Chapter 29: Veil of Serenity Beneath Savage Skies
Kimchi and I lay entangled on the soft, sun-warmed embankment beside the crystalline pool, a serene oasis carved out from the savage jungle's relentless hunger. Her delicate hand traced slow, reverent patterns up and down my torso—like the gentle hum of an ancient lullaby whispered against my skin—while the other cradled her head, propping it up as she watched me with eyes shimmering like molten gold.
"Kimchi," I murmured, voice thick with awe, "you never imagined such pleasures could ripple through your flesh, did you? To know the warmth and sweetness of delight, unanchored from the binding rituals of our mating rites... It's different. Surreal." Her breathing quickened, each sigh a soft hymn of unspoken yearning.
She blinked slowly, lips parted just enough to confess the exquisite confusion in her gaze. "I always understood that females of the Irvine lineage were bound to feel something—pleasure, yes, during the sacred union ordained by our queen. But this... this isn't mating. What sparked you to gift me such an intimate pleasure? Such reckless tenderness?"
Kimchi, my beloved, was a paradox woven from starlight and instinct—soft as honey but etched with the steel resolve to obey the queen's command. Yet, beneath the surface, her craving pressed hard against the invisible bars of duty; to follow the queen's will—to mate first—was encoded into the very core of her being.
I turned my gaze fully to her, letting the depths of my love flood my eyes like the tide's inexorable pull. "What made me want to give you pleasure?" I paused, then swept my hand toward the world surrounding us—a lush tapestry of vibrant greens and sparkling blues, alive and breathing in every quivering leaf and sun-dappled ripple. "It's this. All of this beauty enveloping us. And yet, you—only you—captured my gaze. It's a fierce kind of gratitude, Kimchi. You made me realize how much I treasure you, more than I ever dared believe possible. So I showed you my affection in the only way I could think you might want... or need."
Leaning forward, I bridged the space between us with a kiss—deep, fervent, a communion of souls and flesh. Kimchi responded immediately, the world melting into that moment of shared breath and desire. When we parted, she tilted her head with a slow, sly smile and asked, voice low and dripping with seductive promise, "Is there anything Kimchi can do to show her affection in return?"
Her hand slid down my torso, fingers dancing dangerously close before boldly wrapping around my member. "Well, of course, if you are so inc—"
Before I could finish, a sudden rustling burst from the dense foliage nearby. Instinct snapped us both upright. Hands darted for weapons—mine sliding onto the grip of my sidearm, hers a shimmering armor melding over taut skin like liquid obsidian.
Out from the thicket staggered a ragged band of Ker'mins—fifteen in total—worn thin by hunger and fear. Their sunken eyes, wild and flickering, widened upon spotting us, panic blooming like wildfire beneath their cracked skin.
Kimchi's body tensed with primal hunger, a predator scent rising from her pores, ready to pounce on fresh meat. But I squeezed her rear with a quiet, steadying hand, sending a silent message: don't.
Sensing we were not foes, the group's apparent leader—a female with wary eyes but a resolute stance—stepped forward. "Do you speak our tongue, outworlders?" she asked, voice rough but clear.
I nodded. She seemed to grasp the gesture and continued, urgency dripping from her words like venom. "Good. Then you must come with us. The cursed swarm has invaded. They will reach here soon enough."
Her eyes flicked nervously behind us. "We're heading deep into the jungle, hoping the reinforcements from neighboring planets arrive in time to save us."
Kimchi's microexpressions betrayed a murderous urge—to gut every one of these poor souls here and now. But my calming relay pulsed through her mind, soothing the storm.
"I appreciate your offer of asylum," I said, stepping closer to Kimchi and grasping her shoulder with intimate certainty, "but we are warriors. My mate and I cannot flee a battle we know is coming. It's heresy in our faith to abandon the fight."
I gestured back toward the jungle's edge. "You good folk—run now. We'll hold the rear as best we can. Good luck."
