Friday, June 27, 2014

Smoke Angel

Smoke Angel
by
Bobby Derie

In the corner booth, she lit a hand-rolled cigarillo from the table lamp, her face momentarily lit from below, then disappearing back into shadow and smoke. Just a glimpse had me shaking and pawing at my pockets, the thin nicotine patches suddenly weak and empty things next to the old and familiar craving that gripped me.

She was a coffin nailer, that was for certain.
*

The victim had been drinking AbsintheSmash!, the cheap green plastic bottle molded in the cartoonishly muscled visage of a hulking humanoid; the paper wraparound banner was a cheap comic print of a scrawny pencilneck scientist caught in an emerald explosion, mutating into the outrageous alcoholic avatar. The pre-packaged spoon and sugar were also on the table, but the bottle itself was mostly empty. I resisted the urge to polish off the evidence.

The hunched figure of the Necronaut worked over the corpse. He was dressed - armored, if I was honest with myself - in something that looked like Charon's diving suit, all black leather and old brass, topped by a fishbowl of dark, shadowy glass or crystal. The shadow of ribbs and spine were cast into the torso-chassis, and anatomically-accurate skulls in gunmetal and silver leered from around the mechanical joints. The fat, four-fingered hands hovered over the open mouth, tiny wires snaking out from palms and fingertips, tracing the cause of death.

I busied myself by examining the scene. Utrek's wasn't a classy place or a den of villainy, the patrons were mainly the wrong side of twenty but without the guilders to show for it. Most couldn't even afford to drink themselves to death here, not on cheap green fairy - the serious liver-killers would be in the dinger, more dangerous bars farther down the street. I stabbed a finger into the ashtray, but the grey crust there was cold and long dead. Waste not, want not, I murmured a prayer and drew a rune on the inside of my left wrist; a promise for later, for a little luck now.

"He was killed by a practitioner," the Necronaut said as the little tendrils retreated back into their cavities with a whir. "Traces of pneuma in the lungs, esophagus, on the lips. Physical cause of death was asphyxiation and smoke inhalation - the inside of his lungs are burned and swollen, oxygen levels very low. There are also elevated levels of carbon dioxide and nicotine in the last breath, though not enough by itself to poison him. Signs of old damage underneath - he was a heavy smoker. No signs of a struggle, but there are lacerations on the knuckles from earlier - some hours before death."

I looked at the neighboring tables; one was marked with the circle and glyphs for conjure rum. I thought of thirty-somethings realizing they were just past their prime, doing shots and summoning muscled jade homunculi to wrestle each other, heavy hands hitting the tables. The image didn't fit the crime.

*

There are parts of the Net that the great masses don't have access to. I swiped my card and called up the metaengines of the trade - eBay sold listings and library check-out lists, cross-referenced by shipping address, IP, user name. Practitioners, for all their focus, fall into certain predictable habits: they have interests, and they pour their time and resources into finding things that suit those interests.

Tobacciana seemed the first choice; the first search term came up with over 10,000 hits. I added keywords, tweaked the terms, looking for something I wouldn't know until I'd see it. Atlantean hookahs, Arabic hash oil, whole plants and fat Cuban cigars that had been rolled between the thighs of virgins, guaranteed or your money back...lots of possibilities, nothing quite fit, but there was a pattern of purchases, a name that came up again and again in the book lists, and an address. I clicked open a new tab, to cross-reference with the police databases...and found a hit.

A rap sheet filled the screen.

*

In her corner booth, I laid the book on the table. Arthur Machen's The Anatomy of Tobacco.

"Handsome, for a delivery man." The rasp sent shivers up his spine. He couldn't picture what that voice would have sounded like whole. It was like a cat's tongue on the back of the neck, burned and coated and seasoned to perfection. Nicotine-stained fingers carressed the pale yellow cloth covers; the last two fingers were missing their tips, the pinky little more than a nub.

"Detective Jack Bastard." I flashed the badge. The runes got more attention than the shield; darker angels watch over cops than most people dare play with. "I want to talk."

"What about, detective?" She blew a perfect pentagram, smoke elementals playing in the thin grey-white streamers.

"Got a stiff-" he noted her sudden crinkly smile, and he was intensely aware of the sudden pressure in his crotch "-a dead body at Utrek's. Not many practitioners could do that."

"Not many," she said, then sucked on her cigarillo, the coal flaring to life as she held it in her lungs. "Am I in the frame?"

I nodded.

"I didn't do it."

"That's what they all say."

"He was my husband."

"Divorced?"

"Papers aren't in yet."

The silence wasn't tense. I was getting a better look at her as the eyes adjusted. The hair hanging down over her face didn't quite cover the bruises around her eye, the way she sat was stiffer than natural. She looked thin and fine as porcelain; the kind that breaks easy but still looks good, even when it's cracked and missing a few pieces.

"Did you two...share any interests?"

"He was my husband." Her eyes never looked past the end of her cigarillo.

"What I mean is, could he have conjured it himself?"

She shrugged, noncommital.

"Some guys, they hit a woman - " she stopped breathing for a moment, then exhaled " - they find it hard to live with themselves. Hate themselves."

