《The Law of Averages 》Chapter 5
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"You teleported all the way back to Earth!?" Doctor Mercury demanded loudly, looking off-balance for the first time since Dan had met him.
"Not my Earth," Dan corrected.
"NOT THE POINT!" Mercury shouted in Dan's face, spittle flying forth to coat his cheeks.
Dan wiped his face on his sleeve. "Then what is the point? I tried to go home, I failed, big whoop."
"The point is that we have no idea how your power works, you imbecile," the doctor snarled, his face an angry red. "Maybe you have a limited distance per jump, and you end up in empty space! Maybe you have a limited amount of jumps per day, and you end up in empty space on your way back! Maybe you can't account for the environment and you end up inside of a wall! Maybe you can only jump in straight lines and you miss your mark! So many things could've gone wrong!"
Dan blinked innocently. "Ah. Woops?"
Doctor Mercury went from red to puce, his expression twisting into something murderous, before storming out of the room. The tray of food he'd brought in clattered against the counter as he shoved past it.
Dan shrugged helplessly, grabbed for the tray, and began to eat.
He'd mostly made peace with his situation in the two hours or so he'd had to himself, since returning from his ill-fated jaunt to Earth. Perhaps peace was too light a word. He had made a brief ceasefire with his situation, the terms of which were simple. The world would stop trying to give him a panic attack, and he would, in turn, stop blubbering like a baby.
Things were fine. So he couldn't teleport back home, so what? He had other options he could explore. He'd make a list later, and simply work his way down. Home wasn't going anywhere. There was no need to panic.
Dan's fork scraped the bottom of the tray. He'd finished the meager rations that Mercury had brought him. A tasteless brown sludge that somehow managed to fill his stomach. Dan sighed, setting the tray aside. He should probably find Doctor Mercury and apologize. For what, he had no idea. He was the one who was in danger, after all. Regardless, Dan had years of experience groveling; he'd find a way to make his words sound truthful.
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The door whooshed open, and Mercury stomped back inside. Dan pasted a sincere expression on his face and opened his mouth, his brain quickly cobbling together vague concessions.
"Doctor, I am truly s—"
"Can it," the old man snapped. His left hand shot forward, gripped around the top of a small animal cage. About half the size of a cat carrier, it appeared to be made of normal, boring plastic. He shook it in Dan's face. "Me and you are going to run some experiments, right now."
"Um," Dan began.
The doctor's free hand gripped around Dan's collar and dragged him to his feet. For an old fellow, he was surprisingly strong.
"Now!" Mercury bellowed.
"Okay okay!" Dan straightened his clothing and himself, and cautiously followed the wizened little man out the door. The pair traveled down the winding hallway, passing half a dozen locked doors along on the way. Neptune hovered in the window, a constant reminder of Dan's situation.
They walked for several minutes. Dan wasn't sure about the exact size of the station, nor was he willing to ask questions while Mercury was in such a prickly mood, but it seemed obscenely large for a single person. The doctor had mentioned having some sort of grant during his earlier rant, perhaps the station was meant to support more people but there simply were not any other candidates? Curiosity eventually conquered restraint, and he voiced his question to Doctor Mercury.
"The station is mine," the doctor replied sourly, his brisk pace not slowing in the slightest. "I got it on the cheap because it has a bit of an upleasant history. Built by terrorists and all that, you know how it is."
Dan really didn't, but was hesitant to actually say so. Judging by the deep frown on the doctor's face, this was dangerous territory. He decided to pivot the conversation a bit.
"So... Spackle," Dan proffered. He really didn't know how to broach such an odd topic.
"What about her?" Mercury grunted.
"She's, uh, a she? The ship, that is?" Dan's stuttering won him a flithy glare from his companion.
"Er, the ship that brought me here: she's named Spackle, and she's sentient?" Dan clarified.
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The old man sighed. "Indeed. The only alien I've ever discovered and it's a skittish, idiotic, mute, orphaned serial-kidnapper."
Dan frowned. That wasn't promising.
"I was hoping to have a conversation with her," he ventured.
"What is it you think I mean when I say mute?," Doctor Mercury asked, irritation obvious in his tone.
