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My Dread au I talked about eons ago. What if Dread wasn't picked up by Harper as a little boy? What if he finds another orphaned kid and they stick together for safety and survival?
A proof of concept, so to speak. Kinda gauging interest, so I know if I should consider writing more, or just keep 'em in my head.
~~~~~
The dread child slipped through the streets of the port town on North Island. He didnāt bother to watch where he was goingāpeople tended to get out of his way on their own. That was one of the few advantages of being an echidna, a dread child. No one wanted to interact with him, so they didnāt bother him as he went about his business.
His business today, as it was every day, was to not starve.
He slid close to the various food stands lined up and down the street, his large violet eyes alert and watching for the owners. They hated him. Well, everyone hated him, but the store owners would overcome their aversion to interacting with him in favor of giving him a swat when they saw him anywhere near their wares. Sometimes with a broom, but sometimes with something heavier, or sharper.
It was a hard, cruel world, especially for a dread child of ten. There was no sympathy for this child on his own. No pity for an empty belly. Heād learned that long ago.
There was no kindness in the world. Heād been on his own since he was a puggle, and any memories of life before that, of family, had long since faded. He didnāt remember where heād come from, and ultimately, it didnāt matter. The past didnāt matter. Only now. Only survival.
A few ships had come into port over the past few days, and the marketplace was busy and bustling with people. That was good. He could move about easier if there was a crowd keeping the stand ownerās attention.
That wasnāt to say he didnāt have to keep watch against any of the newcomers, too. When he was younger, five or so, heād nearly been snatched up by a pirate captain with a very bad reputation. Heād heard rumors about that man. Harper. He was cruel, spiteful, and cared only for himself and his status. Young boys hauled aboard his ship either died, or turned into as equally horrible people as the captain himself was. Most of his crew had been gathered as teenagers, and their nasty tendencies encouraged.
It was a hard, cruel world. The dread child knew that.
But that didnāt mean he wanted to endure worse.
He refocused his attention on the task at hand.
The first stand he came to was one with various cuts of meat on display, most of it cooked or dried. The smell hit his nose and his stomach gave a loud grumble. He hadnāt had meat in weeks. Saliva flooded his mouth and he swallowed hard.
Just one of those chunks of mutton would fill his belly for at least two days.
People surrounded him, and he lowered himself slightly, to make himself appear smaller and less detectable. Many of the people around the stand were humans, and they towered over him. There were a few non-human speciesāa few foxes, some sort of bird, and a turtle. None of them seemed to pay him any mind, so he slowly reached over the edge of the cart to snag a cut of leg.
Just as his fingers closed over it, a large fist grabbed his wrist.
āWhat dāya think youāre doinā, rat?ā
He snapped his head around, coming face to face with the large rhino behind the stand. Angry red eyes burned into his violet, and the boy shrank beneath the heavy gaze.
āI find your filthy fingers on my wares again, and Iāll chop āem off,ā the rhino growled, and brought a large meat cleaver from beneath the counter as emphasis. The metal caught the sun, and it flashed a blinding reflection into the boyās eyes. āGet it?ā
The dread child nodded frantically. The rhino snarled at him a moment longer, before releasing his hold on the boyās wrist.
Not wanting to overstay his welcome, the boy hurried off to hide in one of the side streets.
His stomach growled, as if scolding him for his failure.
~X~X~X~
The manx girl picked through the burnt husk of what had been, up until a week ago, her home. The fire that had claimed it had done a thorough job of reducing everything inside to ash and cinder. Any coin her parents had saved was goneāstolen by the same men whoād taken their lives.
Seemed her fatherās gambling addiction had caught up with him. And his luck had finally run out.
Swallowing back a sob, she carefully sorted through the remnants of her room. Her clothes gone, her few belongings burned and buried within the rubble. The dress she woreāsnitched off a clothing line from the other side of townāwas all that she owned at the moment. It hung loose, too big for her small frame, and she held a fistful of material as she sifted through the charred remains.
The men who had come for her father, to collect the money owed from one too many bad hands of cards at the tavern, hadnāt cared that it was the dead of night. Hadnāt cared that the manās daughter was asleep in the next room. Hadnāt cared when she awoke to arguing. To gunshots. To screams.
Sheād seen her parentsā bodies, lying still. So still. And sheād seen the men, two humans and a large boar, laughing. Theyād come toward her, and sheād had enough sense to run, to hurry back into her room and crawl out her window, her nightshirt catching and tearing down the side.
