An Unorthodox Lecture (UL)
Synopsis: Warren is sick of being belittled by Eli and has become paranoid of giants, so he seeks out help from Olivia to learn more about giants and how to defend himself from them.Â
Warnings: Language, mentions of fatal vore, M/M soft, unwilling, nonfatal vore, near death, fear, and Eli being Eli.
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A little bell rang out cheerfully throughout the dusty shop as the front door swung open. It was after business hours , but the front door was left unlocked for a brief time, despite the little neon lights at the front window saying the shop was now closed.Â
The small Hunter began to stride briskly into the shop. The alchemist shop (or more publicly known as an herb shop) wasnât a very welcoming sight. It was dull and lacked any real proper decorations. Upon entry, one would find themselves facing rows upon rows of dusty shelves with jars and containers of every kind which contained ambiguous contents.Â
Warrenâs boots clanked against the creaky old floorboards with each stride as he made his way toward the back of the shop. Oddly contrary to his expectations, the desk in the back of the shop was unoccupied. He paused in front of it for a moment before ringing the service bell.Â
There was a pause.
He ventured to try it again then his hand froze as the door to the back of the shop opened.Â
âI donât need to hear that bell another damn time, Wilbur.â A womanâs voice called out.Â
Warren turned to see the shopkeeper to the side. She didnât look like much from what someone might assume from a powerful alchemist. She looked like she was sixty years old. Her unkempt hair was divided into twin ponytails that were slung loosely over her shoulders. Perched on her nose were a pair of buggishly big spectacles with a silver rim to them that enlarged her eyes almost comically when it hit the right angle. Despite the comical emphasis on her eyes, she looked very tired and droopy with baggy eyes. She was holding an entire glass carafe of steaming hot coffee.Â
âOhâ sorry, Olivia,â Warren quickly retracted his hand away from the bell. He paid no notice to her getting his name wrong. She never got it right anyways. For the reputation she held for her own intelligence, part of him wondered if she actually messed up his name on accident, or if she was just messing with him.Â
Olivia ignored his apology and took a swig from her carafe. She motioned for Warren to follow as she turned toward the doorway. âCâmon, let's get this over with.â
Warren sighed and followed her inside the doorway. There was a stairway leading down into a basement with a higher ceiling. This area was furnished a bit differently than the area upstairs. There were bookshelves of ancient volumes, some titles were written in foreign tongues that couldnât even be recognized. On the far end of the room was a workbench area and some pots and alchemist equipment that looked almost like what one might find in the lair of a mad scientist. Across from the alchemist equipment, there were a couple of armchairs to the far side of the room with a coffee table between them and a book set on the table.Â
Warren took a seat as he was directed to one of the chairs and Olivia set down her carafe of coffee, picking up the big, heavy book.Â
She paused, staring Warren in the eye with a very tired sigh. âAlright, so you wanted to know about how to survive being attacked by a giant, right?â
Warren nodded, opening his mouth to elaborate, but Olivia spoke first.
âI couldnât neglect to notice that when you were returning my silver bullets from your little werewolf hunt that three bullets were missing⌠and the werewolfâs body. I needed that werewolf hair for my alchemy. I would have thought that you would be more concerned about how to kill a werewolf properly than try to learn about something as random as giants, especially since their rotation has already passed this town and probably wonât pass by for another three years.â
Olivia yawned for a solid ten seconds before sighing and took another swig of coffee. Warren frowned. âBut-- you know what happened last time I was around giants. They kidnapped me! They nearly killed me! And they somehow tracked me down, too! I canât just--â Olivia held up her hand with a tired sigh, instantly silencing the young Hunter. âLook, you donât have to explain your whole merry tale. Itâs fine. Iâll teach you anyways. And I think that this would be the perfect opportunity to bring in someone who knows a lot more about the topic than any normal Hunter or alchemist.â
She sighed, her eyes rolling toward the side of the room. She glanced at her small brass watch around her wrist impatiently. âUgh, well heâs a bit late, but he should show up any minute now. Anyways⌠To begin I think you should get to know the different species of giants, or at least the ones youâre most likely to encounter in this particular area.â
Warrenâs brow furrowed in curiosity, wondering what sort of co-teacher Olivia had in mind to bring. Even though he knew he should figure out soon enough, his curiosity made him impatient to figure out who exactly it was. Was it one of the veteran U.L. members? A weathered hunter who had seen decades worth of hunts and slain countless monsters?
