SITTING BY
DESOLATE STREAMS – Act IV
“We are the music-makers, / And we
are the dreamers of dreams,
Wandering by lone sea-breakers, /
And sitting by desolate streams;
World-losers and world-forsakers, /
On whom the pale moon gleams:
Yet we are the movers and shakers /
Of the world for ever, it seems.”
--
"The Music Makers" by Arthur William Edgar O’Shaughnessy
James Welthammer sat in the dusty
bar. He’d been released from jail, all
right, but his ship and crew were still gone.
Public records still listed his ship as being in Imperial Security
impound, where Ian Samothrace had said it was, but there was no record of what
had happened to his crew. Either they’d
been disappeared, or they’d also been released and then gone their separate
ways.
Damnit,
he thought to himself. This has been one lousy week.
The bartender came over to him, and
James was just about to ask for a refill of his Yangtze River Pirate
(rum-and-coke, but using Yangtze Cola, garnished with a fried wonton speared
with a plastic cutlass), but the barkeep put one down in front of him. “This was sent to you by the gentleman over
there,” he said, nodding toward a booth along the wall.
“Tell them I’m much obliged,” James
muttered. He turned to face his
mysterious benefactor, lifted his drink in salute, and downed it in one
gulp. “Same again,” he said to the
barkeep as he stood up and headed over to meet his new friends.
“Former Captain James Welthammer of
the Resolve, at your service,” he
introduced himself to the pair sitting in the booth. One was a tall, balding man in late middle
age, or early old age, with graying hair and bad teeth. The other was a shorter, much younger man in
his early 20’s, with dark hair and an olive complexion.
“I’m Dr. Hicks, and this is my assistant,
Pablo,” the old man said in reply.
“Your assistant?” James asked in a
puzzled voice. “You a stage magician or
something?”
“No,” replied the doctor with a grin,
“then my assistant would be a beautiful young woman in a scanty costume, not a
brilliant post-grad.”
Pablo Losada was less amused. “Former captain?” he asked
pointedly.
“That’s right, Imp Bastards took my
ship, crew, and cargo, not three days ago,” James admitted. “Though I’m sure I’ll figure out a way to get
her back, just need a couple more drinks to get the mind going, you know?”
Icarus gave a sympathetic
shrug. “My commiserations on your
loss. I’m sure you’ll get back on your
feet in no time.”
Pablo was less impressed. “Um, Doc?
He says his ship got seized by the Imps, I’m not sure if he’s the guy we
want...”
“Quiet, Pablo,” said Icarus
with a dismissive wave of his hand. “I’m
sure Captain Welthammer here is exactly the man we’re looking for.”
Emile the bartender came by at that
moment with another round of drinks, and James took a sip from his before
replying. “I’ve been in tougher
situations. Once the Earl of Hyperion’s nose had a run in with my fist...”
Losada’s eyes popped. “You punched
an earl and you got away with it?”
“I did a round in the pokey, if you
call that getting away with it.”
“Only imprisoned?” Icarus was curious how he’d gotten off so
lightly. “The usual penalty for a gaijin
like yourself would be death by vivisection.”
“Well, I think the good noble was a
bit scared of me after the damage I did to his nose, but I wasn’t worried,
since…” Welthammer’s voice trailed off
and he looked around the bar suspiciously.
“Well, I really shouldn’t talk about that one. Can I do something for you boys?”
“We’re interested in transport
off-world,” Icarus answered. “We were
hoping to book passage on a ship.”
James gave a derisive laugh and
cocked his head to one side. “You boys do realize that you’re sitting within a
hundred meters of a major spaceport, right?”
Icarus gave a very slight
smile. “Well, you know how much of a
hassle it can be to book a trip through normal channels. Medical forms to fill out, notarization fees,
all those questions to answer.”
“We want to avoid red tape. Losada
put in.
“I hope you didn’t expect to save
yourselves money by hiring independent pilots,” James replied with a
chuckle. “Time, yes, but the added risk
of arrest by the Imps means added insurance costs.” He took another swig from his drink. “Why are you in such a hurry, anyway? Anxious to get on your honeymoon?”
