.
July 3rd, 802 AT.
The long group bedroom was quiet, and felt very much like a part of the Library that it was—that peculiar silence that only comes of the absorptive ability of thousands of pages of thousands of books.
Kiara sat on her bed, reading an old journal, waiting for something interesting to happen. She’d been sitting for a day, now, and was starting to get antsy. Night had fallen, and brought with it… absolutely nothing interesting.
Chun was in a corner, sitting on a chair, next to a towering stack of books. She fidgeted for a while, then grabbed one at random and began leafing through it. After a moment she decided it was boring, slipped it back into the stack, and grabbed a different one. She’d been doing this since they arrived at Tanique Hall, in between checkups on Kiara’s leg.
Kiara glanced over to the door and sighed. Her shadow fidgeted slightly.
The door swung abruptly forwards, revealing Seth, Reno, and one Cyclops. “Miss us?” Seth said, grinning.
((92 — Wrong Platform))
Chun grinned and tossed the book aside. “Barely.”
“Hey kid, I make the snappy lines,” said the dashing Cyclops, giving Seth a swat on the back of the head as he entered.
Kiara grinned widely. “A bit, maybe. Anyone hurt?”
“None other than a few guards,” Seth laughed. Next to him, Reno shrugged and spun a knife between her fingers, trying and failing to look innocent.
“Funny thing for you to be saying, peggy.” Cyclops made his way over to his wounded Talon. “See, I called you peggy on account of the leg you lost. Want to tell me how you let something stupid like that happen?”
“Don’t know how, actually.” Kiara scowled. “Bitch shouldn’t have been to get me from that close.”
“Which bitch? Be specific, peggy, there are a lot of them.”
“Some pilot.” She grimaced, pressing the end of her stump gently.
“This have to do with that big demon fleet or whatever?” Cyc asked as he waved his hands in the air for effect and lounged into a seat of his own.
“Nah,” Kiara said, shaking her head. “Had to do with… a bit of a misunderstanding on our way in.”
“Suppose it always does. Still, I hate to say it kid, but I don’t know what use I’ll have for you in the next step of our plan here.” He sat forward in his chair, frowning at her. “How well can you get around?”
“With others watching? Not so well. I can move somewhat, though.” Slowly, she pushed herself to the edge of the bed, then stepped off it. Her shadow gathered where her leg should be, keeping her upright. It didn’t look anything like a leg—just a shifting pillar of darkness—but she didn’t fall.
Seth raised an approving eyebrow. “Creative.”
“No reason not to be. I suppose we could wrap some pants and boots around it, though, if really necessary, and we… had extras.”
“Kiara,” Cyclops said casually, his demon eye rapidly analyzing. “I can’t help but notice you seem to have some sort of horribly otherworldly darkness for a leg. Want to explain that?”
Kiara said again, dispersing it. “I’ll let Chun do it. She’ll say it better.”
“Me? Oh, yeah.” Chun looked devilishly excited. “Well. My mom and I were working on a project, see? Playing with crystals and demons. And, to make a long story short enough for you to listen… we found out how to control demons, with crystals.”
“Well hot damn!” Cyclops’ eyebrows shot up. “Any sort of crystal? Any sort of demon?”
“Yeah, any one, any where,” Chun said, eyes dancing.
“If you can catch it first,” Kiara added.
“Yeah, uh, that detail!” Chun admitted, laughing. “That IS the hard part.”
“Catch it how?” Cyc was sitting up now and seemed to be intently listening, like he always was when he smelled profit.
“Like they did in the old days,” Chun said. “Big nets and stun guns. And a LOT of crystal cages.”
Cyc nodded, thinking. “Does this new revelation have anything to do with the hordes of demons I’m hearing about?”
“Nah… we were only doing what all researchers do… and taking it a mile and a half further.” Chun was trying to hide her pride, but only barely. She grinned madly.
“How many demons do you guys got so far?”
“One each. I also have only minimal stuff with me to do any tweaking for any other demons we find.”
“So count off, what do each of you crazy kids have? I gotta say I’m proud of you rascals. Out there enslaving forces of nature and all. It does a man’s heart good.”
Chun Red grinned very widely. “I have a fifteen foot tall crow!”
“Well,” Kiara said. “I’ve got this shadow thing I’m calling Umbra.”
“How physical can it get? Both of them, I should say. The crow and um… er… Umbra?”
“Completely,” Kiara said.
“Mine is called Torrential Black, and he is great, seriously talented at flying, with two sets of wings! He is very physical, and looks like he could fight, though I never got the chance to try.”
Reno just sort of frowned. “Caf is… Caf. I can’t describe Caf. ‘S like… my other…” She trailed off, shrugging.
“Don’t go soft on me now, Reno. Can Caf do anything useful?”
“I… Caf… yes. All sorts of things. Caf can capture anything launched at him and spit it back. And fly. Very useful.”
Seth smiled. “We’ve got a nice little array of friends here, Cyc.”
“Aces. Thanks for that detailed explanation, we’ve all learned a lot. Seth, how about you?”
“Mine’s not here now, but he’s a crystalline—eh?” He cut off as a voice came over the loudspeakers.
The voice was male, and fairly quiet. "This is a reminder. Tanique Hall is under basic lockdown, due to the riots. All staff are requested to remain calm, and in the safety of their rooms." The message had been repeating every few hours all day.
“Oh. Right. That. Anyhow, it’s this crystal-thing. I can change its shape with my mind. The thing’s good at cutting and breaking other things. And probably shielding, though I haven’t tested it out much.”
“Wow wow wow,” Cyc said. “I dig it.”
“Now how are we getting out?” Kiara said, clearly eager to start moving again.
“Slow down, peggy. We’ve got some business to take care of first.” Cyc looked around the room, at each of them in turn. “There is an item, in this very building, that I think should have the luxury—no, the honor—of getting stolen by us.”
Seth’s eyes gleamed. “Do go on…”
Cyc started to get excited as he began to explain the plan to his co-conspirators. “So guys, it’s literally right downstairs. Main lobby. Like three guards max. We’re in, we’re out. Aces. Plus with our demon stuff, it’s pretty much a done deal.”
“What is it?” Kiara asked. “And the only demon here is mine, we had to leave the others outside the city…”
“We could… get them.” Chun grinned quite a bit, obviously wanting to see what Torrential could do.
“Wait, you guys don’t have your demons? Why not?”
“They couldn’t sneak into the city,” Kiara said.
Chun shrugged. “Difficult for a fifteen foot tall crow.”
“I thought you said they lived in little crystals!”
“No, no, they are controlled by crystals,” Chun corrected.
Seth smiled, trying not to laugh. “There’s a fine line.”
Cyclops scowled. “Well, this is nonsense. So we have one demon? Or two, I guess, if you count the mojo I’ve got floating around here.” He poked the scaly corner of his eye a few times for good measure. He turned again to Kiara. “Can you have a shadow leg and do some sort of shadow noose at the same time? Or a shadow club even?”
“She can be pretty much anything.”
“But at the same time, ‘cause you falling over everywhere isn’t going to help us out at all.”
“No idea.”
“Well, why don’t you go ahead and try that out,” Cyclops said slowly, voice clearly bordering on the edge of frustration.
Kiara frowned, concentrating for a moment, then let out a quietly disappointed sigh. “I… no. One shape at a time. But I could… say, sit down around the corner.”
“Or someone could hold you, easy problem to overcome. It doesn’t come with any price, does it? You get tired? Hungry for people burgers?”
“Nope.”
“Phew. I’d hate to have a bunch of cannibals to deal with.” Cyclops sat back in his chair. “So, kiddos… want to come steal the magic box with me?” He grinned, then added, “Oh, yeah. It’s a magic box.”
Chun laughed. “Love to!”
“Sure,” Kiara said.
Seth’s smile was his only answer.
“Good, good. This should be fun. Reno? You in or out?”
“You bet your ass I’m in!” Reno said loudly from her corner of the room.
Kiara let out a small dejected sound. “Actually, I may as well just sit here and control Umbra. Won’t get in the way.”
“Aw, that’d be mighty kind of you, but how would we stay in communication? You’re coming.”
“Point… okay, I’ll sit around the corner.”
“Aces. So, someone help Kiara here, and let’s start to head downstairs. I’ll explain my plan as we go.”
Chun leapt to the task, getting her arm under Kiara’s shoulder, and helping her to her feet.
Cyc made a sweep of the room twice—once with his regular sight, and another with his demon eye, to make sure nothing funny was going on. He let his second vision linger for a minute on Kiara’s demon leg, then turned to the door. “Let’s do this, kiddos.”
((93 — Versus))
They went down the back stairway, meant for staff and maintenance only. Cyclops stopped them for a moment on a flight as footsteps approached the door on the landing, but the sound continued past, leaving them alone. A few flights down, they came to the back door to the main hall. Cyclops gently pushed the staff door open, and motioned for the others to follow him into the museum proper.
Inside, it was set up like one would expect of a museum hall. Glass display cases filled most of it, filled with demon skeletons and preserved carcasses, ancient guns and machinery, and other assorted artifacts of leadership. Here was the first crystal sword--there a crystal imbued with demon energy that seemed carbon-dated closed to thirteen thousand years old--the vials containing the DNA of various Earth-based animals that the scientists had never had reason nor equipment to decant and clone. The lights were turned off, and the large hall echoed with darkness.
The Talons eagerly examined the nearby treasures. Reno’s pale gaze slid delicately over everything. Next to her, Chun and Kiara were staring in wonder at the artifacts.
Cyclops tapped his foot once, getting their attention, then hissed to them. “Okay cats, here’s what I’m thinking. I scope it out with the ol’ eye—” Here he tapped his eye for effect. “And we run in, grab the box, and get out. Easy as pie.”
“Put me down,” Kiara murmured. Chun did, resting her just inside the stairwell, then grinned at her friend.
From a ways off, the sound of footsteps carried through the hall--the sound of the night guard, almost certainly.
“Well, maybe not that easy,” Cyc muttered.
“Shit, not again,” moaned Reno under her breath.
“Just knock him out nice and easy.” He turned to Reno. “And to you, shhhh.”
Seth drew his crystal switchblade and began to sneak forward along the edge of the room. Chun came silently behind him, with Reno after her, dagger swishing out again.
The guard stood well ahead of most of the display cases in the room, looking out towards the front doors. He held a large taser baton in one hand. His posture made it clear that he wasn't expecting any particular excitement.
From her position in the stairwell, Kiara closed her eyes, sending Umbra creeping barely visibly along the floor.
Seth watched it creep past him, amused. He took up position behind a case and waited. If the demon didn’t finish the job, he would be ready.
More footsteps came, from off to the right, followed by a voice. “Hey, Max.”
The guard they were sneaking up on turned to look in that direction, and nodded back. "Andrew."
Another guard—Max—came out from behind a segment of wall, looking every bit as relaxed. The two guards began to talk casually.
"Weird, us both being on shift at once."
"It's those damn riots."
Cyclops, watching from afar with his demon eye, whispered to Kiara. “Second guard. Wait for these guys to jet.” Kiara nodded, and Umbra slipped back against the wall, blending into the ambient shadows.
"I know, man, I blame all the refugees,” Max agreed.
"Yeah? My little brother is a radio operator for the landing platforms."
"Mmhm?"
Seth barely stifled a laugh at that, but fell silent as the guards continued talking, not showing any signs of going anywhere.
"And he says there were HUNDREDS of refugee ships. He didn't get to sleep for DAYS 'cause he was landing 'em all."
"Shit, man, way more than they said on the news."
"Yeah..."
"Hey. You hear something?"
"Like what?"
"I dunno, sounded like voices."
Kiara froze. Umbra tensed.
Next to her, Cyc whispered as softly as he could. "Alright, Kiara, think you can make umbra like a big blanket, and catch them all?"
"You're hallucinating, man."
"I'm gonna go check it out."
"Whatever, man."
Max started walking back towards them.
Seth held his position silently, switchblade closed but ready. Chun bit her lip, trying to hold perfectly still against the wall.
Kiara focused, and Umbra shaped herself into something like a large shadowy net, flat against the wall.
Cyclops waited until Max was nearly level with where Seth, Chun, and Reno were hiding, then tapped Kiara on the shoulder. “Go go go!”
Umbra detached from the wall, and in a blur of darkness wrapped around Max, knocking him to the floor. “What the—!?”
The other guard--Andrew--looked up. "Max? You okay?"
“Score one, us,” muttered Reno. Seth nodded, then began to sneak forward, trying to flank Andrew.
Max called back. "Something knocked me over! Couldn't see it, though..."
Cyc pulled out his pistol and began to advance, moving quickly from display to display, making sure to hide his reflective gun as he did so
Kiara grinned with satisfaction, and Umbra reached out a tendril, wrapping around the second guard’s ankle.
Andrew yelped in surprise. "Something's grabbing my ankle!" Umbra yanked, and Andrew's leg went out from under him, hard. He landed on his back. "Gah!"
Meanwhile, Max was getting back to his feet. "What the fuck is this thing? Did you see it?"
Seth reached Max. “Nah, and you didn’t either.” His grin gleamed in the darkness as the guard spun to face him. He brought the blunt end of his switchblade down on the guard’s head, and Max fell forward, unconscious.
Umbra, meanwhile, had bound Andrew’s weapon arm to his side. He yelled again. “Fuck! Thing’s… got my arm!” He struggled at the shadowy stuff, trying to free his arms to no avail. “Get—off—of—me!”
“Your turn, Andrew.” Seth didn’t bother to keep his voice quiet as he closed in on the second guard.
The guard pushed away on the ground, his eyes catching sight of Seth. "Ah, shit, man, you're one of the demon assassins, aren't you! Fuck!”
Reno and Chun stepped out from behind the case, flanking Seth as he advanced. Both were smiling.
“Forget my face.” Seth laughed. “Or don’t,” he finished, uncaring, hammering the blade casing onto Andrew’s temple. The man slumped, unconscious. Umbra quiet slipped away, fading again into the shadows.
“Okay, demon assassins,” Cyc called, still keeping his voice low. “Let’s get that box.”
Seth cracked his neck, then his knuckles. “Let’s.”
The box was in a particularly large glass display case in the center of the hall. Unlike every other item, it had no plaque to describe it. It was a simple gray box, a few inches an edge, with strange runes etched into each side. It was oddly off-center in its case, as if someone had somehow bumped into it.
Cyclops approached the box, his eye starting to scan for anything suspicious. He suppressed a grin. He had been after this box for far too long now—the only thing he hadn’t yet succeeded in stealing. “Somebody tie those gentlemen up, would you?” He said. “We’re going to need—”
Kiara's voice cut him off, out from the stairwell at the back of the room. "Trouble!" Her voice carried fear with it.
Seth flicked his wrist, opening the shiny blade. “I’ll check it out,” he said, as he began to run back towards the stairwell.
“Good man,” Cyc encouraged, eyes never leaving the box.
Kiara's crystal sword came skittering towards Seth, sliding along the floor. Her voice followed it, panicky. "Demon!"
From her position at the base of the staircase, Kiara could hear something coming down it. She frowned, calling Umbra back to her, to see if it could get a view.
It sounded like... skittering claws. Kiara's eyes widened, and she strained to see it, drawing her crystal sword awkwardly.
The sounds reached the edge of the stairwell, and the thing came around the corner--
... but there was nothing there. The sounds continued towards her unabated, accompanied now by an odd rasping breath. "Trouble!" Kiara tried to call, but her voice came out shakier than she had wanted.
Umbra flickered to Kiara’s side, forming a barrier.
The sound of movement stopped, right above her.
Umbra clawed at where the sound had come from. The claw met flesh and feathers. From her touch, an image rippled outwards. Hanging over her, braced between the sides of the stairwell, was a large creature, somewhat bat-like, with skeletal appendages that looked more like long, bony fingers than wings.
“Demon!” she called, voice shot through with panic. Her mind slowly processed what she was seeing. Embedded in the flesh of its chest was a… what had been human… Kiara’s eyes went wide with horror as she recognized the figure buried in the demon’s chest.
The creature looked down at her with both faces, all four eyes glowing red.
Desperately, Kiara thrust her sword at its center of mass. One of the skeletal wing-segments smacked down, knocking the sword out of her hand. The sword clattered off into the hall.
Umbra lunged upwards, slashing again with its claws, but the creature lashed out with its sharp-edged bones, shattering the shadow and dispersing it. The creature faded into invisibility once again.
Kiara pulled her demon towards her, wrapping herself in her living cloak of shadows. A strange calm settled over her. “Goodbye,” she whispered quietly to herself.
Then dozens of invisible claws tore into her flesh, shredding her skin to ribbons.
In one fluid motion, Seth flicked the switchblade shut and picked up the sword. Jaz had shown him how to use one once. He kept running.
He heard the sounds of a scuffle from the stairwell, and clenched his teeth, trying to run faster. He crossed the last few yards to the stairs, skidding to a stop at their base.
Blood covered the bottom few steps, and—
At the foot of the stairs lay the mangled corpse of Kiara.
Seth let out an almost-silent "fuck" as his breath caught in his throat.
Friday, March 18, 2011
Friday, March 4, 2011
HOPE’S EDGE (4)
.
((85 — Untrue))
.
July 3rd, 802 AT.
The crystal tunnel echoed with the screeching of metal on metal as the hinges protested the opening door. Seth stood outside, calmly letting his cigarette burn itself out. He was wearing his classic demon-leather trenchcoat, and his golden earrings jingled a bit in his left ear’s cartilage. On his face was a wicked grin. He was rather looking forward to seeing his mentor. Reno stood behind him, smiling over his shoulder.
Finally, as the door clanged to a halt, he tossed the dying butt to the floor, and ground it to dust underfoot. “Evening, Cyc.”
“I really hope you brought one for me too.”
“But. Of. Course, mate.” Seth reached into his coat and pulled out two fresh ones. He handed one to Cyclops, along with his lighter.
Cyc grabbed it with a smile and a wink. Brown jumpsuit aside, there wasn’t anything normal-looking about Cyclops. His brown hair was styled back, his face covered in stubble. And of course his left eye had three pupils, was red shot-through with violet, and was surrounded by the crimson demonic scales that covered the left half of his face. ((Griffin Simpson))
“Now tell me,” Cyc asked as he took a long drag. “What took you two so long?” This was accompanied with two quick swats to the backs of their respective heads.
Seth laughed, leaning in the doorway. “Oh, you know, the usual. Guards, demons to fight, demons to train, apocalypses…” The prison cell was small and roughly spherical, with a ledge cut into one side to apparently serve as a bed. The only illumination came from the light filtering through the dozens of feet of crystal.
Reno bowed her head shamefully a moment before speaking. "You two catch up. I'm gonna go knock some heads, clear us an escape route." She ran off down the hallway.
Cyc nodded approvingly. “Resourceful girl.”
Seth laughed again. “You should’ve seen her earlier, seducing prepubescent boys.”
After a moment’s pause, Cyc rounded on Seth, his face absent of its previous easy smile. "Now tell me, boy-o of mine. Where are the rest of the Talons?"
“…Recovering.” Seth’s smile was gone too. “We encountered a bit of trouble on our way in.”
“How long are they going to be… recovering?”
“Dunno. Hopefully not too long. They should still be somewhere near a library.”
A muffled whump came from down the corridor, followed by Reno's voice. "One down!"
“Atta girl!” Cyc called out the door, then snapped his eyes back to Seth’s. “They got skinned knees? A little winded? Or are we talking fist-sized holes in their bodies?”
Seth broke the eye contact. “Kiara lost a leg. Well, most of one, anyway.”
“Damn. How long ‘til she’s mobile?”
“Not sure. But it won’t matter soon, will it? She’ll have to move. We all will.”
“Suppose you’re right, prison busts aren’t popular with the locals. But enough talk, you ready to go?” He stretched, rolling his shoulders backwards.
“Yeah. Let’s catch up with Reno.”
“After you,” Cyc said, with a little bow and a gesture for Seth to lead.
Seth nodded. “Let’s book it.” He took off down the hall. Cyc followed him, puffing like a chimney on his cig all the way.
Reno leaned against the wall by the elevator, eyes closed. "What took you two so long?" She grinned wryly. The old guard who had stopped them earlier was facedown on his deck, a small trickle of blood seeping from the back of his head.
Cyc took the cigarette out of his mouth and blew a breath of smoke. "Violent sodomy. Speaking of violence, which one of you delinquents did this?" He said, gesturing at the guard.
"That would be me." Reno hit a button on the wall, and the elevator doors slid open.
Seth stepped inside and pulled a small silver revolver out of his coat.
“Gold star for you,” Cyc said, entering the elevator with Seth. “How many of those hand warmers you got, kid?”
“This’s the only one that makes things go boom. I’ve also got a few sharp things. Any preferences?”
"Whatever you can spare, kid. So what's this big escape plan?"
Reno laughed. "We barely need one. There's just the kid up here, what with the riots."
“You’ve always been a better shot than me,” Seth said, handing Cyclops the gun as he pulled out his crystal switchblade with his other hand.
“Aces,” was all Cyc said as he took the gun, fiddling with it. “I recognize this gun! You kids hit my storeroom.” He thought for a moment. “Gold stars for both of you for resourcefulness.” Then he turned to Reno. “Wait, riots?”
“Shit,” Seth said, eyebrows raised in genuine surprise. “You not hear about the impending doom, corked up down there?”
Cyc frowned at him. “You have some information you want to share with the rest of the class?”
The doors of the elevator slid open onto the first floor hallway. The young teenager still sat at his post, looking around awkwardly. "H-hey!" The boy pointed. "Y-you can't..."
“In a nutshell?” Seth said, ignoring the guard. “We’ve got a fleet of demons coming down our collective ass, bigger and badder than anything you’ve ever seen. Anything anyone's ever seen.”
The guard stammered, gesturing at Cyclops. "He can't..."
Cyc trained the gun on the kid, not even looking at him. "What are they doing about it?" He said to Seth.
The kid shut up quick, his hands raising in the air over his head.
“No clue. Some friends of Jaz—” He paused for a moment and took a sharp breath. “—some friends of Jaz… shit, I don’t even know. But they got here first and warned everyone. Not very well, I guess, given that all hell’s broken loose already.”