The fire had been bright enough to see from her hiding spot three streets over. It was still smoldering when she dared return the next morning.
Her parentsā bodies gone. Her home gone.
Her life.
Gone.
Her belly grumbled at her, pulling her from her thoughts.
Focus.
People around town had been sympathetic toward her for a few days, but that kindness had mostly run out. Her parents had been liked well enough, and most people wouldnāt turn away a hungry ten year old whoād just been orphaned, but ultimately, she wasnāt their problem. She supposed she understood, even if it made her a little resentful. It was a hard world, after all. Some people had a hard enough time keeping their own bellies full, let alone giving hand outs to someone elseās kid.
A bitter smile curled her lips. She wasnāt anyoneās kid now.
A lump formed in her throat, and she swallowed hard to dislodge it. Crying about it wouldnāt change anything. This was her life now. She had to focus on surviving.
Which is what brought her back to her ruined home. She was looking for something specific, something that, with luck, had mostly survived so she could maybe sell it and get some money for food. She carefully picked through the ash and charred wood, until a flash of reflected light caught her eye. She smiled, going to her knees, hurrying to pull it free, and wiped the soot from the intricate design with the hem of her dress.
Tears brimmed, and she tried so hard to blink them away, but only succeeded in sending them racing down her cheeks.
She was so hungry, but this was all she had left. Her motherās hairbrush, passed down from her mother, made of silver and etched with delicate carvings on the back. The bristles had been singed, but by some miracle were still mostly intact.
The cat cradled it to her chest, her grief surging as more tears spilled over her muzzle.
A sound. Her ears flicked to catch it, and she turned, finding a red . . . something standing where her room used to be. She stood quickly, tucking the brush behind her back.
The boy was barefoot, like her, with black pants that ended in ragged tatters at the cuffs. His used-to-be-white shirt was stained and looked a little big for him, billowing around his arms. His hands were bare, also like her, and she spied what looked like small spikes on their backs, right over his knuckles. He seemed to have quills, like a hedgehog or porcupine, but they were separated into long wavy clumps. When he shifted his weight, she noticed a kinked tail.
His violet eyes locked with her ocean blue, and he gave her a little snarl as he held his hand out.
āIāll be takinā that,ā he said, his voice gruff. āHand it over.ā
She blinked, sending the last few tears over her muzzle.
āNo.ā
She didnāt care what or who this boy was, she was not going to lose her motherās brush to him.
~X~X~X~
The dread child blinked, not quite sure heād heard what he thought. He was used to bullying other orphan kids in the other towns heād been to. His reputation as a dread child was usually well-known, that even the other children didnāt want to get involved with him. And it was easier to take from those weaker than him than to try and steal from shop owners.
This . . . this was new.
He thrust his hand forward in an angry jab.
āMaybe ye didnāt hear me,ā he said, his teeth grit. āI be needinā that shiny oā yers.ā He uttered a low growl. āNow.ā
The girl pulled her own lip up in a snarl, showing a baby fang. āNo.ā
His growl turned into a grunt. Who did this puny runt of a girl think she was? From the looks of her, she wouldnāt last three minutes against a seagull, let alone him. Her dress was miles too big, her orange fur brushed with dirt, and the messy mop of red hair made her look wild. Did she actually think she could stand up to him?
āLook, lass,ā he said, taking a few steps forward. āI aināt askinā. Yeāll hand it over, all nice anā friendly-like, else Iāll take it from ye.ā He gave her a sneering smirk. āAnā ye wouldnāt want that, would ye?ā
She stepped back for every one he took forward, ears and eyes trained entirely on him. She kept the shiny object behind herāhe wasnāt entirely sure what it was, but it looked expensive and should fill his belly for a few days once he sold it. Her face pinched in anger.
āIām not giving you anything,ā she said. āGet lost.ā
Oh, she was getting on his nerves.
He opened his mouth to say something else, when her foot caught on a bit of rubble from the burnt house, sending her toppling backwards. Surprise took over the anger on her face, and she pinwheeled her arms as she went down.
Taking advantage of the opportunity, the dread child rushed forward, grabbing the shiny object and giving a yank to pull it free. When it did, the girl cried out, and brought her now empty fist forward to catch him in the nose. Twice.
āOW!ā
His free hand went to his hurt nose, just as she shifted her weight to launch herself at him. She hit him in the chest, sending them both sprawling in a tangle of arms and legs. It took him a few seconds to realize what had happened, but she has up first, trying to wrench his stolen prize from his fist.
