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The Great Game

Page 44

by O. J. Lowe


  “Not funny, Peter,” he said, unfurling the crumpled bit of paper and straightening it out so he could read the contents out loud. “Carcaradis Island Celebration. Music and dance. Oh, come on Pete, I don’t dance.”

  “Neither do a lot of people but it’s just meant to be a bit of fun. You know how dancing was invented? There was some old duke or king or something about a few hundred years in Canterage. He was walking carrying a beer at a ball or something and tripped, he did like this little jig to try and avoid spilling it and soon everyone was aping it because they wanted his favour. Or they were trying to stop him looking a cock or something, save the embarrassment, I don’t know.”

  Scott looked at him. “I really don’t think that’s true somehow. Where did you hear that?”

  With a shrug of the shoulders, Pete leaned back on the grass. “You don’t know that it isn’t true. I think it might be. It would be brilliant if it was. I saw it on a viewing screen some time ago. I’m full of interesting facts. I’m going. Seems like it might be fun. It’s for all the poor unfortunates who got kicked out of the tournament at the group stage…”

  “Yeah and you might be amongst them unless you pull a win out of your ass,” Scott laughed. “One lucky draw against your sister who threw it away…”

  “She didn’t though, did she?” Pete said listlessly in the tone of voice of someone who’d had that theory voiced to them more than once and was getting tired of hearing it. “I just beat her down with pure skill. First person to knock down Gamorra in about eight months. Might as well face it, I rule. I really rule.” He raised both hands to the air and did mock crowd cheering in a manner that made Scott want to kick him in the ribs.

  “You’re not through yet, just remember that,” he said instead. “Neither am I. And I’ve got a tougher last bout than you.” He thought of Nick Roper and grimaced, he wasn’t looking forward to it.

  “Ah my future brother-in-law,” Pete said with a look of mock disgust. “How about that. Make sure you beat him, yeah?”

  “Might be easier said than done,” Scott replied, leaning forward on the bench to stare down at him. “He’s pretty tough. If it was that easy, I have a feeling…”

  “Yeah, I wasn’t supposed to do something against Sharon either,” Pete offered. “Let’s make it an unbeaten double against the damn lovebirds, shall we?”

  “I thought you liked him anyway,” Scott said. “You seemed pretty friendly with him when I saw the three of you having dinner that time.”

  “We did it once, I’ve barely seen him since. Hells, I’ve barely seen Sharon since. Other than when we fought. I mean I remember when my sister was younger, he’s better than some of the guys she used to show up with…”

  “Yeah but she was like fourteen, fifteen then, am I right? And with guys of the same age. I mean I remember being that age, I was a complete dick back then.”

  “You’re a complete dick now, nothing’s changed,” Pete grinned. Scott ignored him and kept on talking.

  “My point is, you mature. I’m not the same person I was back then. Neither are you. Neither is Sharon. Hells I changed in the time I was with Jess and not solely for the better. I miss who I was back then. Life felt simpler.”

  “Simpler but not really better,” Pete said. “Those first few months as a spirit caller really suck, don’t forget that. You enter tournaments you know you have no chance of winning and for what, a few measly credits for the privilege of being humiliated by someone better. All so you don’t go hungry, all so you can get slightly better and not be beaten as badly next time. And so, the process goes on until you get even and you start beating down people who were in your shoes a year ago.”

  “And look where we are now,” Scott said, nodding in agreement. Pete was right of course, it hadn’t necessarily been better back then. Maybe he was just remembering things differently. The past always looked so much better compared to the present.

  Suddenly he didn’t feel so bad. Things looked a little better. Sure, there was still an ache in his stomach where Jess’ absence lingered but he didn’t feel as bad as he had. There’d be plenty more along. “Thanks, Pete.”

  “For what? I didn’t do anything.” Pete genuinely sounded confused. “Are you going to invite Mia to that dance then?”

  Scott shrugged. “Don’t know, mate. Going to wait and see. It’s a bit soon. If Jess is still on the island, it could cause an argument.”