“We’re willing to pay a premium to
expedite matters,” Icarus replied. “As
for why we are traveling, let’s just say we’d like to avoid any Imperial
entanglements.”
“Well, that’s the trick, isn’t it?” Welthammer
replied, his voice turning less jolly.
“What is this, some local trouble?
Why are a couple of stiffs like you two so anxious to get away from the
big bad Imps?”
“Let’s just say it involves a rather
large fire.” Icarus said with a thin-lipped smile.
“Remind me to introduce you to a
friend of mine named Freak.” James
finished off his latest drink. “Let’s
just say we cut to the chase. It sounds
like fun, boys, but I can’t do you a whole lot of good with my ship still in
ImpSec hands.” He looked down at his
empty glass with surprise, then waved his hand in the vague direction of the
bar to signal for another. “Not that it
got there while I was carrying out a contract, or anything. I was ambushed just after getting paid on
delivery.”
“I’m
not going to bother asking if you were doing something worth getting arrested
for—” Icarus asked quietly.
James opened his eyes in mock
surprise. “You mean they need a reason
to arrest someone? Huh. I should have thought of that one...”
“Legally, ImpSec does need a reason
to arrest someone, but they have a tendency to become a law unto themselves at
times.”
James continued to feign mock
surprise. “What’s the universe coming
to?”
“A bad end,” Icarus stated
simply.
“Speaking of ends, doc,” Losada
interjected. “If this guy doesn’t have a
ship any more, why are we still talking to him?”
“Because someone with a grudge
against ImpSec is exactly the kind of person we’re looking for,” Icarus
replied.
“Then I’m definitely your kind of
person,” James answered with a passable impression of a dashing and self-confident
grin. He’d had a lot to drink.
Losada still wasn’t impressed. “Does that mean you’ve got some way to get us
off-system, not involving your erstwhile ship?”
James looked daggers at the
student. “Yes, we all hold hands, and
follow my lead in chanting.”
“A correspondence portal?” Losada was incredulous. “You’ve got a contact who’s a mage who can
short-circuit the umbra on an interplanetary scale?”
“I am such a mage, thank you very
much,” James replied icily. “You’d best
watch what you say, or I’ll turn you into a toad.”
Icarus raised a single eyebrow. “There are only a hundred or so registered
mages with that level of power, and perhaps a dozen elder vampires who could
manage a similar stunt through their own means.
Your name isn’t on either list, unless this is an assumed identity…”
It was the captain’s turn to raise
an eyebrow. “You memorize lists of
registered mages?”
Losada gave a sympathetic
shrug. “He’s got a photographic memory,
and he reads a lot of strange things.”
He took a sip of his beer and gave another resigned shrug. “You get used to it.
“Huh,” James replied, re-appraising
his new acquaintances. “No, I’m not
really a mage, or a leech.” He thought
back to his recent encounter in jail. “I
could introduce you to one. Not a bad
guy, for an Imp bloodsucker, just don’t accept if he offers to buy you a
drink...”
James’s rambling was interrupted by
a beeping sound. All three of them
looked around nervously, before James finally recognized the sequence of tones
and looked down. The other pair’s eyes
followed.
“Don’t be alarmed,” Icarus said in a
small voice. “But your pants are beeping
at you.”
James dug into a pocket, “Nag, nag,
nag, that’s all they’re good for.” He
withdrew a telephone-style comlink and flipped it open, “Welthammer, who the
hell is this?”
There was a pause, and then James
slammed his drink down on the table, Losada jumped. “Damnit, John, where are you?”
Welthammer leaped to his feet,
knocking his chair backward. “What?!
How the hell did you—no, scratch that, I don’t want to know.” Some of the nearby patrons glanced over
before returning to their own conversations, Hicks watched with interest.
James lowered his voice, picked up
his chair, and sat back down. “Listen,
John, I need you to send the shuttle down to pick us up—what? Oh, just some friends. We’re…”
Welthammer, covered the phone’s
mouthpiece and said to Hicks, “Where are we?”
“Talavera spaceport, the University
sector.”
