Arach C.M. Simpson (polar express read aloud .txt) š
- Author: C.M. Simpson
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Mack was shouting in my head, and Askavor was sidling away from me.
Silly spider. As if I didnāt know the difference between arach and weaver! I stepped up onto the cephalothorax of my latest kill, and looked for more. Couldnāt see any. Sure, there were bodies, just nothing alive and kicking. I turned a slow circle, reveling in the slightly orange light playing across the walls, and then flinching from the sunlight glaring through a rent in the dwellingās ceiling.
Man! Someone was gonna have to pay for that. And rebuilding was going to be a bitch, what withā
āCutter!ā
I turned toward Mack, noting the line of wasps standing quietly in the sunlight, their carapaces gleaming.
āCutter!ā
āWhat, Mack?ā
āYou need to stand down.ā
I had to what? But what if there were more?
āStand down, Cutter.ā Mackās voice shifted from demanding to almost calming. āStand down.ā
I took one more look around the damaged room, and saw that he was right.
āFair call, Mack,ā I said, and he frowned.
I ignored that, too. I figured he couldnāt be that mad at me, given Iād helped him get rid of the arach. I wiped my blades on the silken floor, and sheathed themāand then I went looking for my gun. Itād be nice to reload that.
I stopped, and blinked. Why had I thrown it away, again? I turned as Mack came up alongside me. He had his hands tucked into his belt. Man was not a threat.
āYou okay, Cutter?ā
Weird ass question.
āYeah. Need to get my gun.ā
āHow about we get TāKit and her friends to fly us out of here?ā
āI need my gun, first.ā
He sighed.
āFine. Whereād you leave it?ā
I scanned the site of my secondā¦ thirdā¦ Fuck. How many of these things had I taken on? I felt TāKitās mind whisper across my own, and then the weight of Mackās arm across my shoulders.
āWhy donāt we let one of the vespis get your gun?ā
āBut itās my responsibility.ā
āYeah, and you are mine, and you need to not be here, right now.ā
āOh.ā
He was right. As I scanned the carnage around me, I felt a little light-headed.
āBut Steppy will be upset with me.ā
Mackās arm tightened.
āNot this time, he wonāt. Come on,ā and he drew me back towards the vespis.
We passed across in front of Askavor, and the spider flinched away from me. I didnāt want to think of what Iād done to cause him to do that. I had a fair idea, but I didnāt want to think about that, either. If I wasnāt careful, Iād join the list of things that populated my nightmares, and I didnāt want to be afraid of myself that badly.
āYouāll get over it,ā Mack said. āWe all do.ā
We did, hey? And just how the fuck did he know that?
He squeezed my shoulders again.
āNever you mind, Cutter.ā
He brought us to a stop in front of TāKit.
āWelcome back, little warrior.ā
From the tone of her voice, she was smiling. And who was she calling ālittleā anyway? I looked up at her, and stopped. Yeah. That would be why. Shutup.
āTurn around,ā she said. āI will carry you to the ground.ā
For a moment, I thought Iād be better off climbing down the webbing that Askavor had made his way up on, but TāKit intervened.
āThis structure is unstable,ā she said, āand the lines connecting it to the buildings below were severed to prevent the arach escaping.ā
I turned around, and Mack lifted his arm from my shoulders and went to stand in front of the vespis beside TāKit. It was a short trip to the ground. Unfortunately, it was a short trip that ended where weād startedāin the middle of the stacked limbs of Askavorās people.
TāKit put me down and I heard Mackās feet hit the ground not far away.
āCutterā¦ā he said, and I could feel the reproach he was directing at the vespis, could hear him asking them if they couldnāt have thought of a better place to set me down.
They were apologizing, even as I walked over to the nearest pile, and reached out to touch the closest long, smooth-shelled leg. Sadness welled up in me, but I knew it was not mine.
āMy sister,ā Askavor said, and I had not been aware there was more than one female in a nest.
āNot all are queens,ā Askavor explained.
They werenāt?
Askavor descended on a line of thread heād spun himself, and clung to the wall beside the pile.
āNo,ā he said, and his sadness washed over me. āThe non-breeding females are needed for many things. My sisterā¦ā
And he stroked the leg under my hand.
āMy sister was strong enough to direct the males in their work. A hand-maiden, if you would.ā
Spider royalty, huh?
āShe fought for her men,ā Askavor said, turning the limb under my palm so we could see cracks forming a web of destruction over the limbā¦and the gashes that showed the corded muscle beneath it.
I reached out and traced the surface, not really seeing the injury, but feeling the destruction transmitted through my fingertips. My mind struggled to understand just how the she-spider had kept going after this.
āThe Star-Eaters did not want to kill them. They needed them for their swarm,ā Askavorās revulsion was palpable through his grief and anger. āSome for their queen, and the rest to feed their warriors. They took the whole settlement.ā
His mind voice lost some of its calm, cracking inside my head.
āMy people fought them, until they could fight no more.ā He turned the leg so that its injuries were once again hidden, but he did not leave the pile.
He took the limb, and laid it to one side before lifting another. This one, required pedipalps, and two sets of limbs to hold together, but he did not place it beside the first.
āHer consort,ā he said, and agony
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