"He only ever loved himself." she said, eyes flashing - and they really did flash too, I saw. Big dark eyes, the kind that bug out just a little when they get angry, as the crazy creeps in around the edges, pupils dilated in the dark.

"I'll need a statement, downtown." I said at last.

She looked at me then, and her face was a broken-doll mask, too much concentration to hide the pain any more. My wrist tickled, then burned as the rune flared - and died, as she released whatever she was holding, the smoke elemental slipping out through her lips, her nostrils. She looked up and grinned another crooked smile.

"Mind if I smoke?"

"Be my guest."

There was a little shrine on the corner, an altar to no particular god and devoid of offerings. I pulled what was left of the pack from my pocket, stuck them upright in the sand and lit them, one by one, like incense. She watched me mumble the prayers that the smoke would carry up to heaven, for hungry saints and smoke-stained angels to savor.

###

Friday, June 20, 2014

Countdown


Countdown
by
Bobby Derie


10. A Very Delicate Time
      Kumiko swam through the Matrix as a fish, all chrome-tinted scales and serious drooping barbels. The depths of the Matrix is her sea, her tribe is her school. Together they swam toward the Resonance Well. For a nanosecond, one saucer-shaped fish eye fixed on a hooded woman with raven-wings, far above, looking for all the world like a piece of the scenery. It was a familiar icon, naggingly so. Like an angel carved on a cathedral, or something. Aimee and Kumiko had scanned a documentary on that once. Kumiko captured a still-image of the icon, and mailed it to one of her anonymous accounts. She'd run a search later.
      Then Lucy came over to whisper something about Brian, and they had to switch to an encrypted comcall because Piotr was trying to listen in. They swam along, gossiping and giggling behind Ellery, the whole tribe to the Resonance Pool for the submersion.

9. Dissonance Pool
      The fly-specked miasma of a dead pigeon in a rainbow-slick puddle, the piercing burst of static when an electrical source is plugged into a speaker, and the cold, impersonal touch of the street doc during an exam. It's different for everyone, but it has the same name.
      Dissonance.
      The place stank of it, like it was clinging to the walls of the node. A slick-looking and imperturbable pool of ink sat center stage amidst the ruins of the Host. Kumiko watched Ellery. You could almost feel the rage. Ellery had protected them from all the things she'd suffered when she was younger, from the gangs that peddled BTLs and prostitution, the corps that wanted to poke and prod her and all of those other otaku, the ones who followed the Dissonance.
      But Ellery was twenty-one. Soon she'd Fade. Kumiko knew it. Everyone did. There was nothing anyone could do for Ellery. But without anyone saying it, the whole tribe knew it was on. The Dissonants had gone too far.
      “Syzygy,” Ellery said “was right, all along. She opposes anything that threatens the Resonance. I kept all of you from the crusade against the Dissonance because you're so young…but we're otaku. We grow up fast. It's time we did our part.”
      Ellery said it all. It was war.

8.  Success!
      Kumiko had put on her “war face,” the poison spines and warning stripes of exotic fish replacing her standard icon. This would be her first real combat in the Matrix, outside the sparring that the older otaku insisted on, once a week. She traced a mental finger over the shapes of the Complex Forms in her head. Ellery had given a stern lecture about mentally preparing for battle, but what did she mean? Kumiko was still wondering as they accessed the node.
      There were four of them inside, each shaped like one of the demons from Dawn of Atlantis, all squirming worm-things, muscles and scaly hides. Probably boys, then. Kumiko knew that some of the boys in her own tribe favored the game-sprite image too; they'd have to switch icons fast. The eyes turned on them were dull, stock malevolent glares, but the wave of Dissonance from them was palpable.
      Ellery led the charge, bloody wasps pulling themselves from the tracts on her icon's arms and launching themselves at the nearest of the rogue otaku. It seemed so quick, so effortless to her. Kumiko wasn't nearly as smooth when the nearest Dissonant lashed at her with a gout of flame, bucking and twisting around the attack. She triggered one of her offensive forms, felt the way of it as it ran through her, a half-mnemonic whisper in the brain. The Dissonant even looked surprised as the fish-thing in front of him folded inside-out, flashes of raw meat visible for a nanosecond, and eight short tentacles like a great cuttlefish wrapped him about. Kumiko even heard the Dissonant let out a grown as her poison-spines, now pointing inward, pierced the scaly demon-skin and pumped in their subtle toxin. Parts of the demon appeared to freeze and lose resolution as it struggled, but Kumiko maintained a death-grip on the Dissonant until it was fully incapacitated.
      The other Dissonants were finished quickly. Too quickly, for Ellery. Kumiko felt the gentle and affectionate pat as Ellery came up to the immobilized Dissonant. The older otaku took her time taking him apart.

