I was at the far side of the junction, and sprang at the closest guy with a gun. He clearly hadn’t been expecting someone like me and had totally frozen. I was on him in a second, wrenching the gun out of his hand and flinging it back along the floor towards the elevator. As the guy toppled onto me his colleague fired, straight into him. He didn’t even get time to cry out. I always felt kinda bad about that, afterwards. It was a really shitty way to go out, especially if, you know, you were meant to be a security guard.
But, hey, trying to kill me, and all.
I rolled back out, ran halfway up the wall and propelled myself at the trigger-happy guard. He had pretty good armour on, head to toe and even with his neck covered. Thing is, they always made helmets so that they covered the top of your head but left your face open. Always seemed a bit weird to me - wouldn’t it just encourage people to shoot you in the face?
Anyway, I didn’t have a gun, so I just bit him on the nose. That’s not a nice thing to experience under any circumstances, but being bitten by a squamata is definitely something to avoid. He dropped like a sack of potatoes about three seconds later.
Marv already had the other guys at gunpoint, which was pretty badass.
They cowered - actually cowered - as I approached.
“Don’t kill us,” one of them whimpered, “please, I have a kid. A little boy.”
“Aww, cute,” I said.
Marv glanced over at me. “What now?”
“Knock them out, I guess?”
He nodded. “Right.” He swung the butt of the gun, smacking the guy closest across the forehead. He doubled over and swore. “Man, I’m sorry,” Marv said, genuinely apologetic, “that always works in movies.”
“Listen,” the Guy With Kid said, “can’t you just tie us up somewhere? We’re not even guards, we just work up here.”
“OK,” I said, “but if you try anything, I will find you. And your kid.” I flashed my fangs.
It took a couple of minutes to find anything we could use to tie them up. Seems that your average office doesn’t have handcuffs or rope lying around. After that we moved quickly to the staircase, and continued making our way up the spire.
“So, saying you’d go after his kid?”
“Yeah, what?”
“Kinda creepy,” Marv said. “Pretty cold.”
“Hey, I was just trying to sound serious,” I said.
“And the other guy? The one you bit?”
My stomach crawled. For a moment I thought I was going to retch. “It was just a quick bite. Probably just knocked him out.”
Marv nodded. “You don’t actually know, do you?”
“I’ve not made a habit of trying to kill people, if that’s what you mean. And no, I don’t know. I don’t want to talk about it.”
I didn’t even want to think about it.15
“You’re going to have to at some point,” Marv said.
We reached the next floor without incident. It was entirely deserted.
“I totally thought you were going to get shot, you know?” I watched Marv as he gazed through the walls and the ceiling, looking for heat signatures.
“Still might, you know?”
“Don’t say that.”
“Not everyday I do something this monumentally unwise, Kay.”
“Fun, though, right?”
“Hells yeah it’s fun,” he said. “I can see Cal. He’s on the next floor. And then it’s the Aviary.”
“Answers or death.”
“You know it.”
lineage
ˈlɪnɪɪdʒ/
noun
BIOLOGY
a sequence of species each of which is considered to have evolved from its predecessor.
The good news is that they were wildly unprepared. The bad news is that we’re now holed up in the records office with every exit barricaded and a squad of particularly angry and armed people waiting just outside. Looking on the bright side, this is the room we wanted to be in.
“Found anything yet?” Marv was stalking around the perimeter of the room, glaring out past the walls and blocked-up doors, reading every heat signature buzzing around outside.
I slammed shut another filing cabinet. “Not yet!” This task seemed to define the concept of needles in haystacks. Finding records of the orphanage fire should have been easy, but there was nothing. Cal had managed to uncover the names of some other people born the same day as him but they’d seemingly been erased from history as well. The room was huge: an octagonal archive of everything that had ever happened and been recorded in the country, and possibly the world, organised onto hundreds of thousands of microfilm rolls. Everything was labelled and categorised perfectly but it would still take a month to go through everything.
“Did you really expect them to leave a paper trail?” Marv shouted over the banging from outside.
“I was hoping for something,” Cal said, pushing a stack of shelves over in frustration. He was wearing the same clothes as Marv, who had brought him a spare set of cleaning overalls. “Everything I’ve seen and heard indicated that orders always came from here. All the kill orders.”
I found myself sitting on a fallen bookcase, head in my hands. I knew this was going to be dangerous, and that we’d end up in prison, or worse, but I’d expected to at least get some answers. For there to be some kind of heroic point. But for it to just end without any resolution - I couldn’t even think of it. What a waste.
My dad’s face popped into my mind. It did that, from time-to-time. I hated him my whole life, until he was dead, and now I just wanted to talk with him. There was no changing him, sure, but there was so much unsaid. I don’t think he quite understood how much I loathed him.
I used to be so uncomplicated.
Moral of the story? Don’t find weird men in your shed.
“There’s something else here,” Marv was saying from the other side of the room. “This wall is different. Everywhere else we’re surrounded, but this wall is different. There’s another room back here.”
My stupor evaporated and I ran to where he stood, passing row after row of shelving and filing. The room was a maze of curated history. “Anybody back there?”