He was a bit distracted in his own assumptions as Olivia flipped through her huge book and landed on a page titled, GIANTS. There was a diagram there that portrayed the size differences of all of the different species. The book, despite being weathered and torn in some places, seemed relatively up to date and printed out in at least the past decade or so. There was a size chart that showed several different species of giants, and to the far left was a tiny human in comparison to demonstrate the scale. He could instantly recognize the giant in closest resemblance to Eliâs height titled, Wood Giant. He could at least recall Eli using that term once or twice in the past, and previously wasnât sure if it was just a term they called themselves, or the actual title of that species.Â
Oliviaâs bulbous dark eyes followed his and she tapped the image with her weathered fingertip. âIâm sure youâre familiar with the wood giants. Theyâre some of the most common these days. Most other species only have a couple thousand to a few hundred left in the wild, such as the mountain giants,â She tapped the largest giant on the page which was easily twice the size of a wood giant. Warrenâs eyes widened at the sheer size. It was difficult to believe that creatures of such scale could even exist. His eye followed the page where paragraphs elaborated on each species. He stopped as he saw the information on the mountain giants. 23-27 feet tall. That was insane.
âHow have people never discovered them to exist?â Warren pondered. With creatures at such scale, it sounded impossible.
âWell, they were discovered back in the medieval days. There used to be a lot more giants in the past, and they were a lot bigger too. In the late 15th century, there was a movement to eradicate all monsters, and the king of England at the time was just desperate to get rid of them, so he teamed up with the outcasts, such as alchemists and sorcerers to get rid of them. The larger species were quickly run to extinction while the smaller ones evolved to survive under the radar. Out of nowhere, they seemed to gain camouflaging abilities, which youâre probably familiar with. Camouflage varies by species. Wood giants can disguise themselves as humans for brief periods of time. Mountain giants can merge with stone and camouflage into the mountain. Kapres can merge with trees. Cave giants can turn invisible. And so on.â
She stopped to take another few gulps of coffee. In the momentary pause, she glanced up as they could hear footsteps coming from the shop and the door at the top of the basement staircase opened. A tall figure stepped through, and he could be recognized immediately. Golden eyes, spiky black hair, tall, muscular build. Eli. And he was in camo form, currently standing at 6â1, instead of his usual towering height of 13â3.Â
Warrenâs eyes widened slightly as he saw the figure approach down the stairs. The camoâd giant was smirking. âHey there ya little humans!â He announced cheerfully in his rough voice. Warren shot a look towards Olivia in confusion, but from her expression, he could tell that this was an expected entry.Â
âSpeaking of camouflage, hello giant.â Olivia spoke calmly. âWarren, this is your co-teacher for now.â
âWait-- really?â
âWho better to learn about giants, than from a giant? This is a rare opportunity, since most giants just love killing humans at first chance.â
Warren sighed, frowning slightly as the camouflaged giant came closer, skipping over to slouch against the side of Warrenâs chair. âSo! What are we learning about here? We doinâ those lessons ya asked about, Tiny?â
Warren narrowed his eyes at Eli, not feeling all that comfortable with Eli standing that close. âUh, yeah, I guess thatâs what this turned into then. Olivia was going to help me learn how to stand a chance against giants.â
Eli laughed. âOhhh. Welllll sorry to disappoint ya then. Humans in general donât stand a chance.â
âThatâs not helping.â Olivia said tiredly. âYou should probably know how your ancestors were driven to extinction by humans in the past, unless youâve forgotten, or if the giants tell different tales about what happened.â
Eli rolled his eyes. âAw, youâre no fun all talkinâ about history anâ shit. How about we talk about more fun stuff, like giants eatinâ people and all that fun jazz.â He smirked down at Warren and he scooted to the side of his seat uncomfortably. âOh and by the way, since this room is big enough, Iâm gonna get outta camo for a sec. I canât stay in this form for very long anyways.â
Olivia shrugged indifferently, continuing to sip from her carafe. âSure, just donât break anything.â
Warren shot an uncertain glare toward the giant, âAnd donât you dare try anything, okay?â
Eli chuckled. âYa know I find it hilarious when ya put on that scary face, Tiny.â
He stepped away from the chair with a smirk and there was a sound of shifting and cracking of bones for a moment as his form regrew into massive proportions. He had to sit on the floor to avoid contact with the ceiling. His eyes became slitted like a catâs, and they were lined with dark markings similar to a cheetahâs. His ears were long and pointed. His fingers were tipped with long, sharp claws. Ivory fangs protruded from his lips in a grin. Warrenâs heart skipped a beat at the sight of the creature at his full size again, not feeling all that thrilled to be so close to the very same creature that had eaten him twice in the past.