  “Well if someone else asks her, don’t come crying to me. I don’t want to have to kick you out of another depressive funk. Because I mean it, if you don’t, I might just do it.”

  A dull flare of anger twitched in the back of Scott’s mind, he fought the urge to rise to his feet. “You wouldn’t.”

  “I might.”

  “She’s not interested in you.”

  “How do you know that?” Pete grinned at him and Scott felt his stomach lurch. “Give her the old Jacobs charm and we’ll see where it gets me. Are you going to do it?”

  “Probably. Next time I see her, I’ll bring it up. Still doesn’t feel right.”

  “Meh, principles are for those who are prepared to lose. And you want to win, don’t you?”

  “I guess.” Scott shrugged and Pete rolled his eyes as if his very apathy offended him to his core.

  “Good enough I suppose. I’d like to hear more enthusiasm but I guess we can’t have everything.”

  “Okay, okay, I’ve got him on the spirit caller’s database,” Anne said, trying to manoeuvre around Lysa to get to the viewing screen. Lysa didn’t budge, stayed sat in the chair and in the end Anne had to settle for standing, trying to ignore the surge of triumph emanating out from Lysa as she gave a playful spin around in the seat. She also tried to ignore the thoughts about how easily she could tip it up with little more than the tip of her foot if she found the right angle. That’d wipe the smirk from her face. “Here he is…”

  “You’re certainly desperate to find him,” Lysa said. “I hope he’s worth it. Because honestly, I think he’s a complete idiot.”

  “Only because he didn’t know who you were.”

  “Yeah, he knew who you were though,” Lysa muttered. “I’m in this tournament, you’re not. How does that make me less famous than you?”

  Anne ignored her. She wasn’t as resentful as she made out. She could tell that much easily. “Well when you’ve had as interesting and varied career as I have…” She let it tail off as she read the name on the screen and scrolled down to more of the data. “Maybe he just remembers me from my time when I was a city champion.”

  “Still don’t know why you stopped doing that. You were awesome at it.” Anne tried to suppress down the surge of pride she felt flooding through her.

  “I didn’t like the staying in one place thing. I’m on the road developing my strength a lot now with my spirits. Between that and the other job, I’m pretty busy.”

  “You ever thought about developing the other thing?” Lysa asked suddenly. “I mean, seeing how far you can take that? You can sense stuff now but if you worked at it…”

  “I don’t have time,” Anne said, still reading the file. “So, Theobald Jameson, you seem interesting.”

  “Rude, unpleasant, probably cruel, arrogant… All the sort of character traits you really want to put up with. And he has a stupid name. No wonder he shortens it.”

  “He’s also in pain,” Anne replied, scrolling down. It was there, Theobald’s battling records, known spirits and battle styles but very little about his family life. “He’s in horrible pain and he’s dealing with it in a terrible way. I don’t even want to know what brought it about. I just have this uncontrollable urge to try and help.”

  “You do realise he probably wouldn’t appreciate you prying into his private life. In fact, the only time we pry into someone’s life like that is to see if there’s anything we can use to link him to a crime. “

  “There’s not even any family history on here,” Anne said, ignoring her. “Nothing about his early l
ife. This is massively incomplete.”

  “Well the caller database can be,” Lysa said, studying the surly face in front of her with intense focus, arms folded and one hand stroking her chin.

  Anne knew she had a point. It didn’t have to include any information the subject didn’t want to. If Theobald didn’t want his family life on there, it wasn’t going to be on there.

  “You know I’m still sure he looks familiar. I just can’t think where.” Anne let her study the face for a few moments before she spoke again. “And he didn’t strike me as someone who would be open about his past. Not if he’s in as much pain as you say he is.” Anne thought she heard a faint note of sarcasm in the words but ignored it. She wasn’t getting anything untowardly dissenting from her friend. Probably her imagination. “Maybe we should look him up in the Unisco database. You know if he’s that interesting to you.”

  “Seems like a bit overkill. And an abuse of power. I mean there’s no possible reason for us to be chasing him down.”