7. Daily Life
      It had been three days, and Ellery was still jacked in. Kumiko watched Aimee check the drip going into her vein, and the little stimpatches full of uppers lining Ellery's neck. Aimee looked so tired. She was sixteen, and the twins were in their Terrible Twos, getting into everything. Ellery joked that she had to give “the speech” about sex whenever any of the kids got old enough to recognize Matrix porn these days.
“Just to keep the number of unwed, underage otaku mothers down.” It was only half a joke. Ellery never let any of them out alone. Too many predators on the streets for kids: not just rapists and drug-dealers, but gang-recruiters, ghouls and organleggers too.
      The scavengers came back around dinner time to show off their treasures. Brian scrounged up thirty feet of optical cord around a makeshift spool, while Lucy had found a stack of used optical chips that could be wiped and reused. Piotr had the remains of an old cyber hand, bits of dessicated skin and slivers of old bone still attached to the stump, and began simultaneously picking his nose and dismantling the cyberhand on the kitchen table, patently the most disgusting use of ambidexterity Kumiko had ever seen. Everyone else was jacked in, huddled next to each other for warmth. They jacked out just as the heavily-armed pizza delivery car showed up.
      Dinner was served.

6.  Ambush!
      The ambush had been simple and devastatingly effective. Right after dinner, when everyone jacked back in, they were hit. The Dissonant Ones had been there, waiting, the demon-shapes holding horrible black swords. A boy with silver hair pinned Ellery's arms to her sides, blood oozing down his hands, ignoring the bloody wasps that swam around his head. Kumiko was fighting to jack out as an ebon sword sheathed itself through chrome-tinted scales, impaling her.
      Pain flashed through Kumiko as she was dumped. It was a hideously sudden shift, moving from the Matrix to the painful clarity of the meat world. Her first clear sight was Ellery's head, blood pouring from her nose and ears, eyes still closed. Dead. A crisping flesh smell filled the apartment, and Kumiko saw wisps of smoke rising from the ring of darkening flesh around Lucy's datajack. Biometric subroutines. Black IC. The Dissonant Ones had Complex Forms that mimicked Black IC. They were all going to die.
      There wasn't time for subtleties. Kumiko grabbed the juryrigged junction box, the communual jackpoint they were plugged into, and pulled. She felt her muscles stretch and strain, she put all of her weight into it against the floor. Finally, it popped out, a frayed length of optical cord trailing from its guts.
      The mewling groans of mutual dumpshock were like music to her. At least they were still alive.

5. Waste Not, Want Not.
      Kumiko was the oldest now, at thirteen. She'd called the orks, the ones who took bodies to those who didn't ask questions. Just broke them down for spare parts. But there was something that had to be done before they got here. The bodies were laid out on the kitchen table, and Brian was there with the knife, looking sick. Piotr held the pliers. Kumiko jacked in the tutorial.
      Sometime after she had removed Aimee's datajack and was rooting around with a finger on the bone where the headware memory should be, Piotr ran outside to puke. Brian left to look after him, grateful to be away.
      Kumiko deposited the gory hardware in a bowl. They'd wash the bits of brain and hair off later.

4. Trace Successful
      Piotr cracked the headware memory after the orks left. Aimee had completed a trace on three of the Dissonant Ones, and it was on screen. The little ork rubbed dust from his glasses. Kumiko glanced over at Piotr.
      “What's it say?”
      “They're all from the same place. Ten miles from here. In the Barrens.”
      Ten miles in the Barrens. The others were staring at her, Brian was watching the twins. Kumiko took a moment to chew a nail, and then stopped herself. Aimee always smacked her hand when she did that.
      Brian spoke first “We need to go get them.”
      Kumiko shook her head “In the Matrix? We aren't strong enough.”
      “We can get help. Outside help. Other otaku.”
      “Do you know any? And if you do, do you know any we could trust? No, a Matrix assault is out.”
      “Then what?”
      “The unexpected. A direct physical assault.”
      “We're otaku! We can't fight in the meat! If they're bigger than us, they'll stomp us!”
      “So we need muscle. Someone we can pay to help us out.”
      “You mean gangers? None of 'em will deal with us, 'cause of Ellery.”
      “Not gangers. Runners. Shadowrunners.”
      “How are we supposed to pay them?”
      Kumiko nodded at the bloody pile of cyberware on the kitchen table.
      “We can pay.”

3.  A Little Something Extra
      Luckily, clubs in the Barrens don't give a damn about underage girls. Kumiko scanned the crowd, and picked out the cadaverous troll with the corroded datajack. She padded up behind him and tapped his elbow. He spun around quicker than she thought possible, looked confused for a moment, then glanced down.
      “Wadda you want, breeder?” he snarled.
      “You're Jackie Twobits. They say you do muscle work.”
      His eyes widened when she used his decker handle.
      “No idea what you're talkin' about, girl. Git.”
      He started to turn back to his drink. She played her ace and handed him a crumpled piece of paper.
      “Whatta frag's dis?” the troll said as he quickly scanned the scrap of print out.
      “That's your record with Lonestar. You and your friends help me out, I can make that go away.”
      The troll grunted. “Take more'n that, kiddo. How'd you get this?”
      “I hacked it out of Lone Star's database.” She said with as much verve as she could muster.
      Kumiko desperate tried not to think about how much she had to pee right about then. With her free hand, she squeezed a fat roll of nuyen from her front pocket. The grubby plastic Tir Tairngire bills the street doc gave her.
      “I can pay for muscle. Can we deal?”
      Jackie scratched a scarred cheek. “You got some cojones, kid. Okay, let's talk.”
      Kumiko nodded, reminding herself to look up what 'cojones' meant later on WordNet. She watched Jackie drag out a tattered cell phone, carefully pressing the buttons with a pinky. It took three hours for the rest of his team to get there, while Jackie drank and Kumiko practiced the story over in her head. When they finally got there, the meet seemed to take forever. Haggling over prices, pushing for details. Kumiko even had to leave once to use the restroom.
      Eventually, they made a deal.

