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)

Friday, June 5, 2026

The Tribes: Book 1 - Chapter 3

The Tribes

Book One: The Catastrophe


Chapter 3: The Maiden Crossing

The plaza beneath the Council Canopy buzzed with delight.

Younglings darted between elders’ legs.

Scholars adjusted resonance charts.

Healers packed precautionary satchels, though most believed them unnecessary.

“This is not migration,” Professor Tharnix Quillroot reminded the gathered crowd, his voice amplified gently through the harmonic lattice. “It is observation.”

The vessel, enormous and radiant, pulsed like a patient heart.

“We cross,” he continued, “we observe, we return. You will see what lies beyond the veil. And then we will dine beneath Luminbough as we always have.”

Laughter rippled through the crowd.

“Reserve my branch!” someone called.

“I claim upper canopy seating!” another shouted.

Even Elder Mosswhisk smiled.

It had been generations since such collective excitement stirred the city.

This was not recklessness.

This was joy.

Families boarded together.
Apprentices clutched notebooks.
Engineers ran final calibrations.

The organic hull adjusted subtly as it accepted its passengers, expanding interior chambers like the unfolding of a great seed.

Within, corridors glowed warmly.
Viewing membranes shimmered.
Dimensional gauges aligned.

Elder Bristlethorn stepped beside Tharnix.

“You are certain,” he murmured, not in doubt, but in ritual.

Tharnix’s whiskers twitched with restrained delight.

“As certain as curiosity allows.”

They entered.

The hull sealed.

And beneath the City of Luminbough…

The vessel’s roots disengaged.

It lifted.

Silently.

Gracefully.

The crowd below cheered as it rose through the upper canopy, sunlight catching along its living bark.

Then…

The resonance field activated.

The air thickened.
Light bent.
Space folded inward like fabric drawn through a ring.

For a moment…

There was nothing but brilliance.

Then…

They were elsewhere.

Gasps filled the viewing corridors.

Stars not their own.
Currents of shimmering dimensional mist.
Structures like fractured mirrors stretching into infinity.

Laughter erupted.

“It works!”

Tharnix adjusted a crystalline node, stabilizing the corridor.

“Observe the flux patterns,” he instructed eagerly.

Children pressed against translucent membranes.

Healers relaxed.

Engineers nodded approvingly.

It was perfect.

For three minutes.


(To be continued in Chapter 4: The Moment Before)