Added Interlude and CHapter 18: Tower Battle! |
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Stirling sat in silence for a bit longer as Victor joined him. Then, the barney fighters found them again. | Stirling sat in silence for a bit longer as Victor joined him. Then, the barney fighters found them again. | ||
=== Chapter 19: Why You Donât Argue with Someone Returning from Battle === | |||
Methuselah looked up to the sky. It was the morning of a new day. The sun never really broke through the even gray sky here in Ankoria, but it was still a lovely grey Ankorian dawn nonetheless. | |||
If only he could enjoy it with everyone who'd gone out on the mission. | |||
Most of the people that had gone out to the newly discovered mines had come back. But three teams still had not returned. Most notably, Commander Lancaster, Kalaren, Dr. Jellyfish, Chris -3rd, Rick, with his thick accent, who had gone with one other, and Stirling Silverstine, the foreign knight that had come, rekindling hope that a large scale rebellion was possible. | |||
They had planned to return at around this time. So far, the only sign of a development had been some scouts reporting a loud humming above the treeline. Now, there appeared to be three large purple or red objects on the horizon, seemingly followed by flames. | |||
Methuselah had seen something like this before. Barney bots, they were called. They had heavy armor, and could only be destroyed with heavy weaponry, or strategically placed traps. But these seemed slightly larger⦠and with less limbs. Instead, they resembled something Dr. Jellyfish had mentioned to him, Barney fighters. | |||
He suspected that they were going to try and bomb the city. | |||
He had taken necessary precautions against this, and had gathered everyone into his underground tower, along with as many supplies and valuables they could get. The better to hide and protect. | |||
Wilda came up behind Methuselah, following his gaze off to the distant flying metal monsters. "Do you think they made it?" | |||
Methuselah glanced at Wilda before replying. "At this point, something must have gone wrong. If they have evaded capture or not is the real question. Obviously something happened to give Vladekâs forces reason to send something here. So to answer your original question, I really don't know, but the chances are looking pretty slim." | |||
< | Wilda frowned. "I was afraid you'd say that. Or something like it." She glanced back at the entrance to the tower. "If those flying devices bomb us, we'll survive, but does your tower have a backdoor in case they bring troops down to finish the job, or are we standing our ground in here?" | ||
This caused Methuselah to smile and raise an eyebrow. "Oh yes. I know some think me paranoid, but it does come in useful to be prepared. Easily the first 40 would be killed by traps on the way down. If we decided to stay here and defend for a bit, rather than escaping via hidden tunnels that they would be hard pressed to find, we could comfortably eliminate twice that number." Suddenly souring, he continued. "Can be a pain to live inside something that's set to kill its inhabitants. Anyway, much of the credit goes to Dr. Jellyfish with the traps. He really can be a genius, when he is not going on about marine biology." He chuckled. | |||
Wilda sighed. "Well, here's hoping they make it, and we're here to greet them, even if the town isn't." She put a hand on Methuselahâs shoulder. "Come on, we should get inside before they can see us clearly." | |||
"Youâre right. I should start showing everyone how to activate the traps anyway." His reply came, as he closed the doors and locking each one's safeguards accordingly. | |||
They didn't wait very long, before the sounds of destruction began⦠and ended. | |||
Everyone listened in anticipation and confusion, expecting thunderous explosions above them, but instead only one, metallic rather than explosive, crashing sound. Eventually, Methuselah and a group of a few guards gathered by the doorway, listening. | |||
Suddenly, the sound of frantic banging made Methuselah jump nearly out of his boots. The guards accompanying him did little more than bristle and brandish their weapons at the door. | |||
"Methuselah! Are you there? If you are, open the door now!" Kalarenâs voice came, muffled by the door. | |||
Methuselah jumped slightly more, before relaxing and nodding knowingly and reassuringly, before walking closer and replying, "Password?" | |||
At first, there was only growling, then silence. | |||
"Drowssap." | |||
"Great. Now the combination." | |||
"You know it doesn't work, now open the blasted door!" | |||
"Right." | |||
One and a half minutes later, he opened the door to a bloodied, bloodshot, blood red Kalaren. | |||
"Wow, Kalaren, you look.. bloody." Methuselah said. | |||
"Like you picked a fight with a dragon," one of the guards said. | |||
"Three dragons," said another. | |||
Methuselah hastily added, "Uh, where are the others? Did you come in those machines? We thought they were leading a bombing thing." | |||
"Get out of there. Commander Mattheas has a lot to tell you. Tell everyone. We are supposed to meet in the town hall."Kalaren turned around and limped away without another word. | |||
"Right. Okay everyone! We are fine, pretty sure. To the town hall, no slacking." Methuselah yelled. | |||
â------------------ | |||
Stirling followed Lancaster into the war room of the town hall along with Dr. Jellyfish, one of the newly released scientists, and the other council members who'd stayed in Aragarth. | |||
Lancaster waited for everyone to get settled, and then stood up to address everyone. | |||
"Alright, let's get this started.â Without another moment, Matheeas launched into his report. | |||
âSilverstine and I were able to find some plans the rogues had for the mines, and we gathered from them that Vladek had planned to connect the various mines together, allowing for faster transportation of goods or troops to many different places in the surrounding region, including his castle. Unfortunately, we were discovered shortly afterwards, and were forced further into the tunnel we had chosen.â | |||
Briefly, he looked to Chris the -2nd, who made a silent âahâ as he understood why they hadnât returned. Matheeas continued. | |||
âWe then met up with another team. Kalaren, Kevin and the Doctor. They were also fighting off rogues. Apparently, they also freed a dozen slaves who had been working in the mines, and with them we were able to make our way to their chosen tunnel entrance.â Matheeas frowned. âWe were, however, blocked off, as a rogue fired an explosive at the mouth of the tunnel, sealing it ahead of us.â | |||
Despite himself, and the need to keep the report succinct, Matheeas couldnât help but take a brief moment to appreciate how enraptured his audience was. For once, it was nice to be the one telling the stories, rather than listening. He pressed on with his report. | |||
âThus, we were forced to take the only route available to us: Further in. We discovered a path into the dark castle itself, and freed many slaves along the way, who helped us get out. From there, we made our way through an armory, and then to the tower tops, where the Doctor informed us there would be some spacecraft we could commandeer. Which we did, but one of the shuttles exploded shortly before we escaped. We were followed, for a distance, but we were able to repel them. Finally, one of the shuttles crash landed on our arrival here. That was the noise you heard. I have ordered Kevin to work on a headcount. Dr. Jellyfish has some things to tell you about his discoveries, as well as what the slaves were mining in those tunnels.â | |||
At this, Jellyfish stood up. âI have gathered from the liberated slaves and scientists that they were also mining a particular type of purple crystal, named Crisilau, that Vladek had read about in some Ankorian document or book. Apparently, it was told to be able to pierce anything it was thrown at. They found some of this in the mines, and found that it did have properties that allowed it to split objects apart at the molecular level, similar to anti-matter. It is also very delicate, and shatters easily. They were working on finding a way to put it on weapons without it breaking apart whenever you would use it. If they were able to do this, any close-quarters weapon equipped with Crisilau would become armor piercing.â | |||
âThey havenât achieved that yet, right?â One of the councilmembers asked. | |||
âNo. And I suspect that they will be too distracted reacting to this jailLYFISHbreak to continue their studies effectively. One other small detail, I was able to study a generator they had at the fortress, and may be able to create one here. However it is quite a complex machine, and will take a bit of time to re-engineer, even then-â | |||
âBut you have a pretty good idea, right?â Stirling interjected. | |||
â..Yes.â | |||
âGreat. But for now letâs focus on the threat at hand, agreed?â | |||
A general consensus was echoed. | |||
âThen that is all I have for my report.â | |||
At this, Kevin came through the doors. | |||
âI did the headcount, as requested, Commandude. Itâs hard to tell how many miners we freed in the first place, but roughly, we have 73 remaining of 140 freed slaves, Most of the other teams we sent out made it back, except for one other, with Rick and Debbie, which is still out there. As for our group, Kalaren, Doc, Silverstine, Chris -2nd (swords), you, and me all made it back.â Kevin stated, before continuing in a more reserved and solemn tone. âChris -3rd was in that last shuttle that exploded as we were flying out of there.â | |||
Next to Stirling, Chris the -2nd moaned softly. Stirling wordlessly put an arm around his friend, who had his head in his hands. | |||
After a moment of silence and quiet murmurings about the fallen, Matheeas spoke up again. | |||
âWe might not have time to grieve right now. We have taken the brunt of their workforce, and they will likely be coming soon with either a larger invasion force with heavy ordnance, or they will try and bomb us, like you thought we were going to. Either way, we have shown that we are more than a thorn in Vladekâs side, and are an actual threat to his machinations. My point is, friends, I donât think we can stay in one central location anymore.â | |||
The quiet respectful murmuring quickly turned into⦠less quiet murmuring. | |||
âWhat do you mean by that, Commander?â One of the council members asked. | |||
âI mean we canât stay in Aragarth. At least not at all times. Vladek cannot know our location, or we risk annihilation. | |||
Matheeas noted how the assembly in front of him quickly began to turn and speak more with each other than pay attention to him. He had presented a problem. A problem that heâd helped create. Now he had to present a solution, before it devolved into finger pointing. | |||
âThe way I see it, we have three options as a whole. First of all, we could split into separate smaller groups, keeping contact via messenger gigfrans, communicators, and occasional meetings, while we also travel nomadically, in a sense, constantly evading Vladek, but still staying in the area, using the mines to our advantage to attack strategic points, waging a guerilla war. Of course, we would have to find a way to create a more⦠Mobile curse shield.â | |||
A decent number of the assembled appeared to appreciate this option, judging by the quieting of voices, and contemplating faces. | |||
âSecondly, if Sir Silverstine would have us, we could go with him in his attempt to raise an army to crush those who would restrain our freedom, which, might I add, is the reason this resistance was founded in the first place. There is the possibility of finding places to settle, for some of the families here, in those travels, albeit likely within thedudeâs domain.â | |||
At this, Stirlingâs eyes lit up and he looked up at Matheeas with no small amount of surprise, which was returned with a glance over to him, a small nod and barely perceptible shrug. | |||
âFinally, there is the option of heading south to some of our friends in Domead, and catching boats to⦠Anywhere really. In that way, we could still try and find more people to help in this war overseas. Perhaps in Britay, where Silverstine came from in the first place. Or maybe in Nordland.â | |||
The room was now mostly quiet as the people of Aragarth were now busy mentally turning over their best options of survival. Something they did well. Matheeas did the same, and came to one more conclusion. | |||
âI suppose there is one more option, and that being that we head farther south in Ankoria, finding another ruined city, and settling there, far enough away from Vladek or the Thedude for them to do anything to us. But, at the same time, we would never be able to do anything to them. We would live, sure, but we would be living in this cursed and wretched land, even if it is our home. We would have freedom, but eventually, I think, Thedude, Vladek, or someone else will try and brave Ankoria in search of itâs lost wealth and power, or even just for more land. If we took that path, we would no longer be any sort of resistance, and moreso a⦠Remainder.â | |||
âRegardless, many of the liberated slaves are not part of us yet, and have their own choices, and thus I would propose that we let each person, of Aragarth or not, to make their decision. However, I suspect, we will be able to still work together to a degree, remaining in smaller, distanced groups, for the same goal.â | |||
Stirling stood next to Matheeas, and looked out over the growing group of people in the war room, and the adjoining town hall. | |||
âLancaster, that was brilliant, I must say,â he said quietly. âVery well thought out.â | |||
âI had time on the ride here, I guess.â He replied in turn, then spoke up again. âEveryone in favor of letting everyone outside choose their future, say Aye.â | |||
After a moment of thoughtfulness, everyone did so. | |||
âVery well then. Let us relay this to them then.â He finished, and walked over to Strider. | |||
âStirling, I know I suggested that you might lead some of us, but I wanted to check with you before anything became official or anything. I havenât had a chance yet, and I apologize. <u>If</u> any were to go with you, would you take them? Would they be helpful?â | |||
Stirling glanced around first, to see if they were being paid undue attention to. After assuring himself it was fine, he took a deep breath and nodded. âIt would be an immense honor. And a responsibility that I would be willing to bear.â | |||
Lancaster nodded. âYou donât have to try and take them under your wing or anything, but if they were helpful to you, I believe some would follow you. Not necessarily because they believe in <u>you</u>, per se, but you have been gathering support to dethrone thedude for years, and thatâs why I thought it would be a good idea if you led them, that way they arenât wandering blind.â | |||
Stirling looked back at the crowded war-room, and the small archway that lead to the larger gathering in the Town Hall. | |||
âLancaster. Matheeas. Iâve been all over this world, looking for allies. Iâve found a few here and there, but theyâre all holed up in their own homes or bases. Theyâre all waiting. Your resistance here is the first group thatâd be willing to follow me. Thatâs huge.â He turned and looked Matheeas dead in the eyes. âMost people need a catalyst, or a sign.â He threw his arms wide. âOne guyâs not much of a sign. But two? three? Five?â He waved at the group. âAnyone who wants to come with me is more than welcome. But I canât promise protection. Only more strife.â | |||
Matheeas nodded again. âI understand that. I doubt that any of the families will go with you, but I know certain members have expressed interest. We both have the same goal, even if weâve been holed up here. Anyways, we need to let everyone choose their paths. Thank you again, Strider.â | |||
âNo, thank <u>you</u>, Matheeas.â Stirling smiled. A wide smile, that caused the corners of his face to crease into the very beginnings of aging wrinkles. | |||
After that, they went outside, and Matheeas essentially repeated everything he had just said. There was audible consensus for one of the four options or another, and Matheeas began splitting everyone into groups. | |||
Stirling noted that it was fairly evenly split between three main groups: Following Stirling, leaving by ship, or staying here to continue the fight against Vladek. Surprisingly, his group was the second largest, with roughly 35 people, compared to the ones heading to port, with roughly 40. A slightly smaller group than his was going to stay in Ankoria. He shook his head. Heâd been here for months, and still was amazed at the Aragarthian's will to remain in such a ruthless environment. Even if it ''was'' home. | |||
Looking out at those who intended to follow him, he was heartened to see Kalaren, Kevin, Chris -2nd, and Dr. Jellyfish. He also saw Amras standing a little ways away from Kalaren, but still in the same group. He would have to talk to her later. He also saw Victor with the people who would leave by ship, along with Dr. Skope, Tillman, and some of the council members. The last group had Chrisâ father at the front, with a grim expression on his face Beside him stood a pensive Methuselah. Next to Deke and Mauss, also in this group, was Wilda, who raised a hand, and five other littler hands came up around her. | |||
âCommander. What about the little ones?â | |||
Around Wilda were Joshua, Rita, Rosa, Jonny, and Blake. Most of whom had mixed amounts of confusion, eagerness, and worry apparent on their faces. | |||
âThat will be up to their parents, or course. I am sure there are other places and towns that families could find and stay at, at least for a little while. Many of those places would come across Silverstineâs path, Iâm sure.â | |||
Stirling nodded his confirmation. âSuch places of refuge are growing smaller and smaller everyday under the watchful eyes of Vladek and thedude, but I still know of a few.â | |||
âAnd others could be travelled to by ship from Domead.â Lancaster added. | |||
Wilda nodded. âThen I shall go with you, Stirling, to aid such places in their protections of the innocent.â | |||
Once Matheeas was satisfied everyone had chosen, he spoke up again. âNow, would anyone be willing to accompany me in traveling elsewhere to find more help, like Sir Silverstine is planning to do, but elsewhere, covering more ground?â | |||
After a little bit, some people began to migrate over to a new group, starting with Kevin, after saying some things to Kalaren. Mauss also walked over, with a slave who appeared to be holding one of the cursed swords. Many others walked from the Domead group, and now there was only 13 with Victor and the Domead group, and 30 with Lancasterâs group. Stirlingâs still remained around 30-some as well. | |||
Stirling surveyed the results, and then walked forward. âI just want to say, itâs been an honor to live amongst you all for a time. Itâs an even greater honor that some of you would choose to follow me to fight for this world. And there is no hard feelings for those who wish to seek their own paths and shelters. Iâve walked that path myself, and it can be a very necessary one. Itâs whatâs led me here to you all.â He turned and locked eyes with Chrisâ father for a meaningful moment. âI hope against hope that we all meet again, even as I know that what we fight for will claim many more lives before it is achieved.â He looked out at the rest. âYou all fight as ten men. Or women. Militiregnum will benefit from your prowess wherever you choose to go. You all are capable leaders, and it seems some have been chosen here. Whether you follow Matheeas and I out of Ankoria, or Victor here south to Domead and from there disperse, or if you choose to stay in Ankoria with Chris theâ¦â Stirling trailed off. | |||
âNegative 7th,â Chris the -7th supplied. | |||
âNegative 7th,â Stirling continued. âKnow that you are part of something greater. The spirit of the men and women of Aragarth is indomitable, and Iâve not seen anything like it. Iâm stronger for it myself, and Iâve no doubt you will impart that strength to others no matter where you go.â | |||
Stirling stood there, looking out over them. He tried to think of a way to close⦠But suddenly there were no more words. Not that heâd really even thought about what he was saying⦠It just⦠had needed to be said. | |||
''âIs this how Thingguy works his charisma?â'' he wondered. | |||
However he did it, this way seemed to work, as many among the crowd started to cheer as they were inspired by the speech, even those who were not Aragarthian. | |||
When it died down, Matheeas came up again. | |||
âThen we shall separate as Lancasterâs Lance, Striderâs Sword, and Chrisâs Cleavers, tomorrow morning.â | |||
Stirling was jarred out of his thoughts. âWh-What? You have names already?â | |||
âAlliteration!â Jellyfish exclaimed behind Matheeas. âHelps with organization! I should know, I have no alliteration.â | |||
âAs I said, I had a lot of time to think.â | |||
Stirling looked around at the people in his group, and was glad to see Kalaren and Chris the -2nd, still standing among them. | |||
__-__-__-__-__ | |||
=== Chapter 20: Epilouge === | |||
Kalaren stood silently as he listened to what the Commander and Strider had to say. After some consideration, he decided to join Stirling in his journey. | |||
As much as he would like to remain close to Vladek, be there to see the monster struck down by his own hand⦠| |||
He knew he couldnât. Not right now, with so few. He knew that in order to reach Vladek, he would have to get through the vermin that protected him⦠And Vladek had many of those. Even though they had taken them by surprise, they had still lost half their forces while <u>''escaping''</u> the fortress. No, Grimfire will not remain and be quenched. He would be at the front of the axe to shatter the shield, even if the creation of the axe took years⦠| |||
Kalaren shook his head. He was waxing poetic, and really he just needed to find some more like-minded people⦠And now was not the time for his vengeance. | |||
When Matheeas mentioned his mission, Kalaren was torn between following the leader he had followed so long in search of aid, or following Strider, who clearly had more experience, not just with the dealings of common civilization, but also in connecting with people who still valued their freedom. And, he had seen more battles than anyone else here. And ultimately, his priorities coincided with whatever gave him the best chance of returning for Vladekâs head. | |||
His deliberations were interrupted by Kevin walking in front of him and grabbing his shoulder, with a sad smile. | |||
âDude.â | |||
Kalaren looked back at him, and gave a similar smile. It was a silent conversation, which ended in verbal confirmation by Kalaren. | |||
âDude.â | |||
After patting Kalarenâs shoulder once more, Kevin walked over to Commander Lancasterâs new group, while Kal stayed put in Stirlingâs company. | |||
âWow.â | |||
Kalaren turned to the right, to see Chris the -2nd staring at him, misty-eyed. | |||
âThat was a lot.â He wiped away a tear before it could fall. âYou gunna be ok, man?â | |||
Kalaren chuckled, before cutting himself off. | |||
âWhat was a lot? As far as Iâm concerned, Kevin and I exchanged a formal farewell. I definitely didnât say dude.â | |||
Chris held his hands up defensively, barely containing a grin. âMy bad.â | |||
âAnyways, Chris, what about you? How are you holding up?â | |||
Chris glanced back at his father, the -7th, along with the majority of the other Chrisâ, and a few others. He locked eyes with his father, who nodded. Chris the -2nd nodded back. | |||
He turned back to Kal. âMy road lies with Commander Silverstine now.â he looked at Stirling, who was looking out over the various groups with shining bright blue eyes filled with hope. âHe is the way -3rd will be avenged.â Looking back at Kalaren, he continued. âMy father will make sure Vladek doesnât get stronger.â | |||
Kalaren reached out with his intact human left arm, and the two gripped each otherâs left forearms. Kalaren gave him an intense and pained smirk, replying, âThatâs why Iâm going too. Weâll come back with the fuel for the fire that will burn his fort to the ground.â | |||
Chris replied by nodding, as tears started to wet his eyes. | |||
They were distracted by more speaking by the leaders, and continued to listen. | |||
â-------------- | |||
Kalaren had helped with the first preparations, and now everything that the town needed was packed into the various shuttles. Jellyfish had commandeered the other scientists and engineers, and together they had completely debugged the shuttles, and took parts from the shuttle that had crashed and patched up another one that needed repairs. All in all, there were 3 flying shuttles, and one that would be little more than a suspended trollycar slung between two others. | |||
Lancasterâs Lance would take the larger shuttle, and would use that to fly more or less directly to their next destination. | |||
Striderâs Sword would take the two smaller working shuttles to his destination, with the intent of towing the now inoperable shuttle that had crash landed, just for itâs passenger capacity. Jellyfish was already throwing ideas around about an air-to-surface light fast attack tank. Which made no sense, but everyone nodded, knowing it could eventually. | |||
Those going to the port town would be given a mounted Goat escort by the Cleaverâs to Domead, where they would eventually disperse. | |||
The Cleaverâs themselves would stay in this region, living a nomadic life, using the mines to their advantage. Methuselah would also travel with them, to protect them from the landâs curse, as he had protected Aragarth for years now, just as his predecessors before him had, since time immemorial. | |||
Right now, however, his metallic arm was being repaired inside one of the more intact shuttles. | |||
With Dr. Jellyfish entirely swamped, fixing the shuttles and directing the other scientists, Dr. Steph A. Scope was doing his best to patch Kalaren. | |||
âTo be frank, I know more about your cybernetic arm than Iâd like,â Dr. Steph assured him. âJellyfish often waxes eloquent about it in the office. Tells me about how itâs far superior to the rest of my patientâs arms, and how heâd do up everyone with one if he only had the supplies.â | |||
Suddenly, sparks flew, and Kalaren winced as simulated pain shot up his arm and directly into his brain. | |||
âAh, right. The not-so-funny bone.â Dr. Steph sighed. âWell, good news. Now you canât feel any more pain for a few hours, so I can get this done quite a lot faster. Bad news, youâre going to have to rest for a few hours.â | |||
âWell. Gosh. Whatever <u>''shall''</u> I do?â | |||
Dr. Skope smiled as he realized that Kalaren was dead-tired, and welcomed the rest. âBetter news, it sounds like you might be flying for most of that time, if Jellyfish knows what heâs doing.â Dr. Steph smiled. âAnd of course, he does.â | |||
â... Right.â | |||
Minutes later, Kalaren was resting by himself. Outside, he heard the final rushed preparations being made. Smiling, he felt content, and relaxed. The first time in a good long while. Funny, when everything about his life was about to change forever, that he could be so relaxed. | |||
Then he heard footsteps, as one of the miners entered the little medbay, wearing a hooded cloak. | |||
âKalaren.â | |||
Lying on the medical bed, Kalaren craned his neck. âYeah? Do you need something?â | |||
The miner stood there, somewhat mysteriously. | |||
âItâs been a ''very'' long time.â | |||
Kalaren raised an eyebrow. âDo I know you?â The voice was of an older woman, that much he could tell. But the dark medbay didnât allow for much of the detail beneath that hood to be seen. | |||
âYes. Once upon a time.â The miner pulled back her hood, revealing cropped red hair with strands of bright silver. Her eyes were two different colors. The one on the left was a bluish green, and the one on the right was greenish blue. She appeared to be in her late 50s or so. It was hard to tell, because even though there were many wrinkles, she smiled so beautifully, it took some of those years away. A scar from some sort of blunt force trauma discolored her lower jaw line, but even through all of this⦠Kalaren recognized her. | |||
âMother.â | |||
Suddenly, Kalarenâs understanding of the distant voice calling him back from his rage during the battle in the Castle came flooding back to him. It really had been his mom, not some dream! | |||
âYes, Kal.â His mother stepped forward to the bed, and held his good hand. His human hand. âItâs me. Iâm here.â | |||
âHow? Why now?â Kalaren said, as his voice started to break. | |||
âIt is a long story. This is as soon as it could be, according to the One who plans all things.â | |||
âBut how did you survive? I thought Vladek⦠I saw Father die⦠and Sarah and Lucy, theyâ¦â Kalarenâs voice was stopped by a sob that almost escaped. Instead of speaking, Kalaren pulled his tearful Mother into a hug. Slowly, he began to cry. Quietly, softly, as he was finally able to begin to voice what he had felt every day for almost eight years. | |||
âI thought Iâd lost you. I thought Iâd lost everyone, everything. Iâve been here, trying to find a way to exact revenge on that <u>'''monster'''</u>, everyday trying to figure out another way to do so, but-â | |||
âI know, Iâve seen you working with these people, and Iâve gathered enough to be so proud.â She gave him a quick squeeze, then pulled back to get a better look at him. âI know you escaped after being captured. I know Vladek used and tortured you, and you remained strong. I know that youâre still capable of kindness and love, and yet you use your anger to protect against the monsters.â She ruffled his hair. âAnd Iâm sorry that I couldnât be here earlier.â New tears flowed as she sat down into a chair and held Kalarenâs hand. âIâm so, <u>'''''so'''''</u> sorry.â | |||
Kalaren shook his head fiercely. âYouâre here now.â | |||
His Mother smiled weakly, and then continued. âYour father made sure that I got out of the house and hid before Vladek could find me. Still, I was able to see what happened when you entered the room. I followed you as he dragged you to his ship, and then I stowed away amidst some supplies he had brought. I wasnât able to get to you before they secured you in that room, and before long I was found. However, I was able to pass myself off as a slave that had been working there, and that was my cover for these years. If they knew who I was, they may have discovered too much about the sword your father and I made⦠The sword you have been carrying around since you got it in the castle.â | |||
Kalaren quickly glanced down at the sword, which was leaning against a corner. | |||
âYour Father and I cursed it so only Nuradan and his descendants would be able to use it. It is tied by blood. Your father expected betrayal, just not at this scale.â She sighed. | |||
âEvidently, that made Vladek furious. It is a good thing the magic used to create it is different than the magic here, and thus prohibited them from finding out more about it, as the secrets of the sword may be the one thing we can use against him.â | |||
âSecrets?â | |||
âSome. For the most part, it works as an instrument that harnesses magic. When you used it in the castle, fighting that dark knight, it expressed your rage in fire. If you trained with it, you would probably be able to control any amount of magic around you. Which seemed to be what Vladek needed to protect him from this thedude fellow.â | |||
âIt also will not tolerate being held by anyone not of Nuradanâs bloodline. If someone tries, they will feel a horrible, painful burning sensation in their veins. It doesnât actually hurt the person very much, it just feels like it. Which brings up a question I have been having.â | |||
âYes?â | |||
âYou donât have a son, do you?â | |||
âWhat? No!â | |||
âThen I wonder how Silverstine was able to hold it.â | |||
Kalaren sputtered. âHeâs like, 20-some years older than me!â | |||
Mother shrugged. âStranger things have happened. I mean, we have time travel, dimension travel, cursed lands, I just had to make sure. In any case, we will have to ask him. It could be you donât have a son yet, and he traveled back in time to help you. But if he did, I would assume things went really bad in the future. Anyways.â | |||
âKalaren!â Jellyfishâs voice echoed from close outside. âHowâs that JELLYFISH arm!?â | |||
Striding through the door of the medbay, He stopped once he saw this clearly emotional conversation. | |||
âI heard you yell something, and that usually means you are either very emotional, or insane like me. Everything okay here?â Jellyfish asked. | |||
Kalaren nodded. âEverthing is fine. Jellyfish, this is my mother, Sarma.â | |||
âAh! Not Amras, then. Wait, thatâs just Sarma backwards. You know, thatâs never a good trick. Like spinning.â | |||
Sarma smirked and shrugged. âWorked well enough for long enough.â she turned back to Kalaren. âBut now Iâm here.â | |||
â------------------------- | |||
Stirling laughed, one hand on the spaceshipâs flight stick, and another on his co pilotâs shoulder, Chris -2nd. Chris was also laughing, as he held the radio up for Stirling to use. | |||
âAlright, Lancaster. Iâll be sure to tell Jellyfish off about it. Good luck buffing it out!â | |||
âIt looks nothing like me,â Matheeasâ reply came over the radio. âI know itâs supposed to be a compliment, but me as a jellyfish doesnât make any sense. And putting it on the outside of the ship for all to see means Iâll have to avoid explaining it. Besides that, we are obviously not an official shuttle, so we are going to have to stop soon to get rid of it.â | |||
âMakes sense,â Stirling replied. | |||
âWhere are you going to do that?â Chris the -2nd asked. | |||
Before Matheeas could reply, Stirling interjected. âItâs probably better if we donât know, actually. The less we know of each otherâs whereabouts, the less chances weâre all captured or found.â | |||
There was a silent pause as everyone considered. Then Matheeas replied. âPretty soon weâre going to be out of range for the speaking radio. From there, weâll have the long range beepers to communicate with.â | |||
âMorse Code,â Stirling clarified. | |||
âRight, morose code.â | |||
âItâs a good thing we will have that, because I am going to have to tell you guys all about military slang. You desperately need it.â | |||
Stirling and Chris heard Matheeas chuckle, and then his co-pilot muttered something to him. âWell, Iâve got to go. Donât hesitate to call on me, Commander Silverstine. Hopefully, Iâll be able to surprise you with an even larger force when we meet again.â | |||
âIâd like that.â | |||
âSee you on the other side. I think thatâs how it goes.â | |||
Then the radioâs static overtook them, and Chris clicked the audio channel off. | |||
The two men looked out the windshield. This shuttle didnât have a busted one like the one theyâd initially piloted to Aragarth. | |||
Outside, a number of thick clouds mostly obscured their vision, but Stirling was confident of their direction. | |||
âWell, thatâs it, then.â Chris said. âWeâre leaving Ankoria, Iâm leaving my old commander, and the future is filled with even more uncertainty.â He glanced at Stirling, who was still smiling. âBut I have more hope than Iâve ever had in my whole life.â | |||
âI canât wait for you to see Aquila,â Stirling said suddenly. âThe people can be a bunch of pricks, but itâs absolutely beautiful.â | |||
âWhat do you mean?â | |||
Stirlingâs smile turned into a full grin. âYouâve lived your whole life in the Cursed Land, right?â | |||
âYeah?â | |||
Stirling snatched the radio, and contacted the other ship that flew next to them. âJellyfish, letâs pitch down below the cloud cover. These folks need to see <u>green</u>.â | |||
âSounds like a jolly good idea! But only for so long, the clouds are good cover.â | |||
âOf course.â | |||
Both ships slowly nosed downward, and Stirling watched Chris staring through the windshield with even amounts of anticipation and apprehension. | |||
Then they broke through, and Chris took in their surroundings. | |||
Directly below them were the tips of some mountains that continued south Off to the north, was a thick, black, and dark forest. He pulled his attention away from it quickly, and stared straight ahead. | |||
Ahead, the mountains dropped away into a valley so green, he at first thought it was a giant emerald. Here and there were small blemishes, that, as Chris struggled to understand the distances and proportions of things, he realized were tiny hamlets, with smoke rising from chimneys too small to see from this high up. The mountains hemmed this massive, green valley, on the right side, perfect as a picture frame. On the left, the green spilled into a paler and paler mint, as it blended with snowy fields. | |||
For a while, the only sounds were the straining shipâs engines, and the howling wind. | |||
âWow.â Chris finally said, in a tone that revealed how small he suddenly felt. âIs it like this everywhere?â | |||
âNo,â Stirling said. âItâs <u>all</u> different.â | |||
âWow. Thatâs⦠A lot.â | |||
âItâs worth fighting for.â | |||
Chris nodded, and for awhile, only silence followed, and eventually they drifted back up. | |||
Stirling looked out at the other shuttle, and the cargo they were carrying between them. The disabled ship. He listened to the people behind them as they murmured casually. | |||
This was a strong people. Strong allies. | |||
Heâd been looking for allies for so long⦠Looking to restore hope to others. Rekindle some sort of fighting spirit! | |||
He chuckled. Heâd had a fighting spirit for some time now, but heâd certainly not had much hope for himself. Yet, from the depths of Ankoria, heâd found some. | |||
Now, finally, he felt it. | |||
Hope that this wasnât going to fail. | |||
Hope against his fear that as much as he could try, the only thing he could do was go out in a final blaze of glory, drive ''one <u>last</u> impact'' against thedude from the Silverstine clan. | |||
Hope that he was not the end of his familyâs story. | |||
Hope that he might find his family, again. | |||
Hope for a home. | |||
He felt a similar hope, resonating and reverberating grimly amongst these people, and something more. | |||
A deadly decisiveness that Stirling knew well. | |||
They would do <u>whatever</u> it took to achieve their goals. They were unified by this. And that is what made them strong. | |||
Checking the controls yet again, Stirling refocused his attention on the skies. | |||
This avenging blaze he had been building had a lot more fuel than he thought. | |||
Together, they could call forth more brave people. He already knew of a few that would gladly join such a force, once it was presented to them. | |||
He chuckled. âStirlingâs Swordâ would be ready. | |||
______________________<blockquote>'''''<u>Fuel for the Fire.</u>'''''</blockquote><blockquote>'''''<u>The End.</u>'''''</blockquote><nowiki/>[[Category:Stories]] | |||
[[Category:Stories by JamesAT13]] | [[Category:Stories by JamesAT13]] | ||
[[Category:Stories by RedFireDog6]] | [[Category:Stories by RedFireDog6]] | ||
[[Category:The Additional Manuscripts]] | [[Category:The Additional Manuscripts]] | ||
Latest revision as of 17:53, 7 May 2022
Fuel For the Fire, by JamesGinger and Redfiredog6
Prologue
-
Strider glared into the wind. It was a strong one, and it was in the right direction, but it also came with a warning. He spared a quick glance at the receding safety of the shore of Britay. Perhaps it would have been more prudent to wait, but after these past two years on the sea, he liked to think he'd seen worse than this coming storm. Hopefully, he and his skiff could ride the momentum and get to his destination all the sooner.Â
He turned away from the wind, and peered ahead, to the north. On the far distant horizon to his right was the northern reaches of Ankoria, that cursed land, where nothing good grew.
But he wasn't going there. He was heading to the far north. Nordland, where he hoped to gain allies in the powerful warriors of North Island. Legend had it that when thedude first invaded the frozen north, they had been able to hold their own against his forces, and eventually routed him. However, in the past year, they had finally succumbed to the overwhelmingly increased forces of thedude, and their stronghold of North Island was now thedude's northernmost outpost.Â
Stirling wondered if their eventual downfall had something to do with hope. Perhaps, after seeing nearly every other nation fall, did the Nordeners not see any reason to hold out?Â
He wanted to rekindle that hope.
Tacking the sails yet again, he peered worriedly up at the changing sky.Â
Speaking of hope, he had to keep his own up. This storm was promising to be quite a rodeo.
---------
Chapter 1: Why you don't Argue with Enchanters
Kalaren was having quite a busy day. No, there were no attacks. He was busy with errands. From delivering laundry to stomping on wolf spiders, sharpening weapons, making some, and then delivering them to the armory! Tossing a salad for a delectable lunch! Still, Kalaren did prefer this to warfare, as boring as chores may be. Currently, He was feeding the goats, deep in thought. The past seven and a half years had mostly been uneventful. He was now a full-fledged soldier in the rebellion, as he was twenty three by now.Â
So deep in thought was he, that the goats were now helping themselves to the hardy hay as he stared into the wind.
Kalaren was brought back to reality by one of the goats bleating. He shook his head before picking up the sack of grain and pouring itâs contents into the goats feed troughs.
He was soon finished and was wondering what to do.
âIâll check on Jellyfish and Methuselah, the enchanter to see if theyâve found a way to power our paradox gear.â Kalaren did so, and started making his way to the magicianâs bunker.Â
Along the way, he ran along a group of kids playing kickball in the street with a patched up ball Jellyfish had put together for them. He stopped to watch. Â
There was Jonny and Blake. They made one team.
Then there was Joshua and Rita. To the side, reading a small battered scroll was⦠hmm. Kal had to think for a minute. Ah yes, Rosa. She was the quiet one.Â
Kalarens thoughts were again interrupted as his face met the kickball.Â
Staggering backward, he wondered why his reflexes hadnât saved him. However, it appeared that the last few years had traded some of those reflexes for pain tolerance. Shaking it off, he chuckled and kicked the ball back to the offenders, waving away their apologies.
The rest of the walk was entirely uneventful as he walked through the rest of Aragarth.Â
Several minutes later, he arrived at the enchanterâs quarters. Until recently, it had only been a bunker. It was originally a cellar of some building, long reduced to rubble, though at the passing of Grimoir, the previous enchanter, his replacement, Methuselah, saw to the repair and fortification of the original building. The result was quite desirable for such a resistance. He approached the houseâs door and knocked, waiting for Methuselah to answer. He soon heard a voice.