2. Final Assault
      The Dissonant Ones came out of their apartment at Jackie's order, forming a ragged line opposite Kumiko's own tribe.
      Jackie lowered the shotgun he'd just blown the door with and turned to Kumiko.
      “You said you needed muscle to take out rival a gang, the Dissonants.”
      “Tribe. Rival tribe. The others follow the Dissonance.”
      “So, what, where are the older ones? Who're we supposed to shoot?”
      Kumio pointed. “There are no older ones. Shoot them.”
      “Whatta ya mean, 'shoot 'em'?”
      “You've got the guns. We need you to do it. That's why we hired you.”
      The troll stared down at her, mouth agape, eyes disbelieving.
      “They're fraggin' kids! The oldest one's a dwarf who can't even shave yet!”
      “They're murderers!”
      “I don't fraggin' care! I ain't shootin' no damn kids, otaku or not!”
      “We had a deal!”
      “Stuff it, breeder girl.”
      Jackie and his friends turned to leave. A shaggy dwarf whose matted beard was a mass of dreads called something in Spanish to the dwarf boy Jackie had mentioned. The Dissonant One shook his head, the dwarf shrugged and left.
      The otaku stood staring at one another, eyeing each other warily. Kumiko could just scream at the retreating runners. What was she supposed to do now? This wasn't the Matrix, they didn't have any Complex Forms to attack each other with here.
      Then someone threw a rock.

1. Blood in the Barrens
      Brian was there first, with a length of pipe, and smashed it into the oncoming face of a malnourished ork no more than six years old and half again his size. Lucy was crying and screaming as one of the rival otaku hit her with a lump of rock. Two boys both named Derek, one from each tribe, were clawing and biting one another with their bare hands, rolling around on the ground while the runners looked on in shock. Kumiko watched as one of them succeeded in gouging out an eye with a thumb.
      She lay still, watching the carnage as the blood around her face formed a scab with the pavement. This wasn't how it was supposed to be. They should have been in the Matrix. It was…was it any less real in the Matrix? People still died. Not like a video game where the icon derezzes and you win. Everyone was lying still now, except for Piotr and the dwarf boy. Piotr was crying and lifting up a Saturday Night Special, some shoddy piece of junk he'd scavenged ages ago.
      The gun exploded in Piotr's hand, taking most of his fingers with it. Kumiko caught a flash of blood as the dwarf collapsed. Piotr moaned for a little while, curled around his maimed and bleeding hand. Someone else cried. One of the Dereks screamed now and again.
      Minutes passed, then hours. It grew quiet. The devil rats came out of the corners, began working on the edge of the pile of bodies. Kumiko picked at the scab until she could pull free without too much pain, and sat up. The hard point of the little optical chip in her pocket felt like a thorn in her leg. She pulled the knife from the waistband of her jeans, and jacked in the tutorial chip.
      The little girl went forward to harvest the dead.

0. Mourning Visitations
      When Kumiko came back, blood staining her cloths and dried into horrible little gobs in her hair, with her morbid lode of gear, she found another. It was a woman, at least twenty, holding one of the twins to her and rocking it to sleep. A younger boy with spiked silver hair sat in Aimee's chair, the other twin asleep on his lap. Absently, Kumiko noted the circuit tattoos around his hands and up his arms. The type done with a ballpoint pen, you'd see in some parts of the Barrens. The woman turned to Kumiko and smiled. There was something wrong with her eyes. She spoke with a soft Southron drawl.
      “Hello Kumiko. I see you've been very busy. That's good.”
      The eyes were white. Pure white.

Friday, June 13, 2014

The Last Liferock

The Last Liferock
by
Bobby Derie

Sticks shimmied down into the hole from the half-completed tunnel, holding the sledge near the head and moving as quietly as possible. He didn’t pause to let his eyes adjust, there wasn’t enough light down here for an unaugmented human to see by. Instead, he pulled out an ultrasound emitter and switched on his contacts. The blackness resolved itself into a blue-washed version of a cave or natural grotto. Right below where he was hanging was the body of the ork miner who had broken through the floor a month ago, a dry riverbed of blood followed the gentle curve of the floor west and downwards.

With care, the shadowrunner let himself down the rope and onto the floor, careful not to drop on the body or step in the powdery dark brown trail. A broken stalagmite jutted from the ork’s stomach, the rounded crystalline tip caked with filth, her callused hands still wrapped around it. Poor bitch. By accounts, she’d screamed for almost six hours. In his ultrasound vision, the corpse was the almost the same color as the cave. Carefully, Sticks took off a glove and touched her cheek. It was like fondling a statue; she’d been petrified.

