron, meanwhile laid nearby on her side, practically drenched head-to-toe and smiling far too freely. The cell’s only table and chairs had been toppled over, though the bed remained unyielding in the corner.
“Whew!” Avaron fanned herself with a hand. “You got a lot of energy!”
Damnit, she could still feel that body, but only then had the luxury of smelling anything. Such a head-filling aroma, so far and distant it stuck like a barbed hook in her nose. Koya snorted again, but in such a room, it would invariably come back. “Y-you won’t win!” she said, pointing accusingly with one hand. “I am the great Black Shadow of Kitinchi!”
“You’re great at something alright,” Avaron said, smiling. Koya shouldn’t have looked at her. Splayed sideways, her dress clinging messily, and her skin glistening—flawlessly perfect skin, with all the same characterizing tastes of porcelain. Stony white married with all sorts of blues both bright and dark, framed with writhing coils secretly beneath. Beautiful, in a most exotic way that was terrifyingly distracting. No one would put her in those paintings of noble ladies or goddesses; but maybe, in some other place, she would be the center piece of it all. “Like what you see?”
Koya couldn’t tell if her cheeks were burning from exertion or something else. “Shut up. Just because you can stop my shadow arts doesn’t mean I’ve lost!”
“Wanna go again?”
“Eugh …”
Avaron, smiling so carefree, suddenly snapped in a complete change of aura. “Ugh, really … fine.” With a dissatisfied grunt, she sat up, then stood. Patting down her messy dress, Avaron grumbled and grumbled. “Well, something needs my attention now, but I’ll come by tomorrow.”
Lest she say something that might give her an even worse idea, Koya simply grunted.
“Anyway, since the restraint works so well, you can accompany me around the Hive as well. You won’t be going free any time soon, but the company wouldn’t be so bad.”
“Why would I follow you around anywhere?”
“If you want to stay locked up here by yourself, that’s a choice too.”
Koya pursed her lips, and no more was said while Avaron left. The cell returned to a blissful quiet she hadn’t known she wanted until just then. Still, the scent of their ‘wrestling’ remained, and a ghost of that sensual skin lingered all over her. The kitsune slammed a fist into the ground. “Fuck!” she growled and rolled over onto her back. “You fucking slut, getting me riled up like this!”
She’d take care of herself properly, reaching down with a hand to her hotly wet pussy.
Sadly, her anger proved so great that actually getting off was impossible.
Which only made her even angrier.
*~*
It’d been a long time since Raina sat in any conversation so completely awkward. The Queen seemed satisfied, or at least uncaring, taking a drink of milk and honey while Lord Sternbuck was busy being cross-eyed. His advisor apparent, knight Cerral, looked just as flummoxed. She would’ve laughed if it weren’t so inappropriate. Still, it did mark the first ‘official’ meeting within the City Hall, as Queen Avaron declared it to be called. The long, rectangular chitin table sat in a room off the main hall itself, comfortable but cool in its flavors. The four of them sat at one end, leaving the rest yawning with vacancy.
Very much like the rest of Eden, chitin formed the supporting structure and hard, reinforced sections. The actual architecture was much closer to what Raina would normally expect, simple ‘wooden’ beams, wall reinforcement, and then plank panels that are painted over or covered up with rugs. Bizarre in some ways, but largely mundane, if a bit poor due to a lack of fine furnishings like paintings. The ‘bio-lamps’, as the Queen called them, would’ve been pricelessly rich in a castle though.
Queen Avaron set her cup down on its tray with a tiny, bony ‘clink’. “I understand this probably reads and sounds insane, if not completely against your sensibilities.”
“Of all things I might’ve expected, good Queen, it was not … this,” Lord Sternbuck said with a careful, and obviously practiced, care.
“A person’s truths can often defy the imagination. Still, regardless of personal opinions, I hope it is evident that my citizens are not treated cruelly or unfairly.”
“… No. While there are obvious questions that come to mind, I simply have not had the time to consider them fully. On its surface it even appears so generous as to become suspicious in itself.”
You rat, Raina wanted to snap out, but kept her peace. For his part, Lord Sternbuck had approached the whole affair as one seeking answers, and perhaps reassurances, of a future stay within Eden. It’d been obvious enough the bond of honor to Arzha was forcing his hand, even without his obvious overtures otherwise. That he continued to posture as if he had any position to speak from, however, made him most irritating to listen to.
“Oh? How so?”
“Let us—where is it …” Lord Sternbuck looked over the various papers strewn in front of him. It took some shuffling through the piles before he found the bound-together bundle. “Ah, here. Agricultural. The—“ he took a moment to reread quickly, “—yes, the policies about ‘farm productivity’. While this would ensure the farmers may have more than enough for themselves, it will cause problems for the growth of the queendom.”
“In what way, specifically?”
“Well, in your majesty’s provided annual example of 100 barrels of wheat, the taxed amount is split 60/40 in the farmer’s favor.”
“Until they are satisfied with what they have, yes.”
“Precisely the issue. I do not mean to speak ill, but those with covetous desires will hoard much and say they have little. Some would even lie about their harvests to simply avoid paying tax in the first place.”
“That is fine.”
“… Huh?” Lord Sternbuck and Raina both echoed at once, looking at Avaron dumbly.
The Queen, however, simply smiled. “There are two methods a farm has to deal with their product: what it gives in taxes, and what it sells to others. If they hoard it themselves, they have to deal with rot and pests that will ultimately destroy what they harvested.”
“Correct …” Lord Sternbuck said, angling to hear more.
“By taxing the farms, we take wheat directly as their form of payment. This food then helps to run social programs, like feeding the poor or homeless. But if those farms instead choose to sell their wheat, they then must pay market taxes. I’m not too sure if market forces as an idea is widespread, though.”
“Market forces … errm, perhaps the buying and selling behaviors of merchants?”
“The very same.”
“I have some understanding of the idea then, yes.”
“Suppose we can capture 90% of farm productivity through these two methods, then. The remaining 10% can be ‘lost’ to things like petty corruption, lost goods, unlucky events, and the like. We could force 100% capture rate, but which is better: 90% of a larger harvest, or 100% of a smaller harvest.”
“It would, of course, depend on the numbers but, the 90% in this case,” Lord Sternbuck said. “However, a problem with this is the amount captured, rather than an arbitrary rate, is it not? 90% of 1 barrel is still less than 1 barrel.”
Yes, but obviously if the captured amount is insufficient, special attention is needed, Raina thought to herself.
“If the total output of our farms amounts to less than a barrel, we’ve done something terribly wrong,” Queen Avaron said amusedly. “But I see your point, yes. My broad position is one of practical design. People naturally need to take care of themselves first, so we should accommodate for that. By giving a little bit of overhead, plus their own individual choices, they will naturally seek out the best options for their situation. If a couple farms produce nothing because of circumstances, then presumably they can handle their own affairs.”
“And if they cannot?”
“That is when we give them ‘government aid’. Tax breaks, food or financial assistances, and the such—provided it looks like they can pick themselves up again. Sometimes a business just fails for one reason or another, and then that must be dealt with as well.”
“… And this is what is in your majesty’s idea of, what was it—ah, ‘bottom’ and ‘top’ ‘gains floors’?”
“I’m sure you don’t expect your taxes every year to produce an exact number.”
“No, the language is strange but the idea is common enough.” Lord Sternbuck rubbed his temple, staring at the papers. “If I am truthful, while I have some reservations, the framing here does work. My greatest concern is, perhaps, how would the people be kept honest? What is stopping the tax collectors in either way from taking their own fill?”
That, too, was something that intrigued Raina. Even when she was in charge of great affairs in the Ashmourn, intermediary officials were far more troublesome than paupers. I’ve some idea how she might but … She glanced toward some of the drones loitering in the corners of the rooms. Servants, as much as guards, they sat there curled up, almost perfectly like statues in how inanimate they were. Lord Sternbuck noticed her look, glancing about perhaps a bit more uneasily.
“Generally, not much.”
“Eh?” the two of them cowed again.
“My Hive could possibly handle that sort of business, but some of it is nuanced in ways it cannot. If I employ regular people, then all their regular problems follow along too,” Queen Avaron said, shrugging with a careless sigh. “Being what it is, though, there are ways to cut it down and keep it under control. After all—“
The double-doors to the meeting room pushed open with two tentaclelings. Estimable princess Arzha then entered, Haleen and Magna bowing behind her as they stayed outside. Lord Sternbuck rose from his seating, though Avaron and Raina remained in theirs. “Princess Arzha,” Queen Avaron greeted first.
“Your majesty. Lord Sternbuck; Lady Raina. I apologize for being late,” Arzha said, giving a polite bow.
“It is fine, we were working on the boring part about farm taxes.”
“Is it not the most relaxing part to do?” Arzha asked amusedly, heading over to take a seat beside Raina.
“Right up until we were figuring out how to keep tax collectors honest,” Avaron remarked dryly.
Arzha seemed to think for a moment before frowning. “Is it truly an issue for you, queen Avaron?”
“… How do you mean?”
“Do you not have eyes and ears everywhere? How could they afford to be uncouth then?”
“Because people cannot live under a constant eye,” Raina interjected, feeling more confident about knowing Avaron’s true thoughts. “Is it any different from having a guard at every corner?”
“Is that a downside?” Arzha asked, brow smoothing tilting upward.
“Yes,” Avaron said dryly. “Raina is correct, people cannot live being watched constantly.”
“Forgive me, but what is the manner of this watching?” Lord Sternbuck interjected, seeming rather caught out.
Avaron waved a hand flippantly off to the side where one of the tentaclelings waited. “My drones can tell me and each other what they see or hear. Uhh, in a way that isn’t just talking—shared senses, you could say.”
“I—think I understand,” Lord Sternbuck said slowly. “Then as to Lady Arzha’s suggestions, could these ‘drones’ not observe certain people instead?”
“How do you mean?”
“I agree with Lady Raina, insofar as a guard at every corner will not inspire the people,” he said, gesturing in part toward her. “However, there isn’t anything wrong with officials of the queendom being watched. They are to carry more duties, and any noble worthy of the name is used to being watched.”
“Lord Sternbuck is correct,” Arzha said.
“That is still somewhat …” Raina wanted to disagree, but truly any powerful force within a land would be watched. Human or monja, that truth remained all the same. She glanced toward Avaron, who seemed lost in thought, staring at the table.
“It’s important to set boundaries, and to respect certain ideas,” Avaron said, pulling her hands in and folding them together. “This probably sounds novel to you all, but things like not breaking into homes randomly, seizing or arresting without due cause, and giving fair representation are tremendously important.”
“Those first two sound sensible enough, but what is the third one?” Raina inquired, seeing the other two unwilling to voice the question.
“Ah. Well, let’s say I accuse someone of being a thief. Who would go against my word?”
“Err, no one?”
“Precisely. The accused has no defense against my word, because my word carries so much power. No one would try to prove the thief’s innocence, and many would assume guilt in the first place.” Avaron tilted her head ever so slightly, one brow cocking upward. “Hence, by forcing a fair representation, someone must defend the innocence of the accused. It falls to the accuser to prove the guilt.”
They all exchanged looks, various complex expressions trading between them. Not disbelief, but thoughtful regard and a measure of dubiousness. “Wouldn’t that make it easy to simple tie one’s hands with false accusations?” Lord Sternbuck ventured, stroking his chin.
“You install certain levers, like penalties for frivolous claims, and other people to handle the paperwork. Abuse is a problem, of course, on both sides of the matter. Still, which is better: living in a land where you have fair representation, or living in one where any noble can accuse you and end your life? Literally, or otherwise.”
My queen, we’re all nobles, Raina wanted to point out. She smiled uneasily, glancing about the other two’s stony faces. “F-fair representation, isn’t it?” she ventured once again.
Lord Sternbuck interjected, “Then what of known traitors or conspirators? Foreign spies, at that.”
“Again, levers for that,” Avaron said. “Having sufficient evidence to validate the claim, but not all of it can be brought into the public light. I would think, though, that any number of traitors should be so low that the people will not be unduly disturbed.”
“Is that not simply going around your very notion of ‘fair representation’?”
“It is. Every time we do, it becomes a black mark on any notion of honor or integrity we might hold.” Avaron looked up, casting her gaze and its difficult-to-pierce meaning upon them all. “Otherwise, the difference between noble leader and tyrant gets thinner and thinner.” She held her hands up in a half-hearted shrug. “It is not perfect, but it is flexible. To bend when needed, and regret having gotten to that point, without breaking.”
Arzha said, “There is another problem that must be considered.”
“… Oh?”
“The likes of Haska and magical coercion.”
“… You’re right.”
“Who is this Haska?” Lord Sternbuck asked, and everyone else took on a grim expression that made him visibly nervous.
“My queen,” Raina said, “should it really be talked about?”
Avaron sighed. “Ignorance of the truth only helps them. The worst part is I know how much that, even if we only speak the truth, few will genuinely believe it. Sorry, I’m getting comfortable rambling for some reason.” She sat up straighter in her chair, giving Lord Sternbuck a hardy stare. “Haska is an evil god, one directly responsible for the downfall of Artor, and the soon-to-be fall of the Empire.”
“I’m sorry?” Lord Sternbuck said doing a visible double-take. “An evil god?”
“We’re gonna be here a while, I think.”
*~*
The gentle tapping of sock-covered feet reached her senses long before she heard them. Taiyoko, serpentine beauty she was, paused in her brush writing. Two tall candle holding braziers flickered gently, competing with the dim moonlight pouring in through the open window. Tsukiko, who likewise had been writing beside her, also looked up, and the two shared a quick glance. To their left sat a sliding paper door, and they watched as a shadow crossed over it and kneeled down.
“My ladies,” the servant said, “a letter has arrived from the forest folk.”
“Oh, really?” Tsukiko muttered under her breath.
“Bring it,” Taiyoko demanded.
The servant slid the door open and entered, a comely and older kitsune with black hair. In her hands was a red-wood lacquered tray, and upon it a thick piece of yellow parchment twined with silver thread. Taiyoko took it first, regarding it fully while she gave a dismissive wave of the hand. The servant bowed and left quietly. Tsukiko leaned in beside her, their two selves squishing together as they looked.
“I wonder what they sent this time?”
“I have a good idea of what,” Taiyoko muttered before grasping an end of the thread. A very simple sort of magic acted as a guard, one simply looking for a particular responding magic. Her finger tips glowed a faint hue of green, thin wisps of something almost like smoke coming out. Only then did the thread itself glow a silvery light, before going slack around the parchment. Unwinding the thread, then unfurling the parchment, the sisters read its contents with scrutinizing eyes.
“Pff.” Tsukiko slapped a hand over her mouth, cheeks ballooning with a repressed laugh.
“I’m somehow not surprised,” Taiyoko remarked, her lips tweaking in their attempts to smile. “Why is she always getting caught like this?”
“M-m-maybe she has a thing for it—“ Tsukiko choked out an ugly snort, which only made her laugh more. One hand trying to preserve her modesty, the other slapped her meaty lower snake-half. Its infectiousness wormed its way into Taiyoko’s gut, and she ended up burying her face into her own hands to laugh. The sight of such regal, beauty-defining women having an ugly laugh together might’ve scared some poor soul’s sensibilities to death. Their tails slapped against the ground, a rolling wave of a jerk that thumped and slapped depending on which section did it.
“S-she’s always getting stuck like this,” Taiyoko bit out.
“Did they string her up again?” Tsukiko asked, making a vague gesture with her hand. “She’s still hot and bothered by that.”
“Maybe, the—uhh, that tentradom—“ Taiyoko tried reading the parchment again, “—has her in captivity. She might be getting the time of her life right now.”
“Ugh, lucky bitch.”
“Language, sister,” Taiyoko said in a chastising, if playful, tone. “We mustn’t speak ill of our most capable ninja.”
“She’s the one getting caught with her legs open every chance she gets.”
“It’s a talent of hers,” Taiyoko remarked before taking note of something odd. The parchment had a second page, the two being glued together. Aside from Nuala’s colorful rendition of Koya being captured yet again, she hadn’t a clue what else awaited. Scanning with an artful skill, Taiyoko’s mirth found itself strangled to death within seconds. Her entire face warped to one of a grave concern, a physical change in the air following so sharply that Tsukiko jerked. “Oh, fuck.”
“W-what?” her sister demanded worriedly, leaning in to read as well. “Oh, fuck.”
“Fuck,” they both said in unison before looking at each other.
“She cannot be serious!” Tsukiko nearly screeched.
“When is she not?!” Taiyoko shot right back, waggling the parchment violently.
“This is going to ruin everything!” Tsukiko slapped a hand to her forehead, eyes darting back and forth as her thoughts visibly raced through them.
Taiyoko, however, said, “No, wait, this is our opportunity. Think about it. We can get them on our side, not Honda’s.”
Tsukiko paused despite the tense energy boiling within her. “Yes, you’re right. But if we spring the trap now without being certain …”
“Maybe she hasn’t contacted the others yet.”
“How could she not?”
“We need the ninja on alert now.”
“We need everyone on alert! Where’s Hanamaru?”
“Not to mention purging our ranks,” Taiyoko remarked grimly. “I think we will be up late tonight, sister.”
“Ahh …” Tsukiko groaned out with raw frustration.
The two of them drew themselves up and made ready to leave. Taiyoko stopped next to one of the lit candles, holding the parchment to the flame. It caught easily enough, igniting with a snap and crackle. She left it in the metal basin to burn away, and the sisters hurriedly left their office. Their home castle soon spurred to life, awaking in the dead of night with a liveliness some might think they were under attack.
Before the parchment yet turned to ash, some words could be made out:
I, Efval Gladestride, do declare that the Old Enemy has returned once more.
No longer shall we sit in seclusion and peace.
The forests are hence commanded to return, and to once again join arms in Alva Mor.
Those who honor the old debts and bonds, you are called to repay.
Swear to aide us in the Endless War or be swept aside.
And, rather than the insignia of a peaceful tree bearing fruit, another, more harrowing one stood beneath such words. A stylized face of an owl, cast in the green blood of an undying tree, its eyes furiously sharp, a bow in one talon, and a fistful of arrows in the other. Such was the mark of Alva Mor, the elvetahn covenant of arms against the Nagraki. Unseen in usage since the end of the last great war, forgotten by those cursed with short lives. The parchment burned away slowly, the flames consuming everything until only ashes remained.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.11) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquaintances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.18) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 52: Setting Out
Notes:
Warning: Disturbing Content (violence)
Chapter Text
A journey of a thousand miles began long before the first step.
*~*
A loading yard of sorts had been fashioned beside City Hall, convenient for its location to the underground Hive system. A simple chitin-brick wall surrounded the area, sealed with an even simpler wooden swinging gate. For Avaron, it hilariously proved the most ‘modern’ idea in the entirety of the world she’d seen yet. Some things are timeless, I suppose, she mused, looking down at the white parchment in her hand. Well, at least it’s about halfway done.
Lord Sternbuck ultimately agreed to stay in Eden, ostensibly under the umbrella of Arzha. While there’d been some grumbling and outcries when her nature had been revealed, many more simply kept solemn and silent. They were a people cast adrift, hopes and dreams laid to ruins, and their lives left to the whims of fate. She’d seen them countless times before, both on the news and in person.
While they carried what they owned on their backs, most of the goods belonged to Sternbuck. Hence, Avaron’s Corena went through the laborious task of unpacking, taking inventory, and preparing for dissemination. The loading area sat full of wagons, both unpacked and those in the process of being stripped down by tentaclelings.
(How is it going?) Abyssa inquired through the Hive Mind.
(Slow but steady,) Corena answered. (For the most part there’s a lot of essentials, and a grab bag of other random shit. If I had to guess, the wagons that Sternbuck took himself probably had all the real valuables.)
(That’s fine, then. As long as he stays in his lane there won’t be issues.)
(Mmm. I wonder.)
(Arzha and Nuala are heading over to you,) Prime interjected, a passing messenger.
Her brow cocked upward and she superstitiously glanced over to the loading area gate. Ah, why me? Corena griped to herself. A few minutes later, the duo stepped on through the gate, dressed as they ever were. “I’d say hello but you two look ominous,” she greeted, staring over at them wearily.
“I am the portrait of beauty,” Arzha said with a bit of an upturned nose.
“I don’t disagree,” Avaron remarked, actually making the princess blink for a moment.
“More to the matter at hand,” Nuala said dryly, “it is time you and the other heroines started leveling up.”
“I’m getting by just fine on that front. What did you have in mind for them?”
“A simple adventure through the ruins of Artor.”
“You want to send children into a war zone?”
“Most of the active fighting should have died down,” Arzha said. “Based on what Sternbuck told me, the first hand raiding is done, and many armies have returned to their homelands. It will largely be bandits and other miscreants left now. Even more so, given the Ashmourn came and left just as quickly.”
“This is …” Avaron couldn’t help frowning, tapping her finger on the parchment irritably.
Nuala said, “In large part thanks to Artor’s hunting, the monsters there are also generally weak. They won’t survive training in the Alva Forest as they are right now.”
Avaron sighed and rubbed her temple. (Prime, what do you want done?)
(Why are you asking me?)
(I’m not signing off on sending kids to war.)
(Fine, I’ll shoulder it then. Nuala is right, and we can’t sit on our hands about it.)
Such an ugly taste in my mouth, Corena thought drearily. “Fine, very well. But we’ll run this more as a humanitarian operation.”
“A … what?”
Avaron waved with her parchment hand toward all the wagons. “We’ll empty these out, then load in supplies. The heroines and the escort will go into Artor’s territory and try to rescue as many people as we can.”
Arzha seemed far more surprised than Nuala at such an idea. “Your … majesty, it is not that I would turn away such an attempt but, that undertaking would be immense.”
“Yes. And?”
“Uh …” For once, Arzha was the one at a loss. “Is it even possible for us to support them?”
“Maybe.” Avaron scratched the back of her head. “With Sternbuck’s people we’re so far upside down in our stockpile it’s not funny. I’m rushing to complete the first two hydroponic towers but even when they’re finished it won’t be enough. Any more people and we’ll go further into the red.”
“Surely these lands are not so poor?” Nuala asked dubiously.
“Oh, they’re not. The Hive is just sustaining itself off the bulk of it. I’ve been hitting the ceiling of sustainability for a while now.”
“Can it simply not cut back then?”
“It already is. I’m constantly cycling who’s awake and eating and who’s hibernating. Even those asleep need to eat at some point, though.”
“Is the … I cannot believe I am saying this—“ Nuala sighed and pinched her nose, “—is the women’s milk not enough?”
Avaron chuckled behind her hand, dutifully not looking at Nuala’s embarrassment. “It’s helping a lot. It’s not like we won’t have everything we need. There’s work that’s trying to get off the ground—but right now there’s nothing to fill bellies. Rationing will only get us so far, and I don’t know when pay day will hit.”
“Then, as a compromise,” Arzha said, a hand under her chin in thought. “Why not raid Artor ourselves?” The two of them stared at her with varying expressions of disbelief. “What? Is it not obvious?”
“You said it, not me,” Avaron remarked under her breath, busying herself with the inventory list for a moment. “It’s not a bad idea. We can salvage whatever’s edible, bolster our stocks, and hopefully survive the bump.”
“Then, with your leave, I will lead the mission.”
It didn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out Nuala’s pointed look when Arzha spoke up. Avaron squinted. “That paints me into a difficult spot. Without you here, I don't think Sternbuck or his people are going to be quiet.”
“That—may be, but …”
“It’s not that I don’t understand, but it leaves me in a bad position.”
“As far as escorting the heroines is concerned,” Nuala spoke up, “I can handle that affair.”
“Wouldn’t that leave Eden exposed to danger?” Avaron asked wearily.
“So long as that woman is willing to lift a hand, no, it will be fine.”
“That willingness is the problem in the first place.”
“If you are going,” Arzha said, “then at the least, I will send some of my knights as well. They can carry my banner, undoubtedly there will be some who answer it.”
“That raises a question. Would people even recognize you or them? Or trust any evidence about being Artor knights?” Avaron asked speculatively.
“Peasant folk have little choice when someone armed with swords visits,” Arzha said, although clearly troubled by the thought as well. “Whether or not they trust us depends entirely on how much they will trust strangers.”
“That’s a trash fire waiting to happen,” Avaron remarked before shaking her head. “Alright. Go ahead and get everyone whose going ready, these wagons will take a day or two. Nuala, I’ll send one of my selves along with in secret, do you have a spare set of robes?”
“One of your—ah. You mean to hide as one of my servants?”
“It’ll be easier for the time being.”
“It is doable enough.”
“Alright.”
*~*
Truthfully, although Avaron had some idea of who her neighbors were, she hadn’t the luxury of pinning names to a map. To Eden’s west was the ruins of Artor, Alva Forest touched it on the northeastern side, the Silvervein Mountains blocked off the northern expanse as the Ashmourn occupied regions in the northwest. The immediate south and southeast seemed the strangest, as Artor bled into somewhere called the Free Hardain State. So-called because they renounced slavery, in all its forms, while sitting between two slavery-happy nations.
Who exactly lived beyond them wasn’t all that clear to her. Artor’s downfall had destabilized the entire region, and everyone had spurred into a feeding frenzy of some kind. At least, those with cities, forts, and large armies. Apparently a number of more local, isolated villages, tribes, and other groups also existed. From what Arzha explained of that arrangement, the ‘land holders’ and ‘free roamers’ were in constant friction against each other.
Land holding nations couldn’t exactly squish out the nomads when they were armed to the teeth with magic and a lot of combat [levels]. Not without potentially breaking their own forces in the attempt, then getting slugged out by their neighbor before they could recover. The two ended up tolerating each other only to the extent neither could really win.
It was at once a familiar sounding arrangement, but all the pieces involved were comically different from what she expected.
The cart struck a rock or hole or something awful, sending a jolt right up Avaron’s butt. “I hate these things so much,” she muttered darkly. The power of [Divine Regeneration] meant the pain faded faster than she could complain, but it still hurt somewhat.
“Human designs are ever lacking in elegance,” Nuala remarked dryly. “I would say even these are particularly poor by that measure.”
“Can’t complain about choices when your home’s burning down, I suppose. Anyway, have you felt anything yet?”
“No, not now nor five minutes ago, or possibly five minutes from now. I am keeping my awareness open.”
Avaron shrugged off that acidic undertone of Nuala’s. “Well, the [Hive Mind] is becoming quieter the farther we go. I’m not too sure about my own senses right now.”
“… What do you mean?”
“That for the first time since I became a [Hive Mind], my other selves are not in reach. It is—quite disturbing, actually, how quiet everything is now.”
“So there are limits even to that incredible power?” Nuala asked, sounding quite rhetorical in her observation.
“It appears so. The drones are still working just fine under my own influence, but it’s taking more effort to manage them.” Avaron sighed and rubbed her temples. “It’s probably best I stay here in the wagon and focus on them.”
“At the least, you can guard the caravan. No one should know who we are, save the knights that fly the banner. Those coming for the heroines are ones I can catch myself.”
“Mm.”
Figuring out magical senses was, in itself, another problem atop countless others. It was something obviously linked toward magical ability, though Avaron scarcely had any of that. Try as she might, for all the crazy power she had over genetics, magic sensing simply wasn’t there. It sounded hilariously stupid whenever she thought about it, but there it was all the same.
I wonder if I eat enough animals or plants I’ll gain it that way, Avaron mused, her mind quite literally wandering. Her senses of perception shifted through the various drones. Crushers pulled the wagons while escort drones marched endlessly on the flanks. Skeyes above peered across vast grassy plains, broken apart by odd trees and shrubbery. Some were even being harried by predatory birds, swooping and swiping for a cheap kill.
Not that the skeyes could be bothered; they were far too durable.
All their senses, however, were fairly ‘mundane’. Functions of physiology in very understandable ways, not necessarily magical. Well, her sense of smell might be considered magical, but she wasn’t entirely sure about that.
The feeling of being watched tickled Avaron’s mind, pulling her consciousness into the body everyone knew as ‘her’. Nuala remained sat on the other side of the dim wagon, staring with an inscrutable, piercing gaze. Avaron blinked, her otherwise fixed, doll-like eyes looking somewhat more normal when they refocused. “Is there something on my face?” she asked, rubbing her cheek.
“You are a very strange person,” Nuala said simply.
“Thanks, I work hard on it.”
The elvetahn’s brow tweaked just a tiny bit upward, the vaguest surprise at such an answer.
Avaron wanted to sigh so much, but kept herself ‘professional’. “Would you like to be more specific about me sitting here being strange?”
“Your unwavering stare is, perhaps, inappropriate.”
My wh—oh, right. Avaron actually sighed and then said, “No, I wasn’t staring. I forgot to close my eyes before changing my focus.”
“You mean, gazing through one of your ‘drones’?”
“Correct.”
“Is it so seamless a feat?” Nuala asked, her head craning in that tilt she did whenever she was interested. It might’ve been cute if her eyes weren’t so blatantly predatory. Hawkish, after a fashion.
“Mm. Imagine countless windows in front of you, all of them showing something. I can ‘see’ all of them at once, but my ‘attention’ is much narrower. You don’t think about your heart beat until you have a reason to, after all.”
“Then, does that mean there are blind spots? You ‘see’ something but don’t ‘recognize’ if it is a problem?”
“Mm, no, not quite.” Avaron leaned back against the uncomfortable wooden edge of the wagon. “In fact, it is because of that that I managed to catch onto Koya’s sneaky little attempt. It was like catching a pin drop in the middle of a raging storm.”
“You say it is no trouble, then speak as if it is a difficult feat,” Nuala summarized. “I cannot help but wonder if you wish to hide the truth of it.”
“No, not that either. You are a person with only a single mind, Nuala. Two eyes, two ears, a mouth, nose, and whatever other senses. I am many minds, many living things, all communicating like nerves in the body.” Avaron smiled at Nuala’s thin lipped look, tight but guarded in her usually vexed way. “Even if I found the words to describe it, could you ever truly understand the meaning of them?”
“… Perhaps not, but trying is how one learns.”
Please do because I have trouble figuring it out myself sometimes, Avaron thought dryly.
It would be a few minutes later, however, that something entered her awareness. Through the eyes of a skeye, Avaron saw a black smudge on the landscape. It took a minute of focusing its camera-like eyes, tightening and zooming in to find vaguely defined shapes. It was harder to separate from the background colors and figures, but the farther the skeye flew in that direction, the more marginal detail emerged.
“One of my scouts found a village. Or, what’s left of one,” Avaron said seriously, frowning.
“How far away?”
“Half hour’s ride at this pace. Looks like it was burned to the ground.”
“I doubt anyone’s alive, or left, but it is prudent to check all the same,” Nuala said before pushing herself up to stand. “I’ll prepare the heroines. It’s best if the caravan stay outside the village, in case of ambush.”
“Sounds good. I’ll have a few scouts work through the outskirts for trails or anything.”
“Keep me informed,” Nuala asked, brushing past the tarp that covered the wagon’s rear exit.
*~*
It couldn’t have been anything more than some rural farming community, as far he could tell. Perhaps a stopping point on a trade route—there were a lot of buildings along a central road that ran through the village. There wasn’t much for alleyways or other branches, just smaller roads that led to the odd house or warehouse in some nonsensical sprawl. It must’ve been a quaint but lively place, or so Eberhard wanted to believe.
The smell in the air clung to his nostrils. Acrid ashes intermixed with rot and flesh, like something unspeakably horrible left behind in a dumpster. Even the slightest of breezes couldn’t wash away the foul odor. He snorted once again, trying to keep the bile down in his gut. Something the others, too, struggled with. All of them save Nuala, who led at the front with a stoic, stony face hidden in that cowl of hers.
“I don’t see anyone,” Eberhard remarked. “Not with my eyes or my [Skills]. The tracks are too messy to tell who went where. What about all of you?”
If Nuala led the front, Eberhard walked just behind her, while the rest marched behind him. Hoshi, Katsumi, Chul-soo, Amir, Amelia, and Cecile—the only other non-Heroine in their group—all shook their heads or said ‘no’. Those freakishly disturbing tentacle-spiders trailing after them gave no indication of anything either.
“Uhm, what of you, lady Nuala?” Eberhard asked carefully. The elvetahn exuded an air of solemn indifference and disregard, even when she looked directly at someone. He understood her to be a noble, or someone exceedingly powerful, but what kind exactly wasn’t clear to him.
Nuala stopped walking, and so they all did as well, keeping a space between them and her. She glanced from one side to another, regarding the buildings in particular. “Take a look around. What’s odd about all of this?”
The unspoken meaning being that something wrong was going on, but they’d all missed it somehow. Eberhard looked around once more, but still only saw the burned down buildings. Those with stone reinforcement kept up the best, a skeleton of what they’d once been. Wooden houses either crumbled into a heap, or left behind a rickety, burned out husk that might collapse at any moment. The only more that could be said, as far as he found, they must’ve been well off with how much of their furnishings were left inside.
Chul-soo said, “I don’t see anyone. Or, er, their … bodies.”
He’s right, Eberhard thought as murmurs of agreement echoed Chul-soo. For all the wanton destruction, there weren’t any bodies. At least, nothing recognizable as a body.
Nuala waved her gnarled-wood staff out, pointing with its knobbed end at the buildings. “No bodies, and no stolen valuables, either. Not here, not anywhere we’ve seen.”
Amir said, “They burned down, right? Who would steal something from a fire?”
“Yes, but when did they burn down?”
None of them could answer Nuala’s succinct question. She beckoned with her staff to be followed, and so started walking again. The rest continued after her in silence.
“There are three ideas behind raiding,” Nuala said, “to pillage for resources, to enslave the people, or to garner tribute. In all such times, something of the village is normally left behind to grow again. A crop for next year’s harvest.”
Eberhard’s face tightened, her words painfully true, yet scathingly indifferent to the consequences of people’s lives.
“Then it’s the second thing, right?” Amir asked, sounding as if he didn’t want the answer. “Everyone here got enslaved?”
“Ordinarily, perhaps you would be correct.”
“… Ordinarily?”
Nuala held up her staff, careening to the side. Her walk took her to a side street, one that wove farther ahead and up a slight incline. In leaving the main street behind, they walked through dirty, ash-strewn path of blackened ground, burned grass, and charcoal plants. A quiet, unmoving land of death. For whatever Nuala meant to say, Eberhard nor the rest of them could tell.
They simply followed along, nervously eying the open burned grounds around them.
“Is that a—church? Or shrine?” Amelia asked, wearily pointing ahead. The ashen path before them led up the hill to a larger, presumably once crescent-shaped structure. Unlike all the others, it stood distinctively alone on its hill, but it too had been burned to the ground. Only the stony framework and foundations seemed to remain.
“A shrine, yes,” Nuala remarked. “Moon shrines are dedicated to the harvest goddesses. They’re rather lackadaisical but have a liking for food, so farmlands often make sacrifices to them for boons.”
The air thickened as they neared, a pungent stench so wretched some of them started coughing. Eberhard hadn’t a clue to what could smell so awful, and pressing a cloth to his nose barely blocked it out at all. Cecile seemed to fare the worst of all, even trying to use her own tail’s fur to cover her nose. Eberhard’s eyes started watering even as they reached the flat walkway to what had been the shrine’s front doors.
Doors that had been barricaded from the … outside?
A dreadful feeling crept in his gut at the sight. Chairs, benches, rocks, and anything else a person could throw against such high, two-story tall doors. They stopped a distance from the barricade, though Nuala herself stood at the base of it.
“I was hoping I’d be wrong, but how disappointing,” Nuala remarked.
“What? Why? What is it?” Hoshi, otherwise quiet himself, asked in a hurried voice.
“Mm. [Bevudi].” Nuala waved her staff from one side to the other. A great, powerful humming noise vibrated the air, and the entire barricade came alight. In scant seconds, as if struck by a mighty force, all the debris blocking the doors blasted off to the side. A plume of dust and ash kicked up as they pelted across the shrine grounds. “[Bevudi],” Nuala said again, this time making the shrine doors tremble.
They creaked and wrenched open, their solid mass dragging against the ground. Warped and misshapen from the fiery blaze, they might’ve been impossible otherwise to open. Eberhard and the rest watched with wary eyes, their gazes turning to shocked horror as their guts fell out under them. A mound of bodies, the top half burned to their skeletons, and the under half little more than melted together-flesh, poured out from the doors.
The gruesome sight, stench, and weight of it all slammed into Eberhard all at once. He stepped backward, staggered almost in trying to keep upright. Yet, what truly sent ice down his veins, tearing at his heart was what was upon the doors themselves. Though charred back, he could see fingernail-sized gouges on the inside. Desperate, erratic scars where they’d—
A strong vertigo overcame him, and Eberhard collapsed onto his knees. He ripped away the cloth covering his nose as bile and breakfast alike puked its way out. A heaving, retching sound that other heroines, too, succumbed to making.
“[Tahn-daral],” Nuala said in that magical way of hers, a piercing voice of clarity through Eberhard’s mind. The air around them whirled in a gentle breeze, the foul stench vanishing as a comfortably grassy, floral scent washed it away. He huffed and puffed through his nose quickly, inhaling as much of the clean air as he possibly could. In some way, it helped calm down his nerves, but he dare not look toward the shrine entrance again.
“Y-you can stop this fucking smell?” Amelia barked out, a dry croak underneath her bristling words.
“Easily so. But, you needed to experience it.”
Cecile asked, tepid and stressed at once, “Why? It’s so … so horrible …”
“Do you think this will be the only time?” Nuala asked in return, the weight of expectation heavily upon them all. Eberhard only gazed at the ashy ground underneath him, unmoving. “Do you perchance not understand how evil war truly is? If you are to be heroines, you must be the ones to walk through places like this, undaunted.”
Chul-soo, the only one to remain standing, albeit shakily so, said, “P-perhaps so, but must we do so in front of th-them? It isn’t it disrespectful?”
“To who? You? Or them?” Nuala shot back coolly. “Would it not be worse to deny the fate of these people, if only because it sits ill for you?”
No one had anything to say.
“Stand up now, would-be heroines,” Nuala demanded, a steely edge to her words. “Stand up and regard these people as they should be. If you cannot do that much, how do you hope to fight?”
Eberhard smiled, his teeth grit, a look between vexed and sardonic in his eyes. It’s different from a history book. Seeing it, being here myself … ah. An angry scowl inched across his face, and he clenched his fists full of ash-laden dirt. Get up, you coward. Get up!
He wasn’t sure how he found the strength; his body just moved, shaky and uncertain, but moved all the same. The vertigo and queasiness remained, strong enough he almost toppled over standing up on his own. A hand reached out to him then, pale like snow, crooked and clawed in a way that couldn’t be human. Cecile, despite her own visible unease, wanted to help him up.
“Thank you,” Eberhard muttered, uncertain if she heard him at all. Her surprisingly strong hand and unwavering arm, at least, made standing that much easier. All of them, to some extent or another, managed to meet Nuala’s demand, uneasily staring at the mound of dead ahead.
The elvetahn regarded them all wordlessly before turning back to face the dead herself. “You will meet many in the future, some in situations much worse than this. Sometimes better, if you are lucky. Remember this willingness to stand up, to try and face what is before you. It will be your only friend in those hard moments.”
Nuala lifted her free hand up to her face, and muttered another magical word, “[Naht-ahndu].”
A strange, blue and green gust of wind blew from her lips, streaking across her open palm. It glittered in the afternoon sun, reminding Eberhard of a lake he’d seen in the morning, once. The wind rolled across the corpses in a gentle tide, dispersing like mist through bones, flesh, and ashes. In its wake sprouted roots, and they crawled across the remains, snaking through holes and around bones. From them sprouted tiny stems that grew taller and fuller by every beat of his heart.
Before their eyes, nature itself was born, creating budding plants that soon spat out colorful flowers. It passed in a green tide over the dead and the ruins, covering it all in a lush, verdant garden. Few, if any, of the dead could be seen minutes later, an odd hand or other part sticking out. One that Eberhard saw seemed to be a curled fist with an extended finger, a yellow flower growing and extending off the tip.
Maybe it was beautiful; poetic, even. He found it hard to appreciate, knowing what laid beneath.
But, maybe it was better that way, all the same.
Katsumi asked timidly, “At least we can do that much for them? I—is it even right of us to?”
“From nature are we born, to nature we return. It is a better end than being left unburied,” Nuala said. “Whether or not their souls have found succor in their goddess’ bosoms is their business.”
“O-oh …”
“There is nothing more to do here. Let us return to the caravan.” Nuala certainly had a punctual way of speaking and moving. As if unburdened—no, perhaps she truly was—the elvetahn turned and walked through the heroines, going to head back the way they came.
“Nuala,” a new, previously unheard voice said. The hideously garbled and guttural manner of speech made Eberhard’s skin crawl. He and the other heroines looked in alarm at one of the tentaclelings as it spoke. “There seems to be some kind of secret tunnel they might’ve used.”
“I am surprised somewhere so humble would have one. Where is it?”
“Through the hill, heading southward. There’s tracks left behind, looks like people wearing shoes. My drones are having trouble following them properly.”
Avaron? Eberhard wondered suspiciously. He’d presumed the spider-like beasts were just that, beasts being controlled. Apparently there was much more going on with them. There wasn’t a moment to ponder it further as Nuala’s piercing eyes settled upon him. Eberhard straightened up on reflex.
“As I recall, you have tracking [Skills], do you not, Eberhard?” Nuala asked, though it sounded more like a statement.
“I do,” he affirmed.
“Then it is time to use them. There may yet be people left to save after all.”
For how indifferent she ever spoke, Nuala’s words energized the heroines. They perked up and found strength to move, hurrying up to follow after the elvetahn. Eberhard, trailing behind them for a moment, looked over his shoulder. The greenery yet continued to spread, inching across the stones, ruined architecture, and whatever else it could find. In time, the horror he’d seen would be gone beneath it all for good.
But, he wouldn’t forget.
He wasn’t sure if he ever could.
*~*
Nuala kept her pace as Eberhard worked further ahead. The trail Avaron found went for a while away from the ruined village, but not toward the forest’s direction. It bobbed and weaved through the rolling hills, someone obviously trying to stay on the low ground. Not a bad idea when raiders were about, but her magic hadn’t found any living souls yet.
The heroines, who clung to the idea of survivors, deflated the longer it took. They wore their hope on their eyes and faces, even when they tried that laughable attempt at being stoic. She kept her tongue tucked away; life would provide its own harsh truths. It needn’t her help in doing so.
Thudding hooves tickled her pointed ear and she looked to the side; Arzha’s knights whom had escorted the caravan approached. Like the heroines, they wore grim faces of a sort.
“There’s no visible trails to the west,” Haleen said, pulling up alongside the group with her horse.
“Nothing to the east either,” Magna affirmed, and the others all nodded to some extent.
“Judging by the lack of marks from the raiders, I’m doubtful they were scooped up here in the hills. Either only a few escaped at all, or they dispersed quickly and scattered,” Haleen mused aloud, her attention drifting toward Eberhard. “Has he had any luck?”
“There is still a trail, apparently, Lady Haleen,” Chul-soo informed dutifully.
“Mm. And what of your magic, Nuala the Black?”
There was the scorn Nuala knew from humans. Spending too much time around Avaron’s bundle of miscreants really could deceive one’s mind. “Nothing worth speaking about. Which is rather strange unto itself.”
A moment hung in the air, Haleen obviously waiting for more. “Well? What of it?” she inquired sternly.
Nuala peeked just a little around her hood, glancing at the knight. “If there’s a trail an untrained boy can follow, I should be able to find whoever left it. But, I cannot. It as if they vanished into the air. Since the dead leave behind something as well, and there is nothing, I can only surmise something magical happened.”
She hated being heavy worded about it, but someone as dull as Haleen wouldn’t be good sport. The human even had the audacity to appear understanding of what she heard, and not take the insult it actually was.
“I think there’s something here!” Eberhard’s shout broke the air, drawing all their attention.
This will be something, Nuala thought tepidly. She and the heroines hustled over as the knights rode on. Eberhard himself crouched at the ground, standing at the bottom of a hill’s incline. Before him were a bunch of head-sized rocks and a pair of larger boulders. They were utterly unremarkable and entirely natural.
“It goes right here,” Eberhard remarked, point from the dirt to the boulders in front of him. “Like they just walked right into the rocks.”
Haleen said, “Any ideas then, magi—“
“—Quiet, simpleton,” Nuala shot back like a whip, holding up her hand. She brushed past Eberhard, coming before the boulders, gaze fixed upon them. What she sought in them proved hard to see, if not almost invisible. The moment she noticed how the magic worked, though, she couldn’t help but scoff. The idea was insidiously simple, and comically effective even against someone like her. “So it is like this, then … hm.”
She waved Eberhard back, taking a few steps herself. Hefting her staff upward, Nuala concentrated, trying to remember which incantation it was in particular. “In the light of the moons, may the drink be merry, and the meats marinated,” Nuala recalled, gently coming down and tapping the face of the boulder. The vague outline of a crescent moon soon glowed in response, appearing out of the rock suddenly. “Let only those who share a cup pass by, and those with a story sit at the table.”
The ground trembled beneath their feet. The rocks, dirt, and very hillside itself came alive, moving with unseen power. It rearranged itself, the dirt forming a simple, rectangular entrance that the rocks protected. It wasn’t that which surprised Nuala, however—rather, the man on the other side of the moving entry caught her notice. Dressed in yellow underclothes with blue vestments, he was undoubtedly a harvest priest. Filth, grime, and a wild weariness in his eyes spoke volumes enough to her.
That, and the spear.
“Stay back!” he barked out, jabbing his ramshackle weapon in their direction. It all but rattled in his hands, though whether from fright or exhaustion, she couldn’t tell. “Leave this place, or I’ll kill you! I swear it!”
The sound of armor moving behind her proved convincing enough to move. Nuala backed away, letting Haleen and the other knights take the front. Eberhard and the heroines hovered behind them, close in their dimwitted eagerness to help for some reason.
“I am Haleen, knight of Princess Arzha Shieldcrown. Do you yet acknowledge this crest upon my breast?” she demanded, slapping her chest armor for emphasis. The priest seemed startled for a moment, but his gaze soon fell upon the crest. Some measure of recognition did go through his face, and he froze.
“A-are you really a knight?” he asked, almost sounding afraid of the answer.
“On my honor, I promise so. Who might you be?”
“Uh … ah, G-Genyral. Priest of the Harvest. Or, I was.”
“We found the village a ways from here. Was that yours?”
“… Yes.”
“Then you are yet a man of Artor, and we are here to help by order of the Princess.”
“Help, huh? Help …” Genyral looked from Haleen to the other knights, and then to everyone else behind them. Visibly sizing them up, the wildness in his eyes burned down into a cool, tired indifference. Someone whose heart found calm after the rush, he simply sank onto his knees. For what use it was, he leaned onto his spear to keep from collapsing entirely. “Please, help them. The others. I cannot do any more.”
Haleen looked to the other knights beside her, some unspoken acknowledgement passing through them. She turned part way to the heroines. “We’ll check inside. You lot help him and keep watch.”
So it was the knights hurried inside the hill, while the heroines helped the priest off to the side. Eberhard, first and foremost of all, made an effort to share a flask of water and something edible. Genyral took it in silence, his gaze unfocused. Awake, but perhaps not all there anymore. Something about his expression got to the heroines, some looking away, others adopting grim visages.
It wasn’t as if the man would die, but he’d certainly been through something awful.
Still, Nuala felt no presence of naki or anything remarkably deserving of her attention. She backed away from the entrance, just enough for some comfortable space. Coincidentally, a spot beside one of Avaron’s tentacleling drones standing around on guard. “You should move the caravan over here,” she remarked, glancing down at the creature.
“Already on it. These hills are a real pain in my legs,” Avaron’s drone answered. “What’s got you worrying?”
“I do not worry.”
“Sure.”
It didn’t matter if the drone couldn’t speak properly, Nuala understood the sarcasm all the same. She huffed, feeling strangely caught out for some reason. “This entire village is rather strange to me, is all.”
“Why?”
“There is little point in slaughtering hapless villagers. Even more so to do so upon a shrine dedicated to goddesses. The harvest moons may be lazy, but they are not indifferent. Yet, there wasn’t a hint of divine punishment or intervention. It stands to reason that they simply could not do so, and that is a much more disturbing problem.”
“I can’t imagine who would do it, but Haska and his lot would fit the bill,” Avaron’s drone mused aloud.
“Were there any naki left behind, I would agree. It looks like nagraki did it, but there is naught to support such an idea.”
“… Could it not simply be the cruelty of people?”
“There is cruelty, and then there is that. It is an entirely different order.” Nuala sighed and gave a half-hearted shrug. “But if nagraki are not involved, then it is no trouble of mine.”
“You do not care?”
“I have much more worrisome concerns. Something like this should fall to them instead.”
The sounds of children drew their attention back to the hillside entrance. Haleen and the other knights emerged, a gaggle of children in tow. Some couldn’t even walk, helped along by others or carried by a knight proper. At first a dozen or so emerged, then more, and more, and more. They were all dressed in varying attires, each of them filthy and worn down. Not one looked well fed or kept, and some undoubtedly neared death from starvation.
They didn’t speak much, and what ones had energy left simply groaned and shuffled along.
If Nuala had to guess, most—if not all—of the village’s children had been hidden away in the hillside. The hows, whys, and everything in between fell into place quite neatly the more she thought about it. Yet, she wasn’t sure who’d been responsible for the atrocity in the first place. For that matter, if she ever would be, either.
“It seems we will be returning sooner than expected,” she surmised, gazing upon the scene.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.11) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquaintances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.18) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 53: Making Ends Meet
Notes:
Content Warning: Violence?
Chapter Text
There is no shame in survival.
*~*
Round two of recreating her executive office turned out much better with actual carpenters doing the work. Based on her vague (and sometimes gruesome) shapes, they were able to fashion for her a chair, a table, and a room befitting of business. From the door, straight ahead awaited a smaller table with four chairs flanking it. Her personal desk sat on the other side, with an open window behind. The two side walls were fashioned with cabinets and shelves, and their ever-growing amount of stuff on them.
I hate how I’m still not sure what is or is not enough, Avaron thought, staring down at the parchments in front of her. Between Gleo Sternbuck’s refugees/migrants and the various villages the heroines managed to save, population metrics were booming. The principle problem became the lack of resources: food, medicine, clothing, other amenities … Water, thankfully, they had in excess for the time being.
So far, depending on how the ‘humanitarian’ operations went, their meager stores would go down or hover around neutral for the day. Rationing had already gone into effect, something few surprisingly complained about. It left Avaron spinning so many plates, and ultimately, she had to sacrifice portions of the Hive to keep other plates spinning. Hibernation was helping a lot but she couldn’t save it all from starvation.
She’d simply birthed too many of them to be sustainable before the farms came online. Almost everywhere around Eden, surface and underground, food was growing. Slowly, but certainly. When the harvest comes it’d be an explosion of edibles. The chief problem was, of course, surviving to that point.
Imagine being rich but unable to do a single thing with it.
Avaron rubbed her eyes, the antennae jutting out of her brows drooping down. Her hand reflexively shot up, brushing them back into position. Not that those moth-like fluffy stalks ever listened to her. Or the fluff coming out of her joints. Or anything her body did after the experience called Nahtura. Day by day, I swear. And what does she want?
Princess Arzha had, for some reason, come to City Hall. Heading straight toward Avaron’s office, in fact. At least, she didn’t seem panicked or troubled. Avaron gathered up all the parchments scattered across her desk, making neat piles she had no idea how they were organized. She still ended up waiting for a minute before Arzha actually reached the door. An attending drone, sitting next to the door, unfurled itself and stood. It slid open the door, the princess standing there, fist in the air about to knock.
“You may enter,” Avaron prompted. For whatever surprise Arzha had, she seamlessly brushed it aside. There was a certain cool dignity to even that simple feat that Avaron couldn’t help but notice. I guess this is what genuine royalty can do? she mused to herself.
“Your majesty,” Arzha greeted, doing a slight bow with a hand over her chest.
“Princess Arzha,” Avaron said. “You seemed in a rush.”
“Ah … No. Somewhat. I have a matter of Eden and something personal alike to speak to you over.”
“Very well. You may sit if you wish.”
Arzha shook her head, continuing to stand. “In regards to Eden, thanks to the most recent finds of the heroines, our food looks to be somewhat stable.”
“That herd of cows they found? Is that enough?”
“… I remind myself of your capabilities, once more. On the farmers’ own words, their meat should suffice until the first harvests are ready. Although, they would like to keep some for breeding.”
“They may, but if push comes to shove, those will have to be slaughtered as well.”
“They would expect as much. It should help to liven up the rations to keep the people mollified.”
Avaron sat back in her chair, folding her hands together in her lap. “There is at least that. I’m not sure how long they’ll remain ‘mollified’ for.”
“More than you, perhaps, are willing to believe.”
“Why is that?”
“You provide safety, houses of unsurpassed quality for many of them, and clean, easy-to-use water,” Arzha listed off, a little too punctual and matter-of-factly. “Thinner meals are a welcome sacrifice by comparison, even more so when they know it will end soon.”
“Let us hope they can continue to keep their spirits up. If we keep finding refugees like this, though, we’re going to easily tip into starvation.”
“’If’,” Arzha echoed simply.
Avaron simply nodded. “We will see. If there’s nothing else, what was this ‘personal’ matter of yours?”
At that, Arzha paused, visibly weighing her words for a moment. “If you do not … mind, my asking so directly?”
“Not unless it involves human sacrifice.”
Arzha, in her own tightly controlled way, seemed taken aback for a moment. “No, not at all. It is rather about princess Kaelara. I was hoping if you had some means of helping her?”
“Her accommodations are already the best I can afford to give? Or they should be, at least.”
Arzha’s expression tightened. “No, she herself. You have some power over blood, do you not?”
“To repair or change her body, you mean?”
“… Somewhat, yes.”
The idea hadn’t been off the list of possibilities, but Avaron wasn’t sure if that was what Arzha meant at first. For that matter, for a world of a relatively middle-ages level of development, she wasn’t sure where the idea of transsexuality fit in. ‘Ancient’ cultures were far more cunning than most people gave credit for, after all. Or at least the History Channel led her to believe so. “In theory, yes. In practice, not so much. For someone in Kaelara’s unique position, I have ideas on what can be done, but not the means to do so.”
“What would it take?”
“Time and effort I don’t have to spare right now,” Avaron said with a half-hearted shrug. “As it stands, my [Genetic Engineering] is still only at a basic level. I’ve never even thought about modifying another person directly. The research, testing, and careful examination needed for that is astronomical.”
“Circumstances permitting, it would become possible though, yes?”
“… A lot of ‘ifs’ notwithstanding, yes. I must say I’m quite noticing how much you are going out of your way for her, Arzha.”
The princess, for the first time since the meeting, cracked a wry smile. Her airs itched with an electric unease, something so distinctly unusual for her. “I must apologize if I seem somewhat shamelessly fickle.”
“That hadn’t crossed my mind.”
“… Ordinarily, that might be a polite dismissal for one’s contemptuous disregard.”
“I’m not sure why you would think I would?” Avaron said, bemused. “Forgive me if I’m not picking up the undertones of this conversation.”
Whether or not Arzha could be embarrassed, that self-depreciating look of hers was probably as close as she could be. “In regards to my, ahem, overtures in the bath that one fine evening.”
“In the bath—oh, right. Well, we hadn’t the time for anything more, things being what they are. I’m not upset or anything, if you’ve decided to change your gaze.” Despite having said that, a silence followed as Arzha visibly weighed her own words. Avaron hurriedly waved her hands in some placating manner. “Trying to keep in mind we both probably have very different ideas about intimacy and courting and all that.”
“It is hard for me to say if I have ‘changed my gaze’,” Arzha said, sounding amused at the idea for a moment. “Kaelara suddenly appearing has cast clouds upon my heart. She and I have ever gotten on, but considering everything that happened …”
“For what I can offer, there’s no ill will on my part. I’m not trying to sound dismissive, it genuinely does not bother me. I’ve been through a lot of relationships on Earth. Things happen, is all.”
Arzha regarded her and then nodded. “I shall trust in your words, then. I will not forget this kindness of yours.”
Avaron smiled and tilted her head in a form of acknowledgement. “Was there anything else?”
“Ah—I think Lady Raina wished to speak with you, but became indisposed.”
“Where would she be?”
“The … milk ranch.”
Avaron let out a suffering sigh, putting her face into her hands. “I guess it’s time I finally visited that place.”
“I would offer my support, but I must do my rounds among the recent arrivals.”
Don’t sound too eager to skip out, really. Avaron waved her hand in dismissal, which Arzha took swiftly to leave. In regarding the princess’ backside, Avaron found the weight of their prior words lingering still.
Though Princess Arzha seemed to have some kind of harem going on with her knights, Avaron doubted it worked like one per say. They were all women of status, if not nobility, who were at least bisexual, if not lesbians outright. Finding familiarity and comfort in each other would be a novel luxury, if not the only way to have people like them around. Of course, that was applying her understanding of Earth cultures. This new world and all its strangeness may not even have that problem.
Not to mention Arzha was still a royal in upbringing and blood; her considerations would be different by default. Even with her kingdom destroyed, she wouldn’t simply change overnight. Especially given the burden to remember all that had been lost in the first place. It proved complex enough Avaron wasn’t too sure how to handle it, if it even fell to her to do so.
Tsugumi and Gwyneth had, in their own ways, molded onto her. Nahtura treated her like a favored pet, and being so very timeless, that might all Avaron ever could be. She found a common ground enough with them all, and it seemed to work well. But, in the coming days, all sorts might cross her path, and Avaron wasn’t sure what her heart might take hold of next.
A certain lust-stricken goat woman flashed through her mind’s eye. Avaron leaned back in her chair, staring up at the ceiling with a difficult expression. If I watched this on TV I’d think it’s the stupidest contrived plot for a dating show, she thought in exasperation. ‘Truth is stranger than fiction’ bullshit is way too uncomfortable to live through.
*~*
Atop a crusher with a specially grown saddle-seat, Avaron rode slowly through one of Eden’s main streets. For want of commerce or opportunities, people hung around houses or businesses with friends. The newest refugees were the easiest to pick out with their skittish glances and unease. Tentacle drones were, even with a heaping amount of explanations, unusual creatures to say the least. Since most were simple cargo haulers or cleaners, people simply gave them a wide berth.
No end of curious and hesitant eyes settled upon her, though. Some not so timid in their hateful energies, distrusting to a palpable degree. It didn’t help how the air itself mixed with all sorts of scents, though most of it unpleasant. Even the alluring aspect of a woman was simply buried under mounds of stressors and filth. Somehow that nasty, clogging stench helped clear her head even more.
Tentradoms were, to a fault, intimately connected to women in every sense conceivable.
And since Nahtura so gladly wrenched Avaron’s repression away, that connection only grew stronger.
The tentradom queen let out a sigh, staring down at her hand and the fluffy hair/fur/grass/whatever coming out of her joints. She did look cute with it; a lot more approachable than the doll-like freakish perfection of before. Yet, the ease by which her inner flesh shifted and changed, itched with desire—that problem was about what she expected. Whatever she felt, her scent-emitting fluff shed out, and so everyone around her would be affected.
Nooo, it’ll be a problem if I loosen up, I said. Nooo, look at this, I’m making everyone horny by walking into the god damn room. If only half of them found it a problem in the first place instead of trying to jump my bones … No, wait, I don’t have bones.
She had to stop sighing so much, it was aggravating even to her ears.
Blissfully, no one bothered her on the way out toward the farm fields. Raina’s ‘new and improved’ ranch was outside the immediate housing zones, but not so far as to take more than a ten minute ride. Hedges and trees, hastily grown or moved into place, lined the perimeter of the ranch itself. A conspicuous bubble of greenery in an otherwise vast expanse of tilled dirt lands and intersecting roadways.
Privacy, but also sound dampening. She rather wanted to know how the magic to move plants and grow them worked, but that was for another time.
Avaron smelled the aroma lingering in the air long before she heard the cute, throaty moans and squeaky chirps. The day’s gentle breeze blissfully blew the scent away and across the fields, but not far enough. The tiny fluffs all over her body shivered and perked up, the central stalks extending to an alert state. I can’t even hide what I’m feeling. Come on, really? Avaron griped to herself, trying to rub down a few of the stalks. They simply sprang back up no matter what she did.
Fine, whatever.
The milk ranch itself had a central, three-story complex resembling an apartment building. It stretched onward, one long rectangle flanked with wild-grown gardens and other foliage. Chitinous superstructure met with handcrafted wood, creating a bizarre juxtaposition in the process. If it’d been made with bricks, it would’ve had a quaint appearance of something mostly modern looking.
A long path branched from the roadway toward the front entrance, itself a simple pair of large double doors. Avaron couldn’t help noticing a sign posted by the path’s entrance, one stating ‘no men allowed’. Her brow popped upward upon seeing it as the crusher drone walked past. Hmm, and there’s another problem to figure out.
The lopsided nature of the Hive meant its benefits distinctly favored women, not men. All sorts of opinions and beliefs would grow from that, and she’d have to head them off long before they started.
A small guard hut had been built beside the building’s main entrance, something currently occupied by two women of some kind. One was a human, the other a fluffy, orange fox-like looking monja–quite literally fox-like. Instead of a human face and fluffy ears, her head itself had a snout, and a more animalistic but still human-like appearance. Anthromorphic, for what Avaron remembered that phrase meant. The two perked up at her approach, seeming confused before alarmed.
They hurried out to meet her as the crusher came to a stop, and Avaron climbed down from it.
“Y-your majesty!” the human greeted hurriedly, rushing to bow up and down quickly with her companion. “We didn’t know you were coming today!”
Avaron tried to speak, but a particularly loud, keening cry of excitement sounded out of the ranch building. Well, someone just did, she thought dryly before saying, “I was told Raina was here. Is she in?”
“Ah, yes, she is!”
“If it’s no trouble, inform her I’m here to meet with her.”
“Yes, right away! I’ll be just a moment, Marlk!”
I can guess why she’s skittish but … Avaron watched the human hurriedly bow and rush off into the complex, leaving her and the fox monja. She glanced over and said, “You don’t have to keep bowing the entire time.”
“O-oh.” Marlk hesitantly stood upright, her pawed feet and hands together in some servile stance. Her clothing, much like everyone elses in Eden, looked to be a handmade attire that’d seen better days. Unlike those with skin, she wore mostly a brown leather skirt and bra, with wrappings on her digitigrade feet. It didn’t seem to compliment her orange-and-white colorings that well, but it wasn’t Avaron’s place to say.
“If it’s not rude, I do have a question,” Avaron asked, making Marlk jump in her skin.
“No, it’s not. I mean, rude. It—“
“—Yes, I know,” Avaron said, holding up a hand to cut off the impending panic. “I was just curious as you seem like some other monja I’ve seen, but you have more fluff and a different face. Are you two the same people, or different from one another?”
“Uh …” Marlk seemed taken aback, her brows furrowing and one ear flicking. She did look cute, though very different from what Avaron was used to. “We … are, the same. I think. Tofusa with strong ancestor blood are born like me.”
“That seems reasonable. I’ve not met many monja, so I’m still learning who is who.”
Marlk smiled, a look perhaps meant to be appeasing or disarming. That her lips drew open quite wide and showed thick teeth and gums, however, took a moment to get used to. “I don’t know how the other tribes see we ancestor born. Mine treated them well, and I know they wanted me to be a priestess.”
“Did you not want to?”
Her whole face contorted into a tight expression between shame and something else. “No, I wanted to be a dancer. We argued a lot over it.”
“It did not end well?”
“The raiders came. I don’t know where they are now.”
“… Ah.” Avaron made an understanding nod. “Let us hope for their good fortune in these troubled times of ours.”
“It’s hard to, but thank you.”
“Well, if it’s not awkward of me to ask, I understand you work here at the ranch?”
Marlk’s ear flicked again, her blue eyes looking around the area and at Avaron alike. “I do. Lady Raina needed some capable hands to chase away the menfolk.”
“They’ve been a problem?”
“Just curious boys,” Marlk said, scratching at her chin. “No real trouble. Yet, at least.”
Avaron looked up at the cloud-dotted sky briefly, the afternoon sun just about to hit the apex. “As more come to Eden, keeping everything civil will be a challenge. Do let me know if any serious problems arise. Women need to be allowed to … milk, themselves, in peace.”
“I’ll be sure to mention if there is any, your majesty.”
Avaron had a suspicion everyone else was adjusting to the Hive better than she herself was. Just a tiny bit.
A minute later, the front doors of the ranch threw open, almost banging against the walls. Raina, hair tussled and her ‘dress’ hanging off her shoulders, hurried on out. A woman who all but threw her clothes on and not even a split-second toward tidying up. Her pants, tied off with a cord belt, barely hung on at all. And that loose shirt—Avaron’s eyes bounced up and down along with Raina’s generously huge breasts.
“My queen!” Raina called out, slightly out of breath. “I hadn’t expected you so so-oo-OON?!”
Heading down a flight of five steps faster than she should’ve, Raina’s cloven hooves wobbled. Momentum did the rest, sending her falling forward out of control. Avaron, already near the bottom of the stairs, hurriedly moved to intercept. Tentacles erupted out of her backside, spearing into the ground for anchor. Raina collided into her with full weight, and Avaron grabbed onto her for security.
A fantastic instant movement that stopped the Ashmourn lady from beefing it across the ground. Instead, the much larger woman enveloped Avaron entirely for support, showing their clear size difference.
“Oh, oh my! I’m so sorry!” Raina chirped out, her feet awkwardly finding purchase once more.
“It’s fine,” Avaron’s muffled voice answered, her head completely buried between Raina’s breasts. A perfect prison of softness and wonderful boobs that a lot of her was really happy about. Still, as Raina stood up more, Avaron pulled her head back, and a fresh breath of air cleared her lungs. “Did you twist your ankle?”
“No! No, I’m quite fine, really.”
Ah, Avaron felt her own hands sliding down Raina’s side. Those wide hips teased her with an even wider, plump rear that felt positively inviting. A compulsion she found difficult to resist, her hands pulling off with a slow, regretful speed. The tentacles propping her up, however, slurped back inside her without a fuss. Raina certainly made no effort to create space, it fell to Avaron to put ‘proper’ distance between them.
That Raina seemed terribly pleased with all of it certainly looked a little suspicious.
“I’m told you wanted to speak with me?” Avaron asked.
“Yes. Shall we go for a walk?”
“That sounds reason—“
“—Ah, there you are, Raina,” another, more different voice interjected.
Avaron, Raina, Marlk and the guard human who slid into the background beside Marlk, all looked toward the entrance. A trio of women appeared, one being a human, another fox-cat like monja, and quite possibly a lizard monja as well. She had green scales the edges of her face and slightly wider features, but that might’ve just been how she looked. Avaron only vaguely recalled seeing such monja in the refugees, though she hadn’t interacted with them at all.
“And who are you?” the human asked, staring at Avaron with a hard expression. Not as hostile so much as distrustful, but quite evidently Avaron wasn’t someone she expected to see.
“You would mind your tone, Kelyan,” Raina shot back instantly, her whole demeanor transforming into something unyieldingly stern. “You speak to the Queen of Eden.”
“… Oh?” If the human, Kelyan, seemed to care, she didn’t show anything at all. The two beside her, however, became visibly nervous. They shuffled slightly behind Kelyan’s slender figure, deferring to her as their leader apparent. “Good, then. Rather than complain to you, maybe she will listen to me.”
Kelyan headed down the stairs, followed by the other two, and so the two sides came to regard each other in close proximity. Judging by their manner of clothing, they may not have been nobility, but the quality was still good. White undershirts tucked neatly beneath brown vests that led into the most curious of skirts that covered their legs. They still wore thin-looking yellow pants underneath, making it rather confusing why they had the skirts in the first place.
It didn’t pass the tentradom’s notice their shirts were quite open over their pushed-up bosoms, creating lovely cleavage windows.
“What is the matter, exactly?” Avaron asked, a diplomatic voice of professional quality.
“Raina runs this whorehouse like we’re all slaves,” Kelyan said, her voice piercingly clear and just so slightly grating to hear. Confident to a fault, and someone who filled the room whenever she talked. “How are we supposed to relieve ourselves when menless women molest us all the time?”
“That phrase–menless women–what does it mean exactly? I’ve not heard it before.”
Kelyan blinked, her hazel eyes quite surprised. “Uh, well, women who don’t let men touch them.”
“As in not touch them, or they also only take other women to bed?”
“Both.”
“Ah, so ‘lesbians’. Women who only fancy other women, yes? You have issues with them?”
“Just so. I’d rather not a woman molest and grope me as she wishes, I don’t care for what reasons. Why can we not have men here instead?”
The exact problem wasn’t unimagined by Avaron, but it certainly appeared faster than she hoped it would. She glanced over to Raina, who kept a stony face of indifference in her silence. “How exactly would a woman get milked here, Lady Raina? Explain it to me, as if I walked in through the front door to be milked myself.”
“Since there are a lot of women and only so many stalls, we’d have the woman sit in the waiting lounges. When a stall opens, one of the ranch hands takes the woman there to help milk and pleasure her.”
“… Pleasure?”
Kelyan interjected then, “You can hardly call it pleasure, jamming fingers inside and slapping us around! It’s brutish!”
“We take utmost care!” Raina fired back. “And you of all people know I’ve punished plenty ranch hands for not doing it properly!”
“And they still do it all the same!”
“Every last drop needs to come out! It’s bad if it doesn’t!”
“And you need to molest us to do that?!”
Avaron watched as the two unloaded into one another even more, with some choice, fiery words going back and forth. She sucked in a breath and sighed, reaching through the [Hive Mind] for the nearby crusher tentacle. The heavy thuds, and ground-shaking steps of its approach made the two bickering women quiet down immediately. It did nothing more than stand behind Avaron, but its looming presence served well enough.
She didn’t care for raising her voice in a shouting match. Only simpletons resorted to something like that.
“I have an idea what the issue is now,” Avaron said, folding her hands behind her back. “An adjustment to how things work here will be necessary, Lady Raina.”
The Ashmourn Lady straightened up, bowing her head to Avaron with a hand folded across her chest. “I await your words, Your Majesty.”
“Create a token system for three types of ‘customers’: those simply wishing to be milked, those wishing to be milked and pampered, and those seeking the ‘full course treatment’. Treat them how they wish to be treated; the customer’s wants always come first–within reason, of course.”
“… I cannot promise we will always have the highest quality milk for Your Majesty if that is the case.”
“Be that as it may, it is a necessary compromise. Furthermore, in the instance of any woman declining or saying ‘no’, it is to be treated absolutely within their right to do so. Women should want to come here to be treated well of their own volition. At no point, even as a hinted suggestion, should they be coerced into doing anything.”
“I shall write it down such that we never forget.”
“Good. I believe that handles the most egregious problems, but–“ Avaron gazed upon Kelyan next, “–as to men being involved here, that is a problematic idea.”
“I don’t see why!” Kelyan huffed, planting her hands on her hips.
“Even if I presumed they were all perfectly well-mannered, they are still men. If they go having sex at a milk ranch like this and women become pregnant, what then?”
Kelyan and the rest seemed caught out by the idea.
“To whom does the responsibility fall to?” Avaron asked rhetorically. “Shall these ranches only produce bastard children? Is a man responsible for all his children, or free to make as many as he wants? What of the women who don’t want to be mothers from strangers? Without contraceptives, this arrangement cannot happen.”
“What is that? ‘Contraceptive’?” Kelyan asked suspiciously.
“It is a type of medicine, or sometimes magic, that prevents children from being made. Women and men can have ‘safe’ sex that won’t result in pregnancy, ever.”
“I’ve never heard of something like that.”
The lizard-like monja in the back raised her hand tepidly. “I have? There is a tea we drink the morning after. It’s quite bitter but no child will be born if drunk.”
Avaron pointed at her. “I’ll want to know more about that later. Can you come to the town hall tomorrow?”
“Oh? Yes, I can, Your Majesty,” the lizard monja answered nervously.
“Then the men can’t have sex with us,” Kelyan said, throwing her hands up. “It’s still better than all these ‘lesbians’ you call doing it.”
I can see why Raina finds her aggravating, Avaron though drearily. Still, she isn’t wrong, even if her mouth isn’t suited for the truth. Waving her hand dismissively, she gave Kelyan a disapproving look. “It won’t be easy accommodating such a request. Or are you going to say that any man plucked from the street is someone you want squeezing your tits?”
Even if Kelyan looked ready to be contrarian, those behind her shook their heads. The guards off to the side joined in the head shaking, even if they weren’t in the conversation. “How is that any different from right now?” Kelyan asked hotly. “I don’t know any of the women working here any better than a man from the street.”
“Because they answer to Lady Raina, who answers to me. Ah, that’s an idea, actually. Lady Raina, what if we made a second milk ranch to accommodate women of Madam Kelyan’s persuasion?”
Raina, who remained bowed as nobles properly did, frowned. “It is possible, but I find myself uneasy at trying to manage such a prospect.”
“If you found a reliable subordinate, would that suffice?”
“Your Majesty suggests delegation?”
“With your critical eyes watching them, it would spare you the burden of overseeing it directly. But, you must still keep a guard, lest someone ill-intentioned appears.”
“I shall endeavor to do so then, Your Majesty.”
“Good. Men no younger than twenty summers, no older than thirty. Even if they are not skillful, if their heart is in the right place, then they can be molded to purpose. Does this satisfy your complaint, Madam Kelyan?”
“As long as Raina actually tries to do something,” Kelyan huffed out. “She hardly listens to any of us and—“
“—I will keep a more personal eye on the matter, rest assured,” Avaron sternly cut off the woman before she got going again. “As I have other important matters to discuss with Lady Raina, however, I must excuse us now.”
If Kelyan had any real acknowledgement, she hid it behind a scoff. Nonetheless, Avaron prompted Raina to follow, and the two of them ‘politely’ sped off. Kelyan and her two fellows made their way from the ranch itself, walking wearily around the crusher tentacle. Avaron moved the larger tentacle organism off to the side, hopefully emulating some sort of ‘wandering’ behavior. It took conscious effort to do anything like that, otherwise the drones simply stood around, waiting for directions.
Even as they all appeared to go their own ways, Avaron watched Kelyan and her group through a skeye drone.
Hmm …
*~*
The ‘side area’ of the milk ranch’s main building was part garden, park, and just some wild growth. A trampled out path cut through it all, with a few taller trees offering spacious amounts of shade. At first it seemed pleasant enough; rustic, given the building it was placed alongside. But, given how some areas had a peculiar sort of seclusion to them, something odd stuck out to her.
Something about teenagers and their awkward little hiding spots.
“I apologize for that–mess, my Queen,” Raina said, a measure of reproach to her tone. “I’d rather they not bother you about such matters.”
Sucking in a breath, Avaron gave the quaint scenery ahead one last look. Reprimand conversations were always bothersome, even if they were ultimately constructive. Experience really just numbed the anxiety, it wasn’t necessarily easier to do. “It is important for me to know the state of my subjects, Raina. I’m rather more bothered by your unwillingness to report such things to me.”
“N-not at all! I hadn’t known you wished to hear about it!”
“… I haven’t heard anything of this whole project since you asked to be in charge of it,” Avaron pointed out coolly. “At what point did you intend to report to me anyway?”
“I—when it was, ready, of course.”
A whole other world, the same excuse with some different wording involved. Avaron sighed and came to a stop in their little walk, the two of them standing underneath an auspiciously shady tree. For whatever firm boldness Raina exuded earlier, she wore her anxiety all over her face with those wide eyes and tense expression. “And when was it going to be ready?” Avaron asked. “The main building is complete, the sewage line’s connected, and milk’s pumping down from here into the Hive. Women are coming and going, some obviously being satisfied here, and we’re talking about expanding the ranch already!”
Avaron shrugged, holding her arms open in an incredulous expression. Raina, however, visibly flinched with a frightened look immediately. The Ashmourn lady hurriedly held her hands at her belly and bowed, staring at the ground as a slight tremble rocked her frame. For not even having raised her own voice, Avaron found the reaction viscerally unsettling.
“This isn’t a reprimand, Raina,” Avaron said tersely. “You don’t—“
“—I’ll fulfill my duties, my Queen!” Raina barked out immediately. “I’ll work harder, I promise!”
“Raina, you—“
“—Please, spare just a little more faith in me! I won’t be a failure, I swear it! The milk ranch will be a resounding success and—”
Raina chirped when Avaron’s hand landed atop of her head. She tensed with palpable anxiety, rubbing her thighs together as she stood in place.
“Calm down,” Avaron commanded sternly. “I’m not going to cut your head off or anything.”
“I … ah, yes, my Queen.”
It was an answer, even if Raina remained entirely too anxious. Not that telling anyone to calm down really worked all that well in the first place. Avaron glanced around, looking for anywhere suitable, and soon spied a strange looking arrangement. Some crates from some caravan had been moved to the ranch, and then a messy fabric sheet thrown over them. It’d been situated in one of those conveniently grown alcoves, for want of any proper bench.
“Let’s go sit down, Raina.”
Even though she said that, when Avaron sat down on the uncomfortable wooden crate and its creaky ‘seat’, Raina remained standing. Dutifully holding her hands together and appearing as small as she could, despite her impressive height and capable physique. Avaron squinted her vividly plasma blue eyes, staring at Raina with piercing intent. “Sitting down means you too.”
In her own awkward way, Raina shuffled over and sat down with a comfortable space between them. Despite that, their two different sizes became that much more evident. Avaron’s eyes barely cleared the top of Raina’s shoulders, nevermind the rest of her. Still, how the larger of the two seemed the most timid must’ve been an odd sight to behold.
“What’s going on, Raina?” Avaron asked, trying to use her more ‘peaceful approach’ voice. The hardiness of corporate life always made it somewhat difficult to do. “You’re about ready to crawl out of your skin it seems.”
“It is not a problem at all, my Queen.”
“Raina, I’m not from this world. I don’t know most cultures, the people, or their ways. So I can’t tell if this is a genuine ‘there is no problem’, or there’s some big clue I’m missing out on. Do the Ashmourn beat the shit out of their workers or something? Are you having period cramps? There’s something going on here but I don’t know what.”
“I—snrk.” Raina hid her mouth behind a fist, an unslightly snort of a laugh grunting out. A novel sight in itself for Avaron, someone so darkly beautiful and regal and, at the same time, a little dorky. If nothing else, it seemed Avaron’s audacious questions helped break the funk a little bit. “No,” Raina said slowly, “it’s not something like that. Uh, well … the Ashmourn that is …”
Avaron let her be as Raina visibly worked through some difficult thought. At least, until she turned toward the tentradom with questioning eyes. “Perhaps the beginning would be best?”
“Sure, let’s start there.”
It took Raina a minute longer to find the courage to speak.
“Then, the simplest way to say it is that we Ashmourn value strength and success over everything else. Our lives are harsh in the Silvervein Mountains; there is not, or at least was not, a lot of comforts. Even as we built up Shadowpeak into our great city, and others challenged us, we venerated our traditions. And, I was to become Queen of it all.” Raina stared down at her own two hands. Clenching and unclenching them, her eyes regarded her forearm muscles more than anything else. “I was the strongest out of us all. Or, so I thought.”
“Watching you fight that Lance was pretty impressive,” Avaron offered, keeping her more obvious thoughts to herself.
“… I hadn’t thought I could match even one of them,” Raina said, sounding self-observant. “I couldn’t have, not before the … the pit, anyway. Funny. That made me stronger, but no one respected me anymore.”
“Why do you say that?”
“We Ashmourn despise losers and weaklings. They cost resources, take up space, and waste our time. I should know. I did that plenty enough times myself to others.” Raina smiled then, a sardonic and pained look of contempt. “After I was betrayed and cast aside, I lost everything. It didn’t matter if I escaped the pit eventually. No Ashmourn respects a loser. I’d always be a loser.”
Avaron, though trying to be ‘understanding’, only found herself becoming deeply aggravated. She let out a grunting sigh and heartily smacked Raina on the arm. Whether or not it could harm someone of such incredible physical power was one question, but it did get the goat woman’s attention. “You’re not a loser, Raina.”
“Am I not?”
It was Avaron’s turn to be taken aback, for Raina spoke with such harsh edge to her steely voice. A surprise that lasted only for a moment as Avaron herself steeled up, staring into Raina’s slightly rectangular pupils. “No, you’re not,” she repeated, even firmer in tone.
“I would say you are patronizing me, but you are not like that. How can someone who had it all, and couldn’t even keep their underlings in check, not be a loser? To be cast into a pit and made into some beast’s broodmare?” Raina asked as much as accused. It was the first true time Avaron ever heard fire spit from the woman’s mouth; an inkling of who she might really be, under it all.
The tentradom couldn’t help smiling at the thought of such admirable progress. “You are still alive, are you not?”
“How does that matter?”
“Because if you’re alive, you can do anything. And you have. You fought to be free, Raina, and got that. You fought to find a place of your own, and eventually you did, even if for just a while. You survived until you met us all here, and have helped build Eden in your own way. A loser wouldn’t have done any of that.”
Whether or not her words really reached Raina, Avaron couldn’t tell. The Ashmourn lady simply sat there and stared with an unwavering gaze for a long moment. “I don’t understand you,” she remarked, looking away and toward the ground in front of them.
Avaron waited, but nothing more was said. “Well, ain’t that fuckin’ quaint?” she asked rhetorically. “What’s there to not understand, exactly?”
Some inkling of annoyance crossed Raina’s face, her hands balling into fists. “Because none of that matters,” she hissed out. Whether to convince herself or make a statement, Avaron wasn’t sure, but Raina swiftly looked back at the tentradom again. “It doesn’t matter!” she growled out. “Once you lose like that, once everyone knows you can fall down, then everyone will simply kick you back down again! Again, and again, and again!”
“Then you keep getting back up again!” Avaron shot back sternly. “You fight every time someone comes around to kick you down. It doesn’t matter how—“
“—then you just die! What then?!”
“Then you die! But until then, you’re still alive, and you can still fight!”
Raina trembled, her teeth gritting, and she suddenly slammed her hands down onto the crate-seat beneath. The wood audibly cracked from the force of her standing up. “For what? To struggle in that eternal shame? You don’t even know what it’s like!”
“Ohh, don’t pull that card on me,” Avaron snarled, shooting up to stand as well. She jabbed a finger into Raina’s bosomy chest, making her take a step back. “You don’t know shit about what I’ve been through. Not a single fucking clue in your god damn head, do you understand me?”
“I—“
“Fuck off! Let me make one thing very clear: I’ve been there. Maybe not in the same exact way but I know what it’s like with this ‘I’m a loser’ bullshit. That’s why I can say every dribbling nonsense out of your god damn mouth is useless!”
Raina’s face flashed, a mixture of shock and anger sweeping across her dark visage. “It must be so easy for you then, being a favored heroine of the goddesses.”
Avaron chuckled, a lowly, humorless laugh. “Nah, I was nobody before coming here. Plain, old, mortal, with no one to help me. God never answered my prayers. The only one I had left to trust was me!” She jabbed Raina in the chest again.
“Stop poking me,” Raina bit out.
“No.” Avaron poked again, even as Raina’s shoulders tensed up. “Isn’t this what you meant? Be a loser and let everyone just trample all over you?”
Raina’s whole body tensed, her jaw visibly clenching as her eyes narrowed dangerously. Something so very different from that passive, soulless gloom that ever clouded around her. She took a step backward, but Avaron followed after, and poked again. “It’s not fun, is it? You keep saying stupid shit but when push comes to shove, you don’t like it, do you?”
Raina backed up until her legs hit the same crate she’d just stood from. Avaron followed all the while, poking and poking.
“Come on, Raina. Let’s put it to the test. If nothing about all this matters because you’re a ‘loser’, then you’d have no problem getting on your back, would you?” Avaron smiled, an ominously unsettling look as a slight cracking sound followed. Something moved beneath the shirt on her back, two writhing lumps until the meaty tentacles slithered out from the collar of her shirt. “It’s what you want, isn’t it?”
The Ashmourn lady’s rectangular pupils constricted, her gaze unwavering in its focus, unblinking in the slightest.
More tentacles emerged from Avaron’s sleeves, her whole being coming alive in a writhing, squirming way.
Avaron pushed in closer, jabbing Raina’s chest again. “Come on, Raina. Just bend ov—“
The whole world shifted violently, a sudden force propelling Avaron backwards. She skidded across the ground, rolling side-over-side as momentum carried her straight into the base of a tree trunk. Her whole backside wrapped against the tree in a sickening crunch, and the stunned Avaron could only lay there, utterly paralyzed in both pain and her nervous system somewhat separating. Something with the might of a truck compressed into the size of a fist had slammed into her torso so hard her chest actually caved in on itself.
Raina stood still, her fist outstretched in an unmistakable way. Realization visibly swept over her at what’d just happened, stunned shock etched on her face. “I—I, uh, my Queen? Are you alright?” she asked in a nervous stutter.
Oohhhh, the pain shock still gets me, Avaron thought, the rest of her body already regenerating. Broken innards stitched together as solid chitin snapped into their proper place. When one of her arms started listening again, she grabbed at the dirt beside her. Tentacles stretched out of her arm’s joints, and Avaron pushed herself up from the ground. Like a doll shambling on strings, she wrenched and jerked upright, standing in some crooked, broken posture. Something that audibly corrected itself as [Divine Regeneration] repaired everything.
Raina looked utterly lost at whatever was going on.
If being the villain is what it takes, then fine. Avaron reached up and grabbed her head, forcefully correcting it into the proper position. “Alright. If it’s a fight you want, then let’s fight.”
“N-no, I don’t want to—“
“—Too late.”
Avaron lunged forward, her whole body snapping into place with every step. She raised her fists and tentacles like vipers ready to strike. Raina, for all she said, raised her own fists in response. A frightful fear caked her scent, oily and greasy in its unpleasantness, but Avaron paid it no mind. “Fight!” she shouted, stepping into range. Raina struck first, slamming a fist into Avaron’s shoulder with such force the tentradom’s whole torso turned with the blow.
Avaron still launched a fist into Raina’s gut, her whole hand crumbling into that iron-hard wall of flesh. Her fist shattered apart from the sheer force, something that made even Raina exhale in a painful cough. Whether it be some [ability], [skill], or just a sheer difference in [levels], Avaron wasn’t sure. But, a honed instinct, the sheer commanding impulse to attack fueled her—the collective experience of the [Hive Mind] in its brutal struggle to survive.
A backhanded fist struck across Avaron’s face, and she catapulted backwards. This time, however, her tentacles and feet knew what to do. In a somersault of limbs and flesh, she captured her own momentum, landing on the dirt ground. By the time she landed, all the damage Raina had done was already healed up. A regeneration so frighteningly fast and complete, it truly deserved the moniker of being ‘divine’.
“Fight, Raina!” Avaron snarled, getting closer to the Ashmourn lady that much faster. Even if Raina tried to reposition herself, Avaron didn’t relent.
Every blow she struck, her body screamed in pain. Every hit she took, Avaron endured through. The difference in their power stood out to her as clear as daylight. It took everything she had to even get a small grunt’s worth of pain from Raina. No, more than that—she had to push further beyond, to destroy herself for even a modicum of progress.
An insane proposition even Raina’s own eyes betrayed knowing.
But, Avaron didn’t stop.
And blow by blow, Raina’s insane defenses started to crumble. Her disbelief turned to pain, and pain became anger—anger that burned in her eyes. Anger that she tried to voice, only for Avaron’s singular scream of ‘fight’ to drown out. Blue blood splattered on their clothes and skin, Avaron’s sacrificial fighting staining them. Then, striking with a tentacle, Avaron clubbed it across Raina’s face hard enough to make even her stagger backward.
A telling blow, until that same tentacle got caught by Raina’s hands. Avaron wrenched forward, dragged painfully as Raina turned around. Using that very same tentacle, she whipped Avaron through the air, spinning once in a circle before hurling the smaller woman into a nearby tree.
Not again! Avaron thought sharply as her whole backside broke against the tree trunk. She hit with such force she bounced right back off, landing face down in the dirt some feet away. Already trying to stand up again, a shadow fell over her, and she beheld a hooved foot coming straight at her. Striking with such fury it broke part of her ‘skull’, she slammed face first into the ground.
“Stay down,” Raina snarled. “You can’t beat me.”
It took a moment, enough for her nerves to start working again, but Avaron chuckled. A gurgling sound of her mouth and throat not working properly, but a chuckle all the same. Her body twitched and lurched, fingers clawing at the dirt as her knees sought purchase. It moved entirely by her will, her desire to stand, regardless of the pain. “No,” she spat out in a long, guttural slur. Tilting her head up, she stared at Raina with one eye, that same side of her face restructuring together again.
“Not to you. Not to anyone. As long as I’m alive, I will fight.”
Her face utterly ugly, Raina struck with her foot again—only for a tentacle to wrap around that very leg. Avaron wrenched hard and ripped Raina sideways into the ground. Leaping onto the downed Raina, Avaron viciously slugged her across the face once, twice, three times. By the fourth, Raina grabbed Avaron by the chest and threw her off with a mighty explosion of strength.
So Avaron went sailing again, but it would be the side of the milk ranch building itself she slammed face-first into. The chitin-and-wood cracked from the blow, denting inward as she herself slid off onto the ground. In no time at all, despite the savagery of their constant exchanges, the two stood up once again. Raina, though scuffed and stained in splotches of Avaron’s blood, showed no signs of real damage. Whatever happened to Avaron simply regenerated in its entirety.
“I don’t care how strong you are,” Avaron said gruffly, flexing her individual fingers to make sure they worked again. “I don’t care what it takes. I don’t give up. I fight. And you’re just like me, Raina.”
“You think some cheating [skill] makes you great?” Raina spat out, rubbing her cheek clean.
“No. It hurts. It hurts so much it’d drive a person mad, feeling their own body break again and again. No [skill] makes you endure that any better.” Avaron smiled, her lips drawing open wide in some maniacal look. “The only thing anyone has for that is their sheer will alone. The grit and iron to survive and fight where everyone else gives up.”
It was a look that Raina had on her face, as much as Avaron, as the two stared each other down.
“What is going on?!” a third voice screeched, drawing both their attention.
Avaron recognized them, somewhat. Raina’s sisterhood, and some new helpers that’d evidently been recruited. Despite their disheveled clothes and obvious panicked rush, they’d come with weapons—clubs, wood cutting axes, and the like. The group of women looked at them bewildered, eyes sweeping back and forth
Standing upright and easing the tension out, Avaron patted her clothes down with utmost casualness. “I told you that a spar would be too loud,” she said in a factual manner. “Honestly, you’re way too good at fighting compared to me anyway, Raina.”
The Ashmourn lady looked as if her brain needed a reboot.
Avaron gave a sheepish smile to the women. “Anyway, sorry about all that. There’s nothing to panic over.”
“If—if you say so, Queen Avaron,” the woman from earlier remarked, quite evidently uncertain what to believe.
“I think I’ve overstayed, though. I have meetings I need to get back to. Raina, if you would walk with me?”
“… Certainly, my Queen.”
Not everything needed to be resolved perfectly; sometimes things just needed a way to continue on. They all headed around to the front of the milk ranch, where the women went back inside. Avaron, mounting up onto her crusher tentacle ride to depart, let herself relax somewhat atop it. When Raina turned to leave, though, Avaron said, “Raina.”
Two golden eyes wearily turned up and toward her; a reserved expression, not unlike the first time they met.
“Despite whatever you believe, Raina, I am your friend. I won’t stand by and let you rip yourself apart like that. Hate me, if that is easier to do. But, I will see you become the woman I know you can be.”
“… Why?” Raina asked, her face tight with a suspicious confusion.
“Because that is what friends do. When the Lance struck and you fought to defend us all, I saw who you really are. Beneath all that—“ Avaron waved her hand flippantly at Raina, “—self-loathing and muck. If reminding you won’t work, then I’ll beat the self-esteem into you.”
“You weren’t doing that very well,” Raina quipped dryly.
“Then I will just have to keep at it, won’t I?” Avaron gave a half-hearted shrug. “Oh, before I go, what was it you actually needed to talk to me about?”
“I acquired a new [skill] you might be interested in.”
“Come to my nest tomorrow. Gwyneth’s cooking for me and Tsugumi, I’m sure she won’t mind you joining.”
“If you want me to.”
“If you want to,” Avaron shot back immediately and smiled at Raina’s sour expression. Whether or not she’d done anything to really help Raina out of her self-destructive funk, she didn’t know. There wasn’t a luxury of self-help aides, YouPoop videos, and ice cream for what she needed. If such things would even work on someone who, mindfully, came from a very different culture.
Maybe it’d all blow up in her face despite her best intentions.
Life was just like that.
“I’ll see you tomorrow,” Avaron quipped, and made a ‘go’ motion to the tentacle crusher. A needless thing to do, but it told people outside of the [Hive Mind] what was going on. Nothing more was said, but Raina remained standing there, watching Avaron’s departure for a long while.
Afterward, Raina headed inside the milk ranch’s main building. Ignoring the curious eyes scrutinizing her untidy form, she headed behind the reception desk and into the small office only workers could go into. There wasn’t much in the room save a table, some chairs, and an empty bookshelf. The others had all, largely, gone back to working.
She took up one of the chitin-made chairs, sitting down heavily on its flat and unforgiving surface. Raina slouched forward, leaning on her knees and letting out a long, deflating sigh.
An outstretched hand popped into her downward field of view, holding a cloth bundle tightly wrapped around something. Raina peered upward, spying at Mari who stared down at her dimly. Of all in their ‘sisterhood’, she ever made a point of trying to be helpful. To Raina especially, if no one else. The Ashmourn lady quietly took the cloth bundle, pressing the makeshift magically created icepack against her cheek.
“Was it bad?” Mari asked tepidly.
“… No,” Raina said after a long moment. “She’s just stubborn.”
“Okay. Take it easy, then.”
“Sure.”
None of them really had an idea how powerful Raina actually was; she’d made a point of hiding that. The whole ‘spar’ looked far worse than the light slap-on-the-wrist it actually felt like. Still, Raina appreciated the gesture. The ice proved blissfully distracting from her anger.
*~*~*
Current Relationships:
Gwyneth Flamestoker (lv.11) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Arzha Shieldcrown (lv.22) – Domineering Royalty
->Arzha’s Snowflake Knights (lv.??) – Cordial Acquaintances
Tsugumi Silkweave (lv.18) – Brood Mother (lv.2)
Cecile (lv.??) – Abandoned Stranger
Efval Gladestride (lv.??) – Foreign Queen
Nuala the Black (lv.??) – Knowledge-craving Magi
Nahtura (lv.??) – Brood Mother (lv.1)
Hanamaru (lv.??) – Prideful Chieftain
Raina Ashmourn (lv.??) – Uncertain, Loyal Lust-stricken Slut
Chapter 54: Tradition vs Newness
Chapter Text
What we know cannot constrain what we can become.
*~*
A ghoulish smell assailed Nuala’s nose when the hive door slurped open. Not quite rotten, but definitely meat of some kind. She paused as it washed over her, surprised if only because how ‘clean’ the Hive at large generally smelled. Waving her hand with a little bit of cleansing scent magic, she gingerly stepped into the ‘laboratory’, as Avaron called it. Most of it seemed the same as usual, save for the large table currently holding up a huge tentacle creature.
“Avaron?” Nuala called out questioningly.
“I’m over here,” came the call, seemingly from the other side of the tentacle creature.
Nuala stepped over daintily, curious magical eyes sweeping to and fro. Nothing new caught her gaze, all of it the same old ‘chitin’, ‘meat’, and other unremarkable materials. To her morbid curiosity, however, the creature itself seemed the item of interest. Splayed across the large chitin table, the ‘crusher tentacle’, as Avaron called them, had been gored open on its underside. Various tentacle tubes kept the wound wrenched open, and smaller ones still went inside, visibly pumping some sort of fluid.
There she found Avaron, elbow-deep inside the creature. Some kind of glass visor, one that shielded her entire face, hung off her forehead. A protective apron and gloves of a white skin-like material covered most of her body. A light-emitting tentacle hung off her shoulder, shining into the dark interior. She wasn’t entirely sure what was up, but Avaron seemed occupied moving organs and meat around. Nuala side-shuffled behind her, keeping a respectable distance from any sudden ‘juices’ splashing out.
“What is it you are doing?” Nuala asked after a minute of squelchy, pulpy sounds.
“A very poor attempt at surgery,” Avaron muttered and then let out a deflating sigh. “Which doesn’t surprise me, but I had to try anyway.”
“… Surgery for what?”
“I—well …” Avaron looked over her shoulder curiously. “If you’re not going to vomit or anything, I’ll show you.”
“I have done more than be elbow deep in some creature before, I assure you.”
“Alright. Well, kneel down beside me.”
Nuala cautiously did so, watching as Avaron wrenched open the gruesome wound/incision even more. She wasn’t entirely certain what particular organs she was seeing, but there were definitely some.
“Ordinarily, the varying shades of blue here are what healthy tissue looks like,” Avaron said with that certain ‘experienced’ tone of voice. “The bright, luminescent fiery kind is fresh blood and the such. Now, this black, purple, and red shit here, there, and there—that’s cancer.”
“What is ‘cancer’?” Nuala asked, following along as Avaron pointed around. The internals of a tentacle creature truly were strange to behold. Some of it she superficially recognized, and other organs looked entirely alien. The musculature itself seemed more like some kind of mushroom gills than the wrapping tendons most animals used.
“Uhh, you probably know it by other names.” Avaron pulled out from the tentacle creature, half leaning on the table and looking at Nuala. “You remember my DNA for dummies spiel? Blood has tiny books, it’s a library, all that?”
“Yes.”
“Right. So, those books have to be rewritten again and again. A drop of blood writes more blood, from birth to death. It’s constantly doing that, all the time, and it has to do it perfectly.”
Nuala tilted her head, her cloak’s hood drooping awkwardly. It might’ve fallen off to her shoulders weren’t it for her long ear keeping it propped up. “That is impossible. How could it do that ‘perfectly’ the entire time?”
“Bingo, it can’t. Eventually, somewhere along the way, the blood fucks up. A bad book gets written. Now, ordinarily, the body can catch that—finds the bad book, burns it up, and life goes on.” Avaron held her blue-blood soaked hands together, making some kind of air sandwich. “But, there’s a very specific set of conditions where that fucks up too. A bad book the body can’t recognize as bad, won’t recognize, or cannot stop. When that happens, the bad book gets copied and copied and copied.”
She jerked her thumb toward the tentacle creature’s insides. “The end result is cancer, a malicious, malfunctioning growth of the body. If you’re very lucky, it’s benign and doesn’t do much at all.”
“And if you’re ‘not’ lucky?”
“Your life expectancy drops rapidly and you start to die a painful death. Might take years, months, or everything’s fine until something just gives out and you drop dead. Lots of fucked up ways to go, really.”
“Why is it happening here?” Nuala asked, an unerring sense of curiosity creeping up her neck. Crouched as she was, Nuala shuffled just a little bit closer.
“Oh, that. Pbbbt,” Avaron blew a raspberry, huffed, and then breathed in. “The short of it is these girls have just the worst DNA imaginable. It’s miraculous they can even be born, let alone reach maturity. Since their DNA is so bad in the first place, it makes errors copy a lot more frequently. They become cancerous, sometimes outrageously fast, and there’s not much I can do about it.”
“Then, what are you doing now?”
“I was curious if organ transplantation would help at all. Take out the cancerous ones, plug in a brand new one. The answer to which is yes, it does work, but only for the organ I’m replacing. All the veins, capillaries, muscles, everything else that becomes cancerous continues to break down.” Avaron gave a half-hearted shrug, her hand flopping onto the blood-stained table with a sloppy smack. “So, that needs better solutions I haven’t the slightest clue about.”
Nuala held a hand to her chin, tilting her head the other way. “There are some sicknesses that remind me of this ‘cancer’. I cannot say for certain if they are the same, but they do seem eerily similar.”
“Well, if you find someone who’s afflicted and get me a sample, I could look at the DNA and find out.”
“You … can?”
“Possibly. No promises, but that’s what my [skill] lets me do.”
Such an incredible thing to hear that Nuala found herself gobsmacked. Medicinal [skills], let alone [abilities], were profoundly rare things. Even something as narrowly applicable as pain relief or botanical identification could command respect and immense desirability. Something that, once again, she had to remind herself really shouldn’t have been too surprising.
No, actually. This is quite surprising, even for a divine heroine.
Avaron made to stand up, and Nuala hurriedly did so too.
“Anyway, that wasn’t what I wanted to ask you about,” Avaron said, waving her hand for Nuala to back up. The table in front of them made a cracking sound, and the elvetahn magi watched as the whole thing tilted upward. On the downward sloping side, the floor itself cracked open, the chitin-plates shifting open. The whole crusher tentacle beast soon slid off the table and down into the large opening made for it.
Like trash being thrown away.
“Where is it going?” Nuala asked.
“Down to the digestion vats to be recycled. Not much left to do with that one.”
“I see. And this curious matter of yours?”
“What do you know about the big floating screen that has all my information and stats in it?”
“The divine window?” Nuala clarified confusedly.
“Sure. Big window, like this big—“ Avaron moved her hands, framing a rectangular box, “—blue colored, gold filigree, has a bunch of important information.”
“That is what we call the ‘divine window’, yes. A glimpse into our true selves through divine providence. What about it?”
“So what happens when it changes?”
Nuala took a long, slow blink. “Changes in what way?”
“Between yesterday and today, it completely rearranged itself all of a sudden. Most everything is still there, but some stuff just vanished as well.”
The urge to rock back and forth on the balls of her feet proved terribly difficult to resist. Nuala sufficed for straightening her posture instead, lest she seem too excited. “Broadly speaking, changes result of one’s capabilities improving. Or, gaining new power, such as [Sovereign Power] as you acquired by becoming a Queen. I am not familiar with losing anything at all. Even those who lost their privileged powers, such as [Sovereign Power], retain some usefulness of it.”
“Wait, so if a Queen gets deposed she still has the benefits of [Sovereign Power]?”
“She can no longer exert influence over other people, given she has no subjects left. If, however, she can be affected by that [Sovereign Power], then she would retain the benefits of it. This is especially worrisome with warrior queens and other fighters who may gain, and always retain, extremely dangerous martial power.”
Avaron squinted, looking quite dubious. “That sounds incredibly exploitable to me.”
“It is,” Nuala agreed simply.
“Why did it warn me I would lose my [Sovereign Power] if my subjects lost faith in me, then?”
“As yours, from what I know, affect just your subjects, the loss of said subjects would effectively nullify the [Sovereign Power]. At least, until you gained more again,” Nuala explained.
“So some people get juiced up on this power and don’t have to worry about their subjects at all?”
“Those who seek [Sovereign Power] are often aware of this fact, and pose a great danger to everyone around them. It’s not always clear what sort of power will emerge, and a great many things often change because of it.”
“Huh. Well, I guess I should worry about anyone saying they’re a queen or king, then,” Avaron mused aloud.
“That would be wise, though no end of buffoons would bluff having that sort of power. What was it that you lost when your divine window changed?”
“Uh … It was an information perk. It told me some things I’d rather not know, but it did anyway.”
“Like what?” Nuala asked, craning forward. If the closeness or height by which she towered over Avaron mattered, the tentradom wasn’t bothered at all.
“Stuff like how much you like reading,” Avaron quipped almost entirely on reflex. She jumped in her skin as soon as the words left her mouth, and Nuala blinked owlishly.
“It told you about me?” she asked, tilting her head. “How much? What did it say?”
“Just what you liked and were interested in. If I had to guess, it was a cheating way to get someone to like me easier. Figure out their preferences without having asked, that sort of stuff.”
Half truth, half evasion; Nuala wasn’t sure which was which, nor did it seem Avaron would truly tell her. “And that’s gone now?”
“Yeah. I never bothered using it in the first place, so, maybe that’s why.”
“Such a power just doesn’t ‘vanish’ because you do not use it. Did it go somewhere else in your divine window?”
“Uhh …” Avaron glanced off to the side, her eyes visibly skittering back-and-forth to read something that Nuala couldn’t see. “Maybe? It may have merged into my [Hive Management] tab … No. Kind of? There’s new information there but it’s not quite the same.”
“It may have improved then, which would make much more sense to me.”
“Ssssure. We’ll go with that then, I guess. Anyway—“ Avaron slinked away from Nuala, sliding around her to get to the otherside. The magi twisted in place, watching as the tentradom hurried over to the laboratory’s wall. “Let me clean up real quick here before this blood starts drying on.”
Avaron stood before a cylinder of smooth, crystal-like something. Nuala doubted it was actual crystal, but it seemed the closest thing to glass that existed within the tentradom hive. The cylinder rotated on the spot, opening its interior for Avaron to step into. It rotated again, shutting her off from view, except the vaguest, shadowy outline. Such a ridiculously mundane thing and Nuala couldn’t help wondering what it did.
She crept over, her staff ‘clacking’ with every other step. “What is this thing you’re in now?” Nuala inquired, tapping her staff on the faux-glass wall.
“Decontamination chamber!” Avaron answered, distinctly muffled. The audible hissing and gurgle of something followed swiftly, then the sound of spraying.
Nuala wasn’t sure what was going on, but liquids of some kind were being dispensed from the ceiling. She saw some tentacles, embedded in the wall like pipes, bulge as they pumped into the ‘chamber’. It made sense if it was a shower of some kind, but perhaps it served some other purpose? Although, Avaron was busy scrubbing herself down like she was in a shower. Or doing something like that.
A few minutes later, the cylinder rotated open again, and an ass-slapping naked Avaron walked out. That head visor and protective apron she had on earlier were nowhere to be seen. One part of Nuala told her to look away in some sense of propriety—few people had the elvetahn sense of beauty, after all. They’d rather hide away than be proud of what they were.
Not to mention how simply well-rounded and proportional Avaron’s figure was. What she lacked in a normal height, she made up for in … in … what in the woods was that?
Fluffy, tentacle-like hairs and fur emerged from between Avaron’s joints all over her body. Her statue-like physique soon collided with some kind of natural grown fluff that made her unreasonably softer looking. Like a maiden in the finest of pelts on a bedside, having that tempting glaze to her eyes as she—“What,” Nuala said forcefully, more to get her own thoughts under control, “is that?”
“What is what?” Avaron asked, peeking over her shoulder.
“That … stuff, coming out of your body.”
“Hm? Oh, right.” Avaron looked down at her own hands for a moment. Two fluffy stalks of tentacle antenna poked out of her forehead from somewhere in her hair. They had a life of their own given how they wiggled and felt the air. “Uh, this is me being more ‘relaxed’, you could say.”
“And you weren’t relaxed before?”
“Listen, I’m still coming to terms with it. Anyway, if you start feeling aroused for some reason, let me know, I’ll turn it off.” Avaron shuffled off to the cabinets alongside the same wall as the ‘decontamination chamber’. Evidently looking for something and not finding it at all.
Nuala’s face scrunched up, the prickliness of that thought surprisingly hard to ignore. “And why would I feel anything?”
“Pheromones, mostly. I am a tentradom, after all. When I’m relaxed and ‘open’ like this, I start emitting them like crazy.”
“Pheromones?”
“Uh, the stuff that makes smell, smell. The actual chemicals and all that. Where the fuck did I put that dress?”
“I have enough defensive [skills] that such a thing wouldn’t affect me at all,” Nuala quipped, but superstitiously pulled her robes in tighter all the same.
Avaron let out an ‘ah ha’, retrieving the rather simplistic elvetahn dress she wore all the time. While it slid easily onto her figure, the new fluff she grew had changed her outline entirely. Instead of a provocatively slender appearance, she looked hilariously bumpy.
“That aside,” Nuala continued on, “there is another matter you must know about.”
“Oh? What?” Avaron asked, looking over her shoulder in a way that totally wasn’t seductive or provocative.
“… Queen Efval has declared Alva Mor.”
Whatever playfulness Avaron had in her face drained out, replaced by some overtly noble, serious expression. “And what does that mean?”
“Alva Mor is our sacred covenant of arms against the Nagraki. Invoking it calls upon ancient treaties, agreements, and debts of honor. All elvetahn who honor Alva Mor will come to the Alva Forest. Those who owe us, too, must answer and come. In the next months, it means many hundreds of thousands shall soon flood our forest with their presence.”
“Well, that’s a twist. What the hell are we in Eden supposed to do about it?”
“That is not clear to me yet. Efval will be coming here to discuss those details in the next week.”
“Wonderful.”
“If I were to guess, it is likely Eden will be asked to be host to the non-elvetahn. Though we can care for such people, it is not something we are used to. It is also likely the heroines will be more formally inducted into the war effort against the Nagraki.”
“Are they even remotely ready for something like that?” Avaron asked dubiously.
Nuala shook her head. “No, but it means more appropriate training can be given. It is highly likely the Nagraki will start reacting when they realize Alva Mor has been invoked.”
“Far be it from my dumb ass to criticize military strategy, but is that wise?”
“If I were to look upon our history, no, it is not. But, things are different now.”
“Judging by your evasiveness, you don’t want to tell me.”
“Efval will explain it better. There are some parts of her plan even I do not know.”
“Fuck me, okay,” Avaron grumbled, rubbing her forehead irritably. “You know, I was just barely about to get a grip on things, and now this is coming up.”
“That is how it usually goes, yes. I shall leave you to your work, I will need to prepare for Efval’s arrival.”
“Sure. Thanks for telling me, the drone outside will show you to the surface.”
“Mm. Until next time, then.”
Nuala took the moment to cleanly get away. Avaron’s ‘pheromones’ may actually be doing something much more than she expected. A lovely aroma kept wafting into her nose, something so soothing and warm in its feeling it made her want to relax. The feeling of a warm summer day, with a few clouds in the sky to keep the heat away. The sort where one could just lounge around without a care. Something she couldn’t remember feeling in a very, very long time.
Ordinarily, [skills] like [Detoxification] would stop adverse conditions from taking root. She wasn’t sure why they weren’t working at all. In some way, perhaps the pheromones weren’t ‘harmful’ in a way that triggered her [skills] to work.
That, however, was a truly worrisome thought.
Efval needs to be warned.
The stale, lifeless air in the hallway outside proved merciful in its tastelessness.
*~*
Kaelara never thought she’d be walking with a cane, but there she was. Heading down a surprisingly well-made dirt road from Tsugumi’s Inn to … Eden. The strange ‘town’ growing in the nest of a tentradom. She wondered, deep inside her damaged chest, if there was anything left in her to be surprised. The sheer enormity of it all simply passed over her like a dark cloud.
Punctual sparks of pain and creaking nerves did well enough to ground her.
Though she received some sort of medicinal supplements, the pain would ever remain. Perhaps for the rest of her life, so the elvetahn surmised. A small, small piece of retribution for her faltering failure as Crown Princess, surely.
Even the acid of that thought had turned into a numb indifference.
“I’m not going to fall,” Kaelara remarked.
“Of course not, I am too fast,” Arzha quipped just as easily.
And there walked beside her the Princess of Artor, as if they were back in the academy once again. Kaelara didn’t know if she should enjoy such loyalty in friendship, or wearily await the day even Arzha would turn away. Someone of no use would just be an iron weight, dragging everything down. Her knowledge of the Empire would only go so far.
That, too, was an aching thought that ever followed her along.
In the end, Kaelara opted for the greediest choice of all: to simply enjoy what she had for the moment. To not care about a future she may very well not have a part in anymore.
Oh, good, she was over that frustrating worry.
“Mm.” Kaelara grunted. “What is this ‘town’ anyway? Those buildings look more like they were … grown.”
“They were, mostly. Avaron grows strong chitin bricks and beams used for the wall and frame. The carpenters and masons patch up whatever the chitin cannot handle properly.”
“Isn’t that living in the husk of an animal?”
“No more than living in a wood house would be to trees and the elvetahn.”
I suppose, Kaelara thought, her expression tightening. She hadn’t considered simple wood in the same guise of an animal, or whatever in the red sands a tentradom was supposed to be. It didn’t sound right to her, but what did she know anymore?
They continued on, nearing Eden proper at an insufferably slow pace. Kaelara certainly understood how the elderly felt trying to get anywhere at her horribly pained speeds. Not even near thirty summers and here I am …
At least the complete bizarreness of what was before her proved distracting. Once she looked past the ‘chitin’ made buildings, Eden itself had both strangely sophisticated design, and out-of-place inhabitants. Neat roadways and spacious alleys between buildings ensured very sensible streams of traffic. People and arachnid-like tentacle creatures went about their different businesses. It seemed the tentacles moved a lot of cargo to-and-fro, listening to the directions of people.
People who, in turn, went about handling the business side of the cargo. It seemed the tentacles didn’t do much except menial labor, and all with a freakishly silent precision. Aside from the simple grunts and groans of moving about, they gave no indication to anything else. No wayward eyes—or eyes that could see, for that matter—no uncertain movements, no wandering, no nothing like how animals should.
They just did their work, or waited patiently in disturbing stillness.
Kaelara and Arzha passed the first few buildings of Eden’s outskirts, some kind of warehouses alongside workshops. The banging of hammers against wood, and the clank of metal being fashioned, filled the air. A comfortable noise accompanied by conversation, people moving about, or shouts of workers trying to handle something critical. Lively enough in a way that didn’t have the dreadful veil of the former capital she’d left behind.
“What do you make of all this, Arzha?” Kaelara asked, half-peering from one side to the other.
“Of the town?”
“Of everything. I do not understand how any woman could live in a place with … tentacles, walking around.”
“They keep to themselves; almost to a fault, really.”
“And you sleep easy that you won’t be assaulted without warning?”
“I suspect we may have misunderstood how tentradoms actually live,” Arzha said, sounding entirely too conversational.
“I do not know about you, but I have sat in more than one monster clean up report involving them. There is not much to mistake.”
“I do not know exactly why so many of them resort to that behavior. It is something even Avaron finds strange. Such tentradoms may be more like feral, abandoned children than ‘beastly monsters’.”
“I’m sure the women they captured will love that distinction.”
“… No, but it may be an important way toward helping their kind in the future. Make no mistake, I held the very same reservations. It is through seeing what Eden is, and will become, did my mind change.”
“I worry it is not for the best of reasons,” Kaelara said, grunting as her leg particularly decided to be fussy. Craning off to the side, she staggered toward where a half-wood log awaited on the ground in front of a building. Perhaps a hitching post of some kind, but it’d suffice for a seat. Falling onto it with her butt, whatever relief her legs felt was instead replaced by the torture of having to sit. She rather couldn’t win, no matter what she did.
“If she is so clever to slip past my notice, I think we are all doomed, woman or not.”
Hearing Arzha’s dry tone was, in itself, somewhat comfortable. “I can’t imagine where your confidence about her comes from, but very well. Still, what of the women I see now?”
At a glance, nothing was ‘wrong’. Even on the wide, business-filled street she watched go by, Eden had the guise of a bustling town trying to grow. But, the women held something strange about them—a gravitas in their gait. Subtle, perhaps entirely normal for the most part, but emphasized their chests just that much more. Not all of them did so; mostly the younger ones seemed completely normal.
That and their attires favoring such very revealing things. Blouses cut open that much more, tightened underneath to emphasize their cleavage. Some forsook bras entirely, letting their generous breasts hang within voluminous shirts. Others had something so tight and form fitting they must’ve compressed her two big treasures into something painfully manageable. And yet, they had this air to them of … something.
Confidence?
Some sort of magnetism that made Kaelara’s gut churn.
“What of them?” Arzha asked curiously while she herself took a seat beside Kaelara.
“Poor and destitute as everyone here may be, they’re …” Kaelara rubbed her fingers together, trying to find a word that’d work. “I don’t know. There is something strange going on.”
“If I were to guess, it may be Avaron’s [Sovereign Power].”
Kaelara jerked on reflex, a sudden and sharp movement her body ever protested against. “Are you serious?” she hissed out, “A tentradom gained [Sovereign Power]?”
“She is a natural-born Queen. It was not very hard, it seemed.”
“Do you know what it does?”
Arzha glanced at Kaelara from the corner of her eye. She then slowly leaned in sideways, pressing alongside Kaelara like a conspirator. “Well, if you want to know …”
That damnable voice and its velvety delightfulness. Kaelara scowled beneath her bandages. “Don’t use that voice with me,” she hissed in dire warning. “This isn’t the Academy anymore, Arzha. Everything is different now, in case you forgot.”
