《The White Rabbit: Book 2》Chapter 35
Advertisement
Kyrtarr had pulled the ceiling open to reveal a long, hollow log that matched the wood the rest of the room was made of, and the hot water trickled out of it and onto the group that had gathered in the waiting tub. Xaxac delighted in the muffins he had finally been allowed to eat, far more sweet than he was used to, to the point that he thought they may not be muffins at all, but some sort of cake. He ate each one quickly and followed it up with a gulp of wine as the water slowly covered his outstretched legs.
Agalon looked as if he may fall asleep and seemed to have no interest at all in his meal.
“Are you tired, master?” Xac asked and scooted closer to cuddle up to him.
“Do me a favor darlin and wash your mouth out with somethin’ stronger than wine. Lee, hand me my flask.”
Lee obeyed him, dug the flask out of Agalon’s discarded traveling bag and handed it to him, and he passed it straight to Xaxac, who swished the whiskey around in his mouth, though he wasn’t sure why Agalon wanted him to do that. Agalon took it from him and handed it back to Lee.
“I am tired,” he said, “I’ll be happy to get back on the road tomorrow.”
“I won!” Xac proclaimed as he climbed into his lap, “And Wyatt won too! We’re the best fighters!”
“I don’t know about all that,” Wyatt said, “You thought on your feet but… don’t get a big head. You ain’t… exactly good, Xac. You didn’t get a single hit in the first round. Your form’s real sloppy. You don’t know what you’re doin.”
“But I won!” Xac argued.
“Yeah but…” Wyatt sighed and considered his words carefully, “You got a natural advantage. It ain’t gonna carry you. You need to train.”
“I don’t reckon I’m gonna fight no more, am I?” Xac asked Agalon, “I just did that so Billy could get better? I’m a substitution, right? On account of I hurt him?”
“I don’t know, darlin,” Agalon wrapped an arm around him, “I’m tired. I’ll think on it. I’ll be glad to get on the road tomorrow.”
“Are we goin to Sakala’s?” Xac asked, “You said if I won we’d get more yarn!”
Advertisement
“Did I?” Agalon asked, sighed, and continued, “That sounds like somethin I’d say. Yeah, we’ll stop in but please, darlin, don’t take all day. I’m wore out. I’ll… Lee can take you in the mornin while we’re loadin up the fighters.”
“Thank you, master!” Xac wrapped both arms around his neck and planted a big kiss on his cheek. “I wanna make solstice presents for everybody! Knittin takes a long time so you gotta start before the mask festival.”
“The mask festival,” Agalon sighed again, as if every sentence knocked the wind out of him, “Right. I gotta plan that… I’m so tired… Wonder if Lorry’s comin in for it? Probably not…” The water was up to their shoulders now and had stopped flowing, and Xaxac remembered how the heat of it had made him sleepy.
He was a little more relaxed now; Alex and Wyatt had burned off some of the energy his victory had given him, and he laid his head on Agalon’s chest to listen to the beat of his heart.
The water smelled so good and the heat wasn’t as unbearable now that it was cooler outside.
Quizlivan led the hunting party to the marker he had staked and tugged it out of the snow, then laid flat on his belly to peer through the oculars. The large, lumbering herd had not moved on, as he had suspected. There was so little green left anywhere that they would stay by that grove of trees until they had completely stripped it. Then they would be forced to move on.
The herd had a specific pecking order; they kept the young and the queen on the inside, and around them huddled the elderly or weak that needed protecting, then came the outermost ring of the strongest members who were normally observant and alert, constantly on the lookout for predators.
But the group looked different today.
The middle ring was missing.
Quizlivan suspected that they hadn’t been able to travel, had not survived the trip to find food. He understood instantly, because it had happened to his own tribe.
But that provided a problem.
Normally in a hunt the plan was to pick one of the older animals and find a way to isolate it from the herd. They were the easiests to pick off, the easiest to frighten and trap. The dragons were huge, lumbering things, easily as tall as three humans and as broad as four, with claws, teeth, and a swishing, striking tail.