âWho goes there?â
Kalaren had forgotten about how Methuselah was a little too overzealous about protecting this bunker.
âKalaren.â
âVery well. Do you remember the password?â
Kalaren sighed. "Drowssap.â
âVery good! Now you put in the key code.â
Kalaren switched the numbers on the tumbler lock they had broken off a briefcase they found previously to the code. The lock didnât even work, but whoâs to argue with an enchanter?
âThere, I put it in, could you let me in now?â
âYes, of course! As soon as I open these other locks.â
Kalaren waited two minutes before he was finished. The door opened to show Methuselah. He had brown hair and a thick chinstrap beard, along with his piercing grey eyes. He was dressed in a brown tunic, black pants and a navy robe. He had a rank 3 sorcerer's staff, Chosen because he thought he could utilize the maelstrom energy stored inside. Kalaren tried to separate himself from the paradox equipment as much as he could, as maelstrom energy was the same thing that had almost smashed his father.Â
âVladek beat it to the final blow though,â he thought, before his thoughts were cut short yet again by Methuselah.
âKalaren! You should see what Jellyfish and I fixed up!â
âGreat! Sure, I will!âÂ
Methuselah smiled. âPerfect! This will revolutionize our technology!â
Kalaren followed Methuselah through the bunker, observing the layout.
In this large sort of greeting hall, there was a Wormholer and two shinobi swords near the door, and a wooden bridge that was over a pit that contained sharpened stakes at the bottom. At the other side of the bridge, was a mechanism to wind up the bridge. Not only would the tilted up bridge block the entrance to the stairwell behind it(leading further into the bunker,) but it also formed a barrier against projectiles.
He started descending the staircase, noting the portraits on the walls. He knew there was various weapons and triggers to various traps behind them. Other than the portraits, there was a continuing bookcase containing most of the literature of Aragarth, and some weapons and switches hidden among the books, even a secret passage, he knew, that led into the forest surrounding the city!
It was like a typical wizard's tower, but in reverse. And more booby-trapped.
They passed many rooms, with simple traps devised to use little or no electricity, as you could hardly find a power source other than magical energy, which was largely corrupted. Halfway down, they passed through a small room that Dr. Jellyfish had shown off before, which did utilize some energy. Mostly hot-wired by Jellyfish, there was an airlock that, when activated by one of the hidden switches could shut the doors and the four vents on the roof would release acidic, noxious fumes.Â
They quickly passed through that room.Â
Kalaren also noticed Methuselah appeared to be distracted, occasionally stopping mid-stride and muttering, before continuing on as if nothing had happened. Kalaren knew that Methuselah was actually multitasking. He had to in order to keep the spell going which kept everyone in the ruined city of Aragarth from being corrupted, though, even with his distracted demeanor, he was also clearly very excited about what he was going to show Kalaren.
They reached the bottom floor as Jellyfish watched several rodents running in hamster wheels trying to get the scraps of food hanging outside of the wheel. Currently Jellyfish was bringing them the small pieces of food and many of them stopped running to eat. Next to him was two wormholers, it looked like one of them was empty of ammo, and the other was bursting with energy. Jellyfish turned towards them and it was quite apparent he was especially excited.
âMethuselah! You brought Kalaren!! WONDERFUL!!! Youâre just in time! Iâve finished going over the results from these two wormholers, and Iâve found the common denominator quotients that should correlate across all known Paradox Tech!â
âEureka!â Exclaimed Methuselah. Kalaren was, as you would imagine, very confused.
âWhat?â
âCome see!â he cried, waving Kalaren over to the two Wormholers, having completely tossed all of the lunch-scraps to the rodents. Kalaren nodded and came to the table where the wormholers were located.
âTake a look. These two Wormholers were at varying charges , but roughly like 30% and 45% or something. Normally, weâd save these, use them in some fight, and once they were drained, theyâd be utterly useless.â he gave a mocking frowny face. âMaybe broken down for parts. BUT! With the power of our combined genius, I and Methuselah have found a way to extract the Maelstrom from any Paradox tech, and inject it directly into another, revitalizing the energy pool, and extending the life beyond the total sum of the original two sums!â
Kalarenâs expression went sour.
âLovely, weâll use these things more often.â Kalaren said as he gestured to the weapons. âAnd what does these animals have to do with it?â Kalaren pointed at the rodents on the hamster wheels.
âOh, those are unrelated! They are just creating a little more energy. They may be eating more food than they are producing energy, However.â Methuselah exclaimed with a frown.
Jellyfish shared his frown as he mused. âWhat we really need are electric eels.âÂ
Kalaren cocked his head slightly to the side. âElectric eelsâ¦.?â
âOh yes! When I was sane, and worked in a prestigious laboratory off-world with the Nexus Force, we had electric eels. They were fun to pet.â
Kalaren raised both his eyebrows.
âOh, and they also powered the laboratory they were located in. Sadly, not mine, but thatâs ok,â the scientist continued. âMine ran on cold fusion.â
âOh! Then we can power the entire city! We could overload Vladekâs Fort! We cou-â Methuselah was interrupted by Jellyfish.
âUnfortunately, we donât have the components for either electric eels tanks or Cold Fusion reactors. Come to think of it, I donât remember what weâd need for a cold fusion reactor.â He waved a hand to the hamster wheels. âThus, one I do remember, kinetic energy.â
âI see.â Kalaren said.Â
âBUT!â He swung his other arm around, nearly whacking Kalaren in the face, but Kalaren grabbed his arm with his robotic arm, and froze, stopping both.
âOh, sorry Kalaren.â
âItâs ok, Iâm the one who should be sorry.â
âWhy?â
âIt seems there is another technological outage. I canât move my arm.â
â...Oh.â
They all stood there, awkwardly contemplating this development, which became even more clear as all of the technology around them began shutting off.
âItâs a good thing we canât afford enough energy to get an electronic lock for the door.â Kalaren pointed out, much to Methuselahâs annoyance.
âBut what if paradox rogues were out there? We have tunnels to escape, we donât need the door to open!â
âThatâs why you donât argue with wizards,â Kalaren thought.Â
They all decided to try and make their way up the stairs, and tell everyone the news of how they could double the life of a maelstrom-powered weapon. Going up the stairs was very difficult as Kalarenâs and Jellyfishâs arms were stuck together. Meanwhile Methuselah stated how it might be nice to get an elevator for the several levels.
Chapter 2: Shipwrecked
The waves threw themselves on board Stirlingâs skiff, but he hardly felt them anymore. He was numb to the bone, drenched entirely through, and had absolutely no control of his shipâs course, which, as far as he could tell, was drifting towards Ankoriaâs shores.Â
In layman terms, he was screwed. However, with himself being the only man aboard, he couldnât call it quits, no matter how wet and cold he was. So, he was not too unprepared when a tall, rocky, cliff-shore loomed out of the sheet of rain and lightning, threatening to crush him and his ship to smithereens. Fighting both tide and wind, he was able to veer away from a full collisionâ¦
But on the harsh sea, even the slightest error was often costly.Â
As he turned away from the looming cliffside, he heard the sickening squeal of merciless rock against his wooden hull, and knew that he now had mere minutes before his ship sank. He grabbed the essential supplies in the boat, grabbed the bag Peragrine, his old friend had given him, and the life preserver, (for all the good it would do,) and keeping them close, drove his boat with reckless abandon right along the coast, searching for a cove or beach where he would not have to climb far to find stable shelter. He didnât find one in time.
âPerry could have done it,â was his last thought.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
He woke up with an incredibly dry, raspy throat.
He was lying on his back on some form of sand, he tried to open his eyes, but the sand and sea salt made them sting. He tried to wipe them with his tunic, but that just made it worse, as his clothes were in the same condition.
He decided to bear the pain to take a look around.
It appeared he had washed up in a cave. There was a light up above, and it informed him that outside it had to be daytime.
As he sat up, he gritted his salty teeth as his body cried out as expected.Â
âToo bad,â he thought. âIt looks like Iâm not going to get to rest for awhile now.â
Looking around the cave for an exit, he realized there was apparently none, except for an exit under the clear water, where more light was spilling from.
Did he miraculously go under the water, with his life preserver on, just to bob back up here, safe from the wind and the storm? Â
Stirling rubbed his aching head. This was not a priority to figure out right now. He had to get some water, and after that, it would be beneficial to look for any supplies, and find out where in the world he was.
Checking his person, he was relieved to find his canteen, his katana, (Oh man, that was going to take forever to clean, even with his more waterproof scabbard,) all of his armor, (again, going to need to be cleaned, and soon,) a compass in one of his pockets, the rope that heâd slung over himself, and...That was it, unfortunately. He sighed as he realized that included the pack Perry had gifted him, as well as his samurai rank 3 bow. As well as...
"Crux, Thingguy is going to kill me."
A rejiggered Nexus Force communicator that Thingguy had given him for safekeeping. It was probably at the bottom of the ocean now, beyond reach. Beyond repair. And with it, their only connection to the Nexus Force Armada, just waiting for the signal...
Stirling shook himself, before he could start kicking himself. If he was going to be alive for Thingguy to berate him, he first had to survive and figure out where he was.
Having satiated his thirst with his canteen and taken inventory, he once again looked around to see about getting out. And once again, he only saw the small opening far above him, too small to climb up and out of, and the opening below the water line.
After a momentâs contemplation, he left the life preserver behind, and since he was still quite soaked, he dove into the water and swam out the other side, being sure to keep a tight hold on the rock formation, as the tide was strong on the other side. âThe tide!â He thought. âThat must've been what got me in there. It must have been low tide during the storm, and by the time I woke up, itâs turned around to high.â  Breaking the surface of the water, he wiped his stinging, burning, salty eyes and looked out. To his right, was sheer rocky shore, with no clear ways up. However, to his left was a sight for sore eyes. A short break in the impassable cliff line revealed a gray-black pebbly beach.Â
And did his eyes deceive him, or was there wreckage washed up over there?
Alternatively Swimming and grappling along the rocky formations, weighed down as he was, in his Samurai armor, he made his way to the not-so-distant shore.
A few minutes later, he reached solid ground, and refrained from kissing the ground stereotypically in favor of searching the debris for useful remains of his ship.
There was plenty of driftwood and flotsam, and there was an ill smell of rot on the beach combating the salty air from the sea. Most of the driftwood was far too old to be from his ship, which told him he had not been the first to wreck his ship along Ankoria. Perhaps the curse extended farther out into the sea�
âNo,â he thought. âI only have myself to blame for wrecking here.â He had misread the weather, and was paying the price now. He'd challenged mother nature, and she'd humbled him. Now he had no choice but to continue to challenge her, stuck in the wilderness, somewhere.
There were various tools and even some small treasures scattered amongst the old remains of ships long sunk, but most of it was ruined beyond worth by itâs countless time spent in the elements. A spyglass with no glass. A gem splintered into shards. A half of a map that crumbled to flakes as he picked it up. A grimy dubloon.Â
But the greatest treasure of all wasâ¦
âOf course. I should have known.â
Perryâs Pack.
Relief washed over Stirling.
Somehow, the backpack had become snagged on a large piece of wood with a protruding nail, and now here it was, washed up on the shore, the waves lapping at the board, like a hand shoving it up onto the beach.
âPerry must have rubbed some of his luck off onto it,â Stirling chuckled to himself, as he released it from the nail with ease and looked inside. On the very top was a towel, with the words âDONâT PANICâ embroidered on it.
Rolling his eyes, he took the sopping wet towel out, and inspected the rest of the gear.
Beyond all comprehension, the large majority of the tech, equipment, and provisions, and most importantly, his rewired Nexus Force communicator, were none the worse for wear, having been protected by the towel on top, and, as Stirling found out, another towel on the bottom of the pack, which had â42â embroidered on it. He shook his head.
âWow. Perry, sometimes I think youâre a secret genius.â
After making a last cursory search of the beach, Stirling stepped off, feeling much better about his chances in the Cursed land of Ankoria.
~~~~~~~
Chapter 3: Explaining Maelstrom Revitalization
Kalaren, Jellyfish, and Methuselah climbed up and out of the Bunker, and walked towards the town hall, (Kalaren had been able to detach his arm from Jellyfishâs)Â where Matheeas held residence. Over the course of his time as Leader of the Ankorian Rebellion, the Town Hall had become more akin to a war counsel, as most of the planning for Aragarth took place there. Thus was the reason why Kalaren, Jellyfish, and Methuselah were heading there now.
As they approached the Hall, Kalaren observed the defensive layout again.Â
There was a lantern hanging next to the door, while on the other side an Ankorian Resistance flag fluttered lightly, displaying a red stripe on the top and bottom, and a orange stripe in the middle, with a blazing sword cutting into a warped evil-looking staff. On either side of the door, groups of outward-facing sharpened wooden stakes made access to the door available to only one or two people at a time. The building itself consisted of old stone.
There was a guard outside of the door, who recognized them.
âHello. State your business.â He said, sounding bored.
âWell, we just discovered something that will change our way of life here, by giving us the power of electricity for years to come!â Methuselah replied proudly. The guard nodded.
âIâll let emâ know you got something to work with electricity. Follow me.âÂ
Methuselah and Jellyfish were getting quite disappointed with their reactions, but nonetheless, they followed the guard inside.
Kalaren noticed a few guards roaming about the main hall, various closed off doors leading to a kitchen, closet, administrative offices⦠Very few of these areas still served their original functions, instead being converted into whatever was needed, such as an armory, barracks, or in the case of Matheeas, a bedroom, here where he was most easily available. The one room that hadnât changed much, was upstairs, in the grand dome of the building, which, while mostly intact, had been more carefully repaired to at least resemble what it may have once looked like. The great Council chambers, which Matheeas still used to discuss important matters with his people, and discuss strategies, both domestic and military. They headed to this room. The guard went in, leaving the trio to wait at the door, before the guard came up and let them in, revealing Matheeas leaning over a table with a couple maps, and other officials.
âYou wanted to say something about a power source?â Matheeas inquired. Jellyfish eagerly replied.
âYes! Methuselah and I were experimenting with some of our Paradox weapons! We found out that if you took out the maelstrom energy in one blaster, and put it in another full one, it would multiply the energy! For example, if you added one quart of maelstrom energy to another quart, it wouldnât simply make two quarts, but five! Then you could add yet another quart, and it would go to nine! Approximately.â
âSo you found out a way to power the city?â
âPrecisely!â Methuselah stated.
âThat sounds great, but what happens when we run out of maelstrom energy to combine with the larger stack?â
âWell⦠nothing, really, unless we keep using the energy to power the city, which we undoubtedly will. Unless.. we could splice it!â Jellyfish realized.
âHow so?â A council member queried.
âIf we could slice a part of this maelstrom energy off of the main group, then add it back on, then it would create more!â Jellyfish explained.
âWouldnât that be dangerous? If you have too large of a exposure to maelstrom, then you get infected!â Kalaren pointed out.
âWell, yes, you have a point there. But if we could capture a Paradox scientist or someone who worked on a generator from, say, Vladekâs Fort, then we could find out how to build a generator! Or at least discover their method.â
âMount an assault on Vladeks fort? Are you insane!?!â One of the council members reacted.
âWhy does it have to be an assault? We could try to sneak in.â Methuselah said.
âYou could also be captured, and interrogated. We donât have the manpower for an assault, and a stealth mission is almost too risky.â Matheeas said.
âAlmost?â Methuselah asked.
âIâm thinking about it. How long could we have power, with our supply of energy?â
âHmm, Iâd say we have enough energy to last fo-JELLYFISH! Ahem, sorry. Enough for one year.
Thank you. Weâll talk it over. Methuselah, would you stay here as an advocate for your idea?â
âOf course!â
âThank you. As for Jellyfish, youâre dismissed.â
âVery well.â Jellyfish left, muttering to himself.
Matheeas directed his next words at Kalaren.
âKalaren, itâs yours and Kevinâs turn to patrol the perimeter. You two can choose between your goats who you want to bring.â
âSounds good, Commander!â
Kalaren showed himself out, and made his way to the stables. As he neared them, he saw a minifig a few years younger than himself waving to him; Kevin.
âHeeey Kal! Whassup!?!â
Kalaren sighed. âApparently weâre going on perimeter patrol together.â
âDude, thatâs awesome! I just finished my latest song! I can sing it to you alll along the way! In a quiet tone of course.â
âPlease no!â
âCooool. Afterwards.â
âGreat.â Kalaren and Kevin decided to mount Kevinâs black goat, Surf. In short order, they headed out of the city.Â
Chapter 4: Desolation
Stirling grunted as he climbed. Or was that his stomach growling? Or was it another mysterious creature, watching from below, waiting for him to fall?
âProbably all three,â he groused, as he reached for another handhold above. Three more feet and he would have a clear view above the treeline, to find out where he was in this forsaken place.
The initially positive outlook he had obtained upon discovering Peragrineâs Pack had quickly eroded under the silently soul-crushing conditions of Ankoria. He didnât remember the details, but he recalled the reports supposedly stating that there was some curse set upon the land that brought out the hidden evils in all living things, or something like that.
He tried not to think about it. He didnât need to, as itâs effects were seen everywhere. Everything was different shades of gray, from the dead trees to the ashen ground underneath his feet, to the stagnant pools of âwaterâ heâd come across in the forest below him.Â
He hadnât seen or heard any animals until just this morning, where he had shot down a deer, but upon retrieving it, he found that instead of antlers on its head, it had an antler-like structure all along itâs frame, as a sort of exoskeleton. This had made harvesting it rather lengthy and difficult, and his efforts amounted next to nothing as the precious little meat inside was either unbearably tough or appeared to spoil before his very eyes.Â
Under normal circumstances, he felt that would spoil his appetite. But here, in Ankoria, he found that his appetite was never satisfied. Despite his best discipline, his food-stores were already running lower than heâd anticipated, and what plant-life heâd found to try and supplement it was either bitter beyond imagining, or definitely too sweet to not be poison. Or rotting.
His water reserves were even more desperate. His canteen was nearly dry, and although he had found a small pond in the forest below, where he had filled up a different container, the water was nearly black as ink, and had smelled most foul once boiled for safety⦠He didnât want to drink the local water unless times were desperate. Which would be within the week, at his current rate.
Stirling looked out from the peak he had gained, searching for something to orient himself on the map he had found in Peragrineâs pack. There was no doubt he had shipwrecked upon the Cursed Land, but where exactly? As he peered back west he saw the coast. Following the shore north with a pair of binoculars, he perceived that the coast curved eastward, as the the glimmer of ocean was visible on the northern horizon.
âThat must mean I shipwrecked on the very northwestern corner of this accursed place,â Stirling reasoned. Checking his map, the only thing nearby according to his map was one âFortress of Lord Vladekâ.
âGreat. Just great.â
According to this map, Vladekâs old fort was almost due East of his supposed position. Who knew if Lord Vladek still used the old fort. Stirling didnât intend to find out.Â
The only other point of interest within Ankoria, on the map, was the small town of âDomeadâ. It lay far, far away to the south, on the very shore of the Cursed Land.
Stirling saw two options.Â
Either head East towards Vladekâs old fort, and Morciaâ¦Â
⦠Or head South towards Domead.
Heading east would most likely be faster, but there was great risk in passing by Vladekâs Fort, as there were rumors that the evil Lord was using it as his private residence when not at the capitol by thedudeâs side. However, if this was untrue, there could be valuable resources which would speed up his travel, allowing him to enter Morcia and continue his Journey northward with all haste via the âBridge to Unknownâ
On the other hand, heading South was safer. It avoided Vladekâs fort⦠He wouldnât have to run into any enemies other than the natural predators of the landâ¦Â
But he would have to traverse the entire length and breadth of the Cursed Land. No minor feat, considering his trip so far⦠In fact⦠In light of what heâd seen the past few days⦠The sooner he could leave this wretched land, the better.
East it was.
~~~~~
Kalaren and Kevin had been riding Surf for some time, when Kevin had an announcment.
âIâm bored.â
âWonderful.â
âWhat?â
âNevermind.â
âHey, I know, Iâll surf on Surf! Mind if we switch places?â
âYes. Iâm going to sit here like a civilized minifig being.â
âOh, ok! Iâll just do it up here then!â Kevin said as he stood up on the goat and did your typical surfer stance.
âCowabunga!â
âNo donât! Stop!â
âNo, this is fine, dude! Itâs like land surfing or someth-â
*WHACK*Â
Kevinâs head met an oncoming branch, where he stayed, pushing Kalaren off Surf and into the brambles underfoot. Kevin, after recovering from the immediate shock, realized he had hung onto the branch.
Raising a finger, he said,âThis is what Dr. Seuss would call âa lurchâ.âÂ
Kalaren groaned as he tried to get up out of the thick prickly undergrowth without making too many tears in his clothing.
âSurf, come back!â Kevin wailed. The goat did not immediately appear to hear him, causing him to sigh gloomily. âSurf waits for no one.â But then the goat stopped, turned about, and began careening back!
âSurf! Come back! Wait, no, stop! No Surf!â Kevin cried, panicked, right before the big black goat knocked him down, to the left of Kalaren. Thankfully, the goat missed Kalaren.Â
âKevin, one of these days you will pay.â Kalaren muttered. as he got up and wiped the dirt and pulled the thorns out of his clothes.â He stared after the goat. âHalt, Surf!âÂ
Kevin had gotten up and put his hand on Kalarenâs shoulder.
âItâs no use. You canât stop the killer wave.â He said. But Surf did halt.
âWoah. You killed the killer. You rode the wave. You turned the wind! You are, The Dudeman!â
âOne, has it occurred to you that 'The Dudeman' sounds an awful lot like âthedudeâ?
âWell, no but it sounds epi-â
âTwo, âThe Dudemanâ has a challenge for you! Just BE QUIET for five minutes!â
âHmm.. Ok. I can do both. Instead of The Dudeman, Iâll call you The Mandude, and Iâll be quiet tonight, when Iâm sleeping!â
âBoth of which alleviate NOTHING.â
âSure they do! You donât sound like thedude anymore!â
âI suppose. Come on, letâs get Surf, and continue scouting.
~~~~~
Stirling continued his path eastward, through the mountains. It was slow going, as the land was rocky, craggy, and there was no semblance of any path. Each step disturbed the earth, and raised the grey dust of countless lonely years. It was like walking on a moon. Except, with mountains. And full gravity. In his sandy, itchy, heavy armor.
The next day, he was attacked by something resembling an eagle. Or a Raven. Some hideous crossbreed thing. However, after defeating it, he reasoned there must be a nest nearby. A few minutes and a short climb up later, he found some eggs, which made a decent brunch. He only had to ignore the rotten smell, and their strange green and red yolks. Perry would have said they were âChristmas eggs.â
Perhaps they would make a better eggnog than scramble. All well.
Banking his campfire, he hefted his pack, and continued on.Â
Chapter 5: The Dreaded Gigfran Eggs
Kalaren and Kevin sat behind a boulder on a small hill that rose above the dead tree canopy.
âItâs a campfire, alright,â confirmed Kalaren, as he gazed through a spyglass.
âLemme see, Mandude!â Kevin demanded, trying to snatch the spyglass from him.
âHang on, Iâm trying to see the person who made it.â
âYouâre too slow, lemme see.â
âJust give it a rest, I-â
âAha!â Kevin cried, as he successfully acquired the spyglass. Kalaren just rolled his eyes and let him have it. âNow letâs see⦠Heâs cooking something.. looks like one of those gigfran.â
âThatâs not a very wholesome meal.â
âWait, heâs tossing it to the side⦠He has some sort of egg.â
âOh no.â Kalaren said, snatching the spyglass back.
âHey, not cool, Mandude!â
âJust a second⦠Itâs as I feared. Yes, heâs eating some eggs.â
âOh. Oh no. Not THOSE eggs, right?â
â...â
âThat poor, poor dude! We have to save him from the worst tomorrow of his LIFE!!â
âShh! He could have heard you! Duck!â They ducked for a minute or two before bopping back up.
âOk, itâs clear now. We canât go over there because we donât know if heâs one of Vladekâs agents or a goblin or a dark elf or a dwarf or...â
âOhh. Good point, Mandude.â
âWould you please stop calling me Mandude?â
âSure thing, Dudeman.
âThat doesn't help.â
âOh, ok, man, I mean dude. or man. uhh⦠Bro. Amigo. Muchacho. No, yâknow what, Mandude is still the best.â
Kalaren groaned in agony. âFine! Fine.â He looked through the spyglass.
âHeâs putting the fire out. Maybe we can ambush him somewhere, and bring him to Aragarth for questioning.â
âSure, but where, and how, Bro-haha?â
Kalaren flinched at âBro-hahaâ, replying, âIt depends on if he stays up on the mountains or if he comes down. Hopefully he comes down. That would make it easier.â
âThat plan is off the chain!â
âGood to know?â Â Â Â
âThat plan is off the charts! No one but The Mad-dude could do it!â
âMy plan is literally to come up with a plan later, and I donât appreciate your enthusiasm!â Kalaren replied with a sarcastic smile.
âOh sorry, I thought I was enthusiastic enough, but Iâll try to up my game, like this: SUPER-BROHEMIAN!!!â
Kalaren jumped on Kevin, and covered his mouth. Partly because they needed to be quiet, and partly because it helped him refrain from jumping off the mountain and taking Kevin with him.
A few minutes later, and some more use of the spyglass, they made their way back down to Surf the Goat, and followed the stranger eastward.Â
The rest of their approach was silent. Kalaren assumed it was because Kevin was thinking about the poor strangerâs future plight, which involved various⦠unpleasant sensations.
Kevin shuddered. âThat dude has got to be hardcore.â
âYeah. Might lead to a tough battle.â
âMaybe the indigestion will hit him, and weâll just have to knock âim out!â
âWe can hope.âÂ
Surfâs innate goat agility allowed Kalaren and Kevin to move with near silence, at a speed comparative to a horseâs canter. They were about to exit the treeline when they saw the stranger up ahead, inspecting his compass as he walked. Kevin whispered some commands to Surf before they both dismounted and stealthily made theyâre way to a ledge ahead of the manâs path.Â
Kevin gave some confusing hand signals, consisting of his two fingers heading down the slope, then turning on their side and pinching his other hand, this hand falling over. then he brought the first hand back and made some wiggling figure movements.
Kalaren assumed this meant that Kevin wanted to go ahead and try to attack the stranger, while Kalaren cheered him on. Maybe it could use some adaptation. But Kevin jumped off the ledge and on top of the stranger anyway.Â
Kalaren tried to find a place where he could see Kevin and the stranger fighting, but with them being just under the ledge, he couldnât aim without the brittle edge sending down pebbles and giving him away. Instead, he scrambled to the side of the slope, where he could see the stranger.
The stranger was dressed in rusty chainmail, and had dark brown hair. He wielded a katana, which was raised to swing at a downed Kevin. Kalaren knocked an arrow and fired it at the strangerâs wrist.Â
âGah!â the stranger yelled, dropping his sword as the arrow sprouted from his armored glove. Wasting no time, Kalaren fired a second arrow at his right knee. The stranger dove for the tree-line behind him, seeking cover, as Kevin charged after him.
~~~~~~~
Tumbling behind the tree, Stirling gritted his teeth as both arrows broke and embedded themselves into his armor and flesh as he moved. Hearing the man running up, he stuck his good leg out, and tripped him.
The blonde landed face-first in the gravel, but quickly rolled over, to receive the swift heel of Stirlingâs boot to the same face.
Stirling had to hand it to him, he was tough. If young and inexperienced. Drawing his leg back behind the tree, another arrow appeared where his boot had been.
Stirling looked through his pack, searching for a ranged weapon. He quickly found one of Peragrineâs old Flintlock pistols.Â
âPerfect.â he thought, as he loaded it with a satisfying âclickâ that resounded off the rocks.
Aware he was dealing with an excellent archer, Stirling popped his head out from behind the tree-trunk for a mere second. In that second, he already saw an arrow zooming at his head. He noted the general direction, and ducked back, the whole length of the arrow whizzing past his nose.
âOoookay.â
Tensing up, he swung out right after the arrow had gone by, and saw his second assailant. A cloaked archer, with bright red hair, perched on an edge half-way down the slope. He fired, and ducked back, as a mangled arrow skittered by his cover.
Stirling loaded the pistol and swung out to fire again. This time, though, no arrow came after him, as his first shot had destroyed the enemyâs bow, and knocked him off of his precarious perch.Â
Stirling charged at the archer, firing his pistol and drawing a dagger. The shot hit the man in the arm, and the sound of armor rang out in tandem with the manâs cry of pain.
Stirling dove at the man, intending to pin him to the ground with his dagger, but the man stopped him dead in the air with his right arm. The one that had been shot.
âWhat on Crux-â Stirling began, before he was rammed into the stone, and then tossed like a doll back into the tree-line, where he landed on the previous attacker.
Fighting to maintain consciousness through the pain, he realized the blonde man underneath him had recovered, and was nonsensically slapping him. Stirling struggled to get up, but before he could, the Archer was standing over him.
âWorthless. Vagabonds!â Stirling spat.
The Archer pulled him up with the same ease he'd thrown him, and Stirling hardly felt the left sucker-punch, as the darkness swallowed him up.
~~~~~~
Matheeas set down the report. âAll in all, fairly successful.â Looking up, he saw Kalarenâs relatively unscathed appearance, in comparison to Kevin, who looked like heâd been run over by a stampede of goats.Â
âSo, where is the prisoner now?â
âIn the infirmary. Probably dying.â Kevin pointed out.
âYou KILLED him?!â Matheeas exclaimed, shocked.
âNo, the gigfran eggs did.â
âOr rather will.â Kalaren amended.
âOh. Well, maybe Iâll check in on him. Until then, Kevin, you go to the infirmary, rest up, and Kalaren, you go to that Jellyfish. Get your arm fixed.
âThanks, Commander!â
âOf course, Sir.â
Chapter 6: The Effects of the Dreaded Gigfran Eggs
Stirling woke up in immense pain. Opening his eyes, he noted that he was in some sort of medical facility, which didnât make him feel any better.
âOh great. If the highwaymen didnât leave me, or rob me, they must want something else from me,â he reasoned. Sitting up, he let loose the most thunderous fart known to man.
Naturally, he was quite surprised, and looked around to make sure no one could pin it on him. Unfortunately, everyone had, including three guards stationed around him. He was in a old stone building, patched in various places with wood. All along this room, there were rows of cots on either side, only a few which were occupied by people now staring at him. A nurse scurried over.
âCome with me, sir. You will be needing to use the facilities.â
âPardon?â
âThe report is that you ate gigfran eggs. There is no known cure for the ailment, but considering your strong physical condition, you may not find it fatal.â
âWHAT?â
âWalk and talk, sir.â
Stirling swung his legs out of the cot, and with this sudden change to vertical movement, he found that he did indeed require facilities. Badly.
~~~~
A few minutes later, Stirling felt marginally better, as he sat on the edge of his cot, with only two of his original guards next to him. Suddenly, someone a few cots down was waving to get his attention.
âDude! Hardcore Dude!â
Stirling frowned. It was his blonde-haired attacker.
âYou feeling better, man?â
Stirling stared him down. Or, attempted to. The blonde young man seem unaffected by Stirling's grave stare.
âMe and the Brohemian saw you eating those eggs, we wanted to help you, Man, but it was to late. Sorry Dude.â
Stirlingâs only response was to blink in confusion.Â
âIâve never met anyone whoâs eaten those and survived to tell the story. Whatâs it like?â the blonde continued.
Stirling considered a moment. Others had heard the loud one-sided conversation, and were now looking to Strider for an answer.
âLike eating a mad scientistâs chemistry set.â With this, he unceremoniously heaved. The people around the room responded accordingly.
âOooh, pretty colors.â
âLook away, honey.â
âHenrietta, could you please bring a towel? Or five?â One of the guards said to the nurse, placing a nearby bucket in front of Strider.
âEw.â
âSorry,â muttered Stirling, accepting the bucket. He moved to get off of the cot, but instead of going to the floor to clean up, he immediately dashed off to the facilities. Again. Followed by one guard, yelling at him at first, but when realizing Stirlingâs intent, he quieted down and followed the poor ill man.
~~~
When Stirling returned with the one Guard, (The one that had left originally had now joined the other guard in cleaning up Stirlingâs mess.) there was a few more people waiting for him.Â
There were a small number of soldiers hovering around a core group of 3 people. Two of them wore robes that reminded Stirling of politicians, so instantly, they faded into the background of Stirlingâs assessment. Â The other one of these garnered Stirlingâs immediate attention.
He had black hair which consisted of a full beard, and regular length haircut. He wore a simple white tunic, with blue shoulders and an insignia on the front of it, depicting a knotted sinister-looking staff, crossed with a bright steel sword, burning with vibrant flames, underlaid with three stripes. A red stripe on the bottom and top, and an orange stripe in the middle. Strapped to his side, the black-haired man also had a sword, with a diamond pommel. The handle was fairly simple, steel underneath, with grey cloth wrapped around it.Â
Stirling figured he couldnât take them all on. Not with these infernal symptoms. So he listened as the main figure spoke.
âI trust you feel better now?â
âWell enough.âÂ
âSplendid. I have some questions for you...â
Stirling shrugged, glancing at all of the armed people around him. It wasnât like he had much of a choice right now.
â...Which we will ask somewhere else.â A guard stepped forward with a cloth in his hands.
Upon seeing the cloth, Stirling assumed they were going to drug him unconscious, which, impaired or not, he wasnât going to take lying down. He dove forward, snatching the cloth from the Guard before spinning around and slamming it into the lead manâs face. Following through, he was able to get him into a headlock before any of the guards could recover from their surprise.
Blinded, the lead man drew his sword and deftly flipped it around to stab Stirling. However, seeing the move, Stirling dodged the attack, only to be met with multiple swords and spears pointed at him and his captive. One of them belonged to the Archer from the forest. Only now, he had apparently come around the corner while these previous events were happening.
âNobody move, and no one gets hurt,â Stirling commanded, taking control. âThis I swear, on my honor as a knight.â
âKnight?â His new captive queried. âWhat sort of knight?â
Stirling glanced down at him in surprise. Surely he would have succumbed to whatever theyâd intended to put him to sleep with. âOne with honor, who doesnât attack travellers for a living, or without reason.â There was a groan directed from the man. âMust be the poison,â Stirling thought.
âAnd this is relevant, how?â Â The man said.
Stirling lifted the cloth from his captive and checked his eyes. Totally clear. And annoyed. He squinted at the cloth. It appeared completely normal.
Slightly embarrassed, he wondered if theyâd only meant to blindfold him.
Slightly confused, his grip on the man loosened marginally. âIâm sorry, wh-â
His captive took advantage of this to drop his sword, reach up for Stirlingâs arms, yank, and flip him in front of him.Â
Landing flat on his back, Stirling landed with a solid thump, accentuated by gas. Various pointy tips were set at his throat.
âI can answer questions like this,â Stirling said. âJust donât move me.â He pointed at the now discarded cloth. âI thought that was a means of knocking me out, I apologize.â
He heard the lead manâs voice.
âMaybe if you donât try to harm anyone else here, you may be forgiven. Where do you hail from?â
âMorcia.â
âInteresting. Who are you aligned with? Vladek, Thedude, or some rebellion?â
âBefore I answer that, could you answer that same question for me, since you already have me dead to rights?â
âAnd then you gain our trust and run away, telling our enemy gathered intel?â
âIt is so romantic that you think I want or need your trust. Iâm simply travelling through.â
âThrough Ankoria. Sure.â
Stirling shrugged as best he could from his position on the ground. However, it was ruined by an escaped toot.
âYouâre specifically trying to be aloft- I mean, aloof. If you wonât answer that, then answer it later. For now, tell us where you got this.â The man said, raising a sword.
It was his samurai katana. That meant theyâd gone through his stuff. Typical vagabonds.
âIf youâre wanting more like it, Iâll tell you thatâs not possible.âÂ
The man raised his left eyebrow and looked at the katana.Â
âWhat, this? why would I want a Nexus Force Sentinel rank three Samurai issue Katana?â He said as he turned back to a neutral faced Stirling.
Stirling took a moment to study the people around him. None of them looked like Nexus Force. They were all battle ready, more or less. They had a variety of ethnicity, and most of them were very grim faced. Their gear was largely of a medieval make, though there was the occasional Paradox Rogue item. How did they know what Sentinel gear looked like?
Stirling decided that, no matter what their morals were, they were clearly not allied with thedude. This made it very unlikely, but not impossible, that they were not allied with Vladek either.
âI am against thedude.â he announced abruptly.Â
The leader nodded, though somewhat surprised at his sudden answering of the previous question. âAre you allied with Vladek, then?â
Stirling shook his head. âBefore I answer that, I would like to know your alignment.â The man seemed somewhat disappointed, but did reply,
âWe would be foolish to answer that, but if you wonât answer that now, then we will ask you this: Where did you get this sword?â The leader said as he gestured to the katana again.Â
âIt should be clear enough, if youâve rifled through my belongings,â Stirling growled, becoming irritated with his position. âI was with the Nexus Force, in a past life.â
âSo you come from offworld?â
âI hail from Morcia.â
âHow did you get to the Nexus Force, and how did you get back here?â
Stirling rolled his eyes. âYou want my lifeâs story?â
âActually, that would be preferable. In detail.â
Stirling shook his head, brushing the blades away with his gloved hands as he made to get up. âNope, thatâs it. Iâm not accepting your âhospitalityâ anymore.âÂ
The one who had been questioning him shook his head in frustration.