“Thanks, Doc.” James repeated the words into the comlink. “Yeah, there’s an abandoned strip just east
of us, it shouldn’t be any—oh. Um, no,
that’s fine, the computer should have landing coordinates stored, and the I
think the Autopilot has sixty-percent success ratio on new sites if it doesn’t,
you should be fine. Yeah, I can get it
back up. Thanks, John, see you in a
couple of minutes. Oh, and see if you
can’t get in touch with Joe and the rest of the guys, I don’t want to leave
without ‘em. Welthammer out.”
He started folding the comlink back
up, “Well, you’re in luck, boys, I can have you out of here in no time. I do assume you’ve got the cash to pay for
the trip, of course.”
Hicks pulled out the roll of bills
from his pocket, “Of course, Captain, I’m sure you’ll find this is sufficient
for your—” He stopped.
James wasn’t paying attention; he
was looking intently at the folded comlink in his hands. He pulled what looked like a battery pack off
of the base of the phone, but it was only a metal shell, which was covering the
real battery. Its bottom was marked with
the Imperial Security insignia. “Oh,
shit.”
Hicks looked at the object,
“Standard comm tracer.”
Losada seemed lost, “What?”
Hicks continued, “I think we’d
better get out of here.”
James hastily scanned the room,
“Yeah, I think you’re right.”
The three stood up, James put a coin
on the table, and the group began making their way towards the exit, slowly but
tensely. They were within six meters of
the doorway, when they were waylaid by a group of gaudily dressed people, all
carrying what seemed to James to be an odd assortment of devices, but that
Hicks quickly identified as musical instruments.
A small man at the head of the group
spoke up, “Excuse us, sirs, but we were hoping that you could provide us with
transport off planet, you see—”
“I don’t have time for this,” James
snapped.
The man seemed not to notice, “We
are the Starship Troupers, performers seeking—”
“Get out of my way!” James’ voice betrayed his anxiety, as he
tried to push his way through.
“Please, sir. We are but poor minstrels who have no way
of—”
The bar doors burst open and four
armed Imperial Security agents rushed in.
One of them called, “This establishment is now under inspection by
Imperial Security, all patrons will stand down and submit to a search. Attempts to resist will result in arrest and
severe penalties.”
“What’s the meaning of this?” The bartender, Emile, was leveling the tranq
rifle at the agents, “I’m fully licensed to run this place. What the hell do you think you’re doing barging
in here with guns like that, you want to put me out of business?”
The agent who spoke before turned to
him, “Put down you’re weapon, M. Magritte, this is an Imperial Security
investigation, the security of the Middle Kingdom is—”
He was interrupted by a bellowing
roar. The werewolf, Lobo, had awoken,
and was charging the Imps in Crinos form.
The agents scattered.
*****
Joy watched as Chan lifted up the large scrap pieces of metal she had recovered from his ship and placed them in a pile to one side of the second courtyard in the compound. With interest she drew on his upper body as he sweated. Some of the scars that creased his face seem to follow down from his right shoulder diagonally. She watched as he stopped to take a breather after working for several hours straight. So he wasn’t all talk. Habor must have noticed himself being watched and turned to look up at her. She looked with bemusement at him, on eyebrow raised slightly.
“What do you guys plan on doing with this san
chi?”
“Huh?”
“What do you guys do with this shit?”
“Use it to build fish tanks like the ones inside, repair our own fighters…”
“You have aircraft?”
Oh heck, I’ve said too much, Lee thought.
“Yeah, just a few fighters that we’ve redone to fit our needs.”
“Fighting off the Bloc,” Habor said with a hint of sarcasm.
“More like saving the skin around your incomplete brain.”
“Whoa, take it easy. No personal offence.”
Silence interrupted their conversation again. Habor finished picking the metal blocks up and walked over to Joy’s side. “Now what?”
“You can take a break until tomorrow and then we’ll see about finding a way to get you on your way.”
“Sounds great, me flying off this section of hell and back to….”
“To what?”
“Never mind. So, where’s a good place to take a dip? Do you have a place to take a dip? Do you know what a dip i….”
“We have a small pool, don’t worry ‘bout the pirhanese, as long as you don’t bother them they won’t bother you.”
“Pirhanese?”
“Carnivores, tear a man to pieces in the old days, now their just fun to look at.”
“Ok, whatever you say… so where’s this pool?”
“Follow me.”
