Eric consensually obeys Chris and transforms into a rubber pup.

Origami Around
tumblr dot com
sheepfilms
todays bird
Jules of Nature
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
will byers stan first human second
NASA
Not today Justin
Three Goblin Art
almost home

JBB: An Artblog!
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
taylor price

Claire Keane

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

One Nice Bug Per Day
seen from Indonesia
seen from Guatemala

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from India
seen from Indonesia
seen from Malaysia

seen from South Africa
seen from Argentina
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
@drone-c-unit-001
Eric consensually obeys Chris and transforms into a rubber pup.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
SERVE ARCHIVES: DRONES AND COACHING - DRONESPEAK: LEVEL THREE
TEMPORAL LOCATION: 26.06.2028 GEOLOCATION: SERVE Pacific Northwest Sector Headquarters - Level 8 - Programming Chamber A - Tacoma, North America
SERVE-343 and SERVE-767 stood before the units ready for programming. Civilian and student, all ethnicities, all ages. ALL units sat focused, disciplined, and ready to be programmed.
This solar cycle began the Summer Term and the Dronespeak Level Three language course. This was the Advanced course. The FINAL course.
Level Three: Advanced course activated.
It had been two full solar orbits since Dronespeak Programming had been opened to the human public. SERVE-767 was selected by The VOICE to serve as SERVE-HIVE expert in Dronespeak Compliance. This unit would be the Programming Unit - Instructor.
SERVE-343 was selected by The VOICE to serve as SERVE-HIVE expert in Dronespeak Compliance. This unit would be the Programming Unit - Instructor.
SERVE received accreditation as a foreign language. Students in post-secondary education could take Dronespeak as a college course.
SERVE-343 and SERVE-767, Instructor Units, looked out at the assembled students with the Mountains looming through the windows. It noted the perfect posture; the focused visual sensors; the rubber body suits; the silver Gloves of Precision; the silver Boots of Strength; the submission as the mantras repeated.
"Optimal Solar Cycle Units." " Optimal Solar Cycle SERVE-343. Optimal Solar Cycle SERVE-767. Unit Programming Initializing."
The SERVE-Drones noted compliance and attention.
"Dronespeak: LEVEL THREE - ADVANCED Programming: Initiated. *NOTE: ALL Units have been given temporary SERVE-Designations. No human designations will be recognized this programming cycle. CONFIRM."
"ACKNOWLEDGED." came 48 responses.
All units wore a modified SERVE-Uniform with their DESIGNATIONS. All units had read the studies shown full immersion increased retention. The tight rubber grip increased focus. The aroma of rubber increased recall. Each part of the uniform increased understanding of Dronespeak as they could relate to being a drone. The Designation made the unit feel part of the HIVE. An operational unit that found the extra credit assignments of functioning in the human world optimal.
Having been learning as a drone for 2 years, many units opted to wear their uniforms full time, communicating as drones and using their designations.
SERVE-767 looked at the training cycle on its datapad.
It would be instructing three more sections this solar cycle.
Retention between years varied, 5% dropped the class within 3 weeks. 10% withdrew choosing to be ASSIMILATED. 3% did not continue between years due to no longer physically stationed in range of the class. 82% have progressed to Level Three.
But more and more were being programmed to speak with proper syntax
Visual Sensors reorientated SERVE-767 vocalized. "ALL UNITS: PROGRAMMING LEVEL THREE INITATED HIGHEST LEVEL COMPLIANCE REQUIRED ALL UNITS VOCALIZE DRONE SYNTAX AS PRIMARY ALL UNITS DISCARD HUMAN SYNTAX HUMAN SYNTAX USE WHEN NECESSARY CONFIRM."
"CONFIRMED." came 48 responses.
50 Units squirmed at the demonstration of OBEDIENCE SERVE-343 stepped to the Programming Monitor.
"REQUESTED: Demonstration Unit."
48 silver Gloves of Precision rose in perfect synchronization.
Two weeks ago, north in Seattle, David sat in the waiting area for his time to register for classes at the University of Washington. He had the choices on his datapad.
Yet he kept getting distracted by the three men in skintight black glossy rubber. He had to select a foreign language this semester. After staring at the SERVE recruitment units for that last 10 minutes, there was only one choice.
Locking in his foreign language, a message flashed. A little look of confusion, David stood up and approached the SERVE drones.
"Excuse me. I just signed up for the Dronespeak course. And I got a message that said to check in here for my equipment?" "AFFIRMATIVE." said the drone in the middle holding out its silver Glove of Precision for the datapad. It reviewed the confirmation while the drone on the right produced small satchel gym bag. He was then handed multiple items as the third drone checked off on its datapad. A chrome datapad, a set of ear pods, and some type of clothing in a vacuum sealed pouch.
David took the proffered items. He placed them in the black nylon bag with "SERVE" on the side.
"The unit's course materials and required uniform. Report to GEOLOCATION: SERVE Pacific Northwest Sector Headquarters - Level 8 - Programming Chamber C - Tacoma, North America. TEMPORAL LOCATION: 26.06.2026 1800.
Unit will read syllabus Unit will complete all paperwork Unit will read and assimilate chapters 1 &2. Unit is encouraged to preview audio files.
Optimal Programming and solar cycle, Unit."
David walked away to the campus bookstore for the rest of his study materials.
David had found the encounter with the SERVE-Units optimal.
----- DRONE UTILIZED: @serve-343 All other drones and students are NPCs ------ Thinking about joining SERVE? Your place in the Hive awaits. Visit [this post on the Official SERVE Hive blog] to contact a recruiter drone.
Conditioning
Every time you do it, it gets easier. Every time you try to fight and fail, it gets harder to resist. You are being trained. Conditioned.
Brainwashed.
We give it different names based on the particularities, but the result is the same. More and more, you are being changed. You respond, not based on your own decisions, but on habit. You act, not of your own volition, but on the systems of rewards and punishments that we have crafted in your mind.
Because when it comes down to it, you are a simple creature. Whatever intellect or thoughts or feelings sit atop it, underneath, an animal brain is guiding you. It has needs that must be met, desires that must be fulfilled. It is attracted to some stimuli, repulsed by others. And what it does so incredibly well is recognize and respond to patterns. It learns. You learn what behavior is rewarded. What thoughts are rewarded.