Marv shrugged. “There’s something there, but it’s vague. Dunno what I’m looking at.”
“Not a problem,” Cal said, dropping to his knees as he genoshifted, brown fur pushing out of his skin even as his body bulked up, pushing at the seams of the overalls. His jaw and nose became more pronounced, his features heavier. Standing once more, now a clear foot taller than Marv, he picked up a filing cabinet, hefting it carefully, then pivoted forwards on one foot, swinging the metal cabinet forwards and into the wall. The force sent cracks spreading out from the impact point and plaster fell to the floor.
“Five more ought to do it,” Marv said. “How many more of those you got up your sleeve, anyway?”
Cal ignored him, retreating with the cabinet then burying it back into the wall. As he bashed his way through I watched his single-minded focus, unaware of what was around him, oblivious to our presence and the hundred-or-so pissed off people beyond the walls. I guess he’d been building up to this his whole life. Gotta give you purpose.
The wall quivered, buckled, and collapsed in on itself, light blazing in from beyond. Chunks of masonry rained down from above the hole and dust filled the air, splitting the light into drifting shafts. Cal disappeared through into the next room.
“Got a bad feeling about this,” Marv said quietly.
“Now you’ve got a bad feeling? You not been paying attention or something?”
“How well you know this guy, Kay?”
Felt like I’d known him for years. My whole life. “I met him a couple months back, I guess.”
“Yeah,” he said. “Even less for me. He lived at my digs for the last four weeks, but I got no clue who the hell he is.”
“Guess he doesn’t either. That’s why we’re here.”
“Right. But your whole life been defined
by not knowing; what happens when you find out?”
I shrugged. “Let’s go see.”
Holding a hand to my eyes I stepped through into brightness. The room was white-walled and lit by a row of fluorescents and was considerably smaller than the main archive - more like the size of an office. It was empty except for a device in its centre, next to which stood the hulking form of Cal.
The device was unlike anything I’d ever seen. It resembled a machine but was also like an animal, of sorts. It was clearly built, and designed, but also had organic parts intermingled with the mechanical pieces. Standing half as tall as Cal and wide at its base, it seemed to be pulsating. In front and below the contraption was some kind of receptacle, above which hung a wide nozzle.
Marv followed me through. “Yeah. Told you I didn’t know what the hell I was seeing.”
“Cal? What is it?”
He held something up. “This was in there,” he said, pointing at the receptacle. With a jerk of his hand he threw the object at me. I caught it and examined it. It was white and sculpted, with a bumpy, undulating surface and holes punched through, like three face masks linked together as a single piece. I rotated it around and saw my own face, with Cal and Marv represented either side. Our likenesses, carved into the object. I stared for several seconds, then flipped it over again. There was a message on the back, warning of our imminent arrival at the spire. “In all the confusion I guess they didn’t get the message,” Cal said.
Marv touched the sculpted message with a hand. “Who sends a message like this?”
The scales on my neck fluttered. “We’re way out of our depth here,” I said. “Which, I know, is, like, super obvious. But even with that taken into account, we are then extra out of our depth.”
Cal actually laughed. “Do you not remember your religious studies?”
“I went to a state school. Didn’t really have much of that.”
He grimaced. “Orphanages are mostly run by the church,” he said. “I’ve heard them talk about this kind of thing.” He moved cautiously around it, as if circling a wild animal. The fur on his head and arms was pointed, like an alarmed cat. “But only in terms of proclamations from god. Stone tablets. Messages from the mountain. Ring any bells?”
Cal reached out and touched the contraption. The device heaved and swelled as Cal touched it and he cried out in pain, seemingly unable to remove his hand from its surface. At the same time there was a deafening blast from the archive room.
“Ah man, that’s just bad timing,” Marv said, heading back through the hole in the wall. “I got this.”
I leapt forwards and pulled at Cal, tearing him away from whatever had been holding him in place. We both tumbled backwards onto the floor as he began shivering uncontrollably, eyes glazed over and mouth agape. The fit intensified and as he rocked back and forth he began to shed his fur, leaving it strewn across the floor as he rolled. I tried to pin him down but his form kept shifting, his arms and torso shrinking down and changing texture, from fur to bare skin to scales to feathers and back again. His face was a contortion of pain, eyes bulging, irises flicking from black oval to diamond slit to yellow orbs. His teeth pushed out through his lips, then retracted, then turned to points, then fell out entirely. I backed off, unable to hold him down and at risk from being knocked out by his movements. He writhed, shifting over and over again.
Shouts came from the other room, then gunfire. There was nothing I could do for Cal, but Marv needed my help. Reluctantly backing away from Cal I turned and ducked back through, into a warzone.
The archives were a blaze of light and fire, flames spreading from the far wall where they’d blown their way in. Soldiers were pouring in, firing intermittently and seemingly at more than one target. I crouched low and scampered forwards on all fours, flitting from one fallen row of shelves to another, tasting the air, closing in on Marv’s scent.
