《Meat》Twin Fates 9.
Advertisement
Desert heat blasted the glass sands. The empty plain shone like a mirror, glistening with dust that made a mockery of morning dew. It was dry and scorched, and the memory of the dead slug was now long behind them. Bee and Em were bundled up, hidden from the stinging wind beneath a blanket and shawl. Ay merely kept his beak shut fast when the dust picked up, cracking it open from moment to moment to peer out to the horizon.
“You’re burning,” he growled.
Bee whined, pulling her sore, pink feet and hands back under the sheets.
“Suppose the Vat-Mother can make anything,” Ay said, then grunted. “Why do you burn?”
Bee made a pitiful sound again, twisting to stop her little sister from escaping her lap.
“Could she really make anything?” Ay asked, beak turning towards the girl.
“I don’t know,” she said quietly. Then, a heartbeat later, she realised Ay was looking at her. She shrank under his fleshy gaze. “I don’t.”
Ay’s beak closed with a clack. He focused on the way ahead, an ululating path winding through blasted dunes and stumps of fractured rock. The servants groaned and struggled, but together, they made a good pace. Their mismatched limbs kept an irregular back and forth, faster and slower as they dragged the cart. The occasional stone under the steel wheels bounced them in their seats.
“She’s hungry again,” Bee said, then sighed. Rocking Em on her lap and muttering to the little one’s maggoty head wouldn’t keep her still anymore.
“Give them more,” Ay said through a crack in his beak. “Get some water yourself. We’ll cross the Oasis this way. Resupply.”
That was all she was waiting to hear. Bee jumped out of her seat and into the back, dragging the fur rags with her. Putting Em down with her other sisters, they chirped together when their swaddling was removed, and their eyes found the light.
Advertisement
“You need to be careful.” Ay rasped back to her. “Children eat those who feed them, when they get big enough.”
Bee froze up as she tore up a strip of meat taken from Heych’s pack to feed the girls. Peering back at Ay, Bee knew his opinion didn’t matter. They were just words. They didn’t matter. Yet she had stopped.
“Shut up,” was her dumb response, and she felt a shiver of regret make her hair and cranial spines stand on end immediately after the words left her lips. Ay only croaked a laugh and continued driving the carriage.
Above, Bee saw the black spectres swoop out. They began to circle, sharp figures drifting high in the sky. Sweeping, innumerable.
“What are they?” Bee asked, scattering scraps to her sisters.
Ay made a show of leaning his body to one side, beak opening far enough to look up into the bright sky. He shielded his eyes from the sun with a muscular arm.
“Scavengers. Follow freaks in the desert. Wait for them to die.”
“That can’t be a good way to get water.”
“Not just water, their biomass, their augs.” He looked back. “Like hounds. You know what a hound is?”
“Yes.”
“Right.” Ay refocused on the road ahead, such as it was. With every gust of wind, it seemed to twist and turn. This time, he didn’t stay quiet for long. Something ate away at him, looking from the horizon and then back to the child and the offspring she was feeding.
“Your mother was a Goddess,” Ay said.
“Was she?” Bee looked away, pretending she didn’t know.
“People worship her. People worshipped her.” Ay said, squeezing with the reigns in his hands, where the child wouldn’t be able to see. “Every city has temples filled with her wombs.”
Advertisement
Bee turned to stare at him, frowning. She couldn’t trust him. She knew that, now.
“She made so many of us,” Ay eventually said. Speaking about her mother seemed to disarm him.
“Did she make you?” Bee asked quietly. “Maybe you’re my brother.”
“No. No, I was shed.”
“Heych said he was shed—” Bee stopped feeding her sisters and sat there as her anguish rose, gathering the strength to continue. “What does that mean?”
“It means...” Ay began but paused. He needed a moment to find the right words to explain to the child. “Means we fell off of someone who got too big, got too much biomass. Cities do it a lot. First thing I remember, belched out of a malfunctioning chute onto Jaabas Street.”
Bee’s nose wrinkled. Ay looked back, caught the look and explained, “It’s a marketplace.”
That wasn’t what disturbed her.
“Why does it matter?” Bee asked.
“It doesn’t.” Then, vaguely offended, Ay straightened up, bouncing his shoulders in a disaffected shrug. “Just didn’t think she could die.”
Bee stared at the back of Ay’s head as he returned to his silent vigil. She decided not to tell him, finishing feeding her sisters instead. He didn’t need to know.
