by O. J. Lowe
This should be easy.
Nick studied the anklo in much the same way he imagined his opponent was studying Carcer. Unless it did something unexpected, he had a good idea what would be coming. Lots of durability and probably some decent firepower… That would be a good assessment, given the way it had flung a gytrash across a room. Weaknesses, lack of speed and mobility. And doubtless the other guy had thought that too. And the soft underbelly. Of course, no way to get directly underneath it. He’d already given that some thought.
Unless…
He glanced at the floor, then at Carcer. That could work. Not a chance he’d see that coming. And get it right, there wouldn’t be much he could do about it here. Nick glanced at the ceiling. They had sprinklers in here. It’d all depend how long it took them to activate.
“You ready yet?” the youth said petulantly as he glared at Nick. “Because…”
“Of course,” Nick interrupted. Carcer, go to the sky immediately, he added silently to his spirit. “After you!”
He guessed the uniblast was coming; it was what he’d have done. Quick surprise attack, take the opponent off guard with overwhelming force. The burst of energy erupted through the air, striking past the space where Carcer had stood moments earlier, the shark lizard suddenly aloft like a giant butterfly. In the wild, they’d been clocked of going up to speeds easily matching an aeroship. In here, going that fast would be dangerous. At least the shields were working again; the uniblast hit the barrier and faded out.
Buzz it, he urged. Get in and among its face, try and distract it a little. At the command, Carcer swooped down like an oversized bat and raked his twin front claws across Atlas’ face, the blow leaving shallow cuts bleeding in the scaled head. The anklo bellow angrily, tried to snap at the serpentine neck. Carcer thrust backwards, neatly evading the cumbersome blow. The anklo’s caller looked more and more furious by the moment, Nick could see his fists balled up against his sides. The beaked mouth remained open, bare hints of energy already starting to form…
Move!
… another uniblast tore out, again hitting where Carcer had been just a moment earlier, again fading out on the invisible barrier. Nick grinned. Time to execute. Hey, Carcer. How about turning up the heat. He very quickly and silently laid out what he wanted to do. If the shark lizard understood, he showed no sign of it, instead studying the scene below with beady eyes. And then he rose, almost touching the ceiling and coughed a great stream of fire down towards Atlas, raking it around with great abandon. Nick was pleased to notice the flinch from the anklo, the other caller looked less than impressed with the efforts.
“The other guy tried fire as well,” he said. “You’re not going to burn through that shell. It’s harder than steel. You might as well try to burn… through the floor…” He suddenly went green as his attention turned back to the battlefield at the way Carcer was no longer directing the fires onto Atlas, instead scorching the ground beneath the anklo’s giant feet. A ground already starting to look unsteady, Nick could hear wood splintering under the great weight filling the area. More than that, flames had caught hold of it, leaving Atlas caught within a ring of fire. Roars and moans and pained cries overshadowed the sound of the shattering floor as fire licked at its paws and legs and finally up into the soft protected underbelly. Nick suddenly caught the unmistakeable aroma of roasting anklo.
“You might as well give in,” he said softly. Last thing he wanted was to draw it out unnecessarily. “You’re trapped. There’s nowhere to go from here.”
The other caller shook his head, a scowl on his face. “If you think I’m going to let this stop me…”
Put it out of its misery!
Carcer’s mouth split into a grin as he rose into the air, much like the crimson chimp had done earlier. Crossing the tips of his wings in front of him, he fell into a dive like a cannonball, homing in on the stricken anklo. Nick put a hand in front of his mouth. The black smog from the flames was slowly increasing and he could feel the unpleasant tickle in the back of his throat. Just a few seconds more…
“… then you’ve got another thought coming!” the youth started to say before he realised what was happening. Carcer was fast and he had been distracted. It took a split second but the realisation was starting to dawn. “Atlas, income…”
CRASH!
Just too late to do anything about it. The anklo never saw it through other distractions, Carcer’s blow had been true and Atlas toppled down to the ground with a ferocious smash, still amidst the flames.