“Mm. Not everything,” Arzha remarked airily, then pulled back. “As to her [Sovereign Power], Avaron’s is one that favors her people in particular. As I recall, the details are …”
As much as Kaelara wanted to smack Arzha, listening would be more useful to do. A tactful regard for politics that she soon found herself regretting as she heard more and more. Perm-permanent milking? Being naked makes you stronger?? What is this?
Arzha glanced over when she was done, visibly stopping a laugh from almost escaping. Kaelara had an expression of pure, scornful disbelief as if she couldn’t trust a thing she just heard. “D-despite the fair lady’s disbelief, I assure you of everything I said,” Arzha insisted.
“And you haven’t a thought to how insane that is?”
“I did.”
Kaelara squinted from how fast Arzha schooled her features into regal nobility.
“But, I’ve spent months here already studying both Avaron and all those involved in Eden. It is strange, and different, but not … wrong. Not some kind of failure as we’d normally expect. Avaron alone has shown more care and attention to her subjects than most lords and ladies of Artor ever did.”
“Surely you must’ve considered if she has done something nefarious to undermine everyone?”
“If she could undermine Queen Efval of the Elvetahn, then there is no one in this world who could stop her.”
That—may be, but still …
“Moreso, if she has kept up an act to such an end, she has gone about it very stupidly.” Arzha looked around then, dutifully inspecting all of Eden that stood around them. The people continued on with their lives, regardless of the two princesses having a sit down on a wooden log. “No, she is different from us in many ways. I cannot judge her by what I know, only by what I see her do. I understand why you are skeptical of her, to say the least.”
“Mm.”
“All I will say is, watch what she does with open eyes. That, and perhaps tentradoms are not as fearsome as people have said.”
“What do you mean?” Kaelara asked suspiciously.
“There are some women here who themselves were ensnared by another, different tentradom. One very befitting of its heinous reputation, I should add. But, despite that, in time they were able to overthrow and kill that creature.” Arzha glanced back at Kaelara. “Not to belittle the horrors of what they endured, of course. Only that tentradoms are not so absolutely powerful as we’d been led to believe.”
“… Who would want to lie about something like that?”
“Who would want to admit being defeated by something weak? In that way?”
Kaelara, after a moment’s thought, gave a begrudging nod. “I suppose. I don’t know about any of this, Arzha. If the start of this ‘town’ is the women becoming cows, what is the future going to be like?”
“Different than what either of us could imagine. Perhaps a little interesting?”
“Aren’t you afraid of anything?”
“Only not doing enough before the end of my days.”
She is ever the inscrutable castle of Artor, Kaelara thought wearily. But, despite everything she knew happened to Artor, it was a little heartening that Arzha still seemed herself.
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Chapter 55: Alva Mor
Chapter Text
To suffer, bleed, and die for those you do not know is indeed most noble.
*~*
The elvetahn weren’t at all difficult to notice this time around.
Their caravans of before had a particular care to subtlety and stealth. Perhaps second nature to them, who lived in the vast Alva Forest so easily. That they not only marched in number, but armor and weapons Avaron had never seen before, certainly spoke to a difference. A part of her that, consciously or not, felt alarmed so many were heading toward Eden.
Unless it was an outstanding betrayal of the most unexpected kind, there wouldn’t be a problem. Logically, it all fit just fine–Efval ultimately only cared for the elvetahn, and saw all others as tools to use for their ends. That things ended up being mutually beneficial, even in an asymmetrical fashion, was thanks only to some clever maneuvering on Avaron’s part.
A war alliance, huh … ‘Alva Mor’.
What part would she be called to play in it?
That too concerned her. Even if she was to fight the Nagraki and ‘save the world’, the reality of doing so felt so heavy. No amount of planning ever seemed to matter when shit hit the fan for real. Was it because she lacked skill in planning? Or was everything so far outside her reach that even trying to do so would cost her dearly? These anxieties ever persisted, churning in her mind with their impossible-to-answer natures.
“You’re ignoring me,” Nahtura remarked, pinching Avaron’s cheek extra hard.
It certainly drew one of her minds back to her body immediately. In preparation for the elvetahn’s arrival, Avaron had gone to Tsugumi’s inn and waited at one of the tables. Nahtura, ever able to slip by unnoticed somehow, had decided to sprawl across Avaron’s legs while her mind was outside. Smiling sheepishly, Avaron wiggled on the cushion, trying to get her bearings.
“I was only watching Efval’s approach. She’s certainly come … well-armed.”
“Oh, that. It’s nothing to think about.” Nahtura gave a dismissive sigh, reclining back into her leisure position. If it could be called leisure—she laid across Avaron’s thighs, her butt between the tentradom’s legs, and the rest of her sprawled across the ‘bench’ that the inn’s ground tables used. It had the lovely effect of letting the obviously pregnant dryad sprawl in a wildly comfortable way, her leaves and flowers and other growths splayed open and relaxed.
“I’m new to the whole ‘watching an army walk to my front door’, admittedly,” Avaron said as easily as one told the weather. Knowing that demanding look in Nahtura’s tourmaline eyes, she poked gently at the dryad’s belly. A tiny ‘oh’ escaped from her as she reflexively twitched. “And you bothered to clean up before coming here, so I don’t think it’s for another round.”
“So you do have eyes, how wonderful,” Nahtura quipped airily, scratching her neck in some flippant way.
“I’m desperately trying not to think about it too much. Just for an hour. Or however long this stupid meeting will take.”
“You know …” Nahtura said in a voice more like a husky purr than language. Her hand meaningfully stroked along Avaron’s chest, following the swell of her breast with inquisitive intent. “They won’t be here that fast …”
Even if Avaron wasn’t that excited, the playful flick back-and-forth across her nipple really jolted her every time. Enough so she sat up straighter and coughed in a meaningful way. “I’ll take my time enjoying you, thanks.”
She jumped in her skin at the sharp but not quite painful pinch on her nipple.
“Maybe I want it, what then? Hmm?”
For all the unrelentingly primal sex they’ve had over the last few weeks, Avaron still wasn’t sure about Nahtura. She’d certainly become far gentler than during the winters; comparatively, at least. If she was a thorny bush that grown a comfortable layer of bushiness, the thorns were very much still there. Nonetheless, she opted for the only choice she could only make. “Unless you want to slide down under this table,” Avaron remarked dryly, “your daughter is going to catch us at it.”
Nahtura’s head rolled to the side, her features creased as she visibly weighed the idea. She then let out a huffy sigh and rolled her head back. “No, I hate cramped places. Not unless it’s you wrapping around me, that is,” she remarked with warm, lewd smile. Something not too powerful, but very clear in its meaning. On a face like hers, with both maturity and flourishing spring alike, it really was awfully beautiful.
Avaron’s looked rather strained despite her antennae rubbing together delightedly. “True, and you’ll miss out on Tsugumi’s cooking.”
“I can always eat more than one thing at a time, you know.”
Nahtura chirped from the sudden poke at her plump boob. “No,” Avaron said sternly. “As someone who’s made the stupid choice to eat and fuck at the same time, absolutely do not. You can hardly enjoy one or the other, to say the least.”
“Hmm.” Nahtura stretched, folding her hands behind her head. “I’d rather enjoy those apple crisps that she makes, I suppose.”
“She’d be glad to hear that. It took her around 43 attempts to get it right.”
“… Really now?”
Among the things Avaron learned about Nahtura, she had certain tones of voice that, even if a question was asked, a response shouldn’t be given. Though it surprised her to hear such a thing then, it seemed a different thought occupied the dryad. Something that’d be impossible to tell ordinarily, but that was the second trick she learned: Nahtura was never quiet.
Not unless she was thinking about something.
A minute crawled by, Nahtura’s face slowly creasing into some expression between annoyance and resignation. Then, just like that, she was gone. Avaron noticed the weight leaving before her eyes recognized the dryad had vanished. Something of a disconcerting detail in itself, really. A split moment later, two shrill voices echoed from across the inn.
Nah, not my problem, the tentradom concluded and sat back in her seating. Not that there was much in the way of comfort to do so, it was very much a straight-backed design. Actually, leaning forward and resting on the table made much more sense. Starting to remember why the Japanese do it this way, she mused, folding her arms and laying atop them.
Well, she hadn’t much to do until Efval and the elvetahn arrived.
Blissfully, it didn’t take that much longer. The bulk of the elvetahn army or whatever it was followed through the Alva Forest still. In essence, they marched perpendicular to the open plains that Eden claimed, not quite ‘crossing the border’ as it were. Only Efval, her escort, and Nuala branched off to come to the inn proper. Judging by their attires, at least all of them except Nuala were in a hurry to go to war.
I suppose I could follow them with a few skeyes and see what they’re up to. At least, until the edge of the [Hive Mind].
If nothing else, it’d be useful to watch the direction to see if any ‘roaming problems’ came by.
Her perspective shifted to that of a drone sitting in front of the inn’s main doors. It unfurled its legs, standing up at the small group’s approach. Though Avaron had a reasonable look from the sky, the distance made certain details a bit blurry or ill-defined. The ground gave a much better appreciation for the impressive armor the elvetahn wore.
Brown-painted metal plates were wrapped in lines of a rather eerie, bright shade of green. Somewhat evocative of a tree and its leaves, but very obviously bent toward being actually useful protection. The underneath was lined with bestial furs and, in Efval’s case, actual bird feathers. Colors had been specifically chosen to accent the armor and fan off, typically in a brown-to-white manner. Swooping and curving pauldrons, vambraces, and more gave them a somewhat sleek appearance combined with a menacing air of claw and fangs.
That and their helmets were distinctly stylized after an owl’s head. A complete covering that hid almost everything, save their faces. Protective face-guarding masks hung off the sides of their helmets, dangling on a pair of straps. An appearance of which really reminded Avaron of old Japanese Samurai, for some reason. She had the drone open the front doors and step aside as the group of nine entered into the inn.
“Queen Efval,” Avaron greeted in her most proper voice, and spared the effort to sit up. “You’ve arrived rather fast. And rather well armored.”
For however complex her helmet seemed, Efval slid it off her head easily. She tucked it under one arm, turning her ever beautiful and composed gaze down upon Avaron. “I shan’t stay long for pleasantries,” Efval said. “We are marching to confront a Nagraki incursion in the Free Hardain State.”
“… That was fast of them.”
“I suspect it’s nothing more than a sacrificial force, but even that cannot be ignored if they use doomblades.”
“Doom what?” Avaron asked, not liking the sound of it.
The elvetahn beside Efval—General Bladedance, as it happened to be, spoke up then. “Doomblades are corruptive weapons used by the Nagraki. It afflicts their victims with a curse that rots them away, until whatever is left becomes another Nagraki.”
“Cool. I hate that, how do you deal with it?”
“Protective magics, divine ones preferably.”
Efval continued on after him, saying, “They’re not easy to create, but that many showing up at once is a dire concern. They are likely to have a Sacrifice Forge somewhere in the region.”
“I hate the sound of that even more. I take it as to mean you will have need of me? Or Eden, as it were,” Avaron inquired.
Efval, serious in her expression, softened to a wry, scornful sort of amusement. “Not on the battlefield yet, at least. No, if the Free Hardain State collapses from this, we will be directing their refugees here. The less people the Nagraki have to feed upon, the better.”
“I’m not saying I wouldn’t take them in, but Eden is already at its breaking point,” Avaron said, shrugging her shoulders helplessly. “Our food is riding right on the edge. Picking up whoever’s still alive in Artor has been pushing us further over.”
“Can you solve it?”
“With a year’s worth of harvests, easily. If you can get us more supplies to handle the refugee influx, we’ll do all the rest.”
Efval squinted, appearing thoughtful. “It will be several months before we’re done in Hardain, if things go as expected. I will inform you in advance of any concerning developments.”
“Why not take my sweet little flower along as well, my daughter?”
All the elvetahn turned at the new voice’s interjection, the guards habitually tensing with alarm. When they saw who it was, though, all of them save Efval and Nuala fell to the ground, bowing and holding their palms up on the floor. Efval herself, sighing and turning with a wary look, froze when her eyes finally saw.
Avaron herself could see the efficient gears of the elvetahn queen’s mind shatter apart right then. Turning and turning with relentless perfection only to just give out in a violently catastrophic explosion. Her whole face froze in some places, twitched in others, her eyes bewildered in a way only stunned shock could convey. The tentradom peeked over her shoulder, glancing at the naked Nahtura strutting forth from the kitchen. Carrying a tray with food, too.
It actually looked quite charming in its own way. Nahtura’s natural swaying gait complimented her literally blossoming figure, spiced by that subtly dangerous air that ever carried her around. Thorns were obvious, but poisonous flowers too, had a beauty that deceived the eye while the brain screamed in warning.
Avaron wasn’t sure if she should hate how much of a turn on it sounded as.
When she looked back at Efval, however, their eyes met. One could almost imagine the morse code-like signals being rapidly sent between them then.
You fucked my mother? Efval’s eyes communicated.
Voraciously, Avaron’s returned in response.
The unspoken signals flat lined to a dial tone as the most overwhelmed expression quivered on Efval’s face. “What ever do you mean, mother?” she asked, her voice impressively even-toned despite everything else.
“Avaron here has all those wandering lovelies of hers. She could easily be your tongue, eyes, and ears, no?” Nahtura answered in a lovely voice of warm honey and certainly a hidden thorn somewhere. She stopped by the ground table Avaron sat at, easily stepping down and sitting once again. The tray she carried had a range of fried dumplings and sweetly glazed crisps, both varying in their exact types. Delicious fried foods, yet with a healthiness to them than most Avaron never remembered having before.
“She isn’t wrong,” Nuala offered in a brave attempt to ford the waters around her. “But, how could Avaron help in that way?”
“Because she is like me,” Nahtura said with flippant simplicity, far more interested in trying to claw-grab a hot dumpling.
Whatever was fully meant by that statement, Avaron didn’t know, but Efval and Nuala’s demeanors shifted. Surprised, perhaps, but what more it meant seemed a mystery of its own.
“… So be it. If you say so, mother,” Efval said coolly. “Hurry along then, Avaron. We are marching as I speak.”
“One of my selves is coming. Nuala, if you could meet me down the road? Or someone so your archers don’t riddle me full of holes, anyway.”
Nuala looked toward Efval, who gave a curt, commanding nod. The magi bowed and turned, hurrying out of the inn.
“Then we’ll be on our way now, mother,” Efval said.
“Mm,” Nahtura throatily acknowledged. “Oh, and stop that silly bowing down. It’s not as funny anymore.”
Whether or not the elvetahn, currently bowing, were relieved to hear that, Avaron couldn’t tell. No, they were more confused and still partially terrified in some measure. Still, Efval and all of them left as well to head back to the main army column. For as fast and sudden as it all was, silence returned once again.
“Well, so that happened,” Avaron remarked before scooting closer to the table. “Never a dull day around here. How does it taste?”
Nahtura busied herself with trying to eat her dumpling. It seemed rather troubling to her for some reason, so Avaron gingerly claw-grabbed one herself. Taking a bite, she didn’t find it terribly hot, and certainly quite flavorful. Not too juicy either. A good mix of savory meat and some other stuff she hadn’t a clue what it actually was.
A throaty swallow made Avaron look beside her. “It sthicks to myai teefth,” Nahtura grumbled, picking at the dumpling’s doughy gunk left behind.
… Does this world have dental floss? Avaron couldn’t help wondering to herself.
*~*
Though it’d be hard for most people to notice, a good deal of Eden’s drones suddenly shifted. Each one was an idling drone, waiting for orders or some task to fulfill. A few may have noticed a couple drones in a small area moving at once, but who could imagine so many? They were all sorts: workers, crushers, and a few slumbering warriors.
Skittering across Eden’s carefully sculpted landscape, they rushed toward the border of the Alva Forest. Flowing like many great streams, they came together into a cohesive river of bodies. Dozens became hundreds, and then soon thousands. In the skies above, dozens of dark shapes flew at varying heights and distances. Not enough to be recognizable as an intelligent formation, but a formation nonetheless.
For the marching elvetahn, the sudden emergence of so many moving bodies greatly startled them. General Bladedance sent a great many runners up and down the march, informing them of their new ‘allies’. Avaron watched them all through her skeyes, wearily looking for any that didn’t quite get the message. She could afford to lose a few drones to happenstance accidents, but she’d rather not.
Virtually all of Eden’s reserve drones had been deployed, leaving just the bare bones work force and the young still growing in the nests.
“Perhaps it was a good idea to have me sit with you,” Nuala remarked dryly.
Avaron peeked over her shoulder. “Well, I don’t mind the company.”
Crusher tentacles were so large several people could conceivably sit atop of one. Although Avaron only had a ‘saddle’ just for her, Nuala could sit directly behind her and hold on quite easily. The magi used her staff as an anchor, holding it across Avaron’s stomach. Between its unyielding hardness or the appreciably womanly figure behind her, she found it hard to complain.
Alongside the crusher walked a group of three elk, each rode by an elvetahn. Adorned in black armor, they were as elegant as their riders and perhaps even more fearsome. Muscular, smooth and sleek, they carried a sort of pristine wildness to them artists would struggle to capture. Avaron squinted as she stared at them, thinking, Since everything in this world is magical, what can they do?
Something worthwhile if people like Queen Efval rode on them, surely?
Of the three riding the elk, General Bladedance navigated his mount closer to Avaron. As close as the beast would go, considering the enormous ‘predator’ it very obviously was wary of. “Lady Avaron! You have amassed quite the … army, I see?” he said, sounding humorously dubious. Him, and many other elvetahn besides, frequently glanced at the column of tentacle drones marching beside them.
Well, there was like sixty feet of space between the two forces, but still, ‘close’.
“About a third are the active security forces. The rest are workers or multi-purpose drones; to feed and tend the warriors, you see.”
“I understand. I’m quite glad to have your help with us against the Nagraki, but I’m not certain how prepared your forces are?” Bladedance said, sounding a touch contemplative. “The Nagraki are no ordinary foe, as you very well know.”
“Yes, I’ve given them a lot of thought. I do have some ideas, but is it wise to speak them aloud out here?”
“Ah, yes. Lady Nuala, would you mind?”
“It is not as if anyone is listening,” Nuala remarked boredly, but lifted her hand up. She muttered some [Words of Power], writing a glowing symbol in the air with her finger. Avaron noticed the faintest hint of something emitting outward, like a bubble from some blowing machine. If she hadn’t been thinking about it, she wouldn’t have felt its presence at all. “Continue on with your conspiratorial mumbling.”
Nuala did have her grumbly way of being cordial, if one looked past her prickliness.
“I presume that’s some kind of anti-spying magic,” Avaron surmised, to which Bladedance nodded. With the ball in her proverbial court, she had to give a moment’s consideration. Well, we didn’t even handle the Lance from the Church properly. Even if they’re an elite fighting force, the Nagraki will be far more in strength and capabilities. Frankly, we would be pigs to slaughter.
Not that she could tell a potential ally how incredibly turbo-fucked in open war she would be. The key was to recognize her valuable strengths and make the sale off of those, while downplaying her actual weaknesses. No one cared about how terrible someone could be, only about what they could do as a service. Business 1-oh-1, after all.
“It depends on what kind of Nagraki. I suspect my Hive will naturally resist their naki corruption, but I haven’t tested it properly.”
“… Truly? Resist their corruption without divine—ah.” Bladedance chuckled then like a fool who just remembered something. “The offspring of a divine heroine may possess such a strength indeed.”
“So the theory goes. If that is indeed true, then my drones will be powerful bulwarks at blunting the Nagraki. If not, then I have to withdraw them to prevent haplessly feeding the Nagraki.”
“That is a sound approach, but I am wary at ‘testing’ this idea of yours,” Bladedance said.
“It’s something I’ll work on my own,” Avaron returned easily. Having a deep conversation while sat on a moving creature was truly novel. The uneven up-and-downs were a far cry from the monotonous hum of a limousine on a highway. “That said, the most useful thing we can do is be your eyes and ears.”
“Oh? How so?”
“Hmm.” Avaron glanced around; just the five of them. The two unnamed elvetahn riding behind Bladedance were most likely his guards or attendants. Since he hadn’t sent them away when Nuala put up her magic, they must be well enough to speak around. “What I’m going to tell you is my most powerful [skill], if you understand my meaning.”
“Of course. My ears will hold onto your words so my lips may never speak them.”
Talking to someone with a modicum of pleasantness felt so terribly refreshing. That veneer of professional respect and cooperative demeanor that made working together simply pleasant to do. “It is called [Hive Mind]. Now, you as a person, you’ve only had one body your entire life, yes?”
Bladedance looked amused. “I have, yes.”
“Imagine if your one mind was connected to dozens, if not hundreds or thousands of bodies. You could see through their eyes, hear what they hear, and feel what they feel. Each of them responding to your will as naturally as you wiggle your fingers.”
“That …” Bladedance seemed stumped, his piercing gaze crawling along Avaron’s crusher to the other Hive tentacles nearby. “You mean to say that your mind controls all of them? At once?”
“Correct.”
“… Incredible. How do you not have the worst headache?”
Avaron chortled, and had to hold a hand to her mouth to cover the laugh. “A lot of practice. But, that is the power of the [Hive Mind]. We are a single whole, expressed through different bodies. My drones can go far afield, wait patiently, ever watching like dutiful sentries. They can explore dangerous locales and tell us exactly what is there. If need be, they can sacrifice themselves to buy time, cause diversionary attacks, or burden the enemy through sheer numbers. Some are even more specialized. If you look up, you can see them flying above us.”
The four elvetahn that could hear Avaron looked up in unison. Through her skeyes, Avaron saw all their faces crease in speculative thought, only to slowly widen in realized awe. Or perhaps horror; some overwhelming understanding of what they were witnessing.
“You can see us right now? Through those flying creatures?” Bladedance asked incredulously.
“I can see you, our armies, miles of the forest around us. They have the eyes of birds, and many dozens of them. I can see tiny creatures scurrying about, beasts I’ve never heard the name of lurking around in the dark … you get the idea.”
“Surely they must tire out at some point?”
“That is why they work in teams. As one reaches its limits, another takes its place. The drones take care of themselves, but my all seeing eyes never go away.”
A silence fell between them as Bladedance slowly looked down. Though he stared ahead, his eyes spoke of his mind being somewhere else entirely. Avaron let him be, even if she felt Nuala practically vibrating behind her. The magi would doubtlessly hunger to know more, but Avaron would be a little tight lipped.
It was fun enough in its own way, teasing Nuala with what she wanted. For once, Avaron found herself in the luxury of being able to do so. She’d never had much practice with being playful in that way; most everyone was fine to jump right onto her. Both on Earth and whatever this world was actually called.
“… hm, yes.” Bladedance said in a loud mutter, something that visibly snapped him awake. “Ah, my apologies. I fell into thought.”
“It is alright. What came to your mind?”
“I believe we will have to give this [Hive Mind] of yours some field trials. Its power is truly formidable as a means of gathering knowledge and hunting out an enemy’s movements. I’m simply not certain how actually effective it is. Not compared to hundreds of summers of working with my own scouts, you see.”
“By the sounds of things, we’ll have several months to work together. I’m certain we’ll figure out some sort of strategy. My talents are at your disposal, General Bladedance.”
“I am grateful for them. Truly. The advent of guns caught us by surprise, although not as much as we caught the Empire in turn.”
“How did that go before the Nagraki ripped them apart anyway?” Avaron asked.
“As easy as walking up to a deaf grentule, really,” Bladedance remarked. “The range of our guns and our expert huntresses silenced every noble and officer they found. Their armies fell apart quickly, as you can imagine.”
“Mm. You don’t sound terribly enthused with how it happened.”
“Am I that obvious?” Bladedance asked rhetorically, giving a rueful smile. “I cannot begrudge our success, only the means by which we gained it.”
“Not one to enjoy guns, then?”
“They are truly powerful; perhaps horrifically so. I worry more that I am seeing the end of the era I know how to fight in. A century perfecting my swordsmanship is meaningless against such a ruthless weapon.”
“If this was Earth, I’d say you’re absolutely right.” Avaron glanced at Bladedance’s surprised look. “But, it’s not. Magic exists here, and that changes everything. For as powerful as it may make guns, it may just as well offer an easy counter to them. It’d be proper to say no one has spent time designing a defense against them.”
“Would you agree with that, Lady Nuala?” Bladedance asked curiously.
“… It’s possible,” Nuala offered with a tinge of grumpiness. “I have not seen how costly or impractical it may be. We elvetahn may very well design a defense that others themselves could not easily do.”
“It would give us a distinct advantage, though it is certainly wishful thinking,” Bladedance surmised. “It may suit to say my fears are somewhat unfounded, then. The battlefield is changing, but not too unreasonably yet.”
“I’d agree,” Avaron said. “Still, it doesn’t hurt to keep up and ahead of the competition.”
“If you don’t mind my saying so, Lady Avaron,” Bladedance said, “you seem practiced in the ways of war but not perhaps as a warrior?”
How the hell do I even describe what the History Channel is? Avaron mused to herselves. None of them deigned to give an answer, though. “There’s … a lot, to study of it on Earth. War revealed its final form to us all, in a sense.”
“And what would that be?” Bladedance asked with trepidation.
“Mutually assured destruction. We finally pushed war to such an extreme that no one could fight anymore. If they did, all of us—even the planet itself, would quite conceivably perish. So we found peace at the cliff edge of annihilation because no one wanted to jump off.”
A moment of silence wafted between them, the elvetahn all looking in varying degrees of surprise and dismay. Avaron kept her peace from saying any more, though.
“I’m afraid we won’t meet such a future,” Bladedance said tersely. “Not so long as the Nagraki live on our world.”
“No, I don’t think any of us will. They’re the ones who will quite gladly jump off the cliff if given the chance.”
“Aptly said. I must hurry along and speak with Her Majesty. Please excuse me, Lady Avaron, Lady Nuala.”
Avaron waved her hand dismissively, and so Bladedance and his two escorts hurried on ahead. She watched his backside all the while, staring with a piercing gaze. Sorry to paint a shitty picture, but we’re all gonna have to pull weight on this one. Not if any of us want to reach retirement.
The elvetahn and Hive troop columns continued on: one side moving in a unified, monotonous motion; the other graceful and practiced, even in the simplest of motions. Two very unlikely forces side-by-side, perhaps unimaginable to anyone ever coming together.
Well, not everyone.
On the back of Avaron’s crusher tentacle, a tiny thing moved. Situated between the joint connecting the main body to a leg, it emerged from the tiny gap between chitinous plates. With a red chitin of its own, speckled with black spots, its two antenna wiggled inquisitively as it looked around.
Not that anyone, or even Avaron’s many, many senses, noticed the majestic lady bug.
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Chapter 56: Origins
Chapter Text
Where we came from can yet inform us of where we’re going.
*~*
“… And this about the last place I can show you,” Avaron declared as the fleshy mouth-like door and its menacing teeth slurped open.
Koya hated the sound. The wetness, the stickiness, the way the muscles audibly flexed and moved. It made the fur on her ears prickle as a disgusting tremor crept down her spine. Even a dozen times later she still couldn’t get used to it. Not that the living Hive around her offered anything for a comfortable distraction. If it wasn’t the dull, muted sound of fluids pumping or the occasional twitch of muscle, the place was almost dead silent.
Well, that and whatever ‘drones’ they walked past. Even with the whole ‘bees’ explanation, the concept of such creatures sounded horribly outlandish.
Staying in her prison cell unironically sounded like the better place to be.
Although, if that was by design certainly posed another problem. So, Koya insisted on following Avaron around on her ‘tour’ through the Hive. For what she expected of another white-and-blue room full of sleeping drones, odd storage containers, or other strangeness, a garden was not what she had in mind. Although it couldn’t be called a real garden, it must’ve had the purpose of one.
Rows of white chitin racks stretched ahead in the long, rectangular room. Plants, trees, and some things that looked like plants and flesh fused together all grew on the available support. She recognized some fruits and vegetables immediately, while others simply flowered, or grew great and expansive leaves. A wall of hotter, humid air enveloped the kitsune when she stepped through. The thin silk ‘dress’ she’d been given all but clung to her skin immediately.
Not that she had any reason to hide of her beautiful figure, of course.
A lecherous tentradom aside.
“A garden?” Koya asked skeptically.
“It’s technically a farm, but that works too. Since I can’t let you outside yet, I figured the change of scenery would do instead.”
Koya wasn’t sure if it was an improvement. Whatever might’ve looked normal had that garish white-blue growth infused, intertwined, or simply overcoming it. To say it looked strange would be the kindest words that left her mouth. Still, she followed after Avaron. Glancing side-to-side suspiciously, she did note the other drones working in the area. They were slender, lithe looking things compared to the others, and moved with a particular slowness to them. Oddly fitting, in a way, how they gently tended the garden-like plants.
They soon came upon a literally grown table and some chairs, sat atop a bed of fuzzy but short green grass. Different fruits and flowers hung on a half-wall around the area, creating a cozy little alcove of sorts. Only once they were close did Koya scent out the taste of something edible from the chitin containers waiting on the table. Avaron took to sitting in one chair, and so Koya took the one on the other side of the table.
She rather didn’t like the raised seats of chairs, it left her legs and tail dangling uncomfortably. But, such was how things went.
“All things considered,” Avaron said, “I hope I’ve shown you enough to report back to your ‘mistress’.”
Koya froze, only her rigorous training keeping her from betraying it fully. “Do you always give a tour of your ‘hive’ to prisoners?” she asked while reaching for the containers. There were seven in all, and she made it seem eagerness was her reason to open them swiftly.
“You’re my fiiirss—no, second, technically.” Avaron shrugged flippantly before leaning onto the table. That damnable smile of hers soon shone with a certain intent Koya didn’t want to name. “But I do rather enjoy showing a beauty like you around.”
“… It’s rather unbecoming to lavish that sort of compliment on a prisoner,” Koya said, trying her utmost to be strictly formal. Everything about Avaron aggravated her so much she felt her veins ready to pop out.
“Would you rather me call you the ugliest thing since sin itself gave birth?” Avaron asked, eyebrow popping up. She leaned in slightly, a conspiratorial air around her. “Are you into that sort of thing?”
Koya clenched her first, an angry tremble vibrating down her arm. “It makes no difference to me.”
“I think it would,” Avaron retorted with a cool, whimsical tone to her. Pulling back, she just as swiftly gave an easy wave of her hand, everything about her changing once again. “But, go ahead and eat. I do actually have some questions you could answer for me.”
At the very least, even if it was cordial, that demand sounded perfectly normal. Though Koya sincerely doubted Avaron would choose to poison her right then of all times, she kept a healthy skepticism of the meal. The very wonderful meal that tasted like it came straight from southern Kitinchi. “I can only imagine what you want to interrogate from me,” she remarked testily, assembling her plate with rice, chicken, and fried vegetables.
“Ancient history, as it were. You recognized the name ‘Yamato’, and called it the ‘Origin Land’ of your people, right?”
Koya paused in earnest then, rather not expecting such a mundane subject matter. “I did, yes. What of it?”
“But you don’t recognize the name ‘Japan’ or ‘Nihon’?”
“I don’t.”
“And what of ‘Earth’?”
“… The land of the divine heroines?” Koya questioned.
“The very same.”
“I know only what everyone else does: whatever the heroines themselves said.”
“You don’t know Yamato is on Earth?”
Koya physically recoiled, jerking back in her chair. Her fluffy ears wiggled aggressively, her face scrunched incredulous scorn. “What idiocy is that? I’ve never heard anything like that.”
Avaron eyes widened, and then most strangely, she just sort of sat there for a moment. Then she blinked, shifted in her chair, and her demeanor changed again. Subtly, not in a way of playful provocation or annoyance: she leaned onto the table, eyes narrowed in thoughtful contemplation, busied with some sort of problem. “So there’s never been any divine heroine who told you or your people that?” she asked, looking at Koya piercingly.
What an incredible actress, Koya couldn’t help thinking in admiration. People had all sorts of tells when they put on a face, but so far Avaron’s looked seamless. It made trying to anticipate her actions even more difficult to grasp hold of. Koya made herself busy taking a few bites before answering. “No, of course not. Divine heroines only help the humans, not everyone else. I’ve never heard of one coming from Yamato, either.”
“… Interesting.” Avaron rubbed her chin. “Then anyone who would know would be some sort of elder kitsune, then?”
“Why do you care?” Koya shot back.
“Because it might be very important.”
“If it was, why would I even tell you the truth?”
“Oh, you always could be lying, or simply ignorant. Only by doing further research will I know for sure,” Avaron said, dismissively waving her hand. “Both are useful to me, of course; just in different ways.”
Koya didn’t know what Avaron was lifting logs to look for, but it was certainly something. Perhaps being stingy isn’t the way here, she mused, finishing another few bites. “Let’s assume I am speaking the truth, then. Does that not make me ignorant?”
“It does, but why you are ignorant is the important detail.”
“How so?”
“Think about it. We have two worlds that are somehow connected across two different universes. This isn’t something like skipping to another planet through space.”
“… Planets? Space?” Koya asked dumbfounded.
Avaron blinked, taken aback. “Uh … These containers. Here, look at this.” The tentradom arranged two mostly empty containers side by side, and even shuffled around the remaining food inside. Koya had to straighten up and crane closer to actually see what was going on inside. “Each container is one whole ‘universe’. Everything we know right now is contained inside this ‘universe’—“ Avaron tapped the left container, “—while Earth and everything it knows is in this other container.”
“Okay?”
“Universes do not ever cross paths. They are completely separate from one another, except for unbelievably rare exceptions. The summoning of divine heroines is one such example.”
“… Right, because heroines from Earth come over to here,” Koya affirmed.
Avaron moved a few grains of rice from Earth’s container over to their world’s. “Correct. Summoning magic lets the divine heroines get pulled to this world. Ostensibly, through the power of the goddesses, hence why the heroines themselves become divine.”
“You speak as if that is not true.”
“Because it inherently isn’t.”
Koya stared, her brows furrowing together. “That sounds insane.”
“Truth and madness go together quite well it turns out,” Avaron said, shrugging. “Anyway, the point is that specific summoning magic draws heroines to this world. So, how did your people get here?”
“How would I know?” Koya asked rhetorically, imitating Avaron’s irritating habit of shrugging.
“Precisely, how would you? Or any of ‘you’? If I could find that, I could piece together the truth.”
“Why does it matter at all how we got here?”
“Because there aren’t any kitsune left on Earth or in Yamato.”
Instinct more than thought made Koya push away from the table, standing up angrily in a flash of speed. “Bullshit. How could you possibly know?”
Avaron smiled with a rueful hint, unfazed by Koya’s actions at all. “Because there’s divine heroines here that I asked. Kitsune, oni, leprechauns, yaoguai, djinn–all these fantastical beings that exist only in legend and myth. Earth is simply full of humans, and nothing but humans.”
“And you believe that?” Koya asked in exasperation.
“I’m assuming it’s true for the time being. Now, are you ready for the really weird thing?”
“I’d rather not be, but say it anyway.”
Avaron chuckled for a moment, going as far as to bending over and slapping her knee. “It’s—it’s, goodness I see you’re very cute when you’re angry. That does explain some things.”
“What?”
“Nevermind. Here’s the really weird thing: why do you call yourself ‘kitsune’?”
“Because that’s what we are?” Koya retorted, but even she doubted it was an earnestly cheap provocation. That simply didn’t fit Avaron’s style.
“Precisely. You’re a ‘kitsune’, but that word is Japanese. Here’s the thing: words are part of language, and language changes over time. Kitsune and all the other ‘mythological’ beings are thousands of years old, if not older. Why does your people still own the name ‘kitsune’, when your kind is perhaps thousands of years removed from Earth?”
“Probably because the elders came from Earth themselves?”
Avaron did a doubletake. “What?”
“I mean, I don’t know for sure. We kitsune do not age and die like humans do. There’s bound to be a few who remember living in Yamato.” Koya huffed, her tails flicking from one side to the other. “Well, if the Nagraki didn’t kill them. I don’t know any myself. My mistress might.”
“I would love to have a conversation with them then, because that is very important knowledge.”
“You never said why it’s so important.”
“Because this world and Earth have a deeper connected history than just some kids being kidnapped with magic,” Avaron said with a surprisingly smooth, solid seriousness. “Entire species somehow left Earth, willingly or not, and came here. What’s even weirder is they have some ‘original identity’ left over from when they were on Earth. I’ve been seeing bits and pieces of it everywhere I’ve been, but trying to figure out how the puzzle works is driving me crazy.”
Koya really wished she could buy into the idea of Avaron being crazy. It would’ve been a lot simpler to deal with than the disconcerting sense of logic that crept through her fluffy ears. “Why? So you can know how it all happened?”
“Exactly so. None of this came out of nowhere—it started for a reason. So, ‘why’ did it start? And perhaps most importantly, who was responsible for it?” Avaron said, holding her arms open in a grand statement. She held it for a moment then let her arms flop downward. “That’s about as far as I’ve gotten. I’ll be asking more officially when I get to speak to your mistress.”
Koya squinted suspiciously. “I said nothing about helping you to meet her.”
“Oh, Nuala’s organized it all. She’ll be coming by in a week or two to retrieve you.”
“Wait, what?”
“Sooo, how was your lunch?” Avaron asked, clapping her hands together and smiling. Her whole demeanor had, once again, shifted ever so subtly.
“No, what did you mean my mistress is coming here?” Koya demanded.
*~*
Of all the days there were to enjoy, Cecile was finding the cloudy ones the best. Sunny was too hot, rainy too muggy, and windy a little annoying but manageable. The winds on Mount Um were pretty fearsome, but there wasn’t much reason to go out on those days. After how many weeks she’d been living on the lower plains, traveling around with a bunch of strangers, and ‘roughing’ it out in camping …
Ah, she missed her home.
But, also …
Her face scrunched up. The feeling was difficult to name and ever present; something she didn’t want to acknowledge, yet was there. So, instead, Cecile focused on heading down the street. It was just after morning, but the cloudy skies made it hard to tell. People went about their lives, though noticeably gave her a breadth of space as they walked. Not out of dislike, but rather a conscious awareness of her tall size.
Compared to most humans, she easily towered over them. If she straightened her back up she’d probably be twice their size more often than not. The bigger problem really was making sure she didn’t club someone with her tail. Walking had a natural swaying gait for her kind, hips bouncing from one side to the other, and the tail always swayed side-to-side. It wasn’t like she could drag it on the ground, either, that’d hurt too much eventually.
She tried keeping it straight, but that’d only work for so long. It left a terrible cramp in her back and upper tail more often than not. For that reason, if no other, Cecile felt quite glad to reach the public kitchen near her ‘house’. A large courtyard sat nestled in a U-shaped building, full of large, rectangular tables for everyone to eat at. The cooks and serving helpers all gathered at the long, central wall of the building where the actual kitchen was. The opening to the courtyard itself was blocked off with a fence that had a distinct ‘entrance’ and ‘exit’.
Cecile shuffled into the line of people waiting to go inside. It moved at a reasonable enough pace. There was a time limit to how long anyone could sit and eat, but it wasn’t really a rush to do so. Conversations of all kind rumbled around her, the air filled with a warm liveliness that proved a wonderful distraction.
Most everything she heard sounded very routine: how was work, how is your health, how are you settling in, yeah the tentacles are weird but they don’t hurt us. The constant influx of people she and the heroines rescued from Artor meant a lot of people had to be taught about the tentacles, really. Few of them had any recourse but to accept what was given to them, and fewer still even tried leaving Eden.
It did have a certain feeling of entrapment she herself knew quite well.
But, could one be in a cage and enjoy it? Was it really a cage if they were free to leave whenever they wanted? She’d read stories of cities and great villages far bigger than her own, but never expected to ever be in one herself. A village so big that you couldn’t know everyone in it just sounded too terribly strange to her.
And yet, there she was.
The line moved forward, and eventually she reached the entrance. A small table, attended by decently dressed woman, and a pair of spider-like tentacle guards, awaited. The guards sat with an unmoving stillness, seemingly asleep or like statues. The woman, however, looked up and up as Cecile towered over her.
“Well, I definitely know you’ve not been here today so far,” she remarked amusedly. “Cecile, right?”
“Oh, yes, I am. Cecile, that is.”
“Do you want one tray or two for a big girl like you?”
“Ummm … two, please.”
“Nothing wrong with needing two,” the woman said, standing up. Her table was full of stacked trays, wrapped together bundles of utensils, and even cleaning cloths for any food grime. Cecile received her two stacked together trays, and the rather too-small-to-use utensils. “If the cooks give you any trouble just come tell me. It’s my job making sure everyone gets fed.”
“… I will, thanks.”
Cecile gave a little bow and hurried along as the woman sat down again. She picked up some kind of board with paper on it, writing down something the moment she could. Curiosity left Cecile’s mind as the scent of foods reached her broad nose, spurring on a certain energy in her legs. There was another line that ran along one side of the courtyard that she quickly joined. It moved quite a lot faster than the one outside, creating a steady stream toward the kitchen serving counters.
She glanced off to the side where the building’s wall waited, covered in signs. Simplistic things in themselves, they wrote in bold letters what to do: wait your turn, every tray can have up to 7 serving bowls on it, one loaf of bread per tray, pregnant women and children may eat extra, and so on. It seemed strange the signs were up as long as they were, surely they wouldn’t be hard to remember.
Then again, new people were coming to Eden all the time.
“Next!”
A woman’s voice jerked Cecile awake from her reverie. She’d already reached the beginning of the kitchen serving counter. Bending over, she carefully placed her trays on the mostly smooth chitin surface and started scooting sideways. The serving staff, dressed in white aprons and other clothes, expertly shuffled bowls of food onto her two trays. There wasn’t much said, they put food on and Cecile continued down the line.
Her actual mean varied between mushed gruel, to whole-roasted meats that’d been chopped up into edible chunks. It was less an organized feast and more piles of ‘do it yourself’ cooked ingredients for eating. Not that she minded, putting it together in different ways was actually rather fun. Despite being so ramshackle, the fact that Eden could give out genuine meat in such quantities was really impressive.
What made her pause, however, was the new addition at the end of the serving line. A chitin-made huge barrel kicked over on a stand, such that it laid horizontally and its spout was easily accessible. An array of tankard waited beside it, tended to by one of the serving staff. Beside the barrel was the more familiar water spout everyone got a drink from.
“Milk or water?” the server asked.
“Milk?” Cecile questioned, oblivious to her guffaw until two tankards of milk landed onto her trays. “No, wait, I meant what do you mean by milk?”
“Milk is milk,” the server said, shrugging. “The Queen said the livestock are producing it nicely now. Tastes pretty good, I’d say.”
“O-oh. Uh, thanks.”
“Sure. Next!”
Cecile picked up her heavy trays easily and shuffled on out of the way. The next problem she ran into came in the form of having no idea where she should sit. The courtyard was divided into very neat rows of table with a decent amount of space between them. Benches offered seating, but every table she saw was packed full of people. What spaces did exist were not appropriate for someone of her significant size.
Plus, they were all strangers to her. She couldn’t try to squeeze in and push people out of the way. The thought of even trying proved stressful enough to make her look around the courtyard again. Her gold eyes settled on the empty spaces where nothing, and no one, was at. Sitting on the ground would suit well enough than trying to get on some crowded bench.
“Oi, Cecile-chan,” a mysterious interloper spoke up suddenly.
Cecile’s head pivoted around toward her side and looked down. Where there wasn’t a person, there now was, with a young man in otherworldly clothes standing there without a care in the world. “Oh, Hoshi. You’re eating here too?” she asked curiously.
“Yup, we all are. I tried waving but I guess it’s hard to see our table.”
She had no clue any of them were there, let alone trying to get her attention. It embarrassed her to realize she didn’t have much of an eye for such a detail. “Well, it’s good to see you all the same. I hope you all can enjoy your meal.”
Hoshi’s head tilted. “Do you not want to eat with us?”
The thought hadn’t crossed her mind. “I’m rather large, there won’t be anywhere to sit,” she said, smiling politely.
“Nah, don’t worry about it. We’ll make space.” Hoshi did some kind of head nod-and-shrug motion in a direction. “Come on, it’s better than sitting on the ground.”
Whether he read her mind or simply was that astute, Cecile found herself bewildered. An anxious energy itched at her arms and legs, but she nonetheless followed after the smaller man. While he might’ve snuck up on her, he made no effort in hiding as he walked. In fact, he had an even stranger way of doing so, keeping his hands in his pockets and swaying with exaggerated steps.
She’d never seen him do it out in the fields of Artor, but apparently here it helped tell people to get out of his way? Are heroines supposed to walk like that? Cecile wondered. She couldn’t try it herself given how full her hands were, but it seemed to work pretty well; people actively moved out of their path. The aforementioned table was toward the middle of the whole courtyard, buried in a lake of people.
“Oh, Cecile-chan!” Katsumi called out, waving energetically at her approach. The other divine heroines as well looked up, giving their regards in their own ways. Though it was a table suitable for 8 people, there was indeed no one else sitting with them then. “Come sit down with us!”
The actual sitting part of it seemed questionable. The benches were okay for people half her size. Nonetheless putting her trays down, she awkwardly crouched down, trying to balance herself on the too-small seat. Tucking her tail in and underneath, she wrapped it around her legs to keep it out of the way. It mostly worked, as long as she didn’t lean too much in either direction. Even sitting down, though, she easily looked over everyone’s heads. Hoshi had sat down next to her, keeping enough space they weren’t touching.
“Thank you for inviting me,” Cecile said, bowing with her head.
Amir said, “We’re all part of a team, right? It’s no trouble.”
She didn’t know what that meant, but it sounded nice. “Why are you all over here in Eden?” Cecile asked curiously. “Don’t you stay at Tsugumi’s inn?”
The heroines all exchanged looks of some kind or shrugged their shoulders. It would be Chul-soo who coughed into one hand while raising his other. “It was my idea. I am grateful to Avaron-nim’s hospitality, but considering the tough times we live in, I made an effort to conserve resources. Everyone insisted on following me, though …”
“It’d be pretty rude of us to not follow,” Amir said, shrugging. “Besides, it’s not much different from camping, right?”
“It is better than dried rations,” Cecile said, smiling slightly. How anyone could stand such foods for long remained a mystery to her. Traveling really was far more demanding than she’d ever imagined in her life. The others said some more things, but she focused on getting her too-small utensils ready. I know I shouldn’t eat with my fingers, but … Ugh, I need my own again.
There might be a woodworker she could ask.
“Say,” Amelia spoke drearily, casting her dark gaze toward Cecile, “why do you have two trays anyway?”
Cecile, one bowl of meat-and-mush mixed together in her hand, paused just as she took a bite. “I am bigger than you?” she remarked.
Amelia blinked long and slow before sheepishly looking down to her own food again. “Right.”
Since nothing more would be said, Cecile went back to eating. While it couldn’t compare to the handcrafted quality that Tsugumi’s four hands could make, everything was still pretty good. Fresh in its own way, a little juicy, and a hint of spices she couldn’t name. It might’ve been something else, but she found it all enjoyable. Traveling rations and Tsugumi’s inn aside, it was still far better than anything she ever made back home.
“—going out again soon, apparently,” Eberhard’s voice caught Cecile’s ear and she looked up from her own trays. “Lady Nuala is doing something else, so Kagura is going to be our escort?”
“Kagura-sama,” Hoshi corrected, perhaps entirely on reflex.
“Right, Kagura-sama,” Eberhard echoed.
“What are we supposed to do out there?” Katsumi asked anxiously. “We were already having trouble finding anyone … you know.”
“We keep looking,” Amelia said flippantly, waggling her two-pronged fork at Katsumi. “Save who we can and kill all those freaky animals we run into. Hell, we’re probably eating them right now.”
Katsumi appeared queasy at the prospect, though the others remained mostly silent.
“Never tell anyone how sausage is made,” Eberhard remarked as if he were a wise man.
Amir said, “This isn’t sausage, though?”
Not that Cecile knew what ‘sausage’ was either. Is it bad to know how it’s made?
“Ah, excuse me, if you would?” a new voice interjected, drawing all their attention toward the end of the table. There stood a newcomer, a man accompanied by a boy. Their brown-and-white clothes had seen better days, more dirty than torn or in disrepair. Survivors from one of the villages they’d visited in Artor, as far as Cecile could remember. The man seemed aged, though not the graying hair sort of ‘old people’. “I’m sorry for not having much to offer, but …”
He bowed forward, and pushed the head of the boy beside him to do the same. “Thank you for everything. For saving us. I’m not sure what we would’ve done without you.”
The airs around the table turned decidedly awkward with sheepish looks shot between all the heroines. Chul-soo, however, straightened his back and, despite sitting down, bowed toward the man. “I am glad we were able to help,” he said in a surprisingly formal voice. “I hope Eden has been able to provide everything you needed.”
“Ah? Yes. Her Majesty, the Queen, has been most generous in her help as well,” the man said before a rueful smile overtook his stern features. “I’m not sure how we’ll rebuild anything, but, one day at a time.”
“One day at a time,” Chul-soo echoed. “Rest easy, this place is most certainly safe.”
“I’ll believe in those words. Sorry, we’re overstaying. Thank you so much again.” The man ushered the silent boy along, and the two headed off into the churning crowds of the courtyard. Cecile could somewhat keep following them, but soon went back to eating her food.
The heroine’s table fell under a somber tone after such a visit.
“At least you know what to do,” Amir remarked with a sigh of frustration. “I freeze up every time someone says something to me.”
“I don’t,” Chul-soo retorted coolly, picking up a food bowl and spoon. “But it’s important to receive their gratitude and show you did so. Sometimes all someone needs is to be seen.”
Amelia said in a dreary drawl, “Wow, look at you. Real white knight, huh?”
“I don’t know what you mean,” Chul-soo returned before starting to eat again.
Cecile kept her peace as the heroines started talking amongst themselves again. She and Hoshi simply ate in silence for the most part, though she noticed some curious glances going toward her from the others. There wasn’t much to say, even if she did want to talk. They brought up things like how they fought, but also things like ‘cell phones’ and ‘idols’ and ‘the internet’. It came off as very strange to her, especially as she understood the words, but not the meaning behind them.
A memory bubbled up the longer she watched them.
“You have two jobs: train yourself, and guard the young heroines,” Avaron told her. “It’ll be the best chance for you to grow enough to handle finding your family. Traveling in this world isn’t as simple as going from one place to another.”
As much as Cecile hated even admitting it, Avaron had been right to some degree. Just going to Artor alone and handling the journey there was astonishingly hard. But, as it turned out, the legendary ‘divine heroines’ had as much trouble as her. Even more surprising, they seemed as estranged from what went on as she did.
Maybe that wasn’t such a bad thing, then?
*~*~*
Her heart ever swung back and forth, joyful to fearful, uncertain to maniacal; all because of one woman. One insanely frustrating woman with such a captivating look to her eyes, a voice that tickled her skin, and a mind that shone like the Sun high above. The more she discovered, the deeper she wanted to go. The harder she pushed against her, the more she wanted to fall onto her knees.
Yet, of it all, Raina wasn’t ever sure how much was her desire.
Was it because Avaron too was a tentradom that the back of her skull quivered so wantonly? That some part of her broken and twisted body had been made a slave to such creatures? There were things she knew weren’t hers, certainly. Her ever flowing milk for one, swelling to feed young she hadn’t borne in years. The insistent, unpredictable cramps in her gut—not of a timely red tide, as she once had, but a festering need to be filled.
A primal compulsion to breed that no amount of reckless sex ever satiated.
She’d certainly never borne any more bastards despite her efforts—something undoubtedly, too, another change left behind.
That eternal, gnawing need that was never fed. A hunger that drove her to a tearful madness more than once, her faithfully unwanted companion that dark pit gave to her. Ah, the only reprieve was to be found in rage, and how joyfully she tore that wretched creature apart. It and that misshapen progeny she helped make.
There wasn’t any justice in the world, just burdens to bear unto one’s death. Such was the fate of a loser; a defeated fool in the Ashmourn way of life. Why did she go on, anyway? Dying would’ve been so much easier in the long run.
Still, she went on, even with the fools she called sisters born from the same rotten fate. They were people she wouldn’t spare a second glance toward, before she ended up just like them.
Raina, scowling, looked up at the twilight-kissed sky and the running away sun. The walk toward Avaron’s Hive wasn’t particularly long, but she wasn’t rushing to go there, either. She went one hoof at a time, dawdling like a drunken who struggled to know left from right. A playful scoff left her at the idea. If only I was drunk.
She was too angry to drink.
Day after day, even if she slammed bottles until her eyes went black, she didn’t drink to escape.
It was just something of convenience.
That anger was always there, burning so much it crept up the back of her throat without nary a reason to.
It didn’t matter where she went or what she did, it was always there.
Raina didn’t know why it haunted her, even if she knew why it came to be.
She knew herself well; enough to know what was her, and what wasn’t her. At least, most of the time. How did one deny their own voice when it spoke with such certainty? Anger, after a fashion, ever provided clarity.
Something Avaron had to understand.
She had that same look that Raina saw in herself, in the mirror or on the reflection of a blade. Eyes filled with a seething, cold rage that wouldn’t stay down. A madness bent to a singular purpose no one would understand, not without they themselves suffering from it.
Survival, at any cost.
The world passed by in a blur, something Raina both saw and didn’t remember very much. One moment she was walking the road toward Tsugumi’s inn, the next she was at the mouth of Avaron’s Hive. A portal into an underground realm that, by any logic, should’ve filled with the screams of women and the howling chirps of their unwanted spawn. Yet, it remained as silent and unmoving as the stone around it.
A temple, almost, with its chitin-grown steps and the surrounding pillars supporting a roof of sorts. The architecture was both grown and simplistic, emphasizing a style of form Raina didn’t readily recognize. Yawning like a great beast, the air within blew out silently. Hot and humid in its own perversely different way, coming in great puffs every once and a while. A distinction she knew well enough; the last tentradom hive did much the same.
Her skin prickled, and the fine hairs on her neck stood on end. Her heart sped with an exhilarating rush that almost brought on a sense of vertigo. Yet, too keenly aware to succumb to such a thing, Raina could only feel every part of her perk awake with alarm. It should’ve been fear, and in many ways perhaps it was.
Her body, however, simply yearned all the more. Her knees wanted to collapse, her loins felt far too constricted, and a need to present herself came in a rolling tide. A submissive compulsion that felt as natural as breathing. Something she had to do.
And still, somehow, she found herself easily not doing it.
Always resisting it in some form or another, at least until it tired her too much to do so.
Raina’s golden eyes and rectangular pupils locked onto a creature emerging from the Hive. A tentacleling drone of some manner; there were many different types, though she struggled to recall them all. This one barely reached up to her knee, though it had quite the plump width about it, which meant it was a worker of some kind.
“Raina,” it spoke with a gutturally nasty sounding voice. “Is there something to report?”
“Ah …” Raina swallowed, trying to remember how her voice worked. “No. I’m here for the dinner.”
The drone’s head tilted/turned in an obvious sign of confusion. “It’s been several weeks, so I thought you turned it down. But, very well, come inside.”
It turned around, and so Raina followed after. The air palpably changed from the freedom of the outside world, to the humid, controlled enclosure within. Familiar, yet different enough. Sometimes going into Avaron’s Hive was no trouble at all. Others, crippling in the memories her body so delightedly recalled. It was, funnily enough, the brightly lit interior that eased her heart.
The other tentradom hated light in any form. Even a simple [Spark] would rouse its vicious ire, and so the gift of sight proved terribly infrequent.
Not so here.
Lamps of some kind lined in even intervals, glowing an intensity easy enough to see with but not something to look at directly. It wasn’t as bright as the afternoon sun, but for some place underground, it left little darkness to worry over. Though Raina had been in parts of the underground Hive before, she’d never been … aware, of it, as she was then. As if she saw something she already knew for the first time with fresher, different eyes.
A surreal sensation in itself.
It didn’t escape her notice once again how very alive the Hive felt, but how very orderly it lived as. Form and purpose in everything, even the simple tunnels they were walking through, with an excessive care given to even mundane concerns. Even as they came across columns of worker drones moving from one tunnel to another, they marched in a methodical rhythm only the most highly trained of warriors might achieve. They spared no interest in anything else except their task, and Raina dared imagine their breathing, too, had that same highly controlled mannerism to it.
Is this what a real tentradom can do? she wondered. Live and work in such an ordered way without needing to …
That had to be the case, obviously, but Raina still found it such a marvel to think about.
They soon happened upon a flesh door as indistinct and identical as any other that the drone guide stopped in front of. In a sickening slurp of juices and muscles audibly cracking, it opened as the drone waved a leg, beckoning Raina to enter. The Ashmourn lady did so, a wave of some sort of scent washing over her. Sticky inside her nostrils, clinging in an enticingly familiar way, yet her next breath buried it under the scent of cooked meat. She huffed and rubbed her nose, the conflicting aromas as delightful as noisy.
“You’re finally here,” a certain tora woman remarked, sounding entirely observant.
“Ah, yes. My thanks for having me, lady Tsugumi,” Raina said, smiling with a modicum of noble pleasantness.
Tsugumi, for her part, sat down at a circular table sized for five or six people. The greater room itself seemed like something akin to a lounge, with the table on the east side, and expansive couches in the ground on the west side. The northern side had a … bar? Raina blinked at the sight. It looked like a bar, and had some sort of wooden kegs fitted into the white chitinous architecture. There were even stools, and some other things like tentacles acting like pipes she didn’t understand clearly.
She wouldn’t call the place an inn per say but it did have that sort of feeling to it. That and the surprisingly tall ceiling made it feel much less closed in than the tunnels did. Raina, her hands folded together, waited somewhat sheepishly.
“Make yourself comfortable,” Tsugumi said, waving a hand welcomingly. “Though you may want to strip naked, it will get hot wearing that clothing.”
Raina wasn’t going to comment on Tsugumi being so beautifully bared in all her glory, but she did wonder. The Hive got hot and humid enough as it was, but she’d never spent enough time for that to be a problem. “I—would not be opposed to it, but I didn’t want to intrude,” she said, trying to be amicable.
Tsugumi simply rolled her six eyes. “You should see Arzha and her knights down here. They’ve never been in a jungle before or they wouldn’t wear plate mail in such high humidity.”
“How did they not faint?”
“Arzha’s ice magic.”
“Oh, that is rather unfair.”
“Isn’t it?”
Through the polite conversation, Raina went through the motions of disrobing. The simpler blouse and pants, along with her coat, weren’t that troublesome to put on or take off, really. Nothing like the elaborate attires of long ago she used to wear, anyway. There she was, getting naked within a tentradom hive. And yet, despite recognizing it as such, Raina found it suspiciously unproblematic.
It felt weird because of the lack of response, which was a weird thing in itself.
Ah, she really hated thinking about it constantly.
“What is it you are wearing?” Raina asked, heading over to the table. Lest she seem too skittish, she sat down on one of the chitinous chairs. Though it had a little bit of squish, the hard, generally flat surface proved quite solid against her plush butt.
“Oh, this?” Tsugumi asked, one of her four hands plucking the gray-white silken strand running over her shoulder and down to her milk-laden breasts. “Avaron calls it a ‘bra’.”
“Is it not the chest guard styled after the heroine Gennal?”
“I don’t know of her?”
“Ah, one of the few heroines we Ashmourn respected. Ours prefer to cross over the chest like this—“ Raina made an X-shape over her rather large boobs, “—which she liked to do.”
“That sounds more familiar,” Tsugumi said, her attention more fixed on fiddling with the threads of silk in her hands. She stretched, smoothed, then folded them together in an endless, monotonous motion Raina wasn’t sure about. “This sort of style is more for Artorian knights and the western queendoms. It’s normally quite firm and fixed, not stretchy and silky.” Tsugumi sighed and shook her head amusedly. “It’s a small change in the material, but it’s much more comfortable once you get used to how … free, hanging it can feel.”
“I’m surprised it can handle everything,” Raina remarked, eying Tsugumi’s comfortably supported bosom. The bra itself, having straps at the sides and over the shoulders, supported a cup that cradled the breasts from underneath. It wasn’t a new idea at all, but she was impressed by how flexible Tsugumi’s chest moved. Almost weightless, after a fashion, despite the impressive size and weight at work.
“It needs a little more work, but I almost have a method for making them regularly.”
“… They’ll be incredibly popular, though I worry how much they can support.”
Two of Tsugumi’s eyes glanced at Raina’s chest and her overly large bosom. “More than you think,” she said simply.
Raina smiled uneasily. Speaking with Tsugumi wasn’t uncomfortable per say, but there was definitely a hierarchy between them that had to be observed. She’d made no friends with the tora, but at least they weren’t enemies, either. She is rather good at hiding her thoughts, and stays out of the light, Raina mused. If she really detested me I’d have more issues, maybe, but …
Tsugumi wasn’t someone to win over easily. No, neither riches nor fame nor much of anything seemed to be of her interest. She had a firmly secure position, and didn’t covet anything beyond that. For such a woman, being as unthreatening as possible was the best course of action. She would make her own moves, and unless she had something strange in her mind, Raina wasn’t too concerned about being targeted.
But, trying to also join the intimate family of the woman that Tsugumi also fancied was rather … well, threatening.
Raina looked down at her reasonably thick hands and their tough, war-trained skin. If becoming Avaron’s is what I want, she thought wearily.
Another problem without a clear answer.
A commotion from the doorway by the bar caught her ear. Raina and Tsugumi looked up as Gwyneth and Avaron, both completely naked themselves, trundled into the lounge. Gwyneth, for her part, handled an iron baking pan while Avaron seemed to have quite literally everything else: plates, chopsticks, bowls of some kind of foods, bread baskets, and a dozen other things. She rather impressively held them all with her arms and tentacles, practically a one woman serving cart.
Very blue, squirmy looking tentacles.
There sure were a lot of them.
Raina’s gold eyes fixated upon them keenly, with an unblinking intensity.
And she herself was rather naked—poignantly so.
The Ashmourn lady’s thighs squeezed together as Avaron approached. In a flourish of arms and tentacles, however, Avaron simply arrayed the food and tableware across the table. Gwyneth hurried in behind her, setting down the iron baking pan with a heavy thud. An obviously cooked whole chicken, stuffed with vegetables or something like them Raina didn’t actually recognize. The assorted plates, too, had meals she recognized as Artorian in nature, but also Kitinchi and Ashmourn.
The scent of it all, more than anything, is what jolted her awake.
“Okay!” Avaron said, setting her hands on her hips with a huff. “We succeeded in bringing the chicken to the table this ti-ME!”
Gwyneth, who stood beside Avaron, wasted no time in putting the tentradom into a headlock. It proved quite the sight to Raina, who watched with wide eyes as such a heavily pregnant woman wasted no time in wrestling Avaron to the ground.
“Thou shall not speaketh it!” the Flame priestess screeched as Avaron gurgled a laugh and squirmed like a caught fish.
Raina slowly glanced over to Tsugumi, who seemed at peace making her own plate. On the other hand, there went Gwyneth and Avaron, with the tentradom trying to escape her wife’s surprisingly deadly grapple. It was, in a sense, rather charming. Endearingly so. Seeing that, her own covetous desires felt so terribly out of place. Like a delicate thing she was privileged to see, but never to touch.
And yet …
There’d be no peace even in that thought either.
At the least, dinner looked quite lovely. An array of plates, wonderfully glistening foods, the aroma of fresh baked bread, the tantalizing taste of meat her tongue could almost feel—it’d been a long time since she’d ever had such a proper mealtime. Though not as grand or stylish as the dinners she had years ago, it had such a surprising familiarity and comfort to it all. Something unimpeded even by the fact all of them were very naked in the nest of a legendary sexual predator.
It’s almost comfortable, if I don’t ponder it too much, Raina thought, bemused by the strange turns her life ever seemingly took.
*~*~*
Codex:
[Spell: Spark
Description: A rudimentary fire-type spell that varies between flickering, hot sparks, or a tiny smoldering flame; both can be used for ignition. The first fire-type spell conceived of, utilized in ancient times to enkindle the Eternal Flame, who in turn gifted people with the boon of change.]
Chapter 57: Inhuman Nature
Chapter Text
There is a part of us we all fear.
*~*
Deep within Avaron’s Hive, the nine Avarons gathered in their ceremonial meeting room. The missing tenth, Medusa, while physically absent, lingered within the [Hive Mind] still. The Alva Mor army marched steadily away from Eden, and so her presence within their shared mind grew dimmer. To them, it was akin to a limb falling asleep; present, at some level, but not fully there anymore.
(What the hell is that?) Prime asked, staring at the seat Medusa would’ve taken. Atop the table sat a small chitin box filled with dirt, upon which two tree branches burned.
(A shrine), Iris answered simply.
(Whatever for?)
(For the absent Medusa who is not with us anymore.)
A distant voice cut in then, bold in tone but so very far and quiet. (Fuck youuu!)
Prime rubbed her temples. (Put it out.)
Iris, who often sat beside Medusa at their round table, simply flipped the branches upside down, snuffing them in the dirt.
(Now, since we don’t have the luxury of fucking around—Cypher, why are we here?) Prime asked in an effort to keep them all on track. She loved fucking around, of course, but being productive meant beating those urges down. Sometimes literally. Sometimes with her fist wrapped around her—
(We’re [level 7] now,) Cypher said simply, making them all surprised. Or, as surprised as they could be. It wasn’t ‘unknown’ so much as something otherwise ignored suddenly snapping into perspective.
(That seems fast?) Weaver mused, doing as they all did: pulling up her system panel, or ‘divine window’ as Nuala apparently named it. (I know our menus got scrambled around but things seem out of place?)
(I have some theories about things. I want to run them by you all just to make sure I’m not insane,) Cypher continued on.
(So aside from the fact we’re just sound boarding off ourself and this may actually be a little insane,) Corena remarked dryly, (What is it?)
(Where do I even fucking start … okay. Let’s start from point zero here: look at our status screen.)
Ten curious minds did so.
[Name: Avaron] [Age: ???] [Species: Tentradom] [Sex: Hermaphrodite]
[Height: 5’05] [Weight: Lithe] [Breast Size: B-Cup] [Hip Ratio: Curvy] [Ass: Cute]
[Job: Divine Heroine] [Level: 7] [EXP to Level: 5,000]
[HP: 1,500] [MP: 10] [SP: 1,500] [STR: 10] [VIT: 15] [RES: 13] [MAG: 2] [REC: 99]
(So the first time around, back when we were a single idiot, most of these numbers were smaller,) Cypher said. (Since we’ve grown to [level 7], there’s something of a curve now. The whole ‘XP to level’ thing is linear, for example, but on a ridiculous scale.)
(But considering how fast we’re apparently [leveling] up by …) Prime mused aloud.
(Right. We also didn’t know some of the things on there, like our [Job] being [Divine Heroine].)
(Wait, that is new. What the fuck?)
(Hold that thought. There’s one other thing I want to touch on first. You see all those [attribute] numbers? Strength, vitality, etcetra?) Cypher asked.
(Yeah.)
(They’re relative, not absolute.)
(Relative to what?)
(Welcome to the secret problem—or one of them, at least—to this ‘system’,) Cypher said with a grumpy tone. (I don’t know what exactly. The whole being relative thing is my big break through right now. Reach into my brain and look at the experiment I did with Amelia.)
(The experiment with … oh, I’m seeing that now. Wait, she got an increase of 50 in [MP] off of one [MAG] attribute?)
(Are we all just going to ignore how the system thinks our ass is cute?) Venus asked bemusedly.
(She did,) Cypher continued on, ignoring Venus utterly. (Our two [MAG] points got us 10 in [MP], so logically 5 per point. She has the same [Job] as us, so that can’t be what makes it different.)
(Is it [species] then?) Prime wondered.
(That’s what I’m suspecting right now, but I don’t think it’s that simple. The fact that this supposedly divine, immutable screen has changed several times now means something is going on with it.) Cypher held up her hand in some annoyed gesture. (This isn’t the goddesses juicing us up like they did before we got to this world. Something else is causing the system to change, or they would’ve sent a message of some kind.)
(And based on what we talked with Nuala about,) Iris interjected, (the ‘divine window’ changing isn’t unheard of. They believe it to be in the context of something ‘improving’, though.)
(Whereas our sudden loss of being able to peer into peoples’ inner most desires, which we barely used at all, has evaporated,) Cypher said with a hint of finality. (We didn’t lose access to our [Breeding Mates] party alternative system. That changed too, mostly by losing said information.)
(I’m getting a headache from this,) Prime groused, leaning to the side and rubbing her forehead.
(I’m trying to invent painkillers so I can slam those back every night, let me tell you,) Cypher groused just as easily.
(… I did have a theory, but I haven’t proofed it out very well,) Iris remarked, drawing everyone’s attention to her. (I think the system is relative to the one using it, because the system itself is like training wheels of a sort.)
(Training wheels?) Weaver asked skeptically.
(Yeah. This world has all kinds of people, magic, and other weird things within it. The system puts a lot of that craziness into a very logical and understandable format, right?)
(Right.)
(We’re looking at it like a video game, but even those are relative to how each game is designed. In this world, [levels] are important but on a granular scale. Someone whose lower [level] can threaten someone who is higher [level] to an extent. At least, according to Arzha, that is possible.)
(Right. I feel like we’re retreading some ground here, but go on.)
(Where I’m going is, let’s look at it from the view of a cheat—something to get everyone a ‘leg up’ in using supernatural power or whatever,) Iris said. (We’re not confined by the system, it responds to what we do to some extent. Remember Gwyneth getting [Cum Slut] after we fucked her a bunch?)
(But that’s a pre-existing [skill], wouldn’t the system just assign it to her?) Weaver argued.
(Maybe. Is [Hive Mind] pre-existing? It says it’s part of the tentradom racial nature, but Nex hadn’t a clue about what we talked about,) Iris retorted, to which they all paused in thoughtful contemplation. (But she understood the idea of many minds working in tandem.)
(I don’t know.) Weaver shrugged. (Considering Nex gave it to us in the first place, does that mean she put into the system, or it was always there? We’d have to ask her.)
(Right. That’s why it’s just a theory at the moment. There’s a lot of sketchy details none of us have any idea about right now. Maybe Nex does know what a [Hive Mind] is, but expresses it through different meaning. Which, if that’s the case, the system is biasing its information toward our perspective.)
(Couldn’t we just ask Nuala?) Abyssa pondered.
(Maybe.) Iris shrugged. (She was born inside this world, inside the system. We’re from the outside. Totally different perspectives. I mean, she didn’t even know what monoxide poisoning is, and yet can somehow fart out the raw elements of the universe with a twirl of her fingers?)
(Ah, that—yeah, it’s kind of lopsided, isn’t it?)
(Yeah.)
(For the sake of my sanity,) Prime asked slowly, (what does this mean for us right now?)
Iris and Cypher looked toward one another, and it would be Cypher who spoke. (The system, how ever it works, is a part of this world. Maybe this entire universe. So, we should keep using it, but understanding what it means isn’t simple. There’s a lot of invisible gears under the hood we can barely scratch at. Studying how the system works, and how to best use it, is going to be critically important to our mission.)
(And for the most part,) Iris added on, (the system being relative means we need to study everything even more. Like, we didn’t know about [Jobs] until Arzha told us, and now we can see our [Job] is [Divine Heroine]. However, when we came to this world, we were ignorant of the [job] function.)
(Meaning that in some capacity, the system is hiding information from us until we discover it?) Prime suggested.
(Yes, I think that’s very likely. It’s also supported by this world’s own history with using it. No one ever knows what’s ‘coming up’, but they have endless ideas about how people gained or acquired certain things.)
(So there’s a certain sense of discovery, and reliance on how other people came across those discoveries.)
(That’s what matches up with my research so far, yeah,) Iris said before deflating back into her uncomfortable chair.
(… Which doesn’t answer if the system responds to what we do, or simply unveils something that is already ‘there’,) Prime mused aloud.
(It’s a real ‘chicken or the egg’ problem to be sure.)
(Except we know the answer to that now.)
(You know what I mean.)
Aphora interjected then, (It’s strange, though.)
(What is?) both Prime and Iris asked at once.
(It sounds to me like there’s two ways this system supposedly works. A reward for following it, but also a reward for innovating on your own. It begs the question why this ‘system’ is built this way in the first place.)
(I have an idea, though it’s not a helpful one,) Cypher said.
(Oh?)
(We’re making the assumption that the system was ‘designed’. Like, from the get go we’ve touched base with actual goddesses who can do things like reincarnate souls and stuff. I mean, we still think of it from a video game sort of logic. My idea is: what if it’s none of those things?)
(Then how would we understand how it works at all?) Prime questioned.
Cypher shrugged. (I don’t have a clue. I’m just saying, being from the outside doesn’t mean we know more or better. The system could be as natural to this universe as physics is to us. That is, it just exists and works because how this universe came to be.)
Prime ran her fingers through her hair, the two antenna out of her head rubbing together. (Alright. At the least we have some idea about it, and even more questions for later.)
(There’s a problem, though,) Aegis said, making six of her other selves look over drearily.
Medusa’s distant (What?) interjected first.
(Remember how the [Breeding Mates] function let us peer into the minds of others? Even if in a really limited way?)
(It’s hard not to, but sure.)
(What’s stopping the system from letting others do the same to us?)
Realization rippled throughout the Hive Mind, such that even drones working elsewhere paused momentarily. A thing that some people of Eden noticed when all of them hitched, if just for a split second. As the other nine fully took in the implications, it was Aegis who sighed knowingly.
(Yeah. That’s the problem I’ve been thinking about recently. We have no way of telling if the system leaks information about us at all. Or, if there are ways for it to do so that someone like Haska and Nyoom, actual goddesses, could exploit.)
A solid thumping bang broke the air, eight pairs of eyes looking over to Corena as she dropped her head into the table. She lifted herself up just to collapse forward again with another bang. Then Aphora joined in, then Venus, and soon all the Avarons save Prime were smacking their heads on the table. A noise that was almost rhythmic in its brutal simplicity.
(It’s not funny,) Prime groused as her other selves continued head desking with gusto. (You can’t abuse [Divine Regeneration] like this.)
Honestly, she wanted to head desk as well the longer things went on.
Glancing through her still-open status window, Prime didn’t see much else of note until she reached her [skills] and [abilities] section. (Hmm? There’s something new?)
The other eight immediately straightened up, looking through their windows just the same.
Skills: [Primal Infusion] [Divine Blessing: Unity] [Divine Regeneration] [Forest God’s Knowledge: Botany (Special)] [Hive Mind] [Hive Mind: Unity]
Abilities: [Hive Queen+] [Genetic Engineering] [Rapacious Breeder+] [Mating Pheromones+] [Divine Nectar]
Unique: [Sovereign Power: Hive Vassalage]
(The fuck is the plus symbol … oh, a [level up], right,) Cypher muttered, rubbing her chin. (Did we just get a bunch of variant unlocks?)
(Maybe?) Aegis remarked. (Let’s try and see?)
Curiosity filled their mind as they looked through the first choice.
[Hive Queen: Tentradoms are gestalt creatures, a union of many different organisms working in harmony. The anchor point of this shared mind is the Queen Tentradom. Through the Queen, the Hive orients itself and spreads. Unlocks the skill [Hive Mind]. This is a tentradom racial ability.
Hive Queen has leveled up!
Lv1➜Lv2
Hive Queen gains the following:
+25% bonus to Queen’s power
+Increased physical cohesion
+New tentacle archetypes: Praetorian, Arachne, Gorgon
+New tentacles of all types can now procreate.
+Tentacle-based fauna and flora will now naturally propagate.]
A palpable silence hung in the meeting room as the many Avarons stared at their new and improved [ability].
(I’m sorry, what?) Weaver asked, holding up a hand incredulously at the status window in front of her. (What does half of this even mean?)
(Well, I found the new ‘archetypes’, which is kind of interesting,) Cypher remarked. (Take a look at my screen over here.)
They all peered through Cypher’s eyes, gazing at her status window currently exploring through the [Hive Management] section. Specifically, she’d gone into the area where all their stored genetic information on tentacle creatures was at. The tentaclelings, warriors, skeyes, and crushers were all there, but also joined by new looking ones. Ones that seemed suspiciously based on her own tentacles, not something exotically new or different.
Cypher noticed something on the ‘Praetorian’ tentacle. (Oh, there’s a description here.)
[Tentacle Type: Praetorian
A powerful guardian-type tentacle meant to protect the [Hive Queen] and her various [Brood Mothers]. While they take more resources and longer to grow, Praetorians have unique [abilities] to fulfill their role. They naturally prefer physically powerful women to mate with in order to produce even stronger generations of Praetorians. As such, they’re aggressive and domineering when enticed into mating.
Their unique abilities are:
[Selfless Sacrifice: The Praetorian absorbs all incoming damage that their chosen ward might otherwise be harmed by. This ability has a short range, but allows for the transmission of damage to the Praetorian directly regardless of their position.]
[Living Fortress: By hardening its defenses, the Praetorian reduces all incoming damage by 50% for 5 minutes. This ability has a 24-hour cooldown and can only be activated when their overall health is above 50%. The damage reduction cannot be affected/stacked by other sources of damage reduction.]
[Guardian Instincts: Praetorian have highly tuned senses dedicated toward detecting potential dangers or threats, especially toward their chosen ward.]
In the olden times, the praetorians were noble warriors of the Hive, and embodied Nex's ferocity against evil. Even as the end of her people approached, Nex refused to wage war as others did, for she could not destroy the homes of others.]
(Why does it look humanoid?) Prime asked curiously. (Didn’t we abandon that design?)
(We did, or I thought we did,) Iris mused. (It looks like a lot of adjustments happened to it as well.)
The Praetorian, apparently, was a walking, two-legged humanoid creature that they’d previously tried to make work. In essence, by making a human-like tentacle that could potentially handle much more complex tasks, or so they’d first thought. The version before their eyes, however, could only be called human-like in that it was an upright walking creature.
Thick, powerful muscles defined its entire body, while smooth, overlapping chitin created natural plate armor. Human-like legs ended in three-toe clawed feet, ones so large Avaron only saw similar on dinosaurs in movies. In fact, its arms ended in four-fingered claws looking much the same, both evidently natural weapons of a kind. Like other tentacles, its head was itself an eyeless tentacle with a sucker mouth, but one that hid within its chitinous armor.
(It kind of looks like a beetle,) Abyssa remarked. (Like that big horn beetle whose name we’re all forgetting right now.)
(Oh yeah, yeah, mhmm) and other sounds of agreement followed.
(But also a little alien-like? That weird sort of natural smoothness and organic-made look?)
(Yeah, yeah, mhm) and so on agreed.
(How fucking big is it?) Medusa asked from her distant position. (Its thigh looks bigger than my torso.)
(If I had to guess, it might be a little taller than a crusher, but not nearly as wide. I mean, for a human-like body this thing is stacked. It looks kind of cute though? Like obviously feminine but still super strong?) Cypher said.
The others were somewhat split on that idea. (So it’s a little slender and smooth, but isn’t that our own bias since women are usually thought to be that?) Aphora supposed.
(Well, it’s not like a harraxin. I mean, big and muscular but not in the same way they’re built, obviously.)
(… What if it’s just based on human or tora DNA, and not harraxin?) Iris pondered. (Would a harraxin-born Praetorian be super different?)
(Uhhh—maybe?)
(Where did we even get this from, though?) Aegis asked, cutting off their curious wonder of their new ‘tentacle’. (Even if it co-opted our design, how did that even happen?)
Prime said, (Either the system made it on its own, or it’s something we somehow inherited from Nex. She gave us these powers, remember? What if it’s something she made in the past?)
Aegis’ face scrunched up. (I mean, that makes sense, but we don’t know for certain. Like, what is up with the Greek and Roman names being used here?)
(We won’t know until we ask her, I guess.)
Cypher moved onto the next of their new tentacles, the [Arachne].
[Tentacle Type: Arachne
An adaptive-type tentacle, specializing for Hive management, utilizing [magic], and creating powerful defensive traps. Arachne possess limited autonomy within the [Hive Mind], being delegated toward important but monotonous tasks the Hive requires. Their complex task solving capabilities often make them the first type to gain sapience in more mature Hives. Their [magic] is specialized toward healing, poison, and web-based attacks or constructions.
Arachne tentacles are voracious breeders, and a single arachne can manage up to a dozen women all day in its nest alone if given the chance. They’re very good caretakers for [Brood Mothers] and [Branch Mothers], as well as all their offspring. In the olden times, spiders were seen as guardians of the home, and wardens against unseen evil. They were Nex's gift to people, though they were scorned and reviled for few understood their noble purpose.]
(Okay, so I’m not surprised it looks like a half spider-half woman creature, but what? Why?) Cypher groused, holding her hands up incredulously at the status window. (Why does it gain sapience? Aren’t we a [Hive Mind]? Will they start talking to us at some point?)
(More importantly, would they try to control us? Undermine how we work? Or … I don’t know,) Aegis said with a dire stress to her words. (The ten of us are the same. Tentacle offspring like that gaining sapience may or may not be ‘us’.)
It was something that Avaron, in her entirety, had no idea how to even predict. It was such uncharted territory that any idea was as good as the last, no matter how ridiculous it sounded. Despite all of them thinking on the matter, not one felt any sense of confidence in how to approach the issue. Medusa’s distant voice cut in, (It sounds like we should ask Nex yet another thing, then.)
(Yeah, it does,) Prime agreed slowly, her gaze lingering on the Arachne itself. The spider-like half of its body borrowed from the actual tentacleling design, but bigger and sleeker. The human-like upper half borrowed from Avaron herself, even possessing a face of a kind. Six eyes, no nose, and lips that seemed equal parts lips-and-teeth melted together formed a curious looking mouth. In fact, perhaps a fusion of Avaron and Tsugumi, to some extent. Much more distinctly monstrous or alien than either of them was, but not so far as to appear like a beast or animal. The chitin on the Arachne was more pronounced, not quite to the degree of heavy armor, but certainly protective.
Not to mention that generous bosom it had.
(What’s a Gorgon then?) Medusa asked. (You know, it being part of my namesake and everything.)
(Probably a snake?) Cypher supposed, moving the status window onto the last of the new tentacle types. (Oh, yeah. Called it.)
[Tentacle Type: Gorgon
A huntress-type tentacle, specialized toward seeking out prey, enemies of the Hive, or especially desirable women. As such, they have a lot of autonomy from the [Hive Mind], and generally are among the first to develop sapience. Their ability to roam far and wide, go unnoticed by potential problems, and report back make them excellent scouts. While they’re capable combatants, they can fall behind dedicated warrior-types in direct or prolonged confrontations.
Gorgons love the thrill of the hunt, especially chasing down or cornering prospective mates. They tend to hyperfixate on women they fancy, bringing them somewhere secluded to mate for hours upon hours on end. They’re also notoriously protective of their favored mates and children in general, even ones they’d otherwise ignore. In the olden times, gorgons were often worshiped as protectors, and seen as Nex’s divine messengers.]
They all stared at that last sentence for a long minute.
(Is anyone else getting conflicting feelings about this one?) Medusa asked in disbelief.
(On one hand it says they hunt down women,) Abyssa said, (on the other, it protects them. So, like, knowing Nex, her idea of ‘hunt’ may be different from ours. But, it does sound a little fucked up, right?)
(Yeah, mhm, sure) and other agreeing sounds followed.
(I feel kind of bad for them,) Venus remarked.
(Why so?) Abyssa asked.
(Well, we already have skeyes for scouting. Our home baked spy drones, you know. So what would this type even do usefully?)
(Be more versatile, most likely), Aegis mused. (The skeyes are great cameras but literally nothing else. We could send these things out to do land surveying or more long-term recon. Our skeyes keep getting eaten by actual predator birds, after all.)
(And you think the ground is any safer? Have you seen what the heroines killed in Artor?) Venus asked incredulously, to which Aegis simply shrugged.
(We’ll have to do some research on these things,) Cypher said, leaning onto the table propping her head up on her hand. The Gorgon-type tentacle itself followed a theme similar to the Arachne: the upper body of a human, the lower body of a snake. But, the Hive had never consumed anything remotely ‘snake-like’, and on closer examination, it wasn’t necessarily a snake. Rather, it seemed to be a long tentacle lower body that’d been purposed toward a snake-like locomotion. While essentially a reinvention of the wheel, the Gorgon seemed to mirror the Arachne with its own upper half.
It had a rounder and smoother look by comparison, a two-eyed face, actual lips and a regular looking mouth, and five-fingered hands. A second pair of arms protruded out from its ‘waist’, where upper and lower halves met. These larger arms ended in natural grown blades and with quite a reach to them. Actually, it wasn’t that different from the front claws of warrior tentaclelings, now that she looked at it more. Like the Arachne, it too had quite a generous bosom, almost suspiciously the same.
(Would their appearance vary more depending on their mothers?) Cypher mused. (No, that must be it. Even the tentaclelings had variance depending on the mother …)
(We should probably look into the other two [level ups] while we’re here,) Iris said and clapped her hands, drawing the others out of their thoughtful intrigue. (If nothing else, I want to look at the DNA of these new tentacles. If they are from Nex or the system, I’m very curious how they actually designed them.)
(I’m worried what these two are going to do to us …) Prime muttered, moving her status window over to [skills] and [abilities] again. Or how far down it we already are.
[Rapacious Breeder: Adaptive sexual prowess, extreme virility, and powerful breeding efficiency to better impregnate any other species with eggs that produce either babies or drones. This is a tentradom racial ability.
Rapacious Breeder has leveled up!
Lv1➜Lv2
Rapacious Breeder gains the following:
+Improved interspecies compatibility
+Improved [Brood Mother] and [Branch Mother] physique
+Improved offspring health]
There was another moment of silence in the meeting hall.
(Well, that doesn’t seem too bad,) Venus offered with an indecisive look to her eyes. (The first and third make enough sense, but the second one does concern me.)
(If I had to guess, it’s to strengthen the mother’s body to bear the burden of birth more regularly,) Prime surmised. (It would match up with what happened to Raina, after all.)
(… It’s strange, though. Well, live birth is pretty traumatic for humans in general, even with modern medicine on Earth. Birthing eggs is much easier on the body, at least from how Gwyneth and Tsugumi go through it,) Corena said. (I’m curious how that might intersect with [attributes] like [resilience] and [strength].)
(Does it qualify as a form of ‘body building’ by the system? Nevermind the inherently extreme physiological changes that pregnancy brings on.) Cypher asked. (Although, I wonder if women in this world can gain [skills] to help with that …)
Prime waved her hand to move things along. (We’ll ask them later to see if they notice anything. Let’s check the last thing here.)
[Mating Pheromones: Communicate sexual intent through pheromones, alluring mates and stimulating desires. More powerful pheromones can induce a lust torpor that is similar to low-level mind control. This is a tentradom racial ability.
Mating Pheromones has leveled up!
Lv1➜Lv2
Mating Pheromones gains the following:
+Improved area saturation
+Increased strength to overcome minor resistances
+Now comes in a variety of attractive aromatic scents]
(… There’s literally nothing remarkable about it,) Prime said with some exasperation. (I don’t like that ‘low-level mind control’ still, but …)
(Well, it says ‘similar to’,) Weaver pointed out. (How different is it from getting someone drunk?)
(You know there’s like a dozen things wrong, minimum, with what you just said, right?)
(Considering Nahtura ripped our self-control away like she did—we’re gonna have to figure out exactly what it does at some point.)
(I know,) Prime said with a sigh and waved her hand, closing the status window. (I think we have enough problems on our hands for now. Unless there’s something really important, let’s split and get to work. I can feel Cypher and Iris crawling out of their skin already.)
A round of grunts, nods, and other motions answered back, showing that no one had anything to bring up. All save for Prime were quick to get up, and even faster to leave the meeting room. A sense of timeliness nipped at their heels, tons of work needing to be done and no real luxury to spare for fucking around. It wasn’t as if their physical distance really mattered, given their shared [Hive Mind]. The meeting room was just a self-indulgent luxury.
One that Prime continued to sit within, staring down at the table in front of her.
(You seem bothered,) Medusa asked, the only other one to really ‘remain’. Her presence simply lingered longer than the others, given her already considerable distance away. (It’s not good to worry about the unknown so much.)
Prime scoffed. (I know. But, there’s just so much to this world we don’t know. We’re changing, little by little, and I don’t know what into. We have such incredible problems to overcome and nothing I thought up was even close to working. It’s just–so much. You know that.)
(Yup. That’s why we do it day by day; brick by brick. Just like back on Earth.)
(I have no idea if that’ll even be remotely enough here.)
(It’s better than nothing.)
(Yeah, that’s what I keep telling myself,) Prime remarked sardonically. With a dreary sigh, she pushed herself up, standing but lacking the will to really walk on out. For everything that lingered on her mind, one particular idea suddenly popped up. (Hold on a second, Medusa.)
(Eh? What?)
(You’re going out for a couple weeks with the elvetahn, right?)
(Yeah. Maybe a few months depending on how things go.)
(By yourself?)
(I mean, with the Hive drones I brought with.)
(No, I mean, you don’t have Tsugumi, Nahtura, or Gwyneth for relief.)
(I dooooonnnn’t …. Oh, goddesses damnit.)
*~*~*
Codex:
Avaron’s abilities have improved!
Hive Queen: Lv1➜Lv2
Rapacious Breeder: Lv1➜Lv2
Mating Pheromones: Lv1➜Lv2
Although she’s overlooked it, the reason why her attributes have a +N value is due to the bonus power from [Hive Queen lv2]. It rounds up where possible.
Avaron’s Stat Sheet:
[Name: Avaron] [Age: ???] [Species: Tentradom] [Sex: Hermaphrodite]
[Height: 5’05] [Weight: Lithe] [Breast Size: B-Cup] [Hip Ratio: Curvy] [Ass: Cute]
[Job: Divine Heroine] [Level: 7] [EXP to Level: 5,000]
[HP: 1,500+375] [MP: 10+3] [SP: 1,500+375] [STR: 10+3] [VIT: 15+4] [RES: 13+4] [MAG: 2+1] [REC: 99+25]
Abilities: [Hive Queen Lv2] [Genetic Engineering] [Rapacious Breeder Lv2] [Mating Pheromones Lv2] [Divine Nectar] [Adaptive Physique]
Unique: [Sovereign Power: Hive Vassalage]
Skills: [Primal Infusion] [Divine Blessing: Unity] [Divine Regeneration] [Forest God’s Knowledge: Botany (Special)] [Hive Mind+Unity]
New Tentacles
[Tentacle Type: Praetorian
A powerful guardian-type tentacle meant to protect the [Hive Queen] and her various [Brood Mothers]. While they take more resources and longer to grow, Praetorians have unique [abilities] to fulfill their role. They naturally prefer physically powerful women to mate with in order to produce even stronger generations of Praetorians. As such, they’re aggressive and domineering when enticed into mating.
Their unique abilities are:
[Selfless Sacrifice: The Praetorian absorbs all incoming damage that their chosen ward might otherwise be harmed by. This ability has a short range, but allows for the transmission of damage to the Praetorian directly regardless of their position.]
[Living Fortress: By hardening its defenses, the Praetorian reduces all incoming damage by 50% for 5 minutes. This ability has a 24-hour cooldown and can only be activated when their overall health is above 50%. The damage reduction cannot be affected/stacked by other sources of damage reduction.]
[Guardian Instincts: Praetorian have highly tuned senses dedicated toward detecting potential dangers or threats, especially toward their chosen ward.]
In the olden times, the praetorians were noble warriors of the Hive, and embodied Nex's ferocity against evil. Even as the end of her people approached, Nex refused to wage war as others did, for she could not destroy the homes of others.]
[Tentacle Type: Arachne
An adaptive-type tentacle, specializing for Hive management, utilizing [magic], and creating powerful defensive traps. Arachne possess limited autonomy within the [Hive Mind], being delegated toward important but monotonous tasks the Hive requires. Their complex task solving capabilities often make them the first type to gain sapience in more mature Hives. Their [magic] is specialized toward healing, poison, and web-based attacks or constructions.
Arachne tentacles are voracious breeders, and a single arachne can manage up to a dozen women all day in its nest alone if given the chance. They’re very good caretakers for [Brood Mothers] and [Branch Mothers], as well as all their offspring. In the olden times, spiders were seen as guardians of the home, and wardens against unseen evil. They were Nex's gift to people, though they were scorned and reviled for few understood their noble purpose.]
[Tentacle Type: Gorgon
A huntress-type tentacle, specialized toward seeking out prey, enemies of the Hive, or especially desirable women. As such, they have a lot of autonomy from the [Hive Mind], and generally are among the first to develop sapience. Their ability to roam far and wide, go unnoticed by potential problems, and report back make them excellent scouts. While they’re capable combatants, they can fall behind dedicated warrior-types in direct or prolonged confrontations.
Gorgons love the thrill of the hunt, especially chasing down or cornering prospective mates. They tend to hyperfixate on women they fancy, bringing them somewhere secluded to mate for hours upon hours on end. They’re also notoriously protective of their favored mates and children in general, even ones they’d otherwise ignore. In the olden times, gorgons were often worshiped as protectors, and seen as Nex’s divine messengers.]
Chapter 58: Ecosystems
Chapter Text
Systems of increasing complexity interact in increasingly complex ways.
*~*
Sat within her office at City Hall, Avaron found a measure of comfortable familiarity in her work. While she technically had the memory to remember all sorts of details, the more the [Hive Mind] expanded, the more challenging that came to be. Plus, the recurrent need to explain to other people her own information was an interesting problem in itself. In essence, if she retained all her memories and kept them to herself, people would have to ask her constantly for inquiries. That meant a constant, ever present strain on interacting with how ever many people needed her.
But, if she copied critical information to hard medium like paper, they could reference that instead. The strain of interaction went down massively, replaced by the monotony of recording. If she figured out how to automate that process, then it would minimize to the smallest degree the stress of inter-body operations. The maintenance of the hard medium archives would provide regular people with jobs, and further off-shift administrative-related strain.
The theory seemed good, but working it out had been one of the bigger complications. She always had to build things by hand first, then figure out how to copy them in an efficient manner. With Medusa having taken a lot of Hive workers, warriors, and crushers off to join the elvetahn, it’d been a surprising boon. I never thought I’d be eager to help in a war like this, Avaron mused, but less mouths to feed here has helped a lot.
Off shifting a small army’s worth of Hive population to the wildernesses further away meant they could subsist on wild game and foraging. It left the environment around Eden time to recover, as well as spare its resources for the people. It wasn’t a sustainable model, but she wasn’t one foot over the cliffside of starvation anymore for the time being. I suppose I could send even more Hive further abroad, especially if one of me is with them to extend the [Hive Mind] area of influence …
That remained another ‘interesting’ problem to work through. Avaron sighed and set her chitinous pen down, then rubbed her eyes.
Each of ‘me’ is like a cell tower, transmitting and receiving signals. Go too far and the towers become ‘out of range’, but still ‘connected’. The signals just cannot reach each other. If I boosted the signals would that extend the effective coverage of the [Hive Mind]? I mean it should, but where do I even do that?
If it existed somewhere in DNA, she hadn’t a clue. Sometimes she found something that correlated to a [skill] or [ability], and sometimes there wasn’t anything at all. Plants like the Caged Sun were an example of an [ability] she easily found and exported to other Hive flora. But, something like her own [Hive Mind], or [Divine Regeneration], had no direct DNA correlation. Or, if they did exist, they were far beyond her ability to find.
She couldn’t very well make more of herself, unless [leveling up] the [Hive Mind] [skill] allowed her to do so.
The scalability of such a power would be insane, if it did work that way, Avaron thought, staring up at the ceiling. If I can’t boost the signals but instead make more towers, there’d be hundreds to millions of ‘me’ eventually.
A sudden thought came to mind, one so strong it jerked her forward and she braced against her desk. No, wait a second. Cypher and Iris’ experiments with the human brains. Their voices were deafening because their signals were stronger. They wouldn’t just boost my mental strength, it’d boost the [Hive Mind] network coverage too? It seemed plausible enough to be worth testing; it meant the growth of the [Hive Mind] wasn’t solely limited by its [level], either.
Hmm? What’s this?
Her attention drifted to one of the drones standing by at City Hall’s entrance. A group of high profiled individuals were walking toward the doors: Princess Arzha and Lord Sternbuck led a group of six, which included Dorin and Jaera. She didn’t recognize the four new women, but their attires were that of refugees. Or, at least two looked obviously scuffled, with the other two wore clothing of a fine, elaborate make. Peasants and nobles, at least as far as her contemporary understanding told her. Either way, Avaron wouldn’t have minded if it wasn’t for Arzha’s visibly annoyed look.
Listening in through her nearby drones, Avaron soon understood why.
“The only thing you need mind is the fields and the food! A Queen meeting folk such as you is an insult to her honor.”
“We’re not solely here on just our behalf.”
“And you think that matters? Go wait until you are summoned at the least. Barging into this place is unspeakable!”
“What about you then?”
The peasants and nobles were bickering back and forth, one side clearly disinterested in the other. Avaron couldn’t make out anything meaningful except that both wanted to meet with her, and insisted on the other not bother. Oh, what is it now? she wondered grumpily, cleaning up her desk while she waited. By the time Arzha arrived and the drones opened the doors, it looked as if Avaron had waited entirely just for her. She and the group behind her entered almost all at once, but the four new comers looked taken aback when they saw Avaron proper.
“My Queen,” Arzha said, giving a proper bow of her head. “These four have urgent business concerning Eden with you.”
“Enough to stampede into my office, apparently,” Avaron remarked with a firm, scathing coolness to her voice. The newcomers had the decency to wilt beneath her unwavering stare. “Take them to the meeting room, I will be there shortly.”
“As you say.”
Arzha then ushered the group out and into the room across the hallway. Technically it had been intended as a waiting room, but Avaron decided holding meetings there was a lot more useful. The less people coming and going into her office, the better. It was something Arzha herself had also setup back in Artor’s palace, once upon a time.
Why are they here? Avaron asked herself, but found no real answer. Dorin and Jaera made sense in that most things related to craftsmen went through those two. The other four were undoubtedly recent additions to Eden, so it seemed strange they’d come to her for something. Not unless it was relevant to the refugees around them, somehow.
Nothing really untoward happened among the refugee population, though. Arzha’s knights handled most of the law and order, while the drones were an intimidating presence few wanted to stand against. There was the occasional braggart or belligerent heckling around, but many kept to themselves well enough. At least, as far as she could tell, peering through all her drones and some of their recent memories.
Unless she did a day-by-day analysis, nothing stood out to her immediately despite thinking for a few minutes. Not like a riot was going on or anything.
Avaron couldn’t deny feeling a little curious what sort of problem it may have been as she stood up. Heading over to the meeting room proper, her drones pushed opened the doors. Her six visitors stood up from their seats almost immediately, giving a silent look of acknowledgement toward her. On the left side were Dorin and Jaera, with the two strangers further down the table. The right side mirrored them with Arzha and Sternbuck followed by their two ‘noble’ strangers. A distinct tension sat in the air, with the four strangers evidently uncomfortable in different ways.
Taking her seat at the head of the table, Avaron sat down, waving her hand for the rest to do the same. A scuffle of chairs scooting filled the room as everyone got into position. “I’m being told this is an important matter concerning Eden, so let us act like it. Princess Arzha, if you would enlighten me?”
“Of course. There’s been growing discontent in Eden these last few weeks. The people are concerned about their fate and future, if I was to summarize it. Some wish to return to their homes, ruined or not. Others aren’t certain if they’re safe here. Besides me here is Lady Myalla Whiterock, and Lady Durelia Gloomwood.” Arzha gestured from her side of the table to the other one. “Across from me is Bernna, and Talyn Stonefist, huntress and mason, respectively.”
Avaron’s eyebrows popped up as she got a good look from her own point of view. Both Bernna and Talyn were obviously sun-tanned, Bernna the most by far, and they wore thick but sturdy clothing overlaid with leather. Bernna’s suited for hunting, having both protection and equipment mounting spots, while Talyn’s seemed more to support her huge frame. The two side-by-side were a bit comical, with the tiny and waif-like Bernna to Talyn’s maybe-literal strongwoman, stone-breaking fists physique.
Across from them, the noblewomen were no less strange. The black-skinned Myalla Whiterock wore a stylish vest beneath her white and gold jacket, her billowing sleeves and comfortable underclothes enviously soft seeming. Beside her, the surprisingly pale looking Durelia sat, resolute as a statue in her imposing height. Whereas Talyn had bulk like a castle, Durelia was akin to a tower, perhaps even encroaching on 7-feet high. Her black-and-gold robe covered her neck-to-toes, bound by leather straps and other securing implements that made her generous figure evident.
Of the four, only Durelia met Avaron’s eyes straight on—sharp, crystalline crimson to her own fiery blues.
Something about her unsettled Avaron. Some part of her instincts spoke up; not the horny, ever-lustful ones, either.
Something very animalistic in its agitation with how her gut literally churned.
“So I see,” Avaron remarked coolly. “Let us go around the table, my left to my right—“ she made a circular motion with her hand, “—and everyone can say their piece about their problem. Give me a brief summary, then I’ll decide on who to start with.”
Handling meetings was an important skill Avaron honed with malicious precision in her old life. The surface of it was trying to make sure everyone had their piece, and that clear communication happened. The real tricks happened with things like who was told to speak and how, but also the order in which they happened. Important topics had to be at the front of the meeting, because everyone had the most energy and attention there.
By shifting less desirable topics, or trying to stifle someone, and putting them toward the end of the meeting diminished that energy. People got worn down, antsy, or eager to push things off. With appropriate handle and care, someone could have a seat at the table and be side lined constantly to the point of irrelevance. Of course, kicking the can down the road would demand a price of its own, but that was another skill to manage.
She loved being the shot caller in meetings.
Various heads nodded in agreement, and so Avaron gazed upon Dorin and Jaera. The two men smiled sheepishly, but it was Dorin who spoke up first.
“Compared to the madams here, our issues are perhaps not as pressing. The men folk are wanting to expand Eden more, and build up their businesses. The miners and masons, in particular, want to setup something more serious in the Silvervein Mountains.”
Jaera, however, said, “Well, there is that. A lot of men folk are becoming concerned about the, uh, arrangements, with the women folk.”
Avaron frowned and tilted her head. “What do you mean?”
“The whole milk ranch business, I’m afraid. Um, Bernna and Talyn here wanted to talk about it, so I’ll leave it to them.”
There were questions left to ask him, but Avaron gestured on for the next two to speak. Bernna about fired off the moment the indication came.
“If I might speak somewhat freely, Your Majesty? Forgive me for not knowing what exact etiquette you would expect.”
“Mm. Let’s start from a place of decency and go from there. I will make it clear if there is something uncouth said.”
Bernna nodded. “My thanks. If I might be so bold as to say, on behalf of all the women of Eden, we’re deeply afraid of our livelihoods here. As grateful as we are to be saved, many do not know what will become of us beneath the rule of a tentradom.”
Avaron’s eyebrows popped up even as the rest of her face remained neutral. “You certainly do not want for subtlety.”
“It is such a matter as to need utmost clarity.” Bernna gave a smile, one her steely eyes made certainly standoffish.
“It is as you say.” Avaron glanced to the side. “Jaera, I’m fairly certain I’ve made it clear how the women of Eden would be treated?”
“With so many people coming in suddenly, even with us who know saying otherwise, it’s been hard to get a word in. Fear is an insidious thing, my Queen,” Jaera said.
“We’ll circle back around to that in a moment, then. Talyn?” Avaron asked, looking at the formidable looking mason.
“… Bernna’s better with words, my issues are much the same.” Talyn shrugged. “The only thing in mind is how women and men will be paid.”
“… Equally? Or is there some other reason?”
“No, in coin or bread.”
Avaron blinked and rubbed her brows for a moment. “Right, that. We’ll get back to that. Lady Gloomwood?”
Durelia bowed forward slightly with her whole frame. “I understand Your Majesty to be most busy with many affairs, but we among the nobility are in need of new residences. Ones both large enough to hold our belongings, but also kept appropriately far from the common folk.”
Avaron stared for a moment, trying to believe her ears actually heard those words. I read this in history books but it’s really something else having it said to my face, she thought, utterly bemused. “Considering the state of everyone we’ve rescued—no, a better question would be where you and Lady Whiterock came from, exactly. I don’t recall any noblewomen being found when the heroines went out?” She looked over at the conspicuous princess off to her side.
But, it would be Sternbuck that held up a hand. “That would be my doing, Your Majesty. The Gloomwoods and Whiterocks were neighbors of the Sternbucks. When we fled from our lands, I sent word to our destination in the Free Hardain State. Considering what happened when we found Eden, I invited them to join us here.”
“… Oh, I’m remembering now. The large convoy from a week ago, yes?”
“That one, yes.”
Avaron vaguely recalled doing her regular routine security check, and the convoy was particularly wealthy, but she hadn’t thought more on it. The vast majority of the people were in about as troubled state as any other. Though, oddly, she couldn’t remember seeing either Durelia or Myalla in the convoy. Did I forget? No, I’m thorough about this. I know I haven’t forgotten anything else, have I?
(Medusa’s not in range), Aegis said suddenly, making Aphora jump in her skin.
(Wait, then that means the memory of checking that convoy is gone as well?)
(Medusa did the checking, and she’s not in range. It seems sensible enough—the memories of what ‘she’ did aren’t accessible right now. The drones she used also went with her, I think.)
Staring without seeing anything, a skin-tingling anxiety crept through Avaron. How memory ‘worked’ in the [Hive Mind] wasn’t exactly clear, but evidently they’d just stumbled onto something. If one of her selves went out of range, anything that self knew would be ‘inaccessible’ to the others. There wasn’t a hint of a disconnection or anything untoward, just a perfectly seamless evaporation of memory.
“Is there something wrong, Your Majesty?” Lord Sternbuck asked, seeming rather uneasy himself.
“No. No, it’s—fine. I’m not used to things slipping my mind like that,” Avaron said, waving her hand dismissively. “I’ve been working too hard recently, I suppose. I’ve an idea what Lady Gloomwood means, then. Lady Whiterock?”
The aforementioned lady straightened up—not quite preening, but certainly projecting an air. If Durelia Gloomwood was somber and towering, Myalla Whiterock radiated her presence with stern expectation. “We Whiterocks have yet to decide if we might remain within Eden,” she said, equally cool and punctually clear. “But, given the downfall of Artor, and the upset of the surrounding lands, it may not be a bad decision. We must ascertain the true goals of Eden and its queen, however. We’ve no time to spare for anything that might be unseemly.”
Avaron rubbed her chin, nodding along as Myalla spoke. When she finished, Avaron glanced at Arzha. “Should I talk about the Nagraki? I mean, I know I want to make them public and everything, but …”
Arzha’s face tightened up—not a full scrunch, but as politely as one could do in a meeting. “It is difficult to take such an idea on words alone, I admit. But, until there is any unfortunate evidence, that is what must be asked.”
Although she listened carefully to Arzha’s advice, it didn’t skip Avaron’s notice how Durelia jumped at the word ‘Nagraki’. A very slight jump with a quickened glance of her eyes, surprise of a kind surely enough. Myalla, however, dragged everyone’s attention back to her.
“Nagraki? Those evil creatures the elvetahn slew centuries ago?”
Avaron’s chin rubbing turned into her suspiciously narrowing her eyes. “I’m surprised you know of them at all.”
“History is a rich thing to study that often proves cheap to buy,” Myalla shot back with expert gracefulness. “Though not oft spoken of in recent times, the Nagraki are continually mentioned in much older texts. Elvetahn ones, in particular. From how you speak, I gather they are not all dead as I’d believed.”
“Just so. We’ll get around to that in a moment. Princess Arzha, Lord Sternbuck, I’m not sure if you have anything for the meeting?”
Sternbuck and Arzha each shook their heads.
“Very well then. There’s a few major things we need to touch on first,” Avaron said, clapping her hands together then spreading them open as if in offering. “Some of which may need more than one meeting, depending. Firstly, as brought up by Jaera and Bernna, there is the matter of women in Eden—a place ruled over by me, a tentradom queen. Although I made a proclamation supporting the sanctity and safety of everyone in Eden, it evidently hasn’t reached very far.”
Bernna said, “We—or, at least, I’ve—heard of it from Princess Arzha directly. It sounded quite admirable.”
“But, there is always that fear in the back of the mind—there’s a tentradom around and in power, yes?”
“… I cannot say I am taken with fear, but I understand others to be, yes.”
“Well, I can already tell where the problem is. Then, let’s start with that. As I’m sure you all know, the reputation of my kind is most vile and perhaps well-deserved. I scant hear of anything more hated than a tentradom, really.”
“It is as you say, Your Majesty,” Bernna said easily, but it was something that made the others shoot glances at her.
“Then it’s important to know that it is mostly accurate.” Avaron damn near smirked at the palpable wave of reactions that followed—even Arzha and Sternbuck looked shocked. “But, and this is the important part, the tentradoms who do such things are very much insane.”
“… Insane?” Bernna echoed, evidently not expecting such a word.
“We tentradoms are creatures of emotion before anything else,” Avaron said, echoing the self-same words Goddess Nex once told her months ago. “What we feel, we become. If humans and other people think with their minds, we think with our hearts. That is why if we succumb to great pain, anguish, fear, rage, or otherwise, it very much transforms us. If we go too far, we lose our very minds. Insanity is the only end that awaits us then.”
Bernna’s round, and almost cute but obviously mature face, contorted with some thoughtful regard. It would be Talyn who spoke next. “Then why have we never heard of a ‘normal’ tentradom?” she asked with dubiousness. “If you are one, then there must be more.”
“There very well might not be any more,” Avaron said, giving a light shrug. Talyn’s strong, blocky features contorted into a look of surprise that Bernna mirrored.
Arzha said with a tone of the slightest concern, “What do you mean?”
“Just that, really. Tentradoms are a dying species on this world. Most that can be found have long gone insane. The remainder, if they’re still around, are hiding in seclusion. Also, I might add, slowly going insane in the process. At the least, I am the last tentradom that is properly growing her Hive.”
The air in the room grew heavy—heavier than it’d been, at least. She wasn’t sure why all the people in front of her wore such expressions, even the ones that once looked ready to fight her when they walked in. Lest things get even stuffier, Avaron chuckled and held her hands open incredulously. “What? My kind are hated everywhere despite our good nature, something you all are familiar with. Why care about our fate now?”
Incredibly awkward looks were exchanged, none of them evidently comfortable in speaking. Her gaze lingered, and they all squirmed beneath it until Bernna spoke up.
“It isn’t right of us to rejoice in an earnest people’s death, Your Majesty,” Bernna said, her choice of words audibly particular and enunciated. “Forgive us for giving such an impression, we didn’t know otherwise.”
“It is what it is.” Avaron waved a hand dismissively. “It isn’t much history, but now you know we tentradoms are very much people like you or any other. Our way of doing things is, of course, different, but not abominably evil. We don’t go around wantonly raping or imprisoning women at will, for one. In fact, sexual assault of any kind is almost poisonous to us in doing so.”
“… Is it?” Talyn asked, frowning.
“It is. Remember, we are creatures of emotion. Everything around us affects that. Something as powerful and intimate as sex being perverted through rape is unimaginably vile to us. A tentradom would quite literally have to be insane to follow through at all.”
At the least, her spruced-up narrative was helping sell the point to everyone. Nex had told her a lot about tentradoms, but not all of it was exactly understandable. She was a particularly eccentric goddess out of all the ones Avaron met before the summoning finished.
“Then,” Bernna said slowly, visibly piecing together some sort of thought, “where does that leave us all, Your Majesty? How do we live beneath your rule?”
Isn’t that a million dollar question? Avaron thought dryly to her selves. “Well, the first step is ‘as free people’. No slaves, serfs, or anything of that nature.”
She wasn’t expecting her words to jolt literally everyone in the room, all of their eyes widening.
“What do you mean?”
“Your Majesty, you simply cannot!”
“The whole of that would be—“
Nearly everyone tried speaking at once in a clamorous fervor. The supposed ‘commoners’ Bernna and Talyn seemed the most supportive of such an idea, while the rest were quite mixed. After a moment of letting nonsense fly out of their mouths, she held up a hand, and they all quieted damn near instantly. “Princess Arzha, explain to me simply how Artor operated? Please don’t tell me it ran on serfs.”
“… Serfs were frequently employed as the norm,” Arzha said, professional yet painfully self-aware.
Avaron rubbed her eyes and muttered under her breath, “And Artor was the greatest human queendom in these lands?” Suddenly righting upward, she smacked her hand on the table. “No, wait, that doesn’t make a lick of sense. People gain [levels], [skills], or have [abilities] that let them do all kinds of crazy things. Why in the world would you use serfdom?”
“Not everyone has the potential, or would ever realize, something uniquely useful or powerful,” Arzha explained. “For many, being a serf provided both services to the local lady and gave reason for them to be protected. Nobles, in turn, could spend time refining their talents to great heights without being burdened by menial labor.”
“How in the world did anyone find or cultivate talents, then?”
“Competitions and exhibitions were held regularly, and those seeking apprentices would frequently tour the lands. It is not as if there were no opportunities, but it ultimately fell to whoever came seeking to determine if there was anything worthwhile.”
Does the fact it’s another world with a completely different rules set to its foundational existence justify serfdom? Avaron gave the thought two hot seconds of contemplation before scoffing out a disgusting laugh. Everyone else in the room glanced at one another, not one certain as to what was going on. I hadn’t even thought about that. Sure, queens, kings, lords, ladies, whatever; it’s all medieval or some stupid shit like that. But, not only would people be stepped on for being a ‘commoner’, lacking in [levels] or anything unique means their value is even more worthless by comparison.
The net result would ultimately be civilizations so judgmental and regimented, even Earth’s caste systems would seem quaint by comparison. Scowling, Avaron leaned forward onto the table, and folded together her hands in the utmost display of professional disregard. “Then, Princess Arzha, the reason the Hardain are called the ‘Free Hardain State’ is because there is no slavery or serfdom?”
“The Hardain ascribe to a belief of freedom for all persons, if that someone was measured as a person by their definition. That mostly means an exclusion of certain monja from their lands.”
“… Again and again I find this world challenges my sensibilities with ferocious anger. Nevermind that for now.” Avaron waved her hand stiffly, dismissing Arzha as her attention settled upon the others firmly. The weight of her gaze, and the threatening air exuding off of her made them all stiffen in their chairs. “To answer your question properly, Bernna, I stand by my position. All who dwell in Eden shall live as free persons. More so, any form of slavery, serfdom, indentured or indebted servitude, or similar, are expressly forbidden. Those who violate our laws will be punished, of course, but in ways befitting of their crime. To defile the sanctity of a person through slavery in any of its permutations is unforgivable.”
Her words hung in the air, though she felt no concern if any of them agreed or not. Their acceptance and help would smooth things along, but Avaron would govern Eden according to her standards.
Not some world that hadn’t a moment to consider what a basic ‘human’ right was.
Bernna bowed her head slowly. “Truthfully, I’m uncertain how free people live exactly. It’s not something me or my family has ever known. It was never really affordable to us. If you would give us freedom to live in your lands of Eden, Queen Avaron, it is a gift I do not know how to repay.”
Talyn quickly added in afterward, “Then that means no forced milking? Going to some ranch like a cow?”
Avaron shook her head. “No. I admit that how we tentradoms live is very different from anything you may know. There’s no doubt not only will much of what we do seem strange, it may even be ‘unholy’ or ‘vile’ to most people. That is not our way. I can only simply prove it by doing so.”
“Mm. Talk is cheap, that is true.”
That was probably the closest thing to a positive agreement she’d heard from Talyn yet. “I agree. Then, let us hold a more in depth meeting later, where we may write down these ideas into proper laws. A contract of agreement for all the people of Eden, so that no one is confused as to their rights.”
Bernna said, “If you are willing to do so, Queen Avaron, then it would alleviate many fears.”
Talyn, Jaera, and Dorin alike all nodded along with her words.
“Very good. It is a matter of the utmost importance, so I would like to give it the serious attention it needs. If there is no one else to speak on this side—no? I believe Lady Gloomwood is next, then.” Avaron made a sweeping gesture, going from one side to the other. “You were concerned with proper residency for a noblewoman such as yourself, yes?”
“… That is correct,” Durelia affirmed. “While I would not wish to infringe on Your Majesty for the housing, it is a matter more of land ownership and where it might be. My workers can do the rest for building.”
On its surface it appears quite benign, but land ownership is the root of all evil. Or a lot of problems, at least, Avaron mused. Particularly for rich or powerful people and their insane sensibilities.