âHank, procedure two.â
Hank, who was a nearby guard, said,âYes sir!â Stabbing Stirlings left shoulder, and hitting an artery.Â
âGAH! CRUX!â Stirling glanced down and noticed the man, âHankâ had thrust so hard as to go through his mail. And by the excruciating pain, he might have nicked a bone.
The leader spoke up.
âHenrietta, how much time does he have left?â he asked, addressing a nurse.
âApproximately five minutes before he bleeds out, Sir.â
âWell, there you have it. We can treat you if you answer one of the questions, stranger.â
Through gritted teeth, he looked up at his antagonist. âItâll take more than that, moron.â Seeing his own blood, Stirlingâs fervor was stoked, and he slowly stood up, a hand over his wound. Many people around him grumbled and muttered darkly.
The man, who had picked up his sword by now, looked Stirling in the eye.
âI said answer one question. I suggest you do so.â
Stirling spat at his feet. âYou are without honor.â
âAnd you called ME a moron.â The man muttered, before looking back up, taking a step forward, and continued to talk. âI, am Matheeas Lancaster, and I just might be the most honorable knight here. I have killed countless, for the sole purpose to save countless. All you have done here is condemn yourself to death.â
Already, Stirling felt the cold touch of death as his lifeblood spilled over his chainmail. But he gave Matheeas a smile. âI would be lying if I said it was a pleasure to meet you, Lancaster. But I appreciate knowing who it was that killed me. Know that it is Stirling Silverstine whom you have slain, and that you will answer to Sir Thaddeus Thingguy the Second, if he ever finds out thy hand in this.â
With this, Stirling collapsed amid rippling murmurs.
Matheeas closed his eyes, and facepalmed. âWhat an IDIOT. Henrietta, please try and save him. Hank, go get the Doctor.â
âHardcoreâ¦â
âKevin, shut up.â
Chapter 7: Poisoned, Assaulted, Maimed, Treated, Stabbed, Treated Again, and Prison Time.
Kalaren was surprised at these turn of events. He thought back to his own first time with Matheeas. It had gone much better. Hopefully, this would end up much the same. Right now, he was assisting Henrietta in slowing the manâs, Stirlingâs, blood loss, which mostly was just handing clean towels over, and wringing out used ones of all of the blood with hot water.
Thankfully, the doctor came over very quickly. He was followed by Jellyfish, Methuselah, and Hank. Kalaren remembered that the Doctorâs name was Steph A. Skope, but as is the fate of many doctors, he was simply called âDocâ. He was a middle-aged man, who was balding before his time. His kind brown eyes were always framed by his spectacles, and accentuated his full brown beard. He wore a white overcoat similar to Jellyfishâs, and his grey carpetbag of doctorâs tools was never far from hand. Rushing in, he plopped right down, and took control.
âHave you staunched the bleeding?â
âVery nearly, Doctor,â Henrietta replied. âBut it hit an artery."
âThat is unfortunate! Kalaren, I want you to hold his arm up and apply pressure. Iâm going to sew this up, and then weâll bandage it.
âSounds good.â Kalaren said.
It was a few minutes longer, and then the doctorâs deft hands had finished with his patient. Tying off the bandage, he said,
âI donât think heâll be up and about for a few weeks, and he certainly wonât be fighting or doing anything physical with that arm for at least a month. I would suggest two, but I know that probably wonât happen,â he finished.
Turning around, he noted Jellyfishâs intense stare. âWhat do you think, Jellyfish?â
âYes, it makes sense. Itâs vaguely familiar. Perhaps it was part of something I learned in the Academy. Couldnât you used a tourniquet?â
âI could have, but it wouldnât have been a permanent fix,â Doc explained as the two labcoated men walked off.
Kalaren looked up at a tense Matheeas, who looked down at him and said,Â
âDo you want to guard him? Weâre going to move him into the brig and have personal doctor visits because clearly, he canât be among polite company, even if he IS a knight.âÂ
Kalaren shrugged. âTheyâll let anyone be a knight these days.â
âThat applies to a lot of people, but I donât think the KOTOS would accept someone who acts so arrogant.â
âThe KOTOS?â
âKnights Of The Olde Speech. They fought in the grammar war, and Sir Thingguy was one of them. Supposedly, theyâre quite noble. I thought they were all captured or dead, though there are rumors they still roam about.â
âOh.â Kalaren looked at Stirling. He could be a knight.
âWe better move him now. Rick, Kalaren, think you could get a stretcher, and move him to the brig?â
âOi reckon.â Rick drawled.
âDonât see why not!â Kalaren said.
While Rick and Kal got the stretcher, Matheeas dispersed the crowd, apologising for the chaos. Once the other two got back and loaded the prisoner onto the stretcher, Matheeas excused himself to handle other matters. Methuselah wandered away toward his bunker where he would probably experiment more.
The trip to the brig (Which was the same prison room Kalaren had been in all those years ago except expanded, and patched up.) was uneventful, other than a couple confused or curious glances from nearby bystanders.
Once they did get there, they set him on a cot next to the wall and grabbed some long chains attached to the wall.
However, with the sound of chains, something within the knight awoke, and he groaned. The two guards started to panic.
âOh no, heâs awake!â Kalaren muttered.
âQuoick, chain up hois oither oither hand!â Rick replied.
âYou mean his other hand?â
âYeh, that one!â
âNo, this one,â the prisoner said, swinging up from his cot with his right hand in question balled into a fist. However, the guard, which happened to be Kalaren, caught his fist and smiled at the prisoner.
âHey fella! Thanks for the tip!â
Stirling paled and fell back onto his cot. While Rick finished chaining him up, Kalaren continued to talk and made sure Stirling didnât try anything.
âSo, how are you feeling?â
Stirling glared at the two of them. âIâve had worse.â
âThatâs good. Up for a few more questions?â
Stirling raised an eyebrow. âDepends, can you answer a few for me?â
Kalaren considered this.
âWe probably can. After you answer ours.â
Stirling nodded his consent. âSee, thatâs very sensible. The knucklehead I was talking with before didnât seem to understand that.â
âThat âknuckleheadâ is my boss. Besides, you asked him to answer yours first.âÂ
Stirling made a barely visible shrug as he leaned back against the wall. âFire away, Archer.â This surprised Kalaren.
âOh, I donât have authorization to question you. Youâll have to take that up with Matheeas.â
Stirlingâs features quickly hardened.Â
âIâm sure itâll be fine. If you are reasonable with him, heâll be reasonable with you!â Kalaren reassured, then added, âOh, and my nameâs Kalaren. or Kal.â Kalaren was hit with the sudden realization that he sounded a lot like Egbert, the one who had guarded him when he was in prison all those years ago. A sudden wave of sorrow passed over him as he remembered Egbert had fallen in war, seven years ago.
âPleased to meet you, Kalaren. Iâm not sure you heard me when I was talking to Matheeas. My nameâs Stirling Silverstine.â
âNice to meet you, too.â
Stirling appeared to study him closely. âAre you from the Nexus Force?â
Kalaren started to speak, but then frowned.
âI donât think I can disclose that.â
âWhat is this, some sort of cult? Canât you talk about your own personal stuff?â Stirling groused. Before Kalaren could answer, he continued.Â
âI was in the Nexus Force, before I came here almost six years ago now.â
âOh?â Kalaren might not be able to question him, but gathering information couldnât hurt.
âYeah. Before the Faction wars. I was a Sentinel. You know what the Factions are, right?â
Kalaren thought for a second.
âI might.â
Stirling continued. âWell, the Sentinels are guardians. Protectors. I was a Samurai, and, well, I guess you know that if you identified my stuff.â Suddenly, Stirling leaned in. âYouâre keeping track of all that, right? I donât want any of it missing when I get it back.â His expression ranged from curious to severe.
âHonestly, I dunno. I wasnât the one who went through it.â
Rick butted in.
âOiâm going to tell Matâeas, the prisânerâs awake.â He said as he headed for the door.
âYou do that,â muttered Stirling. Turning to Kalaren, he continued.
âYeah, the Nexus Force wasnât all bad, but eventually I decided to come back home. Militiregnum is home.â
âI see. Did you know about everything that was happening here?â
âYou mean thedude taking over? No. I crash landed here and found out pretty quick though.â
âCrash landed? How did you get past the blockade?â
Stirling froze for a moment, clearly holding back. âIâm a very good pilot,â he said.
âReally? What did you fly?â
âAn old Nexus Force Shuttle a fr- I acquired.â
âHuh. So, you were a samurai pilot?â
âThe Nexus Force Academy program is extensive.â
âAnd generous! I mean, you had one of their shuttles, and unless you stole it-â
âYes, I stole it.â
âWait, what?â
âLetâs go with that. I stole it.â
âIsnât Nexus Force high security?â
âI had friends. But not anymore.â Stirlingâs gaze dropped.
âOh. Iâm sorry for your loss.â Kalaren assumed. Matheeas, along with Rick, walked in then.
âOh, hereâs theâ¦â Stirling checked himself. âAhem. Mr. Lancaster.â Matheeas looked at Stirling in surprise, then at Kalaren, then back at Stirling.
âEr, greetings. So...â
âKalaren tells me that if I answer your questions, you could answer mine. Thatâs something you should have led with, good sir.â Resettling himself against the wall, he listened to the reply.
âHe did? That seems reasonable enough. We should be able to answer a few. Shall we get started?â
Glancing at Kalaren, Stirling replied, âFire away, Lancaster.â
Matheeas winced at being called âLancasterâ, but due to Stirling's volatile mood, decided not to mention it.
âWhat Faction did you serve in?â he asked.
Again glancing at Kalaren, he answered âSentinel. You know which one that is?â
âYes. Moving on, how did you get into Ankoria?â
âWould you believe I crash-landed in a spaceship near the coast?â Suddenly, he shook his head. âNo, you wouldnât. Youâd go looking for the ship. Sadly, thereâs nothing left of my sea-faring vessel. I crashed into the rocky shore somewhere on the northern peninsula.â He thought for a moment. âI suppose you could check my effects and find my compass. It is somewhat corsair in designâ¦â
âI do recall someone saying something about a similar compass. What were you doing traveling in Ankoria, or what were you heading for?â
Stirling sighed. âWell, since I thought I was dead, I told you that I am affiliated with the Knights of the Olde Speech. I suppose it canât hurt to tell you now that I was heading north, towards Nordland. I wanted to speak to their warriors, find out whatâs allowed them to repel thedude for so long. But now, being stranded here, I was walking east to take the longer land route north.â Suddenly, he remembered something. âIs Vladekâs fort occupied?â
Matheeas had been deep in thought, so he looked up at Stirling in surprise at the sudden change of subject.
âIâll tell you in a second. How did you get to Militiregnum?â
Stirling rolled his eyes. âThat is a very long question. Suffice to say that Morcia is my home, and I came here from the Nexus Force 6 years ago. I was shot down by the blockade when I refused to stay away, and Iâve been on the planet ever since.âÂ
âInteresting. I assume your spacecraft was a Nexus Force model?â
âA much older version, yes. But itâs been long gone by now. Somewhere in eastern Morcia.â
âI see. I have one more question. Is the KOTOS still around? I thought they were either all dead or captured.
Stirling appeared to consider his answer very carefully. âIt depends on what you consider âstill aroundâ. The KOTOS are not what they used to be. Many are dead, some are captured; most are still in hiding. But there are some like myself, friends and affiliates, who would say that the KOTOS will never truly die.â
âThatâs good to know! Well, now itâs your turn to ask any questions.â
Stirling nodded, still preoccupied with Matheeasâs final question and response. However, he appeared to shake it off soon enough.Â
âFirst, Vladekâs fort. Does he still use it? I was planning to pass by it, butâ¦â
âItâs probably a good thing you didnât. Vladek himself isnât there too often, but it is in use. He almost always has some sort of garrison there.â
âWell then for that I am glad. I would most surely be dead if you had not detained me,â Stirling admitted. âThat brings me to my second question: Where is here? I understand if you cannot be specific, but I thought Ankoria was barren of civilization.âÂ
âWe are in the City of Aragarth, it was ruined when the founders of our group came here and it has worked splendidly as a base.â
Stirling nodded, before quickly continuing to another question.
âThirdly, WHO ARE YOU GUYS?!â
Apparently, this third question had been weighing heavily on his mind, and surprised everyone in the room. Matheeas answered promptly, and with a bit of vigor and pride, as he realized that this man was the one they needed to meet, and vise versa. This man could connect them to many allies!
âI, and everyone else in this city, (excluding you of course,) are the Ankorian Rebellion! We have been attacked by Vladekâs forces many times and yet we have survived! Our city is quite large so we were able to set ambushes and traps along the roads and paths. We would probably be able to harbor whatever allies you might have.â
âSo, weâre relatively close to Vladekâs fortress?â
Matheeas hesitated to confirm this, but as Stirling had already assumed this, and Matheeas dearly wished to be able to relatively trust him, he did so.
â...Yes.â
Stirling paused, mulling this all over. âWell, at least youâre not all brigands.â Looking up, he asked, âI assume my possessions will be returned to me in due time?â
âYes, of course! I donât see why not. If we kept them you would not be armed correctly for your journey, and then you may never reach allies to tell them of our existence.â
Stirling raised an eyebrow. âYou want me to tell others of your little rebellion?â
âOnly trusted allies. It would be beneficial to both of us.â
Mild confusion turned to thoughtfulness, which melted into a guarded smile. âVery well, Mr. Lancaster. I think we may have reached a mutual understanding at last.â
âI agree.âÂ
âAll it took was my getting assaulted, maimed, treated, stabbed, treated again, and thrown in this quaint prison cell!â he summarized sarcastically.
âAnd donât forget the gigfran eggs!â Kalaren pointed out.Â
It appeared that talking about other things had kept Stirlingâs mind off of this subject, and bringing it up brought several unsavory symptoms back.
âRight,â Stirling added, suddenly turning a sickly shade of green. âAdd âpoisonedâ to the list.â Then his eyes glazed over and he fainted.
Chapter 8: Visitors for the Strider, Part One
Stirling had feverish dreams. Another side effect of the accursed bird eggs. He dreamt of being chased by unseen horrors of nature, fighting faceless shadows demanding his deepest kept secrets. When he refused, he suddenly would find little black birds in his mouth which would start chirping away everything. Stirling closed his mouth, and tried to swallow, but instead the birds multiplied and spilled out of his mouth, only to turn on him and peck at his eyes and face. It only took moments before he seemed to be covered in the never-ending swarm of hatchlingsâ¦!
Then he awoke, covered in his own puke, which he appeared to have rolled around in, and his eyes burned. Blinking a few times, he realized his visual acuity has decreased. He could still see, but finer details were lost to him.Â
"Great. Just great."
Looking around, he got up off of the ground and realized he was no longer in the prison cell. Instead he was in a room more appropriate to a guest. It was a basic apartment size, decently furnished. It even had a small washroom adjacent to it. Looking up, Stirling saw the roof having been patched with wood and skins. Stirling was surprised by the sheer space of the room compared to his cell. A guard right outside his door was able to explain to him that he was under a form of house arrest, under the authority of the Doctor, not Matheeas. Stirling thought that mighty convenient, but accepted this state of affairs nonetheless.Â
Over the next few days âDocâ visited and assured him that though he didnât know how long it would take, his vision would clear, along with the rest of his symptoms. Much to Striderâs relief, the gastrointestinal issues did appear to be fading.Â
As impaired as he was, Stirling nevertheless made use of the time cleaning his armor and talking with visitors, of which there were quite a few.
Various townsfolk were interested in someone new, as this was a rare occurrence. Stirling was somewhat surprised, but ultimately pleased when they came by. Apparently Matheeas trusted him enough to let his people talk freely with him. Stirling considered how to use this to his advantage, but also was careful not to lose said advantage, doing his best to be a good... 'captive host'?
There were also less common folk who came by. The occasional person with some fancy title or specific occupation inside the leadership would come by and ask him questions about things abroad. Stirling would answer them as generally as he could. As kind as this resistance seemed to be, his aching left arm warned him constantly that they could be ruthless.
And then came one other visitor who stood out from all the restâ¦Â
Early the third day of this routine, the guard outside of his room let this visitor in to his room. Stirling could easily see that he was quite curious, and quite excited. As soon as the door closed, the brown-robed man gave a short bow, and greeted Stirling, who had just gotten dressed for the day in some casual medieval attire. His regular armor and clothing lay on a nearby table, still not yet fully cleaned from his travels.
âWelcome to Aragarth, Sir Silverstine!â the visitor said.
âHow do you do, sir.â Stirling replied, unable to make out his features beyond thin, white hair, and no beard. âIâm sorry, I donât recognize you. Should I?â
The man in front of him, opened his mouth to say something, then decided against it and thought for a second.
âNo, no you shouldnât. I am Doctor Jellyfish! The head engineer of the Ankorian Rebellion!â
âJellyfish?â
âYes! Ever tried it fried?â
Stirling squinted, wishing he could read this manâs face better. âNoo⦠Canât say I have. Are you pulling my leg?â
âNo. That would be a strange thing to do!â
There was a long pause as both men tried to figure out the otherâs reasoning for totally different ⦠reasons.
âSo, what brings you to see the half-blind soldier from abroad?â Stirling asked, shuffling over to the wood stove.
âOh yes! I almost forgot! Well, to get to that I would have to start at the very beginning."Â Â Â
Stirling glanced back, kettle in hand. âI was about to brew some coffee. Or what you folks call coffee. You want some?â
âWould you kill me if I said no?â
âUm, no?â
âGood. I know a friend who said no once.â
âLemme guess. The friend died?â
âHm? Well, of course! Who doesnât!â
Stirling paused. What was the point of this conversation again?
âAnyways, would you like the long story, or the short story?â
âIâm going to brew myself some coffee, so give me the long story, and weâll see how that goes,â Stirling said.
âLong story, ok. Would you like the deluxe version?â
Having got the kettle warming on the wood stove, Stirling turned to his visitor.Â
âWhat on Crux is the deluxe v- no, you know what. Iâll take the extra-super. With cheese. Just start telling the story!â
âWell, I donât have cheese, and I donât know what the 'extra-super' is. So Iâm afraid I canât.â
Stirling facepalmed. âJustâ¦âÂ
âJust...Ice? Justice? You seek justice? Do you have an attorney? I know a good attorney.â
Stirling shrugged helplessly. âAre you ok? Do you need a Doctor? How about a good psychiatrist?â
âI am a Doctor! And I have a psychiatrist. His name is also Doctor Jellyfish! Though he actually IS a jellyfish.â
âLemme guess, you havenât seen him in some time.â
âNumber one, why do you ask me to 'let you guess'? You go right ahead anyway. Number two, he visits me in my dreams.â
Stirling nodded. âYup. Certified crazy, if I ever saw it.â he thought. Switching gears, Stirling said, âSo, Dr. Jellyfish. Did you have something to tell me today?â
âOh yeah! Would you like the malnourished long version, deluxe long version or the super-deluxe with cheese!â Jellyfish said, pulling out a slimy slice of cheese from one of his lab coat pockets. It had something green sliding down the side of it.
It took Stirling a few seconds to mentally bite back all of his sarcastic comebacks and exclamations, but he eventually replied, âWhatever you like.â
âWell, I donât like being malnourished. And I donât like cheese. But you like cheese! So we will do the last one!â Jellyfish said, before tossing the slice of cheese at Stirling, accidentally hitting his face, and adding, âHere you go. Oops.â
âThanks,â Stirling replied dryly, as the slice peeled off, leaving a slimy film.
âOnce upon a time, Four Adventurers journeyed to find the fabled-â
âSkip to the end!âÂ
âEveryone dies,â Jellyfish summarized solemnly.
âNOT THAT FAR END.â
âSo, you want me to skip to the middle?â
Stirling took a deep breath. He could feel his blood pressure rising, geez.
âIâve been in the Nexus Force, I know the beginning. Skip the tutorial.âÂ
âPress the spacebar to jump! You can do it!âÂ
Stirling turned to the 4th wall. It was shattered.Â
âHey, reader. Can you help me find the end to this madness?â
âDouble tap the spacebar⦠To order a double patty with fried french Bacon!â
âPlease?â
âYou now have a coronary! Congratulations!â
âIf I didnât know better, Iâd say he was a robot with a malfunction!â
âEat twenty-nine a day! part of your daily heart health!â
âIf you decide to save me, please turn to page fifty-seven. If you decide to leave me to my misery, turn the page.â
(Next Page)
[It turns out, Dr. Jellyfish was actually a jellyfish piloting an advanced mecha. There was an issue with the processing center, which was powered by a nuclear micro-reactor. The micro-reactor exploded, and all of Aragarth was obliterated. The resulting fallout killed everyone and everything in northwestern Ankoria, which included Vladekâs fort. Vladek visits 3 days later, along with thedude. They both get radiation poisoning, and die.Â
Congrats! You killed thousands of people and saved Militeregnum! A much lower death toll than an all out war!]
Blank Page.
Chapter 8: Visitors for the Strider, Part two!!
(Page 57)
âSo, what brings you to see the half-blind soldier from abroad?â Stirling asked, shuffling over to the wood stove.
âOh yes, I almost forgot! Well, to get to that, I would have to start explaining from the very beginning.â
Starting a fire in the wood stove, Stirling said over his shoulder. âGo right ahead. I was about to make myself some coffee, or what you guys here call coffee. Want some?â
âNo thanks. Please do not be offended, good sir.â
Filling the kettle with water, Stirling shook his head. âNot at all.â
âThank you. Would you like the short story or long story?â
Having gotten the water boiling, Stirling ambled over to a chair. âIâve got all day. Long story.â
âOh. Well, the rodents should be fine for awhile. Well, would you like the deluxe version?â
Sitting down, Stirling glanced up at the doctor, who still stood by the door. âSure. Why not.â he motioned to another chair. âSit down, take a load off.â
âIâm not carrying anything. Well, except maybe this.â Jellyfish said, pulling out a slice of slimy cheese, and draped it over the back of the chair, and sat down.
Stirling stared at the slice, wondering why this doctor had cheese in his pockets. Maybe it had something to do with his mention of rodentsâ¦? However, he didnât stay distracted by it for long, as Jellyfish kicked his feet up and began his story.
âOne bright and cheery day, on some distant planet neither I or the Author knows the name of, (as of yet,) I was born in a run-down hospital. I was named something.â
Stirling was about to interrupt, saying he didnât ask for his lifeâs story, only what brought him here today, but the gaping holes that the doctor simply glazed over left Stirling confused enough to simply stay silent and see what else the strange fellow would say.
âAs a child, I was quite intrigued about science, and cybernetics. Jellyfishâs. I learned about the Nexus Force, and would have enlisted as a scientist, but I had to be proved I was sane. Eventually, I was forced to take sanity medication, and was allowed in. Most of my work was helping some paradox scientists with devising cybernetics for different biological beings, such as horses, large dogs, and even wounded minifigures. When the-â
A connection fired off in Stirlingâs mind. âHave you helped Kalaren?â
The scientist was surprised by this interruption, but replied.
âWhy, yes! I gave him that arm from Vladekâs lab.â
A thousand mental alarm bells went off. âYou were working for Vladek?!â
âOnce. Listen to the story and it will make sense.â
Stirling settled down. âFair enough.â He glanced around for his sword. It was out of his immediate reach, by his armor, behind the doctor. He began thinking of ways to get over there casually as his visitor continued his story.
âAt the end of the faction wars, I was mistaken as a Paradox scientist allied with thedude. I was sent on the âU.S.S. Botany Bayâ which was doomed to crash-land here, on Militeregnum, as you know. I laid low and away from thedude, but he did force me to do the occasional job or two. When he took over, I took up a job as a doctor at the village outside of Thunderclap Kee-JELLYFISH!!âÂ
Stirling blinked twice in surprise, but otherwise remain unruffled.
âAhem. Sorry. Ever since Iâve been cut off from the city, I haven't been able to get my sanity medication, which has jellyfish as the main ingredient.â
âThatâs ok. Go on?â
âThank you. What were we talking about again?â
âYou lived in a village outside Thunderclap Keep as a doctor.â
âI DID? Oh. Yes. I did. Thank you again. Anyways, I did the odd job here and there, which largely consisted of giving advanced medical treatment to villagers. I was rivals with Dr. Crabapple. He had a quite dour personality. But he made very tasty cookies!â
Stirling could see this was derailing. He decided to try and tactfully steer it back.
âHow did you end up working for Vladek?â
âHe came to my shop one day and asked if I could work for him for a couple months in one of his labs. I didnât have any long-term jobs at the moment, and I knew Dr. Cashewapple could handle the villagers illnessâ while I was gone. Besides, everyone would love getting cookies more often.â Once Jellyfish mentioned the cookies he had a faraway look in his eyes.
âThey were heavenly.âÂ
Ignoring the heavenly cookies mentioned, Stirling asked, âWait, so you met Kalaren in Vladekâs lab? Was he working for him as well???â
âIâll get to that. I walked out of my shop and was led to Vladekâs carriage. We rode in that for a very long time. We picked up two others. One was very friendly, if nervous. The other one seemed very sinister, and sat next to Vladek. They talked in low tones together. When we arrived at the fort, Vladek himself showed us our accommodations, and then showed us the downstairs lab, In which Kalaren was sleeping strapped to a table. Vladek gave us instructions to take DNA samples daily. We were also permitted to do small, meaningless experiments to him, such as poking him with a stick. We were also allowed to give him silencer.â After a second, Jellyfish added, âIt does exactly what it sounds like.â Jellyfish sighed, and took the piece of cheese that was on the chair and started nibbling on it. Like a rat.
âSo...He was a prisoner.â
âNo. He was a doctor. And a part time baker. Why?â
âIâm talking about Kalaren. Are you?â Before the Dr. could reply, he waved his hands erratically. âForget that, nevermind. How did you and Kalaren escape and end up here with the resistance?âÂ
âWell, one time, the other two scientists cut off his arm because the DNA samples were taking too long. I wasnât there, though. When Vladek found out, he was not pleased. but the other scientists pitched the idea of cloning Kalaren directly, he calmed down. So they popped him in the cloning machine, and afterwards, he woke up and I was the only one in the room. I gave him a cybernetic arm and we stormed through the fort, out the window into the moat with sharks, then away across the plain and into the forest. We met up with the Ankorian Resistance and they knocked us out. Like you, except quicker. It was more of a âspur of the moment kind of thing.â
âDo you regret it?â Stirling asked.
âYes. I will never have such delicious cookies.â
âAgain with the cookies!â Stirling thought. Just then, the kettle whistled, and Stirling got up as fast as he could. âYou still havenât told me why youâre here today, though.âÂ
âOh! Yes. Well, you wouldnât be getting the Super Deluxe Long Version if I skipped over the hiatus in between my getting beat down and coming here and eating cheese while talking to you, Sir Knight.â
âGood point.â
âAlright! So, I woke up, and Kalaren filled me in. Basically, Kalaren was forced to tell Matheeas all about our escapades. Matheeas reasoned that Vladek would send out a search party, which could very well outgun us. Kalaren and I volunteered, and fought in the battle. It was difficult, and we had losses, but we were victorious! Then, and in subsequent battles! The latter being much easier, since we were able to prepare better. Anyways, I was elected as the head tech expert, and Dr. Skopeâs head assistant over the past few years!â Jellyfish smiled with pride, and took an especially large bite of cheese, which made him frown in distaste.
Stirling had already poured the hot water and instant coffee-like mixture together. However, he hadnât sat back down, instead opting to meander around the room to his sword. Now he leaned against the very table that the sword did, and took a sip of the bitter liquid.Â
âOk. Does that bring me up to speed?â Stirling asked over the rim of his clay mug. âNow will you tell me what your question was?â
âI didnât know you were particularly slow. Why would this information make you faster?âÂ
This coffee wasnât helping. Stirlingâs blood pressure was rising. âWhy. Are you here.â he enunciated.Â
âOh, no reason. Just to say hi to a fellow Nexus Forcer!â
Stirling stared at the back of Dr. Jellyfishâs head. âNo reason? No reason?!â His grip on the clay mug tightened. This was 15 minutes of his life that he would never get back, listening to a crazed lunatic who didnât even know his own name.
Jellyfish turned his chair around and pondered for a second. Raising one finger, he said, âOh! I just remembered!â He leaned forward. âHow are things going in the Nexus Force? Did they place my infinite cookie machine derived from one of Brick Furyâs implants in the Venture League break-room?âÂ
Stirlingâs mug shattered under his white-knuckle grip, and with it, whatever semblance of casual conversation with this so called âdoctorâ.
âYou- It- COOKIES!â Stirling spluttered. He found that his mounting frustrations could not be voiced properly.
âYes! If only they were Dr. Camelfishâs cookiesâ¦â
âAUGH!â he cried throwing his hands up in the air, as well as coffee. This alerted the guard, who burst in with two swords un-sheathed.
âWHO DIED?! DO WE NEED A DOCTOR? I MEAN, ANOTHER DOCTOR! DOES ANYONE NEED CPR!?!â The tense guard said.
The intrusion of someone other than the torturous Dr. Jellyfish brought Stirling some semblance of sanity. He pointed at the relaxed, well groomed man in the chair.
âTAKE HIM A- ahem. I meanâ¦â He looked down at himself, only now realizing heâd spilled Ankorian instant coffee all over himself. âI mean, Um. Nothing, guardsman. Weâre both alright. I just spilled some hot coffee.âÂ
The now embarrassed guard slowly sheathed both swords and walked out of the room awkwardly.
âOh⦠My.. Apologies.â
Jellyfish looked at Stirling nonchalantly.
âYou should have asked him for a towel.â
Stirling shook his head. âI have one over here in the washroom,â he answered. He picked up his sword and walked over to the washroom, where he pulled a towel off a rack. Then he came back to his armchair next to Jellyfish and sat down.
âSo, you were asking about the Nexus Force?â
âYes! Specifically about the Venture League cookie machine matter.â
Stirling shook his head. âIâm afraid I havenât been off the planet in a little over 6 years. And I wasnât part of Venture League, but you know that, since youâre probably who identified my gear.â
âOh. Yeah. Well, what was the state of the NF before you left?â
âWellâ¦âÂ
Stirling and Dr. Jellyfish talked more casually after that, mostly about the Nexus Force and other extraterrestrial matters. Dr. Jellyfish would occasionally go off on tangents, and Stirling didnât bother to try and steer the conversation anymore.Â
Hours flew by, and both men found a way to enjoy the idle chatter. Eventually though, Dr. Jellyfish excused himself saying he âreally had to get back to the rodentsâ, whatever that meant. Much of the day had already passed, and surprisingly, no other guests called upon his hospitality that day.Â
Stirling was relieved to see the back of him.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Chapter 9: A Warrior's Rehabilitation
Time continued to pass. The next few days were dull and forgettable compared to Dr. Jellyfishâs visit. Eventually, Stirling grew Stir-crazy and expressed a desire to take a walk. His eyesight was returning well, and no new symptoms were coming up. He felt almost well.Â
After his next checkup with Dr. Skope, he agreed a casual walk would be most beneficial. Matheeas wouldnât let him free in his city without at least one guard though, so the guardsman who usually attended Stirling and his room came along with him.
âRemind me what your name is, guardsman?â
âChris the negative 2nd, at your service!â He replied.
âNegative 2nd?â
âOne of my relatives was named Chris. The whole family liked the name so much, we all decided to rename ourselves Chris. I am the original Chrisâs uncle, and I am the same age as his father. All of the Chrisâs after the original Chris are named positive numbers, while all of the Chrisâs before him are named negative ones. Thus, my name. Get it?âÂ
Stirling blinked twice. âYes. But it still doesnât make sense.â
They strolled through the streets, garnering the attention of many eyes, but most people left the soldier and guardsman alone, going about their business.
That is, until they came upon a childrenâs game of âpretendâ.Â
A boy and a girl appeared to be fighting some invisible enemy being puppeted by a younger girl, who appeared to be the âbad guyâ. At least, thatâs what Stirling assumed, based upon her adorable attempt at an evil cackle.
âYou knights will never defeat my dragon-slave! Bwahahahaha!âÂ
âGah!â âOh no!â said the two knights, before the boy peeked over his toy wooden shield. âThen itâs a good thing weâre not alone!â
Right then, a short, round boy came from a nearby ally, dressed in a bath-robe. âBEHOLD! IT IS I, ROTUNDUS MAXIMUS! FEAR MY STICK OF SIZZLING!â he screamed, slamming his broom-handle into the ground. All four kids burst into laughter, with the âlady knightâ commenting, âYeah, that sounds about right.â
Just then, the âevil wizard girlâ noticed Stirling and Chris coming around the bend. She turned quite red and whispered something to her friends. Chris gave them a smile and a wave.
The boy knightâs eyes lit up and he ran towards Stirling and Chris, much to the embarrassment of the youngest girl. (The âEvil Wizardâ).
âHey! Youâre the foreigner, right?â the boy yelled, pointing at Stirling. The youngest girl facepalmed. The others weren't sure if they should follow or stay.
Stirling smiled, squinting as he tried to make out the finer details of the boy. âWell, Iâm certainly not a local!â he replied jovially.
The kid finally came into Stirlingâs focus as he stumbled to a stop in front of him. âThe nameâs Jonny. Those other kids over there are Blake, Rita and little Rosa!â He pointed at the others in turn. Both Blake and Rita waved. Rosa tried to hide behind them.
âItâs nice to meet you all,â Stirling said. It had surprised him to run into kids here. Of course, it made perfect sense, now that he thought about it, but Ankoria hardly felt like the best place to raise a family. It seemed almost irresponsible to himâ¦
Jonâs eyes lit up. âHey! You were beat up right?â
Stirling stopped his wandering mind and looked back down at the kid. Jonny. âWho told you that?â
âIâve overheard it at least three times now! My father mentioned it to me once.â
A wry grin settled on Stirlingâs face. âWell you hear this then. Yeah, I was beat up, but itâs not about never falling down, itâs about always getting back up.â he flung his good right arm wide, his left one still in a loose sling. âAnd look at me, Iâm back up again!â
Jonny thought for a second.
âHuh. I guess you're right. Anyway, do you want to be our prisoner? Joshua was supposed to be playing the captive king, but he got in trouble and now heâs grounded. So far, weâve been fighting the evil Wizardress, Midnight Veil, for no reason whatsoever. Itâs kinda.. Unexciting.â
Stirling glanced at his guard, who looked back at him with concern. Turning back to the kids, he smiled apologetically. âMaybe another time. I do appreciate your offer though.â
Chris visibly contained a sigh of relief, even as Jonny became slightly deflated.
âOh. Ok. Youâre welcome, Sir.â
âCome on, Sir,â Chris said to Stirling. âI think we should continue our walk and let the kids play.â
Stirling nodded in agreement. âIt was nice to meet you, Jonny.â
âYou too!â Jonny ran back to the others. âHe WAS beat up! I told you so!â The other kids grumbled. Stirling managed to catch one of their statements, âYou arenât actually going to make me eat one of those gigfran eggs, right?â
Stirling chuckled to himself as they continued their walk.
~~~~
More time passed. Stirlingâs arm was nearly healed. It was out of itâs sling now, and despite Dr. Skopeâs best efforts and admonishments to take it easy, Stirling found ways to exercise it and get out of his apartment. Since he was known around the city as a great fighter, (despite strong evidence to the contrary,) he was asked to spar. Stirling didnât need to be asked twice.Â
His ever-constant shadow, Chris, at first lent him his poor-quality one handed sword. It was heavy, but Stirling used it with the utmost skill. Nevertheless, he commented often to his beaten challengers that he could give a better lesson if he had his old Samurai katana.
It didnât take long for word to get around, and. by popular demand, Chris showed up one day with Stirlingâs Katana instead of the heavy sword.
From then on, Chris held the sword till they would go on a walk and get challenged by some foe or another, to which Stirling would accept the sword, win the sparring match, give pointers, and then hand the katana back.
At one of these points, Stirling and Chris were challenged by Stirlingâs original attacker, Kevin, while passing the town square. He was followed at a short distance by a cloaked Kalaren. Kevin strode up, and began to speak.
âHey, dude, up for a re-match?â
Stirling grinned. Clearly, this had been planned. A small crowd was hemming in the square. Quicker than normal.
âWhy? You feel bad about losing before?â Stirling trash-talked.
Kevin stopped grinning and walking. His face reddened. He glanced around at the crowd, slowing his gaze ever so slightly at a small group of tittering young girls. He turned back to Stirling and said, âThatâs not how I remember things.â
One of the people in the crowd spoke up. âYeah! you told us you mopped the floor with him! Cleaned up every grain of dirt from the⦠Dirt!â
âYeah! The mountain-top dirt!â
âWasnât it sun-down?âÂ
Stirling waved his hands. âClearly, thereâs a difference of opinion. How about we see the facts?â Here, Chris coolly handed Stirling his Katana, and produced a whistle and a black and white striped cap. He was suddenly turned into a referee.Â
Stirling smirked at Chris. âOh, youâre so official now,â he teased.
Chris raised an eyebrow. âYou would be surprised.â With this, he stood in the center of the square as both Kevin and Stirling came forward.
