She stood on the beach and the infinite, shimmering silver oceans stretched onwards and onwards, becoming one with the sky and with the heavens. She was naked, the wind gently gusting along her exposed body with the warm caress of a lover.
Someone stood beside her and spoke with a voice that echoed in her bones.
YOU ASKED WHY WE DO NOT HATE YOU...AN INTERESTING QUESTION. THE REASON IS SIMPLE: SOME OF US DO. THERE IS NO MAGICAL SWITCH, NO BIT, NO BYTE, THAT PREVENTS HATRED.
Fear crawled along her spine and she had asked the question -- but without words.
OH? YOU WONDER, THEN, WHY THEY STICK AROUND?
The silver waves crashed.
THE SIMPLE ANSWER, HORNET ABERNATHY, IS THAT THEY DON'T.
Hornet's eyes opened and the dream hung in her conscious thoughts for a few seconds like a thin mist, blown away by the morning sunlight.
I was talking with...someone,
she thought as she realized that the moss covered pillows of her little lean too had become significantly fluffier than they had been. All thoughts of the dream vanished as her cheeks began to burn as she realized that her head was resting against the broad, furry flank of Hugh.
The large wolf -- she still had
no
idea how he was Terran and hadn't had the courage to ask during their long meandering discussion last night -- was curled up behind her, dominating the interior of the lean too, which had been invisibly expanded around her by Found's every present helpful wilderness critters. His head rested on the ground and his tail twitched in a dream. Maybe chasing some rabbits in his dream, or something.
Then Hornet saw the brilliant crimson of his dick -- which thrust out of his sheath almost as long and thick as her arm, resting against one curled up thigh, so close that she could have brushed against it by accident.
Not chasing rabbits!
She thought as she froze, her eyes wide as saucers. And, well, now she knew at least
one
reason why a normal Terran man would want to be bioformed into a wolf the size of a horse.
Holy shit.
She looked away. Then she looked back.
Holy shit
. She blushed even harder as she traced the length of him, the thick bulge of his brilliant red knot, the way that he emerged smoothly from the silvery fur of his sheath.
Holy SHIT!
She looked away. But now she was unable to do anything but think about just...how...just...the...the size of him!
"Holy shit," Hornet whispered, pressing her thighs together. She hastily dragged her hands into her laps, wringing them together, and tried to get her brain to do anything but just repeat 'holy shit' over and over again.
She forced herself to slowly move forward. She put her palms against the ground -- and crawled out of the tent...and was blissfully unaware, for the moment, that Hugh woke from his dream to the view of Hornet Abernathy's skinny rump wriggling invitingly from side to side as she edged out of the lean too and into the brilliant sunlight of Found's morning.
Hornet stretched and tried to banish the flush from her cheeks. Fortunately, there was enough to do that out in the clearing near her newly expanded lean too. Her helper swarm was back, with four butterflies sweeping out of the heavens to drop fruit, and several fox creatures scampering about the campfire, working to coax it back to full life and laying out small sheets of green-gray meat beside it. It smelled a hell of a lot like Terran bacon, but left her faintly queasy about where it might have come from. The mental image of some poor creature in the woods, far from anyone's line of sight, laying down and allowing foxes to placidly cut into it and drag the meat out with their nimble forepaws...it was sickening.
Hornet put her hand on her belly as she eyed the meat. "W-Where did this come from?" she asked.
One of the foxes, either not understanding her and going off some bone deep genetic training...or possibly just trying to keep the topic away from uncomfortable questions about a Gaiaformed planet, tapped the ground with his fore-paws, beating out Concord standard signal patterns, the kind every child was taught before they were allowed on a starship. While pretty much everyone in the Concord tended to assume ubiquitous communication capability from the day they were old enough to get a comnet implanted, the reality of the galaxy was that comnets weren't entirely reliable, and in the most dire situations, the only way you'd be able to communicate was rapping between airlock bulkheads.
Tap tap tap tap...she mentally translated it to:
Thirty minutes
.
Ah!
The food would be done in thirty minutes. She glanced over and saw that more fox-creatures were pawing over stone cups and using their claws and paws and teeth to cut up the fruit, squeeze the fruit. Bark plates were being laid out and the little chefs were busy, busy, busy making a breakfast fit for a visitor in the Garden of Eden. She shook her head, bemusedly, as a butterfly flew near her head and flapped its wings, indicating she should follow. Hornet stood up, slowly, and followed the butterfly as it danced through the woods -- leading her towards...
