DailyCreatedOOM #WrittenOOM 2023/10/20

(Gibbsen’s story will continue after the Sabbath.)

Arthes glanced through the battered windscreen, spangled with webs. He saw a basalt power screw through the air to the other side.

He brought his com up to his fringed lips.

“A narrow leaf, a narrow leaf; Trojan sidling, Trojan sidling; receiver.”

Pendulous tendrils of dark organic material descended from the vehicle top, filtered into his hair as he listened. Then he was dragged up from his seat by his hair, but before he choked with surprise he thrust a red and black taser into the mesh, and turned them to a spaghetti thundercloud. They took the vehicle roof with them, but no matter: clearly it was no more protection than a stand of bushes through which a serpent creeps closer.

#DailyCreatedOOM #WrittenOOM 2023/10/20

DailyCreatedOOM #WrittenOOM #AdolphusSearchAndRescue 2023/10/19

(The story so far resides here: ofourmaker.com/2023/10/17/adolphus-search-and-rescue )

Gibbsen always liked Dr. Kilver’s office: despite the great variety of implements, many of them living, the doctor kept an air of scientific tightness about the place.

Gareth sat on a minimalistic divan. Though now in a seat, the girl still squatted, holding Gareth’s hand again, and in her other hand she held her father’s hand (that is, his claw). Mundbern stood at the door like a guard. Raleigh seemed the most anxious person in the whole business, and spoke with the doctor by one of the testing tables. Dr. Kilver was smiling under his heavy moustache.

“No,” he reassured, “her disease cannot be caught by any human.”

A different concern then filled Raleigh’s face.

“Then, since she has it, she is not human at all?”

Dr. Kilver shook his head.

“It cannot be caught by a human, because we already have it. In a gluckast, the first symptoms of this disease are a loss of scales, horns, and nails, followed by great pain and stupour as the body is all but liquefied like a worm in a chrysalis. The peak of the disease is reached as a perfectly healthy human being. Her disease is the disease of humanity itself.”

Mundbern raised his thick eyebrows.

“You call humanity a disease?”

“For a gluckast, very much so.”

Raleigh looked quite mystified.

“Then,” said he, “you mean that every human is the same as a diseased gluckast?”

“There is one thing unique to her case,” the doctor said, placing his finger down in the midst of his medical hieroglyphic notations.

“Her disease is highly contagious.”

To be continued.

#DailyCreatedOOM #WrittenOOM #AdolphusSearchAndRescue 2023/10/19