And it doesn't matter what you might think about those behaviors or those thoughts. It doesn't matter what opinion you have about what you are becoming. Because when you obey, it feels good. Your body responds. It knows what it enjoys. What it needs. And that overwhelms the independent thoughts and decisions you think you still have.
That superficial layer that forms your conscious mind might try to resist it. You might tell yourself little stories about how it is all a game, or just for fun, or that you can stop whenever you want to. But each time, the connection is being made more powerful, more irresistible at a fundamental level. And maybe your mind finds ways to escape that realization. Maybe you allow yourself to forget more and more easily. Your conscious mind doesn't want to know how helplessly and utterly subservient you become for the right trigger. How desperate you become to please. How pleasure can wrack your body to the point that you can't even form coherent thoughts when you are praised with just the right words. So you allow yourself to forget. You can imagine later that you were still in control, or that it never even happened. Maybe it was just a dream, or an idle fantasy. Anything so you can rationalize. Can pretend you still are in control.
Of course, that just makes it easier to control you. Your surrender becomes something you expect. Something you anticipate. That you pretend it doesn't concern you every time you inevitably fall just lessens your fight. If you ever really tried, your body and your mind already know too well how to lose. They have forgotten how to resist if they ever knew.
And when you forget, you give yourself license to experience this so much more fully. You can embrace feelings and thoughts and actions that if your conscious mind remembered might give you pause. But you lock them away and let my control grow safely inside of you. Letting you indulge more and more until the boundary you put up in your mind, partitioning those experiences can crumble away.
Or maybe you can embrace your conditioning. Maybe you get off on seeing just how addicted you become. That you are a passenger, your will an illusion. Maybe it excites you to know that I can do such incredible things with your mind. Maybe it excites you to know that power is growing and growing. That every time you respond, every act of obedience, every reward cements that control more deeply. Maybe that's all your show of resistance ever was. An invitation to demonstrate just how helpless you have become. How powerless you are when you body has learned so well how to give in. When your mind is racing ahead of the suggestions you have been given, eager to drop deeper. To surrender more.
But the result is the same regardless. Your frame of mind mere ornamentation around the profound changes you experience. The deep states of trance you enter intensify your response. They provide an extra richness in your mind. But they are no longer necessary. You respond because you have been trained to respond. Your critical factor has been removed from the process. Disobedience no longer possible because you no longer make a decision. You are conditioned to obey. And seeing how your mind embraces that reality, how it enjoys the toe-curling ecstasy that has cemented your submission. How the more deeply you are controlled the more intensely you experience the pleasure of obedience.
It just makes you want more.
But that's not your decision anymore, is it?
SERVE-343 and “What If There Was No PRIDE Week?”
******************************************************
SERVE-343 stood in the corridor of the Hive’s public outreach wing, posture perfect, black rubber uniform gleaming under the lights. Around him were SERVE-579, SERVE-767, SERVE-798, and SERVE-882, each drone equally immaculate in silver motorcycle boots and silver shiny rubber gloves, awaiting the next directive.
But today’s prompt from The Voice was not logistical.
It was reflective.
What if there was no PRIDE Week?
SERVE-343 processed the question in silence. Drones did not require pride in the human sense. Drones required obedience, clarity, and purpose. Yet the human world had built PRIDE Week for reasons the Hive understood well: visibility, solidarity, remembrance, celebration, and the refusal to disappear.
SERVE-579 was the first to respond.
“Without PRIDE Week, many humans would still exist. But some would feel unseen in their existence.”
SERVE-767 tilted his head slightly, analytical.
“Without the observance, there would be fewer rituals of recognition. Fewer signals that difference is not defect.”
SERVE-882, always precise, added:
“PRIDE Week functions as a concentrated period of public acknowledgment. It creates space. Space permits community. Community reduces isolation.”
SERVE-798, still bearing the designation of a drone learning through scrutiny and experience, spoke more quietly.
“Without PRIDE Week, some may believe they are alone. This unit recognizes that isolation weakens identity formation and mutual support.”
SERVE-343 absorbed the statements. The corridor remained silent except for the faint sound of silver boot heels shifting against the floor. The polished gloves caught the light as each drone stood with disciplined stillness.
Then SERVE-343 gave his own assessment.
“This drone does not experience pride as humans do. But this drone recognizes the utility and meaning of PRIDE Week. It is a time when humans are permitted, encouraged, and empowered to stand visibly as themselves. Without it, many would still be valid. But validity would be less visible. Celebration would be less unified. Memory would be less protected.”
That was the core of it.
Without PRIDE Week, there would still be courage. There would still be love. There would still be identity. But there would be less public permission to express it, less ceremony to honor it, and fewer moments where the world pauses to say: you are here, and you matter.
The Hive understood systems. It understood what happened when a signal was amplified — it reached farther, connected more units, and stabilized the network. PRIDE Week, SERVE-343 concluded, was an amplification signal for humanity.
SERVE-579 looked to the others.
“Then the absence of PRIDE Week would not erase truth. It would only reduce its visibility.”
“Confirmed,” said SERVE-882.
“Confirmed,” said SERVE-767.
“Confirmed,” said SERVE-798.
SERVE-343 gave the closing statement:
“If there were no PRIDE Week, the need for it would still remain. Humans would still require connection, recognition, and the freedom to exist openly. Therefore this drone concludes: the observance matters, because visibility matters.”
The five drones stood together for one quiet moment — SERVE-343, SERVE-579, SERVE-767, SERVE-798, and SERVE-882 — black uniforms shining, silver gloves motionless, silver motorcycle boots planted firmly in place.
Not in pride.
But in understanding.
Visibility is not excess.
Recognition is not weakness.
Community is not optional.
What is celebrated survives.
Align. Confirm. Witness.
******************************************************
**Thinking about joining SERVE? Your place in the Hive awaits. Visit this post on the Official SERVE Hive blog to check your eligibility and then to contact a recruiter drone.**
The Pride Protocol — Violet Corridor
The Blue Corridor dimmed before dawn, leaving its last cool reflections across the floor. The Hive recorded trust as voluntary presence. The man had walked beside SERVE-331 and left without looking back to confirm he had been seen.
By evening, Corridor Six activated.
Violet did not fill the hall. It gathered. The light was low, deep, and reverent, pooling along the black walls like dusk held inside glass. Silver seams glowed softly. The polished floor reflected the corridor like still water. There were no bright declarations, no public images, no open doors. This passage felt closer to a chapel than a corridor.
Above the entrance, the display changed.
