Mongrels and Music
Copyright© 2024 by Cly Anders
Chapter 1
The miniature hamlet bustled with activity. The sun’s punishing rays were blocked by the horizon, offering the scaly little inhabitants a reprieve from the day’s heat. They crowded the few streets at this time of growing shadows, croaking to one another in their language and hurrying to the market before the chill of the night took hold and they would need to retreat back into their warm homes.
Placing his shaded goggles onto his forehead, Kupper surveyed the scene from the top of a squat, rounded house like a massive, black-eyed vulture. His reflective pupils shimmered a bright copper in the fading light.
Perhaps he could have passed for human, if humans had totally black eyes, tall pointed ears, or even came near to his size and strength. No, the humans shunned him and his kind. They had shunned him since birth, forcing his human mother to raise him among the little lizard people native to this world.
Taking a deep breath into all 3 lungs, he easily dropped to the ground from the roof top which was not even as tall as he was. He was large enough among other humans, but here among these simple little people he truly felt like a god worthy of the legends they told of him. The tallest of the reptilian natives only came to his waist, while the tallest of the humans hardly reached his stalwart shoulders, which were often too wide for these narrow streets. Their colorful houses were entirely too small for one like himself.
At least, that’s what the natives thought.
His size belied a delicate stealth honed by centuries of living as an outcast among humans. They told him he was a monster. An abomination. An alien. His heritage was well known by them for wherever there were humans, there were their most feared predator.
The Q’Ra.
The name alone would cause a great many humans from a great many planets to shudder in fear. Long before he was born, the elves had created these soldiers to fight the humans in their early years of space exploration, making them specifically to prey on human fears with ashen skin, gaunt faces, predatory teeth and large black eyes with reflective centers. The elves had thought themselves clever to neglect creating any females, hoping their iron willed creations would perish once their service was complete. Countless millennia meant nothing to the ageless Q’Ra, however, and neither did peace treaties. Knowing their superiority was threatened by extinction, the hunters began to experiment and found that, though difficult, breeding with humans created a greatly superior species than with their own ancestors, their dominant genetics lasting for several generations.
These unfortunate offspring had been dubbed the Q’Hu.
This Q’Hu walked among the small people that greeted him in their friendly manner, the young ones craning their necks back to stare at him in innocent, wide-eyed awe. They knew him to be generous with the work he did for them, gentle and mighty. Though, in the heat of the day that they slept, he helped himself to whatever trinkets and gems he could find in their homes.
Honestly, it was just for the fun of it. These people did not find such things nearly as valuable as the humans did. It kept his senses sharp, at least so he told himself.
Those senses were beginning to dull. While a human only slept every day and a half for this world, he could go four with ease. Tonight just happened to be that time. He would need to be moving on. The genial natives were becoming curious as to where their items had disappeared to. It didn’t occur to them that someone would take anything without asking.
Sometimes, he returned a few of the things he took to make them seem misplaced. So they didn’t suspect him– really, for the fun of it. He didn’t feel like being fun this time.
Amid lush crops and trees laden with fruit, he had found himself a lovely little pastel orange barn. Fragrant flowers neatly bordered the outside, a little garden stretching out beside it. He knew the sweet, scaly people who tended this land, had watched the care with which they took of their home and their property. Though he did not pay them for his comfortable bed, he repaid them by leaving no trace of his existence. Not that they would mind, but he felt best to take as little advantage of their charitable nature as he could should he return this way and require a favor or two. It wouldn’t be the first time in his life such a thing had happened.
With a heavy sigh, he laid out on his bed roll behind some barrels to stay out of sight in case one of the small folk decided to come in. His mind wandered as he stared at the ceiling. Perhaps he would try visiting a human town next. Moments like now were often lonely and his own merits to alleviate his desire were hardly as satisfying.
It would not be difficult for him to acquire female company. There was no need to force. Humans naturally flocked to all elf-kin, like bees to flowers. A great many women found his excellent physic and roguish looks irresistible. His dark, glowing gaze was mesmerizing, his voice inhumanly deep and clear, and the satin purr he could produce due to his elven heritage was often a done deal.
However, unlike the natives who looked upon him with awe and curiosity, he was often met with scorn by humans and even attacked. He wasn’t human, they said, no matter what his mother had been, what mattered was that his father had been one like him. An ageless mongrel. He knew well the ridicule any woman faced to be with him, even for a night. The same his own mother had faced to raise him.
That had been a great time ago. Centuries. He had stopped counting. Now was not the time for such memories anyways. He would want to start going early in the morning before the heat.
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