"That she doesn't have a mouth?" Dan offered. "She's a ship, so that seems somewhat self-evident."
Mercury shook his head. "She doesn't speak. She just, well, flashes her lights at you."
"But her console has an intercom on it. I heard you through it. She can't use that? Or, I don't know, can't you plug in a computer and have her type through that?" Dan questioned, sifting through his mental science fiction archive for ideas. If it could be done in Independence Day, surely it could be done here.
A separate thought occurred to him. "Don't you have a universal translator?
The doctor clicked his tongue. "My translator only works on spoken languages, and she's never stuck around long enough for me to modify it to suit her. Besides, I said doesn't speak, not can't speak. For all I know, she thinks playing mute is funny. She's barely made any effort to communicate with me. Not since I agreed to berth her, at least."
Dan's newfound optimism sunk a tad. "Well... I'd like to give it a shot anyway. She might be my ticket home."
Doctor Mercury shrugged. "I doubt it. She left an hour ago."
And there it went, the S.S. Hope completely capsized, sploosh right into the drink. Where was his heroic speech scene? How could he guilt trip the stupid ship if it flew off before he could try!?
Mercury ignored Dan's slumping shoulders, instead stopping in front of a door.
"We're here," he said. The entrance opened, and a gust of stale air hit Dan's face. The doctor motioned him in, and Dan obeyed out of sheer habit.
The room itself resembled the unholy offspring of a high school gym and a science lab. Shiny hardwood floor covered an area about the size of a basketball court. Exercise equipment lay scattered about the floor, in varying levels of disrepair. The outer borders of the square room housed several lab tables, filled with microscopes and glass beakers and other fragile, probably expensive objects that Dan couldn't identify. From the tall ceiling hung two pairs of high bay LEDs that had snapped on the instant Dan entered the room.
"Welcome to my old training facility and current storage room," Mercury said, shoving past Dan and walking towards one of the cleaner lab tables. "Stop gawking and follow me."
Dan shuffled after him obediently, still a bit lost as to what they were actually doing here.
Doctor Mercury hefted the cage that he'd been carrying and dropped it on the table. The front of it was opaque, but a few quick motions from the doctor had it opened. Dan internally braced himself for some sort of animal abomination.
A fuzzy white mouse hopped out of the box, sniffing cautiously at the air. It was... adorable. It could fit in the palm of his hand, with bright white fur and little pink limbs and big, shiny, soulful eyes. Dan was struck with the certainty that Doctor Mercury was going to somehow kill it.
"This little guy is one of my test subjects," the mad scientist explained. "I've been bombarding her and her siblings with cosmic radiation in my spare time, to see if I can give them specific powers. Since she has yet to manifest any powers of his own, she can help us experiment with yours."
"...Why do we need a mouse?" Dan asked, dreading the answer.
"We have to test if you can teleport living things of course!" Mercury replied with a pleased smile. "I'm certainly not going to volunteer. Teleportation has a nasty habit of turning things inside out. Better to use something disposable."
The old man bent down, gently stroking a finger down the mouse's spine.
"Who's disposable? You are!" he cooed, as the tiny creature rubbed against his hand.
Dan carefully did not cringe. It seemed that he needed a more cynical imagination.
Mercury wasn't going to kill the mouse, he'd make Dan do it for him.
