Harp here. I just load the chapters into the queue right away. The mediators release them on their judgment and as they see fit. As a result, I'm writing this before the first chapter has come out. I have no idea what's going on. I hope you're enjoying it and commenting. Any issues/updates/comments that can't be taken care in the comment section will be in my profile, so check it out. Thanks for reading.
All characters are over the age of eighteen
Chapter Five
(Decker)
"Are there more synth tins?" Adja asked, chewing, her mouth full.
There were females everywhere. Decker had woken up with Bryn's head under his chin again, the girl sprawled on top of him. He'd frowned down at her head and then met Persya's eyes.
"Sorry," Persya had mouthed, coming to retrieve her, the girl sleepy.
"Adya," Chione said, the woman with dark eyes and skin and long dark curly hair. "Don't talk with your mouth full. How can you eat so much?"
Kay leaned and found a tin, giving it to the girl without looking at her.
"Thank you, Kay," she said, Kay ignoring her.
That girl had her sights on Kay, going where he did, a small shadow following him around. He hadn't scared her off yet, gruff as he'd been. They were sitting in the meadow and the light was shining. Taking a day off. It was pleasant. Decker was watching the way the light hit Persya's hair. The women were colorful and their laughter made you light, their eyes flashing and silky limbs.
They were the strangest creatures. He hadn't spent much time with women except for fucking, and he didn't think the other men had, neither. He imagined Kay hadn't spent any time with them at all. He did seem a little bemused. It was difficult not to just look at them all the time. They were completely different kinds of beings, delicate wrists and ankles, pink and flushed and soft skin everywhere. In motion and their eyes flashing, graceful, high voices and fast gestures. Neat and expressive.
Yenna and Lily were not far weaving tall grass, their fingers busy, sitting close. Lily, the woman with light brown skin and round limbs, glanced at Yenna, a small smile coming to Yenna's mouth as she glanced back. Yenna reached out and touched her cheek. Decker's brows went up. Kay saw it too, their eyes meeting.
The Cromwells weren't going to allow that, to be sure. Well. That wasn't their problem.
Yenna began to hum and Lily glanced at her and started humming too. Decker had heard women in dance halls, but this wasn't the loud singing those women did, belting out bawdy songs. This was high and pure and simple. Persya had done that when he'd met her in the briken enclosure, humming. Evidently women liked to sing. His mother had, now that he thought about it.
He knew men who liked to sing, but they didn't sound like this. Bai had Dawine leaning against him and his arm around her. He leaned and smelled her, the woman not noticing. They did smell good, even without the fancy perfumes the whores wore. Persya smelled best. Dawine started humming, all the women joining in. Persya and Bryn started.
The sound overtook Decker, the prettiness of it. He looked at Kay, whose brows had gone up, his eyes unfocusing. Adya was looking at him, the girl humming along.
It sure was beautiful. Decker sighed. These women didn't know what most women would have understood right away about the three men who'd stolen them. It wasn't that they were stupid like he'd first believed of Persya. They just hadn't been alerted to men that way. They were the most fearless women he'd ever met, and he didn't mean courage.
Grace, the quiet brown-haired beauty, was up and aimless like only a woman could be, evidently, picking wildflowers with her cheeks flushed, also humming. Chione was humming, her warm skin and black hair glinting in the sun. Decker's eyes drifted back to Persya, who glanced at him. A surge went through him.
It was a surprise to him when Grace began to sing words. Then Bryn joined in, and then Persya, and soon the air all around was filled with their high sweet voices, all of them harmonizing and evidently knowing all the words together.
I'm not a fish swimming in the water,
or a bird flying in the air;
I'm a woman singing by the river
with flowers in my hair
It went on, all of it nonsense and meaningless and it was the prettiest, most wondrous thing he'd ever heard. Decker leaned back, looking at the clouds, gone with it. His eyes closed. It wasn't like anything he'd listened to before, their voices weaving together, and it about pierced him with its sweet beauty. He didn't know why it made him feel so good.
I'm not a rock on the mountain,
or a tree that is so high;
I'm a woman singing by the river
Watching leaves go by
I'm not a branch that's broke in half
or a bone that's buried deep;
I'm a woman singing by the river
Gathering stones to keep
Their song seemed to have an endless amount of poetry to it, all nonsense. The melody of it was simple but also strange, almost haunting, bringing things to him he hadn't thought to feel before. They just kept going on about what they weren't. After a long time of pleasure he didn't really remember, more verses and the wash of their voices, the sun was blotted out.
He opened his eyes, coming back, finding a small face close to his, a braid on his chest as the song trailed away. They were just humming again now. He felt more peaceful than he ever remembered being in his life. This was nice.
Decker studied Persya's smaller version. "What do you want?"
"Brikens," Bryn said to him, her eyes lighting with lust. "Persya told me about them. I want to see the brikens, please, Decker."
"They're over there," Decker said, waving at the fence to the briken enclosure and closing his eyes again. It wasn't far, the nicest part of the meadow being near it. He didn't have his sat-reader, but Bane and his herd wouldn't be there now. They had a huge area to roam, days across, and briken things to do.
When he slitted his eyes and glanced, Persya was weaving grass, all of them humming. He watched her. She was so beautiful that just doing that was a pleasure to him. Of course, then he started lusting after her. Her humming was still happening. She glanced at him from under her lashes, sending another surge through him. He did like her, to be sure.
Adya was sitting beside Kay, almost leaning on him, in his shadow again. Kay didn't seem to have noticed.
The girl pointed. "Look, Bryn found one. That's a briken?"
"Nope," Decker said, turning to see where she was pointing.
Then he was up and running, Kay beside him, Bai behind them.
"Bryn," he heard Persya cry behind him, and Bane was about to eat her little sister.
The child was looking up and Bane had his front legs on the fence because Decker didn't have the idium panel up yet. He hadn't had time. Bane had his neck over it. Bryn was humming up to him as he bent down, and his mouth opened, sharp incisors. There she went, Decker bracing himself. A hot ball was in his gut, seeing it in his mind. It was going to be so bad.
Bane's mouth closed with a clack and he sniffed, her hair raising. Breathing in, he crooned, and then he coughed briken snot all over her upturned face.
"Gross," Bryn cried.