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PRIMAL CARGO - EPISODE 2 - UNFORESEEN EFFECTS
2 weeks ago
204K (204,351)
4:24
How far would you go… before there’s no turning back?
Isolation, desire, and the pull of something forbidden push Eira to the edge.
Some boundaries aren’t just crossed… they’re shattered.
ABOUT THE PROJECT
Primal Cargo is an ongoing sci-fi character story about isolation, instinct, and the line between reason and desire.
NOVA RHYNE SIDE CONTENT (DISCORD)
-eira-logs: short entries from Eira that complement the main story
-nova-photos & nova-videos: Nova is the 3D actress who plays Eira in Primal Cargo. Here you’ll find the naughty side of her social media
-primal-shorts: short, intense erotic scenes featuring Eira and Flux
FOLLOW & SUPPORT
https://x.com/IgniteInstincts
https://www.patreon.com/NovaRhyne
https://allmylinks.com/ignite-instincts
Your support keeps the story evolving - thank you for being here
Isolation, desire, and the pull of something forbidden push Eira to the edge.
Some boundaries aren’t just crossed… they’re shattered.
ABOUT THE PROJECT
Primal Cargo is an ongoing sci-fi character story about isolation, instinct, and the line between reason and desire.
NOVA RHYNE SIDE CONTENT (DISCORD)
-eira-logs: short entries from Eira that complement the main story
-nova-photos & nova-videos: Nova is the 3D actress who plays Eira in Primal Cargo. Here you’ll find the naughty side of her social media
-primal-shorts: short, intense erotic scenes featuring Eira and Flux
FOLLOW & SUPPORT
https://x.com/IgniteInstincts
https://www.patreon.com/NovaRhyne
https://allmylinks.com/ignite-instincts
Your support keeps the story evolving - thank you for being here
***
Ancient Inuit Dog Husband Story, or The Origin of the Adlet:
There was once a young woman who refused all human suitors and would not marry (wife swapping is pretty common among Inuit culture, this may have been the main reason, women usually don't like that). Her father, frustrated by her refusal, took her to a remote island and left her there. On the island, she was visited by a dog, and eventually, she married the dog.
The woman and the dog had children together. This was not an ordinary dog, he was somehow sexually compatible with the Inuit woman: in most versions, ten children by the 'dog', five had the upper body of a dog and the lower body of a human and five had the upper body of a human and the lower body of a dog (some translation say five were dogs). So these children obviously were not the ancestors of the white people, or of any of the human races. The Adlet were wild and noisy, and the household became chaotic.
The father, unable to tolerate the noise and the burden of feeding so many, decided to separate the family. He took the children in a boat and left them on another island. He told the dog to swim ashore each day to receive food for the children. Also the father became very afraid in his heart. As the children grew, he saw and wondered what his daughter had done. How was this possible? The woman made boots (some kind of sled for carrying supplies) for her dog husband to wear as he swam. The father, instead of giving the dog meat, filled the boots with stones. The dog tried to swim back to the island, but the heavy boots dragged him under, and he drowned (or realized he was not wanted anymore and departs the story).
The woman, realizing what her father had done, instructed her children to take revenge on him. In some versions, the children gnaw off the father’s feet and hands.
A dream: the father takes his daughter out in a boat and throws her into the sea. As she clings to the side of the boat, he chops off her fingers, which, falling into the water with her (a baptism), her fingers become sea mammals—seals and whales (the nations the Adlet will become), the mammals are the small ones the Whales the big nations.
The Inuit encountered the Adlet later, were very afraid of them and killed them if they could. The Adlet were not very good fighters, but they were very fast, much faster than men.
Sinauf the sorcerer, of Ute legend, is described as half man half wolf, may have been an Adlet. The Kalystrii of Indian legend may have been Adlet. Anubis of Egypt may have been another sorcerer Adlet. Saint Christopher, the Kynokephali who converted to Christianity, may have been an Adlet.
***
a strange story that has been with the Inuit peoples in the north beyond remembering, there are many variations. it would be refreshing if the woman and the mysterious dog remained straight and monogamous. Dogs are mostly monogamous.
The only cautions I can offer are: post a new episode every two weeks and focus on the developing relationship between these two characters only.
The only downer is the constant electrical interference - you need to leave that out.