“… ing!” the other caller finished, too stunned to realise what had happened. The moment the final blow landed, the barrier went down and the sprinklers kicked into life, extinguishing the flames within seconds. Soon only a fallen anklo lay amidst the wreckage of the battlefield. It’d take some repairing. It was unlikely there’d be any more fights in here on this trip. That wasn’t his concern. He’d proved his point.
“And that’s how you do that,” Nick said, folding his arms. “Maybe you should have just apologised. Remember that, next time!”
He turned on his heel and walked away, Carcer already returning to the container crystal. All while feeling the burn of the other caller’s furious gaze burning into his back, the knowledge of that alone enough to make him smile. Maybe he’d gone over the top. It didn’t matter.
Never hold back.
Three simple words but they made a good motto.
Chapter Eight. Opportunist.
“A polite notice to all travellers aboard our Wave Crest vessel, please keep an eye on your belongings and personal possessions at all times. Wave Crest United does not take any responsibility for lost or stolen items.”
Disclaimer shown immediately before boarding any Wave Crest United Vessel.
The fourteenth day of Summerdawn.
A bunch of macho posturing jackasses!
The thought was enough to bring a smile to Maxwell Brudel’s head as he watched the scuffle between the two men. Not at all a surprise. It was a long trip from Canterage to Vazara, there was plenty of time to cut into with all the travelling. It was only natural that someone would find a way to get into a fight. It was like they came looking for them. The nature of the competitive, no matter how much he might consider it beneath him to get into a clash like these two. They were like bulls, force fed growth supplements and ready to clash heads in anger. But all that said and done…
He grinned, slipped his way through the crowd. So many easy targets. So easy for a man in his line of work. The scarlet uniform opened many doors for him. The key card he’d stolen opened the rest. He might have dressed like a steward. Or a security guard. Or a waiter. So many options and yet so little time.
It helped that he looked like he might work here. This Wave Crest was run out of Yletizi in Vazara, it employed mostly Vazarans and thus, he fit in on that regard. A different coloured face might arouse suspicion, would undoubtedly draw attention. More than height, weight, distinguishing facial marks… Maybe if he had a face full of scars shaping out some sort of crude shape it might have been different, should a situation ever arise where he was called to be identified. Yet he didn’t. Average height, average weight, grey eyed and dark skinned like most of the Vazaran staff on board. Yet behind those alert grey eyes lurked the mind of a thief. And like most thieves, he was an opportunist.
This place was candy land. So much stuff he could sneak out with him. Sell it all on; he’d be rolling in the credits. Brudel knew he could make a lot off this trip. It was in his best interests to keep all the distractions going ongoing. If people were fighting, then other people were watching. If those other people were watching the fights, they weren’t watching their pockets. They weren’t watching their pockets then they deserved to be robbed. It was the way of the streets he’d grown up on. And it was a tough job but he was willing to go through with it. It’d be a tragedy not to do so.
Besides, these people could afford to replace it. They wouldn’t miss a wallet full of credits. It wasn�
��t like he’d be taking the bread out of the mouths of starving babes. He’d have felt worse about that. Not a lot worse, because hey, he had to eat as well. And as his mentor had once told him, something is better than nothing. The joke had been on him there; he’d died of heart failure. He’d probably rather that had been nothing rather than something, had he not been too dead to care.
Into the crowd then, his fingers flexing in their gloves. They hungered for action and he was going to give them some.
“You know that guy?”
Matthew Arnholt jumped at the sound of the voice behind him, not expecting it. He’d been engrossed on the bout between the two men, the sudden and violent conclusion leaving him a little dazed. He hadn’t seen it coming. There’d been so much to do and yet he’d just ripped it all up with little more than a quick strategy change. That Roper guy… Yeesh, he looked tough in person. The guy he’d been fighting with didn’t look impressed. He looked furious, like he was willing to go again. He’d never seen him before but he looked like bad news. Really bad news. He was clenching his fists, a muscle going in his jaw that looked hard as stone. The veins were going in his neck and just for a moment, Matt had thought he was going to see some violence.