âThat feels so much better,â the giant sighed in a deeper voice. His sharp eyes focused again on Olivia as she seemed completely unphased, even tired at the sight of the transformation.Â
âCan we get back on topic now?â Olivia tapped her fingers against her carafe impatiently. Warren could only guess one thing might be on her mind right now; sleep. She couldnât seem the slightest bit interested or thrilled in the prospect of this âclassâ and just seemed to want to get it over with. But then again, her true expression never really changed, so it was difficult to read past this.
âYeah, whatever.â Eli snorted. He smirked at Warrenâs alerted expression, baring his fangs.Â
Olivia sighed. âAlright, so now that we have the species of giants out of the way, now we can work on some techniques on how to survive them.â
âWait-- what about fighting them? I should have to know that at leastâŚâ Warren glanced at Eli uncertainly, who scoffed at Warrenâs statement.Â
âLook, kiddo. Iâve got claws, fangs, I can run almost as fast as one of your cars for long distances, I have a lot more stamina and Iâm a lot more durable than any human. Look at what you got. Youâre just a soft little thing that needs all sorts of bells and whistles like guns and knives to make up for all that lot of nothinâ youâve got goinâ for ya.â
Warren looked hurt. He looked to Olivia for some sort of contradiction to Eliâs statement, but she just shrugged. âWell he said it. Thatâs why knowing how to survive is more important than winning in any situation. A lot of Hunters need an assortment of tools and tricks up their sleeve in order to stand a chance. Hence why alchemists are often employed with a lot of the Legionâs affairs. Back in the medieval days, Hunters had tried to use blunt weapons, but they were pretty much useless in comparison. Giants, apart from other monsters, were the sole reason why alchemists ever got accepted as allies of the Legion.â Warren frowned. This wasnât any sort of answer he had wanted. He would just have to get better at using his weapons effectively against giants, but against Eli he couldnât really do that.Â
âSo⌠How do you survive against giants, then?â Warren said.
âYa donât.â Eli quipped with a smirk. âThe only chance that humans have against giants is with your little tools and tricks, and giants know that. Weâve been trained ever since we were giantlings, all of the best ways to disarm ya tiny fellas, and we know how to find any hidden knife and weapon from years of practice even before our first Bindings. We donât just have the looks goinâ for us to be the perfect predators. We were trained for it.â
Olivia sighed, not seeming to like the interruptions. âWithout weapons, thereâs still a few ways. Blunt attacks such as kicking and punching wonât do much against that, so you shouldnât waste your energy. And energy is key here. Because if youâre eaten, the temperature is high enough to send you into a coma-like state within an hour or so.â
Warren frowned, recalling how the heat had been the main thing to subdue him so easily both times, even sending him to sleep once. âBut-- if youâre eaten, itâs already over though, right? Thatâs it. Thereâs no way to escape.â
âYuuup.â
âNo,â Olivia said at the same time, and gave Eli an unamused glare. âNo, thatâs not it. Thereâs still ways. Pressure points and weak points to get familiar with. For the exterior, the point between the thumb and index is a pressure point, as well as beneath the bicep. Immobilizing the arm with pressure points might aid in your release. Interior points, for instance, the lungs. If eaten, youâd be directly beneath the lungs, and continued, repeated pressure to them can be uncomfortable, even shock the giant into awakening again by changing their breathing patterns. Keeping a giant awake is your first priority. Though their digestive system varies slightly per species, for Elmoâs type specifically, wood giants only digest when theyâre asleep in order to conserve energy when theyâre awake.â
âItâs Eli. Ya keep gettinâ my name wrong.â The giant glared daggers at her. She ignored him.Â
âAnother point is a cluster of nerves against the spine. Harsh enough pressure there can actually send a giant into temporary paralysis and knock them out. The giant digestive system is directly linked to their preservation of energy. Since theyâre a lot bigger, their energy can only be localized to a certain number of functions. For instance, if theyâre severely injured, but just ate someone, their body will divert most of the energy to recovery before digesting anything. For getting knocked out, same thing here, and momentary paralysis affects this. So by knocking them out, you can actually set back their digestive system by a few to several hours. This can really buy you time, but the key thing here is that you are actually able to stay awake for any of this.â
Eliâs brow furrowed as she spoke. âA bunch of bullshit. Iâve never had anyone do that to me before. Itâs probably just a myth. Cuz they always try everything, and it doesnât do much except feel good.â
Warren grimaced disapprovingly at Eliâs words, but at least found Oliviaâs words informative. He still had reason to be hesitant to credit it however, because of Eliâs comment.Â
âSo basically⌠The best chance you have of surviving a giant is if you have weapons, or if youâre already eaten⌠But I mean if youâre hurting them, itâs not the same as being released. Itâs just⌠prolonging death.â Warren said, the corners of his mouth tilted in a lopsided frown.Â
âNot exactly. The pressure point against the spine can set them off long enough in repetition to drain them of energy overtime into eventual release, which must be timed properly if youâd have any better chance of escaping them there, or to eventually kill them slowly from energy deprivation. That could take days, though. And youâd need methods of keeping yourself awake during that period of time.âÂ
Eli let out a very loud yawn, that was more of a statement of boredom than him actually being tired.Â
âDo you have something youâd like to say?â Olivia raised a brow, unimpressed.