Chan did. It took about a minute or so for Joy to lead him out of the courtyard and into a small garden. A glass floor shown beneath their feet and steam arose from different corners of the circular room. Flowers bloomed from hanging pots from the open roof. After a few steps the glass floor slowly dipped away into a pool clearer than the glass that surrounded it. Small, blue fish circled the ripples created by drips from green vines that hung from mesh walls. Habor watched this in quiet gratitude.
“Jump in when you’re ready.”
“You coming in?”
She’ll come in later, trust me. You go on in and relax.
She was joking about the fish, they’re perfectly harmless.
The voice woke Habor again and he searched the area for the sign of the voice. Once Joy left him in peace, he whispered. “Doc, is that you?”
Doc?
“Look, old man, I’m tired of this t’ien shu deh game you feel like playing with my head. If you wanna speak, use your gan tsao voice.”
“Fine” responded a voice that didn’t sound anything like Gavenny. From behind one of the giant planters came a rather small-built han, only slightly younger than himself. He dressed in purple silks, studded with a couple platinum pins, and a rather strange earring in his right ear. Most importantly, though, he was a complete mystery to him.
“Who the fei hua are you?”
“You mean you don’t remember? I’m hurt, Chan, truly I am. I who looked up to you all those years, but you never seemed to notice poor little me.” The stranger sniffed. “You’re so cruel.”
“Who…” then Lee saw the face, and he realized who it was. “Hoon?”
“Prince Hoon to you. You forget - we no longer share the same title anymore. You should show the proper respect.”
“Ni you piaoliang de lu maozi!”
“But I’m not married, Chan, not even close over the past fourteen years you’ve been away. However, I understand, it’s not like you’ve been reading the social pages…”
“What do you want?”
“That’s it? That’s all you have to say to your old cousin, after I’ve flown so far from the imperial court just to see you? Really, I thought that you would have learned manners from… well, wherever the hole you dropped yourself into.”
“What… do you want?!”
“You, my dear Chan, you! Since you decided to be foolish enough to get your… um, extra-curricular activities exposed, everyone thinks you’re dead. You dropped… as it were, off the face the worlds. That’s not an easy thing to do in this day in age. That makes you a valuable commodity.”
“Chee wo de shi, Hoon.”
“Thanks for the offer, but no. I’d rather eat whatever nastiness is swimming in this pool than your excrement. Besides, I’m here to do you a favor.”
“Get to the point.”
“Fair enough. The Emperor thinks you’re dead, the court thinks you’re dead, everyone thinks that Old Man Chiang overreacted with that whole Canteern business…”
“How did you know I wasn’t?”
“Dead? Wasn’t easy. Luckily, I’ve done some favors for Minister Dane, and as a result, he provides me with rather juicy bits of information that float my way. To suddenly hear you were alive was a bit of a shock.”
“But how…”
“What? Do you think that the Middle Kingdom ignores this piece of rock? The empire doesn’t ignore anything, Chan. True, there’s no civil police on this moon, but that’s for a very good reason. That doesn’t mean we don’t know what happens here.”
Lee was tired of this business. All he wanted a swim with a beautiful lady, then a flight off this rock; now he had his past roaring up in front of him. He felt his body shift into Galabro form, half man, half werewolf; although to him, it only look like he needed a shave. Habor’s nails became claws.
“Naughty, naughty…” Hoon tsked, then flicked his wrists. Suddenly the water spurted up from the pool and hit him in the face. “You should really cool off when I’m doing you a favor.”
“Then SAY IT!” His rage was building.
“You want revenge against the emperor, yes?”
“YES!”
“Good… then I can help. That is… if you’re willing
to listen.”
*****
Collision alarms screamed throughout
the Zimbardo. The ship dropped out of hyperspace on a
beacon that happened to drift away from its charted real-space point. Instead
of open space, the freighter smashed into the debris field left over from the 3rd
Civil War, adding its own shattered mass to the collection of space junk.