âOk, I want a good clean duel! I hope you two bathed recently. No dismemberment or extreme bloodshed. Remember, this is a friendly practice fight. The duel will continue until either opponent is forced to yield. So uh, hope there isnât any blood feuds or anything, this isnât a matter of pride. Itâs a matter of the audienceâs entertainment.âÂ
To this, Stirling raised a quiet eyebrow, but didnât interrupt. Â
âAnd lastly, donât die, and donât have too much fun.â
Stirling pointed his sword at Kevin. âYouâre telling him to not die, and me to not have too much fun, right, Chris?â
âAs referee, I am impartial...â Chris leaned towards Stirling and whispered, âBut Iâm betting my kid on you.â
Stirlingâs eyes widened. âSurely, you jest.â
âNo, no! My goatâs kid! Thatâs what you call them. Kids.â
âOh. Right.â
Someone in the crowd called for the fight to start. Chris corrected them, saying this was more of an exhibition than a simple âfightâ and that started a conversation that derailed everything for about 3 minutes. Eventually, Chris just started the fight out of the blue, taking both swordsman by surprise.
The first to recover was Kevin. He swung his sword wildly at Stirling, trying to take advantage of his surprised state.
Stirling backpedaled from the center of the arena, giving Kevin plenty of room to flail. Stirling would have laughed along with the rest of the crowd, but he was too busy analyzing his opponent, now that he had the space to do so.Â
Soon enough, Kevin stopped and stepped back, supposedly doing the same.
Various folks wished they had a camera, as the two opponents stared each other down in their two very different stances. Kevinâs stance was tight and controlled. He had both hands on his longsword. It was an aggressive stance.
Stirlingâs by comparison, seemed quite sloppy. He held his Katana loosely in his good right hand, standing sideways to his opponent. He swished it lightly in the air, towards Kevin.
âCome on, âbroâ. Come at me.â he taunted. Kevin considered it, but then relaxed a little bit and grinned.
âOh no, dude, by all means, you go first.â
âAha. Youâre no amateur.â
Stirling raised his sword to point, in a more precise stance reminiscent of the corsairs. He jerkily shuffled through the dirt closer and closer to Kevin, who swung his sword in a diagonal downward swipe, trying to pin Stirlingâs sword to the ground. However, his longsword was not fast enough for Striderâs lighter Nexus Force Katana though, which darted back to itâs ownerâs chest, before zipping back out to tag Kevinâs neck with the flat end of the blade. Chris blew his whistle, and a disappointed sigh went through the crowd.
âYou did well to be cautious, up until the point that you werenât. I wouldnât use such heavy swings against an opponent until you knew he or she would be too tired to dodge.â He paused, considering. âOr if they couldnât see it coming.â
With this, Kevin stood up, deflated. He nodded in half-hearted appreciation before going into the crowd.Â
Stirling felt just a bit bad about trash-talking Kevin so much now. After all, Stirlingâs Nexus Force made Katana was just a huge advantage...
Chris stepped forward again and blew his whistle, âNext up, Kalaren Grimfire!â
âWait, thereâs more?â Stirlingâs attention was called back to the spot where Kevin had exited the arena. There, his next challenger, Kalaren, was striding in with a spear. Today, he was very much bereft of his customary hooded cloak. Instead, he was dressed in light chainmail with a white tunic over it that displayed The Ankorian Resistance insignia. He had leather gloves and boots, and had a visored iron helmet on. Stirling noticed that there was some sort of dagger in Kalarenâs right boot.
âI seeâ¦â Stirling said. Undaunted, Stirling returned to the center of the ring, bouncing on the balls of his toes to get his blood pumping. Things were getting serious. Chris went through the rules quickly, not giving anyone amongst the crowd time to argue his semantics, and blew his whistle again.Â
Immediately, Stirling jumped back to put distance between him and his opponent. However, Kalaren had been watching the previous fight. He threw his spear at Stirling, pressing the attack.
Stirling only just barely avoided the vicious thrust aimed at his torso, his attention was on the spear passing him by within inches. Turning back to his opponent, he saw Kalaren coming at him with his cybernetic right arm raised to punch his opponent.
âOh. Right.â
Stirling lashed his Katana out at what would normally be a defenseless enemy, but Kalaren was able to grasp the katana with his metallic hand and wrench it out of his hands, giving Strider blisters. Kalaren turned to thrust the sword away into the ground, giving Stirling the opening to slug him, with his non-sword hand, which dazed Kalaren. Unfortunately, that hand was connected to his bad arm, which he realized only after it twinged. Outwardly, Stirling muttered, âAgh, jeez.â Inwardly, he thought,âIâll have to check that later.â
Though his hand was now cut, having struck Kalarenâs visored helmet, he was satisfied to see his opponent stagger from the ringing blow. Instead of pressing the attack, though, Stirling reconsidered how to defeat someone with such an overpowering right arm. Wrestling, pinning, fist-fighting, all out. He couldnât disarm a weapon like that, it was a part of him, (And Chris had said no dismemberment,) so what did that leave?
Kalaren had recovered from his dizzy spell, and now pulled out the blade from his boot that Stirling had noticed earlier. Some in the crowd boo-ed at the fact a new weapon was being introduced mid-battle, but both opponents looked to Chris for a ruling. Chris was white faced by now, and asked the crowd for a knife.
âNo, no,â Stirling said, neither combatant having moved. âI donât need another weapon just handed to me. Iâll make do.â A young feminine sigh was heard from somewhere in the crowd, as well as whispering from the same area.
Chris sighed, sounding old and sad, and prepared to hand his kid over to Wilda. âFine. But you better be right.âÂ
Stirling grinned dangerously. Chris blew the whistle, and Stirling dove behind himself for the spear Kalaren had thrown at the beginning of the match. Hearing Kalaren on his very heels, Stirling grabbed the spear, rolled, and twisted, landing the maneuver tightly crouched on his feet at the edge of the surprised crowd, the spear thrust outward towards Kalaren, whoâs momentum carried him forward into a slide, and ended up underneath the spear butt.
The smallest of seconds saw the opponents staring at each otherâs eyes in momentary confusion as to how this happened. Then Stirling turned the spear from itâs vertical thrust to a horizontal position, and tried to push it down onto Kalarenâs throat. At the same time, Kalaren tried to slash at Stirlingâs neck, but it was blocked by Stirlingâs pressing spear.
Chris then became a whistleblower, and blew the whistle. He then pointed at Stirling and shouted, âWinner!!â quite happily. Some were confused about who he was pointing to, including Stirling and Kalaren, but eventually the point got across.
âI won?â Stirling asked. âBut, from what I understood, neither of us yielded,â he argued, still sitting on top of Kalaren.
Chrisâs smile turned into a frown. Annoyed, he turned towards Kalaren (again, confusing.) and asked him, âWell, do you yield?â Kalaren looked down at the dagger and staff above his throat, gulped, turned back to Chris, and nodded. Chris nodded in satisfaction. He started to speak. âWell. I think thatâs everybody so-â
âNo! Not everybody.â interrupted a familiar voice from the crowd. Matheeas stepped out amongst much murmuring, and shrugged off his cloak. With his right arm, he was holding his helmet. He was dressed in full iron armor. His left arm had an iron buckler strapped to it, upon which, The Ankorian Resistance symbol was painted on. He spoke up. âIt has come to my attention that there is an unbeatable warrior in this town.â He smirked and his eyes twinkled. âI decided to try my hand against him.â
Stirling stood up. Offering a hand up to Kalaren, he replied, âWell, youâre welcome to try.â
âOh, Iâll try alright. And win. Even though Iâm offering you a set of armor for this duel!â The murmuring intensified. As well as the whispering.
Stirling too, was surprised. âIâ¦â he lowered his head in thought. Next to him, Kalaren shrugged. âYou can borrow mine, I just found it in the armoury,â he offered, his voice tinny coming from the helmet. Stirlingâs eyes darted to it.Â
âActually, I already have my Samurai Armor, though there are parts of it that Iâve lost over the years.â he said to Kalaren. Turning to his third, (and hopefully final) challenger, Stirling said, âI accept your challenge, and your gracious offer!â
Matheeasâs smile broadened, and he beckoned over to his armor bearers, who brought forth Stirlingâs armor, which was quite similar to Matheeasâs, though noticeably lighter. They also brought out a buckler and kite shield, as well as a longsword, claymore, and broadsword for him to choose from. Stirling accepted most of the armor, as well as the buckler, for his left arm. Though he was loathe to not use his signature Katana, he took note of Matheeasâs broadsword, and regretfully handed the Katana back to Chris, who looked ready to faint.
âIf Iâm going to be losing my speed for defense like Matheeas, Iâm going to need to pack a heavier punch.â
Chris wordlessly nodded, sheathing the Katana.
Stirling picked up the broadsword with both hands. He realized that his left strokes were going to be noticeably weaker, and realized he was going to have to fight off-stance for the strongest right swings he could manage.
Stirling blessed his lucky stars that he and Sir Thingguy had practiced so often with their respective off-handedness.
Chris hopefully ventured, âShall the Commander have a handi-cap?â
Surprisingly, Stirling was the one who said âNo.â
Matheeas turned to his opponent in mild surprise quickly, before turning to Chris.
Chris had lost all hope. His eyes bulged out at Stirling. âYouâre killing me.â
Stirling shrugged as he got help getting his armor strapped on. âHey, I signed up for one fight. These past two were not my fault.â He pointed at Matheeas. âTake it up with Lancaster.â Chris just shook his head and walked off while both duelists were preparing. A few minutes later he returned with a small chair and the goat kid. He sat down in the chair defeatedly and held the goat still. Snickers were heard from the crowd. Stirling was surprised at the goatâs size. It was the size of your average mature goat. Once he thought about it though, it made perfect sense. Heâd seen the adult goats before on his walks; some were a little bit bigger than adolescent elephants.
Preparations were nearly complete, and it was blatantly obvious that the entire city had shown up around the town square, and adjacent buildings.
âHEâS GONNA GET BEAT UP AGAIN!â came a shrill voice from above. Stirling craned his neck to see a group of kids on the roof of a three-story building. He waved. They waved back. One of them almost fell over the side, but was pulled back.
The preparations were finished. Chris half-heartedly stood up.
âDo we need to review the rules? Again?â
âYouâre the ref, youâre supposed to be told not to!â Stirling barked, his excitement getting the better of his tone.
Matheeas chuckled at Stirlingâs joke. Chris just shook his head.
âI donât have the energy to do it anyway. Go ahead and kill each other already.â Chris stepped back as the fight beganâ¦
~~~~~~~~~~
Chapter 10: The Fate of Chris the Negative 2nd's Goat Kid.
Both Stirling and Matheeas rushed forward. Stirling made for a thrust at Matheeas, who parried the attack, changing his overhead swing to push the opponentâs blade towards the ground. Then he continued his forward movement and slashed diagonally upward to his foeâs neck, but was blocked by Stirlingâs shield. Undaunted, Matheeas forced Stirling to step back and recover his sword, and followed this up with a series of vicious strikes that Stirling deterred.Â
Backed up nearly all the way across the arena, Stirling blocked another brutal swing from Lancaster, before giving an almighty roar out of nowhere and putting his full body weight into his shield, ramming him bodily. This took Matheeas by surprise and knocked him down. Rolling away, Matheeas stepped back up to see Stirling charging at him, his open-faced helmet showing fiery eyes. Matheeas raised his shield and prepared to thrust.Â
Seeing that Mattheeas had hunkered down, putting all of his   weight on his back foot, Stirling charged straight at him, spinning to his opponentâs right, in a terrific feint as he went for the back. However, Matheeas saw him at the last second, and raised his sword arm in an attempt to parry. However, he was too late to parry it fully, and instead Stirlingâs full-blown, spin-aided attack ripped through the thin metal and shredded the chainmail underneath. Matheeas yelled in pain before turning around to face his attacker. He let go of his sword and his arm hung loosely.Â
One of the bystanders yelled out, âDo we need an intermission?âÂ
âNah! Heâll be fine!â replied Chris.
Stirling looked in askance at his sparring partner. Matheeas was breathing heavily, but shook his head.
Stirling unbuckled his shield, stepping forward towards Mathee- No wait. Stooping down, he picked up Matheeasâs sword, and advances on the sword-less Commander.
âMight as well finish it quick,â Stirling thought, hoping that the Commander was a good sport. After all, it wouldnât be easy to lose with the entire Rebellion watching.
Matheeas wearily watched him. At least, he did until he threw his now unbuckled shield with full force.
The thin shield zoomed right past Stirlingâs twin swords, the edge ramming right into his chest and face, where itâs spinning power made it run up into the air. Entirely shocked, Stirling was sent staggering backwards, dropping both swords and landing in the dust. Extremely dizzy, Stirling was still coherent enough to grab a sword that had fallen close to him. Grabbing it with his left, he scrambled to get up, convinced that his enemy was about to pounce with the other lost sword.
Chris came over to check on him.
âYou okay?â
He got a sword-point set inches from his neck. âOh. Itâs you Chris. Yeah, Iâm fine,â Stirling said, even as he wondered when Chris had put stars in his hair.
âYeah well, you better be better than fine! My goatâs at stake here.âÂ
âYou can brand thâhat goatâh, itâs aâ good asâh youâs,â Stirling said, staggering to his feet. He turned to his opponent, who looked as tired as he was dizzy.Â
âLancatâherâ¦â Stirling began, but no witty remark came to mind.Â
Matheeas walked over to the other free sword and awkwardly picked it up with his left hand.
Stirling grinned. Suddenly, he realized there was blood in his mouth. He spat it out, along with a tooth.
âAw Cruâth.â So thatâs why his speech was off. He must look pretty ugly now.
Matheeas held his sword out towards Stirling warily, trying to assess the situation.Â
Matheeas was bone tired, effectively one-handed, but otherwise, had escaped actual injury rather well. Stirling on the other hand, didnât seem as tired as him, but somehow, looked twice as bad. Nevertheless, Stirling settled down in a two-handed stance with his broadsword, all the while grinning toothily. It was slightly unnerving. Which was probably why he was doing it.
Both advanced towards each other and did an upward swing. Their swords slid alongside each other, skipping the pommels causing the blades to end up near their respective throats.Â
Stirling smiled and said, âGooâth fightâhâ.â
There was a stunned silence amongst the crowd, which Chris broke with a whoop.
âBEST OUT OF THREE! THE GOATâS MINE!â Somewhere amongst the crowd, there was grumbling. Shortly after that, the crowd broke into loud cheering.
~~~~~~~~~
Chapter 11: Aftermath.
All three fighters received medical attention. Dr. Skope was nowhere to be found, so Dr. Jellyfish was treating the patients. Stirling answered a few questions from a nurse while he waited for the the doctor to finish treating Matheeas.Â
Not long after a loud exclamation of âJELLYFISH!â, Matheeas came out of the Doctorâs office with a cast on his right hand that looked like a gigantic white boxing glove.Â
Stirling winced as he made contact with the Commander. âSâthâorry about thâat. I thâought for thâure youâd block me,â he muttered awkwardly. Matheeas waved it off with his good arm.
âConsider it payback for when I ordered your arm to be stabbed.â
At this, Stirling felt much relieved. âSâthâounds good. Hey, iâth thâat a doodle of a jellyfiâth on your caâthât?âÂ
Matheeas looked down at his cast in surprise.
âI KNEW it! Heâll pay! Iâll give him solitary confinement!â Matheeas said as he walked out of the room.
âYou could juâth âtharpie over it!â Stirling yelled after him, before realizing that Matheeas probably didnât know what a sharpie was anyway.
~~~~~~~~~~~
After Stirlingâs physical health was cleared, (his shoulder was now declared totally clear by Dr. Jellyfish, though Stirling said he would wait to hear that from Dr. Skope,) Stirling instantly began considering when he would leave Aragarth. He had spent far too much time here already. The old impatience that continually spurred him onward was growing again, reminding him of his first and greatest mission, which could not wait any longer...
~~~~~~~~
Matheeas strode through the spacious dining hall he was in.
Aragarthians were laying food on the long table in the middle of the room. It had been years since it had pulled out at such short notice, and not prepared for a holiday. It would be good to gather everyone together, and take a break from the everyday worries that came with running a resistance. Matheeas thought over the plan that Kevin had laid out before him only a few days ago with the help of a surprisingly mischievous Methuselah and not so surprisingly Dr. Jellyfish.
âSo, Commander Dude, The Hardcore dude is looking alot better, but Health Dude says he needs to recuperate for another week! Well, I came up with this plan!â
âPlease, go ahead.â
âSo, step one,â Kevin had turned around and gestured to Jellyfish. âDoc Jelly here will make sure Health Dude is occupied. Step two: Chris takes Hardcore dude on a walk. along the way, they come across this open area where most of us will be. There, I, and the Mandude will see if he really is unbeatable!âÂ
âThey will duel him, and test his arm. If Mr. Silverstineâs arm is fine, then weâll have a dinner all together, as a sort of going away party.â Methuselah explained.
âSo, Dude, whaddya think?â
Heâd considered it thoughtfully. âI donât see the harm in it. Itâll boost morale as well.â
âSo youâll give it the green light?â
âGo ahead,â heâd replied. All three of the conspirators had grinned maniacally. It was infectious; heâd cracked a grin of his own.
He looked down ruefully at his cast now, with that ridiculous doodle that Dr. Jellyfish had drawn. Some hideous bloated monster that lived under the sea, from what he understood. He was beginning to regret that decision. Maybe heâd feel better once everyone was gathered together in fellowship, eating.
He saw someone walking towards him. He couldnât recognize him due to the big helmet he had on, but he could tell that he was a captain of the guard according to the dark orange tunic that he was wearing. When he got close enough to engage in conversation, the Captain saluted, and greeted him.
âCommander! We just received a messenger gigfran from Deke and Mauss. The message says that they spotted some of Vladekâs rogues at one of the old mines. They saw three people come out and talk to the rogues before they headed towards Vladekâs fortress. Deke and Mauss are still investigating.â Â
âThree people who werenât rogues?"
âNo Sir. They were dressed in rags. one of them had an axe sort of weapon that looked rogue.â
âDescribe them to me.âÂ
âThere was one male, and two females, as well as our scouts could tell. One of them had long messy blond hair and an unkempt beard. He had an off-white coat that was in shreds, Similar to Dr. Jellyfishâs. About in his mid thirties. Another has long brown hair. She wore something that Dr. Jellyfish would describe as a space age mystic robe. the other one also had long brown hair, except with streaks of gray. She was dressed in a sweatshirt and pants.â
âDoesnât sound like anyone we know. Iâll ask Jellyfish if he might know anyone later. Thanks, Bruce.âÂ
âYouâre welcome, Sir.â
âReturn to your post.â
âYessir.â
Matheeas sighed. This break was going to be shorter than he might have hoped. He walked over to the table. The Ankorian Resistance couldnât afford a feast by far, but they tried to make this dinner somewhat fancy. Something to remember.Â
The centerpiece of the meal was to be a big, plump goat that had gotten too old to ride hard and fast, slow roasted in a covered ground pit. They also had two massive salads that were made from some of the few herbs and leafy greens that were edible in Ankoria. There was a variety of goat cheeses, as well as a cask of wine made from a strange type of grapes. Water, and goat milk were also available, of course. Matheeas looked down to the head of the table. There were three chairs there. The center one for him, and on the right side would be Methuselah, followed by Kevin and Dr. Jellyfish. On the left would be Kalaren, followed by Stirling and Chris the -2nd.
Everything was nearly complete. They just needed to wait for the guests. Methuselah came over, followed by a distracted Stirling, who besides a few innocuous bandages, and a strange smile, didnât look too bad. Then came Kalaren and Kevin, equally none the worse for wear. And finally, Jellyfish. Other residents of Aragarth arrived as well. As the guests began to sit down, Dr. Scope burst through the sizable double doors. His face was red with fury. He pointed at Dr. Jellyfish with one finger and shouted, âDR. JELLYYYYYFIIIIIIIISSSSHHHH!!!!â
Jellyfish gasped. âOh NO! My compulsive jellyfish insanity is CONTAGIOUS!â Jellyfish turned around and started shaking Stirling as he passed by his chair. âWEâRE DOOMED!!â
Stirling seemed uncertain. âPerhaps, but I think right now youâre the only one in danger,â he replied, as Dr. Jellyfish continued to shake him.
âOh, sorry, you donât know.â He stopped shaking Stirling, leaned across Kevin and started shaking Methuselahâs arm. âIT COULD SPREAD WORLDWIDE!â
âWe canât let that happen!â cried the mage. âWeâll have to quarantine you and Steph!â
âWell, maybe we wouldnât go that fa-âÂ
âNo! I am perfectly fine thank you! Well, other than the fact that Dr. Jellyfish sedated me for your reckless tourney!â yelled Dr. Skope, still standing at the doorway, livid.
âIt was all Kevinâs idea!â Jellyfish said quickly. Everyone present turned their eyes to Kevin.
Kevin waited for dramatic effect, then easily deflected. âWell, how was I supposed to know heâd put him under?â
Matheeas smiled. âDonât try to cover for him, Kevin. Itâs not worth it. We all know youâre fully responsible, Jellyfish. Why, Iâm beginning to think your doctors license here in Aragarth should be suspended.â
âBut Iâm innocent! Right Kevin?â
âNo way, dude. The Health Dude deserves better.âÂ
Jellyfish was now beginning to panic.
âBut Commander, why would y-Waitâ¦â Jellyfishâs eyes narrowed at Matheeas. âOh. Oh. You know, that was a beautiful picture of a jellyfish.â
Matheeas raised a coolly mischievous eyebrow. âSo thatâs what it was?â Mattheas looked down at his sling, where Jellyfish had left his condolences. âI thought it was a picture of a goatâs bladder. Weâll talk about that later. But for now, let us eat!â Matheeasâs statement was met with many cheers.Â
Matheeas was the first to serve himself, as was his right as the leader. Then, Stirling, being the guest of honor, served himself a little bit of everything. Then, the other competitors in the duel served themselves, followed by Jellyfish and Methuselah. Then the food was passed down the table.
As they began to eat, everyone relaxed. Jokes and friendly conversation were passed around throughout the dinner.Â
Stirling had served himself some of the wine for a drink. Now, he took a sip, and found it to be rather more bitter and biting than heâd expected. His brief look of surprise was noticed by Kalaren.
âNot as sweet as expected?â
Stirling chuckled. âWhere Iâm from, itâs generally more sweet or fruity. This isâ¦â Stirling searched for the right word. âAlmost... acidic.â
âOur wine is made a different way than usual,â Kalaren said. âThere were a few vineyards in the city when the resistance started. One of the earlier members tried one of the grapes, and died a horrible death. Not quite as bad as gigfran eggs, though."
Stirling gave him an âunamusedâ look, before he continued.
âWe named the grapes âThe Grapes of Wrath!â Soon after that resistance member died, they found a way to cut up and boil the grapes and make a safe, if bitter, wine. Usually, we put a little in our water supplies to purify it. We only give fresh water to our youth, however. We make an exception for holidays and such.â
âLike today?â
âExactly! Though this was at much shorter notice than usual.â
Stirling chuckled. âIs there anything in Ankoria that wonât poison you without any sort of preparation beforehand?âÂ
Kalaren thought about this for a bit. âThere are a few herbs. Some can even be made into medicinal draughts that can counteract poisoning from some other thing you ate in Ankoria. And then, of course, there are some things we grow and raise here in Aragarth that Methuselah guards from corruption.âÂ
Stirling smiled as he shook his head. âItâs impressive, this resistance against the very land that you all keep up.â
âWe need to. If not, we would starve or be stamped out by Vladekâs forces.â Kalarens face darkened.
âBut,â Stirling hesitated, before continuing more quietly. âWhat I donât understand is, why not move away?â
âFor some, we donât want to leave our homes. Almost everyone here hasnât been anywhere other than Ankoria. Otherwise, we would be at a disadvantage if we relocated. We already are in a defensible situation, and nobody wants to go to Ankoria, with the curse and all, leaving it for us. The only real threat we have is Vladek.â
âIs that why you stay? Because this is your home?âÂ
Kalarenâs orange eyes burned. âThatâs part of the reason. The people here are the closest thing I have to a family, now. The other part is that I want to make a stand against Vladek. Someday make him pay.â
This garnered Stirlingâs interest greatly. âSomething personal?â
âYou could say that. He slaughtered my entire family, if that counts.â
Stirlingâs mouth went dry. Roughly, he swallowed his bite. âVladek?â That sounded pretty ruthless, even for thedudeâs right-hand man.
âHe did it himself.â
âBut⦠Why? How did you survive?â Suddenly, Stirling backpedaled. âIâm sorry, thatâs rather personal; if you donât want to talk about it I-â
âNot talking about it wonât do anything. Iâd rather you knew than be ignorant of it.â Kalaren replied bitterly. Stirling nodded his understanding and leaned back as Kalaren began.
âI better start from the beginning. Youâll probably think I'm a lunatic, but would you believe I came from an alternate dimension?â
Stirling remained silent. He took another quaff of wine. Finally, âYes. Not initially, but perhaps yes.âÂ
Kalaren turned his head and stared at Stirling.
âWhat.âÂ
âIt says a lot about my life that it wouldnât be the craziest thing Iâve ever heard.â
âI seeâ¦â
âAlso, I really donât see why you would start a story like that unless it were true. Or you were pulling my leg. Which, due to the context, Iâm certain you are not.â
Kalaren nodded. âIn my dimension, Ankoria was a beautiful kingdom. But then, something strange happened. People from different eras began visiting the present. People began to have their own sense of time. For example, what was ten minutes for me was three seconds for my sister. And then, of course, since people from the future came to the present, they also brought the Maelstrom with them.âÂ
Stirlingâs eyebrows knit together at the mention of the Maelstrom, but Kalaren was on a roll, and didnât seem to notice.
âOnce, they attacked the town I lived in, and though we were eventually able to fend them off with some Nexus Force gear, my father, who was the best blacksmith in Ankoria, was infected. My mother and the local doctor, along with a few Nexus Forcers that had been staying in the town did the best they could to keep him well. We never got to the conclusion of his illness, though. A couple weeks after the maelstrom attack, there was a barbarian raid. On my birthday, as a matter of fact. I was walking around the town when I saw the barbarians, but then I saw someone beyond them, who turned out to be Vladek, but what surprised me was that he was headed for my house. The rest of my family was there. I ran through the mob, mostly oblivious to the cuts and scrapes I received. But I couldnât catch up to Vladek. His sense of time was faster than mine. Up ahead, I saw him enter my house. As I rushed through the door, I found evidence he had killed my sisters. I rushed through the house. I looked down one hallway and saw him standing over my father, who was sitting on the floor. I rushed down the hallway, and grabbed an antique weapon off the wall. I tried to put up a fight against Vladek, but he just whipped my weapon away and knocked me out... Or something like that. I donât remember much after he flicked my dagger away.â
âWhat about your Mother?â Stirling asked.  Â
âI never saw her. Vladek must have killed her like anyone else.â Kalaren said, before taking a sip of his goat milk.
Stirling leaned back again, pondering what Kalaren had told him. Time itself being messed with? By Vladek? Alternate Dimensions?
If any of this were true⦠He had to put a stop to it.
Kalaren set his cup down and picked up his story.âApparently, Vladek wanted to have a sword that could rival thedudeâs sword. He came to my father for such a sword. He took me prisoner so that he could experiment on me or something, I guess. But then he found out that the sword could only be used by someone of my bloodline. So, he started taking DNA and blood samples to create a clone. Eventually, the scientists who were taking the samples got tired and cut off my arm to use that for DNA.â
âAnd later, Dr. Jellyfish built you that robot arm, right?âÂ
â...Yes, how did you know?â Kalaren asked, suspicious.
âI had a long, frustrating, conversation with your friend.âÂ
Kalaren laughed. âJellyfish?â
âJellyfish.â
âI see! Well, you know the rest then. Did he tell you I have a clone still somewhere in Vladek's Fortress?â
Stirling took a moment to digest the information. His eyes turned down towards his plate. âI think so⦠But more than that, you may have some sort of insanely powerful sword, a space and/or time manipulator, and Lord knows what else, all within reach of Vladek himself!â
âYes. Which is why I stay here. I have to stay here and do whatever I can to stop him. So does everyone else here.â
Stirling had to physically fight the urge to get up and do something about what he was hearing. As it was, his eyebrows seemed to be fusing together in a deeply concerned unibrow for all time. So much so, that Kalaren apparently decided to change the subject.
âBut, on a lighter note, you seemed quite distracted when you walked in. What caused you to be so?â
It took Stirling a minute to stop worrying about these new threats and think about more trivial matters. But with a little effort, he did.
âOh. Actually, itâs this tooth.â he grinned toothily and pointed at one of his teeth. Kalaren peered more closely, and realized it was a silver tooth. âItâs silver,â Stirling confirmed, before closing his mouth. âDr. Jellyfish put it in.â
âBecause your last name is Silverstine?â
âYeah. Also, I didnât want a gold tooth. Thatâs just a good way to get robbed and lose it again.â
âHuh. Makes sense. I thought it had to do with the girl thatâs been gazing at you dreamily throughout the dinner. Well, except for a little bit ago.â
Stirling raised a dubious eyebrow, but didnât look back at the other guests. âIs that so? Which row? How far?â
âThe opposite row. Nine chairs down.â
Stirling picked up a knife he had, and used the blade like a mirror. Unfortunately, the light in the room reflected off of the knife and caught her right in the eyes. Hastily, Stirling put the knife down. Nobody was able to pin it on him. Well, except Kalaren. But he didnât speak up.
âSheâs pretty, I suppose. But far too young,â Stirling commented to Kalaren, confusion and amusement crossing his faceÂ
âI agree. But evidently, she is not aware of the fact. Kevin tried to duel you to impress her. It didnât work in his favor, clearly.â
âIs that so?â
Kalaren nodded.
âWell look at you!â Stirling chuckled. âYouâve got all the juicy tidbits. Iâll have to remember that.â
âI canât help that Iâm trained in espionage. That, and, news travels fast in a town of approximately 40 people. Everybody knows.â
âYou get trained in espionage as part of the resistance?â
âWell, not so much espionage, but they do train us in stealth.â
âAwareness.â
âYeah, exactly.â
Stirling chuckled again. âBet you could teach me some of that. I seem to be slipping in that regard, the older I get. Only thing thatâs kept me alive is my sword and my shield.â He rolled his left shoulder. âAnd a mulish body that just wonât die.â
âWell, I stink at using a sword.â
âBut youâve got that cybernetic arm, surely youâre not a bad fighter!â
âNo, no. Iâm a good fighter, generally. I just resort to flailing at close quarters.â
Stirling tilted his head and spared a glimpse for Kalarenâs right arm. Right now, it was covered in a thick black mesh. Here and there were little holes and slits, for access to lights and the occasional discrete panel or button. The lights glowed a dark purple, almost blending in with the black around it.
âHave you ever considered pugilism?â
âYeah, but when I asked the resident librarian, Linda, if they were any books on the subject, she said there wasnât any. There used to be one, but someone dropped it into a canal. The military training I went through does give you a few pointers if youâre caught in a struggle, however.âÂ
âIâm surprised you havenât taken more advantage of that arm!â Stirling said. âIt must be very useful.â
âI keep on forgetting itâs there. It is useful in archery, but I try not to do anything super strenuous, because otherwise it runs low on power. Jellyfish has it rely on solar power, usually. But it does have an alternative energy source of maelstrom energy, unfortunately.â
âInteresting. Did you have to use maelstrom during our duel?â
âYeah.â
âFascinating.â
âMaybe so. Still, I wish I could use a sword like you,â Kalaren replied, taking another bite of his salad.
Stirling shrugged, returning to his own meal. âIt takes practice. And Iâve had a lot.â
âThatâs the thing! Nobody will practice with me. Not after I broke both mine and Kevinâs swords, and his wristâ¦â Kalaren mumbled.
âWith that arm?â
âYup. I got lucky and hit his sword, twisting both the swords and his wrist.â
Stirling tried to imagine how it must have happened. âYou must have been using it like an axeâ¦!â Stirling groaned.
âTheyâre both sharp, right? You swing!â
Stirling facepalmed. âNoâ¦â
âWell then how do you do it?â
Stirling looked up at Kalaren. âSwords require some finesse. You canât just hack at your target like you would a tree.âÂ
âOh.â Kalaren said.
Stirling paused briefly, staring past Kalaren. âI never gave you pointers after the duel, did I? No, because Matheeas showed up.â He returned his attention to Kalaren. âIâd be happy to teach you some basics before I leave. Kevin too, I suppose." He paused. "I've been taught by some of the best swordsmen in the land."
âThanks!â
âHey, Super-duper-ultra-mega-Mandudesalot, you ever going to get some meat, or are you turning vegetarian with that salad there?â Kevin asked Kalaren from across the table.
âI would have gotten a serving of goat meat, but I didnât have room on my plate. You should try the salad, it tastes pretty good!â
The dinner continued, and everyone enjoyed the food and company immensely. All in all, it was as lovely a time as anyone present could remember in months, if not years for some.
Chapter 12: Return to Action
Kalaren woke up the next morning in his quarters. He swung his feet off the bed and got up. Groggily, he pulled a plain shirt and tough pants from a chest, and tucked them under his one arm. Then, he went over to the stone arch window, and took his arm out of the sun, attaching it deftly, even half-asleep as he was. He threw on his clothes, and then started to make breakfast, which consisted of a slab of ham, scrambled chicken eggs, and a cup of Aragarthian coffee. As he was waiting for the coffee to brew, he heard someone rap on his door.
âThe Commander wants you in the Town hall for a war Counsel. If anybody asks who told you, itâs Gerald.â
Kalaren glanced at the door, to the coffee, and back to the door. âIs it urgent, Urgent or Super Urgent???â
âJust Urgent.â
âGreat. Iâm going to brew my coffee first.â
âOh, can I have some?â
âSure, but don't you have other stuff to do?â
There was silence. Then a sigh. âYeah. I gotta get other people. But, tell you what, Iâll be back later. If you just pour me a cup before you leave, Iâll grab it from here. I donât even care if it gets cold.â
âAlright, sure.â
A few minutes later, Kalaren left a big cup of coffee on the steps of his house, and trotted off to the town hall.
When he got there, he found quite a few others. Matheeas and the other council members. Jellyfish and Methuselah were there, as well as the two scouts that had done perimeter patrol the night before. Stirling and Chris the -2nd were also there.
Matheeas seemed relieved to see Kalaren. âAh, good, Kalaren, you made it. I was beginning to worry.â
âSorry, I was waiting for my coffee to brew.â
Various people gave him dull stares. A few snickered.
âItâs important! Just ask Gerald.â
Matheeas was one of the unamused. âYes. Well. This meeting is more important.â
âAnd now you can finally tell us why, right, Lancaster?â Stirling groused, arms crossed, eyes still blinking. Clearly, he hadn't had enough coffee yet. Beside him, Chris gave him a hard elbow to the ribs.
âYes, yes.â Matheeas replied, annoyed. He took a deep breath, as everyone else grew silent.
âLast night, Deke and Mauss sent a messenger gigfran stating that they saw three people, supposedly prisoners, being guarded by Paradox forces investigating an old mine to the northwest of here." He nodded his head at Jellyfish. "Dr. Jellyfish believes he knew one of them. A scientist, who could help us in a number of ways." Now he turned to the two scouts. "Early this morning, Deke and Mauss here, finally came in. The two had gone against protocol and split up. Deke keeping watch on the mine, which, after the prisoners left, received other Paradox visitors, while Mauss went and investigated Vladekâs Fortress. He found a large number of slave-looking figures along with several rogues. The crowd there broke up into separate groups and went several different ways from the Fortress. Mauss followed one of these groups, and found it headed to one of the mines." He turned to the two scouts, an even expression on his face. "For the record, what you two did was reckless, but with good initiative. It remains to be seen if it will pay off. But for now..." He turned his attention back to everyone else. "We will be investigating once we pull together a strike team. I called you here, Stirling, because I thought you should know before you left. I wanted to give you the opportunity to help if you so wished. I will give anyone here the same choice, excepting Methuselah, he needs to be here to keep the spell up. I will also be going.â
Everyone was surprised at this, and a few council members began to protest.
âWho will lead in your absence?â
âWhat if you get killed?â
âMethuselah will, thatâs part of the reason why heâs staying," Matheeas replied. "And if I do, Methuselah will take over for me.â
Beside him, Methuselah seemed mildly surprised, but said nothing.
âNow, who wants to come?â Matheeas asked.
Kalarenâs hand shot up, even as his brows dove down into a determind frown.
âIâll to come to take a look!â Jellyfish said.
Stirling and Chris shared a look, and they both raised their hands. âIâd love to crack a few Rogue helmets,â Stirling growled.
âAnd Iâm stuck with him.â Chris said in turn.
Matheeas looked around at the rest of the people in the room. When he saw that none of the others wanted to come, he nodded and began to speak. âThe rest I will gather up from around town. Gather your things, we leave at one oâclock, after lunch. We will be riding goats double, as usual.â
â1300 hours,â Stirling translated for himself. He received several confused looks.
âWhat?â âHuh?â âPardon?â
â1300 hours. Military time,â Stirling looked around, and suddenly remembered these were, in many ways, still just peasants. Well, except perhaps Jellyfi-
âMilitary time? What do you mean by that?â Jellyfish asked.
Stirling sighed. âNevermind.â
Matheeas looked confused, then shook his head a little before wrapping it up. âMeeting dismissed.â
~~~~~
Stirling hurried out of the town hall, with Chris right behind him. They were both already dressed in decent armor, but Stirling still had to get a few more things from his apartment. So did Chris. They swung by Striderâs first. He picked up his leather cloak, Samurai Bow, checked his medkit, and his many-pocketed pack, and then headed off to Chrisâs.
The house of Chris was abuzz with activity when they arrived. An older man came out of the house as the two came up.
