Hey guys,
Takin’ a break for the holidays. Will get back to postin’ stuff after new year’s.
Love you all.
Hey guys,
Takin’ a break for the holidays. Will get back to postin’ stuff after new year’s.
Love you all.
I’d only found out about it by accident—I’d been wandering across town again, when a muscular Chinese man with a scruffy beard came up to me and started chattering away in his language.
I’d looked around a bit worriedly to see if I was about to be swarmed or something—I really didn’t feel like being ganged up on again.
He is wide. Â I’m entirely unfond of his ears. Â And he seems to taper off a bit unfortunately below the belly. Â We will find ways to make him better. Â We have the technology to make him better than he was before. Â Better, stronger, faster.
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On the way there he got distracted by a used book store near the edge of the mahalle that he’d never noticed before, a tiny place called “The Joli Raja’s.†Since he had plenty of time, he figured he’d stop in and give it a look.
Just inside the doors was a bargain bin—ten books a nummo. The attendant told him they were worthless because they were so heavily marked, and if he just wanted one, it’d be free.
Prior version of this panel | More Myces
So, time to start getting this page into a presentable shape… at least, as presentable as satyr stories get.
“Hey, who’s there?â€
Someone was behind me, on the bridge.
Sucks to be them.
No, that’s not good at all. Bodies would be worse than witnesses. But the fuse was still going and I was too far away now to stop it.
Nothing to do but keep running, now.
The sky lit up behind me a split second before I heard the blast.
The damage was done. I only hoped there would be nothing left of the man to find; they’d look a lot harder for a murderer than a saboteur.
But I wasn’t ready to be a murderer.
The temple of Aiol at Aleksandreï is the largest structure in the city these days. Regardless of how important I became, though, I still felt like the smallest thing in it.
Not that I ever managed to become very important. From my first year in the service of the god, when it became clear I had no aptitude for the divine engineering, I was relegated to a clerical position. That, though, I was good at, and soon enough I was managing most of the temple’s secular affairs.
Then the railroads came—a perpetual headache.
It seemed simple enough in principle—Aiol, the god of winds, had handed down the principles of harnessing wind and steam and smoke to do the work of men. And, certainly, carrying trains of wagons to all parts of the world was work the divine engineering could handle, but it hardly seemed worth the expense.
After all, the trains would only run if the rails were perfect.
In the cities, that was easy. But even along the rail from Aleksandreï to Bousantie there was quite a bit of countryside—opportunities for thieves and peasants to steal the iron, for trees to fall, for lands to flood—delays and repairs, delays and repairs.
And now they want a railroad built all the way to Tianan in the country of the Sers—did they never learn ambition is a vice?—but with the support of a god, many things are ventured.
I had only met the god Aiol once. I was still, at the time, trying to understand the principles of steam-powered machines, when he came into the classroom where I was studying.
For those who have never seen a god, I should say they are very like their pictures—like a hornless satyr from the waist up, but with feet almost like an ape, though without the thumbs they have. He looked young; but the gods are young when they choose to be.
Tags: Ainlouk, avians, furry, Ierak, scraps, Terce, wolves, writing
Ironic that Seran work would keep the road to the Seran country from being built.
He checked the station, just to be sure. Empty; good. No witnesses. Outside of the station, nobody would be around for a good mile or so.
He went back down the rails to the Coudn bridge. It wasn’t the most impressive bridge the Aleksandreïans had built for their railroads, but like all of them it was built at great expense.
And after tonight, it would be no more.
He set up the bomb on one of the bridge’s foundations, unrolled the fuse a comfortable distance, lit it, and took off running downstream.
I’ll admit I only have a vague direction on this so far.
I took a taxi to Rico’s where I figured Blake’d already be waiting for me. But when I gave my name to the maître d’—Green, reservations for two—I found he’d been held up as well; he came to my table about five minutes after I sat down, and he was soaked even wetter than I had been.
He didn’t apologize. “Quite a day out, isn’t it?†he said, and grinned.
Blake is one of those people who tend to look a little different every time you see them. Today, I was sure he was quite a bit fatter than the last time I saw him… but he wore it well, so I wasn’t going to complain.
He sat down across from me, picking up a menu. “So, did you order yet?â€
“Nah,†I said, “I just got here. Missed my bus, had to call a taxi.â€
“I missed the bus, too. I think they’re running ahead of schedule today. But I figured I’d walk, since it’s only a couple of blocks.â€
Tags: Blake, Emmett, furry, kangaroos, martens, Nother, WIP, writing
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