He climbed to his feet and found Opal staring up at him. She had to look up quite a bit further than before. The top of her head used to come up to his jaw, now it was about level with his clavicle. He'd grown a good five or six inches he judged, more than when he had eaten the giant toads. Not surprising he mused considering he'd just eaten half a tribe of Goblins.
"Big." said Opal.
Rain scratched his chin. "Yes. Still hungry though."
"I can fish."
"Huh?"
"I can fish a little."
"Well that works out because I need to wash all this blood off me anyway."
Rain towed the Goblin girl away from the pile of bones. He paused on the way, noticing that she'd only eaten part of the witch. Not willing to let a meal go he grabbed the spit from the fire and walked and ate.
Opal disappeared inside a tent for a moment and came back out carrying a fishing rod over her shoulder.
"Fish." she said.
"Sure?"
The unusual pair made their way back to the small lake where he made Opal strip again. She complained loudly as he spun her around checking for weapons. Satisfied she hadn't smuggled anything from the dead Goblins, he let the blushing Goblin clothe herself.
Rain lowered himself into the water with a sigh. He found washing wet blood off was trivial compared to matted dried blood and he was soon clean and glossy furred once more.
Opal sat and set up her fishing rod on a large protruding boulder in the shallows. She deftly tied a length of twine to the fishing rod's tip and then a lure at the other end to which she attached a severed toe from the witch. With a flick of the rod the lure sailed out into the centre of the pool where it gently bobbed up and down. She settled herself cross-legged and got ready to wait.
Rain lazed in the water letting the cavern's crystal light wash over him. He sighed.
"Do you think the rest of your tribe, the part that escaped, will return to this cavern?"
"Mmm, doubtful, this is far from the only cave like this and without any top Gobbos they won't have the guts to come in case you are still here. Most Gobbos fear their own shadow if they don't have someone to boss them around."
"Is that why you came to me?"
She snorted. "No, I wanted a better life and I think you can get me it."
"Mhmm." replied Rain floating in the water with his eyes half closed. "Just so you know I'm not sure I can. My goals don't exactly coincide with 'a better life'. Mostly they consist of revenge and killing."
"Revenge against anything bigger than you is not worth it. Gobbo life lesson."
"The ones who I want revenge on are certainly bigger than me. Well, that's only scratching the surface. They have levels, magic, I'm just a monster and have neither… Having second thoughts about being around me?"
The lure in the middle of the pool began to wobble and Opal took notice.
"Well, I figure it's like you said, I just gotta make sure you're bigger than they are."
The lure plopped below the water and the twine zipped taught. Opal braced herself on the rock, leaning heavily back with both heels dug into a crack in the stone. She was immediately yanked off the rock with a yelp and crashed into the water with a splash. Rain blinked and then struck out toward her in alarm as she was towed away. He grabbed her ankle and heaved backwards, but he didn't make much headway as his feet slipped on the sandy lakebed.
"You've gotta let it go!"
"Blub blub blub."
"Shit."
He managed to tow her toward himself a little and got his paws wrapped around the fishing rod. He leaned into it and drove his feet across the lakebed again and again until great sandy drifts flowed in his wake. After a minute of thrashing against the sand the shore started to near and footing became more stable as the water level dropped. He strode free one slow step at a time towing the rod behind him. Water sheeted from his fur as he made it onto dry land. Behind, a shadowy shape below the water jerked back and forth, occasionally breaking the surface and revealing a scaled form.
Rain didn't relent and began tugging and pulling until the monster was in the shallows and then up onto the shore. It was a gigantic fish, twice the size of Rain.
"Quickly! Kill it!" said Opal spitting water from where she had crawled onto the beach.
"How?!"
Rain moved left and right unsure how to approach the thing as it violently thrashed around out of water.
"Use a rock you dumb dog!"
Rain shot her an annoyed glare but scooped up a stone the size of his head and rushed the fish. He brought it down on its head with a fleshy crunch. The fish opened its mouth and began screaming to Rain's distress. He brought the rock down again and again and again until the fish let out a wet gurgle and flopped down limp.
Breathing hard he eyed the fish assuring himself it was actually dead.
Opal patted the fish's side.
"Sometimes the tribe gets fish."
"Oh. That's a bit bigger than I expected."
Rain's stomach growled and he licked his teeth.
Opal rolled her eyes and gestured at it. "Well get on with it." She found a comfortable spot to watch as Rain let his instinct take over and he leapt on top of the fish and buried his maw in its side eating scale and all. He worked back and forth, stripping the fish down to the bone from the top.
He had to stop about halfway through to rest, his stretched taut stomach as big as a beach ball. He belched loudly.
"I think fish is my new favourite. Gods It tastes so fucking good. Second place is toad, third place is Goblin, well, Goblin in third as long as I don't try too hard to smell what I'm eating."
Opal scoffed but wandered over to where he sat. She hesitated then placed a small hand on his bulging stomach. It growled and trembled and then began to gradually shrink. Opal watched hungrily as he stretched his limbs, his bones popping as he grew half an inch taller.
"You like watching me grow?"
"N-no, it's just strange."
"Uh Huh."
She withdrew her hand from his flat stomach as Rain examined his larger body.
"Uhnf. I can never get enough of that," said Rain.
His eyes slid back to the rest of the fish, already he was beginning to drool. He crawled into the mess he had made and continued ripping and tearing at it, hungrily gulping more and more of the fish down. He made quick work of it devouring it down to the ground until there was nothing left.
He felt a pressure on his stomach and realised Opal was leaning on him.
"Hey!"
She only whimpered in reply as his stomach began to recede beneath her until she was resting on his toned abdomen and feeling his body shift and grow beneath her touch. She seemed to realize what she was doing all of a sudden and glanced up at him in horror. She scrambled off of him blushing furiously and breathing harder than normal.
"S-sorry!"
She ran away, snatching up the fishing pole and rushing back to the rock where she turned her back to him.
He grumbled about personal space but decided to let it lie. He waded back into the water to rid himself of the awful fishy smell which to his annoyance seemed to cover him from tip to toe. Not surprising, but he was definitely considering knocking fish down the ranking for it.
A few hours went by without the lure dipping below the water again and Rain's paw pads were starting to get wrinkly, he flopped on a big flat stone on the shore to dry off.
"Hey, do you think that was the only fish?"
Opal hunched her shoulders, hesitated, and then turned to him.
"I think there were more, but… well the fish around here aren't stupid and the pool leads to other pools underground so they don't have to stay. When we fished as a tribe it was rare we caught more than one big fish before having to wait. Sometimes that took days."
"Giving up?"
Opal sighed then threw the rod down. "Yes. Fuck fishing. I've got another idea."
She leapt onto the shore from the rock and beckoned him to follow. He climbed to his feet and wandered after her.
Comments (0)
See all