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Don't starve chronicles

Supriyo_Deb
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Dr. Alex Percival Higgsbury is a great scientist and polymath, he stands in pinnacle in the world of science and technology. Because of his success, his younger twin brother Wilson Percival Higgsbury often pursue science as well in hope to prove himself as he too like science. Although younger brother while better than a typical scientist is far behind his older brother, nevertheless Alex feels proud of his brother for whatever things he managed to achieved. However, one day, something unusual happened, Wilson suddenly went missing, his older brother Alex worried about Wilson, decided to investigate. He found strange machine in Wilson's home. He wondered what the machine is for, he decide to check the codes. To a normal scientist including Wilson, those codes are merely programing to allow the machine to function, but Alex identified it to be codes for a teleporter. Alex was both proud and shocked, proud because his brother managed to achieve what he couldn't, that is creating a teleportation device that many scientists including himself deemed impossible, but he is also shocked because this means that his brother has teleported to an unknown place. In hope to find his missing brother, he decide to find clues from the machine and go to the place where his brother is, as he can't see his family in trouble. [PS: This is a story I wrote as sequel to don't starve. I do not own don't starve franchise as it is IP of Kiel Entertainment. But if they find my work appealing, they can use it.]
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Chapter 1 - The brothers

The laboratory of Dr. Alex Percival Higgsbury was a cathedral of reason. Brass gears hummed in perfect synchronicity, and vacuum tubes glowed with a steady, confident amber light. At thirty-two, Alex was the world's undisputed polymath—a man who had mapped the sub-atomic and the celestial with equal ease. To the public, he was the pinnacle of human achievement. To himself, he was a man who had been fortunate enough to have the greatest mentors in history guiding his hand, polishing his intellect into a razor-sharp instrument.

{Adjusting a microscopic lens} Precision is the soul of progress.

Behind him, his younger twin, Wilson, was hunched over a cluttered workbench. Unlike Alex's pristine station, Wilson's was a chaotic battlefield of spilled tinctures and scorched copper. While Alex operated with the grace of a master, Wilson moved with the frantic energy of a man trying to catch lightning in a jar. Both brothers loved science—the logic, the mystery, the thrill of discovery—but Wilson lived in a long, towering shadow.

I know, Alex. I'm just... trying a different variable.

There was a sudden pop, a puff of acrid black smoke, and a glass vial in Wilson's hand shattered.

Wilson slumped, his shoulders heaving. It was another failure. Another "almost." Every time he climbed a hill of understanding, he looked up to see Alex already standing on the mountain peak. Wilson didn't crave his brother's fame; he simply wanted to prove that his own mind, forged in the heat of curiosity, could reach the same heights.

Alex set down his instruments and walked over. He didn't scold. He didn't sigh. He simply placed a firm, steady hand on Wilson's shoulder.

You're looking at the cracks, Brother, when you should be looking at the friction. This failure is a data point. Most men would have given up three hours ago. You? You're still hungry.

{Voice thick of exhaustion but devoid of malice} It's easy for you. You had the Academy. You had the Royal Grants. You have a mind that was shaped by the greatest thinkers of our age. You were taught to see the answer before the question was even asked.

Alex smiled, a rare, genuine expression.

I am a product of my environment, Wilson. I was polished by masters. But you... you are forging yourself in a dark room with nothing but your own stubbornness. Do you realize how much more impressive that is? I was mentored into a genius. You are choosing to be one. You are doing this on your own, and for that, I couldn't be more proud. Try again. Adjust the pressure. I believe in what you're building, Wilson.

******

A year had vanished into the blur of calculations and the hum of the Great Collider. For Alex, time was often a secondary dimension, easily ignored when the pursuit of a unified theory beckoned. It was only when the final bolt was tightened and the last data set verified that the silence of his study began to ring in his ears.

He looked at the silver tray on his mahogany desk. It was empty.

Alex frowned, pulling open a drawer stuffed with correspondence. He shuffled through the envelopes until he found the last one from Wilson. The postmark was nine months old. In it, Wilson's handwriting had been frantic, nearly illegible with excitement.

Alex, I've found it! A breakthrough in spatial folding. A machine that could make basic transport—trains, ships, even cars—look like ancient wagons. They'll call it the Higgsbury Gateway. I'm so close.

Nine months. Nine months of silence.

Panic, cold and sharp, cut through Alex's analytical mind. Wilson was stubborn and reclusive—he'd always viewed formal college as a bureaucratic hassle that stifled true genius—but he never missed a monthly check-in.

Alex paced the room, his mind already categorizing threats. Could a rival have found him? Wilson was often dismissed as a "wannabe" by the academic elite, but Alex knew better. He knew his brother's raw, unpolished potential.

If I saw it, someone else could have too. A rival scientist, desperate for a legacy, could have realized what Wilson was building. They could have silenced him to steal the Gateway.

The thought of his brother in the hands of a conspirator, his brilliant mind exploited or discarded, was unbearable. Alex didn't stop to pack a bag. He grabbed his coat and his heavy brass lantern, leaving his own world-class laboratory behind.

He drove through the night, fueled by a rare, protective fury. He went straight to the derelict, isolated cottage Wilson used as a workspace. He didn't care about the laws of science or the accolades on his wall; he only cared about the family he had left behind in the dark.

******

The cottage was silent, draped in the heavy stillness of a place forgotten by time. Alex stepped through the doorway, his hand tightening around the handle of his lantern. He had expected chaos—overturned tables or the frantic evidence of a kidnapping—but instead, he found a laboratory in eerie, perfect order.

Dust motes danced in his lantern's beam, settling on pristine beakers and neatly stacked journals. There was no sign of a struggle. Wilson hadn't been taken; he had simply ceased to be there.

Alex's gaze was immediately drawn to the center of the room. There sat the machine—a jagged, hulking silhouette of copper coils and dark iron. Beside it stood a chalkboard covered in a frantic web of equations. Alex moved closer, his eyes scanning the chalk lines.

He froze. His analytical mind, polished by the world's greatest mentors, began to pull the logic apart. It wasn't nonsense. It was a terrifyingly elegant application of a teleportation concept that everyone—including Alex himself—had dismissed as a theoretical impossibility.

You found the bridge, Wilson," Alex whispered, his voice trembling. You didn't just replace transport... you bypassed distance entirely.

Driven by a mix of dread and scientific obsession, Alex sat at the workbench to check the machine's internal codes. To a normal scientist, these strings of logic might look like standard programming to make the engine hum. To Alex, they confirmed the impossible: this was a gateway to an unknown destination.

He needed proof.

Alex moved to a corner of the room where a small field rat sat in a wire cage. He bound the creature with a silk thread and placed it on the machine's cold lead plate. With a steady hand, he reached for the main lever and threw it.

The machine roared. The air grew heavy with the scent of ozone. There was a blinding flash of white-purple light, a sharp sound like a whip, and then—silence.

The rat was gone.

Alex fell back into Wilson's chair, his heart hammering. He felt a soaring, painful pride; his brother, whom the world dismissed as a wannabe scientist, had actually surpassed him. Wilson had achieved the pinnacle. But that pride was instantly swallowed by fear. If the machine worked, Wilson had teleported to a place where he was entirely alone.

Alex decided he could not leave. He stayed in the cottage, obsessively checking the machine's code to determine the exact coordinates. He would find where his brother had gone, and he would follow. He could not see his family in trouble.