Of all the resources in existence, land was both the utmost finite, and conditionally, the most important resource. Livable or working land, as well, further complicated the value proposition. A nation of any kind only had so much to go around, and eventually its borders could not expand any more. Even vast plains filled with nothing but nature held great value, if not at the immediate moment, then in the imminent future as well.
Hence, to own land was to create a foundation of wealth and power. Whether or not one could defend their claim to said land was another problem entirely—but that fundamental truth remained unopposed in either world. I’m not sure how much people of this world would understand that, but it’s a timeless thing, Avaron considered. Even a simplified understanding would be enough, really.
“At the moment,” Avaron spoke up, “the core problem is land allocation. Eden’s position is rather strange, given we’re in a ‘corner’. We cannot touch the Alva Forest to the east, and the Silvervein Mountains to the north are rough terrain. But, expanding west and south pushes us into fertile farm plains and smaller forests we could potentially lumber from. I’ve already laid some plans down for our expansion, but the details aren’t solid yet.”
Durelia ever-so-slightly tilted her head from one side to the other, her crimson eyes thoughtful. “There’s plentiful land to divide up from what I’ve seen so far. If mining is available in the north, and lumbering in the south, then would we not live in the center?”
“Then it becomes a competition between farming and living spaces,” Avaron said. “It’s easy to expand our living space onto farmland, but we end up pushing the farms further out. Given everything I could sacrifice, farm space is the easiest to do, but we all need to eat. I’m not too sure about the hydroponic towers yet, either.”
“Hy-dro … pon-ic?” Durelia tried the word slowly. “I’ve not seen anything resembling a tower. What might that be, Your Majesty?”
“Oh. Uh, think of it like a ‘vertical farm’. The different floors of the tower each act like a slice of farmland.”
Visible confusion flickered around the table, and Talyn spoke up first. “Is such a thing even possible?”
“It’s extremely tricky, but yes,” Avaron said, lightly shrugging. “Leafy greens and other fast growing plants work the best for it. You may have noticed our regular supply of fresh lettuce, despite all the farmland not growing any.”
“… I did wonder about it.”
“They’re coming from the hydroponic towers—which are partially built underground, hence why not one really sees a ‘tower’.”
“Do the farmers know of this?” Talyn asked.
“No, I’ve had them work in the fields.”
“Then who is working in these ‘towers’?”
“My Hive drones, primarily. They’re learning ‘how to farm’, but it isn’t going very well.”
Bernna interjected, “Might I recommend having the farmers help as well, then? They have the most experience doing so.”
Avaron squinted for a moment. “It’s worth trying, I suppose. Anyway, circling back to Lady Gloomwood’s question: at the moment, my hands are tied on land ownership and residence. But, if you have, or know anyone with, city planning experience, I do need to sit down and plot it out more. We could tackle that problem more comprehensively then. I don’t think anyone would like having their house’s land taken away so something like a warehouse is built on it a year later.”
“No, they would not,” Durelia agreed. “But, given the land you do have, I cannot imagine it being terribly difficult to plot out.”
Avaron smiled lightly, her lips thinly closed together still. “Despite appearances, I am envisioning an Eden that grows for decades into the future. A quick and easy solution today may give endless problems tomorrow.”
“It would be dangerous to lay plans on something so ephemeral,” Durelia said coolly. “Especially in these troubled times of ours.”
“True, but I have the means to see it through. It is how I have earned the cooperation of Princess Arzha of Artor, and Queen Efval of the Elvetahn.” It would be the last name that drew looks of surprise from nearly everyone. Bernne and Talyn seemed dubious the most, either not recognizing Efval’s name or something else. Durelia and Myalla wore suspicion, cloaking their racing thoughts at such new information. Avaron paid no mind either way; the appearance of utmost confidence was critical, even when reality might not necessarily agree. “That said, arrogance befits one’s downfall. Despite my far reaching vision, getting there will always be the biggest hurdle. The cooperation and help of all of Eden’s people is of the utmost importance to that.”
Durelia’s whole face transformed into a shy, almost sultry smile that just barely covered her teeth. Something that easily lit up her softly sculpted, pointed features that oozed mature regard. It made Avaron’s anxious nerves stand on end. “An attitude befitting of a Queen, Your Majesty. Very well, as troublesome as it is now, we Gloomwoods will make do. I should be glad to help you in the land plotting when you have need of me.”
“It would certainly help alleviate some burdens of mine. Finally, Lady Whiterock—while I think answering the other questions might’ve answered yours, there is the matter of the Nagraki I mentioned.”
“That among others, yes,” Myalla said. “What of the Nagraki?”
“They have returned.”
“And that is a problem of ours? Do the elvetahn not handle them?”
It wasn’t malicious by default, but ignorance was something that ever grated on Avaron to hear. Something she very much had to find patience to deal with, time and again. “The elvetahn do fight them. The problem is the Nagraki are not just ‘their’ enemy, they are the enemy of all people in this world. Artor was destroyed because of them, and the Arden Empire is currently ripping itself apart. A few days ago I received word that they’re even in the Free Hardain State doing mass sacrifices of its people.”
The mood in the room dropped as she spoke, a solemn seriousness setting in that only tense anxiety could make. Myalla, for her part, remained unmoved even as her own featured hardened. “True, that is a problem. But, the Nagraki have been beaten back again and again. Would this time be any different?”
“Yes, quite frankly. It is worrisome enough that Queen Efval immediately declared Alva Mor, and the elvetahn are mobilizing enmasse. I trust you read enough history to understand the significance of that?”
“… I do.”
“There are other problems afoot I cannot even begin to speak of. Suffice to say, the Nagraki have returned again and again—never once have they been completely defeated. That means they possess not only the will and strength to do so, but the means to keep growing more powerful,” Avaron explained, moving her hands in light gestures. “Eden is my home, but it will also be a bastion for all the peoples of the world threatened by the Nagraki. It is something I fear will only grow more dire as the Nagraki march to full war strength once again.”
After a moment’s pointed silence, Avaron finished by saying, “That sums in total the purpose of Eden. Whether or not you wish to join us in that is your decision. It would be hypocritical of me to espouse freedoms but use the threat of annihilation as a reason for you to stay, after all.”
“Even if that threat of annihilation is a compelling enough reason to force us to stay?” Myalla asked, a dubious tone to her voice. “Provided it is as serious as you say it is.”
Avaron chuckled, holding her hands up in a helpless ‘so what?’ gesture. “Some people do not believe fire is hot until they burn themselves upon it. I do the best I can, but I’ve neither the time nor luxury to save those who do not want to be saved. Eden will continue according to those plans, I may only hope that you find good reason to stay with us of your own choice.”
“Hm. The Whiterocks will, of course, be staying for respite if nothing else. It would be useful to me if we may have more time to ‘sit down’ together in the future. I understand Your Majesty to be most busy managing all the affairs of these lands.”
“Of course. As much as I love sitting around in meetings, we have been here for a while. Shall we all take a break? There’s a lounge down the hall for refreshments and the like.”
Murmurs of agreements followed, and so Avaron stood up, swiftly followed by everyone else. “Ah, that does remind me. You all go on ahead, but Princess Arzha, if I could have a moment?”
No one sought to intrude, and they all gradually filtered out of the room. A drone outside waved for their attention, and so led them onto the lounge. The door was shut by another drone, leaving just Avaron and Arzha alone. The icy princess gave Avaron a curious look.
“That woman—Durelia Gloomwood, is she really from the Gloomwoods?” Avaron asked suspiciously.
“I believe so? The lady of the Gloomwoods was renowned for her prodigious height and, as others would say, ‘mature beauty’. Why do you ask?”
“Because she isn’t a human.”
Arzha’s eyes popped open. “What? How?”
Avaron tapped her nose. “I can smell a blood drop ten miles away. People can change their looks but the scents they exude is almost impossible to alter. She has a scent I’ve never smelled before, and it has absolutely nothing human in it. Something that makes even me feel endangered.”
Arzha frowned. “If she’s a monja of some kind, there are very few who look as plainly human as that, and none of them good.”
“What’s the most likely one that comes to mind?”
“If I was to be crass, I would say a vampire.”
“Vampire. Vampires, are you serious?” Avaron repeated in disbelief. “This world has vampires? The blood drinking, undead making creatures that burn to death in sunlight?”
“I—have never heard of them burning in sunlight or making undead,” Arzha said with a hint of amusement. “But they do drink blood, and possess incredible magical power. They’re formidable fighters and even I would take care when fighting against a proper Lady.”
“And she just walked in here with no one the wiser she wasn’t human except me?”
“It appears so. Although, unlike Artor, Eden is most accepting of all monja, at least as you have demanded. No one may wish to raise a complaint about her being one,” Arzha said, though she too eventually frowned. “What concerns me is her ladyship, as she was responsible for the Gloomwoods lands for decades now. I have not seen her in a while, so I believed her getting on in age. As a vampire, that wouldn’t be a problem, though.”
“Right, it would be suspicious. Well, things as they are now, the open door policies do remain. Are there any problems with vampires? Hypnotic charm? Seducing people into enthrallment?”
“Were all the vampires of your world like this?” Arzha asked dubiously. “No, nothing so strange. Their strength is in their power to take from others; to drain essence and grow even more powerful from it. Even a young vampire could threaten knights if it’d fed well enough over its life.”
“Okay, a little different than what I was expecting, but fair enough. I’ll keep an eye on her for the time being, but let me know if you notice anything suspicious,” Avaron asked.
Arzha bowed her head in acknowledgement.
“Well, let’s get going to the lobby then. I suspect this long day is just starting.”
They too left the meeting room, and so headed to the lobby for refreshments and relaxation. Though she tried to wear an easy going face, Avaron’s mind crunched and churned with thoughtful seriousness.
Now there’s ‘vampires’, another name from Earth. I know their origins are somewhere in Eastern Europe, but I don’t remember much past that. So, we have vampires, oni, and kitsune that know about Yamato. Why is that? Why are things from Earth that aren’t divine heroines showing up? Or, did those things come from this world to Earth somehow and die off?
Or, the possibility they too existed on Earth, but just in secret.
She had endless speculation, and still no more evidence to figure out an answer. It drove her mad.
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Chapter 59: Wants and Needs
Chapter Text
Relationships are more than the sum of their parts.
*~*
“Sooo, I’m glad you invited us all out,” Avaron said in her ‘friendly’ voice.
“Good,” Nahtura returned simply.
“Buu-uut, you don’t need to be carrying me on your shou-lder.”
“The sun would fall before you even reached halfway there.”
“No, it wouldn’t.”
“Somehow, it would.”
Gwyneth giggled as Tsugumi rolled her eyes at the scene.
The four of them trekked into the Alva Forest, led by Nahtura at her insistence. For all of when the walking had started, Avaron’s notoriously terrible stamina kicked in not long after. Despite her insanely fast recovery time, Nahtura elected to simply carry the tentradom on her shoulder like a sack of potatoes. A fact Avaron had protested again and again to no avail.
“Wasn’t it you that said you are working too hard?” Tsugumi asked, somehow in a way that made Avaron shut up instead.
“Verily,” Gwyneth agreed. “Tis most benevolent of—ehm, lady Nahtura—“
“No ‘lady’,” the dryad said curtly. “Just ‘Nahtura’.”
“Oh! Mine mistake. Tis most benevolent of Nahtura to take us all to her refuge. Something thou needeth most, I think.”
Avaron scrunched her face with indignant silence. She couldn’t refute them, but it was impossible to escape the feeling of her being bullied by all three of her wives. But, she didn’t have nothing to do. It’d be a little awkward to do, but her tentacle-like knee joint shifted, letting one thick tentacle emerge out. It slithered down Nahtura’s front side, dipping into her cleavage before—
“AH!” Avaron’s screech accompanied the firm slap of Nahtura’s hand smacking her butt. The sneaky knee tentacle hurriedly retracted and shut the door behind itself. “Fu-fuck, really?”
“Not until we get there.”
“Really?” Avaron echoed incredulously. “You telling me to keep it in my pants?”
“You’ll keep it where I want it,” Nahtura shot back coolly.
Avaron crumpled under that tone, shrinking as much as one could in her position. It rather wasn’t fair how Nahtura could wield such a decidedly firm, lusciously warm voice that way. Endless amounts of experience, confidence, and utmost conveyance—not quite a perfect dominant voice but it sure tickled Avaron’s nerves funnily.
So, all she did was pout, which made Tsugumi laugh.
“Dear customer of mine, shopping for another woman in front of me like that,” she said, just enough edge to her voice to make Avaron squirm. That the fluffy hair emerging out of her suddenly shrank down, and her antenna curled ever so slightly, certainly betrayed her more. Avaron wasn’t an impenetrable fortress prior, but she was someone who had been good at hiding herself. Not so much anymore, it seemed.
“You know I’m still figuring that stuff out,” Avaron grumbled, folding her arms together. “If it bothers you, just say so.”
“Knowing you are out there devouring some helpless maiden is one idea. Seeing it in front of my eyes is another.” Tsugumi smirked all the same. “Although, it does sound fun to watch happen. Isn’t that right, Gwyneth?”
“M-m-mayhaps?” Gwyneth affirmed, squeezing her arms together and trying to shrink at the same time. “But, mine taste is far more … free, than thine own.”
Of the four, Nahtura’s sudden laughing caught them by surprise. Mirthful, yet rich in its fullness, and something that made all the wayward flowers nearby pivot toward her. Watching, perhaps, as if shocked themselves at the sight. “Not even I can remember anyone calling me ‘helpless’,” she remarked, that one word oozing with honey-thick sarcasm.
“Fierceness in combat and bed are two different matters,” Tsugumi said in an off-handed fashion.
“And you think me lacking in one, or both?”
“Why say and spoil the surprise?”
“Hm!” Nahtura flicked her hair with a hand, sounding pleased. That her hair also smacked Avaron in the face and made her sputter was another matter. “A good cook and a sharp tongue. How terrible it is that I slept through that sickly beast you slew.”
“That was that, and this is now. But, at least you appreciate my cooking so well.”
Avaron sputtered indignantly. “I love your cooking! Why are you looking at me like that?!”
“You seem more interested in what kind of butter or cheese my milk will make,” Tsugumi deadpanned.
“That—well, technically that’s a form of cooking …” Avaron poked her fingers together bashfully.
Tsugumi leered with all six eyes, but Avaron had the indecency to look a little firm about her outrageous words. “If that is cooking, then I will show you a chef’s technique on your little helpers.”
“W-wait a second, that—“
To say Avaron would get bullied the rest of the way would be an understatement.
The place they would eventually happen upon was one that had a large, seemingly tree-like house grown over a small stream. Roots the size of people wove through the gravel bedding of the river, supporting a trunk that strangely kept itself off of the ground. Perhaps rather than one single enormous tree, many different trees had grown together, or so it seemed to Tsugumi. For what could be called a ‘house’, she recognized an elevated deck surrounding house-like walls, and possibly round window frames, but …
It was the sort of thing someone must’ve used magic to create for themselves. It simply seemed too odd otherwise. That and the trunk itself was stunted for how wide it was. How did a tree become so fat but barely reached three floors high?
“Oh, this place grew even more,” Avaron remarked. “Why are you making it so fancy?”
“I do nothing so frivolous,” Nahtura shot back with an airy disregard. “The wilds ever grow, and keep growing. More, with your little help in it.”
Well, it wasn’t hard to imagine what the mysterious place was anymore. I doubt she will simply lounge here as she pleases, but, it’s worth remembering, Tsugumi thought. If it was a place Nahtura favored, then some due diligence wouldn’t be remiss. The dryad spared no effort introducing the locale or anything as she led the way to the front steps of the ‘house’. Shifting her weight, Nahtura rolled Avaron off her shoulder. A hearty ‘blergh!’ sounded when Avaron fell right onto Nahtura’s forearm, only to then be pushed up into a stand.
“The Heartwood is more to my liking,” Nahtura remarked, ascending the stairs to open the front door. “But, it would be winter before any of us walked there in time.”
“Exercise is always rewarding work,” Gwyneth said.
“Mm, yes, exercise …”
What a delightfully evil purr, Tsugumi thought, as much impressed as concerned by it. She knew Nahtura more by reputation, something that was ever at odds with the woman in front of her. The so-called mother goddess of the Elvetahn, the progenitor of all woods and forests, and the always-hungering-owl, as her enemies somewhat called her. To say the legends surrounding her were both vast and terrifying would be an understatement.
And somehow, Avaron bedded her.
Tsugumi wasn’t at all sure what how much was tall tale or nonsense anymore, really.
At least the house’s interior seemed nice. More of a natural grown cave than something made by carpenters, the rooms were divided by curved walls and rounded doorways. The leftward room seemed to be a lounge, with literally grown flowerbeds in the shape of floor couches. The rightward room was some kind of … closet? Storage? It had racks and shelves but nothing filled it at all except sunshine and moss.
Is that Sundrinker Moss?
It very well might have been, it had the yellow-tinged edges that shimmered like gold in the sun. And it was just there, growing rampantly in a closet. Tsugumi had to avert her eyes lest she suffer vertigo from such an overwhelming sight.
Yes, the room with the flower bed couches was much more normal by comparison.
Nahtura made ‘shooing’ gestures for them all to enter the lounge. Avaron, followed by Gwyneth and Tsugumi, gently sat upon a lowly couch with some trepidation.
“Should we be wrecking these flowers?” Avaron asked wearily, trying to push some of the bigger, bulbous ones away from her butt.
“Rip them out if they’re a bother. I didn’t tell them to take up my sitting spot like that.”
Tsugumi rather suspected something was up with these particular flowers. They swayed on their own, trying to save their colorful bulbs as she sat down. Yet the moment she was in place, then craned back in, practically hugging her butt. She stared at them and squinted. A few closed up slowly—or perhaps quickly, in a flower’s case.
Very suspicious.
“I suppose I should get the tea going,” Nahtura said, sounding … not quite put off, but perhaps more remembering she had something to do. “It will be the cold kind, however.”
“That’s fine, I like iced tea,” Avaron said with a shrug. Three people, however, looked at her in puzzlement.
“Ice in thine tea?” Gwyneth asked confusedly.
“Yeah. You don’t?”
“No,” three of them said at once, making Avaron giggle.
“It’s really good, especially with sugar. But you need the right kind of tea or it tastes like shit.”
“Iced tea …?” Nahtura muttered, more to herself than them. The tall dryad stalked out of the lounge, heading into a side area that was something akin to a kitchen. Or at least, one with a lot of cabinets. Tsugumi wasn’t too sure what to make of it, but for once she wasn’t the one having to serve the refreshments. Her attention soon went to Avaron, whom laid back on the couch, smothering even more of the ‘groping’ flowers.
“Ahh—well,” her sigh of relaxation sharply turned into a prominent, clear tone. Avaron’s face hardened just as much. “This feels weird. Like I’m surrounded by a bunch of tentacles I don’t control, for once.”
“You noticed it as well?” Tsugumi asked airily.
Gwyneth, however, tilted her head. Of the three, the flowers seemed rather … indifferent, to her presence. “Notice what?”
“Like I’m being groped by plants,” Avaron said, every word tense and laced with incredulity. She then called out, “Nahtura? What is with these flowers?”
“They’re flowers in spring, what more did you think of them?” came her half-meaningful answer.
“Oh, so they’re horny little bastards.” Avaron’s dry tone certainly reached Nahtura’s ears, given the dryad laughed most heartily. The three women, however, had conflicted looks to their faces in varying degrees. “My dear wives, are all flowers like this?” Avaron asked wearily.
“No?”
“Not that I know of.”
So Gwyneth and Tsugumi said.
Avaron blew a raspberry, staring up at the ceiling as if she had no idea what to do. “Well, I guess I shouldn’t mind?”
“They seem picky,” Gwyneth remarked sourly, plucking at the flowers nearest her. The more she tried to encourage them to hug her, the more they leaned away. She eventually let out a stuffy huff and crossed her arms. For all of ten seconds until Avaron’s sneaky hand groped along her side, making her giggle.
“It’s their loss,” Avaron purred with a devious smoothness, tugging Gwyneth toward her. The fire priestess fell into her embrace, letting out a surprised ‘ehh?’ sound. She rather quickly melted into a little puddle that loved to cuddle into the tentradom’s side, though.
Tsugumi couldn’t stop from smirking when she felt those familiar fingers creep along her backside. Nonetheless, she swiftly smacked them away, making Avaron hiss like an upset snake. “Not now,” she chided gently.
“I’ll get you next time,” Avaron promised in a terribly villainous voice that belonged in theatre.
More than anything else, Tsugumi simply wasn’t too comfortable doing such a thing around Nahtura. Not until she knew where that woman stood better. Or, if she’d ever been comfortable with it at all. The subject as a whole had always been ‘sometime in the future’, but now that time had arrived.
She still wasn’t sure what to think of it.
Nahtura soon emerged from the kitchen, a wood-grown tray and equally probably grown, round cups on board it. “I cannot remember the last time I gave tea to anyone,” she remarked, just as much to herself as them, apparently. The first cup went to Tsugumi, then Avaron, then finally Gwyneth; the latter two having to sit up properly. “Certainly perhaps never the Chosen Sacrifice of the Flame, either. Life is rather funny sometimes.”
The moment those words reached her ears, Tsugumi felt the very air in the room tighten to a standstill. Two of her eyes on the side of her head glanced toward Avaron, whose face had all but frozen in time as she was about to take a sip of tea.
“I’m sorry,” Avaron said as she lowered the cup, her voice unyieldingly firm in its powerfully tense tone. “I must be stupid. Nahtura, could you explain what you mean by that?”
Even the dryad seemed put off by Avaron’s tone, her face contorted into some concerned and wary regard. “That is what she is,” Nahtura remarked, waving her hand flippantly toward Gwyneth. “The Chosen Sacrifice of the Flame. The one who will usher in the next Age of Fire. Did you … not, know this?”
“No, apparently not,” Avaron affirmed with a merchant’s fake smile. Her head rotated almost entirely on its own to look beside her. “Gwyneth, sweetie, what the hell is this?”
“Uh …” Poor Gwyneth was obviously lost and cowed beneath Avaron’s intense gaze. “I knoweth of the Age of Fire, any priestess should. I do not remember being a ‘chosen’? Queen Efval mentioned something similar.”
“Oh really?” Every word Avaron said had a certain punctuation to it that felt far too disturbing to hear. She then took a breath in, seemingly to calm herself, before regarding Nahtura once again. The fluffy poof of the ‘tentacle fur’ that came out of her had all but retracted inside her body, an expression Tsugumi knew to very much be of stress or a feeling of endangerment. “So before I completely lose my shit, if it’s not any trouble Nahtura, can you explain this whole business to me?”
Nahtura, for her part, went from wary to some kind of amusement, smiling with a teeth-showing glee. A very odd reaction that made Tsugumi squint upon seeing. “It is simply that. When the next Age of Fire is to come, the Flame choses a sacrifice. The kindling soul to its descent upon the world again, to ignite the new age. It cares not of what happens, only that the new age is born.”
Avaron’s whole face slowly contorted into the ugliest of scowls, and her jaw set so tight it might’ve cracked a tooth. Tsugumi winced ever so slightly at the deep, subdermal muscle crunching she heard. “Avaron,” she said hurriedly, covering the tentradom’s balling fists. “Just breathe and—“
“Thy words ever paint scorn and ire upon us, in this age or others, oh Great Owl. Must thou do so?”
Four heads all craned toward the tiny flame atop Gwyneth’s bosom as a rumbling voice shook through the room. Neither a woman nor a man’s, something in between, or a mixture of both, and of such great presence Tsugumi found herself feeling small. Strangely so, given how it wasn’t even a loud sound in the first place. Nahtura’s sudden, sharp giggling and clapping her hand against her serving tray, by contrast, felt completely bizarre.
“And yet I speak no lies enough for you to dare to descend before me!” the dryad said merrily, then craned forward, her naked breasts hanging and swaying with freedom. Her face, however, stretched unnaturally wide, emphasizing all the more her knife-like teeth in a smile that could kill someone. “Might I snuff this little ember of yours?”
“Prithee mercy upon the lack of decorum on this morrow. Thy sharp tongue ever cut and sunder us, we shan’t be idle when undue harm cometh.”
“Gwyneth, sweetie,” Avaron remarked, her eyes crawling up to gaze into the mask of the priestess. “Can I borrow this flame of yours for a moment?”
“Eh? Uh …” Gwyneth jumped in her own skin, holding her hands to her chest. “T-tis not to be meddled with! For what did thee needeth of it?”
“I’d rather not have to yell at my wife’s direction when I give this thing a piece of my mind.”
“For one who hath not undertaken the rites, thy daring to call this Chosen of ours thine ‘wife’ truly galls,” the Flame said, the cordial displeasure of its words scornfully heavy on the ears. “No respect nor honor given is most unbecoming.”
“You are one hot second away from being at the top of my shit list,” Avaron shot back, pointing very specifically at the Flame atop Gwyneth’s chest. The priestess, though, recoiled as if the words slapped her instead. For all the fierceness Avaron brought to bear, her whole demeanor fell apart into something most regret-stricken. “Not you, Gwyneth. The parasite that dares call itself a goddess.”
Nahtura barked a laugh and tried hiding her face behind the serving tray.
The Flame, however, moved. It slithered through the air, falling like a trail of water that left a burning wake behind. Coiling down across Gwyneth’s chest, the air simmered with rising heat. Indeed, the flowers underneath them shrank and huddled, only to begin drying and crumbling. The fires grew more as they became something akin to a headless serpent, sidewinding its way down from the couch they sat on.
Yet it never touched the ground, instead gliding through the air to about the room’s center. Nahtura moved quickly out of the way, her mirth gone in a flash as she eyed the thing like an unwanted pest in her presence. The serpent coiled in the air, seemingly devouring its own tail, and spiraling down, down, down … into nothingness? The trail it left behind burned like a furnace draining into an empty, black void, but it was then that Tsugumi felt an overbearing pressure.
Her six eyes stared into nothing, but something stared back.
A divine presence so enormous it froze her in place.
Yet, mercifully, that gazing emptiness wasn’t set upon her. If it had been, her lungs might’ve stopped working. It’s angry, Tsugumi tried to think, her own thoughts sounding quiet in her mind. So very angry.
Woe be to those who earn the ire of a goddess; for they are most unrelenting. Something Tsugumi very much believed to be a truth, and one that uncomfortably had Avaron in its sights.
“Neither grace nor elegance upon thy tongue, for surely all that cometh be raging fire,” the Flame spoke, droning in a monotonous tone. Yet, for every word spoken, a little bit more ember spat out from the burning ‘eye’ in the room. A little more heat that dried the moss, and the grass, and the flowers. “Tis most absurd to make an enemy of that which is not one.”
Avaron, somehow, seemed entirely unaffected by the overwhelming pressure in the room. “It sure sounds to me like you’re already one. You think I’m just going to sit around while you, what, burn Gwyneth alive? Take over her body? What fucked up nonsense are you really planning on doing?”
“Avaron …” Gwyneth tried speaking, but the Flame interjected next.
“In ages of yore, and ages to be, there is our Eternal Flame, and our Chosen who will inherit it. For the Flame is ever beside all, giveth and taketh. Tis not a great evil nor suffering, nor villainy of a kind thou must believe, to do so. It hath ever been so, true and unbroken since the first kindling by the first ones who struck stone against rock.”
“So tradition is your answer? Just because you gobbled up a bunch of people in the past, that justifies doing it again?”
“Avaron?” Gwyneth tried speaking again, but lo and behold, the Flame interjected once more with a poignant swelling of heat and fire.
“We become them, they become us; Flame ever changing, throughout the ages. Tis not so different from thine own nature, were thee to give face to its truths.”
“Don’t even think about saying we’re remotely similar,” Avaron spat back. “You—“
“—Avaron!” Gwyneth all but shouted, shoving the tentradom in the shoulder. “I would speak mine words!”
“I … Go on?” Avaron offered meekly, the surging tide of her anger evaporating in an instant.
If anything, the oppressive air in the room became somewhat awkward while Gwyneth coughed into her hand, straightened up, and took on an appearance of propriety. She then bowed toward the smoldering image of the Eternal Flame, at least as much as her pregnancy would allow for. “Prithee a measure of mercy upon her, oh reverent Flame, and her ignorance of what is proper and not.”
I’m not sure that … yeah, Tsugumi thought, eying Avaron’s face contorting into several conflicting emotions. Hurt, namely, present among them all.
“She spoke much the same in her first words amongst us all,” the Flame rumbled, some touch of amusement to its oppressive voice. “Those of her world art not most familiar with decorum, this we know. Still, a pox spilled out is one that spreads filth all the same.”
Gwyneth rung her hands together, her growing confidence rather shaken. “Verily. Mayhaps a lick of truth might burn away the ill so slovenly made? Tis most mysterious, even unto mine self.”
“Truth known is that of the Sun, ever burning to the eyes. Our words are utmost truth, burning as the Sun, and she dared to call upon us a liar and pest?”
“That …”
“Because I’ve heard words just as much like yours before,” Avaron shot out sourly. “I’ve seen what happens to everyone because of it. If you think you’re beyond my questions, then you’re just as much vermin as those ones were.”
The free-floating embers in the air sucked toward the image of the Flame, then blew out, the fires brightening and growing hotter. Whether as a sigh or some expression of displeasure, Tsugumi wasn’t sure.
“Tis clear enough upon thy godless world, thou hath not partaken of truth nor blessing to understand. Nay, what of thine goddesses, and their business thus? Whence did they partake of their duties, or simple pleasure as fire consumed aught in their wake?”
Avaron’s face scrunched up. “What does being a goddess have anything to do with it? Some magical excuse that lets you murder people for free?”
“Perhaps,” Nahtura said from behind Tsugumi, making the tora jump in her skin. How the dryad got there, or was suddenly laying down sideways like a rich spectator, had completely skipped her notice. “As much as I detest the Flame, there is some truth to its words. It does not lie, nor play pretend with coyness. Among anything I would curse upon it, that is not one of them.”
The image of the Flame flickered, though its gaze did not change direction. “Truly the end must cometh, if thy tongue would spit such boons upon us, of all who yet dwell.”
“It’s no fun if it’s not truthful.”
“Mayhaps,” Gwyneth said, holding up her hand as if she had an idea. “Pray begin at the start, a renewing spark to fresh kindling? At least, to spin a tale we might understand. I am, ehm, most curious of what ‘Chosen’ is …”
The question hung in the air as every pair of eyes settled upon the image of the Flame. Slowly, the radiant heat it exuded drew inward, and so too did the embers follow after. Adrift on an invisible breeze, they flitted across the dried, desiccated grass and flowers underneath. They swirled and tumbled in a circle beneath the image, as if spilling into an ever-churning cauldron.
“Nay, perhaps a fault of our own making, once more. How vexing to work in spite of such, only to fall to it again anyway.” The Flame made another heaving sigh/exhalation, but the ambient embers remained content to roil beneath it. “We art not thy enemy, despite all thine words that spit curse upon us. Whether thou might accept our truth tis thy own fault to bear.”
“Just make your point,” Avaron bit out, waving her had curtly.
“Since the First Spark, we, the Eternal Flame, have ever churned beside all. From mother to daughter, father to son, from Heaven to World. So it is, as fire changes and feeds, it grows mightily, spurring all on. This is our Age of Fire. In times of famine and strain, whence few might offer succor, and the Forever Dark creeps upon us all, this is an Age of Ash. Both are needed, but one is inevitable, the other a struggle.”
Tsugumi wasn’t that familiar with Eternal Flame scriptures, but she did recognize the ideas of Ages of Fire or Ash. The end of the Ash War, in particular, was often attributed as the start of the ‘next age of Ash’. Though, until she heard those words, she thought them entirely symbolic meanings more than anything else.
“In times of Ash, a Chosen is selected, one who will inherit upon the altar of the Eternal Flame. We become them; they become us. So a new Age of Fire is born, and we walk upon the world once more to kindle embers into flames. In times of yore, such was our way. But, now … there is fear.”
Nahtura interjected then, her voice disturbingly serious. “What have you, of all, to fear about what is coming?”
“The Forever Dark, our companion, is no more.”
“… What? That’s impossible.”
“Tis so.”
“In what underworld are they possibly hiding in?”
“None. They are no more.”
Tsugumi understood those words well, but it was only when she looked over her shoulder and saw Nahtura’s dumbstruck face that their weight gained meaning. Something even the feared mother of the Elvetahn could be rendered speechless by was by no means simple.
“Now cometh the last Age of Fire, one of destruction and anarchy. Without the Forever Dark to tender the ashes of the world, our Flame will grow endlessly. Change without order, to become chaos. Thus, in the wake of the last Age of Ash, we gazed upon our Chosen, the one whomst precedes Gwyneth, most seriously.”
Avaron said, “I get there’s many Chosen over time, but something happened with the previous one?” She glanced at Gwyneth, who shrugged lightly.
“I hath not heard of Chosen, despite mine study of the scriptures.”
“Verily,” the Flame rumbled. “The Chosen are hidden, secret from the covetous eyes of mortals, lest they become corrupted. To kindle our Flames and tend to the Age of Fire demands a purer heart than most. One that understands meaning in purpose. So all Chosen have been selected thusly, so all Chosen have been. But, the prior Chosen …”
A tentative pause filled the air, the Flame’s very thoughts weighing on them as much as its words.
“… We cannot scorn her for her choice, nor find fault with her apostasy. Still, upon the eve of our rebirth, her flight from purpose brought about chaos. The Age of Ash did not end as it should have, and so the world has suffered. Try as we might to find our next Chosen, none sufficed until Gwyneth, whom embraced our Flames as a babe.”
“Wait, you’re the reason she got burned as a child?” Avaron inquired with plain accusation.
“Nay. Many who cometh to embrace Flame too become as Ash, so it has been. Young Gwyneth then, and now still, embraces Flame without Ash. Such is the first mark of a Chosen, and hence forth, our gaze upon her.”
“That … Then how did it happen?”
“Tis not thine place to ask.”
Avaron blinked and recoiled slightly, but for once, actually seemed to agree with the Flame. “Uh, right. Fine, if I trust Nahtura who says you’re not a liar.”
Gwyneth then asked, “Then, of the Order and its scriptures, oh Eternal Flame, did thou scour the words of the Chosen?”
“Tis so. In every domain hence under our eye did we burn away the words of the Chosen. To cease those who would covet them, and so impede the order of things. A choice, mayhaps, ill-conceived of in doing so. Just as knowledge can corrupt, a lack thereof leaveth barren fields which no fruit may grow.”
Avaron said, “Which is why you had such trouble finding future Chosen.”
“Mm.”
The tentradom squinted. “Apostasy is not a light word for a goddess to throw around. What possibly made the last Chosen renounce you?”
“Those words are not ones to be spoken of again.”
“And yet in my ‘godless world’ we learned to question things like that. To take out all our dirty laundry and see what it really is,” Avaron said with an icy edge. “So ‘why did she resort to apostasy’ is the question I ask. Perhaps because being the ‘kindling’ isn’t as good as you think it is?”
“Why, of all things, doth thou fixate upon that the most?”
“Because I’m not going to let you gobble Gwyneth’s soul up!” Avaron threw her hands into the air. “Why are you so damn fixated on thinking your way of doing things is perfect? The literal embodiment of change is unwilling to change something when it’s a problem?”
“Is it? Thou speak with iron-clad certainty, yet hath no eyes farther than a worm upon the ground. Fear drenches thy words like honey, and so thou cling to a misbegotten belief of evil or wrong. Our words are truth, and thou hath acknowledge that. Tis thy own fault then, surely?”
Never in her life had Tsugumi ever seen someone so brazenly argue with a goddess straight to her own face. Well, she hadn’t had many ‘direct’ dealings with goddesses in the first place, either. Still, the spectacle was so utterly bizarre and insane, she watched, utterly dumbstruck as much as Nahtura.
“You—“
“Nay, tis not here nor now,” the Flame spoke, stomping over Avaron’s words. “Thou must learn the ways thine words so harshly dismiss. In this world of ours, tis unlike yours in any measure. The knowledge thou brought forth may indeed change much, for we hath seen the children of Nahtura and Tahn kill all the more with it. Thine ‘Eden’ is built in ways unknown, yet nonetheless true. Thy success emboldens thine beliefs, but thou hath yet to understand all.”
The image of the Flame swelled, burning with a brightness even Tsugumi found hard to stare at anymore. Out of everyone there, she alone had to avert her eyes from the searing light.
“Gwyneth, temper her arrogance, ruthlessly beneath a hammer if thou must. We, the Eternal Flame, ever seek to change the world, but there is change to be kindled, and change not to be. Heed our words, lest chaos take hold of thee.”
In a mighty, inward suck, all the heat and embers condensed once more into the bubbly little bulb of fire. It wafted through the air, taking its place once more atop Gwyneth’s bosom, and so the overbearing presence of the Eternal Flame receded.
Silence followed after, almost painfully prickly in how empty the room suddenly felt.
Avaron stared at the place the image of the Flame had been, her face contorted into a menacing look of its own. Something even Tsugumi rarely saw herself.
“Why would thou speaketh so?” Gwyneth demanded, a shocking amount of firmness to her voice for once. Avaron looked over in alarm. “To besmirch the great Eternal Flame like that—I, nngh! How could thou?!”
Rare were the times Gwyneth ever showed anger, and her face glowed red like a furnace.
“I did it for you!” Avaron protested with a shrill crack in her voice, pointing back and forth between them. “That thing wants to eat your soul and you want it to happen?”
“Tis not how it would work!”
“You didn’t even know until it just said so, right now!”
“And those words were spoken true. Twas not my place to know until then!”
“I …” Avaron, utterly gobsmacked, deflated as if all her energy was sucked out. “I need to go. For a walk. Or something.”
“Ava-ron!”
With rather swift grace, Avaron stood up and headed out of the lounge. Gwyneth just barely missed grabbing onto her, impeded as she was from her position. Still, the Flame priestess hurried to her feet and followed after, determination oozing off of her. Tsugumi, for her part, remained sitting with Nahtura behind her still.
A particularly loud, crunchy sound followed after, and Tsugumi looked over her shoulder once more. Nahtura contented herself with biting into an apple she’d acquired, somehow. Not that she did so in any clean way; why was that apple so juicy in the first place?
“I worried tea and talk would be the only thing happening,” Nahtura remarked, surprisingly capable for someone with their mouth full. “But this is far better. A ‘parasite pretending to be a goddess’, heh heh.”
If you start choking on that apple, don’t look at me for help, Tsugumi thought dryly, but instead said, “Why is there such … animosity, between you two anyway? If I might be entertained with that truth, at least.”
“Mmm.” Nahtura chewed and took another bite, her gaze growing indifferent. Perhaps a matter she wouldn’t deign to answer upon; it wasn’t as if Tsugumi expected anything more. But, she then said, “Call it a difference of opinion.”
“… On what?”
“Oh, the meaning of life.”
Such a flippant way of speaking made it hard for Tsugumi to really tell how serious she was.
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Chapter 60: War Games
Chapter Text
Plants devour light, animals devour plants, predators devour prey. What devours people?
*~*
Information was the secret to success to any endeavor; without it, no matter how powerful one was, they would invariably lose to their competition.
This fundamental truth shaped the entirety of Avaron’s [Hive Mind] since the very first day she established it. Information from her drones once flowed unfiltered, sending everything all at once all the time. Only by forcefully filtering and prioritizing the flow of information did it turn from raw, chaotic noise, to something functionally useful. How she did so, ever remained an idea she had trouble describing to herself.
Like how a babe learned to walk, the ability was there, it need only practice to develop the muscles and understandings. But, there wasn’t any real word she knew to describe how it was done. She only knew human ideas and concepts, after all. A [Hive Mind] was fundamentally alien by comparison. Still, she knew it as easily as she breathed, somehow.
Any drone at any moment could feed her information, from everything to just a single detail. Even multiple drones, to the dozens or hundreds, could do such, feeding a veritable flood in the process. Each provided their own useful perspective: the scents and smells of the air, the moisture on the skin, the sounds of nature or people, the sight of the world in varying degrees both tall and short.
After a certain point, it was less a matter of absorbing information and more comprehending it.
So, even more filters were grown around that concept.
A drone that felt itchy wouldn’t pass along that information to the rest of the [Hive Mind]. Its installed instincts would allow it to rectify the problem as best it could, then continue on. After a certain point, say a couple minutes, if the itch didn’t subside, then scrutiny would be applied to it. After all, the itch itself indicated a problem, but only time indicated the severity of said problem.
Sometimes it was nothing.
Sometimes it was a tick the size of a golf ball.
The more Avaron learned to scrutinize this information, the more the [Hive Mind] learned to as well. For every problem she built a hand-crafted response toward, the answer echoed throughout the Hive. Now drones checked each other without the Queen’s oversight when an itch didn’t go away, resolving the problem from ever bothering higher neural processes.
At first, it’d been tedious and troublesome. Like a babe that learned to walk, it needed to not fall over every other second. Practice, patience, endless repetition, but the Hive grew from the experiences of its drones and the will of its Queen. An apparatus of learned behavior and instincts, augmented by cunning directive and intellect. It yet posed a lopsided problem, however—the more complex the issue, the more the Queen’s attention in general became needed.
For as much as Avaron filtered the information to its most useful, noiseless form, she yet remained responsible for the ‘thinking’ portion of the processing.
The Hive could not yet deal in abstract concepts like tactics or strategic overview.
Not that she could mind too much, but it would pose a problem in larger-scale warfare later.
“Three elvetahn in section D4,” Avaron remarked, “Maybe a fourth one but I’m having trouble verifying her.”
“There is four,” Bladedance affirmed before letting out a chuckle. “It seems we are finding ways of evading your eyes all the better.”
For what the rest of her Hive was doing, Avaron ‘herself’ stood by a nicely made, smooth wooden table within a tall, circus-sized tent. Rugs covered the packed dirt ground, while crates, boxes, and containers lined two of the four walls of the square-shaped tent. Elvetahn soldiers stood by the entrance, while others sat at different tables, discussing amongst themselves the matters of war and logistics.
It was, simply put, the headquarters of the elvetahn army. Rather fancifully made for something that hadn’t existed in that spot more than a few days ago.
“The camouflage is making a significant difference. I’m only really certain when they move, because it’s incredibly obvious when it happens.”
“Those skeyes of yours have frightening visual power. Perhaps as great as an owl’s, really.”
“It’d be wonderful if I could give them thermal vision or something similar, but …” Avaron carelessly shrugged.
“’Thermal vision’?” Efval asked, her ever-perpetual frown landing upon Avaron again.
“Uh, they can see ‘heat’ itself. The world becomes colors of ‘hot’ and ‘cold’, and living bodies are always hotter than their surrounding environment. Military camouflage is great at dealing with regular eyes like ours, but it cannot hide body heat that well.”
“Eyes like an Unkarlapo, then?”
“I have no idea what that is.”
Bladedance interjected, “A fearsome beast in the far eastern regions on the other side of the Arden Empire. They hunt at night in the deserts, and few things can hide from them at all. Fire, especially, attracts their attention.”
“Then it’s probably some kind of thermal vision or senses,” Avaron surmised. “Since deserts usually chill or freeze at night, anything with a warm body would have a giant ‘eat me’ sign on its head.”
“Could your skeyes even use such vision?” Efval questioned.
“Probably. I know it’s possible to do so; there were devices in my old world that could use thermal vision up to ten miles or more.”
The two elvetahn stared at her with very conflicted expressions.
“Would that not make it impossible to infiltrate?” Bladedance asked slowly, quite visibly trying to grasp the thought still. “Needing to both camouflage and hide one’s very own heat is rather … hm.”
“Thermal vision is terrible at such ranges, but not impossible. If it was a particularly hot day, the local environment would basically blind them from seeing anything that far away.” Avaron shrugged and pointed at the map on the table they all stood around. It was a simplistic one, built to provide an overview of the local region and its topology for quick assessments. Her porcelain finger went from the forested region they’d sectioned for ‘war games’ and toward some small looking mountains. “The forests and plains are one thing. But, on something like those mountains, which are generally quite cold, it’d find almost anyone on the surface quite easily.”
“I fear every time I learn of your world, years of my life disappear,” Efval said in the driest tone Avaron ever heard. The tentradom looked up at her, but Efval was simply shaking her head and turning away. “Recall the soldiers for lunch, and confirm what the returning scouts have found.”
“At once, my Queen,” Bladedance affirmed, saluting as Efval left the tent, accompanied by her royal guard folding in behind her.
“… Isn’t she immortal?”
“We elvetahn are an undying people, if that is your meaning.”
“That may be the closest thing to a joke I’ve ever heard from her.”
Bladedance coughed into his hand, very much looking like he’d rather not have that conversation. “Ah-ahem. Be that as it may. Let us depart for lunch, and consider the results of this last trial.”
“Of course,” Avaron said courteously, and waved for Bladedance to lead the way.
With Bladedance at the fore, they stepped out of the headquarters tent and into the broader camp. Though encamped within a forest, the trees and such hadn’t impeded them in the slightest. The elvetahn, through their wood shaping and nature magic, curved, twisted, and changed the trees around them. Most were living supports for the tents underneath, others interwoven to form a new, larger canopy that disguised the encampment from above. Despite not having to deal with surveillance aircraft, the elvetahn prized camouflage techniques. Theirs easily exceeded anything Avaron had seen on a war documentary, though.
If she hadn’t know where they were, not even her skeyes would’ve seen the elvetahn army in the forest. At least, not easily.
And yet, despite that, plentiful sunlight refracted through the upper canopy. The whole area shone in a sort of dimmer, almost twilight-hue despite the mid-day sun high above. It did have the nice advantage of being much cooler, too. Soldiers of all kinds went about their business, moving from one area to another, carrying gear or crates, and all of them doing so in a methodical fashion. They moved much like army ants, even like Avaron’s own Hive, emphasizing highways of motion when the ground was simply dirt and grass.
Bladedance spoke up as he walked, louder over the ambient busywork around them. “Forgive my curtness, but it seems your skeyes are the most useful forward scouts to utilize. Even if they cannot perfectly find my soldiers, any other army wouldn’t be able to hide at all.”
“That sounds right to me. The tentaclelings didn’t do well at all.”
“No, but their endless patience is useful for sentry duty. My scouts can handle the forward work, while your tentaclelings form watch points. I’m concerned about how sharp their senses are, especially against magical stealth.”
The elvetahn soldiers, despite their orderliness, parted for Bladedance and Avaron like fish in a river. They hardly needed to stop or brush past anyone, even if it did make a few minor disruptions.
“Not that well, but I suppose you could put your own sentries at critical locations, instead of everywhere?” Avaron asked.
“That is the plan as of right now. If we can trust this manner of deployment, I’ll be able to put out more forward scouts for the Nagraki.”
“It’ll help if they can go farther than I can command my skeyes. Sadly, range is still an issue for me.”
“The world is vast, after all!” Bladedance said agreeingly. “But, we will see. We have only just breached the Free Hardain State’s lands, and their borders to us were never particularly bothersome.”
“Well, regardless, we can—“
Movement.
Through the [Hive Mind], one of the skeyes saw movement that was people shaped. Avaron slowed to a stop in following after Bladedance, her attention shifting sharply to her skyborne drone. The feeling of the ground beneath her, and the rumbling of people all vanished in an instant, replaced by the howling of wind and the weightlessness of flight. Of its myriad, grotesque looking eyes, one in particular had fixated upon the source of agitation.
Her vision elongated and shifted, the area of focus coming into detail while everything else turned blurry. Not quite a camera, not quite a telescope, yet able to see far in a way a human mind simply wouldn’t understand properly. The details were crisp, if somewhat distant and small all the same. She saw a group of people, perhaps fifteen in total, running alongside a hill? No, it was a path of sorts; a roadway, once, maybe. If it was, it’d deteriorated over decades, if not centuries, of disuse. Rampant greenery and broken away sections made it seem mostly natural from the sky.
“Lady Avaron?” Bladedance’s voice reverberated through her mind. “What is the matter?”
“People running,” Avaron said through her ‘main’ body. “Southeast direction, toward the hills near the mountain. There’s …”
The skeye rotated more eyes in the direction, scanning for even more movement. From the height and angle, she didn’t see much, at least until the runners cleared more of the treeline around them. Black figures trundled after them at some distance, perhaps thirty seconds or so behind—well enough to be apparent, but not too close. Humanoid, but misshapen, and their gait looked entirely wrong. For something that had two legs, it was more as if the legs and upper body weren’t even properly connected.
Ah, but that feeling.
That sticky, greasy touch on her senses.
She knew what that was.
“Nagraki,” Avaron’s main body voiced. “They’re being chased by ten … no, twelve Nagraki of some kind.”
“Summon the lead stalker and scout at once to the main tent,” Bladedance barked out, his voice sharp and fierce through the air. Two of the four elvetahn guards that ever followed after him nodded and wasted no time running off into the encampment. “Come, Lady Avaron, lunch must wait.”
Her will to redirect two skeyes and return her sense of self to her main body all but happened in an instant. The seamlessness by which she lived was, itself, disorienting sometimes, though far less so these days. Avaron hurried alongside Bladedance and his spritely jog, returning to the tent they’d virtually just left. At Bladedance’s beckoning, they huddled around the map they’d already spent the morning staring at.
“It seems we shall put our training to use,” he remarked. “Can you show me where?”
What a feat it was for her to look between two different skeyes, their dozens of eyes, and scrutinize the world from a bird’s eye point of view. In all, perhaps twenty seconds to triangulate positions, relative landmarks, and their corresponding appearance on the map. “Here, this area,” Avaron said, hovering her finger on a grid location to the southeast. “There’s an old, ruined road they’re using. It seems to travel westward, in this direction.”
“And they’re following it?”
“For now.”
“Hmm. How well are you tracking them?”
“They’re moving out of forest cover for now. The skeyes are taking a moment to get overhead, but it will not be a problem.”
“The distance is a problem. The Nagraki may get the people before we can arrive.”
“So far it is just that group. I’m not seeing any other movement.”
“Scavengers, probably.”
Bladedance’s two guards swiftly returned, accompanied by two elvetahn soldiers. The so-called lead stalker was aptly covered in a veritable suit of leaves, furs, and moss with a facial mask resembling an owl. The lead scout, by comparison, wore more stylized, metal-made green-and-brown armor that snuggly wrapped around her body. Of the two, the lead scout saluted, while the lead stalker craned its gaze upon the map.
“What is the hunt, general?” the stalker inquired in a raspy voice muffled by her mask.
“Sharpknife, take two groups and head to the southeast area here,” Bladedance said to the lead scout, tracing his finger along the map much like Avaron just did. “There’s a group of people being hunted by Nagraki—scavengers, most likely.”
“Are we killing or saving?” Sharpknife inquired, her smooth voice belying the unyielding callousness of her demeanor.
“Saving, for now. Whoever you can grab that isn’t corrupted, we need information. Barkbite, take your hunt farther to the southeast. The Nagraki came from somewhere: find out where, and how many.”
Both of them nodded, and Bladedance cast his gaze upon Avaron. “Can we use that method we tested?”
“I’d rather we practiced it more, but it can work.” Avaron waved her hand, a necessary show to direct their gazes toward one of her ‘sleeping’ tentaclelings. The drone unfurled itself like a spider that came back to life, its ‘tap tap tap’ steps sounding on the ground. “I’ll send these after Sharpknife’s group. If you need to report back something urgently, just find and tell one of my tentaclelings. Whatever they hear, I hear, and I will tell General Bladedance.”
“A relay messenger?” Sharpknife questioned with the barest hint of curiosity to her voice. “We can out run them without issue.”
“No, I hear it instantly. The moment you talk to one of them, I hear it, regardless of the distance.”
Sharpknife’s oak-colored face and black brows furrowed, her expression utterly serious. “That would be faster, if we can find them in time.”
“Do what you can,” Bladedance said, then made a dismissive wave of his hand. “Go, now. Time is urgent and we must catch these leaves before they fall.”
Sharpknife and Barkbite nodded and bowed their heads respectively, then wasted no time in hurrying out of the command tent. Avaron glanced at their backs as they left, then stared down at the map once again. “Let’s hope they use the tentaclelings well. I’m moving fifty of them in the direction of the people at about the best speed they can go.”
“I must admit this is rather new to me as well. Ordinarily I have nothing to do once the orders are given and I await the results. Should I keep asking about what you are seeing?” Bladedance asked, cracking a wry smile.
“So far the condition is unchanged. But … the Nagraki seem to be slowing down. Or, chasing after something else? Why are they splitting up like that? Oh, there’s a boar running away.” For all she’d been loaded up on the threat of the Nagraki, seeing them in motion for the first time was … somewhat underwhelming. They’re like fast running zombies? Are they supposed to be this stupid?
Bladedance blinked. “Scavengers, then. They’re ones more concerned with feasting and spreading naki than anything purposeful.”
“How does that fit into the bigger picture?”
“What is a ‘picture’?”
“Uh … portrait. The ‘bigger plan’, then.”
A thoughtful look settled upon Bladedance, his sculpted brows knitting together. “Scavenger-type Nagraki are like mindless slaves to ‘higher’ forms of Nagraki. If they’re running freely, then either their cast-off dribble of a higher Nagraki, or a deliberate plague let loose. In times of war, they’re a common sight, but it’s strange that there are ones out here.”
“Queen Efval believes the Nagraki are trying to hide still—what with their business in the Empire and the other things we know,” Avaron said. “But doing something like this on the front door of their age-old enemy is basically a taunt, isn’t it?”
“I am not opposed to that conjecture,” Bladedance said slowly, “if we are being ‘taunted’ to come here, why? They don’t have the strength to assault the Alva Forest. In fact, we are still close enough to aid it if they did.”
“I admit I am not a military strategist.” Avaron shrugged. “I have even less experience with a world with insane gods like Haska. I could just as much say they’re being chaotic idiots as much as masterminds of some inscrutable scheme.”
Bladedance chuckled, a sound of utmost practiced perfection for the sake of expression, not necessarily a display of mirth. “The terrible part of all this is that, for my vastly grander experience than your own, Lady Avaron, I am very much stuck on the same branch.”
“I’m sure you’ll soar and fly far ahead soon enough. What the hell are they doing to that boar?” Avaron winced. “Oh, oh that’s nasty.”
“Perhaps spare me those details.”
*~*
The elvetahn were fast, she’d give them that. The stalkers perhaps the most so, sailing through the forest with such precise, powerful jumps they were more like birds in flight. The scouts, by contrast, raced across the ground with a gait and grace that showed nearly zero impact. Indeed, they ran like ghosts and with the speed of horses, if not more so.
I have to seriously upgrade these things, Avaron mused, observing through the fifty different senses of her swarming tentaclelings. The performance difference was very noticeable amongst their ranks between the second and third generations. Gwyneth’s DNA really increased their robustness and endurance, but until then Avaron hadn’t really tested how much.
Somewhere around five times sounded right to her, even if she didn’t have hard numbers to compare to. Well, she did, but the context in how those numbers existed was the problem.
The tentaclelings raced through the forest, the skitter-thump of their legs sounding like a heavy rain storm passing by. While they lacked for speed, their stability more than made up for it. They bobbed up and down, as if riding the gentle waves of a lakeside beach even as the wind rushed past their ears. Still, for all the urgency, it’d be a couple minutes before intercepting the unknown people.
Avaron glanced at them, her mind’s eye gazing through the skeyes above. The Nagraki, for their part, always broke off their attention to whatever was nearer to them. Any kind of animal the survivors ran past served as a distraction enough for them to slow down and recuperate, if a little. A game of cat and mouse that’d only end until they were killed by the Nagraki, or something killed the Nagraki in turn.
Some of the skeyes’ eyes pivoted, gazing at the speeding figures of Sharpknife’s group. They’re ridiculously fast, Avaron mused. The scouts were just about to break into the hilly area the chase happened through. They then dispersed, moving in pairs as they took up a crescent-shaped encirclement. Glints of light streaked through the air, the irritable flashes exceedingly bright to the skeyes’ eyes. Not magic, but rather the metal-tipped arrowheads greeting the midday sun.
She wasn’t sure what to make of what followed, though.
The arrows struck the Nagraki and then they just sort of exploded backwards?
At least, the arrows struck with such power they were more like cannon shots than mere little ‘thwap thwap’ piercing pieces of wood.
Avaron’s eyebrows on her main body popped upward. And they had problems with guns? What are the guns doing in this world then??
Between some Church’s knight squad, an actual Lance, and now this, Avaron still struggled to form a proper frame of reference.
Well, the elvetahn cleared away the Nagraki ‘scavengers’ pretty quickly. Half the squadron went after the stragglers chasing animals, while the other half circled the survivors; who wisely collapsed to the ground, most likely from exhaustion. Sharpknife herself was the only one to approach them closely, the others stood around at range with their bows drawn. Whatever more happened seemed to be talk that a skeye couldn’t hear.
Some long minutes later, Avaron’s tentaclelings entered the area proper. Of the fifty, half split off to go and support the other scouts hunting stragglers, though she doubted it was needed. Insurance on a battlefield, however, was always a luxury to have. The other half pulled up alongside Sharpknife’s encirclement, much to the wary gazes of all the elvetahn standing around.
Their distrust was evident, not that Avaron cared.
She sent a single tentacleling forward, having it trot up beside Sharpknife. The survivors all tensed up with fright at its approach, their eyes showing a madness born from desperation. One man in particular had sat collapsed on the ground in front of Sharpknife, and seemed somewhat more alert.
“Your group is tracking the stragglers perfectly. So far, no other signs of Nagraki in the area,” the tentacleling spoke in its guttural voice. It didn’t pass its ears the light scoff Sharpknife let out. “What of them?” it asked, pointing one of its front, blade-like legs at the survivors.
“Villagers from Sunfield who’ve been on the run for around a week. Nagraki scavengers suddenly attacked them, but it isn’t clear if they had a leader or not,” Sharpknife said, professional if obviously lacking the enthusiasm she showed Bladedance. “They fled when their fellows started to turn as well.”
“Mm. Relaying that now.”
And so Avaron told Bladedance, who rubbed his chin as he stared at the map for a moment. Then, he spoke a message, to which Avaron relayed back to Sharpknife. “Your boss’ orders: learn more if possible, then escort the survivors to camp.”
It wasn’t all that surprising Sharpknife looked at Avaron’s drone with skepticism, but nonetheless nodded her head. “They need to rest unless we drag them the entire way.”
“My drones can stand watch over them if you wish to scour the area more.”
“We will do that,” Sharpknife said firmly, and waved her fist in the air. The standby elvetahn closed in then, forming ranks around her. “Interrogate what you can out of them, we will return before dark.”
Avaron’s eyebrow popped upward. Seriously?
“We’ll be here, then.”
The elvetahn were quick to speed away then, heading down the way the survivors had come from. Avaron stared for a moment after them before leaving one of her skeyes to monitor their progress. As to the tentaclelings, she circled around the survivors at a reasonable, but obvious distance. Before their skittish looking faces might get ideas, though, she had her one drone speak up. “You are safe now, rest, and recover. We will protect you.”
“W-who are you?” the collapsed man asked, a human looking fellow beneath all that dirt and grime covering him.
“We are Avaron, allies of the elvetahn, enemy to the Nagraki.”
“Is … is that what those things were?”
“Yes, they are called Nagraki.”
“Oh.”
He rather didn’t look like he had the spirit to talk anymore; not that any of them did. Once the initial rush of fear passed, quite a few simply rolled onto the grassy ground, wheezing and coughing. Others sat slouched over, dead to everything except the bliss of rest. Upon seeing their state, Avaron reached across her [Hive Mind], working a few drones back at camp. It’d take a few minutes but saddling them up with food and water, and shipping them out to the survivors should help.
Not that anything really seemed to happen otherwise.
The wind blew by and the hot sun bore down on them all, but nothing stirred.
The calm after the battle, I guess? she mused, not really sure what to do in such a situation.
Tiddle her non-existent thumbs, probably.
Some minutes later, the supply tentaclelings arrived, waddling toward the survivors. The speaker tentacleling smacked its blade-legs together, making a distinct, loud clack that drew attention. “We bring food and water. Come, eat and drink,” it said, pointing its leg at the approaching supplies. The words struck the survivors like lightning, all of them animating with a sudden energy they otherwise lacked.
Thankfully it wasn’t enough to drive them berserk; or, if it was, they remained wary of the tentaclelings. With the speaker and supply tentaclelings, canteens of water and soup, as well as loafs of bread, were distributed. The survivors huddled into a circle, sharing between one another their gains as they ate in silence. A few ate or drank a little too fast, starting to choke and making the ones beside them slap their back.
A sense of comradery, if not community, that lightened Avaron’s heart to see.
She let the matter be for a half hour or so, enough most of the eating and drinking subsided. Whether or not they were in a state to answer useful questions wasn’t clear, but the speaker tentacleling clacked its legs together again. “Now, rest, but also, tell us of what happened. The village of Sunfield was attacked?”
A few heads nodded. “Yeah,” one woman said gruffly.
“Was there anything unusual that day? Something weird? Abnormal?”
Glances were exchanged, but one by one they shook their heads.
“Nay, not until the screamin’ started,” another man remarked. “I was movin’ the salt from the boilers’ to the Todayn’s for her meat.”
Similar tales, too, sounded, all ultimately meaning that none of them ‘saw’ the start of it until the attack was already happening. The speaker tentacleling rubbed its ‘chin’ carefully. Mostly because the motion was both awkward and a little dangerous with its front leg being a literal blade. “Then, what about before? The day prior? Or a week, or month. Was there anything weird that might’ve happened? Nobles demanding something? People leaving or arriving?”
“Uhh, the Church?” the man who seemingly spoke to Sharpknife earlier said. “Them Church folk all left a week ago. Or, two weeks now, maybe. Said a pilgrimage was due, and they all had to go.”
Oh, I don’t like the sound of that.
“The Church of the Everlasting Light?”
“Yeah, them lot. Didn’t speak to them much, since they kept to themselves. But, they put up these little light balls a couple years ago so walking at night was safer.”
“I see. And there’s nothing else?”
“Nothin’ weird that I can think of.”
Similar answers, too, eventually followed.
“Very well,” the speaker tentacleling said. “Rest now. We will return to the elvetahn camp later.”
“Uhh, what’ll happen to us?” one of the more coherent women asked, skepticism on her face. Not unreasonably so.
“For now, you will accompany us. These lands are at war, and there may be nowhere safer to go.”
“… Alright.”
It wasn’t as if any of them had the strength to argue, or the will to. Avaron moved the speaker tentacleling to the supply ones, and had them huddle together as if they were ‘busy’ doing something. With her main body, she relayed what she learned to the awaiting General Bladedance.
“Ordinarily, I would not think twice of a pilgrimage,” he muttered, brows furrowed in thought. “But knowing what we know now, Church people leaving and a Nagraki attack following shortly after is … too coincidental.”
“My thoughts exactly,” Avaron agreed. “I have too much bias to say ‘it looks obvious’, but to any outside observer, it may very well not be.”
“No, it wouldn’t. The question is, why orchestrate their attack in this way?”
Avaron held up a fist, and popped up her fingers one-by-one. “Church people go on pilgrimage, get sacrificed, Haska takes their bodies while Nyoom gobbles their souls, Nagraki are made, Nagraki go attack surrounding area. At least, that’s the simplest chain of events I could think of. It’s not as if most people will think to look for Church people who disappeared on a pilgrimage, right?”
“… It does make a certain amount of sense, though convincing conjecture is an easy trap to fall into.”
“Very much so.”
“Mm. By the sounds of things, the situation is handled for now. I must go report to Her Highness,” Bladedance said, straightening up.
“Well, I’ll go get some lunch then. You can check in with me or any of my drones, though.”
A bemused look overcame Bladedance’s face for a moment. “Such a true convenience I find hard to believe I have right now. Ordinarily there’s quite a lot of waiting as messengers find the people I need and bring them forth.”
“Oh, it’ll get better later. Wait until I figure out how to make headsets.”
“A … head set?”
“Like a bird on your shoulder you can use whenever you want. Instant communication at any moment.”
For the first time since she’d seen him, Bladedance’s long, smooth ears twitched. An elvetahn expression of kinds, usually made by others when they talked. Sometimes it meant intrigue, sometimes being upset; it really depended, but Bladedance’s unmoving ears seemed a statement of his own self-control. Or, perhaps some noble idea Avaron hadn’t heard of yet.
“You ever broaden my horizons, Queen Avaron,” he said with a polite laugh. “Please try to keep at least the sky blue when I wake up in the morning.”
“I’ll try,” Avaron said with a helpless shrug.
Bladedance bowed slightly and left, accompanied by his guards. Before Avaron herself would leave, though, she turned her attention back to her drones in the field. One in particular which had been moving toward the ‘killed’ Nagraki scavengers. Strewn across the decrepit roadway, its lower, grounds-eye view really brought their disgusting forms that much closer to her sight.
Though Nex had told her much of how Haska’s naki worked, it was the first time seeing a ‘live specimen’. People of a kind, or what used to be humans and monja, laid on the ground. It seemed like a black and white fungus of sorts. It invasively grew underneath the flesh, spreading black roots as a white, mutant slab of meat erupted out in places. Naki fundamentally altered the forms it invaded, converting them into more fearsome beings. Often, their only purpose was to be stronger to kill others, and spread more naki.
It certainly fit the picture of bulging muscles, deformed faces, and even entire limbs growing out of them. Or, were they perhaps shoved in? One person had the legs of a horse coming out of his torso, while another’s face had partially melted into a cow’s head. Their horrific, unnatural existence stitched together by the fungal-like naki growing rampantly throughout them. The most serious one didn’t even resemble a person or an animal anymore, just a humanoid shape with bone-made claws coming out of its seven limbs.
And yet, for those who’d had their hearts and brains blown away, the naki continued to struggle. They twitched, jerked, and spasmed, more of their flesh and bones consumed by its ceaseless spread. That, too, was an insidious part of its nature, though limited as it was.
Haska, as a physically-oriented god, had very real rules he could not break. His naki-consumed Nagraki needed to ‘live’, in a sense of having vital organs like hearts or brains. If the body endured too much trauma it couldn’t repair, it would soon start to collapse. The naki would survive for even longer, just enough to catch onto carrion feeders who might come by for a snack. Then they, too, would become Nagraki as they were infected.
Or, the remains would be harvested by other Nagraki, who would strengthen themselves with fresh naki to feed upon.
Nex said I am safe from it’s corruption, but … Avaron squinted at the horrid sight of it all. I’d rather not test that without some capable help.
Whether or not her Hive could survive naki corruption was a very important, extremely necessary detail. Nex’s assurances being what they were, Avaron couldn’t take a careless risk. If any single part of her corrupted and Haska learned of what she knew, the world would be Fucked with a capital F.
She really needed to find a way to reestablish contact with Nex.
Maybe Gwyneth can help, since she has the Eternal Flame in her back pocket. Well, her chest, but …
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Chapter 61: Evolving Nature
Chapter Text
The us five years ago will not be the us five years from now; but we are still ‘us’.
*~*
To say Eden was undergoing noticeable changes as summer approached would be an … understatement.
Arzha still wasn’t sure what to make of it exactly.
Nor of the strange ‘plant’ she and a few herbalists were staring at.
The five of them stood in a circle in a small ‘forest’ to the west of Eden. Though it was more like a cove of trees in the surrounding plains than anything, it was dense enough to offer comfortable shade and cover in the afternoon. The farmlands hadn’t quite reached that far, but one of the dirt-packed roadways did cut right alongside it. Their mysterious plant had chosen the curious place of growing in the roots of a tall tree, favoring the shady side over the sunny.
“I can see why you wished to bring this to my attention,” she remarked with perfect noble dryness in her tone. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen this before.”
“Ehem, though I was not well-traveled, I did attend many gatherings for we herbalists,” Jann, the ‘leader’ of the herbalist group, said, “And nothing like this was recorded in any of our books, your highness.”
“Is it a mushroom, or?”
“It’s [class] is a fungus, of which mushrooms are a part of. Its choice of growth location is very consistent with them, too.”
“And it’s not poisonous?”
“Ah, no.” Jann, a comely woman in her forties, hid her mouth behind a handkerchief and coughed. “Quite … quite, the opposite, as it happens to be.”
Arzha wasn’t sure what to feel, most likely knowing why the women around her were being skittish. A few of them and their rosy red blushes, so very enflamed and vivid now that she was there, spoke enough. Yet her gaze remained fixed downward, as Arzha stared at the culprit with her icy blue eyes. It, nonetheless, continued to sit there.
Conspicuously so.
At first glance, it definitely seemed related to Avaron in some capacity. However, whereas the tentradom had blue tentacle flesh and white porcelain ‘skin’, the mushroom had a lovely, slightly dark hue of pink for flesh, and a more snowy white ‘skin’. The largest and most central of stalks had great girth, perhaps a couple inches, as the pink core rose upward. The outer skin wrapped around it in bands, seemingly some kind of support or half-made protection.
The cap of this strange and perverse looking mushroom, however, is where any semblance of dignity fled from it. Shaped like rounded bell, with its pink-hued edges cut into a six-pointed star, the utmost ‘tip’ of it had a cross-like slit, surrounded by a bit of puffy skin. Even since she started observing it, every other minute or so the mushroom twitched and throbbed, as if it had a heartbeat, and a dribbling of fluid squirted out of the slit. Just a little bit that leaked down the sides of the cap, and dripped in sticky, provocative strands to the ground.
It looked like a fat, throbbing tentacle that just grew out of the ground and pretended it was a mushroom.
Not that Arzha had seen what a ‘throbbing tentacle’ was herself, but Gwyneth’s lips were surprisingly loose sometimes about the matter.
“Just tell me what it does,” Arzha said with a sigh.
The herbalists looked between each other until their gazes settled upon Jann. She rather looked like she be anywhere else, right then, but nonetheless coughed into her handkerchief once again. “Uh, well …
[Name: Tentshroom]
[Quality: Immature] [Grade: Average] [Health: Good]
[Type: Tentacle Growth] [Class: Fungus]
[A kind of tentacle-based fungus resultant from a nearby Tentradom Hive. Tentshrooms have the characteristics of mushrooms, and prefer shady, somewhat damp locations to grow within. A tentshroom cluster’s maturity is indicated by the number of fully grown stalks, with the largest clusters having upwards of ten spread about in a three-foot radius.
Tentshrooms are known for their firm texture and warm heat, and make an excellent food. While the tentshroom itself needs to be cooked to be fully edible, its spore-laden nectar is safe to consume and very tasty. While tentshrooms naturally release their nectar, physical caresses will encourage it to release even more. Larger and throbbing tentshroom indicate they are very full, and should be harvested soon. Otherwise, it will eventually erupt on its own in an attempt to spread its spores farther.
They are known to be devious and especially responsive to the presence of women. Some variants, however, exclusively respond to men instead.]”
Arzha held up a hand to give Jann some reprieve before her face ignited. The other women around shuffled in place, their hands firmly locked together as they smiled with embarrassed politeness. None of them readily met Arzha’s eyes. The Princess of Artor, however, simply rubbed her eyes with a gloved hand. A devious mushroom? she thought with exasperation. How is a mushroom ‘devious’?
Did she even want to know?
“Is there anything else?” she asked warily.
“J-just the traits, your highness.”
“And they are?”
“Uh … [Edible, Fast Growing, Aromatic, Aphrodisiac, Sanitary].”
Arzha blinked, not expecting the last one at all. “Why does a mushroom have a trait usually reserved for soap?”
The herbalists, though, all collectively shrugged. “I know some that have the [Clean] trait,” one said, “we used them when making soap. They kind of worked on their own if you were in a pinch, though.”
“You are saying this—“ Arzha waved a hand at the mushroom incredulously, “—can be used to make soap?”
“Uhh, maybe? It already has [Sanitary], so it might be fine to use as is.”
“So we grind it up into a paste then?” one of the other herbalists asked, and the tentshroom visibly shrank in front of their eyes. A few of them blinked and shook their heads. “Did … did it just get smaller?”
Arzha stared with the ugliest looking suspicion in her eyes. “No, let’s invite it between our bosoms and gently coax its loving nectar out instead,” she remarked in a voice anyone would understand to be an evil, sarcastic monotone.
The tentshroom visibly inflated, even more than it was prior. A difference of perhaps only an inch or two at most, but plainly visible. Some of the herbalists squealed at the sight, laughing with a playful sort of embarrassment as they pointed at it. Indeed, perhaps the tentshroom might’ve even shone with a sparkly sort of enticement about its girthy figure. It certainly didn’t have eyes to see, or else it would’ve desperately crawled into the ground to escape Arzha’s look of intense, contemptuous disgust.
For some reason her hand really itched to draw her sword.
Just a little, quick swipe, the same as the last ten thousand she practiced.
The herbalists all sobered up quickly upon noticing her look, stiffly standing up formally once more. “What should we, uh, do with it, your highness?” Jann asked nervously. “These and some others are growing all over the place now.”
“How so?”
“They’re just … popping up. I don’t even know what could’ve brought them here. Or how.”
The real question is if Avaron realizes these are appearing or not, Arzha mused. It’s fairly helpful, and having something that can grow out here will be useful. But, really, this thing’s behavior is …
“Gather up whatever samples you need to study them,” Arzha said, trying not to think of what kind of ‘study’ such a perverse plant would respond to. “If nothing else, making soap would be immensely helpful to Eden. The rest of it can be animal feed until we know it’s really safe to consume.”
“Oh, it’s pretty fine on its own. Cooking gets rid of the aphrodisiac effect tho—“ one of the youngest herbalists there, someone probably just into her twenties, said. Everyone else slowly turned toward her and stared with piercing eyes and decades of wisdom to understand how she came to that conclusion. The herbalist sucked her lips in and froze with a horrified look of realization.
Indeed, perhaps no one more than her in the entire world wanted to die at the moment.
*~*
It was by far the strangest sort of white parchment Durelia had ever touched in her life. Smooth, almost disturbingly so, with the slightest hint of texture that suggested it’d been skin once at all. At the same time, it unerringly absorbed the somewhat sludge-like ink Avaron had on hand. The two had been made to go together obviously, because her much more refined, watery inks barely stayed on before they started running.
And here she’d hoped to impress somewhat with her stationary. It’d been among the few things of her personal items she could escape with, after all.
But, one little set back was always just a jostle to the carriage in matters like this. She’d bide her time.
Not that their meeting at ‘City Hall’ was going much of anywhere. For as nice, if barren, the meeting room was, even she found some confines stuffy after a while. Sternbuck had the decent thought to open a window just before they sat down, so there was that.
Between herself, Queen Avaron, Lord Sternbuck, and Lady Whiterock, they’d been busy with the review of Eden’s so-called ‘land allocation strategy’. Princess Arzha, who evidently advised it during the initial creation, recused herself from the meeting. Something that let Durelia breathe a little bit easier.
Artor’s fiercest Princess, ever deserving of her reputation, was just a bit dangerous to be around.
“Do you really need that much property for a home estate?” Avaron asked, her comely voice finally showing some exasperation. Sternbuck and Whiterock had been busy grinding her down, after all. “We’re talking enough space for nearly three dozen houses, which by your own words—“ she waggled a finger at Sternbuck, “—is already an incredibly generous amount of land for ‘peasants’. What in the world would you do with all that land for a private home?”
“There is the mansion itself, then the servant’s separate quarters—which, I might add, is quite the step up for any noble to have,” Sternbuck said, shooting like a merchant going for the kill. “Then the stables for the lady’s personal stock, then the fields to take care of said stock, then the fields for the lady’s own farm and groves, if any. Finally, drilling yard’s for the lady’s guard, and any militia she’s responsible for. This proposed estate is very cramped, Queen Avaron. We’ve fiercely trimmed down the personal farm and stables as is.”
“Do you need a farm, drilling yard, and stables on your estate?” Avaron asked incredulously. “Those three things are being supported elsewhere as-is.”
“Are those lands not the domain of the Queen?”
“Theoretically, yes. What is stopping you from making use of them, exactly?”
The three of them looked between each other, rather bemused by the question. Whiterock then said, “The Queen’s lands are overseen by the Queen. We nobles each command a fief in her stead, to grow as we can. No fief can expect to survive without a collar on its neck if it relies upon another fief to handle important needs.”
“Wait, wait, wait, that’s right, this is a feudal society I’m dealing with,” Avaron said, waving her hand for them all to stop. She just as swiftly rubbed her eyes in that oh-so-frequent showing of dreariness. “You naturally want to minimize as much codependence as possible to exert your own influence, yes?”
“That is … a way, of seeing it, yes.”
Come now, Myalla, why be so coy? Durelia wondered with a thin smile. Ah, but Sternbuck arguing such a huge piece of land is the ‘minimum necessary’ is quite a dog’s trick on our future Queen, no?
Avaron, appearing in thought, slouched back in her chair, staring at the fifth preliminary map they’ve tried drawing out. While certain aspects, like the roadways, were reasonably fixed in place, their attempts to cut up and divvy Eden’s landscape ever shifted depending on the argument. “I suppose finding a way to bridge the difference is the matter,” she muttered.
“What difference would that be, your majesty?” Durelia asked in the sweetest voice she could offer. Not that hard to do; Avaron was oh so easy on the eyes and a treat to listen to. Even more when those vividly blue orbs turned up toward her. They were much warmer, lovelier color than Arzha’s, that was for sure.
“Decentralization, of a kind. Or, more aptly, I’m looking at the role of the nobility in a fundamentally different light than all of you are, I think.”
“Perhaps then, let us know what the ‘role of nobility’ you envision is?”
“As it is right now,” Avaron said, holding her hands up in a gesture like she held a box. “In feudal society, the queen or king at the top rules, while the nobles underneath govern in their stead of their individual fiefs, yes?”
Durelia nodded along with the others. “That’s correct.”
“One of the problems of feudal societies is that their fiefs are constantly at each other’s throats. They don’t want to cooperate, because codependence threatens their own political power.”
Sternbuck said, “To some extent. A fief that is concerned with farming will not have the land for mining, and thus smithy work. If they would have iron and copper in their lands, they have to trade with those who have it. Codependence, as you say.”
“Precisely,” Avaron said, “and so where codependence develops, political factions form. They act in lockstep together to secure their own collective interest, which means more powerful fiefs then have to side with or against them. Am I missing anything here so far?”
“No. It is perhaps lacking in the details, but broadly correct.”
“Then, what role do nobles take on when there is no need to work in their queen’s stead? When the queen herself can not only do all their duties, but exceedingly outperform them?” Avaron asked, yet none of them could answer. Complex, grim expressions flitted across the three nobles’ faces as they thought. “It sounds like I am being ridiculous, but let me make it clear: I am not just one mind within one body. I am many minds, many different bodies. An entire civilization unto myself, from the lowliest workers to the most noble of queens. In such a view, I try to find what role nobles like yourselves, independent of my [Hive Mind], could fulfill.”
The unspoken message was clear enough: without a convincing purpose in Queen Avaron’s world, nobility would not exist. A quite ridiculous idea to Durelia, and one she found difficult to engage with. Doing so of course meant affirming that her own noble heritage and existence was, to some extent, ‘unnecessary’. The implications of which Sternbuck and Whiterock showed with great displeasure on their faces already.
Sternbuck particularly, considering he was a much more ‘minor’ noble compared to the Whiterocks or Gloomwoods. People in his position were ever liable to be devoured.
Durelia said, “There is the … power, of nobles such as ourselves. Our [levels], knowledge, [class], [skills], [abilities], and so on are much more than any serf or peasant. No civilization would wish to give up such advantageous strength, your majesty.”
“Are you sure about that?” Avaron asked, meeting Durelia’s crimson eyes unwaveringly. “Can not a crop of peasants with promising talent be reared, like a fine harvest, and brought up to such a level of capability?”
“To some extent,” Durelia said with particular care to her words and a small, hopefully alluring smile. “Those of noble heritage like ourselves are those who carry on the flame of our predecessors. It is something carefully nurtured, grown, and passed down. To cast that aside would mean this ‘new crop’ would have to start over, possibly from a much worse standing. It would be very dangerous, especially with these ‘Nagraki’ attacking everyone.”
“And if that new crop could be nurtured in a way they started off even better?”
Whiterock interjected with an exasperated sigh, “Your majesty, that would upend our entire way of life. Not just here, or Artor, or the Empire—any part of the world I could think of. Opportunities for greatness do not just sprout out of the ground. Less so for anyone competent to take hold of them and begin their own noble legacy.”
“… No, you are right in a way. I am going much too far, too fast.” Avaron waved her hand dismissively. “Before we think about something like that, let’s focus more on the now. I don’t like the idea of fiefs, because it creates a division within the lands. People get the idea they should compete for power against their fellow person, rather than cooperate with them. So, if we take nobles out of the fief system, what if we made them caretakers instead?”
“Caretakers?” Sternbuck echoed as three sets of brows furrowed.
“Nobles have a certain amount of interest in jockeying for their positions. Wealth, fame, political influence, because the position of ‘queen’ is not always certain. Hence, running fiefs as they do can be seen as training for all of them to one day take on the position of queen themselves,” Avaron said, the faces of the three nobles becoming increasingly tense as she spoke. “Well, that is true for the highest ranked of the nobles. For most, I suspect, it’s a matter of trying to survive the tides around them.”
“… What is your point?” Whiterock inquired wearily.
“Recontextualizing that struggle. I am like the elvetahn queen herself: ageless. Immortal, after a fashion, if you would.”
Durelia couldn’t believe her ears. No, perhaps her face had gone slack a little as well. Sternbuck certainly look as if he’d been rendered stupid, and Whiterock—well she was on Durelia’s other side, looking at Avaron, so she couldn’t see much there.
“So, if nobles do not have the lofty dream of replacing me, then what are they? The answer to that question would be: caretakers,” Avaron continued on, smiling just a bit at their reactions. No, perhaps a bit evilly. “Caretakers of Eden, burdened with the responsibility of safeguarding us all. To see to our needs, and to design Eden in such a way as to further our prosperity.”
She had to get a word in. Before Sternbuck or Whiterock lost their tiny little minds. “In the same breath you say you are immortal, but also possessed of many minds and bodies, your majesty,” Durelia said, straightening up in her chair and perking her chest out a little bit. “Both these things eclipse us, if not any other noble in the entire world. Why would you want us to be caretakers?”
Avaron tapped her temple slowly. “Because you have this.”
“A … mind?” Durelia asked hesitantly, to which Avaron nonetheless grinned.
“Precisely. For as vast as my own mind may grow, people are ultimately separate from me. Independent. They see things through an entirely different perspective. If Eden is to grow and prosper, it will not be solely because of my own mind. It is the one truly irreplaceable feature of people, and the most valuable one they have to offer.”
The pieces of the puzzle that was Avaron, and her nascent queendom, truly frightened Durelia to behold. Though she had her own fair share of dealings with the Shieldcrowns, particularly the late Queen and then King, they were still just humans. Capable, worldly to an extent, but humans who lived in one (prosperous) corner of the world.
Yet Avaron spoke of things that very much could consume more than just one queendom. For as much as she placated them all on her tentradom nature, the truth belied a far greater problem. Something that could yawn wide and devour everything it beheld, unhampered by the problems intrinsic to conquest. She could make even a sleeping dragon look nothing more than a puppy by the size of such ambition. Power really beyond—
No, stop that, Durelia told herself, forcing a polite cough into her hand and straightening up in her chair. I am not thinking about such a delightfully small woman and her unbridled power. Or her voracious need for supple, comely flesh to sate herself with. Or how many she’ll grind beneath her foot in making her throne …
She was such a terrible help to herself, really. The heat in her belly so tantalizing threatened to awaken that she squeezed her thighs together. Big, strong thighs that someone of Avaron’s stature would definitely get swallowed up by …
Oh, those fiery blue eyes were staring at her. Accusing. Knowing. A trickling fear of being discovered dampened Durelia’s lewd thoughts with a shockingly fresh quickness. The others, too, started to look at her, perhaps waiting for her response. “Ah, ahem—“ Durelia coughed into her hand again, “—pardon my throat, the air is a bit drier here than the Gloomwoods.”
“We have been at this for a while,” Avaron said, “we’re owed a break at some point, I think.”
“Of course, but there is something I’d say first.”
“Oh?”
“We Gloomwoods are not at all opposed to this new type of nobility your majesty wishes to make,” Durelia said, doing her best for her ‘lady’ voice that court life ever demanded. “The reality of what form it may take, or how people address it, will be of utmost concern, though. Future nobles, either from within Eden or outside, will also be most concerned with how respect to their power is paid. We three—“ she gestured around the table, “—were, at best ‘minor’ nobles within Artor. Even though our lines were long, our prestige and wealth is nothing compared to the ducal families of Artor. We have learned to survive in ‘the tides’, as your majesty calls it. Others will not be as … flexible, as we are.”
“They will have to change, then, if they wish to live within Eden.” Avaron shrugged. “Unchecked ambitions from within are as dangerous as a conqueror from without. I will not tolerate either.”
Durelia blinked, rather surprised at such a succinct answer. The simplicity truly did seem attractive, even if reality wouldn’t agree with it. Such ideas are hard to hold onto when those you would tell to change might very well burn you to the ground instead, Durelia dearly wished to say. She still might, just not in the meeting hall. Really, there’d be much to speak to Avaron in private over … if, somehow, she could get the tentradom alone.
That would be very fun.
“That said,” Avaron remarked, clapping her hands on the table in her usual way of saying ‘meeting done’, “these are just the goals I have in mind. You’re not wrong in how we choose to reach that goal, in reality, can be very different. Whether or not your three families choose to stay within Eden, and accept my rule, is your decision to make. I am, if nothing else, upfront with what you should expect.”
“… That is true, your majesty. It is an honesty rather appreciated by me,” Durelia said, smiling with her teeth-hiding grin.
“Of course, your majesty, it ever reassures many of my concerns,” Sternbuck said, a decent follow up ass kisser.
“I am curious on something about that,” Whiterock said, squinting with a suspicion any noble should be familiar with. “With Princess Arzha’s faithful support and your own ‘Hive’ army, why entertain us with talks of building Eden’s future? Any other queen would simply compel us into allegiance, or servitude at worse.”
It was then that Durelia saw something truly different for once. A smile that Avaron bore without the politeness she’d ever made apparent, even when annoyed. It wasn’t evil, nor comforting; it held intent, and her cheek-spreading grin made even Myalla Whiterock, implacable as she was, recoil ever so slightly. Like a predator, who knew very much their own strength and wasn’t afraid to show it.
“I could, but I’m not. I give you the hand of friendship and mutual prosperity. I don’t bother with the other one.”
Oh, it tickled Durelia’s ears and sent a shiver down her moonlit skin.
Not to mention made the back of her jaw tingle with a promising hint of salivation.
Ah, my daughters, do not blame your mother for indulging herself a little bit, Durelia thought wryly. I’m sure it’ll make a very nice home for us all.
*~*
Their route through the Alva Forest was a fairly pleasant one by all accounts. A stamped down dirt path was the closest thing to a road the elvetahn really ‘bothered’ with. It was one of the wider ones, meant to go between their various cities, and they’d already passed by a few caravans on the way. Much to the surprise of the elvetahn, who were ever unused to any outsiders in their territory. The fact they weren’t stopped for questions nearly as much since Alva Mor was declared was certainly nice, though.
“Out of everyone in fuckin’ Kitinchi, I have to escort you?” Hanamaru remarked incredulously, kicking a branch down the roadway. So far it’d survived about seven kicks, a new record. “Why can I not be the one getting escorted?”
“Why would you ever possibly need an escort?” asked her shorter, comely and well-kept ‘companion’. A kitsune in her own right, concealed by a wide-brimmed straw hat and well-made, if featureless, gray robe-shirt and pants.
“To bed, of course.”
“So you can break the floor again?”
“At least that was the only thing that broke.”
The shorter one sighed, shaking her head. “If you exercised some restraint, you wouldn’t make every man in ten miles fear for his short sword.”
“If they exercised at all then it wouldn’t be my hips breaking them.”
“Have you ever considered the touch of a woman?”
“Have you ever considered they all think I’m horrifically ugly?”
“Surely not because of your looks,” the shorter one muttered under her breath, which made Hanamaru bark a deep, chest-filled laugh.
“You’re the one being shown up by your own disciple!” Hanamaru choked out, pointing with a shaky finger. “She gets more pussy than you do at a tenth your age!”
No one, least of all Hanamaru, could’ve seen how fast such a short kitsune could move. Her sudden leap into the air was followed by a twirl, and her fist slammed right into the backside of the harraxin’s head. Hanamaru, muscular powerhouse of a woman she was, rocketed downward, face-first, into the ground. A thunderous crash followed and the roadway caved inward, depressing into the Hanamaru-shaped hole that just been violently made into it. Dust plumed outward, blasting everywhere along with loose rocks, branches, and other debris.
One couldn’t be blamed for thinking an explosion had just gone off.
“That I am so particular with my tastes is surely not for my lack of success,” the short one said, her voice so perfectly clear and punctual. It really complimented the raging vein pulsating at her temple. “Something I could not say the same for you.”
Hanamaru’s deep laugh could be heard, smothered by the ground her face had been submerged in. Nonetheless, utterly unfazed by such a fearsome blow, she picked herself up easily. Brushing off the dirt that’d fallen onto her armor and face, it seemed no more than she’d simply tripped. “I’m sure. Unless you want to go cradle snatching again, the only princesses you’ll find to romance are all in this forest.”
“If only you put as much work into your axe as you did your tongue.”
“Oh, quit being such a bitch, Rinnamu-san. Actually, come to think of it, being more of one might actually hel—“
Indeed, it was impressive how fast Hanamaru could be sent rocketing sideways from a single punch. The tree on the receiving end of her hulking, harraxin-sized muscle mass, though, would not appreciate such a detail. Nor the birds shitting themselves in a panic to escape as the whole thing toppled over.
And so Rinnamu continued to walk, her hands folded together inside the sleeves of her robe. One could easily mistake her for a monk or priestess within Kitinchi, but perhaps not so in Alva or farther beyond. Still, such a simple attire was the least she’d reduce herself into hiding over. It was bad enough Hanamaru made her carry the oversized rucksack, since that muscle-brained idiot couldn’t do anything outside without wearing her armor.
My dear disciple, what ever are you doing now? Rinnamu wondered, imagining the sweet face of Koya. Perhaps even smiling in that cocky way she liked to do. Well, she wouldn’t be for long, anyway. There was such a nice, raw, uncomfortable length of rope on her rucksack just for her. Pray stay alive long enough to make this insufferable trip worth my while.
At some point that idiot managed to get alongside her again, but Hanamaru was busier picking leaves and twigs out of her armor than mouthing off.
Perhaps beating her into silence was actually worthwhile to do?
“Anyway, Avaron is kind of weird,” Hanamaru said suddenly.
“Weird, how? And don’t try to sound noble after filth spews out of that cave you call a mouth.”
“She’s a weird tentradom. Hardly interested in sex and more concerned with … normal, matters.”
“You were rejected,” Rinnamu accused more than asked, but surprisingly, Hanamaru didn’t seem to bite the bait.
“No, I didn’t offer. What’s weirder is she asked me how my people ‘court’.”
“She’s a tentradom who asked the nicest way to take you to bed, and you’re complaining?”
“You know what I mean, Rinnamu-san.”
For something like this to be what Hanamaru sounded serious about, it was indeed somewhat weird. “Out of everything you reported, her unusual aptitude for intelligence did stand out to me. To say nothing of her apparently requesting, and receiving, such substantial information from Honda.”
“That is what concerns me more, even if those two worms don’t listen to me.”
“Honda buying her off?”
“No, her wanting that sort of information in the first place. None of it is anything compromising, at least, not what I managed to sneak a look at. Honda gave her the book on how Kitinchi is laid out and who does what, but nothing else. She was barely struggling to have a roof over her head and food to eat, but wants something like that?”
“It is rather concerning. I would say she is planning something, but what could she possibly do?”
“I don’t know. A regular tentradom going around and raping people would make the most sense. She’s clever; the sort of clever I’d have trouble with.”
It wasn’t as if Rinnamu could disagree, either. No, perhaps it was because Hanamaru of all people was disquieted, it too set her nerves on edge. Intelligence was a gift, but in the hands of someone they barely understood, an extremely dangerous weapon. The fact Nuala the Black had bothered to summon her to pick up her disciple, too, carried an array of implications. Namely that Nuala was helping Avaron, which meant the elvetahn queen had a deep interest in her as well.
If the elvetahn at large were supporting Avaron so seriously, then Honda wouldn’t even hold a candle to them.
But, it wasn’t as if the elvetahn were ignorant of Kitinchi. The two of them were neighbors since the olden days, for better or worse. Nothing Honda provided would be useful in a way the elvetahn already didn’t know. Scowling, her black, fluffy ears wiggled underneath her straw hat irritably. There is far too many powerful forces surrounding this one ‘divine heroine’. Between Honda, the elvetahn, and us, we’re all trying to make plays on her, and she knows it—or, at least, should know it.
“If nothing else, that is why you have me, Hanamaru-san,” Rinnamu said with a simple shrug. “Complex problems are my specialty, not yours.”
“If it means having that much trouble getting someone in bed, I’ll take the simple ones.”
The uniform bundle of her seven tails swayed from one side to the other, flowing like a beauty river. And desperately wanting to crash like a raging flood straight into Hanamaru.
*~*~*
Codex:
[Name: Tentshroom]
[Type: Tentacle Growth] [Class: Fungus]
[Traits: Edible, Fast Growing, Aromatic, Aphrodisiac, Sanitary]
[A kind of tentacle-based fungus resultant from a nearby Tentradom Hive. Tentshrooms have the characteristics of mushrooms, and prefer shady, somewhat damp locations to grow within. A tentshroom cluster’s maturity is indicated by the number of fully grown stalks, with the largest clusters having upwards of ten spread about in a three-foot radius.
Tentshrooms are known for their firm texture and warm heat, and make an excellent food. While the tentshroom itself needs to be cooked to be fully edible, its spore-laden nectar is safe to consume and very tasty. Although tentshrooms naturally release their nectar, physical caresses will encourage it to release even more. Larger and throbbing tentshroom indicate they are very full, and should be harvested soon. Otherwise, it will eventually erupt on its own in an attempt to spread its spores farther.
They are known to be devious and especially responsive to the presence of women. Some variants, however, exclusively respond to men instead.]
Chapter 62: Royal Interest
Chapter Text
The attention of higher powers rarely ends well for those beneath them.
*~*
It was funny to her how much she knew of the underground Hive, and how little at the same time. For the supposed nest of a tentradom, Arzha found nothing to fear, and little more to be concerned over. Still, its winding tunnels, many different rooms, and strange layout made it insanely difficult to navigate. There were no signs, no postage, no indication of what went where except stairs or ramps that led up or down. How Avaron and her drones managed to navigate such a place was more the mystery than anything else.
A rather formidable defense to unwanted problems like certain ninja trying to infiltrate.
The underground garden had been a pleasant surprise, and something she’d certainly visit more. Apparently it’d been the initial testing area for the indoor ‘hydroponics’, but Avaron converted it into a larger, more comfortable place. The huge, oval-shaped hall could fit a barrack’s worth of soldiers inside it, and still have such a vaunted ceiling above it. The rib-like architecture ever present was more the same, but the rampant growth of new plants helped to disguise it.
She wasn’t even sure if she should call them plants.
The garden itself spanned the entire floor, with a simple walkway cutting through from one side to the other. The dirt, as it were, had ‘grass’ growing out of it. Unlike the blade-like ones of the surface, this one was more … rounded. Fluffier. It resembled Avaron’s antennae after a fashion, with a central stalk that had hairs growing out of the sides. It rather reminded her more of wheat during the harvest than anything.
Then there was everything else …
The bark of trees was somewhat similar, if one ignored the tentacles intertwining through the trunk. They wound through and around each tree like snakes, only ending at the points where different kinds of fruits grew. Meanwhile, tentacles the size of her arms supported berry-bearing shrubbery, creating natural grown bowls that their bounty collected within. The blue flesh of the Hive intermingling with such normal flora looked parasitic. The attempted joining of two very different things, no matter the consequences.
“… And so, like, I understand it’s her own goddess and all that, but this is her soul we’re talking about. No one just promises incredible, godly power or whatever without there being some kind of catch,” Avaron griped. “But nooo, I’m the bad guy because I’m trying to save her from it.”
“Perhaps it is merely how you went about it, rather than the end goal?” Arzha offered up.
“Sure, I guess. Presentation matters but it seemed pretty obvious to me …”
“In matters of faith, decorum and procedure are of the utmost importance. Perhaps moreso than even meeting with nobility.”
“I’m not kneeling to anyone, least of all some pretentious goddess.”
I’m starting to see why the fight happened, Arzha mused, pursing her lips together. Nonetheless, it was her part to be mediator to the whole fiasco; or at least, massaging Avaron into something more amendable. For as surprising as the request had been from Tsugumi, of all people, she rather couldn’t turn the opportunity down. Thankfully, her impeccable lap pillow technique that ever beguiled her knights worked just as well on Avaron.
Perhaps a little too well.
It’d taken some strong arming to get Avaron to cooperate—mostly by picking her up and demanding ‘personal time’ together—but true to Tsugumi’s advice, she was entirely amendable to it. Arzha found the nicest, flattest looking spot to sit by a tree, and propped her back to it. Once Avaron’s head hit her lap, she just about went limp. Nonetheless, with her glove-free hand, Arzha wove her fingers through Avaron’s blue, flesh-oil-fiber like hair and all its strange texture. Not unpleasantly so, but definitely different.
At least scratching along the tentradom’s scalp made her mewl about as much as any of the knights would.
“Sometimes remarking on the obvious is helpful,” Arzha said simply. “Perhaps submitting yourself to the mercy of your wife is perhaps the wisest decision to make.”
Avaron, however, chuckled as if she’d heard something funny. “It’s usually the other way around, even when I’m telling her not to.”
“Perhaps that illuminates the seriousness of the matter all the more.”
“Yeah. Yeah … It’s just, I cannot give up on this. If the Eternal Flame is going to mulch her soul into some kind of soul soup made up of every other Chosen, I’m gonna k—“
Arzha slid her gloved hand over Avaron’s mouth, holding it as firmly shut as one could with an idiot who had loose lips. “Let us not speak words that would invoke the ire of the goddesses,” she said with a frosty tinge. “Even the impertinence of a divine heroine can only go so far.”
Avaron mumbled some nonsense into Arzha’s hand. Arzha leaned forward a bit from her resting posture, craning her head just enough to gaze down her bountiful bosom and its ever-in-the-way blocking of lap pillows. Her knights were always delighted to have such wonders over them, but it made looking at their beautiful faces a bit annoying sometimes. She had to sit up straight rather than lean back, after all. What was the fun in pillowing someone if you couldn’t relax as well?
“Lest I develop some awful ability to read your mind,” the princess remarked dryly, “no, not that either.”
Avaron rolled her eyes and huffed through her nose. At least she seemed to drop the matter, so Arzha freed her mouth once more. “Yes, yes, I’ll take your royal majesty’s words under advisement,” Avaron muttered, rubbing her eyes. “I am, after all, appreciative of your support and lovely thighs.”
“With the exception of my knights, only you and Kaelara have been graced by them. Do appreciate it more.”
“Well, if you insist …” Avaron stretched out, making a big show of her going ‘ahh’ in some relaxing way. Arzha about rolled her eyes at the theatrics. Still, that crafty tentradom rolled onto her side, firmly planting her face inward toward Arzha’s belly. “Such hard yet soft thighs, and the aroma of a woman in her utmost prime, bristling with power like a waterfall inviting me to drink—alright I could keep going but it sounds a little creepy.”
Arzha smiled to herself and looked up at the sun-like ceiling and its bio-lamps. Bright, yet not painfully so. “Perhaps, but I do not mind it from you. Though I would do without the sardonic undertone.”
“… Oh. Well, I’ll give it some thought then,” Avaron said, sounding a little caught out. “To be honest, I’m not really sure there is a pleasant way of saying what my instincts are screaming.”
“Then simply say them, and I will judge their worthiness.”
“Is this a … normal, princess thing in this world? Because I don’t want to mouth off the wrong thing if I meet another one.”
“Let us just say it’s something between us,” Arzha remarked amusedly. “I’ve done enough with the delicate and sweet words that come out of mouths better served in a sewer than a feasting hall.”
“Rough life, huh.”
Arzha huffed her laugh out, pressing a fist to her mouth to keep the rest down. “Yes, quite. Sweet words from a snake are less desirable than filthy ones from a maiden.”
“Alright, alright. Don’t freeze me across the ground if I say the wrong thing.”
“I won’t.”
Although, it did amuse Arzha how tepid Avaron was despite her very obvious signals. Tentradom or not, as a woman who indulged so much the delights of women, Avaron needing her hand held so much was a bit … charming. Funny, in that she obviously had the competency to do whatever she wanted, yet skittishly avoided doing so. Not as ignorant as her knights she so diligently taught first hand herself, but certainly a stranger in paradise. She was neither mysterious nor difficult to figure out, yet at the same time it was delightfully fun trying to unwind her thread-tangled ball.
A particularly loud inhale from below caught Arzha’s ear.
“Your aroma is a bit like a … spring, and a mountain. Clean and clear, and refreshing to the nose a bit like the after taste of mint.”
“Mint?”
“A type of herb; very flavorful, but very sharp as well,” Avaron explained. “You have a nice mixture of cool and freshness that compliments the warm musk of being alive. It really accentuates that, actually. A strong scent that reads of maturity and power; especially power. But, not … magical, power. Not like Nuala’s, for example. Very physical, gritty power. Honestly that’s the hardest part to explain.”
“There are some [skills] that can assess things, such as [Scrutinize]. I’m led to believe they more directly tell someone the nature of what they behold,” Arzha said. “It wouldn’t surprise me if a tentradom’s nose could pick it up.”
“That sounds like a neat [skill] to get at some point.”
“It requires a lot of study, if I remember correctly.”
“Well, I’m doing plenty of that. But, yeah, I can smell you’re strong, and did the work to get strong. Then there’s the, uh, everything else.”
Ah, there was her skittishness again. Arzha smirked and gently cupped Avaron’s chin with her gloved hand. A meaningful hold unto itself, with a tiny, playful rub of her thumb on the tentradom’s cheek. “Do not leave me in suspense, now.”
Avaron’s cute antennae wiggled with a nervous energy to them. At least, it seemed nervous. “I mean, well, your womanly side of things. Like, you’re crazy fertile. Super fertile. Probably the most fertile I’ve smelled of anyone yet, including my wives. I also get the feeling you’d make super delicious milk? A lot of it too, because of your generous size and … yeah laugh it up.”
It was too much for Arzha to keep back, and she fell against the tentacle-fused tree, laughing. Such banal words she usually heard about cattle or livestock being directed at her with such sincerity proved incredibly surreal. Strange in a way she had little to compare it to; worse, when she looked down at Avaron’s flustered face, she laughed harder. For anything she might’ve imagined ever since receiving that prophecy of her fate, it wasn’t ‘this’.
It took her a couple minutes to really gain control again. Arzha wiped at her eyes, her face positively radiant with warmth from such heartfelt exercise. “T-this is certainly something,” she said, albeit almost choking on her words again. “Pray forgive my outburst.”
“I’m just saying what I’m smelling,” Avaron remarked with a huff.
Ah, her mild transformation did make her so much cuter. The fluff coming out of her joints and the antennae softened Avaron’s otherwise ‘barren’ physique with something tangibly exotic. Something she’d yet to really experience, herself. Arzha held her gloved hand up and leisurely stripped it bare. “I am so pleased that you regard me as such exemplary … what would be it, breeding slut?”
Avaron’s antennae wiggled furiously as a shocked look overcame her. “O-Kay it’s—seriously sexy, when you say it that way,” she chirped out, and crossed her index fingers together in an X. “Don’t do that unless you want to really rile me up.”
“Oh, really?” Arzha asked coolly, yet her voice carried the warmth of something dangerously thick and heavy. She nonetheless folded her glove and inserted into her pants’ pocket along with the other one. “Something so base and, mm, beastly, is what excites you?”
"Tsugumi is a terrible influence on you,” Avaron shot back, her flustered attempt at being ‘dry’ rather more ‘nervous’.
"Is it not more your fault how much you devour her helpless self?”
"Of the many things I would call her, helpless is not one of them.”
“And yet she walks around that inn of hers, a belly full of … eggs, I believe?”
“Yeah, they’re eggs. Most tentradom pregnancies are egg-based.”
“’Most’? Compared to what?”
“Live birth.”
“Why?” Arzha asked, a tinge of curiosity nagging at her. “It is so far spoken of that women captured by tentradoms underwent live birth, not eggs.”
“I … uh, well, do you want to know? I mean … ya know … The mood, the atmosphere …”
“I’m afraid I’m in short supply on scholars or tentradoms to inquire with,” Arzha remarked dryly. Seeing Avaron’s scrunched face, she smirked and brushed her naked hand along of Avaron’s antennas. Such a delicate yet thick feeling thing, soft in its flesh and softer still in the fuzzy branches coming off. It wiggled madly in between her fingers, unable to escape as its owner inhaled sharply. Ehh? It’s kind of like a fuzzy caterpillar?
And why was Avaron’s face blushing so much? And biting her lip?
An insidious thought occurred through Arzha’s mind then, instinct and intelligence conspiring to create an unfortunate realization. With a skill born from years of swordswomanship, artistry, and delicately fine maidens held aloft by her hand alone, she gently squeezed her two fingers, capturing the antenna at the tip. Then, she just oh-so-slowly slid downward, rubbing the squishy flesh and brushing down those little branches that jutted out. Really, the whole feeling was quite novel in itself, but Arzha knew Avaron’s expression much better.
Twitching eyes, biting down on her lip, the flexing of her neck to keep herself under control—
“Nnnn, it’s SeNiSiTiVe,” Avaron mewled with the highest pitch voice Arzha ever heard out of her. A guilty shudder wracked the tentradom, and she tried rolling away, but alas, her own antenna belonged to Arzha. Who found herself enjoying the spectacle a little too much. Poor Avaron didn’t see the utterly villainous smile that stretched across the face of the princess of Artor.
The whole everything involving ‘tentacles’ and ‘inhuman nature’ being somewhat incomprehensible, it was, for the first time, she found something more relatable. Something much more feminine and human in Avaron’s delighted yet conflicted expression, and helpless struggle beneath the gentlest touch. It’s such a little thing, and so much easier to get to, Arzha mused, applying a gentle pinch that made Avaron jump in her skin.
“N-no seriously, I’m gonna start smoking this place up,” Avaron begged, waving her hands pathetically.
“And what is that?”
“Pheromones. Scents, smells. It gets in your nose and you’re gonna turn into a sexual monster as bad as me.”
Arzha’s eyebrow popped upward. Smiling thinly and sighing through her nose, she nonetheless let go of the slightly darker, almost throbbing antenna. It wiggled furiously against its sibling, scratching and rubbing together. A rather cute sight with Avaron’s flustered gaze just underneath. Yet, Arzha noticed something else, mostly on her hand. Some sort of powdery, scaly gloss not too far away from thin make up in texture. It had a blue and silver hue, and turned darker in color when reflecting light. “And would this have anything to do with that?” she asked, holding her hand over Avaron’s face.
“Uh … maybe? I’ve never seen that before.”
“Really now?”
“I don’t do—that—to my antennae. Plus these are a new feature, so I haven’t figured them out fully yet.”
“… How do you not know your own body?”
“It's funny like that.”
Humming her acknowledgement of that question dodging, Arzha stared at the residue on her fingers. “I can say at least it’s not dangerous.”
“Wait, why?”
“My [skill], [Danger Detection], doesn’t react to it.”
“Wait, that sounds neat, how does it work?”
Such an underwhelming response to such a rare [skill], it almost made Arzha laugh again. She managed with cracking a smile. “It is a higher form of the [skill] [Heightened Awareness]. Unlike [Heightened Awareness], [Danger Detection] is a natural response that is always on. Ah, yes, you are not from this world. You do not know either [skills’] history.”
“Huh, sounds like Spider Sense a little bit.”
“I’ve not heard of that [skill],” Arzha remarked, wiping her fingers clean on her well-worn, slightly yellowing cloth pants.
“Oh, it’s … uh, well, it does the same thing, I think. A sort of bubble around yourself that can sense incoming danger and let you react before it does anything.”
“Correct, that is [Danger Detection]. It is a sense that also informs me if something is poisonous to my body.”
Avaron fingered her bothered antenna, smoothing out its ruffled fluff. Something that made Arzha want to mess it up again. “I wonder how that works exactly. I mean, I’m virtually invincible due to my regeneration powers, so would [Danger Detection] trigger on anything that can ‘harm’ me even if I shrug it off?”
That, however, was an intriguing enough thought that Arzha paid it some more mind. “… It should? Sadly it is not a [skill] one should proclaim widely, since it provides such powerful advantage unseen to the eye. In my case, I’m aware of most anything coming toward my person—something as simple as a quill may be enchanted with magic to pierce flesh like a knife, for example. [Danger Detection] may or may not know that, so I am alarmed when anything being thrown at me comes by.”
“Interesting. I suppose knowing how it works exactly would also mean finding ways to counter it better?”
“It would, yes. It is powerful, not perfect.”
“I’m a little curious how that would work with my [Hive Mind], since my [skills] are propagated throughout it.”
Arzha blinked, recoiling backward slightly. “The [skills] themselves, not just the learned experiences?”
“Oh, yeah. They’re much weaker compared to my version, but more powerful tentacles benefit more from my [skills]. Right now there’s only the weakest ones, so the difference isn’t that noticeable.”
“That is … well, the power it gives is truly incredible. If you acquired a [skill] like [Hardening] to bolster your defenses, then your entire Hive would benefit as well. No army in the world has such uniform power between its soldiers.”
“How do I get a [skill] like that?” Avaron asked.
“Getting beat to the point of near death more than a dozen times is the traditional method. There are others, but that one is reliable.”
Avaron’s antennae fell flat as if they’d just died before Arzha’s eyes; fittingly so, for how depressed the tentradom suddenly looked. “I’m starting to think this world is just a little messed up.”
“It has its upsides. Now that I’ve enlightened you so much on a secret of mine, perhaps tell me one of yours?”
“The mind wonders at what you could ever ask me,” Avaron said with a hint of dryness to her tone.
“As I said before, I have no scholars or other tentradoms to inquire upon. The means by which children come about, or how many, is quite the question on my mind,” Arzha said, wonderfully punctual in her formal tone. Years of courtly speeches made even the most awkward or unsavory of topics that much more bearable to speak, after all.
“Oh, the eggs and live birth thing?”
“Yes, as well as, well, ‘how many’ children are made. Gwyneth is ever quite enthusiastic about her [skill] being a ‘brood mother’.”
“That’s the [skill] one gains from me, actually. So she’s just not, ya know, saying that.”
“I’m not sure that alleviates my concerns as much as you might think.”
“Alright, alright. Um, let’s start with basics, then. I really should sit up for this but I’m loathe to abandon your lovely thighs.”
“Treasure them while you can,” Arzha said with a teasing disregard, petting Avaron’s head. Those antennae of hers wiggled out of the way, deftly avoiding a touch that wasn’t even intended for them. Quite the weak spot you have now, dear Avaron.
“If I fall asleep, don’t blame me,” Avaron griped with a smile, but then took a moment to focus. “Okay, so reproduction is an intense act—don’t smile at me like that! I’m speaking in terms of the body.”
“I’ve been led to believe you are quite ‘intense’ as well,” Arzha said with the easiest air of conversation a woman could muster.
“Oh, I go from one-to-eleven on demand, Princess. No, wait, you almost got me flirting again.”
I just did.
Avaron scoffed and held up her hands, gesturing in some box shaped outline. “Okay, reproduction is very intense. Every animal in existence, at least on Earth, succeeded in two ways: eggs, or live birth. Both have strengths and weaknesses, neither one is outright ‘the best’. Some animals come out of their eggs fully formed, some take a while. Some live births can start walking in hours, or like humans, take years of care before they can even wiggle safely.”
“I understand so far,” Arzha affirmed, running her fingers across Avaron’s scalp again. Hard, but soft like a maiden, yet so very warm and radiant in its heat—her blue hair was much ‘thicker’ as well. Not quite the thin strands she or her knights had, but not so thick as to be similar to the Far West. Still, quite fun to play with all the same.
“There’s a lot of reasons for this because of how evolution works, but—“
“What is this, ‘evolution’?”
“… Oh goddesses. Okay, that’s an entire lecture in itself. The short answer is: it’s how all life ‘came to be’ over time, by analyzing them and the environment they grew up in.”
“That sounds to be ecology of a kind, then.”
“Yes and no. Anyway, humans are descendants of apes and monkeys, which—“
“We are?” Arzha asked incredulously, looking down at an equally surprised Avaron. “Are humans not the children of Goddess Hannalyia on Earth?”
“… Okay, now there’s a whole theological argument I’m not even sure how to cover. Let me just cover the eggs topic here.”
“Very well.”
“Right.” Avaron rubbed her eyes for a moment, then started gesturing again. “When humans started being upright creatures, walking on two legs, how women gave birth changed radically. The one thing humans have is their smarts: generation by generation, smarter humans succeeded where others failed. Human babies have huge fucking heads when they pop out of that small ass ho—okay, small vaginal passage, technically.”
So far that sounded like many of the troubles midwives educated her on, so Arzha simply nodded.
“So human-like birth isn’t perfect; it’s extremely traumatic. It’s full of downsides and problems that can kill the mother, or cripple her severely. Evolution doesn’t necessarily care about ‘that’, as long as the child lives and goes on to reproduce. It’s like a torch being passed on. As long as that torch is passed on, then evolution continues to work.”
“I find myself quickly despising this ‘evolution’,” Arzha remarked frostily. “It seems capricious and cruel.”
“You’re not … wrong, in a sense. But, okay, for tentradoms like myself, who reproduce with embarrassing freedom, women having trouble giving birth would be a serious problem. If all births were as hard as a regular human one, we’d eventually cripple or kill our mates in a matter of years.”
“And to resolve that, tentradoms turned toward eggs?”
“Something like that,” Avaron said, nodding somewhat awkwardly in Arzha’s lap. “Eggs go inside, settle inside the mother, and soak up all her love and support in growing. When the eggs are strong enough to survive on their own, birth happens both easily and somewhat quickly. Tsugumi and Gwyneth, uh, find it very pleasurable as well, apparently.”
“Something which regular human birth definitely is not.”
“Very much so. The independent eggs finish growing the offspring inside until it’s strong enough to survive on its own, and so breaks free. Depending on what kind, the mother may need to nurse them for a while. Some types of tentacles are independent from hatching, though. It really kind of depends.”
“Your elegance in explaining such a complex matter is rather captivating,” Arzha said, smirking when Avaron blinked. “I’m curious if you’ve ever had a reading party before?”
“For … books?”
“Books, poems, and the like. It’d be a shame for such—“ Arzha, her hand near Avaron’s forehead, dipped downward. It trailed alongside the tentradom’s face, down to her slightly parted and open lips. Lips her index finger easily circled around, like a wolf cornering prey. “—oratory skill to be unappreciated.”
How easily Avaron’s face darkened from Arzha’s words! She licked her lips, nearly catching Arzha’s finger before it snuck away once again. “W-well, first time anyone’s ever said that about me,” Avaron said, scratching her cheek. “Um, no, I haven’t. But, uh, maybe it’d be fun to do some time.”
“Some time,” Arzha echoed. “I have to find some books worth reading first.”
“S-sure.”
“It’s a date, then,” the Princess said, tapping Avaron on the forehead and winking. Those cute antennae squirmed and fluttered about the moment she did so. “Please, continue. You said some tentradoms also follow through with live birth?”
“Oh. Oh, uh, yeah.” Avaron really was quite easy to play with when a woman got her hands on her, apparently. “It’s … tricky. Pregnancy is traumatic, tentradom eggs help make it so simple and comfortable it helps women more than it could hurt them. Tentradom live birth is … something. I don’t have any experience with it yet. The thing is, as a woman acquires more [levels] in [Brood Mother], pregnancy and birth both become easier. And, more pleasurable, I guess?”
“Hearing of birth and pleasure in the same sentence rather goes against everything I learned on the matter,” Arzha quipped wryly. “I can hardly imagine it being such.”
“Yeaaah.”
“So what advantages do tentradoms have, then, pursuing live birth?”
