Tag Archives: sci-fi

Chapter 50: Defeat Pt. 2

“He’s lying, Fiear!” Leta’s throat was raw from yelling. “He’s lying, don’t you fucking believe him –” But Fiearius said nothing. His expression was empty, his eyes boring onto hers, stunned into silence.

“Say goodbye though, Fiearius. We’ve got a long journey back to Satieri.” Dez nodded to the guards who moved over to lift him from his chair.

As they lifted him from the chair, finally Fiearius seemed to lose his sense of shock. The confusion on his face swept away, his expression darkened. A storm arrived in his eyes as words ripped from his throat.

“You,” he began, sounding breathless, his eyes fixed on Leta and filled with fire. “You fucking lying bitch!”

Leta could hardly breathe. “It’s not true! Dez is playing you, Fiear!”

“Fiearius — “ Cyrus interrupted meekly, but Fiearius roared over him.

“This?!” he went on, struggling against the grip of four men as though he wanted to lunge across the room at her. Something strange was in his eyes. A haze, of sorts, one that he seemed unable to break through. “After–dov’ha pe’stieren ti dah hes’ziah! After everything! After all I did for you?! This is what I get in return?!”

“I don’t work for them,” Leta cried as muddled Ridellian curses continued to spit from his mouth “– not anymore, I didn’t lead you here, I wouldn’t turn you in — you know me, Fiearius!”

In a pleading voice, Cyrus broke in. “Fiearius, you can’t really believe this shit?”

Fiearius’ fury swung towards him. “You–you knew, didn’t you?!” he growled, malicious masking his face. “You were in on this too?!”

In the corner, Dez observed with curious interest, his eyebrows arched.

“What are you talking about?!” Cyrus gasped. “There’s nothing to be in on!”

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“Bullshit,” Fiearius growled as the agents tugged on him again, finally on the threshold of the door. “I trusted you!” He turned back to Leta viciously. “I trusted you.” With one final heave, the agents wrenched him through the door, but his voice still carried down the hallway as he shouted, “I hope you’re fucking happy! I’erna le si ca’edie fi’et!”

Stunned silence enveloped the room for several long seconds, punctuated only by one dry sob heaving from Leta’s chest.

Cool as ever, Dez cocked a brow and muttered, “Effective…” After a moment, he turned back toward his agents in the room. “I’m sure they’ll want to send the girl back to Vescent soon,” he instructed calmly. “Under careful monitoring, of course. And the brother, we’ll send him wherever he’ll be most useful. For now, secure the three of them in temporary cells. An agent with the proper jurisdiction will follow up with instructions.”

With one cursory glance over the room, he turned and followed Fiearius’ fading yells.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Leta was screaming, screaming her lungs out, but Cyrus could barely hear her. Numb with shock, he watched, transfixed, as Fiearius was pulled through the door, struggling and wrestling the whole way, his guttural yells echoing down the hallway as he was torn from view.

He’d never seen his brother so desperate. He was, quite literally, fighting for his life.

Unthinkingly, Cyrus jackhammered out of his chair. To do what, he didn’t know, but it didn’t matter: an agent grabbed his arms at once. Two more did the same to Leta and Ren and in a flash, they were all being marched into the hallway.

Leta was not going quietly, even as Ren assured her, his voice pleading, “they won’t hurt you, Leta, I promise it’s okay — “

But he was right, thought Cyrus. They wouldn’t be harmed, they couldn’t. Dez said it himself: Leta would be sent home to Vescent, to her father, to be watched and monitored and scrutinized by a team of therapists. He himself would be assigned to some engineering team, forced to continue the work he’d abandoned four years ago. They wouldn’t be hurt. But they would be imprisoned.

Fiearius, however, would not enjoy the same fate. The Verdant CID embedded in his arm. They would want to reclaim it. He wasn’t useful alive like Cyrus or Leta. If he was going to Satieri, he was going to be —

“Executed,” Leta breathed at his side, wrestling the agent at her back. Her voice shaking so badly she could barely form words. “They’re going to execute him, aren’t they?”

The words shook something within Cyrus’ chest. Something dark, something — alarming. Before he could think to do otherwise, he let out a growl, pivoted on his foot, wrenched his arms away and slammed his bound wrists into the agent’s face.

