《The White Rabbit: Book 2》Chapter 5
Advertisement
The crates that Lorsan had brought with him were apparently full of root vegetables stored in dirt, because he pulled them out, looked at them, and stuck those that were not potatoes back into the dirt. When he had as many potatoes as he apparently wanted, he set them on the hearth, stood, and disappeared into his father’s bedroom. Xaxac suspected he was going to steal something else, but after everything Lorsan had done for him, he wasn’t willing to fight him. Instead, he sat, still on the towel on the floor, with the blanket from the couch covering him for the sake of modesty, knitting away at the baby blanket he was making for his sister.
Lorsan returned holding a full basin and chuckled.
“Watercloset’s clean as a whistle,” he said as he began to scrub the potatoes, “But I still don’t trust her not to poison you again. I bet she done that on purpose; she’s always been mean.”
“Always?” Xac asked.
“Far as I can remember,” Lorsan shrugged and set the potatoes out along the edge of the fireplace, “She’s older than I am, so… maybe not always. You feelin better?”
“Yeah,” Xac said, “Thanks… you’re… bein real nice to me. You been real nice to me, I think, since the beginnin. I wish we hadn’t fought so much.”
“It ain’t your fault,” Lorsan said as he looked into the fire, “It’s daddy’s fault. You humans are… it ain’t your fault.”
“Aggie’s always been real nice to me, Lorry,” Xac said defensively.
“It hurts my soul,” Lorsan said, “Cause… you sound like you really think that.”
“It’s true,” Xaxac said, “He got me this stuff. And he’s gonna let me give it to my sister. I kinda… didn’t think…” he stared at his hands as they went through the practiced motions, “Part of me didn’t think he would… want me to give it to her, on account of it’s so expensive and she’s… human. But I said I wanted to do that right in front of him and he told me, told Alex’s master too, that I could.”
“What is that?” Lorsan asked.
“A baby blanket,” Xac explained, “She’s pregnant. They’re real easy; whole things in garter on account of it’s thicker so it’s just one stitch, over and over. It’s a square. You can do it while you’re drunk; I mean, not when you’re shitfaced, but regular drunk.”
Lorsan looked as if he was in deep thought, in concentration, so Xaxac said, “I can show you, it you want me to. You need a pair of sticks. You can use a couple of my double-pointed if you want to. I guess you could make a scarf or something, might fit on um. Just don’t drop the stitches off the back.”
“It’s kinda weird that you can do that,” Lorsan said, “I know a lotta folks in the navy knit and they use pattern books. I didn’t know folks could do it in their head.”
“I don’t get a whole lotta use outta books,” Xac shrugged, “I liked the magazines they had at the clocktower place. They had a lotta pictures.”
“Daddy gathered up all the fur you shed when you shifted,” Lorsan said, looking into the fire, “I reckon he’s gonna sell it.”
“He’s gonna sell it?” Xac asked, “It can’t be worth nothin.”
“Xac,” Lorsan huffed, “Don’t play stupid. You’re a shifter. It’s angora- which is expensive anyway- from a shifter! Shifters are so rare half the folks round here don’t believe in um. He’s gonna make a fortune off that. And there’s a lot of it. You’re over six foot tall shifted. Pushin seven.”
Advertisement
“I wish I could shave,” Xaxac lamented, because the concept of his body hair reminded him of the hair on his face, “I don’t want Aggie to see me like this. He didn’t say nothin about it…”
“I like the beard,” Lorsan said, “When I’m runnin the place all y’all’ll have beards. Makes ya look human.”
“Makes me look old,” Xac argued, “It ain’t cute. I don’t want Aggie to see me like this.”
“I don’t know what to tell ya,” Lorsan said, “I don’t know nothin about it.”
“You reckon I could go downstairs here in a little bit?” Xac asked hopefully, “I wanna take a real bath.”
“You can go wherever you want, for my part,” Lorsan shrugged, “You ain’t gotta ask me.”
“You’re the only one here,” Xaxac argued.
“Only what?” Lorsan asked, “Elf?”
“Yeah, and the only one in charge, ‘cept for Mrs OfAgalon, and I know she won’t let me do nothin.” Xaxac explained as he turned the row and began to knit again.
“Well,” Lorry said as he leaned forward and poked one of the potatoes, “You can go wherever you want, for my part.”
Xaxac stood in front of the dressing mirror and ran the towel over his wet body and through his hair, before he set about the task of combing through the puffy mess. His beard had gone beyond stubble, it was really growing in, and Xac suspected that by the time Lee got back and he was allowed to shave again it would be as fluffy as his head. He couldn’t stand it.
