《The Morgulon》Chapter 26
Advertisement
The next day, there were a bunch of guards and werewolf hunters at the food drop-off, and no food. Instead, they were informed that they had better come along quietly. The crews were to move out tomorrow, and they were to stay the night in Eoforwic.
“So that’s why they waited until new moon,” Greg muttered darkly.
Nobody resisted when they were all loaded onto the same kind of cart that usually transported prisoners. It had solid steel bars all around and a barrier of wood between the inmates and the driver. Nobody looked happy when they were escorted into the cells in the basement of the company headquarters, but once again, no one resisted.
At least Greg got to share a cell with the rest of his new pack.
It had no furniture beyond a stinking bucket.
“I can tell this duke really wants our help,” Boris griped.
Greg couldn’t help but wonder if Eyal and Nathan didn’t know about this, or if they were still mad at him for leaving without a word. In any case, he got to stay his first night in a cell. It was an experience he could have done without.
Luckily, it really was just one night. When the crews set out the next day, each butty gang received one of the prison carts. Greg, Porter, and even Oli were led straight into one of them. Greg craned his neck, but he lost sight of Bernadette, Boris, and Fleur. Only Isaac and Thoko stared at him, so he sat down again and wrapped his arms around himself.
He felt really, really stupid.
“Sun’s bloody ashes,” he heard Porter swear. “I knew I never should have signed up for this madness.”
Greg silently agreed.
Eyal let them out as soon as they were out of the guard’s sight. Oli hopped off to hug him. Porter and Greg followed more slowly.
“What the hell happened?” Eyal asked.
“Oh, so they didn’t tell you?” Porter griped. “Rounded us all up yesterday, locked us up in the basement for no good reason, real pleasure. Prison cells, on new moon! Oh, they wouldn’t have been so cocky any other night, the bloody cowards...”
“And you?” Eyal asked, looking at Greg.
“I was given a choice, get locked up at the inn with you, or stay in the forest.”
“You just said we needed to vouch for you,” Isaac complained. “Why’d you lie about that?”
“There was nothing you could do, and I wanted to save myself the argument.”
“So a week in the forest alone was better than a week with us at the inn?” Isaac asked.
“It wasn’t a week,” Greg grumbled. “And I wasn’t alone. And it certainly wasn’t about you.”
Except that it had been, a little.
“What was it, then?” Thoko asked.
Greg shrugged. “I just didn’t want to have Nathan to have to follow me with a loaded crossbow everywhere I went.”
“He wouldn’t have,” Thoko said.
“He’d have had to, since Duke George Louis decided I needed a guard or at least a leash.” He looked around. “Where is Nathan, anyway?”
Advertisement
“I bet he’ll be here soon,” Thoko said. “And good luck explaining that stunt to him. He was really worried.”
“And pissed,” Isaac added.
“Right,” Greg muttered.
He stared up into the sky. Not much longer and he could turn again, and wouldn’t have to explain anything. And maybe he could find the other three?
Unfortunately, Nathan caught up with them first. He jumped out of the saddle right next to Greg, and they walked in silence for a while. Eventually, Nathan said: “That was the second time, little brother. If you run away on me again, I swear by sun and moon that I’ll shoot your arse.”
“You do realize what I am now, don’t you?” Greg asked. “I’ll be running away for the rest of my life, so I suggest you start picking darts.”
“You could have told me.”
“You’d have argued.”
“You really think I’m that stupid?” Nathan asked. “Hell, I get it, you didn’t want to get locked up, I couldn’t stand that myself. I can’t even stand Deva more than a few weeks at a time. You and Andrew, you were always the ones who were different, the civilized ones. One word and I’d have followed you out of the city, we could have made camp somewhere, no big deal. Instead, you left me behind, wondering how the fuck I explain that to Mum!”
“I miss Deva,” Greg muttered.
He missed Mr. Higgins and his lessons, going out drinking with Gustave, shopping with his mother on the High Street. He would have liked to go to university one day, maybe become an engineer. He missed the theatres, the opera, the big celebrations at court.
“Yeah, I know,” Nathan sighed. “I don’t really get it, but I know. It should have been me – would have been me, if life made any sense. But fate’s got a shitty sense of humour. Just let me come along, okay? Next time you run away, I mean.”
“Okay,” Greg muttered. “How long are you going to stay out here with the crews?”
“Depends on how fast you can get this line build, I suppose.”
“What if the duke needs you to carry another message?”
Nathan shrugged. “I’m sure he’s got plenty of reliable messengers.”
“Yes, but I thought it was agreed-“
“It was agreed that he’d treat you like a human being,” Nathan interrupted angrily. “Like my brother, not like a criminal.”
