I kicked my legs and struck something that gave. Freed from
the grip pulling me across the ground, I rolled, reaching for the shock wand I
dropped when I’d been grabbed and yanked away from the wall. A heavy weight
pounced on my back, shoving me into the soil. I inadvertently took in a
mouthful, spitting and coughing. “Ugh. Ggg, groff!”
The stuff was like fine, powdered dust when dry and a
sucking mud that clung when wet. I was in a mix of both from the heat of the
fire and the damp of the morning dew. The weight of my suit was a fraction of
what it could be, since it was made one of the latest models made from the
lightest metals, but it was enough to hamper me when the thing attacking me
bounced, pushing me even farther down.
My heart pounded as I struggled to get my hands and knees
under me and push. If I wasn’t mauled and killed, my vulnerable head crushed
like a melon, then the next risk was suffocating. My hands slid, and I fell
flat after only gaining the barest of gaps and room to suck in a tiny breath.
“Oof!” My heart pounded in my head, throbbing like a drum as
my chest began to ache. New strategy. I braced with my left arm and leg and pushed.
The weight on my back suddenly disappeared, but I was
already committed. I rolled and kept rolling over the warm remains of the fire until
I hit the wall. Freed for at least the moment, I slapped the button and triggered
my helmet. Sure, I was still covered in dirt, but I it was better than being
covered with the slavering jaws of—
“Chirp.”
I blinked. Chirp. Chirp? I shook my head, blinking rapidly
to dislodge the dirt tearing up my eyes. “Saint’s balls, you have to be kidding
me.” I dropped my head back against the rock wall.
The adolescent red sprinter had followed me. It was sitting,
ears forward, tail wrapped around its legs, spikes laying flat on its neck as
it stared at me.
Expectantly.
Standoff. Except he kept chirping. What was up with that bird
noise? Bird. Young animal. My brain, which had been running slowly due to the massive
adrenaline spike triggering or flight impulses, came back online.
“You can’t think I’m your mother. I fed you once!” Of course
that reminded me my parents. My father wanted to know why they had to stop
working to feed me—a habit I’d gotten used to since an infant— because if I
could ask for food, why couldn’t I get it myself?
Staff had been hired to teach me after that. Or, as my
father crowed to my mother. “Give a boy food, you have to keep feeding him.
Hire someone to teach him how to feed himself, and you’re off the hook.”
I’d given the beast food, and now he wanted more. Or he’d
pounce.
“Chirp?” This was paired with an ear swivel and slow blink
of those white eyelids over that intent black stare.
Definitely a demand. “I don’t see any grubs here, buddy.”
Nothing moved around us, to be honest. He was a predator;
the teeth and claws paired with the powerful build made that obvious. But his
thick skin, plates, and spines? Those were defensive characteristics, meaning
one of two things. Either there were bigger predators or his kind hunted big
animals that could do some serious damage.
Or both.
Either could be dangerous for me. I regretted not bringing
along more weaponry. The shock wand had already proved useless. Still, I
stretched out a hand slowly, watching him watch me, and curled my fingers
around the shaft. Lifting it out of the dirt, I pulled it closer, trying not to
startle him with any sudden movements. “I’m going to sit up now,” I said.
Using my free hand, I leveraged my body back against the
wall, tucking my feet in so he couldn’t grab an ankle again. My suit was
undamaged, thankfully, at least where I could see. No display readouts showed
integrity or structural problems.
The adolescent sprinter was still spindly, his chest deep
enough with long legs showing he’d probably reached full height unless males
were larger than the females in his species, but he wasn’t filled out. Skinny
due to lack of food or age?
Immediately latching on to me could indicate one or both. I
sighed. What was a guy to do?
My parents had been self-involved. The staff had been paid
to care. I’d taken an interest in biology because I’d been fascinated with
animals and learning about their habitats evolved from that. Everywhere we went,
I ended up adopting something. I usually couldn’t keep them; animals didn’t
belong in the house, my parents insisted.
Still, I befriended animals everywhere wildlife of any sort
thrived. I hadn’t done it on purpose this time, it was more just trying to stay
alive and do a good job to prove myself worthy of my last name.
But I’d done it nonetheless.
I sighed and reached for my pack. I’d have to spend some
time searching out food for him later as well as analyzing what might be edible
and palatable to humans—they were not always one and the same—as we continued
on.
Clearly he was hungry, and I was too. I wasn’t going to eat
and not feed him, if he’d even let me without pouncing again. Odds were, if I
did what I planned to do, he was just going to stick with me. Well, I’d be the
only Ardra expert anyway, so I’d make it part of my research.
How to raise up a red-striped…. “What should I call you?” I
mused as I rifled through my rations.
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