Once he had his hair sorted, he turned to the pile of packages Lorsan had thrown out of the way to make room for the new wardrobes. If Agalon was going to be gone for days, he would have time to go through them all slowly, to really absorb each piece. He didn’t even really need to unpack any of them right now; with Agalon gone it was likely that no one else would come into the room. Even Lorsan tended to knock.
But Lorsan may come in to check on him.
Xaxac was beginning to think that Lorsan liked humans, even if he hadn’t when he was younger, as Agalon had said. People could change, and often did. Xaxac had certainly changed himself. And Lorsan would probably appreciate it if he wore clothes.
And Agalon would probably prefer it if they were all hanging up instead of still in packages when he came home.
Xac went to his new wardrobe and pressed his hands to the wood. It was the same size as the old one had been, but it was obvious that it was new. It was completely smooth and shining with the new varnish, and smelled like it too, a scent Xac wasn’t sure he liked. It was darker than the old one had been and the hinges were black instead brassy. He pulled the door open and peered inside at the back wall, as smooth and unbroken as the door had been.
Xaxac closed the wardrobe, stood up straight, walked to the bedroom door, and opened it. The sitting room beyond was quiet except for the crackling of the fire and the ticking of the clock. Wasn’t there supposed to be another clock? Agalon had ordered a clock for the bedroom, hadn’t he? Xaxac wasn’t sure. Sometimes he dreamed things and got them all mixed up with reality. It was difficult to know which memories really happened and which he had dreamed up.
Advertisement
He closed the door, in case Lorsan came in before he was dressed, and walked to the packages. It was already evening, and Agalon had said he wouldn’t be back that day, so Xaxac thought that if he moved slowly he could have enough to entertain himself for the entire time Agalon was gone with those packages. He had always been interested in clothes anyway. Part of him wished he had been able to actually talk to Mrs Sambres. He suspected they would like each other. But he wished he could talk to her… in a way that he couldn’t, that he knew instinctively he couldn’t, but could not really articulate why.
He wanted to learn from her. But he never would. That’s not how those kinds of things were done.
He wanted to know what she had written in her little notebook, how she made all the beautiful things she did, like those outfits in her store window. But Xaxac was fairly certain that… humans probably couldn’t do that. It was probably beyond his capabilities. She had done things that he would never be able to do.
He untied the first box and frowned. It wasn’t that he didn’t like it, it was that it was full of bland, banal practicality. He had unfortunately come upon what was likely the worst of the packages on his first try, full of folded up undershorts, which he dumped upside down onto the bed. They were a bit softer than he expected, but otherwise standard fare. But, he supposed, practical things had even more value than things that only existed for beauty. He selected a pair at random and slid them on, humming as he tied them to fit.
Then he opened a drawer of his new wardrobe and began to fold the rest neatly. He was engaged in this activity when he heard the door to the sitting room open and Lorsan stepped inside.
“Xac?” He asked.
“I’m in the bedroom!” Xaxac called.
“You decent?” Lorry asked.
“No, darlin,” Xac laughed, “I don’t reckon. Never again. After what I been through today decency’s kinda out the window, ain’t it?”
“You care if I come in there?” Lorsan asked, as if he had either not understood that Xaxac had spoken in jest, or maybe just didn’t find it particularly funny.
“Come on in,” Xac said as he stood to open another package.
“Smells a helluva lot better,” Lorsan said as he opened the door and stepped inside. Xaxac noticed that he elected to leave the door to the sitting room open.
“Right?” Xac asked, “I killed myself.”
“But you’re feelin better?” Lorsan asked.
“Feelin a hellvua lot better,” Xac agreed, “And I didn’t pass out, which shocks the shit outta me.”
He carefully untied the next package, opened the box, and found it to be full of undershirts, which he dumped onto the bed. Was the outfit inspired by the fire continent the only good one he got? Still, they were impeccably made and in a variety of styles and he had to admire Sakala’s handiwork. He began to fold them, but stopped in his tracks as he took in something he should have noticed with the undershorts.
There were just so many of them.
When he worked in the fields the family was only given ten yards of fabric to make underthings for the entire family. He did well to get two pairs of underthings a year, the lightweight for the warm months, and the flannels for the cold months. He was looking at a good five years worth of clothes. That Agalon had seemingly ordered on a whim.
He didn’t need these. They could have been split up, would be better used by people who didn’t spend most of their working hours without clothes. This didn’t make sense.
“You sure?” Lorsan asked, “You’re movin real slow. It ain’t like you.”
