home

search

Chapter 25 - Hunted

  

  Chapter 25

  Hunted

  DATE

  UnderstationINTERSPACE – WAYSTATION #0085

  I knew I was taking a gamble,

  rushing down the next set of stairs towards the next set of

  maintenance access halls. The piles of rubbish forming an obstacle

  course that rivalled father’s private training camp.

  I hid in an alcove overcome with a

  mountain of trash, electronics and plastics galore, when the JSPs

  thundered down from the next junction. I was forever grateful they

  never cared for stealth, their discipline promoting the barrel-run

  approach instead of the competent efficiency Iron Wall mercenary

  groups were known for. I thanked whatever Machine God was looking out

  for me that the Gilded Shield hadn’t been tapped to retrieve me.

  The Core-centric rivals to the JSPs were reputed to get the job done,

  with the most efficient brutality that means the client gets what the

  client wants.

  The minute I could I dug the Slate

  out from my stolen boot, hopping on my other foot and nearly passing

  out from the pain the movements caused. That Slate was now safely in

  my stolen bra, its presence a constant reminder that I will have a

  less friendly Taniwha on my heels. One that I’ve pissed off by not

  only crossing into its territory, but poked it. In the eyes. My

  request for Jake had been a piss-poor attempt at negotiations. But

  hey, if he was angry enough, he might just kill me in a dark corner

  and leave me to rot. Mercs and their egos. Surely, my plan was

  .

  “He’ll eat me, he’ll eat

  me,” I muttered under my breath, just a bit more giddy than was

  sane. I took the hallway at a run, my thick French braid whipping

  behind me. I made sure to visualise the consequences of him catching

  me, ripping me apart for the Slate. I’d never been to this specific

  Waystation, but it seemed like it was a more primitive version of

  Waystations of the Silver Belt. The technology might have been

  scavenged, but the general layout should still be the same.

  I shoved my way into a side door,

  the heavy leather jacket leaving a sooty streak that did not look of

  out place, estimating that it connected to the neighbouring halls.

  I was right.

  I ran as fast as my body would

  allow me, which considering my fitness evaluation six years ago, was

  painfully slow. Sweat was beading on my forehead already, a

  combination of the Dark Lotus jacket, running on temps and the fresh

  pain of the new transplant.

  A stitch in my side made me slow

  down to a snail’s pace, I limped onwards. Not stopping. If I

  stopped, the Taniwha would eat me. And I was too near the surface and

  to the JSPs to let that happen.

  I had to make it to the New

  Developments hall. Or failing that, find an alternative.

  I looked over my shoulder, and a

  whiff of roasted earth and male sweat overwhelmed my nose. By the

  bandwidth, did that man smell good. I blinked, refocusing, grateful

  that the space behind me was still empty. I looked forward and found

  myself in a junction.

  “Shit!” I whipped my head

  around to look down each corridor, the signs and maps long defaced by

  centuries’ worth of graffiti. I had to rely on my memory.

  A door slammed open behind me.

  Picking at random, I dove to the left, not even bothering to look

  behind me. I suspected who it was, so I didn’t stop to see if he

  saw me yet.

  A crackle burst through the

  overhead speakers, followed by the station’s clipped, synthetic PA

  voice, repeating its message in multiple languages:

  “Attention all spacers.

  Curfew remains in effect due to the ongoing multi?stellar

  sector poisoning event. All non?essential personnel must remain

  in designated quarters.”


  Perfect. As if I needed another

  reason to panic.

  I kept going the way I had picked.

  I didn’t have time to figure it out. I needed another turn to break

  line of sight.

  The stitch in my side prevented me

  from going faster than a power walk.

  I chanced a look over my shoulder,

  every shadow and alcove potentially hiding a Peacekeeper. Or Az.

  Still nothing but some odd droids.

  I looked ahead and turned at

  another intersection, finding myself in a sterile, clean hall. A

  mural to my left was an old logo I’d seen in ruins over my career.

  If I wasn’t running for my life, I’d have stopped and studied it.

  A seven-pointed white star inside three overlapping rings, an ancient

  Seeder ship silhouetted in the middle. One of the first terraformer

  ships humanity had launched from Ancient Terra.

  I heard the marching of boots

  against the floor coming down the hall.

  I thought I was too late in diving

  into the next alcove, but the footsteps retaining their speed behind

  me told me I got lucky. I frowned. I couldn’t quite believe my

  luck. I had never

  I resisted taking a peek, instead

  looking for an exit. I stared at the lone door beside me, marked

  ‘STELLA C. PERSONNEL ONLY’ in elegant, cursive script. It

  reminded me of the writing from the wreck, the one that even had

  their ‘Maintenance Store’ sign painstakingly decorated. Another

  wave of roasted earth and sandalwood soap lifted from the jacket I

  was wearing, blanketing me in a comfort and familiarity like a dream.

  A haze started fogging my brain. The pain that should have made me

  stop and rest and curl up so my body could recover was affecting my

  decision-making.

  Unauthorized tale usage: if you spot this story on Amazon, report the violation.

  My eyes flicked upward directly in

  front of me. A vent grate old, rusted, held in place by mismatched

  screws and a layer of dust. An air vent that doubled as an emergency

  access hatch for the electrical conduits. It was old. Wrong screws.

  Wrong decade. Someone had replaced it with cheaper parts.

  I stayed still, gazing at both

  exits like one of them would save my life. I just crawled through an

  hour’s worth of ventilation shafts. The pain in my middle flared up

  with my rest, a wave of nausea and vertigo made me list to the side,

  a fresh wave of sweat soaked my stolen Dark Lotus shirt. The door had

  a handle. The grate had tiny, rusty screws I’d had to stand on my

  tiptoes to reach.