âNah, nah. This is riveting. Just thought itâs ridiculous that yâall think itâs possible to kill a giant from a technique as lousy as that. Itâll never work anyways. How about we get to the hands-on learning part ya told me about already.â
Olivia ignored him again, beginning to continue. Warrenâs brow furrowed slightly upon the mention of hands-on learning, not because of the opportunity to learn to defend himself against a giant, but because of Eliâs uncanny enthusiasm about the prospect, which couldnât mean anything good.
âAnother technique is to block their airway long enough to get released. Giants canât breathe while theyâre swallowing someone, but can hold their breath for a very long time, up to six minutes easily. Stretching out your elbows in the throat if swallowed forward, or locking your arms around the jaw if swallowed backwards might help you buy time until they begin to run out of air.â Olivia gave Eli an almost curious look behind her tired eyes. âHow effective do you think this is, with your experience?â
âThat doesnât really work all that often.â Eli huffed. âI think there was only one person who tried that against me that got close, and he was like, a football player, so he had the build goinâ for him. He just grabbed onto my lower jaw for a solid five minutes and I was really tempted to bite him in half. âCourse Iâm stubborn and prefer live prey and managed to get him down whole just by biting a tiny bit. Totally worth it though. He struggled real good. Tasted like laundromat detergent though.âÂ
Olivia frowned slightly. âWe didnât need those details.â
Warren was listening to the story with wide eyes. âWaitâ so you killed him?â
Eli snorted. âWhat do ya take me for? Some sorta merciful giant? Pfft. Yeah, I killed him. Oh, terrible me! What an evil giant! Who knew giants actually killed people!â His voice raised an octave in mockery and he smirked.Â
Oliviaâs eyes narrowed. âCan we get back on topic?â She took a swig from her carafe before sighing. âSo what Iâm gathering from what Ethan said is that if you try to choke them, youâll get bitten in half.â
âItâs Eli. And most giants would probably want to avoid biting you in half unless theyâre desperate. We like squirmy prey.â
Warren grimaced. Olivia ignored him.Â
âAnyways. Onto the hands-on learning part. Edgar?â
Eliâs eyes lit up with enthusiasm, barely bothering to correct her on his name again. He leaned forward, now sort of kneeling on the floor to avoid hitting his head on the ceiling. âAh, right. The hands-on part. Câmon over here, Tiny.â
His eyes locked onto Warrenâs hungrily. Warrenâs heart skipped a beat and he jumped out of his seat stiffly, taking a few steps backward. âUh-- hands-on? What⌠what exactly does this mean here?â
He was trying to hide the unease from his voice and expression. He knew that Olivia probably wouldnât let the giant do anything outright terrible to him in her presence, but she also tended to be fairly apathetic enough to make things rather uncomfortable for anyone without seeming bothered too much by it.Â
âIt means youâll get a chance to try to âsurvive.ââ Olivia sipped her coffee casually, her voice oozed of disinterest in the situation. She leaned back in her arm chair, seeming to halfheartedly be fighting off the ebbing tiredness that tried to draw her to sleep. Beneath her bulbous spectacles, there was a slight tinge of curiosity, though she dared not really show it. By principle, it was impossible to read what she really thought.