Advertisement
They had never even tried to take on a healthy young dragon. He wasn’t even sure they would be able to isolate it. Would the tribe be willing to let one like that go?
It didn’t matter, in the grand scheme of things. Morgani did not have an infinite supply of food; he had shared all he had with them already. No food would grow in the snow and darkness. These dragons were the only other living things they had seen. It had to work. They would be successful or they would die.
“Bad news,” He told the group, “the herd’s been thinned. I don’t see anybody we can pick off.”
“Give it to me,” Ahnah demanded so he did. She held the contraption to her eyes and frowned.
“Alright,” She said, scanning the area, “He’s right. We gotta ambush… It’s the same plan. Same plan, younger dragon. We can do this.”
“Who’s where?” Kifat asked.
“Who volunteers?” Ahnah asked.
“Human.”
They all turned as one, to find the sound of the quiet growl of a voice.
Two glowing eyes stared back at them, easily five feet in the air. Then two more blinked into existence, then more, and more, and more, until it became obvious that they were surrounded.
Quizlivan rolled onto his back, ready to jump and run if it became necessary, ready to fight for his life if he could not run.
Two of the creatures stepped closer and closer, dark blobs against the night, and the snow eventually formed shapes. Four long, thin legs held up equally thin torsos covered in fur that had seen better days, and Quizlivan’s first thought was that they should not look like this. Their fur should have been thick and shiny; their bodies should have been dense and muscular; they should have stood taller and more securely, but they shook and held both their tails and their heads down.
The dire wolves followed their parents, and Quizlivan was sure there were more of them than there were people in his hunting party.
Xaxac awoke before the sun had risen and looked carefully around the room.
He really liked the hotel.
He wasn’t sure he had ever seen a wolf. And he was positive he would never go hunting. He didn’t eat meat. He had also never seen a dragon, but he had heard of them.
He kept having bad dreams.
He softly slid out of Agalon’s grip and walked to the window. The street outside was still lit up, even as early as it was, and he suspected the festivities ran twenty-four hours a day. The nighttime crowd was so different from the daytime crowd, so Xaxac stood and stared down at the people Agalon had once called the ‘dregs of society’. None of them were allowed in the fancy hotel; they wouldn’t make it past the gate. And he couldn’t make out much about them, as far away as they were, looking at them from so high above them.
He deliberately chose not to think about the man he had killed.
Instead, he wondered what it was like to be poor and elven. The two concepts did not match, in his head. He was unable to reconcile them. They seemed to be polar opposites. It did not seem as if a person could be both poor and elven, but there they were, walking the streets, listening to barkers at booths and eating fried dough before the sun rose.
Giving away gold coins.
He turned to look at Agalon, sleeping peacefully in the bed, then softly walked to the door to the sitting room.
He tried the handle.
It turned.
Agalon never locked him up anymore. He trusted him now.
“Xac?” Lee asked, and he had obviously not been expecting him. He was sitting at the sitting area with Bobby before a roaring fire and wasn’t wearing his coat or shoes. They were drinking something out of teacups and eating breakfast pastries, and Xac wondered how early it was.
“I… had a bad dream,” Xac whispered.
“Well go back to bed,” Lee said, “You still got a hour and a half to sleep.”
“Oh,” Xac frowned, “Um… ok…”
“Bet he did have a bad dream,” Bobby said as Xac pulled the door closed behind him, “that boy can’t be right after what he done yesterday.”
“That boy ain’t been right,” Lee said.
Xac stared out the window as he climbed back into bed, then turned and snuggled up to Agalon, burying his face in his chest.