Even if tempers did go, it was unlikely he was going to see it. It wasn’t uncommon for callers to have disagreements after bouts, especially when the losing party was pissed off at the manner of his defeat.
The speaker was a couple of years older than him, a girl he’d been told was pretty on more than one occasion. (Usually by her, more often by various guys she’d surrounded herself with from time to time.) Her hair was the same shade of black-blue as his, it wasn’t the only thing they shared. Observing parties might notice the similarity in the smile as they gazed at each other. He had more of a tan than her, remarkable given the weather in Canterage in the past several months, she towered maybe an inch above him though he put that down to the height of her boots. Barefoot, he’d have been the taller. Easily. And of course, she wore makeup. Possibly bordering on a little too much of it. Their dad would probably have had something to say. Other than those subtle differences, it was easy to tell they were related.
For a moment he hesitated, two pairs of brown eyes met and then the two of them embraced.
“What are you doing here?” he asked as they broke apart. “You’re not a caller. You’re a dancer. So how did you…?”
People had alleged that they got the way they both smiled from their mother. He’d never seen it personally. Maybe he’d just never had a chance.
“You think I can’t get on a boat?” she asked. “Hey, it’s easy to get a ticket. I’m the guest of a competitor, aren’t I?”
“Oh yeah?” He rolled his eyes. Had a feeling he knew where this was going. “Who’s that then?”
“You, bro. Thought I’d surprise you here. You surprised?”
He nodded as she slipped down into the seat next to him, already getting herself comfortable. She had that annoying ability to settle in anyway and wholly look like she belonged there. Be it here amongst those she had very little in common with, back home with the family or on the international spirit dancing circuits.
He had to amend that in hindsight. Just because she was a spirit dancer didn’t mean she wasn’t tough. It was a different discipline to be fair, but the two arts weren’t worlds apart. A good dancer could give a strong caller a tough clash on any given day. In calling, winning was enough. In spirit dancing, winning with style mattered more. His sister had an unfettered creative streak, an air of unpredictability that he’d never quite been able to better. He’d tried it once, for a bet when they were a lot younger. He hadn’t been able to cope. And she’d revelled in it.
“I’m really surprised,” he said. “It’s been too long. You miss me?”
She laughed. “Yeah, always. All those years we spent living together at home, I don’t miss those.”
That brought a grin. Back when they were kids, they’d been at each other’s throats all the time. Well, they couldn’t help it. Their dad had done his best but there’d been times when he hadn’t been at home much. Times that had gotten more and more frequent the older they’d gotten. He’d gotten on with it, realised that it was what it was and he couldn’t do anything about it.
Mia though, sometimes he got the impression it bothered her more than it did him. Just little subtle hints. Sometimes she’d seem distant with their dad when all three of them had been together. But back then, they’d had an antagonistic relationship with each other when they were kids. Their mother had done her best to see it didn’t continue but it hadn’t been that easy. He hadn’t made it easy. Mia certainly hadn’t.
“Yeah, it’s nice to get away. And I’m going to the Quin-C! I told you I’d make it one day,” he said, tailing off for a moment before holding out his hand.
“What’s that for?” she asked playfully. “Just because you’re some big shot caller doesn’t mean I’m bowing and kissing your hand. I could kick your ass all over this boat anyway.”
He laughed. “Yeah and then you’d wake up. I’m thinking more those hundred credits you bet me ages ago that I’d never make it here.”
“Oh, you remember that?”
“You kidding? I’m going to frame them. Going to split them into a hundred one credit
pieces and frame them on the wall, going to label them as how they WERE Mia’s.”
She rolled her eyes and pouted. It’d probably have had more effect on someone who hadn’t seen it a thousand times or more. “You know; everyone hates a bad winner.”