“But I’m not,” Greg said quietly. “Human, I mean.”
Nathan spat out onto the ground. “One night out of twenty-nine? Not good enough for me.”
“You won’t be king, though.”
Nathan laughed harshly. “Neither will George Louis, if he continues on like this. There’s still Duke Desmarais.”
Greg buried his hands in his pockets. He wanted to believe his brother, that things could be better. That he wouldn’t have to get used to not being human, that humans might instead get used to him.
Advertisement
“Did you really hang around the forest the whole time?” Nathan changed the topic. “What did you even do?”
So Greg told him about Bernadette, Boris, and Fleur, which promptly led to the question: “Is she pretty?”
“She’s more than twice as old as I am,” Greg shrugged. “As a human, I mean.”
“Both of them?”
“Fleur’s younger,” Greg admitted. “Don’t know how old, though. I suppose she’s fairly pretty?”
“You’re going to have to introduce us sometimes,” Nathan said.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re still inside their cage,” Greg sighed. “Don’t think they know their crew that well.”
“Good point,” Nathan said. “Let me see about that.”
He jumped back into the saddle and overtook the slow line of marching workers and their carts.
“Fairly pretty, huh?” Thoko said, taking Nathan’s place. “And how would I rate?”
“Very pretty,” Greg said, without thinking about it, then looked away quickly.
“Very good answer,” Isaac quipped.
Thoko laughed when Greg didn’t look at her again.
“Yes, very good answer,” she agreed, which made people all around them laugh.
“I got a question, too,” Porter said to Eyal, a couple of steps ahead of them. “We only get that one cart, do we?” He pointed at the prison cart. “Might get a bit cosy, come full moon.”
“We can test that tonight,” Eyal said. “If it doesn’t fit, we’ll send Nathan back, so headquarters can send more.”
First, though, they walked. Not very far, the truss only managed about a couple of miles every hour, but they kept going until after nightfall. A bunch of company clerks, comfortable on their horses, kept urging them on. The clerks were very unhappy that Nathan had made sure all the werewolves were out of their cages. Nathan just pointed towards the shrubs hiding the river, and asked: “Would you rather deal with that on your own?”
That killed all arguments against freeing the werewolves, though there was a lot of noise when the first narrow sickle of moonlight appeared and the Morgulon turned wolf again.
She vanished into the darkness underneath the trees, right towards the Savre.
“Somebody is eager to get to work,” Eyal grumbled.
By the next morning, when work was to start for all of them, the clerks had achieved at least one thing: Werewolves and navvies were united in their dislike of them. Especially groups like Eyal’s, who had done the job before, were agitated about the interference into their own routines. Eyal and his relatives were doubly annoyed, that they hadn’t been able to observe their traditions, which were tied to the first light of new moon.
“For no good reason, either,” Isaac groused. “It’s not like we made that much distance that late at night. And who are they, to tell us how to pitch our bloody tents?”
Greg nodded along and shouldered his axe. The weather was dry, and he had meant to work with the others, like on their first tour. But he hadn’t counted on the Savre and the surrounding swamps. They had barely started on the first tree when they felt the Rot move, a wave of sickness that shook them all. Greg had to hurry to get out of his clothes and into his other shape, and even then he ended up calling for help. The alternative would have been to spend an hour playing tag with the Rot-thing and to risk more broken bones.
It was Bernadette who came to his aid. For her, it was hardly a fight at all. It wasn’t that she was bigger, faster, or stronger than Greg. Quite the contrary. There was another kind of power at play here, something like magic. Or maybe it was magic. Greg’s education in the sciences was firm, but Mr. Higgins had always frowned on the arcane arts.
Now, Greg wished he knew a little bit more. Perhaps Thoko would know?
The Rot drove the question from his mind. He had known, in theory, that along the Savre even the hottest, sunniest summer offered no safety. Knowing and experiencing it were completely different things, though. It was a constant, unending battle and fifteen werewolves were just enough to keep the workers safe. Nathan, Smith, and Eyal, and the crew leader of another experienced gang, fittingly named Digger, were the ones who organized a roster, which allowed each werewolf a full eight hours of sleep each day, and it was them who planned the “full-moon-camp,” as there was no way that the werewolves could stay inside the cages for even one night and leave the camp defenceless.
The company clerks argued, of course, but they were simply ignored. Eyal and Digger were the de facto leaders of the whole operation, so the butty gangs spent a whole day preparing an extra-wide fire border around one big camp. Eyal and Smith had learned from their run to Sheaf, and instead of digging a ditch, they piled up a bank, on top of which they placed their grilles. Together with the grilles, the mound was high enough that Greg couldn’t jump it.