āGive it back, give it back!ā
His grip was tight, but she fought like a demon, scratching and yanking to make him let go. She had almost gotten it loose enough when he reached up and yanked her by the hair, pulling her off him.
āYe she-devil,ā he muttered. āYeāre lucky I donātāā
Thatās as far as he got before a foot shot out and made solid contact with his belly. He uttered a breathless āUGHā, rolling away before she could follow it with another blow.
This was certainly not what he was expecting.
They both regained their feet, leaving a fair distance between them as they faced off. The dread child rubbed his stomach, the fist on his prize going tighter.
āYeāre crazy, ye feckinā little string oāāā
āGive it back.ā
He paused. Her voice was different now. Shaky. Broken. He glanced down at the object in his hands and discovered it a hairbrush. Looking back to her, he found the fur of her muzzle damp.
She was crying? Over a hairbrush??
āGive it back,ā she said again, and the angry look on her face changed to one of sorrow. āPlease.ā
He narrowed his eyes. āWhat be so important ābout this brush?ā
She pulled her lips tight, as though warring with herself on whether to reply.
āIt was my motherās. Itās the only thing I have to remember her.ā
He rolled his eyes, no stranger to lies intended to pull heartstrings. āNice try. Yeāll need tā do better ān that if ye wanna pull one over on me.ā
Her expression changed, and now it held more pain than sadness. āItās the truth! Itās the only thing left of her!ā She gestured to the ruins beneath them. āOf my home!ā
Silence settled over them, and he glanced at the charred remnants of the house. āYer home?ā
āIt was,ā she said, her voice soft. āNow itās gone. Theyāre gone. Iām all alone and starving and scared and I donāt know what to do.ā
The tears returned, and she seemed to shrink before him.
It shouldnāt have made him feel bad. Heād shaken down countless other kids, all with equally sad little sob stories for how they ended up on the streets. āMy mother died, my dad kicked me out, they had too many kids and not enough food. Poor me, pity me.ā On and on they went, sniffling and boo-hooing over their lot in life.
In the end, it didnāt matter. Heād heard a hundred tales just like this one. It was all the same tune, just with different lyrics. And these other kids could sing this song until they were blue in the face, it didnāt make things better. It didnāt make anyone care about you.
Because that was the way things went. The strong survived, the weak died. If you didnāt want to die, you had to get strong. And thatās what he had done. It was no skin off his nose if any of these other brats toughened up or dropped dead. Less competition, as far as he was concerned.
He looked down at the brush in his hand. Ran his thumb over the lines in the handle.
āYe live or ye die,ā he said, not looking up at her. āThat be the way oā things. āTis a cruel world, anā ye gotta learn tā beat it, bāfore it beats ye.ā
She was quiet for a moment, before speaking again, her voice soft.
āYou canāt beat bad with more bad. That just makes things worse. My mother always said that a drop of kindness was more powerful than a whole ocean of cruelty.ā
The boyās brow furrowed. What a stupid expression. Kindness didnāt do anything but show weakness. Weakness made you a victim.
The strong lived, the weak died.
That was the way of this world. Fair or not.
āAye?ā he said, looking up at her. āAnā where did yer mumās kindness get her?ā
The girl flinched, casting her gaze to the ashes at her feet as her ears flicked back.
āAye, thatās what I thought.ā
Without another word, he turned and strode away, hairbrush still in his tight grip.
~X~X~X~
The boy watched as people moved in and out of the store. He knew the owner bought things, anything the man could turn around and jack up the price to make a profit off. The hairbrush was nice, and heād used his shirt to polish it up as well as he could. It may fetch him enough to eat for a week. Two, maybe!
His stomach growled in anticipation.
He stepped forward, standing in the middle of the street. People passed by, none giving him a second glance. He found it interesting how all these people could both see him and not see him at the same time. Because of what he was.
An echidna. A dread child.
He didnāt even know why he was considered a dread child. What did that mean? Where did that stupid name come from? He couldnāt even remember seeing any other echidna, so it wasnāt like they were so many to have become a nuisance. And heās sure he would have heard stories if they were evil conquerors who descended upon small villages to pillage and plunder.
Unfair. Thatās what it was. To be so harshly judged based solely on what he looked like.
He gave himself a shake. No matter. He was going to march right through that door and sell the owner this brush. Then he was going to go and buy enough food to fill his belly so he could sleep well for a change.
Yessir, that was the plan.
Yep.