Advertisement
- In Serial38 Chapters
Mortalis Mortal
Death. The end, supposedly. And yet, for Andy Jameson, it was part of his new job. After years of depression and stagnation, Andy gets a new career to restart his life… but, thing is, the job description wasn’t very accurate. Instead of working in the tech industry, he was killed, reborn into a new world, and now has to serve as a mischievous god’s prophet with the duty of throwing reality into utter chaos. To say it was a bumpy ride would be an understatement. Join Andy as he transforms into Chaon, the creator and destroyer of worlds. Victories, failures, and struggles within a magical realm rich with monsters, kingdoms, demons, angels, wars, gods, and secrets better left unseen. Allies did he make. Enemies too. Friends, companions, lovers, rivals. Will he bring chaos? Peace? Bloodshed? Will his ascension lead him to be worshiped as a hero? Or feared as a monster? Or the most important question yet… will he even survive that long? Story Information Spoiler: 3rd Person Past-Tense StyleGenres: Fantasy, Adventure, Action, Romance, Mystery, DramaTags: Magic, Harem, War, Discovery, Intrigue Maturity: - Light Cursing, but not much (D-word mostly) - Will contain occasional sex scene - Will deal with dark topics at times (slavery, rape, tragedy) I’ll warn you of potential shaky topics in the pre-chapter notes so you aren’t blindsided, or so you can skip the spots. Release Schedule Spoiler: Currently, about one to two chapters per week is my goal.
8 124 - In Serial6 Chapters
2332: Fleeing the Arrakis
What if you can build a town that moves faster than the speed of light? Silas Creedy, a retired Olympic Fencer in his late twenties, has befallen hard times in a crashing economy caused by dwindling rare minerals on Earth and Helium-3 on the lunar surface. He works as a manual laborer for the Space Force, accepting a measly pay while maintaining a strong physique. On Monday morning, Silas receives a notice of termination, but General Grant Freeman makes a dangerous offer: explore a distant star system in a top-secret electrogravitic spaceship while wearing a prototype exosuit that augments reality into a role-playing game. The objectives? Locate a source of Helium-3. Plain and uncomplicated. Silas accepts, but on an Earth-like planet he comes across a seemingly unmanned crashed spaceship that has a remarkably similar aesthetic to his exosuit. As local Fauna attack him, the crashed ship’s AI hijacks his suit’s programming, fends off the the locals, and repairs itself by fusing with Silas’ ship. Silas soon finds himself in the midst of a war between two Kardashev type-3 civilizations vying for dominance over the Milky Way. With his new AI companion, Tracey, Silas decides to go on the run to keep Earth’s location secret. Contains profanity, gore, transhumanism, and eventual real-world LitRPG character stats and spaceship-building mechanics.
8 726 - In Serial11 Chapters
Dust
""""There are nine bald, naked men in the room with me, and they are all identical. No doors, no windows. nine of the same bald man. "This is the story of strange brothers in a world where people can change their own genetics. It is a world where imagination meets biology with often disastrous results, and where who you are is quite literally whatever you want to be - If you live long enough.expect weird body horror. Not gore, Think Frankenstein by Kubrik, at least for the first few chapters. Also, quite a few naked dudes. They'll find pants eventually.
8 175 - In Serial20 Chapters
The Great Expedition(Hiatus)
In a city surrounded by deadly mists, the runner Lleu spends his days delivering messages and packages while trying to move up in the world. One chance encounter later and his life is catapulted in every direction. Author's Comment: I've stopped working on this for the time being. I lost interest in continuing this story in favor of other projects.
8 106 - In Serial10 Chapters
What Chaos Can do
The Earth, a living breathing organism, hates Jeanie with a fierce passion But Harold, and Marsha had a plan... yesterday...
8 132 - In Serial17 Chapters
Rolf The Barbarian Battlemage
Our story began on the frozen tundra, where barbarians roamed over thousands of years after the first landing of Bok. They were hearty warriors that valued strength and honor above anything else. Rolf the rat boy was the adopted son of Chieftain Kram of the Wolverine Tribe, although the latter claimed that the boy was merely his spoil from a war with the devious rat-men, Stakors. Being bullied and looked down upon by the tribe, Rolf was determined to claim his honor as a true barbarian, but little did he know that the immortal gods had an entirely different plan for him. Meanwhile, storm clouds are gathering inside the walled city of Ubbin Falls at the edge of the Tundra…
8 217

