Cullet
Hive Bitch
December 8, 2018
::: subchapter
Up above, past the lake's shroud, there were birds, clouds and stars. I
looked at the gray blackness above, hunting for something outside the
mind-numbing tedium of the lake. My last canteen had drained to a
half. We hadn't encountered any rockwraiths.
At one point I'd scribbled flat, imagined monsters in the dust while
Hinte wrenched at an uncooperative cryst. My scribbled rockwraith had
snarled with massive claws dripping gore, mouth agape with angled
sword-teeth and streams of caustic venom flying forth. I'd smiled but
not laughed, and that kept my throat satisfied.
By now I wouldn't complain to see a real rockwraith. As long as it
prowled far in the distance, downwind of us, and with no chance under
the sky of eating me. But no. Instead I sifted, seeing the same three
things over and over again. The ash clouds were still cloudy. The
glass crags were still craggy. And Hinte was still Hinte.
We'd found another stone. Well, I did, not Hinte --- even if she
wouldn't accept that. We had argued up and down about it awhile before
I tried making my argument with a thrown rock. She retorted with a
bigger rock and we did that again before she uncovered another cryst
that way.
I dug up a messy red gemstone, too! Hinte hadn't taken it, so I kept
it. It looked a wrinkly raisin, red-streaked and translucent. So maybe
not the kind of raisin you'd want to eat. We saw another glasscrab
too! But it ran off when we approached and I couldn't catch it with my
tired, hurt legs and by the time Hinte looked over at me it had fled.
That'd deflated me, and it lasted until I found another stone, one
which was my find, with no quibbling from Hinte. I'd preened and wagged
my frills at the dark-green wiver. That lasted until she decided we
should check again for another.
My stomach growled, my forefeet looked --- and felt --- like a
tornado passed through, and my legs were sagging.
Hinte was peering at me, and I put my wings under my snout and shrunk my
frills in my closest to a pleading hatchling.
She didn't even twitch a frill. "Well?" The dark-green wiver frowned
beneath amber goggles, head snaking forward and tilted.
I sighed and said, "No, I don't think --- there are no more stones
down there. I don't see the point." My voice tended hoarse and small.
My throat was about to melt, at this point. Even my saliva tasted
coppery.
Hinte bared her fangs, unfolded her wings and spread them, and she
already was bigger. When she growled I slumped. I wouldn't have
another fight with her so soon. I twisted my head toward the hole.
Waves of heat swelled out and crashed into my face, my scales rawer and
tenderer. I stared at the molten maw, my eyes seeking out currents,
flows or anything that might move other crysts, if any others existed.
The cracks clawing out from the hole had the lake skin crumbling or
trembling. Under my claws the ground wobbled. I shifted my footing,
and winced when weight fell on my gashed foreleg.
Crouching down, I doomed my sore but gashless foreleg to that hungry
maw. The lake had eaten, devoured, my lunch, and that hadn't sated it.
Hinte stepped me, frills swiveling as she plopped down a few strides
away, punching her own hole in the dustone with a single hit.
A few moments, and my claw grazed something hard dragging along in the
currents. Toes traced it in the sand. It felt about the size and shape
of a ring, but larger by a notch. Not holding out for anything of note,
I pulled the hard loop out and shook away glass. I poked and ripped at
the glass on the loop.
I peered at the melty thing. Glass sloughed off the hot gray metal, and
revealed was an iron loop twisting deeply around itself, lousy with
pointy barbs and a rough all around. I gave a secret smile and rolled
the loop into my sole, and held that foreleg out to Hinte. A moment
passed before she glanced over. The wiver flicked her tongue and looked
up at me, head atilt.
I let my expression turn solemn. "It reminded me of you," I said.
Wrenching a foot out she took the loop of metal, and regarded it for all
of breath, and then glared at me, bared her fangs. From them the wiver
spat at my my sole, venom projecting out in twin streams. They splashed
on my foot, leaving a faint salty smell.
"Eww!" I squeaked, driving my foot into the molten sand, waving it
wildly around. More glass creapt into splits and lines of my foot, but
I forget that for the act.
And it worked! A small smile had lighted on Hinte's face, until she hid
it. She brushed it off with a glance away, to the lake. I glanced
around with her. As I shifted, the move tore a crack. The plate
beneath me sunk. Glass flowed onto it.