Cyc’s human eye brightened a little at this. “So this whole rock is in pandemonium, eh?”
“Yeah,” Seth said, leading the way down the corridor. The rest of the way out was clear. An empty hallway leading towards a huge hole in the wall where the door had been.
“Good. Now let’s got out of here, and then I’m gonna tell you a little story,” Cyc said, making his way towards the hole.
“Sounds like a plan,” spoke Seth, as he stepped outside.
((85 — Untrue))
.
July 3rd, 802 AT.
The crystal tunnel echoed with the screeching of metal on metal as the hinges protested the opening door. Seth stood outside, calmly letting his cigarette burn itself out. He was wearing his classic demon-leather trenchcoat, and his golden earrings jingled a bit in his left ear’s cartilage. On his face was a wicked grin. He was rather looking forward to seeing his mentor. Reno stood behind him, smiling over his shoulder.
Finally, as the door clanged to a halt, he tossed the dying butt to the floor, and ground it to dust underfoot. “Evening, Cyc.”
“I really hope you brought one for me too.”
“But. Of. Course, mate.” Seth reached into his coat and pulled out two fresh ones. He handed one to Cyclops, along with his lighter.
Cyc grabbed it with a smile and a wink. Brown jumpsuit aside, there wasn’t anything normal-looking about Cyclops. His brown hair was styled back, his face covered in stubble. And of course his left eye had three pupils, was red shot-through with violet, and was surrounded by the crimson demonic scales that covered the left half of his face. ((Griffin Simpson))
“Now tell me,” Cyc asked as he took a long drag. “What took you two so long?” This was accompanied with two quick swats to the backs of their respective heads.
Seth laughed, leaning in the doorway. “Oh, you know, the usual. Guards, demons to fight, demons to train, apocalypses…” The prison cell was small and roughly spherical, with a ledge cut into one side to apparently serve as a bed. The only illumination came from the light filtering through the dozens of feet of crystal.
Reno bowed her head shamefully a moment before speaking. "You two catch up. I'm gonna go knock some heads, clear us an escape route." She ran off down the hallway.
Cyc nodded approvingly. “Resourceful girl.”
Seth laughed again. “You should’ve seen her earlier, seducing prepubescent boys.”
After a moment’s pause, Cyc rounded on Seth, his face absent of its previous easy smile. "Now tell me, boy-o of mine. Where are the rest of the Talons?"
“…Recovering.” Seth’s smile was gone too. “We encountered a bit of trouble on our way in.”
“How long are they going to be… recovering?”
“Dunno. Hopefully not too long. They should still be somewhere near a library.”
A muffled whump came from down the corridor, followed by Reno's voice. "One down!"
“Atta girl!” Cyc called out the door, then snapped his eyes back to Seth’s. “They got skinned knees? A little winded? Or are we talking fist-sized holes in their bodies?”
Seth broke the eye contact. “Kiara lost a leg. Well, most of one, anyway.”
“Damn. How long ‘til she’s mobile?”
“Not sure. But it won’t matter soon, will it? She’ll have to move. We all will.”
“Suppose you’re right, prison busts aren’t popular with the locals. But enough talk, you ready to go?” He stretched, rolling his shoulders backwards.
“Yeah. Let’s catch up with Reno.”
“After you,” Cyc said, with a little bow and a gesture for Seth to lead.
Seth nodded. “Let’s book it.” He took off down the hall. Cyc followed him, puffing like a chimney on his cig all the way.
Reno leaned against the wall by the elevator, eyes closed. "What took you two so long?" She grinned wryly. The old guard who had stopped them earlier was facedown on his deck, a small trickle of blood seeping from the back of his head.
Cyc took the cigarette out of his mouth and blew a breath of smoke. "Violent sodomy. Speaking of violence, which one of you delinquents did this?" He said, gesturing at the guard.
"That would be me." Reno hit a button on the wall, and the elevator doors slid open.
Seth stepped inside and pulled a small silver revolver out of his coat.
“Gold star for you,” Cyc said, entering the elevator with Seth. “How many of those hand warmers you got, kid?”
“This’s the only one that makes things go boom. I’ve also got a few sharp things. Any preferences?”
"Whatever you can spare, kid. So what's this big escape plan?"
Reno laughed. "We barely need one. There's just the kid up here, what with the riots."
“You’ve always been a better shot than me,” Seth said, handing Cyclops the gun as he pulled out his crystal switchblade with his other hand.
“Aces,” was all Cyc said as he took the gun, fiddling with it. “I recognize this gun! You kids hit my storeroom.” He thought for a moment. “Gold stars for both of you for resourcefulness.” Then he turned to Reno. “Wait, riots?”
“Shit,” Seth said, eyebrows raised in genuine surprise. “You not hear about the impending doom, corked up down there?”
Cyc frowned at him. “You have some information you want to share with the rest of the class?”
The doors of the elevator slid open onto the first floor hallway. The young teenager still sat at his post, looking around awkwardly. "H-hey!" The boy pointed. "Y-you can't..."
“In a nutshell?” Seth said, ignoring the guard. “We’ve got a fleet of demons coming down our collective ass, bigger and badder than anything you’ve ever seen. Anything anyone's ever seen.”
The guard stammered, gesturing at Cyclops. "He can't..."
Cyc trained the gun on the kid, not even looking at him. "What are they doing about it?" He said to Seth.
The kid shut up quick, his hands raising in the air over his head.
“No clue. Some friends of Jaz—” He paused for a moment and took a sharp breath. “—some friends of Jaz… shit, I don’t even know. But they got here first and warned everyone. Not very well, I guess, given that all hell’s broken loose already.”
Cyc’s human eye brightened a little at this. “So this whole rock is in pandemonium, eh?”
“Yeah,” Seth said, leading the way down the corridor. The rest of the way out was clear. An empty hallway leading towards a huge hole in the wall where the door had been.
“Good. Now let’s got out of here, and then I’m gonna tell you a little story,” Cyc said, making his way towards the hole.
“Sounds like a plan,” spoke Seth, as he stepped outside.
Friday, February 25, 2011
SOLDIERS OF HOPE (2)
.
((89 — Beginning))
.
July 3rd, 802 AT.
Goat’s room in the hospital was a small one, at the outer edge of the crystal spire. A window let a beam of natural light in, gently illuminating the room. The room was long and thin, with space for six beds to fold down from the wall, though only Goat's was in use, leaving most of the room empty.
Giraffe shuffled in through the door, not fully awake yet and trying hard not to spill the tray of food she was carrying. Zebra followed her in, yawning as well. She quietly took a seat in a nearby chair, looking like she might nod off for a bit.
Goat opened his young, naive eyes. Bandages were wrapped tightly around his upper arm, and more over his leg. The doctors had told him the bullets had gone clean through, and with the benefits of modern medical practices, he should be good to leap again in a matter of days. “Good morning!” He said, looking at the two newcomers.
Zebra waved a hand noncommittally. "Morning."
“Here’s some—” Giraffe paused to yawn. “—food, Goat. How are you so cheery?”
“I just woke up,” he said. “The terrible state of things hasn’t gotten to me yet. Plus you brought me food, which is very sweet of you. Thanks!”
Giraffe gave half a smile and shrugged, setting the tray down on Goat’s lap. “Least I could do.” She happily sank down into a chair next to Zebra, and began gently nursing the cup of coffee she had taken from the tray. “Enjoy, I thought it was rather nice myself.” Next to her, Zebra was similarly sipping at a cup of coffee appreciatively. It didn't appear to be doing much to wake her up yet, though.
Goat sat up and instinctively transformed the food into a sandwich, then began munching happily.
“So,” Giraffe said after a minute or two of quiet eating. “How are the appendages?”
“Good, except for the fact that they’re injured. I think they’re getting better though.” As if to demonstrate, he gave a flail with his injured arm, then winced.
“Well that’s good,” Giraffe said, stifling a laugh. “Any idea where we’re going next?”
Goat frowned. “I see two options: we stay here and do Barret’s dirty work… or we go find Kasby.”
Giraffe perked up slightly. “I like option two, Barret bugs me.”
“Bugs? Seems a bit of an understatement. Hey…” Goat lowered his voice to what he thought was a whisper. “Do you think she’s a demon in disguise?”
Giraffe pondered it a moment. “I dunno, the only demons that we’ve seen, even in disguise, have had non-human features. But then again, she could be like us and just scared of more of her/our kind.”
“We’ll see,” Goat said. “In any case, I guess I won’t be doing much ‘til these limbs heal up.”
Giraffe shrugged. “Guess so.”
The conversation trailed off for a long minute. Goat stared out the window, down at the city below. “This city is really big,” he stated quietly.
Giraffe looked at him blankly for a second. “Well that was random. Are you—”
“Hey,” he cut her off, moving his toe nervously. “If we haven’t been eaten by demons when my limbs get better…”
Giraffe continued to look at him in confusion. “Um…”
“Do you want to… um… gonadate?”
“Say again?”
Goat gulped. “Go on a date?” His eyes darted nervously.
Giraffe puzzled for a second before looking at her coffee. “I don’t… know? Maybe?”
From her chair, Zebra raised an eyebrow, and a hint of a smile creeped along the corner of her half-asleep mouth.
Giraffe jumped up. “I need more coffee!”
“Kay,” Goat said quietly.
She shuffled to the door, yelling over her shoulder, “And that wasn’t a yes, by the way!”
Goat let out a sigh, then looked to Zebra.
The girl immediately pretended to be asleep, letting out a pointed and perhaps overloud fake yawn.
After a few minutes passed, Giraffe sauntered back with a fresh cup of coffee.
“Still not sure?” Goat asked tentatively.
Giraffe opened her mouth to respond, but turned her head as something caught her eye. On the far side of the room, a yellow mist was slowly beginning to flood the floor, flowing seemingly out of nowhere.
((90 — 0800 Dub))
“Wha!” exclaimed Goat.
“I dunno!” Giraffe yelled as she climbed onto a chair, trying to get away from the mist. Zebra stood up, looking down at the mist in confusion.
Part of it swirled up in the far corner, beginning to solidify into a human form. Slowly, it resolved into something all three recognized--the creature that had once been Jazrill Quinn.
Giraffe looked wide-eyed at the figure. “Fuck!”
“Gah!” Goat yelled.
Its skin was black and cracking, and its eyes shone red. The goggle lenses now embedded in its forehead glowed a fainter red, looking almost like a second set of eyes. The creature took a step forward, hissing angrily. It looked around the room, looking for something or someone. From a mouth that was far from human, the thing let out an angry howl.
Giraffe stood very still, and began to hiss for Zebra to do the same.
Zebra didn’t seem to want to wait around, though, and hurled her cup of hot coffee at the creature.
The cup hit it in the chest, splashing steaming brown liquid all across it. It screeched again, this time in pain.
Giraffe looked at Zebra. “Now she’s going to come after us!” she screeched.
“Fine by me,” Zebra said angrily, and picked up her chair, holding it over her head like a weapon.
Then the creature ran at Zebra--though it was limping slightly, favoring its right leg.
With one arm, Goat threw his tray of food at the creature, as Giraffe shot a blast of flame at its injured leg.
It leapt into the air, over both the fire and the tray of food, barely avoiding hitting the high ceiling. It came down with the crystal blade emerging from the end of its arm aimed squarely at Zebra's chest.
She stumbled backwards, trying to get out of its way, but the blade sliced through her shirt and chest, spattering blood on the floor.
“NO!” Goat shouted. Giraffe just turned up the heat, focusing on the wounded leg. This time, her blast of flame caught the creature solidly, bringing out another howl of pain. It rolled to the side, out of the way of Giraffe's blast, clutching at its burnt leg.
“Oh no, you don’t get away that easily,” Giraffe yelled as she re-directed her blast to follow it.
Next to her, Zebra looked down at herself, at the blood that was quickly staining her shirt red. Then her eyes rolled back into her head and she fainted. As her unconscious form hit the floor next to Goat's bed, the room around them seemed to ripple.
A second room seemed to overlay the hospital, a room of metal and wood. It looked almost like one of the rooms of Sector Four, but the walls were overlaid with thick red wires, that pulsed slightly, like blood vessels.
“What the fall?” Goat said, eyes darting around in bewilderment.
Giraffe let off her flame, nervously pacing. “This isn’t good.”
Zebra now stood again where she had been, looking around in confusion. She also lay prone on the floor, at her own feet.
Where Jaz was, though... A second form overlaid hers, this one a glowing silhouhette of angrily flickering red light. It looked around, scowling and hissing, and then its eyes seemed to settle on Zebra once more. Both forms, the physical and the glowing red, took a step towards her.
“Hey you!” Giraffe shouted at the glowing figure. It ignored her, not seeming to hear at all.
Without warning, it leapt forward, landing right in front of the ghostly figure of Zebra. The physical form landed badly, its burnt leg not supporting it well, but the red form stayed standing.
“What…?” Zebra was still frowning in confusion, not understanding. A pale red line appeared along her chest, matching the cut on her body on the ground. Then she reached out a hand to touch the creature’s face, the angry red mist every bit as insubstantial as her hand. “Jaz?”
For a fleeting moment, the redness seemed to peel back where she touched, and the familiar face of Captain Jazrill Quinn emerged from beneath the rage.
Then the moment passed, and the fire once more covered the creature. With one swirly red hand, it grabbed Zebra by the throat.
“Well, shit,” she said quietly.
The creature's other hand punched straight through Zebra, emerging out the back of her spine in a grisly display of bloody light. She fell backwards, even as a third wave of Giraffe's fire hit the creature in the side.
Before Zebra's ghostly body hit the floor a second time, the world rippled, and the overlays vanished. They were once again in the medical room, face to face with the physical demon that had been Jaz.
A demon that was now right in the line of Giraffe's flame. It shrieked, diving backwards, trying to get away from the fire. Giraffe just growled, increasing the intensity of the heat, channeling her anger into it.
Snarling, the creature locked its eyes on its one escape: the window. In a final burst of effort, it launched itself forward, despite both wounded legs. The creature flew over where Goat still lay in bed, smashing through the window next to him.
The room was suddenly deathly silent.
Giraffe ran over to Zebra, dropping to her knees and looking over her body. There didn’t appear to be very much blood, but she wasn’t breathing.
“Shit,” Goat said quietly, eyes wide.
Giraffe didn’t respond, just pulled Zebra’s bloody shirt back to look at where Jaz’s crystal blade had hit her. The wound was a long cut, a slice that ran from shoulder to hip, but it wasn't terribly deep. It wouldn't be life-threatening, but... Zebra wasn't moving. Wasn't breathing.
“Fucktards,” Giraffe spat bitterly.
“Good thing we’re kind of already in a hospital, right?” Goat offered.
“I… I don’t think it will be able to help much.” Zebra lay still. No pulse pushed blood from the wound.
Giraffe reached out her hand, and gently closed Zebra’s eyes, her own hollow eyes looking down at the corpse of her oldest friend.
((89 — Beginning))
.
July 3rd, 802 AT.
Goat’s room in the hospital was a small one, at the outer edge of the crystal spire. A window let a beam of natural light in, gently illuminating the room. The room was long and thin, with space for six beds to fold down from the wall, though only Goat's was in use, leaving most of the room empty.
Giraffe shuffled in through the door, not fully awake yet and trying hard not to spill the tray of food she was carrying. Zebra followed her in, yawning as well. She quietly took a seat in a nearby chair, looking like she might nod off for a bit.
Goat opened his young, naive eyes. Bandages were wrapped tightly around his upper arm, and more over his leg. The doctors had told him the bullets had gone clean through, and with the benefits of modern medical practices, he should be good to leap again in a matter of days. “Good morning!” He said, looking at the two newcomers.
Zebra waved a hand noncommittally. "Morning."
“Here’s some—” Giraffe paused to yawn. “—food, Goat. How are you so cheery?”
“I just woke up,” he said. “The terrible state of things hasn’t gotten to me yet. Plus you brought me food, which is very sweet of you. Thanks!”
Giraffe gave half a smile and shrugged, setting the tray down on Goat’s lap. “Least I could do.” She happily sank down into a chair next to Zebra, and began gently nursing the cup of coffee she had taken from the tray. “Enjoy, I thought it was rather nice myself.” Next to her, Zebra was similarly sipping at a cup of coffee appreciatively. It didn't appear to be doing much to wake her up yet, though.
Goat sat up and instinctively transformed the food into a sandwich, then began munching happily.
“So,” Giraffe said after a minute or two of quiet eating. “How are the appendages?”
“Good, except for the fact that they’re injured. I think they’re getting better though.” As if to demonstrate, he gave a flail with his injured arm, then winced.
“Well that’s good,” Giraffe said, stifling a laugh. “Any idea where we’re going next?”
Goat frowned. “I see two options: we stay here and do Barret’s dirty work… or we go find Kasby.”
Giraffe perked up slightly. “I like option two, Barret bugs me.”
“Bugs? Seems a bit of an understatement. Hey…” Goat lowered his voice to what he thought was a whisper. “Do you think she’s a demon in disguise?”
Giraffe pondered it a moment. “I dunno, the only demons that we’ve seen, even in disguise, have had non-human features. But then again, she could be like us and just scared of more of her/our kind.”
“We’ll see,” Goat said. “In any case, I guess I won’t be doing much ‘til these limbs heal up.”
Giraffe shrugged. “Guess so.”
The conversation trailed off for a long minute. Goat stared out the window, down at the city below. “This city is really big,” he stated quietly.
Giraffe looked at him blankly for a second. “Well that was random. Are you—”
“Hey,” he cut her off, moving his toe nervously. “If we haven’t been eaten by demons when my limbs get better…”
Giraffe continued to look at him in confusion. “Um…”
“Do you want to… um… gonadate?”
“Say again?”
Goat gulped. “Go on a date?” His eyes darted nervously.
Giraffe puzzled for a second before looking at her coffee. “I don’t… know? Maybe?”
From her chair, Zebra raised an eyebrow, and a hint of a smile creeped along the corner of her half-asleep mouth.
Giraffe jumped up. “I need more coffee!”
“Kay,” Goat said quietly.
She shuffled to the door, yelling over her shoulder, “And that wasn’t a yes, by the way!”
Goat let out a sigh, then looked to Zebra.
The girl immediately pretended to be asleep, letting out a pointed and perhaps overloud fake yawn.
After a few minutes passed, Giraffe sauntered back with a fresh cup of coffee.
“Still not sure?” Goat asked tentatively.
Giraffe opened her mouth to respond, but turned her head as something caught her eye. On the far side of the room, a yellow mist was slowly beginning to flood the floor, flowing seemingly out of nowhere.
((90 — 0800 Dub))
“Wha!” exclaimed Goat.
“I dunno!” Giraffe yelled as she climbed onto a chair, trying to get away from the mist. Zebra stood up, looking down at the mist in confusion.
Part of it swirled up in the far corner, beginning to solidify into a human form. Slowly, it resolved into something all three recognized--the creature that had once been Jazrill Quinn.
Giraffe looked wide-eyed at the figure. “Fuck!”
“Gah!” Goat yelled.
Its skin was black and cracking, and its eyes shone red. The goggle lenses now embedded in its forehead glowed a fainter red, looking almost like a second set of eyes. The creature took a step forward, hissing angrily. It looked around the room, looking for something or someone. From a mouth that was far from human, the thing let out an angry howl.
Giraffe stood very still, and began to hiss for Zebra to do the same.
Zebra didn’t seem to want to wait around, though, and hurled her cup of hot coffee at the creature.
The cup hit it in the chest, splashing steaming brown liquid all across it. It screeched again, this time in pain.
Giraffe looked at Zebra. “Now she’s going to come after us!” she screeched.
“Fine by me,” Zebra said angrily, and picked up her chair, holding it over her head like a weapon.
Then the creature ran at Zebra--though it was limping slightly, favoring its right leg.
With one arm, Goat threw his tray of food at the creature, as Giraffe shot a blast of flame at its injured leg.
It leapt into the air, over both the fire and the tray of food, barely avoiding hitting the high ceiling. It came down with the crystal blade emerging from the end of its arm aimed squarely at Zebra's chest.
She stumbled backwards, trying to get out of its way, but the blade sliced through her shirt and chest, spattering blood on the floor.
“NO!” Goat shouted. Giraffe just turned up the heat, focusing on the wounded leg. This time, her blast of flame caught the creature solidly, bringing out another howl of pain. It rolled to the side, out of the way of Giraffe's blast, clutching at its burnt leg.
“Oh no, you don’t get away that easily,” Giraffe yelled as she re-directed her blast to follow it.
Next to her, Zebra looked down at herself, at the blood that was quickly staining her shirt red. Then her eyes rolled back into her head and she fainted. As her unconscious form hit the floor next to Goat's bed, the room around them seemed to ripple.
A second room seemed to overlay the hospital, a room of metal and wood. It looked almost like one of the rooms of Sector Four, but the walls were overlaid with thick red wires, that pulsed slightly, like blood vessels.
“What the fall?” Goat said, eyes darting around in bewilderment.
Giraffe let off her flame, nervously pacing. “This isn’t good.”
Zebra now stood again where she had been, looking around in confusion. She also lay prone on the floor, at her own feet.
Where Jaz was, though... A second form overlaid hers, this one a glowing silhouhette of angrily flickering red light. It looked around, scowling and hissing, and then its eyes seemed to settle on Zebra once more. Both forms, the physical and the glowing red, took a step towards her.
“Hey you!” Giraffe shouted at the glowing figure. It ignored her, not seeming to hear at all.
Without warning, it leapt forward, landing right in front of the ghostly figure of Zebra. The physical form landed badly, its burnt leg not supporting it well, but the red form stayed standing.
“What…?” Zebra was still frowning in confusion, not understanding. A pale red line appeared along her chest, matching the cut on her body on the ground. Then she reached out a hand to touch the creature’s face, the angry red mist every bit as insubstantial as her hand. “Jaz?”
For a fleeting moment, the redness seemed to peel back where she touched, and the familiar face of Captain Jazrill Quinn emerged from beneath the rage.
Then the moment passed, and the fire once more covered the creature. With one swirly red hand, it grabbed Zebra by the throat.
“Well, shit,” she said quietly.