“Just…” Xac said as he went back to folding the shirts, “Thinkin too much. I get to thinkin too much sometimes.”
Lorsan looked behind him to see that both of the windows in the room were open, despite the chill of the early autumn twilight, so he walked over and closed them as Xaxac placed the folded undershirts in the drawer with his shorts.
“I been downstairs in the library,” Lorsan said, “Lookin through daddy’s records.”
“Neat,” Xac said, “What’s that?”
“Bunch of old ledgers and stuff,” Lorsan explained, “Tryin to figure out where you come from. He bought you up in the Sage Lake province, ‘bought fourteen years ago.”
“I don’t know where that is,” Xac shrugged. The information wasn’t particularly useful to him, but Lorsan didn’t seem happy to see his apathy. Xaxac wasn’t sure what kind of reaction he had wanted or expected.
“It’s up by the Sage Lake,” Lorsan said as if this would mean anything to Xaxac, “There’s cities there, big tourism place. They do a lotta fishin, little bit of farmin, but not commercially like we do. Bought a week’s ride out from Satra, another couple days out from the Sacred Woods, the Sacred Woods are right up on um. The treeline hits the lake.”
“Sacred Woods,” Xac said as he untied another package, trying to remember where he had heard that name before. Then his eyes grew wide and he said, “The Emerald Knight!”
“The legend is,” Lorsan said, “That about three hundred years ago, the Emerald Knight went into those woods. Before that, there was a town in there, there was a path in there, folks could go in there. But then there was an earthquake, completely changed the landscape. The woods grew back, grew over the path, and ain’t nobody goes there no more. Anybody that goes in them woods never does come out again.”
He leaned against the dressing table and continued, “Folks see monsters in them woods. They say you can’t even go around the treeline at night. Say you can’t never go up there on the full moons. Folks hear voices. Folks… see all kinds ‘a things up there.”
Xaxac had never given much thought to his birth parents. Families were split up and sold to different people all the time from those slave merchants. It was common for a child to be ‘bought in’ without parents, so he had always assumed that was what had happened to him. His birth parents had probably gone somewhere else to work, without him. He had never harbored them any ill will for that, because it wouldn’t have been their fault. He never really thought about them at all.
But the vet had said that shifting was hereditary.
At least one of his parents would have had to have been a shifter.
Was he a monster from those woods that had been cursed when the Emerald Knight killed a god? Had he wandered away somehow and been found by a slave merchant?
“Did them records tell how much he paid for me?” Xaxac asked.
“Yeah,” Lorsan said, “And it’s crazy. Five hundred gold.”
“I don’t know how much that is,” Xac said.
“Ok so…” Lorsan scrunched up his face in thought, “Most folks never see a gold piece, Xac. Most tradin’s done in silver. A skilled laborer, like, say, a blacksmith, makes about one gold a year. If we wouldn’t kin to Xandra… we could never afford you. That merchant’ll never have to work another day in his life. Daddy believed him. He thought you was a shifter.”
“He was right,” Xac shrugged.
“He’s never been good with money,” Lorsan huffed, “This place is hemmoragin money, and he’s out here goin on trips and shit.” He motioned to all the packages on the bed and the wardrobes, and possibly Xaxac himself, “Buyin stupid shit. Man spends money like it’s goin outta style. I’m gonna inherit a clusterfuck.” He crossed his arms and huffed, “But it’s fine, ‘cause we’re nobility. We’ll just take it in levies from everybody else in the district, I guess. Ain’t like we’ll ever actually go broke. Daddy spends all our money? Fuck everybody else livin here, right?”
“I don’t know nothin about it,” Xaxac said as he opened the package and pulled out a beautiful, thick, soft, green traveling cloak. He liked the texture so much he brought it to his face to rub it against his skin and realized he could smell some sort of fragrance he didn’t recognize.
“I’d say he drinks up most of it,” Lorsan lamented as Xaxac hung the cloak carefully in his new wardrobe.
“I like to drink,” Xac said, “I love bein drunk. I’d lay drunk if I could.”
“This oughta be the most profitable district in the mainland,” Lorsan said, “We’re literally feedin the nation. They’d die without us. We oughta have Xandra by the short hairs. We oughta wield way more power than we do.”
“Oh, on account’a we grow the food?” Xaxac asked, not really understanding what Lorsan was talking about, “That don’t make no sense. It ain’t who grows the food, it’s who’s on top. By that logic, the slaves in the fields oughta have the most power.”
Lorsan’s eyes shot open with an emotion that looked like he had just had some sort of epiphany, but Xaxac wasn’t paying much attention to him, he had moved on to the next package.
