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)

Friday, June 12, 2026

The Tribes: Book 1 - Chapter 4

The Tribes

Book One: The Catastrophe


Chapter 4: The Moment Before

The fluctuation began as a tremor too small to concern anyone.

A single resonance thread flickered along the lower stabilizing lattice.

Engineer Bramble Sootfur tilted his head.

“Minor drift,” he said lightly. “Correcting.”

Professor Tharnix adjusted the primary harmonic spindle.

“Expected variance,” he replied calmly. “The corridor density is thinner than projections.”

Passengers continued to murmur in awe at the strange dimension unfolding beyond the viewing membranes.

A spiral of light bent around them like a luminous river.

Children pressed closer.

Somewhere near the rear chamber, someone laughed.

The second fluctuation struck harder.

The deck shifted, not violently, but perceptibly.

A healer steadied herself.

Tharnix’s paw moved more quickly across the interface now.

“Compensating.”

The vessel pulsed.

The corridor shimmered.

Then a third spike hit.

Sharper.

Irregular.

Not patterned.

Not natural.

Tharnix frowned.

“That is… curious.”

Bramble Sootfur’s whiskers bristled.

“That sequence does not match drift behavior.”

“Recalibrate threshold tolerance,” Tharnix instructed.

“I am.”

The vessel’s interior lights dimmed briefly, then brightened.

Passengers exchanged glances.

The laughter quieted.

Elder Bristlethorn approached the control arch.

“Is this expected?”

“It is manageable,” Tharnix said.

He believed it.

For another twelve seconds.

Then the stabilizer readings cascaded in a pattern that was mathematically wrong.

Not chaotic.

Wrong.

Deliberately offset.

As though a tolerance limit had been nudged… not beyond safety, but toward cumulative strain.

Tharnix froze.

His eyes flicked to the calibration history.

A parameter blinked.

Subtle.
Small.
Adjusted.

Not by him.

Not by drift.

His breath caught.

Someone had…

Another surge hit.

The vessel groaned.

Passengers stumbled.

“Begin evacuation protocol!” Bristlethorn barked.

Corridors unfolded automatically, guiding passengers toward emergency dispersal pods.

The viewing membranes fractured into opaque shielding.

The hum became a roar.

Tharnix’s paws moved rapidly across the interface, attempting override.

The sequence would not reset.

The stabilizer’s fail-safes had been gently narrowed.

Too gently to detect.

Too precisely to be error.

His mind raced.

Who would…

Another impact slammed through the hull.

“Professor!” Bramble shouted. “We must leave!”

Tharnix did not move.

He watched the energy cascade, elegant, terrible.

It was not accident.

It was design.

He could see it now.

The parameters had been altered long before launch.

The mass threshold had been miscalibrated.

The celebratory crowd had sealed the overload.

Someone had known.

Someone had intended…

The evacuation corridor flickered.

“Tharnix!” Bristlethorn called again.

The Professor looked up.

For a moment, his expression was not fear.

It was understanding.

“Go,” he said quietly.

The final surge tore through the vessel.

Space folded violently inward.

The organic hull screamed, a sound like a forest breaking.

And then…

Light.

Silence.


(To be continued in Chapter 5: The Scattering)