The creature's other hand punched straight through Zebra, emerging out the back of her spine in a grisly display of bloody light. She fell backwards, even as a third wave of Giraffe's fire hit the creature in the side.
Before Zebra's ghostly body hit the floor a second time, the world rippled, and the overlays vanished. They were once again in the medical room, face to face with the physical demon that had been Jaz.
A demon that was now right in the line of Giraffe's flame. It shrieked, diving backwards, trying to get away from the fire. Giraffe just growled, increasing the intensity of the heat, channeling her anger into it.
Snarling, the creature locked its eyes on its one escape: the window. In a final burst of effort, it launched itself forward, despite both wounded legs. The creature flew over where Goat still lay in bed, smashing through the window next to him.
The room was suddenly deathly silent.
Giraffe ran over to Zebra, dropping to her knees and looking over her body. There didn’t appear to be very much blood, but she wasn’t breathing.
“Shit,” Goat said quietly, eyes wide.
Giraffe didn’t respond, just pulled Zebra’s bloody shirt back to look at where Jaz’s crystal blade had hit her. The wound was a long cut, a slice that ran from shoulder to hip, but it wasn't terribly deep. It wouldn't be life-threatening, but... Zebra wasn't moving. Wasn't breathing.
“Fucktards,” Giraffe spat bitterly.
“Good thing we’re kind of already in a hospital, right?” Goat offered.
“I… I don’t think it will be able to help much.” Zebra lay still. No pulse pushed blood from the wound.
Giraffe reached out her hand, and gently closed Zebra’s eyes, her own hollow eyes looking down at the corpse of her oldest friend.
Friday, February 18, 2011
SILENT HOPE (2)
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((88 — Phendrana Drifts))
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July 3rd, 802 AT.
“It’s just up ahead,” Delissa said, looking back over her shoulder at Owl and Spider.
The two refugees were following her through the streets of the city, on their way to the entrance to the Deepana Caverns. They had meant to get an early start, but had all wound up sleeping in, and it was midmorning by the time they got moving. The night before, after checking on Kiara, Spider had split off from the Talons and shared Owl’s room for the night. They’d stayed up late catching each other up on their various exploits since parting ways a month earlier.
The alleyway suddenly opened up into what at first looked like a large courtyard. The ground was made of massive metal sheets, instead of the usual ground-down crystal of the rest of the city. In the center sat a small kiosk, with a single door.
Delissa frowned. “Usually there would be guards, but I guess they’re all busy dealing with the riots…”
Spider touched off the ground, letting herself fall towards the building. “Then let’s head inside!”
Owl jogged after, Delissa close on her heels. Their footsteps rang loudly on the metal, making it quite clear that there was nothing but air beneath the panel. They reached the door to find Spider frowning at the large padlock hanging conspicuously on the handle.
“Won’t open,” the teenager said. “I could hit it.”
Delissa shook her head. “It’s probably magically reinforced, knowing security around her. Crystals inside the lock. I guess we’ll have to come back another time.”
Owl stepped forward. “I think I can do something about it, actually.” Smiling, she rested her hand on the padlock. The pattern of words flowed off of her skin, surrounding and describing the lock. Owl focused, and her mouth moved just slightly, lips shaping out words. The writing on the padlock changed, and the lock changed with it. With a click, it popped open.
Delissa just stared. “I… it just…”
“Yeah. It’s… useful, sometimes.”
The younger librarian nodded. “I read about it in your journals, but it’s… it’s something else entirely to see it for real.” She looked at Owl, who smiled sheepishly. “You’re absolutely incredible.”
Owl blushed. “No, I’m just… I do what I can with what I have, and it’s not…” She trailed off as a loud clanging came from within the kiosk. She turned to see Spider already inside and halfway down a ladder.
Spider looked back at her. “What? I got bored. Come on!”
The crystal caves turned out to be much like the ones they had explored on Face, only scaled up a dozen times. They came complete with strange shadow-filled cracks and long-desiccated corpses impaled on crystal spires.
After the fourth or fifth set of corpses they passed, Delissa stopped, tugging on Owl’s sleeve. “We should turn back.”
Owl frowned at her. “Why?”
The girl swallowed, looking down. “We’ll end up like those people we passed… we’ll get impaled!”
Owl shook her head. “I don’t think so. The shadows—the things in the crystals—seem to acknowledge that we’re on their side now. They made contact with us, back when all this was starting.”
Delissa nodded. “I know. I read about it. It still… it feels uncomfortable here.”
“We’ll be fine,” Owl said. “Spider and I have been through much darker situations than this, I assure you. A little spelunking is, you know, easy as falling for us now!” She laughed awkwardly, and Delissa laughed with her, but Owl didn’t think her half-hearted joke had done much to cheer the librarian.
Sighing, they followed after their gravity-defying companion.
After what felt like at least four or five hours of wandering through the crystal catacombs, Spider stopped them abruptly.
Owl raised a questioning eyebrow. “What is it?”
Spider scowled at the floor, looking at it from where she stood on the ceiling. “Gravity goes all weird, right under us. It feels funny.”
“What do you mean?”
“I dunno, but I don’t like it. Something’s messing with it.”
“Something alive?” Delissa asked, voice small.
Spider shook her head. “I don’t think so. It’s like… there’s a hole, where gravity suddenly goes all flippy, like a ledge or something. I can’t really describe it.”
“Do you think you lead us to it?” Owl asked.
Spider nodded sharply. “Absolutely.”
It took them almost another hour of exploration before they found the source of the strange gravity. The orange light came into view first, flickering strangely in the otherwise white-lite tunnel. They rounded the corner to it, bringing it fully into view.
In the floor of the tunnel was a large crack, at least three meters long and half a meter wide. Its edge was lined with glowing orange lettering, that drifted along the length of the crack, phasing gently in and out of itself.
Owl walked slowly to the edge, staring down at the letters, studying them, trying to read them.
“What is it?” Delissa asked quietly.
“And can you read it?” Spider asked, hovering over her shoulder.
Owl shook her head. “I can read the words, but the grammar doesn’t make any sense. It’s all just strings of numbers and descriptive language… Maybe I could decipher it eventually, but it just looks like gibberish to me.” She let out a frustrated sigh.
Spider fell to the ceiling, inverting in mid-air to land on her feet. She stood over the hole, looking straight down through it. “It’s all just white in there!”
“What do you mean?” Owl followed her gaze, and saw only empty whiteness within. A burst of cold air came out, prompting her to pull her arms against her sides.
“The other gaps all had shadows in them, filling them in. This one isn’t even a crack! It’s just white!”
Owl started to answer, but Spider cut her off. “I’m gonna go check it out!” Owl watched as the teenager detached from the ceiling, and let herself fall through the portal.
Delissa frowned after her. “Will she be alright?”
Owl nodded. “She can take care of herself.” She crouched next to the gap, and touched her hand to the words. Rather than flow off of her, the words on the back of her hand took on the orange tint of the writing on the ground. “Oh!” She exclaimed quietly.
“What is it?” Delissa asked worriedly.
“It’s… I can kind of feel how it makes sense now! It’s like the portal is explaining itself to me…”
“Portal?”
Spider came rocketing back up through the gap, a whirlwind of cold following her. She landed again on the ceiling, her head and shoulders now covered with a strange dusting of white. She grinned gleefully at her two companions. “Owl! Owl! There’s a whole WORLD in there!”
((88 — Phendrana Drifts))
.
July 3rd, 802 AT.
“It’s just up ahead,” Delissa said, looking back over her shoulder at Owl and Spider.
The two refugees were following her through the streets of the city, on their way to the entrance to the Deepana Caverns. They had meant to get an early start, but had all wound up sleeping in, and it was midmorning by the time they got moving. The night before, after checking on Kiara, Spider had split off from the Talons and shared Owl’s room for the night. They’d stayed up late catching each other up on their various exploits since parting ways a month earlier.
The alleyway suddenly opened up into what at first looked like a large courtyard. The ground was made of massive metal sheets, instead of the usual ground-down crystal of the rest of the city. In the center sat a small kiosk, with a single door.
Delissa frowned. “Usually there would be guards, but I guess they’re all busy dealing with the riots…”
Spider touched off the ground, letting herself fall towards the building. “Then let’s head inside!”
Owl jogged after, Delissa close on her heels. Their footsteps rang loudly on the metal, making it quite clear that there was nothing but air beneath the panel. They reached the door to find Spider frowning at the large padlock hanging conspicuously on the handle.
“Won’t open,” the teenager said. “I could hit it.”
Delissa shook her head. “It’s probably magically reinforced, knowing security around her. Crystals inside the lock. I guess we’ll have to come back another time.”
Owl stepped forward. “I think I can do something about it, actually.” Smiling, she rested her hand on the padlock. The pattern of words flowed off of her skin, surrounding and describing the lock. Owl focused, and her mouth moved just slightly, lips shaping out words. The writing on the padlock changed, and the lock changed with it. With a click, it popped open.
Delissa just stared. “I… it just…”
“Yeah. It’s… useful, sometimes.”
The younger librarian nodded. “I read about it in your journals, but it’s… it’s something else entirely to see it for real.” She looked at Owl, who smiled sheepishly. “You’re absolutely incredible.”
Owl blushed. “No, I’m just… I do what I can with what I have, and it’s not…” She trailed off as a loud clanging came from within the kiosk. She turned to see Spider already inside and halfway down a ladder.
Spider looked back at her. “What? I got bored. Come on!”
The crystal caves turned out to be much like the ones they had explored on Face, only scaled up a dozen times. They came complete with strange shadow-filled cracks and long-desiccated corpses impaled on crystal spires.
After the fourth or fifth set of corpses they passed, Delissa stopped, tugging on Owl’s sleeve. “We should turn back.”
Owl frowned at her. “Why?”
The girl swallowed, looking down. “We’ll end up like those people we passed… we’ll get impaled!”
Owl shook her head. “I don’t think so. The shadows—the things in the crystals—seem to acknowledge that we’re on their side now. They made contact with us, back when all this was starting.”
Delissa nodded. “I know. I read about it. It still… it feels uncomfortable here.”
“We’ll be fine,” Owl said. “Spider and I have been through much darker situations than this, I assure you. A little spelunking is, you know, easy as falling for us now!” She laughed awkwardly, and Delissa laughed with her, but Owl didn’t think her half-hearted joke had done much to cheer the librarian.
Sighing, they followed after their gravity-defying companion.
After what felt like at least four or five hours of wandering through the crystal catacombs, Spider stopped them abruptly.
Owl raised a questioning eyebrow. “What is it?”
Spider scowled at the floor, looking at it from where she stood on the ceiling. “Gravity goes all weird, right under us. It feels funny.”
“What do you mean?”
“I dunno, but I don’t like it. Something’s messing with it.”
“Something alive?” Delissa asked, voice small.
Spider shook her head. “I don’t think so. It’s like… there’s a hole, where gravity suddenly goes all flippy, like a ledge or something. I can’t really describe it.”
“Do you think you lead us to it?” Owl asked.
Spider nodded sharply. “Absolutely.”
It took them almost another hour of exploration before they found the source of the strange gravity. The orange light came into view first, flickering strangely in the otherwise white-lite tunnel. They rounded the corner to it, bringing it fully into view.
In the floor of the tunnel was a large crack, at least three meters long and half a meter wide. Its edge was lined with glowing orange lettering, that drifted along the length of the crack, phasing gently in and out of itself.
Owl walked slowly to the edge, staring down at the letters, studying them, trying to read them.
“What is it?” Delissa asked quietly.
“And can you read it?” Spider asked, hovering over her shoulder.
Owl shook her head. “I can read the words, but the grammar doesn’t make any sense. It’s all just strings of numbers and descriptive language… Maybe I could decipher it eventually, but it just looks like gibberish to me.” She let out a frustrated sigh.
Spider fell to the ceiling, inverting in mid-air to land on her feet. She stood over the hole, looking straight down through it. “It’s all just white in there!”
“What do you mean?” Owl followed her gaze, and saw only empty whiteness within. A burst of cold air came out, prompting her to pull her arms against her sides.
“The other gaps all had shadows in them, filling them in. This one isn’t even a crack! It’s just white!”
Owl started to answer, but Spider cut her off. “I’m gonna go check it out!” Owl watched as the teenager detached from the ceiling, and let herself fall through the portal.
Delissa frowned after her. “Will she be alright?”
Owl nodded. “She can take care of herself.” She crouched next to the gap, and touched her hand to the words. Rather than flow off of her, the words on the back of her hand took on the orange tint of the writing on the ground. “Oh!” She exclaimed quietly.
“What is it?” Delissa asked worriedly.
“It’s… I can kind of feel how it makes sense now! It’s like the portal is explaining itself to me…”
“Portal?”
Spider came rocketing back up through the gap, a whirlwind of cold following her. She landed again on the ceiling, her head and shoulders now covered with a strange dusting of white. She grinned gleefully at her two companions. “Owl! Owl! There’s a whole WORLD in there!”
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Friday, October 15, 2010
HOPE’S EDGE (3)
.
((80 — Yami no Butou))
.
July 3rd, 802 AT.
It was the next morning by the time Seth and Reno made it to the Complex. They had spent the previous afternoon doing some basic reconnaissance, and making their way through the city. Transportation would’ve been easier if half of the trams hadn’t been shut down due to riots. Reno somehow managed to remember the address of one of Cyclops’ old hideouts, and they crashed there for the night.
The elevator descended the central spire, heading towards the open areas around its base. The Complex was buried inside that spire, and the only entrance was on one of the faces. For a moment the elevator jerked slower before continuing—presumably the result of a lack of maintenance or attention.
Reno stumbled, feet slipping out from under her, but Seth took a step forward and caught her with one arm, helping her upright. “You alright?”
She nodded slowly, putting a hand to her temple. “Yeah, I’ll be fine.”
He frowned concernedly at her. “You sure?”
Reno looked away, out the window. “I…” She sighed.
“What is it?” Seth sounded uncharacteristically concerned.
“I’m pretty sure my dizzy spells are symptoms of demon withdrawal. I need Caf. The connection… it’s… he’s a part of me. I’m losing track of what’s me, and what’s human, and…” She swallowed hard, but her voice was still flat.
He reached out a hand to her back, almost putting it around her, but held back. “Three weeks of freefall would fuck anybody up, yo.”
“If I concentrate on something calming, I should be fine for now. But I… we shouldn’t stay here too long. It might get more severe.” She turned to face him. “I don’t feel like me, by myself. That’s how I killed that pilot. It wasn’t really me doing it.”
Seth just nodded uncomfortably, not sure how to respond. He was saved by the elevator nearing the ground. “You ready for this?”
Reno smiled. “Yeah. I can do this.”
Outside the wide windows of the elevator, the two Talons could see a large plaza before them, crammed with rioters. "Dayum," breathed Reno. "Look at 'em all."
With a loud hiss of outrushing air, the wood-and-glass elevator gently touched down. The cage door retracted, opening out onto a landing platform, up a few stairs from the plaza. Above them, the crystal spire stretched off almost higher than they could see.
A handful of uniformed guards stood nearby, keeping the riot in check. What had been a riot, anyway. Half the people in the crowd looked unconscious, injured, or similar, and the other half looked about to keel over. It looked like the last dregs of a riot which had been going for days--and, from the radio broadcasts they had overheard on the tram, that's exactly what it was.
“Well shit. Ain’t this pretty.” Seth flicked on a pair of shades he’d had stored in his demon-leather trenchcoat for such an occasion.
“You think we missed the bulk of the heavy crap?” said Reno.
Seth shrugged. “S’pose.” They walked the dozen yards along the edge of the crystal spire to the massive door set into it. Etched above it were the words THE COMPLEX. “Looks like this is the place.” The door was easily three meters tall, a heavily sealed array of steel and bolts and deadlocks. There was a small radio panel set into the crystal next to it.
“…and now the big question,” said Reno, squinting up at the behemoth of a crystal prison. “How the living fuck are we going to get Cyc out of here?"
“Oh, I think we might have our ways.” He gestured to his coat, and to one bulging pocket in particular.
Reno leaned over and examined it. "I have a good feeling that this is the part where you whip out the metric crapton of awesome stuff."
“Sounds ‘bout right. I grabbed some supplies from Cyc’s pad while you were still napping.” He patted the pocket affectionately. “Let’s see if we can get in without this shit, though. Of course, if we can’t get in subtly… then it’s time for the fireworks.”
He walked up the door, looking it over. It didn’t seem particularly guarded, at least from the outside. He took a second look at the people dealing with the riot, and noticed the little COMPLEX logos on their shoulders. Lucky riot.
“Well… let’s try knocking.” Seth strolled over the door and smacked it a few times with his fist. The noise was deep and hollow, an echoing vibration that shuddered through the door.
“Oh,” said Reno, with a hint of disappointment. “I thought you meant knocking with literal fireworks.”
The radio hissed, shutting her up, and a voice asked, “Yes?”
Seth leaned over to the radio. “Yo. Here to visit an old friend. Wanna open the door?”
“I’m sorry, but you’ll have to give me an authorization code for visiting.”
“I’m sorry, did that sound like a question? Let me rephrase that. You want to open the door.”
“I’m afraid I can’t do that, sir. You’re going to have to leave.”
Seth shook his head and sighed. “No can do, bro.”
Reno leaned into his ear. “Fireworks anytime now, buddy.”
He nodded. “Let’s see here.” He reached into his coat and felt around for a minute. “Ah. This should do nicely.” He pulled out a small glowing crystal, and place it directly in front of the door. “You might wanna take a step back, babe.”
“Okie dokie,” said Reno, obliging.
The crystal pulsed, glowing with... well, it wasn't light. It was an absence of light. The space around it seemed to pulse shadows, as if all the light were being sucked out of it. The air around it rippled, and the crystal seemed to shrink. There was a flash, blinding un-bright, of non-space. The world seemed to ripple, and for a single terrifying moment, a hole opened into absolute nothingness.
The door, the radio, the crystal floor--in the blink of an eye, everything in a two meter radius from the crystal vanished into the black hole, never to be seen again.
Any hint of mental vagueness Reno had at that moment vanished with the door. “WOAH,” she gasped. “What wasn’t that?”
Seth laughed. “Wasn’t not a black hole. Boom, baby.” The hallway on the other side of the vanished crater stretched forward. Seth lit a new cigarette and began to walk forwards. “Let’s raid this place.”
"Aye aye, capitan," saluted Reno, feeling strangely invigorated by the burst of nothingness. Reno hadn't felt this good since before she separated from Caf. It was as though the burst of nothing had subconciously reminded her that there were worse things than being separated from your mental partner.
A small guard post sat to one side of the hall, with the remaining arm and a leg of whoever they had spoken to on the radio. The corridor was moderately well lit by a series of lamps overhead, stretching forward. Various side passages and elevators up and down branched off from the main tunnel. These were marked with various combinations of letters and numbers, denoting... well, to be honest, they had no idea. But they probably denoted something.
“Wonder which one’s got Cyc,” Seth mused as eyed the numbers. “Any ideas, Reno?”
She stood next to him and rubbed her chin in thought. “Let’s seeeeee…” Her chin-finger stopped moving. "Does starting from the bottom and working our way up make any sense?"
“I don’t have any other ideas.”
She grinned. "Or should we just do it the old fashioned way and hold a sharp deadly object to a guard's throat and make him tell us?"
“That’s faster.” Seth shrugged, smiling lazily. “I think we can pull that off. All we need, then, is a guard.”
“A guard and THIS little bugger. I mean dagger.” Reno whipped out the aforementioned sharp, deadly object.
“Excellent. Let’s keep going down this way. Should be a guard post or something.” He began once again to walk. After a few minutes’ walk, they came to a bend, turning left. “Wonder what’s ‘round this corner…” He stepped around it.
The corridor continued along for a good distance. A door was inset into the left side of it, though, with a window-like opening next to it. Anyone on their way through the corridor would have to pass the window.
Seth nodded approvingly. “Bingo. You wanna chat with the bloke? Or shall I?”
Reno grinned. "You know, this is something I've wanted to try for a while, but haven't for weird tomboyish feminist reasons."
“Take it away, my friend,” Seth said, laughing.
((81 — Peeping Tom))
Reno straightened herself, smoothed out her hair, and sauntered over to the guard post in an uncharacteristically sexy way.
The young man sitting inside the window was scribbling away in a journal, eyes down. There was a desk there, cut from the crystal itself, but no glass separating her from him.
“S’cuse me,” she said, lowering the pitch of her voice ever so slightly to induce a more womanly tone. “Sorry for walking in like this. The door was open."
The guard, who didn't look much older than thirteen or fourteen, looked up in surprise. "Wha--?" He shook his head, long brown hair flying out of his eyes. "You're not supposed to be here!"
Reno froze for a moment, startled by how young the boy was, but continued anyway. "Oh, I'm sorry," she said, putting on a slightly more-dramatic-than-necessary tweak to her self-protecting hand movements "But my heart tells me I must be here!"
The boy blinked at her in total confusion. "Um? You should leave! Or uh, I'll call the guards!" He stammered awkwardly with every word. "Er, the other guards."
Seth leaned on a wall—out of sight, around the corner—trying very hard not to laugh.
"You wouldn't do that, would you?" she said, leaning in and putting on heavy layers of passion "My lover was wrongly imprisoned here and I must see him again! Please, kind young man! Please tell me where his cell is!" One side of her jacket conveniently slid down, exposing her shoulder and a bit of her chest.
The boy swallowed hard. "That... that would be against protocol." His eyes strayed rather un-subtly to her chest, then jumped back up to her eyes, as his face turned beet red.
Reno took note of this. "Oh, you don't have a girlfriend, do you? Some sweetheart you miss right now?"
"N-no..." He pushed his chair back from the window slightly, starting to sweat, clearly immensely nervous.
"That's a shame," said Reno "Then...you certainly don't understand how I feel..." Reno inched provocatively close to the guard. "...you don't know what it's like to have someone...special in your arms..."
The boy said nothing, simply staring at her, eyes very wide.
"...so let me put it this way." Reno reached forward and cupped the boy's face in her hands. "You tell me which cell Cyclops is in, and you get a kiss from me. Don't tell me where he is, and I'll kill you." Her sickly sweet tone drizzled over every word.