âChris! Chris the -3rd will be joining you on your mission. Iâve already gathered your things; Negative Third will be with you all shortly. He canât find his cleavers.â
âI swear, I left them on the mantle!!!â A voice similar, but deeper to Chris the -2ndâs own yelled out from the house.
âYeah, well, dunno what to tell ya, they ainât there!â the older gentleman hollered over his shoulder. He grabbed a bundle of gear by the door and handed it to Chris and Strider. âHere you go, son.â
âThanks, Pops,â Chris the -2rd said.
âOh! Here they are. I left them in the goat-steak!â Chris the -3rdâs voice carried out.
âPopsâ facepalmed. âLike I said, still getting his stuff together. Go on, heâll catch up.â
âAlright, Bye, Pops! We should be back by midday tomorrow.â The two hugged each other, and then Chris the -2nd and Stirling left for the stables.
Along the way there, they ran into some kids trying to see who could throw a pebble the farthest. Stirling recognized most of them. Jonny, Rita and Rosa. Then there was another kid he had met around town, Bobby.
Beyond that, there was one other he hadnât seen before.  But Stirling didnât intend to stop and make acquaintances. His mind was already on the mission ahead.
Unfortunately, the kids had other ideas.
âHEY! Itâs Strider!â Jonny ran up to Stirling. âWoah, whatâs going on? You guys gonna fight some evil troll or sometinâ?â
The others came up behind him.
âWow, you guys are really decked out for a fight!â Rita complimented, pointing out their armor and gear.
Rosa seemed to pick up that they were in a hurry. âIf they are, I donât think we could help.â
Chris the -2nd looked over his shoulder at the kids.
âI donât know for sure that we will get into a fight, but we are in a hurry.â
âAwwww!â Most of the kids collectively groaned as the two adults excused themselves and hurried on.
Next, they went to the armory, stocking up on arrows and other implements of battle and survival. Chris had already given Stirling back his Katana by order of Lancaster, but he still lacked a shield. So he took a minute to inspect the shields. Most were of a small, round buckler nature. He passed right by these, in favor of hefting the few kite shields. However, he shook his head in distaste after each one.
âIâm afraid Iâve been a bit spoiled with the shields Iâve had in the past,â Stirling said. âAll of these are ofâ¦â
âAlot of them arenât made of refined metal. You could probably ask our armorsmith to have one custom-made to suit you.â suggested Chris the -2nd.
Stirling considered it. âThat might be a good idea...â he set down the last potential shield. â...But not now.â Turning to leave, he noted the various swords leaning against the wall.
âI think Iâll take an extra sword though, just in case.â Quickly scanning the swords and belts, he picked out a shortsword. Pulling it out, he flicked it around, before nodding. âThis will do. Just something for when things get hairy.â
Chris stared at Stirling, confused. âYou mean if we run into a Calagasphil?â
âDonât know; hope I donât ever have to.â Stirling said, as they headed to the Stables.
âYou can sometimes mistake them for a 12 foot pile of snow, stone, or dirt sometimes. Look out for them on this crusade.â
âBasically, if it looks out of place, it probably is,â Stirling muttered. âSounds just like my first assignment in Gnarled Forest.â Stirling shook his head. âMan, that seems like a whole lifetime agoâ¦â
Before Stirling could get lost in the past, or Chris begin to ask questions about outer space, they reached the stables, where a few other warriors were already.
Seeing a few of the others having lunch with their Goats, Stirling asked Chris, âWhereâs your goat?â
Chris stared blankly.
âNowhere.â
âSo⦠You donât have a goat.â
âNo, I did. But it got sent nowhere in a spell gone horribly wrong. The goat before that was sent somewhere with a rocket pack gone horribly wrong.â
âAnd Iâll bet before that, your first goat was sent everywhere in some other awful thing gone horribly wrong.â
âNo, we ate that one. We were promised by a fortune teller we would never run out of meat again. Remember -3rd saying he left his cleavers in the steak?â
âYouâre kidding me.â
â...Smells kinda funny now and then, but we eat it anyway, and then itâs fresh!â
Stirling had no words.
~~~~~
A short while later showed Matheeas returning with the remaining warriors. Stirling had met most of them at one point or another, either during his duals or walking around town. It appeared that they had had lunch elsewhere. Many of them came over, and mentioned they were happy to see Strider joining the mission. Strider replied that he was happy to be coming.
Matheeas yelled out that they were going to depart by the east gate. Once everyone got onto their goats, including Stirling and Chris on a newly requisitioned goat, they departed for this location. Along the way, Chris the -3rd rode over with Dr. Jellyfish, one waving a cleaver, and the other his blaster. Kalaren and Kevin arrived shortly afterwards bickering about something or another. As they turned a corner and saw the gate, everyone noticed a small crowd ready to send them off.
Stirling leaned over to Chris the -2nd. âIs it normal for the others to gather like this so far out on the border of the city?â
Chris shook his head. âNo, but we also havenât gone out of the city in such numbers for years.â
Stirling searched the crowd as they cantered past. It was full of determined faces. One or two worried faces, but they were well hidden. Stirling recognized many of them, though not by name. The kids were also there, curious, but also serious.
It was a strong reminder of the hardiness of these men and women. For even though they didnât ride to battle, there was every chance that some might not come back.
Since being discovered and brought to Aragarth, Stirling had heard of all sorts of horrendous fates people had met in the twisted nightmare lands of Ankoria, just beyond the invisible protections of Methuselah and his predecessors.
But like his friends, Stirling was ready. Moreover, he was eager for a round two against the Cursed Land.
~~~~~~~~
Chapter 13:Underneath the Cursed Land.
âI spy, with my little eyeâ¦â
âItâs a tree.â
Kevin groaned. âYouâre too good at this, Mandude.â
Kalaren rolled his eyes, but then realized Kevin couldnât see that, since he was sitting behind him on Surf. âItâs 50/50 between dirt and trees.â
âThatâs totally not true! I could spy⦠Your hair!â
âAnyone could spy my hair.â
âBut not just anyone is playing âI Spyâ with us as we ride my goat to one of these mines to scout it out.â
âThatâs a good point. I guess not anyone, then.â
They rode on in silence for awhile, along with the rest of the group. The gray soil and sparse black trees zoomed by as Surf the Goat glided through the dead forest, along with 7 other goats.
As they rode, Mattheas would silently direct a goat or two towards a mine in the distance. Some had visible Paradox activity outside of them. Others looked much the same as they always had.
Soon, it was their turn to split off. Mattheas directed them, and the goat carrying Dr. Jellyfish and Chris the -3rd, to head down towards the original mine reported to have visitors.
âHere we go,â Kalaren muttered. As they split off, Jellyfish waved cheerfully to Kal, as if he was out on a Sunday jaunt, rather than investigating their mortal enemies.
Once they got closer to the mine, they all dismounted their goats quietly and laid down in the brush, along with the two goats.
âLooks like just three guards out front,â Kalaren said. âAll Shinobis.â
Chris the -3rd turned to his team. Kalaren, Jellyfish, and Kevin. He was leading, as he was the most experienced, so he outlined the goal. âThis mission is most successful if we donât leave a single trace of ourselves. In and out, like ghosts.â
Kevin shuddered, as Chris continued. âI know thatâs a lofty goal, but itâs one that every individual team is going to try for. So does anyone have any ideas to get rid of these guys?â
Jellyfish raised his hand. Kalaren immediately yanked it down before the guards saw a bush with a hand. Chris facepalmed.
âThis isnât a class, Doctor. Just tell us what youâve got.â
âWe kill them.â
Chris was a consummate professional leader, and didnât even blink. Heâd heard about the doctorâs eccentricity. âBut then Vladek will get a report of their deaths,â he explained.
âHmm, well in that case I have something else!â Jellyfish said as he raised a glass vial full of green liquid out of his pocket. Kalaren pulled his hand down again before the guards saw a bush with a suspicious green vial.
Kevin leaned in. âLooks tasty. What is it?â
âSleeping gas I gathered from the Dierth plant. Would you like to try it? Itâs been concentrated into this vial, but should expand into a gas as soon as the seal is broken, but I-â
âOn second thought, it doesnât sound as groovy as I thought.â
âRight. Good plan, Jellyfish,â Chris said. âThrow it over to them, theyâll get knocked out, and then weâll prop them up to make it look like they fell asleep on the job.
Kalaren pulled out a sandwich from his saddle bag.
âWe can use some of my emergency rations.â
âPerfect.â
Executing the plan took less time than it took to concoct, and soon all four were stealing past the snoring, messy sandwich eating guards.
They snuck in and took a look around. Nothing was in the immediate vicinity excluding a few tools, and a box or two.
Jellyfish started scanning the walls with a rewired Paradox something of his own invention. âMhm, yup. 100% Solid Rock!â
Chris raised a hand, stopping Kevin and Kalaren, who made a buffer-stop for the absentminded Jellyfish. âHear that?â
âCanât say that I do. Then again, canât say that I donât either. What do you hear? Does it sound like a Jellyfish? Because I can hear that. Also, does anyone remember the square root of 64? I forgot, and itâs very bothersome. Also my password on BrickBook.â
While Jellyfish muttered, the others tried to drown out his pointless (or maybe not so pointless, one never knows with Jellyfish,) blathering and listened forward into the cavern. The distant sounds of rock and work floated up, along with the occasional shout.
âI hear it,â Kalaren confirmed.
Kevin nodded. âLet me go ahead, and take a peek. Better one to scout ahead than ⦠ALL of us.â
Both Kalaren and Chris nodded, and Kevin scurried to a t-section, and ran right. Around the corner and out of sight.
âSeriously, whatâs the Square root of 64?! And did you tell him to bring back cookieâs, because I know who makes the best coo-â
âDr. Jellyfish, please keep it down.â
âJELLYFISH!!â
-----------------
Kevin turned around the bend, noting the dim light and louder mining sounds up ahead. However, not seeing any shadows, he slowed only marginally as he came into the next area.
He found himself at the top of a large, round quarry area, about 40 feet around. There was a single artificial light hanging from the top of the cavern, which was a few feet higher than where Kevin was standing. Â
To his right, a slope went down to a flat basin below him, where 8 plainly dressed people, guarded by 2 armed Space Marauders and a Sorcerer, were mining a glittering mineral that was scattered throughout the basin. However, they didnât appear to be using pickaxes, but instead, small, precise lasers.
There was also a large laser drill at the far end of the basin, which was busy boring into the glittering wall. It was this that Kevin had been hearing with the others around the bend. It appeared to be very effective, as it was making visible progress as Kevin stood there observing.
All in all, it was very pretty, and rather quiet, even with all the work going on.
âJELLYFISH!â
At least it had been.
All eyes turned to Kevin, who paused for only a moment before yelling: âHey Dudes and Dudettes! Ready to Party on DOWN!?! BONZAI!!â
Kevin jumped off the railing as he unsheathed his sword, heading towards the Sorcerer. Just as he was preparing his spell, Kevin landed on him, rolling off with the sorcerers rank 2 staff in his offhand. The staff was charged with some paradox energy, which, as he turned to face the other two marauders, was released upon them. The other 8 people cheered. Kevin gave them a thumbs up.
âYouâre welcome!â
-------
Chris and Kalaren starred in near disbelief at Dr. Jellyfish. âYou win 'worst operative of Aragarth ever' award.â Kalaren said.
âIâm sincerely sorry. Nice knowing you all. Hope Kevin brings the right cookies back so we can die happy.â Jellyfish whispered, his face absolutely serious.
âNevermind. Câmon, Kevin probably needs help.â Kalaren said as he followed an already standing Chris. They ran to the T-section where they had last seen Kevin. As they reached it, they heard and saw several Paradox running in from the opposite direction Kevin had went. One of them, a Rank 3 sorcerer yelled, âIntruders! Get them!â As soon as the wormholers started whirring, Chris grabbed both Jellyfish and Kalaren and yanked them back towards the entrance to gain cover.
âOkay, so theyâve seen us, and we still havenât finished our mission. We fight,â Chris said. âDoctor, you check on Kevin, Weâll cover you.â
âYes, sir.â Jellyfish said.
Kalaren could hear the Parodox rapidly approaching. As they were almost upon them, he and Chris jumped out, covering Jellyfish as he ran the other way.
In moments, Chris was dual-wielding his cleavers, duking it out with a shinobi, and Kalaren was hacking at his armored opponents with wide, wild arcs. The ring of his iron sword against the superior space-age alloys of his enemies echoed madly against the stone walls. Very soon, his sword was nothing more than a sharp metal bar, but having no other weapon, he continued to use all of his considerable strength in each swing, keeping his enemies off-balance, and sticking too close to them to use their guns. One of the Marauder's thrust his wormholer directly at his chest. Kalaren attempted to block it with what remained of his sword, which was now little more than a metal stake, but it practically disintegrated at the force of the wormholer. In desperation, he raised his cybernetic hand to stop it, but the chainsaw chewed right through it, until it jammed, stopping just inches from his face. With what was remaining of his hand, Kalaren yanked the wormholer away from the surprised Marauderer and turned it around, even as he bore the pain that his metallic sensors were transmitting to him.
âMy turn.â Kalaren said, restarting the Wormholer and firing in a wide arc at the other paradox rouges, including the one Chris was standing off with, just as another group came from up ahead. This time, the chances didnât look so good.
âBONZAIII!!!â
Both Chris and Kal glanced back to see Kevin, Jellyfish, and some impromptu foot soldiers heading their way, echoing Kevinâs battle-cry.
âBONZAI!â
âBONZAI!â
âBONZAII!!!â
âBANANA!!!â
âBONANZA!!â Â
âBONANZAI!â
âBRUCE!â
âBRUSAI!â
âJELLYFISH!â
âThatâs better.â Kalaren said, a small grin coming onto his face, before he turned around to continue to pepper the oncoming troops.
Chris dispatched one of the final first wave. âWe have what we came for, letâs move!â The crew turned towards the ramp up to the entrance, where the gray light of Ankoriaâs filtered down with such promise.
âGET THEM! THEY CANNOT ESCAPE,â boomed one of their pursuers. Kalaren and a few others whoâd acquired ranged weapons shot back at them, as they backpedaled behind everyone else.
Shots flew past Kal and others, who laughed at their poor accuracy.
Then suddenly, one Rank 3 Sorcerer raised his staff and pointed it at the arch of the entrance, before slamming his staff on the ground. In response, just as the most eager of the prisoners were running underneath, the roof of the entrance collapsed atop them, bringing darkness, and the crushing weigh of rocks and lost hope with it.
Chris took a deep breath before turning around to see the lit-up forces of Rogues coming up the ramp after them. âThere has to be another exit, but we have to fight our way through! Câmon!â
One of the prisoners who wasnât giving into despair turned to Chris the -3rd, pulling him by the arm to get his attention. âHEY! We were about to break through to another mine when Commander Kevin jumped down! There would be an exit there! We just have to get through the quarry!â
Chris nodded to the level-headed freedom fighter. âTo the quarry then!â
Kevin repeated the command, and it was carried by the rest.
âTO THE QUARRY!â
âTO THE QUARRY!â
âTO THE QUERY!â
âTOOT THE FAIRY!â
âTOUR DEâ AIRY!â
âJELLYFISH!â
Kalaren and Dr. Jellyfish, as well as the other ranged folks whoâd been at the back, were now at the front, and they rushed forward to close the distance before they were picked off, having no cover.
Dr. Jellyfish pulled out a strange vial, and threw it at the enemy, causing a thick smoke to fill the corridor.
âSMOKE BOMB,â Jellyfish yelled, as a sort of explanation to EVERYONE.
âHOW COULD THAT POSSIBLY BE USEFUL RIGHT NOW?!?!â Kalaren demanded, as the deadliest game of laser tag began.
âSo they canât see us. I thought you would know that.â
âSURRENDER, AND YOU WILL GET FULL PENSION AND BENEFITS. INCLUDING DENTAL CARE, WHEN I GET TO YOU WITH MY FISTS, YOU INSUBORDINATE SWINE.â boomed one of the Paradox.
âFOLLOW MY VOICE MEN!â ringed out the valiant tone of Chris, as it passed by Kalaren. âTO FREEDOM!â
âTO FREEDOM!â
âTO FREEDOM!â
âTO TREEDOM!â
âTO LEEDOM!â
âTO FREIDHELM!â
âTO FREDDYâS HOUSE!â
âTO MY HOUSE!â
âISNâT THAT A PRISON???â
âWHOâS VOICE ARE WE FOLLOWING?!?!â
Nearly a dozen voices cried âMINE!â and pretty much everyone on both sides froze.
âJellyfish.â
âOk, weâre following Jellyfish. Whoever he is.â
âWat.â
âShh. Leaders are confident.â
âOh. Yeah. Not Quackers. Ok. Everyone head to the quarry then.â
âOk, Boss.â
âSounds good.â
âOver and out.â
âRight, then weâll fight those Paradox scum.â
âRoger Roger.â
âOger Oger.â
âNo, WEâRE the Paradox scum. Weâll fight the upstarts.â
â...at the Basin, right?â
âYeah.â âUh-huh.â âFor sure.â "One-Hundo-Percent."
So it was that the whole group of people jostled and shoved and bumbled their way along the dark corridor, around the corner, and into the dim, sparkling grotto, where the laser⦠was gone???
âHey, whereâs the drill?â A Shinobi asked.
âI think it must have reached the other side by now,â a worker next to him replied.
âOh yeah. Makes sense. We should probably go check on it and make sure it doesnât keep going and destroying stuff.â
âProbably.â
âBut first, letâs fight those prisoner scum,â growled another Paradox Sorcerer.
âYeah!â said a Marauder
âExactly!â said another.
âPrecisely!â said Kevin.
âJELLYFISH!â
Chapter 14: Digging for Answers.
Mattheas rode on to the final mine. Behind him, only one goat remained. The one with Stirling and Chris the -2nd.
Looking ahead as they came upon a rise, Mattheas could easily make out Vladekâs Fortress in the distance. This final mine was mere hours away from the dreaded Fortress, and so held the most inherent risk. Therefore, he chose it for himself, and their strongest warrior.
Also, he thought it would be best to keep Stirling close for his first mission with the Resistance.
Chris the -2nd pulled up alongside Mattheas's goat. âOh. Thatâs close,â he exclaimed softly, noting the dark edifice blending with the suddenly lengthening gloom.
Stirling glanced up into the sky. âSurely the dayâs not over yet?â
Matheeas nodded his head. âIt hasnât. the sun isnât down yet. It is darker around us because evil emanates from the Fortress.â
Chris shuddered. âI donât think Iâve ever been this close before.â
Stirling peered past Chrisâs shoulders, and glared into the heart of the gloom.
Vladekâs fortress was not as large or as grand as other castles Stirling had seen in his travels, but it was indeed the most imposing, even from this distance.
All of the Stonework was a uniform jet black, as if the entire Fortress had survived the fires of a dozen ancient dragons. Its dark walls were thick and monstrously tall, hiding all but the tallest of towers that stuck out at clearly strategic points. The only other detail Stirling could make out from here was the equally large and monstrous gatehouse, closed at the moment with a door made of the darkest wood stirling had ever seen. The only splashes of color were the solid red banners that billowed atop the gatehouse and the tallest towers.
It was a Palace of War.
After a moment of silence Matheeas pointed down the slope, and back into the forest. âCome on, letâs stay on task.â
Stealthily, the goats picked their way down the loose gravelly slope, where Matheeas had them all dismount and continue for a short while longer. Soon, Mattheeas ducked behind a tree, and the others followed suit. He pointed ahead, where two Shinobis were patrolling around a huge, wooden trapdoor, at least three yards across. At the far end of the platform there was a smaller trapdoor, large enough for a single person, where you could see the top of a ladder peeking out.
âThereâs only 2 guards so far. Ideally, we would sneak past them and enter without them noticing, but there isnât enough cover from here to there. Not without a distraction,â Mattheas explained, as he pulled out a small pocket mirror. âIâm going to reflect some light towards them from the bushes over here. Hopefully theyâll investigate, and while I lead them off into the treeline a bit, you two can sneak in. As soon as I can, Iâll lose them and follow you, got it?â
âAnd if only one comes?â Chris asked.
Matheeas handed Chris a second small mirror, which was little more than a roughly round shard with a messy molten iron frame. âThen you distract that one as well.â Â
Chris nodded. âSounds like a good plan.â
Stirling nodded as well, before sneaking off to the left with Chris, as Matheeas began fiddling with his mirror and the light.
A minute or two later, Stirling and Chris heard one of the guards exclaim.
âAugh! Something just slapped me in the eyes, Dobson!â
âWhat is it, Dobson?â
âI dunno, it was like light was reflected into my face.â
âWeird.â
âLook! There it is! Do yaâ think itâs a magic pixie?â
âA Pixie? What conspiracy theories have you been reading, Dobson? Clearly itâs a fairy!â
âWhat even is the difference between a pixie and a fairy?!?â
âWell⦠Uh⦠Hm. One is more mischievous than the other? I think???â
âWell, then this one was definitely a pixie!â
âSo you think it whacked you in the eye?â
â....Yeah?â
âHuh. I would guess that itâs either A: Trying to blind you for all eternity or B: Testing you for glaucoma.â
âGAH! It did it again!â
âDefinitely A, then.â
âThat does it! Itâs going in a jar!â
âI wonder how much money we could make off of that!â âDobsonâ said as they chased after the âmagic pixieâ.
Stirling and Chris poked their headâs cautiously through the brush, and saw the two guards scamper off into the forest, leaving their post completely abandoned.
âWow. That worked unbelievably well,â Stirling said.
âIndeed.â Chris said.
The two wasted no time in stealing across the now empty clearing. Stirling immediately jumped down the open smaller trapdoor, falling a short distance. He landed with a grunt, and looked up to see 3 Paradox rouges, turning to him in surprise, sipping coffee. There was one from each kit: Marauder, Sorcerer, and Shinobi.
âAw, nuts.â Stirling groaned, as Chris slid down the ladder.
âYouâre not authorized around here, are you?â the Sorcerer asked, lowering his coffee to the table, as his fellow compatriots reacted a bit faster, dropping their mugs and scrambling for their weapons.
âI work here. Iâm just on break,â Chris began with a straight face, before Stirlingâs Katana lanced the Shinobi who was going for his own blade.
Chris turned around with a face of utter shock. âHow could you!â
Stirling turned back to look at Chris for the briefest of moments, just long enough to give him a look of âwhat?â before he spun around and struck the blaster out of the Space Marauderâs hand, before rushing forward and pinning him to the floor.
Chris the -2nd turned from looking at Stirling pinning down the Marauder, to see the Sorcerer pointing his wand at him.
âHasta la vista, rebel,â the Sorcerer mocked, before an arc of lightning flew from the tip of the wand, and hit Chris full in the chest, sending him flying across the small room, and into the hard-packed dirt wall, shortly before falling to the floor upside-down.
âChris! No!â Stirling slashed his Katana across the neck of the prone Marauder before arcing the blade up to strike the wand out of the Sorcererâs hands.
But even as he was disarmed in one hand, the Sorcerer pulled out another weapon with his other. His sorcerer orb in the offhand, from which he spoke an incantation, and a ripple of Paradox energy blasted Stirling back.
Stirling half-rolled with the blast, beginning to go down a gentle slope that went further into the mine. In the time that it took for his head to stop ringing, the Sorcerer was now standing above him with the Shinobiâs blade.
âTake this, scumbag,â he said, before he fell limp to the floor. Standing in his place was Matheeas, with his sword pommel raised.
  Â
âLancaster! Youâre a sight for literally sore eyes,â Stirling muttered.
âWhereâs Chris?â
âBack there, at the far wall.â Stirling got up and picked up his Katana from where it fell when he was thrown back. He pointed to Chris, who was still upside down and hadnât movedâ¦Â âHe got hit by the sorcererâs lightningâ¦â
Both men rushed to Chris the -2nd. Matheeas attempted to pick him up, but instead was shocked quite nastily through his metal gauntlet. âAh! Looks like it was conducted through his armor.â
Stirling pulled off his mail gauntlet and slapped Chrisâs chestplate a few times, bringing forth a smaller and smaller discharge. Once the shock dissipated considerably, they rolled Chris over to see the area where he had been hit. The armor was completely charred,to the point that it was reduced to a thin, brittle sheet.
âOh no, Chris. Dang it.â Stirling muttered.
âWe need to inspect the wound,â Matheeas urged. âHelp me sit him up so we can take this armor off.â
As they began to take the chestplate off, Chris woke up with a gasp. âAughâ¦!â
The cloth cushioning was widely burnt away by the heat flash and the skin underneath was badly burnt as well. Thankfully, the armor had absorbed most of the force, making sure that the hit had not penetrated Chrisâs vital organs. however, the burnâs total radius had been spread out by the armor conducting it. Chrisâs entire front was a huge burnt bullseye. First degree burns on the edges narrowed down to a roughly fist-sized third degree burn in the center of his chest.
âWhat hit me?â Chris asked, in a mix of surprised, irritated, pained, and impressed.
âYou were hit by a Paradox Sorcererâs lightning, Chris,â Stirling said.
âWow. This is almost as bad as that fireball that hit me last year.â
Matheeas nodded. âYeah, that was bad.â
Stirling turned to Matheeas. âDo you want to continue forward with him in this state orâ¦?â
Matheeas thought for a second. âLetâs search the surrounding area, but I donât think we can go too far down leaving you alone, Chris. You could come with us, but with the hole in the armor, you would be extremely vulnerable. If we donât come back within thirty minutes, or you hear yelling and screaming and bloody murder, then you should take one of the goats and head back.â
Chris was about to object, but after thinking a bit, he agreed.
âYeah, I guess you're right. If I donât make it back, Chris -3rd will never find his cleavers again.â
Stirling smiled, glad that Chris the -2nd still had his sense of humor. âAll right. Weâll be fast, then, Chris. You just stay conscious and hold tight.â He stood up and looked around at the mess heâd made. An old part of him made him feel some small sense of remorse for the killing heâd done, but he quickly and easily shoved the guilt aside, clearing his head.
âHey, Lancaster. Iâve got a stealthy idea.â
âOh?â
~~~~~~~~
An ill-fitted Paradox Marauder and Shinobi flanked a visibly perturbed Paradox Sorcerer, as they walked through the mine. One rogue greeted them with a simple âHeyâ, to which the sorcerer nodded briefly. The occasional worker or slave spared them but a glance, as they passed by.
The Shinobi, with his very tight uniform, leaned over to the Sorcerer and whispered, âIs the leadership chamber much further? I think Iâm getting a wedgie, and I canât take much more of this. Maybe I should just stab you now and be done with this charadeâ¦!â
The Marauder continued the threat. âOr we could burn you, like you did with our friend.â
The sorcerer began sweating more profusely than he already was. âI swear, itâs just two more rooms over and a right. The whole planâs there, lined up on the walls. Just donât kill me!â
The Shinobi growled. âNo promises.â
They went through two more chambers, and turned right, where a door with a tacked on parchment labeled it âManagementâ.
âItâs right in here! I promise!â The Sorcerer said, nervously.
âAnything else we should know about whatâs in there?â Matheeas growled, his hand on his Marauderer blaster.
Stirling poked the dagger he held up against the Sorcerer.
The Sorcerer mumbled something intelligible.
âWhat was that??â Stirling said as he prodded considerably harder.
The sorcerer yelped as he reached out and pushed the door open in one fluid motion.
Inside, there were three other Paradox Rouges. Two seemed to be Marauderers without their full gear, helping a taller man who was clearly in charge. They were all leaning over a table with various papers.
The man in charge was wearing what Stirling had always imagined Rank 4 Paradox gear would end up looking like. What armor he was wearing at the time had translucent wires pulsing with maelstrom energy. His chestplate was thin, jet black, and light looking. His trousers and arms were similar, though there was a Paradox Rouge symbol on his shoulder. His boots had many wires, and large soles which added more than a few inches of hight. His arms had various slim compartments. Other than the gear he had on, there was a backpack leaning against the wall behind him. His helmet was equally slim, with a fully clear face-shield over which three retractable holographic lensâ loomed over one eye. which he had out at the moment.
âThen if everything is going apace, gentlemen-â he paused and turned casually to the three who had burst in.
Shinobi Stirling, Marauder Matheeas, and the sad Sorcerer, all stood there briefly.
â... I shall report to Vladek the good news,â the commander finished, as he began to stride towards the exit, currently blocked by the other three. He showed no signs of stopping, and seemed to expect the subordinates to move.
âTHEYâRE REBE-â The Sorcerer screamed, before gasping as he was stabbed.
Matheeas shoved the body at the leader.
Stunned, the leader flinched on instinct, and swatted the sorcererâs limp form away.
Only to meet maelstrom energy bolts from Matheeasâ pistol, which clanged and resulted in burn marks on his arm and chestplate, but did not penetrate.              Â
Both Stirling and Matheeas stepped into the threshold, and Strider shut the door behind him, smiling grimly under the tight shinobi mask.
Only now did the two other Paradox Guards behind the leader react, reaching for their weapons that were close at hand.
The leaderâs eyes had widened in surprise, but now, they narrowed frighteningly. âTraitors.â
Strider barked a harsh laugh at the irony he found in the word, as he threw one of his Shinobi blades past Matheeasâs head, aiming for the jetpack. However, the leader deftly snatched the blade out of the air as it passed between him and Matheeas, and sprang forward towards Matheeas with a downward strike.
Seeing this, Matheeas moved in the only direction he had available in the narrow room. Forward. Rushing to dive underneath the blade that he could not parry, he then drove his entire body up into the gut of the leader, attempting to haul the leader in a shoulder-toss of sorts.
Both men were heavy in their armor. the Paradox Rogue leader was not able to twist quickly enough to strike Matheeas properly. however, Matheeas was not quite strong enough to throw him quite how heâd wanted to. They both landed in a dusty heap in front of Strider and the two Marauders, who were just now observing the situation and pointing blaster barrels just about everywhere.
Stirling put his remaining blade to the neck of the leader, while staring at the other two lackeys. âDrop your weapons, or Iâll slice through this soft rubber tubing that makes your leaderâs fancy neckpiece,â he commanded.
The two Rogues looked at each other, then at the strange Shinobi. âWhy donât you withdraw your blade first, Shinobi?â the one on the right said. His voice was even and clear. It was the voice of someone who was moving up in rank, and knew how to give commands of his own.
Stirling shook his head. âThereâs only one of my blades. Two of your guns. Remove a gun, and Iâll remove my blade.â
While this was going on, Matheeas tried to get back to his feet, but the leader grabbed him by the neck, and yanked him back to the ground. âNo you donât,â he said. âYouâre staying down here with me.â
âNo,â He replied. âYouâre down here with ME.â
The leader blinked twice. âIs that the best retort you could come up with?!â
âNo, I was about to say that I wish your face shield was opaque.â
The two rogues looked back at each other, then back at their boss.
âI won the annual beauty contest three years straight, what did you do?â
âDidnât even need to do any sort of contest, just had to look in the mirror.â
The two rogues looked back at each other. The first one who had spoken nodded to the one on the left. âFine,â the left one said, dropping his pistol. His tone was one who just saw this as a day job.
The commanding rogue now turned to Strider. âNow you.â
Stirling was glad this mask covered his grin. Maybe he would keep it. After glancing once more at Matheeas, hoping he would be ready for it, he pulled out a knife from his boot, and tossed it underhand at the rogue.
The spinning blade was shot aside by the ready rogue, but the simultaneous sound of slicing flesh and the mad rush of the shinobi dragging his blade from across his commanderâs neck and into an upward swing at him took the yet-young lieutenant by surprise.
â...At least I didnât need hair plug- Oh. Oh!â Matheeas took the sword of the now decapitated commander, and went forward towards the other one that Stirling wasnât on. The one that was quickly recovering his dropped blaster. As he did, he saw Stirling swing his shinobi blade up and into the arms of the rogue with the gun, and ruin his shot, which went flying just shy of Striderâs left ear.
Matheeas didnât focus on that for much longer, as he tangled with the other remaining rogue.
The two lieutenants were dispatched quickly, and easily.                                      Â
âWell, at least we donât have to worry about being stealthy anymore.â Matheeas remarked, amidst the wrecked and bloody room.
Strider sighed, quite relieved, pulling off the hat and tossing it languidly. âWonderful.â
Matheeas turned to the other objects in the room. The Sorcerer had spoken truthfully. All along this room were various maps and charts showing the many levels, passages, and tunnels underneath Ankoria. It did not take him long to see the full scope of the plan arrayed here.
âThese mapsâ¦â Matheeas said, moving from one to the other. âTheyâre individual mines⦠But here. This oneâs not a huge mineâ¦â
He turned to Stirling, who was looking at the jetpack. âStrider, theyâre intending to connect all the mines.â
âYeah, okay. Hey, check this out. Thereâs a whole pistol in here! Talk about space saving!â Stirling said, pointing to a pistol that had sprung out of the side of the jetpack at the press of a button.
âThe mines the other groups are all in!â Matheeas enunciated.
Stirling picked up on Lancasterâs urgent tone, one he had not quite heard before from the usually cool-headed leader. He turned from the fascinating pack and gave his full attention to Lancasterâs discovered map. âThatâs a big project," Stirling conceded. "But whatâs the poiâ¦â
Even as he began to ask the question, Lancaster confirmed his answer.
âIt all connects back to Vladekâs fort. Heâll be able to move his forces much faster, much farther, without us seeing himâ¦â
Stirling raised an eyebrow. âIâve never known Vladek to be sneaky like that.â he turned to a table and began ruffling through papers. âThere must be another reason heâs doing all this.â
Matheeas nodded. âPreviously, he simply threw rogues at us, before he lost interest.â
Stirling shuffled more papers around restlessly. âSo if heâs not interested in you guys, why is he interested in these mines?â He turned back to the Jetpack, tapping it to see if it was a special alloy. His rusty blacksmithy analysis told him no. âIs this seriously just for raw materials?â
âI donât know, but we have to warn the rest of our forces in the mines! Letâs gather as many plans as we can, and then we must get Chris out of here, and from there get to the others!â
Stirling nodded, and continued fumbling with the Jetpack. âThingâs got to have aâ¦â
â...What are you doing?â
âAha!â a slot opened up on the Jetpack. âThing doubles as a standard issue Nexus Force Backpack,â Stirling said. âWe can stuff everything in here.â
Matheeas looked at the dead corpse of the leader. âHow much?â
Stirling followed his gaze. âUm. Wellâ¦â
--------------
As the duo walked out of the âManagementâ room, Shinobi Stirling shouldered the loudly-humming commanderâs Jetpack. According to the energy it was emitting, they had crammed it full to itâs experimental capacity. Basically EVERYTHING but the computer banks and the table.
They casually walked back the way they came.
âItâs been longer than 30 minutes,â Stirling whispered. âI think our friend has left. Or at least he should have.â
Lancaster nodded. âHe will have followed orders.â
As they neared the exit, they became aware of a consternation up ahead. They barely had time to think, before a contingent of Paradox troops, came tromping around the corner, nearly bowling the other two over.
The leader of this group addressed them. âYou two, follow us, weâre on lockdown. Someoneâs infiltrated the mine. The Perimeter guards are missing and the entrance guards are in barrels, naked and quite d- wait.â
âYeah, abou that-â Stirling began, but Lancaster interrupted his sentence by firing his newly acquired rifle at the first line, blasting several.
âDIE, YOU GOOD-FOR-NOTHING BLIGHT-BRINGING TRAITORS!â roared the Leader of the Resistance, dressed as a Marauder. As many of them fell, Stirling grabbed him by the other arm and began running, knowing that these men would only be surprised for so long.
âLooks like we aren't leaving the same way we came!â Stirling said. Once he was sure that Matheeas was running of his own accord, he reached into the Paradox Commanderâs pack and pulled out a map of the mine. âLetâs hope to God thereâs another way out!â
~~~~
Chapter 15: Further into Fear
Kalaren fell to the bottom of the basin with a groan. The battle was not going in their favor.
Most of the slaves had been either knocked unconscious or killed, and Chris, Kevin, and him had been pretty banged up, Jellyfish had been fine because nobody could get a clear shot at him with all the gaseous fumes from the potions he had been throwing around him. One of which had thrown Kalaren off the edge. As he got up, Kevin backed up against him.
âGotta say, Manotaur, it was an honor!â
âWhat is WRONG with âKalarenâ?!?!?â
âDonât talk about The Manotaur like that! Youâll hurt his self esteem!â
Kalaren decided now wasnât a good time to club Kevin, so instead he fired his stolen wormholer at some oncoming Shinobi. Some of them were able to deflect the shots, or they simply stood behind the people in front of them. Unfortunately for them, one of Jellyfishâs explosives hit the group as they ran down the ramp.
âIâve got your back, Kalaren!â Dr. Jellyfish hollered from the cliff above, before getting brained by a rock from behind.
It was then that Kalaren heard some yelling behind him. He turned around. It was coming from the newly drilled tunnelâ¦
âaaaaaaaaaaAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH!!!â As the noise grew louder, a shinobi came into view⦠He was⦠Flying? with a Marauder on his back???
âDUCK!â Kalaren cried.
â... Dude?â Kevin asked, staring at the flying twosome. Then he gasped. âITâS DUCKDU-â he began, before getting bowled over by the flying Shinobi and Marauder zooming past him. Kevin narrowly avoided the onslaught of foes that rushed forward to his prone state, rolling this way and that as shots and blades slammed into the cave floor around him.