. . .
So why werenāt his feet moving?
His grip on the brush tightened. He was being stupid. It was just a stupid brush. The sob story that girl gave was just thatāa lie meant to make him feel sorry for her, so he wouldnāt take this thing. He saw through her in an instant.
Besides, what good would it do her to keep it? Assuming it truly was her motherās, what benefit did holding onto some hairbrush offer? Sentimentality was foolish, and made you weak. That stupid girl would hold onto this brush because of the memories of her mother, all the while her stomach grew emptier and emptier, until she died and some other pickpocket snatched it up to take and sell, just like he was doing now.
When he looked at it that way, heād done her a favor by taking it from her. Now she could move on, and accept the world as it was. She could use that anger at him, that sorrow at losing something that mattered to her, to become stronger and push back against this world that was so cruel.
. . . a drop of kindness was more powerful than a whole ocean of cruelty.
He frowned. That was ridiculous. Kindness didnāt get you what you wanted. There was no room for kindness in this world. Everyone was only out for themselves.
He looked down at the brush.
His feet started moving.
~X~X~X~
Evening. The temperature was dropping, bringing a chill to the air as the sun set, painting the sky and ocean in shades of pinks and oranges and purples.
The girl moved through town, seeking shelter and safety for the night. Her belly still grumbled, annoyed to have nothing in it for the second day in a row. She tried to ignore it. Thinking about how hungry she was only made it worse.
Her sensitive ears tuned to the world around her, she moved quickly and silently through the shadows between buildings. This town had no shortage of people who would take advantage of her if she were caughtāother orphans, your garden variety perverts, or anyone who thought they could make a quick buck selling her to whatever ship could use a new whipping āboyā on board. She never slept in the same spot twice, lest she catch the wrong attention.
Her thoughts went back to that boy from this afternoon. That stupid, mean, jerk whoād stolen her motherās hairbrush, and just seemed to accept how horrible the world was to people like them. The vulnerable. The children left to fend for themselves. She supposed he was right in that you had to get strong to survive, but the way he said it just seemed . . . wrong.
Ducking between two homes, she moved further toward the outer parts of town. There was less foot traffic here, so she figured she could hunker down for the night without drawing too much attention.
There. A quiet house with a short stone fence surrounding it. She crept forward, ears sharp, her pupils dilating in the lower light to let her see better. A wagon was parked near the fence toward the back, leaving a small space between the wheels and stone.
Perfect.
She squeezed into that hollow, curling into as tight a ball as she could to help preserve her body heat. Her breath puffed out in little clouds as the sun dipped below the horizon.
Something would have to change tomorrow. Sheād need to make some hard decisions on what she was willing to do to survive. There were things she was sure, one hundred percent positive that she would not do, but there may be some things she could. She wouldnāt like them, but it was coming down to do a little bad and live, or be good and die.
Maybe the boy was right. Maybe her mother was wrong.
Letting out a little sigh, she closed her eyes and fell into a dreamless sleep.
~X~X~X~
The sound of songbirds drew her out of her sleep, and the girl awoke feeling dizzy, tired, and hungry. Her body ached from staying curled so tightly all night long.
Uttering a soft grunt, she uncurled, slowly, and pushed herself to sit up. She blinked against the rising sun, and lifted her arms above her head for a stretch. Turning her head, she cracked her neck, before freezing when her eyes fell upon something resting on the top of the stone fence.
Her motherās hairbrush.
She stared at it for a moment, barely daring to think it was real. Reaching out a hand, she took hold of it, running a thumb through the bristles. They were slightly damp from the morning dew, but they were here, it was real.
What . . . ? Why . . . ?
Turning her head on a swivel, she looked around, trying to catch sight of the boy. He shouldnāt have been hard to miss, being bright red and all. But there was no sign of him.
She looked back down at the brush in her hands. A little smile curled her lips.
~X~X~X~
He hated fish.
He hated the taste. He hated their stupid little bones and their creepy eyes and how much work they were to catch and prepare and all for what? A few bites of bland, flavorless bits of nothing?
It was a waste of time, effort, and energy.
The dread child sat on a tall rock near the shallows, a snitched fishing pole in his hands, staring at the line that disappeared into the water. Nothing was biting. Heād been at this since sunup, and he hadnāt had a single nibble.
The worms heād dug up for bait wriggled in the little tin by his side, and he found himself eyeballing them more often than he liked.
Gods he was so hungry.
With a huff, he turned his gaze back to the line in the water.