  “Think we can think of one between now and getting it up and running?” Lysa asked, grinning. “I mean that. There’s something suspicious here. I’d say he was acting suspicious.”

  “Really, how so?”

  “Well he didn’t hit on either of us. That’s shifty enough right away.” She said it with a huge grin, Anne couldn’t help but laugh.

  “You know, I’ve missed you,” she said. “I really have. Come on, let’s do it.”

  The second day of Summerpeak.

  The third round of matches in the group stage of the Centenary Competitive Calling Challenge Cup started a few days after, each of the two final matches in the group taking place back to back. Already the first few of the second-round contestants were confirmed. Harry Devine, the man who’d gotten the opening match of the tournament off to a win made his way into the next round, finishing above Glenn Wright to win the group. David Wilsin edged out Meadow Laine to win his group, Wade Wallerington and Lysa Montgomery had gone through first and second respectively to make the next round.

  And Pete had made it as well, just. Scott had been at the bout between him and Bella Carrezo, having worked out the mathematics to see him needing to qualify. With one point going in, he’d needed to overhaul one of Sharon with four and both Reda Ulikku and Carrezo herself with three. Sharon had beaten Carrezo, who herself had then beaten Ulikku who’d beaten Pete in the opening bout.

  When the announcer had told them all during Pete’s bout that Ulikku had been destroyed easily by Sharon, the sections of the crowd supporting Pete had gone berserk in their support and he’d rode that wave to take down the pretty Serranian who’d hugged him and wished him luck as he’d gone through. Matt Arnholt had gone through, second place to Theobald Jameson and now, Scott knew, it was his turn.

  He found himself very aware of the occasion, knowing that Leslie Graham and Santo Bruzack were also fighting at the same time on some other part of the island for the same place in the next round he was fighting for. And at the same time, they didn’t have to face down Nick Roper, a man who’d won his two matches already and was on six points. Leslie Graham had zero. Bruzack and Scott both had three. It was between them. Scott looked at the steely eyed caller across the ice-covered battlefield from him and he gulped. Roper was through already, he just needed something to guarantee top spot. He studied Scott with an inscrutable eye, arms folded and silent as the announcer went through all the stuff for the crowd.

  Scott already knew what he was going to do, he was going to have to start off strong and build up a lead. He needed a good opening, he’d had a glance at the sort of tactics Roper tended to employ. Power. He had plenty of it but he was also an excellent tactician in using that power. If he was just blindly cumbersome in his power, it’d be easy. Fighting power with power wasn’t always the best tactic, in a way Pete had shown that in his draw with Sharon, but sometimes you had to do it.

  Desperate times.

  He wondered if Jess was watching for a moment, all before quickly rejecting the thought. Thinking of her now wouldn’t do anyone any good. Least of all him. He needed his head in the game. Head in the game. He shook himself and took a deep breath, focusing entirely on Roper. No more stray thoughts. He got distracted here and he would lose. No two ways about it.

  Come on, come on, he thought, casting an impatient glance at the video referee. The screen showed it was still warming up, the dull glow signalling its intent of not quite being ready yet. Come on, come on…

  Go!

  Roper moved first, activating his summoner in one swift practiced motion and Scott couldn’t help but watch as the shape materialised in front of him. Slender white furred legs, a compact green body almost the colour of a tunic, blades emerging out of the elbows of the skinny arms and an almost comically oversized white head with a tuft of fur rising out of the crown, giving it the appearance of wearing a bright green helmet.

  It wasn’t something he was too familiar with but the announcer gave him clues as to its identity as he yelled out, “and Roper starts the bout with a garj! This species is native to some of the mountains of Canterage, they live in packs and use their elbow blades in elaborate duels for the leadership of the pack. Based on the size of those blades, I would say this is a male one! What can Taylor pick to counter?”

  He’d never heard of them before. Oh well, no time to change the strategy now. The garj stood maybe four feet tall, almost up to Scott’s chest and he reached for his own summoner, slotting in the crystal.

  “Okay Sangare, it’s time for you to make your entrance to the tournament,” he muttered. “Let’s do this!”