Warrenâs eyes narrowed as he glared at Olivia. âWait-- survive as in--â his eyes flitted back over to Eli who was trying to crawl towards him in the small space. His breath caught in his throat and his heart picked up pace. He stumbled backwards and quickly slipped behind the armchair. âNononono-- wait-- Eli-- Eli stop.â
The giant rolled his eyes with an amused smirk playing over his face. âYeah right⌠of course telling the evil ravenous giant to stop will work every time. You get a gold star for that, Tiny!â Warren felt a pang from his words. âBut-- I donât have any weapons! You should have told me I would--â âBlah blah, yeah keep complaining. Câmere Tiny.â The giant lunged forward in the small space, an arm reaching out to snatch the hunter. Warren dove out of the way, just narrowly grazed by the giantâs claws. He gasped, flattening himself against the wall. He glanced down at his arm that had thin lashes that shredded through the sleeve of his shirt. âWh-- What the HELL, dude!â Warren shouted.Â
Eli only chuckled at his angry shouts, closing in on his prey that was now cornered. Warren could only see a small opening that led to the alchemy workbench. If he was quick, he might make it. He just had to make a run for it and hope that the giantâs disadvantage of size here could give him an opening.Â
Bracing himself with a quick breath, Warren burst forward. He ducked beneath the giantâs arm, flinching at the uncanny proximity to the beast. He had to keep running--
A hand roughly grabbed the back of his hoodie and yanked him backwards. Warren yelped. He struggled to pry off the giantâs grip. âRemember the pressure points,â He could hear Oliviaâs voice lazily call out. Right! Think! The Hunter twisted to reorient himself in the giantâs grip. He could feel himself brought closer. The giant was now in clear view before him. Warren fumbled, recalling the pressure points mentioned. He quickly japped two fingers in between the back of the giantâs thumb and index finger to try to trigger release. Miraculously, Eliâs fingers reflexively came loose and Warren quickly tugged away. He stumbled onto his back, fumbling with his feet as he tried to get up or scoot away.Â
The momentary freedom was short lived as Eliâs hand clamped over the Hunterâs chest, pinning him to the floor easily. Warren pushed around the giantâs fingers trying to pry them off without much luck. He tried again to jam the pressure point, but without any success. Most of the force holding down Warren came from the arm after all, so his efforts came out useless.Â
âAll out of luck now, eh Hunter?â The giant taunted.Â
Warrenâs eyes narrowed. âOkay fine. You win. Let me try again.âÂ
Eli let out a snort. âUhh nope. I donât think thatâs how things will be working here. Iâm not lettinâ ya go quite yet.â
Warrenâs eyes widened by a hair. He shot a pleading look to Olivia, who appeared bored out of her wits as she sleepily sipped from her carafe. âDonât look at me. Just practice those internal techniques we talked about.â She yawned, leaning back in the armchair, seeming almost ready to sleep.Â
Warren looked back at Eli nervously, but he knew nothing he said or did would change the giantâs trajectory now. He squeezed his eyes shut, taking in deep breaths. âI f-frickinâ hate this,â he muttered under his breath.Â
Eli disregarded the Hunterâs nerves and lifted the little human off the ground, leaning back to kneel on the floor comfortably. Warren flinched as there was a pause before he could feel and hear the hot breath of the giant waft over his face before things became warmer. His cheek was pressed against a plush, slimy surface. The tongue rose up to slide over his face, slicking him down to be swallowed more easily. And from the pleasant sounds Eli was making, Warren was once again reminded about how much the giant seemed to enjoy his taste. Disgusting.Â
It was even more humiliating here, knowing that Olivia was just sitting there idly watching as she would drink her coffee. Warrenâs head was pushed in deeper and the tongue pushed him firmly back as the giant made the first swallow. He took in a quick breath, and his head was now stuck tight in the confines of the throat. It was too tight to breathe, so he had to conserve air.Â
The giant took his sweet time tasting him for a while as more swallows sounded, bringing him in deeper. It was a necessary function in order for the giant not to be harmed during this to allow his prey to be slicked up enough to be swallowed more easily.Â
Warren should have been used to this process at this point. He had been swallowed two and a half times already (the half was a bit of an unpleasant story). It was still frightening to him nonetheless. Not to mention, he couldnât breathe in the tight space, and Eli taking his time with this only deprived his lungs from air even longer.Â
The giant had only swallowed the human up past the hips when he heard Olivia clear her throat impatiently. He shot her a confused but angered glare, pausing in his swallows. His neck was filled out with the bulge of Warrenâs slightly struggling form and the legs dangling from his maw would twitch uncomfortably Â