“Yeah but I’m still a winner,” he said. “Better a bad winner than a good loser, right? Come on, pay up. I know you’re good for it, Miss I-Won-The-Dance-Off-Of-Turninghom-And-Took-The-Grand-Prize.”
He didn’t have to worry; already she was digging out her purse and shaking her head with a rueful smile on her face. “My baby brother’s growing up.” Her purse was pink velvet with a heart shaped silver clasp. She popped it open, tossed him a hundred credits chip. “Don’t spend it all on sweets.”
“What are you suddenly, my mother?” he grinned. “Because…”
He paused as someone shoved past him, some Vazaran guy who he’d never seen before in a stewards’ uniform. “Watch it, guy,” he muttered, even watching him knock Mia out of the way to get through as well. She had to grab the table to avoid falling, the air turning blue at the curses coming out of her mouth.
Okay, it might have been a little immature but it was funny hearing his sister swear like that. Especially given to look at her, you wouldn’t expect it.
“Some people,” he said, in effort to be placating. She glowered at him, an angry flush to her cheeks and he had to smile even further. “Come on sis, shake it off. I’m sure he didn’t do it…” He stood up straight, adjusted his jacket. He didn’t know what it was yet something… Something didn’t feel right and he couldn’t work out what it was. “… deliberately…” What was it?
He patted himself down. Glanced at Mia and saw her bag was hanging open where she’d replaced her purse earlier. A purse that was no longer visible inside it now.
Oh no…
He felt his pockets, something still felt off and he had a horrible feeling he knew what it was now. A twist in his stomach and he made a grab for the other pocket, checked his jacket and swore loudly. He’d had a pack of empty container crystals in there, gone now.
“Son of a bitch!” he exclaimed. It wasn’t language their mother would have approved of. “I’ve been robbed!”
Mia studied him for a moment, that moment flirting with comprehension, then glanced down at her bag. Her hands were suddenly in motion as she tore through the contents; the anger slowly growing on her face as the seconds ticked by and the horrible realisation dawned.
“Me too!”
Max grinned as he patted down his pockets. A decent haul to be sure. Maybe just one more pass across the floor for luck… Now to find the right sucker and he’d be home free. Hide his stas
h somewhere on the boat, he had a hidey-hole down in the lifeboat area, and then ride out the search for the thief with an innocent look on his face. By the time the Wave Crest got to Carcaradis Island, he’d be able to leave and mingle with the crowd. He’d even catch the same boat home before he left, under a different identity naturally, retrieve the stuff and then leave.
Ah…
The figure up ahead had his back to him, apparently busy talking into a holocom. It would be so easy. So easy to just dip in and… He was even wearing a coat. And something was sticking out of it, something leather and… Oh that was a big wallet. Think of the credits inside it. He rubbed his hands together, licked his lips. Someone up there liked him. And it just reinforced his view that some people deserved to be robbed.
If he’d stopped to think, he might have put it together. If he’d not been so focused on the theft, he might have noticed the holocom projector was blank. The line was open but nobody on the other end of it.
His eyes only fell for the leather pack hanging out of the pocket. Slowly, deftly, but not breaking his stride, he reached for it. His fingers met the edges of it, clamped down and tugged…
Come on…
Yes!
It came free of the pocket, the arm at the side of the chatting mark even moving to accommodate him that little bit more. In other circumstances, he might have suspected something wasn’t quite right. He’d gotten tunnel vision, all he saw was the opportunity and he was going to see it through as sure as the damn desert was hot.
It was heavy. Like something metal was inside it. Max found himself intrigued. Maybe this’d be better than he’d guessed. He couldn’t help it, he slipped his fingers between the cracks and prised it open greedily, visions of gold pieces on his mind…
SHIT!
He’d seen a badge like the one inside the case before. Silver, an embossed unicorn upon it and the words United International Spiritual Control Organisation stamped beneath it. The thing was heavy in his hand, he suddenly had no doubt it was real and suddenly he found himself terrified.