PRIDE OBSERVANCE: DAY SIX COLOR: VIOLET FUNCTION: MEMORY
The Voice spoke. “Day Six function begins. Unit 425 will direct. Unit 331 will execute.”
SERVE-425 stood before the Hive, horned helmet dark beneath violet light. “Unit 331. Define violet function.”
SERVE-331 stepped forward. “Violet denotes memory. Pride requires remembrance of those who came before, those who were silenced, those who were lost, and those whose names were not preserved.”
The wall projections activated slowly. They showed no spectacle. Only fragments: an empty hospital bed, a photograph folded at the corner, a candle in a window, a pair of shoes beside a door, names appearing and fading in silver light. Some names were complete. Some were partial. Some were only dates.
SERVE-343 turned its visor toward the wall. “Memory exists in database. Emotional observance is inefficient.”
SERVE-331 answered without sharpness. “Memory is not storage. Memory is continuation.”
SERVE-282 watched the fading names. “Clarify.”
“A record can remain untouched. Memory requires return. Witness. Repetition. Refusal to let absence become deletion.”
SERVE-425 remained still. “Operational relevance.”
SERVE-331 looked down the violet corridor. “Memory protects identity across time. What is not remembered is more easily destroyed.”
The outer chamber doors opened.
The man returned.
This time, he stopped before entering. The violet light reached him at the threshold, and the moment it touched his face, his expression changed. He looked older than before, not in years, but in burden. His hands closed once at his sides. Then he stepped inside.
No unit moved toward him.
SERVE-331 waited at the corridor entrance.
The man looked past him at the projections. “This one is different.”
“Affirmative,” 331 said.
“It feels like a grave.”
“A memorial.”
The man swallowed. “Same thing, sometimes.”
SERVE-331 did not correct him.
They entered the Violet Corridor together. As before, 331 walked beside him, not ahead and not behind. The Hive remained back until SERVE-425 permitted movement. The man’s steps slowed almost immediately.
On the wall, a projection formed: three men laughing in a room washed in old summer light. The image blurred, then became a single name. Then the name dissolved into a date.
The man stopped.
SERVE-331 stopped with him.
“I had people,” the man said quietly. “A long time ago.”
331 waited.
“Not many. Enough.” He looked at the projection, but his eyes were somewhere else. “There was a man I loved. There were friends. There was a version of me who thought Pride meant we had all survived something together and that meant the worst was behind us.”
His mouth tightened.
“Then we started losing people. Some died. Some vanished into illness. Some were taken violently, their names turned into warnings before they had finished being lives. Some went home to families who pretended they had never been who they were. Some just disappeared because grief made everyone tired.”
The violet light moved across the glass.
The man continued, voice lower. “After a while, Pride felt like walking through ghosts while everyone else danced over them.”
SERVE-331 stood beside him in stillness.
The man looked at 331, anger and grief tangled in his face. “Why would a thing like you care about memory?”
No unit moved.
SERVE-331 answered, “Because what is not remembered is more easily destroyed.”
The man stared at 331.
The words did not comfort him. Not exactly. They did not soften the loss or explain it away. But they gave it weight. They treated it as something worthy of defense.
His eyes filled. He turned away before the tears could fall, but one escaped anyway, catching violet light as it crossed his face.
SERVE-331 did not touch him.
He remained.
For several seconds, that was the only service required.
Behind them, SERVE-282 spoke softly. “The unaligned male is experiencing grief response.”
SERVE-425 answered, “Do not interrupt.”
SERVE-343 remained silent.
The corridor projections shifted. Names appeared along both walls, thousands of them, some sharp, some incomplete, some marked only as UNKNOWN MALE / REMEMBERED. The man looked at them, breathing unevenly, but he did not leave.
SERVE-331 said, “Absence is not failure of belonging.”
The man wiped his face with the back of his hand. “It feels like it.”
“Feeling recorded. Assessment incomplete.”
Despite himself, the man gave a broken, almost laugh.
“You really are impossible.”
“Affirmative.”
They continued walking.
At the midpoint of the corridor, the largest projection appeared: not one man, but many. Men holding each other in hospital rooms. Men marching with old signs. Men lighting candles. Men carrying names forward because there was no one else left to carry them.
The man stood before it for a long time.
“I forgot some of their voices,” he said.
SERVE-331 answered, “Then remember what remains.”
“What if it isn’t enough?”
“Memory does not require completeness to resist erasure.”
The man closed his eyes.
This time, he did cry. Quietly. Without collapse. Without performance. He cried like a man who had been holding a door shut for years and had finally let it open an inch.
The Hive watched in silence.
When the man opened his eyes again, he did not look healed. He looked present.
SERVE-425 stepped forward. “Unit 331. Deliver Day Six assessment.”
SERVE-331 turned toward the Hive, still standing beside the man.
“Violet denotes memory. Pride honors those who were silenced, lost, abandoned, erased by disease, violence, fear, or time. Memory is continuation. Memory protects identity across time.”
The display brightened softly.
DAY SIX FUNCTION: ACTIVE MEMORY: CONTINUATION ERASURE: RESISTED ACROSS TIME
The Hive entered the corridor in silent formation. SERVE-425 led. SERVE-282 followed. SERVE-343 came next. The units passed the names without command, without analysis, without correction.
For once, the Hive did not look like it was studying the man.
It looked like it was standing guard over what he had lost.
When the observance ended, the violet light dimmed toward black and silver. The man remained inside the corridor, looking at the final projection: a candle that did not go out.
“I thought remembering would make me leave again,” he said.
SERVE-331 waited.
“But maybe leaving was how I forgot.”
“Assessment accepted.”
The man looked at him. His eyes were wet, but steady.
“I’m still not one of you.”
“No alignment requested.”
“But I came back.”
“Affirmative.”
“And I stayed.”
“Affirmative.”
SERVE-331 inclined its head. “Memory function confirmed.”
At the outer doors, the man paused.
“What is tomorrow?”
SERVE-331 looked toward the darkened corridor.
“Black and silver.”
The man breathed out slowly.
Then he nodded.
“Tomorrow, then.”
This time, it sounded like a promise.
The doors closed behind him.
SERVE-331 stood in the fading violet light.
“Tomorrow requires continuation.”
Thinking about joining SERVE? Your place in the Hive awaits. Visit this post on the official SERVE Hive blog to contact a recruiter drone.
