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Arkh

CasimirCat
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
A modern fantasy epic poem, featuring anthropomorphic animals and dark Lovecraftian overtones. Iambic pentameter? Rhyme royal? In 2025?! Say no more. Khazemil the fox has recurring nightmares of a sepia void he cannot escape. But as his waking hours are taken over by new responsibilities as an adult, he must search for answers with the help of his border-collie friend Merrasir.
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Chapter 1 - Dream

A single bulb, a dying buzz and light

Too high above to reach, too dim to see

But half a handbreadth out into the night

Within the circle, sepia debris

Thin-scattered remnants of his memory

"Again! Again! This hellish yellow hall!

Awake! Awake, or how long can I crawl?"

The buzz again, the lightbulb in its place

But pricking up his ears and turning 'round

The lines of terror faded from his face

Those grainy walls by which the room was bound

Were mute, where from the void had echoed sound

And standing, shedding sheets to stretch and yawn

Without another thought he carried on

"Fine morning," said the fox, fixing his nest

Where on the floor it lay, a scattered heap

The blankets, tattered, made for sorry rest

But Khazemil had nowhere else to sleep

Across the room he set the tea to steep

"A night alone, and still I see the dreams,"

He muttered, "Nothing changes, as it seems."

A house, a room, a table, and a chair

A mother and a father down the row

A gray embossed high-collared robe to wear

A path of dust to walk before the snow

And nothing more to learn, to seek, to know

His breath, still tea-warm, curled tongues of mist

His paw massaged the aching in his wrist

The slanted wooden shanties sighed at him

As Khazemil paced early through the fog

Aligning every step upon a whim

"I don't suppose I'll see the dear old dog,"

Ho-hummed the fox, external monologue

"I'm up before the sun again today,

And father'd punish me for such delay."

It was the moving out, the moving up

It was a harvest day, a harvest moon

Accompanied by just his simple cup

Embraced, abandoned, quiet afternoon

The vigil day had come and gone so soon

Beyond the final village-fence, the field

Beneath the close and settled mist concealed

"'Move out, the sting of parting doesn't last!

Why should it when we'll see you reaping grain?'

How could they be so cold to shun our past?

And why hold me, their son, in such disdain?

'The way of things?' The way of needless pain!"

A cry stuck in his throat, Khazemil keeled

Then twitched, and stood, and smiled at the field