He was an idiot.
He could have been enjoying a nice full belly right now. Could have had a decent nightās sleep last night, instead of trying to track that brat girl down to return the brush, and then listening to his stomach complain about its emptiness until he finally passed out from exhaustion.
Idiot.
He should have just sold the stupid thing. He wasnāt even completely sure why he didnāt. Was he going soft? Why? He didnāt care about that girl. He didnāt even feel good about ādoing the right thingā by returning the brush. He felt like the biggest idiot on the planet. Anyone else would have sold the thing without a second thought. He would have sold the thing in a blink any other day. So what happened?
The only thing he could think of was he was weak and delirious from hunger. That had to have been it. Heād been so hungry, heād lost his ever-loving mind and did something completely out of character. That could happen, right?
He uttered another grunt, pulling the line back. Maybe heād have better luck somewhere else.
āHey!ā
The call hit his ears, sharp and loud, but he ignored it as he wrapped the line around his hand. No one ever spoke to him, so he wasnāt going to waste time looking for who owned the voice.
āHey! Hey, boy!ā
Wait. That voice sounded familiar.
He turned, and found the cat girl from yesterday standing on the beach behind him. She held a bag in one hand, and waved to him with the other.
And she was . . . smiling?
His brow pinched in confusion. āAye?ā
She pulled the bag before her, and he saw a long loaf of bread poking out the top. āHungry?ā
His stomach answered her, loud and rude and decisive.
He should be more suspicious of her motivations. What was her angle? What did she want? No one offers food with no strings attached.
Another grumble from his stomach.
He gave a grunt, throwing her a nod. Right now, nothing mattered but quieting this beast in his belly.
~X~X~X~
They sat on the far side of the beach, in the shade offered by the cliffside to the east of town. The girl had brought bread and meat slices, with a small sweet roll for dessert. They had no knife, so they simply tore the bread into pieces and ate it with the meat wrapped around it.
The waves crashing along the shore were the only sounds as they ate. Neither said a word as they satiated their hunger, quieting their bellies with the first food either had had in days.
He kept expecting her to say something, to tell him the conditions of her offer, but she never did. So he focused on the food, licking his fingers once the main meal was done. The sweet roll remained, and they sat quietly. Awkwardly.
āYe sold the brush.ā It wasnāt a question.
She nodded. āWhy did you give it back?ā
He shrugged. āAināt entirely sure, if I be honest.ā
Silence again. The sounds of the ocean. Shouting further off, near the pier.
āWhatās your name?ā
He didnāt reply for a moment, partially out of confusion. Did she not know what he was? āDonāt have one.ā
She cocked an eyebrow. āHow can you not have a name?ā
He turned to her, suddenly irritated. āHow can ye not know what I be? Seems everyone knows. No matter where I be, I hear it. It be the only thing people call me.ā
Her ears flicked back for a second, a look of shame flashing over her face. A second later her ears twisted forward again, the shame replaced with a furrowed brow. āWhat do people call you?ā
He paused, his own brow furrowing. How could she not know? āDread child.ā
It came out softer than he intended. As though he were ashamed of it. Which was odd, because it wasnāt like he named himself that. Itās just what heād always been called, as far back as he could remember.
She looked at him for a long moment, before wrinkling her nose. āThatās not very nice.ā
He didnāt respond.
āWhat do you call yourself? In your head?ā
Another pause. What an odd question. āNothinā.ā
āYou donāt even have a name you call yourself?ā
āNo, I donāt call meself anythinā in me own head,ā he snapped, suddenly done with this conversation. It was idiotic and shoving the fact that he didnāt have a name square in his face where he couldnāt ignore it. āWhy would I do that? I aināt exactly havinā full conversations with meself up there. That be dumb.ā
She flinched again, hunching her shoulders up, her ears flicking back. He quieted, turning away with a huff.
He should just leave. The food was mostly gone, his belly adequately full, and their conversation was making him feel . . . weird. Angry and confused and uncomfortable. Whatās the big deal if he didnāt have a name? Names are only for people who are important. For the benefit of others, who care about you. No one cared to know anything about him, other than the fact that he was a dread child. That was all that mattered to anyone.
āWould be a cool pirate name.ā
Her soft tone snapped him out of his thoughts, and he turned to her, brow furrowed. āWhat would?ā
She gave a little shrug. Her ears had returned forward, but she kept her eyes cast down to the sand before her. She dug her toes in to bury them, wiggling to make the dry sand sift between.