Advertisement
- In Serial49 Chapters
Dungeon Games
The world of Terra holds a very interesting and unique pastime, a game called Dungeon Wars. The game was developed after an accident created a form of Artificial intelligence that was able to create, and sustain it's own miniature habitat with an ecosystem based off of the creatures that began as it's 'start' This in turn created a craze of a new, and somewhat fun method of research that grew and became a game. They sold these A.I units for a modest sum, along with starter races, and from there it took off to become something larger, and greater. Welcome to the Dungeon Wars, a tournament based system where gamers can earn the points needed to increase their Dungeon pet A.I. quicker than natural means, and earn rare and prized races to add into their miniature ecosystem.
8 116 - In Serial30 Chapters
Spaced Out
After the prospect of obtaining a giant sum of cash, Gabe decided he wanted to build a teleporter to pull off the ultimate of heists. But to his folly. He forgot to include locator and a way to return. Making a blind jump he ends up on a mercenary ship and gets conscripted. Join Gabe as he travels the stars as the only human in space!
8 452 - In Serial8 Chapters
Reverse Isekai
An immortal jellyfish is ripped from her home in the sea to a world where her body gets saturated with magic and she gains sentience, a humanoid body, and an army. now on a quest to find the man who brought her to this world she arrived stranded on a world with no magic where she will have to slowly build her strength back up, to find the man who brought her out of her ordinary monotonous life and gave her a new life of fun and excitement. [participant in the Royal Road Writathon challenge]
8 73 - In Serial42 Chapters
The Lone Prospect
New rules. New girl. New home. Ex-military and werewolf, Gideon Vonrothe is looking for a place to belong. His first and last hope for a pack to call his own is the Heaven’s Heathen’s Motorcycle Club. Being the new prospect isn’t going to be easy. Rebels with a cause, the members of the Heaven’s Heathens motorcycle club regularly risk life and limb to rescue those in need, all to protect their greatest secret, that they’re all werewolves. Now a new member has petitioned to join the pack… The Heaven’s Heathens are supposed to be a big bad motorcycle club, a brethren of tough as nails hard asses. Formed out of necessity after the Cascading War, the Heaven’s Heathens have the reputation of being the toughest sons of bitches in Colorado. Their membership filled with those that have little use for society’s rules and pay lip service to laws outside their own. Insular and hierarchal, a new member can throw off the entire group. And they’re Gideon VonRothe’s last hope for a life that feels familiar or else he’s resigned to go back to the family farm. He doesn’t know anything about the Heathens, or motorcycle clubs. He doesn’t even own a motorcycle. An outsider, ex-military and unsuspecting sucker, Gideon is the latest victim of the Club’s brotherhood appeal. Vice President Savannah Barker knows better. The Club is a bunch of party loving, thrill seeking adrenaline junkies with a nose for mischief. Their idea of playing hard is a good brawl and involves the words trigger happy lunatics. Her Grandfather, Brand, President of the Club is the worst of the lot. It’s the officers’ jobs to keep the rest of the world from find out that they’re more than a group that loves motorcycles and explosions. They’re werewolves. The Club is the pack and the pack is a family with siblings that squabble. Their outlet is Heaven Has Mercy, private security for hire. No wars. No assassinations. Before the new prospect can change the rankings, Brand sends the ignorant Gideon on a rescue mission under the supervision of Savannah and her team. Soon the bets are flying on if Gideon has what it takes and how long this lone prospect is going to last. The routine snag and drag turns complicated when it turns out the client lied, and an attack on their home turf makes some believe that the new Prospect is involved. The Heathen’s have a responsibility to the man they rescued and their reputation is on the line. Is this a new beginning or the beginning of the end for the Heaven’s Heathens?
8 177 - In Serial12 Chapters
Tokyo's Shadows of Carnage
This story talks about a middle-schooler named Ryota Yoshiyuki.. His dream is to bring peace into this horrible world.. Will it happen or will something change his life forever..?
8 209 - In Serial14 Chapters
Bakugou's Lover
@/tourabu_neko on Twitter for ArtBakugou has his secrets. Even for the the 22 year old flower shop owner he is he still has them. What happened when he accepts a drink at a bar and the night doesn't go as planned for him or for the friends what went with him?It's a Bakugou harem but with only one true ship at the end. This book it really just for the rare pair and multi shippers. The tags will change depending on where the book is in chapters.This contains OOC characters and Soft Bakugou. Read tags.SLIGHT KiriBakuSLIGHT DekuBakuSLIGHT TodoBaku
8 172