"...C-Cylops!?" It didn't seem possible, but his eyes widened even further.
"Yessssssss," Reno hissed seductively.
The moment of thought passed through the boy very quickly. "H-he's in solitary confinement... Cell s-seventeen... Down the elevator, end of the hall."
"Wonnnnderful," said Reno, and kept her promise. Her face mashed with the young guard, almost as though she intended to suck the life out of him through her sheer dramatized over-sexuality.
She raised one fist. BAM.
The boy dropped to the floor of the guard post, unconscious.
Seth laughed uproariously. “BWAHAHAHAHAH WELL PLAYED AHAHAHAHAHA!” He slowly wiped a tear from his eyes. “That… that was beautiful.” He doubled over, staggering around the corner, still laughing.
Reno sauntered back over to him. "Glad you enjoyed the show," she said “Because I am never. Doing. That. Again.” She hacked up a mouthful of spit, swiftly ejecting it onto the floor and ridding herself of the pubescent-guard germs.
“Awwww,” said Seth teasingly. He walked over to the elevator just down the hall. “So uh Reno. You looked uh pretty good there. If you catch my drift.”
Reno looked at Seth as though she wished there were knives present directly in front of her eyes so that she could stare them into him.
((82 — Poison Prison))
Seth shrugged and sighed sarcastically. “Was worth a shot.” He hit the button, and the elevator’s doors slid open.
She followed him in, and unconsciously tightened her legs. “Three years ago was a one-time thing, Seth. We were kids experimenting. Nothing more.”
He raised an eyebrow at her suddenly more serious tone.
“B’sides,” she continued, looking away. “You’ve got Spider now.”
He leaned against the wall, eyes aimed at the ceiling. “Yeah. Guess I do.” The air in the elevator suddenly felt a thousand times more awkward and full of tension.
Then the doors opened onto the lower floor. The guard in the post in this window, a middle-aged man, jumped to his feet. "Hey! What are you doing down here?"
Seth pushed off the wall and took a step towards him. “Here to visit an old friend.”
The guard pulled a large standard-issue gun out from behind the desk and pointed it at the two. Clearly he was neither as inexperienced nor as incompetent as his companion upstairs.
“Whoa!” said Seth, throwing his hands up. “What’s with the hostility, bro?”
"Civilians are not allowed down in solitary confinement! Even with visitor authorization." His voice was gruff and to the point. "Which, given your lack of escort, I sincerely doubt you have."
Crap, thought Reno, I guess THIS is what the old saying goes about not bringing a knife to a gun fight.
Seth’s tone took on a severity rarely seen. “Do you even know who I am!? How DARE you call me a civilian. Rent-a-cops these days. The nerve.” Next to him, Reno put away her surprise at once, playing along and assuming a psuedo-stance-of-importance.
The man blinked, suddenly unsure. "Um. Oh jeez, you're not one of the Quinn's crew, are you?"
Seth practically exploded at him. “What the fuck do you think, dullard? In case you didn’t notice, there is an ARMY OF DEMONS COMING HERE. Now, if you don’t want any more bullshit on your hands, like the riot going on outside, you let me the fuck in. I’m here to get a man who can help clean up this mess so that the Sector can survive.” He paused for breath. “Dig?”
The man behind the counter swallowed. "Of course, sir. Desperate times call for desperate measures. I understand. I won't get in your way."
“Thank you.” Seth let out a long breath, and walked right up to the counter. “Now, would you kindly direct me to Cyclops’ cell?”
"Cyc--! If... I..." The man's brow furrowed, and he let out a sigh. "Down the hall. The door lock code is 8697." He pointed to the right.
Seth nodded, and walked to the right. He waved to Reno. “Come along, now.” They counted off as they walked--door thirteen, fourteen, fifteen... Down here, the walls were pure crystal, unadorned with anything besides the metal doors and the dim bulbs overhead.
At long last, they reached the door to Cyclops' cell. A simple steel door, with "17" stenciled in white paint on it, and a small electronic keypad set where a lock would normally be
“Let’s see… eight six nine seven.” Seth spoke the numbers as he keyed them in.
The door let out a hiss, mechanisms moving in it as it unlocked, then swung open towards them.
((80 — Yami no Butou))
.
July 3rd, 802 AT.
It was the next morning by the time Seth and Reno made it to the Complex. They had spent the previous afternoon doing some basic reconnaissance, and making their way through the city. Transportation would’ve been easier if half of the trams hadn’t been shut down due to riots. Reno somehow managed to remember the address of one of Cyclops’ old hideouts, and they crashed there for the night.
The elevator descended the central spire, heading towards the open areas around its base. The Complex was buried inside that spire, and the only entrance was on one of the faces. For a moment the elevator jerked slower before continuing—presumably the result of a lack of maintenance or attention.
Reno stumbled, feet slipping out from under her, but Seth took a step forward and caught her with one arm, helping her upright. “You alright?”
She nodded slowly, putting a hand to her temple. “Yeah, I’ll be fine.”
He frowned concernedly at her. “You sure?”
Reno looked away, out the window. “I…” She sighed.
“What is it?” Seth sounded uncharacteristically concerned.
“I’m pretty sure my dizzy spells are symptoms of demon withdrawal. I need Caf. The connection… it’s… he’s a part of me. I’m losing track of what’s me, and what’s human, and…” She swallowed hard, but her voice was still flat.
He reached out a hand to her back, almost putting it around her, but held back. “Three weeks of freefall would fuck anybody up, yo.”
“If I concentrate on something calming, I should be fine for now. But I… we shouldn’t stay here too long. It might get more severe.” She turned to face him. “I don’t feel like me, by myself. That’s how I killed that pilot. It wasn’t really me doing it.”
Seth just nodded uncomfortably, not sure how to respond. He was saved by the elevator nearing the ground. “You ready for this?”
Reno smiled. “Yeah. I can do this.”
Outside the wide windows of the elevator, the two Talons could see a large plaza before them, crammed with rioters. "Dayum," breathed Reno. "Look at 'em all."
With a loud hiss of outrushing air, the wood-and-glass elevator gently touched down. The cage door retracted, opening out onto a landing platform, up a few stairs from the plaza. Above them, the crystal spire stretched off almost higher than they could see.
A handful of uniformed guards stood nearby, keeping the riot in check. What had been a riot, anyway. Half the people in the crowd looked unconscious, injured, or similar, and the other half looked about to keel over. It looked like the last dregs of a riot which had been going for days--and, from the radio broadcasts they had overheard on the tram, that's exactly what it was.
“Well shit. Ain’t this pretty.” Seth flicked on a pair of shades he’d had stored in his demon-leather trenchcoat for such an occasion.
“You think we missed the bulk of the heavy crap?” said Reno.
Seth shrugged. “S’pose.” They walked the dozen yards along the edge of the crystal spire to the massive door set into it. Etched above it were the words THE COMPLEX. “Looks like this is the place.” The door was easily three meters tall, a heavily sealed array of steel and bolts and deadlocks. There was a small radio panel set into the crystal next to it.
“…and now the big question,” said Reno, squinting up at the behemoth of a crystal prison. “How the living fuck are we going to get Cyc out of here?"
“Oh, I think we might have our ways.” He gestured to his coat, and to one bulging pocket in particular.
Reno leaned over and examined it. "I have a good feeling that this is the part where you whip out the metric crapton of awesome stuff."
“Sounds ‘bout right. I grabbed some supplies from Cyc’s pad while you were still napping.” He patted the pocket affectionately. “Let’s see if we can get in without this shit, though. Of course, if we can’t get in subtly… then it’s time for the fireworks.”
He walked up the door, looking it over. It didn’t seem particularly guarded, at least from the outside. He took a second look at the people dealing with the riot, and noticed the little COMPLEX logos on their shoulders. Lucky riot.
“Well… let’s try knocking.” Seth strolled over the door and smacked it a few times with his fist. The noise was deep and hollow, an echoing vibration that shuddered through the door.
“Oh,” said Reno, with a hint of disappointment. “I thought you meant knocking with literal fireworks.”
The radio hissed, shutting her up, and a voice asked, “Yes?”
Seth leaned over to the radio. “Yo. Here to visit an old friend. Wanna open the door?”
“I’m sorry, but you’ll have to give me an authorization code for visiting.”
“I’m sorry, did that sound like a question? Let me rephrase that. You want to open the door.”
“I’m afraid I can’t do that, sir. You’re going to have to leave.”
Seth shook his head and sighed. “No can do, bro.”
Reno leaned into his ear. “Fireworks anytime now, buddy.”
He nodded. “Let’s see here.” He reached into his coat and felt around for a minute. “Ah. This should do nicely.” He pulled out a small glowing crystal, and place it directly in front of the door. “You might wanna take a step back, babe.”
“Okie dokie,” said Reno, obliging.
The crystal pulsed, glowing with... well, it wasn't light. It was an absence of light. The space around it seemed to pulse shadows, as if all the light were being sucked out of it. The air around it rippled, and the crystal seemed to shrink. There was a flash, blinding un-bright, of non-space. The world seemed to ripple, and for a single terrifying moment, a hole opened into absolute nothingness.
The door, the radio, the crystal floor--in the blink of an eye, everything in a two meter radius from the crystal vanished into the black hole, never to be seen again.
Any hint of mental vagueness Reno had at that moment vanished with the door. “WOAH,” she gasped. “What wasn’t that?”
Seth laughed. “Wasn’t not a black hole. Boom, baby.” The hallway on the other side of the vanished crater stretched forward. Seth lit a new cigarette and began to walk forwards. “Let’s raid this place.”
"Aye aye, capitan," saluted Reno, feeling strangely invigorated by the burst of nothingness. Reno hadn't felt this good since before she separated from Caf. It was as though the burst of nothing had subconciously reminded her that there were worse things than being separated from your mental partner.
A small guard post sat to one side of the hall, with the remaining arm and a leg of whoever they had spoken to on the radio. The corridor was moderately well lit by a series of lamps overhead, stretching forward. Various side passages and elevators up and down branched off from the main tunnel. These were marked with various combinations of letters and numbers, denoting... well, to be honest, they had no idea. But they probably denoted something.
“Wonder which one’s got Cyc,” Seth mused as eyed the numbers. “Any ideas, Reno?”
She stood next to him and rubbed her chin in thought. “Let’s seeeeee…” Her chin-finger stopped moving. "Does starting from the bottom and working our way up make any sense?"
“I don’t have any other ideas.”
She grinned. "Or should we just do it the old fashioned way and hold a sharp deadly object to a guard's throat and make him tell us?"
“That’s faster.” Seth shrugged, smiling lazily. “I think we can pull that off. All we need, then, is a guard.”
“A guard and THIS little bugger. I mean dagger.” Reno whipped out the aforementioned sharp, deadly object.
“Excellent. Let’s keep going down this way. Should be a guard post or something.” He began once again to walk. After a few minutes’ walk, they came to a bend, turning left. “Wonder what’s ‘round this corner…” He stepped around it.
The corridor continued along for a good distance. A door was inset into the left side of it, though, with a window-like opening next to it. Anyone on their way through the corridor would have to pass the window.
Seth nodded approvingly. “Bingo. You wanna chat with the bloke? Or shall I?”
Reno grinned. "You know, this is something I've wanted to try for a while, but haven't for weird tomboyish feminist reasons."
“Take it away, my friend,” Seth said, laughing.
((81 — Peeping Tom))
Reno straightened herself, smoothed out her hair, and sauntered over to the guard post in an uncharacteristically sexy way.
The young man sitting inside the window was scribbling away in a journal, eyes down. There was a desk there, cut from the crystal itself, but no glass separating her from him.
“S’cuse me,” she said, lowering the pitch of her voice ever so slightly to induce a more womanly tone. “Sorry for walking in like this. The door was open."
The guard, who didn't look much older than thirteen or fourteen, looked up in surprise. "Wha--?" He shook his head, long brown hair flying out of his eyes. "You're not supposed to be here!"
Reno froze for a moment, startled by how young the boy was, but continued anyway. "Oh, I'm sorry," she said, putting on a slightly more-dramatic-than-necessary tweak to her self-protecting hand movements "But my heart tells me I must be here!"
The boy blinked at her in total confusion. "Um? You should leave! Or uh, I'll call the guards!" He stammered awkwardly with every word. "Er, the other guards."
Seth leaned on a wall—out of sight, around the corner—trying very hard not to laugh.
"You wouldn't do that, would you?" she said, leaning in and putting on heavy layers of passion "My lover was wrongly imprisoned here and I must see him again! Please, kind young man! Please tell me where his cell is!" One side of her jacket conveniently slid down, exposing her shoulder and a bit of her chest.
The boy swallowed hard. "That... that would be against protocol." His eyes strayed rather un-subtly to her chest, then jumped back up to her eyes, as his face turned beet red.
Reno took note of this. "Oh, you don't have a girlfriend, do you? Some sweetheart you miss right now?"
"N-no..." He pushed his chair back from the window slightly, starting to sweat, clearly immensely nervous.
"That's a shame," said Reno "Then...you certainly don't understand how I feel..." Reno inched provocatively close to the guard. "...you don't know what it's like to have someone...special in your arms..."
The boy said nothing, simply staring at her, eyes very wide.
"...so let me put it this way." Reno reached forward and cupped the boy's face in her hands. "You tell me which cell Cyclops is in, and you get a kiss from me. Don't tell me where he is, and I'll kill you." Her sickly sweet tone drizzled over every word.
"...C-Cylops!?" It didn't seem possible, but his eyes widened even further.
"Yessssssss," Reno hissed seductively.
The moment of thought passed through the boy very quickly. "H-he's in solitary confinement... Cell s-seventeen... Down the elevator, end of the hall."
"Wonnnnderful," said Reno, and kept her promise. Her face mashed with the young guard, almost as though she intended to suck the life out of him through her sheer dramatized over-sexuality.
She raised one fist. BAM.
The boy dropped to the floor of the guard post, unconscious.
Seth laughed uproariously. “BWAHAHAHAHAH WELL PLAYED AHAHAHAHAHA!” He slowly wiped a tear from his eyes. “That… that was beautiful.” He doubled over, staggering around the corner, still laughing.
Reno sauntered back over to him. "Glad you enjoyed the show," she said “Because I am never. Doing. That. Again.” She hacked up a mouthful of spit, swiftly ejecting it onto the floor and ridding herself of the pubescent-guard germs.
“Awwww,” said Seth teasingly. He walked over to the elevator just down the hall. “So uh Reno. You looked uh pretty good there. If you catch my drift.”
Reno looked at Seth as though she wished there were knives present directly in front of her eyes so that she could stare them into him.
((82 — Poison Prison))
Seth shrugged and sighed sarcastically. “Was worth a shot.” He hit the button, and the elevator’s doors slid open.
She followed him in, and unconsciously tightened her legs. “Three years ago was a one-time thing, Seth. We were kids experimenting. Nothing more.”
He raised an eyebrow at her suddenly more serious tone.
“B’sides,” she continued, looking away. “You’ve got Spider now.”
He leaned against the wall, eyes aimed at the ceiling. “Yeah. Guess I do.” The air in the elevator suddenly felt a thousand times more awkward and full of tension.
Then the doors opened onto the lower floor. The guard in the post in this window, a middle-aged man, jumped to his feet. "Hey! What are you doing down here?"
Seth pushed off the wall and took a step towards him. “Here to visit an old friend.”
The guard pulled a large standard-issue gun out from behind the desk and pointed it at the two. Clearly he was neither as inexperienced nor as incompetent as his companion upstairs.
“Whoa!” said Seth, throwing his hands up. “What’s with the hostility, bro?”
"Civilians are not allowed down in solitary confinement! Even with visitor authorization." His voice was gruff and to the point. "Which, given your lack of escort, I sincerely doubt you have."
Crap, thought Reno, I guess THIS is what the old saying goes about not bringing a knife to a gun fight.
Seth’s tone took on a severity rarely seen. “Do you even know who I am!? How DARE you call me a civilian. Rent-a-cops these days. The nerve.” Next to him, Reno put away her surprise at once, playing along and assuming a psuedo-stance-of-importance.
The man blinked, suddenly unsure. "Um. Oh jeez, you're not one of the Quinn's crew, are you?"
Seth practically exploded at him. “What the fuck do you think, dullard? In case you didn’t notice, there is an ARMY OF DEMONS COMING HERE. Now, if you don’t want any more bullshit on your hands, like the riot going on outside, you let me the fuck in. I’m here to get a man who can help clean up this mess so that the Sector can survive.” He paused for breath. “Dig?”
The man behind the counter swallowed. "Of course, sir. Desperate times call for desperate measures. I understand. I won't get in your way."
“Thank you.” Seth let out a long breath, and walked right up to the counter. “Now, would you kindly direct me to Cyclops’ cell?”
"Cyc--! If... I..." The man's brow furrowed, and he let out a sigh. "Down the hall. The door lock code is 8697." He pointed to the right.
Seth nodded, and walked to the right. He waved to Reno. “Come along, now.” They counted off as they walked--door thirteen, fourteen, fifteen... Down here, the walls were pure crystal, unadorned with anything besides the metal doors and the dim bulbs overhead.
At long last, they reached the door to Cyclops' cell. A simple steel door, with "17" stenciled in white paint on it, and a small electronic keypad set where a lock would normally be
“Let’s see… eight six nine seven.” Seth spoke the numbers as he keyed them in.
The door let out a hiss, mechanisms moving in it as it unlocked, then swung open towards them.
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
HUNTING HOPE (2)
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((86 — Building Steam With a Grain of Salt))
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July 2nd, 802 AT.
Kasby braced one foot on the creature’s chest, and pulled his crystal sword out of it. He collapsed against the wall, panting. He looked at his leg, where a bullet had grazed him, and confirmed the injury wasn’t too bad. He closed his eyes, took a shuddering breath, and looked at what he had just killed.
It was obvious it had once been human—and just as obvious that it no longer was. Its skin was black and leathery-thick, like charcoal. Its clothes had melted into its flesh, becoming a carapace of sorts. Exposed veins still pulsed eerily glowing red blood through it. Its right arm ended in a twisted hunk of metal—a pistol, fused into the hand that had once gripped it, now all part of the same creature. In life, in humanity, it looked to have been a man, of maybe Kasby’s own age. Now it was just another dead demon.
Slowly, Kasby pulled himself to his feet, took one last look around the shattered lab, and walked out. A crew of scientists would be here soon to perform an autopsy on the creature. He had other places to be. He retraced his footsteps, going back the way he had come, towards the Bioresa tram station.
He had lost track of time, by now. Night had come and gone. He had slept at some point. The hours were blurred together, a vague swirl of trails of blood and corpses and crystal. Every few hours, a new report would come in of someone sighting a demonic assassin, and he would set out to hunt. Two more times it had been Jaz, and both times she had escaped handily. Other demons had gotten away similarly, but he had killed three of the things now.
He blinked, and realized he’d already made it back to the tower, lost in thought and memory and sleepless haze. The tram car door opened onto the central platform of the transit terminal. In the last few days, it had changed drastically, from a bustling place of activity to a nearly empty hall. Most everyone was either in their homes, bolting down and readying for war, or in the streets, rioting. Kasby, cold as ever, strode through the almost abandoned hall to enter the central tower.
The radio at his belt crackled, and Mercuria Barret's voice came through. "Bellwood."
Kasby lifted the radio from his belt, and held it up. "Almost back." He sounded more than just physically tired—exhausted down to his core.
"Don't come back. Got a report in from down in Haraya, of more nonhuman activity." Her voice was terse, to the point, as always, but he could hear the strain of three days running the city by herself beginning to wear on her. "Likely another assassin. Take the 63 Tram down there and check it out."
"On my way," he said, his tone as neutral as he could manage.
"Good. Barret out." The radio clicked off.
He turned around and walked to catch the 63 tram. The tram swung away from the dock without incident, sliding down the wire with an audible hum. The car swooped down, taking him towards the flats of the city, where the lower classes lived, those who could not afford the nicer houses on the quartet of crystal spires that dominated the landscape. Kasby stood in the tram, holding onto the guard rail. He stared straight out at the passing landscape as if it was keeping something from him.
The street was practically empty. Ramshackle houses stood around her, shanties and lean-tos comingling with more solid buildings. Here and there a store or restaurant eked out a quiet existence. They had slammed their doors to her, people fleeing the streets before her.
Skunk clenched her fists and tried to ignore the fearful stares of her fellow humans. In fact, she was starting to doubt she was quite human any longer... She shook her head in irritation. The day since her arrival had been spent aimlessly wandering the city, watching as humanity turned its collective back on her.
From a nearby door, a young boy stumbled out, not older than eight or nine. He clutched a sword made from two pieces of scrap metal glued together, and brandished it halfheartedly at her. "S-stop!"
Skunk glared at him incredulously. "What the fuck you want, punk?"
The boy shrunk back at her words, almost stumbling.
Despite herself, she paused. Softening her tone slightly, she added, "You can forget the the sword, kid."
"I... I won't let you kill my dad!"
Skunk's brow furrowed. "I don't have anything to do with your dad. What are you talking about?"
A man's voice hissed from the door the boy had come out of. "Daniel! Daniel, get back in here!"
Skunk held up a hand. “Daniel. Hold on. Just answer me, I won’t hurt you.”
"Y-you're gonna kill 'im! Like you killed all the people over 'n Storm, an, an, an, an daddy says you killed the Council!" The boy stammered, but was fierce and defiant, his own words seeming to inspire him.
"Look, punk—Daniel. I've been here a few hours maximum, and since I've been here I've done nothing but walk around. I don't know what you're talking about." She paused. "Why do you think it was me?"
The boy frowned. "... your skin. You're not a person, like we are."
"How did I know," she muttered. “Your dad is wrong.” She sighed. "You know what? If all you're gonna do is brandish a stick at me and accuse me of things I didn't do and don't plan to, I'm leaving."
Overhead, a tram car whirred down a cable, settling into a dock a block or two away.
"I'm gonna--" The boy was cut off as his father ducked out through the door, grabbed him, and pulled him back inside.
Skunk blinked. "Oookay," she muttered. Turning to the cable car, she walked over to investigate. The tram building was extremely dilapidated and worn-down, like everything else in the area. The windows were all broken, and large sections of wall and flooring were gone, looking as if they had been pried off with crowbars. She could hear someone moving inside.