Sticks sniffed the dry air and looked around, Sticks found another stalagmite nearby and gently touched it; dry as a bone. This cave or grotto was dead. Sticks unhooked himself from his rope and let it dangle. Following the trail of blood, Sticks felt and hear his own heart beat a little faster as the sounds and smells of the Ork Underground faded away. Either some sorcerer had put the miner out of her misery, or something down here had done that to her, and nothing natural could survive in a dead, sealed up cave.

As the cave grew colder and freezing sweat slowly trickled down his ribs, the shadowrunner’s thoughts grew darker. A gorgon, maybe. He hadn’t signed on to this thing to become a dragonslayer, and gorgons were some of the nastiest of the breed. Sticks could picture the thing worming through the tunnels on its belly, dry scales slithering and leaving that slight groove that the dried river of ork blood was following. It might be a pale thing, pigmentless, cut off from the light; Sticks realized he’d never know what color it is, because the ultrasound vision everything would be shades of bluish grey and bluish black.

Abruptly, the trail of dried blood ended and pooled around a stone hand. In life, if it ever lived, the figure the hand was attached to would have been larger than a troll. The statue thing was in a fetal position, half-buried in a kind of depression in the stone. A womb, he though, and then quickly brushed aside. He knelt closer to get a better look, moving the ultrasound emitter at different angles to catch the faint echoes.

It was worse closer up. Parts of it looked like a statue carved straight from the rock, the flesh of a forearm smooth and clean, only to end in a withered stump of a hand that looked like the roots of a petrified tree. The statuesque, elongated head had cracked, or been broken, and a piece the size of a dwarf baby’s fist had fallen through; the wound showed the smooth dome of the skull and a brain pan empty save for a few gently curved shards of stone. Sticks didn’t touch it; the stone-man was the same texture as the rock it had come from, the same texture as the petrified miner before.

Laying the sledgehammer down carefully, and clipped the ultrasound emitter to his climbing harness, Sticks sat down set about taking a paper packet of shade out of one of his waterproof pouches The shadowrunner tried not to think about what else the boccor One Nail might have slipped into it when he sold it to him as raised it to his right nostril and took a quick snort.

Ants were crawling through his brain. Ants crawling over his skull, in his skull, copulating behind his eyes, crawling under his skin, white mucous flecked with bluish-black dripping from his nose as the ants slithered in the skin between his toes and just
beneath the flesh of his spine. A pounding pressure built up in his sinuses and his blue-dyed vision tinged purple then red as Sticks felt like he could crawl right out of his skin—and did.

On the astral, the cave was worse, sterile and desolate and painfully dark, clear of any of the light or pattern of life; the living earth itself seemed muted and shadowy, only Sticks’ own body below him seemed vibrant and bright. The only other thing of real substance was the rock the stone-man was half-merged with, Sticks could discern it clearly—the aura gave the impression of immense size and gravity. Then it spoke to him.

The rock didn’t exactly speak, but it emoted; the feelings were very clear, very distinct, and Sticks had to remind himself they weren’t his feelings at all. Closeness and pressure, like sleeping in the embrace of a group of lovers—no, brothers...and the smell and feel and taste of rock. Shock, loss, like when they told him his mother had been gutted by her pimp. Sticks realized it was telling him a story. Joy turned to sadness, like the stillbirth of his son. Grief. The horrible pain of absence in his chest, and then it grew worse. Each loss compounded on the other, no joys in between, the absence growing larger with each death until there was nothing. Sticks felt like a hollow image of himself, a lifeless Sticks-shaped statue. He was losing track of time, the thing wasn’t just emoting now, it was triggering old memories in him. An old nightmare, buried alive, but this time he was dead, and the worms bored through his flesh and he could see it, objectively, like an outside observer. It wasn’t him though, it was the ork woman. He pain made patterns on the astral, the dull warmth of her lifeblood awoke the echo of life in the stone. It was lonely, it was lonely, it was lonely. The spirit of stone tried to enter—

Sticks felt his chest churn, trying to will himself against seeing the scars on his chest, the stains echoed on his aura, the image of the larva-thing dropping on his chest. With an effort, Sticks was brought back to himself. The ghost of the stone was surrounding him, probing him. His astral form convulsed in rage, and the ghost withdrew a little, stung. Sticks followed up, expelling the yin he had stored with every attack, returning the fear and revulsion and loneliness the spirit had awoken. He pictured mountains crumbling, stone breaking, rock shattering. The ghost struggled. It didn’t matter.

Some time later, Sticks returned to himself. The bluish glow of the cave seemed brighter, now, compared to the darkness he had faced. His body ached, and the scars on his knuckles had split open like he’d been punching the bag for days. He tasted the gritty, sickly perfume of the shade in the back of a raw and parched throat. Before he left, he picked up the sledgehammer and smashed the stone-man to bits, and the bits to gravel, until no one could say it had ever been shaped like a man.

Sticks wiped the blood from his nose and recalled a bit from an old flatvid movie scanned to trideo and broadcast on the free networks they got at the orphanage, some ancient black-and-white Japanese period piece called The Tale of Heike.

Like a fossil tree
Which has borne not one blossom
Sad has been my life
Sadder still to end my days
Leaving no fruit behind me.