“More powerful offspring, generally. More complex ones, too. Eggs do a lot, but they have their limits. A particularly powerful mother could nurture very powerful tentacles inside of her if the pregnancy lasted as long as a human one does.”
“I see. But, presumably, less offspring per pregnancy?”
“Yeah. Live birth takes up a lot of space inside. It’d go from dozens of eggs to like, one to five babies, at best.”
“And for all the faults of it, somehow, a [Brood Mother] wouldn’t be harmed from birthing?”
“… In theory, yes. To be honest, I’ve [leveled] up recently and … acquired, more types of tentacles. The issue is two of them require live birthing, and I haven’t broached the matter with my wives.” Avaron made a shrugging motion. “It’s a bridge we have to cross but I’m rather reluctant to make them do so. Or if they even want to.”
“Yet, you need those ‘new types’ of tentacles, do you not?”
“Need, probably not. Want them to help grow the Hive, sure. I’m not so craven to put their concerns under my desires.”
Arzha exhaled, her gaze drifting up to the expanse of the tentacle-infused garden they ever sat within. “If only men were so adamant. There truly is no end of them who would rather have a son to inherit their legacy, than a wife to experience life beside.”
“You gals get that problem here too, huh?”
“I cannot imagine how it is on Earth, admittedly. Men here are, at least, easy to put to the sword when the only thing they care about is their ‘sword’.” Arzha brushed some of her dark blonde bangs back behind her ear. “After all, women are always left to care for the family, such that men may come to enjoy the fruits of the labor when it is convenient. Well, perhaps it is better among the serfs and commoners. The matters of family and legacy are not as important to them as it is to nobles.”
“Something I’ve been curious about, if you don’t mind me asking?”
Arzha’s eyebrow quirked upward. “What of?”
“I’m pretty sure you’re a lesbian—a woman whose only romantically interested in other women.”
“I’ve not heard of that word before, however it sounds much nicer than some others I could speak of.” Arzha smirked. “Yes, exclusively so.”
“So how the hell does royal succession work? I mean, you become Queen, there’s no promise of an heir …”
“That would be the same quandary that frustrated the Artorian court since they discovered me in bed with a duchess’ daughter,” Arzha said, the mirth in her voice uncontainable. “My suggestions toward adoption, or an ‘anonymous contribution to royal integrity’, were not well received.”
“… Seriously?”
“I might regale you on the intricacies of noble obligation and familial responsibility, but as you said earlier, it is quite the ‘lecture’.”
“Yeah, alright.”
Frowning, Arzha’s doting ministrations slowed to a stop as old memories ever reared their head. “If I am honest, for many years I suspected my father favored my brother because of it. He would make a blood heir that the Shieldcrown line could follow down, and that secured much favor in the Artorian court. My father, though a good man and a great father, was a terrible king. After my mother died, he struggled to keep a hold on the court.”
“So it would make sense for him to curry favor through that kind of choice.”
“It would, but as my mother named me her inheritor, it caused even more friction in the court. My father spent his rule navigating the rift he so willfully made in the first place.” Arzha sighed and rubbed her eyes. “Then the Church whispered into his ear the promises of power and glory if he helped summon the next generation of heroines.”
“Which is where the Nagraki plot to overthrow Artor comes about.”
“That or earlier, knowing how timeless they truly are.”
“… The most concerning part of it all, though, is why the Nagraki would conspire to do something like that. Divine heroines are, essentially, their natural enemy.”
Arzha squinted as the weight of that idea set in for the first time. “That is true. No one would be better equipped to fight them than divine heroines. Presuming they have some semblance of sanity, doing such a thing would have to benefit them in some way.”
“I can’t even begin to imagine which way that would be, though. Maybe harvesting all the sweet, sweet divine power out of the heroines?”
“… I’m not sure if they could, but if they can …”
Neither of them were really that sure, but knew well enough there had to be a reason.
*~*
The parallel processing of multiple sounds at once was never not a bit weird to Avaron. It’d been one of the first things she tuned out from the [Hive Mind] since it made redundant noise, and so largely wasn’t an issue. When one of her ‘main bodies’ was going around, however, it would reproduce at least one parallel echo as a result. Since cutting out the complete transmission of that information wouldn’t be good, she was simply left to deal with it.
That said, at least the laughter and giggles of children wasn’t too terrible. Until they started screeching, but such was life.
Standing at the simple wooden gate at the ‘orphanage’s’ entrance, Avaron, with Nuala beside her, watched all the children for a moment. Some sat off in their own corner near the main house, busied inside their microscopic world. Others played with one of several chitinous balls Avaron had created for them. Many more were having fun with the caretaker tentaclelings, which were essentially very large spider-dogs with three-inch thick floof covering them. The children rather enjoyed riding them like horses, and so the tentaclelings obliged their ceaseless, inane requests to go to-and-fro.
“Well, at least they can laugh still,” Avaron remarked, pushing open the gate and heading toward the front doors. Curious but wary eyes glanced at her, with the most skittish of them hiding behind some tentaclelings, crates, or small plants.
“Quicker than I would expect,” Nuala quipped from beside her.
“Mm.”
They reached the front door of the chitin-and-wood made house, albeit more like two houses fused together in a hurry. Avaron knocked twice and then gave a gentle push to slide the door open. “Hello?” she asked, peering into the dimmer interior. The relatively sparse inside, what with its two tables and various stools strewn about, only had a few children. The youngest ones, tended to by the oldest ones, helping them to walk or write on the ground impotently.
“What you want?” one of the older ones asked, her scuffed up face scrunching with annoyance.
“Hi, is Genyral up?”
“He’s in da keethen.”
“Alright, we’re just here to visit him.”
“Aight.”
Children really did have a way of not giving the slightest fuck sometimes that made Avaron worry. Still, that’s what the tentaclelings were for: caretakers, and guards.
The two of them headed inside, and the kitchen itself was just an adjacent room. Avaron spied at the firepit at the other side of the room, smoldering with burned woods with a cauldron-like pot suspended over it. An older kid, probably a teenager, tended to the liquid contents with a long wooden spoon. To Avaron’s right sat the kitchen’s only table, at which a man sat on a stool, slouched against the wall.
“You want to keep stirring until it’s more sticky than watery—oh. Hello there?” Genyral started, jolting upright before letting out a disgustingly wet cough into the strip of cloth that was his face mask. Avaron held up a hand, beckoning him to ease back. It took a moment before the sickly priest got himself under control again.
“Hi there. Queen Avaron, Nuala the Black—“ Avaron gestured around appropriately, “—we’re here to ask you some questions, if you’re feeling up to them.”
Genyral glanced between them, his weary, sleepless eyes visibly trying to make some sense. Sheer exhaustion and starvation had done a number to him, and shortly after arriving in Eden, fever and sickness took him greatly. It’d only broken in the last few days from what Avaron observed, and since he was up-and-about again, elected to finally visit him. “I … remember, you,” he said, pointing weakly at Nuala. “You were with the knights.”
“I was.”
“Okay. Right. Thank you. Queen?” Genyral looked at Avaron next, somewhat bewildered.
“That’s me. Don’t worry about formality or anything.”
“Uh … okay?”
Nuala said, “We need to know what happened to your village. Goldgrass, was it?”
“I—yeah. Goldgrass. The attack, right? You want to know about the attack?”
Avaron said, “As much as you know about who or what did it, yeah.”
Genyral glanced to the teenager working the cooking pot. Then he leaned onto the table and rubbed his forehead, scowling as if to remember. Or perhaps forcing himself to recall. “The little folk. Kagr. They came hollering across the farmlands, screaming like they—“ he ruptured a terrible cough out and fisted his chest. “Screaming like nightmares,” he wheezed.
Nuala frowned beneath her hood. “Kagr do not raid like that.”
“No, they don’t. Ah, a moment.” The raspy Genyral turned to a mug on the table, and pulling his mask down for a moment, took a drink of something. It certainly helped clear up his throat when he spoke next. “We’d been friends with the kagr nearby. Bunktuka’s village. They traded forest hunts for grains; leathers for metals.”
“… You can be friends with those things?” Avaron asked, both eyebrows popping up.
Genyral’s cheeks lifted in a half-hidden smile of some kind. “It took some work. Kagr stick to themselves.”
Nuala hummed. “It’s not unheard of, but certainly difficult to do. And these kagr are the ones that attacked you?”
“Maybe. Or different ones. They looked … different.”
“Different how?”
“Crazy. Empty. Dead eyed, but moving. Some wore armor I never saw before. Others used spears we definitely didn’t make in the—ahem—village.” Genyral rubbed his forehead. “I don’t know why. The Red River folks already demanded tribute from us. The kagr didn’t care, they just started killing everyone who resisted. The ones who didn’t were dragged to the shrine.”
Avaron said, “To which you and the children escaped in a secret tunnel.”
He nodded. “Too small for us all, so children went first. I’d bring them to the hidden cave. The fire … the fire, started as we were leaving. We should’ve left earlier, maybe more would—“
Nuala cut in, “Pay no mind to that thought. It is what it is. Tell me, why did the Harvest Moons not visit a boon upon you? They would not let their shrine be defiled.”
“… I don’t know. I prayed. We all prayed. No one answered.” Genyral held up his hands in an empty offering. “It wasn’t like they were ignoring us. I couldn’t divine their presence at all; as if they were just gone. I don’t know what I did for them to scorn me. Or us.”
“I’m not sure you did. I am satisfied with this, Avaron.”
Genyral just looked confused, eyes glancing between them.
Avaron nodded. “Alright. Genyral, I bid you and yours a comfortable stay here in Eden. This house and its land, please take care of it, and the children as well.”
He leaned forward—no, more like a lifeless drooping. “I fear I cannot work well anymore, good Queen. My hands and knees are not so well. We won’t make enough to live here. The children are—“
“—Nevermind that. I am the Queen of this land; you will be taken care of. Think only of healing and recovering, as best you can. For yourself, and for all the kids here.”
“I …” Genyral, head bowed, held up his hands together, cupping them as if to receive or give an offering. “This lowly priest can only give thanks to you, good Queen. Bless your house, and your harvests.”
Is this something magical or just manners? Avaron wondered, not really feeling anything magical. Smiling thinly, she said, “Be at peace here. If you think of anything else, tell the tentaclelings—they will pass your words on to me.”
“Aye,” he squeaked out.
Oh, she never did well with people crying, least of all men who rarely cried at all around her. Bidding farewell, she hurried out with Nuala, giving a half-wave to the children on her way past. In no time at all they were on a packed dirt road, heading into the direction of Eden’s City Hall. The surrounding neighborhood of houses, for the most part, either had people lounging on their front porches, or doing work of some kind. Cleaning clothes, mending said clothes, taking care of their leftover belongings like hammers or shovels, and the like. Most paid no mind to Avaron, though a few who recognized her made a show of bowing. She waved back in turn.
“Alright, so what’s going on?” Avaron asked the suspiciously quiet Nuala.
“I have only conjecture to offer.”
“And I’ve got nothing, so let’s hear it.”
There was a pregnant silence for a moment.
“Kagr are a broken people, if they are even people in the first place. They have neither goddesses nor a homeland to call their own; they are offered nothing, not even help,” Nuala said. “In our own attempts to enslave them, we found them too stupid to even be called a person. They had no ability to understand complex language, let alone mathematics or otherwise.”
“Which I’m suspecting is just a bit of racism on your part, if Goldgrass managed to make trade with a kagr village.”
"Racism?"
“Discrimination on others purely because of what they are or how they look.”
“Mm. No, that is the strange part. They should not have been able to. Kagr don’t conceptualize of outsiders as anything except threats. The fact they could trade at all goes against thousands of years of kagr history.”
“Wait, thousands of years? How do they survive?”
“Kagr are predominantly a women-only species, with very few men ever born. Those who are, typically, are prized breeders kept in very well-protected areas,” Nuala explained. “Otherwise, kagr must kidnap men of other peoples and use them for breeding. An entire kagr nest can survive off two or three men for decades, if not centuries, at a time.”
“I really don’t like the sound of that. Is it as horrible as I am imagining?”
“So long as the man can ‘get it up’, the rest is rather … optional, to say the least.”
“Oh, yuck. They have to be a genetic mess from all that incest.”
“Inbreeding has greatly changed them over the eons, if that is what you mean. The kagr of today are demented mutants of what they used to be.”
“Were they always violent and exclusive?”
“Exclusive, not violent. Kagr are afraid of everything bigger than themselves, which is why they hide more than confront such problems. For most of time, kagr are a nuisance and nothing else.”
“Wait, that makes no sense.” Avaron held up a hand. “Gwyneth fought a kagr group that was escorting some kind of giant kagr.”
“… That was one disturbing question that still remains unanswered. There is also, of course, the Doomblade-wielding nagraki that was escorted by kagr Hanamaru reportedly ran into. Of the three, the nagraki one is the easiest to understand in having simply corrupted the kagr. The giant’s group, and that ‘supply convoy’ you yourself encountered, however, are not.
“It’d be reasonable to assume the kagr are behaving differently this time around, and we have no idea why.”
“Succinct as always. I have many theories, but little evidence to see which would be correct.”
“Lovely,” Avaron said with a roll of her eyes, then glanced at Nuala over her shoulder. “And what is up with that whole ‘enslaving the kagr’ thing, anyway?”
Nuala simply spared an uninterested look in return. “Those who cross our borders uninvited forfeit their lives. While we cultivate a reputation of utmost lethality, we usually enslave such trespassers, rather than kill them.”
“… Why?”
“To kill weaker prey than one’s self is most unbecoming. But, we cannot permit others to think lightly of our lands, or our ways. Trespassers cannot be allowed to leave, nor do we find killing them that much better. If, then, they are left to live on our land, they will do so in service to us. At least then they will account for their crime.”
Oh, it wasn’t hard seeing how much of a problem that would become in the future. With Eden’s staunch anti-slavery stance, Avaron’s alliance with the elvetahn of the Alva Forest may encounter just a bit of a bumpy road. It certainly would if such knowledge became wide spread, and Eden’s own citizens started demanding action. Then again, they might do so anyway for the other foreign nations that Avaron would invariably encounter.
“I see,” Avaron said simply, electing to push that problem off later. “Well, what of the Harvest Moons, then? Goddesses up and vanishing can’t be normal.”
“No, it’s not … Why do you sound unsurprised by this?”
“Because apparently the Forever Dark is also gone.”
“What?” Avaron found herself yanked by the shoulder and whirled around as Nuala grabbed ahold of her. For once, the ever calm and collected magi looked utterly shell shocked, and perhaps a little insane. “How do you know that?” Nuala demanded sharply.
“The Eternal Flame said so,” Avaron answered, craning her head back from Nuala’s frightful closeness.
“What in the world could have killed the Forever Dark?!”
“No, not ‘killed’. We got into a bit of a discussion with the Eternal Flame. It said the Forever Dark vanished, and it has no idea where to. I’m guessing that means neither dead nor alive?”
“That-that’s not possible. Goddesses, even when they die, are part of our world. They have a purpose in—they just don’t ‘vanish’!” Nuala’s amethyst colored eyes trembled and darted in tiny, thoughtful motions; as if a terrible thought had gripped her. For one so normally stoic to be so shaken, it rattled even Avaron to see. She kept her peace until Nuala finally let go and stepped back.
“I have to go. I’ll return later.”
“Wai—“
In a puffing swirl of black smoke, Nuala vanished before Avaron’s eyes. The tentradom queen grunted and threw her hands up in the air. “Seriously! When am I going to get this cool teleport vanishing trick? Huh? HUH?”
No one answered.
*~*~*
Codex:
[Scrutinize]
[An intelligence based skill capable of discerning truths once discovered long ago when something is scrutinized. The accuracy of the information depends on the user’s knowledge and cognitive abilities. Those closest to the truth may be graced with a divine insight.]
[Danger Detection]
[Your senses are always alert and active for any possible perceived danger, no matter the direction or your state of being. In moments of danger, your cognitive speed will be massively enhanced to allow for reaction time to incoming dangers for 2 seconds.
There is a minimum cooldown of 5 seconds before Danger Detection may trigger again.
This is a higher form of the skill [Heightened Awareness].]
Chapter 63: Far From Home
Chapter Text
Home is a place, as much in the heart as in the world.
*~*
The rides back were always the quietest ones. A day’s hard labor took much out of a man, even if Bernd wasn’t doing as much as he used to. Not that he’d complain to a soul about it, eight-to-nine tallow shifts were blissfully short compared to the twelve tallow shifts he used to do. They weren’t even full working tallows: the mandatory breaks every two tallows, with a half tallow’s worth of break time to eat and relax.
Honestly, it seemed like they were never doing enough. Progress was progress, but they could make more if they worked harder and longer. Bernd just didn’t understand what the supposed Queen was planning with that kind of work schedule. Maybe starting easy since we’re all new here, he mused, since it made decent sense. Couldn’t work a man to the bone if one didn’t know how much bone he had to give.
Still, he’d enjoy the shorter days while he could.
The cart began slowing, the freakishly huge and ugly creature pulling giving them a bit of a jerk. It didn’t fully stop, but that meant they were at one of their drops. Bernd glanced at the ‘street sign’ at the corner of the road, where the odd number ‘13’ waited. He started a bit, patting himself down to make sure everything was still on and where it should’ve been. “My stop here,” he said gruffly, giving a half-salute of a wave to the other miners riding with him. “See ya tomorrow.”
Grunting responses answered, some waving back, others just laying still as they waited. Bernd hopped off, a heavy thud rocking his through his bones when he hit the ground. Thankfully his boots and their hard leather still held up for years as is. They were getting worn down something fierce, and he wasn’t sure how he’d replace them yet. New soles only did so much, and he hadn’t found a shoemaker in ‘Eden’ yet.
A different problem for another day, though.
He set down the packed dirt road that cut through the household neighborhood. Even if he’d been living there for weeks, seeing such neat and perfect rows of those weird looking houses never sat right with him. Each one was as same as the last one, which is why so many started putting banners and flags on their front doors. Or their ‘lawns’. Or their porch.
Ah, but he soon arrived. A strange house as same as any other, but with a tarp that had a broken pickaxe on it. The shutters were closed, but smoke came out of the chimney—Ari getting the evening dinner ready, hopefully. Bernd trudged up the walkway to the front door, then knocked four times in a specific way. The sound of something like a chair scrapping the ground sounded from the inside. A moment later, a voice asked in a muffled way, “Who is it?”
“It’s me, back from the mines,” Bernd answered loud, but simply.
The sound of something being moved on the door followed. The sliding front door slid sideways, just enough for an eye to peep through. Their eyes met, then the door slid open fully. “Oh, welcome home, husband.”
Bernd cracked a crooked smile and gave a thumbs up before stepping inside. “Aye, I’m back. Where the little bugs?”
“… Playing with Haellan’s lot next street over. They got a ball of some kind to play with,” Ari said in her ever-present gloomy sounding voice. She was not the most energetic woman but something about her seemed a bit more perky than usual. More than since they had to leave home, at least.
“Good, good,” Bernd grunted, dropping his heavy backpack off next to the front door. His dirt-and-rock caked boots followed next. “It’ll brighten their spirits, at least. Something’s smelling mighty fine, what is it?”
“I got lucky with the food stall today,” Ari remarked and shuffle-walked over to the fireplace alongside the far wall. “Soup with meat. There’s some … extra, off to the side. I don’t know if you wanted to roast it.”
“As long as we got some salt left, that’s enough to roast it. A solid feast tonight for us all, then!”
“Mm.”
“I’ll clean up here and see what can be done,” Bernd said, giving another thumbs up. As much as he’d love to hug the snuggly, bosomy maiden his wife ever shone as, he was covered in all sorts of filth. Ari gave her own cutesy, timid thumbs up in return, and so Bernd headed off to the bathing room.
As strange as Eden was with things like ‘tentradoms’ and ‘tentacles’ being everywhere, it wasn’t stiff with the things it did provide. Clean water pumped right into each and every house so people didn’t have to go to a river or well was just wonderful. It sure beat having to haul things to-and-from the river alright; though he did miss bathing with the other men. Goddesses only knew how they were doing, it was hard enough finding them to chat with when he had the time, let alone them.
Well, some old fashioned work, a water bucket, and some soap saw him clean enough and two shades lighter from all the grime finally being off.
Bernd returned to the main area, freshened and dressed in a plain beige shirt and pants with the most generous of rope cords for a belt. Not the finest wear a man could have but he wasn’t choosy given the circumstances. Even divested of his boots, Bernd’s hulking frame made audible noise with every step he took. Scratching at his short, fuzzy-fluff cut hair, his gaze lingered upon Ari busy at the cooking pot for a moment.
Really, quite the treat of a sight to come home to every night.
Ah, but he couldn’t enjoy her yet. There was meat needing some work.
If the fire pit was at the center of the wall, the kitchen counters was some distance to the side of it, nestled into the corner of the house. Five cabinets in total, along with a sink and another spout that gave out free water. Plus it had a nice window right over the sink, so the sun’s twilight peaked through in lovely hues and oranges. A wooden bowl, turned upside down on one of the counters, caught his eye as he stepped over.
“This it?” he asked.
“Mm, yeah. I put the toughest parts in the soup.”
Picking up the only cooking knife they had, Bernd flipped the bowl over. His bushy brows popped upward and he made a pleased-sounding hum. “Fine piece of work here, alright. Good call for roasting,” he appraised, using the knife to move the slab of quality cut over. Salting is fine enough but darn shame there isn’t more, he mused. Glancing at Ari from the corner of his eye, he saw her secretive looking smirk.
She didn’t show much but that didn’t mean she didn’t show, after all.
Getting the meat ready was simple enough. Salt it, roll over, salt some more, give it an even layer, and then slap it onto the roasting plate. A solid iron plate with small holes, and two hanging hooks, he carried it over to the cooking pot and its supporting rod. Ari slid the pot over to the side, freeing up some space over the hot flames below. Not enough to let the flames out directly, though. An indirect heat helped cook much more controllably.
She griped about never knowing anything and then did that without asking, huh.
Once that was all set in place, he washed his hands in the kitchen sink with some spare soap they kept there. “Wash your fucking hands! With soap!” the Queen’s voice echoed in his head still. It’d been a shocking tirade to witness at the mine that day, but darn no miner ever went anywhere without washing them anymore. It wasn’t like they didn’t if they had a choice, but soap was hard to come by, after all …
Well, he kicked that thought aside. The thrown-together, layered cloth ‘rug’ in front of the fire place was looking mighty fine with Ari sitting on it. Bernd certainly wasted no time in heading over and sitting down. His ass barely touched the ground before a strong shove in his side toppled him over. Laughing at the dastardly surprise attack, a hefty, bosomy weight pinned his legs to the ground. Ari, far more aggressively than he ever saw her, hurriedly climbed onto him.
One would think a six-and-a-half heads tall man like him with a woman half his size would certainly lead to … assumptions.
Ari didn’t speak much but she had far more fire to spit than anyone he ever knew.
He didn’t mind very much, she did love giving her warm kisses with her on top, after all.
Anyway, once the couple had ‘greeted each other’ properly, Bernd pushed himself up. Ari, for her part, sat like a queen on his lap, her legs folded beside his thighs. “You’re in good spirits,” he remarked, rubbing her head and messing up her smooth brown hair. Ari puffed her cheeks up indignantly, but nonetheless simply sat there.
“I’m trying. It’s hard, is all.” Ari ‘smiled’ by pushing her cheeks up with her fingers. “The little bugs are sleeping easier nowadays, at least.”
“And you’re not?” he asked with some concern. Bernd knew well enough he snored like rocks falling down a cliff, so Ari preferred slipping in the kids’ room instead. A fair enough arrangement since she dipped out when he blacked out first.
“Sleeping’s fine. It’s … everything, else.”
“My snoring is it?”
“No, rockhead,” Ari huffed and smacked—more of a pat against him, really—Bernd on the chest. “This place. Staying here instead of moving on. I don’t know.”
“Alright, alright, what is it?” Bernd asked, looping his arms around Ari and keeping her from squirming away. “The plan’s still to get on our feet to head out next spring.”
“This place is …” Ari frowned, a more dreadful seriousness to her than Bernd expected. “It’s changing us. I don’t know how.”
“Changing … how?”
Ari gave him a ‘are you dumb?’ look then started untying her puffy blouse. Now, as much as Bernd did enjoy the sight of that lovely bosom and its hearty size, the prior conversation left him a bit of a fright. Still, as his wife slid her blouse down her shoulders and bared herself to him, he didn’t see much to fright over. He tried, really, but he couldn’t help enjoying seeing her beauty once again.
“Ari, my love, I fear my eyes cannot see anything different,” he said with an embarrassed grin. “Not that I mind.”
Rolling her eyes, but still smiling in that delightful way of hers, Ari reached for one of her breasts. One hand on bottom, the other on top, with a very particular motion toward her rather plump and thick looking nipp—
Sheer instinct made Bernd’s head dodge backwards, a sharpshooter’s squirt of milk barely grazing past his face. Once, he’d been gotten by that trick before with their first little bug, but never again would he fall for it! Ari chirped a disbelieving laugh as Bernd hastily grabbed her hands and pulled them away from that deadly weapon of hers. He, too, laughed with the thrilling rush of such a quick exchange, but his gaze fell upon her leaking, twitching nipple.
“You’re pregnant?” he asked with disbelief.
Ari, however, shook her head. “No. The Queen’s power did this.”
He blinked and furrowed his brows. “But, you’d already stopped before we got here? Right?”
“I did. I shouldn’t have again, but here it is.” A conflicted look settled over Ari’s features, and Bernd let her hands go. His wife, in turn, wrapped her arms together under her breasts and pushed them up. The very much bigger, milk-laden breasts he knew her to have before. “Some other women, too, started bearing milk again. Some hadn’t in years, and then suddenly it started again.”
“But, why?” Bernd asked confusedly, but Ari simply shrugged.
“Only the divine know. Or maybe the Queen does. She isn’t complaining about more cows.”
“Ari …”
His spitfire wife soured as she spoke, a conflicted look about her dour expression.
“I don’t know what to do, Bernd. This’ll start and never stop and …”
Rather not knowing what he could say, Bernd instead gently coaxed Ari into a hug. As endearing as her softness in his arms might be, he found it rather hard to enjoy with how upset she was. Indeed, it left him ill-at-ease, with a ball of iron in his gut and a burning touch on his tongue he wasn’t sure what to do with. Ari snuggled her head into the crook of his neck, relaxing into a melty, womanly woman in his arms.
“’course the other women are all talking about it, but no one can make up their mind,” Ari grumbled. “Lots of them like that Raina’s ‘ranch’ of hers. They all go there to get … wrung out, like a bunch of cows. And get touched. I dun want anyone else to be going around touchin’ me like that and them stupid—“
“Anyone goes touching you and they’ll get my axe in their head,” Bernd said with a loving, murderous seriousness to his voice that made Ari hum pleasantly. “Queen or not.”
“Right, right. Oh, the meat need’s flipping.”
Ari, naturally, had no inclination to get up, so Bernd had to sort of ass-shuffle sideways toward the fire pit a bit. Thankfully he had the foresight to set the long forked prongs by the side already, so he could just jab the roast and flip it over on the hot plate. Though he didn’t mind the heat, he didn’t like Ari exposing herself and being near it so much. Juice went flying sometimes, after all.
So he begrudgingly ass-shuffeld back, making Ari giggle somewhat.
“Meat’s flipped,” he grunted with a touch of playful scorn.
“No, I’m not,” Ari said with a huffy tone of voice that he damn well knew a little too well sometimes.
“Oh, don’t go griping like that to me!” he barked and gave her the meaningful pat on her ass through her pants. Ari giggled again and tried squirming around, grinding and wiggling in vexingly provocative motions. “Not while the little bugs are out still,” Bernd said a bit more seriously. “Or the cooking’s not done either.”
“Hmph.”
“’sides, we can figure out something, Ari. Maybe leaving earlier, before winter. The Hardain are a straight shot south. Can’t be that hard to scrounge up what we need. Plenty of people coming into this place, after all.”
“… I guess. The house is nice.”
“The house is nice, but …” Bernd agreed begrudgingly. “Not if one of those thing’s ruling over our heads is what it takes.”
“The land here’s nice. And it’s safe. And the elven folk are helping out. I dunno if the Queen is so bad, but I don’t want our little bugs growing up like, a place like this. Especially Lamri. Seeing her ma and the other women walking around like cows and—“
“I know, I know,” Bernd said, Ari very much voicing the thoughts that concerned him the most. The two of them might rough it out, but such rough going wasn’t easy on their children. There wasn’t any guarantee striking out on their lonesome, or even a small group, would be safe either. It wasn’t a great choice, but knowing what they had here, versus what could be out there, was an exceedingly harsh truth.
Would it be worse than some nebulous beast of a creature like a tentradom changing them?
“But, there is something else,” Ari said slowly, and leaned back from Bernd.
He rather didn’t like that tone but said, “What?”
Ari held up her right hand, and pinched her fingers together as if she was holding a needle. “My hand doesn’t hurt anymore,” she said simply, making Bernd blink with incredulity.
“What? Really?”
“Mhm.” She nodded. “I can sew again.”
“T-that’s great? That’s great! But …”
Her hand getting smashed by a falling box had spelled the end of Ari ever being a seamstress again. By the time a priestess saw to trying healing magic, there wasn’t anything that could be done. Bernd’s brows furrowed. It doesn’t make much sense, but …
Something about this place called Eden must’ve done it.
“Did the … Queen’s, [Sovereign Power] fix it?” Bernd asked as much as mused, his face scrunched up in thought.
“Some of the other women mentioned something like it. Back pains going away. Shoulders not popping anymore. Some injuries like mine suddenly getting better when they wouldn’t ever again.” Ari shrugged. “I think so. The Queen said it’d do something to fix our bodies.”
“Now that you mention it … It’s been easier getting up in the mornings …” Bernd hadn’t paid it much thought, but despite all his years of mining catching up to him, it slowly hadn’t anymore. He’d chalked it up to simply having a place to rest and relax much more comfortable after Artor fell. Maybe the exercise and hardwork had gotten him a comfort [level], since that had gone up during the escape.
Something about it all just didn’t sit right with him.
A sudden knocking at the door made the two of them jerk.
“Ma! Pa!” two voices yelled in a muffled, through-the-wall ear-grating unison. “Open up!”
The two parents scrambled to tidy themselves and get up to welcome home their kids.
*~*
Thonk. Thonk. Thonk.
The sharp, heavy thud of metal-against-stone sounded; almost rhythmic, yet with the slightest, uneven tempo. The black iron pickaxe hefted back in the air, then swung forward again, held by a hand whose flesh bulged, whose bones poked out at odd angles, and whom remained held together only by fleshy sinew. The shapely stone cracked under the blows, dusty spittles erupting into the air.
He didn’t mind.
The work had to continue.
Small pieces chipped away, but it wasn’t what he wanted. No, he kept striking and striking, until finally the cut slab itself cracked almost in half. The wall from which he mined shuddered, and he paused to listen. Nothing more followed, and it seemed well enough to keep working. He reached with a hand twice the size of a man’s, one that a horse’s leg had been grafted into being one whole appendage. Though his fingers were each a different size and shape and somewhat troublesome, he slid them around the edge of the crack, then wrenched with monstrous strength.
Ah, at last.
With both arms—the other all but fused to the pickaxe, really—he hefted the stone up. Something half his height and many times his weight, yet it proved no harder than a sack of grain. Step by step, meaty thump by thump, he trudged toward the cart nearby. Exercising great care, he placed the stone upon others already loaded in the cart, setting it just right. While more could fit, it was already loaded over the edge to begin with.
It would do.
The stones couldn’t be damaged carelessly.
Nodding, his head bobbed up and down, the face of a man inside the maw of a beastly chicken. He stepped around the cart, his hand sliding over the flesh-infused wood. Wood that, eventually, turned more flesh and beast. The cattle had been put to work, so other beasts were needed to pull the carts. He wasn’t sure about this one, a thing of ten legs and arms, the hands of people so pitifully pushing and holding up against the ground.
He shoved and grunted with a clucking chirp, and the writhing mass gurgled in response. Still, it walked forward, dragging the all-too-heavy cart behind it. For as slow as it was, he couldn’t complain. His other leg was still lame, a stump of bristling stalks and flowers yet to grow into something proper. Good enough to stand, never mind walk. With one hand on the cart’s edge for balance, he followed along.
Why was it so useless, anyway?
He … hmm.
He broke it when running?
Yes, running away from something, though he couldn’t remember what.
Not that it mattered, he didn’t need to run anywhere anymore.
Walking was good enough.
The street ahead, cleared of rubble and mining detritus, sufficed only for carts like his. Empty or full, only carts may use the roads. A luxury to have, to walk on such clean and even surface. He savored it for as much as he could, though it would always come to an end. Other carts lined up ahead of him, rolling at about the same speed, each of them drawn by a different beast. None of them could damage the stones; a certain care was needed.
He couldn’t help scoffing at some of the shoddy mining going on around him. Workers both great and small toiled, but few had skill or talent in such a taste. Some shattered the stones apart, or broke them into too-small pieces, or struck a corner, which let a floor’s worth of wood, furniture, and other garbage collapse onto them. More than one pile had limbs and faces sticking out of them, twitching impotently as they wasted their lives away.
It made his gut churn with anger.
How dare they do such a poor job when Lord Haska needed them?
How dare they let themselves die when there was work to be done?
At least they would make good eating later.
The convoy he’d joined continued on, the sounds of mining, grunting, and labor alike fading behind him. The towering buildings, too, crumbled down, fading into heaps of stones and wood that lesser works sifted through. The roads remained cleared, that was good. The skyline, too, cleared as those ugly buildings were broken down. He wasn’t sure why anyone bothered living in them in the first place.
So cold, inert; unloving, empty.
It lifted his four hearts when he beheld the blackened walls ahead, grown in magnificence and tender care. Mushroom-like frills lined the fleshy portions, stitched between chunks of stone and rock that’d been relegated to such purpose. Ugly stones, not like the one’s he’d mined. They were only good enough for the walls. Still, he liked it. Ugly and beautiful together in harmony like that.
His cart rolled along, soon to pass through the tall, open gates of the wall. The Ones-In-Iron waited alongside the road, four on either side, standing like statues within their plate mail. He dared not meet their twelve eyes or scrutinizing weapons, magnificent as they were.
No, his gaze settled upon the ground, itself a wondrous thing.
New growth was black; for in Lord Haska’s words, black was the ink upon which all things were made. The brickwork floor transformed from that ugly city street transformed into interlaced segments, grown as much as masoned. Their black edges shimmered in the sunlight, revealing the tiny white speckles deeper within. Starlight, after a fashion; or so he saw at night. It set well against the smooth silver interior, etched with the Words of Haska. Despite all the filthy feet, cart wheels, and otherwise that trudged upon them, they never dulled nor dirtied.
Ah, if only he understood what they said.
But, it wasn’t his place to, no matter how much he wanted.
The twisting and swirling architecture around him spiraled off, like trees growing from a sea of roots. He passed by the Growing Pillories; cylindrical towers of pitiable fools mewling and groaning. They’d yet to accept Lord Haska’s benevolence upon them, but it mattered not. Flesh and growth alike intertwined, and they would be given purpose even their ungrateful selves could do. Lord Haska did not discriminate, after all.
He was much too kind for something like that.
Between the Growing Pillories, the kindred faithful such as himself toiled. He wasn’t sure of their task, but the stockpiles and materials needed tending. Things came to and fro without end: stone, metal, flesh, parts, and everything in between. It would be that a path, branching off the road, would be to his calling. Stone carrying carts such as his turned off onto that path, guided by the thoughtless beasts who ever knew what to do.
He didn’t stare much upon the Growing Pillories if he could. It felt too uncomfortable.
Too ugly.
“Decent cut, acceptable shapes,” a voice, once distant, grew louder and more distinct. It carried a presence in the air, one of authority and command that its soft, whisper-like tone felt so garish against. Stranger still was the manner of speak: half the sentence spoke in the voice like a woman, the other half like that of a man. Almost as if it had a conversation with itself, as much as whatever it spoke toward. “Leave the cart, retrieve another. The work continues.”
Miners like himself, who had gone ahead, soon trudged away on their own limbs.
He didn’t stare much upon them either.
When his cart next arrived for inspection, he looked up.
The Tender-Counter, as he knew it by, shuffled over on its fourteen legs made of hands and feet. It towered over even his height, clear enough maybe two of him could’ve stood up before reaching its underside. The slender, centipede-like lower body bulged with misshapen flesh and pitiable creatures, half-fused into its bulk as those were in the Growing Pillories. How lucky they were, to be tended to so carefully.
It made him jealous.
Leaning forward, the Tender-Counter’s large figure craned over his cart, and he nervously scratched his hoofed foot on the ground.
Its three pairs of arms came together, each of its hands steepling its six fingers. The upper body and head were one contiguous whole, almost like a worm that’d been vaguely human once upon a time. Two torsos, along with their heads and arms, had wrapped together and melted inward, forming a V-like depression in its oval figure. The two dips that led inward housed darkness itself, something not even the midday sun could pierce.
It looked.
It hummed.
He liked the hum, it vibrated the air.
“Excellent cut, acceptable shapes,” the Tender-Counter surmised. It stepped backward, the air around him moving as if its breath had been caught. Two hands, each half the size of his body, soon grabbed and wrapped around his entire torso. He chirped a surprise in his throat, but he had no mouth for which it could escape. A sense of gravity tore at him as the Tender-Counter lifted him upward, high into the air.
Like a mother showing her child the sun for the first time.
It hummed.
It looked at him.
He wasn’t sure why it was looking at him.
It turned his head from one side to the other, brushing with a thumb bigger than his face.
Should he stare into its darkness? Was that uncouth?
It brought him closer, to a pair of arms much smaller than those that held him. A child who might be embraced in its mother’s bosom.
They groped along his chest and flesh, picking as if to cut scabs away. He tried not to squirm, but they were deep. Strong. They pushed in, sinking into him so painfully he groaned—a sound muffled by the mounds of flesh around his vocal cords. It hurt, but he found himself delighted by it.
Its face came in front of his, two deep, flesh-borne chasms staring with an impenetrable void. The world itself became the Tender-Counter, and he felt his gut churn. His muscles ached as the other fingers wormed inside them, feeling for something.
What did it want?
“Close. Imperfect. Not suitable,” the Tender-Count said as it ever did, but he felt it was a declaration.
It lowered him to the ground, ripping its fingers out in the processing. He grunted as viscera and blood erupted out, but only for the moment. The wounds would close soon enough, even if it felt as if fire had burned him as they did so.
“Leave the cart, retrieve another. The work continues,” the Tender-Counter said, dismissing him.
He did as it bid, and hurried with a hobble back down the road he’d just arrived from.
Why was he not suitable? For what?
He did not know, but it ached in his heart worse than the gaping wounds left behind. He did not want to be unsuitable.
He had to work harder. To mine and bring even better stones. Lord Haska needed them; needed them to build … to build … something.
It wasn’t his place to know what it was to build. His part was helping to make it possible.
Lord Haska knew what to build, and that was enough.
He, with another cart in tow, left the gates and the Ones-In-Iron behind. He stared up the long road stretching into the remains of the city, a spear that had lanced into the fetid den of people. Workers like him toiled, breaking apart the stony buildings to retrieve the stones that were needed. He did not know much, but he knew what he was to do.
He had a part in Lord Haska’s vision.
To save the world.
No, not save.
Change?
Fix?
The meanings blurred together.
Oh, it did not matter.
His pickaxe arm ached for rock and stone.
*~*
Night fell, and one curious orange-hued eye peeked around the white rock corner. The moon above shone only half way, dim but not dark. The pale light fell between burning torches and their blistering brightness. Just like every other night, the last of the normal guards left before the moon crested high. Only those things—those spiders remained. They weren’t impressive, but they were skittish.
Not that he minded, it meant the night staff should be gone from the kitchen.
Slowly drawing backward, Mulk all but slid against the wall. There wasn’t much cover save the darkness, and he had only till the moon crested high. Not a good window to work in, but something he could do. Darkness to hide within, and [Silent Steps] to conceal his footwork would do well enough. It always did. That and being head-to-toe covered in crap rags and thrown away shreds of blankets helped a fair bit.
Moving at a brisk, albeit sneaky, gait, he crossed the length of the kitchen building’s outside wall. A stack of deliveries sat near the double doors, probably forty-something crates all tighter than a pant’s rope belt. His game wasn’t there, but rather, inside. No guards or spiders bothered with the doorway despite all its seeming value, something he found weird. But, then again, the whole town was the meaning of the word weird.
Stopping before the double doors, he looked around swiftly, checking for any potential wanderers. The two triangular, cat-like ears atop his head swiveled, hearing nothing but wind and distant echoes. Everything checked out—he’d done plenty of watching the last week, and nothing untoward showed up.
His eyes gazed up to the keyhole of the doors, odd in shape and size as it were. Thankfully he was big enough it was mostly eye level, though he had to stand on his toes a bit. Fishing a smooth, thin iron rod with a crooked hook at the end, he bit down on it with his teeth. Retrieving another thin rod, one with a slightly different crooked hook at the end, he leaned in toward the lock.
It always took a bit of work, coordinating his lips and one rod with the other one in his left hand. His head just didn’t move as easily as hands did, but plenty of practice made it more than doable for a boy with just one arm.
Not even thirty pounding beats of his heart later did he feel he got it, and [Lockpick] told him just as much.
The weird part was the door sliding into the wall when he turned the handle and pushed, but it wasn’t much fuss. Plenty of places had sliding doors instead of pushing doors, not that he cared. Mulk opened it just enough to peek through first, but only dim light and darkness waited. To his cats eyes, though, gray and ill-defined it may be, it wouldn’t be hard to get through.
He slipped through real quick, and shut the door just as carefully—but not all the way, incase the lock would reset.
Where is it, then? Mulk wondered, looking around. The interior was a warehouse of some sort. Not particularly big, just two isles with large racks with crates and other things stowed on them. It made a bit of sense then why others were stacked up outside: no room to speak of inside. Still, he couldn’t go cracking them open easily. From his entry point, there were two doors: down the way on his left, and one closer on his right.
If he made sense of how the building was laid out, the left one should’ve gone more toward the cooking areas that served the people.
So he went right, instead.
The trick, after all, was to find the pantry and not the service area.
The warehouse didn’t seem like a pantry to him, unless they were opening and shutting such big crates all the time.
Hurrying over toward the door, not a sound was made by his feet in the slightest. The door, according to [Lockpick], wasn’t even locked. Actually, it didn’t have a lock at all. Mulk carefully cracked it open and peaked through. A hallway of sorts awaited him, a T-junction one. He looked to be on the shorter end, because toward his left was a much longer hallway that undoubtedly went deeper into the building.
Pantry would have to be somewhere near the center. Especially if there was a cellar—it’d keep all the cool in, if they used magic or salt for something like that. Mulk snaked through the door, slid it shut, and carried on down the long hallway. To his chagrin, there were about five other doors: two on other side, and one at the end. Though it worried him to take too long, he checked each one as he went past.
A room full of pots, pans, and utensils: good to come back to when he needed replacements.
A room full of crates again. There sure were a lot.
A room full of … bookshelves and books? Well, more shelves than books filling them, but none of it interested him.
A room full of—oh, there it was. The pantry.
Mulk eagerly slipped inside.
A long corridor of sorts, either side held shelves of ready-to-grab foods like breads, sealed mugs of milk, edible nuts, and even the hardier fruits that could survive a modest touch of heat. There were a few closed doors at the other end, undoubtedly where the actual stoves and ovens must’ve been. Mulk paced up and down the pantry three times, eying everything and weighing it in his mind.
He wouldn’t want for choice, that was for sure.
That’d make stuffing the bag even easier. Mulk hurriedly laid out the linen sack and carefully opened it. His first item of choice were the dried nuts and smaller fruits: easy to fill out the bottom with. Next he lined a layer of the harder, bigger fruits: decent foundation, and a fair bit of weight. Atop them he layered the bread rolls and loaves: bread crushes easily unless it’s the hard stuff, and this stuff proved pretty soft. Finally, whatever dried meats he could stuff in at the top: if they had juices or seasonings, all the better for it to fall on the bread.
Biting the overly-filled sack’s cord, Mulk tugged, tightened, and tied it off into a knot as best he could. He double checked all the trays he pilfered from, making sure they weren’t overly messy or out of place. If it didn’t look like a thief had broken in, then the staff would be suspicious of each other instead. Much less of a headache for him whenever he came back later.
The last items on his list: five sealed mugs of milk. Using the rope slung across his chest, he carefully slung them on one-by-one. Sadly, their weight was nothing to laugh at, nor was the overly-filled sack. Just getting the five mugs on and secured all but sapped him dry. Breathing in stiffly, Mulk huffed out a single word, “[Strength]!”
Magic power surged through him, and what once weighed him down to the ground became nothing more than pebbles. Mulk threw the sack over his shoulder, the securing rope audibly straining under the sudden weight straining it. Only once he felt certain nothing would pop off or break did he hurry to the pantry exit. Despite his new gains, Mulk exercised just as much caution in trying to escape as he did breaking in.
Thankfully, fortune favored him and nothing or nobody stood in his way.
The moon still hadn’t crested high in the sky by the time he snuck out of the kitchen building. No guards, no spiders, no people of any kind prowled the streets. For the first time in a long while, Mulk’s round face broke out in a wide-toothed grin and he nearly laughed as he ran away. The only sound of his passing was the slight rustling of nuts and the metallic tinkling of the mugs swinging about.
Perhaps if he’d been an older, wiser thief, he might’ve noticed the spider creature on the kitchen roof watching him run away.
Knock, knock, knock.
The clear, punctual noise startled Mulk awake. The house’s interior, dark as it was, carried the softest hints of morning light. Last night’s fire had gone out, and aside from Jar and Bank slumped over in the corner, no one else slept in the main room with him. “Shit,” he swore, rushing to stand up. His head swirled and the fog of sleep dragged his muscles, but still, he got upright. Shambling more than walking, he got over to the frontdoor, superstitiously checking the lock.
Still there, all sealed up.
He inched along the wall, toward a curtain-covered window. It took some real delicate work moving around the edges, glimpsing through the glass without showing himself in the slightest. He made sure the curtain itself didn’t even move a fart’s breadth. Someone was on the otherside of the front door alright, some woman with snowy skin and tan clothes. Mulk didn’t recognize who or what she even was. Why were her joints like blue ropes?
Knock, knock, knock.
“I already know you’re in there, thief,” the woman called out, her voice muffled behind the door. “Open the door.”
Mulk about shit himself. He glanced over at Jar, then Bank, and then the bedroom door where the girls slept. He’d have to wake them up and get them out faster than a whore in the lady’s room. He was good, but not that good. His ears twitched frantically, his brow knitting frightful thoughts.
He didn’t have much.
But, he couldn’t let the others get caught up in it.
If they just took him, he could get out later.
Yeah, just like before.
It wasn’t a safe plan but he trusted himself to handle it. Hanmi was still sicker than a slug, even if she ate well the night before. She wasn’t going anywhere fast. Mulk sighed, scratching his head. Shit, was all he could think.
Wasn’t much more to do than the obvious, really.
He opened the frontdoor, peeking through. The snow woman stood there, her head craning down to meet his orange eyes. She didn’t seem particularly fast, or strong, or anything, but there was that weird bug antennae coming out of her forehead. At the same time, she had a kind of weird fluff, kind of like wheat grass, growing between the blue flesh rope.
He ain’t never seen someone like her before. “Who you callin’ a thief? Huh? This is our house,” he shot back gruffly.
The woman smirked with that insufferable know-it-allness adults ever did. “You are, of course, the thief in question. Last night’s kitchen, as it happens. The guards saw well enough.”
“Yeah? And why ain’t they here, then? Sounds like shit, it does.”
The woman tilted her head, turned partly, and looked behind herself. Mulk followed the motion and eyeline, squinting at the morning sunlight and its awful brightness. Two rows of ten of those spider-helper-things awaited on the front lawn of the house, patiently standing with statue-like stillness. He sucked his lips in slightly at the sight.
“Alright, so what? Ya gonna throw me in jail or something? Who the fuck are you anyway?”
“Quite the mouth,” the woman remarked, then made a disgusted expression. She waved her hand in front of her face distastefully. “Why does it smell like death in there? Are you kids shitting on the floor or something?”
“What? No, we use that toilet thing with the water. And what smell?”
She sniffed more, her disgust turning to something … else. Mulk didn’t like it. There was a thoughtfulness he didn’t understand, but knew enough to be wary of. “No, something’s wrong. Open the door, brat,” she demanded, already stepping forward.
Mulk called upon [Strength] without even thinking, bracing himself against the door and forming an immovable wedge. A solid thump sounded when she pushed and collided with the chitin-wood.
“What the—open the door, brat!” she barked, pushing against it and having no luck at all.
“No! Shove it up yours, go away!”
“I really don’t have time for this!”
“Then fuck of—!” Mulk’s scream died in his mouth as something fast and snake like shot from the woman’s hand and into his mouth. The taste of something utterly vile, fleshy, and wriggly broke his concentration. [Strength] or not, no footing meant shit all would stop her from shoving it open and knocking him to the ground. Whatever it was that went into his mouth quickly fled back, disappearing inside her arm.
He spat across the ground, trying to get the disgusting taste out. Jar and Bank stirred at the commotion, making annoyed sounds as they woke up. “Hey!” Mulk coughed out, trying to grab the woman’s leg as she walked by. “Get out, you bitch!”
“Charming,” she said, stepping over his hand without even looking. Snapping her fingers, she said, “[Light].”
A tiny, blistering ball of light sparked into existence in the palm of her hand, flashing the dim interior. Mulk winced; Jar and Bank yelped at their eyes getting flashed. She looked around, sniffing rather pointedly all the while. Mulk scrambled to stand up, but he hadn’t a clue what to do now or what she was even looking for. He didn’t smell anything out of the usual. Jar and Bank looked at her wide-eyed, then him, their faces asking questions their mouths weren’t brave enough for.
He shrugged.
The snow woman, having swept through the main room, went toward where the bedrooms were. “Over here?” she mumbled.
“Hey, they’re sleeping still!”
“How many of them?”
“Why would I tell you?”
“Do you have a choice?” she asked, sparing a brief glance at him. Mulk scowled at her indignantly. The snow woman went by the bathroom door, sniffed, then shook her head. “No, in the bedroom.”
Mulk shadowed her all the while as she opened the bedroom, the smaller space brightening up in an instant. The four girls laid sprawled out across dirty sheets, blankets, and soddy pillows they’d scavenged up. Of them, three were together, while Hanmi laid over in a corner on her own. He tried to keep his gaze decent and away from them, since they weren’t dressed proper and he rather shouldn’t have been there. The snow woman didn’t appear to care, stepping in slowly. She sucked in a breath and hacked into her hand.
“Fuck that is awful,” she mumbled.
What smell? Mulk wondered, not really picking up anything but girl stench and how stuffy it was.
The three girls stirred one by one, bothered by the light and noise. One saw the snow woman, inhaled to scream, but stopped at seeing Mulk making a ‘shush’ motion. She instead hurriedly woke the other two, and all three, despite being groggy from sleep, huddled together. Frightful, inquisitive, and uncertain most of all.
The snow woman reached Hanmi, and knelt down beside her. Mulk smacked the woman’s hands when she went to grab Hanmi’s blanket. “She’s sick! And sleeping. Don’t bother her.”
“She might be dead,” the woman remarked with unflinching simplicity.
“What? No? Hanmi ate fine last night,” Mulk said, his confidence wavering. He didn’t stop her from moving the sheet.
Hanmi, her yellow fur matted with sweat and grime, laid motionless. Not even her chest rose that he saw, a certain stillness to her he ever hated recognizing. The snow woman touched Hanmi’s neck for a moment, her frown deepening. “Not yet, but close,” she mumbled, and then swept aside the ratty-rags Hanmi wore as clothing. Searching for something, but Mulk had no idea what. It wasn’t until she reached Hanmi’s left leg that she stopped. “Yup, there it is. Septic, too.”
The gash Hanmi had gotten two weeks ago was still there, the skin beneath the fur discolored and ugly in a way Mulk knew meant something bad. “She’s fine,” he insisted, not knowing anything else to say. “She was eating last night! And laughing, and—“
“Dead cat bounce, if we’re unlucky.”
“What’s that?”
“When a cat slams into the ground, bounces off, and then walks away. Everyone thinks they’re alright, but the damage hasn’t caught up yet. They usually die later despite looking perfectly fine.” The woman turned to him and scowled deeply. “Why didn’t you bring her to a healer?”
One of the girls interjected, “’cause we’re orphans an’ no un wants dat.”
The woman glanced over, then her scowl returned to Mulk and his indifferent shrug of agreement. A conflicted look passed over her face, something Mulk saw all the time with folk that wanted to do good but never did. “Yeah,” he said. “Nowhere cares about us except us. This place ain’t any different.”
“It is,” the woman said, whether to him or herself though, he didn’t know. She turned back to Hanmi and, with a speed of urgency and particular care, scooped the sick monja up into her arms. “Because I’m here.”
“And who the fuck are you?” Mulk asked, pivoting to keep up with the snow woman as she tried to leave. Not that he could stop her, or should. It might hurt Hanmi even more if he tripped her at this point.
“The queen,” was all she said, and marched out of the house.
“Yeah, right, and I’m a king,” Mulk said sardonically, then frantically scratched his head. “Fuck! Gals, get dressed or something! We have to follow her!”
He didn’t know what was going on anymore, but he had to make certain they didn’t separate.
No one ever came back once they separated.
*~*~*
Codex:
[Silent Steps:
Eliminates the noise made by footsteps, regardless of their condition or wear. Does not eliminate the noise created by anything else, such as rustling clothing or hands doing something.
Drains stamina while being utilized, regardless if one is moving or not. Stamina drain increases the heavier one becomes.
A hallmark skill of thieves, assassins, and errant children who do not wish to wake their parents.]
[Lockpick:
Discern the complexity of locking mechanisms, as well as the best means by which they can be disarmed. Lockpick will also alert the lockpicker if there is a potential alarm or trigger device that would result from lockpicking.
Allows for the bypassing of magical security mechanisms, depending on one’s magical proficiency.
A skill for those who dare to open that which should not be, and all the consequences that may ensue.]
[Strength:
Enhances one’s own body with physical power. The exact nature of how this skill performs depends on one’s own physical training and capabilities.
Drains stamina while being utilized, regardless of any actions being done or not. Stamina drain increases the more exertion beyond one’s natural limits they go.
A skill for those who would change the world, yet need only the strength to do so.]
[Light:
A spell that creates a ball of illumination. While it can change colors, and brighten or darken to some extent, its simplistic nature make its beginner friendly and rather inflexible. It does, however, have a high mana cost relative to its function, making it useful in emergencies rather than all the time.]
Chapter 64: Good Intentions
Chapter Text
Wanting to do good, and actually achieving good, are two different things.
*~*
Avaron, or rather Cypher, found herself busy staring down at the ‘petri dish’ on the table. The small glass bowl had been repurposed from food to experimentation device, and currently there were two thick, squirming blue strands within in it. They were, in essence, bundles of nerves that commonly ran throughout tentacle-based lifeforms within her Hive. The liquid solution was as close to something like ‘saline’ she could manage; or rather, had Nuala make with magic. The relatively neutral liquid didn’t impede or affect the nervous structure while keeping it hydrated, and that sufficed for her means.
The rest was just bruteforce testing and study.
[Genetic Engineering] had limits in the granularity of information it provided. Avaron couldn’t see elementary particles or physiology of such a tiny scale they interacted with said particles. She could, largely, guess things like ‘ion channels’ and other chemical signals such low-level physiology needed in order to operate. To some extent, she could even perceive bacteria, macrophages, and other microorganisms, but not all of them and certainly not clearly.
That formed another complication: her understanding of microbiology and DNA and everything ‘genetic’ was completely different from Earth. She wasn’t looking through microscopes, using electroscopes, or any other fancy technology. Somehow, she intuited the information she wanted, and to a lesser extent, could imagine the world in which it existed. That meant everything she did ‘perceive’ was just different than anything she knew of ‘before’.
For example, if she ran into bacteria like e. coli, she wouldn’t recognize it as such at all. Arguably, Avaron might understand its ‘true form and nature’, whereas a human looking through a microscope would have an impression of that form. That didn’t mean a human couldn’t interact with it or anything, only that their means by doing so would be different. Avaron could directly interfere in the genetics of the bacteria, if her power recognized her ability to do so.
Hence, she had to build a complete library of understanding from her own perspective. Even if she had the vast internet at her disposal, such information would only be of limited use. She’d have to translate human-based perspective to her own, then figure out what the differences were, and so on. If anything, doing it from the ground-up on her own might’ve been the better path to take. It’d at least avoid unwanted biases coming in and tainting her perspective.
Avaron sighed, leaned back, and stretched for a moment. Sat on her stool as she was, she’d been hunched over for hours, trying to intuit every little detail possible. Sometimes I can perceive more, sometimes less; sometimes nothing at all, sometimes everything. I get it that the universal system is letting me cheat or whatever, but it’s a real pain in my ass figuring out the edge cases.
The only solution, as Nuala had told her and Avaron quickly learned as well, was to study, document, and just record everything. From an engineering stand point, that made enough sense. Avaron needed to know all her materials and how they worked before she could really build something with them. Her slap-together-solutions for her other projects worked, but they were crude and Frankenstein-like abominations under the hood. Only her wives offspring had anything resembling genetic stability and structure, but that meant she couldn’t really screw around and change them either.
If she was to improve her Hive of biological creatures, she had to really figure out how to improve them. Nature would only provide so much genetic information she could throw around before she hit a wall. Her latest experiment twitched in the petri dish in front of her, impotently sending signals from one end to the other. In theory, both tentacle strands were different nervous structures: one was the existing and standard type, the other an ‘improved’ one that sent more signals faster and with greater clarity.
The problem became she couldn’t just slap the improved nerves into a creature and call it done. Everything that interfaced with the nerves had to be adjusted to accept the new parameters of possibilities. Otherwise, if nothing broke, they wouldn’t really use the new potential of the improvement. Worst case, they broke down entirely due to incompatibility problems. Just because something was ‘better’ didn’t mean it’d magically work on its own. It had to be properly integrated and translated throughout the entire creature.
Fortunately for her, the amazing adaptability of tentacles meant even her most botched efforts could still ‘work’. Their rate of cancer just shot up dramatically as cell division broke down further and further. The smoother her changes were, the less cancer there would be. Ergo, the more stable and healthy the creature itself would become.
The theories all made sense; she had theories crawling out of her ass. The problem was doing the practical work, experimenting, recording results, and iterating from there. That took time, patience, and a mind of clarity.
Even Avaron in her new body and magical-whatnot could burn herself out.
Cypher rubbed her eyes. Physically her body maintained peak condition for the most part, it was the mental fatigue that got to her. An oxymoron in itself; if her body was physically fine, why was she mentally drained? She didn’t even sleep necessarily like how a human would. The shell would go unconscious, but she herself would remain conscious within the [Hive Mind].
What did resting even look like anymore?
The toothy door to her laboratory slurped open suddenly, jolting her awake. Avaron glanced over to the lovely if somewhat dread-inducing sight of Gwyneth and her big belly. The Flame Priestess wore a half-robe ensemble of sorts, more like a shawl that just draped around her shoulders then fell down in long, wispy strands. She glowed beautifully, but also very annoyed looking in a way Cypher didn’t want to deal with.
She already knew her other selves had shoved that problem off until the proverbial can arrived at her feet.
“Finally!” Gwyneth proclaimed, stepping inside. “Why hath thou hidden away from mine sight?”
“Hello, Gwyneth,” Avaron droned out. “No, Gwyneth, I wasn’t hiding. I live down here. Well, this ‘me’ lives down here.”
“And thy other selves live even deeper?”
Oh, she can be sarcastic, how funny, Cypher thought. “No, they’re being little bitches who want to avoid having the hard talk with you.”
“And you don’t?”
“I’m one of the more responsible ones.”
Gwyneth huffed and put her hands on her hips. “Tis hard to speak as if thou art familiar with me or not. Thy words art of a stranger, not mine … wife.”
“Are you sure the Flame won’t throw a tantrum about ‘ritual’ and ‘decorum’?” Avaron asked, finger quoting with as much sarcasm as she could manage. Gwyneth pursed her lips, rather unimpressed looking, but didn’t rise to the verbal joust at all. Knowing better than to indulge in the wonders of pettiness, Avaron sighed again, and then took off her intestine-made safety gloves and visor. “Contrary to how I appear and speak, I rather can be hurt when it’s by someone I care for. Sadly, it’s the one fucking weakness I really can’t get rid of.”
“I did nothing of the sort!”
Avaron, gloves in hand, slapped them down onto the table particularly hard. “Your goddess wants to eat your fucking soul and you get pissed at me for objecting to that?”
“Tis not what will happen!”
“And here’s the breakdown between us,” Avaron said, waving a hand from her to Gwyneth. “From my perspective, I have every reason to believe that’s the case. From yours, you don’t. So, how do we build a bridge of understanding here, Gwyneth?”
“As the Eternal Flame itself hath said: to learn. Thou wilt learn of our scripture and words, to understand the Eternal Flame.”
“Okay. Normally I’d say that’s insane, but this is a different world. I’ll give it a try.”
Gwyneth’s head tilted ever so slightly. “Why would it be insane?”
“Goddesses didn’t exist on Earth, so as far as anyone could really tell, it was just crazy. But, they exist here. Hell, I have one as my patron and I’ve talked to several others. Pretty sure I’m fucking one too, for that matter.”
“Tis what the Eternal Flame meant for ‘godless world’, then?”
“Yeah. I wonder how true that really is, not even I know the answer now.” Avaron shrugged. “Do you want a seat?”
Though she didn’t say anything, Gwyneth did slide over to the stool Avaron pointed out. Considering how much searching Gwyneth apparently did throughout the Hive to find her, plus pregnancy, her feet were probably complaining. Not that she showed any sign of discomfort. She was someone who never betrayed small inconveniences like that. Well, not when she wanted to.
“For what it’s worth,” Avaron said, a lifetime’s practice of professional etiquette coming forth. “I will apologize for being crude and besmirching the Eternal Flame. I will not, however, apologize for why I did so. My concern for your safety remains the same.”
Gwyneth did look at her, but there was no response forthcoming. She seemed to be weighing such words, if not only to herself, then quite possibly her goddess as well. For as understanding as Avaron did want to be, the silence proved awkward.
“I am not … ungrateful,” Gwyneth said slowly, fiddling with her fingers together. She didn’t look at Avaron exactly, though she never did a lot of the time anyway. “Tis not well to speak ill of the Goddesses, mine or not, no matter the reasoning. Yet, it heartens me to know of thy reason.”
“That would be another difference between us,” Avaron said, scratching the back of her head. “You’re a priestess, one who works with Goddesses and divinity and all that. I’m a [divine heroine] from another world with a very different way of doing things. You’re born underneath them and live in fear of them; I see them as something eye-to-eye.”
“Respect, not fear.”
“… Sure.” Avaron had a dozen different thoughts about that, but she let it slide. Frankly, she’d always been hyper aware of the cultural differences between them. She’d done enough multiculturalism on Earth to know how to gel between very different ways of life. It’d be very easy to say Gwyneth—and basically everyone thus far on this new world—had a very ‘primitive’ or ‘backwards’ way of living underneath these ‘Goddesses’.
That, however, worked on Earth rules and logic and a lifetime’s experience. In a world in which such bizarre and incomprehensible existences were materially real and had tangible effects, the entire situation changed abruptly. It’d be far more reasonable to say Avaron herself was the idiot who didn’t understand anything at that point. A fact that became painfully clear after her blow out with the Eternal Flame a few days ago.
Regardless, she couldn’t find it in her to trust such beings all the same. Even after receiving one as her patron, or the many she’d talked to at the edge of existence. There was simply too much missing, too little understanding and context to be permissive about it. That, Avaron knew, was certainly her extreme paranoia coming forth.
I don’t know how much I’ll like what I’ll find.
Death was much less of a mystery ever since she crossed worlds, and oh she so much more preferred the days when she was ignorant.
“There is …” Gwyneth started, trailed off, then brushed her hair behind her head. She fidgeted and squirmed, obviously indecisive. “There is work to be done, certainly. For thee and mine self alike. If thou hath the mind to do so, that is. I do not wisheth conflict between us anymore.”
It could be cute, seeing how priestess and womanly Gwyneth conflicted with one another. For Avaron, a modern perspective made it clear someone wouldn’t just only be their job. For people like Gwyneth, their job was their life. Funny. My last job was my entire life and here I am, forgetting about that. Avaron rubbed her eyes, wanting to lay down and just deflate. “I’ve said my piece and we have something of a plan on what to do. If you’re fine with that, I’m fine with it.”
“Ehm … yes?”
Evidently Gwyneth wanted something more with how much anxious energy bubbled off of her. Avaron waited, but nothing happened. “Is there something else?” she asked finally.
“Will thou, err, warm mine bed again?”
The part being it was Avaron who left the bedroom first, which left Gwyneth and Tsugumi more to themselves at night. A part of her wanted to be quippy with something like ‘it’s always warm down here’, but that wasn’t the question being asked. Truthfully, Avaron didn’t know if she’d answer it honestly or not. She remained pissed about what happened, even if she ‘understood’ the reasons.
Becoming a creature driven by the very concept of emotion made it even worse.
“… Sure,” Avaron said slowly and held her arms out symbolically. “Hug and make up, then?”
It took Gwyneth a moment to get off the stool again. Avaron stood as well, and with a practiced familiarity, approached from an angle. The frontal/sideway hug maneuver was a necessity when one’s wife was as big as Gwyneth was then. Perhaps the hug, one of both of them squeezing and holding each other together, did more than Avaron gave it credit. A few days without Gwyneth’s touch left her rather unprepared for the supple, womanly feeling of those iron-clad muscles Gwyneth hid underneath.
Avaron was pissed still, sure, but maybe it’d go away faster than she expected. “Although, while I’m thinking about it,” she said, pulling back somewhat. “I will need your help with something, if you’re able to at least.”
“For what?”
“I need to build a shrine to Nex so I can hopefully get in contact with her again.”
“Who is Nex?”
“My patron goddess. Goddess of the tentradoms, rather.”
Gwyneth’s head tilted from one side to the other. “I know not of her and her wishes. A shrine would be difficult to do, lest it offends her.”
“As long as it catches her notice, I can deal with the rest. I’m a bit lacking in how to even build something a goddess would take notice of.”
“It is not a simple thing to do.”
“At this point finding anything simple is … no, wait, I know someone who might.”
“Who?”
“A sexy tree.”
*~*
(We’re in the wrong spot,) Aphora remarked, looking at the freshly dug up ground. She glanced back at the parchment-made schematic in her hands.
(Can’t be, the poles lined up with the surface didn’t they?) Venus asked.
Aphora looked up at the edges of the pit far above her. The chitinous poles they used for landmarking were still visible despite the blaring sun overhead. (Yeah, the poles are there.)
(Okay. And you see the hatch?)
(Nope.)
(What the fuck. Let me look.)
Aphora soon had the lovely sensation of Venus intruding into her optic feed, and so the two of them looked at the problem together. The premise was quite simple: they were doing another Hive-to-surface construction. The surface pit was dug down to the Hive, and should’ve been in the spot where the connecting hatch waited. Instead, solid white chitin awaited, completely the wrong place to be.
(We can’t be off by this much,) Venus said with exasperation.
(And somehow, we are. Okay, let’s double-check again. Go back to the main junction and follow along with the tentacleling and skyeye combination. Knowing our luck, the damn tunnel is curving or something.)
(That makes no sense. It’s the only service tunnel in this direction and the poles are up in the proper places. The hatch should be right here! I’m looking at the damn hatch from my side!)
(Then dig up from the hatch and see where the hell it leads to, genius. Nothing we’ve done lines up properly here!)
“My Queen?”
Aphora’s ear tickled at hearing Raina’s voice come from above. She’d been too busy visualizing the weird clusterfuck of a problem on her hands to pay attention to her approach at all. Looking upward, the dark beauty stood at the lip of the pit, the sun blisteringly bright behind her. “I’m currently in a hole lot of trouble,” Avaron remarked. “Did you need something, Raina?”
“I wished to speak of you on something important.”
Of course, Avaron thought. “I’ll be out in like, five minutes. Unless it’s life threatening?”
“No. Don’t trouble yourself, my Queen, I’ll come down.”
“I—“
Raina did come down, as it happened. She simply jumped from the lip to the bottom of the pit, a fall of some ten or more meters at the least. The dug-up ground sank under her weight, a solid thud sounding as the Ashmourn landed without issue. Avaron looked from her to the dirt staircase that lined the pit. I guess being a goat woman gives her super jumps or something? she wondered, rolling up the schematic. “Alright then. What was it you wanted to talk about?”
And I’m totally ignoring this new outfit of yours because it’s unreasonably good looking.
Raina found—or had made—some ensemble of tan cloth and hardy leather. A proper, protective attire from head-to-toe that looked at home working some adventure or out in the fields or something. It did well to compliment her figure, and the corset-like chest piece really emphasized her bosom. If it weren’t for the protective neck guard or whatever that was across her shoulders, her cleavage would trap a moon inside it.
“It’s about the ranch … project,” Raina said, the particular word still rather new in her mouth. “I’ve acquired a [Job] related to it. I seek your wisdom on it.”
Avaron scratched her face with the rough end of her rolled up schematic. “Alright,” she said with a barely suppressed sigh. “Tell me about it.”
Raina then said, “[Job Title: Sapient Rancher], [Type: Agricultural], [Description: A variant [Job] of the [Rancher] agricultural family, specialized toward handling sapient people as its form of livestock.] The, uh, effects are rather detailed …”
“The description’s awfully short for some reason, isn’t it?”
“Because it’s a variant [Job]. If we found a regular [Rancher] and asked them, we would obtain the full description of the [Job].”
Avaron’s antennae wiggled thoughtfully. “If a civilization has no [Ranchers] at all, then how would they ever find out the full description?”
“I’ve never heard of anyone not having [Ranchers]?” Raina offered confusedly. “Is there such a people?”
“There can be. Nevermind, it’s another weird quirk of this bizarre system. What’re the effects?”
“[Effects:
Sapient Livestock Handling – You may maintain bonds with your chosen sapient livestock, improving their quality of life and productive output, up to a maximum of [10] livestock. These bonds must be maintained at least 3 times a week per sapient livestock, and the bond will degrade if not maintained. A bond may be maintained and improved by caring for the sapient livestock physical, mental, and sexual well-being, as per the livestock’s wishes.
Sapient livestock productivity improvements correlate directly to their [Sapient Livestock] skill. The sapient livestock may break any bond when they choose to, or it may break naturally if degraded too much.
Authority: Sapient Livestock – You exercise greater authority over your bonded sapient livestock, making them willing to accept your orders and desires.
Designate: Handler – You may designate others as [Handlers], workers who aide the main [Rancher]. These [Handlers] receive half the effects of [Sapient Livestock Handling], but can work on any sapient livestock recognized by the [Rancher]. They may not designate other [Handlers]. You may designate up to [5] [Handlers]. Becoming a [Handler] is a [Sub-Job].]”
Avaron rubbed her temple, feeling like she should have a headache but her [Divine Regeneration] kept that from happening. “I’ve several questions and disturbing implications to think about, but what is a [Sub-Job]?”
“Some [Jobs] can grant [Jobs] to others, and these are known as [Sub-Jobs]. They don’t change the [Job] someone already has, but grants them additional effects instead. The price, usually, is being much weaker than a [Job] proper.”
“Which means [Jobs] that do this must be pretty valuable?”
“They can be,” Raina said, though lacked any confidence in saying that. “Some more than others. [Rancher] and [Farmer] are the sorts of [Sub-Job] granting [Jobs] that are useful for, well, running farms. Of course, they are not often as highly regarded as [Knight] …”
“No, that sounds pretty typical. People look down on physical labor professions even when they’re the literal backbone of a nation,” Avaron said, a scornful tone. “That aside, I’m none-too-happy about that ‘authority’ portion. How does that work?”
“I’m not certain of it myself,” Raina answered with a shrug. “Effects, spells, or anything that can compel a person are exceedingly rare. Influence, yes, but not compel.”
“It seems like an influence sort.”
“It probably is. It does concern me as well, it’s unusually vague about its intended result.”
“Do [Jobs] level up or anything?” Avaron asked speculatively.
“No. A [Job] is ordinarily set in stone. It’s possible for the [Job] to change, typically into a different but ‘stronger’ [Job], or a variant.”
“Hm.” Avaron turned around and went over to the dirt-made stairs, sitting down on a step gently. “This is a real pickle, ain’t it?”
Raina looked around on the ground for a moment. “Pickle?”
“Sorry. A vexing problem.”
“Ah. Yes, I surmised you would see it as such, my Queen.”
Don’t look cute when answering like that, Avaron wanted to say, but kept it to herself. The third question on her mind needed asking instead. “So doesn’t this erase your previous [Job]? Do you even want it?”
“Erase?” Raina echoed, eyes squinting. “No, not at all. It takes merely 7 days to change my [Job] as I wish.”
“Wait, really?”
“Yes? Do you not yourself, my Queen?”
“Nope. Only have had one [Job] and I’m kind of stuck with it.”
Raina’s head tilted. “A [Job] you cannot change out of? I have never heard of such a thing.”
“[Divine Heroine] is weird like that.”
The goat woman stared, dumbfounded at first, then blinking in disbelief. “You … you’re a [Divine Heroine]?”
“… Didn’t we talk about that?” Avaron wondered aloud, rubbing her chin. Did Medusa take that memory with her as well? Or am I crazy and imagining it?
“I—have heard conjecture about it, but to hear you are one is, well …”
“You’re not sure I’m just saying that.”
“It’s not that I don’t trust you, my Queen,” Raina hurried to say, holding her hands up placatingly. “It’s simply no one who isn’t a human has ever been one! This is historical! And a … err, tentradom, no less.”
Avaron’s face scrunched up in confusion. “Don’t your goddesses select champions all the time or something?”
“[Divine Champion], or [Divine Chosen], I have heard and read about frequently. [Divine Heroine] is exclusive to those who come from other worlds to this one. No one but the summoned humans have ever possessed it—that I know of, at least.”
Why is there an exclusive [Job] to humans not from this world? Avaron pondered, but she had only that question to ask and nothing to speculate on. Fuck me, there’s another thing I have to bother Nex about. Ah, this is so aggravating.
Raina’s lovely aroma did have such an enticing allure to it. Thick, meaty, nostril filling and with a dash of flavors like the mud of the earth, sweat and exertion, and a peculiarly unique blend her species possessed. Something chalky tasting with a fiery follow up that Avaron found hard to figure out exactly. Raina smiled in her direction, perking up under Avaron’s scrutinizing gaze. Her rectangular pupils looked particularly wide then, giving her a disarmingly cute look for one so damningly beautiful.
“More to think about, I guess,” Avaron said dismissively. “But, yes, I’m a [Divine Heroine], and not from this world entirely. Hence the weird questions.”
“Not weird at all, my Queen!” Raina chirped, and probably would’ve bounced on her hooves with how energetic she appeared. “If there’s anything you want to know, I’d be glad to tell you! No matter what it is! Or mundane or—“
Avaron held up a hand, trying not to smile. “Yes, yes, I appreciate your continued support, Raina. Or should I call you lady Ashmourn from now on?”
Raina froze. “That was a simple rebuttal toward Lord Sternbuck, my Queen.”
“Oh?”
“Please, call me Raina. It’s an honor for my name to grace your lips in such kind regard.”
It would be so easy to play with her flirtatious signs, but Avaron knew better than to do so. “I’m more surprised you revealed your Ashmourn name. I doubt you did so carelessly.”
“Ah …” Raina, for the first time since visiting, broke her overly formal manners to rub her cheek. A small, temporary thing, but one Avaron noticed. “I merely thought it best to … live up, to my name once more. For whatever that might entail.”
“It is a step forward,” Avaron said agreeingly. “One I suspect you’re annoyed at having to do, but still.”
“It’s hard to, when everything I feel tells me it doesn’t matter. I do as you ask, and ignore that feeling, hoping I will find something that does matter.”
“Give it time. Shitty answer, I know, but it does work eventually. I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t follow through with it myself.”
A conflicted look passed behind Raina’s eyes, her pleasant demeanor not changing in the slightest. Recognition, maybe, or at least some sense of camaraderie she felt they must’ve shared. Perhaps, in a way, they did, though Avaron’s suffering came from a much different source. What Avaron rather didn’t expect was Raina walking toward her, then kneeling down. The much taller goat woman suddenly became mostly eye-level; Avaron sat just high enough to slightly gaze downward.
Though the physical yearning coming off of Raina might’ve been thick enough to lick, she kept her hands atop her knees. “Selfish of me as it is, my Queen, as you have helped me, I too wish to help you.”
It didn’t help how Avaron grew very consciously aware of how such a precarious position left Raina. Minus some clothes and adding a lengthsome, throbbing tentacle, and she’d be perfect height to get pushed down and it forced into her mouth. Raina even had those nice, strong looking horns Avaron could grab onto like handlebars. She was practically a self-serve opportunity in the making.
(Who the hell is leaking their horniness again?) Aphora demanded, but Raina’s big, golden eyes were much too distracting for her to go looking through the [Hive Mind]. Instead, Avaron could only sigh and let a forced sense of weariness try to drown out her natural instincts. “I suppose it’s obvious, huh?”
“I may not know of you well, my Queen, but I try. I fear only you may not wish me to.”
I’d love to beat this dead horse some more until you realize it, Avaron thought dryly. She knew better than to press such an obvious fact, at least for the moment. Too much stick and no carrot would be a problem of its own making as well. Avaron leaned back and stared up at the bright sky, made brighter by that weird scientific effect of being in a dark hole. She couldn’t remember the name but knew it’d been on TV at one point.
“I’m just not used to people wanting to know me,” Avaron said plainly. “Everyone always wanted something. Favor for business, attention for promotion, trying to fuck me for the thrill of it. You know, everyone wanting to use me for their end. Never wanting to be with me. It still sounds bizarre, even now.”
“Is it truly?”
“A lifetime’s worth of mistrust and suspicion doesn’t go away. I’m not sure it ever will. That’s why I try to embrace being lovable, doing the loving, all that. Maybe at some point it’s genuine, maybe it’s me wearing a mask no one can see behind. If I don’t try, I’ll always be fucked up. If I’m lucky, maybe sometimes I can experience what it’s like not being fucked up. Who knows then?” Avaron shrugged and regarded the doe-eyed Raina more particularly. “It’s not that I don’t appreciate the offer. I just have issues of my own to work through.”
“It’s easier with someone else to share the burden with, isn’t it?”
“Hey, that’s my line,” Avaron protested, making both of them smirk at one another. “Yes, yes. I’ll try to rely on your strong shoulders a little bit more, Raina. Like this whole funny ranch business you just dumped into my lap …”
At least she had the good grace to appear sheepish about doing it.
“There’s a lot of complexities involved with it, but so far, nothing actually ‘new’ is bothering me. It’s curious that [Sapient Livestock] is a [Skill] and not a [Job]. This implies to me someone could be both part of a ranch, and also a regular [Job] holder.” Avaron rubbed her chin. “I’m rather suspicious of that but I can’t imagine how it’ll play out exactly.”
“I haven’t broached it to the others yet to discover its effects, I’m afraid to say.”
“… I’m really curious what its effects are. If it’s a [skill] worth having, there’s even more implications there. On the other hand, I loathe to ask any person to, well, become livestock. Even if the term is not exactly misplaced …”
“Misplaced?”
“I hate how normal this is starting to sound,” Avaron muttered to herself, then sighed. “In a, broad way, it makes sense why the system calls it that. Or would, anyway. What’s the purpose of livestock? The regular animal kind.”
“Uh, to be reared for whatever they can make, and their meat?” Raina answered slowly. “Sheep sheared for wool, cows milked for … well, milk. That business.”
“Normally, civilizations capture animals who produce something useful and can be domesticated. Some animals are too dangerous or not viable for that, of course,” Avaron explained. “The important part is that ranching turns a lot of otherwise useless land into something productive. Grass that people can’t eat becomes sheep wool, or cow milk, or meat. Makes sense, right?”
Raina looked thoughtful, scrunching her face and glancing around aimlessly. “Yes, I believe so.”
“So what purpose would tentradom hives have for doing the same? Tentacles can eat everything, up to and including each other. There’s no such thing as ‘useless land’ to my kind.”
“Except for women,” Raina pointed out, perhaps a little too-eagerly, “because tentradoms need milk!”
“It’s a cornerstone of their diet, and the one thing they cannot make themselves. So, every other form of life falls into two broad categories: milk and breeding. Women, of course, let both happen at once. It makes them the one and only form of livestock the tentradoms could ever desire or use.” Avaron held up a finger, silencing Raina’s all-too-intrigued-and-shouldn’t-be look. “But, let’s think about that word. ‘Livestock’. It’s dehumanizing—well, depersonizing would be closer. It inherently demotes the idea of a person to that of a baser animal, making the concept of ‘sapient livestock’ kind of an oxymoron.”
“A what?”
“An idea that opposes itself.”
“Oh. I can see that, but it’s not any different from keeping slaves, is it?” Raina inquired.
“Words matter. Some cultures consider slaves non-people, even if they’re the same species. Others consider slavery a state of moral, religious, or financial consequence that a person ends up in for one reason or another. Anyway, my point is, this is the first time I’ve really seen this universe’s ‘system’ have an oxymoron like this,” Avaron pointed out. “And, the fact that no [skill] I know about has anything negative or harmful to the one who gets it, means at best [sapient livestock] is a neutral or even ‘beneficial’ [skill], just like every other. Has there ever been a [slave] [skill]?”
That made Raina furrow her brows and nose wrinkle cutely. “No … not that I ever heard of, either.”
“So why is there a [sapient livestock] [skill]? Do [Sub-Skills] exist or something?”
“There isn’t. Or shouldn’t be.”
“That makes this even weirder. Slavery is definitely in this world, and definitely more prevalent and widespread than tentradoms running ranches.” Avaron sighed with exasperation and held up her hands in a shrug. “So why here? Why this [skill]? This name? This way of doing things? It’s bizarre.”
“Is it not enough that is simply the way of things? The way of our world, that is,” Raina asked.
“To you, it might be. I’m from the outside. I knew a different universe and a different way of things. What I see comes from a very different perspective, because in my old universe, there wasn’t a system. Or goddesses, or magic for that matter.”
Raina blinked her big, doeful eyes. “How is that even possible? Does everyone not have any [levels]?”
“Nope. Things just worked. Just like how you’re saying ‘things just work’ here.” Avaron pushed herself off the dirt staircase and patted her butt clean for a moment. “Anyway, not like knowing that changes what I can do about it. Best I can do is live with and around it and hope things work out from there.”
Raina, too, came to stand up, her towering height once more leaving her above Avaron. It didn’t skip the tentradom’s notice how very eye-level she was with Raina’s generous, milk-laden bosom. Or how there was that tiny, almost imperceptible jiggle to them inside that corset of hers. Avaron’s bastard antennae swiveled in Raina’s direction, angling with eager sensing at her breasts. She didn’t know how, but she just knew how full and suckable Raina was. Plump and ready for—Avaron reached up and physically diverted her antennae away.
“What is your order, then, my Queen?” Raina asked, observing and hopefully not understanding what just happened.
“Find a volunteer who will become [sapient livestock] and gain the [skill]. I need to know what it does before I can fully permit its utilization. Frankly, half the people in Eden are going to riot as soon as they hear about it. Kinda undermines my whole ‘youre not here to be cattle’ and then suddenly I’m turning them into [sapient livestock],” Avaron said with a hint of increasing aggravation. “I’ll just deal with it one step at a time. If it’s really beneficial, I can spin it as a positive … somehow. Fucking hell, I really have to sell that idea … ah, I’m so pissed …”
“I’m sor—“
“It’s not your fault, and don’t go making it that way, either,” Avaron said sharply. “We just deal with what life throws at us and hope we get over it. Anyway, break time is over—I have to get this stupid tunnel aligned and the foundations building.”
“As you command, my Queen. I will report the [skill’s] description as soon as I know it,” Raina said, surprisingly dutiful sounding. Avaron nodded and waved her dismissal, and so Raina took off, quite literally so. She jumped out of the hole as easily as she first entered, leaving Avaron staring up in surprise.
Is this what it’s like being in a superhero comic? Avaron wondered.
(I figured out the problem,) Venus interjected.
(Oh?)
(The poles were inserted in the wrong spot.)
(Of course they were. Okay, let’s try again.)
*~*
(I’m not sure this is working,) Aegis thought, her face burning hot. Almost sizzling, but whatever damage happened, [Divine Regeneration] negated.
(Yes, yes,) Iris answered flippantly. (Seeing if we become tan or be afflicted by skin cancer is what we're testing.)
(Do I look like I want cancer?)
(I’m sure Gwyneth could burn it away if we really needed it.)
(Oh yes, being incinerated is such an improvement.)
Nonetheless, the experiment continued. After Iris found some highly reflective serving sheets, a little bit of polishing and cleaning made them essentially functional mirrors. Aegis’ task then became to lay out in the open field, a dozen of these polished mirrors aimed at her face, and let the sun absolutely blast the shit out of her. It functioned less like an aggressive sun tan and more like a very weak infrared attack of sorts due to the intensity. If she opened her eyes, they’d literally fry inside her own skull.
That hadn’t been a pleasant sensation at all.
Some clouds passed by overhead, reducing the intensity in an instant. Aegis sighed, and sitting on the grass as she was, flopped backward. Whatever. At least I’m getting a better idea of our power sharing.
The [Hive Mind] meant her own power was shared, to some extent, throughout it. Everything connected to the [Hive Mind] had some tangential benefit of something like [Divine Regeneration]. A principle issue remained in how unclear how much of that benefit actually existed. For one, Avaron couldn’t easily quantify things even with the system’s numbers—because those numbers were, themselves, relative. Any relative information needed quantifiable references in order to make it statistically meaningful.
Ergo, she had to establish meaning before there could be understanding.
Her gut instinct and shoddy scientific method told her that somewhere between 10% and 20% of her power was shared in the [Hive Mind]. Where things got funny weird was something like [Divine Regeneration], which maxed out her [Recovery] stat and conferred supernatural power way, way outside the norm of the world. Her drones could, and in fact have, taken seriously damaging or lethal blows, and regenerated within minutes. Not as fast as Avaron herself, obviously, but compared to most wild animals she’d hunted down, their durability proved ridiculous.
They did suffer in combat against high leveled specialists, like Arzha’s knights. Their individual durability wasn’t enough to slow those women down in the slightest. The confrontation against the Church’s Lance also proved that even stronger individuals could blow through Hive drones without any trouble. However, if such people were the specialists of armies and not the norm, they were problems Avaron could work around. Rather than using suicide wave tactics, she could instead just carpet bomb them out of existence.
Granted, she had to develop bombs to drop from the sky, but that was a solvable problem.
Other, more immediate possibilities in the form of poisons and toxins were something to consider. She’d scavenged several interesting specimens from the Alva Forest, and their lethality made even the elvetahn respect them. If she could incorporate poisons into her drones enmasse, it would amplify their lethality dramatically without affecting their overall cost or design. On the other hand, if something like a ‘cure poison’ [spell] existed, such an extreme upgrade could also be totally countered.
On the other, other hand, if using such magic proved straining to an enemy’s resources, she could abuse that maliciously.
There were tons of possible data points to consider, but Avaron simply lacked enough useful, practical information to capitalize on. Hence, torturing herself in order to figure out things like her own baseline performance. A baseline that kept changing when it shouldn’t have and she hadn’t a damn clue as to why.
Hm? Tsugumi? Avaron noticed the lovely little inn keeper heading in her general direction through some of her drones. The weird part was, Avaron didn’t actually know how she got there. She had eyes and ears throughout the Eden and there was a bizarre gap that proved inexplicable. Am I just losing my mind when Medusa isn’t here?
Even weirder was Tsugumi coming toward her, specifically. Aegis had set up her experiment on the outskirts of Eden proper, at least enough the town was a ten-something-minute walk away. Some drones on the outskirts and a few skeyes were directed to monitor her closely, if only for her own protection. Avaron always kept some sort of guard active and following Gwyneth and Tsugumi, when her damn brain worked enough for it. Aegis frowned for a moment. Do I need to guard Nahtura now too?
Considering how much she warped around everywhere, that sounded rather impossible to do.
Not to mention how freakishly powerful she probably actually was.
I can try, I guess?
It’d be rude of her not to, at least.
Aegis waited, the clouds overhead remaining all the while. The dozens of drones waiting around Aegis parted at Tsugumi’s approach, moving in unified silence.
“Hey, Tsu, howse it going?” Avaron asked, angling the polished silver in her hands still.
“Ava,” Tsugumi returned evenly. “What are you doing?”
Oh, that’s a tone of voice, Avaron thought, what the hell did I do now?
“Uhh … well, this me is currently seeing how harmful concentrated sunlight is. I’m testing if there’s anything mystical to sunlight inherently, and if there is, if it does any real damage,” Avaron explained, holding up her polished silver for emphasis. “So far it just burns a lot like regular sunlight, so that’s kind of underwhelming. I can’t tell if that’s because of my insane [recovery] stat mitigating any real power it might have. It’s a little annoying to figure out. Why? What’s up?”
“… Do you have to do it this way?”
“I don’t get exactly what you mean.”
“Torturing yourself,” Tsugumi said with a heaviness that didn’t hide her scorn. “Mutilating your body, chopping it apart, pouring acid, sitting in a fire—why do you do that to yourself?”
How does she even know about some of those? Avaron wondered, lowering her polished silver. She had the surrounding drones do the same. For the moment, at least, the experiment could end. Whatever lingering damage she’d sustained healed off, so Avaron opened her eyes to regard Tsugumi’s scornful look. “I can certainly make an argument for why it’s been very useful to me, but that’s not what you want to hear. The question to me is, why is it a problem?”
“Because I’ve seen people like that. The excuses they make because it’s useful, and then the monsters they become later regardless. I don’t want that for you. There’s testing the limit of your power, and then there’s going beyond that.”
“And I’m going beyond that?”
“Yes.”
There were a lot of ways to deconstruct what Tsugumi said, and even more to justify Avaron’s own decisions. Of them, only one real idea came to mind. “You’re right, and it’s a reasonable concern. My question then is, where do I draw the line?” Avaron asked, standing up. Tsugumi herself approached then, moving in front of her. “The [Hive Mind] makes me everything, Tsu. From the drones digging in the dirt over there, to the ones pulling carriages, or standing guard. To the growth stretching underneath us, to the buildings people live inside of, and to the skeyes flying above us right now. At what point do I stop making use of ‘myself’ in that way?”
A conflicted look passed through Tsugumi for a moment, but she poked a finger into Avaron’s chest. “Yet the ‘you’ right here is ‘different’ from all the rest, isn’t it? Special?”
“As far as I know, yes?”
“Then what happens to ‘you’ is what matters the most. I don’t want the babies I birth to suffer, or have horrible things happen to them but … that’s them, and this is you. Even if you’re ‘the same’, there’s still a difference.” Tsugumi sighed, lacing her four hands together evenly. “Just because you have the power to do something like that, doesn’t mean you should. And I don’t speak as some priestess with scorn, either.”
“I get it,” Avaron said placatingly. “I’ll stop with the wanton self-destruction. I’m very aware of what it entails, but I agree it’s not worth taking that kind of risk with.”
“As long as you understand, and actually do it.” Tsugumi looked suspicious for a moment then sighed. “I’ve told others the same, and they always think just because they control it now, they always will. That’s not how it works.”
There was some wisdom to Tsugumi’s words, even if Avaron knew she could dismantle the argument. Honestly, she felt like it was an overreaction, but there wasn’t any harm in throttling back, either. HR never liked me in the first place, so what else is new? she thought, stretching her arms overhead. At least the sun torture experiment would be done with, and her body needed some motion. “Ahh—I’ll need your help with some work, then.”
“Oh?”
“I want to see if I can train your drones to use webbing better. I think it’ll have great use but I don’t know tora silk like you do.”
“Is there another great queen you’ve promised my silk to?”
“Hey now, I apologized for that …”
Tsugumi stared in that piercing way of hers.
*~*~*
Codex:
[Job Title: Sapient Rancher] [Type: Agricultural]
[Description: A variant [Job] of the [Rancher] agricultural family, specialized toward handling sapient people as its form of livestock.]
[Effects: Sapient Livestock Handling – You may maintain bonds with your chosen sapient livestock, improving their quality of life and productive output, up to a maximum of [10] livestock. These bonds must be maintained at least 3 times a week per sapient livestock, and the bond will degrade if not maintained. A bond may be maintained and improved by caring for the sapient livestock physical, mental, and sexual well-being, as per the livestock’s wishes.
Sapient livestock productivity improvements correlate directly to their [Sapient Livestock] skill. The sapient livestock may break any bond when they choose to, or it may break naturally if degraded too much.
Authority: Sapient Livestock – You exercise greater authority over your bonded sapient livestock, making them willing to accept your orders and desires.
Designate: Handler – You may designate others as [Handlers], workers who aide the main [Rancher]. These [Handlers] receive half the effects of [Sapient Livestock Handling], but can work on any sapient livestock recognized by the [Rancher]. They may not designate other [Handlers]. You may designate up to [5] [Handlers]. Becoming a [Handler] is a [Sub-Job].]
Chapter 65: Consequences
Chapter Text
The outcome of our actions is not always under our control.
*~*
Mulk kicked his legs back and forth, sitting on the weird chair as he was. The hallway remained the same as it did five, ten, fifteen, and however many minutes ago: a long stretch of white chitin and blue rope-flesh in the crevices. The magic light thing overheard kept up its piercing brightness, and so he didn’t look up much. Despite the wait wearing down on him, he kept sitting. Even if he got up to walk around, he sat down eventually.
He’d keep waiting, at least until the hunger pangs got to be too much.
Eventually, the sound of a door sliding open caught his ear. He glanced over from the corner of his eye. The snow woman—Avaron—emerged from the room. Upon seeing him, she walked over, and then sat down heavily in the chair beside him.
He didn’t say anything.
Neither did she.
The silence pressed in then, the unspoken heavier than anything he’d ever known before.
“How is she?” he asked finally.
“Alive,” Avaron answered with simple banality. “Miraculously so.”
“That’s … good?”
“Mm. Maybe. Her leg’s gone, and her insides got roasted by the Flame. No telling how much that’ll impede her growth, or what kind of problems she’ll have in the future.”
“Oh.” He was glad Hanmi lived, but at the same time, wasn’t sure if it was worth the price. Death was a better end than living sometimes.
“So. What’s your name?” Avaron asked.
“Mulk.”
“Why’re you here, anyway?”
“Because I’m the leader,” he said.
“Mm. How’d you kids get to Eden, anyway?”
“Carriage.”
“Huh.”
“What’re you going to do now?”
“About what?”
“Us.”
Avaron shifted in her seat, tilting from one side to the other. “Orphanage for the time being.”
“Tch. Typical.”
“Let me guess, gone through a couple of them?”
“Which of us hasn’t?” Mulk asked sarcastically. “Throw us in a room with one blanket and call it enough. Every town’s the same.”
“Can’t blame you for presuming it, but Eden is different.”
“Is it?”
“How many towns did you live in that’s ran by a tentradom?”
For someone saying to be a queen, she sure didn’t speak like one. Mulk stared at her blatantly, not really sure what to make of it. “Not like that changes much.”
“For someone who is going out of their way to give you bedrooms, three meals a day, and a house to be safe in,” Avaron listed off with an increasingly condescending tone, “and saving your friend’s life, you do little to show gratitude. If all you are is rude, then all you will ever find in life is enemies.”
“You didn’t give us those things yet,” Mulk said simply. “Thanks for Hanmi, though.”
“Ingratiation, too, is a useful technique,” Avaron remarked, but inclined her head. “I do like your straightforwardness.”
“Is she … awake?”
“No, sleeping. She’ll be out of it for a few days, at least. A couple weeks to heal, but I’m not sure how many days that will be.”
“Can I see her?” Mulk asked.
“Let me guess, think I’m lying?”
“No. I don’t trust you.”
“Alright. Be quiet, though.”
He found himself surprised again. Usually other people got really mad at such a simple truth, but not her. She apparently knew what he wanted for her to prove her trust worthiness. Mulk couldn’t stop inherent suspicion, but nonetheless followed after Avaron. They entered into the room where Hanmi was, itself a very different sort of place.
The white chitin and blue flesh remained, but the chitin widened out spaciously, while the blue flesh grew wildly. Fleshy grass with green or teal-colored tips reached upward, swaying despite the complete lack of breeze. Some kind of light-making magic crystal was embedded in the ceiling in even, segmented sections, brighter than candles but not as harsh to his eyes. An involuntary shiver crept up his back at how his feet sank into the floor slightly. Squishy, but firm after a certain point. It wasn’t like anything he’d ever walked on before.
At the center of the room, however, was some kind of … bed. Or egg. An egg-shaped bed, half of it open, with Hanmi sitting in the middle of it. Something adult-sized, but that flesh grass grew abundantly within the meaty interior. Tentacles were attached to her, namely where her leg used to be, and then at different parts of her torso. They twitched and pulsated in a certain, particular rhythm, almost like a heartbeat. Hanmi slept there peacefully, tastefully covered by the grass, but even Mulk could see the burn scars stretching across her. It’d cut through her fur like fire swept through a forest.
A difficult feeling swelled in his chest, one that made his throat clench tightly. “Why …?”
“The Flame’s power to heal comes with harm in equal measure,” Avaron explained in a whisper. “It would’ve killed her. The Hive, however, could strengthen her body enough to survive the process. Think of it like ‘life support’.”
“Right.” He didn’t get it, but it apparently worked.
“If you’re satisfied, let’s go then.”
Wasn’t hard to see Hanmi was still alive and breathing, just with things attached to her. Even if he wanted to do something about that, was it even the right thing to do? Mulk didn’t know. He left the room with Avaron, the weight in his bones making him so very tired.
“Now then,” Avaron said, “as to you and your—“
Thump.
She looked over and found Mulk passed out on the floor. Stopping, she stared for a moment in confusion. “Really? Now of all times is when you clock out?”
Sighing, she waved her hand, and a section of the hive’s wall squelched open. A worker tentacleling emerged, wet, fluffy, and a creature of nightmares to most people. It came by and scooped up Mulk, holding him up on top of its body, and carried him off. Next when he awoke, he’d be inside the very orphanage he scoffed at, in his own little bedroom.
*~*
The elvetahn army continued its trek through the Free Hardain State, similar stories to Sunfield’s massacre greeting them. Nagraki scavengers, mindless slaves as they were, wantonly attacked various hamlets, villages, and towns. Some successfully fought them off, but later succumbed to the naki corruption left behind. The found survivors were those lucky enough to receive divine protection or grace from patron deities. It at least stymied the corruption, if not prevented it entirely. Avaron’s responsibility became taking care of the survivors so Bladedance and his soldiers could continue their lightning-speed advance.
“I’ve been wondering about something,” Avaron asked, sitting behind Bladedance. The two of them shared the same elk as the army marched onward.
“Oh?”
“Naki corruption is pretty bad, but the elvetahn don’t worry about it. Is it because of Nahtura?”
Most of the elvetahn nearby visibly flinched at hearing that name spoken so casually. Not out of anger; fear was much closer.
“… Yes, in a sense,” Bladedance answered. “Naki cannot take root when divine power or blessings are present. It is its one glaring, unchanging weakness. We elvetahn are blessed by the close, loving attention of the All-Father. His warmth pulses in our blood, casting off vile poxes like naki.”
“Oh, that’s nice. Tahn seemed pretty great when I met him.”
“Ahh, it’s quite the boon to have met the All-Father himself,” Bladedance said, his voice surprisingly warm and enthusing. “He is rare to walk among our world these decades.”
He might just be a stoner, Avaron wanted to say, but kept it to herself. No one wanted to hear about their god being a lazy bum who smoked dope all day. Then again, she didn’t know about him much at all. “Kinda scared the shit out of me when I walked outside. He’s as tall as a tree.”
The elvetahn around them started laughing then, even Bladedance joining in. It’d been the first taste of good humor she’d heard from them in a few days—the nagraki put quite a damper on their spirits. Avaron smiled with a shrug.
A minute later, a different voice interjected, “The Great Owl does not share blessings, they are earned.”
Avaron twisted around, looking at Barkbite, clad in a cloak of feathers, leaves, moss, and furs, walking beside them. Despite the speed and gait of the elk, she kept up with a disturbing ease. Glancing downward, Avaron soon noticed why—Barkbite’s raptor-like feet let her hop from one spot to another without a problem. Eh? What?
“Great Owl … you mean Nah—“
“It isn’t wise to speak of her name,” Barkbite warned, her voice filtering through her owl-shaped mask. Familiar, but with a trill or airy accent to it. “Death flies swiftly.”
“We’re on speaking terms?” Avaron offered, frowning with some uncertainty. “Is this some sort of disrespect thing?”
Bladedance said, “No. The Great Owl kills those who speak her name. It is a very necessary warning.”
I wonder how much of that is she just hates getting random phone calls from people talking about … her … No, I’d kill people too at that point, Avaron thought, suddenly understanding how annoying being a goddess might be. “Well, she seems nice. A bit demanding, though. Why? Why are you all looking at me like that?”
The elvetahn who could, at least, glance at her in disbelief did so. Avaron wiggled her antennae speculatively.
“To meet both and survive is reward enough,” Barkbite remarked. “You are fortunate.”
Yeah, your stoner god sent me to your queen and then I started banging her mother instead, Avaron thought. She wasn’t entirely certain how that worked out but she wasn’t going to question it. Strange shit just happened to her and she figured not thinking about it was for the better. Still, she was rather curious about Barkbite. “I’ll take it as that, I guess,” Avaron said. “Do I get to ask you a question, though?”
Barkbite’s head rotated independently of her body in a really unnatural looking way. Or a bird way. No, definitely a bird way. “Why?”
“Curiosity.”
“A dangerous thing.”
“Contentment is worse.”
Avaron almost, almost winced at how Barkbite’s head rotated on an axis. The exact same freaky thing Nahtura herself did. She didn’t even need to look where she was going to keep that hopping walk going.
“What question?”
“Well, I’ve been noticing there’s elvetahn like you, and elvetahn like Bladedance here, but I’m not sure why there’s a difference.”
“I’m not elvetahn,” Barkbite said simply. “We are elvetura.”
“Oh.” Avaron was going to ask more, but Barkbite readjusted herself forward again, and stalked off ahead. “I was going to ask more, but I guess that offended her?”
Bladedance shook his head. “I’m more surprised she spoke so much. The elvetura don’t find it easy to converse like you or I do.”
“I have to admit I find them pretty interesting.”
“Their history is something of a secret, even to me. It can be said, though, that we elvetahn descend from Tahn, and the elvetura from the Great Owl.”
"But the Great Owl gave birth to you both?” Avaron asked confusedly.
“Not perhaps as you might understand at first.”
Avaron felt some interesting trauma coming back. Mostly high school and learning about the Greek gods. Knowing her, maybe she knocked up Tahn instead. No, wait, she’s all woman, right? How does this work? What?
“I’m not sure I should. Gonna put that one out of mind for now.”
“A wise decision,” Bladedance remarked. “Have you seen anything from the skeyes?”
“No, just forest, plains, and rivers. There’s still something further on the horizon—maybe a couple days at this pace. It’s some kind of black mass, like the forests burned away. Or the naki growing out of control.”
“That is what remains most worrisome of all to me,” Bladedance said, sighing. “Very well. Keep me informed as you can about it.”
“Got it, boss.”
*~*
“Nahtura. Nahtura?”
The dryad blinked and shook her head before looking over at Avaron.
“What?”
“Hearing your voice in two places surprised me,” Nahtura remarked.
“Two places?” Avaron echoed, then squinted. “Oh, is the one out with the elvetahn say your name?”
“Did you not know?”
“She’s out of range, so I’ve no idea what she’s doing right now. Nothing bad, hopefully.” Avaron fluffed the large schematic parchment in her hands, looking down at it and back up again. “Well, that’s as close as I can make it, I think. I dunno if this counts as pretty or what.”
For the better part of a few days, after being asked to help, Nahtura, Avaron, and Gwyneth were building a ‘shrine’ to Nex. Avaron repurposed one of the deeper storage rooms in the Hive, but the actual construction proved challenging. None of the rare or exotic materials Nex liked were available, and Avaron didn’t have much in actual architectural skill. I’m not sure this will actually work … but, whatever.
At the center of the room, the flooring had between arranged in a figure-8 shape. Flesh formed the solid ground, while a running river of water flowed around the continual loop. Where the two ‘o’s met together, the platform for a statue was erected. Built from chitin, it featured a harshly made, and rather poorly designed, rendition of an erupting water wave. Or, perhaps, a sea of flowers and vines; Avaron had the vision in mind, but her hands were too stupid to make something passable.
Nahtura did the actual growing of a tree into a familiar feminine shape. Vaguely woman-like, her flesh similar to Avaron’s own tentacle braiding. Unlike Avaron, nothing resembling chitin could be found, and she sported six arms that curled in onto herself. Whether in presentation of her torso, or emphasizing her muscular nature, neither proved clear. Her head resembled that of a flesh-made flower, sporting six large petals and a cavernous maw inside the center.
The rest of the makeshift shrine mostly became small garden beds with magically grown fruits and vegetables. Nex loved to eat, or so Nahtura said, and so food offerings were important to her.
“Is there really no bronze or brass?” Nahtura asked suspiciously.
“There might be, but there’s no metal works up yet,” Avaron said, shrugging. “I don’t think throwing links and chains and other junk is really endearing.”
“An ugly thing holds attention as much as a pretty thing.”
Gwyneth interjected, “Tis unnecessary. Her blood alone may suffice as one of goddess Nex’s.”
“Blood …“ Nahtura squinted. “That’d work.”
“Please don’t say we’re going to sacrifice me. Tsugumi made me promise no more self-inflicted harm,” Avaron said dryly.
“Not a sacrifice,” Gwyneth answered. “Merely an offering of blood shall suffice. I hope.”
“If you say so. Well, let’s give it a shot then.” Avaron held her schematic off, and a tentacle emerged from the floor, took it, and receded. She did look over at Nahtura. “Should you be here?”
Nahtura’s head tilted at that angle she liked to do. “Why should I not?”
“I dunno. Another goddess at a shrine to her might be freaky. You two have history, obviously. Will that scare her off?”
Looking as if she’d eaten something unpleasant, Nahtura turned away. She didn’t answer, but didn’t need to, either.
“I’ll ask her on your behalf, at least. If she even answers me,” Avaron offered.
“I suppose …” Nahtura offered up lamely, and in the next moment, simply vanished. Her depressed voice did concern Avaron, but there wasn’t anything she could do for the dryad.
“Gonna have to deal with that later, I guess. Uh, so, I just sit in front of the statue then?” Avaron asked Gwyneth.
“Tis as spoken.” Gwyneth brandished a small knife from within her robes. “Where might I cut thou?”
Avaron closed eyes for a moment and breathed. “You know, I don’t think twice about doing it to myself. It gets real weird when you ask to do it, though.”
Nonetheless, Avaron took up a position in front of the statue. She sat in the middle of the ‘o’ shape, where a small, fleshy cushion of sorts waited. Folding her legs together, she balanced her hands on her knees. One long, dexterous tentacle extended out of her shoulder, going to Gwyneth’s waiting hand. “Just cut that one, I guess.”
The pain, existent as it was, wasn’t as bad as Avaron’s fear of the knife was. Thankfully she wasn’t looking. The small current of water soon changed colors, diluted by her blood. Once Gwyneth seemed satisfied, she backed away, and Avaron’s [Divine Regeneration] sealed the wound up.
“Now,” Gwyneth said, “think of thine patron, of thy connection to her, of a bond shared. Keep it close to heart, speak her name, and the words to draw her attention.”
I’m not sure how much that counts, but okay, Avaron thought to herself. Aside from their first meeting, and the whole becoming her patron, Nex didn’t offer up much. Still, Avaron considered what she knew, and tried to visualize some sort of bond between them. If nothing else, something like a rope or link of Nex’s blessings to Avaron herself. Nothing really seemed to happen, but she tried keeping the mental image going.
“What was it …” Avaron mumbled to herself. “Rati nyi tolma tan? Solm de Nex umm dur … oh, fuck it. Bunch of gibberish. Nex, are you there? Hello, Nex? Nex? Neeeeexxxxx?”
Gwyneth, standing nearby, sighed and shook her head. “Tis not the way thou will summon her.”
“She’s my patron, she better be listening. Nex, are you there? I know you’re there, Nex. Pick up the phone, Nex. I’m going to keep calling until you do. Nex. Hey, Nex. Nex. Pick up the phone, Nex,” Avaron said, loud but not shouting. A particularly annoying sort of person came to mind, and she channeled that irritating energy. “Ring, ring, fucker, I know you’re there. I’m gonna keep calling until you answer me, Nex. You’re gonna get a huge headache when you could’ve just answered.”
Gwyneth shuffled her feet nervously. “Ah, perhaps not incite her anger?”
“I know where you live, Nex. I’ve been inside your house! I’ll bang on your door until you answer it, Nex. Ring ring, pick up the phone. Believe me I haven’t even started yet, I used to work a hotline! Nex, Nexy poo, Nexy doo, pick up the fucking pho—“
Something clubbed Avaron upside the head in a rushing, violent motion. The next instant, the shrine room vanished into darkness. The pull of gravity wrenched her downward, the air roaring past her ears in a way very much like freefall. It happened so suddenly she hadn’t a moment to even scream, the sheer sensation of it completely overwhelming. At some point she passed through water, or something gelatin like. The air vanished, instead becoming an all-consuming presence that invaded every pore of her body.
It writhed, like maggots in a tin can left to rot.
The slimy stickiness felt warm and cold at the same time, disgustingly filthy all the same. Avaron shut her mouth lest anything unwanted to get in, but it didn’t help. Some of them felt to burrow into her, slipping into the tiny cracks of woven tentacles. A great pressure pulsated around her, then contracting. It moved in a rhythm of force, pushing and pulling, like a muscle she herself wormed inside of.
It crushed with force in ways not at all even or sensible.
Avaron tried gasping, a purely mechanical motion she’d been forced to do, but there wasn’t air to breathe.
Her world slid downward with every heaving contraction around her.
Something definitely broke.
Maybe her whole body; maybe just a limb or three. Every kind of sensation she knew blended together in a confusing mess.
The pressure squeezed tighter and tighter.
She wasn’t sure what happened for a moment, and then it all just vanished in a wave. Her arms and legs bound by something wet, warm, and writhing, she found herself on a wall of flesh of some sort. Darkly blue, tar-like flesh, in a place most likely a cave of some kind. Stone pillars held the ceiling up while broken statues of women—each one a different species entirely—laid strewn across the twitching floor. Errant mounds of flesh grew into grass, mutant flowers, and other forms of wild life.
Yet, whether they were life unto themselves, or some mockery thereof, Avaron couldn’t tell.
The heavy thud of something walking reached her ear. She turned her head as an immense figure three times her size rushed at her. Animalistic fright filled her for a split second, an instinct to run or evade making her struggle. The tentacles restraining her did not budge. A monstrous hand of worms, its nails fashioned from stone, thrust its writhing fingers right through her neck. It grabbed her, inside and out, and Avaron gurgled impotently.
“Irritating thing,” it growled in a greasy voice of oil and sludge, as if every word boiled through its throat. “Your voice a pox, your existence a curse, and still you dare speak to me?”
The problem with being a shapeshifter was how her own body shifted around the intrusion. At least enough that Avaron’s voice could work again, despite the hand quite literally through her throat. “About time you answered, Nex. Miss me already?”
That flower-like head quivered in anger, the womanly mouth at the center of that petal arrangement snarling. “Insufferable,” she hissed out, a stream of red-speckled air spilling out between her rather normal looking teeth. Avaron coughed and spat as that breath splashed onto her face.
“Yeah, yeah, what else is new?” Avaron coughed out. “If you’re done with the temper tantrum, there’s work to do.”
“A mouth as loose as it is crooked,” Nex hissed. “Do you even know what danger you’ve brought with?”
“Is it actual danger or you just being a coward?” Avaron asked, smiling. “Because I really don’t care about this pity-pot, hiding at the edge of existence shit.”
Nex trembled, rage itself coursing through her, but she did nothing.
“Yeah, yeah, get mad, whatever. I got a list a mile long we both need to get through here.”
“I grant my blessing and gave you passage to this wretched world. What more do you want?”
“You’re still a goddess, and my patron,” Avaron said. “There’s things you know or can do I don’t or cannot. So, I need you to step up and start doing your job.”
“Fehh.” Nex let out a disgusted sound, a mixture of exhaling and phlegm splattering out with it. She ripped her hand free of Avaron and turned away, stalking into the expansive cave of flesh. “No, I will not. You promised that my gift was all you needed to save everyone.”
“I did, and I’m working on it. We both know that saving can happen the easy way or the hard way,” Avaron answered, snapping her head from one side to the other. Her throat rearranged itself properly now that half of it wasn’t punched full of holes. “Unfortunately for us both, shit is happening.”
“Feh!” Nex grunted and turned around, half-crooked and slouched over. For a being of no bones, she towered like a hunchback, more an animal that could walk upright than a person. “Your problem, not mine!”
“It’ll be your problem eventually. Do you know anything about the Forever Dark vanishing?”
“… Huh?” Nex’s petal face flapped open and shut in a rhythmic wave. “That cannot die.”
“No, not die. Vanish. It’s completely gone, and the Eternal Flame is freaking out about it.”
One set of Nex’s arms rubbed her chin and bottom petal flap, while the other two wringed their hands together anxiously. She mumbled something indistinct, looking from one side to the other. “No … no, that’s not … mmm, no … Couldn’t be …”
“If you could let me down from the wall in the mean while …”
Nex waved one of her arms, not even bothering to look at all, and the wall physically spat Avaron out like something disgusting. The tentradom flew into a mound of molding flesh-growth, an unimaginably foul stench rushing up her nose. She coughed, hacked, and wheezed, clawing at the ground to get away. Oh, real cute, Avaron thought sardonically, wiping her face clean. Not that she’d ever feel clean in Nex’s domain, but she tried.
One of those broken statues provided a refuge. One of the few places not covered in tentacle flesh of any kind, the rigid stone gave Avaron a certain amount of comfort. Being about twice her size, she found a clear enough spot to sit on. Even if it did wobble a bit if she leaned too far in one direction. “Do you have any ideas, then?” Avaron asked, flinging more sloppy something-or-the-other off of her. “’cause I can go ask your ex-girlfriend otherwise.”
“… Ex-girlfriend?” Nex echoed, twisting into Avaron’s direction. Half of her lower body remained where it was, while the upper half all went like one long, elongated snake.
“Wife. Whatever. Mother of the elvetahn?”
“Who?”
“… Uhh, a big sexy forest dryad with black teeth? Listen I can’t say her name because that’ll draw her attention here.”
“I’ve never met a ‘dryad’.”
“Oh for fuck’s sake,” Avaron groaned. “You two were together at one point, and then apparently you died. She’s been real bummed out about it ever since.”
Nex’s head turned from one side to the other before her body collected itself together again. “You … met, her?”
“Yeah. Freaked out when I mentioned your name.”
“Uggghhh …” Five of Nex’s hands reached up, grabbing onto her head petals and pulling them apart. Her last hand clawed into her mouth, to be chewed on and chomped angrily. “That liar. That selfish craw. How did you meet her?”
“In a weird way. You two have a history, then?”
Nex physically tore her own head open slowly, strands of sinew, tentacle, and blood spilling out. She went as far as her own shoulders, leaving the interior ‘throat’ and ‘mouth’ exposed. Her teeth kept chomping on her sixth hand. “Hate her, hate her hate her, hate her. Stupid. Moron. Selfish idiot. Urghghghghg!”
In letting go, her torn-apart petals slopped back together, wounds visibly stitching shut. “Long ago, before all others, there was me, and then her. We fought. We laughed. We loved. From our union, the world followed after. Then I could stand her no more.”
“How come?”
