This is a short work of erotic fiction containing furry, or anthropomorphic, characters, which are animals that either demonstrate human intelligence or walk on two legs, for the purposes of these tales. It is a thriving and growing fandom in which creators are prevalent in art and writing especially.
Please note that all characters are clearly over eighteen and written as such in all stories.
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The space station was nearing completion, all down to the skill and dedication of those that were stationed there, looking down at the planet on which they had been born. They'd been up there for nigh on one hundred years by that point, yet the needs of people came above all else, working for the greater good. At least with the elongated, extended lifespans of human beings, as they had evolved and further developed their psychic powers, finding new ways of expanding their knowledge of the world, it meant that they had more chances to do more, simply put. A century on the space station was nothing in the grand scheme of things.
Yet the near years would always feel longer and more drawn out than those that were one hundred years ago, time never quite being remembered as it was, not for humans and not for anthros either.
The man sighed, brushing his fingers back through his black hair, though he had something of an androgynous look about him, dressed in a polo and jeans, a brown belt at his waist. Thankfully for him, they'd managed to fix the anti-gravity system of the development space station some days ago, though floating around and dealing with a constant lack of gravity had led to some challenges, not for the first time. It was just something that they had to deal with, however, people there from all walks of human life, from those that were there to fix and build out the exterior of the station to the scientists, there to take readings and quicker action, to feed back to those on the planet and progress.
However, he was far from alone in the control room, writing with a pen that they had developed for use in such an environment, though they most often used simple pencils still for when the anti-gravity system ticked offline. There were still a few bugs in the system, to be fair, that had to be worked out. It was nearing completion, regardless, and the dogs that they kept there to complete more menial tasks and less specialised labour had been a benefit to all the humans, allowing them to delve into more intricate, intelligent work.
The dogs... He mused over that, shaking his head. He'd never dealt with them that closely on the planet, though he had not considered them capable of such technical knowledge before. Though, he supposed, it was the difference between someone who could be trained to use and run some things on the space station, yet would never specialise in even a single machine like the engineer that designed it from scratch. But they were clearly capable of more knowledge than he'd been aware of and, although he could not quite put his finger on it, that troubled him.
It didn't matter though, he was sure. Dogs had been the loyal servants of humans for so many years already, so long back that it was almost beyond the limits of human memory, as powerful as that was. At best, it meant that they could make the canines more useful than they had been before to human beings -- if that was where they fit best in the grand scheme of the world, of course. Who was to say where the dogs were best suited, after all? He had been up on the space station for so long already that he would not have a good idea, regardless, of what the world was like on the planet anymore. Even small changes could have knock-on effects, ripples that may not be seen by someone down there in the thick of it.
He sighed, waiting for the newly completed fusion reactor to finish its final systems checks. It seemed to be taking forever, but it had been several years since he had had the chance to work with something like that, so he had to be patient. Patience was something that they should have learned up there, though once it was initialised and taking over providing the station power, it would change everything. No more would they have to maintain the small, temporary reactors that had been sent up before, freeing them up to do even more intricate work. Which was, in fact, what they were all there to do.
Things were moving quickly, however, he could tell, at least from the small bits of information that had been sent up from the planet, the green and blue so inviting to him and yet so far away. Although he knew he could not return home until the mission was complete, his assigned (willingly so) span of time up on the space station, there was something about home that could never, not even in a million years, be replicated by the space station. Technology couldn't replace everything, as much as they tried, as many simulations as they delved into.
But since the incident with the anthro nation invading, or at least trying to...things had moved so swiftly in his world. Humanity had not known what to do when it had happened, some of the border cities struggling more than others, though the anthros had never reached anything of great importance -- it was more in line with supply chains being cut off and trade routes, their towering cities designed to be as self-sufficient as possible. Frankly, no one even believed that the anthros would have managed to take a single city.
But it had set off something, the ripples of effect, that could never again be taken back. Humans had spent millennia content in their lands, in their cities, in the places where they had grown and prospered with their psychic powers, never wanting for anything. There had not, to be fair, been anything of great importance for any of them to do, though that was not their fault, not when so much already had been automated, even down to farming and food production, which was, of course, vital to their health and wellbeing. Most humans whiled away their time on idle interests, taking the time to pursue their hobbies without any greater goal.
Truthfully, the last major project that humanity as a whole had undertaken was repairing the planet from the damage it had taken in the Great War. That had been of intricate importance, even for those that did not see beyond the walls of their towering cities, for they needed the planet to survive, they needed the planet to still be there to sustain them. Even out there on the space station, it was obvious even to him.
The Great War had, of course, forced them to retreat to the heart of their lands and the landmass where their primary occupancy was: he could see it from the station, a sense of home clawing at his chest. But that war... It had not solved anything. Neither had anything subsequent, truth be told.
On a civilisation-wide level, humanity could, of course, remember the first time they had encountered the anthros. And that was more than the dogs, of course, though they could surely be forgiven for initially thinking that the anthros and the dogs were the same things. They had animal features, after all, both walking on two legs like humans -- yet the dogs would never be the same as anthros. They were a different race -- so many different races and species -- amongst the anthros, the new, young race that wielded stone-tipped spears, so many years ago. They had stumbled upon human shores on primitive rafts, not knowing what they would find there, though it had not been at all difficult for humans to, at least politely, make the anthros leave back then.
That had been simple, the humans leaving the anthros be, content with that and observing them from something of a distance as their technology developed further and further. If they were left alone, they had no problem with the anthro, seeking out their knowledge bases, furthering their skills, developing technology. But the anthros themselves had then suddenly (relatively speaking, for it was several hundred years later) appeared back on their shores with an invasion, a fleet of ships and soldiers intent on taking them.
That had impressed some humans, their resilience, their tenacity, even when their intelligence and way of using the world around them were so far behind human beings. It was impressive, some said, that this plucky race had pressed on to such an extent, though they could never have compared to humans. And they had come with armoured, magical vehicles too, nothing to compare to their tanks and self-defence items of warfare, but, still. It was something notable, something at least of a little interest in a world that, for humans, had never changed all that much, not as the long, slow years of their lives passed in relative peace.
Although they had the tools, they were not assembled in a way to be a military force to defend their country in that way, though it had not been as difficult as some higher powers had suggested to scramble together a military presence. They had all been volunteers, often young males that were interested in making a name for themselves, in having a sense of purpose in the world, though women were as interested, if perhaps not quite on as high a level. Their tools and technology had been slapped together into rudimentary arms and armour, taking some mild inspiration from the anthros and easily bettering it without all that much effort at all.