Skunk stepped through the door into the tram room, and found herself face to face with the business end of Kasby's pistol. "Fuck! What the hell, Katsby!?" Skunk held herself still, resisting the urge to jump away.
As Kasby made eye contact, he froze for a moment. He let out a breath, and lowered his weapon, but did not break eye contact. He looked... tired. But maybe for the first time in a long while, a little bit relieved. "Skunk. Holy hell.”
"Nice way to greet a friend," Skunk said scathingly.
Kasby almost smiled. "You're alive. Thank the Void... you'll have to tell me what happened later."
"Sure, assuming there's a later." She looked around the room. It was small, with a patchwork roof that let bits of light shine through. "What's happening here? Some kid just tried to kill me. Ranting about how I’m a monster.”
"I'm not surprised. This city's been thrown into chaos... and you don't exactly look human," Kasby noted, gesturing at her metallic skin.
"Thanks, I get that." Skunk's tone was light, forced. "What's happening around here?" she repeated.
Kasby's expression hardened. "....Assassin. Of the demonic variety. Took out almost all of the Council, and now it’s running amok. Not to mention the Swarm is practically at the gates." He looked away.
"Demons come in the assassin variety? I thought they were all ravening beasts.” She sighed again. "I saw you on those, uh... screen things.”
Kasby looked confused. "Televisions? I was on the television?"
"At the assassination thing," clarified Skunk. "I saw you guys."
Kasby blinked. “How long have you been in Sector One?”
"A few hours, I guess."
"On that note, where are Spider and Owl?" his voice was laden with concern.
"Spider? Not sure. Owl is probably still in the library," she added, almost guiltily. "We landed there, and I'm betting she'll stay there as long as she can."
Barret's voice came from the radio clipped to Kasby's belt. "Bellwood! Report."
Kasby grabbed the radio off his belt. "Situation has been handled, Barret. How many reports of non-human activity in this area, again?"
"Just one. Good to hear it, too. We've got another report in from over at Enjaya. Reason to suspect they're trying to take out the reactors."
"On my way," Kasby repeated for the third time that day. He clipped the radio back to his belt without replying.
"Good. It's barely a kilometer away, you should be able to run there. Head straight outwards from your current position, towards the spire." Barret’s voice came through the radio. “Good hunting. Barret out.”
Skunk looked at him, one eyebrow raised. "Where are you going?"
“Demon hunting,” he replied, expression neutral.
"I could do with a bit of a fight," Skunk hinted. "This city pisses me off."
Kasby looked hesitant, for a moment. "...Alright. I don't have time to argue. Just... follow me." With that, he broke off back towards the spire.
Skunk followed, looking distinctly more eager and bright-eyed than she had been.
((87 — Battle of the Heroes))
The direction they were headed was drastically more industrial. A cloud of black smoke hung over the district, drifting out of angry smokestacks. The crystal spire rose dramatically, pointing outwards, away from the city center like the spoke of a wheel. Buildings, factories, and industrial complexes covered it, sprawling up its face.
They hadn’t even been running five minutes when they began to hear the first screams. Kasby’s pace increased. He darted towards the scream, swerving around corners and ducking under pipes as he navigated the industrial labyrinth. Skunk strained to see the source of the screaming, but followed Kasby.
Up ahead, a single large building dominated the base of the crystal. A large pair of double doors opened into the base of the building, hanging open. Two guards lay by the doors, dead of matching slash wounds to the chest. Kasby pulled the dartpistol from its holster once more and skidded to a stop a few feet inside the building.
Skunk glanced at the corpses, then began forming her left hand into a blade. With her right hand, she caressed the whip at her side. Another scream came from inside, cutting off abruptly.
Kasby walked carefully through the interior of the building, his pistol aimed in the direction of the scream. Inside, a quartet of ladders lead upwards, toward a series of catwalks.
Skunk stepped up beside him, peering at the ladders. “That’s… crappy. If we get trapped on those...well, it won't be pretty."
From further inside came another scream, as if falling from a catwalk, ending in an electrical hiss.
"Fuck it,” Skunk swore. “Let’s do this.”
Kasby nodded. "Don't get caught in close range." He was already bounding up one of the ladders. Skunk climbed up beside him, cursing as she re-formed her hand back to its normal shape.
The building was full of an electrical hum, with static electricity setting their hairs on end. As they reached the top of the ladders, they could see down into the center of the building. A trio of massive crystals, glowing with orange light, floated there, rotating in a slow circle. Huge arcs of lightning leapt between them, and to rings of dynamos and collectors lining the room. Metal-lined wooden catwalks stretched outwards from where they stood, overlooking the reactor core. At the center of them, a control platform hung from the ceiling.
"Okay...what's all that? And what should I be expecting from these demons?" Skunk hissed.
In response, Kasby just pointed to the control platform. Half a dozen scientists cowered on it, looking in fear at the figure advancing towards them.
She--it--walked slowly them, crystal blade at her side. The leather clothes, the walk, she short-cropped hair. It was unmistakably Jazrill Quinn. Or what was left of her, anyway.
Kasby raised his pistol and took careful aim.
"Fuck," remarked Skunk, too anstonished to even sound surprised. She took out her own gun as well, cradling it lovingly. "Do you want me to...?"
It took another step towards the scientists, moving slowly, taking its time with the kill.
Skunk kept her tone neutral. "Kasby?"
Kasby wore an expression colder than any Skunk had seen on him before. It might have been that absence of emotion, more than anything else, that showed Skunk the turmoil, the rolling storm inside him.
He pulled the trigger. His hand was steady, and this time, the crystal shard flew true. It thudded into the square of the creature's back, sending it sprawling forward against the catwalk, bringing forth an angry howl. Bracing itself on the catwalk with its blade, it reached its one hand back, grasping at the wound. Slowly, its whole body tightening visibly, still hissing angrily, it pulled the chunk of crystal out. The crystal hadn't gone more than an inch deep, most of the impact taken by the leathery armored skin that had once been a flight jacket.
There were two parallel catwalks running towards the control area. "Run past. Protect the scientists," Kasby ordered Skunk, gesturing to the unoccupied bridge. He broke forward towards the creature, raised his pistol and fired again. And again.
"Got it." Skunk crossed the room in as fast a run as possible, considering their height. "Good thing I grew up on Face," she grumbled.
It was still pulling itself to its feet as Kasby fired, its hand still tight around the first shard. The next shot went wide, but the third and fourth slashed across her sword arm. Jaz dropped again to the catwalk as the arm holding it up was shot out from under it. Kasby continued his frenzied advance, and ripped the crystal sword from its sheath at his side. He flew into Jaz full force.
Skunk didn't stop until she had reached the scientists. They huddled behind a control panel, and one let out a yelp of terror upon seeing her. "P-please..."
"For fuck's sake, I'm here to fucking save you!" bellowed Skunk. "Now MOVE!"
The scientists, a group of mixed-gendered elderly people, blinked at her for a long moment. Then they obeyed her order as one, leaping to their feet before her commanding voice. The scientists took off at a run down one of the other catwalks, fleeing at high speed.
Skunk turned towards the demon, in time to see it bringing its feet up, catching Kasby hard in the face with a kick. Skunk formed both arms into long, hooked blades. She advanced more cautiously than Kasby had, waiting for a clear shot.
Stumbling back, Kasby landed half on the catwalk, one leg slipping off of it. He slipped and teetered, for a moment over the edge.
Jaz took a step towards him, grinning as if meaning to shove him, and in that moment Skunk struck. She darted in close and stabbed with her blades, one after the other.
Jaz swung to face Skunk, bringing her crystal blade up to block both blows. Her wounded arm was moving at half speed, though, and barely managed to knock them aside.
Skunk danced just out of range, grinning manically. The thrill of battle.
Hissing angrily, the creature got fully back to its feet, and took a few steps back, now focusing on Skunk. A yellow sheen passed over the goggle-lenses that emerged from the skin of its forehead for a moment, but it shook its head, clearing them back to their normal red.
Skunk moved in, feinting and then going in, aiming for the creature's belly, under the wounded arm. The distraction of whatever had happened to her was enough, and Jaz couldn't block fast enough. She managed to fall backwards, though, away from the slash, past where Kasby was stabilizing himself. The blade's tip still dug into her chest, flitting away a long line of blood. It hissed furiously, almost spitting with pure rage.
"Did you see that?" Skunk yelled.
Kasby pushed himself forward and regained his balance. He dashed forward towards the combat, ducking under Skunk's arm as he lunged. She attacker as well, and they lunged in parallel, blades extended.
Jaz put a foot back and brought her blade up, free hand wrapping around the base of it for support—
The three blades met with a loud clash, ringing out over the hum of the reactor below.
Skunk grimaced at the shock, but pressed in, striking again. "I can hold her, Kasby!" Jaz blocked a strike, a second, a third, alternating between the two attackers.
"So hold her!" he almost screamed back as he continued to trade blows.
The yellow glow flashed over the lenses above Jaz’s eyes again, looking like another pair of eyes, watching her. A shudder ran through her, and she dropped back, pulling her sword arm away from the three-way-clash. She took three quick steps back, away from the fray, and raised her blade high over her head.
Skunk rushed in with renewed power. “Gotcha!”
Jaz’s hand dropped, sweeping out a full arc, swinging around below her, rending through the flimsy metal of the catwalk. With a horrible creaking, it began to bend downwards, pulled down by its own weight, no longer supported from both sides.
Skunk's eyes widened. "Oh SHI—" Skunk’s momentum carried her forward, into the hole. She stretched with her hooks, and just barely managed to dig them into the wooden catwalk on the other side of the gap. "Fuck!"
Kasby's mouth dropped open. No.
Jaz fell forwads, dropping through the widening gap, down towards the three spinning crystals below. Kasby lunged forward, throwing himself against the catwalk and extending his arm as far as it would go. He grabbed onto Jaz’s arm as she plunged downwards.
Jaz hung, dangling from the catwalk, held up by Kasby's grip. Slowly, she turned her head to look at him, eyes bathed in dispassionate yellow glow.
“Please. Not again,” Kasby said, whispering.
"Kasby, what are you doing?" screamed Skunk. Her blades slowly began to cut through the catwalk, inching her downwards.
Jaz's blade arm flashed upwards, swinging at Kasby's wrist, where it held her tight. The blade bit in deep, throwing blood across the catwalk. But Kasby did not let go. He shook his head, silently, mouthing one word. Please. Please.
She fell away from him, dropping away towards the reactor. Kasby's hand still clutched her wrist in a dead man's grip. As she reached the crystals, there was a swirl of yellow smoke, and she was gone.
"Touching!" yelled Skunk frantically. "Now fucking get me out of here!" She attempted to claw her way towards Kasby. Her motions only pulled the catwalk down further, creaking louder. “Little help?”
Kasby watched the beast that had once been his lover fall into the reactor below. He felt everything. And yet....shock. He looked at the bloody tattered sleeve where his hand once had been.
If only the catwalk were metal, instead of wood boards, she could've bent it into shape, but—another crack. Another crack. The wood itself was beginning to crack, where Skunk's blades dug into it. “Kasby.” Skunk’s voice was quiet, hard to hear with the hum.
Over the creaking of the collapsing catwalk, and the reactors, Kasby managed to hear Skunk. Ungracefully, in the midst of all this, he stumbled to his feet and backed away from the broken edge. "....Skunk. Skunk!"
Skunk gingerly kept her hold on the other side of the gap, a meter away from Kasby. Skunk could feel her heart pounding, adrenaline rushing through her.
Kasby rushed forward again and held out his uninjured hand.
"Grab hold!" He was close enough that she could probably reach him, but it would mean pulling one of her blades out of the woodwork.
"Cocksucker," she groaned. She could almost hear Owl’s voice in her head, saying “language!” The thought threatened to bring a bitter smile to her face, but she fought it off. "Okay, gimme a sec." She cautiously pried one hand loose. “I don’t think you’ll be able to pull me out...”
Kasby looked around in a panic. The pain was beginning to cloud his thoughts. He had to act quickly. The captain ran back to the control panel, and went to work at the display to try and turn the reactor off. "Hold tight!"
“Kasby!” Skunk yelled. With only one hand dug into the wood, she was slipping faster. "Oh, fuck..." She cut an inch deeper into the wood, towards the edge.
The controls were complicated, covered with switches and dials and readouts. "Fuck!" Kasby shouted, before dashing back to Skunk.
Skunk, starting to give up on Kasby, unclipped the whip from her belt with her free hand, and tossed one end away from the gaping hole. She concentrated, melding it with the metal edge of the catwalk.
Kasby skidded to a stop, grabbing hold of the secured whip with his hand. The catwalk frame groaned under the weight, but held. Kasby stabbed the crystal blade into the wood platform and used it to brace his leg. "Alright, Skunk!"
"Okay, no problem," she groaned. She reformed the other blade into a hand once more. With nothing holding her to the catwalk anymore, she fell down, swinging under it, held up by the wire. Skunk grunted, holding onto the whip for all she was worth. She squeezed her eyes shut, just briefly.
Kasby threw himself backwards, bracing against the sword to hold Skunk above the humming reactors.
Between Kasby's grip and the metal bonding, Skunk didn't fall. Not quite.
Kasby could feel the pain beginning to overwhelm him, though, darkness dancing at the edge of his vision, and knew he couldn't hold on for long.
“Okay,” she called up. “Good. Very good. Not dying. Excellent.”
“Hurry, Skunk,” Kasby rasped through the fires that had ignited in his nerves.
“Goddamn demons,” she half-whispered, struggling up the whip. Reaching the catwalk at last, she collapsed onto it, gasping.
As Skunk reached safety, Kasby let go of the whip. He swayed, upright, for a moment, before collapsing to the catwalk.
They lay, side by side, now alone with the massive whirring crystals below them.
"Kasby?” Skunk panted. “You still awake?”
The only answer from the unconscious captain was a slowly expanding bloodstain in the woodwork surrounding his left wrist. Skunk stared for a moment, then picked him up carefully. She was still trembling, but she managed to get him over her shoulder, carrying him away from the hole. She walked towards the control area, the catwalk still making ominous creaking sounds with every step.
The radio at his belt hissed and crackled. "Bellwood!" The voice was the same as before--a harsh, older woman.
She jumped at the radio's crackle, right in her ear, but pushed the talk button. “Uh… hello?”
"Who is this? Where's Bellwood?"
"If you mean Kasby, he's here. Badly injured. Here, I mean... shit, what did he call it?"
There was a pause. "But the reactor's still online."
"Yeah, the reactor. We’re at the reactor.”
"Alright. I'll dispatch a medical team. They should be there within fifteen minutes.”
"There was a fucking demon-thing, and it cut the railing, and then...well, his hand is gone. It’s dead, though, it better be dead.” Skunk knew she was babbling.
"Good. Barret out." The radio hissed static for a moment, then went silent.
Skunk took a deep breath. “Okay.” She lay Kasby down in the center of the controls, and collapsed against a bank of controls herself.
She stared blankly up at the ceiling, settling in to wait for the medical team. “…fuck.” This time, there was no Owl to scold her.
((86 — Building Steam With a Grain of Salt))
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July 2nd, 802 AT.
Kasby braced one foot on the creature’s chest, and pulled his crystal sword out of it. He collapsed against the wall, panting. He looked at his leg, where a bullet had grazed him, and confirmed the injury wasn’t too bad. He closed his eyes, took a shuddering breath, and looked at what he had just killed.
It was obvious it had once been human—and just as obvious that it no longer was. Its skin was black and leathery-thick, like charcoal. Its clothes had melted into its flesh, becoming a carapace of sorts. Exposed veins still pulsed eerily glowing red blood through it. Its right arm ended in a twisted hunk of metal—a pistol, fused into the hand that had once gripped it, now all part of the same creature. In life, in humanity, it looked to have been a man, of maybe Kasby’s own age. Now it was just another dead demon.
Slowly, Kasby pulled himself to his feet, took one last look around the shattered lab, and walked out. A crew of scientists would be here soon to perform an autopsy on the creature. He had other places to be. He retraced his footsteps, going back the way he had come, towards the Bioresa tram station.
He had lost track of time, by now. Night had come and gone. He had slept at some point. The hours were blurred together, a vague swirl of trails of blood and corpses and crystal. Every few hours, a new report would come in of someone sighting a demonic assassin, and he would set out to hunt. Two more times it had been Jaz, and both times she had escaped handily. Other demons had gotten away similarly, but he had killed three of the things now.
He blinked, and realized he’d already made it back to the tower, lost in thought and memory and sleepless haze. The tram car door opened onto the central platform of the transit terminal. In the last few days, it had changed drastically, from a bustling place of activity to a nearly empty hall. Most everyone was either in their homes, bolting down and readying for war, or in the streets, rioting. Kasby, cold as ever, strode through the almost abandoned hall to enter the central tower.
The radio at his belt crackled, and Mercuria Barret's voice came through. "Bellwood."
Kasby lifted the radio from his belt, and held it up. "Almost back." He sounded more than just physically tired—exhausted down to his core.
"Don't come back. Got a report in from down in Haraya, of more nonhuman activity." Her voice was terse, to the point, as always, but he could hear the strain of three days running the city by herself beginning to wear on her. "Likely another assassin. Take the 63 Tram down there and check it out."
"On my way," he said, his tone as neutral as he could manage.
"Good. Barret out." The radio clicked off.
He turned around and walked to catch the 63 tram. The tram swung away from the dock without incident, sliding down the wire with an audible hum. The car swooped down, taking him towards the flats of the city, where the lower classes lived, those who could not afford the nicer houses on the quartet of crystal spires that dominated the landscape. Kasby stood in the tram, holding onto the guard rail. He stared straight out at the passing landscape as if it was keeping something from him.
The street was practically empty. Ramshackle houses stood around her, shanties and lean-tos comingling with more solid buildings. Here and there a store or restaurant eked out a quiet existence. They had slammed their doors to her, people fleeing the streets before her.
Skunk clenched her fists and tried to ignore the fearful stares of her fellow humans. In fact, she was starting to doubt she was quite human any longer... She shook her head in irritation. The day since her arrival had been spent aimlessly wandering the city, watching as humanity turned its collective back on her.
From a nearby door, a young boy stumbled out, not older than eight or nine. He clutched a sword made from two pieces of scrap metal glued together, and brandished it halfheartedly at her. "S-stop!"
Skunk glared at him incredulously. "What the fuck you want, punk?"
The boy shrunk back at her words, almost stumbling.
Despite herself, she paused. Softening her tone slightly, she added, "You can forget the the sword, kid."
"I... I won't let you kill my dad!"
Skunk's brow furrowed. "I don't have anything to do with your dad. What are you talking about?"
A man's voice hissed from the door the boy had come out of. "Daniel! Daniel, get back in here!"
Skunk held up a hand. “Daniel. Hold on. Just answer me, I won’t hurt you.”
"Y-you're gonna kill 'im! Like you killed all the people over 'n Storm, an, an, an, an daddy says you killed the Council!" The boy stammered, but was fierce and defiant, his own words seeming to inspire him.
"Look, punk—Daniel. I've been here a few hours maximum, and since I've been here I've done nothing but walk around. I don't know what you're talking about." She paused. "Why do you think it was me?"
The boy frowned. "... your skin. You're not a person, like we are."
"How did I know," she muttered. “Your dad is wrong.” She sighed. "You know what? If all you're gonna do is brandish a stick at me and accuse me of things I didn't do and don't plan to, I'm leaving."
Overhead, a tram car whirred down a cable, settling into a dock a block or two away.
"I'm gonna--" The boy was cut off as his father ducked out through the door, grabbed him, and pulled him back inside.
Skunk blinked. "Oookay," she muttered. Turning to the cable car, she walked over to investigate. The tram building was extremely dilapidated and worn-down, like everything else in the area. The windows were all broken, and large sections of wall and flooring were gone, looking as if they had been pried off with crowbars. She could hear someone moving inside.
Skunk stepped through the door into the tram room, and found herself face to face with the business end of Kasby's pistol. "Fuck! What the hell, Katsby!?" Skunk held herself still, resisting the urge to jump away.
As Kasby made eye contact, he froze for a moment. He let out a breath, and lowered his weapon, but did not break eye contact. He looked... tired. But maybe for the first time in a long while, a little bit relieved. "Skunk. Holy hell.”
"Nice way to greet a friend," Skunk said scathingly.
Kasby almost smiled. "You're alive. Thank the Void... you'll have to tell me what happened later."
"Sure, assuming there's a later." She looked around the room. It was small, with a patchwork roof that let bits of light shine through. "What's happening here? Some kid just tried to kill me. Ranting about how I’m a monster.”
"I'm not surprised. This city's been thrown into chaos... and you don't exactly look human," Kasby noted, gesturing at her metallic skin.
"Thanks, I get that." Skunk's tone was light, forced. "What's happening around here?" she repeated.
Kasby's expression hardened. "....Assassin. Of the demonic variety. Took out almost all of the Council, and now it’s running amok. Not to mention the Swarm is practically at the gates." He looked away.
"Demons come in the assassin variety? I thought they were all ravening beasts.” She sighed again. "I saw you on those, uh... screen things.”
Kasby looked confused. "Televisions? I was on the television?"
"At the assassination thing," clarified Skunk. "I saw you guys."
Kasby blinked. “How long have you been in Sector One?”
"A few hours, I guess."
"On that note, where are Spider and Owl?" his voice was laden with concern.
"Spider? Not sure. Owl is probably still in the library," she added, almost guiltily. "We landed there, and I'm betting she'll stay there as long as she can."
Barret's voice came from the radio clipped to Kasby's belt. "Bellwood! Report."
Kasby grabbed the radio off his belt. "Situation has been handled, Barret. How many reports of non-human activity in this area, again?"
"Just one. Good to hear it, too. We've got another report in from over at Enjaya. Reason to suspect they're trying to take out the reactors."
"On my way," Kasby repeated for the third time that day. He clipped the radio back to his belt without replying.
"Good. It's barely a kilometer away, you should be able to run there. Head straight outwards from your current position, towards the spire." Barret’s voice came through the radio. “Good hunting. Barret out.”
Skunk looked at him, one eyebrow raised. "Where are you going?"