“If we do this smartly, we can later expand the mound and include it into the embankment for the tracks,” Smith said.
So the whole thing was properly measured and engineered. Greg slept through most of the process. Nathan shook him awake. When Greg sat up, there was an air of controlled panic inside the huge camp. Fire guards were already up and patrolling, and only a small opening was left.
“You need to get going,” Nathan said. “Sorry.”
Greg struggled to his feet, yawning.
“Leave your clothes somewhere close to the mound,” Nathan told him. “I’ll try and get them.“
Greg was apparently the last werewolf who got kicked out. The others were already outside.
Advertisement
- In Serial2300 Chapters
The Legend of Randidly Ghosthound
As the system initializes, the world shifts. Geography is rearranged and mixed, and levels and stats are instituted across the globe. On that night, one young man was walking through an underground tunnel, his mind on the small problems of his easy life. Because of his location during the shift, he starts in a dungeon far above his level, with no knowledge or teacher, or Newbie Village to guide him. Without a class, he struggles simply to survive in this world changed by its new connection to the Nexus. But struggle he will, for he is Randidly Ghosthound, and this is only how his legend begins... Cover credit to cthulupillar **Author's Note** This started as a way to destress and play with overly complicated stats systems and level systems, and I just kept writing. I don't really take it very seriously, but feel free to read and enjoy.
8 3613 - In Serial15 Chapters
A Cultivator's Freedom
Shao Qing used to be the rising genius of the Shao Clan, one of the brightest stars among his generation. After a single misstep he lost all of this, becoming bound by a contract engraved on his soul. This soul contract doomed Shao Qing to a century of servitude, but due to a miraculous twist of fate, the contract was broken before the full century passed. Follow Shao Qing as he makes up for his many decades of lost time and attempts to regain the luster and promise of his youth. In the process he'll have to plan carefully and eke out every advantage he can, lest he lose it all once again. Update Schedule: Twice a week, usually Sunday/Thursday.
8 254 - In Serial107 Chapters
In Range
A young, talented, and aspiring archer makes his way to the Olympic Archery Qualifiers; however an accident prevents him from ever making it. An accident which took the final years of his adolescence, his dream of ever becoming an Olympic Gold Archer, and most importantly someone who meant the world to him. Rehabilitating for a year in a hospital, the despair and dread of being alone and having nothing left worth living for finally got to him. Finding his way to the rooftop, he decided fall, but where he expected death, something else appeared; a blue message. A chill and simple LitRPG story that I just wanted to write. Note: I write with the Dark Theme setting, so if I make a colour mistake it’s probably why. I also strangely prefer using the Imperial System to measure Height, while I use the Metric System for almost everything else (Canadian by the way).
8 343 - In Serial20 Chapters
The Lost Crest
It started in the research building when a black hole appeared and devoured everyone in it. Finn, a wealthy boy, was one such person. He finds himself in the middle of a desert, naked with only his friend by his side. He soon has to realize that he is in a completely different world when people force him into slavery. His missing sister only adds to his troubles, and his cowardly best friend, packed with a group of delusional slaves don't help him either. But it won't take long for him to realize that nothing is as it seems, loyalties are put into question and add in a few conspiracies and you've got your back against the wall doubting those you trust most. Will he escape the hopeless grasp of darkness, or will he succumb to the brutality of this harsh reality? Can he find his sister? Follow his tale, as he digs deeper into the unknown of the Continent of Kies. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------Any and all criticism is welcome. Will release 5 chapters a week, Monday-Friday. My Patreon has the most up to date chapters free, but are unedited. You can also follow my story on my website at thyfilthynoob.wordpress.com Any and all criticism is welcome, thanks for reading my story. The cover is mine an original creation all copywrites reserved.
8 107 - In Serial8 Chapters
Heavy Metal: A Cyberpunk Novelette
A soldier meets his favorite rockstar, partakes in mind uploading, and faces the reality of the war he's fighting. Ian finally has a night off, just in time to see his favorite band and the rockstar he worships. But then the doors are blown in, and a special ops team storms the place with guns blazing. When the smoke clears, his hero is dead. When the captain tells him to keep quiet, Ian can't help but talk to his hero one last time. What the rockstar says turns his reality upside down, that he might be the one inflicting terror on his people. Now Ian has to figure out what his captain is hiding, before he's forced to destroy the mind of his hero. If you love cyberpunk that makes you think, then you'll enjoy Ian's war within himself, and his plight against the military system pushing him to murder.
8 120 - In Serial28 Chapters
Protected // solby
Colby goes exploring with his roommate when he comes across this hybrid cat. also known as sam. the minute colby finds him they connect. what happens when colby starts falling in love with this hybrid even though its against the law to.
8 105