Aboard the Yamamoto, lead ship
of a convoy that was using the Zimbardo
as a screen, its onboard computers automatically registered the destruction of
the freighter, immediately offering its human components options. The officers
took the computer’s sage advice; the gravity drive’s field was shifted forward,
taking the brunt of the debris field they had just jumped into. Yamamoto immediately
took steps to ensure that the ships she was escorting dropped out of hyperspace
short of the debris field. As soon as the beacon was launched through the
rapidly collapsing dimensional hole, their collision alarms were replaces with
a slightly different klaxon.
“Sai, scanners show an
unidentified Prince of Wales class….she
is firing!”
Plasma washed across the port
section of the vessel, opening her up like a can of tuna. The bridge, forward weapons, and sensor
arrays were completely eradicated. She
was now little more than an engine in space, maintaining its previously
established course. The Dickerson blazed by the wreckage with
deadly purpose.
Payback’s
a bitch, thought
Weathers, then turned to his com officer.
“Ensign, contact the Marm and
tell them to begin their run on the freighters as soon as they jump out of
hyperspace. Helm, plot a new course;
punch the engines beyond maximum and take us straight at their rear guard. They’ll
have time to react to us, but let’s limit the time they have.”
The
surprise worked and evened up the odds - now let’s see how good this other
slant is.
Like
clockwork, the rest of the convoy appeared, thanks to the warning the previous
battlecruiser had given them. Unfortunately, the beacon hadn’t been launched
before they learned they were jumping into a trap. Weathers gazed out the forward
view-port and gazed at the bluish smudge that signaled a new hyperspace jump
point opening. Several ships poured out, but he was focused on the
“Weapons, plot a firing solution for
an alpha strike.”
The lieutenant manning the weapons panel
went white. “Sir, that means we have to get danger close before we fire…”
“I’m perfectly aware of what it
means, Lieutenant Schultz. Proceed.”
David felt a presence come up beside
him; the woman was his new executive officer, Lieutenant Commander Teresa
Palmer. She was a strong believer in The Book, so when she whispered that “we
don’t have the capability to withstand their long-range weaponry until we get
in range,” Weathers simply nodded. Palmer knew what a Prince of Wales class
ship could take; Weathers knew what Dickerson could do.
“Commander, this pass has to be
fatal. We only get one surprise. If we miss, the Marm could catch hell before we swing back around.” Finally, he
stepped away from her, and tapped the weapons officer’s shoulder. “When you
have your solution, fire at your discretion.
We’ll be moving too fast; don’t wait on word from me.”
The crew made preparations as the
ships closed. With millions of kilometers between them, even a fast pursuit
felt like forever. The captain once again turned his attention to his enemy. Who is at the helm? Is he young and brash,
or is he patient?
As his thoughts focused on his
adversary, suddenly he could see the man. Once his initial shock wore off, he
realized he was hearing the conversation on his opponent’s bridge. His shock
and focus were interrupted as the communication officer reported that the Marm was launching fighters and
shuttles. Apparently one of the
freighters was armed and had inflicted minor damage. Upon hearing about the other vessel his
thoughts immediately jumped to his son.
Oddly though, the concept of son did not bring up images of David,
instead a young Asian boy, who happened to be the son of the enemy captain.
Dear
God, my thoughts are influencing that bastards mind!
Years of military life caused
Weathers to immediately seek a tactical use of this boon.
Slants
are all about honor, let’s hammer away at that.
Weathers began to bombard the man
with image of his son sitting in disgrace at learning of reports of his father’s
cowardice and indecision. Details of the
report showed the man had fired too early.
The dispersion of his weapons fire, due to wasting his long-range
weapons at extreme distance shots, caused very little damage to the enemy. It
allowed the opponent to land devastating fire on the
On board the
“Hai, sai. Re-plotting
solutions and awaiting your orders.”
Okay,
you bastard… let’s make you really sweat.
The next barrage of images covered a
young Asian boy hanging by a rope from the balcony of his home. His mother, finding the corpse threw herself
off the balcony. The images then warped
to a funeral where family and friends lamented the fact that their son, cousin,
friend has been such a failure.
The effect on Saito was
immediate. His focus interrupted he
began to fight to clear his mind of the horrible images. His discomfort began to be visible to his
crew.
“Sai, we are approaching the firing
point, do you wish me to fire? Sai?”