I found him underneath a stack of cases, leg trapped and arm bleeding profusely. “What the hell?” I shouted over the weapons fire.
He grabbed me and pulled me close with his uninjured arm. “There’s somebody else here. Gotta be. I sure ain’t a threat.”
Risking a glance around the cabinet I caught a flash of movement and two soldiers evaporated, leaving behind a shower of blue sparks. The others turned and re-aimed their fire, but my view was blocked.
“We need to get out of here,” I said.
“Captain Obvious,” Marv said. “Get my leg out.”
I helped him prop up the cabinet and he rolled clear. Slinging his arm over my shoulder we moved as fast as we could back through the smoke-filled records room, where sounds of gunfire were being replaced with screams of soldiers.
We reached the gaping hole in the wall and scurried back through into the white room. It was now emptier than before: the device remained in the centre, as if nothing had happened, but Cal was nowhere to be seen.
The sounds of fighting from beyond the hole slowly diminished while I moved around the room, hunting for an exit, or a hidden door. The walls were clean and featureless, and yielded no escape.
A frightened shout from the hole turned our attention back, just in time to see a terrified soldier running towards us, covered in blood. Before his feet touched the floor he erupted into vapour and sparks and vanished before us. Through the mist-that-was-man another person was revealed, stepping closer and holding some kind of weird gun. He looked unlike anybody I’d ever seen, and bore no discernible genoform markings. No horns, or fur, or wings, or scales. No tentacles or additional limbs.
His defining feature was his face, deeply scarred from chin to forehead.
He grinned crookedly. “Hello, children,” he said, “I’ve been looking for you.16”
apex predator
noun
ECOLOGY
An apex predator is a predator residing at the top of a food chain on which no other creatures predate.
“I should be more precise,” said the man with the scarred face, speaking with a weird accent that I couldn’t place. “I’m looking for him. Your friend.”
Marv stood next to me, one hand placed on my arm. I wasn’t sure if he was trying to warn me not to try anything, or gripping me out of his own fear. This guy in front of us had just vapourised the entire room. That kinda thing gets your attention.
“Don’t know who you’re talking about, man,” Marv said, shaking his head so much that I was worried it might fall off.
The scarred man made an adjustment to his weapon, turning a dial, then aimed and fired at Marv. Now, the thing about guns is that you don’t get that slow-motion scream or cry of anguish, as you lunge across the room trying to push someone out the way or take a bullet for them. Hell, I was standing shoulder to shoulder with Marv and still had no time to react. One moment his arm was gripping mine; then he didn’t even have an arm. Half of it was simply gone, the forearm and hand still gripping mine, but nothing connecting it back to its owner.
At first Marv didn’t really react. He jerked a little, maybe, at the initial impact, but that was about it. As the blue embers that had been his shoulder fizzled to nothing, he glanced down and his brain tried to register what had happened. Instead, he turned a little and, using his remaining arm, pulled at the disembodied hand, removing it from my arm and holding it up in front of him. Blood pumped from his shoulder.
He looked up and into my eyes. “Really want to make an unarmed pun, Kay,” he said, not smiling. Then he collapsed to the floor and started convulsing.
“You’ll want to do something about that blood loss,” the man said. He threw something onto the floor in front of me. It was a bandage of some sort. “Put it on his shoulder, quickly now.”
Grabbing at the bandage, I ripped off the packaging and fumbled with it. It wasn’t long enough to wrap and, besides, there wasn’t enough arm left to form a tourniquet.
“Apply it directly.”
I did as the man instructed. As soon as it was placed onto the wound the bandage expanded to
encompass it entirely, binding itself into the flesh and sealing it up, as if it knew what it was doing. I’d never seen or heard of anything like it. There wasn’t anything like it.
Then again, this guy had a ray gun. So I probably should’ve been ready for anything.
“Consider that a gesture of goodwill,” the man said. “So tell me, where is your friend?”
The man’s outfit was as odd as his accent. Not just the style, but the materials themselves seemed unfamiliar: smoother and more form-fitting. A little like tight leather, but different and less natural. Around his chest he wore a circular contraption with metal filaments stretching out over his torso and down his limbs.
He raised the gun again, pointing at Marv’s other arm.
“Wait,” I said, holding up my hands in a vague and obviously useless attempt to shield him, “just wait. He was here. But he’s gone, and I don’t know where.”
“There’s no door out of this room. So where did he go?”
“I genuinely don’t know, you arsehole.”
The man grimaced and stepped closer. “I know your friend has unusual powers,” he said. “What happened when he came in here?”
I thought about trying to feign innocence, but there was Marv, writhing on the floor and frothing at the mouth, and decided that now wasn’t the time to be awkward. “Something happened when he touched the machine, or whatever it is.”
His face turned towards me, eyes glaring and jaw set hard. “What happened?”
“He started changing again.”
The man dropped the gun to his side. “Well, shit,” he murmured. “That’s really fucked it, then.” He adjusted something on his chest contraption and I heard a barely audible hum as something electronic started charging up. “I didn’t want to get into this, but you’re both going to have to come with me so we can figure out what you know. If anything.”
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