“Demon hunting,” he replied, expression neutral.
"I could do with a bit of a fight," Skunk hinted. "This city pisses me off."
Kasby looked hesitant, for a moment. "...Alright. I don't have time to argue. Just... follow me." With that, he broke off back towards the spire.
Skunk followed, looking distinctly more eager and bright-eyed than she had been.
((87 — Battle of the Heroes))
The direction they were headed was drastically more industrial. A cloud of black smoke hung over the district, drifting out of angry smokestacks. The crystal spire rose dramatically, pointing outwards, away from the city center like the spoke of a wheel. Buildings, factories, and industrial complexes covered it, sprawling up its face.
They hadn’t even been running five minutes when they began to hear the first screams. Kasby’s pace increased. He darted towards the scream, swerving around corners and ducking under pipes as he navigated the industrial labyrinth. Skunk strained to see the source of the screaming, but followed Kasby.
Up ahead, a single large building dominated the base of the crystal. A large pair of double doors opened into the base of the building, hanging open. Two guards lay by the doors, dead of matching slash wounds to the chest. Kasby pulled the dartpistol from its holster once more and skidded to a stop a few feet inside the building.
Skunk glanced at the corpses, then began forming her left hand into a blade. With her right hand, she caressed the whip at her side. Another scream came from inside, cutting off abruptly.
Kasby walked carefully through the interior of the building, his pistol aimed in the direction of the scream. Inside, a quartet of ladders lead upwards, toward a series of catwalks.
Skunk stepped up beside him, peering at the ladders. “That’s… crappy. If we get trapped on those...well, it won't be pretty."
From further inside came another scream, as if falling from a catwalk, ending in an electrical hiss.
"Fuck it,” Skunk swore. “Let’s do this.”
Kasby nodded. "Don't get caught in close range." He was already bounding up one of the ladders. Skunk climbed up beside him, cursing as she re-formed her hand back to its normal shape.
The building was full of an electrical hum, with static electricity setting their hairs on end. As they reached the top of the ladders, they could see down into the center of the building. A trio of massive crystals, glowing with orange light, floated there, rotating in a slow circle. Huge arcs of lightning leapt between them, and to rings of dynamos and collectors lining the room. Metal-lined wooden catwalks stretched outwards from where they stood, overlooking the reactor core. At the center of them, a control platform hung from the ceiling.
"Okay...what's all that? And what should I be expecting from these demons?" Skunk hissed.
In response, Kasby just pointed to the control platform. Half a dozen scientists cowered on it, looking in fear at the figure advancing towards them.
She--it--walked slowly them, crystal blade at her side. The leather clothes, the walk, she short-cropped hair. It was unmistakably Jazrill Quinn. Or what was left of her, anyway.
Kasby raised his pistol and took careful aim.
"Fuck," remarked Skunk, too anstonished to even sound surprised. She took out her own gun as well, cradling it lovingly. "Do you want me to...?"
It took another step towards the scientists, moving slowly, taking its time with the kill.
Skunk kept her tone neutral. "Kasby?"
Kasby wore an expression colder than any Skunk had seen on him before. It might have been that absence of emotion, more than anything else, that showed Skunk the turmoil, the rolling storm inside him.
He pulled the trigger. His hand was steady, and this time, the crystal shard flew true. It thudded into the square of the creature's back, sending it sprawling forward against the catwalk, bringing forth an angry howl. Bracing itself on the catwalk with its blade, it reached its one hand back, grasping at the wound. Slowly, its whole body tightening visibly, still hissing angrily, it pulled the chunk of crystal out. The crystal hadn't gone more than an inch deep, most of the impact taken by the leathery armored skin that had once been a flight jacket.
There were two parallel catwalks running towards the control area. "Run past. Protect the scientists," Kasby ordered Skunk, gesturing to the unoccupied bridge. He broke forward towards the creature, raised his pistol and fired again. And again.
"Got it." Skunk crossed the room in as fast a run as possible, considering their height. "Good thing I grew up on Face," she grumbled.
It was still pulling itself to its feet as Kasby fired, its hand still tight around the first shard. The next shot went wide, but the third and fourth slashed across her sword arm. Jaz dropped again to the catwalk as the arm holding it up was shot out from under it. Kasby continued his frenzied advance, and ripped the crystal sword from its sheath at his side. He flew into Jaz full force.
Skunk didn't stop until she had reached the scientists. They huddled behind a control panel, and one let out a yelp of terror upon seeing her. "P-please..."
"For fuck's sake, I'm here to fucking save you!" bellowed Skunk. "Now MOVE!"
The scientists, a group of mixed-gendered elderly people, blinked at her for a long moment. Then they obeyed her order as one, leaping to their feet before her commanding voice. The scientists took off at a run down one of the other catwalks, fleeing at high speed.
Skunk turned towards the demon, in time to see it bringing its feet up, catching Kasby hard in the face with a kick. Skunk formed both arms into long, hooked blades. She advanced more cautiously than Kasby had, waiting for a clear shot.
Stumbling back, Kasby landed half on the catwalk, one leg slipping off of it. He slipped and teetered, for a moment over the edge.
Jaz took a step towards him, grinning as if meaning to shove him, and in that moment Skunk struck. She darted in close and stabbed with her blades, one after the other.
Jaz swung to face Skunk, bringing her crystal blade up to block both blows. Her wounded arm was moving at half speed, though, and barely managed to knock them aside.
Skunk danced just out of range, grinning manically. The thrill of battle.
Hissing angrily, the creature got fully back to its feet, and took a few steps back, now focusing on Skunk. A yellow sheen passed over the goggle-lenses that emerged from the skin of its forehead for a moment, but it shook its head, clearing them back to their normal red.
Skunk moved in, feinting and then going in, aiming for the creature's belly, under the wounded arm. The distraction of whatever had happened to her was enough, and Jaz couldn't block fast enough. She managed to fall backwards, though, away from the slash, past where Kasby was stabilizing himself. The blade's tip still dug into her chest, flitting away a long line of blood. It hissed furiously, almost spitting with pure rage.
"Did you see that?" Skunk yelled.
Kasby pushed himself forward and regained his balance. He dashed forward towards the combat, ducking under Skunk's arm as he lunged. She attacker as well, and they lunged in parallel, blades extended.
Jaz put a foot back and brought her blade up, free hand wrapping around the base of it for support—
The three blades met with a loud clash, ringing out over the hum of the reactor below.
Skunk grimaced at the shock, but pressed in, striking again. "I can hold her, Kasby!" Jaz blocked a strike, a second, a third, alternating between the two attackers.
"So hold her!" he almost screamed back as he continued to trade blows.
The yellow glow flashed over the lenses above Jaz’s eyes again, looking like another pair of eyes, watching her. A shudder ran through her, and she dropped back, pulling her sword arm away from the three-way-clash. She took three quick steps back, away from the fray, and raised her blade high over her head.
Skunk rushed in with renewed power. “Gotcha!”
Jaz’s hand dropped, sweeping out a full arc, swinging around below her, rending through the flimsy metal of the catwalk. With a horrible creaking, it began to bend downwards, pulled down by its own weight, no longer supported from both sides.
Skunk's eyes widened. "Oh SHI—" Skunk’s momentum carried her forward, into the hole. She stretched with her hooks, and just barely managed to dig them into the wooden catwalk on the other side of the gap. "Fuck!"
Kasby's mouth dropped open. No.
Jaz fell forwads, dropping through the widening gap, down towards the three spinning crystals below. Kasby lunged forward, throwing himself against the catwalk and extending his arm as far as it would go. He grabbed onto Jaz’s arm as she plunged downwards.
Jaz hung, dangling from the catwalk, held up by Kasby's grip. Slowly, she turned her head to look at him, eyes bathed in dispassionate yellow glow.
“Please. Not again,” Kasby said, whispering.
"Kasby, what are you doing?" screamed Skunk. Her blades slowly began to cut through the catwalk, inching her downwards.
Jaz's blade arm flashed upwards, swinging at Kasby's wrist, where it held her tight. The blade bit in deep, throwing blood across the catwalk. But Kasby did not let go. He shook his head, silently, mouthing one word. Please. Please.
She fell away from him, dropping away towards the reactor. Kasby's hand still clutched her wrist in a dead man's grip. As she reached the crystals, there was a swirl of yellow smoke, and she was gone.
"Touching!" yelled Skunk frantically. "Now fucking get me out of here!" She attempted to claw her way towards Kasby. Her motions only pulled the catwalk down further, creaking louder. “Little help?”
Kasby watched the beast that had once been his lover fall into the reactor below. He felt everything. And yet....shock. He looked at the bloody tattered sleeve where his hand once had been.
If only the catwalk were metal, instead of wood boards, she could've bent it into shape, but—another crack. Another crack. The wood itself was beginning to crack, where Skunk's blades dug into it. “Kasby.” Skunk’s voice was quiet, hard to hear with the hum.
Over the creaking of the collapsing catwalk, and the reactors, Kasby managed to hear Skunk. Ungracefully, in the midst of all this, he stumbled to his feet and backed away from the broken edge. "....Skunk. Skunk!"
Skunk gingerly kept her hold on the other side of the gap, a meter away from Kasby. Skunk could feel her heart pounding, adrenaline rushing through her.
Kasby rushed forward again and held out his uninjured hand.
"Grab hold!" He was close enough that she could probably reach him, but it would mean pulling one of her blades out of the woodwork.
"Cocksucker," she groaned. She could almost hear Owl’s voice in her head, saying “language!” The thought threatened to bring a bitter smile to her face, but she fought it off. "Okay, gimme a sec." She cautiously pried one hand loose. “I don’t think you’ll be able to pull me out...”
Kasby looked around in a panic. The pain was beginning to cloud his thoughts. He had to act quickly. The captain ran back to the control panel, and went to work at the display to try and turn the reactor off. "Hold tight!"
“Kasby!” Skunk yelled. With only one hand dug into the wood, she was slipping faster. "Oh, fuck..." She cut an inch deeper into the wood, towards the edge.
The controls were complicated, covered with switches and dials and readouts. "Fuck!" Kasby shouted, before dashing back to Skunk.
Skunk, starting to give up on Kasby, unclipped the whip from her belt with her free hand, and tossed one end away from the gaping hole. She concentrated, melding it with the metal edge of the catwalk.
Kasby skidded to a stop, grabbing hold of the secured whip with his hand. The catwalk frame groaned under the weight, but held. Kasby stabbed the crystal blade into the wood platform and used it to brace his leg. "Alright, Skunk!"
"Okay, no problem," she groaned. She reformed the other blade into a hand once more. With nothing holding her to the catwalk anymore, she fell down, swinging under it, held up by the wire. Skunk grunted, holding onto the whip for all she was worth. She squeezed her eyes shut, just briefly.
Kasby threw himself backwards, bracing against the sword to hold Skunk above the humming reactors.
Between Kasby's grip and the metal bonding, Skunk didn't fall. Not quite.
Kasby could feel the pain beginning to overwhelm him, though, darkness dancing at the edge of his vision, and knew he couldn't hold on for long.
“Okay,” she called up. “Good. Very good. Not dying. Excellent.”
“Hurry, Skunk,” Kasby rasped through the fires that had ignited in his nerves.
“Goddamn demons,” she half-whispered, struggling up the whip. Reaching the catwalk at last, she collapsed onto it, gasping.
As Skunk reached safety, Kasby let go of the whip. He swayed, upright, for a moment, before collapsing to the catwalk.
They lay, side by side, now alone with the massive whirring crystals below them.
"Kasby?” Skunk panted. “You still awake?”
The only answer from the unconscious captain was a slowly expanding bloodstain in the woodwork surrounding his left wrist. Skunk stared for a moment, then picked him up carefully. She was still trembling, but she managed to get him over her shoulder, carrying him away from the hole. She walked towards the control area, the catwalk still making ominous creaking sounds with every step.
The radio at his belt hissed and crackled. "Bellwood!" The voice was the same as before--a harsh, older woman.
She jumped at the radio's crackle, right in her ear, but pushed the talk button. “Uh… hello?”
"Who is this? Where's Bellwood?"
"If you mean Kasby, he's here. Badly injured. Here, I mean... shit, what did he call it?"
There was a pause. "But the reactor's still online."
"Yeah, the reactor. We’re at the reactor.”
"Alright. I'll dispatch a medical team. They should be there within fifteen minutes.”
"There was a fucking demon-thing, and it cut the railing, and then...well, his hand is gone. It’s dead, though, it better be dead.” Skunk knew she was babbling.
"Good. Barret out." The radio hissed static for a moment, then went silent.
Skunk took a deep breath. “Okay.” She lay Kasby down in the center of the controls, and collapsed against a bank of controls herself.
She stared blankly up at the ceiling, settling in to wait for the medical team. “…fuck.” This time, there was no Owl to scold her.
Friday, October 1, 2010
SILENT HOPE (1)
[Reconstructed]
.
((79 — The Days Become a Traveler of a Hundred Generations))
.
July 2nd, 802 AT.
Owl turned the page slowly, taking care not to damage the ancient book. She eagerly scanned the new page, taking in word after word, locking them away in her mind to store forever. Each page, each book, brought with it incredible ideas, strange worlds, new people—the memory of an entire civilization.
“Owl?”
She had been sitting in the basement of Tanique Hall reading for… she didn’t know how long. She had no motive or means to keep track of time here. The archives were unlike anything she had seen before. A massive underground warren, a labyrinth, with every wall lined with bookshelf upon bookshelf. It was as if someone had taken the Archives from the Corkscrew and let them multiply seemingly infinitely, burrowing out into the crystal.
“Owl.”
Periodically Delissa had come down to bring her food and water. Owl quite liked the librarian, she found. The woman was a scant few years younger than Owl, but apparently only qualified as a Junior Librarian. It boggled Owl’s mind to think that in this world, thirty-four was considered young, with a whole lifespan ahead of one. The idea of so much more to learn, to discover, to read… for the first time in months, Owl found herself honestly happy.
“Owl!” This time the voice penetrated Owl’s thoughts, and brought her attention snapping upright. There before her hovered a familiar face, one she hadn’t seen in almost a month.
Blinking calmly, Owl carefully set the book in her lap on the table, then turned to face the girl. “SPIDER!” she yelled, wrapping her arms around the girl in a sudden blur of motion, grinning widely.
Spider laughed, and embraced the older woman in return. “Hey! I thought I’d never see you again!” They broke their embrace, and Spider settled to the wall. “What’s been up?”
“Oh goodness! So much has happened.” Owl opened her mouth, about to lay out every detail of her life over the last month, but stopped and reconsidered. “Skunk and I were captured by a scientist, escaped, and flew here,” she summarized.
“Huh,” Spider said. “Sounds like fun, I guess. I, uh, got a pet demon, and met up with the Talons, and maybe made friends, I think.”
Owl quirked her head to the side. “Talons?”
“They’re…” Spider thought back to the events of the morning. “They’re just people, I guess. From Sector Four.” She looked away for a moment, her eyes coming to rest on the books. “How long have you been down here? Just been reading?”
Owl’s eyes lit up. “Oh, Spider! You won’t believe the things I’ve read!”
“Yeah? Like what?”
“There are so many things in the universe! It’s all so vast… there are these demons that don’t hurt people or have magic, called animals—”
“Anemals? That’s what that lady said about our names!”
Owl nodded. “My predecessor once told me that all of the names in Face came from an ancient record of naming. I think that it was actually a zoology book from the old ship!”
Spider looked at her blankly. “Sure.”
The older woman laughed. “I haven’t looked up what a spider is, but an owl was apparently a big thing with wings and big eyes, that people used to think was very smart!”
“A perfect name for you, then. What other kinds of anemals were there?”
“Well, there were these things that wriggled like this—” Owl made a motion with her hands together. “Called fish! They lived in big water places called, uh, ponds! And people ate them all the time.”
“Weird.” Spider stopped, thinking. “Where was all this water? I thought this place just had fog.”
Owl shook her head. “This wasn’t in the Void.”
Spider looked at her quizzically. “Not… in the Void? Where else is there?”
The rememorist smiled. “This was on a place called Earth.”
“What’s an earth?”
“It was… is… a…” Owl frowned, struggling to describe it. “Imagine a giant crystal, only round. Kind of like Sector One, only a million times bigger. Instead of being made of crystal, though, it’s all made of solid dust and liquid metal, and covered with plants and water and friendly demons that don’t kill you!”
“That… sounds nice,” Spider said, smiling. “Where is it?”
Owl’s face fell. “Too far away. The Templar, the ship that crashed and became Face, was full of people leaving it, to find a new home… as far as we’ve come from Face to get here? That would be like… a millimeter, compared to how far it is to Earth.”
“Oh.”
They sat in silence for a moment, thinking, before the calm was broken by footsteps coming around the corner. Delissa walked up, carrying a basket. “I, um, thought you might be hungry, so I brought some food!”
She came a few steps closer, then stopped short, staring at Spider. After a moment, she took a deep breath, and finished her approach, setting the basket on the table.
Owl smiled warmly at her. “Thank you, Delissa.”
“You’re… welcome, Owl.” The librarian bit her lip. “Could I… ask you a question?”
“Of course.”
“I, um. Why are your skin and shadow covered with words? And, um.” She looked to Spider. “How is she sitting on the wall?”
Spider laughed. “Oh, man, that’s a really long story.”
“…which I happen to have written down!” Owl grinned. “Would you like to read it?”
Delissa nodded eagerly. “I would love to! If you… wouldn’t mind.” She looked down, her face turning a shade of red.
Owl looked at her in surprise. “What? Would that be odd?”
“I… well, it’s your journal, isn’t it?”
“And what’s odd about that?”
Delissa looked at her in confusion. “Well, you’re alive, and we’re not…” She trailed off, looking at the strange expressions on Spider and Owl. “Are things different in the outer sectors?”
“We’re not—” Owl started.
“Yes. Yes they are,” Spider cut her off.
“Oh.” Delissa nodded. “Well, around here, it would be considered an invasion of privacy to read someone’s journal while they were still alive, or if you weren’t… particularly close to them.” She turned a darker shade of red. “I’ve never read someone else’s journal before.”
“While they were still alive? Why do you keep emphasizing that?” Owl asked.
“Well, of course once they’re dead, you’ll want to read their journal for all the important information they took down,” Delissa said very matter-of-factly.
The rememorist nodded. “I suppose that makes sense.” She smiled. “The books are up in my room. I’ll bring them to you later, alright?”
“That would be wonderful. Thank you.”
Owl sat back in her chair, thinking. “Wow. It’s… so much has happened, these last months.”
Spider nodded, stopping with her hand halfway to the basket of food. She’d just remembered quite how hungry she was. Three weeks of harshly rationed supplies hadn’t been good. “Yeah, uh. Yeah.”
With a start, Owl sat up. “Center.”
Spider looked at her. “Huh?”
“The Center. That’s… that’s where the shadows told us to go. Back when this all started.”
“I missed that part. I was with Kasby.”
“Well, the point is, we’re… we’re here. We’re at the Center.” Owl frowned. “But nothing makes any more sense than it did at the Corkscrew.”
Spider shrugged. “Well, we’re at Sector One, but maybe there’s a way to further into the center of it…?”
Slowly, she and Owl both turned to face Delissa. The librarian blinked at them. “Sorry, I… lost you…”
“We… need to go inside.” Owl said slowly. “Is there a way into the heart of the crystal? Into Sector One itself?”
Delissa shook her head. “Not a way that anyone can access.”
Spider raised an eyebrow. “Is... there a way people can’t access?”
“Yes. The Deepana Caverns. No one has ever come back from there, though.”
“What are they?” Owl asked.
“They appeared two or three hundred years ago… cracks in the crystal.”
Owl and Spider exchanged glances, eyes wide. Spider turned back to Delissa. “Can you take us there? We need to go in there. I need to… I’m an architect. I can check the integrity from inside. See if…”
“… if there’s something trying to escape,” Owl finished. “Whatever’s trapped inside this crystal… right here in the center…”
Delissa frowned. “I can take you to the entrance, but no one’s allowed inside any more. Too many expeditions have vanished inside, never to return. Kids started trying to brave it, on dares to each other, so now the entrances are guarded.”
Spider laughed. “We can get in. Don’t worry about that.”
“If you insist. We can go there first thing in the morning.”
Owl smiled. “Thank you, Delissa.”
The librarian blushed again. “It’s… it’s nothing, really.”
“Now then!” Spider said. “Can it be time to eat?”
Delissa laughed. “Absolutely!”
“Great! I’m starving. What’s for dinner?” She opened the basket.
“I made you sandwiches.”
Spider stopped, looking inside, and then looked up and caught Owl’s eye. They laughed together, smiling with tears in their eyes. Delissa watched, smiling along with them despite her confusion.
.
((79 — The Days Become a Traveler of a Hundred Generations))
.
July 2nd, 802 AT.
Owl turned the page slowly, taking care not to damage the ancient book. She eagerly scanned the new page, taking in word after word, locking them away in her mind to store forever. Each page, each book, brought with it incredible ideas, strange worlds, new people—the memory of an entire civilization.
“Owl?”
She had been sitting in the basement of Tanique Hall reading for… she didn’t know how long. She had no motive or means to keep track of time here. The archives were unlike anything she had seen before. A massive underground warren, a labyrinth, with every wall lined with bookshelf upon bookshelf. It was as if someone had taken the Archives from the Corkscrew and let them multiply seemingly infinitely, burrowing out into the crystal.
“Owl.”
Periodically Delissa had come down to bring her food and water. Owl quite liked the librarian, she found. The woman was a scant few years younger than Owl, but apparently only qualified as a Junior Librarian. It boggled Owl’s mind to think that in this world, thirty-four was considered young, with a whole lifespan ahead of one. The idea of so much more to learn, to discover, to read… for the first time in months, Owl found herself honestly happy.
“Owl!” This time the voice penetrated Owl’s thoughts, and brought her attention snapping upright. There before her hovered a familiar face, one she hadn’t seen in almost a month.
Blinking calmly, Owl carefully set the book in her lap on the table, then turned to face the girl. “SPIDER!” she yelled, wrapping her arms around the girl in a sudden blur of motion, grinning widely.