Weathers changed the direction of
his attack. Now the images were of the
man’s ghostly wife screaming at him about how his failure had destroyed her
son. The attack was devastating,
completely blowing any concentration the man had upon the events unfolding
around him.
Then his nervous lieutenant screamed
out, “Firing all batteries now!”
The Dickerson’s weapons flared to life with deadly fury. The weapons officer on board the
Weathers’ connection to the other
man was broken violently. The disruption
left him shaken as he had witnessed another man’s death, from first person
perspective.
Holy
shit… I must remember to break the connection beforehand. If this happens
again…if I can do this again. Jesus, I don’t know
if I can do that again!
The cheers on the bridge and the
calls of damage reports brought him back to reality. He took a deep breath and
said, “All right, folks that was a great attack. Good work to everyone. Let’s
get back and help the Marm with the
loot. Helm, plot the course.”
After rejoining with the Marm, the two vessels were able to
capture three enemy vessels. The others
had either gone down fighting or were able to jump out before they were disabled. After loading as much plunder as they could
the two ships jumped off the standard beacon and began very different, random
paths home. Weathers got no sleep that night; every time he closed his eyes, he
thought of a 9-year-old boy named Shintaro, who lived in the Phoenix System.
The han child was probably laughing and playing with friends – because
he didn’t know that just a few hours ago, a quai loh named Weathers had
killed his father… and everyone else on his boat.
David felt all of it.
*****
Sherif Tian-yi
But I know who you are.
Sherif swung his head. The dark alley with a big draft of wind that
had seemed so clean, so full of life when he sat down now seemed empty and
desolate. There was no one there.
You cured the girl, magus. You stepped out of reality. You multiplied the mass.
Sherif jumped to his feet, and
looked around. No one was there. "Who
are you?" He shook from fear but tried to stay calm.
I know who I am. Do you know who you are?
"I know who I am. Who are you?"
I don't think you know who you
are. If you did, you could ask me more
interesting questions. I'll be back, M.
Adams. And perhaps next time, you'll
know more.
Sherif looked around, and then grew
angry. Everything was quiet. He looked some more, and still, everything
was quiet. After
The ex-farmer got up, now too angry
to be depressed. He looked around one more
time, didn't see anything and said, "I see you!"
He brushed himself off and looked
around. He smelled. His last crown had been spent on buying
food. A little calmer, Sherif began to
walk again. He believed that he was
getting out of the city. He didn't know
if there was countryside on this miserable rock, but if there was, maybe he
could find work as a laborer on a farm. Hell,
maybe those villagers had been right, it was all he was cut out for.
Although he had been kicked off
three buses, one finally took him. He
rode the hover bus for tremendous differences.
He would just get on, and wouldn’t get off until the end of the
day. Asking locals where he could find
food would lead to soup kitchens, where he could eat off the benevolence of the
local religious people.
At the end of the week, Sherif was
tired, but he was told he was finally getting to the farm areas. It was an odd way of putting it, he
thought. The farm areas. Minos wasn’t defined by where the cities
were, but rather where the farms were.
It was a concept Sherif had difficulty grasping. He realized that the farming operations on
Minos would be very efficient, and that grain came in from other planets, but
it was still a difficult concept.
When he entered the twelfth northern
farming district, he had trouble telling a difference. Sherif had been hoping for fields, and super
efficient rice. Instead, there were
factories. When
He walked only a few feet before he
looked around, and realized that all the farming took place in the
factories. It was an odd concept. He had heard of it at school, but the full
magnitude of it never dawned on him, until now.
An entire planet, fed without the use of the sun. Somehow, it seemed appropriate. The people from Minos had so much pollution
in the sky, it was just as well that the wind never met the food. It would ruin the taste.
Looking around for a few more
minutes, Sherif walked to what he supposed was the north. He went twenty feet before seeing a sign
asking for employment. He should have
known that someone so close to a bus station looking for workers was going to
be trouble, but Sherif was naïve, to say the least.
“Look out!”
The call went out this night, like
it had four nights before. Sherif woke
up. He had spent the last four evenings
in jail. And the same dream came to him.
“Look out!” That’s what happened. But how did it happen?