āLotta pirates have those kinda names. Itās always āThe Terribleā this, or āThe Mercilessā that.ā She shrugged again. āYou could be āThe Dreadā. Like, even the sound of your name makes people feel this weight in their belly, you donāt even have to do anything, really.ā A little smile curled her lips. āCaptain Dread, whose name inspires fear and respect across the seas.ā
He looked at her. Stared at her, really. That was . . . well, that kinda made sense. Heād never considered that this name that followed him wherever he went could be used to his advantage. That he could actually own it, make it his, and make it work for him. If everyone knew what he was . . . who he was, that could go a long way in asserting himself as a force to be reckoned with.
And that is very much what he wanted to be. If people were going to hate him anyway, the least he could do was give them a reason to do so. One that didnāt simply come down to his species.
His eyes narrowed at the girl next to him. She sat, watching her toes burrow into the sand. She didnāt look at him, but her ears were turned just slightly in his direction.
This cat was strange. She didnāt seem to know who or what he was. Sheād fought him without a second thought yesterday, in defense of her motherās hairbrush. And then sheād sold said brush, sharing the food sheād bought with him anyway.
And she spoke to him. Like he was a real person. Like he mattered. Like she didnāt care at all that he was an outcast, ignored and shoved aside for his entire life. Looked upon with disdain and fear or hatred.
She didnāt seem to see him like that.
And that . . . that made him happy.
Of course, heād be an idiot if he didnāt at least entertain the idea that this may all be a trick. Some act to make him want to help her, take care of her. She wasnāt a fighter, that much was obvious, and there were many on this planet, in this very town, who would have no qualms with hurting a little girl on her own. He wasnāt the best fighter, sure. But he could stand his ground better than she could.
So maybe this was all because he could be useful to her.
But maybe . . . maybe she could be useful to him, too.
āWhat be yer name, lass?ā
She flicked her eyes over to him. āScarlett.ā
A smirk pulled one corner of his mouth up, and he nodded to her. āAye, pleased tā make yer acquaintance, Scarlett. I be Dread.ā He held his hand out. āIt be nice tā meet ye.ā
Her eyes flicked from his hand to his smirk, and her own lip curled similarly.
āA pleasure,ā she said, reaching out to take his hand and give it a few quick pumps.
A little chuckle rumbled in his chest, and he flashed her a sly smile as he pulled his hand back. āSāpose I should ask why ye shared yer food with me. We aināt exactly on the best of terms, after yesterday.ā
She gave a little wave. āYesterdayās history. Todayās all that matters. You gave me back the brush, and you didnāt have to.ā
He shook his head. āStill donāt know what came over me for that.ā
āYou saw a poor, defenseless little girl who was all alone in the world and realized you couldnāt steal from her,ā she said, batting her eyelashes at him.
He barked out a laugh. āThat āpoor, defenseless little girlā got two good hits on my nose anā fought like a she-demon. So, Iām thinkinā that werenāt it.ā
She snickered with him, before quieting and gave a little shrug. āMaybe it was just a moment of weakness.ā
He quieted, watching her toes continue to dig into the sand. āOr maybe it be a drop oā kindness.ā
Her toes paused, and she looked over at him. A little smile curled her lips. āMaybe.ā
They shared a smile for a moment, before he snickered again. āNah. Moment oā weakness.ā
She nodded. āMost definitely.ā
āDonāt expect it again. It be everyone for themselves in this world.ā
Another nod. āObviously.ā
āAināt got time for charity cases.ā
āGods, no. Any cooperation between us would be strictly a mutually beneficial arrangement.ā
He nodded. āAye, that it be. Anā the minute it aināt yeāre gone.ā
āOh, absolutely,ā she agreed, nodding. āLikewise, if you double cross me, Iām leaving you in the dust.ā
āAye, fair.ā
Silence settled over them for a moment. Something seemed to have changed in the air between them, and he couldnāt figure out what. But it felt . . . comfortable. Warm. Like he wasnāt all alone anymore.
Finally, he broke the silence, keeping his gaze anywhere but on her.
āSo . . .ā he said, gesturing toward the sweet roll. āYe gonna eat that, ār what?ā
She watched him for a moment, before smiling. Without a word, she picked up the roll, and tore it in half to offer him one side.
He took it, casting her a quick glance, a little smile on his lips.
They ate in silence, watching the waves crash on the shore as seagulls called overhead.