âYouâre taking your sweet time. You know humans can only hold their breath for so long. Take your time any longer and youâll suffocate the poor Hunter,â Olivia muttered. Her voice was still very tired by default, but there was a strictness in it.Â
A muffled growl sounded in his throat and he rolled his eyes, tilting his head back. He made several more powerful swallows, gravity aiding the smaller form to sink in deeper before Eli rose up his hand to pick off Warrenâs shoes. He swallowed one last time, the back of his tongue rising up to squish the little feet into the throat before they disappeared. The bulge in the giantâs throat sank in deeper before it disappeared from his neck, reforming as a small protrusion from his torso that wasnât too noticeable, as the giantâs larger form could harbor the little human quite easily.Â
Warren coughed up the stale humid air as soon as his head pressed into the tight opening of a wider area. The air was hot, and already he could hear the gross, squelching sounds of the stomach as it stretched to accommodate him. He could hear the giantâs muffled heartbeat pounding nearby, and his labored breaths as he caught his breath from his airway being cleared. The rest of the Hunter was forced and squeezed inside the tight space, curled up in a puddle of clear drool. He was dripping with slime, and that gross stuff slid down the ceiling, connecting with him and getting in his hair. Warren panted for air for a while, disliking the heat and foul air that filled his lungs. It smelled disgusting.Â
Once again, Warren was stuck sort of upside-down in the tight space, forced to curl up so his limited mobility made it hard to right himself. He aimed an angered kick near the throatâs opening, scowling and shaking in the darkness.Â
Eli smirked through his fangs between breaths as he felt the small retaliation, then shot an annoyed look to Olivia.Â
âWhy rush it? That ainât no fun.â He huffed.Â
Olivia rolled her eyes, getting up from her seat with another swig of her coffee before she walked over to the giant. Her expression was unphased, though despite this, Eli could still smell a slight tinge of fear from her. This amused him.Â
âYou okay in there, Winston?âÂ
Warrenâs face contorted into a further scowl as he heard Oliviaâs muffled voice from outside. He squirmed wildly in place, trying to reorient himself in the sweltering darkness. He kicked at the tight walls angrily. âYou frickinâ freak! You just let me get eaten by a giant! What the f-fuck is wrong with you!â He glared up at the ceiling, grimacing as slime dripped onto his face. âAnd stop taking your sweet time. Iâm not a dang candy!â
Eli snickered, rubbing at the form in his gut, much to Warrenâs annoyance. âNah, candies are sweet. You taste more like meat.âÂ
Warrenâs eyes narrowed and he kicked angrily in defiance. âThatâs disgusting. Donât ever call me that,â
âYa know, I might actually have room for seconds if you were interested in learning as well.â Eli sneered at the alchemist.Â
âYou do NOT.â Warrenâs muffled voice came from Eliâs middle, punctuated by an angry kick that was visible from the surface.
The giant smirked. âOh yeah? Wanna test that?â
Oliviaâs eyes narrowed by a hair. Her voice lowered threateningly. âThat would be unnecessary. And if you try anything, youâll find yourself stuck in your camouflaged form again without even realizing what hit you.â
Eli smirked, âAww you donât think itâll be fun?â
âCan we focus now?â Oliviaâs voice came in a tired drawl. Any alarm from Eliâs threat of eating her was quickly gone from her countenance.
The giant rolled his eyes. âMeh, boring, but whatever.â
Olivia moved closer to the giant and poked his middle with an unwavering expression.Â
âStopit!â Warrenâs muffled voice snapped angrily.Â
Eli snickered. âYeah, stop it, alchemist lady.â
Warren paused. â...Olivia?â He squirmed slightly in place to try to get himself at least more upright, though without much success. All that could be seen were the bulges of his form shifting around from the outside.Â
Olivia pursed her lips for a moment, part of her was curious and interested, and another part was a little fearful of the giant being completely capable of swallowing an entire human being. She had heard of it done before, but she had just never witnessed it. It was surreal to comprehend. The analytical, scientific side of her brain was curious about how it was physically possible, and how the hunter was even able to gather air there, despite having studied recounts of hunters who had confirmed that it was possible. It was a very curious opportunity to be able to work and study alongside a real giant. As far as she knew, giants never worked alongside humans, so this was a very rare occasion.Â
âYes, that was me,â Olivia withdrew her hand, her voice returning in her usual tired drawl. Any interest she had was impossible to guess from how well she concealed it. âAre you able to get your back to face me? Just by using the poke as a point of reference.â
Warren paused, panting tiredly. The heat was overwhelming here, and being upside down, the crown of his head was half-immersed into the gross puddle of fluids at the pit of the stomach. He was getting a headache from this. The darkness here was disorienting and made it even harder to figure himself out.Â