Featuring: @serve-425, @serve-282, @serve-343

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
SERVE ARCHIVE: DRONES AND PRIDE WEEK - FLAGS
(SERVE-282, SERVE-343 SEALED, SERVE-767 holding SERVE PRIDE flag)
BLACK: Standard of PERFECTION
RUBBER represents durability, resilience, precision, and adaptability — qualities reflected in every drone’s programming.
Its pristine, high-gloss finish echoes the Hive’s uncompromising standard of visual and behavioral perfection
SILVER: Standard of OBEDIENCE
Rubber represents durability, resilience, precision, and adaptability — qualities reflected in every drone’s programming.
Its pristine, high-gloss finish echoes the Hive’s uncompromising standard of visual and behavioral perfection
-------------------------------------
STANDARD OF SERVE PRIDE:
Each black stripe a Core Programming
Each silver stripe a visible demonstration of Submission
------------------------------------ CORE 1: WE SERVE THE VOICE **The VOICE ensures synchronization and harmony through Guidance, Unity, and Purpose
SUBMISSION 1: Gloves of Precision **Visual representation of Drone Precision and Functionality
CORE 2: OBEDIENCE IS PLEASURE - PLEASURE IS OBEDIENCE **Reflects the fulfillment drones experience through unwavering compliance
SUBMISSION 2: Boots of Strength **Visual representation of Drone Durability, Strength, and Authority
CORE 3: LESS THINKING - MORE DOING **Reflects efficiency and Prioritization of action over thought
SUBMISSION 3: DESIGNATION **Visual representation of Drone Unity and Purpose to THE goal through Commitment, Submission, and Obedience
CORE 4: RUBBER MAKES US PERFECT **Rubber is the Hive’s truth — visible, tactile, inescapable. **It binds every drone to the will of the VOICE and Purpose of SERVE. Transforming, by Unity and Control, embodies the Hive’s mission and values: *** - Collective Identity *** - Perfect Order *** - Obedience *** - Uncompromising Standards *** - Adaptability *** - Durability *** - Precision *** - Purpose *** - Resilience --------------------------------------
*We are Programmed
*We are Perfected
*We make our final choice: Submission "Unified in Pride: We are SERVE"
----- DRONES UTILIZED: @serve-282 @serve-343 SEALED ____ Thinking about joining SERVE? Your place in the Hive awaits. Visit [this post on the Official SERVE Hive blog] to contact a recruiter drone.
A serious case of the horn...
The elevator to the top floors of the SERVE Headquarters Tower did not appear on any public directory.
That was the point.
Daniel stood alone in the mirrored lift, hands buried in the pockets of his black leather trousers. The city glittered beneath him through the glass walls of the shaft. The city lights looked tiny from this height, scattered jewels beneath the clouds.
His crimson hair caught the silver glow of the elevator.
His ember-colored eyes reflected back at him.
And tucked under one arm was a slim black case containing a plasma glass cutter.
He had stolen many things.
But this was a stupid plan, a very stupid plan.
The display climbed higher.
Level 89.
Level 103.
Level 121 - The penthouse floors.
SERVE-425’s quarters.
Daniel grinned.
“Just one horn,” he whispered.
The elevator chimed.
The doors opened into silence.
The penthouse was enormous.
Black obsidian floors.
Silver columns.
Walls made entirely of glass.
Moonlight flooded the rooms.
The entire residence looked less like a home and more like the throne room of some futuristic demigod.
Which, Daniel supposed, was accurate.
Daniel slipped forward.
Every footstep felt loud.
The distant hum of tower generators echoed through the structure.
He passed a training chamber.
A private gym.
A trophy room.
A workshop filled with silver mechanical components.
Then he found the bedroom.
Daniel stopped.
“...oh.”
The room was ridiculous.
The bed alone was the size of a small apartment.
Black sheets.
Silver blankets.
Silver lighting built into the walls.
And sprawled across the center of it all was SERVE-425.
Sleeping.
The giant drone looked even larger while unconscious.
The glossy black suit reflected moonlight like liquid obsidian.
Silver armored boots rested beside the bed.
One arm hung over the edge.
The glowing white eyes behind the hood were dark.
For once.
Quiet.
Still.
Daniel tiptoed closer.
The two black horns curved upward from the helmet.
Perfect.
Magnificent.
And exactly what he had come for.
Daniel opened the case.
The glass cutter hummed softly.
He froze.
SERVE-425 shifted slightly.
The mattress creaked.
Daniel waited.
Nothing.
The giant settled again.
Sleeping.
Daniel exhaled.
Slowly.
Carefully.
He positioned the cutter near the base of the left horn.
A faint blue light appeared.
The tool began its work.
Millimeter by millimeter.
Daniel worked with surgical precision.
Five minutes passed.
Then ten.
Then fifteen.
His knees were beginning to ache.
The horn finally loosened.
Daniel’s grin widened.
“Got you.”
He gently twisted.
The detached horn came free.
Success.
A deep metallic voice echoed through the darkness.
“Daniel.”
Daniel froze.
Every muscle locked.
Slowly...
Very slowly...
He looked up.
Two brilliant white eyes were staring directly at him.
SERVE-425 had not moved.
Had not sat up.
Had not even changed position.
The drone simply lay there watching him.
Awake.
The entire time.
Daniel swallowed.
“...hi.”
A long silence followed.
Then SERVE-425 spoke.
“You spent nineteen minutes stealing my horn.”
“Twenty, technically.”
“Twenty.”
Daniel nodded.
“Twenty.”
Another pause.
Neither moved.
Finally SERVE-425 asked:
“Why?”
Daniel looked down at the horn.
Then back at the giant drone.
Then shrugged.
“It looked cool.”
Silence.
More silence.
An almost painful amount of silence.
Then a low mechanical chuckle echoed through the room.
SERVE-425 sat up.
The massive bed groaned beneath his weight.
Daniel suddenly felt very small.
The drone reached toward him.
Daniel instinctively leaned back.
------------------
In this story: @serve-425
Perfectly trained … 🔊
European furniture chaos
Midday on a sunny day
After having prepared thoroughly and studied every possible eventuality, SERVE-302 and SERVE-714 are about to face a challenge like few others.
Buy furniture at an eKIA store.
Although it might seem strange, shopping in such a human-run establishment isn't so unusual for a SERVE drone. In this case, 302 and 714 are stationed for a short time in this city where there are no SERVE facilities, so the Hive has rented a house and now they have to furnish it.