Startled, the agent stumbled backwards and Cyrus went in for another hit, adrenaline rushing through him, and then another, and then another. His wrists may have been bound, but they weren’t useless. They pounded into the guard’s neck, his knee found his stomach, his elbows rammed his side.

Bleeding and shouting, the agent scrambled for his gun, sending panic flying through Cyrus. He lowered himself, braced and rammed his shoulder into the man’s stomach downwards. His back collided with the metal ground with a thump and Cyrus at once pinned him there with his knees, reaching his tied hands for that holster on his hip desperately.

But before he could even lay a finger on it, he felt a rough hand dig into his shoulder and drag him upwards. Still clawing at the gun’s grip uselessly, Cyrus was lifted back to his feet and spun around to face the woman who’d been leading Ren just as her disapproving frown gave way to a distorted cry of pain and she crumbled to the ground, blood spurting from her leg.

She’d been shot — but how? Cyrus wheeled around, half-expecting to see his brother towering there, in all of his heroic glory.

But it wasn’t Fiearius, it was Leta, holding aloft a stolen gun. It seemed his scuffle had given her just the distraction she needed to arm herself and turn the situation in their favor, at least fleetingly.

While he stood in place dumbly, feeling stunned, she rushed over to him and hastily untied his wrists, then did the same to Ren.

“Leta,” said Ren, carefully, watching her as if he’d never met someone so insane in his life, “Do you know what you’re doing?”

“No.” Leta crouched down, retrieved another gun from the floor and passed it to Cyrus. “No, of course not, now let’s go.”

Blindly, gun in hand, Cyrus turned and bolted down the hallway and kept bolting until his feet found the metal floor of the airy open hangar once more. All around him, enormous ships the size of houses were parked side by side and Cyrus dodged beneath their wings and pillars. It wasn’t too late, he told himself desperately — it wasn’t too late to get to Fiearius.

Only dimly aware of Leta and Ren running behind him (Ren was protesting, Leta pulling him along), Cyrus suddenly stopped short at the sight of one vessel in particular. Larger than a cathedral, it must’ve been half a mile wide — but that wasn’t what suddenly made Cyrus’ heart stop.

He recognized this ship. It was a Satierian ship. And Fiearius was headed to Satieri.

He must have been inside.

Gripping his gun with determination, Cyrus shot forward, ran up the ship’s ramp and into the large, open cargo bay. It was empty and quiet, at least five times the size as the Dionysian’s.

“What ship is this, Cy?” said Leta desperately, her hand circled around Ren’s wrist, leading him forward like a confused child. “Is Fiearius aboard, are you sure he’s aboard this one?”

“It’s the BKN-550,” said Cyrus as he rushed through the bay, his eyes flitting back and forth for signs of movement. “But they call her the Beacon. A Satieran frigate.” The ramp was beginning to close behind them and he could feel the low vibrations from within the ship radiating out beneath his feet. She was getting ready to leave. “Fiearius has to be here,” he gritted out, though it was more an assurance to himself than it was to Leta.

Without looking back, Cyrus ducked into one of the Beacon’s smaller hallways, determined to reach the bridge and stop the ship before it could leave the Baltimore. He couldn’t let it. He didn’t exactly have a plan yet. March right into the bridge and demand Dez let Fiear go didn’t sound like it would work all too well. But he had to do something. Cyrus wouldn’t even humor the notion of losing him and what that would mean. He wouldn’t. He couldn’t.

His heart was pounding in his chest as he slunk through the maze of cold metal hallways as quickly as he could, Leta and Ren on his tail. The ship was mercifully quiet enough to avoid confrontation with the few Society agents he caught a glimpse of. It seemed to only be running with a skeleton crew. Well, how much crew did the frigate need to simply transport a passenger to an execution? he thought grimly.

What the Beacon lacked in crew, however, it made up for in size, an obstacle in itself. Cyrus wasn’t convinced he would ever find the bridge at all let alone make it on time until he turned a corner into a hallway and laid eyes on it.

Chapter 50: Defeat

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All at once, Society agents flooded the hallway, grasped Leta by both arms and dragged her into their fold. Dez strode ahead of them, swinging his sword at his side with an air of utmost casualness. Beside her, agents seized Cyrus and Ren too, and Leta’s mind raced with one thought: please don’t let us be separated, please don’t separate us, please don’t …

For better or worse, all three of them were marched down the long hallways and through the same metal black door marked TEMPORARY CONTAINMENT UNIT. Inside, the walls were sterile and cold, the pure-white floor filled with chairs and metal benches. With a jolt of her heart, Leta saw one of the chairs was occupied.