Meanwhile, the two newcomers flew up to the clifftop above, and were lost to Kalarenâs sight. However, he heard the fighting resume strongly, andâ¦
âThis is the way out!â yelled the same voice. Something about it was familiar...
âThen letâs gather the troops and push forward!â said another, which Kalaren recognized immediatly.
âMatheeas!â Kalaren realized. âWhatâs he doing here?â
The Marauder reappeared at the cliff top, before ripping his helmet off. âLetâs bring this party outside!â he roared. Everyone in the room spared a moment to look at this newcomer.
âWho the stars are you?!â cried one of the slaves.
Another person came up next to him. A shinobi, who ripped off the facemask. âWeâre the blasted calvary, what more do-â
âWe are two Knights of the Olde Speech, here to save you from certain doom!â Lancaster crowed.
Next to him, Stirling, for it was Stirling, now that Kalaren saw them without the disguise, did a double-take. However, before they could say anything more, Kalaren felt he should mention a minor detailâ¦
âThatâs great and all, but the entrance to this tunnel is blocked.â
At that moment, Kalaren heard more sounds from the tunnel behind him.
Stirling and Matheeas turned to each other, both looking quite pale. Then they looked down at a sheet that Stirlng was holding⦠Slowly, they looked at each other, then down the tunnel that Kalaren had come from originally. There were a number of Paradox Rouges, watching them curiously. Clearly fresh reinforcements.
âLooks like itâs the belly of the beast for us,â Stirling said.
One of the Paradox rogues below in the basin with Kevin and Kalaren, shook the slave whoâs shirt collar he still held.
âSo we gunna fight or not?â
From the tunnel, several rows of organized marching rogues appeared, causing the other (admittedly disorganized) rogues to cheer.
And the battle commenced again.
âTo me!â cried Matheeas. âIf you value your freedom, to me!â
Kalaren threw a grenade behind him into the new troops from the tunnel, and ran to the ramp, chainsawing a sorcerer who stepped too close with his right hand, and hauled Kevin to his feet with his left.
âThanks, dude,â Kevin said, stumbling to his feet. Behind them swarmed the few surviving slaves that could still run.
âAnytime.â He muttered.
Upon reaching the clifftop, Kalaren saw Stirling using a Wormholer to drill his own gruesome hole into the other oncoming Paradox Rogues, even as Matheeas used a shield in one hand, and slapped Dr. Jellyfish to consciousness with his other.
âWake. Up. Doctor.â he said, punctuating the words with slaps. âTime to Run. For the hills.â
âArguum⦠Wha- oh. Oh. OH! Yes SIR! Where are they?â
Matheeas pointed down the hall that Stirling was shooting. âThat way.â
Dr. Jellyfish leaned to see around Stirling, who was actively getting shot at. âOh. Jellyfish.â
Matheeas nodded. âJellyfish indeed.â Then he turned to the others as they arrived. âHere is the plan. Weâre going to fit into a circle, putting the weakest in the center, weâll move down the tunnel behind me, and past the entrance to this tunnel. It wonât be as fast a mad rush, but we should go farther. We can still make it!â
A few of the weary slaves turned fighters cheered, Kevin and Kalaren with them, but Matheeas could tell they were near their breaking points.
âGREAT PEP TALK,â Stirling yelled. âNOW LETâS MOVE, PEOPLE!!!â
So they did. Commanders Matheeas, Kalaren and Stirling headed the movement, all armed with Wormholers to better mow down the attackers. Kevin and Jellyfish formed the rearguard. Jellyfish with his explosive potions, and Kevin with a rocket launcher and blaster. In the middle with many of the slaves was Chris -3rd, who was badly injured.
Moving down the corridor, the three in front shot at anything that moved. Kalaren glanced at Stirling, who had clearly already been shot in multiple non-vital areas while heâd cleared the tunnel during Matheeasâ speech. The jetpack on his back appeared to be pulsing, and small batches of nanobots were scurrying from the backpack, moving across his shinobi armor, causing him to grunt and twitch from time to time.
Now, they pressed the advantage Stirling has earned them, trying to keep the tunnel clear. Up the short tunnel, past the collapsed entrance on their leftâ¦
âContact!â yelled Kevin from the rear. âThose bad dudes have caught up with us back here!â The sounds of gunfire echoed from behind the group.
âHold them back!â Matheeas yelled, even as they heard a familiar explosion and hiss from the Doctorâs concoctions.
As they continued to advance, they soon saw their enemies retreating rather than standing to face them.
âTactical retreat.â Stirling muttered. âTheyâll regroup up ahead.â
âSo, itâs a trap?â Kalaren asked, glancing between the two. âDo we press forward?â
Matheeas shook his head. âNot much of a choice.â
Stirling waved an arm. âThis whole mine was a trap. Gah..!â He grunted, as a group of nanobots reached a wound and burrowed in, disinfecting it. It served as a further reminder of the fact.
They rushed as quickly as they dared down the ramp and followed it as it curved gently right. It led into a dimly lit corridor, with room for barely two people to stand abreast. The walls and ceiling were absolutely covered with light purple crystals that jaggedly reflected the light.
Stirling grimaced. It was the perfect murder hole. The perfect place for a trap.
He roared, rushed forward, and fired blindly into the dark. Crystals shattered with the sound of glass, and as some shards hit the ground, there was a telltale beep, and then an answering roar as a dozen mines went off, creating an inferno that was channeled both ways. Matheeas yanked him back around the curve of the tunnel to relative saftey as shards of crystal and fire zipped past both of them.
Stunned, Stirling muttered, âBetter me than everyone. Wayâs clear.â
Kalaren stared at him, before saying in a voice quiet enough so no one behind him could hear, âWe could have thrown one of the half-dead slaves instead.â
Matheeas closed his eyes and took a deep breath. Then he hissed as his brain alerted him to a deep gash in his left arm.
He examined it. A clean cut, straight through the thickest part of the Marauder gauntlets he was wearing. Beyond that, he could see he was bleeding no small amount through a cut in his muscle.
Surprised and intrigued, he pulled the gauntlet off, and saw the cut was a few centimeters deep. He quickly pulled out a bandage and wrapped it tight, as Stirling recovered his feet and the rest of the group piled up next to them.
âWhy are we stopping?â exclaimed a hooded woman, bumping into Kalaren. âThe Paradox are pressing us from behind!â
âThey are laying traps up ahead. We are⦠disabling them. Watch your step, there are sharp shards of crystal on the floor.â Matheeas exclaimed. âKalaren, youâre expendable, go in there and shoot the rest of the room up quickly, just in case the explosion left anything. Youâll lead on after that.â
Kalaren raised his eyebrows before Stirling interrupted, staggering to his feet.
âNo, no. Iâm fine.â he reached into his Nexus Force backpack and pulled out a Venture League flaregun. âHow do I fire this thing?â
âHey, I can do it. You cleared most of it anyway, and I will be more careful than. That.â Kalaren said.
âYâknow what..!â The hooded lady said as she snatched the flaregun from Stirlingâs hands and chucked it into the room. Nothing happened.
She turned to Stirling. âThere, see? No more traps there. Youâve got more?â
Stirling looked into the backpack. There was tons of junk here, and once again Stirling wasn't sure to bless or curse Peragrine's packrat tendencies. âSure.â
He ran forward, only to hiss as he started limping. Taking a quick glance, he noticed there were multiple thin gashes through the fronts of his leggings.
âOh. Curious.â However, he didnât stop.
ââIâm sure you're fineâ.â Kalaren said as he hurried to catch up with him.
The corridor was covered in crystal, and Stirling could feel the sharp edges cutting into his Shinobi boots. He could only guess what this was going to do to the slaves, but it wasn'tâ like they had a choice. He and Kalaren ran as the corridor began to slope uphill slightly. As it did, Stirling stopped Kallaren with an arm, and said, âCover your eyes.â Then, he threw a flash bang from his pack.
For a moment, nothing happened. Then, the sound of an engine turning on in the distance.
The others caught up with Stirlng and Kalaren.
âThatâs one of the laser drills!â A slave yelled, recognizing the sound. âThey must be pushing it down the slope that's up ahead!â
Sudden panic threatened to overwhelm the group as they realized they would soon be between a rock and a hard place.
âWeâre boxed in! We canât break past their forces behind us!!!â
Stirling looked at Matheeas, who in turn looked at Stirling, frustrated. The leader of the resistance threw his hands up helplessly.
That was all that Stirling needed. Ripping off the Shinobi shoulderpads, he reached into his pack and pulled out his Samurai pads and helm. Then he yanked the Paradox Jetpack off his back and dumped EVERYTHING on the floor. Dozens of papers, several weapons and armors, and grenades.
âEVERYONE, GRAB SOMETHING AND GET READY TO RUN," Stirling commanded.
As various people picked up supplies, Matheeas watched Stirling as the knight shoved a final grenade into the jetpack, then closed it back up.
âStirling, youâre not going to-â Matheeas began.
Stirling studied some buttons on the jetpack, even as the sound of the drill grew louder, keeping above the renewed din of the Paradox forces having caught up with them from behind.
He pressed a few buttons, and the jetpackâs engines revved up.
âGo with the jetpack?â Stirling asked. âNo. Iâm reckless, not stupid.â And with that, he sent the jetpack rocketing up the ramp.
Just as it went out of sight, a terrific explosion rocked the entire structure, followed by the sound of a second explosion. Various people screamed, and it felt like they were in the center of an earthquake.
Kalaren looked up just in time to avoid a large section of the ceiling falling down on top of him.
âWEâRE GOING TO DIE!â someone yelled.
Stirling rushed forward, even as the corridor began to collapse. âRUN! FOLLOW ME, YOUR LIFE DEPENDS ON IT,â he roared over the crashing rocks, the screaming combatants, the raging inferno up ahead, and the crunching of the armed troops behind.
Matheeas and Kalaren rushed after Stirling, shooting debris as it rained down upon them and their charges that followed. However, to their surprise, when the ceiling fell, it didn'tâ reveal more rock, but instead, a much wider open ceiling many yards away. Seeing as the way further into the tunnel just included more crashing rocks and debris, this seemed like a good place to go. Stirling scrambled up some rocks that were conveniently piled on a wall into the room, and the others followed suit.
They emerged into a wide open cavern, with mine carts and tracks leading to and from many various tunnels, including one massive tunnel across the room. Stirling spun around once. Theyâd just created a massive sinkhole in the middle of what he now identified as a fledgling ore processing center and hub.
âCrux.â
At least 22 rogues in the immediate vicinity were staring at them, along with countless slaves of all sorts of ethnicities. Â
They were, of course, the center of attention.
Chapter 16: Only the Beginning of the Madness
And then the room exploded with activity.
Stirling rushed forward, repeating his cry to all the slaves in the room. âFOLLOW ME IF YOU WANT TO LIVE.â
The cry did not immediately affect the slaves in this new room, as they were still processing what just happened. However, the outpouring of Matheeas, Kalaren, and all of the others, including the fighting slaves, from the fissure in the floor brought the realization forward, and friend and foe were stirred into action.
Stirling pointed to the largest tunnel, and said to Matheeas, âThink thatâs our target.â
Matheeas nodded. âSounds good. Might be able to use those.â He said, gesturing to the mining carts on tracks that went up the tunnel.
Stirling nodded. âWomen and Children, with one fighter each. As many as we can.â
âWe donât have any children here. Maybe older teenagers. Donât forget the elderly.â
âMinors then! Non-combatants!â
âTheyâre all miners,â Kalaren said as he threw a sorcerer mightily high into the air with his cybernetic arm.
âYOU GET THE POINT!â Stirling spluttered as he dove behind a minecart, not having a ranged weapon to fight back against the ranged combatants all around the room.
Matheeas shrugged and yelled the order. âEVERYONE UNABLE TO FIGHT GET INTO THE CARTS ON THIS TRACK!â
Dr. Jellyfish raised a hopeful hand from the back. âIâm getting to that point, Commander! Only so many beakers left!â
âThen make them count! Defend the slaves as they mount the carts, and light the track up with something NON-EXPLOSIVE!â
Chris the -3rd appeared from the crowd and slumped next to Stirling. âHey, Strider. Been meaning to ask: Whereâs my bro?â
Stirling glanced up, and surprise flashed across his face. âOh yeah. We had to leave him behind.â
âWhat?!â
âNo, not like that! He was badly injured. We-â
âYou left him there?!?â
âNo! Well yes, but-â
Chris the -3rd began spluttering incoherently, giving Stirling just enough time to finish his explanation.
â-last I saw him, he was given orders to make his way back to base if we didnât return in some amount of minutes. We didnât return. Yet.â
âOh.â And then Chris dodged a lightning bolt from a sorcerer who was shooting from a higher vantage point. The sorcerer was instantly retaliated against by multiple laser blasts.
âThatâs what hit him.â Stirling said, indicating the lightning blast. Then he gripped Chrisâs shoulder hard. âAnd if you want to see him again, youâre going to hold on and help me get everyone else out of here. Got that, soldier?â
Chris looked at Stirling in surprise, then his features hardened and he nodded grimly. âWhat do you want me to do, commander?â
âYouâre going to be on the first cart out of here. I need you to spearhead the convoy out of here. Be sure to get a wormholer.â
âYes sir.â Chris sprinted up towards a cart that was farther ahead, cleaving a few rogues on his way there, and grabbing an aforementioned wormholer.
Stirling turned his attention to getting a weapon of his own. âRight. Enough hunkering down.â And he stormed into the fray.
~~~~~~
Kalaren looked further up the tunnel as the cart he had hitched a ride on came up the tunnel. Up ahead, he saw Chris the Negative 3rd fighting off the last of the Paradox guards in the room, with the hooded slave that had talked to Matheeas and Stirling earlier at his side, swinging a shinobi katana at their foes.
The other slaves had rounded up a group of scientists in typical labcoats or outrageous goggles and other sciency gear. They held them hostage by waving tools and blunt objects menacingly at them. Kalaren jumped off of his cart and headed past the rest of the stacked up carts. The further they came into the room, the more familiar it seemed in shapeâ¦
Then it hit him. This room looked like a mirror image of his original holding cell! Only, instead of being a dimly lit torture-slash-expirimental test subject chamber, this was some sort of geological study laboratory.
âKal! Give me a hand here,â Chris called, wrestling with a Paradox Marauder and bringing Kalaren back to the situation at hand.
âOh, yeah, sorry!â He yelled back as he unsheathed his shortsword and ran over. He grabbed Chrisâ assailant and stabbed him, before rushing over to the hooded lady, who was desperately fighting off a shinobi. Kalaren proceeded to stab that foe as well.
âThere we go.â Kalaren said as he helped Chris back up to his feet.
âLooks like the free ride is over,â Chris said, pointing to where the mine carts stopped against a bumper in the middle of the room.
As he spoke, the line of carts shuddered again as more carts arrived with more people.
âGonna have to use your old tired bones!â Kalaren jested. âI used to have a holding cell like this.â
âBut then you took an arrow to the knee?â
âAxe to the arm, rather.â He said, gesturing at his right robotic arm.
âOh.â The color drained from Chrisâs face a bit more as he realized the perfect reversal that Kalaren had just done in equal parts jest and seriousness combined.
âYou were a slave too?â The hooded lady said as she walked up.
Kalarenâs eyebrows knitted together. âNot quite. Itâs hard to explain. Letâs see whatâs on the other side of this door.â He said, as he walked up to the thick steel door at the end of the room. At the moment, it was locked. Kalaren braced his foot against the wall and ripped out the handle and lock with his mangled, but still functional, right hand.
Various sounds of exclamation and approval from all conscious came from behind, but like a boss, Kalaren didnât look back. Part of the reason being his face had slightly reddened. Instead, he heard the hooded lady say to the other hostage scientists, âThatâs right. Thatâs the kind of secret firepower weâve got! So now you can either escape with us, or stay out of our way, you⦠youâ¦â
The other slaves came to her rescue.
âTorturers!â âManiacs!â âEvildoers!â
A few of the scientists stood up with their hands in the air. âI hate this job anyway! The foodâs lousy and I donât get dental.â
The slaves just looked at each other, then at the scientists.
âOh. Yeah.â One of them said.
âIt wasnât that bad, especially the fried land-roving squid!â Jellyfish said as he ran up.
One of the scientists gagged and fainted.
The first one that had spoken up first did so again. âLook, we wonât stop you. Thereâs even some here that would join you! Take me, anythingâs better than staying down here in this stinky dank dungeon investigating Crisilau!â He paused. âIâve always been more interested in the zoology of Ankoria,â he stated wistfully.
âLike land-roving squids!!!â replied Jellyfish.
The rest of the scientists murmured their agreement, and some began hotly debating if the land-roving squid was truly still a squid with land-roving capabilities, or an entirely new animal.
âDoesnât matter right now,"Chris said before turning back to Kalaren. What's on the other side of the door anyway, Kal?â
The previously mentioned individual held two unconscious guards by the scruff of their necks, before dropping them simultaneously in mock guilt. âNothing!â Kalaren said, a grin slowly creeping up on his face. âAlso, there is a cell block. If there are any prisoners in there, we can free them."
One of the scientists reached towards a dead guard, before one of the slaves knocked his hand aside.
âHey, what do you think youâre doinâ?â
âOw!â The scientist sucked on his stricken palm, and with the other, he pointed at some keys on the dead guardâs belt. âFu muh mu fat mu muwock the mrulls.â
âSay again?â The slave asked.
Next to him, another scientist translated the palm-suckerâs words.
âHe said, âYou can use that to unlock the cells.â Really, Dave, it couldn't have hurt that bad.â
âmru mrrts mru mink!â
The slave shrugged and grabbed the keys, before tossing them to Kalaren. He nodded his thanks and headed down the corridor. Four cells on either side, each with a heavy iron door. He stopped at one door and looked in through a rectangular viewing port that opened and closed with a thin iron sheet.
It was a cell, but there were just more crates of crystal in them. The next few cells all contained more crystals, though some had scientific equipment and information on fold-out tables or taped up corkboards filled with notes. Each cell seemed to be set up to investigate something different about the crystals. This Crisilau. The same crystals that had cut through Matheeas' and Strider's armor in the mines below.
As Kalaren reached the end of the corridor, there was another iron door, but thankfully this one was ajar.
Walking into the large circular room, he saw three more doors like the one heâd just come through. Looking up, he realized that this central chamber also had a large winding staircase that looped around and around and around the inside of this tall interior. Far up in the distant ceiling, Kalaren could see a pinprick of natural light.
He looked back down the hallway he had come through, as he saw Chris leading a swarm of slaves.
âThe others have come up the tunnel, and so have their pursuers. Whatâs up ahead?â Chris asked.
Kalaren gestured to the cells. âNo prisoners in these. Just crystals and notes. This door leads to a room with a stairway leading up, and three other cell blocks.â
âThere are a few prisoners in the next cell blocks, maybe we could free them too.â The wishful zoologist ventured helpfully.
Kalaren nodded. âAlright, then youâll lead us through the cells. Five of the others will come with me. Chris, you stay here to tell Matheeas and the rest what weâre doing, and keep everyone here until we come back.â
Chris the -3rd nodded.
âThis one first,â the scientist said, pointing to the one left of where theyâd come from. It had a plaque next to it reading âNâ. The others, Kalaren now realized, also had plaques, reading âSâ, âWâ and âEâ. Compass points.
Kalaren unlocked the North door, and as it groaned and protested, two guards sprang out and fired point-blank at Kalaren with their blasters. One shot hit Kalarenâs cybernetic arm, and the other one grazed his left shoulder, but this gave the other slaves that were following Kalaren time and room to shoot and hack at them.
Chris rushed forward to check on Kalaren. Wordlessly, Kalaren waved him off, and Chris instead turned back to the others, and those coming through the West door, up from the mines.
After that short debacle, Kalaren and the others following him quickly cleared out the Northern Cell Block, which rather more resembled a micro-community, with each cell being a tiny house, and the central corridor more of a general hangout.
All in all, while everyone here was absolutely a prisoner, they seemed to be treated humanely while not actually working in the mines. Most of them agreed to come with them in this prison break, but others rejected the offer, and they were thrown in a cell together so they couldnât, or wouldnât stop them from escaping.
The strangest part of the cell block was at the end, however. A final door at the far end was easily opened without force or key to revealâ¦
âOh, this is our hottub lounge and general breakroom. Good for relaxing those muscles at the end of a long dayâs work.â The scientist explained.
Two masked Paradox Marauders looked up from where they were chilling in the hottub. They appeared to only have their helmets and swim trunks on. They turned to the newcomers.
âHey. This is our break. Come back later when we are high-strung and ready to shoot,â one of them said.
âNo... Dobson, these must be the guys that are causing all those alerts,â said the other.
âWonder whyâ¦?â
âDunno, Dobson.â
âWhat should we do, Dobson?â
âWeâre on break, like you said. Itâs not our problem.â Dobson turned back to Kalaren. âTake what you want, just leave the nachos. Those are mine.â
Kalaren stared in disbelief, before turning around and closing the door.
âHe seemed nice!â came the distant voice of one of the Dobsons.
Kalaren kept walking down the corridor. âNext!â
Meanwhile, while Kalaren and the wannabe zoologist were clearing out the North Cell Block, Stirling, Matheeas, and everyone else arrived to speak with Chris, who brought them up to speed.
Stirling growled a curse under his breath. âWe donât have time for this.â
Matheeas shrugged. âWeâll never get another chance like this.â He dropped his voice to a lower volume. âBesides, some of them could join the resistance, and I wonât say no to that.â
âFine!â Strider said. âThen let's split up, you and me, and get the other two corridors. Weâll be out of here faster.â Stirling said, before looking up the staircase. âWeâre sitting ducks here for all manner of things to be rained down on us.â
âThen, like you said, letâs get out of here as soon as we can!â Matheeas said, and then proceeded to turn right, heading to the eastern tunnel. Stirling growled, and barged south.
Fishing some keys from one of the comatose Guards, Stirling flung the south cell block open.
Two guards spun around the doorframe, as Stirling expected. He reached out and grabbed both of the Marauder's blasters and pushed them upward just as the two fired. As the blaster fire shot harmlessly into the ceiling, Stirling shoved them both back into the room, and spun around on the one to his right, getting the guard into a chokehold between him and the second one.
The free guard yelled as a small mining laser hit his visor and melted, fired from a slave outside the corridor.
Stirling grinned with grim satisfaction, then snapped the neck of the guard that he held, dropping the body unceremoniously. He stepped forward to the other rogue, who was scrabbling with their helmet on the floor, desperatly trying to get the melted visor off of his face. A quick sword cut, and there was silence. Â
Stirling looked around the cell block.
This cell block was distinctly more dismal. A number of curious and anxious faces leered out from the individual cells that lined this prison block.
A trio of slaves stepped into the block behind Stirling.
âThat was⦠Very⦠Effective.â One of them said, grimacing at the bloody mess they had just stepped over.
âItâs only going to get worse,â Strider grunted.
âExcuse me, but are you here to let us out?â said one of the voices from the cells.
â...Or kill us?â Ventured another.
Stirling moved to the one that spoke first, partway down the hall. It was a woman in a baggy burlap habit with the hood up. A strand of dirty, matted, red hair was visible. Stirling thought he noticed some silver in it too.
âI have keys. I donât have your freedom,â he said, as he unlocked the cell door. âThat, youâll have to fight for.â
The trio that followed Stirling in found other sets of keys and began opening other cells as Stirling continued to talk to the red-haired woman.
She nodded slowly. âBetter than this, I suppose.â She lowered her voice and leaned closer to Strider. âEveryone else in the cells should be fine to release, there are a few eccentric ones, but fairly harmless, the real person you should be careful around is the one inhabiting cell number 17. Thatâs Tillman. Heâs their⦠Test subject.â
Stirling turned and looked over his shoulder at cell 17, further down the cell block. Inside was a man in a similar habit, rocking back and forth on his cot. He seemed to not have noticed anything outside, and was just staring ahead.
Stirling looked back. âDuly noted, missâ¦?â
âAmras. Is there a weapon I could use?â
Swinging the cell door open, Stirling withdrew his dagger and handed it to her hilt-first. âTill you can pick up one of their guns, or a drill, or something.â
Amras looked at it a little disappointedly. âBetter than this shard of a rock I found, I suppose.â Then she took it.
Stirling chuckled, then got back to unlocking more cells. As he did so, he felt a hand grip his shoulder.
Instinctively, he whipped around, backhanding the freed prisoner in the face.
âWhy you little...!â the stranger said, clearly offended. âWho are you? What do you want?!â he asked, as a poor means of beginning a conversation.
âIâm Stirling Silverstine. Iâm here to get you out, apparently,â Stirling said, turning to free other prisoners. But the stranger wasnât done talking.
âWell, that certainly depends on who you are and who you serve.â
This gave Stirling pause. He looked back over his shoulder and regarded this young man. Like a lot of the prisoners, he had muscle, and was well-built from hard labor. He had a full head of black hair and a full beard, both roughly cut. His eyes were simple, dark green, flat, and searching.
Stirling turned back around to face him fully, and slowed down, as everyone else continued to mill around him, Amras, and this stranger. This stranger who was smart enough to question his motives...
âAs I said. Iâm Stirling Silverstine. I serve no one, and seek to make that choice possible for everyone. Iâm against thedude, and Vladek, and any other tyrants that would restrict your freedom to live as you will.â
He noticed others were listening to his words, and that most of the cells were open now, except for cell 17.
âDoes that answer your question, sirâ¦?â
The stranger opened his mouth to speak, lost in thought. âVikky.â He mumbled.
The sound of others sniggering brought âVikkyâ to focus. He shook his head. âAHEM! I mean, uh, Victor.â
Stirling reached out and grabbed âVikkyâsâ shoulder. âNope, itâs Vikky now. Are you willing to fight for your freedom?â
âNo one calls me Vikky. No one but my sister. Got that?" Victor said evenly. He changed the subject again before anyone could object. "I don't mind fighting if it means I can go home.â
Stirling narrowed his eyes slightly at the prisoner, then shook the shoulder once. âFine. Next time, donât sneak up on me. I could have done a lot worse.â Then Stirling gave a final grim smile to Victor and the onlookers as he walked over to cell 17.
As he approached the cell, he observed the prisoner within.
âTillmanâ had not noticed him, and continued to stare at the wall. As Stirling looked closer, he noticed âTillmanâsâ skin was sand green. He also lacked hair. But the oddest part about him was his fingers. They were long and spindly, holding his legs up to his chest.
âMr. Tillman?â Stirling asked.
Tillmanâs head snapped to look at Stirling, as he stopped rocking and let his thin anemic legs fall to the floor, and his eyes squinted.
âAh! John! How good to see you! Have you broughtâ¦â His eyes darted from side to side, before he whispered mysteriously, â... the barnacles?â
Stirling held up the keys and jangled them. âSomething better. Iâm here to let you go.â
âLet... me go? No. I canât do that. No food out there. No power.â He said, gesturing to a power cord hanging from the ceiling.
Stirling looked up. âNo⦠Power?â
âNo power, no food, no sustenance, more hunger, more pain, more quiet. Itâs too quiet in here. And yet, too loud. All because of fear. Too much fear. Maybe not enough. Healthy fear. Good to lose weight on. Also hair. You got barnacles?â
Stirling shook his head. He didnât have time for this. This was like talking to Dr. Jellyfish. But more freaky.
âTillman! Focus.â Stirling jangled the keys again, and began unlocking the cell.
âYes! I have the payment. You got barnacles? Is that thing in your hands a barnacle? I need bar-â
âIâm opening this cell. You can go and get your own barnacles. Outside. People will try to stop you, but something tells me they canât stop you, if you really want barnacles bad enough.â
âYou sure thatâs a good ideaâ¦?â One of the slaves said.
Stirling turned back on him more brusquely than he intended. âI donât have the time to judge each one of you. Weâre wasting too much time already.â He swung the cell open.
Tillman peered outside cautiously, as Stirling and others backed up. âNo power. Canât come. Unless⦠You have other food?â
Stirling blinked furiously. âYou eat electricity?â
âYes. Sort of. Not very good. All I haveâ¦â
Stirling pulled Peragrineâs pack off and began rummaging around.âAlright, Peragrine, I'm calling on you again here.â Stirlingâs hands wrapped around something sizable and metallic. He pulled it out.
It turned out to be a Boombox. Stirling set it down on the ground in front of the test subject.
âOk, Tillman. Can you take the battery power from this?â
Tillman looked down at it. âMaybe.â He wrapped his fingers on it, and his entire body started to glow as he started humming in delight.
Sufficiently disturbed, but glad that heâd made the strange⦠Man? Creature? happy, Stirling turned to the end of the corridor, where a number of slaves were attempting to unlock the far doorway with a number of keys⦠The only question was which ones to use, as these double doors had four differently colored locks. The others had already unlocked three of the four, but were having difficulty finding the last one.
âNot this one⦠Not this one⦠Which of these is it?!â
âThereâs too many locks on this stupid door! Whatâs so interesting behind here?â said one of the slaves thatâd come from the mines.
âWeapons.â Amras clarified. âAt least, I think so. I see guards go in there without weapons and come out with weapons.â
Stirling grinned wolfishly. âThen thatâs certainly worth a minute.â He glanced back at the main room, noting how the other leaders hadnât quite come back yet, and the main force of the slaves was holding back the guards in the mines. âBut only just a minute.â he growled, noting the treasure-filled glee among those around him.
âAh! Hereâs the final key!â The slave said. âWait. No. I was wrong.â
âOh, let me!â Said one with a mining laser, who proceeded to cut through the final lock. Sirling strode forward and pushed the heavy iron double doors open.
The room was filled with various weapons, mostly Paradox. Wormholers hung on the wall, racks of shinobi katanas, boxes of sorcerer wands, and various armor pieces were scattered about the room. Here and there were other more antiquated armaments, like black spears, sets of red armor with black skorpions emblazoned on them, and dark, foreboding helmets entirely black. Along the back wall were seemingly more special items in glass cases.
There were also two stone statues of knights on either side of Stirling, which started to glow an eerie red.
âWell, Crux.â Stirling sighed.
Chapter 17: The Clarity of Insanity.
Matheeas and Jellyfish opened the east cell block, and they both handled their individual guard. Matheeas by a quick parry and thrust, and Jellyfish by a quick dodge and countershot to the head. They sauntered into the block.
âYup. Mhm. Place looks familiar.â Jellyfish said as they looked around.
âReally?â Matheeas said. The place looked fairly well maintained. Good lighting, although the doors were steel with only a sliding window to look in. Matheeas walked up to the closest one and peered in. Inside appeared to be a knight wearing dark armor, sleeping on a cot. A cherry-red light activated within his helmet, and he sat straight up, giving Matheeas a look inside his helmet. It appeared that one half of his face was covered in metal. His right hand, also appearing to have a metallic glint, shot a short, thick, blade. The knight quickly grabbed his right arm with his left and held it down.
âGreetings. My sincerest apologies. It is simply my right sideâs reaction. Have you come to bring me supper?â
âNo, I have actually come to break you out of here, if you wish.â
The cybernetic knight- for surely, Matheeas thought, this man reminded him of Kalarenâs cybernetics- frowned.
âBreak out? Out of this cell.â He paused, considering Matheeas. âThen⦠Thou art not with the Lord Vladek?â
âNot in the slightest. You?â
The knight stood up. âLet me out, and I shall slay our foes.â
Matheeasâs brow furrowed. âSwear on your honor as a knight that you wonât harm me or my allies.â
The cyber-knight paused, so Matheeas added:
âAt least until we get out of here, you wonât attack any of my comrades. Then we can talk about it more.â
The cyber-knight was silent for a moment. âI am afraid I cannot do that.â
âWhy not?â
He motioned to his cybernetic arm. âThis arm. It is encoded to kill. I cannot guarantee that I shall not harm thee. Tis why I am enclosed herein. I am one of the greatest swordsmen in this fortress. With few exceptions, we wouldest meet little resistance in our escape. But I cannot say with veracity that thou wouldest be safe with me thereafter. Or indeed, before.
Matheeas nodded slowly. âSo, if you think you went ahead a little bit, and thought about killing only Vladekâs troops, we would be relatively safe?â
â...Perhaps.â
âGreat! Weâll come back for you later so you can lead the way.â
â...Very well.â
Matheeas closed the slot, and turned to look at Dr. Jellyfish, who was standing outside one of the cells, door open.
âThis⦠This was my room.â
Matheeas walked over. Inside was a bedstand with a sheet of metal, and a pillow, with straps welded to the sides to make a very low-grade operating table. All around the room were bits of machinery on the ground, on other tables, hanging from stands and small power-cranes. There was even an entire generator in the back of the room, which was hooked up to at least a dozen items. From the other cranes, to the bright surgical lights, to a few humming machines.
âThis room is definitely used for cybernetics. Fitting, that was my specialty.â
âStill is, Doctor. Think you could take any of this?â
â..Oh. Oh. Oh yes. Yes indeed! Give me a few minutes, I want to analyze the generator!â
Just then, the door at the far end of the corridor opened, upward with a hiss of air, and a tall, gaunt man in a white lab coat and gloves stepped through a blue force field.
He paused when he saw Matheeas and Jellyfish. Jellyfish turned to meet him.
âSylvester! Good to see you! How are the tests going? Howâs Collin?â
Matheeas observed this âSylvesterâ. Tall, gaunt, very much a scientist like Jellyfish, but he seemed to have a more... Sinister air about him. He was wearing goggles, but they did not make him look goofy. Instead, they accentuated the pinprick-like eyes he had, with their minimalist blue irises. He had slick black hair, and a neat, close trimmed, mustache.
âJohnathan.â he said. His voice was low. Surprisingly low, for someone so thin. His tone was neutral. He was clearly still processing what he was seeing.
âWas that my name? Yes, I suppose it was. Anyways you didnât answer my questions, so hereâs another one⦠Have you tried out my fried jellyfish recipe?â
Sylvester considered Jellyfish as he thought about this question. âYes. It was nutritionally and palatably terrible. A recipe not worth repeating. What is your business here?â
Matheeas was about to speak before Jellyfish beat him to it.
âWe are commencing a jailbreak! Aaaand raiding whatever we come across!â Jellyfish waved his blaster at the room they were just in.
âI hope that excludes me.â
âThat is up to the Commander here!â Both of the scientists turned expectantly at Matheeas.
âYou two know each other?â Matheeas asked.
âOh yes! We were colleagues.â Jellyfish replied.
âAssociates.â amended Sylvester.
âWe both worked on Kalaren!â
âSubject OâBryan.â
Matheeas shook his head. âIs he a threat, Doctor?â
âYeah, kind of, pretty much.â
âActually, I agree. But you canât touch me.â Then, he stepped backwards, into the forcefield.
Jellyfish let out a small bark of laughter. âYouâre relying on the same security system I assisted in installing!â
There was no reply, except for the door closing with another hiss of air.
Jellyfish strode forward. âIâll have this down in five minutes!â Once he got within a foot of the archway, he was met with a blast of electricity that discharged seemingly from the door itself.
âJELLYFIIISSZZ!â he squealed as he flew back down the corridor.
Matheeas stared for a few seconds, before cautiously walking over to check on Jellyfish. The tips of his face were somewhat singed, and parts of his coat was blackened, but other than that, the electricity had not conducted too far past his leather coat. Matheeas shook him awake.
âYou ok?â
âYeah,â Jellyfish wheezed. âI think. Thatâs new. That never would have conformed to Collinâs safety regulationsâ¦â Jellyfish paused as they heard a grating metal sound behind them. they both looked back to see the Cyber-knight stepping out of his cell.
But he clearly wasn'tâ here to help. His face spoke only of murder. A long blade slid out of his right arm.
Then he turned and ran out of the cell block.
â âJellyfish.â â
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Stirling dove into the room as he heard the two stone knights groaning and creaking with movement. Snatching a sturdy-looking spear from a stand, he twisted around to block any oncoming attacks, and sized up his opponents.
They were just now turning towards him. Slowly, they stepped off of their pedestals, and Stirling realized how tall and lumbering they were, about twice his height, they had huge stone halberds that they lowered in his direction. They seemed to go faster the more they moved.
Glancing back towards the door, and all ofthe people beyond, he began to back up, hoping that the others would catch onto his unspoken plan. The room wasnât very large, and was filled with weapons, but he hoped to lure the stone knights further in, so that the others could sneak up from behind and defeat them⦠Somehow.
The knights began to thrust at him. Realising he would probably not be able to block or parry their massive stone halbard attacks, he began to duck and dodge and scamper backwards.
Amras watched, her hooded eyes assessing the situation. As one of the miners began to step forward, she held an arm out and stopped him.
âDonât cross the threshold. Use your mining lasers.â
âFine by me.â The prisoner said, raising his laser to fire at the knight, slowly deteriorating the stone. The others followed suit, and soon anyone with a ranged weapon was helping.
âFocus the fire,â someone said. âIf itâs magic, it might just heal or something!â
âGo for the arms, who knows if it even needs a head.â
âI have a rocket launcher here, when do I fire that?â
âWhy not now?â
âOkay! Bombs away!â
Stirling tried to watch as he rolled to escape the ensuing explosion of rocks and rubble. he continued to dodge and evade as the room quickly became an absolute wreck. Not to mention the fact that other racks of weapons had fallen and were set off. Including rocket launchers.
But even in the chaos, he took a moment to appreciate how the prisoners were working together.
After a few minutes of frantic evasion, Stirling unbent his knees and looked around at the dust settling. The stone giants were obliterated, the walls and floor were scarred and chipped, and at least a quarter of the weapons exploded.