Five days ago, Sherif had been
working. It wasn’t a good job, but it
paid money, and
The growing of the fungi was under
controlled light. Plural fungus provided
many calories for its small size, and it would grow on anything. The two or more heads of the fungus grew off
the stock of the mushroom and provided twice as much nourishment as a normal
mushroom. Plus, with enough flavoring, the
taste could be covered up. It smelled atrocious, and
The rain was unusually strong that
day. Though no one knew it, or cared,
for years, the roof had not been cleaned.
Years of rain had left years of dirt on the roof. Mushroom spores, which got everywhere, began
to grow in the left over dirt. They
compromised the integrity of the roof, even feeding off parts of the
fungicrete.
The roof collapsed during the
storm. The dozens of men who were
working in the building cried out in terror, and then in confusion. The ceiling had been suspended.
He held up the ceiling, and then
forced it back and out. Rain came pouring
in. Sherif and the rest of the laborers
were soaked. It was miserable. The lights were out. It was dark out. Within minutes, the emergency service was
outside. When asked what happened,
Sherif was turned in. He had been arrested
for doing the right thing.
Over the next three days, several
mages came and examined the half-breed.
They denied that he was a mage. A
werewolf was called in and he denied that
So he was left in the local
jail. They couldn’t move him to the
regional prison without a crime. But
what crime had he committed? And so
Sherif remained. Without anyone to talk
to, or anything to do,
Sherif broke out. The wall went down. He jumped, clicked his heels together, and
ran down the road. Nothing could hurt
him now. Bullets flew past. They didn’t matter.
*****
Cho woke up to find herself strapped
down by tubes. Once her eyes adjusted to the light, the assassin figured out
that she was in a hospital – and not a very good one from the look of the
cracks in the ceiling. She felt weak after… what the go sch had
happened to her?
She heard the beeps next to her head
go a little faster. Oh, it’s just the heart monitor. Well, that proves I’m
alive, but how did I…?
Memories of the night before came
flooding back into her. Did I overdose? How can that be? I’ve been taking
this stuff since I was old enough to steal it! That’s…
The word impossible escaped
her thoughts when a rather strange man entered the room. He was hung mao,
another one of those black devils, about middle-aged with blonde buzz-cut hair,
shades, and a rather strange gold earring shaped as skull and crossbones. He
may have been old, but you could easily detect the muscles hiding underneath
the trenchcoat and the formal business suit he was wearing.
“Who…” her voice came out in a
hoarse whisper, “who are you?”
“I was concerned about you, we all
are. When I heard the news, I had to come for myself.” As he spoke the words,
he heard his voice doubled in her head, saying a completely different message. My
name is Lord Cornelius. I was sent to find you.
“I’ve never seen you before.”
“Of course not, but when your
friends called, I had to see you myself.” I am the head of Yakuza-Gaijin, M.
Yamazaki.
Cho went tense; she hated these
round-eyed scum who called themselves yakuza. Yet why they should care
about her... it’s not like she had done anything to them. “Why are you here?”
“Because I was concerned, I told
you.” To pay back that which you stole from us.
She was so tired; she could have
responded in that mental voice, but the assassin couldn’t muster the strength
to do it. Why this lord continued
to be oblique was beyond her. “Which concern?”
“The concern we have
for all our employees.” Do you remember a job you did three
years ago on Pi?
“I’m not your employee, but I remember you.”
“Ah, it’s coming back
finally. Good, I was afraid you had forgotten.” You assassinated Sir
Marius; I did not forget.
“How did my friends
contact you?”
“They have my net
address, my dear girl.” I spiked your drugs with a
convulsionary agent. After that, I kept my ears open for an overdose.
“I’m glad you came, although I don’t know why.”
“Well, that means a
lot.” Sir Marius was my blood-brother; I did not forget his
killer.
“Your concern is appreciated but you might as well forget me for now. I’ll be out in a few
days.”
“I fear not. The
doctors say you’ll need more time to recover.”
Cornelius pulled out a hypospray. Curse my name in the
afterlife, bitch! As his face turned to a smile, he started to bring
the poison-laden syringe to her neck.
END OF
EPISODE ONE
Text Copyright (C) 2004 by Marcus Johnston. All Rights Reserved. Do not try ANY of this at home, even if your long-lost brother DOES turn out to be royalty.