~X~X~X~
The child, Dread, slipped through the streets of the port town on North Island. He moved with purpose, weaving his way through the crowd, heading toward the stand offering various cuts of meat for sale. The large rhino behind the bin turned and pegged him with a narrowed gaze as he neared, eyes flicking over him quickly.
āYou bring it?ā he asked, his voice gruff.
Dread nodded, pulling a mended shirt from the bag slung across him. The boy held it out to the man, who took it and spent an unnecessary amount of time examining the repair. Finally, he turned to Dread, giving him a little nod.
āGirl does a good job,ā he said, tossing the shirt behind the stall, and gathering a few bits of meat to wrap with paper. āCheck with Williams down the way. May have some chores to be done.ā
The rhino handed the meat over, and Dread gave him another nod as he took it and hurried off.
āWilliams,ā Dread muttered to himself, trying to keep the name in his memory. He had no intention of speaking with this shop owner himselfāhe wasnāt exactly a diplomat, and besides, people around town were only just slightly starting to interact with him. Heād tell Scarlett, and she would talk with Williams to arrange any work to be done, as well as payment.
The girl may have been rubbish at fighting, but she knew how to string words together. She could finesse a deal, diffuse a fight, or cut down anyone who stirred her ire. (Including him.) She wielded words like a master swordsman did a blade. It was truly fascinating to watch.
Not that heād ever tell her that to her face, obviously. But she was clever. And he admired that.
He skirted a few humans who blocked the street, tucking the paper-wrapped meat into his bag. He and Scarlett hadnāt eaten for nearly a day, and he meant to get it back to the abandoned house where they had camped for the night as soon as possible. His stomach growled, eager to tear into the food immediately, but he ignored it.
For once, he wasnāt thinking only of himself.
It struck him just how different things were these days. If heād been asked a month ago how heād picture his life now, he would have said not much different than any other day. Struggling. Surviving. Trusting no one but himself.
But what a difference a month makes.
Dread moved quickly through the streets, snitching a few coin here and there from unaware sailors. Scarlett wasnāt overly approving of the pick-pocketing, but Dread was more pragmatic. Theyād never get anywhere if all they were doing were chores and small jobs for locals. Sure it kept their bellies full, mostly, but that was about it. They were paid in food, and it took coin to go anywhere in this world.
Dread was not planning on spending his entire life in this port town.
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An Archive of Our Own, a project of the
Organization for Transformative Works
Okay, I reworked this piece, adding and expanding on some bits, doing some tweaking. I'm still not 100% thrilled with the ending, but it is what it is.
Now to work on the next chapter of one of my wips.
~~~~
The dread child slipped through the streets of Thunder Bay Harbor, the bustling port town of North Island. He didnāt bother to watch where he was goingāpeople tended to get out of his way on their own. That was one of the few advantages of being an echidna, aĀ dread child.Ā No one wanted to interact with him, so they didnāt bother him as he went about his business.
His business today, as it was every day, was toĀ not starve.
He rounded the corner to the market district, where shops posted stands outside their businesses to hawk their wares to the travelers whoād docked in port. New ships meant new customersānew chances for sales, for bartering, for deals to be made.
Tables and stalls lined either side of the cobblestone street, displaying everything from leather bags, to maps, to rolls of cloth in different colors and textures. Some of the fabric was shiny and smooth, imported from lands with names heād never heard of. Those usually carried a high price tag, and only sold to people who looked like they didnāt actually need them. People who smelled of flowers and soap, their clothes clean and pristine. They also usually carried a heavy coinpurse, but nicking any from them would bring more trouble than it was worth. So he steered clear.
What did people need more sets of clothes for, anyway? Just more to haul around, honestly. He pushed the sleeves of his shirt up, freeing his hands from their excessive length. It was too big for him, heād swiped it from a clothesline a few towns back to replace his last that had grown too small, but it served its purpose for the most part. Kept him warm on cool nights, and gave him something to wipe his nose with.
Besides, the longer the sleeve, the more easily he could hide anything he snatched from distracted vendors.
He slid close to the various food stands lined up and down the street, his large violet eyes alert and watching for the owners. They hated him. Well,Ā everyoneĀ hated him, but the store owners would overcome their aversion to interacting with him in favor of giving him a swat when they saw him anywhere near their wares. Sometimes with a broom, but sometimes with something heavier, or sharper.
It was a hard, cruel world, especially for a dread child of ten. There was no sympathy for this child on his own. No pity for an empty belly. Heād learned that long ago.