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The Primordial
With one goal fueling him, he broke through the final barrier, reaching the apex of power and regaining that which was once lost. Trying to find a new beginning, he reforged himself anew as he awoke to memories of a long forgotten past. Memories that intersected with his new reality. His invincible soul now unchained, surprises await him as he begins his new jouney in an unknown land. I'm just writing this for fun, but i'll never drop it. This won't be something short, as I have the very long term in mind, but I'm a total noob to writing, so I most likely won't release chapters very often, at least until I really get the hang of it. But, the chapters will always be several thousand words long. At the minimum 2k, maximum like 6k... Pretty big variations, sorry. If you like it, great. If you don't, that's understandable. Regardless, if you have a read, I'd appreciate feedback for areas you think I should improve on, whether it's the use of some words or how I should write something or WHATEVER. I'm open to anything, good or bad, because with your help, it'll help make this story better. **DISCLAIMER** So you don't waste your time, I want to let you know what you're getting into, because I like knowing ahead of time before I read something. This might appear like a Xianxia novel, but it's not. It only starts that way. This is a western fantasy world and setting that many of you are familiar with. The beginning chapters might be a bit of an info dump. Some of it might seems superfluous, but a lot of information is relevant to the story. The first few chapters might also seem rushed, but I'll try to keep it exclusive to those. This is a cliche, OP MC story with the typical harem, but other than the quick start, everything else will be gradual. There will be romance, and probably many moments at that, but don't expect anything TOO detailed. If you want something really steamy, look elsewhere. References and throwbacks to stuff most likely. The setting won't be really dark or really light. Middleground, I guess. The MC is far from a young kid, but he won't totally reflect his age. I don't plan on discarding info, abilities or characters that you KNOW should come back and be around. I see it a lot and it sort of bugs me haha... but I could have oversights, I dunno. As I said, I'm a noob. That's it, really. If you're interested, welcome to my world!
8 119My Wonder System
Frank Hart lived a peaceful life with his mother in the lonely town called Marble, he had most of the things he needed and life didn't seem to be harsh on him without a father. Deep in the forest of Marble town was an underground settlement but it was abandoned. The body of a tyrant was buried beneath it, but it wasn't locked up forever as the duration of the spellbinding the tomb was complete, the beast lord broke out and along with his ugly beasts turned the world into a state of dilemma. Frank had to flee along with his mother into one of the few refugee camps that the humans had. There was a war, a war between humans and the beast lord, with the population of humans declining Frank was forced to go to war. With no experience at all on how to fight struggled until he was at the point of death. "Is this how it ends for me?" Frank grunted as he pulled himself across the hard floor. A drop of blood fell from his forehead and landed on the blue necklace on his neck, a gift from his mother. The necklace began to glow and at that point, he lost consciousness. [ System Active ] [ You have obtained the wonder system ]
8 139Oublivant
Oublivants: a category of dungeons characterised by the antithesis of life, necrosis. "Dungons as a whole tend towards the lethal side when it comes to exploring them; however, an oublivant actively seeks out destruction on a grand scale. No greater example of their deep hatred for life exists than the very first discovery of an oublivant. It was a massive dungeon spanning miles in all directions. It continuously expanded along the surface, so fast you could see it, and left nothing but a scorched, withered wasteland in its wake. Wherever the oublivant resides, nothing but the undead exist, as all living life has been eradicated. Why it is, exactly, the oublivant seem so against life so as to break the passive rule dungeons have is unknown. What is known, however, is that they're a threat that, upon discovery, is to be immediately eliminated." - Archomagus Addiom Onero, Court of VascilNote: This is my first story on royal road. It'd be nice if you were nice... nicely.
8 172Attuned
A musically minded genius in his second year at the prestigious Curtis Institute of Music finds himself swept up in a subsistent world full of smiling psychopaths and grim-faced allies. Between keeping the secret and keeping the balance, can Ladron manage to fulfill his dreams and not get himself killed until he dies a lethal death of being killed from dying?Probably not, but at least he's got the battle tunes ready. (Props to my Editor AficionadoAvacado for putting up with my idiocy)
8 108The Glory After Rebirth
A letter to break off the engagement leads Ling Family in Tangyang to endless doom. And he, Ling Zhang, is tortured to death after his legs are cruelly broken. This time after rebirth, he swears to restore glory to his family and to seek revenge. The very first he should do is to break the engagement himself! Yuewen Family? Far in the capital enjoying high privilege and glory? I simply don’t care. You think yourself some delicious cake that everyone crazes to grab a bite? Bah! Too hard that it hurts my teeth! Yet never has Ling Zhang expected that this ‘hard cake’ would promise him a life of glory after rebirth. Welcome to read all The Glory After Rebirth on Flying Lines.
8 78Cypress
Let's do it for the love that used to be here.It is reason enough. miscellaneous 2022 © crierayla
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