Friday, June 26, 2026

The Tribes: Book 1 - Chapter 6

The Tribes

Book One: The Catastrophe


Chapter 6: The Giants

The second morning in the unfamiliar forest brought hunger.

Not ceremonial hunger.
Not scheduled nourishment.

Real hunger.

Acorns were discovered.
Edible bark identified.
Small insects tested cautiously.

The food was primitive.

But survivable.

By midday, a cluster of survivors led by Elder Bristlethorn had gathered near a shallow stream.

Healer Nutmeg Flicktail tended twisted limbs.

Younglings clung silently to elders.

The air was heavy with absence.

Then…

The ground shook.

Not violently.

Rhythmically.

Thump.
Thump.
Thump.

All heads turned.

Through the trees emerged something vast.

Tall.
Upright.
Hairless except at the top.
Wrapped in strange fabric.

It carried a long stick.

The creature paused at the stream and bent down, splashing water onto its face.

Several squirrels gasped.

“It stands on two legs,” whispered Mosswhisk.

“It has no tail,” murmured Skatterlily faintly.

The creature made a noise, a low, humming sound, entirely unaware that dozens of hyper-intelligent, dimensionally stranded beings were staring at it in stunned silence.

The human scratched its head.

Looked around.

Then sneezed.

Several squirrels flinched.

Bristlethorn narrowed his eyes.

“Observe,” he said quietly.

The human squinted toward a nearby branch where three survivors clung frozen in place.

Its gaze passed directly over them.

Unfocused.

Unseeing.

Then it turned away.

A pause.

“He does not perceive us fully,” Mosswhisk whispered.

Bristlethorn felt it then, faint but intact, the psychic resonance all their kind possessed.

Their species had always been able to bend perception slightly. It was subtle in their home dimension, a diplomatic courtesy among sentient species.

Here…

It could be survival.

Another human voice called from deeper in the forest.

The first responded and moved away.

The shaking of the ground faded.

Silence returned.

Bristlethorn exhaled slowly.

“They possess intelligence,” he said at last.

“But small.”

“Unfocused,” added Nutmeg Flicktail.

“And enormous,” Skatterlily said faintly.

“Yes,” Bristlethorn agreed.

He looked at the gathered survivors.

“If we are to endure here… they must never truly see us.”

The others understood at once.

A collective stillness settled over them.

Not ritual.

Instinct.

Bristlethorn closed his eyes.

He reached inward, toward that part of himself attuned to mental resonance.

The others followed.

A quiet wave moved outward.

Not domination.
Not control.

Just suggestion.

A gentle shaping of expectation.

Humans would see squirrels.
Simple creatures.
Native.
Unremarkable.

Nothing more.

The psychic imprint settled into the forest like pollen on wind.

When the next human passed by an hour later, he glanced at a nearby branch and smiled faintly.

“Squirrels,” he muttered.

Then he walked on.

The Firstbranch Tribe had made its first true decision in exile.

They would endure.

They would adapt.

And they would wait.


(To be continued in Chapter 7: The Firstbranch)

Friday, June 19, 2026

The Tribes: Book 1 - Chapter 5

The Tribes

Book One: The Catastrophe


Chapter 5: The Scattering

The explosion did not sound like thunder.

It sounded like something deeper.

Like roots tearing from the soil of reality itself.

The vessel did not simply burst.

It unraveled.

Fragments of living bark and shattered resonance membranes tore through a collapsing dimensional corridor.

Passengers were thrown into dispersal pods mid-evacuation, but the pods themselves lost cohesion as the corridor collapsed.

Light fractured.

Gravity inverted.

Then…

Branches.

Cold air.

The smell of unfamiliar earth.

Squirrels fell.

Not in formation.

Not in dignity.

But in chaos.

Some crashed through leaves.
Some struck trunks.
Some tumbled through undergrowth.

A young apprentice collided with a mossy log and lay stunned.

A healer landed in a thorn bush, bleeding but conscious.

Elder Mosswhisk struck a branch, twisted, and fell into a pile of dead leaves.

Across miles of forest, survivors gasped and scrambled.

The sky above them was blue.

Blue.

No luminous canopy.
No drifting platforms.
No resonance hum.

Just wind.

And the distant cry of a bird none of them recognized.

Elder Bristlethorn pulled himself upright on an unfamiliar tree trunk.

The bark was rough.

Unpolished.

Unresponsive.

He pressed his paw to it.

Nothing answered.

“Gather!” he called instinctively.

But his voice carried only so far.

There was no amplification lattice.
No harmonic network.

Just air.

In the distance, smoke rose briefly, organic fragments from the vessel combusting as their dimensional structure failed.

Then even that faded.

The living ship did not remain as wreckage.

Its structure, dependent on corridor energy, withered and dissolved into inert matter, bark, sap, ash.

Unrecognizable.

As if it had never existed.

Hours passed.

Injured squirrels limped toward sound.

Toward movement.

Toward instinct.

By nightfall, small clusters had formed across the forest.

Confused.
Grieving.
Counting the missing.

Professor Tharnix Quillroot did not answer any call.

The first night was silent except for wind and the occasional unfamiliar animal cry.

They had expected to return home for supper.

Instead, they huddled in branches that did not know them.

And for the first time in generations…

The squirrels of Luminbough were afraid.


(To be continued in Chapter 6: The Giants)