SapphicSeductress
Super-Earth
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2012
The planet was named "Idyll" by the first human explorers to travel through the sector. From the sky, it looked almost Earth-like; when the explorers landed to investigate the atmosphere, they found that the climate and air were perfect for human colonization. After a cursory check around the planet for other dominant forms of life, the explorers sent word back to human-inhabited space about the peaceful, seemingly-perfect world they had discovered. Within ten years, a colony had been founded on Idyll. No resource or habitation problems arose, and it seemed like Idyll would easily prosper.
But while the humans were slowly expanding, another race had been slowly dwindling. Though the discoverers of the planet had thought they had made a satisfactory search, the minerals within the soil interfered with their scanners, preventing them from detecting the numerous vast hives that laid beneath the surface. Even if their scanners had been able to penetrate the soil, they would have found little, as almost all of the hives were empty. Only a few hives were inhabited, with numbers nowhere near where they had once possessed.
Outside one of the hives, four of the last remaining queens gathered. Each were about a foot taller than the average human. They were feminine creatures, with slender, curvy bodies, long hair the colour of straw, and plump breasts—three bore a single pair of breasts, while the fourth had a second pair of breasts placed below the first. Orange chitinous plates covered the outsides of their upper arms and from their feet to just below their knees; the rest of their skin was a pale yellow colour. Though they possessed colourful wings that resembled a butterfly's, the large yellow insect abdomen that hung just above their backside looked like a bee's without a stinger. Though three of the queens, including the one with four breasts, were strictly female, one bore an eight-inch penis placed just above her slit, which even now was erect.
The queens had gathered to discuss what they should do about their dwindling numbers. Their speech would be incomprehensible to any other creatures around. Due to their shortage of scouts, none of the insects knew that a perfect solution to their problem was already on the planet—not even that far from where they had gathered above ground.
But while the humans were slowly expanding, another race had been slowly dwindling. Though the discoverers of the planet had thought they had made a satisfactory search, the minerals within the soil interfered with their scanners, preventing them from detecting the numerous vast hives that laid beneath the surface. Even if their scanners had been able to penetrate the soil, they would have found little, as almost all of the hives were empty. Only a few hives were inhabited, with numbers nowhere near where they had once possessed.
Outside one of the hives, four of the last remaining queens gathered. Each were about a foot taller than the average human. They were feminine creatures, with slender, curvy bodies, long hair the colour of straw, and plump breasts—three bore a single pair of breasts, while the fourth had a second pair of breasts placed below the first. Orange chitinous plates covered the outsides of their upper arms and from their feet to just below their knees; the rest of their skin was a pale yellow colour. Though they possessed colourful wings that resembled a butterfly's, the large yellow insect abdomen that hung just above their backside looked like a bee's without a stinger. Though three of the queens, including the one with four breasts, were strictly female, one bore an eight-inch penis placed just above her slit, which even now was erect.
The queens had gathered to discuss what they should do about their dwindling numbers. Their speech would be incomprehensible to any other creatures around. Due to their shortage of scouts, none of the insects knew that a perfect solution to their problem was already on the planet—not even that far from where they had gathered above ground.