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Joy Pursuit: Steel Dragon
Chapter -10: Nascent Reverberations/ Prologue

Chapter -10: Nascent Reverberations/ Prologue

Under the faded night sky, between the fading edge of night and the first light of dawn, an unfortunate miracle occurred. Against all odds, a massive, dark vessel landed unharmed atop the blossoming canopy of an otherworldly forest. Its imposing form, dark and unyielding as it brushed against the delicate, ethereal pink blossoms that cradled its strange, weighty presence with grace.

The dark vessel towered over the vast expanse of the eerie, silent forest. The vessel churned and moved ever so lightly, like a leaf swaying above the abyss of dark green lake water. Its form balanced by a celestial harness that had spared it from a disastrous crash, swaying gently beneath the crimson glow of the shattered night sky. High above the treetops, a massive formless volume of water floated, suspended by some unnatural force. It shimmered with an eerie red hue, reflecting the fractured remnants of a shattered crimson sky—like shards of stained glass scattered across a cosmic canvas. Decorating the otherwise bleak vessel in a swaying wave of color.

As if in response to the celestial interplay, flickers of soft light pulsed from the forest below, illuminating the vessel’s jagged belly. The low pink glow clung to the edges of the dark intrusion, casting it in sharp relief against the organic surroundings. The dance of color against the dark vessel shook lightly as the weight of the massive vessel strained the canopy’s patience—cracks spread through the branches. The low groans of protesting wood echoed through the silence, stirring the nothingness.

Within the dark vessel was an incomprehensible array of black stone chambers, empty and shaped in violent jagged shapes; it was a senseless expression of engineering. The chambers, at the very least, were separated with some level of logic, allowing the timid human mind to the very least perceive it as a vessel of organic geometry, like the gut of some ancient, long-dead leviathan.

It’s blackened insides were painted with an oily, dark liquid that permeated throughout every surface. It clung to the walls in viscous streams that pooled at the base of yawning vast chambers.

Despite the vessel’s irregular form, there seemed to be a rule of duality. From the outside, its jagged shell resembled an elongated mass of rock, but within, the space unfolded into two cavernous chambers bound by perfect symmetry. The disorienting angles and pointless halls all obeyed this logic. The centerpiece of the vessel—a gaping hole—connected the two main chambers through the means of a familiar bridge-like structure. It was worn and scarred, hinting at the things that had once inhabited the space. Their presence lingering only as a pitiful liquid clinging to the black stone.

This section of the vessel was a particularly elongated, level expanse, akin to the deck of a ship. The bridge itself glimmered in the crimson and pink hues as the segment featured broad openings above and below, revealing the inner sanctum to the splintered heavens, permitting slender beams of scarlet light to seep in, casting sickly crimson light over the oily architecture.

From below, the coral glow of the forest fought its way through the lower aperture, mixing with the red in an uneasy shade. The oily walls inside the vessel glistened like exposed flesh.

Desperate. The sharp rasp of frantic breath echoed through the dark halls. Claws scraped desperate for hold against the slick black stone. With a burst of speed, a blue figure darted across the bridge, its talons clambered for footing on the treacherous ground. The creature had six limbs—its front and back legs steady beneath it, while two smaller arms clutched its serpentine abdomen. In its frantic rush, it stumbled, losing its grip on the shifting surface. It tumbled and rolled the momentum, sending its body against the edge of the bridge. In a panic, its smaller arms unfolded as it frantically held onto the bridge.

It froze. Whipping its head towards the twisted black crevasse, it had come from. Its triangular snout trembled; its three vertically slit red eyes widening. It saw something in the yawning abyss. The creature’s breath hitched as it staggered back onto the bridge in a panic.

From the black, a wet and unnatural sound slithered closer—the slosh of flesh, the rasp of labored breathing echoed against the wet rock.

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The blue creature’s fox-like ears twitched, sensitive to the nuances of the labored breath that ran down its spine. Tensing its muscles, the blue creature put all it had into escaping the darkness that was gaining.