Fiearius. Continue reading

Chapter 49: Finding Ren Pt. 2

“Leta.” His voice was raspy and dry, unused for days. His eyes scrutinized her face. “How — “

Before he could properly voice his myriad of questions, Leta angled her forehead against his, and then her lips were pressed onto his, softly but warmly, relief pouring out of her and into him, until she knew it had been a few seconds too long and she broke away.

“We have to go,” she breathed shakily, fumbling now to get Ren’s arm around her shoulders as she hurried to a stand. “Can you walk?”

“Leta.” Ren was having a most difficult time pulling himself into the moment, out of the haze. “How’d — I can’t leave, we can’t make it past–“

“No, no, we will,” Leta hastened, and there was a note of hope in her voice now, her breathing still shaky from the threat of tears. “I’m not alone. We just have to hurry — “

Mercifully, Ren seemed to be gaining more consciousness and movement in his limbs as Leta drew his arm around her neck and hurried to the door.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Thump.

Fiearius spun around just in time to see the agent’s figure land heavily on the hangar floor. From where he was standing at the base of the Dionysian’s ramp, he couldn’t see which of his helpers from above had fired the shot, but he’d have to remember to thank both Corra and Finn later. They were likely the only reason he was still standing at all.

The ‘grab the biggest gun on the ship and cause a distraction’ plan had started out rather well, mostly because the biggest gun on the ship was a monstrosity Corra had affectionately named ‘the Crowd Breaker’ that effectively fired an array of ten rounds at once in practically every direction. It wasn’t built to do that. But apparently she’d broken it at one point and that was the miraculously positive result.

The Crowd Breaker and Finn’s rifle had been enough to fight off the initial wave and, he presumed, buy Leta and Cyrus the time they needed. Now, however, the inevitable had occurred: Fiearius had run out of ammo.

Wham.

Fiearius stepped back as another agent stumbled and fell to the ground.

Fortunately, the Crowd Breaker wasn’t just a great gun. It was also a pretty fantastic battering ram and he’d made good use of it in simply swinging its length into his attackers’ faces. Face after face after face. It seemed the Baltimore agents were following an order to simply overwhelm him until he could be captured. Alive.

Not a single one had fired at him which could only mean one thing: someone on this ship knew about the Verdant CID. Someone knew he had it. And someone knew that some poor prison ship agent shooting him down would only cause more problems. Someone knew he had to be kept breathing.

But who that was couldn’t concern him for the time being. For now, he had to stay focused. Focused on the man’s face in front of him as he knocked his teeth out. And the next who got an elbow to the gut and the butt of a gun to the forehead. It was becoming mechanical at this point, like some rhythmic dance that was slowly wearing down his energy. He couldn’t stop, he had to keep going until the ground team returned, but dov’ha ti’arta, he wasn’t as young as he used to be. Nor was he the only one doling out injuries.

There was blood running down his temple from a blow he couldn’t now remember. Someone had dug a knife into his shoulder right before Finn took him down. There had been a few seconds when enough of them had managed to restrain him long enough to put some mounting bruises on his ribs. But the pain of the wounds, even the worst of it, was drowned out by adrenaline. That is, until all of a sudden, he felt a sharp burning tear across his legs.

Before he even had a chance to reconcile what had happened, he found himself crumbling to the floor, his joints no longer willing to support themselves with the fire now racing through his nerves. There was blood, he realized with a start, looking down at his legs through vision that was starting to become fuzzy, lots of it. He could feel the warm stickiness spreading quickly and coating his skin.

A familiar scream sounded from above the ship and a familiar voice shouted something directly behind him, but he couldn’t understand any of the words. It sounded like it was coming through a tunnel. Far off, distorted. His weapon was wrenched out of his hands, an effort he couldn’t even fight.  A figure’s shadow spread over him from just above on the ramp. And slowly he became aware that the reason this had happened, the reason he had fallen, was a deep gash on the back of his legs, right where the joints met. And he knew exactly whose blade had made the cut.