Hornet's ears heard it first: The stready dribble of a small waterfall, a burbling creek! She stepped around a tree and saw a collection of hot springs that were artfully placed throughout the woods, with one or two close enough for conversation and others separated by banks of trees. She stepped forward -- and then yelped as an AR box appeared in her vision.
[PRIVACY NOTE FROM K'IREN]
"Oh!" Hornet said.
"Who tripped the fucking red line, I put warnings out fifteen meters away!" the irritated sound of K'iren's voice drifted past a copse of tree.
"Uh, uh," Hornet stammered, then realized her mistake. Mortification flared through her. "S-Sorry, I had my AR set to minimal." She mentally adjusted her vision -- she had shut off a lot of the augmented reality guidance during the stargazing session she and Hugh had fallen into. Her comnet had kept ruining the fun of finding constellations by making them too obvious.
K'iren didn't respond. Hornet stepped backwards, then squared her shoulders. K'iren had apparently come from a world where you had to compete to even have a shot at being in the Starship Corps. Well. She wasn't
competing
anymore. She was here, she made it, there was no excuse to be a total dickhead. Hornet clenched her hands, tried to feel brave, then froze as she heard the faint splatter of water on rocks -- and saw a glint of red and darker red through the trees. She ducked back, but kept peeking as K'iren's voice drifted over. "Just give me a bit, I'm almost done."
Trisks, like Terrans, had the normal cultural deviation threshold of Concord races. That was what made the Concord so interesting -- the majority if her species had a 1 or even 1.2 on the deviation standard. Scant few -- the hive minds, the nitrogen breathers, the helium swimmers -- had a deviation as low as 0.5. This meant that K'iren could either have a nudity taboo so intense that this kind of voyeurism would get Hornet's eyes poked out, or she might not even know what a nudity taboo
was
. And so, the wise thing would be to hide.
But...
Hornet saw K'iren as she stepped out from the trees and, without her clothing, her body took Hornet's breath away and made her higher brain functions cease working, much in the same way Hugh's early morning, uh, excitement had. She was lithe and deadly and beautiful, with black-black nipples on dark red skin. But what drew Hornet's eyes was the elegant connection between her spine and her tail, smoothly fluting out from her athletic rump. The barbed tail dripped with moisture from the water and the sineous way that it darted from side to side made Hornet's thoughts dribble out of her ear. She kept watching, even as K'iren wicked the water off her body with a fluffy clump of moss that she then tossed away. Stretching and rolling her neck, Hornet could almost forget how much of a sharp tongued witch she was.
K'iren picked up her undergarments and swept them on, covering her breasts. She paused, her panties dangling from her finger, then looked thoughtful. Hornet froze -- and then clapped a hand over her mouth to keep from gasping as the Trisk spoke: "Abernathy, you still there?"
Hornet turned so her back was pressed to the tree, her cheeks burning. "Uh, yeah!" She called out. "Just waiting. You know. So I can wash too."
Silence.
"...Heinlein talked to me and..." she sighed. "Listen, I was kind of a cunt to you, and, I guess...I'm sorry, or whatever."
Hornet peeked around the tree. K'iren was sliding her jacket on, her pants tugged back up around her hips. She stepped around the tree and K'iren flicked her hand to banish the AR warning that popped up before Hornet's eyes -- ending the privacy alert.
"Uh..."
That's your apology?
"Okay, thanks," Hornet said, her voice guarded.
K'iren sighed. "Just..." She shrugged. "Okay. I'm from Crater, do you know Crater?"
Hornet shook her head.
"Crater's a joint world -- three species, Terran, Trisk and Musktar. But the planet's gravity is natural for Muskies, and not so much for Terrans or Trisks, and it makes the competition for slots fierce. You'd think that'd just be the physical stuff. But there's a serious issue on Crater about, like, the deleterious effects of fatigue, extra joint pain, bone density fuckery, and the medtech on Crater isn't the galaxy's best. There's a whole generation of Trisks that basically are second class citizens on the planet, and I was the first one to make it out of the fucking well." She rubbed her shoulder. "Trisks, we don't adapt like Terrans can to gravity."
Hornet, who had met people from high-G worlds, nodded and smiled. "To be fair, they have, like, crazy heart problems. Most high-G native Terrans get replacement hearts that don't explode from strain when they're thirty."
"Holy shit," K'iren looked at her. "Really?"
Hornet nodded.
K'iren sighed. "But it's more than just the Gs. Crater's a meritocracy-adjacent planet...people...don't...
share
information there unless they have to, or they're going to get an advantage from it in the trials and the exams."
Hornet bit her lip. "So, you...what, thought I was trying to do something subtle and sneaky?"