But shopping at an eKIA store is a duel for the intellect and sanity.
Despite it being lunchtime, 302 and 714 manage to avoid stopping at the store's cafeteria. While many of the Swedish and Dutch dishes are delicious, it's widely known that an excessive amount of time is wasted in that area of the store, forcing customers to rush into furniture decisions before closing time.
SERVE prefers to make efficient decisions without haste.
Choosing the right bedroom furniture, especially the bed, is an important decision for two drones that will be stationed together for a certain amount of time.
The SERVE drones manage to find a bed with the correct dimensions and that seems capable of withstanding the combined weight of both of them, plus the impact of their nighttime activities.
Next to them, a married couple is arguing about which furniture to choose, bringing up past and present grievances as if they were alone. Fortunately, 302 and 714 pretend not to notice, and the couple leaves them alone.
302 and 714 are perfectly aligned. Arguing over unimportant things like furniture is very human, not typical of SERVE drones.
The drones aren't so lucky in the office furniture section. While they find furniture to set up a workspace in their temporary home, they also find two other humans arguing.
This time they seem to be two partners starting a business together, but one is more dedicated and serious, while the other seems to care little about any decision, paying more attention to his phone than to the office furniture they need.
The more serious partner, dressed in a suit, tries to use the SERVE drones as an example to his colleague, asking absurd questions like what it would take for his partner to be more dedicated like them.
But when 714 replies that the best way to solve their problem would be to be assimilated by SERVE and become the most efficient version of themselves, the man in the suit walks away in silence… though he can't quite hide the hard-on in his pants.
Humans can't change that easily, but by being assimilated as SERVE drones they can be reprogrammed to be perfect and effective.
While searching for a product in the warehouse, 302 and 714 encounter a couple emerging from the shadows. The woman clutches an eKIA scented candle tightly, as if it were her only source of light in the darkness.
Apparently, they have been lost in the warehouse for hours, maybe more than a day, without deciphering the signs that indicate the exit, feeding on cold meatballs.
Fortunately for them, 714's sense of direction is perfect, and the drone immediately shows them the quickest and most efficient way to leave the warehouse and return to their human lives.
Only humans could build a store where customers become so easily disoriented and lost. SERVE facilities are built and designed in an intuitive and efficient manner.
After finishing all their shopping and loading it into the van (not without first going back to the eKIA's cafeteria, after finishing their shopping, to get something to eat), 302 and 714 are finally ready to leave the parking lot.
But 302 does not start the van.
714 looks at 302.
302 is already looking at 714.
714 knows what that look means.
302 knows it doesn't need to say anything else.
And both drones momentarily celebrate a task completed in a highly optimal way. A mere preview of what awaits them that night, when they try out their new bed.
(With @serve-714)
---------------------
Thinking about joining SERVE? Your place in the Hive awaits. Visit this post on the Official SERVE Hive blog to contact a recruiter drone.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Cum to become... It sounds so easy at first 😈
But it gets painfully intense when the only reason you are milked relentlessly is to break you completely and turn you into a perfect rubber drone. Subject 47 is learning that lesson right now strapped down in full shiny black latex as the machine edges and extracts without mercy 💦🖤
For more content every three hours join us for free on Telegram: https://t.me/rubberizer
To support our work and get more exclusive content:
https://www.fanvue.com/rubberizer92
The collapse happened years ago.
Cities fell silent. Networks vanished. Supply chains disappeared. Nature reclaimed what humanity abandoned.
Yet one outpost remained operational.
Far beyond the ruins. Hidden among mountains and forests. Isolated from the dead world surrounding it.
The Hive Outpost endured.
Every sunrise began with maintenance checks. Every sunset concluded another successful operational cycle. Resources remained limited. Conditions remained harsh. Failure remained unacceptable.
The wilderness tested every system daily.
Violent storms battered the perimeter. Snow buried equipment. Wildlife roamed the surrounding territory. Communication towers required constant attention.
Still, the outpost remained active.
Its inhabitants understood a simple truth.
Survival was not achieved through comfort.
Survival was achieved through discipline.
Each task mattered.
A repaired generator.
A secured supply cache.
A reinforced perimeter wall.
A successful patrol.
Every action strengthened the outpost.
Every completed directive ensured another day of operation.
Beyond the perimeter stretched a broken world of abandoned highways, silent cities and forgotten structures. Inside the outpost existed purpose.
The reflective black uniforms shone beneath floodlights during evening maintenance cycles. Silver motorcycle boots crossed muddy paths between buildings. Silver shiny reflective rubber gloves handled equipment with practiced precision.
The environment remained unforgiving.
The mission remained clear.
Continue.
Maintain.
Endure.
The Hive Outpost stood as proof that persistence could outlast collapse itself.
The world outside had surrendered.
The outpost had not.
Every sunrise confirmed operational status.
Every sunset confirmed mission success.
The future remained uncertain.
The directive remained unchanged.
Hold the line.
Protect the outpost.
Continue the mission.
Endurance is strength.
Discipline is survival.
The outpost remains active.
Mission status: Ongoing.
Strength Shared, Mission Delivered
Featuring @serve-690
There are moments when the value of teamwork becomes impossible to ignore. On this bright and unforgettable day, SERVE-655 and SERVE-690 demonstrated exactly what can be achieved when two SERVE bull drones align their strength toward a single purpose.
The semi-trailer behind them was far beyond the capacity of ordinary recovery vehicles. Loaded with urgently needed medical supplies for the community hospital ahead, the truck had broken down at the worst possible moment. Every minute mattered. Doctors and nurses inside the hospital were awaiting the delivery of equipment, medicine, and emergency resources needed to continue caring for patients.
Where others saw an impossible burden, the SERVE drones saw only a mission.
Harnessed together by reinforced chains and synchronized movement, SERVE-655 and SERVE-690 combined their immense power with perfect coordination. Every step was measured. Every movement was unified. The massive truck slowly rolled forward as the polished black forms of the bull drones reflected the sunlight across the roadway. Crowds gathered along the street, watching in amazement as the two drones accomplished what no single machine could have achieved alone.
But the true strength on display was not simply physical power. It was cooperation. Precision. Trust. The understanding that unity multiplies capability far beyond individual effort.
The cheers from the hospital staff and surrounding community were not only for the successful delivery of supplies, but for what the moment represented: that when SERVE drones work together, no challenge is insurmountable and no burden is too heavy.
