Authors: Sean Allen
Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Science Fiction/Fantasy
“Sy, do you copy?”
“Bloody hell, luv,” Simon said after a few seconds delay, “I’m tryin’ to get done with my assigned duties so I can catch up and have a pint!”
“You might want to rethink that plan. I don’t think this place is quite your…
style
.” Dezmara zoomed the view so Simon could get a closer look at the melee of lights and get an earful of the music that blared from the pub’s entrance.
“Aw, bugger! What is it with the free people in the universe these days? Can’t they run a respectable place of ill repute without all that bloody racket? Well, I s’pose it’s right down your alley, then, idn’it? ‘Cept for that large bloke in the doorway there. Be careful, luv, he looks like a nasty fellow.”
“Will do, Sy. How’s the cargo coming?”
“Libby’s almost finished with the crates an’ I’m busy hackin’ away at the encryption for the gate, but I’m”
“I’ll have to call you back, Sy,” Dezmara said abruptly before he could finish, “I’ve been spotted…”
The brutish doorman pivoted on his stumpy legs and turned to face her. He moved aggressively in her direction, leaning forward on his big arms as he planted the thick, callused knuckles of his left hand into the stone floor, followed quickly by the other, and then repeated the motion twice more with increasing speed. Even with his little legs and his knuckles dragging on the ground, the creature stood a head and a half taller than Dezmara and it was easily three times wider than she was at the shoulders. He sniffed the air heavily and leered at Dezmara with threatening eyes.
“Who are you? What do you want?” the doorman snapped in the deepest voice she had ever heard.
“I’m a traveler and I’m thirsty,” she quipped. She was a natural smart-ass and she found it hard to make herself behave despite the voice of reason that pleaded with her to do it anyway for survival’s sake. “I hear Buego’s is the place to go if you want to part with your money.” She quickly slipped out a stack of shiny tolocs and dropped them into the doorman’s hand to quell any animosity her reply might have sparked in the creature. The stack of coins barely filled a fraction of his giant palm, and she was glad the kranos shielded her genuine concern for the brute’s size and power.
The bouncer let out a snorting laugh. “Go on,” he said as he cupped his fingers around the money and shuffled to one side.
She walked calmly past the doorman and through the stone archway that led to Buego’s. She waded past several patrons crowded near the entrance trying to escape the deafening noise inside and shouting to each other in strange tongues. The display on the kranos blinked four times and outlined as many cameras in the dimly lit ingress as she descended down the walk. The entrance ran straight for several paces and then opened into a large, semi-circular foyer that overlooked the pub. The railing of the balcony was lined with more statues groping for the high, flat ceiling above. Dezmara leaned on the rail and scanned the area.
The room was a large rectangle. Not much in the way of obstacles or surprises, except for the several hundred people packed into the place and the multiple passageways branching off of the main chamber. The walls were lined with carved niches that encased even more statues and, Dezmara noted, could possibly serve as hiding places. She was also keenly aware of several cameras strategically placed around the cavern. At the back of the room, a platform of rock floated on the upstretched hands of hundreds of half-sized Triniton statuettes. On this stage, a band of unruly creatures vigorously banged, strummed, and slapped their strange instruments, driving the writhing bodies on the crowded floor in front of them into a rhythm-induced frenzy. Dezmara couldn’t help but smile a little before turning to walk down the path to her left: the band was pretty good.
The trail leading from the mezzanine curved along the back of the chamber and descended to the main level below. The drop-off to the right of the walkway was blocked by a wall that was several feet taller than Dezmara but did not reach all the way to the ceiling and was lined with a number of posters. The signs were crowded onto the partition in haphazard fashion, the crisp edges and bright colors of more recent announcements overshadowing the curled corners and faded claims of events past. Most of the advertisements were for musical acts that had come and gone. Dezmara chuckled to herself as she read the names of different bands and looked at their pictures, both of which, she guessed, were meant to be as cool as possible. Some got it right; some didn’t. She read the first few out loud. “The D-Liners, last show EVER! The North Star Drifters. The 1:10 Trio—Canceled Due to Band Mutiny, No Refunds!” She ran a gloved hand down the wall and over the banners, glancing less at each passing one as she descended. Then she stopped dead in her tracks. Her fingers caught the stiff edge of new parchment, and her peripheral vision shocked something in her subconscious that her rational mind didn’t comprehend.
