Servant to the Spidae – Aspect and Anchor Read Online Ruby Dixon

Categories Genre: Fantasy/Sci-fi, Novella, Paranormal Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 60
Estimated words: 55964 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 280(@200wpm)___ 224(@250wpm)___ 187(@300wpm)
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He nods. “Do you wish to return to your quarters, then?”

I hesitate. I don’t want to go back to that windowless room. It feels like a tomb, a cage, and I think that’s part of what’s making me anxious. He wants honest reactions from me, right? “I don’t like my quarters,” I blurt out. “At all.”

The Spidae’s perfect, beautiful face is blank. “It is safe there.”

“It makes me feel like I’m trapped.” I lick my lips, nervous. “Can’t I just wander around for a bit? I’ll stay out of your way. You can put me back in there when I need to sleep, but for now I’d like to keep exploring my home, if that’s all right. And if there’s anywhere you don’t want me to go, I won’t. I promise.”

The god considers for a moment. “You would rather not be safe in your room? I thought you wished to be safe with us.”

“I’m at the end of the world. I am the servant to three gods. How can I be any safer?”

I expect him to smile, but he only gives me another curious look and then nods. “Very well. I must return to my duties, but if you need anything, call for us. The spiders are always watching and will let us know.”

I’m so relieved I break into a wide grin. I want to grab his hands and squeeze them tight, but I don’t know if he’ll appreciate that. So I clasp my hands tightly together in front of me. “Thank you so much, my lord Fate.”

He stares at me for a moment longer, and then turns and melds into the cobwebs on the wall. It doesn’t even bother me this time, because I’m starting to get an inkling of how things work around here. The webs—the spiders—they’re all tools of the gods and not to be afraid of. Spiderwebs cover everything because that’s how they move about in their home.

I glance at my surroundings. Do I stay here or do I head back down to the kitchen and make myself something? If I can find some meat and vegetables, I’d love a thick, comforting soup. Just the thought of soup—and the process of making it—decides me. It’ll give me something to do instead of staring at the walls. I head for the entryway to go back out into the hall, and as I do, I absently lift the lid of the trunk closest to me.

And pause.

It’s full of fabrics.

I turn, my attention now fully on that trunk, and open the lid all the way. Sure enough, the trunk is full of bolt after bolt of rich brocades and expensive silks. It’s a treasure trove of fabric, and the realization fills me with sheer joy. The god—the Spidae with the blue eyes—said I could have whatever I wanted in this room. I can make myself dresses.

I can make myself dozens of dresses.

Happiness bubbles inside me at the thought. I love pretty gowns, the more ornate the better. When I was a child, we had no coin, and I was envious of the lovely gowns the other girls my age wore. At one point, I was sold into slavery to a tailor and his wife, and I assisted in their shop and taught myself to copy the fancy fashions of the wealthy upon my own clothing. It was a nice time, I think wistfully, until I grew breasts and the tailor’s roving eye turned to me. Then I was sold off, and, well, that was that.

But I like sewing. And here, there’s no one to tell me that a slave can’t have a dozen flounces upon her dress. There’s no one to tell me that flashy ermine is inappropriate for one of my status. I finger a lovely red silk, imagining the skirts I can make with the wealth of fabric here, and I smile.

The gods must be looking out for me after all.

Five

Soup fixes everything.

Hours later, I’ve got a basket full of feathers plucked from a fat bird, and a full stomach. I worried that I’d made too much soup between the two pods I’d opened up, one with the fowl in it and the other full of root vegetables, but I’ve eaten every bite. I guess it’s lucky that I’m ravenous as an anchor? There won’t be much left over to waste.

With a full belly, I’m feeling much more at ease, too. I’ve had strange turns of events in my life in the past and I’ve managed to handle them. The Spidae can’t be a worse master than some of the ones I’ve already had. As long as I make them happy, I should be fine. And if it’s a bit quiet up here, well, I can surely keep busy with sewing and cooking for myself.

There are far worse fates out there.


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