It was all the eulogy he was willing to spare for a stone ghost that had tried to eat him. He turned away from the rock and back toward the light and life of the Underground.
###

Friday, June 6, 2014

Blademaster

Blademaster
by
Bobby Derie

Bastion was the heart of the old Empire, or what was left of it. Through interminable civil wars and conflict, the planet had kept itself as a model of Imperial civilization - clean, well-laid streets, and mostly human. No-one glanced away nervous or afraid when they saw the characteristic white armor of a stormtrooper or the dark gray uniform of an officer; or raised a fuss when the same slipped into buildings without warning only to exit a few minutes later with a suspect in custody.

Eiven Task was barely spared a glance as he walked through the streets in full armor, the metal butt of his unlit lightsaber pike clanging gently with every other step. His full armor and robes were based on those of the old Royal Guard, save colored white instead of scarlet; on any other world that might raise suspicion or cause concern, but on Bastion the flitting thoughts of the populace still had respect for the armor, and any curiosity about it restricted to what obscure branch of the Imperial military it belonged to.

Task sweated inside his helmet, spoke little, and presented his electronic documents at every security check point without hesitation. He hadn't had anything to eat yet today, but a bad feeling gnawed at his guts. There were places in the universe that the near-human would rather be. Even here, he knew he might be recognized, and he felt the presence of other Force-users here in this very city - Imperial Knights, most likely Task told himself, but who knows what visiting Jedi or secret Sith might yet lurk in the old capital?

Yet Eiven made his way from the spaceport deeper into the city, past stately residences shaped like truncated pyramids topped by garden, and soaring apartments in the Imperial Monolith style where windows like gun-ports peeked out from dark walls that seemed to drink the light. No street was straight, every intersection a potential trap for invading ground forces, and quiet memorials praised the faceless heroism of the common stormtrooper and the tactical genius of the Moffs.

On Mitth'raw'nuruodo Avenue, Task turned and came to a small business set off from the street, unmarked by any sign. An electronic eye was set into the middle of the door - not durasteel, Eiven knew, but Mandalorian iron imported at enormous expense of credits and favors - and Task raised his left hand to make a gesture in clear view of the eye. The droid beeped a command in droidspeak, and the human wrapped his robes about his arms and slowly circled as it scanned him, consciously aware of the weapons quietly trained on him - turbolasers probably better suited to a TIE fighter than the defenses of a simple artisan's shop. When he had completed his revolution, the droid beeped again, and the door slid aside. Dropping his arm and letting the robe fall back into place, Task stepped inside.

Lightsabers of every style and material rested in niches and hooks on every wall; a rack of lightpikes and lightclubs rests on his left, while on his right were a spiraling display of curve-hilted dueling sabers and lightfoils. A trio of lightwhips lay curled on the far wall, before which was a heavy metal work bench that looked for all the world to have come from an Imperial battleship. In the spaces between these more ostentatious displays were lightsaber hilts both prosaic and exotic - double-hilted, light tonfas, laser daggers and more than even Task was familiar with. Seated behind the desk was a squat, balding Firrerreo, his two-tone hair reduced to a horseshoe around his balding pate golden-skinned pate, his prominent canines capped with electrum.

Under Palpatine, lightsaber technology had been outlawed, the sources of most natural lightsaber crystals destroyed, all to seek and root out and exterminate the Jedi - and other rivals to the Sith Emperor's power. Subsequent governments had maintained the ban, but a few clever and quiet entrepreneurs and collectors skirted the law, dealing in facsimiles, antiques, and non-functional models that lacked only lightsaber crystals. Of them all, Karn Fullo was the best and most successful. Not Force sensitive to any great degree himself, he was nonetheless as skilled an artisan as any the Sith or Jedi orders had ever produced, and it was rumored that his services were even retained by the Imperial Knights.

"Mr. Task," Karn Fullo said. "It has been some time. What can I do for you, sir? I trust the weapon remains functional?"

"Through fire and blood, Mr. Fullo." Task said, raising his lightsaber pike. "Although I've had to make the odd repair. No what, I need from you is information."

Fullo raised a two-tinted eyebrow, nictating membranes sliding down over his eyes in a slow blink.

"That can be an expensive proposition, Mr. Task. What do you want to know?"

Eiven fished a small holoprojector from his belt, and thumbed the activator. A pale blue scene shot up - a Miraluka, armed and armored as an Imperial Knight.

"This woman. Do you recognize her?"

Guardedly, Fullo nodded.

"Who trained her?" Task pushed.

Fullo sighed, his hands remaining carefully in view on the work bench in front of him.

"That," the Firrerreo said, "is where we must talk of payment. He is powerful, well-positioned with the Imperial government, and a valued customer."

Task thumbed the activator again, shutting down the hologram. He replaced it on his pouch, then untied a gray pouch and placed it on the bench in front of Fullo. The Firrerreo raised a two-toned eyebrow, and Eiven nodded; the artisan reached forward and opened the pouch. Light glinted off crystals of every color. The artisan quickly reached to his side, bringing forth a soft black cloth and an electronic monocle, spilling the rainbow of crystals onto the square of darkness and beginning to examine them, one by one.

"Where did you get them?" Fullo said.