She
took a small step backwards and turned to face the sign. Her heart jumped into her throat as the kranos disseminated the information and neatly organized it into sections on the right side of her view. She selected the first heading and read the posting twice to make sure she wasn’t hallucinating. It read:
~ DANGER ~
It has been reported to the port authority that a Human has been traveling this region of the galaxy and may try to resupply at Luxon. It is unknown what powers Humans possess, but they
must
be treated as hostile as their presence here could bring the wrath of the Durax upon this great port. Capture or kill is permitted.
100,000 tolocs
DEAD OR ALIVE
~
The rest of the posting detailed what a Human might look like, including the position of their eyes, ears, and noses on their heads; the different colors and placement of hair on their bodies; and the number and shapes of their limbs and extremities. Dezmara had heard rumors of old warnings posted by the Durax ages ago, but this was new and posted not by the Durax, but by free people, people whose worlds and families were destroyed just like hers. She was an outcast among outcasts. Loneliness punched a hole right through her, and she felt the sickening feeling of emptiness begin to numb her senses. She might not have been so concerned if the sign had just listed a description of a male Human—something she couldn’t even vouch for—but it also included a description of a female and it was frighteningly accurate.
“How in the hell? Nobody’s seen a Human for millennia. How’d they get a description of…” She reached up and killed the connection with
the
Ghost
,
and she had a creeping feeling that she should have done it sooner. She fought her suspicions back behind their irrational cage, but it was a delicate barrier. Her paranoia could riot at any moment and send her running for the exit, ready to slice to ribbons anything that stood between her and her ship, anything that came between her and freedom. Dezmara was a skilled fighter and pilot. She made split second decisions in the heat of battle and during dangerous maneuvers in a run without hesitation, with infallible judgment and almost supernatural precision. But when it came to her Humanity, she was at a loss.
She talked it out, a habit when she needed to think about the topic at hand. She found a carved indentation in the left wall just a few paces down the trail, and she slipped past the Triniton statue standing guard over the darkness behind him, vanishing from the view of the other patrons who were too busy laughing and drinking to notice her anyway. “Now, if we assume the Human they’re talking about is
you
, who could’ve possibly told them? Fellini’s never seen you outside of
the
Ghost
,
and besides, he doesn’t get paid as much if his number one runner goes down.
“You
just
told Simon you were Human, and he stands to make
way
more than a hundred grand on the next run alone. Besides, if it
were
him, he could’ve just given a photo or video from
the
Ghost’s
security cameras and there wouldn’t be a need for male and female descriptions…
unless
…”
The lonely feeling was gone, and elation washed through her body in warm, tingling waves. Her logic led her to the only reasonable explanation for the wanted poster: there were other Humans and they had been spotted in this galaxy—maybe coming to
this
station! Her happiness rose up from deep inside her and moisture blurred her vision. “Stop it, dammit! You can’t wipe tears away under this stupid helmet. Pull yourself together, girl!” She sniffed heavily and took a deep breath to calm her nerves. Even though her eight-year search could come to an end very soon, she had to be at the top of her game if she expected to locate the Humans without exposing them or herself to the portmaster, his goons, or anyone else who bothered to take the posting seriously. She needed to focus.