Spider laughed, and embraced the older woman in return. “Hey! I thought I’d never see you again!” They broke their embrace, and Spider settled to the wall. “What’s been up?”
“Oh goodness! So much has happened.” Owl opened her mouth, about to lay out every detail of her life over the last month, but stopped and reconsidered. “Skunk and I were captured by a scientist, escaped, and flew here,” she summarized.
“Huh,” Spider said. “Sounds like fun, I guess. I, uh, got a pet demon, and met up with the Talons, and maybe made friends, I think.”
Owl quirked her head to the side. “Talons?”
“They’re…” Spider thought back to the events of the morning. “They’re just people, I guess. From Sector Four.” She looked away for a moment, her eyes coming to rest on the books. “How long have you been down here? Just been reading?”
Owl’s eyes lit up. “Oh, Spider! You won’t believe the things I’ve read!”
“Yeah? Like what?”
“There are so many things in the universe! It’s all so vast… there are these demons that don’t hurt people or have magic, called animals—”
“Anemals? That’s what that lady said about our names!”
Owl nodded. “My predecessor once told me that all of the names in Face came from an ancient record of naming. I think that it was actually a zoology book from the old ship!”
Spider looked at her blankly. “Sure.”
The older woman laughed. “I haven’t looked up what a spider is, but an owl was apparently a big thing with wings and big eyes, that people used to think was very smart!”
“A perfect name for you, then. What other kinds of anemals were there?”
“Well, there were these things that wriggled like this—” Owl made a motion with her hands together. “Called fish! They lived in big water places called, uh, ponds! And people ate them all the time.”
“Weird.” Spider stopped, thinking. “Where was all this water? I thought this place just had fog.”
Owl shook her head. “This wasn’t in the Void.”
Spider looked at her quizzically. “Not… in the Void? Where else is there?”
The rememorist smiled. “This was on a place called Earth.”
“What’s an earth?”
“It was… is… a…” Owl frowned, struggling to describe it. “Imagine a giant crystal, only round. Kind of like Sector One, only a million times bigger. Instead of being made of crystal, though, it’s all made of solid dust and liquid metal, and covered with plants and water and friendly demons that don’t kill you!”
“That… sounds nice,” Spider said, smiling. “Where is it?”
Owl’s face fell. “Too far away. The Templar, the ship that crashed and became Face, was full of people leaving it, to find a new home… as far as we’ve come from Face to get here? That would be like… a millimeter, compared to how far it is to Earth.”
“Oh.”
They sat in silence for a moment, thinking, before the calm was broken by footsteps coming around the corner. Delissa walked up, carrying a basket. “I, um, thought you might be hungry, so I brought some food!”
She came a few steps closer, then stopped short, staring at Spider. After a moment, she took a deep breath, and finished her approach, setting the basket on the table.
Owl smiled warmly at her. “Thank you, Delissa.”
“You’re… welcome, Owl.” The librarian bit her lip. “Could I… ask you a question?”
“Of course.”
“I, um. Why are your skin and shadow covered with words? And, um.” She looked to Spider. “How is she sitting on the wall?”
Spider laughed. “Oh, man, that’s a really long story.”
“…which I happen to have written down!” Owl grinned. “Would you like to read it?”
Delissa nodded eagerly. “I would love to! If you… wouldn’t mind.” She looked down, her face turning a shade of red.
Owl looked at her in surprise. “What? Would that be odd?”
“I… well, it’s your journal, isn’t it?”
“And what’s odd about that?”
Delissa looked at her in confusion. “Well, you’re alive, and we’re not…” She trailed off, looking at the strange expressions on Spider and Owl. “Are things different in the outer sectors?”
“We’re not—” Owl started.
“Yes. Yes they are,” Spider cut her off.
“Oh.” Delissa nodded. “Well, around here, it would be considered an invasion of privacy to read someone’s journal while they were still alive, or if you weren’t… particularly close to them.” She turned a darker shade of red. “I’ve never read someone else’s journal before.”
“While they were still alive? Why do you keep emphasizing that?” Owl asked.
“Well, of course once they’re dead, you’ll want to read their journal for all the important information they took down,” Delissa said very matter-of-factly.
The rememorist nodded. “I suppose that makes sense.” She smiled. “The books are up in my room. I’ll bring them to you later, alright?”
“That would be wonderful. Thank you.”
Owl sat back in her chair, thinking. “Wow. It’s… so much has happened, these last months.”
Spider nodded, stopping with her hand halfway to the basket of food. She’d just remembered quite how hungry she was. Three weeks of harshly rationed supplies hadn’t been good. “Yeah, uh. Yeah.”
With a start, Owl sat up. “Center.”
Spider looked at her. “Huh?”
“The Center. That’s… that’s where the shadows told us to go. Back when this all started.”
“I missed that part. I was with Kasby.”
“Well, the point is, we’re… we’re here. We’re at the Center.” Owl frowned. “But nothing makes any more sense than it did at the Corkscrew.”
Spider shrugged. “Well, we’re at Sector One, but maybe there’s a way to further into the center of it…?”
Slowly, she and Owl both turned to face Delissa. The librarian blinked at them. “Sorry, I… lost you…”
“We… need to go inside.” Owl said slowly. “Is there a way into the heart of the crystal? Into Sector One itself?”
Delissa shook her head. “Not a way that anyone can access.”
Spider raised an eyebrow. “Is... there a way people can’t access?”
“Yes. The Deepana Caverns. No one has ever come back from there, though.”
“What are they?” Owl asked.
“They appeared two or three hundred years ago… cracks in the crystal.”
Owl and Spider exchanged glances, eyes wide. Spider turned back to Delissa. “Can you take us there? We need to go in there. I need to… I’m an architect. I can check the integrity from inside. See if…”
“… if there’s something trying to escape,” Owl finished. “Whatever’s trapped inside this crystal… right here in the center…”
Delissa frowned. “I can take you to the entrance, but no one’s allowed inside any more. Too many expeditions have vanished inside, never to return. Kids started trying to brave it, on dares to each other, so now the entrances are guarded.”
Spider laughed. “We can get in. Don’t worry about that.”
“If you insist. We can go there first thing in the morning.”
Owl smiled. “Thank you, Delissa.”
The librarian blushed again. “It’s… it’s nothing, really.”
“Now then!” Spider said. “Can it be time to eat?”
Delissa laughed. “Absolutely!”
“Great! I’m starving. What’s for dinner?” She opened the basket.
“I made you sandwiches.”
Spider stopped, looking inside, and then looked up and caught Owl’s eye. They laughed together, smiling with tears in their eyes. Delissa watched, smiling along with them despite her confusion.
Saturday, September 25, 2010
HOPE’S EDGE (2)
.
((77 — Distant Lights))
.
July 2nd, 802 AT.
The wan voidlight illuminated a tired scene. Kiara still lay unconscious on her coat, with Umbra standing guard over her. Not far off, Noh’s fog had gone opaque hours earlier, after the surgery. Chun was curled up in a ball on top of Torrential, who was lying down with his beak under one wing. Reno was the only one awake, pacing uncomfortably, absent-mindedly spinning her crystal dagger through her fingers.
Spider stepped out of Noh and walked back to the group, holding her arms. She looked older now, her eyes grave and heavy with dark circles. Scorpia scuttled up behind her.
Seth emerged from the dark shadows of his demon behind her, and cleared his throat a bit. “Yo. Guys.” He glanced around. “Err. Gals. Whatever. Someone wanna wake Chun for a tic?”
A faint groan came from Kiara, as she raised her head slightly, looking around, finally starting to wake up. Umbra curled up next to her, still in gryphon form.
Seth sighed at the complete lack of action from his fellows. “Alright. I will myself.” He trudged over to Chun and prodded her with his foot.
Torrential was the first to stir. He lifted his head, in doing so knocking Chun tumbling to the ground. She sat up, abruptly very awake. “Whu—oh, hey guys.”
Kiara sat up a little further, resting on one elbow. Umbra flowed under her, stabilizing her. “Anything… happen, while I was out?”
Spider shook her head. “Not really. We can’t stay here forever, though.” She glanced over at Seth.
“…yeah,” he said. “But ‘fore we go. One, uh, minor note.”
“What?” Kiara asked tiredly.
“What just happened back there? Let’s not do it again.”
“Agreed.” Chun got up and brushed herself. Beside her, Torrential mimicked her, ruffling his feathers.
“The whole killing people who thought we were demons thing. It’s… that was not good.” Seth looked off to the side. “There’s gotta be a better way to go about things than… doing what I did. And what that caused you guys to do.”
Reno shifted her eyes upwards. “Well,” she said. “They DID try to kill us. So it’s justified.”
“So, uh.” Spider cleared her throat, and changed the subject quickly. “I figured it’d be safer if we didn’t go charging in with our demons. I think I should fly in first, and try and talk with them. Maybe get a map and find a place for you guys to enter without being spotted, or provide a distraction.” She shifted her feet, obviously a little uncomfortable with this half-formed plan.
Kiara frowned. “And why wouldn’t they just… shoot you, Spider? That’s what they tried before.”
“Well, they’ll wonder how I got to the base, but I won’t have a demon with me.”
“Well, duh.” Kiara blinked at Spider in confusion. “But how do you plan to get in without using your demon?”
“Uh…” Spider scratched her head. “I can fly.”
“Oh. Good… good point.” Kiara closed her eyes, fading back into sleep somewhat.
Spider laughed half-heartedly. “Guess she’s a little more out than she thought… anyway, you guys can NOT bring your demons into the base. It’ll cause a panic, and it’s likely that you’ll just kill everyone. We can’t do that.”
“Yeah,” said Chun. “But someone will see us coming on our demons. It will cause panic either way.”
“You guys don’t come in on demons!” Spider said. “I’ll go alone. Find a way for you guys to come in without being noticed.”
“I’m with Spider on this one, yo,” said Seth. “Worst case, we bring in the cavalry. As a backup.”
Reno tensed a little. “How long do you think we’ll be separated from our demons?”
Spider looked to Seth for support. “Shit, I don’t know. Either you guys wait here, or I bring you without your demons, which will take a while to go back and forth.”
Kiara sat up again, rousing. “Mine can hide… if she chooses. She can help. And… I’ll need her to walk.” She glanced uncomfortably down at the stump of her leg.
Seth glanced away. “We can help you move, Kiara. Actually… perhaps we can use that as an excuse to get in.”
“I was just thinking that!” Spider said.
Kiara raised an eyebrow skeptically. “Explain…?”
Seth half-grinned at Spider, then turned to Kiara. “People see injured person. We get help. They’re much less likely to be suspicious. We’re much more likely to get in… without incident.”
“So we’re using Kiara’s injury as our ticket in?” said Reno, as Caf came up behind her, nuzzling her.
Spider rocked back on her heels. “But we’ll be showing up at the base out of nowhere. We don’t exactly have a ship…”
“If more ships fly overhead we could hijack one,” said Chun.
“Uh.” Spider’s eyes widened. “We do have a ship. We have a ship that’s been in a recent accident.” She looked out at the Void. Sure enough, the ship they had damaged was still drifting, not far off. The gaping hole in its side made it list slightly to port, but other than that it was still functional. Spider jerked her thumb at it.
Seth grinned. “This just might work.”
Spider nodded. “Bet you I can get it working again if there’s any problem. We should still probably leave our demons here, so they don’t get detected.”
“Wouldn’t we still be noticed, though?” Kiara asked from the ground. “I would think they’d recognize their own ship.”
“Sector One is big, right?” Spider said. “And we have someone who’s seriously hurt. They might not pay close attention.”
“We could tell them that the crew valiantly saved us from demons but tragically died,” suggested Reno.
Seth nodded again. “It might not be perfect, but I think it’s our best bet.”
Reno was looking very apprehensive. It was clear that the idea of being separated from Caf was not an appealing one by any stretch of the imagination.
Noticing, Seth looked at her flatly. “Reno. You’ve got two options. Stay here with Caf, or come alone.”
Caf nudged Reno in the back. She turned around and looked her beloved in the eyes forlornly. The girl stood up and cupped Caf’s head in her hands, leaning their foreheads together.
Kiara rolled her eyes. “Anyway, let’s… rehearse our story in more detail. In case they ask. Also… we might be able to sneak one demon in…”
Seth furrowed his brow. “Is the risk worth taking, though?”
“I’m useless without Umbra, right now. Besides…” The demon slid into Kiara’s faint shadow, and faded into it. The shadow darkened, but the demon was quite unnoticeable. “She is a shadow.”
“Huh,” said Spider. “That is a cool trick. Okay. So, maybe we were flying our own ship, but it got attacked by demons. That’s what the other ship picked up on. They rescued us, but died in the process?”
“Drove the demons off?” Kiara said. “Or killed them?”
“I say killed,” Seth said. “That way they won’t go looking for them. If they think there’s an immediate threat, they’ll start looking, and maybe find ours. That is not what we want.”
“Okay, I’m going over to the ship to see if it’s still working. You guys finish up the story.” Spider fell upwards into the mist, heading towards the damaged the ship.
Reno withdrew from Caf, suddenly looking steady of mind. “So why were we out here?”
“Refugees from Four,” Seth said.
“We should get going,” Chun said quietly. “If we arrive too late they may get suspicious.” Without another word, Torrential hopped to the edge of the crystal and took off towards the ship, Chun on his back.
“Let’s move.” Seth jumped up onto Noh and followed Chun. Umbra and Caf lifted off close behind, carrying Kiara and Reno. They approached the bullet-shaped ship, and one by one stepped off of their demons, through the massive rend in the side of the ship. Chun saluted Torrential, who flew back down. Caf and Noh, though, stayed alongside the ship for the moment.
Spider was inside, bent over the controls. “It’s all working here still, thankfully.”
Seth glanced around. “Any recent journals?”
“Umm…” Spider started to check the bookshelf, then remembered that she couldn’t read. “Uh, take a look.”
Umbra flowed into the space under Kiara’s stump, becoming a shadowy leg. Slowly, Kiara made her way to the bookshelf and pulled down the most recent journal. The last update had been about a week earlier, and was just a quick few notes on an uneventful few days of patrolling. Kiara nodded. “Good. Nothing.”
“Alright, let’s go then.” Spider moved towards the controls. “Um. So. Not that I don’t technically know how to fly a ship, but… does anyone else know how to fly one better than I do?”
“I can get by, but I’m not very good,” Kiara said.
Spider shook her head. “You’re really out of it, Kiara.”
Seth flicked a hand, and Noh drifted away towards the crystal they’d been on. “I’ll take it from here.” He stepped to the controls and sat in the pilot’s chair. “All ready?”
Reno took one last look at Caf. Nothing was said. It was all in their eyes. Reno clenched her hand ever so slightly before releasing it again. "Ready."
Kiara braced herself against the bookshelf. “Ready.”
Spider nodded. “Yeah. Let’s do this.”
Seth cracked his knuckles, grinning. “So uh. It’s been a while since I last did this. This should be go.” His hands flicked a control, and the ship accelerated at an uncomfortable speed, lurching heavily to one side.
Kiara stumbled and fell, despite her bracing. She seemed to give up on standing at that point and plopped down on the floor. Umbra disappeared into her shadow.
Chun laughed uproariously as the ship continued to rock and shake. “This is FUN!”
Spider was unmoved by the motions of the ship. “So, right, what’s the rest of our story—” She shut up quickly as the radio on the control panel beeped loudly. Seth barely managed to stifle an ironic laugh.
A male voice came from the radio. "Astartes, Astartes, this is Sector One, do you read?" The words were followed by a half-masked yawn.
“Hey,” Seth replied. “This isn’t Astartes but, uh, we read. Unless Astartes is this ship, in which case… yeah.”
“… you’re… yeah, Astartes is…” The man on the other end sighed. “You know what, I don’t even care.”
Spider glanced at Seth. She stepped from the wall to normal gravity and walked to the console. “We need help, one of our crew members has been really hurt!” She tried to sound as panicky as possible.
“Yeah? Lemme guess, refugees from Sector Four? Stragglers?”
“That we are,” Seth said.
“Well, all of the landing fields are full. Courtesy of the other refugees. Should still be room on the roof of Tanique Hall, though.”
“Spiffy. I can see this ending smoothly already.” Seth rolled his eyes.
“Listen. I’ve directed something like a hundred and fifty refugees ships in the last forty-eight hours. And gotten a grand total of oh… six hours of sleep. Maybe.” The radio operator’s voice was frustrated. "So if you would kindly just shut up and go where the data points you..."
“At least you have two legs,” Spider snapped.
The radio broke into what sounded like static, which quickly resolved into a cracking, coughing laugh.
Spider ignored it. “One of our crew, not so much. Can you send someone to help?”
The laughter trailed off, but the voice now carried a tone of bitter sarcasm. “Yeah, I can totally spare a medic for your injured friend. By which I mean nope, sorry. Between the refugees and the riots, all the hospitals are jam-packed or shut down entirely.”
Seth muted the mic for a moment. “At least no one will be suspicious of us getting in.” He flipped it back on again. “Alright. Let’s just land this thing.” As if on cue, a green light winked on on the console.
“Did you get the telemetry data?”
“Yeah.”
“Fan-fucking-tastic. Sector One so very over and out.” The radio crackled off.
Seth laughed. “Riots, eh? This might be easier than we thought. That, or very, very messy.”
“Wow. This place sounds lovely,” Spider snickered. “Bet no one really notices.”
Chun grinned. “You know? I almost want to show up on Torrential, just to add to that guy’s bad day.” Spider shot her a cold look, and she shrugged vaguely apologetically, then grabbed a random book off of the bookshelf and settled down to read it.
((78 — Unite))
Following the data, they slowly orbited the crystal. After about half an hour, the city came into view, nestled in its crevice between the massive crystal spires. “Nice,” said Reno with a chink in her voice that was most unlike her.
Chun jumped up and shoved the book in her bag, marveling at the sight. Spider helped Kiara to the window, and smiled as the younger girl pulled out her own notebook, and began sketching a rough image.
Spider admired the massive-scale architecture as the ship came in low over the city. “Impressive,” she said quietly. In several places, especially around the base of the crystal tower in the center, she could see large riot mobs. She looked away, turning to Seth. “You guys don’t have any idea where your friend is being held captive?”
He shook his head as he brought the ship up towards one of the side spires. “Cyc told us about the prison at Sector One, The Complex, but nothing specific. He’s gotta be in there, but no clue where it is.”
“There’s gotta be a map somewhere in this city. Man, it is big!” She looked back out the window as their destination came into view. She smiled at the immense columns along its front, noting how they structurally compensated for the glass wall behind them.
One ship was already on the roof of Tanique Hall. It was a little larger than theirs, with a pair of engines on either side in rotating gimbals. Seth raised an eyebrow. “Great. A roof. Hope I don’t hit that other ship. Could get awkward.” He reached a hand up and brushed his red-tipped bangs out of his eyes.
“Don’t… crash…” said Reno, still with the unusual stutter in her voice.
Seth fiddled with the controls, trying to slow the already-shaky ship down a bit. It jerked its way down towards the rooftop, coming to rest… just above the roof.
“Aw balls.”
With a shudder, the engines cut out, and the ship dropped the remaining foot to the surface. It landed with a resounding crash, hitting and rolling slightly to one side.
“Oh woah!” Spider didn’t move, leaving her now floating a foot about the deck of the ship. “Uh, let’s get out. Now.” She pointed towards the hole in the side of the ship.
Seth nodded. “My work here is done.” He hopped off, blowing a kiss to the smoking wreckage as he did. Chun grinned, and jumped out behind him.
Kiara gritted her teeth, wincing with pain. “Someone want to help me?” Spider set herself down and walked to Kiara, offering an arm. Kiara took it, pulling herself to her… foot. Umbra slipped quickly into her shadow, and they awkwardly made their way down onto the roof.
Reno finally released the support bar she had been gripping, though it was not particularly clear whether this was because she had chosen to let go or because enough sweat had accumulated that her fingers simply slid off of it. She exited the ship, almost tripping over herself as she did.
“Want a hand there, Reno?” Seth actually seemed a little concerned.
“Yeah, that’d be great, Seth,” said Reno, reaching out an arm to him. Seth offered his own, and she rested her weight awkwardly against him.
Spider adjusted her grip on Kiara. “Right, we better get you someplace to rest… if they have any beds left.”
“I doubt they do… but that would be nice. I’d be good with a crutch, though, I think. At least for now.”
“We’ll find something of the sort,” Spider assured her.
Chun readjusted her backpack and slid her goggles over her eyes. “We should stick together, since there are riots.”
Spider nodded, and reached for the door in the small structure atop the roof. Just as she did, it swung open, and a small woman stepped out. Both started and jumped back in surprise.
The woman laughed slightly. “Sorry, I didn’t see you there.” She was dressed simply, in a long green overcoat tied with a plain belt. "Hello, you all must be the new arrivals. We got word there'd be another group landing here..."
“Hi,” Spider said nervously. “Uh, do you think you could help us out?”
“Of course, we’re happy to. We haven’t got much, but, well, no one thinks to go to a Library when there’s a crisis on, do they?” She let out another awkward laugh, tucking a strand of wild red hair behind her ear. “Sorry, where are my manners? I’m Delissa, one of the junior librarians.”
“Right.” Spider smiled slightly. “Um, I’m Spider.”
The girl raised an eyebrow over her thick glasses. “Spider, huh? What is it with you Sector Four folk and your animal names?”
“Anemal names?” Spider cocked her head. “Right, uh, we’re strange like that?”
Chun tried to look composed, which ended up with her looking like she was just frowning hard. “I’m Chun.”
Kiara smiled, though it looked a bit strained. She leaned a bit more exaggeratedly on Spider. “I’m Kiara.”
“Seth.” He waved a hand.
“R…Reno Corbonov.”
Spider glanced at Kiara, then back to Delissa. “Listen, our friend is hurt. Is there a place she could lie down? Or at least a crutch or something?”
“Of course, of course, let’s get you inside.” She gestured for them to follow her, and started down the stairs into the building. As she walked, she called up to them. "We've got a few spare beds in the living quarters here, there should be room for you."
Delissa led the Talons down a long corridor, passing a number of side doors. Eventually she came to one with the door hanging half-open, and pushed inside. She called out as she walked to the door. "Hello? Owl? Are you here?" When no answer came, she shrugged and walked the rest of the way in.