In heartbeats, the glass had crept to me. Because it had cooled even as
it flowed, it crawled like so many toes. Still, some of it got onto the
bright white fabric at my hindlegs or belly. With the sand cool enough
to spare the stuff, it threatened less than it just annoyed. Still, I
squirmed and talked reason to my companion:
"Hinte," I said, and waved a wing at her, "I told you there's nothing
else down there." My hoarse voice was faltering.
She said nothing, still peering at the lake surface. I glared at her.
Why did she have to be so difficult? She looked over the ground again.
Her focus settled on a spot a few strides away. She lay down there, and
again had her foreleg in the lake with a single punch.
Several beats of sweeping her leg through the glass, then she pulled out
a stone flickering green and blue. I made myself cringe and glance at
her as she stood, but it held no hint of smugness.
She cracked the stone, and this time she let the scuttling fragments
fall to the dustone. They skittered about there for a bit, and not long
afterward faltered motionless. Hinte walked forward without me, not
quite waiting for me, but not striding off.
It took moments to stand up. The gashed foreleg was folded under the
weight, and even the other foreleg was bruised, and only good in
contrast. Wounds ached. Like that, I took care trotting after her. I
was a few steps away, and she turned to me. The wiver looked to my
foreleg.
"It still hurts?" she asked.
I tried to say 'it does,' but it came out an alien croak. I lowered my
head instead. She said nothing else, turning around, walking on.
My canteen dwindled to a third as we roamed straightly the surface of
the lake. The glowing cracks in the dustone shrunk or fell away. Were
we walking toward a shore of the lake? I let my hopes well up. Would I
finally get a break?
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the distance, the gray-black vog gave way to a grayer, blacker wall
of crumbling dustone. Sprawling cliffs sheltered, the Berwem, on three
sides. On the last side, there was also a cliff --- that one opened
to a ravine. As far as I knew, through that ravine wound the usual
route into the Berwem.
We'd taken a different route: a long, winding detour through the
farmlands and emptiness on the outskirts of town, doubling back through
caves and trenches in the cliffs, climaxing in a glide down from the top
of the cliffs right into the lake!
The vog thinned here on the shore, and I had a better view of only the
gnarled crags and crevices. Covering all the ground and piling like
waves, the gravel here looked the lake's exiles, half tough clinker
rocks and half wild-looking lapilli fragments. In the troughs of those
waves, you sometimes saw glimpses of the fire clay insulating the lake
bottom and encircling cliffs; or sometimes you only saw gyras of built
up volcanic hair, glassy and brittle. Things calmed and flattened the
farther you got away from the lake, and by the cliffs walls it was
proper ground again.
If that sounds all very lake shore, like no particular places as much
as a kind of place, well, you'd be right. You couldn't even tell which
edge of the lake this was.
Hinte walked up to the wall, slowing to a stop at the base. She lay and
without looking to me unstrapped her bag. Setting it in front of her,
she withdrew her canteen --- a blue and pink bit of leather bright
even in the dark --- and a roast the size of my foreleg, wrapped in
greasy leaf-paper. Unwrapped with haste, it was six-legged squirrel
with each limb splayed.
They were everywhere down here, but I hadn't heard of them back home, in
the sky. There, the closest we'd dealt with were winged rats, pests
that climbed the skywires to glide from there down to every corner of
the cities. We raised nets everywhere to keep them out. Sometimes it
worked.
Hinte finished unwrapping and ripped into the squirrel roast. I turned
away.
The ground here grew more solid than the mix of dustone and glass
covering the lake itself. I crouched to lay down, and as I lowered
myself, a wave weary lightheaded throbbed. Lying down fully, I settled
a strides away from the eating wiver, and snaked a tail into my bag for
my trout lunch.
My tail curled around air, even after I'd remembered.
Hunger roiled in my belly, and it had been long rings of exertion
already. I couldn't ignore it. I looked around, my gaze still avoiding
Hinte, and I glared at the voggy lake.
Could I eat a raw glasscrab? Maybe not the highest idea. Even besides
all the glass and weird soot on it. No scuttling fragments would remain
on the any of the stones, either. I scratched my belly, and just
scowled down at the ground.
Dust crunched. A wing prodded my side, and I looked up. The dark-green
wiver stood above me, holding her squirrel between her alula and
pinion. Taking the squirrel in both forefeet, she ripped. It was two
halfs. One leg was already eaten, and she offered the half with three
legs.
"Thank you," I whispered
She didn't say anything, just stepped away, returned to her spot. I
looked at the squirrel. It was no trout, but I had gotten hungry. I
bit into it and ripped out a chunk of meat.
The taste was lighter than I'd like, but I savored it, and took care to
grind the smaller bones with my teeth and suck th
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