The ship needed supplies, as it always did when she and Simon came into a dockyard. But Dezmara’s search for others like her always topped her list of priorities, and coming into a port gave her a unique opportunity to help find Humans. The supplies would have to wait; right now Dezmara was on a mission—reconnaissance. She always headed to a port’s pub because it was here that pilots and sailors flocked like thirsty animals around a watering hole to tell stories about where they’d been and what they’d seen during their travels through the stars. Dezmara knew that these types were prone to exaggeration—even she tended to stretch the truth for dramatic effect when regaling Simon with her own tales; but, since he was either aboard the ship during one of her spectacular runs or able to rewind the view on her helmet when she was out and about, she rarely got away with much. Although, to Dezmara’s credit, her un-exaggerated feats were more spectacular than most pilots’ flights of fancy; she truly was the best pilot in the known universe. But story telling was in most adventurers’ blood and liberties were almost always taken to ensure an entertaining and dazzling tale—especially in the company of fellow pilots—and Dezmara took everything with a grain of salt. Fueled by this new information—that other Humans could be close by, possibly even here on Luxon at this very moment—she was even more focused on her mission.
Dezmara tapped the side of the kranos and programmed it to scan for the word
Human
in multiple languages. With the program running, she all but launched herself from the crevice where she was hiding, streaking onto the stone walkway in a blur of burgundy and black. Her sudden appearance startled a young couple holding tightly to one another and searching for a dark corner so they, too, could disappear. They recovered from their initial shock at the strange, masked figure darting out from the shadows and decided it was a good hiding place as they slipped into the now vacant cut-out. This day was the best Dezmara had known since her awakening, and the euphoria, coupled with excitement, made her feel as if she were floating down the passage toward the main level.
She rounded the edge of the divider and turned to her right. A large U-shaped bar directly in front of her stuck out from the the wall into the open area, now occupied with more wild music fans than when she had first arrived. She looked over the jostling bodies and flailing limbs that reflected in the whirling stage lights and saw the band at the far end of the room. One of the musicians was balanced on his instrument, clutching it between long, dexterous fingers while plucking its strings with equally impressive toes as the band’s high-energy song shook the chamber. Dezmara was impressed with the creature’s display of balance and, evidently, so was the crowd. A loud surge of cheers, hoots, and raised fists jolted the air in response to the feat.
Dezmara smiled again and considered what she would have chosen to do if being a runner hadn’t come so naturally. At first glance, being in a band seemed to suit her ulterior motives rather well. There was definitely plenty of travel involved, not to mention opportunities to sit and talk with fellow travelers before and after a show. It would be easy enough to do recon while talking to them about where they were from and where they had been. Acts were always trying to separate themselves from the crowd, and wearing a mask like the kranos would probably seem pretty cool these days. But the pay sucks unless you became a rock star, and that would bring the kind of attention Dezmara couldn’t afford.
“Who are you kiddin’?”
she thought to herself.
“You have enough trouble staying under the radar as the Ghost; and besides, you couldn’t stand flyin’ around in the kind of hunk-a-junk a musician’s salary would afford.”
She chuckled inwardly but the former sentiment had shaken her confidence.
She had drawn a lot of attention to herself as it was. Being unbeaten in over twenty straight runs would be legendary in the black market, but two hundred and thirty consecutive victories was unreal. Dezmara originally had figured that by around one hundred wins, she would be treated like a deity: worshipped and respected or perhaps even feared. Either was fine with her because, in both cases, she would be left alone. But instead of being respected or feared, The Ghost had become a thorn in the side of any runner gunning to be the best—and that included every last one of them in the universe. They had all become increasingly aggressive toward her during runs and had performed questionable maneuvers in their frustration at being unable to unseat Dezmara from the highly coveted, and highly lucrative, number one slot.
One rogue, enraged at being overtaken so easily, even opened fire on the
Ghost
with armor-piercing rounds. She would have returned fire with her aft guns and would have been completely justified in doing so per the code, if it weren’t for the risk of hitting the rest of the runners hurtling behind her target. Dezmara paid the captain of the attacking ship a personal visit following the run, and she
never
took attempts on her life lightly. She offered the captain a choice: give up his ship as payment for his mistake or give up his life. Most captains, as proud as they are, would have chosen death, or would like to think they would if they were put in a similar situation, but Dezmara could be very persuasive when she wanted to be, and the unruly captain chose to live in the end. Simon scavenged all the good parts from the acquired vessel, sold it, and split the proceeds between the two of them.