Struggling to regain his senses, Fiearius managed to slowly look up to face the triumphant figure standing above him. Though Desophyles Cordova has always been an inch or two shorter, he nonetheless consistently dwarfed Fiearius simply in breadth alone. He was the one man Fiearius would never challenge to an arm wrestle. Not just because he was obviously stronger. But because he knew every single way in which he might cheat.

“Well,” he began, straining to keep his voice conversational, despite the searing pains he was beginning to feel all over his body. Apparently some of those hits had been a little harder than he’d thought. “Fancy running into you here.”

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But Dez wasn’t paying him any attention. He was standing there, holding up the long straight blade that bore a fresh sheen of blood and admiring it thoughtfully. For a long moment, he said nothing. Until at last he asked, as casually as someone who’d just sat down to dinner with an old friend, “Didn’t you used to mock me for bringing this on missions?” He glanced down at Fiearius now, his dark eyes sharp and hollow as ever. “Bit ironic, isn’t it?”

Fiearius was in no laughing mood. He was starting to feel faint and though his arms were still managing to hold him up, they wanted to crumble any minute now. Even so, he forced a bitter one-note chuckle and growled, “Hilarious. So they’ve got you serving–” His breath choked in his lungs, “–on TTDs now? Kind of a downgrade.”

“They told me it was a useless gamble to wait here,” Dez remarked absently as he began wiping the blood from his blade onto his shirt. “They said there was no way you’d do something so stupid as to waltz right onto a Society prison ship of all places.”

Suddenly, he glanced down at Fiearius as though only just realizing he was there. A slow smile pulled across his face as he crouched down beside him and clapped a friendly hand on his shoulder. Fiearius struggled for his arms not to give way from the weight. “But they don’t know you like I do,” he said quietly. “They don’t know your weaknesses.” Dez sighed heavily and put his hands on his knees. As though scolding a child, he shook his head and said, “What did I always tell you about pretty girls?” His smile shifted into a sympathetic frown “They’ll only cause trouble.”

Fiearius met his stare calmly, though he was anything but. His thoughts went to Leta and Cyrus, out there on the ship with no idea what they were going to come back to. It hadn’t worked. This whole thing. He’d failed. And all at once, Dez put a hand on his forehead and shoved it backwards into the floor.

As he felt his mind start to dip into unconsciousness, he saw Dez stand up over him. “Forget the ship, find the others,” he ordered to the agents still hovering around the scene. “They’re here somewhere.” He glanced down at Fiearius, his expression cold as ice. “Someone take this one to a containment unit while I prepare my ship.” And the last thing Fiearius heard as his vision turned to black was, “We’re going home.”

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Chapter 49: Finding Ren

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Whatever distraction Fiearius was pulling in the hangar, it seemed to be working: this long sterile hallway was empty of armed Society agents as Leta sprinted after Cyrus, her heart pounding in her chest. They were so close to Ren’s cell that she could barely breathe.

The interrogation bay was one deck below, a half-set of metal stairs that ducked downward. Leta’s feet swallowed the steps two by two, her gun gripped tightly in hand. Down here, the hallways were swept with silence. This bay was clearly set apart from the rest, as if they were underground, beneath the ship, held away.

For the worst detainees. Continue reading

Chapter 48: Boarding the Baltimore

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“The Baltimore? We’re actually going to board the Society ship?”

“‘Course not, ‘cause it ain’t possible — “

“ — watch your mouth. Cap’n says we can do it, then we can do it.”

“Yeah, right — “

Conversation swirled right past Leta’s ears. She barely heard the chattering crew as she breathlessly pressed through the mess hall and down the corridor with one destination in mind: the bridge. If this ship was really and truly headed to the Baltimore and to Ren, then she needed to speak to its captain.

Leta stalked right into the bridge, frenzied as a tornado.

“Fiear,” she demanded shakily, “what the hell is going on?” Continue reading

Transcript 072961

INTERCOMM Ship Connection Active: Crew Deck 001 outgoing. Command Deck B incoming. Transcript Begin.

001: Cy-cy? Psst. You Awake?

CDB: C–Corra? What time is it?

001: I don’t know. Late.

CDB: Then why are you calling me?

001: Because I thought coming into your quarters while you were asleep would be rude.

CDB: …A fair point. What’s the matter? Continue reading