Vaid Empire: Mother of Tentacles
is a prequel to
Vaid Empire: Conquest
, though acts as a complete stand-alone. No prior knowledge regarding the previous series is required.
Long before the rise of The Vaid Empire, far on the other side of Ayphieal, a young woman finds a deeper purpose beyond her own survival when she is captured and offered to an ancient monstrosity.
Ancient entities conspire to achieve hidden schemes while tentacles spread across the land in this strange and mysterious prequel.
New chapters and artwork are released every month for free, with the completely optional possibility to receive early access on the official Vaid Empire Website. The Series focuses heavily on worldbuilding, story, and characters.
***
9th of Iahta, 768 BVE.
Deep Jungle.
"Are you certain we're safe in here?"
Aifa took a handful of mud, packing the makeshift walls of gathered branches around them with wet clumps. Smoothing the rough surface, she turned around to regard the voice behind her. "Of course not. Have you no sense? Anything could stumble upon us. Quiet and help me."
Beside her, the girl's eyes narrowed in anger. Grabbing a handful, she smeared the mud loosely upon the wall.
"Not like that," Aifa smacked her hand away. Inside the crude shelter, kneeling in the shallow pit they had quickly scraped out to form their floor, they hardly had enough room to lie down shoulder to shoulder. The branches of their domed ceiling were inches from their heads, requiring them both to hunch. "Pack it tightly, else our scent shall escape. Have you never made a shelter?" She watched the girl reluctantly shake her head. Aifa scowled. "The safety of that cave has defeated you."
Scooping another handful, the girl tried once more. Her hand began to tremble before tears trickled down her face. A tiny whimper reclaimed Aifa's attention.
"What is this?" Aifa glared in disgust at her weakness. When the girl turned, the sight of her weeping eyes softened her expression. She sighed. "Your name, girl. What is it?"
Wiping her tears with her wrist, the girl quieted herself. "Darmi."
Easing her tone, Aifa met her gaze. "I'll offer no comfort, Darmi. We may be dead by morning." Taking her hand firmly, she filled it with more mud before guiding her. "Like this. Larger creatures may stumble upon us by accident, though your monstrous tribe won't find us here," she said despite her doubt. Hadn't she believed herself concealed before her capture by Aslyd warriors? Still she replayed the memory, unable to explain how they'd found them.
Following her instructions, Darmi smoothed the wall. "They aren't my tribe. Not anymore," she said softly. "You saw what they did to me."
Feeling Vaecath's slimy body resting against her leg, Aifa brushed aside a tentacle that prodded at her thigh. Mere hours after their escape, his potent warmth remained inside her, loins aching for more. "I never saw you fight."
Cheeks darkening, the younger woman turned away. "I...couldn't. They would've cut my throat."
"They didn't cut mine." Aifa's lips thinned at the memory. "I sought to spill their blood. You moaned."
Darmi glared. "As did you." She let her anger simmer before cooling. "I would've. I...don't know. After the abomination touched my mind, something...
changed
."
Aifa turned sharply. "
Careful
. The abomination you speak of was my
son
."
Retreating from her anger, Darmi pulled her knees to her chest meekly. "That's why you...saved me? Saved my child?"
"I saved you solely to hunt while my unavoidable pregnancy advances. Pray it's a child of Onaalag's line." Aifa resumed her work, ensuring no holes remained to leak their presence. Eyes glowing in the darkness of their tiny mud tomb, she checked and double checked every inch before allowing herself to rest.
"Onaalag?" the girl asked softly, receiving no answer.
Claiming the first moment of calm since her ordeal, Aifa eased onto her back, curling into a ball. She allowed the weight of all that occurred to sink down upon her for only a moment. When her throat tightened, she forced it away with anger. "
Savages...utter savages."
They had killed her child. They had taken her as little more than breeding stock. Clenching her thighs together, she scowled, feeling utterly violated, calming a trembling twitch of her hand.
The permanent tingle of arousal forced her to glare with disgust at herself. It was a protection of sorts, holding back emotions that would surely destroy her. There was no time to cry, to grieve. All she could do was hold her face, inhaling a sharp breath.
"What now?" Darmi asked as she rested on her side.
The question was a simple one. Aifa had asked it all her life. Each time she dared to open herself to a tribe of her own, they fell to predators, were scattered from infighting, or slaughtered by outsiders. Her master had fallen, her child butchered and burned. The world itself undid whatever purpose she sought to grasp with every horrifying act of bloodshed and betrayal it could coax. Was mere survival a reason to continue? "Sleep."
"
Seek Synaalag."
They both stirred at the voice, though Darmi answered first. "How...does it do that?" She eyed Vaecath as the creature slid onto Aifa. The slightly taller woman moved her legs, allowing him to rest on her stomach while his black tentacles wrapped around her waist, as if clinging to the mother of his offspring. Fertilization had surely occurred by now, Cavari or beast. Receiving no answer, the girl watched Aifa embrace the creature tightly. "What is Synaalag?"
Shaking her head, Aifa caressed a tentacle, feeling others squeeze her lovingly. She sighed. "I thought he was an ideal, though I no longer know. I've been left to claw at the darkness alone." She remembered visions of tentacles stretching across the land, feeling her lips tighten. "My children were destined to consume the world. Now we cower in a hole on the verge of death."
Darmi touched her head, wincing. As visions of an endless sea of tentacles reaching into the sky played within her mind, she calmed herself, lips parting. She looked at Vaecath, her advanced eyes seeing his outline in the dark. "What...is this?" Whispers tickled her mind, seeing a blinding flash of light. Fear eased into curiosity, feeling her fury oozing forth. "The world...consumed. My tribe...my father, they'd be...
punished
for what they did to me. To us!"
Aifa watched her youthful rage, seeing tears return to the angry girl's glowing eyes. Her own could drown them, thus she held it back with a grimace. "So they would. What of it? Their deeds cannot be undone." She stared at the mud ceiling, feeling a tentacle caress her cheek. Were it possible, she'd go back and slay them herself. Instead, she squeezed Vaecath tighter, as if he'd be torn away.
The vision had been beautiful when in Onaalag's grasp. Now it called to Aifa as a necessity. The world ripped away whatever she dared to love. Predators sought to consume her. Cavaries sought to use her. Once more a thought of endless tentacles tickled her mind, a promise of safety, of survival.
"They can't go unpunished." Determination filled Darmi's gaze. "Did you see that? Did you see the end of all things?
That
would be fitting, as they sit in their cave, believing they're safe."
Aifa eyed Vaecath, her lips tightening. Punishment or safety? The vision remained, a temptation. "So be it. Seek your punishment. I'll seek our safety."
Granting her a questioning look, the girl listened.
"Endless dangers threaten my future children. If I could only...
push
them all away..." Tentacles tore across the land until nothing but writhing masses remained in her vision. A possible future, a horror for all, yet a feeling of peace touched her. There'd be none left to take what she loved. The alternative was an endless struggle, endless running. "I see only a single path forward, for I can't ensure our survival alone."
"Another tribe, then?" The girl's face soured.
"
No
." The word came harsher than she intended, shaking her head. "Your species has granted me pain and disappointment, nothing more. I won't seek another tribe to lose, nor risk my capture."
Darmi raised a confused brow. "My species? Haven't you noticed you're a-"
A glare stopped her. Aifa sighed, calming herself. "What good has being a Cavari granted me?" A wetness touched her eyes, quickly blinked away. "No.