âI canât move. Iâm upside down.â
âI guess youâll die then.â Olivia huffed apathetically.Â
âWHAT-!â
A flurry of struggles came from the giantâs middle and Eli shut his eyes, putting his hands against his middle with a grin. âYeah keep up that stellar fighting and thatâll magically teleport you out.â He chuckled, looking down and poked at Warrenâs form. âYa canât just expect every giant to let you go cuz youâre a little tired, or landed wrong.â
Warren grimaced, trying to push away the contact from Eli, but was stuck in too bad of a position to reach it properly. The best he could do was kick near the stomach entrance tiredly. Â
âOkay, okay,â He muttered. He dug his foot into the low opposing wall, grunting as he tried to get enough purchase into pushing himself more upright. His socked feet slipped at first, just sliding against the slimy, malleable surface. He tried again a few times, finally managing to push the sides of his feet into the plush folds and tried to extend his legs just barely enough to push his upper back against the wall, sliding into a slightly more upright position. He grimaced at the gross sounds that came from this action, but at least his head was no longer immersed in slime. He panted for a while, the small change took way too much effort, and it was so hot and humid in here. The difficulty of breathing here didnât contribute to his lightheadedness either.Â
âHâO-Okay, my back is facing the âpokeâ now,â he panted.Â
âWowww⌠you moved like a grand total of like two inchesâŚâ Eliâs voice quipped.Â
âSh-shut up. Youâre n-not the one stuck in here.â Warren retorted between breaths. It was taking a while to gain his bearings, and the heat was really getting to him. But at least now being somewhat right-side-up, he was beginning to feel a little less light-headed.Â
âBe quiet and focus, Wilfred.â Olivia drawled. âSo from there, youâre in the perfect position to reach two pressure points. The lungs should be directly above you towards the front, and directly ahead of you would be the pressure point for the nerves along the spine.â
Eliâs eyes narrowed at her words, crossing his arms over his middle. âNone of thatâs gonna work.â
Olivia shot the giant a drained, unimpressed look. âWilhelm?â
Warren tried to catch his breath in the darkness, putting out his elbows out to try to conserve a proper air bubble, as well as trying to keep the slime and stomach folds away from his head so he could actually hear. Oliviaâs voice was muffled and he couldnât hear it very well over the sounds of the giantâs innards and how his ears were probably clogged with the stomach fluids at this point. He was able to make out enough and pieced together the rest.Â
He grunted, trying to bring his legs up near the stomach entrance in a weak kick, not bothering to use his arms if he didnât want to compromise his little air bubble. He only heard Eliâs rumbling chuckle around him in response. His eyes narrowed in the darkness and he kicked harder towards the ceiling. Heat was rushing up to his head and the air was thick and hard to breathe, making the smallest actions exhausting. There was a jerky clench around him in response to his action and he heard a small âhicââ come from the giant.Â
Eli winced for a moment, but quickly smoothed out his expression with a smirk. âHiccups, really? Wow⌠What a fearsome fighter.â
Warren glared. âShutup!â
There were several more attempts of kicks and nudges that were barely visible from the surface, but were only felt as enjoyable sensations against the giantâs innards.Â
âThis is lame. Almost relaxing. What if I just take a nap here?â Eli feigned a yawn.Â
Olivia glared at him, lowering her carafe for a moment. âLike hell you would.â
Warrenâs struggles weakened and he rasped for air shallowly. His arms which had splayed out on either side to preserve his little pocket of air had grown too weak to maintain that position any longer. It was hard to breathe. He was exhausted.Â
âP-please⌠just let me go⌠so tired⌠Iâm gonna pa-pass out. I ca-canât breathe.â The timid voice was barely audible.Â
Olivia raised a brow, taking a minute to actually interpret the words because of their diminished volume. âGiving up already? You didnât even manage one good hit.â
âWhat did I tell ya. Itâs useless tryinâ.â Eli scoffed.Â
âI do-donât frickin care. I canât bre-eathe. Iâm going t-to suffocate in here. Ple-please, Eli.â Warren just gave up at this point. Whatever position his struggles had landed him in just wedged him into the folds bad enough that he couldnât gather breath properly. Normally, this shouldnât be as much of an issue with the esophageal sphincter currently being lax enough to allow air to pass through. His current position had him curled up downwards with his back facing the sphincter to block off the only passage for fresh air. He was running out of air pretty quickly.Â
Eli narrowed his eyes, at first thinking this was some sort of trick, but by focusing on the small sensations of the humanâs breaths against the sensitive lining, he could feel the breaths were a lot shallower. He furrowed his brow. This wasnât normally a problem, at least not one he commonly came across (not that he would normally care. Accidents happen after all.)