Confusion rippled through the Ker'mins. The outlanders, with their foreign customs and warrior creed, were a mystery to this world's locals.
The female leader blushed faintly before adding, "One last thing... Though monstrously impressive, it is uncustomary to parade your reproductive appendage openly. Would you consider... covering up?"
I chuckled, the tension breaking like a wave. "Sure. We were just partaking in a ceremonial dip. Clothes are over there." I gestured to a small pile of garments beside the pool. "Now, enough dawdling. You'd best be on your way."
As the Ker'mins shuffled off, some of the females stealing shy glances before disappearing into the jungle's embrace, Kimchi turned to me, brows knitted in bafflement.
"Why did you let them go, love?"
I expected the question. "They were civilians, Kimchi. That might mean little to you and the hive—hell, I don't expect you to change your ways for me. But they posed no threat. They were innocent. Taking a soldier's life is duty. Taking civilians' lives? That's something else. Something I can't abide."
Kimchi stared as if I were reciting the language of ghosts. To her, prey was prey. It didn't matter if they fought or begged for mercy—they would be devoured regardless. But years beside me had taught her that I was a complicated alien with strange morals. If I was picky about my hunts, she would love me fiercely all the same. That was enough.
The romantic glow of our hidden pool shattered, so I slipped beneath the water, letting its cool embrace wash away the battles' grime and gravity. Kimchi indulged her favorite pastime—watching me—perched with hands on knees, eyes soft with affection as I splashed and goofed for nearly ten minutes. Each stroke peeled away the weight of war pressing down on me.
Our fragile peace didn't last.
From the same bushes where the Ker'mins had emerged, a lone drone skittered out—small, no bigger than half a meter, a scorpion-like scout with a segmented cephalothorax and bulbous abdomen, but lacking pincers or tail. Its sole purpose was reconnaissance: to sniff out prey or danger, to unleash pheromones that would mobilize the hive's ravenous fury.
Its primitive mind surged with joy upon sighting me, ready to signal the swarm. But a sudden command from a superior caste halted it cold.
"COME HERE."
Without hesitation, the scout skittered to Kimchi, who plucked it delicately onto her lap. In the presence of a higher caste, the scout's mind blanked out, entering standby mode.
I didn't know how long I had been swimming—it felt like hours—yet fatigue was only now whispering at my muscles. The sun had long passed zenith, casting a golden haze over the jungle. Days on this planet stretched twenty-seven hours, slow and unyielding.
Feeling guilty for ignoring Kimchi so long, I waded to her side. The scout rested quietly in her lap.
"How long has it been here?" I asked.
"About ninety minutes, my love," she replied softly.
I sighed and took the scout from her, setting it back down to resume its duties. "Come. Let's leave before the hive arrives. I can't bear to see this place destroyed. It's become too special."
This place wasn't just coordinates on a map—it was memory made flesh. A sanctuary of our shared firsts, of pleasure, of laughter, and of understanding. I wanted to remember it in this fleeting perfection, not as the battlefield it was destined to become.
Kimchi didn't fully grasp my sentiment, but she understood that this place held meaning for me. And that was enough. It was where I first showed her that reckless tenderness. It was where she watched me laugh and splash like a foolish child, her heart blooming with love. It was where she learned to respect the strange and merciful way I approached prey.
After drying, I dressed and reattached my power armor's arm plating. Kimchi whispered a command to the scout, sending it back to duty. The drone released a thick cloud of orange pheromones, sharp and sweet—like pears bursting in the sun.
It wouldn't be long before more bioforms came pouring through this patch of jungle. The scout, forever imprinted with the vision of me swimming, carried a spark of warmth even as it tracked prey for the relentless swarm.
The memory of that peaceful moment, that absurdly tender scene of me foolishly splashing in the water, would fuel its hunger and its chase—like a quiet anthem in the chaos of war.
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