That went better than heâd expected. He should do jailbreaks more often. Standing up, he was inordinately pleased to find that heâd gotten away with only a few cuts and bruises for all his frantic tumbling.
He turned to the doorway and called out to the bristling guns and lasers. âGood job, men. Seems safe to come in and take what you can use.â
âWoo-hoo!â
âFinally!â
âI never knew mining rock would be an important life skill!â
âLook at all this STUFF!â
âRemember, only what you can use,â Stirling reminded. âYou donât want to be bogged down during out escape. We still need to run like the dickens.â
âIâll take the laser gun, the purple glowing ninja sword, the OTHER laser gun, and that knife over there!â Victor exclaimed, pulling armor on and gathering weapons.
âWhat did I just say,â Stirling muttered, knowing that with a crowd this large, he wouldnât be able to control or save everyone.
Amras came up to him with a spear and some sorcerer armor. She handed him his knife back.
âHere you go. I wonder why they have all those swords along the back?â
Stirling turned around and realized that nearly all the items in the glass cases were ornate swords. Walking over, he picked up a sword that had fallen out of its smashed case during the fight.
This sword was made of unusual materials, with a gold hilt and crossguard and a silver blade. On one side of the blade was a depiction of a peasant with a sword. On the other, a wizard with a sword. Presumably the same sword. As Stirling lifted it, he found it was extremely unbalanced and forward-heavy. Showing his disgust, he tossed it and said to Amras, âNothing more than an ornamental, Iâm afraid.â
However as Amrasâs eyes went wide, Stirling looked back at where heâd tossed the sword, and it swooped through the air, and plunged itself back into Stirling, who gasped in surpriseâ¦
But not pain.
He looked down at his armor. Patted himself.
He was perfectly fine. Unscathed. He turned around, looking for the sword, but it was nowhere to be found. Murmurs and exclamations came from others, but Stirling wasnât having it.
âWhat the blazes was that?!â Stirling yelled.
Amras simply had an eyebrow raised. âPerhaps theyâre all magical swords.â
That triggered an excited rush to the swords. Everyone wanted to claim one.
âOoh! I want one!â
âMaybe this red one shoots fire?â
âThis one looks like a dagger.â
Stirling and some of the other more cautious people also rushed forward, with words of warning, but they were outnumbered, and in moments, every swordâs hilt was in the hands of a curious miner, with various effects.
The red and orange sword was indeed a fire sword, and the miner that held it yelped in pain as the sword burst into flames, scorching his hands.
Another lifted his sword over his head, and a rickshaw appeared with a flash of thunder complete with a strange young lad, who began yelling incoherently.
And yet another sword, wooden, and ornately carved, leapt from the would-be wielder, turned around and began assaulting him.
âCursed!â yelled someone, even as his chosen blade, a dagger, began teleporting him around the room. âTheyâre all cursed! They gotta be!â
Amongst the instant chaos, which included a thunderous blast, the first verse of 99 cans of cola, and a blinding flash of light, came another sound. The sound of clanking metal boots speeding down the corridor and screams of pain. Stirling turned around just in time to see a dark-clad figure in red and black come at him with a long blade in one hand.
Stirlingâs practiced instincts kicked in, and he raised his Katana, parrying the blow at the last possible moment.
But the dark knight had momentum on his side, and Stirling nearly lost his balance as he slid backwards through the debris, the force of the shock reverberating through his thin blade and into his stolen Shinobi gloves. He grit his teeth in pain and annoyance, all too aware of the heavy notch the blow had made to his own blade. He didnât have time to initiate a counterattack, much less breath or assess his assailant, as the attacker spun around to deliver another blow at him which he ducked out of the way of. Stirling threw a quick stab at his target, but only met hardened steel and left himself open as the dark knight backhanded the off-balance Stirling with his sword hand into the debris.
âWho the heck is this guy?!â Stirling thought, as he stared down the length of his opponent's sword at his neck.
~~~~~~~~~~~
Kalaren walked down with the last of the prisoners from the north cell block. A small army in its own right. Next to him, the helpful scientist verbally reminisced about all the zoological pursuits he would follow once he got out of here. Kalaren had almost tuned him out.
And then he saw him. A figure dressed in red and black armor, running out from another corridor.
It had to be him. The Murderer. Vladek Verilus. Only this time, he wouldnât let him get away. This time he would catch him, and make him suffer.
He sprinted after him as the dark knight sliced through the back of a miner with a sword in his right hand. Kalaren rushed down the corridor even as a red mist obscured his eyes. He chased the Monster into a cell block where there was a line of prisoners handing weapons and armor down. Two more fell, even as the red and black knight sped up, leaving Kalaren a few seconds further behind him. âAlways just out of reachâ¦!â The knight disappeared into the room ahead. As Kalaren burst into the room, he saw the knight standing over another victim. âFinally!â Kalaren thought, as he slammed into the knight bodily, throwing them both against some of the sword cases that lined the back wall. As a sword fell from its mounting, Kalaren grabbed it with his one good left hand, and, feeling a surge of energy, rolled off and slammed the sword into the evil knight's sword, one that apparently was protruding from his arm.
The knight rolled to his right, putting distance between himself and Kalaren. âClone? I was not aware of thine activation.â
He was answered by incoherent roars as Kalaren erupted in fire and leaped at him.
There were no coherent thoughts in Kalarenâs mind. Only Death. Revenge. His next swing. His next strike. Flashes of pain. Vladek Verilus would not survive this confrontation. Heâd finally caught up with his family's killer. Nothing existed except him and his chosen target. A rack fell as the two duelists crashed through it, a mess of fire, metal and blood.
Kalaren pinned his tormentor to the ground, ready to cripple him. Not kill, that would be too fast and easy a punishment...
And then he heard a voice. Distant at first, it sounded vaguely familiar as it fought its way through the bloody haze he found himself in.
âKalaren! Stop it! youâre burning everything!â
âForget him! We have to get out of here!â
âNo! We need him!â
Kalaren turned around and stared at the origin of the voice. A woman in a brown habit. Red hair. Green eyes. Familiar tone of voice, familiar face...
â...Mother?â
And then everything went black.
~~~~
The evil knight stood over Kalaren now, having knocked him out with a solid strike to the back of the head.
âGuess itâs my turn again!â Stirling yelled, rushing forward to save Kalaren as Kalaren had saved him moments ago.
But before he got there, the other sword wielding miners attacked first. A woman with a broad Orange and Gray sword swung at the Knight, who easily blocked it, but not the subsequent thunderous shockwave that threw both of them both away from each other, and the unconscious Kalaren.
Even as the Knight rolled into a standing position, the Dagger-weilding miner blinked and zipped across the room to stab the Knight in the hip.
âHa!â the miner crowed. âI think Iâm getting the hang of-AAAAH!â
He was cut short by the knight cutting both of his hands off. however, this was distraction enough, as a half-dozen other miners, some with the power of swords, and others with the more common weaponry all assaulted him in a haphazard and frenetic effort that even the expert combatant could not defy.
Meanwhile, Stirling rushed to Kalaren, who was no longer on fire. He checked his pulse.
âStill beating. Really fast.â he said to Amras, who was staring at the sword in Kalarenâs clenched left hand. When she didnât say anything immediately, Stirling added, âHe called you âmotherâ.â
âNot the time.â
âI expect to hear all about it if we make it out of here alive.â
ââIf we make it out aliveâ. Thatâs the kicker.â Then she knelt down to Kalaren and bandaged him quickly with his own cloak. âWe need to get him and everyone else out of here.â
Stirling nodded, lifting Kalaren up, and grabbing the sword. âMight as well take this,â he said, as he pulled it from Kalarenâs grasp.
As Kalarenâs hand slipped off of it, the sword buzzed irritably in Stirlingâs hand, but he simply ignored it as he focused on hauling Kalarenâs limp form over both his shoulders.
âOK, LETâS MOVE!â Stirling yelled.
As he and the many others rushed back up the South corridor towards the middle room, they were met by a weary looking miner who ran down the hall yelling, âTheyâre gonna break through! We need to go up, now! We canât stop them from coming up from the mines!â
Stirling bit back unhelpful sarcastic remarks, and instead said to the miner, âYouâve done a heroic job holding them back this long. Letâs blow this pop stand.â The miner nodded and bolted back to relay the message.
As they all rushed back into the main room, Stirling took note of the key players he knew by name. Commander Matheeas was at the foot of the stairwell rallying everybody to him. Dr. Jellyfish was coming from the East cell block, his hands and pockets filled with datapads and mechanical parts. Following him were a number of other scientists similarly loaded down. Chris the -3rd was bringing the majority of the slaves up from the mine entrance, chased close behind by laser fire, while Kevin was in charge of 15 slaves who were covering the escape. Behind Stirling came the strange Mr. Tillman, Amras, and Victor, who held a glowing, mint green longsword. Victor was cheering the other slaves on as Amras helped Tillman along.
âTo me!â Matheeas cried. âForward, onward, and upward! TO FREEDOM!â
Jellyfish spoke up. âI wired the generator back there to overload these four cell blocks, so we should be out of here in five minutes or so. Hope thatâs okay.â
Stirling glanced at Dr. Jellyfish with wide eyes, as laser fire zipped by him. âOh, sure. Add that to the brickinâ list.â
Matheeas blinked. âDouble-time it, people!!!â
Matheeas charged up the stairwell, followed closely by Stirling and the various magical sword wielders. Behind them came a small horde of slaves. About one third of the way up, they heard a hissing sound, and a marsh green, heavy gas started to pour down from somewhere near the top of the stairwell.
âGas!â Stirling yelled. âMore than likely lethal! Thatâs deadly, for all of you illiterate numbskulls!â
âLet me have a go at it!â said the fire sword wielder, who had found some leather gauntlets, which were already smoking. He pointed his sword at the lowering gasâ¦.
Nothing happened.
âWhat are you trying to do?!â Someone else asked, as the gas drifted down closer.
âShoot it. With fire. Ignite it.â
âYou mean like this?â A miner who was still stuck with a mining laser asked sarcastically, as he shot the mist, causing it to explode in flames.
The resulting fireball roared as the gas expanded in the heat and combustion, and the small army stared into what would be their imminent demise.
That is, until another sword wielder, with a icy blue cutlass of unique wavy shape burst forward from the crowd and stabbed upward into the oncoming inferno.
âNO! Not today!â cried the miner, as a beam of cold white light shot from the tip of her blade into the inferno, where it spread into a thin sheet of ice that the fire evaporated into steam.
When all the fire and steam was dissipated, the Miner sank to the steps, her forearms now blue and black with ice, frozen to the sword in an âAâ formation.
Matheeas rushed forward to check on the brave female miner.
âYou all go on,â she moaned. âIâll hold them here. I will just slow the rest of you guys down.â
Behind Matheeas, the Fire sword wielder knelt down next to the Ice wielder, even as others began to rush onward, led by Stirling. He pointed at her arms. âIf youâre already dead, do you mind if I try?â
She shrugged. âI guess.â
That was all the Fire wielder needed. He took his gloves off, and holding the sword in one hand, he put his other on her frozen arms. The fire sword roared to life, and Matheeas watched as the fire-wielder began to give off heat as with an intense fever, which caused the arms to thaw.
The fire-wielder opened his eyes and looked at the last of the miners passing Matheeas. âI think Iâm a little dizzy, but Iâll stay back with her, sir. I think we can do better together.â
âYou can come up with the rest. We already have some people covering us.â
As Kevin rushed up to them, a loud explosion, followed by many screams cut short resounded from below.
âTheyâre right behind me, dudes and dudettes, but they got a taste of Doc Jellyâs bad mojo! Letâs split!â
The three stared at Kevin for a moment, deciphering his words.
After a few seconds Matheeas spoke up. âThere is a wave behind him, but behind that the other paradox just blew up, And.... I think we should run?â
âThatâs what I said!â
Matheeas turned back. âAre you coming or not?â
The two sword wielders looked at each other. Then the Ice wielder turned back to Matheeas. âI guess I sounded pretty silly being so dramatic.â
âThe time for great sacrifice may still come,â Matheeas said, standing up. âThere are many that already remain behind, but your time is not yet, it would seem. Come on!â
âWise words, Commandude!â
The four stragglers rushed up the stairs, following the others, just as two metal half circles began to close over the circular opening.
âAh, right! I forgot about this gate here,â Jellyfish said from his point in the line. Some stopped charging up just to stare at him. Others sped up, blasting the doors with various explosives and lasers, with little to no effect.
Suddenly, one of the miners appeared with the magic dagger in his teeth at the top of the stairs, slipping through the trapdoor at the very last moment with another person with a different magic sword, just as the gate slammed shut.
âFLOYD!â yelled one of the miners next to Stirling. âYOU BETTER NOT ABANDON US, YOU NITWIT!â
Stirling shook his head, and gave a final push, taking the stairs two at a time, but he knew he wouldnât be able to make it to the gate on time.
As Stirling and the others leading the charge ran up the final steps, they could hear muffled sounds of combat, and thunderous booms that sounded like rolling thunder, echoing throughout the metal walls.
As the escapees reached the top of the stairs, Matheeas called out to the front of the line.
âSilverstine! What is the holdup?â
âThereâs a trapdoor over the top of these stairs, and no visible way to open them!â Stirling called back, even as one of the miners began using his laser on it. âWe might be here a bit as we cut through it!â
Matheeas looked back down the stairs. All was quiet for now⦠But as Kevin had said, there were more. Not to mention Jellyfishâs electrical explosion countdown.
Suddenly, Stirling and the laser-drilling miners took note of the fading echos of thunder from beyond the door. The miner stopped drilling for a moment.
âYou think Floyd and that dagger-guy won?â the miner asked.
âMore like they ran off, and the other Paradox are waiting for us.â another miner said.
Stirling pondered this. âIâm no-â
Suddenly, the doors began to creak and slide back, to reveal an awful scene of violence. At least a dozen rogues lay dead, as well as many darkly-clad knights; Vladekâs personal guards. The knife wielder, and the sword wielder among them. The sword wielder with his arm hooked over the lever.
âFloyd!â
A number of the miners ran over to the sword-wielder on the lever, who mumbled something and then handed the sword off to one of them. Others went over to the knife-wielder, but he was already dead. They took the knife and followed Stirling, who didnât give any of the bodies a second look. Instead, he looked at the multiple exits to this large domed room and turned to Jellyfish as he came up from the stairs.
âWhich way, Doctor? Quickly!â
Jellyfish pulled out a pen and started drawing imaginary calculations in the air while speaking.
âWelllll, we could go out the same way Kalaren and I did, but thatâs a lot of jumping, and the main gate is too risky. Losses too high. Orrrr we could go to the main tower and construct a zipline down!â This he punctuated by throwing his pen at a miner, who yelped. âBut thatâs too long. So we hijack a ship.â
âA boat?â said a miner with a glowing mint-green sword. The one Stirling recognized as Victor.
âNo. A ship.â Jellyfish said, gesturing helplessly at Stirling. Stirling nodded in tired sympathy, before realizing the implications of what Jellyfish had said.
âWait, a spaceship?â
Jellyfish hopped in excitement. âYes! Thank you! Hopefully an experimental one! That way!!!âhe said, pointing and shooting once down a hallway that curved up and around to the left.
Even if the other leaders had disagreed with this course of action, they could not have stopped the wild stampede of liberated slaves rushing down the hall in excitement after the old Doctor. Not only would they be free, but they would get to ride on a spaceship!
To cries of âSPACESHIP!â the ragtag army rushed forward,
through beautiful, but dark and gloomy halls. The iu
occasional piece of artwork here or there, but never in the way. Never cluttering the hall. Never obstructing the path for this army. Or any other potential army. The red carpeting was never bunched up underfoot as the escapees rushed. The walls were all a dark gray stone, and every door was solidly built to withstand an assault. Up above, the stonework curved into an arch, and at even distances, timber beams held heavy, sturdy-looking wrought-iron lanterns in which were brilliant flames, but despite its large, radiant flames, each one seemed to accentuate the darkness surrounding it, rather than lighting the area as much.
Beneath itâs luxury, it was a fortress of evil, and of war, and every detail did well to remind its occupants of such.
---------------------------
Inderlude: Chris -2nd
Chris the -2nd rode back into town. Fairly quickly, he was greeted by the general populace, even as someone ran to get Methuselah.
âHow did it go?â
âDid you see any of the others?â
âAre you alright?!â
âIâll be fine,â He replied. âIâve been burned a bit, but I need to see Methuselah first.â
âWhat about the others that were with you? The Silverstine, and the Commander?â
âTheyâre still there. Theyâll come back.â
This caused a small sigh of relief, before he added:
âProbably.â
A few short minutes later, Chris the -2nd met Methuselah halfway, and they were now sitting outside a vacant ruin, sipping some strong tea that Methuselah had steeped.
â...And then I got hit by lightning.â
âOh. Weâll have to get you to the infirmary.â
âYeah. It stopped smarting on my way back here, but⦠Anyways, the other two told me to wait for thirty minutes while they explored, and if they hadnât come back I was supposed to take a goat and ride back.
âI take it they hadnât come back,â Methuselah said.
âNope. Waited 40. But they had a prisoner and disguises, so they seemed pretty well off.â Chris sipped some of his tea.
âWhatever it was in those mines, it looked like they needed to be able to move large items or large groups in and out. Least, thatâs what I gather from the ramp that was there that I told you about.â He stared into the murky tea. âThis stuffâs good. I donât recognize it though.â
Methuselah smiled absentmindedly, still thinking about everything Chris had said. âThanks, itâs a special new blend Iâve put together.â
Others listened to Chris and Methuselah. Others who now, sensing that Chris was finished, turned to Methuselah for some sort of verdict. Maybe a summary.
âRight.â Methuselah looked out at the small crowd. âWell, weâll wait here for the others. We canât send any more parties or troops, we wouldnât have enough here. So weâll carry on as normal everyone.â
Properly sensing that this was the most civil âmove along people, youâre dismissedâ theyâd ever received, the crowd began to disperse with uncomfortable murmurings.
Methuselah turned to Chris. âBut letâs get you to the infirmary.â
Chris nodded, looking down his nose at his chest. âDo you think my chesthair will grow back?â
âDonât want to try to figure that out, Chris. Letâs go.â
---------------------------
Chapter 18: Tower Battle
Kalaren awoke to the rhythmic bouncing of his body. He vaguely remembered something very important happening, maybe a fight, but he couldnât quite recall it. Just a red mist. He looked around him. He was being carried up a staircase. He looked up to see the sweaty back of Stirlingâs head.
âGah!â He yelled as he lurched back.
Stirling teetered for a brief moment, before people behind him shoved him forward and back on balance again. âKalaren?â Stirling said, unable to twist his head around to look at him. âYou awake?â
âYeah! Iâm awake.â
âGood. Weâre running through Vladekâs fortress at the moment. Going to the top of this tower to steal a spaceship, according to your pal, Jellyfish. That make sense to you?â
â...No. You know what else doesnât make sense to me? That youâre carrying me. Can you let me down??â
Stirling gave it some thought as he continued to stride up the stairs. âMaybe. But Iâve got a rhythm now, and Iâd hate to-â
Suddenly, the front of the group came to a screeching halt, and Stirling found his stride broken as he ran into the back of Matheeas and Jellyfish.
âHey! Whatâs the holdup?!â Stirling said, putting Kalaren down.
âMadameâ¦â Matheeas said, as everyone behind him strained to see who he was talking to on the stairs.
Kalaren looked up. Matheeas was standing next to Jellyfish. They were both looking at someone in front of them. Kalaren shifted his head to look over.
Standing in front of them was a well dressed lady who was looking at the scene in front of her with a dismissive but irritated stare that had just lifted from her book. She had black hair, pale skin, and red eyes. Overall, she was the most beautiful lady Kalaren had ever seen. His jaw started to drop before he caught it. He looked down at himself quickly and remembered he was dirty, bloody, unshaven and slightly maimed. Well, to be fair that was his metal hand, but still.
The point was, he wasnât presentable. And for the first time in a very long time, that bothered him.
Shifting his ragged cloak, he looked back up as she spoke.
âValerie. Madame Valerie. And you are?â She said as she tucked the book under her arm.
Stirling, Jellyfish, and about a dozen others of the various miners in front all turned to Matheeas. Kalaren continued to stare at the madame Valerie.
Matheeas looked back slowly. âUh⦠A revolt?â
Stirling whispered to Matheeas. âIâd hate to fight the lady, but just say the word, boss.â
Valerie paused for a moment. âI see. I take it youâre heading up this tower to take a spaceship?â
Matheeas blinked. âWell, yeah. Thatâd be nice.â
âWell then, Iâll be out of your way. Excuse me.â She said as she started to walk forward, flipping her book open, and beginning to read once again.
As Matheeas and Jellyfish parted, Stirling motioned for everyone else to do the same, as did the next person, and so on.
After a second Kalaren hopped to the side. Next to Kevin.
As she passed by Kalaren, she called back, âDo make your way directly up the staircase. Any unnecessary pillaging will be met by my extreme prejudice, understood? Thank you.â
As Kalaren followed her with his gaze, he eventually met a grinning face. It belonged to Kevin.
âDonât worry. Weâll plan more attacks on this tower, dudeman.â
âShut up.â Kalaren said, flushing redder than his hair, as he became the first to move forward up the tower.
Matheeas shrugged and followed.
After a few seconds, Jellyfish spoke up. âYaâ know, I donât think the ship will be able to carry us all.â
Without stopping, Matheeas turned his head to him. âYouâre kidding.â
âNope.â
Stirling was less stoic, stumbling on the stairs, and cursing as he regained his footing.
âWill the ship have guns??â Kalaren asked.
Jellyfish thought about that. âProbably. Most likely. This is a fortress after all.â
âGreat. Some of us can cover the rest of us with it then, while we climb down. Do we have rope?â
âThere might be some in the ship. Or line.â
Stirling laughed mirthlessly. âLooks like we might use all your ideas, Jellyfish. Ship, zipline, Guns, Explosions, Jumping into the moat.â
âZipline! Perfect idea!â Jellyfish exclaimed as he quickened his pace and caught up with Kalaren.
Matheeas kept climbing. âSounds like our best shot. Kevin, you relay that to the others, will you?â
âYou got it, Commandude!â
Next to Stirling, Victor spoke up. âAlso, donât forget these magical swords that some of us have. They might help.â
Stirling scowled, but nodded, glancing at the magical sword in his hands. âGood point.â
The group met no further resistance through their charge up the tower, until they reached the top.
Bursting out of the trapdoor, Kalaren looked out with a blaster he had grabbed. They appeared to be in a large flat area, which was the top of the tower. Other towers inside the fortress were taller than this one, but this elevation still gave an unparalleled view of the northern wasteland of Ankoria. There was various supplies on the platform, and a large object in the center, covered by a tarp. Kalaren called down and let everyone know it was clear, before he clambered up.
However, as soon as he stepped out, a laser blast narrowly missed his human shoulder.
Behind Kalaren, Jellyfish popped out from the trapdoor and shot back at the sniper, who was on a different tower.
âYeah. So there should be other rogues out here, and a few barney-bots, also anti-aircraft cannons,â Jellyfish began muttering, as if commenting on a kickball game. âSo it might be a little tricky. Humph. I missed.â
Multiple shots began raining upon Kalaren now, as everyone began rushing out of the trapdoor.
Amras brushed by Stirling and yanked the sword out of his hands. âExcuse me, gotta-AAHH!â She yelled as she half dropped, half slid the sword on the ground towards Kalaren.
Kalaren looked back, seeing Stirlingâs magic sword sliding towards him. Looking up once at Stirling, who seemed to be arguing with one of the hooded miners, he grabbed the sword with his one good hand, and turned back to pull the tarp off of the-
'Woah'
He felt energy flow from it into his arms and into his body. It seemed to warm his very blood, filling him with a sense of well-being. âHuh.â He glanced down at the sword, and realized he had seen it before. He couldnât remember where, but he knew that it had something to do with what happened before he fell asleep.
Itâs blade was a dark steel, and was inlaid with five gems, running up to halfway up its length. They were red, orange, yellow, blue, and purple. It had two ornate gold spheres on either side of the crossguard, which was wrapped with a faded red cloth, along with the hilt, which had lines where the steel was slightly depressed, so it had a design that evoked something like a classic unicorn horn. It ended in a faceted black gem for the pommel.
Even though he only had a moment to take this all in, Kalaren suddenly felt a kinship with it. However, his train of thought was interrupted by another shot coming from a large reptilian-like robot hovering over and onto the platform. followed by others very similar.
âAh, CRUX!â
Kalaren turned to look at Stirling, whoâd just lain eyes on the flying metallic lizards.
âBARNEYBOTS!â Stirling roared, before charging madly at the first one with nothing in his hands but a nicked katana. âALL YOU SUCKERS ARE GUNNA DIE!â
Kalaren decided it might be a good idea to help him out while the others got the ship running and found the line.
He rushed forward with a speed that surprised him, reaching the âbarneybotsâ before Stirling did, and gave it a good swing. He was surprised when that lifted it into the air a few feet, causing it to activate some sort of jets. A large section was now melting where he had sliced. Grinning, Kalaren started going to town, swiping left and right at these confused robots, who started firing on this new assailant, even as he dodged with inhuman speed.
Stirling stopped short, watching Kalaren slice into the quickly growing swarm of Barneybots filling up from over the edge of the tower.
âWow. Thatâs a great sword.â Was all that Stirling could think for a moment, before noting that the swarm was getting thicker, and Kalarenâs sword technique, while effective, was not very defensive. Probably due to a lack of technique. At all.
He rushed forward to cover the kidâs back.
Meanwhile, Jellyfish and Matheeas had now gotten into the ship, as others were pulling the tarp off.
Matheeas looked at the mass of buttons, levers, and switches on the dashboard, his eyes fighting to stay in their sockets.
âDonât worry! I got this Commander! I used to pilot a hover-cart back home! It crashed, but this looks like it has stabilizers!â
âI trust you, Doctor,â Matheeas said, realizing he didnât have another choice. âJust get this up in the air. Iâm going to find some line and someone to operate a turret.â
Jellyfish glanced around at the panel. âLooks like this ship only has forward guns.â He pointed at a set of controls in a different color scheme than the rest. âThereâs your shooter controls.â
âIâll find someone with a wormholer then. Or a co-pilot. Someone with a pulse and working hands!â He said as he walked out. Looking up, he also noted the other ships on other towers.
Another thought occurred to him âWho else can drive a ship?!â he yelled. Two hands were raised among the crowd, one empty, and another one on the other side holding a bundle of nylon rope. Matheeasâ eyes were drawn to Stirling, who was hacking at a fallen barneybot, while Kalaren and the fire and ice sword slaves were taking on the rest of the swarm.
âSilverstine! Can you drive?â
One of the barneybots turned to Matheeas. âOnly if he has a valid driverâs license. LET ME SEE YOUR ID.â As the Barney bot started to advance, it was cut short by steam frying itâs circuits, evidently from the ice and fire sword. Stirling began to run up, as the other two pilots came up to Matheeas.
âFound line! looks like at least 70 feet. I can fly as well.â
âIn a pinch, I can as well.â Said the other. âThe gal who picked up the blink dagger took a few miners, a scientist, and that cool kevin dude to another tower.â He pointed at the nearest one, where a rogue was falling off of now, screaming in a very high and long pitch. âTheyâre going to eliminate snipers and rogues and the such so we donât have them sniping at us. Those of us with rockets are trying to fire at any AA cannons we can find, but they are pretty well hidden.
Matheeas nodded. âGrab a few people who can fight, and meet us here. Weâre going to have to pilot a few ships.â
As recognition dawned and grins appeared on the pilotâs faces before they turned away, Stirling arrived.
âWhat do you need, Lancaster?!â Stirling yelled over the commotion, even as he was getting shot at by additional assailants.
âYou have some experience with tech, so I figured you might be able to pilot a ship if you needed to!â
âYessir!â
âWe are going to hop to each tower and drop pilots off so they can drive those shuttles, with a few of them we should be able to make it out of here.â
Stirling grimaced. Matheeas clearly saw Stirlingâs incredulity at saving everyone, but Stirling didnât voice it. Instead, he said. âYessir.â
The various pilots scrambled up into the shuttle, as Jellyfish finished familiarizing himself with the controls.
âAha! Hereâs the button.â Jellyfish exclaimed, pulling a lever.
The shuttle lurched up and into the air, and in response to more button pressing, spun around, and fired at the swarm of barneybots, destroying the current wave.
Then he jammed the controls forward, toward the tower which had been cleared, even as they saw some shadowy forms wisping across to another tower. They dropped one of the pilots there with one or two normal prisoners for backup, and kept flying to the next one. There, they dropped the other pilot with other fighters, and finally, with a steep pull up on the controls, Jellyfish careened over the final tower, which was taller than the others.
A large, dark ship with red highlights and two rotating turrets on the top rested on its top. 6 or 7 dark-clad knights were running out of the trapdoor there, before Dr. Jellyfish blasted the first two and covered the rest in rubble. Unfortunately one of the back engines of this large ship also sparked as rubble sprayed across it.
âThis is you, Stirling.â Matheeas barked. âLooks like youâll need the extra people to man the ship, so Iâll let the rest off with you. Weâll be providing aerial support until we can get everyone evacuated from the first tower. Everyone out, before they clear the rubble!â Matheeas said, as the ship lurched and fired, punctuating his command with a whirl of his finger in a circle, indicating the door.
Stirling growled an incomplete acknowledgement before leaping out of the shuttle door and landing. As he ran for the larger ship, he spared a glance at the attackers who were already trying to extricate themselves from the rubble, and making good progress.
These were clearly Shadowknights. Stirling had never really seen one before, much less fought one. The stories were relatively clear though.
In the last war where Vladek had fought against the Knights of Morcia and King Matthias, a large part of his army had been these minions. These men were sworn to Vladek, sometimes unwillingly, through some sort of dark magic.That was evident enough by the unnatural darkness that hung inside their helmets, obscuring their faces in a uniform evil.
Stirling knew that nothing short of death would stop these assailants. He and his crew had moments before the Shadowknights freed themselves and began their relentless assault. He dashed into the shuttleâs entry ramp, making a beeline for the cockpit.
Behind him, the three miners, one of whom was Victor, ran into the shuttle, and then turned around, firing their various ranged weapons at the Shadowknights as they sought to get up.
Stirling stormed into the cockpit. He yanked the snoring pilot that was there out of his seat, tossing him roughly behind him, before shutting the cockpit door behind him via the door panel. One more glance at the controls, and Stirling realized that this was not your standard Nexus Force setup. He immediately began pressing likely buttons, and hauled up on the controls.
In response, the shipâs engines screamed to life, but only slowly began to rise.
At that moment, he heard a crash and rumble from somewhere outside and behind the ship, followed by exclamations of surprise from Victor and the others.
âHOLD ON!â Stirling yelled back, before seeing the flashing âClose Rampâ button and hitting it. Stirling pushed forward on the controls, and the ship half fell, half burst forward, but then it stopped, apparently snagging on something just before it cleared the tower.
The ship vibrated with the sound of metal tearing from itâs sockets and welds, and a primal scream. Suddenly, the ship lurched forward, and Stirling saw on a glowing display of various ship systems the back right engine flash red, before losing color completely.
âPort Engine Integrity at Zero Percent,â the ship intoned, even as the ship veered drastically to the right.
Anti-aircraft cannons tried to fire at him, but given Stirlingâs complete lack of a flying pattern, none hit. However, in doing so they revealed their positions, and were either gunned down by other ships or those operating it were too distracted to continue firing.
âCrux!â Stirling cried as he yanked the controls around haphazardly, losing some altitude and barely missing other towers and ships.
As he spun around a full 180 before stabilizing, he saw the source of this damage.
There, level with him now and standing on the towerâ¦
Was Kalaren.
Yet, it wasnât. This Kalaren was shirtless, wearing practically nothing but some swimming shorts, and slick with⦠something slimy. His eyes were wild, red, and his hair, while very much of the same style as Kalarenâs, was a murky blonde, and longer. He was taller than Kalaren, but by how much, he wasnât sure. He was also very muscular, as evidenced by the tossing of the engine that he was returning to Stirling. But most of all, he saw Kalaren in his jawline and face. Disturbingly, he also seemed to share other characteristics that echoed around in Stirlingâs headâ¦
And then, as the shriek died out, and the eyes flickered, the creature dropped the remains of the engine and collapsed onto the stone, and was dragged away by the shadowknights, as they retreated back into the cover of the rubble, since some of the miners had rushed up into the turrets and began firing on them.
Deeply distrubed, Stirling shoved these thoughts out of his mind for now, as the shipâs controls continued to scream at his poor handling, and rapidly falling altitude.
âGuess Iâm falling with style today,â Stirling growled, as he focused on swinging his way out from the towers rather than gaining altitude. Futily, he yelled back, âDOES ANYONE SEE KALAREN?â
Above the sounds of a scuffle, the others replied.
âHOW CAN WE, WEâRE ALL THE WAY DOWN HERE BETWEEN THE TOWERS!â
âYEAH! DONâT WE GOTTA GET UP AND SHOOT MORE ROGUES?â
âIâM WORKING ON IT!â Stirling replied, as he banged the damaged side of the ship against a final tower before being free from the majority of them. From here, he spun around, to try and gain altitude before heading back into the fight, if there was still one to be had.
Just then, a blaster shot was heard, followed by the door to the cockpit being opened. Victor hopped into the co-pilotâs seat. âCan we contact the other ships from here?â
In response, Stirling snatched and tossed the shipâs onboard radio at him, the distraction almost sending them spinning again.
âUh, right.â Victor muttered as he activated it. âThis is Victor on the bigger spaceship thing with Stirling! Weâve been mauled by an abomination from the deep! Or something. If someone could direct us to the first tower we would.. Survive I guess. Over?â
âRoger Charlie Blackhawk Alpha nosedive!â came the voice of Dr. Jellyfish. âWeâre heading out! This colony of flying jellyfish is all up in the air! Itâs time to avoid the sharks, just like last time!â
Other voices crackled on the radio.
âIs this whatâs throwing everyoneâs voices around?â
â-Button here? I press th-â â-And it-â â-vates?â
âHead south.â Matheeasâ voice came through.
At that moment, something hit the left side of the cockpit and scraped it, and turning, Stirling could see the sword Kalaren was holding earlier pointing to the front and left.
âThaph way!â He seemed to yell, though muffled by the windshield and metal.
Stilring sighed in relief. Kalaren seemed normal. Red hair, determined demeanor, glowing magic swordâ¦
Well, relatively normal. At least he didnât seem to be cursed. Plus, he still had a shirt on. A sure sign of sanity.
Stirling twitched the controls in that direction, then properly compensated for the lost engine, and the ship shuddered and whined pitifully, but dutifully. Above and around them, Stirling could see the other ships in similar bad shape, but all mostly flyingâ¦
A few more freed slaves and miners and people leapt from the towers as they passed, and Stirling did his best to maintain stability, even as rogues also lept down and fought others on the top of his ship.
As the lowest and last ship in the fleet, Stilring saw four small shuttles as they rose, escaping the fire and ranges of the hidden AA guns. All of the shuttles were badly damaged, but flying. The radio chatter began to fill with cheers, and nervous laughter. Next to him, Victor gave a shuddering sigh.
Despite himself, Stirling smiled.
Then the ship directly in front of them blew up.
The Windshield was engulfed in fire, and shards of metal flew into the ship, piercing the hull and shattering the windshield. A cry of surprise and pain turned into a roar came from his left, where Kalaren was holding on, and then the flames suddenly were shoved back, and around them as with an invisible hand.
There was silence on the radio for a second.
âEveryone report in, starting with Shuttle 2.â
âHere. All vital systems functioning.â came the voice of a miner.
âShuttle 3?â
Only Static responded.
âShuttle 5 here. Damaged but we can go awhile. Who was on Shuttle 3?â Came another Miner.
âWe donât have time to sort that out right now, and we canât afford to go back right now either, the blink dagger wielder and the fire and ice sword pair can only give us so much time. Stirling, you there on Shuttle 4? Over.â
Stirling nodded to Victor, who responded. âYeah, weâre here, one of our propellers is missing but we are compensating?â
Stirling nodded again, poking at some sliding dials to balance the energy outputs better.
âWait, theyâre staying behind?â came Shuttle 2.
Shuttle 5 crackled in. âYes. The Dagger was.. affecting Joanne, and it wasnât practical for her to come. She agreed to cover us.. And I saw the Swords talking to that red-haired guy before he jumped onto Shuttle 4. Is he okay by the way? Over.â
Stirling glanced to his left and leaned out of the broken windshield. âKalaren?â
Kalaren leaned forward slightly. He had some burns and various pieces of shrapnel stuck in him, in addition to other wounds he had acquired from bullets, but he still doggedly held onto the side of the ship via his mangled hand jammed into a crevice between panels.
Kalaren gritted his teeth, grunt/yelled affirmation, and pointed south again.
â..We think so?â Victor replied to the Radio.
âYou wanna climb in?â Stilring asked Kalaren casually, motioning to the open, shattered windshield, before having to duck back inside to adjust the shipâs trajectory.
Matheeasâ voice came in again. âOkay. Everyone, follow Shuttle One. We are going to have to cut radio transmission as long as it pertains to direction, as we are using Vladekâs frequencies. Donât want him to know more than he needs to. We got a bit to go, so hang in there, got it?â
âAffirmative.â Came Shuttle 2.