“She is selfish. Arrogant. Dimwitted. Never cared for anything that didn’t suit her fancy. We argued. We fought. She never learned. She always wanted me; I wanted away. Life could not protect me, so to death I went, and hid away forever.” Nex’s head craned in Avaron’s direction, the petals shutting until only a thin, fleshy tube to her mouth remained. “And you told her I still remain?”
“Woops,” Avaron said, shrugging with a smile. “No one told me drama like this was involved.”
“… It matters not. She cannot come here, even if she tried.”
“Well, that’s that, then. Back to the question at hand, do you know anything about the Forever Dark vanishing?”
“No. Tis not possible, nor should be, yet it has become so. It would be as if all the air in the world simply disappeared. Life, as we know, would end.”
“Yeah, it seemed about that bad. There might be some other goddesses vanishing, too.”
“… Who?”
“I don’t know their names, but Nuala called them the ‘Harvest Moons’. Sound familiar?”
“If they are, then by a name I don’t know.”
“Worth a shot.” Avaron shrugged. “Yeah, so goddesses are vanishing, which is apparently incredibly unnatural for this world. I’m too busy going neck-deep in Nagraki to figure that problem out.”
“You already fight him?”
“Just his pawns. Which leads to another question about if his naki can corrupt me or not.”
“It cannot. I told you this before.”
“I need specifics,” Avaron said with a sigh, and then waved her hand back and forth. “Because if at any point the Nagraki learn what I learn, this whole world is fucked. So am I screwed if they corrupt my drones, or what?”
“What a disgusting word,” Nex said before hacking up a wad of spit onto the ground. “You fear for something that was never alive to begin with.”
“Only because I’m attached to it,” Avaron remarked dryly.
“Tch. Naki cannot do such a thing. Even if flesh is torn and reborn, the mind remains inviolable.”
“It just turns people into puppets, but they’re trapped on the inside?”
“Until their brains are ripped asunder. It is his sister you should fear more; no secret can hide from her.”
“Cool, how does that work?”
“The light sees all and knows all that is seen. Fear what it touches and your secrets shall be safe.”
That doesn’t actually help, but okay? Avaron wanted to complain, but knew well enough she was pushing limits with Nex. At least if naki isn’t an issue, I can work with that for now. What the hell does Nyoom do then?
Physical corruption made enough sense, in its own fucked up ways. Whatever Nyoom did with souls, though …
“Wait, would that even affect me?” Avaron asked aloud, as much to Nex as herself. “You know, considering what I am?”
“Do you wish to find out?”
“Not particularly.”
“You, of destruction, of void, and desolation. She would fear you; scream like a child who found her first monster, and knew it was real.”
“Oh, in that case, maybe I should go shake her hand or something …”
Nex horked something inside her throat, as close to a laugh as Avaron ever heard her make.
“Well, uh, let’s see here,” Avaron muttered, scratching the back of her head. “Two more things to cover. Do you know about Greece?”
“Grease from food?” Nex asked, two of her petal flaps wiggling.
“No, the place. Greece. Greek.”
“Never heard of it.”
“Uh. The system tells me you made tentacles called Gorgon and Arachne, right?”
Nex’s head swayed from one side to the other, a flower in the wind. “Mmm, yes. Such troubled women. Hated for what they were. Scorned for what they did. They yearned for love and so love we did. Wonderful children followed.”
“… Did you actually meet Medusa and Arachne?” Avaron asked incredulously.
“I know not Medusa, but Arachne was to her what human is to … humans. Is Medusa a gorgon?”
“The first one, as far as Earth mythology is concerned. She’s an important figure in ancient Greek epics and stuff. A woman most likely cursed by her patron goddess, for one reason or another. The second one was also cursed, if I remember correctly.”
“The gorgon I knew bore a curse, yes. She never said her name as Medusa. They both called their homeland Hellas.”
Avaron squinted. I should know what that means. Oh, it’s right there. Hellen was Roman stuff wasn’t it? No, shouldn’t be. Ugh, I hate history. She waved her hand in front of her face, clearing away a nasty smell that wafted by. “It sounds familiar, but I can’t remember exactly. There’s something really disturbing about that, though.”
“Oh?” Nex’s head craned toward her once more.
“Only humans can be summoned to this world, right?” Avaron asked with a modicum of seriousness. “That’s a pretty solid, unbreakable rule.”
“As far as can be known, yes. Your exception not accounted for.”
“So how did gorgons and arachne come to this world? Were they summoned, despite being made into something not human?”
“I don’t know if they ever said so.”
“So do you know about the kitsune and oni as well?”
“Yes?”
“How the hell did they get here, then? Because they weren’t ‘humans cursed to become something else’, if that is somehow a weird loophole. All these peoples, whatever they are, came from Earth. They somehow crossed over between universes to come to this world, and so far the only way either of us know how to do that, is through summoning.”
“… I feel the problem now.” Nex rubbed her neck, it physically deforming like puddy beneath her hand. “A way to cross over that defies knowing. Is that not your realm to understand?”
“My boss does her own thing. Having my head crushed by a rock is more helpful than asking her.”
“Such a tormented arrangement.”
“I’ve learned to live with it. At the least, it seems reasonable there is another way to cross between universes. One that no one on this world has apparently figured out.”
“Or one that is a secret kept so well not even death may know it.”
“Yeah, lotta disturbing implications behind this. Anyway, last item: gonna need some way to get in touch with you more regularly. Or is doing this weird sacrifice cult bullshit at a shrine the only way?”
“I stay here for a reason,” Nex rumbled. “I won’t leave, no matter how much you beg.”
“Can you get a cellphone or something then?”
“A what?”
I miss Earth, Avaron thought with aggravation. “Some kind of simple, two-way communication. Gwyneth’s always talking to the Eternal Flame because it’s on her damn chest all the time.”
“Ah, the Chosen of the Eternal Flame.”
“Yeah, tell me about it,” Avaron remarked flippantly, but then perked up suddenly. “Wait, you know about that?”
“Since the first day the Flame sparked awake, and the world beheld warmth and darkness in equal measure,” Nex said, her tone somewhere between recollection and presentation. “The Eternal Flame brings change, but fire ever must be controlled. The Chosen becomes the guide, to shepherd the change. But, their stewardship comes at a price, for each new Chosen joins with them. A cacophony of souls, neither living nor dead, continually stoking the fires of change. One becomes two, two becomes four, an ocean forms, each new droplet adding to something it can never leave.”
A strong sense of vertigo overcame Avaron, a rush of something between anger and pure adrenaline. Her fluffy fur and antennae receded into her, hiding behind chitin and bulging tentacles that swelled with murderous rage.
“Why do you let anger come to you so?” Nex asked curiously.
“Because this Chosen is my wife,” Avaron said tersely. “And I’m going to have to beat the shit out of the Eternal Flame.”
“It is not a horrible thing. It is the way of change. You cannot deny that.”
“I’m not letting her soul get gobbled up!”
Nex scratched her throat, stripping peels of flesh off in the process. It flaked off and onto the ground, newer flesh having grown back in its place already. “Tis not the fate you would share. Your fear is admirable, but your reasons are misguided. Speak to the prior Chosen of the Eternal Flame. Their voices will assuage your worry.”
“How can I possibly trust them?”
“The Eternal Flame cannot lie. It is the way of things.”
“It can sure fucking omit some details when it chooses to.”
“Does it? Or do you simply not ask the question as it should be?” Nex retorted. “Of all that can be trusted, the Eternal Flame is peerless. Lift the clouds from your lying eyes, and you may yet understand how to speak to it.”
I’m not having this argument again, Avaron thought in irritation, standing up. “Yeah, we’ll see about that. How do I contact you better?”
“Tch-tch-tch,” Nex hissed out, a sputtering sound awfully reminiscent of a sprinkler for some reason. “I always listen, I simply cannot speak. Make offerings of milk from willing women, and bread baked with love. I might garner strength to speak then.”
“What, does it cost you something?”
“You do little to understand goddesses, despite spitting curses and demands freely. Not even the most devoted messenger can run on an empty stomach. It is no different for us.”
Avaron sighed, wiped her bangs backward, and found her antennae slowly peeking out once more. It appeared whenever anger overcame her, that fluffy-floofiness of her receded quickly as some kind of defensive shell. A neat, if useless, observation. “Alright. Do you have a book or something? Like holy texts I can read?”
Nex looked around, her head craning one way, then another. She walked over in heavy thuds to some far side of the flesh cave, where mounds of rot and tentacles writhed impotently. Ripping chunks and clumps out with four hands, she tore apart the flesh mold until she picked up something from it. Approaching Avaron, she held out the thing in offering.
While it had the shape of a book, Avaron didn’t actually know what it was made out of. Brass formed the frame of the book, while what could’ve been chitin or bone made the back and front covers. As Avaron took it and opened it up, she found only sheets of thin, yellow skin inside, written in a scratching scrawl that made zero sense to her. “Oh, what the fuck?” she mumbled, flipping through the very warm and definitively alive pages. The thing pulsed and throbbed with an alien heartbeat, following a tempo that simply felt unnatural.
It should’ve freaked her out, but for some reason, she didn’t really feel much of anything at all. Nothing except how squishy and grossly warm it was in her hands.
“I can’t read this?” Avaron remarked, shutting the ‘book’ with a wet squelch. “Can anyone read this?”
“Read what?” Nex scoffed. “You do not read, you feel. It becomes you, and you become it. That is our truth. My truth. If you cannot, find another who can.“
“Okay, gonna have to figure that out too, apparently.” Avaron patted herself off, for whatever good that did, and moved from the broken statue she sat on. “Listen, I know how much you hate all this, but I do appreciate the help.”
“You use courtesy to hide your malevolence,” Nex said scornfully. “It doesn’t work on me.”
“Sometimes pretending a useful lie is better than being the ugly truth.” Avaron smiled. “Eventually, the lie can become truth. Or close enough it doesn’t matter anymore.”
“Snrk. Such a nasty way of seeing things. Fix the statue next time.”
“What’s wrong with it?”
“This isn’t what I am anymore. It’s simply what she remembered me as. I hate being this way again.”
Avaron blinked. “Oh, sorry. I didn’t know.”
“You do nothing to know. You care only for what is useful to you. That is why you are so wicked and vile.”
Avaron hadn’t a moment for a witty retort before that same clubbing-the-back-of-her-head happened suddenly. The world flew forward and upside down, and in a rush that made her gasp sharply, found her eyes opening again. The shrine room remained where it was, the ugly statue of Nex in front of her, and the sound of running water echoing loudly. Avaron inhaled as if she’d been drowning, her lung-flesh burning for the taste of oxygen. She looked at her hands and lower body, not a spec of that rotten filth from the cave on her. That, more than anything, relieved her.
“What the hell? Did I teleport or something?” she mumbled.
“Thou remained all the while,” Gwyneth’s lovely and warm voice came from off the side. “Tis successful, then?”
“What happened?”
“Thou merely paused for a moment, slumped forward, and then awoke once more. A common thing when thy art called to serve.”
“Yeah … okay. Well, made contact with Nex, at least. Figured out some things and—oh great, the book is here too.”
That same unnerving book of flesh sat at the base of Nex’s statue, simply waiting.
“Book? Oh!” Gwyneth inhaled happily. “Thou received a boon from thine goddess!”
“Yeah … boon.” Avaron squinted at it for a moment, then stood up shakily. Even if supposedly only a minute passed, her legs felt like noodles. Literally so. She scratched her head, fingering through the hair and briefly rubbing her antennae. “I need a bath.”
Oh, I forgot to ask her about [Jobs]. Ugh.
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new yet.
Chapter 66: Changing Ways
Chapter Text
Who we were will never gasp who we became, yet we are both the same.
*~*
“Never thought I’d miss spinning in my chair this much,” Avaron remarked.
Kaelara looked up slightly from her desk, just enough to glance over at the tentradom queen. Who, for the most part, seemed to just sit back in her chair, staring up at the ceiling. The barebones office was boring, admittedly, but there was still work to be done. It’d been a nice change of pace since her flight from the Empire, at least.
“Spinning?” Arzha echoed, looking at her as well.
“Seriously, these chairs are so annoying. Very old timey and all that but if they had some wheels and pivot it’d be so much nicer,” Avaron griped, and held up her hands. “Yeah. They could spin around on a circle because of some ball joint or whatever. You’d just push back, spin around in a circle, and think. I can’t even push this chair out without really doing it with some effort.”
Kaelara asked, “Where in the world do you have chairs like that?”
“Not anymore, unfortunately.”
“I’m sure the smiths could work out something?” Arzha offered, but Avaron shook her head.
“No, no. I’m not going to bother them over something that dumb. I’m just being whiny and trying not to look at another one of these forms again.” Sighing, Avaron rubbed her eyes, her antennae wiggling dispassionately. “How are you two fairing?”
Kaelara and Arzha both inspected the stacks of parchment and re-used paper they’d been working on.
“I have mostly finished the comparative listing,” Arzha remarked, looking from one parchment to the other. “Some of your choice words confuse me still, so we will need to go over them later. The inventory sorting shouldn’t be too much of an issue.”
“I’m worried about some of these numbers,” Kaelara remarked.
“Oh?” Avaron intoned.
“How is there not any mass starvation?” she asked, holding up one piece of parchment for emphasis. “There isn’t enough to go around even for the most generous rationing.”
“Because there is mass starvation.”
“I haven’t seen any of it.”
“Because it’s not the people who are starving.”
Kaelara blinked. “Your Hive, then? Starving?”
“Bingo.” Avaron, without looking at Kaelara, pointed at her for some reason. “Got it. Food priority is going to the people of Eden first, and the Hive survives off of whatever’s left. Sending off drones to go to war helped a lot in that respect. The numbers should look bad, but they haven’t been updated to include that send off.”
It wasn’t hard to do the math in her head, and Kaelara slowly nodded. “At least, the death rate should be minimal enough until bountiful harvest. What if the harvest fails?”
“Then we’re all going to be in some deep shit. The Hive will have to go out much farther and scavenge something to eat much faster.” Avaron’s head tilted to one side, her antennae wobbling. “I don’t expect there to be problems. The hydroponic towers are coming online without much issue. That plus the regular crops growing in the fields should, in theory, be enough.”
“In theory,” Kaelara echoed. “I’m not sure I agree with such a risk.”
“You can see why I’m playing it the way I am, though.”
“I can.”
“Do you have a better way?”
“If we had something to trade with, wouldn’t the western or southern queendoms suffice?”
Arzha interjected, “No. Not unless we were clever about how we sent out merchants. Even then, there’s too many armies and marauders riled up to send a large convoy safely. Another year or two and it might be worth the risk.”
Kaelara looked at the parchments spread out on the desk in front of her. “Then everything is where it can possibly be. I do not approve of where many of these numbers lead, but, what choice do we have?”
“It’s good to be certain,” Avaron said, finally leaning forward and sitting properly again. “At least I know I didn’t overlook something obvious that might cost me literal lives as a result.”
“Only those of your Hive,” Kaelara said, setting her everything down on her desk. “I don’t understand why you do so.”
“Is it that hard?”
“From what I know of tentradoms, but as princess Arzha tells me, such things do not apply to you.”
“Precisely so. Drones are replaceable. Each of them is just a body born to purpose, to live and die in service of the Hive. A person, however? A thinking mind, brilliant no matter how small it is, is valuable no matter how unnecessary it could be. I can replace drones without question. I cannot replace people.”
“Is that what women give birth to here, then?” Kaelara asked, and though she tried to be polite, couldn’t keep all the disgust out of her voice. “Mindless monsters?”
“Mindless, at least until the sapient ones start waking up …” Avaron answered, then trailed off.
Arzha asked, “What do you mean?”
“It’s … difficult, to capture in words. The thing you all call a ‘tentradom’ is just one piece of a much larger, more complex organism. One that isn’t limited to a single body the same way you are,” Avaron said, making some circular gestures with her hands. “Some parts of it aren’t capable of thought. Others grow into becoming their own thoughts, and bud off to form person-like existences. The hows and whys of this change on a per-tentradom basis.”
Kaelara, ever mindful of her aching body, rubbed her eyes slowly. “Yet a woman must bear them all the same?”
“All the same.”
“Who could stand to have something grow inside them, then hatch like some … some parasite?”
“Oh, children are parasites depending on how you look at them,” Avaron said, a touch of cheekiness to her words Kaelara didn’t appreciate. “The difference is millions of years of evolution forcefully changing your own thoughts toward love, instead of hate, so the species can continue. Otherwise, people wouldn’t be here.”
The two of them stared at Avaron for a moment. Arzha said, “I fear you have lost me there.”
“Don’t be bothered over it, I’m jumping ahead to something too complex to be snide with. I suppose the crux of your concern, princess Kaelara, is ‘why would women want to bear tentradom offspring’?”
“That is one way of putting it.”
“And there are many ways to see how it comes to be,” Avaron shot back just as smoothly. “Carnal pleasure is certainly a big part of it; a woman can experience heights scarcely possible with her own species. Then come the physical changes: empowerment and birthing. Tentradoms uniquely strengthen their mates, making them stronger, so stronger offspring are born. The tentradom species continues, while the so-called ‘hosts’ benefit individually. Imagine you can gain [levels] just by fucking tentacles and bearing their offspring, instead of having to wage wars on a battlefield.”
“Any simpleton who lacks grace in the art of wars will be cut down by those a fifth their [level],” Kaelara pointed out.
“Sure. Now lets say actual warriors do the breeding. They have the smarts and the [levels]. What then?”
Kaelara’s expression soured.
“Tentradoms came to ruin in this world because the women they loved turned into greedy, dangerous psychopaths,” Avaron said. “The gifts they gave for love and health, became war and suffering. When they refused, it was taken from them. The tentradoms did not survive this, hence today their rarity and generally insane state of being.”
“I’ve never heard of this.”
“Who would care to remember?” Avaron asked rhetorically. “It’s an unbalanced situation. Tentradoms give wealth and power, and the ones who benefit eventually turn on them. Your species can survive without tentradoms, but they cannot survive without you. They’re doomed to either become oppressors, or be oppressed. You fear women becoming cattle, princess Kaelara, when I fear quite the opposite: the women becoming tyrants from the love they’re given.”
“What, then? Does inevitability excuse cruelty for your own survival?”
“Maybe. I’m sure some would make that argument.” Avaron shrugged. “It’s not my place to. I have one clear goal: save this world. When that goal is done, my time here is up. I may very well be the last sane tentradom to walk this world, and when I’m gone, the history of my people comes to an end. Thousands of years later, your peoples will have forgotten us entirely, even if you still live because of our sacrifice. Isn’t that funny?”
“… Save this world from what?” Kaelara asked, though felt as if she knew the answer already.
“The Nagraki, of course.”
“Of course. I do not mean to sound … ungrateful, for what you do.”
“But, I and my people are so different from you, you struggle to relate or understand us at all. Or something like that?”
“Something like that,” Kaelara echoed. “I cannot imagine that a paradise of beauty and pleasure exists simply because a ‘sane’ tentradom is in charge of it.”
“Granted. The form of such a civilization would be completely different from anything you or Princess Arzha know of. Even I cannot imagine it. I’ve never seen a thriving tentradom civilization, just the ruins of them.”
Nor have I ever heard of them, Kaelara thought. A history so ancient not even the Empire remembers it is … something.
“Anyway, I shouldn’t replace boredom with being a depressive sack of shit, either. You two are free to go on lunch break, it’s about that time.” Avaron stood up slowly from her chair, visibly stretching as she did so. “I need to read your reports and get them stuffed inside my brain somewhere.”
Likewise, Arzha and Kaelara stood up, the latter being rather careful in how she did so. The dull ache of sitting became sharp and biting as her ruined muscles were forced to work once more. She endured, all the same, nothing more than a clenching of her jaw. Slowly shuffling around the desk, half-bracing on it all the while, Arzha made a note to come over and help quickly.
Kaelara hated how she always did it.
Hated more how she felt relieved to rely upon it.
Hated not even having her own strength anymore.
“You should take a break too,” Kaelara said, giving a look to Avaron between regard and glaring. She wasn’t sure how she felt about the tentradom. Pity, maybe. “Even you must feel stress.”
“It’s different for me, when there are so many ‘me’ around,” Avaron said, then sighed. “I’ll be along shortly, at least. I should pretend resting even works sometimes.”
Arzha said, “Then, we look forward to your company.”
Kaelara made some agreeing sound.
“Have fun,” Avaron said, looking down at parchment on her desk and waving her hand dismissively.
So the two princesses left the office, Kaelara hobbling along as Arzha supported her. The outside proved refreshing, somehow, even if the air had that same general taste to it. Those ‘drones’ continued to move about, moving boxes and crates from one place to another. Some other people, like Dorin, passed by. Kaelara recognized them as reasonably important, at least enough Avaron delegated tasks to them. For a place that belonged in the definition of ‘middle of nowhere’, it ever churned with a certain business to it.
Their trek to the lunchroom went on in silence.
Unsurprisingly, once the door open, it seemed to have gone under another renovation. More wood planks and paneling had been installed, and that Artor style of curves-and-sweeps furniture filled out the room. About five tables in total, each with six chairs, all of them in varying states of condition. A few were pristine, but most had obvious damage from improper care and being thrown around in a wagon for a while. The left side of the room had turned into some kind of bar, with the kitchen visible past it. The right side had larger windows carved out of the building itself, with simplistic wooden shutters than glass or crystal.
Normal, if incredibly low class, to Kaelara’s eyes.
No one else seemed present, until a clank-bang of metal and someone swearing caught her ear. She and Arzha both headed over to the bar, and peered into the kitchen.
“Hello?” Arzha asked.
“Huh?” a man grunted, and then trudged into view. Surprisingly stout, and someone who’d done work given how muscular he was. “Oh, your highness—es. Welcome! Are ya hungry?”
“If it isn’t any trouble.”
“No trouble here. I need to get lunch started up anyway. I’ll get something out to ya soon.”
“Very good. Shall we sit then, Princess Kaelara?”
Kaelara, for her part, grunted some disagreement. She ambled toward where the windows were, waist-high with their sills and open air breeze. She wanted to, even if it pained her more than sitting, stand for a while. Arzha made no disagreements, simply enabling her all the way. Kaelara had to lean onto the window sill, and her elbows and shoulders rather didn’t like it, but what part of her liked living anyway?
At least the breeze cleared her lungs somewhat. There wasn’t an outside garden, just a stretch of grass, dirt, errant shrubs, and various crates littered around. Hardly scenic.
Arzha herself took up a spot on the other side of the window, leaning against the wall than the sill.
Maybe she wanted to say something, or Kaelara wanted to say something. It felt like it, even if she didn’t want to say anything. It’d just be me complaining more, she thought drearily. Unbefitting behavior, again.
“For all my worries for how everything would go, it seems Avaron has kept on top of it rather well,” Arzha said, looking outside. “Even if some of her decisions are surprising.”
“Because they are, or that’s all you’ve seen?”
“Both, though I have seen much.”
“I’m not sure we should be praising her,” Kaelara said drearily. “Let alone condoning her actions.”
“Perhaps before both our falls, we would be justified in doing so. Now, we have little choice in the matter.”
“And that makes it permissible?”
“No, only that it forces us to see things in a way we wouldn’t have before.”
“Not all change is good.”
“Not all change is bad, either,” Arzha said, unusually glib for someone of her status. “I admit my bias in this regard. I’m clambering for power and status in a situation that may bear little of either.”
That surprised Kaelara enough she looked over for a brief moment. “You?”
“Even me,” Arzha said, giving a half-shrug. “A year ago my world centered around my moronic father and equally moronic brother ruining the courts. My country was laid to ruin by invaders and traitors alike, and now I am the privileged guest of a tentradom queen. My enemy is a god of unimaginable age and power, and the continual destruction he visits upon the world. I have nothing to my name except my own hands and my knights.”
Arzha met Kaelara’s look, even her sharply regal face seeming worn down right then. “What would you have me do, Kaelara?”
“If any of the ducal houses of Artor were worth calling upon, they’d be the obvious choice. Yet, all of them eagerly turned upon the royal family at a moment’s notice, so there’s no worth there. The surrounding queendoms for much the same reasons. The north is occupied by the Ashmourn, so that won’t happen. The east leads to the Empire and Free Hardain State, of which the Empire is being torn apart. What ever happened to the Hardain?”
“Something bad enough for the elvetahn to send their armies there.”
“Wonderful. It seems there aren’t any other choices, not without going even further beyond.”
“And the further west is ruled by the Church, an enemy of ours. The south is a madland of territorial disputes and wars since forever,” Arzha said with some finality.
“Yet, I must protest relying upon a tentradom of all things, for want of anything better,” Kaelara groused. “If I had anything for clout, I could try … no, I can’t even imagine it. There won’t be anything left of the Empire to call upon.”
“Leaving both of us doomed to the only course that remains. At least, I might have some faith in the elvetahn and what they will do.”
“A feeling I cannot share.”
“I wonder why,” Arzha remarked dryly.
“Snippiness is unbecoming of you.”
“A lot of things are unbecoming of me these days. When the comfort of choice is gone, the only thing left is learning to live with what must be done.”
“The burden of the loser, huh?” Kaelara muttered. “It’s a bitter thing after all.”
“It is. I refuse to give up, even if my name will never be as illustrious as my mother’s once was.” Arzha smirked. “I’m a sore loser.”
“Hm. Heh, heh.” Kaelara chuckled. “Yes, you are.”
And I am too.
*~*
“I’m serious. This place wasn’t a town not even a fart ago.”
“Mhm.”
It wasn’t particularly impressive by any stretch, granted, but it was leaps above a shitty little inn and everyone stuffed inside. Hanamaru found that, most of all, the hardest thing to get over. Even villages with a number of people in them didn’t explode in size, or have so many new buildings. Granted, she could guess most were refugees or escapees or something from the nearby lands. That’d provide the bodies, at least.
The buildings, though?
Even with magic or the lucky [jobs] that handled that, it wouldn’t have been that fast.
Something was up. She didn’t know what, but something.
Their approach to the outskirts of the town continued, the dirt path leading them onward. Eventually, one of those spider-like tentacle creatures ambled toward them. Mighty fluffy looking despite not being winter, and lacking in the bladed forelegs Hanamaru thought they all possessed. Rinnamu, subtle as she could be, tensed at its approach. The three came to meet each other, stopping a respectful distance from one another.
“Hanamaru,” the tentacleling gurgled out in a disgusting voice.
“Shit, you can talk?” Hanamaru asked, scratching her head. “Worse than me after some razz, heh.”
“New feature.” The tentacleling’s faceless, mouth-like tube of a head turned from the harraxin to Rinnamu. “Guest?”
The kistune bowed only to the extent of being polite. “Rinnamu, mistress of Koya, whom I believe the Lady Avaron has under custody.”
“Ah. Yes. You’re expected. Follow this one.”
Not that they went anywhere really different except forward. The tentacleling led them through the outskirts of the town, on a path being overtaken by grass. It cut between the town proper and the tree line of the Alva Forest. The mountains’ river ran along their side, something that’d been obviously engineered over. Less of a natural formation and more one with sloped sides and some basic stonework to stabilize the waterflow. At least one building ran alongside it, and what might’ve been a waterwheel slowly churned away.
At least Tsugumi’s inn looked virtually the same as Hanamaru left it. Suspiciously so.
“… This is a tora style. Albeit elvetahn in make as well,” Rinnamu remarked.
“Told ya so.”
“Never thought I’d see something like it again.”
“Real tora inside, too.”
“So your mouth can tell the truth.”
Hanamaru scoffed. Knowing how it would all end up, she brushed past the tentacleling’s relatively slow pace. Nothing about the inn had been, or ever would be, harraxin-sized, so she had to be mindful about things. Opening the door meant using two thick claws and pushing carefully. Getting inside meant doing a twist-and-turn to avoid having her dangerous spines tear into the wood or get stuck on something. She was used to it, but that never meant she didn’t hate having to do it.
Just one of those little annoyances life ever kept throwing at her, really.
The interior looked familiar and different the same time. The huge hall, once stuffed with people, had been sorted into sitting areas. Floor-recessed couches lined around central, lowly tables, sized for regular humanfolk rather than something of her scale. Small dividers offered privacy, while walking paths led either to the doors or the kitchen’s serving counter. Which, apparently, doubled as the inn’s reception desk as well. Economical, and typical of places forced to compact work together than emphasize showiness.
Not a bad change from a stuffed jar, Hanamaru appraised, her rough face not really showing her approval clearly. She moved out of the way so that Rinnamu could get inside properly. The tentacleling, for its part, simply turned away and headed off toward the town.
Not a moment later, someone passed through the flap-door of the kitchen. Tsugumi, dressed in her yellow-colored cooking attire, entered. Wiping her hands on her apron, she appraised the newcomers, just as much as Hanamaru took note of how very pregnant she was.
“Hanamaru-san, and guest; welcome to my inn.”
“Tsugumi-san,” Hanamaru greeted, giving a half-wave. “This is Rinnamu.”
“Koya-chan’s mistress, if I’m not mistaken?”
Rinnamu’s ear twitched under her hat. “Correct.”
“Avaron is bringing her up now, it will only take a moment. Please, be seated, my guests. Hanamaru-san, there is a table for you in the corner.”
Hanamaru blinked. “Me, huh?”
People corralled her from one place to another to minimize damage, which much was pretty typical. What she saw, however, wasn’t. In stark contrast to the other seating arrangements, the mentioned table was taller, wider, and with heavy, sculpted tree-trunks for a bench. Not really crude, but definitely out of place, and definitely sized for a harraxin ass to sit on. Heck, her legs could even get under the table. There was enough space to stand up, too, and the wall wasn’t anywhere close to her back spines.
Positively harraxin-friendly.
Hanamaru sat down with some amazement. It wasn’t a small sacrifice in space, either; two or three other tables could’ve gone in where she sat. For once, it wasn’t her being the giant at a table, it was Rinnamu being the midget. The kitsune herself simply sat on the other side, tails unfurling behind her and laying downward. “Rip my quills out while you’re at it, Tsugumi-san. I rather like it!”
“An inn should be accommodating to its guests,” Tsugumi said matter-o-factly, her four hands neatly folded together across her frontside. “I shall retrieve your refreshments.”
She left with measured grace, unbothered by the flour or grease marring her.
Hanamaru didn’t give two shits about that, instead rather pleased with having leg space under a table. A minor thing, but a novelty compared to a life of constant inconvenience.
“Must you act with such childish glee?” Rinnamu asked rhetorically, taking off her straw hat and rucksack from her back. Once that was done, she unwound the protective cloth that wrapped her seven black-furred tails.
“Can’t hear you from down there, shorty.”
Tsugumi soon returned, carrying a tray with some white-and-blue Artorian styled tea pots on it. “Elvetahn tea, as well as orange juice if that is your preference.”
“What’s an orange?” Hanamaru asked curiously.
"A tree fruit."
Rinnamu, though, jolted. She glanced sharply at Tsugumi, her nose twitching with gentle, dainty sniffs. “How could you possibly have an orange?”
The tora inn keeper merely smiled. “Trade secret.”
“A trade secret does not revive a tree dead for thousands of years … oh, it really is orange juice.”
Tsugumi spared no effort to debate, simply sitting the tray down, arraying the cups in front of them. To Rinnamu she poured the orange juice, but Hanamaru gestured to the tea, and so received that instead.
That juice smelled sweet, and Hanamaru didn’t have much of a tooth for something like that. Rinnamu, though, almost sparkled with an excitement that seemed unreal. Not enough to be improper, but for one who had the stoicism of a corpse, anything out of her was already surprising. The kitsune wasted no time in taking her cup and sipping at the juice with a connoisseur’s reverence.
An odd sight, and not even the funny drunk Rinnamu could be, either.
Hanamaru left the matter be. Instead, she asked Tsugumi, “How’d you all build up this town so quickly, anyway? Just an inn and some dirt last time I was here.”
“Avaron is quite capable,” Tsugumi said easily, smiling. “The many people who fled from Artor helped just as much.”
“People running for their lives don’t pop up streets that clean-cut, or houses in rows,” Hanamaru said, her voice between observation and accusation. “You all planning to live here for real, then?”
“Oh, yes. I suspect this is our home now, for better or worse.”
“The elvetahn haven’t crawled up your asses yet?”
“Thoroughly. They’re quite happy with the arrangement, for now.”
Hanamaru blinked, then rubbed her neck. “Shit, first time I ever heard them letting neighbors settle down.”
“Avaron is quite persuasive.”
Even I’m not that dumb, Hanamaru thought, giving a half-hearted shrug. A tentradom of all things on their front door? Really?
It wasn’t as if Avaron did something rape-y or tentradom-y. Neither one fit her personality, nor if she had, the elvetahn weren’t idiots. Any kind of scheme like that would die faster than an arrow could fly. Which meant some kind of arrangement had been made, but Hanamaru couldn’t imagine how or why. Or if it’d even be a bother of hers in the first place.
She drank her tea, putting it out of mind for the time being.
Eventually, the door to the inn opened up. A familiar looking tentradom, wearing a leafy-green elvetahn dress, entered. A tentradom that’d poofed out with some kind of new fur and antennae. Hanamaru furrowed her brows, not sure what she was seeing. The fur pushed the dress out in odd places, squirming ever so slowly and gently. She wasn’t sure if it was a bunch of worms or actual hair anymore.
“Hey there, Hanamaru … san. San?”
“San is fine.”
“Right. Hanamaru-san and mystery kitsune-san over there.” The shadow underneath Avaron wobbled for some reason.
Hanamaru stared downward for a moment, then laughed.
“Koya,” Rinnamu said simply, not bothering to look at all.
Avaron’s shadow bubbled and boiled, growing into a blobby shape, and then finally receding away. In its place kneeled a smaller, black-haired kitsune, one who bowed with her forehead to the floor in Rinnamu’s direction. For one who was supposed to be a ninja, she wore nothing except a sheer piece of cloth in a poor imitation of a dress. That it also happened to leave much of her more delectable parts on display, or at least easy to imagine, surely wasn’t an accident.
“Tsugumi-san, is there a room available per chance?” Rinnamu asked, regarding the tora.
“There are several, of generally the same quality. The luxury rooms are still under construction.”
“Any would suffice, though something meant for noise would help the most.”
“There is one that comes to mind.”
“Wonderful. Koya, take the rucksack there and wait for me.”
"… Yes, Mistress,” Koya said, and with the resolve of someone off to execution, left with the rucksack.
Rinnamu took another sip of her orange juice, then properly regarded Avaron for the first time. “I apologize for any trouble she may have caused, Avaron-sama.”
“She’s been a delightful guest for an unwanted spy,” Avaron returned with smooth coolness. “Something I think I’ll have to get used to.”
“Perhaps. I rather hadn’t planned on Nuala the Black aiding you; an oversight on my part.”
“Ah, it wasn’t her who helped me this time around. I did the catching part, at least.”
One of Rinnamu’s ears flicked. “Hoh? You defeated my [Shadowless Step] technique?”
“It wasn’t easy. I had to listen really damn hard.”
“No sound is made, at least when the technique is properly done.”
Avaron made a face like she disagreed. “Oh, I’d love to point out the flaw there, but I’m not sure I can do it for free. Tsugumi might kill me if I did.”
The tora inn keeper merely smiled with pleasant indifference.
“How wicked,” Rinnamu remarked, her regal expression playful enough to disguise her annoyance. Hanamaru knew better than anyone how prideful Rinnamu was about her techniques. For someone of Avaron’s presumably pathetic [level], it would greatly incense her. “Perhaps though, if we might be allies than enemies, it could become a courtesy to share it?”
“That depends,” Avaron said, glancing between her and Hanamaru. “I got a rough idea of what you two might want, but let’s hear it from your mouths first.”
“Shall I?” Rinnamu asked, regarding Hanamaru for a moment.
“What, and let me stop you from grandstanding? I’ll be here,” the harraxin shot back gruffly, then drank her tea some more.
“That I suffer for propriety surely emboldens my virtue,” Rinnamu quipped, never the one to leave the last word unspoken. She turned more fully toward Avaron then. “The most pertinent question of all is whether or not you have decided to ally with Lord Honda?”
“He has shown me a kindness, and even lent one of his ninja here,” Avaron said. “Kindness after a fashion. I’d rather not snub his goodwill without even better reasoning.”
“There are many reasons, not all of which you may trust from my mouth. Or hers.”
Never one to miss taking a cheap shot, either, Hanamaru thought dryly.
“Lord Honda is the ruler of Kitinchi, but his rule comes at a harsh and unforgivable price,” Rinnamu continued on. “He has wrung our lands dry, our people made to labor for ever more riches and crafts they never receive. They train tirelessly for wars we never fight, to guard a border that is never broken. The weak are crushed underfoot, while the strongest of all lay with slovenly greed upon lavish thrones. He, most of all, exemplifies such.”
“And you mean to overthrow him, but need help in doing so.”
“As painful as it is to admit, yes. Two of the five pillars are ready for such a thing, but the other three remain loyal to Honda.”
“And are they just as corrupt as he is?”
“… Two are. The third claims neutrality and would rather not upset the status quo that they benefit from.”
“Quite the problem.” Avaron turned toward Tsugumi for a moment. “Well, what do you think then, dear?”
The tora’s polite demeanor shifted somewhat, a look of vexation creeping in. “It is hard to imagine Ringo-chan becoming something like that … Yet, time changes us all.” She looked down at one of her four hands. “Lordship, too, can do even more.”
“Yes, and there’s another angle to this. I’ve seen this trick done twice already, so a third time is to be expected,” Avaron said. “How likely is it that Honda has been corrupted by the Nagraki?”
Rinnamu’s ear flicked and Hanamaru paid some attention then. “There is no naki that I have found,” the kitsune said with measured thoughtfulness. “However, his state renders him incredibly susceptible to it.”
“So maybe he’s being groomed for it. If it’s run-of-the-mill hedonism, that’s one thing. The odds the Nagraki are just ignoring Kitinchi sounds utterly insane to me.”
“I would agree. Yet, if they are, even I cannot find their shadow.”
“Lovely. Add in standard geopolitics and it’s a real fun show.” Avaron rubbed her eyes for a moment, her antennae wobbling up and down. A moment later, she gave a more serious and attentive look. “Here’s the problem: even with Honda’s little book of everything going on in Kitinchi, I have to get my own feet on the ground and see what’s happening. Right now, my greatest concern is the Nagraki and anything they’re doing. They’ve torn down Artor, Arden is currently imploding, and something is happening with the Hardain.”
Avaron did some weird fingers-together-and-pointing that looked like an arcane hand symbol, but no actual magic followed. Not that she’d be alive if she tried in front of Rinnamu of all people. “Plunging Kitinchi into civil war, even if the Nagraki aren’t doing anything, is setting the scene for real trouble. I’m not completely against it if Honda is an irredeemable shit heap, but there’s not enough for me to work with.”
“And what is it you would need?” Rinnamu inquired.
“Time and information gathering. I have no stake in joining either side until I know more. For one, your side wanting to rebel might just be blowing smoke up my ass.” Avaron smiled.
“An opportunistic undecided is more dangerous than an enemy,” Rinnamu said, her tails rotating from one side to the other. “Understanding as I am of your reasons and perspective, I find myself at the mercy of your decisions all the same.”
“An unpleasant position to be in, but one I cannot make assurances on. There’s always the question if even I or the other heroines have any place with intervening in your impending civil war.”
“Honda has attempted to recruit you. You are already involved, whether you wish to be or not.”
“True. Perhaps it is best of me to say a visit to Kitinchi is in order.” Avaron looked over at Tsugumi. “I suppose we can check on him ourselves, if you think it is wise to do so.”
“… Not yet. This winter, maybe,” the tora answered.
“And you presume not to be tempted by what Honda can offer?” Rinnamu asked, a tinge of curiosity to her polite accusation. “Many others have succumbed to it themselves with a smile of understanding.”
“Believe me, I cannot impress upon you how tiny you all truly seem to me, either. I’ve held the world in my hands before, and I will do so again. One little lord and his country is not much to that but a stepping stone.”
The arrogance of it all tickled Hanamaru, but she couldn’t laugh. No, what alarmed her more was the earnest meaning of those words, spoken with such banal disregard it sounded like a jest. For a moment, she entertained it as entirely true: that Avaron held her old world in her palm, and ruled over it all. Even if not all of it, then enough so that her practical power essentially meant the same thing.
Of the many people, both great and small, she’d dealt with, such words truly brought a measure of quiet to Hanamaru.
“I worry for the world you hold,” Rinnamu said simply.
“My job this time around is saving yours, so I wouldn’t worry too much about it.”
“Hmm.”
Avaron clapped her hands. “Well, posturing aside, I believe you’ve all had a long journey. I welcome you to stay in Eden as my guests, though try not to fight with Kagura whenever she shows up. Please avoid spying in places too sensitive or secretive, lest you draw the ire of the Great Owl in the process. Not even I can save you from her.”
Hanamaru interjected, “Wait, she’s here? She’s awake?”
“Oh, yes. Very much so.”
“How the fuck did you manage that?”
“I’m a convincing bed warmer, apparently.”
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new yet.
Chapter 67: Chosen
Chapter Text
When the burden falls to us, we shall cry, complain, and wish it were not so; but it is our burden, all the same.
*~*
Durelia checked over herself once more, discreetly of course, given the hallway she stood in and everything. For one of her formidable size of around eight feet tall, clothing was a … tricky, affair. Everything required custom tailoring and some parts of her were much more generous than others. Having to bow under every door frame she passed through meant her heavy bosom hanging down in front of her. A proper corset could handle such a thing, of course, but she’d heard more than one remark about her entering ‘tits first’ into a room.
Sometimes useful, sometimes not. She rather didn’t mind how captivated others were of her, it made it easier to control them in the end. The key matter, however, was when deliberate intent was required. Trying to present herself more … favorably, could end in disaster if she went a little too far. Hence, her choice of attire that cut between supportive and evocative.
By necessity she used rather sturdy corsets, which coupled with a white dress, some frills around her cleavage, and long, billowing fabric that wasn’t quite sheer but certainly thin … Well, she struck the guise of a proper woman first and foremost, and certainly noble at that. Here I am worrying about something like this again, she thought, a certain giddiness in her belly. Oh, how naughty. Look at me, trying to be a seductress again. For a tentradom, no less, either.
She couldn’t deny how thrilling such an idea posed.
A powerful and dangerous sexual predator renowned for destroying every woman it crossed! Its insidious guile and poisons, tearing her apart as much in mind as in body. Something that so very much stacked the deck against someone like her, almost as if she were destined to lose … Oh, she had to stop thinking about it. Her fangs were starting to ache. If she really got going, why, Avaron might even smell it.
What was that saying? ‘A moth to flame’? Durelia wondered, finally satisfied she looked proper. It wasn’t her most glamorous attire—most of those were lost back in Gloomwood—but a little rustic taste couldn’t hurt her charm. Mmm, mmm, but this little moth bites.
Gosh, she hadn’t been this excited since … forever. Durelia smiled, her lips pointedly tight together lest her teeth show, and knocked on the wood door in front of her.
A moment later, it slid open, one of the tentacle creatures inside acting as the servant.
Avaron’s office within City Hall awaited her, and so Durelia stepped forth. She grabbed onto the topside of the doorframe, holding onto it as she bowed under and through. Perhaps a little too slow, and a little too flashy of her naked cleavage—all of it for nothing, of course, since Avaron wasn’t looking. The tentradom queen busied herself with something on her desk; parchment, probably. Durelia didn’t let such a thing bother her at all.
She moved to stand before Avaron’s desk, dutifully keeping her hands clasped together at her front. A technique that also, incidentally, pushed her breasts up a little bit. Not too much, of course; she couldn’t be gaudy about it. Durelia waited.
It took a minute before Avaron set her quill down and looked up.
“Your Majesty,” Durelia greeted, stepping back with one foot slightly and dipping downward in a curtsy. A ridiculous gesture from one of her size, but propriety had its requirements.
“Lady Gloomwood,” Avaron returned, her voice as firm and velvety as ever. “How kind to grace me with your beauty.”
Durelia smiled lightly. “I’m glad to please your eyes so.”
“Mm, let me not indulge too much. What did you have need of me for?”
“A matter of purpose, Your Majesty, if it might not be a bad time to speak of it.”
“I do like how ominous it sounds,” Avaron remarked, then glanced from Durelia to the chairs in front of her desk. “I apologize if the chairs aren’t suitable to you. I’ve noticed how you struggle with them, but finding something larger is rather …”
“Oh, don’t be troubled by it! I’m used to having to squeeze into somewhere a little tight,” Durelia said, waving her hand in polite dismissal. “Strong legs like mine aren’t afraid of a little standing around.”
“Still, if you wish, you can sit on the desk corner there. It’s better than nothing, I suppose.”
The tall vampire spied a look, rather not expecting such an offer. All sorts of things were across Avaron’s desk, from stationary to items of bizarre make she didn’t recognize. The offered corner, however, was both empty and relatively clean. Her first instinct had been to decline, but on second thought, it seemed like a good opportunity. “It would be rude of me to decline,” she said smoothly and then stepped over.
Sitting side-saddle was nothing new to her, and it let her really emphasize her good size to Avaron’s bright eyes. It even pulled her dress a little taut, sculpting her generous figure that much clearer. A scandalous enough posture, one might think her being provocative. Durelia fingered some of her hair, combing some behind her round ear. Its color ever had lovely hues to it, blending reds and blacks in with the maple brown. Something she very pointedly kept refined, clean, and glossy; all the better to accentuate the its smooth and slightly curly nature.
She rather loved her hair, few people in Artor could compare.
Avaron sat back in her chair, looking up at Durelia expectantly. Those antennae of hers wiggled, though Durelia hadn’t a clue what that meant. She couldn’t exactly go asking around, either. “Ahem,” she coughed into her hand, then gave a closed smile at the tentradom. “As I’m sure the others have mentioned to you, they’re looking to set down roots here in your queendom. Well—“ she paused and thought for a moment, “—the Whiterocks might move on. Myalla is a fussy little girl.”
“She hasn’t committed to either decision, though I understand her hesitation,” Avaron replied with diplomatic courtesy.
“She always worries over what may be, than what is, but I digress. As it pains me to say, Artor truly is gone, and soon to be a footnote in history. We Gloomwoods lost our territory when the Ducal Houses began fighting amongst themselves. The mongrels, in particular, covetously eyed me for many years.” Durelia scrunched her nose up disdainfully. “Such an ugly man with an ugly heart.”
“… Mongrels?” Avaron echoed, perplexed.
“Oh, my mistake.” Durelia held a hand to her lips, embarrassed. “A bit of a naughty word for them. Wolka is their proper name, a Ducal House on the far western edge of Artor. They’re notoriously bloodthirsty and served as Artor’s deterrent against the West for many generations. Useful dogs, but dogs all the same.”
“Ah, and without the royal family, you were left in their sights.”
“Quite so,” Durelia sighed out. “Duke Edkon Wolka is quite the perverted man, though no one would dare say so aloud. Fancied himself Head of the Household, and supposedly murdered his wife, Maralia Wolka, to get it. No one could prove it, of course, but everything panned out in his favor just a little too well.”
“He seems the undesirable sort, so why would the royal family keep him around?”
“He kept hold of the Wolka dogs well enough,” Durelia said, giving a half-hearted shrug. “As long as he stayed in his den and did his job, they ignored him. It left minor nobles, such as myself, who bordered his territory rather at his mercy sometimes. Look at me, rambling about stupid history.” She fanned herself, pouting for a moment. “I do get caught up in it.”
“I don’t mind at all. Your voice fills my ears quite warmly.”
“Oh!” Durelia, not expecting something so forthright, jolted a little bit. She blushed a bit, her cheeks flaming up. “Your Majesty, you’re quite bold, aren’t you?”
“Do you dislike it?”
“… No, not at all.”
“Then do accept my praise with kind regard,” Avaron said, smiling. For someone of such authority, her fluffiness and demeanor made her insufferably cute. And beautiful. Cutely beautiful? Durelia wasn’t sure how to capture it. Maidenly, almost, but with age and experience that sculpted her eyes with a certain fierceness. “A charming conversation partner is a luxury.”
How sly, complimenting me and yourself at once, Durelia noted, fingering some loose hair behind her ear again. “Indeed. Now, all that said, we Gloomwoods would love to settle ourselves within your queendom, Your Majesty. Not as refugees, but as nobles proper who could serve you.”
“You wish to bend the knee to me, and give up on Princess Arzha, then?”
“Is it giving up on her, when she herself angles to do the same?” Durelia asked. “Her Highness certainly favors you more than is simply proper, if I might be so bold to say.”
“Mmm, you’re not wrong.”
“I firmly believe it is our path to take, all the same. We have no friends left, and the Ducal Houses are too dangerous in their own ambitions. Your grace and kindness has meant much, and your ambition is much more … how to say, pleasant?”
“Oh? Me, pleasant?” Avaron asked with some obvious skepticism.
“You care for your subjects in a way that is without … bias,” Durelia said, careful of her word choice. “Human or monja. Your concern and consideration is quite profound, even beyond that of the former Queen of Artor herself. Is it wrong to be taken by such inspirational leadership?”
“No. I trust in your ability to understand such situations well. If, as the Lady of the Gloomwoods, you wish to become my vassal proper, then I will give it due consideration.” Avaron held up one finger. “There is simply one issue we must discuss.”
Durelia suddenly didn’t like where this conversation was going. “Oh? And what might that be?”
“How honest your intentions may be as a vampire.”
In a way, she wasn’t surprised at being found out. Tentradoms had such notorious senses that not being found was surely even more absurd. A rippling tingle shot through her all the same, her skin prickling and hackles raising with instinctual alertness. Durelia licked her ruby-painted lips unconsciously. “Might you have a wish to discriminate against my kind, then, Your Majesty?”
“No. I wish to understand them, to better envision how they will fit within Eden.” Avaron smiled, that same cutely damning smile and her dangerous know-it-all eyes. “After all, people scorn my kind just as much, if not more so. Are we not similar in that way?”
“… We are, yes. I—“ Durelia fanned herself, the rush of it all making her rather hot. “I suppose some honesty on my part would be very necessary.”
“Yes,” Avaron said in a punctual sort of way. “As Eden’s Queen, I would ask you to bare yourself to me fully, Lady Gloomwood.”
Durelia jolted and looked at Avaron with wild surprise, her mouth falling open just enough her fangs peeked through. Only then did Avaron herself blink and slap a hand to her forehead. “Wait, that sounded incredibly sexual.”
“Was that not your intention?” Durelia asked with the incredulity of a maiden who might just be into that.
“I won’t say no to that but … let me try again. I’d rather there be no secrets between us, Lady Gloomwood.”
Even Avaron could be flustered, much to Durelia’s delight. Perhaps my charm truly does captivate her so? she considered for a moment. It wouldn’t be the first time someone lost their senses around her, after all. It would’ve been rather emboldening if the topic at hand wasn’t so concerning. “Trust does grow slowly. Then, what do you desire to know, Your Majesty?”
“Let us start on the nature of vampires. I’ve been told they acquire great power from drinking the blood of others.”
“Succinct, if somewhat crude. We crave blood to live and to grow more powerful. The latter, however, is more … conditional.”
“How so?”
“While we acquire some of the donor’s strength for ourselves, it is not a simple process. If we don’t properly internalize and, I suppose ‘digest’, it properly, it becomes dangerous to us,” Durelia explained. “Whereas someone too weak to offer us strength is still a source of much needed blood to survive.”
“So it’s not possible for a vampire to, I dunno, drain an entire knight and become twice as powerful overnight?”
“Nnnn, well … It depends,” Durelia said, smiling uneasily. “If I might use rather inappropriate language?”
“Go on.”
Maybe, just maybe, as a tentradom, Avaron would understand the perspective better than others. “Think of it like tending to a cow. If you milk that cow regularly and gently, it will live long and provide much. That is how most vampires should tend to their donors. If you slaughter that cow, you gain much quickly, but you are still ultimately down that cow.”
“Long term profits versus short term gains, classic problem. Yet no matter how much they gain in a short term, a vampire would need time to digest and internalize their new strength?”
Durelia nodded slowly. “It depends on the vampire and their skill at such a thing, but generally, that is correct.”
“Interesting. Are there any unusual issues with instincts or behaviors? A compulsion to attack others or regard them as cattle?”
“If there is something we all feel, it is that starvation makes us more … wild. When we lack blood, we cannot hope to find it except in animals or people, and it can drive us feral if we starve too much.”
“Animals,” Avaron echoed. “You can gain blood from animals?”
Durelia’s face scrunched up. “It is profoundly disgusting in taste, but it is possible. In much the same way someone would eat bugs to satiate hunger.”
Avaron’s brow furrowed. “Do you not eat meat?”
“Oh! I prefer not to,” Durelia said, chirping a bit and blushing bashfully. “Um, most vampires don’t eat meat since the meat taste is so … ahem, nasty.”
Avaron held up a finger, then rubbed her nose. “I rather didn’t expect vegetarian vampires today, but okay. That’s interesting. Uh, do vampires have a weakness to sunlight? Summon the dead? Turn other people into vampires?”
“No, only necromancers, and you can only be born as a vampire, not made into one,” Durelia answered dutifully. “Those are popular misconceptions some divine heroines accused my kind of long ago.”
“I wonder why,” Avaron remarked dryly, then shrugged lightly. “Very well. It sounds like vampires do not have anything inherently dangerous to them, just special concerns that need extra consideration. I am rather curious if you can subsist off of tentradom blood, though.”
“Y-Your Majesty that is rather, errm, lewd to say …”
“The fun of innuendo aside, think of it differently. My Hive is one large, enormous organism, full of blood,” Avaron said, smiling despite the seriousness of her words. “If vampires can subsist off of its blood, then does that not mean they don’t have to worry about regular people?”
Durelia blinked, her rather heated mind changing positions then. She couldn’t recall anything about tentradoms, and never having experienced one herself, rather didn’t know the answer. The possibility of it working, however, made something very clear: it would fundamentally change the need for blood among vampires. The fact Avaron grasped such a possibility, and seemed interested in exploring it, floored her.
“I …” Where do I even begin? “That is quite a lot, Your Majesty. I’m not sure what to think about it.”
Her heart raced with thunderous anxiety. It would change everything for vampires across the world! Creatures they could live off of, and not be forced to drink something as rotten as animal blood. If it worked, she thought, and that singular realization put a halt to her feverish wonder. Durelia breathed in, steadying herself, and said, “If it works, it would be an unimaginable change to my people, Your Majesty.”
“It’s worth testing to see exactly, if not there’s several alternatives I can think of—“
“How absurd,” a third voice cut in, seeping through Durelia’s thoughts like worms in the dirt.
Durelia felt the weight of it, a pressing, squirming mass of muscle and flesh that demanded her attention. No, it dragged her very mind itself in a direction, and her eyes went there, gazing down upon something on Avaron’s desk. She recognized such a sensation, at least the gravitas of it if not the particulars. A goddess is here? she wondered with alarm.
“How gracious of you to join us, Nex,” Avaron remarked with a disturbing amount of boredom. “What’s so absurd this time?”
“Coddling the devourers, ignorant of their craven nature. Are you this stupid?” the book asked, flipping its flesh-strewn pages back and forth. “The first to hunt us to death, and the last to finish us off.”
“Oh, now that’s interesting. Do you happen to know about vampires hunting tentradoms, Lady Gloomwood?”
“N-no?” she offered, standing up quickly from the desk. “I’ve never heard of—“
“Young and supple, hungry for more, ignorant of what came before. Biting and chomping and feasting and hungering. Vampires desire for our flesh began our end. It matters not how they know, only what they become.”
“I’ll disagree on that,” Avaron said simply.
“What?”
“Since you’ve been listening in, is it true what Lady Gloomwood said? Digesting blood and all that?”
“Yes?”
“Then it’s a solvable problem. Vampires have needs we can provide for.”
“Are you deaf and stupid? Their hunger—“
“A problem born of nature can be solved in different ways than a problem born of culture,” Avaron said, her firmness cutting off the goddess’ scathing anger. “If the vampires who caused the problem were all psychopaths, then do we not simply need to raise vampires who are good people?”
The goddess’ sick, disgusting laughter echoed in Durelia’s mind, full of spittle and squelches and fleshy noises. She wasn’t even sure what to make of Avaron speaking so casually, let alone to divinity.
“Fine. Your mistake to make, I shall watch.”
Durelia flinched as the book sprouted worm-like tentacles from between its pages. It crept up and stood on the table, its form a demented mockery of spiders. It rotated around, one side changing to the other, and seemed to regard Durelia herself for a moment. Insofar as lifting its spine up and glancing at her in a way an animal might, at least.
“Little devourer. Why does hope gleam in your eye? For what?”
“… For a place we might be able to call home,” Durelia said, feeling she really couldn’t or shouldn’t hide anything from a goddess. Less of all to one she had no idea how it would react.
“To you, who would come into our home, the burden of responsibility. The hunger you hold will bring ruin if not kept leashed. My daughter favors you as savable, but I ponder how much. If you would have my blessing, you must submit.”
Durelia wasn’t sure what to think.
Everything happened so fast she couldn’t even ponder one realization or the other.
But, the goddess’ demands were plain and evident.
Perhaps not too far from what Durelia herself wanted, anyway. That same hunger the goddess scorned is what led her to Avaron, after all. Perhaps not the blood drinking kind, but a hunger all the same. “Submit, how?” she asked slowly.
“Willingly. How does not matter. To your knees you shall live, to us you shall ever look up to. For hunger, you shall beg, from us we shall give. Only in your control do you deserve to stand, and shall be allowed to. For this, we might survive, and you as well.”
Bondage, in other words.
Servitude to a goddess.
She understood, and felt the plain scorn in every word. Fear, too, of a world that once lived, and was destroyed by her kind. It wasn’t an agreement of covetous desire, but one of certain safety for both involved. It made sense, but still, Durelia hesitated.
Servitude to a goddess was not a simple thing.
Yet, it wasn’t something merely offered at a moment’s notice, either.
How long has she been watching me? Durelia wondered, and certainly nowhere close to an answer. “Are you the goddess of the tentradoms?”
“Yes.”
“I …”
That alone told much, and Durelia weighed her options. It would close the door of escape, of belief that if Eden failed, she and her daughters could flee elsewhere. Flee as Durelia always had, when one land discovered her true nature, or simple misfortune fell down. A sense of permanency wormed in her thoughts, a willingness to go to the end, for whatever that end entailed.
To face herself, and her kind, and hopefully build something from nothing.
For her, a vampire to be offered such by a goddess, she didn’t know if any of her kind ever received that attention. Vampires were feared and hated, never accepted. If it took bondage for such acceptance, was it worth it?
To be muzzled like some dog for what she was?
Or …
“You say that only in control would I deserve to stand. Then, if we control our hunger, we may stand?”
“You fear slavery, but that is not this agreement. You, who cannot control your hunger, must be controlled. If you learn control, then you may earn trust. If you are trusted, then you may stand.”
“Why me?” Durelia asked, a bit shakily. The enormity of it all pressed on even her tall, indomitable shoulders with undeniable heaviness.
“A tender heart, torn asunder by life and hunger. To weep for ones who did not deserve their fate. To conspire to save others, even if you won’t be. To love the weak, and offer them your bosom, and nurture strength into them. The chains inside tear you apart, little by little, and you do not know where to go.”
A pregnant pause.
“Your resolve is admirable. It deserves recognition.”
For all her clothes, Durelia felt utterly naked. Seen by something she could barely comprehend, and secrets long buried in time so plainly brought forth. If there was any doubt she stood beneath the eye of a goddess, it disappeared completely. The choice, then, remained before her.
“Touch the book, receive of me, accept your bondage. Or deny it. The choice is yours.”
Avaron, all the while, was busy rubbing her eyes again. “I denounce slavery and what do we do, magic slavery. Hooray,” she muttered under her breath in dark tones.
“And you remain deaf and stupid.”
“I’m sure.”
A ringing hung in Durelia’s ears, her heart pounding in her chest so much it might’ve been visible. Her whole body tingled, and a part of her really just wanted to run away. To have the security of fleeing, of her own strength and decisions. She licked her lips and then her fangs, wanting to chomp down on something. Conflicting feelings welled up within her, reason and emotion as much at war as working together.
Slowly, her hand moved outward.
Reached.
Neared.
She knew so much of certainty, that the uncertain terrified her.
But, it was that same certainty that let her throw down her mother, and escape her family.
To denounce the wicked, evil ways her vampire kin upheld as natural.
In the end, plunging into the unknown was always what she had to do.
What was one more time?
Her finger tips grazed that living flesh book.
Tiny tendrils of azure-colored flesh shot out, a hundred little spears piercing her hand, forearm, upper arm—skewering her. No pain followed, only pressure, the sensation of flesh being moved, of blood not her own being injected in. Her heart raced. She wanted to scream, but nothing moved. Avaron watched all the while, her burning blue eyes unwavering in their intensity.
She looked beautiful.
Durelia felt sick.
Her vision started to waver, as if sweat clouded her eyes with stinging bitterness. The divine window opened before her, letters writing away on it.
[Your Job has been forcibly changed by a divine patron.]
[You have received a Fixed Job. Your Job can no longer be changed unless acted upon by your divine patron, or another.]
[Job Title: Bearer of Writhing Flesh] [Type: Divine Chosen]
[Description: The Chosen of Nex, Goddess of the Tentradoms. Inherits the fundamental qualities of the [Priestess] [Job]. Specializes in [Healing] and [Flesh Manipulation] magic types. Long ago, the Bearers of Writhing Flesh preached of love, and so life bloomed from within as much as without. It was that same selfless love that doomed them all.]
[Effects: Adaptive Physique – Your body will naturally adapt to overcome problems.
Immaculate Reproduction – Your pregnancies will never cause problems, and all offspring will be made of the highest quality possible. Massively increased probability of multiple offspring simultaneously.
Divine Nectar – Your liquid bodily products, such as spittle, milk, and cum, are imbued with edible vitality, and can fully replace food as a consumable for other beings. These products may inherit additional secondary properties.
Blessed Regeneration – Your [Recovery] stat is quadrupled. Immunity to diseases, both as a carrier and victim.
Mating Pheromones – Communicate sexual intent with pheromones, alluring mates and stimulating desires. Can induce a breeding frenzy.]
One instant, the flesh book bored into her; the next, it was gone, as if it’d never been there.
Something was inside her, squirming.
Touching places that’d never been touched.
She didn’t know anymore.
The world spun, and Durelia fell backwards. Strangely, she never hit the ground; something warm and womanly firm braced her backside. The comfort of that sensation, more than anything, made it so much easier to fall unconscious.
“Welcome to the family then, I guess?” Avaron’s voice muttered, wafting away like smoke in a breeze.
*~*~*
Codex:
Alright im not gonna pump my word count here, it’s literally like half a page up, just scroll lol
Chapter 68: Precipice
Chapter Text
How little we understand how close we are to something.
*~*
The change from normal world to naki corruption proved stark and unrelenting. Though she’d seen the black-and-white growth days in advance, the elvetahn’s approach toward it left Avaron uneasy. From the sky, the forest and plains looked increasingly rotten, black fingers stretching across the earth. It looked right out of one those science channel demonstrations on mold cultures and how they grew: the central mass and the many tendrils shooting out, seeking sustenance.
It wasn’t hard to tell where the epicenter of it all was. Though it’d be some days still, something that used to be a city stood at the deepest, most rotten part.
Her eyes, ears, and tentacles on the ground encountered the naki corruption far more viscerally. It warred with the nature around it, invading through the barks of trees, strangling bushes, and nothing remained of the wildlife. Mutant creatures amalgamated together were the most she saw, but they were wandering, mindless things. Leftovers too lowly for even the Nagraki to care about.
The elvetahn marched far more solemnly than they ever had before. Not even playful jests or small, idly conversations went about their ranks. Their silent, expert steps left them unheard, their equipment even devoid of rattling or jingling. If no one saw them walk by, they would’ve never known an army had passed through at all.
Ghosts in a dying land that birthed something evil.
Mushrooms Avaron couldn’t identify sprouted up in places, twisting stalks becoming bulbs that grew at harsh or impossible angles. Flora in the shape of rib cages or people sprouted up from dying greenery, grasping for something; or someone. Spider webs of naki wove through the dirt, hardening into some alien geometry that looked as intentional as it was random. Worse, the air thickened with spores that smelled of the sweetest fruits and tastiest breads. Heady, nostril clogging smells that made one’s mouth salivate and stir hunger in the belly.
The first sign of naki invading the body; the deliciousness of it all.
The elvetahn wore cloth-masks over their faces, lined with herbs and other things that counteracted the airborne contagions. To Avaron, her incredible regenerative power fought off the invading naki constantly. It was a subtle, unnoticeable thing, like a sickness trying to start but dying just as quickly. The airways of the tentaclelings clogged with snot and other refuse, making their breathing somewhat labored.
Nonetheless, they endured, and so the march continued.
"... I think I found a village," Avaron remarked, hugging Bladedance as the two rode on the elk. She’d been given a facemask, so at least she didn’t have to deal with sneezing or coughing constantly. “A few houses at least, and what was a field. No survivors?”
A hamlet or something else of small size, sitting harmlessly in a field a couple miles away from them. A squadron of her drones went in, ambling through the corrupted grounds. None of the animals remained in the barn or their pens, for what of those structures even stood still. It didn’t seem like a fight happened at all, but the houses’ doors were all ripped off their hinges.
Whatever happened came quickly and violently.
“Once naki clouds the air, nothing else survives,” Bladedance said. “The corruption progresses too swiftly to be halted if it takes root. If you do find someone, they are either already corrupted, or a Nagraki.”
The dark interiors of the houses showed different stories: a barricaded door that broke in, an evening dinner that’d long rotted away, laundry still hung to dry near a dead stove, and more. Lives that went on humbly, all of it cut sharply down. Avaron saw them all, the weight of every household heavy on the tentaclelings that tip-tapped through them. She tried to find anyone left, even a corpse, but there wasn’t anything to be found.
Some minutes later, the drones left, returning to the Hive swarm and elvetahn army.
“What about someone blessed?”
“The corrupted will attack them first,” Bladedance said, distasteful experience in his voice. “Anyone, or anything, that is not Nagraki will die.”
“Leaving little hope for holdouts, unless they’re very lucky.”
“Quite so. Fleeing is the best course of action. Even if someone fights off the Nagraki, failing to cleanse the aftermath means another outbreak is inevitable.”
It’s funny how familiar, yet different, it all is, Avaron thought, looking up to the sky. Times of war on Earth came to mind, of villages she’d been driven through. People who did nothing wrong, but Hell came to them all the same. The looks in their eyes, the most, ever remained clear to her. Those piercing, haunting eyes. I wonder how such people look here, where you can’t even die properly. Or what it’d be like when she’d have to be the one to kill them. Knights and soldiers are one thing, but …
A bridge she might have to cross sooner than later, regardless of what excuses she cooked up.
A sudden sound reached one of her many, many ears; the crack of thunder. Avaron’s conscious eye flitted through her swarm, sweeping their senses to find the source. It wasn’t discernible from the ground, or most of the sky, but a few of her skeyes vaguely heard it. Three of them pivoted most of their eyes in the direction, scrutinizing everything. There’s no clouds … nothing enough for a storm cell to formulate. Cannonfire?
“Did you hear that, general?” Avaron asked.
“No. What is it?”
“A thundercrack from the east, but there’s no stormy weather. It reminds me of gunfire, but it’s very distant.”
“… Interesting. I’m not sure the Hardain ever acquired guns from the Empire, but these are strange times. Outside the range of your skeyes, I presume?”
“Very.”
“Barkbite!” Bladedance yelled, and moments later, the lead stalker of the elvetahn appeared in feathery-thump beside them. “Take your stalkers to the east, there may be Arden soldiers, or someone with guns, fighting there. Learn all you can, then return.”
“Kill the Arden?”
“Not yet.”
Barkbite grunted before leaping off into a dying tree. She sped off, and so too did dozens of shadows and feathers after her. The arrangement itself made sense to Avaron: forward scouts of the main elvetahn army. Though what they were going to scout exactly remained a mystery.
“Is lightning magic a thing? Or common?” she inquired.
“It is a rare form of magic, and found only on truly powerful magi. Lightning is not a simple force to control, after all.”
“My next wonder if something like explosive fire magic exists, then?”
“It does, and is the preferred form of attack for large-scale warfare.”
“Mm, interesting. So whoever is out here is using either guns or powerful magic, and they’re deep inside Nagraki territory. Would-be allies, perhaps?”
“I would not count on it,” Bladedance said sternly. “Many in this age do not have the memory or experience of fighting the Nagraki. Without proper precautions, they’re more liability than help.”
“I shall temper my hopes, then.”
Their trek continued, and the land ever became stranger and more alien around them. Avaron knew there had to be countless types of fungus in the world but she wasn’t a botanist. Or fungist. Or whatever they were called. She just saw weird, bulbous shapes, sometimes coral-like frills and ridges, others spidery tendrils, and ever more combinations of living nightmares. They did have a certain charm to them, if in a sort of ‘that would kill me’ way.
When nighttime came around, the encampment became a mess of huddling together. The tents were connected with relatively air-tight passages, but the elvetahn didn’t carry an excess of such building material. Worse, with most of the land around them a corrupt mess, cleaned living space took some effort. She watched them use magics she had no idea about, but did some combination of cleaning and healing the forest remains. Splashes of green and brown returned, itself visibly struggling at the slow, creeping invasiveness of the naki.
For her part, Avaron camped her tentaclelings outside. The magical barrier the elvetahn erected at least stymied the worst of the naki, making it much easier for the Hive to fend off the constant attack. It didn’t make it any less weird how the tentaclelings bunched up against, and on top of, the elvetahn structures. The larger crushers had the great fortune of becoming partial structures unto themselves, supporting tarps and cloths off their immense bulk.
Splashing water into her face, Avaron tried rubbing off the icky feeling of sweet filth on her skin. It didn’t help, but she tried. At least Bladedance had the forethought to keep the survivors out of this region, she mused. I’m not sure how the elvetahn back there are going to escort them all the way to Eden, but I suppose that’s their problem.
While she wanted to tend to the survivors herself, military concerns rapidly made that idea unviable. Frankly, moving them out of the region entirely had been Bladedance’s better call. Obvious in hindsight, but not in the moment. The difference experience makes. Ah, well, I know that a lot myself. Damnit, it’s so quiet in here I’m playing both sides of the conversation again.
The tent she was within wasn’t itself quiet, of course, there were plenty elvetahn about doing their business. Her mind, however, had only her voice within it. Myriad signal streams of information from the drones fed into her, but there wasn’t thought. Avaron yelled, and nothing echoed back.
It felt surreal.
She didn’t know how she couldn’t have felt such emptiness back when she was still only a single mind.
It gnawed at her.
“Lady Avaron?”
“Yes?” Avaron drawled, looking up from the pot of water.
A delightful distraction in the form of an elvetahn servant asked. One of Efval’s handmaidens, though dressed in brown leather armor and padded cloth instead of sheer fabrics. No one was never not combat ready, even when they slept; such was Bladedance’s orders. “Her Majesty asks for your presence.”
“Ah, well. Lead the way.”
Not that much leading or waying was needed. The servant cut a path through the cramped interior, going around crates, barrels, elvetahn huddled together; not at all different from the hard winter at Tsugumi’s inn, really. Efval’s area combined both command post and queen’s chambers together, though stripped down from even those niceties. That she had enough space to twirl around and dance alone was quite the luxury given the circumstances. Avaron glanced around as she entered, seeing only handmaidens, and guards posted at the entrances. Bladedance and his retinue were off somewhere else.
Little magic lanterns hung off of ropes above, just enough to cast a moon’s glowing haze. Efval herself reclined on a mess of pillows, and though not wearing leather armor, sufficed for yellow padded cloth. The servant that led Avaron headed off to the side, coming to wait dutifully in ranks with her fellows. Avaron herself stood before Efval and waited.
The queen spoke without looking up from whatever report she was reading. “How are you faring since meeting the naki?”
“It’s actively trying to corrupt my drones, but our natural regeneration can overpower it for now.”
“Is it a losing battle?”
“No, not unless the naki intensifies for some reason.”
“It likely will. Has it affected you at all?”
“No, my regenerative power is much greater than my drones. Supposedly I’m directly immune to it, but that’s not something easy to test.”
“It’s not,” Efval remarked, almost bored. She probably was. “The skeyes?”
“They’re above the naki cloud so it’s not affecting them, but finding safe places for them to land and rest is proving … tricky. For now, they’re reliable.”
“Good. The lead scout has reported in, and my fears have come true.” Efval looked up then, readjusting herself. She held out the report for a nearby handmaiden, who took it and left quickly. “The Nagraki are erecting a Sacrifice Forge at what used to be Laemenda, a major trade city for the Hardain. We’re two days from reaching the city proper, and it is swarming with Nagraki.”
Avaron inclined her head to show her understanding, but kept her words. She knew Efval well enough when the prompt to speak came.
“Your Hive will act as our vanguard. What you lack in skill or ability, brute force will suffice. It will draw the Nagraki and, ideally, tie up most of their number for a while,” Efval explained. “At the same time, your skeyes will be critical in maneuvering our flanking attacks to where the Nagraki are weakest. Ideally, we will be able to pierce into the city, destroy the Sacrifice Forge, and debilitate the Nagraki.”
“But, there’s a problem?” Avaron guessed.
“Quite. The Hardain, and some remnants of the Arden, are trying to attack Laemenda now. They’ve apparently fought off incursions by the Nagraki for some time, and have made headway into reaching the city.”
“But, that’s not the problem, is it?”
“Was it not evident from the Sacrifice Forge?”
“No one has quite told me what that is, though I can imagine.”
Efval blinked once, then rubbed her chin. “Sacrifice Forges are the first manifestations of the Nagraki’s fetid god. They are sites of worship and work that turn victims into Nagraki. You can imagine it as a slaughterhouse and workshop in one. The problem, as you say, is that the Hardain’s army is fueling this forge with their deaths.”
“… Because a protracted siege provides the bodies it wants without actually gaining meaningful victory,” Avaron surmised.
“Precisely. Caution must be thrown aside to stop the Sacrifice Forge before it can be fully completed. If any Highborns are made from it, we will have tremendous difficulty cleansing the city.”
“And there aren’t any there now?”
“Not that we have found out,” Efval said. “The forge is near enough to completion it’s impossible to say how many hours we have left.”
“Alright. Is there any chance we could work with the Hardain or … I’m taking that as a ‘no’.”
Efval’s distasteful expression spoke well enough. “The most useful thing they could do is leave, but rarely do such people listen to reason. We’ll make use of their poor attempt at sieging, but ignore them otherwise.”
That’s not a smart thing to do, but, she really doesn’t care otherwise. Avaron nodded. “Very well.”
“You don’t seem to think much of your Hive being thrown to the wolves,” Efval said, tactful in a way that beget deceit.
“Should I?” Avaron asked rhetorically. “They are born to live and die for the Hive. Everything they learn, we remember, and the next generation embodies. An elvetahn dies, and the spark of that life is gone forever. A drone dies, and ten more replace it.”
Efval stared at her for a long minute, then slowly, gazed up to the ceiling. “Your very existence disturbs me,” she said in that same caustic flippancy. “Do not blame me if I use you as I wish, then.”
“Queen Efval, you need only be grateful I am on your side,” Avaron said, matter-of-factly. “The poor bastards on the other side are the unfortunate ones.”
The elvetahn queen huffed, waving her hand in dismissal.
*~*
What a lovely day it was in Eden.
The sun was shining, the birds were chirping, and people were yelling their bloody heads off.
Avaron rubbed her temples in a slow, methodical circle. The anarchy unfolding before her had gone on for an hour already, and showed no signs of slowing down.
The largest room in City Hall, ostensibly for presentation or court or some bullshit purpose she hadn’t used it for yet, was jammed full of people. Avaron sat at a desk at the center back of the room, while the rows of seats that should’ve been in front of her, had been shoved aside. Some tables were even overturned and chairs lodged into funny places. No one cared about it, only that space was made. Some were even half-way shoved through the windows like some crappy zombie movie.
Despite the pleasant breeze outside, the stuffiness of the hall wore on her heightened senses. A cacophony of smells that clogged the nostrils, from filth to unnecessary horniness. She hated the fact she could unwind every scent as easily as plucking threads out of a shirt. I can’t believe some of you are turned on during this, she thought with exasperation. You’re not even Raina or her sisterhood, so what’s your excuse?
Not that Raina’s wonderful aroma wasn’t there, buried in a mountain of shit. The Ashmourn stood in the fray, yelling at one person or another. At one point she headbutted some poor bastard and that took the woman out completely. Thankfully no lasting damage, but the ever increasing escalation of violence simmered. There were plenty who wanted to throw down, but didn’t have it in them.
It helped that Arzha and her Knights stood around at the edges of the hall. Plate mail and swords really did have such a lovely effect on people.
Not that’d it made them anymore calm.
A tentacleling ambled through one of the open windows, clambering over a bench that’d been half-way thrown out of it. Avaron held out a hand as it neared, and the thing spat out a dildo-shaped device. Fucking finally, she thought, fiddling with the magic microphone thing. Once it was on, she turned up the volume and said, “Are you all done yet?”
Her amplified voice reverberated in the hall, clubbing everyone in the ears and making them all flinch. A rippling unison of noise followed them all turning to regard her. They had, reasonably or not, kept space away from the Queen’s desk. That and the fact they would have to pass Arzha, who stood ready to kill a person, might’ve deterred them.
“Good, you know manners,” Avaron continued on, the silence feeling fucking delightful. “Now that your little temper tantrum has ruined this hall, let’s focus on the real issue at hand here.”
“I ain’t being some fucking cow!” one woman yelled.
“Slavery is what it is!” another yelled.
Murmurs of agreement followed.
“Right. Can someone explain to me what it is you are all actually in a bother about?” Avaron requested, but the mob looked from one another; seeking some sacrifice to step forward.
A man grunted something, trying to talk to another, but all Avaron saw was a shorter, comely woman pushing her way to the front. He followed behind her, a bulky fellow who’d done work in the mines. Bernd was his name, if she remembered correctly. He looked damn near in a panic as everyone’s attention zeroed in on them both; not that the woman cared in the slightest.
“A bother? You want us all to become cattle and call that a bother?” the woman demanded hotly, pointing at Avaron accusingly. The motion made Arzha, her knights, and Raina all tense for a moment.
“Sorry, who are you?” Avaron asked.
“Name’s Ari, wife of Bernd.”
“Okay, hello Ari. What is this about becoming cattle?”
“Don’t play stupid,” Ari bit out. “You got that goat over there rapin’ and molestin’ women all day and night in that ‘ranch’ of hers. Now she’s got some awful [Job] that lets her make people into cattle? Are you mad?”
I love being right all the time, Avaron thought drearily, not enjoying it in the slightest. She glanced at Raina who definitely had the decency to look chastised. Taking a moment to sigh away from the microphone, she then said, “Raina told me about her new [Job]. Unfortunately, we still don’t know how it works exactly.”
“Is it a mystery or something? It forces people to get a wicked [skill] called [Sapient Livestock]!”
Some gasps followed, probably the sort who didn’t know the whole picture. Angered murmurs arose quickly at Ari’s reveal.
“It doesn’t force the [skill] on a person. I don’t know what that [skill] actually does, though,” Avaron pointed out, not that it quieted the crowd any. “Lady Raina, did you find out what it does?”
The audible sound of many heads turning accompanied everyone staring down the Ashmourn lady. Despite the pressure, she seemed unfazed by their attention. “No, I haven’t, Your Majesty. I asked for volunteers last night and I was going to find out today before this all happened.”
Does no one know what ‘discretion’ means in this world? Avaron wondered for a moment. “Okay. As of this moment there has been no plan to force anyone to get this [skill]. I’m not even sure I want such a [job] in Eden in the first place. But, to make a decision, I need to know what the [skill], [Sapient Livestock], actually does. Would anyone like to volunteer as a test subject?”
Murmurs followed while people glanced at one another. Not even Ari, spirited woman she appeared to be, had the courage for that. It amused Avaron to see how very much everyone acted the same way like people on Earth when it came down to it. Same bullshit mob mentality, different planet.
“I will!” an unexpected voice offered from the side. Knight Saryl, standing in armor, stepped forth. The other knight’s sharply looked at her, and even Arzha was taken aback. Avaron looked at the Princess, who looked back at her, the two sharing a meaningful look. Arzha gave a slight, permissive nod, if still wearing an uncertain look.
“Alright. The Snowflake Knight Saryl volunteers to discover what this new [skill] does. Do any of you object to this?”
Predictably, not a soul spoke up.
“Let’s begin then,” Avaron said, gesturing with her hand. Raina and Saryl took the center stage, so to speak, with everyone’s eyes on them.
Raina said, “A handshake should suffice, I think.”
“Okay.”
So the two shook hands, and Saryl’s eyes widened. She stared at something, her gaze focused on a weird point in space just off to the side of Raina; the [System] screen, undoubtedly. Her brows furrowed. Something like thoughtfulness appeared on her cute face. Then, her eyes widened, and she gasped. Whirling around, she regarded Arzha and said excitedly, “It’s a [Doubler]!”
Arzha physically recoiled, surprise overcoming her incredible decorum. “Really?” she asked with amazement.
“Yeah! And … oh … well, that’s something too, I guess …” Saryl’s excitement died as sharply as it began, her expression becoming complicated. “Aw, come on, really? Well, Magna will like it, I guess … Huh? It does what?”
Avaron sighed with aggravation. “Can you not torture me with anticipation? What does the [skill] say?”
Saryl let go of Raina’s hand and scratched her cheek, something of a blush warming upward. “Uhh … right. [Sapient Livestock: A temporary skill granted by mutual agreement from a [Sapient Rancher]. If the agreement is broken, and the skill is still temporary, it will be removed. The agreement will break automatically if the bond with the [Sapient Rancher] deteriorates too much. If the bond is maintained for a period of [5] years, the skill becomes permanent.
Effects: Vitality is doubled, to a maximum value of [15] additional vitality.
Bodily products, offspring, and pregnancy dramatically improve in quality.
Bodily products are more tangibly affected by dietary intake.
Resistance to disease and sickness is increased.
Resistance to adverse weather greatly increases in proportion to how much clothing isn’t worn, with a maximum effect at less than 10% of body coverage.
Lactation occurs regardless of pregnancy status.
Dramatically increased sexual sensitivity and libido.
If this skill is permanent, it becomes [Hereditary] and is passed down to future offspring.]”
Avaron admired her ability to read off something so increasingly ridiculous; a real professional, through and through. The hall, however, quieted down so much a wet fart could be heard like a thunderous clap. She coughed into her hand. “Well, the first half of that sounds pretty good … I think?” Avaron remarked, trying to coax the mob along.
It would be Arzha that regarded her with complete befuddlement. “A [Job] that grants a [Doubler] [skill]? I’ve never heard of such a thing,” she said, amazed.
“Sorry, for those of us who don’t know, what’s so great about a [Doubler]?”
Perhaps remembering where she was, Arzha quickly schooled herself into the peerless princess she ever was. “[Attributes] are the measure of a person in their totality; faithful, if hard to understand. [Skills] or [abilities] that increase [attributes] are among the rare sort, and the rarest of all is the [Doubler]. It does as its name says: it doubles an [attribute], usually to some upper limit. In this case, to [15]. Your Majesty, this is an absurd [skill]. Nevermind a [Doubler] [skill] that can be passed down to the next generation …”
No, Arzha’s mind slipped away from her again. The more the implications of the [skill] dawned, the greater her incredulity became. The consternation of her sharp features proved quite lovely to see, if unfortunate in the context.
If Arzha is freaking out this much, it has to be incredible, Avaron mused. The vitality increase alone looked pretty potent. Unfortunately, it made sense why it offered something that powerful. Stronger livestock means better offspring and milk, she thought dryly. A skill that amplifies their role on a ranch, even if it can be applied elsewhere.
“Well, now that we have that, I’d like one volunteer from the crowd to come get the [skill],” Avaron said, drawing everyone’s attention. “As a Snowflake Knight, Saryl is quite potent on her own. I’m curious to see if someone not a knight obtains a similar result.”
A little lie to hide the fact she was really trying to prove that Saryl wasn’t a ‘paid actor’. People would naturally learn the truth, but corralling them toward it was one of many tools for public relations. The mob spoke amongst itself, interest more than fear clouding their words, but few had the bravery. Eventually, a rather pale looking woman stepped forth. Wrapped in a cloak as she was, her blood-red hair spilled out of the hood. Bandages wrapped around her face, though too sloppy to be proper concealment.
Avaron wrinkled her nose. She’s definitely human, but what’s that complexion?
“I’ll do it,” she said, a light and airy voice that had a slight rasp. “If it’s no trouble …”
Raina, however, furrowed her brows. “You’re pox-touched?”
The people around the mysterious woman backed away in an instant, all of them expressively weary of such a person in an instant. Avaron marveled at the sheer uniformity of fear that motivated them all so.
“I am,” the woman said. “Unlucky as I was.”
Avaron looked at Arzha meaningfully, and the princess got the hint enough to whisper over to her, “A survivor of unnatural disease.”
I can see why people would get bent out of shape about it, Avaron thought tiredly, but said into the microphone, “I don’t smell disease or sickness upon you, so I take it you survived?”
“You … don’t?” the woman asked confusedly.
“I’m a tentradom. Our noses are best in the world, and sickness is very obvious to us. Some of you may have noticed how effects like my [Sovereign Power] try to mitigate it. Disease is something we hate very deeply,” Avaron explained. “But, I’m curious why you want to obtain the [Sapient Livestock] as a [skill]?”
“Oh!” the woman jolted, fidgeting under all the attention boring into her. “It is just … the pox tore me apart. I survived, barely, but I’ve always been so weak, and my [vitality] is very low. I hoped the [skill] would alleviate that, Your Majesty.”
“I don’t want to be the bad person in this situation, but the [skill] is temporary unless you participate underneath the [Sapient Rancher],” Avaron pointed out. “You’ll have to do things you may not want to in order to keep the bond for the five years.”
The woman shook her head slowly. “If that is what it takes, Your Majesty. I have little hope to overcome this frail body on my own.”
Avaron scratched at her temple for a moment. “I’m not comfortable with that, but I will respect your decision. Lady Raina, if you would?”
As before, Raina held out her hand, and she and the red-haired woman shook. Without prompting, the red-haired woman read off the effects of the [skill], or at least mimicked everything Saryl herself said earlier. Assuming truthfulness, then the [skill] was discernibly known, pending more test subjects repeating the same information.
“Please speak with Lady Raina about the arrangement you would like between yourselves,” Avaron said. “It is, ultimately, her [Job], and what she wishes to do with it is her choice to make. I will not order her to take on those she does not want.”
“O-of course, Your Majesty. L-Lady Raina, if it’s no trouble to talk sometime …” the red-haired woman’s admirable front started to crumble a bit from emotion.
Perhaps such a [skill] really did help her, but it wasn’t Avaron’s place to force the matter. Considering what would be needed for it to be maintained, it was an intimately private affair between rancher and livestock. Avaron rubbed her eyes. For the love of some goddess, please don’t tell me that’s going to be in common vernacular. No, fuck me, I already know it is. I have got to invent a better word for people to use first. Boudoir? No, that’s some French word I can’t remember …
“Lady Raina, do you have a moment?”
“Ah, I might be of service, Lady Raina!”
“I have quite the bosom you may indulge in, Lady Raina!”
Avaron watched, dumbstruck as women in the mob shuffled their way toward Raina. As one made an offer, another followed, then two more, and suddenly many women were trying to garner Raina’s attention. Their outrage of earlier vanished, quite possibly greed or something covetous overcoming them instead. Even some men made offers, while those who thought such a thing was insane were pushed to the back of the Hall.
And so the shouting resumed, with Raina now the center of very different attention. Arzha and her knights moved in then, trying to restore order as much as screen Raina from being accosted. Avaron flopped backwards in her chair, staring up at the ceiling and wishing for a lightning bolt to strike her down.
(See how they fear the unknown, but when benefits become clear, they hunger for more,) Nex’s voice intruded in at the back of Avaron’s mind. (Uncaring of what they can do for others.)
(Yeah, I graduated high school,) Avaron quipped dryly. (People being inherently selfish is step one. Step two is thinking being selfless is even possible. Step three is realizing selfishness comes in positive and negative forms. Step four is realizing everyone is selfish, even the ones who think they aren’t. The trick, of course, is learning to weaponize selfishness in a way both sides benefit from it.)
(A fool playing with fire is destined to get burned.)
(Sure. If you give up after being burned once, you’re destined to be a loser. Only those willing to get burned constantly can build a kitchen, a forge, or rocket engines to fly to the moon. No, wait, hold up, what do you know about this [job] in the first place? Nex? Nex?)
Nex said nothing, her presence simply receding away as foam would on a lake’s shoreline.
If she starts giving me snippy one-liners every time something happens, I’m going to be cranky.
*~*~*
Codex:
[Sapient Livestock: A temporary skill granted by mutual agreement from a [Sapient Rancher]. If the agreement is broken, and the skill is still temporary, it will be removed. The agreement will break automatically if the bond with the [Sapient Rancher] deteriorates too much. If the bond is maintained for a period of [5] years, the skill becomes permanent.
Effects: Vitality is doubled, to a maximum value of [15] additional vitality.
Bodily products, offspring, and pregnancy dramatically improve in quality, depending on your bond with the [Sapient Rancher].
Bodily products are more tangibly affected by dietary intake.
Resistance to disease and sickness is increased.
Resistance to adverse weather greatly increases in proportion to how much clothing isn’t worn, with a maximum effect at less than 10% of body coverage.
Lactation occurs regardless of pregnancy status.
Dramatically increased sexual sensitivity and libido.
If this skill is permanent, it becomes [Hereditary] and is passed down to future offspring.]
Chapter 69: In Haska's Name
Chapter Text
Where purpose fails, belief provides.
*~*
Having a literal bird’s eye view of things felt like cheating to Avaron. It probably was, but how she loved abusing it with malicious glee. Her squadron of skeyes flew high above Laemenda, letting her take in the foreign terrain with complete totality. She wouldn’t call it mountainous, but flat ground proved relatively rare; everything had angles, hills, and declines. Laemenda itself must’ve been built on a tall hill at some point considering it was generally higher than the surrounding terrain.
Some work had been done on leveling out areas. What might’ve been roadways at one point cut through the hills. A dozen or so roads left off in every direction imaginable, the literal arteries of what’d once been a vast city. I wonder what it looked like, Avaron mused, two of her skeyes sweeping their gazes across the ruins. I’ve not seen a city from the sky yet like this.
The naki grew fiercest within the city, the epicenter of its cancerous growth. Everything had been overtaken, and what remained were only piles of rubble and stone that monstrous abominations mined from. Towering mushrooms jutted upward, wafts of naki-filled air spilling out of their gills in slow, steady breaths. Patches of groping fingers waved back and forth, bleeding a red gelatin from their tips. Coral shelves formed suspiciously mouth-like shapes, inanimate until they slammed shut then opened again. More and more alien flora sprouted up and she wasn’t sure what the hell they were.
New constructions jutted up amidst it all. Naki growth combined with repurposed white-yellow stone from the city, becoming some Nagraki-made facilities. Some were towers, the most noteworthy being the eight of them in a star pattern. The center of said pattern housed an enormous, mountain-like collage of stone and fungus, its interior alight with the burning glow of a fiery heart. I guess that contains, or is, the Sacrifice Forge? Avaron considered. The towers must be important, they’re too specific and unnatural otherwise.
She wasn’t sure what to make of the surrounding facilities. Some had the idea of being barracks or resting areas, at least with the number of Nagraki around them. Others were less clear, like an enormous, twisting structure of twenty shafts that grew around a particularly towering mushroom. Maybe farming, or some kind of resource collection? Ehh, I don’t even know what these other ones are. This place is a mess.
The toot of a warhorn caught her attention, and three skeyes pivoted dozens of eyes in the eastern direction. The Hardain army, boldly green-and-yellow in color with splashes of red, began their assault. Like Bladedance supposed, the morning sun was the start of their day. She did spot the likes of Arden soldiers, dressed in their apparently traditional dark grays and blues. The black and yellow of nobility, if there were any, weren’t visibly out and about. It took a minute for her skeyes to scan through everything, but the thoroughness of such spying merely confirmed her suspicions anyway.
“I have eyes on the Hardain army,” Avaron said, her queen-body in the elvetahn command tent, standing beside General Bladedance. She reached out and traced a finger on the map in front of her. “They’re dug in here, and they’re starting their advance toward the city. Several thousand in number, though maybe less than ten thousand total. Some Arden are among them, maybe a few hundred.”
One of the elvetahn soldiers nearby moved miniature figurines onto where Avaron’s finger traced. Bladedance nodded. “Good to have exact positioning reaffirm the lead scout’s report.”
“I’ve spotted what might be the Sacrifice Forge? It’s a mountainous structure of fungus and stone, but there’s eight towers around it in a star pattern.”
Queen Efval said, “Are the towers alight?”
“No.”
“Then the forge isn’t fully complete yet. General, we’re in the time to strike and not worry about it activating.”
“I agree,” Bladedance remarked, then looked over to the lead scout and stalker. “Sharpknife, Barkbite, as planned, move your troops to the strike positions. I’ll relay orders through one of the tentaclelings.”
Sharpknife saluted, Barkbite nodded, and the two sped quickly from the tent. Avaron, despite the seriousness of it all, found it funny how each of their groups had one person stuck carrying a tentacleling piggyback. My little organic radios work well, she thought wryly. Bladedance had been quick to exploit her intelligence gathering-and-sharing alright.
“Lady Avaron, can you describe the city wall to me?” Bladedance asked.
Avaron nodded and started tracing her finger along the map again. “It’s largely intact except the eastern side where the Hardain are attacking. They’re—oh, that’s not cannons. What the hell is that?”
“Describe it.”
“Four wheels, angled surface, I’d call it a ballista but they’re not loading anything into it except … fire? Oh, there’s giant fireballs forming.”
“Blast throwers,” Bladedance surmised. “Standard siege weapon of choice for attacking armies or lightly defended positions. It’s not ideal against stonewall, but I would guess they’re shooting the Nagraki with it.”
The growing fireballs soon launched forward, arcing as tiny meteors across the battlefield. Some did hit the walls, or buildings, but most shot either through the open breaches or over into the city itself. From her perspective it looked random, but the apparent purpose might’ve been saturation bombing the Nagraki inside. It provoked the first genuine response of the lost city’s interior as the Nagraki abominations unanimously began moving. They flowed in streams of flesh and teeth, going toward the walls where the attack came, and then spilling outward.
“That’s correct. The Nagraki are responding, and the conflict is beginning.”
One of her skeyes squinted, looking closer into the city. She meant to see what sorts of creatures they were in better detail, but a sudden, sharp pain struck. Avaron herself winced and grabbed her head, averting the skeye’s gaze immediately. “Oh, what the fuck?” she muttered darkly, feeling as if something stabbed through her skull. “Why does looking hurt?”
Queen Efval sharply demanded, “What happened?”
“I tried looking closer into the city, but something stabbed me in the brain. Metaphorically. It’s—“ she tried looking again, and winced once more as a second stab struck,”—yeah, it’s something in the roads. It looks like starlight and it hurts whenever I stare at it.”
Both Efval and Bladedance’s faces turned into dark, unhappy expressions. Bladedance asked first, “Could they have already inscribed the Words?”
“What else are they? It is the same as it ever is.”
“Words before the forge is even finished?”
“A Highborn is here, most likely from somewhere else entirely,” Efval said with utmost displeasure. “Assume we’re fighting one of age and ability, not a newborn.”
“I fear I may have to ask for your help then, my queen,” Bladedance said, hanging his head in Efval’s direction.
“Let us be decisive about this: I will command from the front. Coordinate from here, General Bladedance,” Efval declared, marching out from the tent.
Avaron watched the exchange all the while, keenly aware of her role as a helper. The wisdom, or lack thereof, of the monarchial leader going to the frontlines of war sat at the tip of her tongue. When in Rome, or something, she thought, rolling some of her skeyes’ eyes instead of her main body. “Do I need to worry about these Words, or whatever they are?”
“If you can observe without pain, continue to do so. The Words themselves are … physical, representations of their god. We’ve no idea what they actually say, but the Highborn Nagraki make them wherever they can,” Bladedance explained. “Those of low [level] are harmed by merely observing them.”
“It’s definitely stopping me from spying closely, but I can at least track general movements in the city itself. Wait, wouldn’t something like this be devastating to human soldiers?” Avaron asked suddenly.
“To anyone of a low [level], yes. Those under [15] in particular.”
“… Queen Efval believes it unnecessary, but I would ask you—“ Avaron said, regarding Bladedance seriously. He stood up then from hovering over the map, staring at her straightly. “—I think working with the Hardain to some extent is wise. At least warning them of problems they might not understand fully.”
He gave it some thought, rubbing his chin for a moment. “I agree with Her Majesty, as I can already imagine many reasons to do so. However, we have you now. If you can send a drone to the Hardain and communicate with them, that saves us the time and effort.”
“I half-expect them to just kill the drone on sight.”
“If you can think of a solution, then try. There’s no guarantee the Hardain would listen to us even if I sent my own soldiers there.”
“Alright, fair enough. Can I get a surrender or peace flag to strap to the drone? They might not shoot it immediately.”
“Someone help Lady Avaron!” Bladedance barked, and two soldiers moved with purpose to do so.
Avaron’s sense of multi-command truly found itself pushed in new and interesting ways.
Firstly, her skeyes ran aerial recon constantly by seeking new problems, watching concerning areas, and checking for anything unexpected. Dozens upon dozens upon dozens of powerful eyes and their optic feeds streaming visual information that had to be checked with a high quality of attention. The more she developed a sense of how things flowed, the more she could concentrate in certain eyes, but preparing for the unexpected remained important.
Secondly, physically coordinating her drones to move with the elvetahn army. In terms of number her drones weren’t that much, but they were durable and sacrificial fodder. As long as the elvetahn supported them with arrows, the tentaclelings and crushers could most likely survive in melee to keep screening. Frankly she hadn’t intended to fight in a situation like this in the first place, but she made do.
Thirdly, coordinating with Bladedance to feed him intelligence, then relay his orders to specific ‘radio’ drones that were proliferated throughout the elvetahn army. She then had to relay back information from the other side of those radio drones, prioritizing need-to-know information that Bladedance desired. It wasn’t physically taxing so much as mentally, especially as she had to keep said information in completely understandable language.
Fourth, the special little messenger drone that headed toward the Hardain needed its own direct attention as well.
I’m so glad this is medieval warfare, she thought with exasperation. At least it moves slow.
For all the hustle and bustle, the elvetahn army remained hours away from engaging Laemenda proper. Her messenger drone went far ahead, traveling through woodlands and hills in a long, winding curve toward the Hardain. She specifically selected one of Gwyneth’s offspring to do so, and the human endurance helped tremendously. Still, even the drone had to take breaks and rest once and a while.
Not an easy thing to do in a land so fundamentally hostile. Nothing remained of the original forest or earth except corpses of trees and animals. The fungus spread ceaselessly, spewing naki into the air as newer and different things kept growing. For her worries of encountering wandering Nagraki or something horrible, Avaron never saw anything resembling complex lifeforms. The danger of toxins seemed sufficient enough.
A worrisome enough thing in itself, but it sat at the bottom of her list for the moment.
The exposed flank of the Hardain army approached.
*~*
Barkbite stood on the highest branch of a dead tree, the feeling of squishy fungus underneath her talons. It disgusted her, but necessity proved the greater concern. The rest of her flock waited beneath her, perched on branches and nearby trees, the many dozens of them still and silent. The sun crept upward from the horizon, shining brighter as the morning clouds burned away. Distant sounds of screams, yells, and magic rumbled through the air and ground.
The flock remained as they were, undisturbed.
They were patient, after all.
The tentacleling on the branch beside her gurgled awake before its hideous voice spoke. “Status update: Hardain assault on the east side continuing. Main elvetahn army making preparations to break open the western wall. Nagraki are responding to the west side. Aerial recon sees most of the Nagraki numbers are committing battles directly. Barkbite, do you have a possible entry point?”
“We do,” she answered simply. One of the fungal masses overgrew the wall, sending its roots down the stonework. Most couldn’t use such a thing, but to the elvetura, it was as easy as any other road.
“Confirmed. Bladedance’s orders: when the western wall is blown up, commit to your attack. Prioritize dismantling the Sacrifice Forge if you can. We have reason to believe a powerful Highborn is already active, so exercise caution.”
Barkbite’s head rotated from one side to the other, eyes flashing with irritation.
“A challenge,” hissed one of those in the flock.
The others ruffled at such a prospect.
Barkbite hissed, making them cease immediately. “Clever hunt. Never swoop for what isn’t seen.”
The others made their sounds of acknowledgement, if not agreement.
“This drone cannot survive inside the city due to something called ‘the Words’ etched into the floor,” the tentacleling said. “Where do you want it to stay?”
“Here.”
“Alright. I’ll try to keep it here and alive as long as possible. Be careful of the Hardain’s siege weapons, they’re shooting into the city itself.”
“Tsk.”
She would’ve laughed at something like that being a problem. Then she saw one of hers lose half her skull to a gun from the Arden. It wasn’t so funny anymore when something so easy became so dangerous. Barkbite grit her teeth, their bladed-tips against each other, the grinding noise reverberating inside her ears. She didn’t want to wait, but she did.
Patience was the virtue of the owl.
In time, a tremendous explosion sounded from the west. A geyser of flame and wood erupted toward the sky in a fiery crackle, taking stone and naki with it. For as sudden as it appeared, it burned away into ashes with a rippling crackle, creating a black cloud. The moment came, so Barkbite and her flock pivoted forward from their branches and leapt.
In speed and grace they vaulted from tree to tree, hurtling toward the southern wall of Laemenda. The wind whistled in her ears, drowning out the sounds of war farther away. From tree to dead grassy field they went, running in leaping motions toward the base of the wall. When they reached it, they each took a crouch, then jumped upward at a height of dozens of meters. The fungus roots came into reach, and with talon-clawed hands, they grabbed onto it.
So the flock ripped upward, ascending to the height of the city wall.
The dozens of them perched upon fungus and brick, peering into the den of their most hated foe. Their eyes and heads twitched in rapid, precise motions, surveying where to go and what to kill. Streets cut through ruined buildings and overgrowing naki, forming clear pathways of movement amidst an ocean of rubble and ruin. Most of the structures appeared unstable, but the spires of fungus could be useful.
She pointed where a great tower stretched high into the sky, uniquely different from all the others. “Reach there, tear the heart apart. Regroup afterward.”
Twittering sounds signaled agreement.
A shuffling followed as they all reached to their backsides beneath their cloaks. Clawed hands reached through special handles, gripping tightly around custom-made grips. They swung their arms out, brandishing the long, two-bladed gauntlets and their wicked nasty, sharp edges. Barkbite descended first, all but gliding from the wall to the street below, and the flock followed.
There were no Nagraki immediately, and so they ran through one street, then another.
Their first prey to be found was a collection of workers, busied with pickaxes and hammers on the stone. Humanoid creatures, amalgamated from person and beast alike, working in a mockery of purpose. Their understandable forms, if different and unique for each one, meant they still had tangible weaknesses. Nagraki needed brains, hearts, and organs. Sometimes blood, sometimes not. To kill them required destroying those vital things.
They didn’t notice the arrival of the elvetura.
Without words, the stalkers swept toward the first few, claw-gauntlets swinging with lethal precision. Their weapons were not swords, which were made and honed over eons to kill people. No, theirs were weapons made to kill monsters, to tear through flesh and muscle and bone that’d be far more dense and tough than any person. Their methods carried no elegance, no technique to demonstrate; only brutal, precise driving power to gore their enemy apart.
The workers howled, braying of beast and person alike, drawing their fellows’ attention. As the first few died, the rest turned, compulsively twitching and jerking as blood was pumped by the fungus controlling them. For what ones had eyes like a person, they silently pleaded for death even as their mouths screamed in rage.
Barkbite deftly sidestepped a man-like creature swinging a pickaxe at her, the horse his own head fused with of nickering loudly. Her claw-gauntlet swept into its throat, cutting through inches and inches of flesh and fungus alike. It staggered for a moment, preoccupied by blood flooding its lungs, but one of its arms kept swinging; moving entirely on its own, separate from the rest of its musculature.
She dodged in a twist, using the claw-gauntlet buried in the thing’s throat as a pivot point. With the talons on her feet, she gripped its shoulders, using its own body as an anchor before ripping her claw-gauntlet through entirely. It’s head tore off, spinning from the sheer force of such a violent motion. Kicking off, she jumped away and sent the decapitated body to the ground. Twisting through the air, her head moved on its own, sweeping for a target that her momentum might carry her to.
A hammer-wielding creature made of two men, a woman, and the bodies of pigs awaited her. Its blobby form held no distinction for a head, making it a formidable proposition to kill. Depending on how many brains or hearts it had, she’d have to quite literally tear the whole thing apart. Barkbite inhaled, the sweet corruption of naki intermingling with the intoxicating aroma of blood’s coppery-iron. Her limbs burned, heart thundering in her chest with a beating rhythm far beyond usual.
The smile she wore remained hidden behind her facemask; the thing they wore so their siblings wouldn’t be disturbed.
Disturbed by the gleeful joy she showed, her eyes devoid of compassion or empathy.
Her smile that of a beast who hunted others not to satiate itself, but simply for the pleasure of the kill.
*~*
Hmm. I’m definitely going to get shot.
Avaron’s professional assessment still seemed true five minutes later. Her messenger drone stood at the edge of the encampment for the Hardain. It took some maneuvering to get around their farther away sentries, but they weren’t looking for a sneaky tentacleling. The problem became the army had cleared out a huge stretch of dirt from the rotted out forest to their encampment proper. A perfectly flat field of dirt without a single hole, ditch, or rock to use for cover.
A killing field, in other words.
Well, it’s not like it matters if this drone dies. Alright, where’s that flag? A repurposed tent-support pole and large, white sheet formulated her ‘surrender flag’. The white flag had been popularized by heroines centuries ago, apparently. The tentacleling studied the pole for a moment, rotating it with two helper tentacles and making sure it locked into place firmly. This is a nice pole.
Hoisting the thing proved a little tricky. By bulging out some internal, organ-like tentacles on the drone’s right side, she had a proper holster that could keep the flag up for the most part. Taking a few side steps and walking around in a circle, she found it reasonably secure. Alright, time to die, probably.
The tentacleling marched on out and into the killing fields. Pretty much as soon as it broke past the treeline and became a discernible shape, it heard alarmed shouting. There were makeshift towers along the camp’s perimeter, and the people there immediately became animated. A skeye flying high above saw their movements, but none of the soldiers further in were reacting.
Ten meters into the fields and nothing happened.
Twenty meters.
Thirty.
A pop-crack broke the air and a split second later, something harshly slammed into the drone’s frontal chitin. The flesh beneath bruised from the impact, but the armor held, and a round iron ball ricocheted off into the air. Moments later, the internalized damage from the kinetics were mostly healed by regeneration. The chitin armor stopped the bulk of the damage, much to her surprise.
Well, that stung. The range is probably weakening the killing power a bit.
Forty meters and onward.
Fifty meters.
Two towers loosed four arrows, three of them uselessly hitting the drone’s chitin. The fourth lodged itself into the joint between the rear left leg and main body. It took a moment for her to move the head around, rip the thing out, and then let it heal itself. More arrows thudded and scrapped against the chitin, ricocheting off. I love angled armor. Thanks military channels at the dead of night.
If she had to guess, there was about two-hundred meters of killing field to cover. When she reached the seventy meter mark, however, she noticed something. Both drone and skeye saw a pair of knights on horseback head out from the camp. Other soldiers near the camp’s border moved into position, reacting to a possible incoming attack. Avaron wasn’t sure if she should press onward, so she stopped the drone and waited for the knights.
Holy shit those are big spears, she thought, mildly impressed. The knights, adorned in plate mail and the colorful green-yellow of the Hardain, wielded spears three times longer than any she’d seen before. Pure metal weapons, streamlined with smooth, conical curves the closer one went to the handle. She hadn’t a clue how a person wielded them with one arm, but then again, she was a tentacle monster herself.
After a certain point the problem became more those enormous weapons coming at her than how it happened.
They’re coming at me in a staggered charge in case the first one misses, the second can pivot. Simple, effective. Mm, I guess dodging is what I should do. The car crash of a horse might kill the rider. Horse crash? Car horse? Ah, whatever, just dodge.
The knight came, hooves thundering underneath as the horse barreled toward her. It all came down to timing, and Avaron spared no effort in jumping the drone sideways as the spear nearly hit. With the first knight out of the way, the second came, but a little fancy tentacle limb work that moved in impossible ways let her jump again. The second knight’s spear grazed into the drone’s body, a meaty scrunch sounding as it gored into the angled chitin. Most of the power redirected offward, but the sheer force of it hit harder than the musket ball had.
Actually standing up again proved troublesome; something had broken, at least the armor. The pain, however, served little use to Avaron. Both the knights circled around at a distance, taking stock of the drone; studying with their unpleasant eyes behind their visors.
“Hey, assholes, stop trying to kill me!” the drone gurgled out, raising a foreleg in anger. “Don’t you see the fucking flag?”
The knights looked at each other, their circling not stopping.
“We don’t care for Nagraki trickery!” one of them shouted, her commanding tone drenched in anger.
“I’m not Nagraki, you fucker. I’m a messenger from the elvetahn!”
“There are no elvetahn in these lands!”
“Shows what you know! Their army approaches from the west, and they mean to attack Laemenda. They are here to destroy the Nagraki in their entirety.”
Whether believing her or not, the knights looked at one another again, and the one who spoke signaled the other. The speaker came to a stop at a safe distance in front of the drone, while the other knight held a more standoffish position. “The Senate has not requested their aide,” the knight said sternly.
“The Nagraki are their ancient enemy. They do not care, they will find and kill them anywhere they have to,” the drone said, sitting backwards on its ass. For a spider-like creature as it was, it seemed half dog-like at the moment. “Your city is already a lost cause.”
“I know that!” the knight snarled. “What message do you mean to give us?”
“Stay out of Laemenda, and keep the Nagraki occupied for as long as possible. There is a Highborn in the city and your entire army is like a big fucking feast to a creature that powerful,” the drone said, with some paraphrasing of Bladedance’s wisdom. “If your siege weapons can hit the support towers of the Sacrifice Forge, that will seriously screw up the Nagraki’s plans.”
“How so?”
“Dunno, it needs those towers, and the main forge itself is too big to knock down easily. As long as the forge stays cold, the Nagraki won’t receive any help from their wretched god.”
“… Julianne, watch this thing. I will report in to the Commandant.”
“Ride swiftly,” the other knight, Julianne, answered.
“Kill it if it gets any closer to camp!” the riding knight yelled as she headed off.
“Oh, I’ll be here,” Avaron’s drone remarked dryly.
Not that she had anything to do.
A minute later, knight Julianne asked, “What sort of monja are you?”
“Tentradom,” Avaron replied automatically before the rest of her brain realized that might’ve been a bad idea.
“… A tentradom among the elvetahn? You hardly seem the sort.”
“Yeah, lucky me. Last of my kind and all that.”
“Surely not, there are tentradom dens in the southeast that plague the lands there.”
The drone’s head extended outward and curled toward the knight, who seemed less than thrilled at such a motion. “Tentradom nests, huh? They’re probably the insane ones. Rape monsters and all that.”
“… Quite.”
“Figures. Like I said, last of my kind that isn’t insane.”
“And the elvetahn sent you here, alone and unguarded?” Julianne asked skeptically.
“I do what they tell me to. It’s not like I have a choice.”
The knight hummed some form of agreement.
The drone’s head turned in the direction of Laemenda. “So how long have the Nagraki been around? Did you all not notice one of your cities collapsing or something?”
“By the time we realized something was wrong, Laemenda had already fallen,” Julianne said with some consternation. “We’re not sure how it happened, but we learned of it when other nearby cities and villages experienced outbreaks of these monstrosities.”
The drone rubbed its proverbial chin with the safe side of its foreleg. “Traitors is the obvious bit. Nagraki have been going around corrupting all sorts of people. Artor fell because of it, and Arden is collapsing from it as well.”
“Truly?” Julianne asked with gusto and surprise. “Nagraki were responsible for that?”
The drone looked back at her briefly. “Oh, yes, quite. As best we can tell, the beginnings of the next great war are coming. The Nagraki headhunted all the major powers around the elvetahn in order to assault them before they realized their foe had returned. It failed for the most part, but that’s little comfort to everyone who died.”
“It disquiets me how something from history books no one cares to speak of suddenly proves how very real it is,” Julianne remarked. “Ancient stories of different eras and here we are, living in the moments our descendants will read about.”
“If it’s any comfort, it’ll be the last of the great wars with the Nagraki.”
“… Why do you say that?”
“Because the game has changed,” the drone remarked, giving its form of a shrug. “Of course whether or not that comes true is a different question. If we’re lucky and alive, we’ll see whether or not it happens.”
“Hmph. It would help if the elvetahn did more than sit in their trees every day,” Julianne said snidely.
“The Arden certainly rattled them enough they woke up and noticed the Nagraki immediately. Now the elvetahn are marching to war.” The drone chortled a disgusting sound. “Be careful of what you wish for.”
“You—“
The sound of hooves and shouting drew both their attention. What might have been that knight from earlier returned, accompanied by a cadre of other knights and some different figures. Quite possibly ladies and lords judging by how fancy their armors were and the stupid hats on their heads. All in all about thirty, plus more soldiers following after them. Avaron watched them from both the ground and sky, taking stock but finding nothing in particular.
Plate mail seemed the norm, though many compromised in places like their joints with chainmail and padded cloth. Only a few were complete armored fortresses, whether due to simple stylistic preference or some other concern. All sorts of colors and patterns accentuated the green-and-yellow primary choices, most likely denoting rank, household, or some other kind of purpose. Frankly it looked like color vomit to Avaron, but it might’ve made more sense if she knew why they used them.
A number of foot soldiers rushed ahead, creating a curtain of steel and bodies between her and the approaching nobility. They didn’t draw swords, but their unkind gazes and certain purpose spoke well enough. Knights proceeded to move off onto the flanks, waiting to strike as they kept watch. The nobility, some five in total out of the group, was what approached the foot soldier wall.
Of the five, she noticed one in particular who stood out oddly. A woman dressed in painfully familiar ashen robes, adorned in iron-made finery too specific to have been accidental. Her pale complexion beget a head of dirty blonde hair, and a twisting scar dug through her left cheek, crawling down her jaw and throat. The sort of scar only one source Avaron knew that could’ve made it. A priestess of the Eternal Flame?
Another woman on horseback took the fore in particular. Her round face held a seriousness to it that smothered any notion of ‘cute’ that might’ve remained. Deep set eyes, with vividly emerald-green irises, regarded the drone with contemptuous scorn. A mane of shock-red hair spilled out and over her shoulders, golden metal clips in a number of places to tame it into something battlefield-appropriate. She spoke with a voice that filled the air, a booming authority of someone who could shout over battle itself. “You are the messenger of the elvetahn?”
Magic? Must be if she’s the general, Avaron mused for a moment. “I am,” the drone answered simply.
“I am Supreme Commandant Irmgard ael Taevola, Defender of the Realm, Freedom, and the Righteous Ways,” she declared. “I have received your message. I shan’t turn down the elvetahn’s assistance toward eradicating these monstrosities, my many concerns set aside for the moment. What assurances do I have of you speaking the truth?”
The drone rubbed its proverbial chin again then looked over in the direction of Laemenda. “In about four minutes the elvetahn are blowing open the western side of the city. Would that suffice?”
“And how do you know that?”
“Magic communication,” the drone remarked dryly.
“You use something so dangerous here?” Irmgard questioned with obvious skepticism.
“Don’t think our means of doing so are as backwards as what you know. Anyway, four minutes and you’ll have your proof.”
“Very well. What sort of monja are you?” Irmgard asked, unwittingly echoing Julianne of earlier.
“Tentradom,” Avaron’s drone answered since that cat was already well out of the bag. Virtually every soldier present reacted in some form, most tensing, others becoming uneasy, and a number of hateful eyes flared menacingly.