"Mimban." Eiven said.

Fullo started and looked up.

"Kaiburr?" the Firrerreo barely breathed the word. Task nodded.

"This puts a different perspective on the matter, Mr. Task, I must say." Fullo said, as he returned to examining the gems. "His name is Uto. He is...he was the blademaster for the Imperial Knights, responsible for their training in lightsaber combat. For some years now he has been retired, but he runs an academy in the city where he trains prospective Knights."

"I need to meet with him." Eiven said. "Can you arrange an introduction?"

"As the Force would have it, I believe I can do better than that..."

*

Uto's academy was set in a low-land residential district that had been razed in the last planetary assault and never rebuilt; poor drainage left the ground marshy and pestilent, the shattered apartment blocks peeking up out of a viscous black ooze swarming with six-winged flies and slowly strangled by wire-like creepers with hooked thorns. Task kept to the main street, which was set above the muck, and walked toward the only intact building: the rather humble dojo of the former Imperial Blademaster.

Fullo's "introduction" was in fact a delivery - crooked in Eiven's left arm was a golden casket containing four lightsabers which the Firrerro had refurbished for Uto to the Blademaster's own specifications. Armed with this and Fullo's authorization as his agent, Task passed unmolested through the gates, and four human tweens in padded training armor escorted him across the couryard to the open-air training hall.

The floor was gravel and sand, designed to let the water drain away, and their steps crunched and shifted rather than echoed. The ceiling was a good eight meters overhead, and instead of walls, the roof was supported by eight angular pylons that were more than a meter wide at the base and narrowed as they reached the top. The central effect was to give the room tremendous space, while keeping the inside shadowed from the sun - though Task guessed that at sunrise and sunset, an unfortunate duelist could easily be blinded as the sun peeked out from behind one of the pylons.

The knot of trouble in Eiven's gut increased with every step inside that space. The whole place seemed charged with the Force, but to what side he couldn't say. It seemed on the edge - between light and dark, soft and hard, order and chaos. A new generation of Force adepts was training in this space, but Task wouldn't have been surprised if Uto had built his academy on top of something even older.

Blademaster Uto stood in the dead center of the compound, dressed in the red armor of an Imperial Knight, holding a lit lightsaber horizontal, parallel with the ground, feet shoulder-width apart, his eyes closed and breathing controlled. Eiven had seen this sort of meditation before, among Jedi.

"Why have you come here?" Uto rasped.

Task almost gasped at the old man's voice. There was something deeper in that rumble than a scarred larynx and a trained voice used to command; there was an imperative in there that reached into his backbrain and almost made him come to attention.

"Karn Fullo asked..." Task began.

"No lies, boy." Uto said. "I know who you are. I recognize you. Give the box to the cadet nearest you."

Deciding to play along, Eiven handed the box to the nearest cadet, who promptly opened it. The four lightsabers within were a fairly typical design, but the casing and styling reminded him of nothing so much as Stormtrooper armor. The cadets each took a hilt out of the box, then quickly took up positions flanking Uto.

"The miraluka." Task said. "You trained her."

"She was my finest student. It was a great loss to the Empire when she fell to the Dark Side."

The old man opened his eyes, revealing durasteel grey orbs that stared out at Eiven like he was looking right through him.

"Now. What do you want?" he said.

"Vaapad." Task said. "The lost style of Mace Windu. She used it against me, and I barely survived. Now I need it."

The wind picked up, moaning through the training hall.

"Why?" the old man said, his raspy voice reduced to a whisper.

"I need it. I have...something I can't control. A weapon that draws me toward the Dark Side."

Task's gaze was drawn to the old man's lightsaber, which though it had not wavered since he had entered the hall, had begun to crackle. Subtly, the atmosphere of the hall changed, and the cadets began to move.

"What you call Vaapad consists of three elements, which come together to form the most lethal style of lightsaber combat." Uto said. "First, there are the actual movements and positions which constitute the style. These are largely refinements from Juyo, as well as the other six forms, but organized and categorized according to a more complex system - to master Vaapad you must comprehend this system until it is nearly instinctive, to see the world in terms of a series of attacks and movements, threats and probabilities. The physical style may be recorded and emulated, as it was by General Grievious during the Clone Wars."

As one, the four lightsabers ignited, revealing burning orange blades. Two each circled around Task on each side, moving to flank him. Eiven responded by igniting his own lightsaber pike - a shorter, silver-white blade, but the haft of the weapon gave him a reach that the tween cadets lacked, and he carefully set himself in a defensive guard. On the fringes of his perception he was aware of an audience: other cadets, standing between the pylons, looking on at the strange duel.

"This brings us to the second element, philosophy. For most martial artists understanding and intent in combat are ephemeral qualities that do not contribute to the result; a strike delivered in anger or calm is in the end simply a strike. For the Force-user, however emotion translates into power, and the intangible qualities give tangible results. Simply put, those who do not understand and embrace the spirit of Vaapad will never master it. That spirit is aggression; it is the channeling of emotions through the user's will, the Force flowing through them like a torrent. To master Vaapad is not to be the calm in the eye of the storm, it is to be the storm."