That bright spark overhead, that foul daystar, slowly arced above. Finally, it escaped over the horizon. Night swallowed them, and Bee’s furs became insulation from the biting cold. She slept. She awoke. The sun made its way across the heavens until it disappeared once more. When night came again, and Bee dared peek above, she saw the darkness break with flashes of light, streaks of fire spitting across the heavens, as if the stars themselves were trying to rake the earth and burn the sky.
Together, they did not slow. Ay did not break even as the thralls mewed at his lash. Even in what seemed to Bee unconquerable darkness, he pressed on. Ever on, those at his command guided down the faintest traces of a path.
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 3590 - In Serial65 Chapters
Druid Evolution (A Battle Royale, Druid MC LitRPG/Gamelit Adventure)
A high school biology teacher is sucked into a new reality, where a mysterious Gamemaker forces him to fight for his life. With no other choice, Theodore Cross must become a Druid and master the powers of nature to protect himself -- and those he loves the most. New chapters every weekday at 9 AM CST. For advance chapters, see my Patreon page! Discord for Druid Evolution --------------------------------------------------------------- What to expect: 1. A pretty standard LitRPG apocalypse set-up, with certain high-potential players getting invited to participate in an Arena. 2. A MC who is human and empathetic, who makes mistakes and flounders sometimes, but who is willing to fight and kill to protect his friends. 3. A quest to save his best friend and crush from another party of players led by two psychopaths. The MC doesn't vie for power, but does what he thinks is right and gains power along the way. The basic set up resembles a love triangle, but will not go that way. 4. A Game/System that is reminiscent of both Skyrim and Dungeons and Dragons. 5. Some gore and violence, mild horror, some foul language, but no sexual situations or overly traumatizing content. 6. Typos -- this is a first draft, so bear with me! I am going to keep writing forward, then go back later and take comments and suggestions into account.
8 131 - In Serial19 Chapters
Chronicles of a Dungeon Core (Side Stories)
Side stories of Chronicles of a Dungeon Core following the dungeon core Inari, and others.
8 169 - In Serial48 Chapters
Stories Of Indlu
“… to grow, for opportunity, for adventure, to be free. Join the colony ship Nao Vittoria. Be the first to live amongst the stars.” It was obvious from the literature that the NextStar corporation wanted the young, the adventurous and the brilliant. So why were the super rich fighting over seats? Why were AI’s trying to stow away? Did this signify a premature end to human/AI civilisation? Why had some questions directed to NextStar been aggressively sidelined? Why did the colonist inflight entertainment trial produce fatalities? In fact, why colonists at all? Those and many other questions, however, boiled down to a single central question. Why was the world’s most advanced AI dumped with a hundred year babysitting job for 50 million people speeding towards an uninhabitable planet? It made such little sense. The only sure way to get answers, catch a ride on the Nao Vittoria and play the inflight entertainment game, Pax Domini. I joined, and this is my story. Well, I feature. OK, I’m more of a spectator. Actually, I’m completely irrelevant I was just there. I’m only the storyteller. But what a story to tell. --------- Hi All, Content will be published weekly usually Saturday and typical posts will be 25oo to 4ooo words per post. Though for some reason the Royal Road word count does not include the content of tables so some posts may not appear to meet this criteria. Currently I have written sufficient unedited content to keep this schedule for the next 12 months (half way through the first story arc). My current productivity would indicate that I can maintain this schedule for well into the second story arch. This also allows for the additional content that will be posed exclusively on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/StoriesOfIndlu). This additional content follows minor characters, peripheral events, maps and other content that does not take away from the main story. I would love to accelerate the post schedule but to meet this I need the assistance of more beta readers than I currently have. So please let me know if you are interested. - Andy ©2022 Andy Leauter. All rights reserved. This story is also being published on Patreon.
8 113 - In Serial33 Chapters
Axis:Legacy
Years have passed since the Axis Conflict, a war that nearly tore the Axis region apart between the two Kingdoms of Jorouse and Exavis. In hopes of preventing yet another war, a Military Academy designed on training an elite and neutral force was made to serve as peacekeepers. This Academy is known as Axis Academy dedicated to the former heroes of the War, Arios Elpis and Andras Desper, who had perished. Unbeknownst to all, their long lost Children had enrolled into the Academy not knowing the heroic lineage they carry.
8 242 - In Serial11 Chapters
You're A What - A OHSHC FanFiction
(Y/n) and Haruhi are mistaken for boys when they meet the Ouran High School Host Club. All they wanted was a quiet place to study but instead, they found this.
8 200