“A poor jest,” Irmgard retorted, scowling. “I have slain many such creatures, and none of them looked as you do, in form or color. Never mind the question of why the elvetahn would treat something like you.”
“Sadly, I’m one of the last ones who’s still sane and having a conversation,” the drone shot back, its tube-like mouth curling into its nearest approximation of a smile. “Don’t lump me in with my insane brethren.”
“Wonders never cease, it seems.” Irmgard wrangled her horse for a moment, keeping it in place.
“Truly. I’m surprised to see a priestess of the Eternal Flame here,” the drone said, regarding the aforementioned woman. “Your order has been of great help to my Hive.”
Said priestess frowned. “We do not help tentradoms, sane or not.”
“As far as you know, I suppose. Do you all have divine blessings or something? The naki in the air isn’t something to laugh at.”
“The touch of the Eternal Flame and blessings of the—“
A resounding boom came from the west, and everyone looked over. A pillar of wood and fire erupted skyward, crackling and evaporating to ashes as suddenly as it’d formed. In its wake, a plume of smoke and debris followed, chunks of rock flying away from the enormous explosion. A nigh-invisible wave raced toward them, the very air pressure of such an explosion blasting past with uproarious noise. Clothes, hair, loose dirt and other garbage all rustled or blew away, and the horses brayed and shuffled anxiously around.
“The assault is beginning,” the drone said casually before regarding a surprised Irmgard. “Shall we cooperate, then?”
“Perhaps there is something to speak about after all,” Irmgard returned, quickly gathering her wits about herself.
*~*
Well, that just annihilated some of my skeyes, Avaron noted distastefully. They’d been much closer than she thought to the planned attack point, and oh they’d been atomized by the blast. Some suffered concussions, but she still had enough airborne and usable that recon remained viable. Everything else, at least, had gone to plan.
Elvetahn magic formed a loose protective bulwark in front of the army, shielding it from the blast of their own attack. Once the shockwave passed, it fizzled out immediately. That was Avaron’s cue, and so all her warrior tentaclelings began skittering forward. The falling dust and rocks were annoying, but ultimately non-issues for her. The elvetahn would wait for clearer airs while the Hive secured an advanced position. She had to cross hundreds of meters of relatively open and flat terrain before she even got within spitting distance of the blown-open wall itself.
Hundreds of warrior drones moved, marching in small groups subdivided by rows. They had an appropriate amount of spacing to ensure concentrated arrow barrages wouldn’t be an issue. Similarly, it’d mitigate explosive attacks or other unwanted forms of artillery. I’m curious what the Nagraki might actually use since this world just discovered guns. Catapults or something, maybe?
She didn’t see anything resembling sophisticated defensive structures. Whatever the city might’ve originally used either went ignored, or was actively dismantled. Halfway across the advance, nothing at all happened so far except the dust falling down. Unless they can’t see me and this is giving me a nice cover advantage?
Some sense of anxiety wormed through her, but Avaron did her best to ignore it.
She heard, more than saw, the enemy: beastly howls and people’s screams fused together. Each one as indistinct as the last, all of them hair-raisingly angry and in pain. Dim rumbles shook through the earth, growing and growing as the advance continued. Avaron saw through a skeye the many Nagraki forms within the city rushing toward the newly made opening. Far more in number than Avaron’s warrior line, that was for sure. Not as much as what the Hardain were fighting, though.
Tighten the ranks and prepare, she told herself, as much as lived that very command. The thought helped bring order to the sea of consciousness that was her own existence, subdivided into the many drones. They were her, and she was them; the distinction of ‘self’ and ‘other’ purely arbitrary. No one questioned the arm they used, or the legs they walked on, or the heart that beat in their chest.
The drones pulled into formation as the air cleared and the Nagraki spilled out of the wound in the city’s wall. They spread out somewhat, but the bulk of their momentum carried forward. They saw both drones and elvetahn through the dissipating dust, and so that is where they went. Simplistic intelligence, varied forms. Repurposed animals, recombined humanoids, but nothing denoting tactical level planning. Alright, drones versus zombies.
The drones tightened their ranks, becoming more like a wedge. Crushers moved to the front and clapped their bulky arms together, creating living barricades. Avaron wasn’t sure how things would turn out, but the time for finding out fell upon her.
The Nagraki front runners came with picks and axes, or just huge, club-like arms, slamming into the crusher’s shield arms. A rattle-clap of meat and chitin sounded, animalistic howls joining in as dead silence remained on the other side. The crushers took the brunt of the damage and held their ground, but as the second and third hits came in, their natural-grown defenses started to crumble.
Nagraki rushed around the sides of the crusher wall, only to be met by stabbing and slicing drones. She wasn’t sure what techniques to use, or how to even cut into some of the monstrosities, but Avaron tried. It mostly failed despite her goring them open or cutting off limbs, the Nagraki themselves just had too much meat. They kept coming, clubbing the warrior drones or grappling them to the ground. Still, the drones fought, stabbing with their legs, biting with their teeth-filled mouths, or slashing and slicing as deep as they could.
A free-for-all of limbs, blood, and gore.
Avaron’s attention honed solely into her drones, every split second decision requiring incredible thought. Positioning, anticipation, reading enemy action, identifying weak points, predicting movements that could be intercepted, conceptualizing of attacking and retreating or following up, coordinating two or more pairs of drones to attack a Nagraki, prioritizing defense or survival for those in danger and rotating in combat ready units and—
Whistling sounds shot from overhead, screeching like falcons. The wafting dust blew away as arrows flew through at incredible speeds, then slammed into the Nagraki. Avaron watched with a stupid expression for a moment as the impacting arrows exploded through the monstrosities. Heads, chests, limbs of any sort; it didn’t matter, the arrows destroyed everything. In some cases her drones got caught up by a shot, and they unfortunately died as they were blown apart.
That barrage, however, blunted the Nagraki’s advance.
A wall of twitching and screaming corpses collapsed into the warriors, smothering both drones and still-fighting Nagraki. Avaron stabbed, sliced, and chewed, going for heads, hearts, and dangerous limbs. Continue to tie them down. Not one must pass through.
The more she fought, the more she learned how to coordinate her drones. The more her drones died, the faster the ones who remained reacted. Whether with artful slices, deadly slashes, or just using their bodies to bog the enemy down, her drones fought. Fought, and suffered. They ached from exertion, adrenaline forcing their biology into overdrive. They kept killing, silently attacking even as wounds piled up on them. Limbs were torn off, legs and arms alike, or even their heads, but so long as the others remained, they kept fighting.
Any weakness one incurred would be offset by the others.
A drone blind or deaf would be told what those beside it knew, and so could keep fighting.
A limbless drone would be hurtled into the enemy, to writhe and chomp and bite until it finally died.
A veteran drone dodged deadly swings from clubs and angled its chitin to deflect pick axe blows, letting others swiftly exploit openings to attack.
Crushers moved forward, shoving their huge bulks to disrupt the Nagraki’s momentum.
The drones were dying; dying so incredibly fast that Avaron could only marvel at the speed.
Another barrage sailed over head, blowing apart a huge swathe of the Nagraki’s advance. It brought with it a reprieve, a chance to kill the ones immediately in melee, then reform her own lines.
Half her number gone already, their bodies sitting still on the earth and oozing blue, viscous blood. The naki trying to corrupt them took root, but the blood hissed and snarled. She knew it sought to take them over, to make more Nagraki, but even in death, her Hive resisted its encroachment. I suppose that’s a good thing, at least for now.
There wasn’t much time until the next wave hit, and Avaron couldn’t figure out a solution to the situation.
No concept of pain, incredible physical resilience, and multiple redundant organs of a completely random nature … These things are insane to kill with swords or axes, Avaron contemplated, very real and very immediate battle data in her mind. I optimized the warrior drones to deal with people, not super zombies. I need different weapons for them. I need some fucking guns is what I need.
The Nagraki’s advantages in melee were unreasonably strong. For whatever they lacked in ranged options or intelligence, sheer brutal resilience made up for. Even if they died, corruption would spawn more of them from the freshly slain. Simple, yet effective. At least I know my future strategy for my warriors will work this well.
Another barrage shot overhead, faster than before. The elvetahn army advanced, closing in with Avaron’s dying melee wall. The drones themselves advanced over the corpses of their slain kin and foes alike. They intercepted the Nagraki who survived the incoming arrows. Ranks and formations ceased to matter, only the swiftness of speed and violent death remained. Efval wanted her to screen, so she would screen, up and including to the very last drone.
The Nagraki came, and she fought.
She died, and continued on.
With each less drone, the next fought harder, smarter, and faster.
For each Nagraki slain, Avaron learned of their weaknesses, no matter how chaotic or small.
In each fight, she learned how to maneuver even better.
Less than a hundred meters from the blown-open city wall, the last of her drones died, skewered onto a bone-sword arm of some cow-and-horse made Nagraki.
Avaron clapped her hands on the wooden table, making Bladedance look at her. “That’s it, all my drones are dead. The rest is up to Queen Efval.”
“… I see. My sympathies, then.”
“Thank you,” she said simply. “The Hardain are holding their own. I’m talking to their leadership now, and they’re toeing the line. It looks like their siege weapons won’t have much effect on the forge’s towers.”
“That much was expected, but at least they’re occupying the bulk of the enemy. The Lead Scout and Stalker?”
“They’ve infiltrated. No report yet of their progress.”
“Then things continue as planned. Let us have faith in Queen Efval and them,” Bladedance said.
Avaron hummed some affirmation, her attention flitting through her different skeyes. Without any drones on the ground to manage anymore, all that remained was aerial recon. A bird’s eye view of the entire battlefield across the city and not much to do otherwise. Something unexpected popped up in her views.
[You have gained the skill Swarm Coordination.]
[Improves coordination of multiple disparate bodies acting in unison.]
[You have gained the skill Pain Resistance.]
[Reduces the impairment effect caused by debilitating pain.]
[You have gained the skill Feral Fighter.]
[Increases fighting capability when using natural physiology instead of manufactured weapons.]
Thanks, I guess.
She did notice how much less stressful managing her skeyes and radio drones became. Not much, but some. Like fog lifting from her senses and a certain clarity coming into focus. Faster communication, more efficient movement, more knowing and less ‘noise’. It wasn’t any one thing, but a lot of them.
The other two were much less notable and Avaron wasn’t sure how to quantify them. I wonder if the other me back in Eden just suddenly gained that notification too or not … Well, I’ll find out eventually.
She never noticed the tiny insect sitting in the rows of her hair, its red, bulbous body speckled with white dots. The lady bug watched, its antennae twitching inquisitively.
*~*
The world shook around her, rattled by explosions buried behind walls and earth. Distant and dim as they were, she feared their increasing frequency. Time very much wasn’t on her side, but she still wondered how things would go. Nonetheless, Siskor stood on the observer’s platform, watching the sanctified hall as the work continued.
A cavernous place that stretched onward, defined by the central channel that ran the breadth of it. Many different tributaries fed into it from the sides where large alcoves awaited. What each contained differed, though all of them contained huge iron cauldrons of possibilities, crammed full of flesh, people, animals, fungus, and more. Smiths, cloaked in sewn-together robes of mycelial flesh, churned the cauldrons with long, forked poles. It fell to them to keep the dissolution going, and shove back in anything that tried escaping.
“She is not ready,” the Starshaper remarked from behind her, its many hands-and-feet skittering nervously. “Too young. Too immature.”
I know, Siskor thought, the frustration as palpable in her mind as morning fog. Her nine different golden eyes, concealed behind the veil of an armored helm, stared at the false womb the entire forge had been built for. Such a small, simple thing, a cocoon of starstone woven around a yet unmade highborn. One of such voracious hunger that not even an entire city of meat could satiate. They harvested so much to feed her, and they still weren’t close enough.
The world shook again.
Siskor looked up at the gill-shaped ceiling, seeking comfort in its endless repetition and soothing respiration. “Can she be moved?”
“Maybe?” the Starshaper muttered, then stepped forth. Its long centipede body carried it to the cocoon, where upon it carefully circled around. The huge, twined-bodies of its upper torso craned over the unborn, staring with its divine gaze. “So soft. So supple. Maybe. A little more … Yes, the work can continue. Suitably. If flesh-yet-to-be is made to purpose as such.”
“Do so, then.”
“It will take time that isn’t ours.”
“I will make it. Flee with the unborn through the tunnels as soon as you are able,” Siskor ordered, then turned around.
“What about you?” the Starshaper asked, clutching its many fingers together worriedly. “The Greatest of Huntresses stalks toward us.”
“She is my foe once more. How can I not challenge her?”
Meaty thuds sounded as the Starshaper skittered toward her, making Siskor look back. Despite her own formidable height, Siskor had to look upward at the much, much larger Starshaper that towered over her. Some of its hands fidgeted nervously, wringing each other with bone-cracking forcing. Another lowered down, brushing along where Siskor’s cheek would’ve been were it not for the helm.
“I fear for you,” it said, resonating voice full of dreary and dullness.
Siskor clasped the hand rubbing her head, indulging in the warmth of it despite the steel yet separating them. “We have worked together for many years. You and I both know we cannot shirk the appointed hour.”
“That does not stop these feelings inside me.”
“Nor me. I am not dead yet, and I do not mean to die fruitlessly. Let us play our parts in this, my friend,” Siskor said, and though she regretted having to do so, lifted the Starshaper’s hand away. “Every second matters. No matter what happens, we will always meet again at the side of our Lord.”
“The toil continues,” the Starshaper said, scratching at the combined bodies of its upper torso in agitation. “Yes. I will see her to safety. I will wait for you at the next temple.”
“Until then.”
Siskor turned and left, purpose driving her forward. The ascent up the stairs took time, her heavy boots thudding against the solid stone underneath. Bright glowing mushrooms sufficed for torches, casting a pale light over the black fungus its white accents. The stairs led to into the first of many different foundries, filled with workers tending all sorts of living things that sufficed for forging.
Some were creatures born of fusion, melded together animals and peoples redefined into large-scale organs. They moaned and grumbled, what vocal cords that remained making distressed sounds. Others were stripped down to their bones, then bolted together with iron to form solid, unbreakable forges and smelteries. They could only watch as marvels were made upon them, gladdened to be of use even as nothing more than an anvil for their betters. The toil continued on all the same, the pounding of metals adjoined with the squelching of flesh.
Siskor slammed her hand against her jagged, angular breastplate, the bang commandingly loud. She continued it as she walked, drawing the attention of everyone and everything. “The enemy is at our doorstep! My kindred, awaken! Arise! Join with me at the gates, to fight and die in Lord Haska’s name!”
The Nagraki stirred. Toil once tended was set aside, each of them grabbing a tool or makeshift weapon. Some even foisted up incomplete doomblades, those blessed things boring tendrils into their wearer’s arms. As Siskor marched on, leaving one foundry and going into another, she repeated her call-to-arms. More joined in, folding into the ranks of those who trailed behind her.
Warriors, too, emerged from their alcoves in the walls, mycelial growth snapping as they parted. Adorned in menacing armor just the same as hers, their hulking forms conveyed incredible strength and resilience. Golden eyes peered through the slits in their helms, unquestioning in loyalty, determined in obedience. All throughout the temple, the Nagraki answered her call, coming like ants from every corner of their nest.
The floor rumbled under the weight of their march, tens became hundreds, hundreds became thousands. Siskor marched at the fore, impressive in height and unyielding in might. A body forged within steel, blessed by the stars, and imbued with the naki of their Lord. The simple, brutalist construction of it belied the elegance to which it’d been made, and to which Siskor ever lived to embody. Some derided her like a walking basalt formation, but she only saw that as beauty of purpose.
How could anything to which nature birthed be ugly? That it lived to be witnessed was proof only of its worthiness.
The great, two-handed doomblade upon her back ached, its wanton desire for use beating like a second heart.
Soon.
The temple’s entrance yawned before her, a cavernous maw bordering the light and their darkness. The cave-like immensity of it let their marching echo, imposing in depth and we ight. What awaited further beyond was the main loading area, a flat and expansive place entirely made for cargo to come and go. As Siskor stepped out of the shadowy interior and into the sun-kissed outside, she already saw the elvetahn army waiting.
They stood in rows at the other end of the loading area, five ranks deep, while many of their archers and owlkin stood on the nearby structures. It wasn’t the totality of their army, but rather the most elite of their kind. The personal retinue of the greatest elvetahn to walk the world, and the most dangerous foe Siskor ever crossed swords with. The Nagraki formed their ranks, stretching from one side of the temple’s walls to the other. The warriors took the fore, becoming the living shields to which the many less capable would hide behind.
No arrows were shot, no magic cast from hands or mouth.
Both sides stared at one another in silence.
Siskor inhaled slowly, tasting the outside air and the fresh naki riding upon it. A small, guilty pleasure to take in before she finally walked forward. Her heavy boots thudded against the stone, countless hundreds of eyes watching all the while. At the same time, a part of the elvetahn on the opposite end moved. They split in half, stepping to the side and lifting their weapons. They crossed them, forming an archway of presentation for one elvetahn in particular to walk beneath.
An elvetahn adorned in armored leather, yellow padded cloth, a cloak of leaves and feathers upon her shoulders, and the terrifying mask of an owl covering her face. The elk-like antlers of her helm stretched upward, marrying two estranged beasts together. Green glowing lines in the shapes of vine pulsed across her, flesh and clothing alike, beating in rhythm with the heart of nature itself. Siskor recognized her well, all too familiar with that beautiful height and gracious gait, filled to the brim with power born from millennia of hardwork. Just as so many times before when they crossed paths, they both came to about half-way between their respective forces.
“An honor to lay my eyes upon you once more, Queen Efval,” Siskor greeted, placing a hand over her breastplate and bowing slightly.
The Elvetahn Queen tilted her head in regal acknowledgement. “Knight Siskor, how surprising. This place is far too beneath someone of your station to be here.”
“Ah, sadly, Lilian’s failure falls upon my shoulders. I hoped to clean up her mess, but I am not so fortunate.”
“The wisdom of doing so upon our very forest’s border notwithstanding,” Efval remarked with amused scorn. “Come now, Siskor. You’re too cunning to be caught out like this.”
“We all make mistakes, as grating as that is for me to say,” Siskor returned, shrugging. “My sympathies, all the same, for what happened with your sister. We never expected those guns to actually kill her.”
“And yet she remains dead, all the same,” Efval stated, looking up at the sky. “One more corpse in this pointlessly eternal war.”
“A war, I fear, will change in the coming years,” Siskor remarked, joining Efval in contemplating the mostly clear sky and its odd clouds. “The end of the age of blades, and the age of fire that will consume everything afterward.”
“You disapprove.”
“Of course. Killing is only a means to an end; if one killed for its own sake, then everything becomes pointless.”
“Why continue on, then?”
“I do as Lord Haska bids. He has his plan, and I know it will work out in the end.”
“Even if you are not there to see it?”
“How many of us truly will be?” Siskor asked rhetorically, then shook her head. “No, it is that impossibility that drives me on, all the same. If I hadn’t the will to challenge what couldn’t be challenged, then nothing will have ever changed. You understand that, I’m sure.”
“I do. I admire that reckless drive as much as it embarrasses me to see.”
Siskor laughed then, a guttural sound trapped inside a tin-box. “I hope to inspire your eyes, then. If I might be selfish, would you honor me with a duel?”
“Now, of all times?”
“When else, if not when both of our sides are there to witness it?”
Efval chuckled, and so the two came to regard one another. “Countless among your kind have tried; all have failed.”
“I dare to imagine myself as the first to break that record, then!”
Efval rolled her shoulders. “There’s that recklessness, but very well. A duel would satisfy my sentiments quite nicely.”
“I pray I shan’t bore you with my paltry efforts, then,” Siskor said good-naturedly, reaching for her greatsword. Grown into her back as it was, she tugged and pulled, a sickening crunch-snap sounding as it separated. In one smooth motion, she tore it free and swung it in an arc with enough force to throw off the holster-growth. The doomblade twinkled in the sunlight, its black-silver alloy dull and unreflective, yet bespeckled with the grace of stars. She lifted it up and set it across her shoulder, bracing the heavy sword with ease.
“Hear me, I am Siskor, Knight of Haska!” she bellowed out, her voice filling the area. “I demand a duel with the Queen of the Elvetahn, in honorable combat to the death!”
Efval reached into her cloak, and drew from nowhere a sword of wood. Clean cut and shaped wood, made from one contiguous piece, the light brown hue of it darkened with varnish and careful polish. An iron handle and guard fixed over the wooden core, decorations to its splendorous self rather than something strictly necessary. Its straight edge befit cutting, slashing, and piercing in equal measure; a well-balanced, elegant weapon.
Something made from the wood of an Everliving Tree, Siskor knew.
A deadly weapon of unmatched equal.
“Hear me, I am the eternal Queen of the Elvetahn, Daughter of the Great Owl, and Greatest of the Huntresses, Efval Gladestride. I accept your duel, let all here bear witness!” she proclaimed, her sword held off to the side. A graceful posture, one that a fool might take for open and easy, and not the sinister trap it truly was.
Both the elvetahn army and Nagraki stomped the backs of their heels, a cacophonous beat of acknowledgement and celebration.
“As the challenged, I grant you first stike.”
“My thanks,” Siskor returned in frank honesty, then hefted her greatsword off her shoulder. Reaching up with her other hand, she grabbed the long handle, stepped forward, and swung with all her might. [Starless Step] activated, and Siskor vanished for a literal instant of time. The next moment, she stood within striking distance of Queen Efval, her brutal greatsword crashing downward diagonally motion. A windy screech accompanied her swift attack, the air itself tearing apart.
Efval leaned away, curving as if her body was more water than meat. The greatsword passed within inches of her, missing entirely yet feeling as if it should’ve connected. Her arm twitched, flourishing the everliving sword in a sharp, cutting stab. For Siskor, long familiar with the strengths and weaknesses of the greatsword, such an attack fit perfectly as a counter to her.
She dropped her hand from the handle, slamming a fist down into Efval. Her dastardly sword changed directions, going from a belly stab to a glancing blow that cut into Siskor’s side. Horrendously thick armor and redundant flesh tore apart, nothing more than paper to such a weapon. Sheer force slammed through Siskor’s torso, the Elvetahn Queen’s raw strength transmitting through that one little cut.
In one simple exchange, the two parted; Siskor maneuvering around her greatsword’s weight as Efval craned around to swoop in once more.
The cut in Siskor’s side ached; despite her own massive regenerative power, nothing regrew.
No, she felt something writhing in the folds of torn flesh; trying to take root.
She’d hoped for a moment armor would be enough, but that was a stupid, vain hope. Against a living legend like the Queen of the Elvetahn, only skill would suffice. It put her at a disadvantage, but she still had her strengths.
Efval flew on long, vaulting steps using the balls of her feet as Siskor swung her greatsword in an ascending arc. In a situation of fighting a fast, agile opponent, the greatsword became a weapon of denial rather than damage. Wherever it went, Efval couldn’t be; it took options away, and forced her into taking others. At such an angle, she might go under the blade rather than over it, so Siskor leaned into getting her leg ready to kick.
She didn’t expect Efval to jump.
The Queen’s whole body pivoted forward, her legs tucking inward, sword-arm extending in curving slash. Siskor ripped her greatsword backward and held it like a makeshift shield. An ear-splitting clang sounded, accompanying the ground crushing underneath Siskor as she sank down to her ankles. Efval utilized the very force of her swing as a spring, launching herself into the air before any reprisal came.
She’s different, Siskor surmised. Or, it’s the first time I’m seeing her serious.
They’d clashed a number of times throughout history, but Siskor never committed to an earnest bout. In those ages, she felt unprepared to face someone like Efval. Now, without the luxury of choice, she must withstand that very legend.
Very well.
Nothing else remained but to do the impossible.
Efval soared through the air, landing a distance away. She pivoted around, moving gracefully into another running assault. Siskor straightened up and held her greatsword at a high, horizontal angle. Heaving herself forward, Siskor’s heavy steps thudded against the ground. The two raced toward one another, and the Nagraki highborn swung her fearsome sword once more. Efval dodged underneath, but as the greatsword’s arc swept past, [Double Strike] activated. It suddenly reversed course, swinging downward in defiance of momentum as a concept.
Only then did Efval kick away, launching herself out of the attack’s path. Siskor pursued, continuing her momentum in a twirling slash. A banging clang sounded when the two swords struck, one deflecting the other, but the assault did not end. Without momentum, Siskor pulled her greatsword back, then thrust it forth. Her very arm boiled and ruptured in a lightning-flash growth, extending forward nearly three times in length.
Yet, despite even that, she barely cut into Efval’s cape.
Every time she got close, only to just barely miss.
It frustrated her.
Yet, frustration became motivation; maniacal in its all-consuming focus.
Siskor ripped her overgrown arm backward, flesh, muscle, and metal alike recombining back into its normal shape. Efval brought her Everliving sword to bear once again, and so they clashed.
*~*
“What the fuck am I watching?” Avaron’s thoughts leapt right out of her mouth.
“What? What is happening?” Bladedance demanded.
“Oh. Uh, well, Efval is fighting a Nagraki. Probably the highborn? I don’t know why everyone is just standing around there and watching it, though …”
“Ah, a duel,” Bladedance said with a bizarre sense of understanding. Avaron looked at him dubiously.
“Your queen is having a duel with our mortal enemy?” she asked for clarity.
“If the challenge is given, it is her honor to answer it. There’s nothing to worry over; her majesty does not lose duels she earnestly tries in.”
Avaron didn’t know which amazed her more: the incredible physical brutality her skeyes were watching, or the insanity she just heard. Both together were starting to give her a headache. However, since she couldn’t tell an ancient elvetahn general how incredibly stupid what he said was, she kept her peace. At least the ‘duel’ gave spectacle and insight alike.
At the distance of the skeye, she couldn’t make out precise movements, but their impacts were plainly visible. The very air itself buffeted in shockwaves from every swing, punch, or kick. The highborn, a creature of incredible physical mass and armor, moved as swiftly as Efval herself. Whenever its ridiculously huge sword swung, a ripple followed in its wake. The times it struck the ground, dirt and rock exploded upward from the crater left behind.
Neither of them seemed to notice nor care, continuing their deadly dance.
It kind of looked like Efval was getting hits in, but were they actually lethal?
Avaron wasn’t sure.
First the Lance, now this thing. You know I was dealing with this world pretty well up until this point.
*~*
The ground trembled with every step, the air wailed, and dust blasted away; aftershocks of their duel escalating. Efval’s graceful evasions turned toward swift strikes and decisive parries, her Everliving sword meeting Siskor’s doomblade greatsword. One pushed the other with every clash, a contest of Efval’s horrific speed against Siskor’s unrelenting momentum. For as even as it might appeared, Siskor bore increasing wounds of varying depths and severity. One particular slash gored through her left shoulder, killing most of her arms functionality. She managed to grow new flesh around the wound, but it still wasn’t working as well as it should’ve been.
It frustrated her so much.
Centuries of training and war brought her nowhere closer to winning.
Efval retreated, creating space between them once more. Siskor pointed at her with the greatsword, willing forth the power of her Lord. Three [Black Bolts] of pure darkness erupted from her bracer and glove, shooting forward like twisting snakes through the air. Efval flourished her cloak, whipping it up in an arc that became a shield. The bolts slammed into the cloak, deep, bassy thuds sounding as their darkness blasted out sideways. Although completely negated, it gave Siskor time to close the distance once more.
Her greatsword swung, but Efval curved under the blade, lunging toward Siskor. The knight curled her left fist, and with bone-breaking force, thrust it in the Queen’s direction. Fast enough to burn against the air itself, her arm screamed in pain as much as torn wind. Yet, just like so many other attempts, her fist missed, a column of air blasting past Efval, and another slice of that cursed Everliving sword gored its way through Siskor’s stomach.
If she were younger, she’d blame her specialty in the greatsword. The simple reality of weapons carried honest, unblemished truths of their own strengths and weaknesses.
But, Siskor knew better.
She just wasn’t good enough.
They drew apart again, standing at the ready. Efval, save only a small cut on her cloak, appeared utterly unaffected. Siskor, however, hemorrhaged fungal blood out of wounds writhing with roots. Streaks of white painted her black armor, luminous fragments within twinkling in the sunlight.
“Come now, Siskor,” Efval said suddenly, swinging her sword to clean the blood off of it. “Of all times and places, why here? Why now? For some city that doesn’t mean anything in this long war of ours?”
Siskor chuckled, flexing her left hand to see if it was usable at all. “What kind of knight questions her Lord’s orders? I am called to service, and so serve I shall.”
“If only there were more people in this world with such nobility. It might even make the battlefield enjoyable again.”
“Time is always changing around us, Queen Efval. Even for those who stand still in it, the river rushes past us all the same.”
“All too true. Age has made even me nostalgic,” Efval remarked, then scoffed. “I shan’t bore us with such dribble anymore.”
The Queen made ready, and so did Siskor, both brandishing their weapons.
I’ve bought time enough for them to escape, the knight considered. Even if not, my strength wanes with every blow. A few minutes more, at best. There’s only one course of action left, then.
She couldn’t win through attrition; the fight thus far proved Efval would be victorious. If, however, Siskor changed the tempo, and gambled it all, then she might win yet. All those years of criticizing stupid risks, and here I am, betting it all on one.
Idle thoughts fled from her mind when Efval sprinted toward her. Siskor flourished her greatsword, twirling it around in the air to point it down toward the ground. Shoving into the earth with a mighty force, power surged through her. The ground erupted, blasting segmented sections forward as [Landslide] activated. Meters-thick stone shot upward at bone-shattering speeds, creating a conical wave with the speed and force to shatter armies.
The elvetahn army—coincidentally collateral damage—readied their own defensive magic to withstand the attack. Efval herself leapt high into the air, soaring over the erupting earth. Siskor withdrew her greatsword, then stepped forward, swinging in a horizontal arc. [Starless Step] activated, and the next moment she was in the sky behind Efval. Her greatsword screamed as it cut through the Elvetahn Queen, bisecting her in half right through the torso.
Siskor saw that, her eyes telling her one thing as her mind realized another.
The Efval in front of her crumbled away into a pile of feathers and leaves, blowing into the breeze.
Twisting herself in the air with skin-ripping speed, Siskor swung her greatsword around to strike behind herself. Before Siskor’s very eyes, clad feathers and nature’s embrace, a terrible being of wood and bird scowled down at her, mighty horns jutting upward. The very light around them quivered in fear, retreating away, and leaving the Elvetahn Queen cloaked in shadows—all except those piercing, owl-like eyes.
The eyes of a predator, swooping for the kill.
Taloned feet slammed into her chest, cutting off the greatsword’s motion in an instant. A piercing pain shot through Siskor as the Everliving sword buried into her chest, right to the hilt. Together, the two of them fell to the earth, crashing like a star from the heavens into the ground. Dirt, stone, and rock alike caved underneath the impact, collapsing into a crater that swallowed the area. A deafening crash boomed, the air itself blasting outward and knocking everyone around them on their asses.
So there laid Siskor, impaled at the heart of the crater. Efval, appearing her elvetahn self once more, stood up and moved off of the highborn.
This is how I die, huh, Siskor thought, viscerally feeling the everling sword burrow through her body. Roots upon roots upon roots, dug and tore and spread all throughout her insides. Whatever strength she had left didn’t matter anymore; she couldn’t stop it. Her many eyes closed for a moment, and she tried to enjoy one last heaving sigh before her lungs were torn apart. “How frustrating,” she wheezed. “So very frustrating. To live for so many centuries, striving for the top, only to realize how impossible it is to reach.”
A life spent only to glimpse on how truly tall and magnificent the tree called Efval Gladestrike truly was. Siskor never even came close to matching her.
Efval, patting her gloves off, spared a glance over at Siskor. “There is nothing wrong with your technique. Among the highborns I have fought, yours deserves recognition as the most refined and capable. If you had more time, you would have reached such heights.”
A part of her wanted to hate those words, but Siskor knew Efval wasn’t patronizing her. The Queen of the Elvetahn did not speak lightly, nor suffice for coyness. Such a genuine compliment from so great a person, despite the circumstances, eased the bitterness in Siskor’s heart. “Thank you, your majesty. I can only regret not being a more worthy foe.”
“You’ll understand I don’t hope too highly of such a thing.”
The highborn laughed, spittle and blood choking out of her root-infested throat. “Ahh … Queen Efval, I pray for you to reach our promised day. To see our world saved; restored, to the beauty it once was. Someone—“ it grew harder to speak, “—someone of your nobility deserves that much, at least.”
“… I fear, whether I want to or not, I will be there on that day.”
Siskor smiled beneath her helm, staring up at the blue sky and the boundless stars twinkling beyond it. Her part in everything would come to an end, as frustrating as failure felt. In her final moments, her thoughts were not of Lord Haska, whom she trusted beyond doubt. No, she worried for her nameless friend, so loyal and helpful throughout their long service together.
She hoped they would receive a name one day, to be recognized by their Lord.
Even if she wouldn’t be there to celebrate it with them.
*~*~*
Codex:
[Starless Step: No matter how fast light can be, darkness is always there waiting for it. By embodying this truth for a simple instant, you may move anywhere within [100] meters that your body can physically exist inside of. [5] minutes must pass between uses.]
[Double Strike: After making an attack, immediately attack again without penalty. [60] seconds must pass between uses.]
[Black Bolt: Darkness itself carries force, striking at your foes. Up to [3] bolts may be conjured at once and used to attack. [60] seconds must pass between uses.]
[Landslide: Send a devastating ground wave attack in front of you, fixed in a conical arc. The more strength or magic exerted for this, the greater the ground wave and associated damage. [5] minutes must pass between uses.]
[Swarm Coordination: Improves coordination of multiple disparate bodies acting in unison.]
[Pain Resistance: Reduces the impairment effect caused by debilitating pain.]
[Feral Fighter: Increases fighting capability when using natural physiology instead of manufactured weapons.]
Chapter 70: Aching
Chapter Text
Ignoring pain does not resolve the pain.
*~*
The cleanup operation for Laemenda took about a week. The elvetahn army swept through the remaining Nagraki without any issue, and so soon went about ‘purifying’ the landscape. That apparently involved using some weird nature magic to invigorate the lands, causing wild growth to bloom in rampant abandon. Naki-made fungal nightmare collided with nature’s overwhelming hunger, eventually the naki being consumed by it. A particularly weird looking tree grew upon the site where Efval slew the highborn, rising up with such speed it audibly cracked and creaked.
By the time they ended up departing, the landscape became a sea of green and black. A wilderness overtook the city’s corpse like something out of a post-apocalypse film, giving it the air of having been abandoned for decades. Though Avaron wasn’t convinced, it apparently was such a self-solving problem that the elvetahn at large considered the matter resolved. So, at Queen Efval’s orders, they marched out once more, returning to the Alva Forest.
Avaron, however, found herself knee deep in some shit. Having initially visited the Hardain, left her message, and then scuttled off, Irmgard chased after her like a dog. Avaron barely got back into the forest on some animal-trodden path before the human knight caught up.
“You cannot surely mean to simply intrude into our lands and then leave like this?” Irmgard demanded, riding her horse alongside Avaron’s messenger tentacleling. Her escort knights were busy catching up still, their many horses loudly thundering closer.
This is what I get for trying to tie off loose ends, Avaron thought drearily, but then said through the drone, “Lady, I don’t got a choice in this. I don’t know how many times I have to tell you: Queen Efval doesn’t care to talk, and she has Nagraki to hunt down. Asking her for a ‘diplomatic conference’ is only going to anger her even more than she already is.”
“We have common enemy enough to work together!”
Avaron’s drone grunted then stopped trying to run away. Irmgard reared her horse around and parked herself in front of the drone. “Yeah, and how secure is your back, exactly?” Avaron demanded.
“What is that supposed to mean?”
“Nagraki subvert people pretty routinely. Artor died, Arden is dying, Laemenda got turbo-killed by it, and what have you done to cover your backs?” Avaron demanded. “How deep runs the rot? If we work together only to get backstabbed by half your army turned traitor, then that’s a real problem.”
Irmgard glared, though held her words if for the moment. “It is not that I don’t understand that concern, as much as it galls me to hear it,” she said tersely. “All the same, I grasp enough the danger of the Nagraki to know when reliable allies are needed. I must implore the elvetahn all the same.”
Oh, lady, if you heard the things I heard, Avaron wanted to say, but kept her peace about it. Instead, she used the foreleg of the drone to tap the ground. “The bottom line is the elvetahn are vividly angry and working on their own right now. The most I can guarantee is hearing you out myself.”
“And what can you do?” Irmgard asked with obvious skepticism.
“Things you can’t even imagine,” Avaron shot back coolly. “But, I’m not going to sit out here and compare which of us has the longer sword. If you want to work with my Hive, come to Eden—a town on the western side of the Alva Forest, up against the Silvervein Mountains. We have some Hardain refugees you’ll want to pick up anyway.”
“Refugees?”
“We found them when we started our march inland, running away from the Nagraki. We weren’t sure how far gone your state was, so we sent them to Eden proper for safety. Well, I did, anyway.”
“Then you have my thanks for saving them,” Irmgard said frankly. “I fear I cannot make the trip until the end of summer at the earliest.”
“That’s fine, we can take care of them until then. Oh, that reminds me, do you know Arzha Shieldcrown?”
“The Princess of Artor? Who doesn’t?”
“If it helps, she’s working with me nowadays. Her and the survivors of Artor, at least.”
Using social clout was always tricky, particularly if she stepped onto a landmine. That said, throwing around heavy names could get results plenty enough on its own. It had quite the effect on Irmgard, who seemed dubious at first, but her face showed her thoughts gradually shifting. “That only leaves me with more questions, but I suppose I shall know the truth soon enough. Very well, I will meet with you on behalf of the Senate in the coming months.”
“Cool, that’ll work. Be careful making the trip, Artor’s a wasteland; Ashmourn, Ducal Houses, and who knows what else is clawing each other apart over there. We’ve not been hit in Eden yet, but it’s only a matter of time.”
“I thank you for the warning. I suppose then it is ‘safe trip’ for you and the elvetahn.”
“Can’t imagine anywhere safer than with them right now. Oh, if it helps, again, the Eternal Flame priestesses can be pretty good at purging Nagraki corruption. If you’re friends with them, getting more on board will be useful.”
“They’re remarkably reluctant to intervene in worldly affairs,” Irmgard said, a tinge of disapproval to her voice.
“Yeah, unfortunately. I need to be off now, the march is starting.”
“Good luck to you then, Avaron, tentradom of Eden.”
“And luck to you, Irmgard ael Toleva … do I have to say all those titles too?”
“Supreme Commandant is sufficient.”
“Supreme Commandant Irmgard ael Toleva, then.”
The aforementioned laughed and shook her head, then kicked her horse into motion. She rode off then, meeting up with her escort, then shooting right past them. The women in the escort group groaned, turned around, then chased after Irmgard once more.
Fucking finally, Avaron thought, dragging her hands down her face. With that headache now firmly out of her ass, she set the messenger drone on a return path, and narrowed her focus back down to her main body. Once again, riding behind Bladedance, she was delighted to the imagery of another forest she couldn’t differentiate from any other. At least it had a sort of mundane allure to it.
And definitely not the incredible sight of another beautiful woman clad in armor who could probably kick her ass. Irmgard’s red hair and green eyes were starkly vivid and goodness they complimented her no-nonsense face perfectly. Wash off the dirt and grime from being on the battlefield and give her some polish, and she’d probably be a goddess in the flesh.
Yup, there’s my horniness again. Cool, gotta deal with that now. Nope, not imagining little red-furred tentaclelings. Noooope—ah fuck, there it goes. This is starting to turn into a thing.
*~*
(Hooray, more refugees,) Corena’s dreary thoughts echoed throughout the Hive Mind.
(Oh, come on. They settled in just fine,) Abyssa countered. (It just took a week.)
(We need an immigration office or something. Boohoo a tentradom queen. Boohoo we’re not rape monsters. I’m sick and tired of repeating the same shit over and over again.)
Aphora interjected, (Then give them a pamphlet to read.)
(Most of them can’t read! It’s fucking insane! This is a world with magic, how are they literally illiterate??)
(For the same reason serfdom is still the norm?)
(Forget the … the … whatever that damn thing was. The revolution? No, that was later. The thing when people got smarter because books and education got way cheaper.)
Aphora groaned. (Oh, I don’t know. The Renaissance?)
(I think? That sounds close. Anyway, forget that, this world will go nuts when we start putting out public education and civil services.)
Corena’s dreariness wore in on them all even heavier. (Oh, goody, having to hand teach everyone myself. Dozens and dozens of them at the same time and remembering all their stupid inanities and—)
(We get it,) both Abyssa and Aphora retorted at once.
It would be Venus who remarked, (Maybe getting those new tentacle creatures would help. The sapient ones.)
(Yeah, I’ll get right on that,) Corena said dryly. (Hey, Gwyneth, Tsugumi, are you done giving birth—)
Their collective perception peered into the birthing chamber, where the immediate loudness of orgasmic moaning rattled through their figurative ears.
(—nope, still popping that batch out. I’m sure they’ll love getting knocked up with something new.)
(You know, despite being a sarcastic bitch,) Abyssa said, (you’re probably not wrong.)
Prime’s scathing presence weighed in upon them. (Are you done?)
The other intelligences quieted down.
(Goddess damnit,) Abyssa groused. (Not again.)
Of the Avarons, she’d been going through the makeshift warehouse area near City Hall. When she checked into one of the rooms to take stock of the storage drawers, she nearly stepped in a literal puddle of cum. Definitely not tentacle-made, and oh the male scent of it made her almost throw up. Abyssa shut the door quickly and headed onward. The stale taste of wood and dried chitin at least clogged her nose instead.
(Who the fuck is taking quickies on my property? Ugh, it’s rancid …)
Iris dryly quipped, (Sex monster’s queendom full of people having sex, more tonight at nine.)
(Invent me some kind of gas mask I can wear, Iris.)
(… You know, there’s a thought.)
Cypher said, (Can we make it those creepy World War masks? That’ll make us really popular.)
Weaver said, (Some kind of filtration mask wouldn’t hurt to have for production. We don’t have cotton or anything; can silk even filter air?)
(Uh, maybe?)
Iris said, (There’s some plant fibers I can think of to test out. Something like a SARS mask should be fine—)
A wave passed through the Hive Mind; subtle, but distinct, like hair rising on the back of one’s neck. Tingles and twitches coursed through her multitude of bodies, feeling like nerves waking up for the first time. All throughout Eden, the various drones hitched in their movements: a misstep there, a stumble over a rock, shaking a cart a little roughly, and so on. Individually, most people wouldn’t grasp anything unusual happening. From the perspective a collective intelligence, Avaron couldn’t miss noticing it at all.
Thoughts and memories that were hers, but not before, appeared. Places she didn’t know about she suddenly saw; things she never did, she remembered doing. It wasn’t intrusive; no, it happened almost seamlessly. If she hadn’t been thinking about what happened, Avaron might’ve never noticed gaining such memories.
(Fellow bitches, I am back,) Medusa’s distant voice shouted, faint across their collective link. (Victorious, too. Oh, this feels weird.)
(Yeah,) the other nine Avaron said in unison. (It does.)
A strangeness arose the more they looked at one another, feeling their connection. A sense of ‘other’ between them and Medusa; of someone who had experiences they did not, but now did. In all functional ways, they were still identical enough, the only difference being their lived experience. That difference, though, created a contrast in the Hive Mind it’d never experienced before.
(Oh, this is weird,) Aegis remarked. (I don’t even know what to do about this.)
Prime said, (I guess this is what happens when one of us comes back with ‘new experiences’?)
Iris said, (It’s weird. We didn’t notice Medusa leaving, but lost some information contained within her. She returns, and now all of us are getting affected by new information.)
They knew Medusa felt the same as them, which resulted in both being the agent of change and the changed simultaneously. (I guess figuring this out is my homework now,) Medusa said with a sigh. (Weirdest problems, I swear. How do I even change this stuff? Run a nail through my head or … oh, I can touch it now.)
‘It’ being their metaphysical connection, however it existed.
Weaver interjected, (Guess it’s level up time for us.)
(Oh goody,) the other nine droned out, utterly excited.
Their information screen popped open.
[Name: Avaron] [Age: ???] [Species: Tentradom] [Sex: Hermaphrodite]
[Height: 5’05] [Weight: Lithe] [Breast Size: B-Cup] [Hip Ratio: Curvy] [Ass: Cute]
[Job: Divine Heroine] [Level: 8] [EXP to Level: 7,500]
[HP: 1,500+375] [MP: 10+3] [SP: 1,500+375] [STR: 10+3] [VIT: 15+4] [RES: 13+4] [MAG: 2+1] [REC: 99+25]
Abilities: [Hive Queen Lv2] [Genetic Engineering] [Rapacious Breeder Lv2] [Mating Pheromones Lv2] [Divine Nectar] [Adaptive Physique]
Unique: [Sovereign Power: Hive Vassalage+]
Skills: [Primal Infusion] [Divine Blessing: Unity] [Divine Regeneration] [Forest God’s Knowledge: Botany (Special)] [Hive Mind+Unity lv2+] [Swarm Coordination] [Pain Resistance] [Feral Fighter]
Collective brows went upward.
([Hive Mind] and [Hive Vassalage] this time around. I was going to ask Medusa about our three new additions until I literally got her memories about it,) Prime said. (I’m noticing that while it tells us what EXP we need to level, it doesn’t track how much we’ve actually gained.)
(Yeah, I’ve been watching it,) Iris remarked. (Based on our level 7-to-8 speed, and the amount of sex we’ve had, I think the combat at Laemenda is what really kicked us forward.)
(So large-scale warfare gives us a lot of EXP?)
(It gives us an amount of EXP. If I could graph the damn thing, I could probably say ‘a lot this time around’.)
[Hive Mind: A self among others, collectively connected, and defined by what it is and is not. The smallest parts become a greater organism, acting in a cohesive group indistinguishable from a singular entity.
Hive Unity: A portion of the [Hive Queen’s] [skills] and [attributes] is dispersed evenly throughout the Hive.
Hive Mind has leveled up!
2➜3
+Increased mental cohesion
+Increased structural capability
+Increased synaptic connection range]
(… Medusa, where are you right now?) Prime asked.
(What? Speak up!)
(WHERE ARE YOU RIGHT NOW?)
The others flinched, but Medusa yelled back, (Still in the Hardain! Gonna cross the border tomorrow, probably. Why—oh, I see why now.)
Venus said, (I see our connection range is way bigger now. Didn’t we lose track of her like, halfway to the border?)
(Yeah, something like that.)
Iris’ curious thoughts, however, tickled them all. (Shouldn’t [Hive Queen] be a [Job]?)
(What?) Prime asked. (I guess it could be. Why?)
(Because if it’s a [skill], how is [Hive Mind] splitting out part of our attributes and skills to the rest of the Hive? Why is one [skill] targeting another like that?)
(I don’t know. It just works that way.)
(Yeah, that’s the problem. Why does it work that way?)
(Go find a wheel to spin, at least you could turn that into a generator.)
(Well,) Aegis said, (our mind feels a lot more … three-dimensional, for some reason. Yeah, that’s the closest I can describe it. Guess I’ll figure out what we can actually do now.)
Iris muttered, (Come to think of it, we can change [Jobs]. So, changing out of [Hive Queen] would be like killing the whole Hive or something, I guess?)
Prime grumbled, (Rationalize it some other time! Let’s look at vassalage real quick then.)
[Sovereign Power: Hive Vassalage
By assigning vassalage status, a person or group will be accepted as a proxy extension of the Hive itself. They will be an autonomous segment, independent of the [Hive Mind], but recognized as low ranking members of the Hive. Instinctual behavior and automatic defenses will include them in the event of being assaulted.
Hive vassals may revoke their status at will but reacceptance in the Hive will become that much more difficult.
The [Hive Queen] may assign or revoke vassalage status at will. Those who do not accept vassalage status will obtain no benefits from the [Sovereign Power] except recognition as a proxy extension.
The benefits of Hive Vassalage will diminish the farther one is from Hive controlled territory, regardless of political boundaries.
Benefits will increase or change as more vassals are acquired or lost.
Benefits may take up to half-a-year to take full effect as the body undergoes changes.
The following benefits will be given to willing Hive Vassals:
Self-correcting genes which will repair dysfunctional genetic information. This change is permanent and cannot be lost.
Physical healthiness, robustness, sexual sensitivity, and sexual satisfaction for adults will increase. While these changes will affect the baseline properties of a vassal, they can be greatly enhanced by wearing less clothing. This increase will continue until less than 10% of the body is covered in clothing.
Physical healthiness for children will increase significantly to better ensure their survival. They are not affected by the clothing bonus system.
Milk producing women will now indefinitely produce milk.
Increased nutritional benefits from sexual products and milk.
Sovereign Power: Hive Vassalage, has leveled up!
1➜2
Select a specialization:
Everspring Bloom: Women are the heart of the Hive, the beginning and ending of its entire purpose. The greater they are, the greater the Hive.
+5 to all attributes for women.
All women of physical maturity will lactate by default; anything else that may trigger lactation instead increases milk output.
A woman’s breasts will fill to their maximum capacity, but no longer spill over unless deliberately stimulated.
A woman’s breast milk will contain minor amounts of EXP. This does not affect their leveling process.
The longer a woman’s breasts remain full of milk, the richer the milk becomes to a certain point. The potential EXP contained within the milk continues to accumulate regardless of other factors.
Minor physiological improvements to off-set the anatomical burden of breasts laden with milk.
Tentaclized Production: The Hive mobilizes toward full output, and all of its elements will be shaped to purpose. Only when the maximum value is extracted can greater heights be reached.
+5 to all attributes of Hive tentacles.
Quaddruple the milk production rate of lactating women.
Double the effective offspring capacity of women when impregnated with Hive tentacles.
All women gain the [skill] [Brood Host].]
(‘All women of physical maturity’,) Prime echoed. (What the fuck does the System consider ‘physical maturity’?)
(Anything from puberty starting to the end of physical growth?) Iris offered speculatively. (No, can’t be puberty, that’s when sexual maturation begins. So it’d have to be somewhere in the mid-twenties. You know, like when human brains stop growing.)
(Isn’t that the thirties?)
(I dunno. People can get pregnant way before then, regardless. It seems to act as a way of ensuring every woman will start milking regardless of what they do. Technically, that eliminates the need for any sort of pregnancy in the first place, which has interesting implications.)
(Yeah,) Weaver said slowly, her attention going over the choices again. (So, uh, it’s probably a branch choice, but [Sovereign Powers] are weird and unique anyway. We should probably ask Tsugumi or Gwyneth—who are busy giving birth … uhh …)
(Arzha’s right in front of me,) Abyssa said, (I can ask her.)
Avaron did enjoy her offices, when she had the time to sit in them and pretend life could be normal for a second. Sitting in City Hall’s office as she was, Avaron looked over to Arzha, who sat at another table with a pile of papers and parchment in front of her. “Oh, Princess Arzha, I have a question.”
Arzha, head bowed down, looked up with just her eyes. “What is it you said before? ‘I hate that tone of voice’?”
“Yeah. Fun, isn’t it?”
“Dreadfully. What’s the matter?”
“So it seems my [Sovereign Power] has leveled up this time around.”
That made Arzha jerk and sit upright. Pure surprise overwhelmed her for a moment before some calculative thought took control again. Nonetheless, she shook her head. “[Divine heroines] truly are different. It took my father years before his advanced at all.”
“I’m also a tentradom, so that might be affecting things.”
“Perhaps. What about the level up concerns you?”
“Do people not see me having the choice?”
Arzha shook her head. “No, only the effect once it takes place. It is considered a national secret to know what choices could’ve been made. Aside from unrest in the queendom’s subjects, it may also hint at other fundamentals about the power of your queendom.”
That wasn’t too hard to figure out, so Avaron nodded. “Well, might I confide in you my choices, then?”
“Is it wise to do so?”
“If you were going to betray me, I have far greater problems than a binary choice in a level up.”
Arzha folded her hands together, leaning on her desk. Avaron physically resisted from looking down at how it framed her chest in that royal attire of hers. “It would be remiss of me to not be proper about such a matter. National secrets should not be spoken of lightly.”
“Consider yourself a part of my inner circle, then. Besides, I’m very familiar with ‘need to know’, and who truly needs to know,” Avaron said.
“As you say, Queen Avaron.”
“Then, my choices are …”
So, Avaron explained them, and Arzha’s stern features once against lost to sheer surprise. Her brows climbed upward and her eyes widened, though the rest of her remained admirably steadfast. “A universal [5] attributes to all women or tentacles?” she mused aloud. “That alone is remarkably profound. They will have years of lived potential in advance of many others.”
“Not to mention the exponential effect of stronger subjects producing stronger offspring,” Avaron pointed out. “A recurrent theme in tentradom hives that favors an exponential manner of growth.”
“I cannot imagine all tentradoms grew on such potential. If they did so at even a fraction of it, however, they’d be most formidable. How did the tentradoms ever die out?” Arzha asked, sitting back in her chair. “A hundred or so years would make them incredibly formidable, if only on attributes alone.”
“Imagine that but their women, who became even stronger, faster. For a species of natural cowards, no matter how strong they became, others would stomp them out just as easily.”
“… Natural cowards?”
“The original tentradoms are very different from anything you know,” Avaron said, shrugging. “When war came to them, they could not fight back—not because they weren’t strong, but because they were incapable of violence. Defending yourself only goes so far until your enemy becomes greater than any defense you can muster.”
Arzha’s brows furrowed. “That they did not go forth to strike down their foes became their ultimate downfall, then?”
“Essentially, yes. Defense only works when people believe you are capable of striking back and going on the offensive. If all you do is sit behind a fortress, then eventually they will find a way to tear down that fortress.”
“Attrition must surely apply to some extent?”
“If we talk in theory, sure. I’d argue people would still fear reprisal; they did, for a long time, until they learned tentradoms couldn’t retaliate. Things went downhill for them very quickly after that.”
“I find it difficult to imagine,” Arzha remarked. “Be it their former power or the limitations that brought them to an end. Surely they must’ve had some way of getting around it?”
“If they ever did, it obviously didn’t work out at all.”
“… True.”
Avaron tapped her desk. “Now, what do you think of the choices, otherwise?”
“The second choice is powerful, but it merely shifts the applied numbers of the populace around,” Arzha said, gesturing with her hand. “One woman obtains the milk output of four, and her total birthing potential matches two. You can do more with less, and you gain more growth overall. The fact tentacles become naturally stronger in every way also means the Hive is improved across the roster … What?”
Avaron stared at Arzha, taken aback. “Nothing, it’s just been a while since I had a conversation that used brain power.”
Arzha huffed a laugh out, smirking. “I am glad that you listen to me.”
“How could I not? A brilliant mind and a voice that warms my ears is quite the treasure.”
Those icy, clear blue eyes regarded Avaron; a stern and commanding face, but an expression that spoke of something different. A certain kindness intermixed with intrigue that only noblewomen seemed to make in Avaron’s experience. It couldn’t be pinned down as any one thing, coy and insubstantial as it was, yet still, it was something. Avaron’s antennae bobbled up and down, but her tentradom senses couldn’t discern anything special.
“Then I shall treat you with my words,” Arzha said coolly, but her playful air turned serious once more. “The first choice, though, has something you may not realize.”
“The EXP gimmick?”
“Precisely. On the surface it isn’t as immediately powerful, but it does allow for women to ‘share EXP’. Something like that is unheard of, at least to me and Artor as it once existed.” Arzha drew an imaginary chart in the air. “Countless women could funnel their milk to select individuals, letting them level up in a way that didn’t demand hard labor, confrontation, or sex.”
That teasing smirk didn’t slip past Avaron.
“I have no idea what it means by the aging aspect. It sounds similar to wine: gaining potency and potential the longer it’s allowed to ferment.”
“That was my assumption,” Avaron said, then sighed. “If I am honest, I feel it is the strongest option of the two. Nevermind the EXP sharing aspect of it, the fact it changes how lactation works for women means their lifestyle decisions will also benefit.”
“Women wouldn’t have to regularly milk themselves,” Arzha pointed out agreeingly. “They’d have power to decide when they milk and who they give it to.”
“It might technically mean the overall flow of milk in Eden will decline, but the quality of life for my vassals will undoubtedly improve. The second option … well, puts great burden on them.”
“It does. What of that [skill]? [Brood Host]?”
“I suspect it’s a version of [Brood Mother], which Gwyneth and Tsugumi have from uh, bearing our offspring. It doesn’t tell me what it actually is, but I presume it—”
“I do wonder what that [skill] entails,” Arzha cut in, rubbing her chin. “Let’s not ruin the surprise for me.”
Avaron’s brain short-circuited enough that her other intelligences also fried. Poor Iris dropped a beaker with some nerve cultures growing it and the thing shattered on the Hive flooring. Arzha, however, laughed in a genuinely mirthful way that made Avaron blush even harder. She felt the warm, fluffy fur extending out of her with a decidedly lustful interest, enhancing her puffiness even further.
“Oh? And what does that fur mean, Queen Avaron?” Arzha asked, sounding as interested as teasing. “I’m not familiar with tentradom expressions.”
“It means you should leave the room before my aphrodisiac dust starts going up your nose,” Avaron said, voice tight between sternness and flustered. “Seriously, I can’t stop it.”
“Then I shall have lunch early!” Arzha declared, gracefully launching from her chair and heading to the office’s door. “Don’t work yourself too hard, Queen Avaron.”
Avaron couldn’t even tell how much was innuendo anymore. She looked down at her desk and the work waiting for her, nearly missing how Arzha peeked around the doorframe at her still. A strange sight for a royal princess, and a woman of stunning beauty, being coy in such a way. Avaron’s brow popped upward.
“And, there’s a more appropriate place to share yourself.”
“You!” Avaron shouted at the retreating Arzha, and the princess’ laughter echoed all the way back into the office. For Queen Avaron, all she could do was bury her face in her hands as a hot and passionate feeling burned in her tentacles. (Just pick the first option, we were going to anyway,) Abyssa demanded, her voice particularly high-pitched within the Hive Mind.
(After we consult Gwyneth and Tsugumi about it,) Prime remarked.
(What? You think they’ll vote differently?)
(No, involving them in the process is important.)
(Oh, yeah.)
Medusa yelled, (Don’t forget to pump our [MAG] attribute!)
[MAG: 3+1]
*~*
She hadn’t slept so well in such a long time. It felt …
Well, the lack of feeling anything else really was the real upside.
The absence of such little agonies that sleep used to slay, until time and age made even its comfort a long gone memory. Durelia stared up at the blue flesh and white chitin ceiling, watching the fluffy, grass-like flesh poking out between chitin slates. She’d watched it for an hour or something at least, noting how it waved in one direction or another in such smooth, careless motions.
There wasn’t any wind in the room she’d awoken inside of, so it couldn’t have been that.
What do you do? Durelia wondered. Grass did its own thing, of course, but such a thing only resembled grass. Within the world of tentacle flesh, what purpose did it serve? Tiny specks emanated off of it, almost invisible unless she truly looked for them. They wafted through the air like dust, gradually disappearing from her sight for some reason.
She deduced that it did something with the air, and possibly the moisture level.
Turning her head, Durelia regarded the fleshy ‘bed’ she laid upon, and the very same ‘grass’ growing out of it. At such a close distance, she much more easily discerned the glistening stalks and their long, tongue-like branches. A light, oily sheen covered them from base-to-tip, the white fluff coming out of their tongue-branches dressed in morning dew. She couldn’t smell anything in particular that wasn’t meat, so if they had a scent, Durelia didn’t recognize it.
I was never much for gardening, she thought amusedly, staring up at the ceiling again. Every time I tried flowers, they just died. How lucky Vivilena didn’t inherit that from me.
Thinking of her second daughter, she realized she hadn’t gone home the night before. Considering everything, the three of them were probably upset. That, more than anything else, motivated Durelia to sit up and throw her legs over the ‘bed’s’ edge. She really did want one of these for herself; finding something that could support a woman as tall and heavy as her was expensive.
Durelia also, unfortunately, needed to pee.
At least she saw something resembling a washroom off to the side.
…
With all that taken care of, Durelia entered the bedroom once more, feeling refreshed.
“Are you awake?” a voice suddenly asked, making her jump in her skin. When she looked over, the fleshy-teeth door was shut tight, but it sounded as if it spoke. She superstitiously covered her breasts and loins all the same.
“Yes? Is that you, Avaron?”
“Yup. I can’t see anything, so don’t worry. Uhh, I’m outside with breakfast, do you want to eat?”
“I rather cannot find my clothes—or I would say so, but there they are on the table. Ah, one moment, let me dress.”
“Take your time.”
Durelia fussed with yesterday’s dress, getting herself ready. A mirror would’ve been nice, but the situation hardly allowed for propriety. “Very well! You may enter.”
She’d never heard a door slurp open like that. The sound of it made her jaw ache in that same crinkling, crackly pop stretching open sometimes did. Durelia winced slightly as a disgusted shiver crept through her. Avaron stepped on through, carrying a wooden tray loaded with nicely white, clean porcelain plates, bowls, and pots. Only when she looked closer did Durelia realize the ‘porcelain’ was in fact a form of chitin not all different from Avaron’s own body.
The tentradom set the tray down on the bedroom’s only table, and went about organizing everything. “I don’t know what your exact preference is, but Tsugumi always makes great food.”
“Yes, she does.” Durelia stepped over, mindful of where she went. People always felt nervous when she stood too close to them; or troubled by trying to meet her eyes instead of her breasts. “A bit farther eastern than I am used to, but quite delicious.”
“You don’t go to Kitinchi often?”
“It and Arden, yes. My family is from the far western reaches, beyond the lands now owned by the Church,” Durelia explained. “Finding home in Artor was something of a refuge from their influence.”
“The Church? Or your family?”
“Both, but mostly my family.”
“They’re a problem, then? Oh, please sit, everything’s ready.”
Durelia did so, but she was surprised by Avaron joining her. It seemed they’d eat together, for what delightfully conspiratorial reasons that may entail. Avaron certainly had a way of moving around: her two hands worked on their own, just as much as smaller tentacles extended out from her joints. Hands grabbed plates, tentacles moved utensils, and altogether they assembled a meal before the tentradom. Noodles, eggs, strips of meat that looked possibly pork-based, an assortment of fruity cuts as a side, and some things Durelia didn’t recognize.
She, by comparison, took a bit longer to actually get her own plate ready. “Since you know what I am, I suppose I needn’t be coy. My ‘birth’ family are very traditional vampires, which means they see everyone else as food to be eaten. We fought frequently over that, and the more my parents realized I shan’t give up such ideas, the less deserving I seemed to live.”
“’Traditional’, huh, so most vampires see things that way?”
“More or less. My birth family are, let us say, more extreme, than other vampire nobles. Most are content to tend their domains and go unobserved by their neighbors. Many people would see my kind killed without question; not that I blame them for that, really.”
“Something we share in common, then,” Avaron remarked, her good humor painting over the grimness of such words. She busied herself twirling her fork in a bowl of noodles and taking a bite.
“… Indeed,” Durelia agreed, staring down at her own ensemble of choices. One of her great problems with noodles was the decidedly lacking way of eating them civilly. They were such a messy food even a good bite caused issues. Nonetheless, one benefit of being bigger was having a large mouth, after all. Despite the size of her bite, she took her time chewing as to enjoy the flavors and textures. It’d be a crime to disrespect Tsugumi’s worthy cooking otherwise.
“Incidentally,” Avaron muttered around a mouthful with an unsightly amount of skill. “Your daughters paid a visit to me last night.”
That made Durelia perk up and look over with some concern.
Avaron swallowed. “Since I wasn’t sure they’d take ‘your mom is now a priestess to my goddess’ very well, I told them you’d offered to check on something for me, and that you’d be back by the morning-ish.”
“That’d do very little to calm them,” Durelia said, “if only because it isn’t one of our secret phrases. Something we pass on to make sure none of us are in danger, you see.”
“Oh, I get it. They’re stewing in your house at the moment, so all’s well for the moment, at least.”
“I fear I will have to see them soon, then. My daughters are quite … capable.”
“Let us enjoy this breakfast while we can.”
Whether it was an order or suggestion, ultimately it meant the same thing. Durelia nodded, and for a time, the two of them ate in amicable silence. It afforded her the opportunity to study Avaron’s mannerisms in a way she hadn’t yet. How one ate told a lot about a person, though just as easily misled someone to certain assumptions. That Avaron used utensils in specific, purposeful ways, didn’t take too much food, ate with proper-sized bites, and a certain methodical manner to her motions foretold she’d practiced for fine dining.
What sort of dining depended, since every culture had their own slight variations. Kitinchi considered slurping noodles to be a sign of appreciation, whereas in Artor they’d be laughed at.
A small thing to take note of, perhaps, but one piece among many others Durelia tried putting together where ‘Avaron’ was concerned. “I can sense there’s something troubling you,” she remarked, setting her utensils down in favor of drinking some water.
“Always is.” Avaron sighed, arranged some meat before taking a bite, then said, “I worry for you, mostly.”
“Why so?”
“… Goddesses make me uncomfortable,” she said with a particular care and slowness to her words; contemplative, almost, or perhaps someone at a loss. “Beings who have more power than any of us ever will, who can do things we cannot really control or stop. A noble does me wrong, I can drive a sword through them. A goddess does me wrong, and I might never be able to do anything about it.”
“Would you not find a goddess to avenge your wrong?”
“If they would or could, but there I am, still owing a goddess something.”
Durelia furrowed her brows. “I can understand the issue, though I find it strange coming from a [Divine Heroine].”
Avaron smiled then, but it was a polite face that her eyes didn’t match. Durelia knew such a look well; from herself and others alike over the centuries. The face of someone wearing a mask that contained a deep, seething hatred. Her motions changed ever so slightly; a conscious, controlled set of movements that bordered on the unnatural. “I was kidnapped from my world to serve a power I can never escape from. I am to serve whether I want to or not, and I have no ability to ever change that. Perhaps my problem has become more apparent.”
There were many ways to take such words, and though a chill ran through Durelia’s veins, age and refined practice served her well in keeping composure. “Is Goddess Nex so terrible, then?” she asked, finding it difficult to grasp for some reason.
Avaron shook her head. “No, she’s just a goddess of this world. Honestly, aside from being stupidly outdated in her thinking, she’s fine.”
Durelia couldn’t stop her confused look anymore. “I don’t understand how you are in such a terrible arrangement, then?”
“Nex is my patron; the one who let me into this world and granted divine power. My boss is something there aren’t even words to describe, let alone understand.” Avaron shrugged, smiling like everything was funny. “Let’s just say I have a very bad opinion of the whole ‘supernatural beings’ thing. You’ll end up on a better deal than I ever will, so there’s that.”
She had so much to unpack from just learning that. Durelia merely nodded, her mind spinning a little bit.
“Anyway, now that I’ve ruined the mood,” Avaron said, waving her hand. Her face changed back then, perhaps even more disturbing in how natural she looked. That, more than her other expression, felt incredibly fake to Durelia. “I have no idea what Nex plans for you. Assuming it’s not something awful, I’ll do what I can to support you. You and I are on the same side now, after all.”
“… I appreciate your kindness, Queen Avaron,” Durelia said with utmost decorum. “Even if I’m not sure of what I’ll be doing exactly.”
“Unless Nex has something better, there is a shrine I tried building to her, but it’s not very well made. If you can help with that, it’d probably get things started.”
“Oh, yes, a shrine would be a good idea. I will come see you about it this afternoon, then.”
“Alright.”
They finished their breakfast in silence, the normalcy of such business pushing back what Durelia heard before. Still, those words lingered on her mind all the same.
*~*~*
Codex:
[Name: Avaron] [Age: ???] [Species: Tentradom] [Sex: Hermaphrodite]
[Height: 5’05] [Weight: Lithe] [Breast Size: B-Cup] [Hip Ratio: Curvy] [Ass: Cute]
[Job: Divine Heroine] [Level: 8] [EXP to Level: 7,500]
[HP: 1,500+375] [MP: 15+4] [SP: 1,500+375] [STR: 10+3] [VIT: 15+4] [RES: 13+4] [MAG: 3+1] [REC: 99+25]
Abilities: [Hive Queen Lv2] [Genetic Engineering] [Rapacious Breeder Lv2] [Mating Pheromones Lv2] [Divine Nectar] [Adaptive Physique]
Unique: [Sovereign Power: Hive Vassalage lv2]
Skills: [Primal Infusion] [Divine Blessing: Unity] [Divine Regeneration] [Forest God’s Knowledge: Botany (Special)] [Hive Mind lv3] [Swarm Coordination] [Pain Resistance] [Feral Fighter]
Chapter 71: Privy Council
Chapter Text
That which whispers closest to our ear is first in our mind.
*~*
The closer to Eden Medusa came, the more she recognized the terrain features: particular hills, the way the river bent one way then another, and even select pockets of trees and other growths. For a place that once was a random hole in the middle of nowhere, her intimate familiarity with it proved … annoying. A sense of growing used to the life she’d ended up in, despite not wanting to at all.
Riding on the same elk as General Bladedance as ever, Avaron eventually said, “Looks like my stop is coming up.”
“Your what?” he asked.
“Where I can get off and head back to my Hive. You’re all going to the Alva Forest, right?”
“Ah, yes. My apologies, I was considering some things.”
“The burden of being in charge.”
“Something you understand, I’m sure.”
“All too well and worse, since becoming a queen and all that.”
Bladedance chuckled. “Quite. Where may I leave you off, then?”
“The dirt road there will do. I built out a bunch of them from Eden to serve as guides to the town proper.”
The elvetahn army proper continued their march on, heading on some path over the bumpy, natural terrain without much issue. Bladedance and his escort, alongside the few remaining drones Avaron left with, diverted from the main column. Avaron stared at the dirt road itself for a moment, squinting. Though once smooth and serviceable, it’d turned bumpy, pocketed, and small plants grew in unwanted places.
Right, road maintenance. That’s a thing. Time to find magic gravel or something.
When the time came, Avaron scooted off the elk, landing with a thump. She patted herself, knocking off loose fur as much as straightening her elvetahn clothes out. The thin yet paradoxically insulating fabric really was quite the novelty. For as simple it seemed, it had advantages over even Earth’s abilities. Her few drones walked around, taking up their own rank and file in Eden’s direction.
Bladedance regarded them for a long moment, then stared down at her. “Again, I must say, I am grateful for your help in the war. One battle among many it may be, but any battle we can walk away from alive and sane is something to be celebrated. The soldiers who witnessed your drones’ sacrifices commended their ferocity, and utmost commitment to fight to the death.”
“I am grateful for that, though I feel it would be dishonest of me to treat their deaths as equivalent to a person’s,” Avaron said, the same conflicted feelings still remaining. “It’d be disrespectful of those who actually die.”
Bladedance’s expression changed from thoughtful to concerned, then back again. He eventually gave a slow, agreeing nod. “True. They are nonetheless a ‘part’ of you, are they not?”
“They are.”
“Then, assumedly, all the struggle, fighting, fear, and pain are, too?”
“… To an extent.”
“And, as I understand, there are mothers yet needed to birth such ‘drones’ in the first place?”
“Sure.” Avaron wouldn’t let out her little method of ‘cloning’, if it could even be called that.
Bladedance hummed in acknowledgement, looking off into the distance toward the Alva Forest. “On the occasion, we elvetahn use war beasts of varying breeds and purposes. They are not people, but they are alive, and their deaths always entail a certain loss. The potential of their lives, the herders who took care of them, the mere idea of them in service to us, the time and energy spent caring for them … There is always something lost, even if we are not so directly pained by it.”
He regarded her once more. “You are both survivor and killed; you live, burdened by the experience of fighting to survive, but dying. I cannot imagine it myself, but I know war, and the struggles it entails. It will take its toll upon you one day, Queen Avaron, as it does us all who live by the blade. Perhaps, in that way, our respect to your sacrifices may make sense.”
After a moment’s considering, Avaron nodded. “I know enough to respect your wisdom, if not how to fully understand it yet.”
“I dearly hope you never fully understand it; such is the burden of those who do. There is but one thing I can offer advice on, if you wish.”
“I won’t turn you down on it.”
“Don’t be alone. No matter how great a warrior one is, being alone is the hardest battle of all,” he said, a seriousness and sense of age to his words. “Find those you can open your heart to, and confide in them dearly. They may not understand the struggles of war, nor should they, for their company is enough.”
I wonder how much awareness cultures of his level have of PTSD? Avaron mused for a moment, but nonetheless bowed graciously. “I shall keep your words in mind. Thank you for them, and hopefully the next time we meet, I have something enjoyable to offer for a drink.”
“You’re welcome,” Bladedance said, giving her a half-bow in return. He straightened up, his solemn air vanishing in an instant. “I don’t prefer alcohol, it’s a terrible poison. I admit some curiosity about the sorts of drinks another world may have imagined, though.”
“Mmm, there’s a few I can think of, but finding the ingredients will be tricky. You’ll be first on my mind if I actually make them.”
“I shall look forward to that day. Hopefully we meet again only for drinks, but the war ever continues onward.”
“Until next time then, General Bladedance. Oh, and associated guards. You all can come for a drink too.”
Bladedance laughed as his personal guards seemed taken aback. Avaron didn’t know them by name—most elvetahn kept to themselves, seeing her as an outsider of varying degrees. They weren’t rude, but they weren’t warmly open, either. She didn’t mind, either way. Their groups parted ways, and so Medusa began the walk back to Eden. Her drones ambled around her, walking in near-perfect synch despite their different physiologies.
She looked up at the sky, aimlessly watching the clouds. Despite the daytime brightness, one of the moons was visible in the distance. Some twinkling lights between it and the sky betrayed some of the rocks floating around in orbit. They weren’t enough to be a proper ring like Saturn’s, and most of the time she couldn’t really see them. Sometimes they showed up at night, sometimes at day like right then, but they were always just a bit odd.
It made for a good distraction, at least.
I want to be really arrogant and say something like ‘yeah that’ll never happen to me!’ Medusa thought, cracking a wry smile. I know better. We all know better. The question isn’t really ‘if’ it will happen, but ‘how badly’.
In the sense of time, she wasn’t that far removed from her first drones fighting some random kagr and a drone dying for the first time. As much of a baby’s first bicycle at combat as that was, all the pains and harsh realities of conflict set in quickly. Then came the Church and their problems, and the very real people she killed. Laemenda and the Nagraki there were simply the largest, most war-like engagement she’d committed to yet.
If I have bombers, will I care about who I bomb? If I have artillery, will it matter how much I shell the enemy? Medusa wondered. Swords bring me in distance to see the whites of their eyes as they die. True modern weapons mean I may never have to even see what species they are. What does any of that matter against freaks of nature like Efval and that highborn?
She scowled.
How do I kill goddesses?
There was never any option to consider otherwise; she simply had to, in some form or another.
Even if I do kill them, what’s to stop them from coming back? Nex is sitting around in the afterlife and then decides she’ll come back at some point … Can they just do that, or is she special? Did she even actually die in the first place, or just go through some stupid door?
She could kill planets; that was easy. Understandable, even. Just build a big enough bomb or throw an asteroid fast enough and the planet would be done for. Would such awesome scales of power even remotely affect goddesses like Haska or Nyoom? Or did they have some special rule or clause that had to be fulfilled?
I need to escalate the war effort something serious. Bigger hive, more drones, more weapons, more knowledge, more everything. A complete and utter clusterfuck of demands, considerations, and problems she had to balance, or everything would fall apart. Nothing new at all on her list of problems to deal with, only the context in which they existed had changed. Or, at least, she got some more perspective on it all.
Avaron scratched her head irritably. Look at all these problems coming home to roost and—
A tiny red bug flew in front of her face, making Avaron stop for a moment. She squinted at the sight, puzzled. “What the fuck? There’s lady bugs in this world too? Oh, you know, that’s a question actually. Did this planet have a bunch of convergent evolution or did that come from Earth too?”
The lady bug did not answer, and merely flew away.
I’m talking to bugs. I need a vacation already.
*~*
Life changed her in all sorts of ways, and Tsugumi took pride in her adaptability.
When she first left to join a heroine’s party, a much younger her had been enamored by the ideas of adventuring. Brave the unknown, defeat horrible evils or rampaging beasts, get incredible loot, earn the favor of people and the goddesses … there were a lot of things all wrapped up in that idea. She may or may not have favored the side-benefit of all the beautiful women she’d run across in need of a tora’s particular expertise.
The latter one eventually bit her ass off when she got locked out of time in her own family’s inn.
Solitude was the one thing she couldn’t overcome. The slow, creeping stillness of an unchanging world as the inn broke down little by little, decade by decade. The madness of shouting but nothing echoed back except her own voice. At some point she certainly went insane, though Tsugumi wasn’t sure how she got out of that drooling, twitching mess of a person.
The few times others crossed the inn’s path and dared to enter might have been the only thing that truly kept her alive. A vague, ill-defined hope that someone could break the curse trapping her in there. She couldn’t have gotten out any other way, no matter how she tried. Some promised to find a solution, most simply stayed the night then got on their way. That hope, too, dwindled away as the years dragged on by.
She still felt it; even after being freed and finding a love that made her head spin like a top, those horrible feelings never left Tsugumi.
A painful pinch on her nipple made her jerk slightly and look downward. The immature tentacleling gurgled, readjusting its lips on her breast as burp broke out. At least the one on her other tit had manners; it suckled at a simple, consistent speed compared to its sister. She, nonetheless, cradled them both with her upper arms, supporting their squishy, flesh-like chitin and squirmy bodies.
They were such cute things she couldn’t stare too long without wanting to mess with them.
Instead, Tsugumi wove silk between her lower hands, turning raw material into more serviceable fabric. It wasn’t the fastest way, but it was something to occupy her hands and part of her mind. One of the few things she could lose herself within, only to wake up hours or days later once her stamina finally ran out. She’d made so many things when she’d been trapped, and burned them all to keep herself warm in the winters.
Repetition, of course, did not lead one to supreme skill, but it certainly helped.
Mother, I am not sure my pregnancies make me as moody as you, Tsugumi mused, most of her eyes staring up at the tentacle flesh-grass ceiling. But, I find myself growing awfully wistful.
She wasn’t dissatisfied, per say, but youth brought shortsightedness and eager energy Tsugumi found hard to muster up again. Everything these days took planning, careful consideration, and maneuvering in ways she knew would leave her safe. A deep-seated fear she’d never had before, though she knew all too well why it haunted her.
It helped Avaron was so dumbly reasonable all the time.
Despite everything she had at her fingertips, the tentradom moved at an even more insanely cautious, paranoid pace. She built plans for things that wouldn’t even happen, positioned herself for the greatest advantages imaginable, and kept pushing for strength constantly. Yet, at the same time, she did it in a way that carried consideration Tsugumi rarely saw even in the most respectable leaders.
Definitely different from the last [Divine Heroine] she journeyed with.
Still, the irony of being caught up with another one of them hadn’t been lost on her.
She gave up on adventuring when it became clear she just lacked the skill to keep pace. Cleverness only went so far before raw strength and magic power were the only requirements to meet. It’d been a bitter medicine, but one that happened all the same.
Now I have a wife who levels me up by fucking me. And knocking me up. And making me eat that deliciously thick cum of hers constantly and … Tsugumi sighed, every ridiculous part of it unbearable when she thought on it too much. The worst part was all the years of danger she’d endured to level up in the first place. Starving nights, harrowing moments between life and death, agony-filled weeks of training, failing, and training more. Spreading her legs and getting ravished let her leap past all that from the comfort of a bed.
It aggravated her.
Infuriated her, even.
It made everything she’d achieved seem completely pointless when it was that easy.
Of course, levels weren’t everything, but being rich and powerful from the start was a far cry from scraping up every copper piece just to buy cloth for armor.
Two synchronized pops sounded as the baby tentaclelings freed themselves and started squirming around. Knowing they were full, Tsugumi got up from her flesh-chair and headed over to the nursery pen. The waist-high chitin wall surrounded a large, spaciously flat area filled with other baby tentaclelings. Some ambled around, learning how to use their limbs, while others slept in awkward messes. The two she set down quickly huddled to join the others, then flopped over and started snoozing in an instant. Most of the time after a feeding they were sleepy little things, so that part seemed normal.
What would they become wasn’t the normal part.
As her babies grew, eventually their little, cute mannerisms faded away. They became stoic, purposeful creatures that worked and worked and worked. If she hadn’t known better, she’d believed it just a normal tentacleling thing to do. Knowing that it was the [Hive Mind] gradually asserting itself inside them, taking them over, making them a part of it; that they became Avaron, in body if not mind, made it much harder.
In a sense, she was giving birth to more of her wife.
That messed up thought had been stuck in her mind since forever.
Tsugumi didn’t even know where to start with it, but it remained there all the same.
The troubling part was how much it didn’t bother her until she sat down and thought on it. Going with the flow, letting things happen, doing her own work in it all; easy, purposeful, and without a problem. Do I worry because it’s nothing, or because it’s something I can’t name? she wondered, though there are few people to ask about it.
Avaron would have an answer, of course. Gwyneth was … content. The Flame Priestess was one beholden to the whims of her goddess, and always lived under such pretenses. Raina—the mere thought of asking that woman made Tsugumi smirk even when she knew she shouldn’t have. There were people to ask, but she doubted if any of them would give satisfactory answers.
Perhaps, in the end, the only answer that mattered was the one she could live with.
Finding the confidence for that proved troublesome.
Some time later, she heard the fleshy door to the nursery slurp open. Avaron herself, distractingly naked and fluffy, walked in carrying a tray. Tsugumi, half-way into trying to create some kind of tentacleling-fitting shirt, paused, then squinted her six eyes. She demanded, “Who let you into my kitchen?”
Avaron stumbled from the sharp words, but didn’t drop anything. “Hey now, I have my own kitchen I can wreck.”
“Uh-huh.”
If there was one thing Tsugumi hated, it was her kitchenware getting destroyed. Avaron’s unbelievably terrible cooking made it more than clear she couldn’t be let anywhere near an open flame. With such experience, she regarded the tray of food coming toward her with some suspicion. The fact it even looked normal only deepened her suspicion. Avaron set the tray down on the small table beside Tsugumi, mindfully not disturbing the various silken wares she’d made.
“Is that bacon?” Tsugumi inquired.
“Yup. First batch. Townsfolk knew how to make it so I left that part to them.”
They sure were nice, cooked strips of bacon; a bit thick, and seasoned by pepper and salt flakes. Tsugumi plucked one up, taking note of its crisp crust, cooked-through qualities, the fat-to-meat balance, and other things a chef of her standing should know. At the least it didn’t look dangerous considering Avaron of all people cooked it. She took a bite, and the rush of flavor immediately jolted through her.
“Mm!” she hummed, covering her mouth to stop an indecent sound from coming out. Bacon was one of those easy-to-mess-up foods, even in its simplest form. While it was a little too burned for her tastes, it worked well enough.
“Why are you looking at me so suspiciously?” Avaron asked dryly. “I can cook, you know. No, stop squinting like that.”
Tsugumi kept squinting even as she snuck another piece of bacon into her mouth. Two of her eyes, however, glanced down at the tray. Aside from the bacon, there were white, puffy balls with pleated edges. “Are those dumplings?” she asked suspiciously.
“Uhh, kind of. It’s bao.”
“Bao?”
“Chinese food I ate a lot back in college. It took a while to figure out how to recreate it, but it’s still not as authentic as I’d like.” Avaron rubbed her neck while she rolled her head. “I dunno if my tastes changed or magic screws with the flavor or whatever … anyway, it does taste good.”
Intrigue more than playful wariness motivated Tsugumi to sit up and regard the new food. She took one into her hands, feeling along its firm yet soft exterior. “Hmm. Steamed?”
“Yeah.”
“The dough holds well. Good texture. What kind of filling?”
“Beef, onions, spices for flavor, and a vegetable that might be cabbage. I want to put a little cheese in it but there isn’t any in Eden at the moment.”
Without further waiting, Tsugumi took a large, tentative bite. The softness of the bao complimented the gushing flavor of its warm innards, creating a pleasant harmony. It was similar and dissimilar to her own dumplings, though she felt its relatively dry and stable nature had distinct advantages. After swallowing, she said, “These would be good to store for short term trips or expeditions, maybe. Dumplings can fall apart easily.”
“Yeah. There’s a version where you fry the bottom and get this nice crust, but I can’t figure that out.”
Tsugumi squinted thoughtfully. “A crust means oil but maintaining this fluffiness without steaming is … tricky. I’d have to try it myself to really know.”
“Mm.”
The first bao finished with incredible speed, and Tsugumi already began the next. “It’s good, though.”
“At least there’s something you’ll eat,” Avaron remarked airily, taking up the other seat on the other side of the table. “Even I think it’s a little weird just, uh …”
“Fucking my face and pumping me full of cum?”
“… Yeah.” Avaron smiled and scratched her cheek, her antennae bouncing up and down on their own. “Getting used to something purely sexual being useful for … food.”
“Shouldn’t I be the one saying something about that?” Tsugumi remarked, going for another slice of bacon. “I’m the one you’re stuffing full.”
“Is it stuffing if I’m grappled by your four arms and sucked dry like a vacuum cleaner?”
“A what?”
“Let’s say great and powerful suction that’ll pull my tenty right out of my body.”
Tsugumi sniffed daintily. “How rude. I treat her with utmost care and respect.”
“What about me??”
“I suppose you get to enjoy it as a side effect.”
“Pffbfbfb—“ Avaron deflated in her chair, taking a bao with her and eating it grumpily.
An amicable quiet arose, if for a time.
“Thank you for this,” Tsugumi said simply. The food might’ve been a bit rich but it had a heartiness to it that brought contentment.
“Sure. You usually seem down at times like this, so I figured trying to make something might help.”
Tsugumi blinked. “I’m not ‘down’. Why do I seem like it?”
“Something’s bothering you, just don’t know if I should ask about it or not.” Avaron waved a piece of bacon around flippantly. “I dunno, like breastfeeding the tentaclelings isn’t what you want to do or something.”
They were simple words, but they made Tsugumi pause all the same. How much of it was something she wore on her face, or just Avaron trying to intuit, proved hard to figure out. She knew that, nonetheless, clarity would be important or misunderstandings would spiral out of control. “It’s nothing bad. Times like this merely give me a chance to ponder my life. There’s simply a lot to … think, about.”
“Alright. Is there anything I can help with? Or just listen about, I guess.”
She still wasn’t used to such frank offers, though Tsugumi nonetheless appreciated them. Most, in her experience, busied with dancing around the subject to see how much of a problem was truly there. Avaron jumped ass first and worked her way back out again. She eventually shook her head slowly. “No, they’re … hm. I don’t really know what to say in the first place. Maybe there’s nothing worth saying about it.”
“Writing it out can help sometimes. Usually when I couldn’t find where to start, that worked for me.”
“Maybe.” Tsugumi didn’t feel convinced about it at all, but it’d be something to think about later. A larger part of her felt more uneasy about not really having anything to do with Avaron about it. A mixture of receiving help and not being grateful about it combined with a sense of disquiet about problems she wasn’t even sure were problems. “It’s—hmm. I suppose a part of me wants to be an adventurer again, but I question how much I’m looking at that through a booze cup.”
“A booze cup?”
“Remembering it better than it actually was.”
“Oh, rose-tinted glasses,” Avaron said with yet another strange idiom. “Yeah, that makes sense. I don’t know much about adventurers in this world, so what about it do you like?”
Tsugumi sat back in her chair and stared at the ceiling. “The planning, figuring out what the job needs or what we’ll do, getting everything we need, heading out or preparing to actually work on the quest ... The fighting was always the most exciting part. Fast moments between life or death, outwitting my enemies, and always improving on my technique.”
“I’m sensing a ‘but’ there.”
“Those are the crowning moments of being an adventurer. Most of it is just walking around, haggling prices, finding somewhere to sleep, arguing contract with the guild, getting stiffed by the guild later, worrying about food, wondering if that queasiness in your gut from that suspicious food will be a problem, having to spend hours on night watch worrying about what’s in the dark, the constant fear of what you find may just be a bit too much to handle …” Tsugumi counted off one by one, eventually reaching over two dozen different stressful problems she routinely had to deal with. She let out a long, suffering sigh.
“The question becomes if those crowning moments are worth all the stress of everything else?” Avaron offered, surprisingly on the mark.
“Mhm.”
“Well, I can harp about my perspective if you want?”
“Go on.”
“I—alright, stop me if I stop making sense. So, the way I see it, adventurers combine a lot of different jobs together: explorers, treasure seekers, big game huntresses, and whatever else. Basically anything that nobles or guilds themselves don’t directly control and run, yes?”
“Yes, mostly.”
“Okay, but most people don’t like the whole ‘ride or die’ being an adventurer entails. No matter how you’re gonna cut it, most are in it to get rich and get out before they get killed or worse, yes?”
Succinct summation really did strip out the glamor of the lifestyle. Tsugumi begrudgingly nodded. “Most I met wanted just enough money to get into different work. Guard duty was popular; real experience in fighting is different than training them up.”
“Yeah. The winning move here might be to take the idea of the adventurer, but give it real backbone and support. A dedicated job with guaranteed pay, benefits, education, and stuff like that,” Avaron said.
Tsugumi frowned slightly. “That’s normally official employment in an adventuring guild, if you can manage to join one.”
“Sure, but this is government-backed adventuring. Official oversight and support so that everyone who adventures has a lot more to work with than whatever they can scrounge up. Take an … uhh, expedition, for example. Some ancient ruins or whatever. A whole support group of cooks, cleaners, camp-site guards, and the like can go out and setup a home base the adventurers’ can rely upon.”
Reduce or remove the burdens to focus on the crowning moments, huh? Tsugumi considered it for a moment. “It’s not anything new or different, though?”
“It doesn’t have to be. Sometimes just doing what’s already done, but better, is all you need,” Avaron pointed out. “Exploring the unknown and confronting unusual dangers is a very useful profession in a world like this. It’s something I’ll want to develop and support, but do you want to be in charge of something like that?”
“Me?” Tsugumi asked, tilting her head.
“Sure. Head of Eden’s Adventurer’s Guild, Tsugumi Silkweave. You have the experience of doing it, so you’ll know what adventurers’ will need and want. I can handle all the logistics and paperwork, at least until I can hire some people to do it.”
The offer was a lot to take in, but she didn’t immediately hate the idea. It was, ultimately, different, and in a way Tsugumi wasn’t sure she wanted to be. “I’ll consider it. Being the head means doing a lot of work that isn’t adventuring,” she quipped dryly. “But … ah. I want to see Kitinchi again.”
Avaron, finishing eating, drank some water from the jug and cleaned herself up with a cloth. “We can do that, then. At the least I need to go there and see what Honda is trying to sell to me. Unless you want to sit in boring diplomacy talks?”
Tsugumi chuckled. “No, but I need to see him again, too. There’s a lot to catch up on.”
“Let’s make a trip of it. We could try for this summer or next spring, I’m not really comfortable going out in the winter.”
“It isn’t wise. Next spring might be for the best. There’s a lot we both have to do here in the summer.”
“Oh? Like what?” Avaron asked, tilting her head.
Tsugumi’s brow jumped upward as she stared amusedly at her wife. “What always happens to some innocent maiden trapped in a beast’s den.”
Avaron’s antennae stilled, then started bobbing up and down. “Oh. Well,” she said, her blush blooming in a wave across her face. “If you don’t mind.”
“When have I ever said no?”
“Listen, I’m just checking.”
I need to work on her aggressiveness, Tsugumi considered. Avaron was sweet, but she could afford to be a little more … primal.
*~*
The sun was shining, the skies were clear, and a breeze swept away most of the heat. It might’ve been the closest thing to pleasant she’d experienced for weeks, but Cecile wouldn’t complain. Maybe spending so long off the mountains affected her because the heat wasn’t as oppressive as it used to be. A comfortable, if unsettling, detail in itself. Dorgians like her lived in cold lands where snow and frost was the norm, not green grass and flowers.
Dressed in a grayed, cloth combat bra and training pants, Cecile grew used to being practically naked as well. Heavy, insulating clothes were the norm, even for those who fought, for the cold was an insidious and always present danger. In a warmer land, heat didn’t flee nearly as easily, and her normal clothes became a sweltering prison instead.
The Divine Heroines dressed in the same simplistic clothing as her, so at least near-nakedness seemed normal. Together, they trained, and continued to train, and train some more. Princess Arzha’s Snowflake Knights oversaw their schedule and routine, imparting their practical experiences through very direct methods.
Cecile looked behind, taking stock of the heroines. Like usual, she led far in the front, taking long strides as her great height allowed for. Speed and endurance, once an issue that left even her winded, wore away under months of grueling repetition and aching limbs. She hadn’t expected it to do anything; dorgians were just more powerful than other peoples. The Snowflake Knights took that as a challenge to see where her real limits were.
Hers, and the heroines.
They’re starting to keep up, she mused.
The ‘training track’ was a long, oval-shaped ring not far from Tsugumi’s inn. A simple chitin hut near one end contained all their equipment and other belongings used for training and practice. Their trainers, today’s being Haleen and Elseh, stood under a gazebo that shielded them from the sun. Dressed in their own cotton shirts and leather vests, they carried a stern air as they watched. Not that there was ever anything else about them; they were … hardy.
Cecile kept her eyes forward as she began rounding the end of the track.
“That’s enough!” Haleen’s stern voice called out, loud enough it could be heard a mile away probably. At the order, Cecile instead pivoted toward the gazebo, diligently arriving before the two knights. The heroines took a minute to line up next to her, each of them panting and sweating. Eberhard and Chul-soo were in the best condition by far. “Half a year and you’re already hitting the track this well. Divine heroines really do have it easy.”
Amelia panted out, “What—what part of this is easy?”
“A person from this world would’ve broken their bones with the weight you are under,” Haleen remarked, not an ounce with being impressed. “Go ahead and dispel it, Elseh.”
The other knight waved her hand, a colorless ripple vibrating in the air. In the next instant, the invisible weight bearing down on Cecile vanished. The ground underneath her clawed feet eased, and she didn’t feel like she’d fall through the dirt nearly as much. She lifted one leg then the other, stretching them a bit. Her joints didn’t hurt nearly as much anymore carrying all that magic-induced weight.
The heroines let out sighs of relief, each of them stretching as well. Amelia and Katsumi collapsed onto the ground instead, falling over backwards.
“You’ll have thirty minutes of rest, then we’ll move onto practicals,” Haleen declared, clapping her hands. She took Elseh aside, heading off to the equipment hut.
The heroines hurried to the benches beneath the gazebo, collapsing upon them with gleeful abandon. Cecile followed after at a more measured pace and sat down on the end of one bench. It was, like most everything, just a bit too small, but she made do. Chul-soo went around handing out cloths they could wipe their sweat away with.
“Train, train, train,” Amelia griped, sitting on the packed dirt ground. “All we do is fucking train!”
Katsumi interjected, “It isn’t so bad, Amelia-chan.”
“Are you kidding me? This world is the worst! No internet, no music, no decent food, no clothes that don’t FUCKING ITCH!” Amelia growled, scratching at her side again. “No AC, either. It sucks. Fuck this place. Aren’t we supposed to adventure around and get rich digging through old crappy places or something?”
Amir said, “Fighting monsters, looting dungeons, getting crazy levels! Yeah, that’s how it usually goes in the stories.”
Hoshi laughed in that punctual way of his; it kinda sounded forced sometimes to Cecile. “There’s always a page about the training arcs, Amiru-san! Or a few, and then it says ‘a few months later’!”
It never stopped feeling weird to Cecile how she heard and understood what they said, but never actually figured out the meaning. Ordinarily she tried to push it out of mind, but something intrigued her then. “Are divine heroines common on your world?” she asked curiously.
The other six looked amongst themselves before shrugging and shaking their heads. “No,” Eberhard said, “there’s books and TV shows about it, but it’s all made up nonsense. Just stories, or at least, it should’ve been.”
“But, stories come from somewhere? How can they be nonsense?”
“Fictional stories are just made up ones. Imagined. Someone, somewhere, thought up the idea of going to another world.” He frowned, staring up at the gazebo’s ceiling. “I wonder how much it was imagined now.”
Chul-soo said, “That would imply people returned home afterward, and we don’t know if we can.”
That brought a somber air that soon depressed the heroines. Cecile asked, “Is there no way for you to return?”
Amelia blew a raspberry, then started that ‘talking with her hands’ thing she did when mocking someone. “’The Heroine Summoning is a special ritual of great power and destiny, calling heroines to aide our world. I shan’t know of a way to return, sadly, but I have heard of those who managed’, or some shit like that. The Church is evil, so lying to us to keep us in line totally fits them.”
“… I spoke briefly with Nuala,” Eberhard said, drawing everyone’s attention. “According to her ancient knowledge, she’d never heard of divine heroines returning to Earth. Some did leave this world, but she had no idea if they were ever successful. It is, quote, “easier to be drawn toward something than to go there yourself”.”
“So we’re fucked then, is what you’re saying.”
“It will not be easy, if it is at all possible,” he remarked, turning his nose up. “Much like everything else in life.”
Cecile understood, perhaps not as daunting as them, but in her own way. Her gaze drifted in the direction of the Silvervein Mountains where her home, or what remained of it, awaited. A place she couldn’t return to; no, perhaps even if she did, it wouldn’t be home as she wished it to be. The longer she’d been gone, the more she realized how much Avaron wasn’t the problem. A problem, sure; she still hated her.
But, she hated knowing how things were different even more.
Katsumi asked, “Is something wrong, Cecile-chan?”
Jumping a little, Cecile looked over and found all the heroines regarding her. Scratching the back of her head and trying not to blush, she said, “No, nothing’s wrong. I just understand your frustrations, is all.”
Amelia cut in, “Oh, you were kidnapped across worlds too?”
“… I was kidnapped, yes. Even if my home was once in this world, it is not there anymore.” She smiled politely at the wilting Amelia. “I understand wanting to go home, but knowing there may not be a home to go back to. Or ever reach again. It is a terrible thing.”
Some of the heroines nodded, but Amelia simply looked away in that huffy indifference she liked to do. Cecile didn’t blame her, but Amelia’s mouth ran faster than she could catch it a lot of the time.
“Perhaps,” Chul-soo said, “fate or fortune favoring us, we will find our homes once again.”
“I can only hope so.”
When break time was over, she joined the other heroines in their ‘practicals’, which mean doing exercises and movements meant for combat. The Knights, veterans of war and killing, always beat the color out of them. Still, Cecile trained with the same quietude of focus that got her through countless long, lonely winters.
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Chapter 72: Expansion
Chapter Text
That which is not claimed can yet be taken.
*~*
In the weeks since Laemenda, and Medusa’s return, Avaron took note of some things. The [skill] [Swarm Coordination] did far more for her management of the Hive than she’d given it credit for. Or maybe her own practice and fighting the Nagraki pushed her over some hurdle she hadn’t realized was there. It might’ve been some combination of the two, she still had trouble figuring out which part was ‘innate’ and which ‘came from the System’.
They might be both the same thing and she was just the weirdo trying to make a distinction.
Her control and embodiment throughout her drones improved dramatically, letting them work efficiently with less direct oversight. It wasn’t quite leaning onto the cobbled-together instincts she’d tried wiring into them. She felt like her ability to set and automate their behavior was the main improvement; subconsciously commanding them. The instant she freed up the bandwidth from her current burden, Avaron went about maxing it out again as soon as possible.
The major problem, of course, was for how great her ‘software’ became, the hardware limited what she could do. She needed more drones with better physiological makeups. For whatever attempts her tests and experiments might yield, the fact remained they simply needed time to proof out. There was an alternative method always staring at her in the face and she’d been reluctant to really invoke it.
Maybe it wasn’t a big deal.
Maybe it’d be her Rubicon moment.
Maybe she wouldn’t have a choice in the end, no matter how she postured.
As the various core intelligences worked, Avaron as a whole gathered information. Arzha’s report on the ‘tentshroom’ had been surprising, for they were not of her Hive, but they were tentacle-kin of a sort. She still wasn’t sure if they should be destroyed. The tentshrooms, at least, provided a new type of crop that grew in areas traditional crops didn’t suffice. A number of herbalists were quite eager to cultivate them, so they took residence in a specially-made reservation. If those tests panned out, it would bolster Eden’s food production.
A compliment to the stranger issues surrounding milk production.
As she’d expected, the citizenry became rather relieved by the changes. Women, in particular, turned from worrying over milking themselves like cattle to protecting their ‘bosomy fruits’. One key thing Avaron overlooked, however, was the nature of ‘+5 to all attributes’. Many who had little to no magical power suddenly gained access to a baseline of magic potential they’d never have otherwise. It didn’t result in immediate spell casting usually, but some who knew small forms of magic like [Light] did it far more easily.
(There has to be some way to genetically pass on magic,) Aphora remarked upon review of the subject. (If not [skills] or spell knowledge then some kind of [ability], right?)
(In theory it’s possible, but how the fuck are we going to figure out which DNA strands have it?) Iris retorted. (I mean, aside from the obvious ‘breed someone magical until we get magic offspring’.)
(… Are we not going to?)
(Are we having the moral debate of just wanting to use someone for breeding again?)
Aegis interjected dryly, (You know we can just pay a prostitute or something, right?)
(Is a single one of us going to fuck her even if we did?) Iris asked, to which none of them answered. (Okay, I’m the one full of theoreticals here, and even I know that’s bullshit. Seriously, a tentacle monster that needs to feel love to fuck is just depressing.)
Prime intervened, saying, (Let’s put it aside, then, and just continue to monitor.)
And monitor they did.
Every tentacleling saw and heard everything in Eden. Each one fulfilled camera and microphone at once, feeding thousands of data streams into the [Hive Mind]. Most of it, of course, was largely the nonsense of daily lives, social interactions, and other things that formed the fabric of society. That did have value in tracking who knew who, how well, and what sort of engagements went on. Avaron, though, struggled to maintain such granular information and the ephemeral web it existed within.
So, as a stop-gap, she selected for more precise information and discarded the rest.
It let her follow trends and sentiments within the populace, such as the women’s reactions or the men’s growing concerns. The latter felt increasingly ill-at-ease, especially as the newest level in [Sovereign Power] amplified women so much. For some of the monja, women being stronger was a natural outcome, and so they weren’t bothered. Humans, in particular, were unsettled by once ‘feeble’ women not only competing with them in physical prowess, but sometimes exceeding them.
Avaron wasn’t sure how to reconcile that, particularly if the very make up of her own being conspired in that same favoritism. The possibility of men becoming second or third-class citizens purely by the nature of her [Sovereign Power] seemed tangibly real. On the other hand, even if the Hive amplified women, it didn’t mean men lost by default. It simply shifted the baseline starting point; in theory, any one could reach the heights of power.
Having an advantage when starting would certainly make a huge difference. Cultures would change, one way or another.
It wouldn’t hurt to check on something, though.
Avaron, embodied through Prime, headed down from the top level of her Hive’s entrance. The stairs, renovated to be more usable to people in general and not tentaclelings, descended four levels lower. Solid-chitin bricks intermingled with tightly woven tentacle flesh, upon which tufts of fleshy grass grew out. The combination of architecture and growing life never ceased to look funny to her, even if it was ‘technically’ her she was looking at.
It was so much easier when she didn’t conceptualize of being the multitudes her existence actually entailed.
So, Prime focused on heading down the tunnel to the work-in-progress shrine to Nex, where Durelia and some of the herbalist women were gathered. She hadn’t paid much attention to their going ons, but it was probably nothing. Of course, when the flesh door opened up, it was definitely something.
The statue once built in Nahtura’s version of Nex had been torn down, leaving just the water-filled ‘infinity’ symbol in the floor. The only thing of note was where Durelia and the herbalists were at, where tables and chairs of varying sizes and purposes were in use. They looked up at the door’s opening, some even chirping in surprise.
Avaron stopped mid-step into the shrine, antennae perking up. “I take it this is a bad time …”
“Perhaps not so much, Your Majesty,” Durelia said, rising to stand at her impressive height. “Your consideration would be most helpful, as it happens to be.”
Always something, Avaron thought, heading inside properly. It didn’t pass her notice how the herbalists looked uneasy at her sudden arrival, so she tried focusing on Durelia. A not-so-difficult task with how much there was to look at. Her other problem became not being obviously lecherous, either. She sure wasn’t aware where Durelia found such sheer, figure-hugging dress, but it really worked on her. The cream-colored cloth complimented the golden stitching, and the real artistry came in the frills of the upper body framing her collar and bosom, while a pleated skirt gave a sort of water-flowing vibe to her motions.
Simple, yet elegant, could mean a lot of things, and Durelia embodied the idea supremely. Avaron’s head craned upward as the vampire stood before her. “What am I considering, then?”
Durelia pressed the tips of her fingers together, smiling in a polite, awkward way. “You’ll forgive me if I’m not … certain, how to word it politely?”
“It takes a lot to offend to me, so don’t worry over it.”
“… What, perchance, is the punishment for adultery in your queendom?”
A stillness set in the air immediately, but Avaron couldn’t help blinking in puzzlement. “Adultery as in someone who’s married has sex with someone they’re not married to?”
“Broadly, yes.”
There were a lot of ways to take that question. Avaron rubbed her eyes for a moment, contemplating. Right. Cheating is a big deal, historically. Lots of social and religious crap tied up into it. Do I really need to invoke any of that?
Pretty much any developed civilization on Earth did away with adultery laws and implemented ‘no fault’ divorces. The ones she could think of that didn’t were textbook examples of gender inequality and patriarchal oppression too ingrained to be removed easily. However, on the New World, bonds of marriage may have more to them than Earth ever did.
“Just so I understand clearer,” Avaron said slowly, “how does a typical marriage work in this part of the world?”
“It is handled by a priestess or officiator acting in the queen or king’s name,” Durelia explained. “Many invoke ceremonies in accordance to their beliefs and the legal documentation serves merely to codify the matrimonial bond. Anything else is a matter of those involved in the marriage; Artor merely officiated them, rather than involving itself directly. I know the Church oversees everything related to the marriage as a matter of course. The Harvest Moons personally bestowed their blessings.”
“Does the marriage itself grant anything? Boons, [skills], [abilities] …”
Durelia blinked. “Not unless a divinity chooses to do so. I’ve heard some marriages can generate unique effects, but I’ve never really seen it myself.”
It doesn’t sound like anything incredibly special, then? Avaron mused. We’ll go by my playbook, then.
Making a show of shrugging, Avaron said, “Then it is no problem. My edict will be as follows: every religion, creed, or belief system that exists shall always be second to the laws of Eden. Should the two come into conflict, Eden dictates all final decisions. Summarily, in regards to the matter of adultery, there shall be no law mandating punishment of any sort. Any attempts to enforce punishment for any reason not permitted by Eden’s laws itself shall be a crime.”
Durelia frowned thoughtfully. “I take that to mean then that your majesty will not intervene in any way with marital disputes?”
Avaron nodded. “Eden is solely concerned with maintaining the legal record and entity of the marriage. Whatever happens in the marriage is the business of the people in the marriage, unless it conflicts with one of Eden’s laws. We’d never permit honor or revenge killings, but if one or both parties wish to divorce, then that is their business.”
“I think it would benefit the people if this was codified, as I imagine many will not see it that way.”
“You disagree?”
“… No, but I can see those who would; violently so.”
“Mm, that’s reasonable.” Avaron asked in a hushed whisper, “Now, can you explain to me why that one over there is crying all of a sudden?” While the herbalists watched the two of them talk, one of them broke down into tears after the edict’s declaration. The others tried quieting her, or at least keeping her from direct line of sight.
“That is something,” Durelia muttered. “The one who spurred on this interesting problem has come down with an unexpected pregnancy.”
“Ah.”
“From a tentshroom.”
“I’m sorry?” Avaron babbled, her head bobbing back and forth stupidly for a moment.
“Her husband accused her of infidelity and it turned into quite the mess,” Durelia continued on without missing a beat. “Goddess Nex directed me toward her to provide … succor.”
“Nex did? Why?”
Durelia gave a politer form of shrug in answer. “It is as she wills. To her, the fruitful union is permissible, if not to be celebrated. Though I am left to questions as to why.”
Avaron squinted. “Did a tentshroom assault her or something?”
“It is more her who assaulted the tentshroom.”
“Oh. Aren’t they just a mushroom of some kind?”
“Supposedly, yes.”
“Nex didn’t say anything?”
“It is more that all tentacles can—breed, with others. The tentshroom is a tentacle. It is simple, is it not?”
A headache inducing amount of questions came to Avaron in a rush she rather didn’t enjoy. “Do you know what she’s pregnant with?”
“More tentshrooms, of course. Why?”
“Things are different for tentradom queens like myself. Let’s say certainty helps a lot in situations like this.”
“Indeed,” Durelia remarked dryly. “Your edict, nonetheless, will do much to help in this situation, Your Majesty.”
“The safety and prosperity of my subjects is a chief concern.” Avaron glanced over toward the herbalists for a moment. “Well. I’m pretty sure Nex or her book mention something breeding with tentacles being different, right?”
“I have been reviewing her words, but what about them in specific?”
“Most people associate pregnancy with a serious, life-altering change. You know, babies to take care of, kids to raise, all that. It’s different for tentacles because most types aren’t really sapient. They just sort of come out, grow up a bit, then go off on their own,” Avaron said. “I don’t know how much that helps, there simply is a difference.”
“A difference or not matters little to the heart or its ways,” Durelia pointed out.
Avaron begrudgingly nodded. “True. It’s not my place to intervene, so I’ll leave the matter to you. Come see me later, there is something I wanted to discuss.”
Durelia bowed her head, which given her sheer height, made it look more like she simply looked down on Avaron closer. “Of course, Your Majesty. I shall see you as soon as I can.”
*~*
Farming is the easy life, Venus mused. Especially when it’s automated.
Her ‘main body’ sat in the comfortable spa built within the Hive’s depths, soaking in the heat of a reinforced-boiler that definitely shouldn’t explode again. Despite her innovations in the field of not-exploding, she wasn’t rewarded with a [skill] or any acknowledgement by the System. Presuming it did something like that, then that meant there were boiler machines somewhere on the planet. Or universe, if it reached that far. Presuming it didn’t do something like that, then she spun her wheels for nothing.
At least the dirt never lied to her.
The drones kept digging and Avaron kept directing. Well; directing and embodying. She was both worker and leader: white collar, blue collar, black collar, and every other collar that could exist. While the stress and strain of physical labor centralized within each drone, the mental labor solely centralized in her main body. While the drones had some neural functions, they were so strapped down that keeping the thing functional took up everything.
Hence, taking care of her main body to ensure optimal mental functioning.
She wasn’t sure why she felt the need to make an excuse for it at all, but the guilt remained for some vestigial reason.
Ah, whatever. Skeyes! Venus diverted her attention through the three different skeyes under her control. As always, they flew high in the sky, giving her the bird’s eye view of Eden she needed. A good half of the farm fields were still growing, but some summer crops had come in finally. As the farmers and drones harvested with apparently record-breaking speed, the last of Eden’s food burdens would disappear.
It wasn’t a great variety, and she lacked a lot of choices, but mass starvation had finally been averted. Proper storage and processing would take time, but the rest of the year’s harvest should secure their gains even more. That, and as the vassal farmers learned how to use the hydroponic towers better, their food security would only increase.
No matter how Avaron called it ‘hydroponics’, she knew precisely fuck all about actually doing hydroponic farming. What did help was manipulating Hive growth inside the towers to create existing food, such as oranges, in an ‘artificial’ manner. From another perspective, the hydroponic towers were massive stomachs reprocessing nutrient-rich waste feed, then excessively growing new ‘Hive material’. It wasn’t an exact science, and she did things by the seat of her pants, but it worked out somehow.
Normally, overproduction of food is insane to do. People can only eat so much, trade it away, or store it. However, my Hive can consume it all or store it for long time periods, Venus considered. In that case, even more farmland is ideal. Anywhere not being used for something that can grow crops should become farmland.
Her precious ‘edible biofuel source’ should be up for the task. The cancerous, rotten, and other reject material would simply be fed into giant stomachs and processed into EBS for the drones to eat. In the end, everything was recycled in some form to extract the maximum potential value from it. Such methods could only go so far, but the further they took Avaron, the greater the steps she could follow up with.
At least I have a more stable form of EBS now. Bees are amazing girls, seriously. Honey really does everything, Venus mused. It wasn’t pretty cobbling together the insectoid macro-organs to imitate bee digestion, but with some funny tweaks, she managed something out. Of the hundred EBS variations she’d made, two stood out for usage: EBS 72 and 39.
EBS-72 turned solid at room temperature and started crystallizing as it approached freezing. Thankfully, it melted at Hive-standard temperatures, putting it in a nice threshold for transitionary storage and usage. The main problem was it took a long time to produce and was grotesquely inefficient at food conversion. But, food whenever she wanted couldn’t be underestimated. It didn’t rot and she highly doubted any kind of rat could eat it and live.
EBS-39, on the other hand, remained liquid up until freezing, and carried a lot of the viscous qualities of honey itself. Its incredible nutrient density made it almost toxic for drones to consume and unfortunately far too volatile for long term storage. It rotted within hours if expelled from a macro-organ, requiring constant upkeep in the form of bacterial suppression and physical agitation. However, the food conversion rate was truly incredible.
Thus, they became Avaron’s choice for the basis of her EBS economy. (Hey, Iris and Cypher?) Venus asked.
(What?) the other two answered in unison.
(How’s that new tentacleling coming along?)
(It’s done,) Iris said simply.
(So soon?)
(It’s a macro-organ with legs, what else was there to do?)
Venus pursed her lips. (I dunno, make it fancier looking?)
(You design it next time, then.)
(Hmph.)
Still, that reached an important milestone. EBS-72 could be handled within the Hive itself, or established outposts, where slow processing wouldn’t be an issue. EBS-39’s constant need for attention required a mobile solution, and what could be more mobile than a macro-organ that produced it on the march? It wasn’t the perfect design she had in mind, but small failures led to greater successes later on. The macro-organ tentaclelings need only survive and produce until they could be replaced.
Ideally I won’t need to ravage entire ecosystems to feed my armies. EBS-72 can be shipped in and reprocessed into EBS-39, which is then fed to the drones. Supplementary scavenging and raiding can make up for shortfalls or intercepted supply convoys. Not to mention the possibility of devouring oppositional forces.
Although, whether or not she could safely consume Nagraki in any form was … questionable.
She’d have to test it at some point but she sure didn’t look forward to it.
Venus lifted a hand out of the spa’s water and started counting. EBS food is usable enough for supply logistics. Tentaclelings war report came in, they did shitty. Nagraki melee is pretty ridiculous, can’t even imagine fighting the highborns. I need guns or bombs or … bombs …
She squinted. Bombs would be more useful to make. Versatile applications, just struggles with delivery. Modified skeyes could carry an appropriate payload, but I don’t want Nagraki to think of the sky as an attack vector. Bombs, bombs, bombs … lobbing them like catapults? Trebuchets? Could, range is too typical for this kind of world. Cannons are just now coming into usage, so that will be something to worry about.
Venus’ head bobbed from one side to the other. No air attacks, actual artillery requires a lot of work I can’t do, but high explosive bombs … Shooting them is basically a gun, so no. Throwing grenades? I guess that’s something. Oh, land mines. Land mines would be great. Oh, I know! OH!
She shot forward, sending a little wave forward in the spa. “Suicide bombers! Yeah, there we go!”
Mobile drones equipped with high explosives could be a game changer without compromising her real advantages. She’d get to develop the ordinance and then just translate to aerial bombing later on. It’d also neatly slot the living bombs into the logistical supply chain, so it wouldn’t be too disruptive having a contingent of them along. One large problem presented itself, though.
I need to figure out a chemical for the bomb itself. Sure there’s stuff like nitroglycerin but I have no idea how to make that. Unless the elvetahn alchemists do?
She’d have to pay them a visit and start figuring out what they knew. The whole ‘firaxis’ crystal used to make super gunpowder had been neat, but she needed something organic to reproduce. Maybe there’s an exploding flower out there or something I can eat …
*~*
He didn’t trust how long the ‘orphanage’ would last, but so far Avaron made good on her word. At least it let him have a chance to take it easy, but Mulk feared the others were taking to it too easy. Living on the streets was a hard life and it taught real simple truths. No one gave anything away for free; they all wanted something back in the end. If they didn’t want it right then, they’d want it one day. Avaron was definitely the latter; she wanted something, but he couldn’t imagine what.