There was no kindness in the world. Heād been on his own since he was a puggle, and any memories of life before that, of family, had long since faded. He didnāt remember where heād come from, and ultimately, it didnāt matter. The past didnāt matter. Only now. Only survival.
A few ships had come to dock over the past few days, and the marketplace was busy and bustling with people. That was good. He could move about easier if there was a crowd keeping the stand ownerās attention.
That wasnāt to say he didnāt have to keep watch against any of the newcomers, too. When he was younger, five or so, heād nearly been snatched up by a pirate captain with a very bad reputation. Heād heard rumors about that man. Harper. He was cruel, spiteful, and cared only for himself and his status. His treasure hoard. Young boys hauled aboard his ship either died, or turned into as equally horrible people as the captain himself was. Most of his crew had been gathered as teenagers, and their nasty tendencies encouraged to a deadly degree.
It was a hard, cruel world. The dread child knew that.
I'd like to know more about Dread AU for the WIP Game! <3
It's an idea I've been tossing around for months, that diverges from the verse from Slow Descent. Dread is still referred to as a "dread child", but he's not found by Captain Harper and thus put through a lifetime of horrific abuse to change him into a cold-hearted killer like in that story.
In this au, (that I don't have a name for yet, because I am terrible at coming up with AU names) Dread has been on his own since he could remember, and the story begins when he's 10. He adopts the name "Dread" early on, simply because that's the way people have referred to him his entire life.
He has been stowing away on ships, acting as cabin boy if they let him, before scurrying off once they make port. He never stays in one place or with one ship too long, because even if they don't mistreat him, he never felt any sense of loyalty to them. So he kept moving.
He arrives at North Island port, where he finds Scarlett, a little manx girl his age, crying behind a burnt out husk of a house. Her parents were recently murdered, and she's all alone.
They have a bit of a rocky start (she punches him in the nose when he comes near) but are soon inseparable and develop a sibling-esque bond to survive.
I want to explore what kind of person Dread would be if he wasn't all alone and had someone who cared about him, and he cared about. He's still him, and can get tunnel vision when on the hunt for treasure, and be a bit reckless, but Scarlett acts as a grounding presence to keep him from going too batshit, and to keep him from getting himself killed when he's blinded by the lure of the score.
In return, he's her grounding force when her insecurities and anxiety start to get the better of her. And he drags her out of her comfort zone, forcing her to actually live and not hide away.
I don't have much written for it as of yet, but here's the beginning.
The dread child slipped through the streets of the port town on North Island. He didnāt bother to watch where he was goingāpeople tended to get out of his way on their own. That was one of the few advantages of being a dread child. No one wanted to interact with him, so they didnāt bother him as he went about his business.
His business today, as it was every day, was to not starve.
He slid close to the various food stands lined up and down the street, his large violet eyes alert and watching for the owners. They hated him. Well, everyone hated him, but the store owners would overcome their aversion to interacting with him in favor of giving him a swat when they saw him anywhere near their wares. Sometimes with a broom, but sometimes with something heavier, or sharper.
A few ships had come into port over the past few days, and the marketplace was busy and bustling with people. That was good. He could move about easier if there was a crowd keeping the stand ownersā attention.
The first stand he came to was one with various cuts of meat on display. The smell hit his nose and his stomach gave a loud grumble. He hadnāt had meat in days. Saliva flooded his mouth and he swallowed hard.
Just one of those chunks of mutton would fill his belly for at least two days.
People surrounded him, and he lowered himself slightly, to make himself appear smaller and less detectable. Many of the people around the stand were humans, and they towered over him. There were a few non-human speciesāa few foxes, some sort of bird, and a turtle. None of them seemed to pay him any mind, so he slowly reached over the edge of the cart to snag a cut of leg.
Just as his fingers closed over it, a large fist grabbed his wrist.
āWhat dāya think youāre doinā, rat?ā
He snapped his head around, coming face to face with the large boar behind the stand. Angry red eyes burned into his violet, and the boy shrank beneath the heavy gaze.
āI find your filthy fingers on my wares again, and Iāll chop āem off,ā the boar growled, and brought a large meat cleaver from beneath the counter as emphasis. The metal caught the sun, and it flashed a blinding reflection into the boyās eyes. āGet it?ā
The dread child nodded frantically. The boar snarled at him a moment longer, before releasing his hold on the boyās wrist.
Not wanting to overstay his welcome, the boy hurried off to hide in one of the side streets.
His stomach growled, as if scolding him for his failure.