âFine. Ah, Over.â Growled Shuttle 5.
âSounds good, Cap. Over.â Victor replied.
âUnderstood. Radio silence begins now.â Shuttle One finished.
â...Thatâs the button on the left side of the radio! JELLYFISH!â
There was a collective groan as the static gradually became the only thing on the radio, before Stirling shut it off as well.
Kalaren rolled over the edge of the windshield and landed on the floor with a thud and a groan, hitting a few dozen buttons and dials on the way, which Stirling frantically corrected, as Victor grabbed the controls and kept them relatively on course.
âTheyâ¦âKalaren wheezed. âGot some jets out there as well, but after a second those back there managed to divert them away. Still⦠Maybe alert your-â he grunted. â-laser cannon people. The others back there pretty much got the giant metal- ah. Lizards.â
âYou mean Barney bots.â
âBarney bots?? What a stupid..phew..name. Who comes up with this..akh..stuff?â
âBeats me. It was like that when I got here.â Stirling turned to Victor. âThere should be two holes in the ceiling, with ladders you can pull down. Get the others into them, if theyâre not already in there.â
As Stirling said this, another face appeared at the top of the broken windshield. âHEY! Thereâs a couple people out here whoâd like to get out of the wind!â
Stirling facepalmed. âOf course. Iâll lower the ramp.â
Kalaren heaved himself onto his sword with another grunt of pain, and replaced Victor in the co-pilotâs chair.
As Stirling and Kalaren sat in silence, they heard the ramp being lowered, people climbing in, and then milling around⦠The laboring hum of theirs and others shipsâ¦
âAll things considered..gaff.. I think this went considerably well.â Kalaren spoke up.
âWeâre alive, which is impressive.â Stirling agreed.
âAnd weâve freed at least ¾ of.. Vladâs slaves. And most of those are alive.â
âIf youâd told past me weâd do this, I would have said you were crazy.â He glanced at Kalaren. âAnd Iâd be right.â
âCrazy.. But alive, anyway. If we make it back without those jets shooting us down, at least.â
Stirling nodded, looking grave. âYou know you canât stay now. An attack this massive⦠Lord Vladek wonât abide you all anymore in his lands.â
After a momentâs consideration, Kalaren agreed. âYeah. I guess so. Previously we were just an area he couldnât send patrols around. But now we stole most of his slaves and-â Kalaren coughed, and his mechanical arm shuddered, itâs lights flickering. âShips. Running low on power, shutting it down for now.â
âNow youâre a threat.â Stirling said, focusing on the conversation.
âYep. At least, we canât stay in Aragarth. Maybe we can still split up into smaller groups, maintaining communication.. I donât know. Weâll have to talk to Matheeas.â
Stirling reached out and patted Kalaren in an attempt to comfort. âIâm sure Lancaster is already thinking about it.â
Kalaren replied in between grunts and gasps. âProbably⦠The Miners.. Wonât wanna stay.. not most of them⦠anyway.â
âWhat I want to know about,â Stirling said, withdrawing his pats, âis that insane sword youâve got there.â
âWell⦠Itâs magic. And strangely familiar. But it seems to⦠Harness things around me⦠and in me. Thatâs how I pulled the fire back.â
âAnd how you cut through those Barneybots so quick?â Stirling asked. Then quickly added, âDid you lose your shirt at any point?â
Kalaren slowly turned to Stirling. âIn my life? Yeah, I⦠Guess. Today? Itâs⦠Been shredded, but no.â
âThen Iâm either hallucinating, or you have a twin,â Stirling said. Then he proceeded to explain as best he could of the person whoâd ripped off the Starboard engine, and whoâd nearly thrown it back at the ship before seemingly falling to exhaustion. He explained how itâd looked like Kalarenâ¦
âBut it also looked likeâ¦â Stirling shook his head. âBut thatâs crazy.â
Kalaren was confused, but then realization dawned on his face, and he knitted his brows together.
âThat must be the clone they were⦠Making, of me⦠That I told you about⦠At the feast.â
Stirling was quiet for a moment. âIf thatâs so, your clone is made up of more than just yourself. No offense, but youâre not that strong. The only other person Iâve seen with that kind of strengthâ¦â
Kalaren looked thoughtfully at his sword for a second, before turning to Stirling again. âNo offense⦠Taken. I rely on my robotic arm a lot.â He chuckled, which turned into painful wheezing. â..Gah. You were saying?â
âThereâs a man where Iâm from. From the Nexus Force. His name was Brocktree. He was a very strong and powerful knight. A Sentinel, like myself. Used to be a very kind and stalwart person. But once he came here, thedude somehow got him to work for himâ¦â Stirlingâs jaw worked as he ground his teeth in frustration and fear. âItâs not too much of a stretch for someone as crafty as Vladek to maybe have some of that manâs DNA.â
Kalaren looked up, confused. âDNA?â
âUh⦠Blood. A sort of scientific blueprint of him.â
Kalaren thought for a second. âHuh. How do you know it was him though? I mean, maybe he was just a really good body-builder, or maybe someone else was that strong?â
âNo one Iâve met -until today -had that strength⦠Besides, He has that same mad look. Similar to how Brocktree⦠does.â
âOh.â
âBut if Vladekâs scientists have got a hold of Lord Brocktreeâs DNA⦠Who knows what other persons and skills your clone hasâ¦!â
Kalaren laughed. Then turned apologetically towards Stirling. âSorry. Itâs just that it is a bitâ¦. Of a relief to not be the onlyâ¦.. One contributing to that thing.â
Stirling noted Kalarenâs longer pauses between breaths. âHey, you ok?â
After a grunt, Kalaren replied. âFor now, but Iâm gonna find⦠some first.. aid, just to be sure. Iâll send someone up here again, and tell them a bit more of the⦠plan. Find more weapons⦠That stuff.â
âAlright. Hey, Kal?â
âYeah..?â
â...It was an honor to fight by your side today. Uh, donât die.â
âThanks⦠Same.â He grunted as he hobbled out.
Stirling sat in silence for a bit longer as Victor joined him. Then, the barney fighters found them again.
Chapter 19: Why You Donât Argue with Someone Returning from Battle
Methuselah looked up to the sky. It was the morning of a new day. The sun never really broke through the even gray sky here in Ankoria, but it was still a lovely grey Ankorian dawn nonetheless.
If only he could enjoy it with everyone who'd gone out on the mission.
Most of the people that had gone out to the newly discovered mines had come back. But three teams still had not returned. Most notably, Commander Lancaster, Kalaren, Dr. Jellyfish, Chris -3rd, Rick, with his thick accent, who had gone with one other, and Stirling Silverstine, the foreign knight that had come, rekindling hope that a large scale rebellion was possible.
They had planned to return at around this time. So far, the only sign of a development had been some scouts reporting a loud humming above the treeline. Now, there appeared to be three large purple or red objects on the horizon, seemingly followed by flames.
Methuselah had seen something like this before. Barney bots, they were called. They had heavy armor, and could only be destroyed with heavy weaponry, or strategically placed traps. But these seemed slightly larger⦠and with less limbs. Instead, they resembled something Dr. Jellyfish had mentioned to him, Barney fighters.
He suspected that they were going to try and bomb the city.
He had taken necessary precautions against this, and had gathered everyone into his underground tower, along with as many supplies and valuables they could get. The better to hide and protect.
Wilda came up behind Methuselah, following his gaze off to the distant flying metal monsters. "Do you think they made it?"
Methuselah glanced at Wilda before replying. "At this point, something must have gone wrong. If they have evaded capture or not is the real question. Obviously something happened to give Vladekâs forces reason to send something here. So to answer your original question, I really don't know, but the chances are looking pretty slim."
Wilda frowned. "I was afraid you'd say that. Or something like it." She glanced back at the entrance to the tower. "If those flying devices bomb us, we'll survive, but does your tower have a backdoor in case they bring troops down to finish the job, or are we standing our ground in here?"
This caused Methuselah to smile and raise an eyebrow. "Oh yes. I know some think me paranoid, but it does come in useful to be prepared. Easily the first 40 would be killed by traps on the way down. If we decided to stay here and defend for a bit, rather than escaping via hidden tunnels that they would be hard pressed to find, we could comfortably eliminate twice that number." Suddenly souring, he continued. "Can be a pain to live inside something that's set to kill its inhabitants. Anyway, much of the credit goes to Dr. Jellyfish with the traps. He really can be a genius, when he is not going on about marine biology." He chuckled.
Wilda sighed. "Well, here's hoping they make it, and we're here to greet them, even if the town isn't." She put a hand on Methuselahâs shoulder. "Come on, we should get inside before they can see us clearly."
"Youâre right. I should start showing everyone how to activate the traps anyway." His reply came, as he closed the doors and locking each one's safeguards accordingly.
They didn't wait very long, before the sounds of destruction began⦠and ended.
Everyone listened in anticipation and confusion, expecting thunderous explosions above them, but instead only one, metallic rather than explosive, crashing sound. Eventually, Methuselah and a group of a few guards gathered by the doorway, listening.
Suddenly, the sound of frantic banging made Methuselah jump nearly out of his boots. The guards accompanying him did little more than bristle and brandish their weapons at the door.
"Methuselah! Are you there? If you are, open the door now!" Kalarenâs voice came, muffled by the door.
Methuselah jumped slightly more, before relaxing and nodding knowingly and reassuringly, before walking closer and replying, "Password?"
At first, there was only growling, then silence.
"Drowssap."
"Great. Now the combination."
"You know it doesn't work, now open the blasted door!"
"Right."
One and a half minutes later, he opened the door to a bloodied, bloodshot, blood red Kalaren.
"Wow, Kalaren, you look.. bloody." Methuselah said.
"Like you picked a fight with a dragon," one of the guards said.
"Three dragons," said another.
Methuselah hastily added, "Uh, where are the others? Did you come in those machines? We thought they were leading a bombing thing."
"Get out of there. Commander Mattheas has a lot to tell you. Tell everyone. We are supposed to meet in the town hall."Kalaren turned around and limped away without another word.
"Right. Okay everyone! We are fine, pretty sure. To the town hall, no slacking." Methuselah yelled.
â------------------
Stirling followed Lancaster into the war room of the town hall along with Dr. Jellyfish, one of the newly released scientists, and the other council members who'd stayed in Aragarth.
Lancaster waited for everyone to get settled, and then stood up to address everyone.
"Alright, let's get this started.â Without another moment, Matheeas launched into his report.
âSilverstine and I were able to find some plans the rogues had for the mines, and we gathered from them that Vladek had planned to connect the various mines together, allowing for faster transportation of goods or troops to many different places in the surrounding region, including his castle. Unfortunately, we were discovered shortly afterwards, and were forced further into the tunnel we had chosen.â
Briefly, he looked to Chris the -2nd, who made a silent âahâ as he understood why they hadnât returned. Matheeas continued.
âWe then met up with another team. Kalaren, Kevin and the Doctor. They were also fighting off rogues. Apparently, they also freed a dozen slaves who had been working in the mines, and with them we were able to make our way to their chosen tunnel entrance.â Matheeas frowned. âWe were, however, blocked off, as a rogue fired an explosive at the mouth of the tunnel, sealing it ahead of us.â
Despite himself, and the need to keep the report succinct, Matheeas couldnât help but take a brief moment to appreciate how enraptured his audience was. For once, it was nice to be the one telling the stories, rather than listening. He pressed on with his report.
âThus, we were forced to take the only route available to us: Further in. We discovered a path into the dark castle itself, and freed many slaves along the way, who helped us get out. From there, we made our way through an armory, and then to the tower tops, where the Doctor informed us there would be some spacecraft we could commandeer. Which we did, but one of the shuttles exploded shortly before we escaped. We were followed, for a distance, but we were able to repel them. Finally, one of the shuttles crash landed on our arrival here. That was the noise you heard. I have ordered Kevin to work on a headcount. Dr. Jellyfish has some things to tell you about his discoveries, as well as what the slaves were mining in those tunnels.â
At this, Jellyfish stood up. âI have gathered from the liberated slaves and scientists that they were also mining a particular type of purple crystal, named Crisilau, that Vladek had read about in some Ankorian document or book. Apparently, it was told to be able to pierce anything it was thrown at. They found some of this in the mines, and found that it did have properties that allowed it to split objects apart at the molecular level, similar to anti-matter. It is also very delicate, and shatters easily. They were working on finding a way to put it on weapons without it breaking apart whenever you would use it. If they were able to do this, any close-quarters weapon equipped with Crisilau would become armor piercing.â
âThey havenât achieved that yet, right?â One of the councilmembers asked.
âNo. And I suspect that they will be too distracted reacting to this jailLYFISHbreak to continue their studies effectively. One other small detail, I was able to study a generator they had at the fortress, and may be able to create one here. However it is quite a complex machine, and will take a bit of time to re-engineer, even then-â
âBut you have a pretty good idea, right?â Stirling interjected.
â..Yes.â
âGreat. But for now letâs focus on the threat at hand, agreed?â
A general consensus was echoed.
âThen that is all I have for my report.â
At this, Kevin came through the doors.
âI did the headcount, as requested, Commandude. Itâs hard to tell how many miners we freed in the first place, but roughly, we have 73 remaining of 140 freed slaves, Most of the other teams we sent out made it back, except for one other, with Rick and Debbie, which is still out there. As for our group, Kalaren, Doc, Silverstine, Chris -2nd (swords), you, and me all made it back.â Kevin stated, before continuing in a more reserved and solemn tone. âChris -3rd was in that last shuttle that exploded as we were flying out of there.â
Next to Stirling, Chris the -2nd moaned softly. Stirling wordlessly put an arm around his friend, who had his head in his hands.
After a moment of silence and quiet murmurings about the fallen, Matheeas spoke up again.
âWe might not have time to grieve right now. We have taken the brunt of their workforce, and they will likely be coming soon with either a larger invasion force with heavy ordnance, or they will try and bomb us, like you thought we were going to. Either way, we have shown that we are more than a thorn in Vladekâs side, and are an actual threat to his machinations. My point is, friends, I donât think we can stay in one central location anymore.â
The quiet respectful murmuring quickly turned into⦠less quiet murmuring.
âWhat do you mean by that, Commander?â One of the council members asked.
âI mean we canât stay in Aragarth. At least not at all times. Vladek cannot know our location, or we risk annihilation.
Matheeas noted how the assembly in front of him quickly began to turn and speak more with each other than pay attention to him. He had presented a problem. A problem that heâd helped create. Now he had to present a solution, before it devolved into finger pointing.
âThe way I see it, we have three options as a whole. First of all, we could split into separate smaller groups, keeping contact via messenger gigfrans, communicators, and occasional meetings, while we also travel nomadically, in a sense, constantly evading Vladek, but still staying in the area, using the mines to our advantage to attack strategic points, waging a guerilla war. Of course, we would have to find a way to create a more⦠Mobile curse shield.â
A decent number of the assembled appeared to appreciate this option, judging by the quieting of voices, and contemplating faces.
âSecondly, if Sir Silverstine would have us, we could go with him in his attempt to raise an army to crush those who would restrain our freedom, which, might I add, is the reason this resistance was founded in the first place. There is the possibility of finding places to settle, for some of the families here, in those travels, albeit likely within thedudeâs domain.â
At this, Stirlingâs eyes lit up and he looked up at Matheeas with no small amount of surprise, which was returned with a glance over to him, a small nod and barely perceptible shrug.
âFinally, there is the option of heading south to some of our friends in Domead, and catching boats to⦠Anywhere really. In that way, we could still try and find more people to help in this war overseas. Perhaps in Britay, where Silverstine came from in the first place. Or maybe in Nordland.â
The room was now mostly quiet as the people of Aragarth were now busy mentally turning over their best options of survival. Something they did well. Matheeas did the same, and came to one more conclusion.
âI suppose there is one more option, and that being that we head farther south in Ankoria, finding another ruined city, and settling there, far enough away from Vladek or the Thedude for them to do anything to us. But, at the same time, we would never be able to do anything to them. We would live, sure, but we would be living in this cursed and wretched land, even if it is our home. We would have freedom, but eventually, I think, Thedude, Vladek, or someone else will try and brave Ankoria in search of itâs lost wealth and power, or even just for more land. If we took that path, we would no longer be any sort of resistance, and moreso a⦠Remainder.â
âRegardless, many of the liberated slaves are not part of us yet, and have their own choices, and thus I would propose that we let each person, of Aragarth or not, to make their decision. However, I suspect, we will be able to still work together to a degree, remaining in smaller, distanced groups, for the same goal.â
Stirling stood next to Matheeas, and looked out over the growing group of people in the war room, and the adjoining town hall.
âLancaster, that was brilliant, I must say,â he said quietly. âVery well thought out.â
âI had time on the ride here, I guess.â He replied in turn, then spoke up again. âEveryone in favor of letting everyone outside choose their future, say Aye.â
After a moment of thoughtfulness, everyone did so.
âVery well then. Let us relay this to them then.â He finished, and walked over to Strider.
âStirling, I know I suggested that you might lead some of us, but I wanted to check with you before anything became official or anything. I havenât had a chance yet, and I apologize. If any were to go with you, would you take them? Would they be helpful?â
Stirling glanced around first, to see if they were being paid undue attention to. After assuring himself it was fine, he took a deep breath and nodded. âIt would be an immense honor. And a responsibility that I would be willing to bear.â
Lancaster nodded. âYou donât have to try and take them under your wing or anything, but if they were helpful to you, I believe some would follow you. Not necessarily because they believe in you, per se, but you have been gathering support to dethrone thedude for years, and thatâs why I thought it would be a good idea if you led them, that way they arenât wandering blind.â
Stirling looked back at the crowded war-room, and the small archway that lead to the larger gathering in the Town Hall.
âLancaster. Matheeas. Iâve been all over this world, looking for allies. Iâve found a few here and there, but theyâre all holed up in their own homes or bases. Theyâre all waiting. Your resistance here is the first group thatâd be willing to follow me. Thatâs huge.â He turned and looked Matheeas dead in the eyes. âMost people need a catalyst, or a sign.â He threw his arms wide. âOne guyâs not much of a sign. But two? three? Five?â He waved at the group. âAnyone who wants to come with me is more than welcome. But I canât promise protection. Only more strife.â
Matheeas nodded again. âI understand that. I doubt that any of the families will go with you, but I know certain members have expressed interest. We both have the same goal, even if weâve been holed up here. Anyways, we need to let everyone choose their paths. Thank you again, Strider.â
âNo, thank you, Matheeas.â Stirling smiled. A wide smile, that caused the corners of his face to crease into the very beginnings of aging wrinkles.
After that, they went outside, and Matheeas essentially repeated everything he had just said. There was audible consensus for one of the four options or another, and Matheeas began splitting everyone into groups.
Stirling noted that it was fairly evenly split between three main groups: Following Stirling, leaving by ship, or staying here to continue the fight against Vladek. Surprisingly, his group was the second largest, with roughly 35 people, compared to the ones heading to port, with roughly 40. A slightly smaller group than his was going to stay in Ankoria. He shook his head. Heâd been here for months, and still was amazed at the Aragarthian's will to remain in such a ruthless environment. Even if it was home.
Looking out at those who intended to follow him, he was heartened to see Kalaren, Kevin, Chris -2nd, and Dr. Jellyfish. He also saw Amras standing a little ways away from Kalaren, but still in the same group. He would have to talk to her later. He also saw Victor with the people who would leave by ship, along with Dr. Skope, Tillman, and some of the council members. The last group had Chrisâ father at the front, with a grim expression on his face Beside him stood a pensive Methuselah. Next to Deke and Mauss, also in this group, was Wilda, who raised a hand, and five other littler hands came up around her.
âCommander. What about the little ones?â
Around Wilda were Joshua, Rita, Rosa, Jonny, and Blake. Most of whom had mixed amounts of confusion, eagerness, and worry apparent on their faces.
âThat will be up to their parents, or course. I am sure there are other places and towns that families could find and stay at, at least for a little while. Many of those places would come across Silverstineâs path, Iâm sure.â
Stirling nodded his confirmation. âSuch places of refuge are growing smaller and smaller everyday under the watchful eyes of Vladek and thedude, but I still know of a few.â
âAnd others could be travelled to by ship from Domead.â Lancaster added.
Wilda nodded. âThen I shall go with you, Stirling, to aid such places in their protections of the innocent.â
Once Matheeas was satisfied everyone had chosen, he spoke up again. âNow, would anyone be willing to accompany me in traveling elsewhere to find more help, like Sir Silverstine is planning to do, but elsewhere, covering more ground?â
After a little bit, some people began to migrate over to a new group, starting with Kevin, after saying some things to Kalaren. Mauss also walked over, with a slave who appeared to be holding one of the cursed swords. Many others walked from the Domead group, and now there was only 13 with Victor and the Domead group, and 30 with Lancasterâs group. Stirlingâs still remained around 30-some as well.
Stirling surveyed the results, and then walked forward. âI just want to say, itâs been an honor to live amongst you all for a time. Itâs an even greater honor that some of you would choose to follow me to fight for this world. And there is no hard feelings for those who wish to seek their own paths and shelters. Iâve walked that path myself, and it can be a very necessary one. Itâs whatâs led me here to you all.â He turned and locked eyes with Chrisâ father for a meaningful moment. âI hope against hope that we all meet again, even as I know that what we fight for will claim many more lives before it is achieved.â He looked out at the rest. âYou all fight as ten men. Or women. Militiregnum will benefit from your prowess wherever you choose to go. You all are capable leaders, and it seems some have been chosen here. Whether you follow Matheeas and I out of Ankoria, or Victor here south to Domead and from there disperse, or if you choose to stay in Ankoria with Chris theâ¦â Stirling trailed off.
âNegative 7th,â Chris the -7th supplied.
âNegative 7th,â Stirling continued. âKnow that you are part of something greater. The spirit of the men and women of Aragarth is indomitable, and Iâve not seen anything like it. Iâm stronger for it myself, and Iâve no doubt you will impart that strength to others no matter where you go.â
Stirling stood there, looking out over them. He tried to think of a way to close⦠But suddenly there were no more words. Not that heâd really even thought about what he was saying⦠It just⦠had needed to be said.
âIs this how Thingguy works his charisma?â he wondered.
However he did it, this way seemed to work, as many among the crowd started to cheer as they were inspired by the speech, even those who were not Aragarthian.
When it died down, Matheeas came up again.
âThen we shall separate as Lancasterâs Lance, Striderâs Sword, and Chrisâs Cleavers, tomorrow morning.â
Stirling was jarred out of his thoughts. âWh-What? You have names already?â
âAlliteration!â Jellyfish exclaimed behind Matheeas. âHelps with organization! I should know, I have no alliteration.â
âAs I said, I had a lot of time to think.â
Stirling looked around at the people in his group, and was glad to see Kalaren and Chris the -2nd, still standing among them.
__-__-__-__-__
Chapter 20: Epilouge
Kalaren stood silently as he listened to what the Commander and Strider had to say. After some consideration, he decided to join Stirling in his journey.
As much as he would like to remain close to Vladek, be there to see the monster struck down by his own handâ¦
He knew he couldnât. Not right now, with so few. He knew that in order to reach Vladek, he would have to get through the vermin that protected him⦠And Vladek had many of those. Even though they had taken them by surprise, they had still lost half their forces while escaping the fortress. No, Grimfire will not remain and be quenched. He would be at the front of the axe to shatter the shield, even if the creation of the axe took yearsâ¦
Kalaren shook his head. He was waxing poetic, and really he just needed to find some more like-minded people⦠And now was not the time for his vengeance.
When Matheeas mentioned his mission, Kalaren was torn between following the leader he had followed so long in search of aid, or following Strider, who clearly had more experience, not just with the dealings of common civilization, but also in connecting with people who still valued their freedom. And, he had seen more battles than anyone else here. And ultimately, his priorities coincided with whatever gave him the best chance of returning for Vladekâs head.
His deliberations were interrupted by Kevin walking in front of him and grabbing his shoulder, with a sad smile.
âDude.â
Kalaren looked back at him, and gave a similar smile. It was a silent conversation, which ended in verbal confirmation by Kalaren.
âDude.â
After patting Kalarenâs shoulder once more, Kevin walked over to Commander Lancasterâs new group, while Kal stayed put in Stirlingâs company.
âWow.â
Kalaren turned to the right, to see Chris the -2nd staring at him, misty-eyed.
âThat was a lot.â He wiped away a tear before it could fall. âYou gunna be ok, man?â
Kalaren chuckled, before cutting himself off.
âWhat was a lot? As far as Iâm concerned, Kevin and I exchanged a formal farewell. I definitely didnât say dude.â
Chris held his hands up defensively, barely containing a grin. âMy bad.â
âAnyways, Chris, what about you? How are you holding up?â
Chris glanced back at his father, the -7th, along with the majority of the other Chrisâ, and a few others. He locked eyes with his father, who nodded. Chris the -2nd nodded back.
He turned back to Kal. âMy road lies with Commander Silverstine now.â he looked at Stirling, who was looking out over the various groups with shining bright blue eyes filled with hope. âHe is the way -3rd will be avenged.â Looking back at Kalaren, he continued. âMy father will make sure Vladek doesnât get stronger.â
Kalaren reached out with his intact human left arm, and the two gripped each otherâs left forearms. Kalaren gave him an intense and pained smirk, replying, âThatâs why Iâm going too. Weâll come back with the fuel for the fire that will burn his fort to the ground.â
Chris replied by nodding, as tears started to wet his eyes.
They were distracted by more speaking by the leaders, and continued to listen.
â--------------
Kalaren had helped with the first preparations, and now everything that the town needed was packed into the various shuttles. Jellyfish had commandeered the other scientists and engineers, and together they had completely debugged the shuttles, and took parts from the shuttle that had crashed and patched up another one that needed repairs. All in all, there were 3 flying shuttles, and one that would be little more than a suspended trollycar slung between two others.
Lancasterâs Lance would take the larger shuttle, and would use that to fly more or less directly to their next destination.
Striderâs Sword would take the two smaller working shuttles to his destination, with the intent of towing the now inoperable shuttle that had crash landed, just for itâs passenger capacity. Jellyfish was already throwing ideas around about an air-to-surface light fast attack tank. Which made no sense, but everyone nodded, knowing it could eventually.
Those going to the port town would be given a mounted Goat escort by the Cleaverâs to Domead, where they would eventually disperse.
The Cleaverâs themselves would stay in this region, living a nomadic life, using the mines to their advantage. Methuselah would also travel with them, to protect them from the landâs curse, as he had protected Aragarth for years now, just as his predecessors before him had, since time immemorial.
Right now, however, his metallic arm was being repaired inside one of the more intact shuttles.
With Dr. Jellyfish entirely swamped, fixing the shuttles and directing the other scientists, Dr. Steph A. Scope was doing his best to patch Kalaren.
âTo be frank, I know more about your cybernetic arm than Iâd like,â Dr. Steph assured him. âJellyfish often waxes eloquent about it in the office. Tells me about how itâs far superior to the rest of my patientâs arms, and how heâd do up everyone with one if he only had the supplies.â
Suddenly, sparks flew, and Kalaren winced as simulated pain shot up his arm and directly into his brain.
âAh, right. The not-so-funny bone.â Dr. Steph sighed. âWell, good news. Now you canât feel any more pain for a few hours, so I can get this done quite a lot faster. Bad news, youâre going to have to rest for a few hours.â
âWell. Gosh. Whatever shall I do?â
Dr. Skope smiled as he realized that Kalaren was dead-tired, and welcomed the rest. âBetter news, it sounds like you might be flying for most of that time, if Jellyfish knows what heâs doing.â Dr. Steph smiled. âAnd of course, he does.â
â... Right.â
Minutes later, Kalaren was resting by himself. Outside, he heard the final rushed preparations being made. Smiling, he felt content, and relaxed. The first time in a good long while. Funny, when everything about his life was about to change forever, that he could be so relaxed.
Then he heard footsteps, as one of the miners entered the little medbay, wearing a hooded cloak.
âKalaren.â
Lying on the medical bed, Kalaren craned his neck. âYeah? Do you need something?â
The miner stood there, somewhat mysteriously.
âItâs been a very long time.â
Kalaren raised an eyebrow. âDo I know you?â The voice was of an older woman, that much he could tell. But the dark medbay didnât allow for much of the detail beneath that hood to be seen.
âYes. Once upon a time.â The miner pulled back her hood, revealing cropped red hair with strands of bright silver. Her eyes were two different colors. The one on the left was a bluish green, and the one on the right was greenish blue. She appeared to be in her late 50s or so. It was hard to tell, because even though there were many wrinkles, she smiled so beautifully, it took some of those years away. A scar from some sort of blunt force trauma discolored her lower jaw line, but even through all of this⦠Kalaren recognized her.
âMother.â
Suddenly, Kalarenâs understanding of the distant voice calling him back from his rage during the battle in the Castle came flooding back to him. It really had been his mom, not some dream!
âYes, Kal.â His mother stepped forward to the bed, and held his good hand. His human hand. âItâs me. Iâm here.â
âHow? Why now?â Kalaren said, as his voice started to break.
âIt is a long story. This is as soon as it could be, according to the One who plans all things.â
âBut how did you survive? I thought Vladek⦠I saw Father die⦠and Sarah and Lucy, theyâ¦â Kalarenâs voice was stopped by a sob that almost escaped. Instead of speaking, Kalaren pulled his tearful Mother into a hug. Slowly, he began to cry. Quietly, softly, as he was finally able to begin to voice what he had felt every day for almost eight years.
âI thought Iâd lost you. I thought Iâd lost everyone, everything. Iâve been here, trying to find a way to exact revenge on that monster, everyday trying to figure out another way to do so, but-â
âI know, Iâve seen you working with these people, and Iâve gathered enough to be so proud.â She gave him a quick squeeze, then pulled back to get a better look at him. âI know you escaped after being captured. I know Vladek used and tortured you, and you remained strong. I know that youâre still capable of kindness and love, and yet you use your anger to protect against the monsters.â She ruffled his hair. âAnd Iâm sorry that I couldnât be here earlier.â New tears flowed as she sat down into a chair and held Kalarenâs hand. âIâm so, so sorry.â
Kalaren shook his head fiercely. âYouâre here now.â
His Mother smiled weakly, and then continued. âYour father made sure that I got out of the house and hid before Vladek could find me. Still, I was able to see what happened when you entered the room. I followed you as he dragged you to his ship, and then I stowed away amidst some supplies he had brought. I wasnât able to get to you before they secured you in that room, and before long I was found. However, I was able to pass myself off as a slave that had been working there, and that was my cover for these years. If they knew who I was, they may have discovered too much about the sword your father and I made⦠The sword you have been carrying around since you got it in the castle.â
Kalaren quickly glanced down at the sword, which was leaning against a corner.
âYour Father and I cursed it so only Nuradan and his descendants would be able to use it. It is tied by blood. Your father expected betrayal, just not at this scale.â She sighed.
âEvidently, that made Vladek furious. It is a good thing the magic used to create it is different than the magic here, and thus prohibited them from finding out more about it, as the secrets of the sword may be the one thing we can use against him.â
âSecrets?â
âSome. For the most part, it works as an instrument that harnesses magic. When you used it in the castle, fighting that dark knight, it expressed your rage in fire. If you trained with it, you would probably be able to control any amount of magic around you. Which seemed to be what Vladek needed to protect him from this thedude fellow.â
âIt also will not tolerate being held by anyone not of Nuradanâs bloodline. If someone tries, they will feel a horrible, painful burning sensation in their veins. It doesnât actually hurt the person very much, it just feels like it. Which brings up a question I have been having.â
âYes?â
âYou donât have a son, do you?â
âWhat? No!â
âThen I wonder how Silverstine was able to hold it.â
Kalaren sputtered. âHeâs like, 20-some years older than me!â
Mother shrugged. âStranger things have happened. I mean, we have time travel, dimension travel, cursed lands, I just had to make sure. In any case, we will have to ask him. It could be you donât have a son yet, and he traveled back in time to help you. But if he did, I would assume things went really bad in the future. Anyways.â
âKalaren!â Jellyfishâs voice echoed from close outside. âHowâs that JELLYFISH arm!?â
Striding through the door of the medbay, He stopped once he saw this clearly emotional conversation.
âI heard you yell something, and that usually means you are either very emotional, or insane like me. Everything okay here?â Jellyfish asked.
Kalaren nodded. âEverthing is fine. Jellyfish, this is my mother, Sarma.â
âAh! Not Amras, then. Wait, thatâs just Sarma backwards. You know, thatâs never a good trick. Like spinning.â
Sarma smirked and shrugged. âWorked well enough for long enough.â she turned back to Kalaren. âBut now Iâm here.â
â-------------------------
Stirling laughed, one hand on the spaceshipâs flight stick, and another on his co pilotâs shoulder, Chris -2nd. Chris was also laughing, as he held the radio up for Stirling to use.
âAlright, Lancaster. Iâll be sure to tell Jellyfish off about it. Good luck buffing it out!â
âIt looks nothing like me,â Matheeasâ reply came over the radio. âI know itâs supposed to be a compliment, but me as a jellyfish doesnât make any sense. And putting it on the outside of the ship for all to see means Iâll have to avoid explaining it. Besides that, we are obviously not an official shuttle, so we are going to have to stop soon to get rid of it.â
âMakes sense,â Stirling replied.
âWhere are you going to do that?â Chris the -2nd asked.
Before Matheeas could reply, Stirling interjected. âItâs probably better if we donât know, actually. The less we know of each otherâs whereabouts, the less chances weâre all captured or found.â
There was a silent pause as everyone considered. Then Matheeas replied. âPretty soon weâre going to be out of range for the speaking radio. From there, weâll have the long range beepers to communicate with.â
âMorse Code,â Stirling clarified.
âRight, morose code.â
âItâs a good thing we will have that, because I am going to have to tell you guys all about military slang. You desperately need it.â
Stirling and Chris heard Matheeas chuckle, and then his co-pilot muttered something to him. âWell, Iâve got to go. Donât hesitate to call on me, Commander Silverstine. Hopefully, Iâll be able to surprise you with an even larger force when we meet again.â
âIâd like that.â
âSee you on the other side. I think thatâs how it goes.â
Then the radioâs static overtook them, and Chris clicked the audio channel off.
The two men looked out the windshield. This shuttle didnât have a busted one like the one theyâd initially piloted to Aragarth.
Outside, a number of thick clouds mostly obscured their vision, but Stirling was confident of their direction.
âWell, thatâs it, then.â Chris said. âWeâre leaving Ankoria, Iâm leaving my old commander, and the future is filled with even more uncertainty.â He glanced at Stirling, who was still smiling. âBut I have more hope than Iâve ever had in my whole life.â
âI canât wait for you to see Aquila,â Stirling said suddenly. âThe people can be a bunch of pricks, but itâs absolutely beautiful.â
âWhat do you mean?â
Stirlingâs smile turned into a full grin. âYouâve lived your whole life in the Cursed Land, right?â
âYeah?â
Stirling snatched the radio, and contacted the other ship that flew next to them. âJellyfish, letâs pitch down below the cloud cover. These folks need to see green.â
âSounds like a jolly good idea! But only for so long, the clouds are good cover.â
âOf course.â
Both ships slowly nosed downward, and Stirling watched Chris staring through the windshield with even amounts of anticipation and apprehension.
Then they broke through, and Chris took in their surroundings.
Directly below them were the tips of some mountains that continued south Off to the north, was a thick, black, and dark forest. He pulled his attention away from it quickly, and stared straight ahead.
Ahead, the mountains dropped away into a valley so green, he at first thought it was a giant emerald. Here and there were small blemishes, that, as Chris struggled to understand the distances and proportions of things, he realized were tiny hamlets, with smoke rising from chimneys too small to see from this high up. The mountains hemmed this massive, green valley, on the right side, perfect as a picture frame. On the left, the green spilled into a paler and paler mint, as it blended with snowy fields.
For a while, the only sounds were the straining shipâs engines, and the howling wind.
âWow.â Chris finally said, in a tone that revealed how small he suddenly felt. âIs it like this everywhere?â
âNo,â Stirling said. âItâs all different.â
âWow. Thatâs⦠A lot.â
âItâs worth fighting for.â
Chris nodded, and for awhile, only silence followed, and eventually they drifted back up.
Stirling looked out at the other shuttle, and the cargo they were carrying between them. The disabled ship. He listened to the people behind them as they murmured casually.
This was a strong people. Strong allies.
Heâd been looking for allies for so long⦠Looking to restore hope to others. Rekindle some sort of fighting spirit!
He chuckled. Heâd had a fighting spirit for some time now, but heâd certainly not had much hope for himself. Yet, from the depths of Ankoria, heâd found some.
Now, finally, he felt it.
Hope that this wasnât going to fail.
Hope against his fear that as much as he could try, the only thing he could do was go out in a final blaze of glory, drive one last impact against thedude from the Silverstine clan.
Hope that he was not the end of his familyâs story.
Hope that he might find his family, again.
Hope for a home.
He felt a similar hope, resonating and reverberating grimly amongst these people, and something more.
A deadly decisiveness that Stirling knew well.
They would do whatever it took to achieve their goals. They were unified by this. And that is what made them strong.
Checking the controls yet again, Stirling refocused his attention on the skies.
This avenging blaze he had been building had a lot more fuel than he thought.
Together, they could call forth more brave people. He already knew of a few that would gladly join such a force, once it was presented to them.
He chuckled. âStirlingâs Swordâ would be ready.
______________________
Fuel for the Fire.
The End.