Sitting on the thick tree branch, Mulk gazed out across the orphanage’s ‘playground’ and front yard of the whole place. Other orphans littered around, making a mess or talking in their own little nonsense circles. White chitin, white-furred tentaclelings mired in between them, mere beasts tackled and prodded and pushed along to the whims of children. The beasts never made a fuss except when something painful happened, but even then they never lashed back.
The priest called them caretakers, but Mulk knew better.
The difference between caretaker and prison guard was purely imagination.
The tentaclelings did well to keep the children in and around the orphanage, never letting them stray too far, or get in the way of others. There weren’t any walls to pen the kids in, but there didn’t need to be, either. They were penned in all the same.
Except him. He know how to get out and in again without being noticed.
Still, he couldn’t leave the others behind.
Perhaps that was what penned him in as well.
Mulk knew enough to know he couldn’t do much, but that didn’t mean he couldn’t watch, just in case.
As he sat in his tree and watched, he gradually noticed some figures approach from the road. When they neared, he noticed one as Avaron, and the other one as a tiny someone he’d been worrying about. With a chirp, Mulk scrambled out of the tree, dropping down from the branch and landing with a graceless thud. Rushing to the front gate, he pushed aside the wooden slab and headed out. Strangely, none of the tentaclelings tried stopping him, but he didn’t care.
“Hanmi!” he shouted.
The aforementioned perked up and started waving back, shouting, “Mulk!”
The closer he came, the more he saw her and how different she’d become. Patches of missing fur, burned and twisted skin like the black robes, and a white gown too nice for any one like them to wear, but … still Hanmi. She hobbled forward a bit, gait and motion alike betraying something was wrong, and caught his speedy hug with a loud ‘oof’. At least everything felt like it should’ve been when he hugged her, though she seemed … smaller, for some reason. Hanmi hugged back, though without the certain strength he used.
After a moment, he pulled away and said, “You’re back.”
“Am back,” Hanmi grinned toothily. “Fluffy lady helped a lot. Not sick anymore.”
He looked up at Avaron, who stood there patiently. “Yeah. Thanks.”
“Sure. Help her inside, then we’ll talk.”
“Okay.”
Hanmi looked between them curiously, but Mulk ushered her forward. Despite the noticeable limp, she refused to lean on his shoulder, hobbling alongside him instead. He begrudgingly obliged, walking at a pace she could match. It helped seeing her lively again, the wagon they’d snuck onto had been real tight when her fever started. Getting sick always meant something bad, but he’d hoped she got through hers.
She may have died if Avaron hadn’t hunted him down.
He wasn’t sure what to make of that idea. “Jar! Bank!” he called out, and his gang mates perked up immediately. Upon seeing him and Hanmi, they bolted over immediately, startling the other kids around them.
“Hanmi!” they called out, and Mulk had to shield them away from tackling her.
“Jar! Bank. You fat,” she said, staring at the latter sternly. Bank wilted and scratched the back of his head nervously.
“Am not.”
“Are too. Look,” Hanmi said, pinching his cheek.
He laughed and gave a little shrug to knock her off.
“Jar, Bank,” Mulk said, drawing their attention. “Help Hanmi inside. That priest should be making lunch now.”
“Aren’t you coming?” Jar asked, tilting his head.
“Nah, gotta talk to her,” he said, thumbing over his shoulder toward Avaron. “Won’t be long.”
“Alright.”
Hanmi looked at him in that weird way of hers, but at his insisting motion, followed Jar and Bank inside the orphanage. He stared at their backs for a moment, not sure what he felt. They were all together again, but under the eye of something he barely understood. Something they might not be able to escape from like they had before. Mulk took his time heading back, mostly wanting to see if any real useful thoughts came to mind.
When he stood before Avaron and looked up at her, he still didn’t know much of anything.
“Bedrooms, three meals a day, safety, and more in the future hopefully,” Avaron said, staring down at him for a moment then gazing upon the orphanage. “Does it work for you?”
“Nothing’s free, so what do you want?”
“Nothing’s free,” Avaron said agreeingly. “Someone always pay the price, somewhere, somehow. The difference between you and me is that paying the price for this is as free as plucking the grass out of the dirt over there.”
Mulk squinted suspiciously. “Why do it, then?”
“Some people only feel good about themselves when they help others. It doesn’t make much sense, but that’s how they are.”
“And do you feel good doing it for us?”
“In a way. When I was young, my life was a lot like yours. The only difference is, no one was there for me,” she said. “Maybe me being there for you is just to appease all that anger I still have. It doesn’t make much sense, but that’s how it goes.”
He hated how much sense she actually did make. It wasn’t how adults talked to each other, but at the same time, Mulk could grasp the meaning. “Fine, I guess. What do you want?”
“I welcome you and your friends to stay in Eden, and to make this place your home. In time, as you grow up, you will find purpose and meaning in being here with all of us.” Avaron regarded him then. “Whether you want to live here or skip out and go somewhere else, that’s your choice to make. The only thing I can say is: don’t be afraid of something good falling into your lap. Otherwise, you’ll never find anything good in this world.”
“I don’t trust you,” he said simply. “But, here’s as good as any other, unless you do something.”
“That’s fine. Then, priest Genyral is the head of this orphanage, and he’ll be responsible for taking care of you all. Work with him on making this a place deserving of being called home. I’ll come see you, Mulk, in a few years when you’re older, I might have some work for you.”
“Why not now?”
Avaron smirked. “Too small, but you are a crafty thief.”
“Tch. Smaller is better.”
“We’ll see. Oh, one last thing: if you notice anyone suspicious, or something bad happens, report it to any of my tentaclelings. They’ll pass it onto me, and I’ll take care of it from there.”
“Aren’t I supposed to stay in this orphanage?” Mulk asked sardonically.
Avaron gave him a flat look. “You’re not stealing, but you sure do like to break and enter everywhere you look.”
Mulk blinked, his ears fluffing up. “Do not!”
“Whatever you do, don’t enter the Alva Forest. The elvetahn kill anyone who trespass, and nobody sneaks under their noses. I mean that literally, they can find your soul, so don’t try.”
“… Yeah, okay.”
Avaron turned around, then started heading back to the town of Eden proper. She waved flippantly over her shoulder, saying, “Take care of yourself, Mulk. I’m always listening if you need me.”
“Okay.”
He watched her go for a minute, then headed back to the orphanage. Mulk still wasn’t sure what to make of Avaron, or the weird town he and everyone was gonna be stuck inside of. If nothing else, the eating was good and no one bothered the orphanage. The priest was a bit lame, but at least it meant he wouldn’t be threatening.
For the time being, it might be the closest thing to peaceful he could find.
*~*
Deep in the bowels of the Hive, Iris and Cypher labored to think with their immense mega-brains. It proved tricky adding newer cognitive function because as soon as they connected to the newly grown brains, the neurons started firing. Shoving too much activity into these fresh brains usually caused some kind of damage to them, hampering their effectiveness and ultimately degrading the quality of actual thought. However, for them, who only had the innate sensibility to use the brain of ten Avaron main bodies, additional brains proved endlessly tricky.
But, the new level in [Hive Mind] added some … flexibility.
(I’m so fucking sick of calculating pi,) Cypher whined, writhing on the floor. (Am I done yet?)
(Almost. I can feel it,) Iris mumbled back, crouching nearby. The Hive flooring of their laboratory had been improved with new hexagonal chitin plating as part of one experiment in adopting bee-based construction methods. It’d been quite useful in itself, allowing for the same standardized manufacturing of chitin plates rather than just growing them on the spot. A section of the lab’s floor had been swapped out for the glass-like, see-through chitin plates, which let Iris peer down into the flesh-sack full of nutrient fluid and human-like brains.
She wasn’t sure actually looking at them would help, but it did something.
(… I can think we parallelize properly now?) Iris muttered, tilting her head.
The ephemeral thought she tried grasping was one of two simultaneous neural pathways. Like a mirror trying to reflect on itself, if only once. Each of the core intelligences was their own branch of the [Hive Mind]’s great tree, but what if those branches subdivided into more branches? Or, if they grew leaves? Something that tangibly improved their neural processing in some capacity.
Yet, growing a new limb involved changing in some way Avaron had no concept of how to do.
(Why, what are you feeling?) Cypher asked.
(Uh … No, nevermind, the brain’s having a stroke. FUCK!) Iris slapped her knees and stood up, severing the intangible connection as the neural component broke down. She whirled around, stomping toward Cypher. Pinching her fingers in front of her other self, Iris said, (I was this close to figuring it out. This fucking shit and its stupid fucking nonsense and—)
Iris’ wandered off, her tirade running endlessly.
Cypher gave up on calculating pi and sighed in relief. Rubbing her forehead to try numbing out the annoying buzzing that went on, she relaxed on the floor. I know figuring out increased mental power is important but it sure is a pain in my metaphorical ass, she thought drearily. (Iris. Iris? IRIS!)
(WHAT?)
(Your five minutes is up, stop having conniptions.)
(FUCK! Fine.)
(I hate to say it, but while we might figure this out eventually, there’s a shortcut in the form of the potentially-sapient offspring,) Cypher pointed out. (We really should ask Tsugumi or Gwyneth. I mean, we know Gwyneth will jump at the chance to get bred anyway.)
(And that’s opening a can of worms we don’t know we can shut again,) Iris retorted, then audibly sighed. (It would be a waste to not try, I guess, but still.)
(We don’t have to keep making them, we just need to see what one can do. I mean, we’re doing something unknown either way.)
(Alright, let’s put this project aside for the time being and see what they think. Where are we on the drone template organization?)
(It’s essentially done, did you want to go over it one more time?)
(Oh, I love being neurotic,) Iris quipped.
(Don’t we all?) Cypher asked rhetorically. (Alright, here’s the spread.)
The System’s window popped open and Cypher navigated toward the [Hive Management] section of it. The subcategory [Broods] then revealed four ‘folders’: one for Tsugumi, Gwyneth, Nahtura, and then Avaron. She opened [Avaron], which then popped up the various tentacleling genomes they’d engineered. As far as could be told, the other folders only added new genomes if their respective [Brood Mother] actually birthed them. It was a weird distinction, and it probably meant something, but Avaron wasn’t too sure yet.
(Oh, I like the categorization,) Iris remarked.
(Yeah. Everything we’ve done is being swept under Generation 1 design. Generation 2 will have some of our actual new innovations in them, plus what we learned from the [Brood Mother] birthing process,) Cypher explained. Despite her laying on the ground and Iris standing in some corner, they were both perceiving the same information. (Namely they should be less cancerous as long as we give them more growth time. It’s painful but we don’t need to be that fast. Not for most of them, anyway. The suicide bombers that Venus just cooked up might want it.)
(Disposable attack forces don’t need to live for that long, but that’s for a different day’s considerations.)
(So starting with—)
“What disgusting creatures you’ve made.”
Nex’s sudden intrusion pierced through Avaron’s collective mind. It seemed more ‘focused’, at least insofar as only Iris and Cypher heard it, and through them it echoed through the [Hive Mind]. The aforementioned frowned, and Iris said, “Nex, reading over my shoulder again?”
“Whether I want to or not,” Nex rumbled with dissatisfaction.
Cypher, however, asked, “And what is wrong with my drones?”
“’Drones’. What a disgusting word. You tore out everything that made them, them. Yet you wonder why your monsters are so ineffectual?”
“They seem to kill just fine. Everything else can be fixed with time and effort.”
“Feh. You don’t even consider what it is you took away. Do you even know you are sending babies to fight your wars?”
Both Avarons frowned. “They’re plenty matured,” Iris pointed out. “Their growth cycle—“
“These pumped up monsters, bulging with muscle and chitin, are not mature. Their growth is uncontrolled, their maturation stymied, and their purpose smothered by your incompetence.”
“Thanks, I hadn’t noticed,” Cypher remarked dryly. “Okay, since you’re the genius, what about their growth cycle is stunted?”
“Life begins, the young crawl and writhe. They feed and are nurtured. They grow. The flesh writhes, changes, and becomes. Age begets power, and so the babe becomes a child who becomes an adult. The urges follow; life’s compulsions. The fire that is lit within must spread, so that the fire never goes out.”
Both Avarons rubbed their foreheads with contemptuous ire. Cypher slowly came around to an idea, however. “Sexual maturation. Juvenile to adult is typically marked by sexual maturity and reproductive activity. You mean that?”
“Those are words that may yet mean the same thing.”
“Yeah, I stripped out their mating functions because I don’t need them being sexually mature. It’s enough of a problem when any random instinct I plug inside fires off on its own, like the boar ones wanting to charge and headbutt. I don’t need my drones suddenly having the urge to go mating whatever they see.”
“You deny life’s meaning even as you toil to build it to your own ends. What insanity is that?”
“Insanity is the only word those who don’t understand visionary purpose can use,” Iris bit back, but then smiled. “I’m not too up my ass to say I’m not wrong, though. You’re correct; I did overlook something important. If I create an organ to stimulate sex hormones throughout their bodies, I can trigger maturation without restoring reproductive ability.”
“… What?”
Cypher groaned. “Which means all the changes I did are complete bogus, because we have no idea what this ‘matured’ form actually looks like.”
“Fuck, you’re right.”
“So much for Generation 2. Guess it’s more Generation 1 prototyping. Ahh, I’m so fucking tired of working in these things, seriously.”
“You have all the means for life to take its own course. Must you control even that?”
That pissed her off enough that Cypher actually pushed up from the floor, rising to a stand. “Because control is everything,” she declared. “Control is the difference between a person or an animal. Control is what lets a nation grow to greatness. Control is what ensures everything works the way it’s designed to be. The more you can control, the better your designs will be. All progress imaginable is in service to this one truth, the only difference is how that control is applied.”
“You cannot possibly control everything.”
“And that’s where you’re wrong. You, sweet goddess Nex, from this alien world that hasn’t even figured out how to split the fucking atom yet,” Cypher spoke, her voice rising in strength and clarity. She thrust a finger at the air, aiming pointlessly. “You can’t even imagine what Earth can do. You sit there and stare at one of your moons thinking it’s untouchable, but Earth touched its moon. We sent humanity straight to it without any magic whatsoever. Blood, sweat, tears, all creating progress, all furthering control over ourselves and our world.”
“As much as I would say such a thing is impossible, you will tell me with unflinching certainty it is possible.”
“You’re a goddess. You have power in this universe that I can’t imagine how it works,” Cypher remarked, giving a shrug. “But, I’m not in awe of that. I don’t see it and think ‘oh that’s just how it is’. That willful ignorance leads nowhere but stagnation and regression. Question things. Wonder why they happen. How do they work? Can I change them? What made them that way? Always yearn to know more, in some way, and you will always advance. You have power, Nex, but you do not use it in any way that advances you. You sit on it, watching the world move by and complain when nothing happens.”
No pretty quip came that time.
“If you want something done properly, do it yourself. Sure, I really hate having to do the work, but I know for a fact nothing will get done if I don’t.” Cypher swept her arm toward her laboratory. “If you want to work with me and figure out how something can be done, by all means. I’m old enough to set my shit aside and do the work with anyone it takes. But, do not sit there and neg me the entire time, because not only is that unhelpful, it actively impedes progress.”
“What is ‘neg’?”
That took the wind out of Cypher’s sails enough she had to pause for a moment. “Being negative. Using unkind words or talking with intent that just doesn’t help in any way.”
“I have not ‘neg’ you once. You simply reject my wisdom.”
“Is it really that wise?” Iris interjected, unable to stop the laugh underneath her words. “Sure, it fits the world you knew, but you’re not looking at the world as it could become. I have a plate of issues and you’re telling me to just let things run rampant as if that could possibly solve problems, not make more of them. A woman’s marriage is in jeopardy because of a fucking mushroom of all things.”
“And? Is it the fault of the tentshroom, or the woman unsatisfied with a husband who neglects her? Do you side with some ‘idea’ you think is how things should be, rather than what they truly are?”
“Yeah, fine, whatever. I’m taking a break,” Iris grumbled.
“Yeah, me too,” Cypher agreed.
“And when confronted, you run as your veneer of certain knowing crumbles.”
“Yeah, yeah, pot calling the kettle black.”
“What?”
“I really hate when my one liners don’t work,” Cypher grumbled.
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Chapter 73: Our Shared Flesh
Chapter Text
A civilization is a single whole; divided, but connected; separate, yet same.
*~*
Nothing beat having good, quality raw material to work with. While not the best it’d ever seen, who could complain when so much was on hand? Even vast tracts of dirt could be made into something incredible, with the appropriate mind and skill. Ah, but it had millennia of practice, and centuries more of experience on everything from dirt to the gold of goddesses.
Lumbering through the remains of the Arden Imperial Palace, the reddish-yellow stone contrasted harshly against the oily black chitin of its lengthsome body. Pearlescent white flesh, stitched-and-grown together as it was, shone from the fiery light of the burning torches on the walls. One might call it slug-like, yet the myriad pointed legs coming out seemed closer to a centipede. Its body lacked symmetry, undulating in a grotesque manner as lopsided and strenuous as a half-broken corpse.
Jorkof, Hand of Haska, First Nagraki, and many titles beside, enjoyed strolling through the palace ruins. Much of the pointless finery like the paintings and jeweled statues had been long since torn down. The raw materials of such things were more imminently useful, after all. If the so-called ‘rich and powerful’ had one thing they were good for, their obsessive collection of rare materials made them exemplary targets.
“Hmm, hmm, hm, hmmm …” Jorkof hummed, idly recounting a tune from an era so old not even the elvetahn knew it. Of course, music theory and auditory organs had certain definitive limits to them. Imagine how surprising it could be to hear songs from such an era ‘accidentally’ recreated by ignorant souls. Downright unnerving, really.
It tried calculating the mathematical probability of such a thing, but the number started becoming unwieldy after 48 digits.
The Nagraki knights continued their march in front, their solid, massively armored frames making heavy thuds to Jorkof’s grating slither. An unnecessary guard, but precautions were necessary things even in the face of insane possibilities. Divine heroines made a career out of doing the impossible as Jorkof learned with aggravating regularity.
Further ahead, the archway yawned with the warmth red-orange hues from the falling sun. Night would approach soon, but getting up a little early wouldn’t be too much to ask for. Jorkof’s 16 vertically slitted eyes, situated beneath the sharply angular, mushroom-cap of a ‘head’ it possessed, squinted. Their starlight-speckled irises constricted at the aggravating presence of sunlight.
A necessary form of light, but still aggravating.
What a pleasant sight to be greeted by, though! The vast frontal gardens of the imperial palace overgrown with naki and a truly breathtaking variety of new growths. Careful attention had gone into making sure things grew to form, rather than wildly out of control. The Arden so greedily operated such a vast garden right on the cusp of a desert; really, what kind of opulence was that? In a land without much water, it should be conserved, not spent on greenery that can’t even be eaten.
Typical nonsense, really.
The sunlight tickled its flesh, but Jorkof kept ambulating onward. The wide, spacious steps of the frontal stairs were just shy of being a slope proper, but it made it easy to use them. Gardening could come later, the more important issue lay further ahead. Bone wagons and Nagraki servants alike amassed in the reception grounds, unloading cargo and moving materials into the palace. These late arrivals from the west thankfully looked intact, if lacking in number.
Its eyes gravitated toward the largest among them: the Starshaper. The only one of true authority and knowing, and strangely enough oddly alone. At Jorkof’s approach, the Starshaper turned toward it, cradling an oval container of black stone and pulsating flesh.
“I see our newest addition is sleeping soundly,” Jorkof remarked, its voice speaking through mouths grown into its frontal upper body. “I see too there were issues. When is Siskor arriving?”
The Starshaper’s grip tightened on the false womb, its towering upper torso curling downward. Ah, the weight it bore; the heaviness of the stars unseen, Jorkof did not like any of it.
“Siskor is … no more,” it said with resigned simplicity.
Though it heard the words, Jorkof’s eyes blinked independently as the meaning still worked its way. “What?” it asked, then said confusedly, “Siskor out of all is the most crafty and capable at survival. How could she pos—“
“Queen Efval. A duel to the death to buy time. She did not win.”
“What? That’s … that’s not …” A sinking sensation crept through Jorkof’s body, each stomach inside churning with acidic bile. The sudden, acute vertigo that struck made it wobble, then fall to one side. A nearby guard rushed over, using its whole body to brace Jorkof. Despite the guard’s formidable size, it still nearly collapsed underneath Jorkof’s immensity. “No, no no no no, no that’s not—that’s not—“
The gills beneath Jorkof’s head heaved in great breaths before exhaling streams of air thick with naki. Shaky, uneven breaths punctuated by hiccups in growing strength. Jorkof pushed off from the guard, raising one of its huge arms and pointing shakily at the Starhaper. “You! You should’ve stopped her! Why didn’t you? She didn’t—she didn’t have to—“
“It is as Lord Haska wills,” the Starshaper spoke, any luster of life to its voice simply absent. Only dutiful purpose steeled its words. “The unborn carries our promised day. She must survive. Siskor knew this and bought the time needed. There was no other way.”
What a wound to be struck with.
Jorkof strength failed and it collapsed forward, falling to the ground with a stone-rattling thud. It caught itself on its hands, face so close to slamming into gravel and rock. Inhaling, exhaling, and all those emotions coming no matter what it did or thought, all it could do was let out choked, gargled noises. The naki blew from its gills and sobs left misshapen lips as Jorkof grabbed fistfuls of earth. “We-we’re so close, Siskor. We were so close!” it wheezed out.
A war with no end; thousands of years of strife across a world that no longer appreciated their struggle. Friends coming, going, leaving memories only Jorkof was left to carry. Some it held no regard for, those ones living such short lives and ending just as swiftly. Others were companions, those who truly embodied the world as it should’ve been. It loved those ones the most, for they were the dearest of all.
And Siskor, Knight of Haska, a runt of the litter even Jorkof hadn’t expected to live for long, lived the longest out of all. Centuries upon centuries of dutiful service, loyal beyond measure, and a true paragon that made even Jorkof feel unclean in her presence. A friend who deserved to stand beside it and Pushey as leaders of the Nagraki. To see the promised day that, after so very long, finally neared.
A fool too enamored with the ways of knighthood to know when to call it quits.
Jorkof wept, silvery starlight spilling from its eyes, pooling and slithering in the earth beneath. It raised a fist, then slammed it into the ground; then another fist, and another, and another. A tantrum that did nothing to relieve the searing agony throughout all its being.
How long it lived; how many it saw come and go.
Leaving it behind in the realm of life to toil and struggle just for that promised day.
Though Jorkof knew that, like all others, Siskor would await beside their Lord, how long before it, too, would stand there? How many years would it be to drink and laugh again together?
One of the Starshaper’s hands came down, pressing against its shoulder. Jorkof stilled, though the sorrowful rage in its body continued its rampancy. Then, and only then, did Jorkof understand too that the Starshaper wept in its own way. For all their different purposes in life, they shared that same pain.
And so Jorkof wept for them both.
*~*
Deep in the Alva Forest, in what many could call the ‘grand capital’ of the elvetahn, there was a black-barked tree. Modest in size and lacking any leaves, it sat by itself in a grassy field not far from the royal palace. Long ago, when the Alva Forest was only just the Heartwood, it’d been among the first trees grown. Eons later, it remained there, unmoving and unchanging; an old growth older than most elvetahn themselves.
Not her, though.
Queen Efval stood before the black tree, staring up its trunk. Dressed in a sheer, blue silk robe, the opaque fabric concealed her skin but nothing at all about her figure. A luxurious thing to wear in the summer heat, providing comfortable air while conserving modesty. What luck would be needed to see such an eternal figure of sublime, ethereal beauty? Not even several lifetime’s worth for most of the world, at least.
Efval inhaled, then sighed and stamped the back of her heel down. “Open up.”
The audible creak and groan of wood answered, followed by the crumbling of dirt. The black tree’s roots moved, pulling apart the earth in great chunks. A stone stairway revealed itself, nestled amongst even more roots and dirt. Efval headed down immediately, her naked feet soundless with every step. The dark swallowed her whole, but she needed no light to guide her path forward. Such a place couldn’t be breached unless its owner wanted visitors, anyway.
With no sense of where, when, or how, Efval moved. If one worried too much over what they lacked, they’d be lost forever in the twirling void.
A dim light teased her unfocused eyes, beckoning her. It widened the closer she came, turning into an open stone doorway. The finely crafted brickwork conveyed a purposeful, sophisticated air that only a true attention to detail could convey. When her foot set down on the threshold, the void’s perilous emptiness vanished in an instant. Normalcy filled her being again as Efval stepped into her dear friend’s ‘secret’ laboratory.
Appearances were deceptive things when dealing with Nuala. The laboratory itself was a long, rectangular hall filled with dark oak shelves that created miniature libraries, alcoves filled with sophisticated forms of magic machines, repositories stocked with exotic materials unseen for millennia, and more. It was, however, not a ‘single room’. Any number of portals, doorways, and other areas existed in a labyrinth of a size so insane even Efval feared it.
A place so safe not even goddesses or Mother Dearest could invade it.
Efval headed along the singular long, red-strip of monotonous red carpet that cut through the whole laboratory. At the other end, sitting at a wood log for a desk, was Nuala herself. Divested of anything resembling clothing, the magi sat there with fixed, unblinking eyes, her finger speeding across the page of some ancient tome. There times she exhibited truly obsessive focus and Efval worried over what it might be.
She had an idea, even if she vainly hoped it wouldn’t be that idea.
Standing before the desk, Efval regarded the tomes, scrolls, books, and even scraps of parchment strewn everywhere. Nuala’s [Light] spells floated in the air, providing a daylight brightness of clarity that surely must’ve been annoying. Though she hadn’t a clue to their contents, Efval did recognize some of the books by their make.
“You’ve dug up things from as far back as ten ages ago,” she remarked, lifting a thin book with a binder made from fossilized tree bark. It lacked anything in the form of imagery, naming, or description, because that tree bark was, itself, the identifier. “Nuala, what in the world are you doing?”
Sitting with both feet on her stump of a chair, her head on her knees, Nuala looked like a child stricken with madness. Or, at least, someone who hadn’t taken care of herself in weeks. “Do you want the easy answer or the worst one?”
“Give me the answer that guides the elvetahn.”
“… The Forever Dark has vanished,” Nuala said, her voice tired yet energetic in a way only mania provided. “The Harvest Moons have vanished. Long ago, there was magic made to try and erase goddesses. The Nagraki even invented a form of this themselves.” She pointed to the tomes on the left side of her desk, then slowly swept her finger rightward. “However, we know their fetid god prefers to invade and kill them himself in order to increase his strength. Their domains become his, and little by little, he takes more of the world’s influence into himself.”
Efval waited.
“Erasure is not vanishing. Killing is not vanishing. Erasure merely destroys the cohesive identity of a goddess, so as that particular form never arises again. Their essence is still a part of the great cycle. Killing a goddess sends them through the cycle of life and death, upon which they may change for whatever reasons they do. Vanishing is something … theoretical. Vanishing removes something entirely. As if it never existed at all in the first place.”
Efval waited.
“The fetid god does not vanish things, that undermines his goals. A lesser goddess being vanished, like the Harvest Moons, is one thing. To vanish the Forever Dark is to threaten the very integrity of our entire world. Life, death—these things don’t matter. The very concepts upon which we exist are simply removed.” Nuala held her hands to her temples, staring mindlessly at her desk. “Imagine sinking the ship you’re on over an empty void that nothing can exist within. That is what vanishing the Forever Dark has done to us. The Eternal Flame is right to fear it, for our world is falling apart.”
Efval frowned. “How do we fix it?”
“How would I know?” Nuala asked with a manic little laugh, her head twitching as she looked up at Efval. “I’ve dug through everything I can think of and I still can’t find an answer to that, Efval. Vanishing is theoretical. We magi argue over what would happen in one way or another as a stupid little thought experiment. A way to see things differently. Now it’s not only very real, it’s happening all around us.”
“Then who did it?”
“Who? What? Where? Someone? Something? Some being?” Nuala mimed before shrugging. “I don’t know. There’s no traces. There’s no evidence. The only way to know is the absence of something. Is it an attack? Some cosmological force of a power so incomprehensible it spits on the fabric of the universe? I don’t know. I can’t figure it out. It’s—“
“How long until it gets bad?”
“Centuries, at least. Millennia. That’s if the rate of deterioration stays consistent. But, the more things start to unravel, the faster it’ll happen. One little piece breaks down, then two, then four, and then everything else.” Nuala rubbed her hands on her face, inky smudges miring with her brown skin in another mess. “I’ll know for certain in a hundred years and we’ll be well past the point of saving then. Nevermind what will happen if another concept of our world is vanished, like the Eternal Flame.”
Gently rubbing her eyes, Efval took a moment to let such a mind-rending reveal work its way through her. “I was having such a great day,” she remarked. “A feast in honor of Siskor and our victory, some of the exotic wines reserved for killing highborns, the Temple of Luscious Fields sending maidens for entertainment, the Crying Owls performing their stupid comedies … oh, I was having such a great day.”
Nuala laughed and chuckled at once in some disjointed mixture. “I was having a great life, too.”
“What do you need to keep working on this?”
“… I don’t know. I have no idea where the vanishing is coming from, nevermind stopping it or trying to reverse the damage.”
“You’re certain it isn’t the Nagraki?”
“Not unless they have found something that truly changes everything I understand about the universe. A completely incomprehensible innovation that’d somehow justify completely unmaking this world as we conceive of it.”
It’s not zero, but it’s unlikely to be them. It cannot be a fated thing to happen, no prophecies have reached my ears either, Efval considered. Yet, we are facing an ultimate threat all the same.
“… I will have to ask Mother about it.”
“Her?” Nuala’s head tilted nearly ninety-degrees. “She doesn’t even know how to work a sink. What could she do?”
“She’ll know someone or something,” Efval said, then quirked a brow. “And that was the first sink this world ever saw. How would she know how to work it?”
Nuala laughed and slapped her legs, smiling.
“You’ve spent too long here. Get dressed or I’ll drag you out naked.”
“I’m not going to some stuffy feast.”
“No, I’ll send you to a tentradom. You’ll drive the performers insane like last time.”
“… I haven’t tested a pure tentradom’s alchemical potential …”
Efval rolled her eyes and headed around the desk. Nuala chirped like a bird being kicked out of its nest when she was suddenly yanked up. Protesting or not, Efval carried Nuala under her arm and out of the laboratory. She’d dealt with plenty end of the world crises and their ‘one of a kind’ natures. True, this time around it might be the most novel of all, but the fear would never find purchase in her mind. There would be a solution or it wouldn’t be her problem to deal with anymore.
There wasn’t any reason to be bothered over it.
*~*
I guess the metalworks is coming online? Avaron pondered while she stood atop a grassy hill. Further ahead, to the north of Eden and away from the town proper, a small ensemble of structures stood. At the behest of smiths and miners, she’d help construct the necessary buildings to house smithing, ore smelting, and anything else they deemed necessary. She couldn’t exactly cast cauldrons on the spot, so while most of the physical structuring was done, the final components needed to do actual work took longer.
Admittedly she’d left it to their expertise and she’d been about to head down there to do her first inspection in a while. However, another matter demanded more immediate attention.
“You can come out now,” she stated loudly, hands folded together behind her back. There wasn’t anyone else ‘around’, not even her usual escort tentaclelings. The skyeyes, ever in flight, were the only thing watching her from a respectably ‘ignorable’ distance. That was how Avaron noticed her unwanted guest in the first place, after all.
Moving shadows stood out quite plainly from a bird’s eye point of view.
Avaron’s shadow wobbled and then grew upward in a blob-like shape. The next moment the shadows receded, leaving a comely kitsune in her prime, dressed like any traveler on the road.
“It is aggravating how you know, yet I cannot determine why,” Rinnamu remarked pleasantly conversational. “Divine heroines truly deserve some regard.”
“There aren’t any others like me,” Avaron said, just as pleasantly conversational.
“No, there are not.”
“And how might we do business today, Rinnamu … san, I believe?”
“You are not from Kitinchi, my simple name suffices.”
“Very well.”
Rinnamu stepped forward, coming alongside Avaron and regarding the same metalworks further ahead. For a ‘kitsune’ being on the shorter end, Avaron was still surprised there could be a woman shorter than even her. Not by much, but enough. “I will admit my puzzlement over you and my understanding of why Honda would desire you for his uses.”
“Oh? I do like flattery.”
“I didn’t understand it until I saw it myself, but these ‘tentaclelings’ of yours are truly incredible. Efficient workers, unquestionably loyal, perhaps even capable fighters for those warrior ones I observed. All the power of people, but without most of their weaknesses.”
“Honda is perhaps not aware of their abilities as well as you. I’m not too sure how much Kagura has told him yet.”
“Indeed.” Rinnamu tilted her head in agreement, the muted fwish and thwump of her big ears moving under her specially-made straw hat. “What is your plan, truly?”
“I am tasked with defeating two evil goddesses to save this world.”
“And what afterward?”
“Retirement sounds nice. It’s a real bother having to manage all of this, plus the people, plus the children, plus the … you get the idea. As it goes, after the heroine slays the great evil, peace follows until another evil arises,” Avaron said, giving a long, wistful stare at the sky. “I’d like the peaceful part of that, someone else can deal with the next evil.”
“Something we ourselves may never see when that evil is the Nagraki.”
“Hope is an important part of being able to do the impossible.”
“And yet you sound oddly hopeless,” Rinnamu observed.
“Of retirement, sure. The two evil goddesses may be the easier challenge.”
“You say two, but I only know of one for the Nagraki. Who is this second?”
“She’s quite well hidden and I cannot say more than that. The less of a chance she knows I know she exists, the better.” Avaron held a finger up to her lips with a conspiratorial smile. “It makes it easier to follow what she does.”
“… I should hope you might forewarn us of her doing anything, then,” Rinnamu remarked.
“Of course. Her attention is primarily in the far west right now by the looks of things. The other one is busy in the far east.”
“Because attention on him is less possible attention on her.”
“Precisely so.”
“What she works on would then be of great importance to need such secrecy … No. The Church of the Everlasting Light. Them? Truly?” Rinnamu looked at Avaron, squinting.
“Shush, don’t spoil the surprise. Or do, actually, there’s a question I have.”
“Oh?”
“Where did the Church begin, exactly?” Avaron asked. “I’m seeing a lot of parallels to something I know from Earth and it’s quite … disturbing, to say the least.”
“Hmm.” Rinnamu’s tails fluffed from one side to the other in a way that looked seductively inviting. Seriously, they were so incredibly soft and she got to use them? It wasn’t fair. “I am not as familiar with the far west as others, but there are some notes. Many centuries ago, the divine hero Jose from Earth arrived and preached the ‘Word of God’ as he called it.”
“Do the names Christianity, Judaism, or Islam sound familiar?”
“Christianity? Do you mean their Lord Christ?”
“Oh, fuck me,” Avaron groaned and rubbed her eyes. “He was a Christian. Devout, too, probably. Sorry, continue.”
“… It is just so. As he preached the Word of God, and as a divine heroine of notable accomplishment, Jose accrued quite the following. His rejection of this world’s goddesses, however, also made him many enemies. To them, they saw the Word of God as a threat and Jose was famously martyred after a long, gruesome battle.” The wind blew gently and Rinnamu rubbed her nose for a moment from all the pollen in the air. “I’m not sure where the Church of the Everlasting Light began, but when they appeared, they used the same holy texts penned by Jose himself. The most notable difference was that their venerable Light responded to their worship, whereas Jose’s God never seemingly did.”
“What a clever trick,” Avaron mused aloud. “I have to hand it to them, that is a way to get followers without revealing your true nature.”
“Would not impersonating a god, even for another goddess, invoke divine ire?” Rinnamu asked, cordial with a tinge of genuine curiosity. “Such a thing would never happen in Kitinchi.”
“Earth’s goddesses and gods may not be there; either having never existed, or simply vanished one day. There’s no tangible proof or relationship like on this world,” Avaron explained, then chuckled. “Then I got sucked through to another world and here I am. It’s quite the uncomfortable difference.”
“As much as I cannot imagine such a world as Earth,” Rinnamu said lightly. “Life is truly mysterious.”
“It is. Oh, unrelated to all of that, and something that will thrill you probably: I mean to visit Kitinchi, most likely next year or the year after that at the latest.”
“Oh? And to whom shall you visit?”
“Honda’s first, of course. I do owe him for that lovely pile of books he gave me, even if I am suspicious of his ultimate motives.”
“My ladies will be most distraught to hear that, I fear.”
“… I still don’t know who you serve, exactly. Hanamaru I gather is her own force, but you?”
“I am but a humble ninja in service to the Twinned Ladies, Guardians of the Moons, and protectors of Kitinchi. Whom Hanamaru herself also serves, in her own brutish ways.”
Avaron did recall reading about the Twinned Ladies’ in Honda’s books. Half-humanoid, half-serpent monja women notably born as twins during an auspicious lunar event, blessing them with divine powers. They were apparently a capable pair of priestesses whose boons staved off plagues while rituals provided bountiful harvests. Honda considered them important cornerstones to Kitinchi’s welfare, giving them incredible political power.
“I’ll admit they’re more thrilling to meet than someone like Honda, but there is an order to these things.”
“Of course. I am certain they will understand.”
“I’d think poorly of them if they asked me to not respect propriety,” Avaron stated in a cool, off-handed way. Not directly accusatory, but a definitive statement in itself. For all the verbal jousting they did underneath the veneer of politeness, promises could be made without promising them directly. After all, subtlety was an art form of important meaning in itself.
“I confess to one concern, however,” Rinnamu said, deftly brushing past Avaron’s remark. “You are aware that Kagura is training one of the other divine heroines herself?”
“I am.”
“Does that not concern you?”
“Hoshi is a capable lad. He and I have already had that talk. After all, Eden is the only place in all this world that is owned and ran by a divine heroine. It is safe harbor for us, where as other nations may simply wish to exploit us instead.”
“… I see. I thank you for your time, Queen Avaron.”
“Before you go, I do have one devious little question myself,” Avaron said, turning to give Rinnamu a smirk. The kitsune stared up at her with those roundly angled eyes and their big, shimmering amber colors. Her face carried a maturity unmarked by the troubles of aging; shapely in a way only a woman in her thirties or forties could be. Even if she was likely far older than that in reality. To she say fit in being Avaron’s type would be unfair because goodness why were all the ninja she saw outrageously beautiful?
“Oh?”
“What is proper manners for wanting to touch a kitsune’s tail or fluffy ears? I myself am very fluffy but I rarely get to enjoy it at all.”
Rinnamu stared, then blinked in a wide-eyed expression of surprise. She actually reached up and hid her mouth while turning away, a red splash washing over her creamy skin. “I—ahem. That is quite a personal question to ask, forgiving as I am of your ignorance.”
“Think nothing of it, then, I don’t mean to be a bother.”
“I shall think much of it,” Rinnamu said with a certain coyness and sneaky look over her sleeve. “It is a deeply intimate act, after all.”
It almost made Avaron laugh, because the idea of her being seduced sounded incredibly funny. Seduction wasn’t that much of a mystery, after all: use romance, love, and/or sex to manipulate others. Even simple heartfelt companionship of being listened to could do a lot. Spies and secret agents would undoubtedly target such a vulnerability if they could find it. Ninja probably weren’t that different.
The idea of a single person trying to seduce her, a living [Hive Mind], was what really tickled her.
On the other hand, it might be incredibly dangerous if it did actually work on her.
Knowing about something’s dangers did not, in fact, lessen their dangers at all.
“I shall consider it with respect in the future, then.” Avaron grinned, but then made a show of sighing and looking toward the metalworks. “Sadly, I must get to work and do my inspection. You’re welcome to stay in my shadow, if you want.”
“Oh? No concern over my inquisitiveness, Queen Avaron?”
“You’ll never find what’s truly dangerous. Well, not unless you peek up my dress like Koya did.”
Rinnamu’s eyes popped open and Avaron hurried on ahead, laughing. At least for once she got a one up on someone!
*~*
People were such flawed, aggravating beings. They lacked understanding of their own natures even as they were beholden to them. They refused to accept what they were, pretending to be something else instead. They conspired and plotted, schemed and devised, all toward some nebulous goal that meant nothing but furthering their own power.
Why struggle for something when food was already available? Why pine for more when given shelter was more than enough? What drove them into realms of such insanity that what nature provided, wasn’t enough anymore?
Old questions she’d concluded countless answers to.
People weren’t that mysterious. Different, yes, but an animal of their own kind. Unique in the burden of thought and unshackled in their potential to grow. Knowledge was their truest form of all; a creature made by the effort of the many, to become the many more. They worshiped it, embodied it, contributed to it, scorned and reviled it … but it was what they were.
Tendrils of something greater, embodied in solitary minds, yet beholden to their collective will.
Not that different from a tentradom.
Without knowledge, a person was nothing more than animal. Intelligent and cunning, but nothing more. There were many animals that fulfilled this criteria. Only people cultivated knowledge—the beast that lived in them all, formless yet tangible.
That was why Avaron’s knowledge terrified her so much.
She was a beast from another world; the tendril of something immense in size and age.
Even if her knowledge was fragmented, distorted, or biased, the faintest pieces beget horrific power. The merest ability to ‘know’ and believe that knowing with certainty gave direction and purpose. Through both, action manifested, and so change followed. Avaron was right; there were things not even she could imagine. Once, ignorance had been a comfortable blanket, but with it so rudely stripped away, she was left only to fear.
Fear the monster she allowed into her world.
Something far, far worse than the refugees she’d granted passage to long ago.
There were many things she didn’t know, but that didn’t mean she knew nothing. She could see what would happen if such a monster was left unchecked. Between Avaron or Haska, she wasn’t sure who she preferred. One brought familiarity and comfort, for however doomed his own views were. The other brought change without reference or meaning, but purposed to ends that would be irreversible.
Avaron was right about another thing; she couldn’t simply sit around, watching.
If the world ended because of her again, Nex doubted even death would bring peace anymore.
It agonized her so much, but there was work to do.
She doubted anything could stop Avaron, but perhaps guiding her would suffice. If nothing else, avert her from the worst possible outcome. Whether or not that’d be the correct thing to do, Nex didn’t know. But, if she did nothing, then a doomed future was all that awaited. Even her stubborn hope for a better world would die and there’d be no point to anything anymore.
So long as Avaron insisted on her putrid drones and their soulless ways, Eden’s Hive would grow like a cancer across everything it beheld.
It must be averted; changed.
She’d hoped the blood of the children she gave to Avaron would lead her toward a different path. Instead, it only made her turn away all the more.
Nex’s attention crawled through existence, between the lines of everything and anything. It would be within Eden itself, nestled in a dark corner of the southern forest, her divine gaze fixated. Blue flesh pulsated in the roots of a tree, burrowed deep into the earth and well-hidden even from Avaron’s invasive observations. To the outside, it appeared like a shut-together sphincter, lips tightly sealed to protect the bulbous and large egg buried in the ground.
Despite knowing what had to be done, Nex still wondered if it was appropriate.
She’d given up before; she might give up again.
She hated that, herself, and everything.
But, hatred itself was a kind of motivation.
I am already this far, what point is cowardice? she mused.
It only took lighting the fire before it left her control.
Control.
Hmmm; she started to hate that word, too.
Nex reached down with an unseen tendril, brushing the slumbering mind within the egg. Freed from the shackles of torpor, the unborn tentacle within began writhing. The mouth of the egg gurgled as nurturing fluids splurted out, the muscles of its sealing lips twitching sporadically. Then, moments later, like a flower in bloom, the sphincter opened and the lips parted. A spindly creature crept out, eight distinct legs and a torso in the vague shape of an hour glass.
Two long, coiled tails whipped about it, easily four times in length to the rest of its body. The creamy chitin, speckled with molted dots of white and gold, complimented its darker blue flesh. The spidery creature stretched its long legs and shook itself, knocking off the excess fluids clinging onto it. Sucking in a breath, it then coughed and hacked, expelling mucus from the huge, mouth-like organ on its torso’s underside. Two wide, vaguely vaginal lips spread open, lined with a row of soft, jelly-like teeth as two different tentacles flexed, stuck out to stretch, then sucked back inward again.
She’d borrowed from the realm of spiders to create it, the last of her children before the downfall. Something to carry on the legacy of the tentradoms should a time of their return ever truly come. It never did, no matter how long she watched.
Perhaps doing nothing, in the end, was the blame she solely deserved for it all.
Go, Nex compelled the newborn. Live. Eat. Breed.
It would, in its own ways it’d been born to do. The spidery creature snorted the air, scenting the wilderness for anything concerning. It wasn’t a fighter in any capacity, but it did know how to sneak and survive. Hiding, after all, was a great virtue to something that’d be hunted to the ends of the world.
Whatever came of it was out of her control; Nex merely set the piece in motion.
*~*~*
Codex:
[Tentacle Type: Humper
A scavenger-type tentacle ideal for pollinating plants as well as women. Specially created by Goddess Nex, it contains the blood lineages of all tentradoms, allowing its impregnating eggs to mature into countless thousands of types of other tentacles. They’re extremely frightful creatures and stalk their chosen mates in near perfect secrecy before latching onto them. While humpers may remain affixed for hours during mating, their nectar is especially potent as a food and aphrodisiac.
Their unique abilities are:
[Bloodline Repository: Humpers contain all the bloodlines of tentradoms that Goddess Nex collected, making them living libraries.]
[Voracious Mating: Humpers lack flexibility compared to other tentacles, but make up for it with their aggressive and skillful penetration-centric mating.]
[Pheromones: Humpers can exude a number of pheromones to communicate, entice mating, or ward off potential danger.]
[Bioelectricity: Humpers generate a degree of electrical charge and can utilize it in various ways.]
Long ago, as the last tentradoms died, Nex encapsulated their lineages within a single descendant. She buried them across the world, waiting for the day in which her children could return once more. It is believed the outbreaks of the tentradoms throughout the ages are a result of these sleeping humpers being disturbed.]
Chapter 74: Eden's Gardens
Chapter Text
The ashes of ruin lay a fertile soil for the future.
*~*
Awareness stretched and yawned alike, vast and quaint. She hadn’t really tried extending herself so much in a long, long time. Like unused muscles, it took far more effort because of years of neglect. It hadn’t seemed all that important, but her lacking ability scratched her pride something fiercely. A stark and certain truth to even her, of all goddesses, falling victim to time after a fashion.
One more scathing irritation in an ever growing pile of them.
Trying to put it out of mind, Nahtura felt along the breadth of the wilds, scrutinizing everything she could. Her gaze sought, saw, and remembered, rebuilding her understanding of the world for it’d once again changed beyond recognition. The earth remained in many places, familiar mountains and great valleys set alongside the usual seas and oceans. Those places she remembered, which made piecing together the rest of it much easier.
Some places changed entirely, no recognizable animals or plants that’d once been there. Whether from disaster or people, it didn’t matter, for change happened all the same. Others were mostly familiar and comprised of descendants she vaguely recognized. Of course, the unmoving, timeless ones she knew well too; they were always the same, thankfully. Some recognized her passing attention, giving due respect and acknowledgement. Better still to know not to ask of her anything, for she despised unwanted business.
The more things changed, the more she found some things were the same. Comfortable and annoying at the same time.
Nahtura saw as well places where nature didn’t extend into. Places of overwhelming naki where Haska festered and stewed, mired in his timeless rage. Some were the usual spots, but he seemed to have grown into others. As always, though, he kept his manners about him, and never unduly took from her domain what wasn’t his. He was, if nothing else, respectful to a fault even she found ridiculous sometimes.
If only he and Nyoom let go of their senseless attachment to bygone times, there’d be so much more they could do.
It hurt whenever she lost a daughter, even after all the years and she’d hardened tougher than any of the oldest growths. Nahtura hated Haska, for his actions took her daughters from her. At the same time, she understood the great cycle of things. Life and death were components of it, as much as pain and happiness were that of the heart. Two contradictory forces that tore each other apart and gave purposeful meaning to why they existed at all.
Still, he hadn’t gone too far, so she turned her gaze from him. When no other answer sufficed, ignoring always worked.
How much she wanted to go back to sleep again and ignore everything. Yet, there were things in her that ate away at such a notion. Irritating forces that did just enough to push even her mind around. Her once love not only remained, but returned again; a song Nahtura could never resist. Yet, she despised her, and chose not to speak anymore; there was nothing she could do but wait. It burned her as fierce as the acid spilling from her throat.
The Forever Dark had vanished, tearing out a foundational root of the tree that was the world. The Eternal Flame would have to be jarred up again, lest its chaos swallowed everything. She highly doubted any except the oldest of goddesses even had the power to do that anymore. Such a duty may fall to her to resolve, for she was one of the unfortunate fools still stuck in the world it’d burn.
The changing of the ages threatened the delicate balance between the many forces of the world. That terrible gun she saw proved enough that, much like when the first bow shot the first arrow, things would become different. Nature was not prepared for such a difference; it would have to become so.
A tinge in her bulging belly reminded her of yet another thing.
It was enough and wasn’t much at the same time, and so Nahtura opened her tourmaline-colored eyes, gazing up at the sun rays peeking through the canopy. Laying in a patch of wild flowers, they shuddered and waved, greeting and avoiding her scrutinizing look. She rolled her head from one side to the other, the creaking-crack of woody joints accompanying a pleasant release from stiffness. Rather than sit up herself, she simply had the tree root buried underneath her rise and push her into a half-sitting posture.
The motion made the changing muscles-and-fibers in her gut give a protesting reminder. A familiar and strange feeling, one she knew so well, yet felt so far away from. Nahtura hadn’t a concept of how long since her last pregnancy, nor of the children she birthed then. Long slumber numbed the pains of death and separation, but so too stole away the memories of the babes that supped on her breasts. Along with the smiles of an ignorant, unformed child bedazzled by the world Nahtura herself knew inside and out.
If she thought about it for too long, she’d start hating again.
Whether sensing her ire or having a convenient sense of timing, a ladybug buzzed on by. Nahtura held a hand out, letting the noble land upon her palm. “Oh, it’s you. Finally back, then?”
The ladybug’s antennae twitched.
“Interesting, you say? Very well, tell me.”
So the ladybug did and Nahtura learned of something that created a troubling context.
Back when the tentradoms died out, and Nex refused any aide to save them, Nahtura watched. She wondered, not for the first time, how anything could be so unwilling to fight. Like cows or sheep, the tentradoms and their tentacles had fight in them, but only so much. Social pecking order was the biggest source of conflict they cared about. Facing something like humanity, who possessed the drive to destroy everything in front of it, their simplistic concept of violence wasn’t a match at all.
Avaron wasn’t fighting like tentradoms; she fought like a human.
Her tentaclelings marched in formations and wielded natural weapons, slaughtering Nagraki slaves with a ferocity equal to theirs. They didn’t pause to mourn the fallen nor even regard pain on their own bodies. They marched with unceasing brutality, using each other just as much if the situation called for it. Nahtura wasn’t even sure how much of it she believed, but there was no deception to the ladybug’s testimony.
A [Divine Heroine] from another world; a different kind of tentradom. Or, is she truly a tentradom? Nahtura pondered. Nex granted flesh to her, but that is just a shell. What is she?
It’d been one of those details Nahtura noticed on that fateful day of their mating. Avaron’s insides were all … misaligned. Improperly made. Flawed in a way no naturally born tentradom ever would’ve been. The more she thought on it, the more it seemed like something else that’d been remade into being like a tentradom. Not in a fake way, for Avaron was an authentic tentradom, but the legacy of such work nonetheless remained.
If she was a tentradom from another world, she was one very different from anything Nex and her kin ever were.
“You have done well,” Nahtura remarked, regarding the ladybug. “I shall call upon you again.”
The ladybug’s antennae bounced before it took to flight and buzzed off.
It is that difference that lets her wield the violence of people, she considered. The greatness of the tentradoms may finally have a predator deadlier than even their greatest rivals.
If left unchecked, Avaron would singlehandedly herald a new age of unbridled supremacy. For Nahtura, who wanted to see Nex and her kin live once more, it left a bitter taste in her mouth. They wouldn’t ever return to such gentle days, for the world knew of violence far beyond what was ever natural. It collared life itself, dragging it to some inscrutable end she still couldn’t see. Or, at least she couldn’t before.
Avaron’s simple, terrifying words foretold how that end could arrive. What war is fought that needs a ‘nuclear’ weapon? she wondered. Who must die that such power need be made?
“—tura! Hey, Nahtura!” Avaron’s voice suddenly reached her ears.
Nahtura scowled, all too aware of someone calling for her. She wasn’t used to that, either. Generations of teaching the world to never utter her name meant long and lasting, blissful silence. Only her daughters dared to do so, but they had proper respect. She could tolerate them.
She ‘should’ tolerate Avaron; dangerous and enticingly strange being she was.
“Nahturaaaa—“
Smacking her hand on the ground in annoyance, Nahtura stood up. The location was apparently one of those underground garden domes deep within the Hive itself. Fleshy, cyan-colored tentacle grass intermingled with rooty, natural green grass, creating a field underneath a magic crystal-lit sky. The next moment, she disappeared from the flowery field and reappeared behind Avaron herself. Latching her hand around the tentradom’s neck, she squeezed just enough to make Avaron shut up.
“I was sleeping,” Nahtura said with the sweetest sharpness.
“Yeah, I gathered,” another, different Avaron said from off to the side. Nahtura looked over at her in surprise, half-forgetting about the other ones existing. “I can’t exactly tell if you’re awake or not, though.”
“Tch.”
“Would you please stop choking her before she gets some bizarre kink?” Avaron requested.
The other Avaron wheezed, “Like hell I will!”
Even Nahtura didn’t have the patience to deal with whatever was going on. She let go of Avaron and gave them both a doubtful look. “What do you want?”
The formerly-choked Avaron coughed a bit, then pointed off to the side. “Well, first there’s food there you can eat. Second, I wanted to talk.”
She wasn’t sure how hungry she was, but Nahtura did like the idea of something to eat. A nearby chitin-made table awaited with some chairs around it, trays of luscious food that bore Tsugumi’s distinct style. Nahtura headed over, shadowed by three Avarons, Gwyneth, and Tsugumi. They all carried a certain wariness to them that delighted her, but at the same time she found it annoying. Plopping down onto a chair, Nahtura craned over the table, fingers twitching at which prospective prey to sup on first.
“I don’t care for this fuss you make,” she remarked without looking. “What do you want?”
Gwyneth and Tsugumi, at Avaron’s ushering, also sat down at the table. They, however, had their own selections to eat from and nothing that would detract from Nahtura’s. A clever and irritatingly insightful arrangement. She plucked up some round-looking, white puff ball that smelled of meat and flour. It felt rather soft between her fingers, strangely firm in character but easy to rip apart. A dumpling? No … Maybe?
“Well, your opinion, I guess. From all of you, since we’ve all, uh, bred together.”
Nahtura tilted her head toward the speaking Avaron, staring at the awkward sight.
“About what?” Tsugumi asked in that light, polite way of hers.
“You know, I had a whole speech lined up, but this is so embarrassing,” one Avaron said to another, who nodded.
“Yeah, right.”
The third Avaron sighed. “Up until this point through our wonderful breeding together, you’ve all born what I classify as drones. Tentacle-kin who grow into becoming a part of my [Hive Mind]. I’m repeating some of this so Nahtura knows as well.”
“… Is that why the young in me are so strange?” the dryad asked amusedly. “I thought you were ineffectual.”
“They’re most likely different from what you know, yes,” the third Avaron returned dryly, which made Nahtura stick her tongue out petulantly. A tongue she plopped one of those fluffy not-dumplings onto and sucked into her maw quickly.
Gwyneth asked, “Prithee, what doth thou mean to offer?”
“There are two new choices to be made for future offspring. Uh … Even I’m feeling embarrassed about this now,” the third Avaron said, rubbing her face. “A new type of tentacle-kin that I inherited from Nex. They’re more traditional, you could say, and require a live birth, not something as simple as eggs.”
Tsugumi interjected, “Meaning it will be much harder on us.”
“I can’t say how much so. The [Brood Mother] skill being what it is confuses me. There’s no promises it isn’t risky.”
“And the other choice?”
“Uh, ‘normal children’. We’ve kind of talked about it before, but I’m more … open, to the idea, now.”
Nahtura squinted. A tentradom fears the offspring she makes?
“Why?” Tsugumi asked curiously.
The second Avaron spoke up then. “For however complicated I feel about raising an honest baby, it’s not … fair, of me, to deny any of you that choice. I still don’t think I’d be any good of a parent to them, but that’s on me.”
“Does it matter?” Nahtura drawled around her mouthful of food. “What is made is made.”
“I present the choice; the decision is yours. Just, uh, tell me whichever you all want when the time comes.”
“Or I do,” the other Avaron remarked under her breath. The other, other, Avaron jabbed her elbow into herself.
Gwyneth said with a degree of enthusiasm, “I shall give it due thought, then!”
“… I’ll consider it,” Tsugumi said much more reservedly.
“I don’t care,” Nahtura remarked. “You woke me up for this?”
“Can’t blame me for trying; or do, I guess …”
It sounded bizarre to Nahtura in ways she found aggravating to figure out. So, she didn’t. If a tentradom mated, children followed; what kind was whatever kind they were. She did find Avaron’s ‘eggs’ different than … anything, before, but every tentradom had a quirk of some kind to them. Until she gave birth and actually got a look at how different they truly were, though, it just didn’t matter.
No, something else garnered her attention.
Her gaze slid over toward Gwyneth’s chest, staring with unerring sharpness. At the same time, she plopped another one of those teeth-sticking fluffy things into her mouth. It tasted meaty, yet at the same time, gunky. Hateable and likeable. Taking a swig from a mug of water, Nahtura set it down heavily and said, “You and I must talk.”
“Eh?” Gwyneth jolted.
“Not you. The Flame. Just us.”
The burning flame that hovered over Gwyneth’s bosom flickered, moving to a wind that didn’t exist. The priestess looked down and regarded it. “Ah, of course.” She cupped her hands underneath the flame, then offered it Nahtura. The dryad swept her hand underneath the flame far more flippantly, snatching it away with a callous quickness.
The burning change of promise the Eternal Flame offered hadn’t been upon her hand in a … long, time. It felt as distasteful as it ever did. With a grunt, Nahtura stood up and tried to think of where to go for such a conversation.
“Forgive me, Avaron,” Gwyneth said sheepishly, rubbing the back of her head. “I cannot perceive the statue thee wisheth of me until the Flame returns.”
Nahtura’s brow slid upward and she looked at the priestess amusedly. “Then make another flame to see with?”
“Eh? Oh, I cannot, tis not my—“
Incompetency annoyed her even more than someone daring to talk about. Nahtura bit out commandingly, “Make a flame of your own, one that can do all of what you believe. You need not the Eternal Flame’s help to do so.”
The Avarons and Tsugumi frowned, but Gwyneth bowed her head lightly. “V-very well, ehm …”
Clasping her hands together, palm-to-palm, Gwyneth focused upon them. Her breathing changed slightly from a natural rhythm to one of specific purpose: inhaling, rising, then exhaling, not unlike the bellows of a furnace. Inhale, exhale, and the creeping warmth of a new light slowly peeked out between her palms. Sparks and embers left her mouth, the tiniest wisps of warmth soon kissing her naked hands.
When she slowly peeled her hands apart, a crackle hissed as a new flame erupted to life. Though lacking in many ways to what Nahtura held in her palm, it was, in part, a divine flame.
“Eh? Ehhh??” Gwyneth gushed confusedly, looking at her hands, then around herself. She cradled the flame like a candle in the darkness, using it to see everything. “It works so simply?”
“It works?” an Avaron echoed confusedly.
“You are the Chosen Sacrifice of the Eternal Flame,” Nahtura remarked airily. “[Job] or not, its presence imparts boons and poxes alike. Perhaps lift your head more and you may learn something.”
If her acidic words did anything, Gwyneth showed no signs of caring, far more interested in looking around with her newly created candle flame. The dryad scoffed.
Avaron, however, said, “Well, thank you, Nah—“
She left in an instant, uncaring of such platitudes. Instead, Nahtura stepped through the world to where she and the Eternal Flame might speak without an undue interruption. A meadow atop a mountain, far removed from everyone and everything, where the winds blew in torrential currents and mighty beasts of the sky roosted. Situated on a plateau, no one would think of such a place for anything more than a temporary rest. The charming view of the vast horizon didn’t mean anything to her. The winds, at least, were respectful enough to redirect themselves elsewhere lest they earn her ire.
The presence of another being pressed in, the flame upon her palm beginning to grow in size.
“How unexpected.” The Eternal Flame’s rumbling voice shook the loose dirt and stone around them. “What of us might be thine desire, oh Great Owl?”
“Your partner vanishing.”
“… Does that mean then, that of our plights, even thee shall move?”
“As much as I would rather sleep,” Nahtura said dryly.
The flame upon her palm leapt forward, arcing to a place just in front. It splashed upon the ground and a great heaving suck followed just before it bloomed alive. It grew thrice her height in an instant, then spiraled upon itself like water down a drain. The whole of the flame wobbled, contorted, and writhed, squirming like an egg on the cusp of hatching. It grew dimmer and darker, smoldering with ashes of the world.
A figure took shape, melting from fire to formed figurine. It became the blackened flesh of women and men, of every species that spoke with thought and love. Humanoid in shape, it comprised of thousands of smaller statues, each the carved bodies of its prior Chosen. Their hands wove together, they embraced one another, all intertwined in ways unnatural and seamless in shared love, hatred, endearment, revulsion, and so much more. Something even the bravest of souls might be driven to madness upon trying to grasp an understanding of. Others left in stunned awe of the beautiful craft, the surreal design, and the overwhelming presence of divinity.
Where would be its head was instead a great gaping hole. A cauldron in all ways, tipped onto its side toward Nahtura like some sort of face. Its edges were the Chosen themselves, their hands raised in pious devotion. To them, they worshiped the meaning of change as much as embodied it. The true home of the Eternal Flame; the living seat of another goddess.
“It hath been many ages before we hath seen thee once more, oh Great Owl,” the Eternal Flame greeted, the many thousands of voices speaking in a near perfect, harmonious unison. The burning fire within the cauldron writhed and churned, as much a gaseous flame as it was liquid magma. “Were it for better reasons than such sorrowful times.”
“Were I not need a reason to see you,” Nahtura shot back casually. “Speak plainly and tell me what you know of what happened.”
“Prithee, listen, and receive our plea …”
*~*
“So that happened,” the Avaron sitting with Tsugumi in the garden remarked.
“It did indeed.”
Letting out a suffering exhale, sitting-Avaron deflated downward into an uncomfortable slouch. “At least Gwyneth is, uh, having fun, I guess?”
The priestess had gone off through the garden, using her newly created ‘candle flame’ to explore with. For whatever it is she actually saw, it proved enamoring enough she’d done it for at least half an hour. Apparently when the flame grew ‘brighter’, Gwyneth could ‘see’ farther, and alternating its intensity had been one of her ongoing tests. One of the Avaron’s followed after if only to keep an eye out for anything catching on fire in their enclosed space.
“I don’t understand her. Miss ‘Great Owl’, that is,” Avaron complained. “I get it, everyone is different and has their own things going on but like … talking to her is aggravating. Literally as soon as we fuck, she waltzes off and doesn’t want to bother with me. Did I screw up? Am I the moron for expecting differently? I dunno.”
“A little, but, she is a goddess,” Tsugumi pointed out before politely sipping her drink. “One of the oldest and most powerful ones, too. I cannot say how much that will affect things, but learning her ways would not be simple.”
“I guess. It’s not ‘bad’ yet, I’m just at a loss,” Avaron griped, gesturing with her hands impotently. “It takes two to tango and I’m the only shaking around my ass, but I have no idea if that’s even the proper thing to do. Alright, I’m done, I’m over it, I’ll keep my peace about it.”
Tsugumi didn’t know what a ‘tango’ was, but she made an agreeing sound. On the one hand, she did want to help Avaron get over such frustrations, but on the other … well, Tsugumi wasn’t entirely going out of her own way to help, either. Gwyneth she accepted; Arzha seemed inevitable, and Raina may or may not pan out. They were people she understood; they could be made to fit into the web of things. A goddess? The elvetahn’s infamous progenitor who killed any who misspoke her true name? That and many more horrible things besides?
One part of Tsugumi felt staying far away from such a being was the only reasonable thing to do.
But, her life was full of unreasonable, if not completely insane, things.
Reason was a luxury sometimes she didn’t know how to buy.
“The only thing I will say—” Tsugumi set her cup on the porcelain with a ‘clink’. “—Is to consider how wise it is bringing some of us together. One like her is a beast that wishes to be left to its own contrivances. No matter how she’s entreated, she is still a beast. No matter how skilled you are at handling her, Gwyneth nor I may not be so powerful, or lucky.”
It was something that could end up any number of ways, be it painful or simple. Avaron sat there, staring while she spoke, then looking away. A thoughtful way of hers that Tsugumi recognized and so waited. After a long moment, Avaron said, “It’s funny how familiar that reasoning is to me. I guess whether in a corporation or a harem, how people come together is the same old ways.” She rubbed her forehead, those cute antennae of her bobbing up and down suddenly from the motions. “You’re correct, I’m being too willful about it.”
“Knowing is the first step on the road toward doing, I merely hope you can achieve that as well.”
“Me too,” Avaron remarked with a tinge of amusement. “It helps Gwyneth learned something from all this, at least. I haven’t seen her laugh this much since … well …”
“Since when?” Tsugumi asked with a steely tease.
“That one time she tried sucking me off and I blasted all over her face and clothes,” Avaron answered with a certain comedy-inclined dryness. “Listen, it was funny at the time.”
“Isn’t that every night when she prowls upon you in bed?”
“It’s still funny. And I remember you using those webs to tie her down when she wouldn’t stop long enough for you to lick her clean.”
“Details,” Tsugumi shot back airily. “She’s so graceful when she squirms like a cum-starved maggot, begging all the while.”
Avaron barked and coughed a laugh out at the same time, hurriedly holding a fist to her lips. In their quiet duel of comedy, she lost plainly. “Hey now, she’s a lot more beautiful than that. Can’t you find something else to describe her?”
“A rapacious slut?”
“That’s just how she is—“
“What, pray tell me, am I?” Gwyneth’s voice suddenly interjected, the naked priestess standing behind Avaron. Tsugumi saw her approach all the while, but apparently the Avaron she talked to didn’t know for some reason. Said Avaron jumped in her skin and whirled around. When she tried to get from the chair, Gwyneth sat down on top of her, squishing that plump ass in a way that meant business. The flame that once sat upon Gwyneth’s impressive bosom was not there, but instead she made it coil around her arms. They licked at the air, roiling serpents as alive as they were tranquil.
Divine, almost, in appearance.
“A studious and thoughtful priestess dedicated to her craft in a way that should inspire—mpmhmphf?” Avaron’s cute, snooty mouth shut up the instant Gwyneth plopped her boob right into it. A sucking pop sounded when Avaron gulped nipple and areola all into her hungry maw. “MPmph huhudu su—“
“Don’t talk with thy mouth filled,” Gwyneth chastised, flicking Avaron on the forehead with a finger. “Suck and drink mine bounty as thou must.”
Avaron rolled her eyes and lifted her hands behind Gwyneth. One went to her upper back, pulling her closer as Avaron reclined into the chair. The other created a loud, cracking smack across Gwyneth’s butt cheek, making the priestess cry out a surprised chirp. Gwyneth lurched forward, one hand on Avaron’s shoulder, the other on the back of the chair. For one who so boldly attacked with sudden ferocity, she lost all the initiative in an instant.
Tsugumi smirked at the sight and nearly jumped out of her own skin when two arms descended down her chest. Another Avaron stood behind her, leaning in a way that wrapped her demure bosom around the back of Tsugumi’s head. In the moment since Nahtura left and Tsugumi eased her alertfulness, Avaron found a way to get into her blindspot.
Way easier than ever before.
“See,” Avaron purred in a throaty, deep closeness right into Tsugumi’s ear. “You talk about wanting to be hunted, but you tensed enough to take my head off.”
“There is a difference been hunting and ambushing,” Tsugumi retorted, her curled fingers slowly easing. “As well as timing and place …” She tried to keep a stiff front, but Avaron’s arms sliding down her frontside made it really, really difficult. Not quite a grope, nor a teasing touch, yet those arms pushed her breasts together just enough to show a certain intent. Her lilac-colored bosom squished, the even darker nipples and areola plump and needy for attention. It didn’t take much to get them going anymore, much to Tsugumi’s chagrin. Sometimes just walking around in clothing started a leak and it was all so aggravating to deal with.
“Mm. Maybe. I worry it’ll make me into something I’m not,” Avaron remarked, her heated teasing turning into that dreary sort of pillow talk voice. “Doors once opened refuse to shut tightly again.”
Tsugumi reached up and with the tip of her finger, lightly tapped on the fluffy-ball end of Avaron’s antenna. “Is that so?”
“Don’t sound too excited. But, it’s rude of me to dump all my problems on you,” Avaron quipped then leaned in. Anticipation and the feeling of someone approaching closer made Tsugumi’s skin tingle before those lips landed on her neck. Softly warm, plush and wet, and a tiny little suckle to make her know the kiss; she couldn’t stop from shivering if she tried. “Soooo—“ damn that purring right on her skin, “—let’s make a game of it.”
“Game?” When those two sliding hands decided to reverse and cup her hefty bosom instead, Tsugumi chirped.
“A little game with simple rules. Maybe a code word. Maybe a certain piece of clothing,” Avaron remarked, each of her fingers doing a rolling wave; getting comfortable and taking a firmer, commanding grope. The pressure of being caught by another centered on Tsugumi’s mind with a pointed, heart-throbbing awareness. She felt her nipples start to stiffen with an eagerness they really shouldn’t have. “So when you give the signal, the hunt is afoot. Whether you or me, it’ll end one way or another.”
“What a devious thought you have,” Tsugumi retorted. “Placing all the expectation on me …”
“So you can take my head off on a day you don’t want to play?”
Tsugumi pursed her lips. It was a fair point even if it seemed to spoil her idea of spontaneity a little bit. “Fine, but if both of us can play the role, then you have to give a signal too.”
“I’m sure we’ll think of something …”
Gwyneth’s throaty, pleased sound rung out of her just as another cracking-smack landed on her ass.
“… After all, Gwyneth’s busy being the world’s sluttiest priestess. We can’t ignore your fun either.”
“I don’t need the world,” Tsugumi quipped, reaching up and lacing her hand along the back of Avaron’s head. “Just you.”
“Dearest proprietor, I am the world,” Avaron purred with delightful intensity.
*~*
Durelia hummed a tuneless song while she followed the tentacleling. Though Avaron made improvements to the tunnels of the Hive, a lot of it remained … same-y. Everywhere resembled everywhere else, making it a confusing labyrinth that only pure rote memorization could overcome. She was getting better at it, but it still took time. To her pleasant surprise, though, when they arrived at a cross-junction, Avaron herself appeared.
“Oh, Your Majesty,” Durelia greeted, bowing lightly in a way that definitely accentuated her cleavage. Intentional or not, she might as well delight her queen with such a sight.
“Lady Durelia,” Avaron returned, smiling in that pleasant-but-acknowledging way. It didn’t pass the vampire’s notice how those lovely blue eyes did glance at her cleavage. “A pleasant sight as always. You’re on your way to the surface?”
“Yes, I need to speak with lady Raina on some matters.”
“Ah. Shall we?” Avaron waved a hand in a gesture to continue on and Durelia nodded. The tentacleling trundled off to its own business while the two of them headed onward. “I know it can be hot down here, but has it been an issue?”
“Not at all. To speak truthfully, I’ve found the heat helps my old bones rest a bit easier than the house you provided.”
“Hmm. I wonder how much of that is your new [Job] affecting it?”
“It shouldn’t, but then again, it is quite different, too.”
“Well, do make use of the hot bath sometime, I’m sure it’ll help.”
“A hot bath?” Durelia echoed. “If it is no trouble, may I bring my daughters to use it as well?”
“That’s fine. It’s big enough for twenty people.”
“That’s quite impressive. How do you heat it?”
“There’s a boiler underneath it I’ve rebuilt a couple times. The useless biomass gets burned up as a fuel source.”
“Biomass?”
“Biological mass; biological matter … Ah, old flesh, chitin, and other things,” Avaron explained. “I try to recycle everything where I can, but there is just some waste I can’t save.”
“A sensible approach,” Durelia agreed, even if the terminology was a bit strange. The thought crossed her mind of the smell being bad for the baths, but it seemed ridiculous to overlook something that simple. “We’d all be glad to have such a luxurious bath. I’m used to the cloth and bucket, but my daughters … well, they grew up in finer tastes. The loss of the Gloomwoods has been harder on them.”
“Such is life when we find ourselves on the worse end of it. Has the tentacle blood helped at all?”
“Marvelously so. I’m not sure I would consider it completely superior to a person’s, but certainly far greater than beast blood,” Durelia enthused. “It surprised me. I suppose it also showed me why vampires of old were such a scourge to tentradoms.”
“Hmm. It’s likely I can improve on the flavor factor. Sadly, I have too much work on my plate to deal with right now.”
“Think nothing of it, Your Majesty. A viable substitute is already profound enough for my kind.”
Their pleasant journey through the Hive came to its gradual end when they reached the main entrance. Stepping out into the midday sunlight, the chitin bricks beneath led downward, terminating into the dirt road that led to Eden proper. Unlike the warm, body-enveloping heat of the Hive, the sun’s warmth felt as oppressively indifferent as it always did. A small, subtle difference, but an important one.
“That’s good, at least. If I’m honest, there’s a lot about tentradoms I’m still not certain about.”
Avaron’s casual remark belied how surprising her words truly were. Durelia looked down at her short queen and asked, “Why is that, Your Majesty?”
“There’s so many ways to start off on that,” Avaron muttered, then sighed. “I was raised by very human standards, let’s say. Never really did things in a tentradom manner, even when my nature was more hindrance than help. Now that I’m on this world, that very nature is causing all sorts of change. The [Sovereign Power] affecting everyone, especially women. My own, ah, intimate capabilities. The stupid aphrodisiac dust I make. It goes on and on.”
“… Aphrodisiac dust?” Durelia echoed, perhaps too much of her genuine intrigue slipping through.
“Technically it’s called [Mating Pheromones]. Pheromones being the actual, uh, alchemical makeup that makes smells, smell.”
“If I understand then, you make a ‘smell’ that tells others you want to mate with them?”
“… More like compels them; that’s the aphrodisiac bit. They start huffing the pheromones I make and their whole body starts enflaming with drug-induced arousal. I don’t mean it lightly either, I’m talking their minds start crumbling and they start craving sex like a beast in heat.”
“Oh. That would be an issue.”
“Yeah. It’s kind of like just making everyone around me drunk and they can’t stop it. That’s not a good thing.”
“Isn’t it? Of course, not freely,” Durelia asked, hurriedly qualifying herself when Avaron looked at her unpleasantly. “There are certainly uses for such a talent. If properly collected, Your Majesty, it could be a valuable medicine to those who struggle to achieve such passion on their own. Or, perhaps as a commodity for those rich enough to desire … more, in their bedrooms.”
“And what of those going about their business, stricken with a lust that isn’t theirs just because I walked nearby?” Avaron’s dry tone meant she’d more than given it such thought already. The posed problem, however, wasn’t something Durelia had an easy answer to. “Does tentacle goddess supreme have any clever idea on how to handle that?”
“None that I have read myself, I am sorry to say.”
“No, no, it’s my fault.” Avaron waved her off, then sighed while she looked away aimlessly. “I’m just frustrated with something I can’t change. It’s hard not feeling like a ticking bomb about to go off. It’ll always be that way.”
Perhaps, in its own way, it wasn’t so different from Durelia herself. Though the hunger for blood meant many things to vampires, it would always be a hunger. Everyone needed to eat, but only vampires needed to eat and drink blood. A concern unique solely to them and all the burden it placed, whether or not they gained more or simply suffered. The self-same complaints her daughters made when they came of age returned to her then, echoing old problems and old answers alike.
“Forgive my blithe words, Your Majesty, but the answer you may seek lays with embracing what you are,” Durelia said with a certain tone of experience. “Understanding and taming it to your own ends. Even if it may be a wild stud some days needing a good beating, that doesn’t make it your enemy. I speak as a vampire and someone who’s familiar with such a feeling.”
“… Mm. Perhaps truthful, even if it leaves a sour taste in my mouth.”
“For your consideration: we are allies, as you said before. What ally am I to not offer myself to help you?”
Avaron looked over, her antennae bouncing from the speed.
“In all ways that may be of service,” Durelia added on, smirking just enough her fangs peeked over her lip.
“I fear you play with fire,” Avaron returned, a little light sounding her voice.
“No one lives without getting burned once or twice. I merely make the offer, Your Majesty.”
“… I’ll consider it. I need to go to City Hall, I’m afraid. What was it you needed from Raina?”
“Oh, some strange request of the Goddess to speak to her. I’m not sure what over, but I am obligated to do so.”
“Don’t let her boss you around too much,” Avaron said with some seriousness.
“I would rather not unduly offend my new Goddess,” Durelia quipped dryly. “Even if being ‘bossed around’ is still new to me.”
“Ehh—fair enough.”
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Chapter 75: The Devil You Know
Chapter Text
A known evil remains an evil all the same.
*~*
(So what am I looking at?) Aegis asked.
(Uh, a parasite?) Venus offered.
(No shit it’s a parasite. You can see it eating our flesh right in front of our eyes.)
(My eyes, technically,) Aphora quipped. (But, yeah, first time seeing one of these. Not really sure what to make of it.)
(Kill it before it lays eggs?) Weaver suggested.
(If it hasn’t already. I’m more curious how it even survives eating us in the first place.)
(This better not be another West Jersey thing,) Cypher groaned, then palpably shivered throughout their [Hive Mind]. (Ah, fuck, thinking about that god damn wall and—)
(Yeah, stop thinking about it, asshole,) the other nine minds shot back at once.
The crux of the matter laid before Aphora, who’d been busy going through one of the Hive’s underground tunnels. A relatively newer tunnel, it ran underneath Eden perpendicular to the sewage system. Something the people of Eden, if they ever went into the sewers proper, would never actually find or use; proprietary ‘Hive’ only passage. In that very passage, nestled between white chitinous plates, munching away on the blue tentacle flesh of the Hive, was something like an earwig. If it’d been the size of Avaron’s thumb, purely gold colored, and had three pincers on its ass, anyway.
(I mean, it was bound to happen,) Corena pointed out. (I dunno what this thing is, though. I don’t think we’ve seen or eaten anything like it in this area?)
(It could be migratory, a hibernator, something purely underground we hadn’t mined into before … tons of possibilities,) Iris listed off drearily. (Where there’s one, there’ll be another, and then more. A better question is how do we deal with it?)
(The Hive has some mild self-defense ability, but it mostly stops bacteria and smaller organisms. You know, stuff like eyelash mites or whatever,) Cypher remarked. (It shouldn’t be too hard making larger defense features?)
(Do you have to keep remembering all this awful crap I’d rather forget?) Prime asked rhetorically, rubbing her forehead.
(It’s not like ignoring it helps us in any way except sentimentality,) Cypher retorted. (Believe me, I’m trying to figure out cognitive blocking so it’s less traumatizing for us all.)
(Cool, so anyway, what do I do about it?) Aphora asked. (I can just kill it.)
(Jar it and bring it to us,) Iris ordered. (At the least we should try assimilating it to see if there’s anything useful about its DNA.)
(You say that literally every time we find something fucked up in this world,) Abyssa pointed out.
(Am I wrong?)
(No, but that DNA backlog keeps getting bigger and we still have like, less than one percent idea about any of it.)
(That’s the fun thing about science. It’s boring and uneventful until something weird happens.)
(I don’t have a damn jar,) Aphora griped. (Fine, whatever.)
(Yooo, what’s going on at Raina’s ranch?) Medusa asked suddenly, drawing everyone else’s attention. Nine different intelligences filtered through the [Hive Mind], extending their senses into a particular skeye that was in flight over that side of Eden. Six of its eyes ambulated around in a camera-like sweep and search to visualize everything.
A crowd of people spilled out of the main building of the ranch in a rush that definitely wasn’t planned. Raina stood at the forefront of it, and for a moment Avaron thought her to be leading it. Seeing Durelia chasing after Raina, and the many other peoples behind her, meant something very different went on. What the fuck is this? Avaron wondered, incredulously.
(Aegis, I think you’re the closest,) Prime said after a moment’s searching through them all.
(Yeah, yeah. I’m heading over now.)
The one upside to the whole apparent mess was the crowd being dragged toward Eden. Avaron, embodied through Aegis, alongside several dozen worker drones, intercepted the mob some minutes later. At her own imminent arrival, the people all quieted down from their discordant shouting. Raina herself greeted with a loud, forced jubilance, “Ah, Your Majesty!”
Don’t like that, Avaron thought, then saw something on Raina’s arm. What the fuck is that?
Some sort of spider-not-spider creature had wrapped itself around Raina’s admittedly nice and muscular arm. Rather, she’d gripped its main, spider-like body, and two of its very long tails wrapped around her arm. It struggled one way or another, its legs flailing in a way only arachnids did naturally. Just the mere motion of it disturbed Avaron in a way her own spidery tentaclelings never did.
“Good goddesses, does that thing bleed acid?” Avaron asked, pointing accusingly.
Raina, her expression decidedly angered in a way Avaron hadn’t seen before, stared at her then the creature for a moment. “No. I don’t think it does?”
“Oh, it’s ugly. Where did you find it?”
“It’s not one of yours, then,” Raina asked rhetorically.
“No.”
“Good, I’ll kill it.”
Durelia shouted, “Just wait one moment!”
The two looked over at the impressively tall woman hustling toward them. Visibly flustered, fanned herself while glowering down at Raina. “I told you, she isn’t a threat!”
“Really? You’re saying that after I pried it off that woman’s face?” Raina retorted scathingly. “You’re saying that after I told you what these things are?”
“And what you knew, and what she is, are different,” Durelia stressed, huffed, then regarded Avaron with a wave of her hand. “If you shall not listen to me, then surely to Her Majesty.”
“Oh, I love being pulled into shit I don’t know about,” Avaron enthused, giving a half-hearted clap. “What’s going on?”
The crowd, thus far, had gathered around the three of them as mostly silent spectators. All women from Raina’s ranch in varying states of dress; mostly decent, but obviously hurried. “That thing snuck into the ranch!” one of them shouted.
“Yeah, I woke up with it sucking my tit!”
“And it was humping poor Yrem right there on the floor!”
“And—“
Avaron held up a hand and they quieted down. “I hear you. Lady Raina?”
“This—“ the Ashmourn Lady held up her arm still holding onto the offending creature, “—little monster must’ve come from another tentradom’s nest. I’ve seen them before.”
That bucket load of implications worked through Avaron’s mind at record speed. “Pretty good reason to kill it so far. Lady Durelia?” she asked next, looking at the ‘priestess’.
“As I know it,” the vampire priestess said with a certain forcefulness behind her polite voice, “she is merely recently awoken. A sleeping gift from the Goddess, apparently.”
“Sleeping gift?”
“She is a—“ Durelia held a hand out in presentation, her verbal hitch painfully obvious, “—Humper. A bearer of the old tentradom bloodlines and their many kindred. The Goddess left them in many secret places across the world as seeds for when the tentradoms might one day return.”
The crowd murmured then, apparently surprised by such knowledge. To Avaron’s own surprise, they didn’t seem ready for pitchforks oddly. She, however, looked at Durelia weirdly. “You’re telling me Nex left these little genetic bombs all over the world? Shit, is this why there’s insane tentradom outbreaks? No, of course it must be. How else does a dying species keep coming back?” The moment she asked her own question, an answer materialized. The odds of it being wrong were even more improbable.
Avaron smacked her forehead and stared at the sky. “What a stupid fucking plan, and believe me, I know some real dumb ones.”
Durelia smiled thinly.
Another voice, however, cut in, “Uhh, is it so bad?”
The asker, as far as Avaron knew, was Mari—one of Raina’s ‘sisterhood’ who survived an insane tentradom themselves. A brown-skinned human woman who didn’t look like she came from Artor given her more rounded features. Apparently not from Arden’s direction, but that was the farthest Avaron knew anything about her.
“Is there any reason it’s not?” she asked skeptically.
“Well,” Mari started slowly, self-conscious from everyone’s attention going to her. “She’s been nice. Drinks our milk and really good at massaging. Uh, a few girls had some fun with her mounting them … you know … fun things …”
“And are they pregnant now?” Avaron asked pointedly.
Mari didn’t quite meet her gaze, scratching her neck indecisively. Raina’s increasingly hard, unforgiving stare eventually made her crack. “Two are, yeah.”
The crowd murmured again.
The prospect of drinking chemically isolated sulfuric acid seemed way more fun than dealing with such people. Nonetheless, Avaron let out an aggravated sigh. “And did they decide to fuck around with it because they thought it was one of mine?”
“… I don’t know. Maybe?”
Can I even provide abortions? Maybe with healing magic I can do it mechanically instead of chemically, but that’s iffy. The only concrete healing magic she had on hand was Gwyneth’s, and Flame healing was dangerous in its own ways. Never mind whatever tentacle pregnancies did since they were bound to be much more complex biological processes. One more problem among many others to figure out, yet again. “That’s a heaping problem in itself, because as we’ve established, this thing isn’t one of mine. And if Lady Raina has experience with them, that’s good enough for me to know they’re danger—“
A rippling crackle sounded suddenly, not unlike the transformer box on a powerline suddenly exploding. Flashing blue light arced between the creature’s twin tails, climbing in a Jacob’s Ladder all the way to their tips. In a stinging motion it struck Raina’s arm, delivering the electricity with a spark-filled bang straight into her. The Ashmourn lady grit her teeth, her own muscles seizing on involuntary reflex. Her very hair shocked outward in a sudden, voluminous poof.
The crowd yelped and backed away.
Despite everything, Raina kept her hold on the creature. Avaron feared more for her heart or brain than anything else. “Y-y-y-you F-F-F-ILTHY THIN-NG!” Raina stuttered angrily, rearing her arm up in the air, aiming to smash the creature right into the ground.
“Wait, wait, wait,” Avaron barked, waving her hands. “I think it’s done?”
The spidery intruder had gone limp, not even wiggling to free itself anymore. Audibly panting and wheezing, it looked as if all its energy was spent in that one attack.
“It can make electricity,” Avaron said, her own thoughts slipping right out her mouth right before she smiled. “That’s incredible. I gotta dissect this thing!”
The possibilities of organic-derived electricity; she hadn’t even imagined it and there it was right in front of her. She could bypass the entire hassle of figuring out magnetism and turbines and copper wires and—
“Your Majesty, I must insist!” Durelia enthused loudly, gesturing in a pleading way. “She’s scared and this is going much too far! No harm has happened, I can promise you that!”
Raina squinted irritably.
“What? Can this thing talk? Are you talking to it?” Avaron demanded.
“No, it’s more a … feeling. From my [Job], you see.”
“Oh. Well, of course it’s scared. It broke into my lands, deceived my subjects, violated them, and now I must clean up after its mess,” Avaron pointed out, one-by-one. “If a man did this I’d punish him short of death. Perhaps even death itself, I haven’t ruled that out yet. It’s not a man or possibly even intelligent, just a dumb animal. Are you telling me it’s smart like a person?”
“… I’m uncertain of it.”
“Okay. If nothing else, the very first step to take here is I grab this thing and get my tentaclelings to wrap it in webbing and—“
Avaron froze the instant her hand laid atop the intruder creature.
A palpable sensation coursed up her arm at the speed of nerves-firing, reaching her mind in a near instant. An overwhelming fear pressed against her psyche, the alien sensation of another afraid for their life in a viscerally primal way. Avaron yanked her hand back a split second after such contact, her own expression contorting. The almost flippant snideness she exuded vanished entirely, replaced by a cold, calculative look that made both Durelia and Raina firm up.
(… Did you all feel that?) Aegis asked slowly.
(… Yeah,) the other nine intelligences answered. (We did.)
(Okay. What just happened?)
(If I had to guess,) Iris wagered, (it felt a lot like—)
“Your Majesty?” Durelia asked.
“Lady Avaron?” Raina also asked.
“Quiet,” Avaron ordered sternly, staring at her hand that touched the creature. Nothing about it seemed change, internally or otherwise. “I’m thinking.”
(It felt a lot like when we connected to the test brains,) Iris continued on again. (Except, you know, already occupied.)
(And something that isn’t fundamentally us,) Aegis wagered. (Familiar, but different in a way we simply don’t know.)
(Yeah. Try touching it again, I’m curious.)
(Is that wise if its thoughts intrude into ours?)
(What else are we going to do? Now’s a good as time as any to drop ass first into another mess.)
Iris wasn’t wrong, but Aegis was the part of their psyche that hated taking risks. Or at least, that’s just how she was, anyway.
Avaron looked at her hand speculatively, then reached slowly toward the creature again. “Alright,” she muttered. “Let’s see what’s inside.”
Hardy chitin, familiar but different to her own; warmer, coursing with blood, and the feeling of muscles articulating underneath. Physically, Avaron remained where she stood, but the mental connection brought her awareness into a different perspective entirely. Seeing without seeing, and knowing without thinking, she beheld herself—her entire self—in her ten great intelligences and the increasing multitudes that comprised the Hive’s existence.
The other, the ‘humper’ creature, tiny and alone, shivering with the fear of death.
It had no intelligence like a person, but more than she expected. Avaron wasn’t even sure how to gauge it or why she knew how to do that. Some part of her subconscious offered an answer that the rest had no idea how it was even made. The humper couldn’t even be called a dog’s level of intelligent; something just above it, but below a person.
Knowing without comprehension; living without hesitation. Sentient and aware, but not sapient.
Her mental gaze remained, staring down like an indifferent goddess. Ten pairs of eyes and a multitude of other bodies and their sensory apparatus melded together into one cohesive, alien existence.
The humper, for however long they both remained there, started to regard her. Curious, cautious, and afraid. Its mind felt around, finding safety within its own flesh still being there. Tired, drained, but pushed to live on. Its mind, for whatever it could be truly called, felt along its senses and soon found Avaron’s mental intrusion.
It wasn’t afraid, though it recognized strangeness in what happened. It was curious, for it felt kinship but not of any it knew. The humper acknowledged Avaron’s presence, though it did not know what she wanted.
(You harmed my people,) Avaron told it, and the humper did not understand. The words and concepts meant little to it, though it grasped some meaning.
(You hurt what was mine,) Avaron tried telling it again, and the humper understood more, but not enough.
If words were too complex, then impressions and thought would have to suffice. Avaron thought of such things: emotions, mental images, meaning understood if not spoken aloud, and the muddiness to which all these things intertwined. The humper did not understand, but it learned the more she showed it.
She told it that it’d hurt people it mated; the humper was confused, for nothing it did hurt anyone.
She told it that unwanted mating brought hurt; the humper was confused, for its mates offered themselves to it.
She told it that not all signs of offering meant mating, that others were different and did not know.
The humper understood a little bit more: what it took for offering and acceptance was not what truly happened. Still, its confusion persisted, for its mates didn’t fight it off nor resist.
Avaron showed it that, in some respects, those taken by fear become paralyzed and do not resist, for they are afraid of dying. Just as the humper feared Raina, the others feared it.
The humper understood more, creating a comprehension not wholly perfect but usable enough. Its desire to mate remained, but it wanted to know how to make such mates fearless, for it did not want them afraid.
Avaron told it that she did not know, but perhaps they could find out. As long as the humper obeyed her instruction, it would neither die nor be bereft of willing mates.
That enticed it enough to show a semblance of agreement, for what it could conceptualize of such a thing.
Lifting her hand away, Avaron’s mental connection closed and she found herself … herself, again. Raina, Durelia, and the crowd of women watched her with varying expressions. “Lady Raina.” Avaron looked down at her hand, flexing it superstitiously. “Please hand the ‘humper’ over to Lady Durelia. Lady Durelia, please take it to the Hive and have it … contained, for the time being.”
There were looks of doubt and annoyance alike, but Raina nonetheless obeyed. The humper, for its part, curled up in Durelia’s big arms and seemingly tried to hide away in her elbow.
“Lady Raina, please gather the women who interacted with the humper. We will need to watch over them until I can find someone to examine them.”
“For what?” Raina asked warily.
“Let’s hope everything is normal and uneventful,” Avaron returned, giving her hand one last wiggle. “But, I don’t know what that thing is or how it works, so, precautions are in order. That goes for the rest of you!” She shouted suddenly, pointing toward the crowd. “Twice now there have been women going around and getting it on with things they shouldn’t be! If you ever meet or find something you do not, for an absolute fact, know is part of my Hive, ask my drones! If you see something happening to someone, report it to my drones! If you’re walking home alone and are afraid of something in the middle of the night, report it to my drones!”
Avaron hammered her words punctually. “Until you know something is completely safe, be cautious! I won’t judge you for what you do, but for the love of whichever goddess you worship, be safe about it! There are still tentradoms out there in this world even I think are violent monsters that need to die. If one of them sneaks in here somehow, it’s going to end badly.”
Whether or not they appreciated her warnings, the crowd did seem somewhat chastised by her intensity.
“Yes, Your Majesty,” Raina affirmed with a pointed loudness.
“Yes, Your Majesty,” came the following discordant answers from the crowd.
Regardless of how things turned out, at least she tried for the time being. Avaron turned toward Durelia next. “Let’s return to the Hive and figure out our unexpected guest. Maybe ‘that goddess’ will wake up for some questions, too.”
“… Hopefully. As you wish, Your Majesty.”
I need to step up security as well. Clearly something of this size can slip past my sentinel drones like nothing. Ahh, there’s always something …
*~*
There wasn’t much she longed for and little she set aside for herself. The quiet gardens at the back of the cathedral, however, were one of the rare exceptions. Officially, it served as sanctified grounds for rest and recuperation that only the most piously faithful of the Church’s followers were permitted entry. In reality, it served as Pushey’s private retreat. Perhaps, in the end, the distinction didn’t matter, for she ended up caring for such useful tools herself anyway.
Shuffling sideways on her knees, she followed along the white-stone bricks that acted as the demure barrier for the garden been. The thicket of shining glowpetals before her was mostly okay, though she saw new branches or stalks that didn’t belong. Plants were obedient things, though only to their own sensibilities. They kept growing even long after it’d been self-destructive to do so.
It took a guiding hand to keep them healthy in a way they’d never know otherwise.
If only the same could be said for her aging body.
Reaching out with her cutters, Pushey tried squeezing, but a sharp nerve pain shot up her forearm. Her hand simply refused to work, compulsively twitching as tendons failed. The cutters slipped from her shaky fingers, thumping into the dirt. Pushey frowned at the sight, trying not to sigh. Two centuries in this body, she mused. Better than most, yet still an eternal disappointment.
She didn’t really care for the charade, but it had to be kept up. The timing simply proved unfortunate as much as ironic in its fateful coincidence. I really should select a successor and get on with it. The frailty of this form are affecting my own thoughts far too much.
With open war on the horizon and the next step of Lord Haska’s plans in motion, she needed to step up more. Lady Nyoom would expect as much anyway, so it just fell to her to get the work done. Well, she’d take care of the garden first, if only as a treat to herself.
With summer arriving, the glowpetals came in quite nicely. Their dark yellow stalks jutted upward, casting off branches of wide-brimmed leafs that curled slightly at their edges. In morning sunshine, when fog lay heavy, the dew collected in such simple basins, creating sparkling ponds filled with the purest of clean light. Fools never appreciated what they could truly do. The light merely dazzled them with the sight of something beautiful, if mind numbing.
Such was the way of things; few knew what glowpetals could do.
Once her hand stopped being a stubborn, fallible piece of flesh, she picked up the cutters once more and went to trimming again.
A pleasant day in summer; at least until the shouting began.
Pushey paid it no mind, already knowing who intruded upon her sanctum. The steel-plated guards tried stopping the intruder, but even they hadn’t the strength to truly stop them. Shouting and the heavy trudge of boots all clamored into her general direction, nearing closer and closer. She made one pointed little snip on an errant branch, setting aside the immature glowpetal with methodical care.
“GRAND SEER TRAVOISKA!” bellowed a woman more at home on the battlefield than a garden.
It took a moment for Pushey to realign with the name her body wore. ‘Grand Seer’ usually sufficed since she so often disconnected from whatever name she should’ve been wearing. Knowing all too well what would follow, she simply waited. Her guards protested indignantly, but in the end they couldn’t do anything meaningful.
A thick leather glove grabbed Pushey by the collar, ripping her up from the ground. Dangling in the hands of the person entirely too-human looking for how beastly she truly was, Pushey stared down calmly at the glowering Nyelfha.
“Why is my sister dead?!” the human warrior growled, her gold-tainted, blue eyes narrowed quite impressively.
Pushey tilted her head slightly, glancing down at the hands grapping her collar. “Even I have limits to my patience,” she said coolly, “Knight-captain Nyelfha.”
Chiseled face twitching with suppressed rage, Nyelfha still looked a hair’s breadth away from losing it entirely. After a long moment of staring at one another, she nonetheless gradually set Pushey back onto the ground. Their incredible height difference became all the more apparent, for Nyelfha was easily an entire foot taller and thick with muscle to put any man-at-arms to shame. Some even accused her of harraxin ancestry, much to Nyelfha’s endless shame.
“I apologize, Grand Seer,” Nyelfha bit out in a way that sounded more like an insult. “I implore your answer to my question all the same.”
Brushing her white, gold-trimmed robes clean, Pushey subtly glanced to her guards for them leave. Though they looked uncertain of such an order, they knew better than to disobey. Once they were out of earshot, she said simply, “Everything went out of expectation in the worst ways possible. I know such words give little comfort, but do understand not even my greatest precautions worked.”
“What happened?”
Nyelfha’s habit of growling with every word really didn’t fit spoken language at all. Pushey breathed for a moment, then said, “What I will tell you is a highly guarded secret, even among the Lances. You understand, I’m sure?”
“Of course.”
“The divine heroine summoning in Artor went awry, with thirteen heroines being summoned. Prioress Haelfha, as the ranking member of the Church in Artor, was supposed to guide and shepherd them to our care.” Pushey glanced at the glowpetals, finding them more appealing than Nyelfha’s glower. “We never expected so many, nor the appearance an unexpected abomination.”
“… Abomination?”
“A ‘divine’ tentradom, in defiance of all things good and sane,” Pushey said, then sighed. “The ones in Artor were too busy being gobsmacked to kill her on the spot. She soon escaped and everything fell apart after that.”
“More than four heroines is already strange, but twelve and one not even human?” Nyelfha wondered aloud, sounding like a dog trying to find its way through a maze. “Why?”
“A great mystery that has frustrated me for months. Time and distance, unfortunately, conspired against us. I ordered your sister to gather the heroines and come westward. Instead, I received a report that half them disappeared and she chased after. From what I pieced together, she pursued them toward the escaped tentradom, who may have very well captured the other heroines.”
“Why? Why would she …”
“She was always righteous,” Pushey said, eons of skilled practice making her placating words perfectly sympathetic sounding. “Even when caution would be better. Knowing how serious the matter would be, I dispatched a Lance to where she last was. Unfortunately, not even they were able to do much.”
“Is this new tentradom ‘heroine’—“ Nyelfha spat the word, “—so powerful?”
“No. The elves intervened; Nuala the Black, specifically. For reasons even more mysterious to me, they place great value on the tentradom and guarded her heavily.” Pushey held her hands open in a ‘helpless’ gesture before folding them together again. “As best can be determined, Prioress Haelfha and her escort have returned to the grace of the Light. Whether or not the tentradom did the deed, I know for certain the elves were involved.”
Silence fell as even Nyelfha put great thought into what she just heard. For one who usually rushed ahead, seeing anything resembling pause was certainly the sight. Doubly funny for how, if one wasn’t told so, they’d never expect such a bloodthirsty woman as the sister of a dutifully quaint and quiet prioress like Haelfha. Pushey did enjoy seeing such flawed contrasts; for what amusement it offered, anyway.
“I already know your penchant for disregarding orders, even under threat,” the Grand Seer remarked. “Before throwing away your life and that of your soldiers, consider the impossibility of the task.”
“… I know that,” Nyelfha grunted, yanking her hauberk’s collar irritably. “Killing Nuala the Black might be a fantasy even to me, but not that tentradom. She can definitely die.”
“Perhaps. Her ‘nest’ is on the western side of the Alva Forest. Technically, on the literal outskirt, and not in elf territory proper.”
“That’s facing Artor, then? And the Ashmourn, too … hm.”
“We do not have the troops to spare for that region anymore, Knight-captain. We’re stretched too thin, even if revenge is desirable.”
“I have only one suggestion, Grand Seer.”
“… Oh?”
“Artor’s western front and the Ducal Houses,” Nyelfha pointed out. “We can cut a deal with them. A tentradom is a threat to us all, especially one with false divinity. We promise not to push the frontlines, they go and take that thing’s head or heart.”
Pushey stared for a long moment, dumbfounded. Such an idea was so hilariously stupid, what actually aggravated her was it could work. A pretense for peace in the face of a greater threat. Both sides can recuperate and leave the conflict at a cold stalemate in the meanwhile. It would take pressure off us to reinforce that battle line as well …
All of it hinged on the Ducal Houses agreeing to it. They might be in a position it’d be a tempting offer. The Ashmourn descended from their mountains to ravage Artor, so they surely had their hands full with those monja as well. One major problem did present itself. “They won’t pursue it if the elves are involved. How do you intend to convince them to do so?”
“They don’t need to know. If they send enough troops and lose them, we can press the advantage afterward.”
Either way, it would advance the Church’s interests. Pushey almost felt impressed. “Your time in the south has made you crafty,” she remarked. “I take it then I should leave the matter of Artor’s warfront to your handling?”
“On my honor or my life, it will be purified of their wicked ways,” Nyelfha declared, thumping her gloved hand to her breast.
Letting out a theatrical sigh, Pushey made a show of nodding. “Very well. I shall pen the letter to the Ducal Houses and leave the matter in your capable hands, Knight-captain Nyelfha. Walk with grace in our Light and burn all who are wicked.”
Nyelfha grinned, nodded, and headed off as heavily as she’d arrived. Pushey watched her go for a moment, then turned back to her garden. For what would’ve been a volatile outcome, she’d managed something almost useful. Crouching down, the meaty pop in her aging knees reminded her once again how such a motion proved unduly painful.
Ultimately, the warfront in Artor didn’t matter, but it kept up appearances of the Church’s power and projection. Their ‘peacekeeping’ did well to dissuade the nations in the south from trying anything. Whether Nyelfha herself succeeded also didn’t matter; win or lose, it would change conditions for better, actual work to be done. If the Church gained ground over Artor or the Ducal Houses felt emboldened enough for full warfare, both were suitably usable.
Nyelfha dying in service to the Light would be of use, too. She was simply growing too popular with her accomplishments and accruing undue influence in the military ranks. Pushey didn’t understand how such a brutish woman could command respect, let alone popular support like that. Then again, it didn’t really matter, either.
Picking up her cutters again, Pushey surveyed through the glowpetals, looking for errant growths that needed to be cut. Things that didn’t belong should be removed, after all.
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Chapter 76: Sentimentality
Chapter Text
Emotion is the oldest form of logic, and thus the most unknowable.
*~*
Avaron wasn’t sure what to make of her underground facility being co-opted, but it was what it was. After the initial testing of Arzha and her knights versus tentacleling ‘warriors’ some months ago, the Princess of Artor insisted on acquiring a training ground within the Hive itself. It was, ostensibly, for privacy of both their martial and magical forms so as to not let their military secrets be revealed. Avaron did point out that anything in the Hive would be perceptible to her, so such secrets would be revealed to her.
Arzha made it clear that wasn’t a problem, for some reason.
So it left Avaron to actually make an arena that could host such knights and provide them accommodations. It wasn’t actually that difficult to do, but making the place durable enough to survive their levels of power was. Another tremor rumbled through the Hive, jostling chitin, tentacle, blood and flesh alike. I suppose this is where [Divine Regeneration] comes in handy? she mused. Am I supposed to gain [skills] from this kind of regular trauma?
That was one weird consideration she wasn’t totally settled on yet. The acquisition of a [skill] like [Feral Fighter] suggested that the [Hive Mind] acquired [skills] through its drones doing things. But, was it the drones themselves doing it or Avaron’s direction that made a difference? Was there even a distinction? That would undermine the very principle of a [Hive Mind], which was embodied throughout its entire existence.
Arbitrarily deciding whether or not Avaron was present for [skill] acquisition seemed counterintuitive. Additionally, what was the barometer for Avaron being present? Active in thoughts? Direct control? Some combination thereof?
Presumptions, especially on any logic from a literally different universe would be a dumb mistake to make, though. So, Avaron tested, and tested, and tested, and so far not much of anything really happened. Drones that mined, farmed, lumbered, or hunted went about their business, but nothing resembling [skills] manifested. From what she gathered from the people of the ‘New World’, or whatever it was called, [skills] took time to manifest. Enough so they were considered hallmarks of effort or great feats, though no one had any idea what the exact requirements were.
Combined with her [Divine Heroine] [job], though, she should be gaining [skills] at an accelerated rate. Perhaps she was, and it was only the [skills] she didn’t expect, like [Feral Fighter]. Is there some kind of hidden [EXP] gain for [skills] that then triggers based on specific actions? she wondered, fiddling around with the nerve cluster in front of her. The attached tentacle limb twitched in one direction or another, compulsively compelled. Or is there separate [EXP] tracks for each potential [skill] and working toward them provides that specific track’s gain?
Ironically, being a [Hive Mind] interfered with her observations. She did so much that she couldn’t isolate herself down enough to identify a distinction. Not unless she found some really obscure, completely one-of-a-kind action that led to a [skill]. I have to ask Nuala or something about it, then. There’s gotta be … no, wait, I should really ask her. She’s a know-it-all ancient immortal whatever, so she has to know a lot of [skills]. Maybe even ones that are really powerful and she doesn’t realize it …
Or, in the context of a [Hive Mind], formerly ‘less valuable’ [skills] suddenly took on a new dimension entirely. Something like [+5 defense] or [+5 armor] or whatever inane values the System used would be … okay, for a singular person. But, for her tentacle armies, a fundamental enhancement to their durability on an industrial scale.
I suppose I’ll get some when they come, Avaron mused, and feeling she’d done enough, set a curved, chitinous plate back onto the nerve cluster. Playing this stupid game and breaking the rules is the only way I’ll win, though.
She’d find other ways to do so, anyway. Taking a step back, Avaron beheld her latest creation. The testing chamber, though spacious, was almost entirely taken up by the newly grown tentacle appendages, chitinous vats, and their assembly line-like layout. In theory, at one end sheets of stripped skin could be deposited into a bin. Tentacles would then take those sheets, dip them into vats of test chemical solutions, then proceed to move them along to drying areas. The ultimate purpose was to create a ‘flesh paper’ printing ‘machine’ of some manner.
The problem was getting the machine to work.
Physically, it could be designed without an issue. However, getting the tentacles to do the repetitious, mechanical labor proved strangely frustrating. She had to pay too much attention to make them work properly, but their ‘instincts’ were too animalistic to be left alone. To obtain full automation, she needed them to infallibly fulfil their intended work without her oversight. In theory, if that happened, she even had a ‘self-healing’ and ‘self-maintaining’ machine template to use.
It didn’t matter if the overall output was less than a steel-and-electricity machine. The economy of scale might be completely ridiculous thanks to those organic qualities.
But, it had to work.
It had to work and it continued to aggravate her.
“Okay, let’s try again,” she muttered, giving a stupid little ‘magic wave’ with her hands. “Start up.”
A pincer tentacle twitched, jerked, and then pivoted around. It reached into the bin full of sheets of flesh, clamped down on one and yanked it upward. Rotating around, it laid the sheet of flesh down on a smooth chitinous slide, where it then slid down toward the chemical vat. Another pincer tentacle reached down, submerging the flesh into the vat and holding it there.
Technically speaking it’d take a couple hours, but she’d been running the tests for so long that there were samples ready to extract. A third pincer tentacle acted, dragging out the crusty sheet of scrunched up flesh from the vat of piss-yellow fluid. So far everything worked, but only because of her active control.
Alright. Reduce influence. Reduce. Reduce …
The various tentacles jerked and spasmed the further her control receded. Most remained inert with nothing to do yet, while a few started twitching their pincers erratically. Thankfully they weren’t flailing about wildly and making a mess, or tearing themselves apart. The crusty sheet of flesh was moved over to a cutting platform where a specialized tentacle awaited. Based on the same ‘sword leg’ growth of the tentaclelings, it was a much thinner, finer blade for cutting the specific flesh before it.
I just need length-wise cuts, Avaron thought, watching intently.
The platform rotated with some actuator tentacles, turning the crusty sheet from horizontal to vertical. Other tentacles pressed in another panel, creating a clamp that kept the crusty sheet straight and firm. All the sword leg tentacle had to do was cut down into nicely even, thinner sheets. It fell, sliding with an eerie ease through the crusty flesh; one sheet, two sheet, three sheets. It wasn’t as thin as industrially-manufactured pulp paper, but it wasn’t parchment-thickness, either.
Okay … now, reduce.
The barest threads of consciousness connected to flesh. Avaron wasn’t hoping for total autonomy yet, but such a strain would’ve been accep—the tentacles holding the crusty sheets together twitched, spasmed, then ripped apart. Sheets went flying, the cutting tentacle was smacked so hard it broke its joint, and then everything else started losing its mind. She learned quickly to make sure the chemical vats weren’t part of anything that could move or splash inside of it, so at least that wasn’t a worry.
“FUCK!” Avaron yelled and stomped around, smacking her head in frustration. “DAMNIT!”
She stopped suddenly, her entire motion ending with an eerie mechanical precision. Alright, I’m over it. There’s lots of areas to improve upon. Brushing her shoulders off, Avaron went over to the corner of the workshop where her table and chair awaited. Sitting on the hard and, frankly uncomfortable, chitin, she scrutinized her shoddy ‘engineering drawings’. The parchment sprawled across the table, full of diagrams and attempts at studying size, dimensions, weight bearing, and other issues.
She wasn’t some genius with an encyclopedia of engineering with eidetic memory; yet, at least. Just reinventing some of the vague concepts she remembered from school, or having her own engineers tell her, proved a headache. Reinventing the wheel in very literal, extremely painful ways. Avaron scratched her temple. There’s a brickwall in automation and instinctual behavior. Until I figure that out, pure flesh-machines probably isn’t going to work. If I do mechanical, then I have much more conventional expectations, but I need engineers. Or smiths. Or people to actually design this shit.
Scratching turned into rubbing and Avaron closed her eyes. Her antennae bounced up and down with a conspiratorial thoughtfulness. Conventional machinery demands a lot to be made, but crewing it is a different proposition. I get engineers to make it, my drones crew it. No worries about labor laws or human rights violations, or having to deal with early industrialization nonsense. That could work, but how much mental burden is it?
Her head tilted to one side. Machinery is made to automate labor toward specific goals. I can utilize organic growth toward my goals of increasing food production, growing drones, and facilitating hive infrastructure. Her head tilted to the other side. Machinery for goals that people need is a different question. Clothes, building materials, medicine, food processing, and more … Very complex needs, but I can set Eden upon it. That would provide a labor loop that should satisfy individuality and its needs.
She didn’t want to rely upon such people, but not making use of them was also a mistake. If they provided a breakthrough she could pivot off of, then it’d be a worthwhile investment. The issue was whether or not the developments of people could be usable to the Hive. Not all of them would be, but that didn’t mean the ones that were didn’t have value. It came down as much to sheer opportunity as intentional pursuit.
Multi-pronged approaches sufficed in times of uncertainty. Only then would she discover something to truly capitalize upon.
I suppose I should start with the miners and smiths, Avaron considered, reaching across the [Hive Mind]. Her drones at the metalworks would suffice for finding the ones in charge and arranging a meeting. The sight that greeted her, however, made her grimace.
“Okay, I get it, being nearly naked confers advantages from my [Sovereign Power], but good fucking goddesses how are they that hairy?” Avaron muttered, feeling like she needed to develop industrial bleach for her eyeballs. “Are the furry monja even naked? Does that count as nudity for the purposes of the System? … It should, right?”
*~*
For being ‘dumped off on a tentradom’, Nuala shouldn’t have been surprised Efval saddled her with other problems. Namely in the form of Bisnar Treeshade and his entire entourage ‘coming with her’ to Eden. The thirty of them in total rode upon elks from the depths of the Alva Forest, toward its western edge. Nuala traveled a bit ahead of the group, so to at least not deal with small talk or Bisnar’s inane questioning.
Despite the leisurely ride through the forest and its immense trees, sprawling foliage, and bountiful life, Nuala found no comfort. Her mind wandered to-and-fro, seeking answers to inscrutable problems. Grasping for meaning in a malaise of uncertainty that changed everything she looked back. It’d been a long time since such a mystery ever cornered her, and she rather didn’t like it.
Not when the end result of such a mystery was the world, literally and metaphorically, falling apart.
Can I link this to the Heroine Summoning? she wondered, rubbing her forehead. The unusual nature of its outcome indicates a perversion of the rules, if not at a breaking. ‘Only four heroines at a time and always human’. We have thirteen plus one non-human, which is remarkable in itself. Something fundamental has gone wrong. Was that affected by vanishing as well?
Something like a goddess being vanished could be found out through secondary details: worshippers, written record, and so on. A fundamental concept being vanished, if such a thing could happen, was even more worrisome. Yet, that didn’t fit the pattern at the very least, so Nuala couldn’t let herself speculate wildly about it. The Forever Dark vanishing merely offsets the Eternal Flame, causing it to crash out of control. The Harvest Moons vanishing offsets the celestial balance between divine and mortal, but that could be filled in. They were long standing goddesses, not fundamental ones like the Forever Dark.
Which meant vanishing itself was somewhat random, yet indiscriminate. Did it only target divine beings like goddesses? Or could it target anything?
How did she find traces of something erased from existence itself?
The mere act of trying to perceive such a thing could fundamentally change the answer, clouding the truth further.
Efval might’ve been joking, or maybe not, but Avaron could hold the answer. Not fully, but the means to find one.
Atomic theory, huh … Nuala mused, recalling that mind-rending lesson. Though she hadn’t made progress in verifying it fully, she did observe effects tied to it. Atoms, in a form perceived through magic, but not in any way she understood. Merely conceptualizing of them in the formation of magic allowed her to innovate new methods of greater efficiency, heightened potency, stronger cohesion, and more.
It would’ve been revolutionary to truly develop if the end of the world wasn’t on her lap again.
True, the end wouldn’t come for a while yet, but the anxiety of it all found root in her mind.
The trek continued, and eventually towering elder trees turned into modest adults and younger saplings. Smaller shrubbery, bushes, flowers, and the like competed in the edges of the Alva Forest. Sunlight could actually reach the ground fully, giving them precious energy to grow. Only those adapted to the gloom of the true forest had any right to survive there. Nuala didn’t care much for bright sunlight or clear days; it hurt her eyes more often than not.
At least she wouldn’t have to spend long being out underneath the sun. Tsugumi’s inn being on the edge of the forest made it blissfully quick to get indoors again. Little by little, the tree line receded, the western edge gradually becoming plains once more. Nuala gazed off onto the horizon, staring at the sprawling but evidently growing queendom of Eden.
It’s bigger, she mused. Not much, but some.
On the way to Tsugumi’s inn, amidst a field of grass, Nuala spotted an approaching tentacleling. A worker-type, given its size and lack of bladed legs.
“Oh, so you finally show up,” the tentacleling barked out, its vocal cords surprisingly more tolerable. Still guttural, but less ‘speaking through a snot-filled throat’.
“My duties are vast and many,” Nuala returned smoothly. “Rejoice, I am here to bother you once more.”
“Wonderful. Is that Bisnar?”
The two of them regarded his arrival, much to his own speculative look.
“Minister Bisnar!” the tentacleling greeted. “It’s been a while.”
“Ah, hello there? And who might you be?” he asked, somewhat taken aback.
“It’s Avaron. I’m just speaking through this thing,” the tentacleling said, pointing at itself with a leg.
“Truly? How mysterious.”
Nuala remarked dryly, “You get used to it.”