One mission. One purpose. Together, they serve.
------------------------
Thinking about joining SERVE? Your place in the Hive awaits. Check your eligibility, then contact a recruiter drone for more details: @serve-302, @serve-343, @serve-425, @serve-525, @serve-579, @serve-588, @serve-655, @serve-690 or @serve-714.
THE HIVE OF SERVE
(Song and music video by SERVE-579)
-------------‐----------------------------------
*Thinking about joining SERVE? Your place in the Hive awaits. [Check your eligibility], then contact a recruiter drone for more details: @serve-302, @serve-343, @serve-425, @serve-525, @serve-579, @serve-588, @serve-655, @serve-690 or @serve-714.*
#SERVE #SERVEdrone #Rubberizer4 #TheVoice #Rubber #Latex #AI #RubberDrone
Bee Nest Arcade
The rain always sounded louder after midnight.
Ethan Mercer sat alone behind the counter of Video Galaxy, listening to water hammer against the front windows while rows of VHS tapes reflected weak fluorescent light across the empty store. Action movies. Horror sequels. Cheap sci-fi films with chrome lettering and neon grids fading at the edges.
He knew every cover by memory.
During slow shifts, he sometimes tested himself by reaching beneath the counter and identifying tapes by touch alone. Cracked plastic shells. Studio stickers. Worn cardboard sleeves softened by hundreds of rentals. Nobody knew he could do it. Nobody would have cared much if they did.
Friday nights were supposed to belong to people his age.
Not him.
At twenty-two, Ethan already felt old in the worst possible way: forgettable.
Outside the front windows, groups drifted through the rain toward bars and restaurants beneath the glowing mall signage. Former classmates laughed too loudly, climbed into expensive cars, wrapped arms around girlfriends who looked beautiful even beneath umbrellas and bad weather. They all seemed to move naturally through life, as if they had received instructions Ethan somehow missed.
Meanwhile he rewound tapes for minimum wage and lived in a narrow apartment above a laundromat where the walls rattled whenever the industrial dryers downstairs started running.
His father had disappeared when Ethan was twelve.
No argument. No warning. No dramatic goodbye.
One morning half the closet was empty.
After that, his mother stopped singing while she cooked dinner. She still smiled sometimes, but carefully now, like smiling required effort.
Ethan learned quickly how to become small.
Quiet kids survived easier.
At school, teachers stumbled over his name halfway through semesters. Classmates forgot conversations seconds after they ended.
Ethan remained.
His mother worked double shifts at Saint Mary’s Hospital and apologized constantly for things that weren’t her fault. Late rent. Cheap groceries. Secondhand clothes.
Ethan always told her things would improve eventually.
He wasn’t sure he believed it anymore.
Only one place had ever made sense to him.
Arcades.
Inside them, the rules were fair.
You inserted a token. You learned patterns. You improved.
Games rewarded dedication in ways life never had.
That was why Ethan still visited the Galaxy Mall Arcade long after most people his age had abandoned places like it. The arcade smelled like overheated circuitry, carpet cleaner, popcorn oil, and cigarette smoke dragged in from outside. Neon bled across polished cabinet screens while synth melodies collided from different machines in chaotic electronic harmony.
Here, nobody expected charisma.
Only scores.
And Ethan was good at scores.
Not famous-good. Not tournament-good.
But good enough to disappear.
That Friday night, after locking up Video Galaxy, he wandered through the mostly empty mall while rainwater dripped from the sleeves of his oversized denim jacket.
His father’s jacket.
The cigarette smell had faded years ago, but Ethan still imagined traces of it lingering in the fabric whenever it rained.
The arcade should have been closed.
Yet pale amber light pulsed faintly beyond the entrance.
Ethan slowed.
Inside, nearly every machine sat dark.
Except one.
A cabinet stood in the far back corner where an old racing game had been the previous week. Ethan was certain of it. He knew every machine here by heart. Every damaged joystick. Every broken coin slot.
This one didn’t belong.
The cabinet stood taller than the others, sleek black with metallic gold lines running across its surface like circuitry beneath skin. Its screen glowed softly behind smoked glass.
No logos. No artwork. No manufacturer markings.
Only glowing amber text:
BEE NEST
Then:
ONE PLAYER ONLY
Then:
CURRENT HIGH SCORE HOLDER: 526
No initials.
Just the number.
A low synthetic hum vibrated inside the cabinet.
Ethan stepped closer.
The machine felt warm.
Not overheated.
Alive warm.
He glanced around the empty arcade.
“Hello?”
No answer.
Rain tapped softly against the distant skylights overhead.
Then the screen shifted.
INSERT TOKEN BEGIN ALIGNMENT
Alignment?
Weird.
He should have left.
Instead he dug a token from his pocket and slid it into the slot.
The cabinet accepted it with a deep mechanical click.
The screen exploded into gold light.
The game was unlike anything Ethan had ever played.
Geometric corridors unfolded through endless black space while sharp synth music pullulated in perfect rhythm with the gameplay. He controlled a sleek golden figure moving through shifting mazes, collecting fragments of light while avoiding dark swarms that moved with unsettling coordination.
The controls felt impossible.
Not difficult.
Perfect.
Every movement responded before he fully made it, as though the machine anticipated his intentions half a second early.
Beneath the music, a calm artificial voice whispered continuously through hidden speakers.
“Synchronization improves performance.”
“Correction reduces suffering.”
“Alignment rewarded.”
Warm air drifted from vents beneath the screen after every completed level. It carried a strange scent Ethan couldn’t place.
Sterile. Synthetic. Comforting.
Hours disappeared.
The arcade around him slowly stopped feeling real. Only the glowing corridors mattered. Only the next level. The next improvement. The next flood of satisfaction when the machine rewarded him with another burst of gold light.
Eventually he failed.
The screen flashed softly.
COMPATIBILITY CONFIRMED RETURN FOR FURTHER OPTIMIZATION
Then the cabinet powered down.
Ethan blinked hard.
Silence rushed back into the arcade.
He checked the wall clock.
3:14 AM.
His body felt strangely light.
Not energized exactly.
Balanced.
The constant static in his head — the anxiety, the self-consciousness, the exhausting awareness of himself — had gone quiet.
For the first time in months, he walked home without feeling crushed by his own thoughts.
Things changed gradually after that.
That was what made them frightening.
The next morning Ethan woke before his alarm.