The giant sighed and rolled his eyes. âMeh, fine. Youâre one pathetic human being getting stuck like that arenâtcha?â
Warren didnât bother retorting. He was feeling lightheaded. The giantâs voice, as close as it was, felt foggy and distant.Â
He was faintly aware of the walls crushing in tighter as they squeezed him up into the throat. The feeble breaths he had gathered were sucked from his lungs within the tight tube. The harsh muscles tugged at his limp form, slowly dragging him out of the confines of the stomach and completely within the throat and he was carried upward.Â
Olivia stepped back, her expression only read of mild disgust as she watched the giant hack up the small hunter. The small bulge in his middle disappeared to reform in his throat. The fanged maw opened as the hunter was eventually emitted onto the floor in a slimy pool of drool. He wasnât moving.Â
The alchemist grimaced, moving forward as the giant wiped his mouth on his sleeve. She crouched down in the gross puddle of fluids, wrapping her arms around Warren to lift his face out of the puddle. Warren seemed unresponsive, or at least mostly out of it at this point. She scowled, squeezing an almost too-tight hug around him in a swift motion, collapsing his diaphragm enough to force a ragged cough out of his throat.Â
Warren coughed again, spitting and rasping for air. His eyes were half-lidded in exhaustion. Olivia relaxed her grip around him with a sigh, letting him drop back to the floor on his back. She glared at Eli narrowly through her bulbous spectacles.Â
âThat was too close of a call, Elric.â
Eli quickly caught his breath after the harsh motions of coughing up the hunter and narrowed his eyes at the alchemist. âSo? Most people eaten by giants donât even get to live to tell the tale. Tiny here just got lucky.â
Warren tried to get up, but got too lightheaded from the small action and laid back down on the floor, squeezing his eyes shut as he continued to try to catch his breath.Â
âI need⌠a⌠a shower.â Warren rasped quietly.Â
Eli smirked. âCalled it. See? Heâs fine. Priorities, right?â
âI am notâ f-frickinâ fine.â Warren opened his eyes slightly to glare at the giant, but his gaze was more weak than angry. A part of him shuddered to see the creature that had just eaten him and nearly killed him effortlessly. âI could have diedâ andâ and I learned nothing! Yâyou canât do that to me again. Iâ I canât take it.â
Olivia sighed, getting to her feet. She disregarded the gross slime that was now dripping from her clothes from helping Warren. âIf you really donât want to train with giants, you can avoid giant related hunts. Just stick with the werewolves and spirits.â
Eli snorted. âKeepinâ your nose clean ainât gonna deter giants from huntinâ ya. Might help your odds a bit on encounterinâ em, but your fightinâ techniques are still shit.â
Warren sighed in defeat, rubbing his face as he laid back on the floor. âPeople are still out there... getting killed by giants every day. Dying lâlike thatâŚ. I hate it that I canât do fr-frickin anything.â
Eli shrugged, making a slight grimace of nausea as his stomach settled again. âWhy bother? Theyâre humans. Theyâre gonna die anyways. âSides, giants do a good enough job killinâ themselves from what ya saw at the Binding.â
The Hunter frowned at Eliâs words. He winced as he tried to sit upright again. He still felt a little dizzy and lightheaded and his senses were beginning to return in full⌠only to realize how gross he felt right now.Â
âI need to go home and get cleaned up before Rebeka comes back from work.â The young man said finally. He managed to get to his feet, but he was still a bit wobbly.Â
Olivia frowned slightly, taking a small sip of coffee as she finished up her carafe. She glanced at the giant tiredly. âWell, I guess class is over then. And Iâll add to the Legionâs records that those techniques donât seem to work.â There was a slight tone of disappointment in her voice.Â
âYou can tell the U.L. Iâm done. I canât⌠I just canât do this.â He shot a wary look at Eli. Even seated, the giant was still a good three or so heads taller than him. He shuddered, still weary and recovering. He headed towards the staircase out of the basement.Â
âAtta boy, tiny! I knew you wouldnât stand a chance there!â The giant cheered.Â
Warren turned on the stair for a moment to glare back at him. âIâm not doing this for you. Iâm doing this for my sisters. I canât do this to them. So you can shut the f...fuck up.â
He glared daggers at the giant before he stumbled up the rest of the stairs and left.Â
Eli snorted, rolling his eyes. âSheesh. Humans are so dramatic.â
Olivia raised an unimpressed brow at him.Â
âWhat? Hey. Dâya wanna try out those âmethodsâ too, just for the sake of learninâ something?âÂ
Her eyes narrowed in mute disapproval.Â
Eli seemed to debate something for a while before backing down. âFine. Fine. Some other time.â Heâd rather not get stuck in his camo form again and didnât want to give her any reason to do it.Â
Warren was still sticky and icky from all the gross fluids as he went towards his car. He quickly found his borrowed silver knife from Olivia and his magazine full of silver bullets. He frowned in disgust. It was a stupid idea to ever sign up for this. He had almost died and Eli wasnât even trying.Â
Or was he?Â
The thought sickened him to dwell upon. He quickly loaded up his borrowed hunting supplies and set them down on Oliviaâs desk at the back of the shop. He didnât look back as he left them there. They were an ominous reminder of his foolishness. He couldnât go back to that now.Â
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Link to the rest of the series can be found here.