“Yeah, what she said,” the tentacleling echoed, pointing at her. “Anyway, are you all here about that request I put in? Or some awful news to ruin my day?”
If only you knew, Nuala thought, barely stopping her laugh behind a snort. “I will be staying here for a while. The minister is the one with business.”
“Oh?”
Bisnar said, “Yes, in regards to your request. While I’d rather bring them here for a demonstration, Her Majesty insisted upon you coming to the capital instead.”
“Oh, goodie, I get to go to the elvetahn capital. Is she going to flay me alive perchance?”
“… Not that I’m aware of.”
“That’s disappointing, I wanted to test my regenerative power. Ah, well. Come rest in Tsugumi’s inn, I need to dig myself out of this hole first,” the tentacleling remarked, then turned around. It gave a flippant wave with its leg, though the motion looked awkward since its body didn’t want to bend that way.
At least Avaron’s flippancy hadn’t changed at all. There was a certain charm, if gratingly so, from someone who didn’t care about the great powers she spoke to. Nuala’s reputation certainly the greatest, for she doubted literally anyone heard of Bisnar outside of the Alva Forest. At least conversation wouldn’t be boring.
The elvetahn rode onward, reaching the inn. Half of them set about securing the elk, only to be greeted by tentacleling workers bringing water troughs and buckets. Nuala gave them a sparing glance before heading inside the Kitinchi-styled building. The interior looked much better since her last visit, being far more spacious and inn-like than … stuffed hovel. Dare she say it was even decent.
Tsugumi herself made an appearance from the kitchens, wearing a heavy cloth apron and cooking hat. “Welcome, my esteemed customers. Please sit where you like, I will have appetizers ready soon.”
Nuala didn’t give it much thought and took a table nearest the kitchen. While the other elvetahn went off in their own little groups, she did note Bisnar coming to sit with her. “Are you so sure, minister?” she asked with a certain dryness. “Stay too long in my presence and you may turn as black as me.”
“I’ve no worry over something so baseless,” Bisnar disregarded immediately. “Besides, meals are always better with others.”
She preferred hers alone, but Bisnar’s well-meaning idiocy was one of those things she learned to live with. Be that as it was, Nuala hefted up the satchel hanging off her waist onto the table. Unwinding the securing cord, she opened it up and started sorting through her belongings. In particular, she withdrew a black leather journal, a self-inking quill, and a crumb-eating napkin. Setting the satchel onto the ground next to her, she gave a quick slap to the napkin when it started growling. “Quiet, fool.”
It folded up onto itself, making a neat, polite looking triangle.
Bisnar gave her a sidelong glance and ever, ever so slightly shifted his folded hands away from the napkin.
Nuala, however, flipped through the heavy-bound pages of her journal. A quarter of the way through the tanned-yellow pages brought her to where she last wrote. Let’s see … ‘Divine heroine summoning, Nagraki influence, most likely arranged and interfered by Nyoom, sister of Haska’. Yes, then let’s put, ‘Avaron is the only non-human heroine summoned: why? What caused that to happen, let alone work?’.
A thought came to mind and she flipped through the pages, going back a few dozen to check on a prior note. ‘Avaron knows things no elvetahn, or maybe even the Great Owl, does. Why?’ Yes, because she knew Nyoom existed and we didn’t. Why is that?
Somehow extracting that information could prove incredibly valuable. [Divine Heroines] were weird as a rule and broke any semblance of reason or logic more often than not. Usually that was in the context of their [skills] and [abilities], not knowledge. How did Avaron know such things in the first place? Nuala doubted finding out would be terribly revolutionary, but at least it would put some things together better.
She’d been cautious, particularly given Tsugumi’s warning, but such concerns couldn’t be afforded anymore. Even if there were centuries before the world became truly endangered, opportunities to confront that might rarely arise. If Avaron knew anything, Nuala had to get it out of her somehow.
There’s always the first step of asking directly, but if that fails … Force is questionable. Seduction? Nuala scrunched her nose at the thought. Even if she’s a tentradom, I can’t get the bark off a tree. Coercion?
A suspect method in itself with Tsugumi’s awareness and capability. Whether or not Avaron would capitulate or cut and run was also a valid concern. Even if Nuala gained something, it may not be the whole something, which could have dire ramifications. The prospect of mind magic remained, but against the strange sort of mind that Avaron was, or became, she wasn’t sure. That sort of magic was meant to target those who only had one mind in the first place. A ‘group mind’ might resist it entirely, or worse, cause some kind of reversal.
Quite the quandary to be faced with yet again.
Nuala ground through different considerations, idly reading her journal in the process. Tsugumi eventually came out with some tentaclelings, carrying trays of some kind of Kitinchi-styled food she always made. It wasn’t really to Nuala’s taste, but then again she found most foods not much to regard.
When Avaron herself finally appeared, she entered through the inn’s main doors. Giving a wave to the other elvetahn, who simply regarded her with a nod, she headed over to Nuala’s table. “Nuala! And Minister Bisnar, much to my surprise.”
Bisnar rose from sitting and said, “Lady Avaron. Or, Queen now, I believe?”
“Technically a queen on two fronts, but I’m sure that’s funny sounding to elvetahn of your ability.”
“Ladies among ladies, queens among queens. Entitlement is a form of a respect, after all.” He gave a polite half-bow. “Small as Eden may be, it is nonetheless a queendom on the rise.”
Avaron chuckled. “Always a pleasure, Minister Bisnar. So you’re here to take me to the capital then?”
“The sooner the better, Her Majesty is greatly interested in your request.”
“Well, have a break and then we’ll head out after unless there’s some reason to wait longer?”
“A quick rest would do, yes.”
“Wonderful. Oh, Nuala.”
Nuala answered by shutting her journal with a thump and glancing over at her name.
“I’ve made some progress on magic, but there are other items of concern as well. Whenever you’re ready, head down into the Hive, I got some work for us.”
The imperiousness of such a request rankled Nuala on principle. At the same time, however, it presented opportunity. The patient huntress gets the prey, she mused, finding it a little funny. Waiting around was never her strong suit, for better or worse. Setting aside the impropriety of it all, Nuala merely said, “Very well.”
It’d been a long time since she dealt with anyone who didn’t understand what Nuala the Black truly meant. The novelty certainly offered its own sort of charm.
*~*
“Seriously, what the hell is this thing?” Avaron remarked incredulously, waving her hand.
“A humper, Your Majesty,” Durelia answered dutifully; well, a little bit teasingly, too.
“Funny. Since Nex hasn’t answered yet, I guess she’s ignoring us.”
“Or resting, as goddesses are allowed to do.”
“How conspicuous of her after dropping this little bomb in my lap. Ah, whatever.” Avaron scratched her temple. “I didn’t expect it to be a literal pollinator but here we are …”
One of her less-used experiment gardens featured a variety of natural flowers, both grown from seeds and from hive flesh. The principle purpose was to determine the usefulness of flowers in a controlled environment. She’d originally wanted to figure out how to farm bees. But by cutting out the middle bee, she repurposed their genetics to other goals.
The humper, apparently, delighted in what it found. Despite its decent size—maybe like a particularly fat cat with long spidery legs—it apparently enjoyed tasting the flowers.
It trundled through the dense fields of flowers, a long, tasting proboscis extending out of its … head. Avaron wasn’t even sure it was a head. The thing didn’t have eyes or even the large mouth-like organ of her own tentaclelings. Its ‘mouth’ was on the underside of its ‘belly’, a complex organ in itself with a number of different tentacles within. Mating tentacle, cum feeder, one that pumped air into its victim’s lungs while it was attached; everything an organism needed and then some.
“I guess if I could train it to do gardening, it would be a useful agricultural tool?” Avaron mused. “Though it has no real intelligence and it isn’t a part of my [Hive Mind].”
“Forgive me, Your Majesty, but I struggle to understand your reasons.”
Looking at the tall, bosomy vampire beside her, Avaron craned her neck somewhat to actually meet her eyes. “How much do you want to understand?”
“Whatever may be useful, really.”
The one downside to being that tall was Avaron’s neck ached looking up for long. So, she turned back down and watched the ‘shouldn’t be a rape monster but definitely looked the part’ humper. “There’s a lot to work through, so stop me if you lose track.”
“Of course.”
“Nex, tentradoms, tentacles; they’re an entire order of life completely separate from everything else I’ve seen on this world. They work in fundamentally different ways, both alien and offensively strange. The humper, for instance, has no concept of consent as we understand. If it scents a woman whose horny or sexually interested in some way, it will ‘ambush’ and forcefully mount her. To its understanding, that is all the permission it needs because the woman won’t kill it if it pleasures her well enough.”
“Is that not similar to spiders?” Durelia asked speculatively. “Where the females eat the males after mating?”
“Sure. It happens a lot in nature for insects and arachnids; I guess the humper inherits some of that. But, that simple desire is one filled with all sorts of problems.” Avaron waved her hand in some aimless gesture. “Consent among people and consent among animals are two very different things. In the case of aphrodisiac pheromones, like me, it raises questions of effective consent as well. A woman who says no until she’s drugged up cannot provide consent in any way. She’s being forcefully manipulated against her will, and her very mind altered to do something she otherwise wouldn’t. By the legal definitions I live by, that is rape.”
“To which the humper, unaware or unable to know such a distinction, participates within because that is all it understands,” Durelia surmised.
“Precisely, leaving us to question how permissible its existence is.”
“Why not, perchance, treat it by a separate consideration?”
“I’m doubtful, but go on.”
“To judge it by a standard it can never meet is to ask a fish to fly,” Durelia pointed out. “It’s unfair at the least, if not ridiculous. If the humper, or other tentacles, behave in a way that doesn’t unduly harm their … mates, then is that not permissible?”
“Even if the women they target end up drugged, coerced, or forced into doing something they otherwise wouldn’t?” Avaron retorted. “I’m sure this world must have the concept of date rape somewhere in it. A man puts a drug in your drink that you, unknowingly, imbibe, which then renders you unconscious or highly susceptible to influence. You can imagine the rest, I’m sure.”
Durelia hummed for a moment. “In that light, perhaps I see your point better.”
“Let us also consider two things: tentacles are breeding-happy organisms, and pre-existing relationships. As we both saw with that herbalist and her interesting time with some mushrooms, of all bloody things, her marriage imploded. How would a man feel if his wife walked home one day with a big new bump from a bunch of tentacles growing inside her?”
“… I would argue it could depend, but most men would feel upset, I imagine.”
“Sure. Now, let me try to be fair to the other side of this,” Avaron remarked, gesturing with one hand coming to the other. “Tentacle pregnancies are fundamentally different. They’re easier on the woman, contribute to her overall health, and in the case of the System, offer things like [experience] gains or other weird shit. That’s the main reason tentradoms were hunted to extinction in the first place.”
“Mhm.”
“There aren’t as many child-rearing issues, either. As far as I know, once they’re born, they need some weeks to mature enough to get mobile and head off,” Avaron continued. “Presumably in a bigger tentacle ecosystem, they have safe nurseries to grow up in and develop independence. It’s not like having a regular baby who is going to be an important part of your life forever.”
“As with me and my daughters,” Durelia remarked.
“Precisely. Now, most women develop natural attachments to their children. How much they will to tentacles that become independent that fast is … well, maybe it’ll be traumatic, maybe it’s not.” Avaron shrugged. “Consider how many problems there are, then how much answering them would demand of people. Civilization will change, but I cannot tell in which direction.”
“Is it not the duty of the queen to navigate such uncertainties?” Durelia asked, and though it sounded a bit facetious to Avaron, the vampire priestess was serious. “Burdensome as that sounds, what we feel will happen may not be what happens after all.”
“And yet,” Avaron grumbled. “I am paralyzed with indecision, for if things go exactly how I expect, I wasted not only time, but harmed people in the process. I would be rightly scorned for my failure in leading everyone safely, wouldn’t I?”
“Perhaps, but when a choice must be made, we can only live with the consequences,” Durelia said with an air of understanding. “Sometimes there are no good choices, only the least terrible ones.”
She’d heard of such things before and knew it herself. Hearing it again, even if it was true, did ruffle Avaron’s fluff somewhat. Still, wouldn’t blame Durelia for it. Scratching the back of her head, Avaron squinted in annoyance at the humper, who continued blissfully going through flowers and drinking its fill of whatever it ate. There was one large component to her issues that no one else would ever be able to know, though.
I am, ultimately, thinking from the mind of a human from Earth. Nex, tentradoms, tentacles; they’re alien even to me. I mean, I could argue this is just a really weird form of bestiality, which it might be, Avaron thought with dry amusement. Then I go and touch the mind of one of these freak things and now I’m not certain anymore. There has to be an ethics violation going on here somewhere.
To live a life where her only concern was killing goddesses; oh that would be simplicity itself.
Sadly, she was stuck dealing with literally everything on the road to that goal.
“Maybe. It’d help a lot if I could get Nex to work on some kind of better solution,” Avaron remarked. “I mean, the System is neat and everything, it should have a means to do so.”
“System?”
“Oh. The ‘divine window’, or blue panels or whatever. The thing that shows you information.”
Durelia tilted her head. “Why call it a ‘system’, though?”
“To my eyes, it resembles a computer system. Which you don’t know in the slightest, but its something from Earth.”
“Earth, which does not have magic or a ‘system’, but it resembles it?”
“Apparently.”
“How mysterious,” Durelia remarked. “Perhaps it could, but that is the domain of goddesses … Ah, hence your pondering.”
“Yeah.”
“I fear there are no easy answers to your quandaries, Your Majesty. For what ones I might think of, you have already refuted. I am understanding, but between a choice of nothing or something, I find myself interested in the something.” Durelia looked down at her hand for a moment. “After all, I’ve seen and received enough of what a ‘nothing’ answer entails.”
“Yet here you stand, all the same.”
“Yet here I stand.”
Avaron hummed for a moment, then turned away. She started toward the flesh-door exist of the garden. “Work out something with Nex, then. Whatever the tentradoms of old did, failed. We need a new answer, at least one different from everything before. I’ll do what I can to keep everything running, but I expect the people to throw riots at some point.”
“… I will keep you informed, Your Majesty.”
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Chapter 77: Oathsworn
Notes:
(See the end of the chapter for notes.)
Chapter Text
In seas of chaos, a promise is a ship of certainty.
*~*
Scenic views were proving more to her liking in recent years, much to Arzha’s disconcertion. She remembered vividly scoffing at her mother’s penchant for sight-seeing, only to fall prey to it just the same. That is something else I’ll have to apologize to her about, she mused with a certain weariness in her bones. Perhaps the adage ‘as one grows older, regrets ever continue growing’ also had quite the merit to it. Then again, indecisive times wore down even her confidence enough she became uncertain of many things.
Arzha wasn’t sure what to make of such thoughts, coming and going as they did, so she merely stared out onto the landscape. The small cliffside situated itself further up onto the Silvervein Mountains, above the entrance to Avaron’s Hive. She and her knights found it while idly exploring and surveying the landscape for possibilities. A few errant bushes and crooked trees dotted the rocky ground, and a conspicuously round rock the size of a seat awaited near the edge. It made for a decent vantage and resting point, and one she returned to with distressing regularity.
The vast plains and dotting forests of Eden’s lands stretched before her, not to mention Eden itself. It’d transformed from hobbled-together tents and wagons into a place more deserving of ‘small city’ than some hamlet or village. Though it lacked the density or cramped qualities of even Artor itself, the meticulous planning stood out clearly. Straight cut roads, regimented housing and business districts, the creation of self-powered magic lamp posts for guidance at night, fully functional sewage and water systems … It had more than even Artor did, in some respects.
And Avaron was just getting started.
Her vision and ambition both outstrip mine, Arzha pondered. Her goals are simple to grasp, but her means to reach them are truly unfathomable. Is it just because she is a [Divine Heroine] from Earth? Or because she is a tentradom?
Or both, as the case may be. The powers of a [Divine Heroine] mixed with the esoteric knowledge of Earth. History was full of such people who, even in their faulty memory, offered unbelievable breakthroughs. In many ways, they weren’t things entirely unknown, but the [Divine Heroines] had such a unique approach, it fundamentally altered the circumstances regardless. The innovation of freezers for food storage stood out in her mind clearly enough as one such thing. Who would think raw meat, with no preparation, could be frozen and retrieved without issue?
The far Northerners knew of such methods, of course, but they had the advantage of winter to exploit. Warmer queendoms like Artor weren’t so lucky and ice magic was already rare enough. Putting together ice and insulation was the novelty that changed everything. Most of Arzha’s childhood training for her own ice magic involved doing just that. How long would it take us to invent that on our own? If we ever did.
All that to wonder how much Avaron’s innovations would change everything. The ‘hydroponic towers’ and mysterious ‘sewage reprocessing plants’—she wasn’t sure what plant ate sewage like that—alone were absurd creations. Vertical farming space that simultaneously resolved waste by turning it into food; or at least, plant matter that could become cattle feed. Even in their apparently ‘incomplete’ forms, they were producing output that would be year-round. If no disease struck, such towers could eliminate the concept of famine. No wonder Avaron thought of universal food allowances for the citizenry. She’d have more food than she could ever possibly use.
How much I recognize only makes me realize how ridiculous she truly is, Arzha thought, leaning forward. With her sheathed sword planted before her, she placed both hands on the handle’s tip, then laid her head atop them. Slightly uncomfortable but better than nothing when all she sat on was a rock. Were she a human I’d conquer her queendom to have her as a wife.
Avaron lacked martial aptitude, despite her attempts otherwise. She truly excelled in civil matters, whereas the opposite was true for Arzha. Though her title as the firstborn princess, and at-times crown princess, of Artor enabled her greatly, Arzha knew well enough of her own shortcomings. War, and its many proclivities, had been her burden to bear as the future queen of Artor. Keeping the Ducal Houses in line was her second future obligation, leaving what concerns she had for the nobles, commoners, and peasants as … lacking. She’d hoped to deal with that once her powerbase stabilized. It was easier building temples and hospitals when a duchess wasn’t trying to suck away years’ worth of taxes. Sadly, none of that ever happened.
Nothing she ever planned for ever happened.
It all just kept falling apart like some demented little sandcastle she built again, and again, and again.
Was it because of her own incompetency?
Did she lack in some visceral way completely indiscernible despite all her nights of searching otherwise?
Or was she just unlucky? Unlucky that no matter how much she did, no matter how correctly she did everything, she still lost in the end?
The uncertainty of it all was what grated on Arzha the most.
If she knew why, she could find some way of resolving the problems.
But, never having that answer truly proved maddening.
Arzha breathed in, the warm air and distinct taste of pine tickling her throat. When thoughts ran wild, centering through the other senses often sufficed to quiet them down. She breathed and looked, watching the scenery of Eden with an eye too-critical to ever truly relax. Still, she tried.
Sometime later, the heavy trudge of boots approached from behind. Seven pairs of thick leather and clanking iron, as knights were ever to wear. Arzha didn’t regard the seven Snowflake Knights as they lined up behind her with Haleen at the front. They saluted as they ever did, loyal to her and formal procedure to a fault.
Arzha stared out for a moment longer before lifting her hand and allowing them to be at ease.
“My Lady,” Haleen greeted, a willingness to serve ever present in her words. She needn’t anything more to show such.
The Princess of Artor turned partly and stared upon her seven knights, of what used to be an order of thirty. Women she handpicked throughout her life as royalty, uncaring of their own upbringing. Women like her who were just a bit different, never once having a thirst for men. Her parents didn’t understand quite so well, but the Snowflake Knights never failed to bring honor to Arzha’s name. In that sense, people trusted her judge of character.
Perhaps that was the one good skill she had, if nothing else.
All who remained anymore were Haleen, Saryl, Magna, Elseh, Gerunma, Foyla, and Pippit. Of them, the first four were the elder knights whom Arzha served the longest with. Gerunma, Foyla, and Pippit were such young inductees they were closer to squires than knights proper. Still, they survived the downfall of Artor, even as their elder mentors died to let them escape. In a world in which home didn’t exist anymore, they only had Arzha left to lead them.
The responsibility of such a thing couldn’t be ignored.
“… We’ve been through much together, in hardship and bloodshed,” Arzha began. “The way of the sword demands things others will not understand, but we do. It is hard to believe we are here now after everything. Artor, once ascendant if troubled because of my father, has been torn down and scattered. The Ducal Houses have splintered apart, becoming their own lackluster attempts at rule. I am the last of the Shieldcrown line and you are the last of my knights.”
Their faces were hard, grim in some and burdened in others. When one confronted the reality of what life did, such expressions were all a person could make.
“I have thought long and hard upon it, since we first rode out from Artor as it burned, to the moments I walked up here. Artor will never return, not as we knew, nor as I can imagine. The people are scattered, and faith in the Shieldcrowns is deservedly shattered. If I were to try rebuilding, I must wage war upon the Ducal Houses and the neighboring nations themselves. A bloody conquest unbefitting of my family’s name and the peace we maintained for so long.”
A prospect none of the knights were thrilled by, either, though she appreciated their grim resolve.
Arzha smirked at the sight before turning around. The scenery didn’t offer any comfort, but at least they could show themselves without fear of her gaze. “I’ve no intention of such, at least in that manner. War is already here, but we lack any means to truly fight in it. You all were present when I handed Artor’s artifacts over to the elvetahn, after all. Even with such things, we would be a few without allies or meaningful help to call upon.”
That act alone was affirmation enough of Artor’s demise and everyone knew that. A queendom without artifacts would be destroyed by any who possessed them. Only a truly miraculous warrior of unbelievable power, or a [Divine Heroine], could overcome such incredible weapons. Arzha, though perhaps one of Artor’s greatest fighters herself, was nowhere near that level. She might never truly be, either.
“The path before me is a simple one, but life-changing. No … violating, perhaps. It spits upon everything it means to be a queen as I know. Insulting in a way I still do not fully grasp myself. My pride rankles at the mere notion of it, even as it is an unforgiving truth of royalty, diplomacy, and the interests of the queendom.” Arzha heaved in a great sigh, then exhaled. “But, I wonder how much of that is my own childish ideals. Life’s demands are never so glamorous, it seems.”
“My lady?” Haleen dared to ask, her worry evident enough. Dreadful, even, for out of any of the Snowflake Knights, she could glean Arzha’s thoughts the most. They knew each other, body and mind, closer than any other.
Standing up at last, Arzha tied her sword to her belt once more and turned toward her knights. She stood with an implacable seriousness as any princess should, her demeanor forewarning of grim words. “The path before me is a simple one, but understand this: I do not ask any of you to follow me upon it. Loyal as you are, I know all too well that loyalty can compel one to unforgivable acts, even to our sense of self. This is my formal allowance for departure, if you so wish. No questions asked.”
The knights jolted, surprised if worried expressions going through them. Haleen opened her mouth to start a big tirade, but Arzha held up her hand to silence it. “My plan is to formally request marriage with the [Divine Heroine], Avaron, and all of that which it entails.” Arzha smirked sardonically as her knights turned gobsmacked. “For what good a princess without a queendom is, anyway.”
Haleen’s mouth cracked open, a stupid look of surprise overcoming her. The other knights clued in enough they show their understanding. It would be Saryl, however, that said, “Is it so terrible, Your Highness? Assuming Avaron wishes to marry, of course.”
“You think marrying a tentradom is something done lightly, Knight Saryl?” Arzha asked evenly.
“N-no, but, it is Avaron. I’ve been watching her, too. She doesn’t seem so bad.”
“And how much have you been enjoying being milked down at that ranch?”
Saryl huffed and averted her gaze, sticking her nose up. “It’s quite pleasurable, I will say!”
Though Arzha told her that maintaining such a bond wasn’t necessarily, Saryl wasn’t stupid. A raw increase to [attributes] was hard to come by, even if the demands for it were … unusual. An inheritable [doubler] was something her entire bloodline would benefit from as long the [ability] remained in it. She was a farmgirl through and through, but had a shrewdness that made it easy to underestimate her. Magna, at least, looked disapproving down at Saryl. The two of them might as well have been married for how tied at the hip they were, so her displeasure was understandable.
“… As you say, I have also been watching her. We all know the notorious nature of tentradoms, for however truthful our knowing of that may be,” Arzha continued. “Her actions show a very human-like mannerism, and what parts of her that is more tentradom, seems very … constrained. Even the supposed aphrodisiac effect she exudes is comparable to becoming drunk. It may impair judgement, but not for long, nor forever.”
Magna said, “Which means your decision is not being compromised by some unseen force.”
“No more than any of us when our heads turned at a banquet night at the festival,” Arzha quipped dryly, but no one really laughed. “I have done what I can to check for that. I inquired Lady Raina about the matter, but she concurred with my observations. Even when at the mercy of an insane tentradom, she likened it to severe alcohol withdrawal or sniff addiction.”
“Something that can be compromising in time, but not subtly so.”
Pippit, smallest among the knights, spoke up. “Which reduces worries over being controlled of, but not eliminating them. I’ve oft heard of the priestess’, ehm, sultry, desires more than I care to.”
Elseh remarked, “I think that’s just the priestess being a slut.”
“Elseh,” Arzha said with an admonishing tone.
“What? She said as much herself.”
“Oh.” Arzha wasn’t sure what to make of that, but politely coughed into her hand. “So be it.”
“… My Lady.” Haleen’s words bore a tight forcefulness of one trying to be polite, but Arzha saw the anger in her eyes. “Is it truly necessary? There are other lands we can go to and—“
“We’ve been over this, Knight Haleen.”
A slap to the face might’ve hurt Haleen less, but rank existed for a reason.
“Not a day has gone by I have not considered that, either. But …” Arzha glanced over to scenic view of Eden once more. “Avaron’s ambitions are beyond what even I would have done as Queen of Artor. She makes the Elvetahn Queen, of all people, worry. Nuala the Black has all but built a house here just to watch her. I cannot live the life of someone selfishly wandering around, or bowing my head to some ungrateful king in another land. Even if the people of Artor scorn the Shieldcrowns, I yet have duty to them, no matter what name or flag they are under.”
Gerunma said, “A marriage to such a ‘person’ may yet offer power for Your Highness to protect the people of Artor. If, at least, we assume that she does grow to such heights in the first place.”
Gerunma’s distaste for monja ever remained, not that Arzha could blame her. “I’ve no reason to believe otherwise. Lady Raina’s input has only clarified that despite whatever … changes, happen, a strong will can yet prevail. I am not thrilled at the prospect, but it is not a new one. Merely a tentradom rather than some man.”
Though, saying that, Arzha’s distaste was merely … propriety, after a fashion. Her worry over being manipulated, genuine as it was, faded the more time she spent in Avaron’s company. The danger was always there, but she couldn’t deny Avaron’s own beauty had a certain charm to it. Perhaps in form alone, and without the perils of a tentradom, she’d be a captivating sight enough. Not to mention her vexingly cute fluffiness that appeared without warning.
Gerunma, Haleen, and Pippit wouldn’t understand. Saryl might. Magna and Elseh were flexible, but cared more for appearances as noblewomen than the others. Foyla only cared about martial skill. Arzha wasn’t sure if she herself wanted approval, necessarily. She didn’t want any of her knights to leave, but at the same time, understood why they might.
In the end, it would be their decisions to make.
*~*
Arzha’s walk through Eden took her nowhere in particular. With too much on her mind, she sought refuge in something mundane. Familiar and unfamiliar looking people going about their lives, intermingled with Avaron’s drones. From refugees to the citizens of a new queendom, though their clothing and manner of conduct wasn’t quite there yet. Suspicious eyes intermingled with dreary resignation as much as sparkly hope and boisterous laughter. Avaron’s generosity did much for them, and more would come, perhaps in ways they couldn’t imagine.
Both good and bad.
Her eyes flitted across the bosoms of many women, undoubtedly heavier and bigger in size than ever before. She’d grown up knowing that a woman who bore children gave milk so that their babes could grow. In time, the milk would dry up as the babes aged and life went on. For tentradoms, the milk must never end, and so their powers conspired it to be so. One change that would cascade into all sorts of other concerns.
She was already seeing those trying to wear ‘less’ clothing. Shorter cut pants, sleeveless shirts, bundled up skirts … different attempts at reducing their attire without crossing the line. Artorian ways weren’t prudish compared to some she could think of, but a covered body was just a sensible thing. A sensible thing being undone by the insanity of a tentradom’s power influencing it. Increased physical resilience and endurance by the less clothing one wore? It literally defied sense itself.
Yet, there it was.
Was it actually better than clothing? For most people, commoners and peasants especially, it may be true. Enchanted or high quality clothes were the domain of the affluent or a family’s life savings. It didn’t seem possible that mere nudity conveyed the same benefits as such artisanal wares. Then again, maybe it did and she hadn’t seen it for herself yet.
Arzha wasn’t sure if she’d ever trapeze around letting anyone see her. A funny, nonsensical idea; horrifying to consider in reality.
“—a third or fourth floor, but we lack elevators to really use it,” a familiar voice reached her ears.
Blinking, Arzha looked around. She wandered somewhere onto the western end of Eden, where heavy developmental work went on. A half-built building near the street corner ahead seemed to be where Avaron’s voice emanated from. Heading over, she found a large plot of land sectioned off by zoning markers. Tentaclelings went about arranging chitinous poles and pylons, laying the foundational framework for a large-scale building; something that easily exceeded the size of city hall. A plot easily in the scope of tens-of-thousands of square feet.
Avaron herself stood over near some wooden crates with Dorin Haeldone and some carpenter looking folk. They were huddled around a smaller wooden crate where a large, white parchment Avaron liked using for her blueprints laid. “Stairs work for able-bodied people, but for a hospital, it can be a little counterintuitive, right?”
“Of course, My Queen,” Dorin returned easily. “I’ve heard of these ‘elevators’ before, though only in the capital cities. They would be most expensive for us to use, assuming we could design and build them here.”
“I’m seeing that. What about building future elevator shafts, but walling them off? Or putting little crank-lift systems in as an interim solution?”
“I would ponder if the empty space left over could’ve been used for something else entirely. Wouldn’t a remodel be required to fit the elevator’s specific concerns?”
The other carpenters nodded in agreement, making Avaron grumble. “I suppose. Better to have something we can use immediately. What about smooth ramps to let wheeled chairs access them?”
The topic intrigued Arzha enough she moved in from around the corner. Eavesdropping wasn’t what she did at all, of course; a princess always knew when to enter conversation properly. Dorin and the carpenters perked up at her arrival before giving hasty bows of acknowledge. Avaron turned partway, giving a more casual glance and nod.
At least she’s learning manners, Arzha mused. A queen’s demeanor demanded much and Avaron’s refined, if crassly curt, mannerisms didn’t quite suffice. She’d probably never reach the heights of Artorian court propriety, but covering the basics should hopefully prevent embarrassments. “Your Majesty. I was on my way by and couldn’t help but notice another interesting project of yours starting.”
“Ah, this?” Avaron lightly waved toward the ongoing construction. “A proper hospital, or as much as one can be made right now.”
“A hospital?” Arzha echoed. “Does Eden have the healers to staff it?”
“There’s Gwyneth and a few local herbalists who know a thing or two.” Avaron scratched her cheek. “Gwyneth is fairly capable, though I’d prefer Flame healing to be a last resort.”
“As potent as it is aggressive,” Arzha agreed. “Though the choice of location seems strange to me?”
“How so?”
“If I recall the future development plans, this will be in the center of the main ‘residential areas’, will it not?”
“That’s the intent, yes.”
“I’m not so certain nobles will wish to mingle with commoners at such a place, Your Majesty.”
Dorin and the carpenters, who were decidedly not nobility themselves, glanced at each other at Arzha’s words.
“Ah, yes, feudal societies and their quaint social stratifications,” Avaron remarked flippantly, staring down at the blueprint. “I would find such nobles caring for themselves, rather than the people they should be serving, as useless to my queendom.”
An ironic thing to say, admirable in its intent if not the reality that would follow. Arzha found herself impressed, if only by the virtue Avaron displayed once again. “I do not disagree, Your Majesty, but there is a practical concern: unique bloodline [abilities] or learned [skills] they may wish to hide have certain demands.”
“Mmm, that is something. And undoubtedly every noble will wield that as an excuse. I suppose a high-security hospital would do for such individuals, noble or not.” Avaron looked over to the carpenters. “Once we’re finished with this, I shall have to trouble you all for another hospital design.”
“It would prove an interesting challenge, My Queen,” one of the carpenters answered, bowing.
“One thing at a time, though. The wagons are arriving over there and I think we’re in agreement about the design,” Avaron said, rolling up the parchment then handing it over to Dorin. “Three floors will do. It’s already oversized for our current population, but hopefully it’ll do for a few years.”
“As you say, My Queen,” Dorin agreed, taking the blueprint. “I will let you know how construction goes.”
“Thank you all for your hard work. Hopefully, piece by piece, we will make Eden a better place for us all.”
They bowed to Avaron then hurried on to the arriving wagons nearby. Arzha, watching the sight, remarked when they were out of earshot, “You ever mystify me, Your Majesty.”
“Oh?”
“From the little tentradom that popped out of the air to an up-and-coming ruler of an entire land. Most people, [divine heroine] or not, struggle with such a change. You, seemingly, do not any more than I would.” Arzha stared down upon Avaron who soon stood before her. Their height difference usually wasn’t so great, but when that close, it wasn’t hard seeing over the tentradom’s head clearly. Those bubble-tipped antennae really looked far too cute for a face usually quite serious. “Perhaps it is not wrong to say you yourself are quite talented?”
Avaron, however, chuckled and scoffed at once, turning away. “No, I’m not talented. Not on Earth nor this world. The weird System this universe works with aside, anyway.”
Arzha blinked and, seeing Avaron suddenly start walking off, moved to keep pace alongside her. It wasn’t a rude dismissal since Arzha herself was intruding on the Queen’s business anyway. “What would you call it, then?”
“Pure luck,” Avaron muttered dryly. “I was nobody on Earth and my upbringing would’ve made a peasant’s life here seem rich.”
“Surely there must be more to it than that?”
“No, just that. I worked at a restaurant and some old pervert took a fancy to how ‘exotic’ I was. He couldn’t get his dick up anymore but his taste for women never went away. Offered me a job as a secretary he could grope whenever he wanted.”
Arzha wasn’t sure what emotions went through her then, but all of them mired together in a dreadful realization that made her gut sink. Skilled propriety kept her from showing the ugly expression that dearly wanted to escape right then. Their trip along the roadway toward the center of Eden continued on, an awkward silence settling in for a moment. “I—apologize, for overstepping with my question.”
“Only after you realized the shit you stepped into,” Avaron quipped, though without any acid to her tone. “It’s fine. I got asked that all the time on Earth and no one ever respected the answer there either.”
“To weather adversity and dishonor is, itself, commendable,” Arzha pointed out firmly.
“Maybe. It does reveal what people really think. Take away the illusion of virtue, propriety, ‘do it yourself’ meritocratic bullshit, and suddenly they have no idea about anything.” Avaron rolled her head and rubbed her neck. “That old fuck had more money than sense. I learned a lot about the social circles of the rich, made some ‘friends’ among them, and slithered my way inside.”
“I would say that is a skill in itself, but I have the impression you would believe otherwise.”
“No, you’re correct,” Avaron refuted. “Social skills are something most do not value, but circumstances matter just as much. If I was still a waitress bussing tables and getting leered at by old perverts, I’d never have the chance to step into the world of the rich. I’d be another street rat trying to get by, crushed by debt I could never pay, working jobs that were never enough. All very much designed that way, of course.”
“Is Earth so terrible?” Arzha asked curiously, her impression of such a mysterious world at odds with Avaron’s words.
“Depends, I guess,” Avaron remarked, giving a shrug. “By the standards of Earth, I grew up a—uhh, I think you’d call them vagrants or something like that.”
“I understand your meaning, if I would not use such words myself,” Arzha protested politely.
“Anyway, enough about me rambling about a life that doesn’t matter. Was there something you needed?”
A rare glimpse into Avaron’s past as it was, Arzha doubted she’d find out much more. Coughing into her hand politely, she said with commendable formality, “I’d been considering that ‘book reading’ sooner instead of later. I was curious if you might make the time for it?”
“Book reading … oh. Oh. Uhm, yes? Sorry, my mind is all over the place.” Avaron made a circular motion at her temple. “When did you want to?”
“Tomorrow or the day after might suffice.”
“Did you have anywhere in mind?”
“… I would offer a choice location if I had any.” Even Arzha couldn’t keep the regrettable embarrassment out of her voice. “Eden is your land; it would be unbefitting of me to commandeer a place.”
“I can’t leave a princess out in the cold. I’ll make accommodations in one of my Hive gardens, but it’ll take a day to get it ready.”
“If it is no trouble. The privacy would be preferable.”
“I’m sure,” Avaron remarked with a certain knowing to her voice. Arzha wasn’t sure if she felt relieved or uneasy from it; all too real in a way no amount of wandering thoughts could ignore. “I’ll put some effort in so you can enjoy it.”
There were so many ways to take that one that Arzha wasn’t sure which to believe. Worse, definitively choosing one and being wrong might be unbearably awkward. Instead, she merely nodded and said, “Thank you, Queen Avaron. Your hospitality continues to be pleasantly impressive.”
Avaron made to turn away, but she stopped as if taken by a thought. “It’s a culture difference between us, so I’m not too sure about the formalities. Is there a point we start using casual speech with each other, or is it always formal?”
Arzha blinked, surprised for a moment. “Presentation is the essence of regality. Even if we are in the middle of a street with no one else around, it is still ‘public’. Nobles must always consider their appearance, mannerisms, and the portrayal of themselves and their household. Were we behind closed doors or somewhere more private, then that concern is much less.”
“But, not gone.”
“No more than it is for anyone else.”
“Ah. Earth has its own customs, though it is more people wearing formality like clothing than embodying it. Faking it, almost. You get used to it, dealing with people who wear one mask or another, and you never really see each other’s face.” Avaron carelessly shrugged. “Nobles, royals; different names for the same sort of people. You, though, aren’t like that. You’re the real deal, so I’m always a little uncertain what to do.”
“Your Majesty, I might take that as a high compliment,” Arzha returned coolly, even if a warmth made her heart rise a bit.
“Because it is one?”
“… Artorian etiquette can be likened to a sword duel: strikes, feints, deflections, as much as positioning and intent. Anyone who knows the sword can tell which is which. And, how practiced the tongue is.”
Avaron chuckled. “I can’t say I have a lot of practice for something like that. I do know one good trick, though.”
“Oh?”
“Attack, attack, and attack. Ruthlessly attack; recklessly attack. Like a wolf with no fear of death; like someone who will sink the ship to kill everyone on board. It’s the one thing that helped me climb the corporate ladder on Earth. After all, the person with nothing left to lose is the most dangerous of all.”
For a moment, Arzha wasn’t sure if Avaron fully understood her subtle implications. It seemed ridiculous, especially given Avaron’s evident intelligence. Yet, the more she considered the simplicity of such words and their meaning, the more about Avaron fit together. Her suicidal inclination as much as sheer insanity in her tactics—it wasn’t overt fear that held her back, but uncertainty. She knew enough to find out what she needed in order to attack.
Once a direction arose, then everything committed toward it.
The Princess of Artor stared at the tentradom before the corners of her lips twitched into a sly smile. “And how might that end against someone with the skill to withstand such an attack?”
“I haven’t met that person yet.”
“Well, do be prepared for disappointment.”
Avaron squinted while scratching her head. “Does that really count as a feint? That sounds like a double negative, which is way more confusing.”
“… Would it not be disappointing to be proven wrong when you are met by someone who can withstand such an attack?”
“No? Well, it depends. It—I’m getting a headache thinking about this.”
*~*
The walk to Avaron’s Hive was, if nothing else, quiet and tranquil. The twilight stretched over the sky, fingers of gold and orange covering blue and white. Flame worshippers called it the ‘great cauldron’, the transformation of day to night; the burning of light to make ashen darkness. Church worshipers argued it was the Light stretching to other worlds, giving unto them boons while asking of challenges to others. In their mind, only the worthy preserved through the darkness, and so to die at night was a shameful thing.
A belief often turned against them, for those brave enough to try nighttime attacks or raids.
Arzha wasn’t sure which of them was correct; to say nothing of the others who had their own ideas.
It was pretty, though.
A spectacle to the eyes with a lull in the air between day’s sweltering work and night’s chilly embrace.
That same indifferent sky, as beautiful as when she was a child, when Artor burned, when she marched in defeat to the elvetahn, and when she walked to her unchanging future. Arzha’s icy blue eyes aimlessly wandered across the expanse, her certain steps carrying her forward. She almost felt naked in her plainclothes, for what they were of a worn-in brown vest, white undershirt, and baggy pants. Hardly the height of fashion for a princess, but luxurious items rarely survived hardship, either.
Perhaps naked did suffice, in a sense. With such a clear, brazen goal in mind, and her intentions so well known, there wasn’t anything to hide. Arzha wasn’t sure if confidence was what let her shrug it off so easily. Even seasoned warriors always held that little doubt; that tiny voice daring to ask, ‘what if?’.
“Are you sure, my lady?” Saryl asked.
“It’s not like you to doubt my decisions,” Arzha observed, uncannily aware of Saryl suddenly reading her mind. Hopefully not literally.
“Perhaps doubt suits us best when we’re most certain.”
“Magna, you’re rubbing off on her again.”
“Oh, good,” the only other Snowflake Knight present remarked. “At least something does.”
“Bleh,” Saryl retorted, sticking her tongue out impudently.
“Hm. To answer your question, Knight Saryl, I am as certain as I could be,” Arzha stated, her words sounding as proper as they could be, even if they didn’t feel that way. “Even if the path ahead isn’t what I … imagined.”
“Is it ever?”
“No, but comfort would be nice.”
“Avaron seems comfortable,” Saryl pointed out with a professional regard as much as teasing. “Fluffy, too.”
Such words tickled Arzha’s insatiable curiosity to find out. A silly little compulsion that popped up the first time she saw Avaron’s ‘change’. The beauty of women stretched endlessly, be they human or monja, and Arzha saw much of it. Yet, like that very same twilight sun, the more she saw of it, the greater she appreciated. How could anyone grow tired of such splendor? Be they on the earth or in the heavens.
“And a tentradom,” Arzha also pointed out.
“Does that still concern you?”
“Does it not for you?”
“Not so much anymore.” Saryl gave a careless shrug, lacing her hands together behind her head. Like Arzha, she and Magna wore their plainclothes, though Saryl’s deservedly seemed more … farm-like. Rougher hewn, firmer textures, simpler colors; ‘comfortably homey’ in her words. “She seems a queen like any other; makes demands just the same. The skin of it’s not so different once you peel it off.”
Magna quipped dryly, “Coming from she who graciously turned herself into a cow?”
“Farmer blood, farmer milk,” Saryl quipped. “’sides I don’t hear you complaining about my taste.”
Magna pursed her lips and kept steadfast, not betraying any emotion at all.
There was always a pungent wisdom to Saryl; the mind of someone born to the plow. She saw the ugly sides of Artor, of the aristocracy, of blood and household. Half of what drew Arzha to her in the first place was that keen insight in the first place. Even if pessimism laced through it just as often, Saryl saw how things worked, not how Arzha imagined them to.
If Avaron didn’t bother her, then that meant something tangible.
Yet, a sword could only trust itself; the certainty of its own steel and the hand that held it. If Arzha couldn’t trust her own judgement, would others lead her to a flawed outcome? That insidious doubt, however, meant little to her lived experience: her Snowflake Knights were much her as she was them. Their insights, knowledge, and abilities furthered her goals in a way a singular sword never could. Perhaps the fact those who remained, Haleen among them, disapproving was what truly rattled her confidence.
I’m over thinking this again, Arzha told herself. Knowing that, however, did little to actually stop her from doing it.
Her intelligent mind knew what to do, but her sword heart wavered.
The simple, yet familiar, entrance to Avaron’s Hive soon yawned before her. Refined since the first days when she arrived, it had an almost temple-like splendor to it. Smooth, brick-like chitin intertwined with strands of flesh as tightly wound as rope. Orderly in a way nothing the word ‘tentradom’ usually evoked. She’d seen it plenty times enough, coming and going for martial practice. Then and now, however, felt distinctly different.
Was it any different, or just her own mind going mad?
One of the tentacleling workers emerged from the interior, tip-tapping out on those pointed, spidery legs. It had the air of a messenger, given the absence of its kin or anything resembling work. “Oh, good, you’re here,” it said in a guttural if distinctly feminine voice. “Just you three?”
“… For tonight, yes,” Arzha answered politely.
“At least Haleen won’t be giving me death glares all night.” The tentacleling—a flesh puppet to Avaron’s will—scratched its tubular, eyeless ‘head’ with a foreleg. “Well, this garden is going to be a little awkward with how big it is, but I can work on something. Follow this drone down here.”
Propriety, if nothing else, became the lifeline to which Arzha moved by. She wouldn’t dare seem rude to a gracious host, after all. She, along with Magna and Saryl, followed the drone inside. The change in air happened by the footstep as cool breeze turned into sweltering humidity. A heat that invaded the body, seeping in with a constant, sweat-inducing monotony. Though she thought herself used to it every time, even Arzha became self-conscious.
Overheating was a deadly problem in armor, especially on the battlefield. Strangely, the Hive’s interior warmth was never too much of an issue. It defied reason with how it warmed the body and encouraged sweating, yet did nothing to induce heatstroke or lightheadedness. Avaron herself was entirely unaffected by it, as was Tsugumi and Gwyneth.
Though ‘unaffected’ or ‘completely adapted to it’ were very different ideas.
The drone led them deeper into the Hive, below the level Arzha usually associated with the training grounds. The monotonous and identical makeup of the interior actually made it somewhat challenging to know for certain. Deeper depths brought greater pressure, but the Hive blurred the lines. One floor looked the same as any other, only separated by an arbitrary idea of ‘up’ and ‘down’.
If Arzha hadn’t a guide, escaping such a place would prove challenging.
Perhaps impossible.
The drone stopped before a toothy flesh door the same as any other. “Alright, here we are. I don’t have anything for fancy Artorian décor, so I went with my own specialty. Do enjoy.”
It flourished one of its legs like a butler toward the opening flesh door. Where Arzha, Magna, and Saryl stood within a Hive tunnel with its blistering, monotonous light, the other side awaited like a dark portal. For once, quite literally and not just Arzha’s own mind working itself silly. The sharp, unyielding darkness carried a smattering of glittering lights, flickering like stars. Warm, pulsating rings, lines, and wavy swirls hung among them as accompanying banners to their sublimity.
She wasn’t sure what she saw.
Arzha stepped forward, her legs moved as much by command as intrigue. The air itself changed slightly, a bit cooler than the tunnel and with a certain … motion, to it. Breathing, almost. Her eyes adjusted slowly, turning indistinct blurs of color into distinct figures. Mushrooms? she wondered, squinting.
Stalks with bulbous heads, stalks with long spindly fingers, stalks with long, flowing skirts waving out under the bells—they were mushrooms of a kind she’d never seen before. Hive flesh intertwined with barky wood of trees, reaching to the ceiling in a sculpted, arched way. Long, thin branches stretched out, intertwined with one another, and their leaves melded together into a canopy roof. Mushrooms dotted along the wood, erratic and plotted alike, creating sinewy shadows amongst their gentle living light.
A smell tickled her nose, but not that erotic perfume Arzha half-expected. In fact, it was a lot more familiar: freshly baked bread.
Her foot nearly slipped, but years of training caught her just in time. Large, cut stones created a path amongst the floor’s flesh grass, something Arzha almost shamefully hadn’t noticed. That sudden jolt made the world feel entirely real again in a sharply jarring way. Clearing her throat and folding her hands together behind her back, she proceeded onward with a rigid properness.
Wonder had its place; ideally, under her boot.
The largest of the stepping stones guided the main path, while smaller ones branched off. Under rows of grown, arched trellises, Arzha found herself drawn toward what might’ve been a gazebo. Smaller tables of natural wood dotted the interior, each laden with covered plates and serving trays. Long, thin, and vividly teal fungal strands hung from the ceiling, their bulbous ends casting a strangely pleasant, fiery-hue across everything. Not quite the same as a hearth, but not far from it, either.
And there was the lady—queen—monja, and more, that vexed Arzha so.
Adorned in elvetahn dress with a simple, yet form-fitting green silk with golden threads down the sides. A figure lithe in a way as human as it was oddly not. There were times Avaron struck Arzha as so terribly human she often forgot how very much the tentradom wasn’t. Perhaps, in that moment, she embodied both with an exotic strangeness to which Arzha hadn’t the words for.
Avaron smirked and, in a simple flourish of both her hands going wide then coming together, declared, “Princess Arzha, and Knights Magna and Saryl. Welcome! Do forgive the … well, I wouldn’t call it cheap, but different, perhaps …”
Arzha started, “I—“
“—come on, Your Majesty!” Saryl interrupted with an incredulous laugh. “Look at all this! It’s way prettier than most gardens I’ve been in.”
Arzha pursed her lips. Saryl was, if nothing else, a warhammer.
“Ah? Well, then.” Avaron snorted a laugh and shrugged. “I’m at least certain the food is to your liking.”
Saryl, as ever at the prospect of eating, bundled off toward the tables with an immediate ‘ooh’. Arzha might’ve rolled her eyes were she a lesser woman. Magna remained by her side, dutiful if uneasy. Not that the princess blamed her; every minute spent in such a garden was a minute closer.
Funny, the anticipation before battle wasn’t nearly as bad.
“That said,” Avaron continued on, watching Saryl for a moment before turning back. “I’m still not sure what qualifies as ‘good reading’ in this world. What books Eden has aren’t exactly stories and what ones I did find seemed to be children’s tales or nursery rhymes.”
“Literature is oft in demand, but hard to keep,” Arzha remarked, curtly waving toward Magna. “Stories even more so when the queendom falls down. A few of Magna’s favorite books are all we’ve kept with us.”
“I’m always interested in learning more. Plus there’s always good conversation, I’m sure there’s plenty to talk about. But, please, come, sit, take your boots off, don’t let me keep you. It’s not like I know Artorian court manners or anything.”
Something Arzha might have to fix in the future, if anything resembling ‘court life’ ever returned.
There wasn’t a shoe rack, so Arzha elected to take her boots off near the ‘entrance’. Saryl and Magna followed her example, but the moment Saryl freed her feet, she skipped over to a food table. Arzha and Magna shared a look with the other noble letting out a soundless sigh. The princess gestured for her to go on, and so Arzha left the two of them to their fun.
In times of indecision, any action could lead to decisive outcomes; thus Arzha plunged herself head-first into the heart of the problem.
She headed over and took up a spot alongside Avaron, who was opening different dishes. The tentradom’s antennae bobbled, curving slightly toward Arzha, but she otherwise remained diligent.
“Oh my, how bold,” Avaron quipped. “Cornering a delicate maiden like me that fast …”
“Delicate?” Arzha echoed, the mere idea the height of comedy itself.
“I’m very delicate,” Avaron shot back with an offended huff.
Realizing her own guffaw, Arzha cringed internally. “Forgive me, perhaps there’s a difference between us. To describe a maiden as delicate is … uncouth.”
“Oh.” A pregnant pause. “I’ll be the idiot and ask ‘why?’”
“It denigrates her strength? I cannot imagine why anyone would be called delicate unless they were … sickly, I suppose.”
Avaron looked up from the table, stared forward, then squinted. She scratched her forehead, making her antennae bobble. “There’s some weird cultural difference going on here. Hold on—“ she held up a hand in Arzha’s direction, making a ‘stop’, then a circular ‘go’, motion, “—let’s start over again. Ahem. Oh my, how bold, trying to corner me like this.”
At least Arzha’s little diversion worked, and Avaron’s antics made laughing rather genuine. “Yes, well, I should be bold when wishing to confront a queen such as yourself.”
“Confront, huh. I’m very dangerous, you know.”
At least that tone of voice then was far more permissive, so Arzha noted. “I am nothing if not courageous,” she retorted easily. “Be it with my sword or my hands.”
“Speaking of hands,” Avaron remarked, flippantly moving a plate over into Arzha’s surprised grasp. “Make your choices while they’re still hot.”
The princess blinked for a moment, but carried on quickly. As ever, the selection of food favored Kitinchi styles, but some Artorian ones made appearances as well. She’d eaten enough of Tsugumi’s cooking to recognize her work, but the others were more mysterious. Artorian cuisine favored heartiness and volume, with fewer but richer ingredients. Kitinchi culture really loved the artistry of complex flavors, which made it quite novel to eat sometimes.
There was something she didn’t recognize, though. Arzha squinted and leaned forward slightly, staring at the blackened husk of what should’ve been a rack of ribs. The outer surface looked like charcoal while the bones poked out at one end.
“Oh, it finished nicely,” Avaron muttered while going for that burnt husk. She managed to separate out three ribs and their meat with disturbing ease.
Arzha had never seen meat separate like that unless it was in soup. Contrary to her expectation, the interior flesh had a lovely hue of sharp red and pink, yet oddly the texture of thorough cooking. “What is that?” she inquired curiously.
“Eh? Never seen barbeque before?” Avaron looked over in puzzlement while her hand continued to load her plate. No, not just her hand, some tentacles emerged from her joints to help as well. The limb practically moved like its own creature, separate from the rest of her body. If Arzha hadn’t seen her do it so much while doing desk work, it would’ve been disturbing.
She wasn’t sure if she should hate it for seeming kind of cute.
“You mean roasting?” Arzha clarified.
“Uhhhhh … I guess that’s technically the same? There’s a lot of smoking, aging, and heavy seasoning for proper barbeque.”
“The seasoning is perhaps why. I am not sure any Artorian noble would have prized meat cooked in this manner.”
“That’d do it. Barbeque is great, but it relies on a lot of things to really get going. It’s always around in some form or another, though it takes some pretty hefty spices to make the kind I know.”
“How did you procure those spices?” Arzha inquired, her curiosity even stronger. “It’d make for a powerful commodity to trade with.”
“Ohh yeah, the spice trade,” Avaron echoed, then smacked her own forehead, which made her antennae go sideways for a moment. “I forgot how big of a deal that was.”
“… Was it not on Earth?”
“No, it was. Eventually people figured out how to culture foreign spices more locally, plus innovations in farming improved output. For like half a day’s labor you could get a cupboard of 50 or more spices if you wanted—why are you looking at me like that?”
Arzha wasn’t sure what kind of face she made just then. “A peasant can afford that much? Or are the spices that cheap?”
“Yes?”
“Your world is difficult to imagine,” Arzha conceded with a sigh, then finished setting up her plate. She’d try some of the ‘barbeque ribs’ at least to experience whatever novelty made them. “Those many useful spices in a cupboard would be a queen’s ransom by itself.”
“Well, we’ll see. Money is just an abstract concept in the first place,” Avaron remarked. With her plate loaded to bear in what was an unseemly amount of meat, potatoes, bushy vegetables, noodles, and bread, she headed off. The actual sitting table wasn’t that far away, though it had a size meant for a dozen rather than just the four of them. Avaron took the head of the rectangular table, or at least what would become the head when she sat there.
“You cannot simply say that as if it will not bait me,” Arzha complained, taking her much more politely loaded plate and following after. “It’s impolite to make a princess ask so many questions.”
“But, I love hearing your indignant tone?”
Pursing her lips, Arzha very pointedly sat on the right-side seat nearest Avaron. The second greatest position of power at such a table arrangement, and one that spoke intent well enough. Or so she hoped, at least. “It’s even more impolite to tease a princess,” she huffed, setting her plate and the strange wooden utensils she found in proper position.
“I fear I’ll live the rest of my life being impolite, then. I’m a dreadful teaser.”
Arzha glanced over.
Avaron eyed back at her with a sidelong, sly look. Her posture was one about to eat, but it wasn’t directed at the food below. Arzha wasn’t really sure she saw what she saw, but her heart thumped oddly for a moment. A purely instinctual reaction, but one that made her self-conscious of her entire body. The hairs upon her neck tingled, singing with the knightly awareness of danger.
Arzha had seen that look many times; done it herself just as much.
Men oft tried the most, disgusting as it was and so easily ignorable.
Yet, Avaron’s burning blue, sun-like eyes tickled something in the princess’ instincts.
An acute understanding of the message being sent.
She glanced down at her food, hiding behind propriety and feigned interest. If that message sunk in anymore, her cheeks might actually blush. Her heart wouldn’t stop bouncing between excitement and combative adrenaline, either. So that is what it is like, Arzha mused, suddenly understanding very well the reactions of all those fine maidens she’d brought to bed.
The idea that her, of all women, would instead be the one taken to bed was—“Before I forget, and it is important,” Arzha said, practiced and elegant as ever, “spice creation is important. Are you able to achieve a steady supply?”
“Mmm, it’s doable,” Avaron drawled, relenting in her dangerous gaze to also start eating. “I can start growing them, but I will need others to figure out their uses first. When I acquire the DNA of plants, my perspective is too down-in-the-dirt to really understand what it actually is. Tahn’s knowledge helps a lot, of course. I couldn’t get this far this fast without him.”
“The All-Father of the Elvetahn?” Arzha clarified if only for her own sake. “He is helping you?”
“We chatted a … year or so, ago. I helped him, he helped me. I don’t know anything about plants, but he does, so he shared some of it with me.”
“Ah,” Arzha agreed with conversational ease even while her mind raced. Nex, a forgotten goddess of the tentradoms. Nahtura, the Great Owl herself. Tahn, the All-Father of the Elvetahn. Her ‘boss’, whichever deity that could possibly be …
Four different goddesses all favoring and working with one [Divine Heroine]. Not to mention that Avaron bedded Nahtura herself. Such beings existed in realms of power Arzha could only dream of. Technically, Avaron also bedded—if married without ceremony?—a Flame Priestess with a direct connection to the Eternal Flame itself. That might possibly be five goddesses then.
She, who never once balked at difficult challenges, found herself at a loss.
The plight of being human was being human; how could she compare to such existences?
Then again, there was Tsugumi in all that as well. Accomplished, certainly, but in the same league as Arzha. Maybe a little below or above, depending on the circumstances.
At least the bread was nice and soft. Whether Avaron intended to or not, Arzha did prefer the softer loaves with gentler crumbs. She wasn’t too sure about it being a darker brown, almost black, loaf, but it tasted wonderful enough to distract her mind. Arzha did not give into despair; only lesser people had such a luxury. She was a realist, and that meant grasping situations properly and doing the best she could within them.
“Try not to think too heavily,” Avaron quipped.
Arzha glanced over, suppressing her surprise. “I merely enjoy the food. You always provide such interesting flavors.”
“It took me decades to learn how to enjoy life in the moment and I still forget sometimes,” Avaron remarked, looking at a piece of honeyed chicken on her wooden fork. “Good food helps with that, at least.”
Decades? Arzha wondered, the prospect of Avaron’s true age suddenly revealing itself. She wouldn’t be so uncouth to ask directly, but it implied Avaron herself was already much older. Even if she didn’t act like it sometimes. Perhaps, also for the first time, Arzha found an older woman reaching for her as well. Although, the concept of an older woman and Avaron seemed … incompatible.
No, completely nonsensical. Even if her literal age was greater she didn’t act it at all.
Why did that annoy Arzha so much?
No, wait, maybe they were in the same age bracket. Decades was at least ‘two’, so it could be that low, which would make Avaron younger.
It annoyed Arzha more.
“The company matters just as much,” she said with graceful intonation. “A long night alone at a table soon makes even a queen’s meal seem worthless.”
“Too true. You need the right mood and atmosphere to really enjoy dining. I spent enough nights in my office suite that Speeding Panda was all the takeout I needed.”
Arzha tried; she really did, but while she knew the topic pertained to food, she still couldn’t piece it together. “Speeding Panda?”
“Fast food—which this world probably doesn’t have a concept of. Uhh …” Avaron scratched her temple for a moment, thinking. “Like an inn, but it makes a few select dishes really fast all throughout the day. Cheap prices for cheap food, at least until the second Great Depression hit. Ah, can’t believe I’m actually missing it.”
It wasn’t hard understanding such a sentiment; the loss of familiarity, no matter how minor it might’ve been. Arzha nodded while continuing her polite eating. It was an opportune moment to keep talking, but at the same time, letting conversation rest was also important. The ebb-and-flow had to be managed for proper discourse to happen, after all.
The quiet, too, could be pleasant.
At least, until a surprised, girlish moan reached her ears.
Arzha snuck a sideways look.
Avaron, holding one of the ribs in her hands, scrunched her face up as if she’d eaten something as sour as it was delicious. Her antennae bobbled up-and-down, wiggling with an erratic motion. “Suh fukin’ strung,” she mumbled around a mouthful, physically shivering as drool started dribbling out. Taking one more bite, she chewed with great hurry, then all but slammed a tankard of water down her throat.
Even still, Avaron panted afterward, her long and very strange looking tongue slithering out of her mouth. “Spicy, so fuckin’ spicy, why is it so spicy?!” she bemoaned, looking at the rib on her plate accusingly.
There were so many things to pick apart, but queen among them was Avaron’s … very long, tongue. Maybe a foot or more, one side of it tongue-like, the rest of it more of tentacle organ of some kind. Tiny branches sprung off of it with even tinier feelers that had even smaller hairs upon them. The whole way it wiggled, twitched, and jerked made it look like some massive alien worm than something a woman kept in her mouth. Not to mention the tip having that bizarre arrow-shape to it.
Perhaps in some small way Arzha had focused too much on Avaron’s cute, womanly nature and not the … other, side of her.
Sucking her tongue-tentacle back into her throat, Avaron inhaled, then started eating the rib meat again. Propriety left Arzha the longer she watched, beholding the sight of a tentradom eating and crying at the same time. The self-torture of it all looked utterly mad. “You don’t have to eat it,” Arzha implored.
“Buut suh gud?” Avaron mumbled over her next bite.
Arzha stared.
Avaron, finishing her mouthful, drank again with a more measured pace. “Uff—ohh. It’s not a proper southern style, but it’s damn close. Why is it so spicy? There’s not even sauce on this thing …”
One very similar rib awaited on Arzha’s plate, staring at her with ominous promise. A more important issue demanded attention, however, as off-putting as Arzha found it to be. “Must it be–ah, eaten with the hands?”
“It’s finger food, technically. You can cut the meat off with a fork or knife, but a lot of the experience is eating the meat from the bone.” Avaron looked up thoughtfully for a moment then glanced at Arzha. “Let me guess, it’s improper etiquette or something like that?”
“You would not see anyone do this at a queen’s table, no.”
“Am I not a queen doing this at my table?”
Arzha paused, more surprised at herself. There wasn’t much of a point in denying how off-foot she was. She couldn’t even keep a proper conversation going. “It is different if the queen herself decides to, of course …”
A light chuckle accompanied Avaron’s hearty shrug. “I won’t besmirch Princess Arzha’s reputation if she decides to try a little finger food. Eat as you wish, though remember I do have manners. I’m not just doing this because it’s funny.”
That’s a lie.
She knew Avaron well enough to know that much, at least. A temporary defeat wasn’t a great opening to the night, but the war wasn’t over yet.
Even if Arzha was a little hesitant to eat something with her bare hands. The bone, at least, stuck out enough from the meat to serve as a natural handle. Setting her utensils down, she stared at it for a long moment. It wasn’t entirely dreadful; no, just … other. Different in a way she wasn’t used to. Or if she ever wanted to be.
It wasn’t the first time she’d eaten in such a way, of course, but still.
Hesitation was never a welcome guest, so Arzha set about her task. Picking up the rib with a precise pinch on both ends, she lifted it up to her lips. The meaty crust had a certain appeal to it: firm, crumbly, and cracked like sand in the desert. Hints of smoke, pepper, and sugar teased her nose, evident but faded, intertwining with the scent of ... beef? It seemed to be meat from cattle.
Taking a slow, measured bite, the crumbly crust fell apart with incredible ease, and the meat itself all but tore away like a cloud. Arzha blinked, biting more than she expected from the complete lack of resistance. Hurrying to catch the errant strands, she sucked in the bite fully, restoring some measure of propriety just as the flavor hit her.
“Mm?” An unbecoming noise of delighted surprise escaped her.
“It’s spicy,” Avaron quipped warningly.
Hot, tangy, crusty, smoky, charcoal or wood, beefy … there were many, many flavors all coming together in a way she hadn’t ever tasted before. Familiar, yet different, sharply clear and overpoweringly delicious. Nothing resembling spicy, except the mildest of peppers, really registered at all.
After finishing three decidedly improper bites, Arzha took a moment to set down the rib, have a drink, then say, “There’s nothing spicy about it, your majesty.”
Finishing her own mouthful, Avaron looked rather dubious. “Well, my tongue isn’t burning because it’s bored. No heat? No flame at all?”
“I can taste pepper, but nothing as to what you’re feeling, I think. It’s rather almost … sweet, or sugary.”
Avaron stared down at the rib in her hands suspiciously and muttered, “It’s the same animal, same smoking technique, same chefs …”
“If I might conjecture, if the food is the same, the difference is between us, is it not?”
“How do you mean?”
“[Skills], [abilities], your majesty being a tentradom, myself being a human …”
The bubble-shaped antennae on Avaron’s head jumped up on their own. “Oh, that’s why! The chefs are human and monja. My sense of taste is different from theirs. Which part of this comes off as spicy to me then?”
Uncertain if she should interject such monologue, Arzha took artful chomps of her rib some more. Certainly not because she found its novel taste more engaging than Avaron’s enthralling company, of course. Though, it’d been a while since she had anything resembling a proper lady’s meal, so perhaps eagerness worked against her.
The rest of the meal passed pleasantly as the two enjoyed both the food and company.
*~*
“Food coma,” moaned a pathetic bundle of tentacles.
“Food coma,” moaned a knight who should’ve had much higher standards, but never did.
Arzha wasn’t sure how she, and everyone else, ended up in such a situation, but there they were. After dinner was done, Avaron ambled over to a wide, almost bed-like couch adjacent to the dining area. Saryl followed after, and the two of them had lain across the couch like sacks of potatoes. Magna’s brilliant idea of ‘going over and doing something’ somehow evolved into both her and Arzha providing lap pillows for the food-stricken fools.
It wasn’t what she’d planned for but it did move things along, in a sense.
And Avaron laid her head on Arzha’s lap again, so that had to be a good sign.
Those cursed antenna and their idle twitching were tempting little things.
She never thought of such strange things as … alluring. Or cute. Somewhat like a cat; soft, yet tied to something fierce and proud. Just being able to touch them was surely important in itself. Her hands itched, yet there was no itch.
“Oh, yeah, the reading thing,” Avaron half-said, half-mumbled. “I’m supposed to be doing that.”
“Considering everything, it is merely an … option.”
“The get-together is more the reason, then?”
“That is a way of seeing it, if the company is not terrible.”
“Alas, all I’ve to offer is decent food and these cool glowing mushrooms on my ceiling …”
Arzha let out a stiff, polite exhale to stop herself from snorting. “Yes, what a shame to be in the company of such a pleasantly endearing queen. Torture itself.” Those antenna, once pointed in different directions with a lazy air, perked and angled toward Arzha. Sensing, as she knew such a motion to mean, and pointedly showing Avaron’s attention on her; even if the tentradom otherwise remained still.
“Alas,” Avaron echoed, “all I’ve to offer is a horrendous appetite and ferocious proclivity toward women who can beat the stuffing out of me.”
The proverbial sword parry became a hammer resounding against Arzha’s skull. It stunned her, if for a moment, but long enough that Saryl’s choked laugh broke out. Magna smacked the knight, but it only made her laugh even more gayly. “Her Highness would never, Your Majesty!”
Avaron held up a finger in an aimless gesture. “See, this is the part where I’d make a quip, but I’m not sure it’s ‘proper’ in this sort of context.”
“How are we to know if you do not say?” Arzha asked with rhetorical dryness.
“Alright, alright, I was going to say, ‘I don’t know, this princess’ thighs feel pretty deadly to me’.”
Those words left a visceral silence in the air.
Then a snorting, sloppy giggle broke out. The sound of something being smacked was followed by a disgruntled ‘hey!’, and so Magna did her best to restrain Saryl. A tumultuous little scuffle of the two play fighting, not that Arzha paid any more attention to them. Instead, the oddest sensations of surprise and embarrassment collided together in sweet mixture that almost made her blush. She wasn’t even sure why it did, but such a … forward, compliment did something for her. At least, hopefully, not enough to look like some maiden at her first dance.
She didn’t like that smug look Avaron had.
“Ah, see,” the tentradom remarked, “I got you with that one, huh?”
Such forthright admission made Arzha’s lips purse and her icy scowl emerge all the more readily. Rather than any decency to be admonished, Avaron simply chuckled, her antenna wiggling with insidious cuteness. It really wasn’t fair. “You might find my steel more unbending than you expect,” Arzha shot back, even if it felt a bit lame of a defense.
“Don’t worry, I’m very flexible. Very.”
It didn’t help knowing what she did from Gwyneth and Tsugumi just what that meant. A thrilling sensation shot through Arzha, but she didn’t give it the dignity of acknowledgement. Even if it was a little tempting.
“… But—“ that sudden change in tone didn’t pass her notice at all, “—perhaps we should talk about something first. You know, clear the air.”
“I do not mind, but for what?”
“Ahh …” Avaron didn’t look like she wanted to, but nonetheless made the effort to sit up.
The sudden absence of the weight and heat on Arzha’s lap annoyed the princess greatly. Still, watching the tentradom move in such simple sensual motions was a delight, too. When Avaron turned and slid up alongside her, however, Arzha froze. Though distinctly taller than the tentradom, at that moment, Avaron made sure to lay her head on Arzha’s shoulder. Her long, very naked leg hitched over the princess’, settling between both with a certain familiarity beyond anything proper. Many women had done so before, in one form or another, but Avaron was the first that made Arzha feel anything like nervousness.
Or, was it excitement?
The two were distressingly close together.
“Well, a very necessary conversation,” Avaron continued on, her voice punctual yet laced with a warm silkiness to it. Accommodating for being almost nose-to-nose with Arzha, but certainly not seductive. “One I’ve been putting off, but one we should have.”
“And that is …?” Arzha tried prompting, but it felt like she was being teased. Maybe she was, given how Avaron smirked so damnably cutely. Another look soon replaced it, one very distinctly of business and authority the princess recognized well enough. Avaron’s free hand rose up and planted a pointing finger right into Arzha’s chest. It might’ve sank directly into her cleavage if she hadn’t a shirt in the way; an exciting little thought in itself.
“Princess Arzha Shieldcrown,” Avaron enunciated every part. “What is it that you want?”
The tone and words warred with each other; one demanded a queen’s answer, the other a purring promise that shouldn’t leave a bed. Indecision paralyzed Arzha, every part of her brain firing in different directions. All of it, however, keenly fixed on Avaron’s very close face and insufferable, maidenly beauty. A beauty that hid layers of thorns and sinister desires that were undoubtedly extremely dangerous. Those inhuman eyes with their deep, dark yet fiery blue colors and perky lips on a face finer than any doll’s—
“Because if it’s the restoration of Artor, I’ll help with that, of course.”
Like a wagon whose wheel tore off suddenly, Arzha’s mind whipped from one side to the other. The implications thereof were simply far too many to think through in a split second. “What do you mean?” Arzha asked with practiced guile.
“Just that,” Avaron continued without missing a beat. “Or, perhaps I’m misunderstanding all those wistful and idle comments of yours?”
The question was its own issue; Avaron’s sudden shift into a very familiar and unwelcoming mannerism was another. Such an attitude befit a negotiation, not a bedroom. “I am not certain there is an Artor left to rebuild,” Arzha remarked. “My wistfulness for it does not really matter.”
“But it does.” That cursed finger poked into her cleavage again. “Because you are still its princess. No, perhaps its future queen, as so justly deserving. You are someone who would see its banner to the end of time, if possible.”
“What concern of it is yours?”
“The fact there are two Arzhas before me. One who would lift Artor to glory again, and the other who would leave it behind. Duty is the essence of who you are, so I wondered.” Avaron’s probing finger pulled away and the tentradom laid there, smiling with eyes that were anything but human. “Because I play for keeps. I’m very greedy like that, as I’m sure you know. Consider my questioning a showing of respect for you I rarely give others.”
A part of Arzha wanted the fun, perhaps blood tingling tense, atmosphere of before. The other recognized the moment for what it was, and the sort of decision she’d have to make. It was funny, in a way, how she’d plotted and considered so much that led her to the very place in the bowels of a tentradom’s hive. Yet, when the moment of decision arrived, hesitation crossed her mind. The dream of an Artor where she was queen, as was her right, was a tempting one. Sweet, seductive, and as hollow as any piece of candy in its fulfilment.
The comfortable dream of everything going the way she wanted, not how it actually did.
Bitterness clung to her heavier than any armor she’d ever worn.
Perhaps, no matter how well she might hide it, some people still saw through her.
Avaron’s gaze felt oddly piercing.
Arzha looked away, though the fuzzy darkness above with its warm glowing lights offered little reprieve. “The Artor I want is gone, and the Artor I could build wouldn’t be the same. I have all the freedom in the world, yet nothing to which I could give it. At least, until I met you.”
“Oh?” Avaron’s puff-ball antenna bobbled up and down interestedly.
Charming a maiden, at least, hadn’t left Arzha’s confidence yet.
“I didn’t know who you were, at first,” Arzha said with a ‘factual’ air. “A tentradom never seen before, a mysterious woman amidst the heroines … Snippy, to be sure.”
“Me? Snippy?” Avaron waxed with playful sarcasm, but Arzha merely gave her a knowing look.
“Deceiving royalty on our first meeting surely qualifies.”
Avaron stuck out her blue tentacle-tongue indignantly. Maybe it was cute; maybe Arzha had other thoughts on what it looked like that she tried ignoring.
“But more than that, as I was quick to find out, you’ve a sharp and terrifying mind. One that smiles easily but hides a dagger even easier.”
“Now you’re making me sound like a villain.”
Is that praise? Arzha wondered for a moment. “It was hard for me to know at first, of course. The prophecy in particular was certainly concerning.”
“The proph—yes, that whole thing.”
Its mere mention always soured Avaron’s mood, so Arzha took mind to bury as far as one reasonably could. She gave a halfhearted shrug. “As inconsequential as any other, though perhaps mine was much more good fortune than not.”
“I just have my own issues with fate,” Avaron remarked with a certain caustic flippancy. “But you’re not kowtowing to it, so it’s not that much of an problem.”
“… One might expect aid from the Goddesses to be a good thing.”
“Not in my experience.”
A telling truth, if one that left things incredibly vague still.
“But, anyway,” Avaron drawled for a moment, then shot a pointed look at Arzha. “You haven’t answered my question, yet.”
The answer had already formed in Arzha’s mind, even if she found admitting it to be … difficult.
If the root cause of Artor’s fall—Haska and all his ilk—didn’t exist, she’d choose Artor. Arzha had the strength, knowledge, and ability to rebuild her queendom in such a world. In that very same world, however, Artor might’ve never fallen in the first place. Her brother wouldn’t become the playtoy of some evil god’s machinations, her father might never been truly incompetent, her mother might still be alive … Yes, perhaps in such a wistful world, Artor would’ve gone on a normal, predictable path.
But it didn’t; nor would it ever.
Which meant she, herself, had to go down a different path for a very different world.
Somehow, Arzha didn’t mind it nearly as much as she used to.
Reaching up to cup Avaron’s cheek, Arzha stared at the tentradom who truly held the keys to her future in more ways than she’d ever imagined. "Dearest Avaron, Queen of Eden,” she said, voice as formal and straight-laced as a loving purr could be. “Would you grant me the estimable honor of my life by becoming my one, and only, wife?”
Avaron stared back, her wide eyes unblinking. Then, ever so slowly, her porcelain cheeks darkened and her antenna started wiggling with a tiny, energetic buzz. Her façade of haughty grandeur melted away into a squirmy, messy look of a maiden who’d been caught dead naked in her bedroom. She glanced away then back just as quickly, indecisiveness betrayed in every little motion. For all of Arzha’s own callous, well-trained royal attitude and raw experience, even she felt her heart move at such an incredible sight.
“Wow, that’s, um,” Avaron tried saying, yet her mumble just as easily became a nervous lip bite. “Whew. Okay, before I accept, there’s just one tiny little question I have.”
Arzha never felt warm elation turning into cold dread nearly so fast in her life. “What of?”
“Well, it’s—heh, it’s uh, I am a tentradom,” Avaron pointed out, her antenna rubbing together. Despite being one who constantly exuded an aura of infallible competency, she seemed to be completely crumbling apart. “I just want to know if you, well, want all that, or just the womanly part … and well—“
Cold dread instead became dubious relief, making Arzha chuckle. She slid her thumb over onto Avaron’s lips, silencing her. “Were you a man, I would not want what you say in the slightest. But, you are not, and I am most eager to see myself become your proper, complete wife in all ways, dearest. The better question is how you will do so, no?”
Of every response she imagined, Avaron’s own lips slipping onto her thumb wasn’t it. The tentradom’s warmly hot and so very womanly mouth sucked her thumb inside, where a devious, inhuman tongue slithered around it. At the same time, Avaron’s blushing, maidenly eyes became different; transformed, even, into a salacious, burning desire that stirred Arzha’s womanly instincts in a visceral, skin-tingling way. There were always those who held some sense of subservience or lower station, people who naturally conferred themselves as Arzha’s inferior in some form or another.
Not Avaron.
No, that tentradom clearly saw herself a contender; conqueror, even.
A worthy foe that Arzha couldn’t wait to meet in battle.
“Princess Arzha Shieldcrown,” Avaron purred through her thumb-sucking mouth somehow. “I duly accept your offer of becoming my wife, and the honor of a seat in my deepest of hearts.”
Such a sly play on words didn’t pass Arzha by in the slightest. Not one to give up the advance, Arzha’s other arm slid to Avaron’s delectably quaint, yet welcomingly plush backside. She pushed the tentradom up, bringing them closer and closer. Peeling her thumb out of that salacious little mouth, Arzha’s lips took its place in the first kiss with her new fiancée. A surprised sound wormed around in Avaron’s throat, her shocked expression turning to a devious, smug-filled delight.
Arzha herself soon smirked, feeling Avaron’s tense body melt in against her.
Yet, the taste of her was what truly delighted.
She’d kissed many, both human and not; tasted deeply of them just as much. All were, in some way, unique with tiny flavors and textures words couldn’t ever capture. Avaron was no different, but for the first time in her life, Arzha felt herself be drawn in by the velvety caress of a woman’s lips: the hard softness of a mouth neither too big nor small, warmed by a wetness that almost reminded her of a floral tea. Neither deep nor invasive, a meeting of themselves, offering to one and taking from the other. Avaron’s stunned surprise lasted barely a moment, and she wasn’t shy about giving her own riposte.
Why did it all feel so different?
For one used to commanding her breadth of experience in such intimate arts, a certain newness greeted Arzha. Certainly not because Avaron was a tentradom; that seemed too … simple-minded. No, there was something going on. Some inextricable feeling she wasn’t sure how to name, but it certainly wanted to bloom inside her.
There’d only be one way to find out, really.
Their kissing continued long, long into the night, accompanied by posture changes, position flips, and devious little hands exploring one another’s bodies. The heat of romance burned within them, but at such a stage, it was a time of learning and knowing one another. The first of many in their long future together, and Arzha was in no rush to miss any detail of her fiancée. No, as someone would be her wife, it was the princess’ duty to learn everything about Avaron.
The prospect of it truly excited her beyond words.
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.
Notes:
Originally, this was intended to be Arzha's premier erotic chapter, but I ran into numerous conceptual issues as I tried writing it. Her character just wasn't speaking that way to me, and though I tried forcing the matter, it's better to listen to the character sometimes lol
So, sadly, we're not quite there yet, but I'm sure our ice princess won't mind.
Additionally, I am certain the readers may wish to know about this story's ongoing status. In light of recent political turmoil here in America, as well as various things in my own life, my writing coherency has been completely shot. It's difficult for me to even write out one-shot, unedited nonsense pieces, let alone something more cohesive like this. I'm not even sure what the rest of this year will look like, or if people like me are going to get rounded up into concentration camps by the end of it. So, I'll simply state that I cannot commit to a regular update schedule for this story for the foreseeable future.
I suppose that might count as a type of hiatus, but I do hope about getting out some pieces here and there. Thank you for your understanding, and I am sorry about the unreliability of all this.
Chapter 78: Meeting of Minds
Chapter Text
Relationships work by their own rules, built by their own hands.
*~*
Is that mold on the ceiling? That better fucking not be mold.
All throughout the day the only thing Avaron wanted to do was go into her hive, strip down, shower, then relax in her massively inordinate indoor bath / spa. She got through meetings, stupid bullshit disagreements, and other inanities her daily life disturbingly started to pile up with. Really, she did! And now that she was on her back, floating on the surface of the hot bath water, enjoying the peaceful bliss of fucking nothing around her, and there was mold on her ceiling.
I’m not thinking about this, she decided, closing her eyes once more.
With her ears submerged, the lovely resonance of her own blood in her head provided a droning, monotonous noise that drowned out thought. As the bath had virtually no major water flow at the moment, its perfect stillness meant that, with her arms and legs splayed out, she floated in perfect equilibrium. Just a little over half her body submerged, her tits out and sagging to the sides, and a delightful mixture of the slightly cooler-yet-humid bath air and the actually hot water underneath. Enough for a person to get lost in the sensation and feel a little bit of that surreal peace such a unique combination brought.
Now if only there weren’t six other minds joy-riding in the same body.
It wasn’t as if any of them were actively thinking, so it was that much more tolerable for the time being.
Just them, the same shared body, and the stillness of the bath.
She floated with such perfect equilibrium that Avaron’s two antenna, bending sideways, acted as tiny paddles. Gentle little motions that sent her oh-so-slowly floating from one end to the other of the bath. If it weren’t for her antenna’s movements, she wouldn’t have even known she moved at all. It wasn’t quite the closed in claustrophobia of an isolation tank, but for such a medieval-esque world, it’d probably be the closest experience imaginable.
For however much she could enjoy it, anyway.
The whole ‘becoming a hive mind’ thing ever kept reminding her of the staggering differences such an existence entailed. The more of ‘her’ there was, the more things simply kept working. Sure, different areas shut off or lowered activity in a form of resting, but as a whole, the lights were always on in her building. It didn’t matter if it was top floor or bottom floor, ‘she’ always did something. It wasn’t quite stressful in a normal human way; in fact, with time and experience she’d become quite skilled at managing everything. Optimizing workflows, picking through cognitive instincts for clean and efficient behavior, scrubbing out sensory noise that was utterly useless—tedious, unremarkable things by themselves, but the sheer scale of it kept her in working order.
She hadn’t experienced true unconsciousness since her change, though.
That blissful moment of sleep where memory stopped and then started again, and all the wonderful drowsiness of before and after. Physiologically her bodies could simulate most of that, but not the perspective—not the view. Not her entire existence slowing down, coming to a stop, and then starting again. Instead, the entirety of her slowed, stopped, or started at its own tempo and rhythm, but never truly ceasing for a moment. Avaron worried it’d drive her insane, but it didn’t.
Rather, she just longed for an experience she could only have as a singular entity, and quite possibly would never experience again. It was a terrifying thought in its simplicity and something she tried to ignore when her mind wandered in its direction. Unfortunately, her choice of distracting memories was something that, while it worked, guaranteed it would occupy her for even longer.
Skin caressing skin, soft flesh hiding steely muscles, the plush curve of thighs—oh, the delightful moans of great, throaty purrs and softer chirps of half-formed words. Gwyneth and Tsugumi alike danced through Avaron’s mind in a veritable library of unstoppably erotic memories that she remembered in far too great detail. Lips close to her ears panting in small, tumultuous breaths that stirred the tiny hairs on Avaron’s neck. Pure feminine bounty tantalized her hands that waited to grasp breasts of bountiful, overflowing sizes, or loins flush with warmth and utterly plush as her fingers sank inward …
(WHO IS THIS THINKING THIS?) Aegis demanded in a mental holler that rattled the other nine minds. (I CAN’T WORK LIKE THIS.)
(Stop listening then,) Weaver retorted.
(I CANNOT NOT! FUCK, I’M HARD AGAIN!)
It’d been miraculous enough Weaver’s own body hadn’t popped her tentacle out in an instant either. The bath water’s delightful heat at least seemed to suppress that part, if only somewhat. Her insides churned with a long-familiar desire—a compulsive need—to breed that would take very welcoming pussies and empty bellies to settle down. One she’d dearly hoped to get a grip on and under control, but alas every effort there failed despite Gwyneth and Tsugumi’s best efforts. Sticky, belly-expanding efforts, nonetheless!
(Well, this ruined my bath time relaxation,) Weaver thought dryly.
(That’s usually how it goes,) Prime remarked, rousing awake—for whatever awake qualified as. (It’ll be nice whenever we get the horny suppression drugs going and we can just self-medicate this away.)
(I’ll put it up there with satellite TV and music that doesn’t suck.)
(Listen, it’s not orchestral, but the … rustic, instrumentation can be charming.)
(You literally cannot lie to me, you know it sucks.)
(The positive side is around the bend on the wine glass, I think.)
Abyssa’s idle thoughts wandered in, (Oh, I’d find the positive send of bending somebody over. Unf, the way Gwyneth’s pussy tightens when she knows the eggs are coming—) Collective groans reverberated in their mind, the visceral recollection of that experience hitting them, (—her pussy practically sucking them in and getting her knocked up—)
(Shut up!) Prime and Weaver chimed at once despite Abyssa’s salivating groan of hungry anticipation.
It wouldn’t be possible to keep herself floating in tranquil quiet anymore. Weaver, grunting with annoyance, pulled herself in and stood up properly in the bath; even if that was chin-height at her depth. Though snuggly in the enveloping heat, she really needed to get out before her tentacle escaped on its own and burned itself in the water. Not at all a fun proposition, less so without science to justify it.
A quick hustle over and she rose up, one step at a time, from the bath. Water splashed down her from the various nooks and crannies of her porcelain and segmented body, creating a slightly noisy cascade a human body never had to deal with. The bath air, though respectably hot, felt far cooler than the waters themselves, unfortunately. At least walking a little bit kept her churning gut inside her gut and not erupting out like some perverse flower; or mushroom. Lest her irritation get the better of her, Weaver focused on procedure: head over to the benches, towel off a bit, wrap up, and then figure out what to do next.
(Alright, bitches, free loading is over. Get back to your bodies,) Weaver demanded. Various groans answered, but one-by-one, the other intruding minds receded. It couldn’t have been called painful or pleasurable, or any other kind of sensation except ‘pressure’, really. That feeling of being pushed to the brim of ‘containing’, but without the physical sensations associated to it. Their sudden, direct absence made her own conscious awareness ‘contract’, and feel a bit emptier as a result. Maybe ‘being overstuffed with food’ then ‘not being’ were closest analogies.
Distracted enough by that, Weaver headed to the bath’s only flesh door entrance/exit. It slurped open and she beheld the sight of a pale, somewhat toned belly, and the lovely droop of two very large breasts. Two long, chitinous tails curled around each one, holding onto them with clearly possessive intent as a spider-like creature laid on the woman’s shoulder. Craning her head back, Avaron met the expectant gaze of Durelia, completely naked in all her vampiric beauty. “Hello there,” she said, brain still finding which neurons to fire properly.
“Your Majesty,” Durelia greeted, bowing in a polite curtsy that made her big breasts strain against the humper’s curling tails. It looked, if for a moment, like a salacious offering of a drink from those lovely thick nipples. “I come with news.”
“Delightful,” Avaron remarked dryly, then stepped back so Durelia could enter the bath properly. “What headache inducing nightmare is there today?”
“The Goddess will speak with you, though she is … terse.”
“I’m sure.”
“If I may impose upon you?”
“Go ahead.”
“Please mind your … speech, with her,” Durelia said, her mature face uncomfortably caught between polite decorum and nervous trepidation. “I know not what has fouled her mood but it will not help agitating her.”
Avaron rubbed her forehead, mustering some semblance of ‘minding her manners’ from the dredges of memory. “I shall be pleasantly forthright, then.”
Whether she believed it or not, Durelia curtsied an acknowledgement, then stared up at the ceiling. “My Goddess?” she asked with polite formality and a touch of nervousness. “I present Queen Avaron to you.”
The presence and pressure of another, unseen but tangibly felt, immediately followed and Avaron’s skin prickled.
I’m sure, Nex’s slithering voice of endless worms crept through each of their minds, twitching and spasming. What is it?
As much as she dearly, truly wanted to rip into Nex and just give her a piece of her mind, Avaron chose the path of civility for the moment. “One issue to touch base on, because I genuinely do not know,” she said with well-crafted neutrality. “This humper and the other tentacle creatures are not part of my [Hive Mind]; they’re not part of me. Are they part of yours, or their own?”
The worms did not answer, instead sliding down the back of Avaron’s throat with an unpleasant, greasy meatiness she instinctively wanted to puke. Curling her fingers into tight fists, she resisted, if resistance was only keeping her stomach where it should be.
Mine, yours, ours; each a nest, each a road. All together, flowing from top to bottom. One river becomes many, but every river is connected. That child is not with you, but she could be.
“Okay, for a lot of reasons I’m keeping my [Hive Mind] locked up tight right now. Here’s my request: is it at all possible to enhance the tentacles concept of consent to something more modern? Like, some kind of System message prompt that tells them what to do, or warns women there’s an eight-legged spider about to rape them?”
No response came until those writhing, invasive worms coiled around Avaron’s throat from the inside-out. She coughed and sputtered, air suddenly cut off in a poignant grope that slid from the very back of her tonsils down to the pit of her stomach. Though she’d a good idea of her own body, such a new and alien sensation left her distressingly aware of her own esophagus in ways she’d never been before.
Again, you fail to understand. We do not rape; we cannot. It poisons the union and kills us. Those who do were wrong to begin, and just to end. What is right or wrong is clear and plain, the rules and ways well-laden and bred long before you. It is your own mind that refuses to accept the truth we all understand clearly.
“Just … humor me. Is it possible to do something like that?”
Still you insist, eeking answers and blood from stone. Tis not, for each and all are different from one another; similar, but unique. A mighty warrior craves a strong mate who can overpower her. A comely maiden too shy to unleash her lust yearns to be taken. A neglected and abused wife wishes the comfort of love and motherhood from another. A supplicant kneels in the life waters, exposing herself for all to roost within. An artist craves meaning found at the dark end of a throat-filling tunnel.
Images, places, people; they flashed through Avaron’s mind like half-memories from another mind.
Each of them and more crave their nature, Nex summarized, for once sounding instructional rather than condescending. A woman is a temple to be filled and worshiped, we, the worshippers. It is art and song and dance to know the rites of her temple even she does not. It is joy and beauty to teach her godliness and belonging to her legacy. She grows, as do we, one completing the other in union and bond. There is more to a woman than herself; more than her own mind. Dark and hidden corners, yet unexplored, ignored, or merely unknown. We are the darkness that would invite her to the truth awaiting inside.
“As opposed to the light?” Avaron remarked blithely, all-too-familiar with such turns of phrases.
Light only kisses the skin; we, the soul. Tis not light that birthed the soul, but scoured it, instead. If only Nyoom learned this, her light might not blight others instead.
“… I’m not comfortable with any of this, but maybe I just have to wait and see,” Avaron said, feeling more tired than anything of having to deal with stupid shit constantly. “But some of what you said might make some women think they’re only useful for being incubators. What about those who don’t want that? Or asexuals?”
We, who have loved and known love for ages longer than written word, know these truths. They are temples worshiped in different ways; enticed through other means. Tis not rejection of them or theirs, but … adaptation. As one changes, so too does the other. They become what they are, we become around them. You cannot understand this, for you are a monster not of this world. You cannot understand us, for you have not seen us as we should be, only what we have rotted as.
Avaron, hand still holding a towel, rubbed her eyes with the other. “Fine, I get it. I’ll leave this to Durelia, then. As long as these independent tentacles don’t interfere with what I’m supposed to do.” The writhing worms pulled out from her, one at a time, their absence filled in the unsettled comfort of her own existence once again. No parting quip, no caustic shot, just absence and being ignored once more. That suited her just fine, and so Avaron regarded the stiffly standing Durelia. “Okay then. You can take that thing outside, let it go do whatever fucking business it has. I really don’t care at this point.”
“Your majesty—“
“And I try to be understanding, but sometimes even I get a little fucked off,” Avaron continued, giving Durelia a pointed look. “So let’s save the rest of it for another time. Enjoy your bath, Durelia.”
“… I will try, Your Majesty.”
Avaron turned and left, and so Weaver, thoroughly steamed and simmering like a pot about to erupt, sought something to occupy her time with.
*~*
She’d been wondering for days and weeks on how to handle the matter, but it seemed things really did just … work themselves out.
Tsugumi wasn’t sure if it had been, but at least she had direction.
Direction to a very private and secretive area within the Hive that only she, Gwyneth, and Avaron ever visited. She knew this, of course, through means of magic, wards, and astute observation. Not that it necessarily merited such vigilance, but paranoia had ever been the instinct that kept her alive. Sometimes even the tiniest precautions meant the difference between life and death; agony and comfort. “You don’t seem nervous at all,” she noted observingly, needing neither sight nor sense to understand Arzha Shieldcrown’s indomitable solidity.
“Should I be?”
“Even brave women can fear what is to come.”
“I’ve enough fear on other matters to last a life time.”
“Yes, but any like this?”
“Should I?”
The two descended a flight of spiraling chitinous steps, deeper and deeper into the ground. Flesh lights, or ‘bioluminescent lamps’ as Avaron once called them, lit their way, bulbously protruding from the white, stone-like wall every quarter turn downward. One set of soft feet padded along as heavy boots trudged afterward; both echoing in the unerring stillness around them.
“Perhaps,” Tsugumi remarked airily. “This is the path you have chosen, but sometimes even things we choose can frighten us.”
“I do not know if you mean to intimidate or test me, Lady Tsugumi.”
“Not adversatively, of course. From one woman who lives in the home you are entering, I must know you more than we ever have before. If there is to be peace in the household, there must be peace among us.”
“And have I given reason there would not be peace?” Arzha inquired coolly.
“Only in that I do not know where you will fit into our lives. Fortunately for us all, Avaron is an accommodating … wife; perhaps too much so.” They arrived to the ground floor that Tsugumi had grown to known so well despite its unerring similarity to everywhere else in the hive. A simple path forward that hooked left, to which a singular flesh door awaited them. When they stood before it, she turned toward the taller human princess, looking up into those icy blue eyes and captivatingly regal demeanor they held. Hands folded together within her long kimono sleeves, Tsugumi exuded the decorum the lady of any house should. “My people are creatures of habit and form; our lives as well-built as our homes. New additions do not come easily, but we make do. The home me, Avaron, and Gwyneth have built together is set to become your home as well. A new addition to fit in. I know I sound overly terse and unsympathetic, maybe cold, but decorum and politeness runs in my blood.”
Arzha smiled in a thin, polite manner. “Something I understand, though human royalty is perhaps a touch different.”
“A touch. We have all been told and learned just as much, you are engaged to my wife, Avaron, as her new fiancée. As I have gathered, not a solely political arrangement, but one meant to be … intimate, and more.”
“I would be her proper wife in all ways, yes.”
“In all ways,” Tsugumi echoed, directing a knowing look upon Arzha who, despite her greater height, seemed smaller in that moment. “An easy thing to say; a harder one to live up to. You are a skillful woman, Princess Arzha, and I know you have seen your way around many a woman’s beds and coves. I cast no judgement upon that, but I do discern you may not understand what all a wife’s duties entail.”
“Is that not my burden to surmount?”
“Not alone, no. You did, after all, secure mine and Gwyneth’s approval to join our household before Avaron even knew. I’m not sure she does at all, really.” Tsugumi smiled thinly, as much human as arachnid with how her teeth poked out slightly. “As I said, I would come to know you, and Gwyneth would as well. Not as any other woman, not as a princess or a knight, or anything else except the new wife joining our household. We are Avaron’s wives, and there must be no secrets between us if there is to be peace.”
“… I understand.”
“You do not, but you will.” Tsugumi turned toward the flesh door, and stepped a bit closer to trigger its automatic opening. “After all, we are women, and a wife must embrace all that means. Leave your shoes on the outside here, they won’t be needed.”
Or the clothing, Tsugumi wanted to add, but she mustn’t terrorize Arzha too much. Not until the proud princess learned how to waddle after getting pumped full of Avaron’s eggs for the first time, anyway. A wall of slightly more humid air blew into her face when the flesh door opened, revealing the wondrous cavern-hall beyond. Darkly hued, fleshy floor spanned the ground, covered in a thicket of blue-bodied, green-tipped ‘tentacle grass’. A miniature rolling plains unto itself, great white-chitin spires connected floor and ceiling, dribbling streams of babbling water into small, sculpted basins at their base. The biolamps within were a darker, warmer hue; sunset and dawn captured by mortal hands.
Tsugumi stepped in, as did Arzha, who seemed more intrigued than surprised.
Similar in many ways to other areas of the hive, surely, but it would be the large banks running along the walls that truly differentiated the place. Naturally grown and sculpted cauldrons lined with thick, silvery-hued hair-fur, creating dense but wet nesting that suited the many, many different tentacle eggs filling them. Whether still translucent from freshly laying or hardened into their bulbous-yet-chitinous shells, they were eggs all the same.
Her eggs, along with Gwyneth’s. Tsugumi held out a hand in silent bidding, leading Arzha to one of the banks along the wall. The eggs within were newer; recently laid, in fact. Still squishy and translucent, their interior misted with precious lifeblood and newborn growth. The vague form of a future tentacleling could be made out in some of them, even. Nervousness wasn’t something Tsugumi let set in often, but bringing someone ‘new’ around her unborn young … truly, tested her in a surprising way. Gwyneth had been natural; sisterly, even. They’d gone through so many firsts together, it’d been a journey all of its own.
Arzha was an outsider coming in, and though she herself felt ready to welcome her, that animalistic part of her brain still twitched.
“Gwyneth provided colorful … words, about this,” Arzha said, hands folded together behind her back as she scrutinized the egg bank. “Seeing it is certainly … different. Dare I ask if these are yours?”
“What gave it away?”
“What mother wouldn’t show her children first?” Arzha coolly retorted, only her sly smirk revealing the tease for what it was. “They also have your very lovely purple colors.”
“Pff. Yes, these are mine. Gwyneth’s are above.”
“Ah, the fatter and golden hued ones.”
Years of practice kept Tsugumi from snorting an indecent laugh out, her sides clenching with expert restraint. “Each of them inherits after us. Our blood and Avaron’s, woven together in new life. Proof of our bond and motherhood alike,” she said, waving a hand in grand display, then turned toward Arzha once more. “And the future you will soon have yourself.”
Those cool, icy eyes flicked toward her, then to the eggs, then back. “I suppose you shan’t believe me if I say I find that … interesting?”
Despite having rehearsed the idea, actually doing it took a moment of courage for Tsugumi. She reached up then, sliding her fingers along her collar while simultaneously undoing her belt. In a smooth motion only four hands could achieve, she disrobed entirely, no underwear or clothing at all. Arzha blinked, recoiling somewhat in surprise, her eyes darting upward in that ‘polite avoidance’ people did. Folding her clothing and setting it down by the bank, the tora woman stood before Arzha with her ever-present decorum. “Come. Gaze upon me,” she bid softly, using her fingers to coax Arzha’s vision downward. “Look at my body.”
“You’re—very lovely?”
Tsugumi smirked, her lower two hands cupping her fat, milk-laden breasts. At the same time, her upper hands slid down her sides, wrapping around to her definitely bigger, plushier ass. “I am, yes. But, this is what pregnancy does, Arzha. It changes you in ways you never know how until it happens. For Gwyneth, it was giving birth the first time. For me? Feeling my belly grow, little by little, heavier and heavier. The weight of my babies inside me stirred emotions I never thought I’d have, but I do. I do so very much now.”
She held out a hand, silently prompting Arzha to give hers. Once the human did, Tsugumi pulled her in gently, then led Arzha into cupping the underside of her heavy breast. The feeling of another woman’s hands she didn’t recognize stirred her skin alive with alertness, but she endured. “It’s not simply the burden of young in our bellies, but our breasts, too. Our cute, tempting little fruits we tease and taunt others with turned into milking teats for our babies—and Avaron—to drink from. Not simply a little, either. Pregnancy after pregnancy I’ve gotten bigger, fuller, and the cravings don’t stop.”
Even the dutiful and strict Princess of Artor could be left flabbergasted, it seemed. The look of someone who had a trap sprung on them, or even shot by an arrow; pure surprise and no idea what to do. More than anything, such a genuine expression is what earned Tsugumi’s begrudging recognition. “The worst part of it is, even if I look more like some human cow than a tora woman now, I’m stronger than I ever have been.”
“Huh?” Arzha dumbly looked at her. “That’s the worst of it??”
“Oh, yes, terrible. The more Avaron fucks and breeds me, stuffs her fat tentacles down my throat and leaves me a quivering, humiliated mess covered head-to-toe in cum,” Tsugumi revealed with the utter banality of talking like it was the water, “Or the mind shattering pleasure being made to lick and suck it up as if I truly were some stupid broodmare … that’s the secret. Tentradom love gives us experience and strengthens us, little by little.”
Arzha was a smart woman; a princess rightfully in all respects. She would grasp the severity of such a matter within moments, and the way her face twitched and curled? Oh, a frown of recognition and the eyes of someone beholding something unbelievable. She undoubtedly knew, of course, but knowing and understanding were two very different things. One ‘knew’ a smithy was hot and laborious, but they didn’t understand the flesh-searing heat of an ingot until it bit them. Experience would always be required to fully comprehend something.
A third voice, however, interjected, “Thy games play plight and torment upon her, Tsugumi!”
The two turned, watching as the very naked and primal beauty called Gwyneth rounded the corner. Her arms cradled beneath her breasts, supporting two baby tentaclelings in their plump, infantile squishiness as their tubular heads latched onto her breasts. Flexing, squishing, and twisting, they viciously mawed at her teats, immature slurps and gulps sounding from their cute little throats as they drank their mother’s thick, hearty milk. How lucky they were, such devious creatures! Supping on the breasts of a beauty greater than any goddess, shapely and fertile, sublimely soft and nurturing and … Tsugumi had to stop thinking about it or she’d start eating Gwyneth next instead. “I didn’t know you were awake,” she offered in the lamest excuse imaginable.
“Pay her foreboding menace no mind, Princess Arzha,” Gwyneth said, bumping a shoulder with Tsugumi meaningfully before bowing slightly. A motion that, in pure motherly skill, made her impressively large, milk-heavy breasts heave forward as she kept her babies artfully matched so as to not interrupt them. If they cared at all, their squirming, slippery legs kicking around wasn’t any different. “But there is truth in them all the same.”
“I can see as much,” Arzha remarked, her eyes struggling on where to look with any sense of propriety. Curiosity, intrigue, maybe not desire but certainly the inkling of lust for a woman; all good things to see, Tsugumi wagered. “Surprising, of course, but not … unwelcome.”
“Avaron is understanding,” Gwyneth stated, full of conviction and understanding as pure as faith itself. “Whether you find comfort in becoming a brood mother as we have, she will not force misfortune upon you. I certainly welcome another’s hands in wrangling these little ones! They’re spirited and rambunctious, and unlike Tsugumi, I only have two arms to hold them with.” The priestess turned around, finely honed yet lusciously inviting ass all the more evident. “Come, help me then, future wife of our wife. Thou must learn motherhood proper as thou will soon enough.”
“I—yes?” Arzha agreed, looking between the two women confusedly; her hand still hadn’t left Tsugumi’s breast.
The tora woman slid her fingers along that very hand, up to her wrist, then to the crook of her elbow. Turning around and pulling Arzha with, the princess stumbled forward slightly as Tsugumi molded against her with a courtesan’s seamless guile and grace. “First, we should disrobe you,” she remarked, airy and knowing in a way no one would sanely resist. “The first rule of being a brood mother: things get messy, and as a princess, I don’t think you’re used to cleaning your own clothes.”
“I-I’ve done plenty enough in the field—“
“Dirt and dust are nothing like virile, sticky cum that seeps into every inch of your body and hair,” Tsugumi retorted with a clean, killing cut. “Nor the gushing of milk, or the viscous drool, or the constant, seeping lust that drips between our legs … really, Arzha. You may be an expert in a woman’s garden, but this is not just garden of women. We are mates of a tentradom, and the reality of that—mm, well …”
“Avaron will pound into thee!” Gwyneth chirped with a laugh. “Tis very fun!”
“Says the slut who can’t stop breeding,” Tsugumi quipped.
“Of course! Do not slander me when thy womb aches to be filled and hips quiver to be spanked, too.”
“I couldn’t slander you if I tried, dear. It’s me that stops you from walking around the town, naked and covered in cum.”
“Tsk, tsk. Thou will come to know tis beauty and proper, too.”
“More like I’m starting to think Avaron unleashed a slut-beast who needs a collar on her,” Tsugumi muttered dryly.
They rounded the corner where a larger area awaited, one purposed entirely to a larger pen of sorts. Softer, almost gelatinous hive flesh filled said pens, where infant tentaclelings trundled around, play fought one another, or simply lounged like they finished life’s hardest labors. Many dozens, if not hundreds, of them sprawled across the pen and its almost wilderness-esque environment. Gwyneth entered first, hefting one leg then the other over the half-wall that caged in the young. “Tis nothing wrong with being a slut,” the priestess defended with a huff. “Life and pleasure are to be shared.”
“And you’ve grown bolder since Avaron tamed you.”
“Just as thy desires have grown stronger. Prithee be honest with thy own nature before lashing mine?”
“Honesty, huh? Hold that slippery thought for a moment.” Tsugumi turned to the dumbstruck Arzha and smiled. “Princess, if you would disrobe now?”
Arzha’s icy eyes darted around, taking in what obviously would be to come. “I’m not … that is—“
“Your breasts are dry for now, but no, a helping hand is what needed. Training for when you will join us here and nurse your babies as well.”
If anything, Arzha’s continued endurance of the stark reality her impending ‘marriage’ entailed only showed the seriousness of her conviction. Should she handle being thrown into the deep end of her imminent fate, then Avaron would have no trouble in claiming her properly. If Gwyneth is a slut and I the comely maiden, though, what will be her proclivity? Tsugumi couldn’t help wondering, eyes drinking in the size of Arzha’s honed, sculpted body being revealed. A human woman trained for battle, physically at her peak with corded muscles and breasts perfect for temptation. Oh, yes, Tsugumi could see how many women were beguiled by such a beauty; she herself felt an itch in her tongue.
The slightest desire to taste and feel that perfect human body before Avaron’s thick tentacle remade her into something else. Muscles distorting as her belly grew taut and round with pregnancy, breasts fattening and tits blooming as milk began flowing, the plush softness of motherhood slathering over Arzha’s sculpted physique slowly but surely … oh, the transformation of an unmated woman into a life-bearing brood mother.
That, perhaps more than anything else, excited Tsugumi to watch happen.
It’d made sense when that befell Gwyneth, fathomless slut she ever remained. But for the two of them, that’d been a moment of exploration and journeying together. Now, as the veterans of being Avaron’s mates? They’d teach their junior very well in her journey to becoming a skilled wife and brood mother alike. Arzha might be a fairly competent and capable lady, but she wouldn’t understand what breeding did to a woman until it happened …
*~*
The chirp-song of birds and chittering of insects filled the forest, punctuated by the roars of distant predators, or the sudden snap-smash of twigs from ambush. Noise, of course, but the noise of life; of many different notes playing to their own tunes, not each other’s. To the untrained ear, it would always be just that: the song of the forest. Only those with age and experience could discern the differences—small and fleeting, but differences all the same.
Nahtura hated it, for such a forest wasn’t the one she wanted.
The songs played wrong, the sounds distorted and alien.
Different life had grown in her absence, taking roles that were never theirs to have in the first place.
Reclining upon the curved nook of a branch and trunk, one leg idly hanging off, her hand rubbed the pregnant bulge of her belly, ballooned to a size ready to release any day now. It wouldn’t, of course; the eggs would stay inside, soaking warmth and love and change in their bizarre little bodies. That, too, had been something that bothered her, but she wasn’t sure if she hated it yet. The young Avaron gave her were not the squirming seedlings of tentacles, but wrapped-together creatures clearly made for a purpose.
A purpose that wasn’t hard to see when she gazed upon Avaron’s Hive called Eden, but one she would deny all the same.
That clever little tentradom may be turning her other mates into unwitting hosts, but not her.
Oh, her children would be proper ones, even if that took longer to figure out.
The sudden thump of footfalls caught her ears, moved by legs that hadn’t been there a moment prior. The tree and branch alike shook at its approach, leaves rustling rhythmically. Nahtura tried not minding how those same vibrations reverberated through her, shaking her life-filled womb and milk-laden breasts in a bizarre way. Novel, to be certain in how she hadn’t felt anything like in … ages, really.
A great, wooden hand shot up nearby, brushing aside a branch like a door as an equally huge man stepped in. “Oh, pardon me; wonderful tree, really. Nahtura!” Tahn, the All Father of the Elvetahn, gushed with the enthusiasm of a waterfall breaking free. “So lovely to see you again! Oh, my!” His head, bigger than her whole body, leaned in, blue-green eyes bigger than boars curiously fixing on her belly. “You’re pregnant! How wonderful—tentradom???”
His shrill cry of disbelief made Nahtura push his big head away, and Tahn thundered a few steps back from the force of it. “Yes, dummy, tentradom,” she affirmed with the scathing sarcasm to make grass never grow again. “That delicious little strumpet you tried pawning my daughter off onto. Really, Tahn? Efval wouldn’t know how to mate properly if I held her hand through it!”
“Can’t blame a father for trying!” he retorted with a laugh, patting himself down and knocking loose dirt, rocks, and other detritus from his tree-like body. “She’s a heart as strong as yours but none of the passion; quite worrisome, really.”
“It is,” Nahtura agreed, brows curling as the stupid realization of Tahn sounding smart for once set in. “When did you grow a brain?”
“Not willingly, I assure you,” he said with utmost seriousness.
“I can’t imagine it otherwise.”
“Still, that tentradom called Avaron, huh? Did you have fun?”
“Oh, baby-making kind.”
Tahn rolled his eyes, blowing a raspberry that blasted some leaves off the huge oaken tree around them. “At least someone’s breeding properly. Gonna strip the bark off my hide again finding someone for Efval.”
“I’ll find someone to breed my daughter, you dingleberry,” Nahtura cut in sharply, her glower making Tahn’s body foliage wilt slightly. “You have a different job.”
“From you?” Tahn asked disbelievingly, then fell to a knee with a land-shaking thud. He held his hands up to her, as if giving or receiving something divine. “My dearest friend, anything for you. What can this old pile of sticks do for you?”
“… Never call yourself old in front of me again.”
“… As you wish.”
Nahtura sighed, the whole tree heaving along with her in a show of exasperation. “I communed with the Eternal Flame,” she stated bluntly. “There’s a problem; a world unraveling one.”
“The Eternal Flame?” Tahn echoed, taken aback for a moment before leaning in with a serious expression on his boyish face. “What kind of problem?”
“The Forever Dark has vanished, along with some others that don’t matter. Vanish, Tahn, not dead or missing; gone completely.”
“Oh, that is serious.”
“Yes. Not in the lands of life or death, of the lands of maybe or chaos, or inbetween—“ Nahtura paused in her recollection, an unwelcome thought making itself plainly clear. Her head rotated slowly during her contemplation, nearly inverting perfectly upside down. “The Inbetween …”
“No good comes of that place, Nahtura.”
“No, but it is the one most likely connected to this. The power at work is unnatural, and where else suffices for unnatural but there?”
“Please don’t ask me to visit that place, you know I won’t come back proper.”
“I’m not,” Nahtura hissed, flicking a finger against Tahn’s forehead and making him back up again. The man had no concept of personal space and stuck to the bark like a cat with its claws out. “But those stupid grand-brats of mine are meddling with something they shouldn’t be.”
“Want me to go give them a hearty slap?”
“Because that worked last time,” Nahtura drawled, then rolled her eyes while shaking her head. “No, I need you to call upon the others; everyone that matters. If we don’t set our roots properly on this there won’t be ground to root to anymore. You must be in touch with them more than I at this point, yes?”
“Some. Most are gone, but there’s lots of newblood running around.”
“I don’t need new, I need capable.”
“It’s been a long time, Nahtura,” Tahn said, his usual geniality firming up suddenly. “The world’s changed, and I barely kept up with it. I’m still in out-of-season colors!”
Letting out an exasperated sigh, Nahtura plopped her head against the tree trunk. “Just send out the call, Tahn, and make them listen. They need to pay attention. If they don’t, then I will find each one and rip their heads from their spines and let the flies roost in them.”
“I shall convey your clearest intentions to them!” he declared, straightening up like a man on a mission. Turning around, he took one thudding step to leave before her voice stopped him.
“Did you know, Tahn? About Nex?”
He remained as still as a fawn in an open field, unmoving; unblinking.
“Did you know, Tahn?” Nahtura asked again, her words creaking with the thorny promise of a gruesome, eviscerating death.
“… She made me swear an oath, Nahtura. Nothing more I could’ve done.”
The forest quieted around them, every animal, insect, and plant shrinking with a fear they didn’t understand as murderous anger swelled with a foggy thickness. “An oath? Is that enough to lie to me—“
“If I might be honest?” Tahn asked suddenly, turning around and regarding her with eyes she’d rarely seen; serious, but tired eyes, carried by a face truly fed up with something. “After everything, Nahtura, for all that might ever matter to you, can I have just a moment of honesty?”
Her eyes narrowed with utmost contempt. “For what?”
“To tell you how much of a mountainous asshole you really are.”
Nahtura blinked, brows inching upward as if to spread wings and fly.
“You both are my dearest friends, and I love you equally; I hope I made that clear,” Tahn continued on, doing those usual little hand gestures of his for emphasis. “I have helped and been there for you as much you have me; sometimes more, sometimes less. It breaks my heart seeing you both at odds when I know how much you love each other. Well, maybe you more to her than the other way, now.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“That no matter how much Nex is first in your heart, always and ever, you rightly and truly fucked yourself out of hers. Not once have you made recompense. Not once have you prostrated or begged. Not once have you tried righting your wrong.”
“Because I haven’t done any!” Nahtura shouted, half the forest bending sideways with primal fear.
“And that’s the problem!” Tahn fired back, the other half of the forest bending the other way. “It doesn’t matter what I think, what our children or your other children think—there’s no one higher in all this world than you two. Nex feels and believes she was wronged, and that’s all that should matter! The woman of your heart was hurt and wronged and you did nothing to fix that! No, you made it worse! So when she comes to me and explains it all, and I try to understand it from your side? Ho, ho ho, oh yes, Nex certainly made good points about it.”
Nahtura pursed her lips, the ugliest bile and venom that hadn’t been seen since the First Ice Age creeping up in her throat.
Tahn, having worked himself up, took a breath and sighed. “I am the rope pulled back and forth between you two, and no rope in the world can take that forever. I was a lot dumber back then, Nahtura, I freely admit that. But I’ve done my thinking and learning, I’ve listened to reeds and swan songs, I’ve potted myself and watched others to find what I could’ve done differently. I’m helping in the only ways I know how, and what’s worse is I know that’s still not enough.”
Dusting himself off again, Tahn stood up straighter; prouder, perhaps, than she’d ever seen. “I know you, beneath all those thickets and brambles and poisonous feathers. You are my dearest friend, just as she is. When I say you are a mountainous asshole, I’m trying to help you understand how you really behave. Don’t take my word for it, I know you don’t think as highly of me as I do you, but for all the lakes and rivers in the world, Nahtura, really, truly try to have some reflection. You’ve spent ages being miserable and pining for her without doing anything about it. Do you want to spend the rest of them doing it still?”
“… Just go, Tahn.”
He held up his hands, understanding all too well that was the only courtesy she’d give before going for his throat. Turning to leave once more, he remarked, “It’ll take a winter or three to reach them all, maybe five to make them listen. I’ll whistle to you when everything is ready.”
She neither answered nor did he wait, and as he left sight, the land-shaking thuds of his steps disappeared.
Nahtura sat on her tree branch, face peeled in the ugliest expression a person and beast could make, full of conflicting emotions that neither knew who would win in the end.
*~*~*
Codex:
Nothing new.

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