“Wait, wait!” Spider halted abruptly, causing Kiara to grimace in pain. “What? Owl? What?” She looked around, distressed and flustered, her hair seemingly more everywhere than normal.
The room inside was lined with fairly average beds and amenities—tables and lamps here and there. "Owl's the other girl staying here... her and her friend Skunk, but I think Skunk had to run off somewhere. They came in on the other ship on the roof." Delissa smiled, helping Spider lower Kiara into one of the beds. "Friends of yours from Sector Four?"
“Uh, yeah…there we just the two of them?”
Delissa nodded as she filled a glass of water from a faucet in the corner of the room, handing it to Kiara.
“Tch. Owl and Skunk I can deal with. It’s that other one.” Seth spat.
Spider pulled her mouth to the side and shrugged. “Well… I supposed I’ll see them at some point.” She looked at the others. “If you see Owl or Skunk tell them…” She paused the words on her tongue.
“Tell them what?” Kiara asked.
“Tell them… I’m here, I guess.” She looked down, and crossed her arms. “Anyway, we should get a map, that’d be great.”
“Yeah, uh. We need to… find our friend’s house,” Chun said slowly.
Satisfied that Kiara was settled, Delissa nodded. “Hold on, I’ll be back in a minute with one.
“Thanks,” said Chun as the woman ran out of the woman. She stood there, looking around the room awkwardly. It was fairly spartan, but not uncomfortably so.
Reno gently detached herself from Seth’s grip and sat down on another bed, rubbing her temples. Spider sat down, her legs and arms both crossed. She didn’t look like anything, face completely blank.
Seth dropped the remains of a cig from his mouth, leaned against the wall, and lit a new one. “So we get Cyc back. Then what?”
No one responded for a long minute.
Spider looked away from them all. “No one knows what to do,” she hissed under her breath.
Seth sighed. “One step at a time, then.”
The door pushed open again, and Delissa came in, holding a piece of paper. She handed the map to Reno, who was closest. “So where did you say your friend lived?”
“Um… did he specify a district?” Kiara asked from the bed, looking to Seth.
Reno handed the map off to Seth, who blinked. “I uh,” he started. “I think we can take it from here.”
Delissa shrugged. "Alright. I think I'm going to try to find Owl!"
“Great!” Spider perked her head up.
The librarian smiled warmly. "You want to come? She should still be wandering around the archives in the basement somewhere."
Spider looked around at the others. “Uh… I don’t think you guys need me. I can come back and keep Kiara company?”
“Your choice, Spider,” Seth said. “I know where I’m headed. Have an old friend to see.”
“Yeah… I guess I do too.” Spider grinned faintly. She stood up, and nodded at Delissa. “Yeah, let’s go find them.”
“Great! Come on.” She walked out of the door, motioning with one hand for Spider to follow. Spider did so, waving her friends farewell.
Chun looked at Kiara. “I should stay here with her. Make sure her condition doesn’t worsen again… besides, I can go looking in the library for any relevant medical books.
Seth shrugged, then turned to Reno. “That leaves us, then.”
Reno nodded, and pointed to a spot on the map in his hand. “There’s the Complex,” she said quietly. “Right at the base of the central spire.”
Seth grinned. “Then let’s book it. We’ve got a Cyclops to find…”
((77 — Distant Lights))
.
July 2nd, 802 AT.
The wan voidlight illuminated a tired scene. Kiara still lay unconscious on her coat, with Umbra standing guard over her. Not far off, Noh’s fog had gone opaque hours earlier, after the surgery. Chun was curled up in a ball on top of Torrential, who was lying down with his beak under one wing. Reno was the only one awake, pacing uncomfortably, absent-mindedly spinning her crystal dagger through her fingers.
Spider stepped out of Noh and walked back to the group, holding her arms. She looked older now, her eyes grave and heavy with dark circles. Scorpia scuttled up behind her.
Seth emerged from the dark shadows of his demon behind her, and cleared his throat a bit. “Yo. Guys.” He glanced around. “Err. Gals. Whatever. Someone wanna wake Chun for a tic?”
A faint groan came from Kiara, as she raised her head slightly, looking around, finally starting to wake up. Umbra curled up next to her, still in gryphon form.
Seth sighed at the complete lack of action from his fellows. “Alright. I will myself.” He trudged over to Chun and prodded her with his foot.
Torrential was the first to stir. He lifted his head, in doing so knocking Chun tumbling to the ground. She sat up, abruptly very awake. “Whu—oh, hey guys.”
Kiara sat up a little further, resting on one elbow. Umbra flowed under her, stabilizing her. “Anything… happen, while I was out?”
Spider shook her head. “Not really. We can’t stay here forever, though.” She glanced over at Seth.
“…yeah,” he said. “But ‘fore we go. One, uh, minor note.”
“What?” Kiara asked tiredly.
“What just happened back there? Let’s not do it again.”
“Agreed.” Chun got up and brushed herself. Beside her, Torrential mimicked her, ruffling his feathers.
“The whole killing people who thought we were demons thing. It’s… that was not good.” Seth looked off to the side. “There’s gotta be a better way to go about things than… doing what I did. And what that caused you guys to do.”
Reno shifted her eyes upwards. “Well,” she said. “They DID try to kill us. So it’s justified.”
“So, uh.” Spider cleared her throat, and changed the subject quickly. “I figured it’d be safer if we didn’t go charging in with our demons. I think I should fly in first, and try and talk with them. Maybe get a map and find a place for you guys to enter without being spotted, or provide a distraction.” She shifted her feet, obviously a little uncomfortable with this half-formed plan.
Kiara frowned. “And why wouldn’t they just… shoot you, Spider? That’s what they tried before.”
“Well, they’ll wonder how I got to the base, but I won’t have a demon with me.”
“Well, duh.” Kiara blinked at Spider in confusion. “But how do you plan to get in without using your demon?”
“Uh…” Spider scratched her head. “I can fly.”
“Oh. Good… good point.” Kiara closed her eyes, fading back into sleep somewhat.
Spider laughed half-heartedly. “Guess she’s a little more out than she thought… anyway, you guys can NOT bring your demons into the base. It’ll cause a panic, and it’s likely that you’ll just kill everyone. We can’t do that.”
“Yeah,” said Chun. “But someone will see us coming on our demons. It will cause panic either way.”
“You guys don’t come in on demons!” Spider said. “I’ll go alone. Find a way for you guys to come in without being noticed.”
“I’m with Spider on this one, yo,” said Seth. “Worst case, we bring in the cavalry. As a backup.”
Reno tensed a little. “How long do you think we’ll be separated from our demons?”
Spider looked to Seth for support. “Shit, I don’t know. Either you guys wait here, or I bring you without your demons, which will take a while to go back and forth.”
Kiara sat up again, rousing. “Mine can hide… if she chooses. She can help. And… I’ll need her to walk.” She glanced uncomfortably down at the stump of her leg.
Seth glanced away. “We can help you move, Kiara. Actually… perhaps we can use that as an excuse to get in.”
“I was just thinking that!” Spider said.
Kiara raised an eyebrow skeptically. “Explain…?”
Seth half-grinned at Spider, then turned to Kiara. “People see injured person. We get help. They’re much less likely to be suspicious. We’re much more likely to get in… without incident.”
“So we’re using Kiara’s injury as our ticket in?” said Reno, as Caf came up behind her, nuzzling her.
Spider rocked back on her heels. “But we’ll be showing up at the base out of nowhere. We don’t exactly have a ship…”
“If more ships fly overhead we could hijack one,” said Chun.
“Uh.” Spider’s eyes widened. “We do have a ship. We have a ship that’s been in a recent accident.” She looked out at the Void. Sure enough, the ship they had damaged was still drifting, not far off. The gaping hole in its side made it list slightly to port, but other than that it was still functional. Spider jerked her thumb at it.
Seth grinned. “This just might work.”
Spider nodded. “Bet you I can get it working again if there’s any problem. We should still probably leave our demons here, so they don’t get detected.”
“Wouldn’t we still be noticed, though?” Kiara asked from the ground. “I would think they’d recognize their own ship.”
“Sector One is big, right?” Spider said. “And we have someone who’s seriously hurt. They might not pay close attention.”
“We could tell them that the crew valiantly saved us from demons but tragically died,” suggested Reno.
Seth nodded again. “It might not be perfect, but I think it’s our best bet.”
Reno was looking very apprehensive. It was clear that the idea of being separated from Caf was not an appealing one by any stretch of the imagination.
Noticing, Seth looked at her flatly. “Reno. You’ve got two options. Stay here with Caf, or come alone.”
Caf nudged Reno in the back. She turned around and looked her beloved in the eyes forlornly. The girl stood up and cupped Caf’s head in her hands, leaning their foreheads together.
Kiara rolled her eyes. “Anyway, let’s… rehearse our story in more detail. In case they ask. Also… we might be able to sneak one demon in…”
Seth furrowed his brow. “Is the risk worth taking, though?”
“I’m useless without Umbra, right now. Besides…” The demon slid into Kiara’s faint shadow, and faded into it. The shadow darkened, but the demon was quite unnoticeable. “She is a shadow.”
“Huh,” said Spider. “That is a cool trick. Okay. So, maybe we were flying our own ship, but it got attacked by demons. That’s what the other ship picked up on. They rescued us, but died in the process?”
“Drove the demons off?” Kiara said. “Or killed them?”
“I say killed,” Seth said. “That way they won’t go looking for them. If they think there’s an immediate threat, they’ll start looking, and maybe find ours. That is not what we want.”
“Okay, I’m going over to the ship to see if it’s still working. You guys finish up the story.” Spider fell upwards into the mist, heading towards the damaged the ship.
Reno withdrew from Caf, suddenly looking steady of mind. “So why were we out here?”
“Refugees from Four,” Seth said.
“We should get going,” Chun said quietly. “If we arrive too late they may get suspicious.” Without another word, Torrential hopped to the edge of the crystal and took off towards the ship, Chun on his back.
“Let’s move.” Seth jumped up onto Noh and followed Chun. Umbra and Caf lifted off close behind, carrying Kiara and Reno. They approached the bullet-shaped ship, and one by one stepped off of their demons, through the massive rend in the side of the ship. Chun saluted Torrential, who flew back down. Caf and Noh, though, stayed alongside the ship for the moment.
Spider was inside, bent over the controls. “It’s all working here still, thankfully.”
Seth glanced around. “Any recent journals?”
“Umm…” Spider started to check the bookshelf, then remembered that she couldn’t read. “Uh, take a look.”
Umbra flowed into the space under Kiara’s stump, becoming a shadowy leg. Slowly, Kiara made her way to the bookshelf and pulled down the most recent journal. The last update had been about a week earlier, and was just a quick few notes on an uneventful few days of patrolling. Kiara nodded. “Good. Nothing.”
“Alright, let’s go then.” Spider moved towards the controls. “Um. So. Not that I don’t technically know how to fly a ship, but… does anyone else know how to fly one better than I do?”
“I can get by, but I’m not very good,” Kiara said.
Spider shook her head. “You’re really out of it, Kiara.”
Seth flicked a hand, and Noh drifted away towards the crystal they’d been on. “I’ll take it from here.” He stepped to the controls and sat in the pilot’s chair. “All ready?”
Reno took one last look at Caf. Nothing was said. It was all in their eyes. Reno clenched her hand ever so slightly before releasing it again. "Ready."
Kiara braced herself against the bookshelf. “Ready.”
Spider nodded. “Yeah. Let’s do this.”
Seth cracked his knuckles, grinning. “So uh. It’s been a while since I last did this. This should be go.” His hands flicked a control, and the ship accelerated at an uncomfortable speed, lurching heavily to one side.
Kiara stumbled and fell, despite her bracing. She seemed to give up on standing at that point and plopped down on the floor. Umbra disappeared into her shadow.
Chun laughed uproariously as the ship continued to rock and shake. “This is FUN!”
Spider was unmoved by the motions of the ship. “So, right, what’s the rest of our story—” She shut up quickly as the radio on the control panel beeped loudly. Seth barely managed to stifle an ironic laugh.
A male voice came from the radio. "Astartes, Astartes, this is Sector One, do you read?" The words were followed by a half-masked yawn.
“Hey,” Seth replied. “This isn’t Astartes but, uh, we read. Unless Astartes is this ship, in which case… yeah.”
“… you’re… yeah, Astartes is…” The man on the other end sighed. “You know what, I don’t even care.”
Spider glanced at Seth. She stepped from the wall to normal gravity and walked to the console. “We need help, one of our crew members has been really hurt!” She tried to sound as panicky as possible.
“Yeah? Lemme guess, refugees from Sector Four? Stragglers?”
“That we are,” Seth said.
“Well, all of the landing fields are full. Courtesy of the other refugees. Should still be room on the roof of Tanique Hall, though.”
“Spiffy. I can see this ending smoothly already.” Seth rolled his eyes.
“Listen. I’ve directed something like a hundred and fifty refugees ships in the last forty-eight hours. And gotten a grand total of oh… six hours of sleep. Maybe.” The radio operator’s voice was frustrated. "So if you would kindly just shut up and go where the data points you..."
“At least you have two legs,” Spider snapped.
The radio broke into what sounded like static, which quickly resolved into a cracking, coughing laugh.
Spider ignored it. “One of our crew, not so much. Can you send someone to help?”
The laughter trailed off, but the voice now carried a tone of bitter sarcasm. “Yeah, I can totally spare a medic for your injured friend. By which I mean nope, sorry. Between the refugees and the riots, all the hospitals are jam-packed or shut down entirely.”
Seth muted the mic for a moment. “At least no one will be suspicious of us getting in.” He flipped it back on again. “Alright. Let’s just land this thing.” As if on cue, a green light winked on on the console.
“Did you get the telemetry data?”
“Yeah.”
“Fan-fucking-tastic. Sector One so very over and out.” The radio crackled off.
Seth laughed. “Riots, eh? This might be easier than we thought. That, or very, very messy.”
“Wow. This place sounds lovely,” Spider snickered. “Bet no one really notices.”
Chun grinned. “You know? I almost want to show up on Torrential, just to add to that guy’s bad day.” Spider shot her a cold look, and she shrugged vaguely apologetically, then grabbed a random book off of the bookshelf and settled down to read it.
((78 — Unite))
Following the data, they slowly orbited the crystal. After about half an hour, the city came into view, nestled in its crevice between the massive crystal spires. “Nice,” said Reno with a chink in her voice that was most unlike her.
Chun jumped up and shoved the book in her bag, marveling at the sight. Spider helped Kiara to the window, and smiled as the younger girl pulled out her own notebook, and began sketching a rough image.
Spider admired the massive-scale architecture as the ship came in low over the city. “Impressive,” she said quietly. In several places, especially around the base of the crystal tower in the center, she could see large riot mobs. She looked away, turning to Seth. “You guys don’t have any idea where your friend is being held captive?”
He shook his head as he brought the ship up towards one of the side spires. “Cyc told us about the prison at Sector One, The Complex, but nothing specific. He’s gotta be in there, but no clue where it is.”
“There’s gotta be a map somewhere in this city. Man, it is big!” She looked back out the window as their destination came into view. She smiled at the immense columns along its front, noting how they structurally compensated for the glass wall behind them.
One ship was already on the roof of Tanique Hall. It was a little larger than theirs, with a pair of engines on either side in rotating gimbals. Seth raised an eyebrow. “Great. A roof. Hope I don’t hit that other ship. Could get awkward.” He reached a hand up and brushed his red-tipped bangs out of his eyes.
“Don’t… crash…” said Reno, still with the unusual stutter in her voice.
Seth fiddled with the controls, trying to slow the already-shaky ship down a bit. It jerked its way down towards the rooftop, coming to rest… just above the roof.
“Aw balls.”
With a shudder, the engines cut out, and the ship dropped the remaining foot to the surface. It landed with a resounding crash, hitting and rolling slightly to one side.
“Oh woah!” Spider didn’t move, leaving her now floating a foot about the deck of the ship. “Uh, let’s get out. Now.” She pointed towards the hole in the side of the ship.
Seth nodded. “My work here is done.” He hopped off, blowing a kiss to the smoking wreckage as he did. Chun grinned, and jumped out behind him.
Kiara gritted her teeth, wincing with pain. “Someone want to help me?” Spider set herself down and walked to Kiara, offering an arm. Kiara took it, pulling herself to her… foot. Umbra slipped quickly into her shadow, and they awkwardly made their way down onto the roof.
Reno finally released the support bar she had been gripping, though it was not particularly clear whether this was because she had chosen to let go or because enough sweat had accumulated that her fingers simply slid off of it. She exited the ship, almost tripping over herself as she did.
“Want a hand there, Reno?” Seth actually seemed a little concerned.
“Yeah, that’d be great, Seth,” said Reno, reaching out an arm to him. Seth offered his own, and she rested her weight awkwardly against him.
Spider adjusted her grip on Kiara. “Right, we better get you someplace to rest… if they have any beds left.”
“I doubt they do… but that would be nice. I’d be good with a crutch, though, I think. At least for now.”
“We’ll find something of the sort,” Spider assured her.
Chun readjusted her backpack and slid her goggles over her eyes. “We should stick together, since there are riots.”
Spider nodded, and reached for the door in the small structure atop the roof. Just as she did, it swung open, and a small woman stepped out. Both started and jumped back in surprise.
The woman laughed slightly. “Sorry, I didn’t see you there.” She was dressed simply, in a long green overcoat tied with a plain belt. "Hello, you all must be the new arrivals. We got word there'd be another group landing here..."
“Hi,” Spider said nervously. “Uh, do you think you could help us out?”
“Of course, we’re happy to. We haven’t got much, but, well, no one thinks to go to a Library when there’s a crisis on, do they?” She let out another awkward laugh, tucking a strand of wild red hair behind her ear. “Sorry, where are my manners? I’m Delissa, one of the junior librarians.”
“Right.” Spider smiled slightly. “Um, I’m Spider.”
The girl raised an eyebrow over her thick glasses. “Spider, huh? What is it with you Sector Four folk and your animal names?”
“Anemal names?” Spider cocked her head. “Right, uh, we’re strange like that?”
Chun tried to look composed, which ended up with her looking like she was just frowning hard. “I’m Chun.”
Kiara smiled, though it looked a bit strained. She leaned a bit more exaggeratedly on Spider. “I’m Kiara.”
“Seth.” He waved a hand.
“R…Reno Corbonov.”
Spider glanced at Kiara, then back to Delissa. “Listen, our friend is hurt. Is there a place she could lie down? Or at least a crutch or something?”
“Of course, of course, let’s get you inside.” She gestured for them to follow her, and started down the stairs into the building. As she walked, she called up to them. "We've got a few spare beds in the living quarters here, there should be room for you."
Delissa led the Talons down a long corridor, passing a number of side doors. Eventually she came to one with the door hanging half-open, and pushed inside. She called out as she walked to the door. "Hello? Owl? Are you here?" When no answer came, she shrugged and walked the rest of the way in.
“Wait, wait!” Spider halted abruptly, causing Kiara to grimace in pain. “What? Owl? What?” She looked around, distressed and flustered, her hair seemingly more everywhere than normal.
The room inside was lined with fairly average beds and amenities—tables and lamps here and there. "Owl's the other girl staying here... her and her friend Skunk, but I think Skunk had to run off somewhere. They came in on the other ship on the roof." Delissa smiled, helping Spider lower Kiara into one of the beds. "Friends of yours from Sector Four?"
“Uh, yeah…there we just the two of them?”
Delissa nodded as she filled a glass of water from a faucet in the corner of the room, handing it to Kiara.
“Tch. Owl and Skunk I can deal with. It’s that other one.” Seth spat.
Spider pulled her mouth to the side and shrugged. “Well… I supposed I’ll see them at some point.” She looked at the others. “If you see Owl or Skunk tell them…” She paused the words on her tongue.
“Tell them what?” Kiara asked.
“Tell them… I’m here, I guess.” She looked down, and crossed her arms. “Anyway, we should get a map, that’d be great.”
“Yeah, uh. We need to… find our friend’s house,” Chun said slowly.
Satisfied that Kiara was settled, Delissa nodded. “Hold on, I’ll be back in a minute with one.
“Thanks,” said Chun as the woman ran out of the woman. She stood there, looking around the room awkwardly. It was fairly spartan, but not uncomfortably so.
Reno gently detached herself from Seth’s grip and sat down on another bed, rubbing her temples. Spider sat down, her legs and arms both crossed. She didn’t look like anything, face completely blank.
Seth dropped the remains of a cig from his mouth, leaned against the wall, and lit a new one. “So we get Cyc back. Then what?”
No one responded for a long minute.
Spider looked away from them all. “No one knows what to do,” she hissed under her breath.
Seth sighed. “One step at a time, then.”
The door pushed open again, and Delissa came in, holding a piece of paper. She handed the map to Reno, who was closest. “So where did you say your friend lived?”
“Um… did he specify a district?” Kiara asked from the bed, looking to Seth.
Reno handed the map off to Seth, who blinked. “I uh,” he started. “I think we can take it from here.”
Delissa shrugged. "Alright. I think I'm going to try to find Owl!"
“Great!” Spider perked her head up.
The librarian smiled warmly. "You want to come? She should still be wandering around the archives in the basement somewhere."
Spider looked around at the others. “Uh… I don’t think you guys need me. I can come back and keep Kiara company?”
“Your choice, Spider,” Seth said. “I know where I’m headed. Have an old friend to see.”
“Yeah… I guess I do too.” Spider grinned faintly. She stood up, and nodded at Delissa. “Yeah, let’s go find them.”
“Great! Come on.” She walked out of the door, motioning with one hand for Spider to follow. Spider did so, waving her friends farewell.
Chun looked at Kiara. “I should stay here with her. Make sure her condition doesn’t worsen again… besides, I can go looking in the library for any relevant medical books.
Seth shrugged, then turned to Reno. “That leaves us, then.”
Reno nodded, and pointed to a spot on the map in his hand. “There’s the Complex,” she said quietly. “Right at the base of the central spire.”
Seth grinned. “Then let’s book it. We’ve got a Cyclops to find…”
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