Shuddering, its three vertically slit red eyes glanced back, their glow catching the sickly light from the shattered sky above. From the shadow, panic flashed through them as something shot from behind: a bladed, bone-tipped appendage, slicing through the air with deadly precision. It grazed the side of the creature’s triangular snout, leaving a thin line of blood in its wake.

The creature snarled—a short, sharp cry of pain and terror—but it did not slow. Every instinct demanded speed. For whatever lurked in the shadows harbored a fate worse than death and to falter meant agony.

The vessel groaned like an old dragon; beneath the burden of its weight, the trees had begun to snap; the deep sound echoed through the tension of the night. But the blue alien kept moving, its six limbs carrying it deftly across the twisting, chaotic bridge. Expertly maneuvering into the entrails of the opposite chamber.

From the opposite end of the bridge, a screech split the air—a confusing cacophony of torment. The screech echoed through the vessel, spurring the blue creature forward with renewed desperation. The predatory pursuer was relentless but clumsy—dangerous, but slower than its fleeing prey.

Beyond the vessel’s walls, the forest seemed to respond to the wailing from within. Dark mist coiled around the ship, thickening like sentient smoke, drawn to the pain and fear.

The blue alien slammed into a massive greasy stone seal, its body twisting in a panic, claws scraping against the unyielding surface. Pulling itself back, the alien revealed a serpentine tail and sprouting from the expected end was a seven-fingered hand, its movements precise but slightly trembling. It deliberately plunged its hand into an oily black waterfall that cascaded over the stone hatch, the liquid cold and thick against its shaky digits.

The alien’s chest heaved as it waited, every second stretching painfully long. Behind, the wailing grew louder and louder—

With a sharp click, the mechanism responded. For a brief interlude, the alien’s lips curled into something akin to a smile—hope flickering through its red eyes.

The stone hatch slid with a heavy scrape, revealing the outside world with a flash. The maddening pink glow of the alien forest spilled in, bathing the creature in its disorienting light, casting everything in its unnatural hue. There was something deeply wrong in the air—a suffocating sense of dread that caused the blue alien’s skin to crawl, but the clatter of claws on stone left it no time to hesitate.

Blindly, it leapt just as a mangled, pale hand shot from the shadows, its twisted fingers narrowly missing the tip of its tail. The blue alien’s eyes widened in terror as it caught a fleeting glimpse of its pursuer—a grotesque thing, pale and deformed, something disturbingly alien to an alien. The sight seared into its mind—a vision of horror that sent a jolt of panic through its entire body.

Driven by blind animal panic, the alien aimlessly fled into the forest. Branches clawed at its limbs, leaves whipped across its snout, but it did not stop. The only thought pulsing through its mind was escape—get away, get away, get away.

Behind the fleeing alien, the predatory creature floundered awkwardly out of the ship, its twisted form crashing down as it fell onto the coarse roots of a dark blossom tree. Bones cracked and shattered on impact, the sound echoing through the forest, followed by a pained scream—guttural and eerily human.

It struggled to stand, its twisted limbs trembling under the effort, but they gave way, sending it slumping back against the gnarled trunk of the blossom tree. The creature clawed at the dark bark, trying its best to stand but failing. Collapsing against the tree, the pale creature curled inward, trembling as soft, childlike sobs escaped from its throat. A pitiful sound that was carried through the forest.

The pink grass beneath the creature stirred, shifting unnaturally as if awakened by the scent of blood. Blades of grass twisted and elongated into fleshy, spiraling tongues, writhing as they reached out to meet the creature’s broken body. The soft tendrils entwined with its pale, deformed flesh, wrapping around it in a grotesque mockery of care.

The creature shuddered, letting out small, broken sobs as the forest embraced it, cradling it in an unsettling parody of comfort. The pink tongues curled tighter, pulling it deeper into the underbrush as though the forest itself sought to claim it, merging beast and land into one grotesque cocoon.

And there it lay, its body sinking into the strange, pulsing landscape.