  The Slate in between my breasts

  vibrated again, reminding me that Az could probably track me through

  it. The stupid thing had rung non-stop while in the vents, making the

  crawl awkward, where I had to make sure my chest didn’t touch the

  metal ground.

  My heavy breathing was also

  becoming a liability, I had to put a distance between me and the

  approaching marching boots.

  “Ouch,

  fuck!”

  The

  sound made me jump in place, I looked around and saw a flash of pink

  through the grate in front of me. We stared at each other for a

  second before the marching boots off

  in the distance quickened as if they broke

  into a run. I launched to my feet, shoving the door open in the same

  moment a loud crash and clatter exploded behind me.

  I

  was towered on either side by crates, a veritable

  hallway of a hoard that made my mouth water and eyes shine with a

  curiosity I hadn’t felt in a long time. But the wonder was quashed

  as a pair of running feet caught up to me.

  “Small

  station, hey, Supernova?”

  Carla the cyborg merc said breathlessly.

  “Wrong

  cyborg, but I’ll take it. You

  got my Slate?” I snapped

  back, conscious of the other running footsteps following

  us.

  “Uh, no. Being chased by JSP jarheads right now,

  kinda don’t want to get grabbed and you know...”

  We

  paused at a junction, and I chanced a look over my shoulder.

  Jade

  Sphere grunts, three of them, had faltered

  in their

  tracks when they saw me. Then

  doubled their speed.

  “Fuckers,”

  I snarled, pushing Carla to head in one direction while I picked the

  opposing side. “Let’s try and split them up!”

  “How the fuck are you moving

  like that?!” Carla shouted over her shoulder, still taking the new

  direction at a run.

  “Talk later!” I responded,

  skidding around a new corner and praying the new wave of adrenaline

  will last until I get to a hiding spot.

  To my dismay, all three pairs of

  boots sounded behind me. Angry tears sprung to my eyes, they really

  wanted me. My new stomach dropped, a sense of dread rising instead.

  ‘Maybe they know. They want

  me for the rest… Someone figured it out.’


  “I

  need my Slate,” I muttered. I needed to make some calls. If the

  university leaked my medical situation. Or hell, if Anna mentioned

  something to the wrong person.

  Metal

  on metal skittering made me look up. I stopped in my tracks, cursing.

  A

  sleek black quadruped security unit was leering down at us. The head

  resembled Forty-Five’s, the obsidian reflective visor had a single

  large ring light. It was glowing an ominous red. The three soldiers

  behind me grabbed my arms, pulling

  me back but I made

  sure to resist them, managing

  to pull arm free as I tried to show

  that I was seeking protection

  from a ‘greater perceived’ threat.

  The

  robot’s reverse jointed limbs were built for speed, and the

  attached feline paws were tipped with sharp, metal claws. I

  was banking on the fact it was a security robot, hopefully programmed

  with the old War Crimes protection protocols. Protect women and

  children.

  “Alert.

  Intruders detected,” it rasped, its thin voice sounding like it

  echoed inside a tin. “Unauthorised personnel in restricted area.

  Identify.”

  ‘

  I thought to myself, swallowing the lump of fear in my throat. I

  stayed still, remaining non-threatening for as long as possible. A

  corporate unit would work a bit different. It would

  have an internal database of ‘authorised personnel’, and

  depending which company this warehouse belonged to now, that list

  would be very small. My hope

  was vanishing quickly.

  The

  soldiers behind me scoffed.

  “Detected,”

  the robot ignored them, a red laser scanning my front,

  right where the stolen Slate

  was still tucked in my bra.

  “Asron, Scion.

  Injured.”

  Two laser guns appeared out of its

  shoulders, swivelling to target the Peacekeepers behind me. I jerked

  my arms forward and dove to the ground, the smell of ozone filling

  the air for a brief moment before shouting filled the air.

  “Run!” One of the men shouted,

  grabbing the arm of his injured comrade and shoving the other frozen

  one back. “Leave the girl, Meng and the boss can negotiate.”

  The trio and the robot began

  scuttling away back the way we came, leaving me alone in the hallway.

  I pulled out the Slate, Az’s bored face staring back at me.

  “You just saved my life, again,

  void-spawn,” I muttered in wonder, thinking back to Forty-Five and

  his entry as my co-pilot. “Asron, huh? That’s… a bit weird.”

  I placed it with a bit more care

  over my heart, glancing over my shoulder before getting up, uselessly

  dusting my filthy pants.

  The pain behind my ribs flared

  even more viciously than before. I stumbled against the wall of

  crates, the stack thankfully sturdy enough to take my slight weight.

  I gasped as my vision tunnelled, more sweat soaking through the shirt

  and into the jacket. The leather keeping shivers at bay for now.

  Overcome by a wave of nausea, I

  fell forward, retching. Black bile spilled out, but smaller, chunky

  bits were the concerning additions. I tasted copper and iron, and I

  knew there would be gold and silver too. A couple of organic, meaty

  lumps were clumped with the gold scarabs. The nanites had coalesced

  together and formed into the insect carcasses.

  I tried not to think which organ

  the meaty lumps came from. It shouldn’t matter. It didn’t matter.

  The nanites have finished their

  job. Or perhaps, the job was finished for them. The size and number

  of the nanites’ carapaces told me they finished munching on

  something mechanical they shouldn’t have. The small grey vial of

  the little itchy shits had ballooned to three times the volume.

  I sat up straight against the

  crate wall, breathing through the sick feeling in my gut and the urge

  to pass out. My lungs were functioning better than before, I finally

  realised. Maybe the meaty lumps were scar tissue. Maybe the hospital

  fixed the filter on the artificial lung too.

  I closed my eyes again, intending

  on only resting until the warehouse stopped spinning.

Recommended Popular Novels