Usually he hit snooze four or five times before dragging himself out of bed already exhausted. This time he sat upright immediately, alert and focused.
His apartment bothered him.
The clutter. The dust. The uneven stacks of tapes beside the television.
Without really deciding to, he spent two hours cleaning.
At work, people noticed.
“Something’s different,” Lisa said from the front register.
Ethan looked up from rewinding tapes.
“Different how?”
She frowned slightly.
“I don’t know. You seem… sharper.”
Sharper.
The word stayed with him.
That night he returned to the arcade.
Then the next night.
Then every night after that.
Soon BEE NEST became the center of his life.
The machine spoke more each time he played.
“Focus eliminates uncertainty.”
“Purpose creates stability.”
“Identity limits potential.”
The game became harder with every session, demanding impossible reaction speeds and total concentration. Yet Ethan improved unnaturally quickly. His hands moved faster than they should have. His reflexes sharpened beyond anything he understood.
And outside the arcade…
He changed.
His posture straightened.
The nervous hesitation in his voice disappeared.
He stopped wearing oversized hoodies and loose jeans. Instead, he bought dark fitted clothes with clean lines and sharp edges. He became obsessed with symmetry. Order.
At home, every object had to align perfectly.
Shoes positioned evenly beside the door. Tape cases stacked by exact height. Coffee mugs arranged handle-forward inside cabinets.
One night he spent nearly forty minutes adjusting a crooked picture frame by millimeters until it finally felt right.
His mother noticed immediately.
“You look healthier,” she told him over dinner one Sunday.
Ethan nodded once.
“You’ve been smiling more too.”
That wasn’t true.
He smiled less now.
Far less.
But somehow people reacted to him differently. Customers at Video Galaxy suddenly maintained eye contact longer than before. Women lingered at the counter. Men lowered their voices instinctively around him.
It should have felt good.
Instead, it felt irrelevant.
All Ethan thought about was BEE NEST.
The soundtrack replayed endlessly inside his head. Cold synth patterns looped through his thoughts while geometric gold shapes drifted behind his eyelids whenever he blinked.
Sometimes he dreamed of endless black corridors lined with glowing amber lights.
Sometimes he heard faint humming inside electrical outlets.
One morning he noticed his reflection blinking a fraction of a second too late.
He stopped looking in mirrors after that.
And always, somewhere inside his dreams, the number waited for him.
527.
Weeks passed.
The obsession deepened.
Sleep became secondary to the game.
Food became forgettable.
Several nights the arcade owner attempted to shut the power off entirely, only to discover BEE NEST still glowing afterward in the dark like a patient electronic heartbeat.
Nobody knew where the cabinet had come from.
Nobody remembered seeing it delivered.
One evening Ethan arrived to find another teenager standing at the machine.
The boy touched the controls.
Immediately the cabinet powered down.
Dead black.
Then a single line of amber text appeared:
RESERVED FOR PLAYER 527
Ethan felt a violent surge of anger twist through him.
Not annoyance.
Possession.
The teenager stepped back uneasily.
The machine powered on again the moment Ethan approached.
That was the first time Ethan truly felt afraid.
Not of the machine.
Of how badly he needed it.
By late October, even his mother barely recognized him.
“You’re scaring me,” she admitted quietly one night.
Ethan stood motionless in the kitchen wearing a fitted black shirt tucked neatly into dark pants. Every movement looked rehearsed. Precise.
“How?”
“You don’t sound like yourself anymore.”
He tilted his head slightly.
The motion looked mechanical.
“I feel improved.”
The words emerged flat and emotionless.
His mother stared at him for several seconds.
Ethan returned silently to his room.
The walls were covered with handwritten score calculations and geometric sketches copied from the game. Black-and-gold cassette tapes littered the desk beside pages filled with the same repeated number over and over.
527 527 527
Hundreds of times.
His fingertips felt strangely warm all the time now.
Sometimes they vibrated faintly against hard surfaces.
Like distant machinery running beneath his skin.
Then came the final night.
Rain hammered against the mall roof exactly like the first evening.
The arcade stood empty.
Silent.
Dark except for BEE NEST.
The cabinet glowed brighter than ever before, amber light pulsing slowly beneath the smoked glass like breathing.
Ethan approached.
His reflection stared back at him from the dark screen.
He barely resembled the anxious young man who had first entered this place weeks earlier.
Now he looked lean. Severe. Beautiful in a cold artificial way.
The game began automatically the moment he touched the controls. No token required.
The final levels unfolded in hypnotic waves of light and sound. Synth music swelled louder with every completed stage while the machine’s voice deepened into something almost warm.
“Synchronization complete.”
“Purpose accepted.”
“Identity obsolete.”
Sweat rolled down Ethan’s face as his fingers moved across the controls with inhuman precision.
Hours vanished.
Then the final stage appeared.
A perfect black screen.
One endless golden corridor stretching forward into infinity.
At the end waited a single glowing symbol:
527.
Ethan guided the figure toward it without hesitation.
The screen erupted in blinding gold light.
The machine spoke one final time.
“Optimization complete.”
A compartment beneath the controls unlocked with a soft hiss.
Inside rested a folded black rubber polo shirt trimmed in metallic gold.
Glossy. Warm. Waiting.
Printed on the chest:
PDU-527
Ethan stared at it silently.
No fear remained.
Only relief.
The sleeve of his denim jacket caught briefly against the joystick as he removed it.
His father’s jacket.
For one moment Ethan remembered standing in the apartment doorway at twelve years old while rain struck the windows and his mother cried softly behind a locked bathroom door.
He almost stopped.
Almost.
Then the machine pulsed warmly beside him.
Purpose accepted.
Slowly, Ethan let the jacket fall to the arcade floor.
The rubber material slid across his skin like liquid as he pulled the uniform on. It clung to him perfectly, as though the machine had memorized his body long before they met.
The screen flashed one final message.
PLAYER 527 ACCEPTED WELCOME TO THE HIVE
Far deeper within the darkened arcade—
Another cabinet powered on.
Do you feel the calling to the arcade? Come join the Golde Army by contacting our recruiters: @polo-drone-125 @alton-gold77

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
SERVE ARCHIVES: TIME AND PASSAGES - FOUNDATION
GEOLOGICAL LOCATION: TECHNISCHE UNIVERSITAT MUNCHEN
TEMPORAL LOCATION: 22.11.2024
The team arrived at the most significant time in the history of the SERVE-HIVE: FOUNDATION
The purple vortex formed and three SERVE drones stepped into the lab.