The attack came almost without notice, the cadets moving in unnatural synchronicity. Task cut wildly with his blade, trying to keep the quartet from closing in where he'd be at a disadvantage. Still, numbers were against him, and the cadets worked together with precision - they seemed trained to work in pairs, one always guarding the other as they moved in for a strike. Eiven had heard that Knights had perfected such styles, the defensive Praetoria Ishu and the aggressive Praetoria Vonil...

"The final element are the Force disciplines; while these techniques may be seen as separate from Form VII, they are really the expressions that complete the form - for if you have absorbed the spirit of Vaapad, then you already draw the energy into you and it must find release. The core of these expressions are the focus meditations, forms, and stances of Jedi combat, where the adept combines physical technique and Force application as one, striking harder and faster, weaving mind-tricks into feints, evasion and counterstrike with precognition, buttressing blocks with the Force, bolstering one's physical attributes while degrading the resolve of opponents. Vaapad is, at its core, a moving meditation, where the Force supports and augments the user in all things."

Task snarled in rage as the cadets pressed their assault, moving with a skill and precision beyond human capability; only his Force-given precognition allowed him to step where the burning orange blades would not be, avoiding death or dismemberment by seconds. Yet every moment the four tightened the noose, drawing closer and cutting off his room to maneuver. In a flash Task realized that the droning blademaster must be guiding them, focusing their movements and efforts...

"Taken together, you can see how Vaapad has gained a reputation for being so formidable - and so difficult to reconstruct. The physical style is demanding, the philosophy difficult to fully express and internalize, the Force powers require considerable training; to put them all together into an effective combat form requires considerable dedication and discipline."

With a quick movement Task swung his lightpike one-handed as he reached for the hold-out blaster he carried in the small of his back. One of the cadets reached past the blade of the lightpike and grasped the hilt, pulling it from Task's grip just as he brought the blaster to bear, and Task squeezed off three shots; the smell of burning ceramic and plastic filled the chamber as three cadets fell, clutching their shoulders as lightsabers fell from suddenly nerve-less hands. The fourth moved in with a bold two-handed overarm strike, but without protection from his comrade left himself open: Eiven's toe cracked the boy's codpiece and caused the cadet's scream to glissando into a high-pitched squeak.

Breathing hard, Task spent a moment looking at his fallen foes. The crunch of gravel brought him back to matters at hand as the blademaster came forward. Arcs of blue-white lightning traveled up and down the length of the former Imperial Knight's lightsaber. With a thought, Eiven reached with the Force to telekinetically activate the force saber embedded in his prosthetic left arm even as he brought it up to parry.

No simple lightsaber, the force saber was an ancient artifact of the Dark Side, modified and amplified by Task's tweaking. As the red blade ignited, Eiven felt the familiar mix of enervation and berserker rage that had overcome him the last time he had used the weapon - every thought and memory erased save for pain and hate, fear and rage, anger and cruelty, burning through whatever mental and physical reserves Task had in an explosion of power. Uto seethed with aggression, his crackling saber moving with dizzying speed and pounding strength, and Eiven ran almost on automatic pilot, reduced to precognition-fed instinct and muscle-memory training as he tried to match the blademaster blow for blow using his knowledge of Juyo, the incomplete form VII.

It was not enough.

Uto was a blur, his blade seemingly everywhere, bashing down Task's defenses in a whirlwind style, those grey eyes in complete control. In his own right mind, Eiven would have retreated from the battle, or sought some other advantage, but the force saber would not permit him to run away from a fight, blood lust stirring him on to superhuman efforts.

When Uto made yet another pass, Task brought his own blazing blade up to parry - only to gasp as the blademaster's lightsaber crackling blade passed harmlessly through his own; the canny former Knight having thumbed the blade power adjustment knob down to its lowest setting, rendering the deadly weapon into little more than a flashlight...yet still a potent conduit for the Force lightning crackling up its length as it made contact with Task himself. Paralyzed by the sudden electric shock, Eiven couldn't even scream as the blademaster held the blade there for a few moments one handed, and with his gauntlet-clad right hand reached out and grasped the force saber blade. The cortosis in the former Imperial Knight's gauntlet caused the blade to collapse with a sudden snap, and Task felt the familiar exhaustion that accompanied every use of the weapon wash over him.

When the old man finally released him Eiven collapsed face-first onto the gravel, utterly spent.

"I see now why you want Vaapad. The weapon controls you, not you it." Uto said. "But you are not ready, or worthy, for such teaching. It is no surprise to me that none of the orders would have you, Task. You have some skill, but neither the patience or strength to master what power you have. You subsist on trickery and small advantages, tilting the odds in your favor and always running from the fair fight because you know you will lose. You believe in nothing, not even yourself. You fear the Dark Side? You do not have enough hate in you to become a Sith. Your weapon will consume you, in time, of that I am sure...and in truth you deserve nothing else. Search your feelings, and know what I say is true."

With a snikt, the blademaster extinguished his lightsaber, then attached it to a plate at his belt. With a loud clap of his hands, other cadets moved in, and Task felt their hands on him as they lifted him up.

"Take him back to the city." Uto said. "If he comes here again, I'll cut off both his arms."

###