  The spirit that appeared was easily four or five times the size of the garj, crashing down onto all fours as it tossed its serpent-like neck back and let out a bellow that almost shook the stadium. Five pointed horns protruded out the back of the triangle shaped head, scarlet covered scales lay across the thick body, great claws tore up the ice beneath his feet. The tail was whipcord thin and lined with the same spikes that rose up the length of the dragons back while two great leathery wings protruded out from his back. Scott peered past Sangare, hoping to see some reaction on Roper’s face but all he got was quiet amusement.

  “Impressive,” he said softly. “Very impressive indeed. I hope you know how to use it.” The garj nodded in agreement, flashing his blades out in front of him into an unmistakeable fighting stance. “Shall we then?”

  “Oh, I’m ready,” Scott said. “Let’s do this!”

  Chapter Twenty-Four. Don’t Make It the Last One.

  “Everything comes to an end. That is the nature of life itself. As a purpose, it is singularly bleak, we are moving through an endless great cycle. Everything that ends must have had a beginning.”

  James Michael Tan, five kingdoms philosopher.

  The second day of Summerpeak.

  A burst of fire, final and poignant almost, erupted from Sangare’s mouth and engulfed the garj with a terrible burst of heat and smoke. As it cleared, the humidity lingering in the air, the garj lay blackened and twitching in the half-melted pool of ice water. No getting back up from that.

  Yes! Yes! Scott punched the air. One down. The garj was down, he was a third of the way there. He watched Roper return the creature to a capture crystal and he drew a deep breath, forcing himself to stay focused for the moment. This wasn’t over yet. Sangare had defeated Bish, the garj, but Roper still undoubtedly had a few more tricks in his sleeve that he hadn’t shown yet.

  Out came the second spirit, a large bipedal frog hued in green and yellow, a pair of pointy horns protruding out of its head, large twisted claws poking out from its webbed hands, claws that dripped with venom. A horn headed arrow frog, Scott had seen those before. Barry Harrison had owned one, his old friend from back home, admittedly not as big or vicious looking. The one in front of him had a sneer across its face that made for uncomfortable viewing.

  “Shall we go again, then?” Roper smiled. It was a smug smile, one that said he wasn’t
overly worried by his first loss. On the surface of it, the clash looked a bad matchup. If the dragon was larger than the garj had been, the size difference was even more considerable here. Scott wasn’t too worried. If he had the estimates right, the scales would keep out all but the strongest of attacks. Those frogs were poisonous, he knew that much but again, no way the poison could get through the scales.

  With a beep that sounded more ominous than normal, the video referee gave them the signal to get the bout underway and he already gave the mental command for another blast of fire. Sangare’s jaws snapped open and the flames shot out again, cutting a swathe through the ice on the battlefield below, melting it into sludge. The frog jumped nimbly out of the way, opened its own mouth and sent a barrage of toxic stings out towards Sangare’s face. They were accurate, Scott flinched as he saw them land but not quite as much as he recoiled at the sound of the pained roar bursting from Sangare.

  Shit! Eyes!

  He could have kicked himself for not working that one out sooner.

  Eyes on the battlefield below, Pete felt someone sit down next to him and it was only when he glanced to his left that he realised it was the Arnholt siblings, Matt and Mia both along to watch Scott in action. Getting here had been a laugh, there’d been a lot of interest in this bout, there was very little elbow room about him and he’d been offered any number of merchandise featuring either of the callers outside the stadium. As much as a beer glass with his best friend’s face on it might have appealed, he’d managed to get up here with time to spare and crucially, all his credits remaining intact.

  “Running a bit late, aren’t we?” he asked with a smile. “You’ve already missed the first knockout.”

  He was only moderately disgusted to see Mia was wearing a t-shirt bearing Scott’s face on it, no doubt a product from one of the said opportunistic hawkers outside the stadium and carrying a flag with the words ‘Go Scott Go’ written on it. Seeing his friends face emblazoned across her tits was something he wanted to see again. Matt looked moderately embarrassed to be seen next to her but he was hiding it well mostly.

 

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