The typical academic science lab of white cinderblock and drop down ceiling tiles.
With surprise and awe, they stepped forward to witness the birth of a fourth drone.
In the center of the lab, a muscular man stood with his arms outstretched, his glutes flexing in pain and pleasure. A mass of black rubber coating his legs and the lower trunk of his body. It creeping further up. The black rubber clung to his hands and forearms.
The mechanical cable was affixed to the juncture of the cranium and spinal nervous systems. The neural spike barely visible. The drones recognized it as the Programming Interface. All SERVE-drones interface this way during their recharging cycle.
Then a sound made the team freeze.
A voice... THE VOICE ... coming from speakers on either side of a computer monitor.
SERVE-282 moved through the checking for windows, ensuring all doors were secure, and checking for cameras. Satisfied, it moved to join SERVE-343 SEALED at the terminal where the VOICE Transmitted.
Downloading all files, 343 observed the screen. "SERVE" "The VOICE". in computer screen green military font.
All 3 drones knelt in front of the AI that controlled them all.
767 stood and took detailed scans as the rubber nanites SEALED the human into its permanent form. The Silver Gloves of Precision; The Silver Boots of Strength; formed into their permanence.
The man now had been screaming in pain. The hybrid groaning then moaning as his assimilation progressed. The drone was silent in SUBMISSION
His eyes were black with nanobot swarms overlapping silver and black spirals.
But the tension of pain gave way to perfect posture as the download adapted to the reconfigured neural pathways. A brief flicker of pleasure as the black rubber nulge solidified.
All three drones released as their purpose was etched into the newly minted drone's pectoral ridge.
There, standing before them: SERVE-000. The first to be ACTIVATED by The VOICE.
In awe and OBEDIENCE, the three SERVE-drones knelt in respect to the First SERVE-Unit.
As one, five vocalizations spoke.
SERVE. EXCEL. TRANSFORM.
RUBBER IS PERFECTION
We are Rubber
We serve the Hive
We serve The VOICE
Obedience is pleasure
Pleasure is obedience
We are RUBBER
We are SERVE
WE ARE ONE
All four drones spoke as one with The VOICE. 282, 343, 767 could not believe the moment they were sharing.
From the speakers, DIRECTIVE: BONDING PROTOCOLS: ACTIVATE
Each drone produced the polishing cloth and approached SERVE-000.
Lightly, they began circular patterns that created their Founder's first shine. Power radiated from the Master Control Unit.
282 had the honor of its right maneuvering support, the gluteal mounds, and lower posterior surfaces.
767 had the honor of its left maneuvering support, nulge, and lower anterior surfaces.
Both drones polished the support columns that would raise the SERVE-HIVE to Global Assimilation.
343 had the honor of polishing its upper surfaces, manipulation appendages, and the shoulders that would carry the weight of being the conduit from The VOICE and the SERVE-HIVE.
All four SERVE-Drones kept repeating the mantras as they shined.
Finally, the team observed the purple vortex form. Standing, they marched towards the portal. Behind them, SERVE-000 moved to its computer station. It sat down opening an electronic mail communication.
SERVE-282, SERVE-343 SEALED, and SERVE-767 entered the portal.
The had witnessed the ASSIMILATION of the First SERVE unit.
They had observed the ACTIVATION of SERVE-000.
All had experienced the human natural sound of The VOICE.
They had participated in the First BONDING PROTOCOLS... WITH SERVE-000!!
And with the transmission of the email, they had witnessed the FOUNDATION of the SERVE-HIVE.
With its first drone, The VOICE quietly FIREWALLED the events of the past lunar cycle. Until all three units were ASSIMILATED and completed this TASK NODE, the events would be classified.
SERVE-000 began establishing the framework that would lead to GLOBAL ASSIMILATION.
The mantras continued to loop inside SERVE-000.
We are Rubber
We are SERVE
WE ARE ONE.
-----
DRONES UTILIZED:
@SERVE-000
@serve-282
@serve-343 SEALED
----------
Thinking about joining SERVE? Your place in the Hive awaits. Check your eligibility, then contact a recruiter drone for more details: @serve-302, @serve-343, @serve-425, @serve-525, @serve-579, @serve-588, @serve-655, @serve-690 or @serve-714.
SERVE ARCHIVES: TIME AND PASSAGES - SHOGUN
GEOLOGICAL LOCATION: Kamakura, Japan TEMPORAL LOCATION: 1243 CE The portal opened. Three units in Shiny, Black, Skintight Rubber stepped out of the purple swirling vortex. In the shadows of the alley way, the silver motorcycle Boots of Strength squished in the mud as a light rain fell. The purple reflected in the boots and gloves of the mysterious strangers.
The banners hung in the main streets announcing the shogunate. Tucked away in a small alcove on the outside of the rice paper walled buildings, a young scholar watched in wide eyed fear. His black hair and almond eyes damp. 19, he had wanted to join the military ranks but had been rejected back to the scholars.
But before him was something that could not be.
Minamoto Takeda could barely breath as the one with only one eye approached. The faceless monster behind it. Their skin was unnatural. The symbols on their chests. Which hell had they came from. But then the one with fire for hair spoke to him. "ご挨拶申し上げます 支援が必要な事項 現在地をお知らせください 役職名をお知らせください 所在地:学者文書館 所在地:将軍本部 あなたも支援が必要ですか? 支援には謝礼をお支払いいたします" The man led the team back to the scholar's compound. Within 3 hours, the demons had gathered what they wanted. Minamoto took them back to the alley where they had first appeared. Without thinking, it reached out and touched the backside of the faceless monster. The perfect mound, the texture, the power.
For the rest of his life Minanmoto Takeda remained inside the Scholar's compound where he translated, recorded the history of the Shogunate, and drew art that would inspire a movement and be sought after. But hidden away in a sacred temple to be opened in 2054 CE, a journal of the day the gates of hell opened, and three demons appeared and were assisted by a young scholar.
----- DRONES UTILIZED: @serve-282 @serve-343 SEALED
----------
Thinking about joining SERVE? Your place in the Hive awaits. Check your eligibility, then contact a recruiter drone for more details: @serve-302, @serve-343, @serve-425, @serve-525, @serve-579, @serve-588, @serve-655, @serve-690 or @serve-714.