《Deeper Darker》Book 3 – 15: Game Time
Advertisement
Wormhole Island - Interior.
Lower Level.
It was relatively quiet inside Ubik’s head. He wasn’t sure he preferred it that way. A voice in your head might be a sign of madness or, as in this case, the presence of an alien consciousness, but it was still nice to have someone to talk to, bounce ideas off, share a joke or two with.
Now it was like a silent tomb, no one knowing what to say. That’s what the air smelled like. Like the absence of life. Like the morning after a party before the cleanup.
“What are you making that face for?” asked PT.
“I’m not making a face,” said Ubik. “This is what I look like.”
The incline of the slope they were on seemed to be increasing. It was very wide and smooth, like it had been designed for something very large to be rolled down it. The only light they had was from the occasional patches of luminescence that appeared on the engraved walls; old and sticky, like a spill that hadn’t been cleaned up properly. It barely illuminated anything.
“You were smiling sadly and sighing,” said PT. “Is something terrible about to happen?”
“Undoubtedly,” said Ubik. “But that’s not my fault.”
Ubik veered closer to the wall on the right. The grooves and engravings didn’t tell him much. They seemed dead and burnt out from overuse.
PT frowned and looked very much like he thought any problem they encountered would be Ubik’s fault. This was the problem with helping people. They always ended up blaming you for everything that went wrong, even the stuff that had nothing to do with you, the stuff that was put into motion long before you were even born.
“What about Fig?” asked PT, all serious and direct.
Ubik shrugged. “Why ask me? I’m not his dad.”
“I know,” said PT. “That’s why I think you might care.”
“He has something the Antecessors need,” said Ubik, brushing his hand against the wall as he walked. “Naturally, they won’t risk his life until they get it. Then they’ll kill him or throw him out of an airlock. Either way, I’m sure he’s fine.” He switched to a more haughty voice. “Probably making notes about it for a series of edifying lectures to be released on the net. My life as the toy of our new galactic overlords.”
“Could you save him, if you wanted to?” asked a voice from behind him.
Ubik turned to look at Leyla, her face expressing curiosity rather than sarcasm.
“Why do you care?” said Ubik. “Don’t you hate men?”
“We don’t hate men,” said Weyla. The two sisters were marching side by side behind him and PT. They moved surprisingly quietly, didn’t seem to be in a rush to get to the action, and, so far, hadn’t bothered to join the conversation. “Not all men.”
These two felt they owed PT some kind of life-debt. He had helped them survive their forced claiming by the wormhole, and now they were going to follow him around until they saved him back, whether he needed saving or not. That’s what you got for helping people.
“Ah, yes, of course, I forgot. You were in love with one of us. And then he dumped you.”
Weyla’s mouth twitched and her eyes sank into her face. “You know nothing about him.”
“True,” said Ubik in a whimsical tone as he tried to conjure up the image of the kind of man willing to pursue a woman of the Corps. “But looking at the way your face goes from cold, hard killer to nettle-chewing pufferfish, I can see why he’d have second thoughts and leave town in the middle of the night.”
Advertisement
“My face isn’t puffy.”
“Ignore him,” said Leyla. “He’s trying to rile you.”
There was a sound from ahead of them. A tortured scraping as though some large door was slowly being forced open.
“How far is that sound coming from?” said PT.
“Not far,” said Leyla.
“How did you know he left in the middle of the night?” mumbled Weyla.
“Hmm?” said Ubik. “Oh, cheaper off-world space flights if you book pre-dawn. He wouldn’t want to waste any of the money on unnecessary expenses.”
“What money?” said Weyla, a sharpness creeping into her voice.
“The money the Corps paid him to abandon you,” said Ubik.
There was a moment of silence before Weyla exploded. “What the hell are—”
“Don’t,” said PT, turning to stop Weyla from attacking Ubik. “He’s just making things up to annoy you. It’s what he does to amuse himself when he’s bored.”
“I’m not making it up,” said Ubik. “How often do you think men come along and try to seduce the ladies of the Corps? As a challenge, as a form of revenge, out of true love? Quite the badge of honour, to have one of them as a notch on your bedpost. And if the Corps did nothing about it, all they’d have left would be the lesbians and the ones with really bad hygiene issues. Standard Corps policy — buy off the lotharios. Pretty effective, from what I’ve heard. Right, Leyla?”
Leyla frowned but didn’t respond.
Weyla looked at her. “Is this true? Did they buy him off?”
Leyla looked at the ground.
“Judging by how guilty she looks,” said Ubik. “I expect she was the bagman.”
Leyla continued to find the area around her feet to be fascinating.
“Leyla?”
Leyla’s fists clenched and then she blurted out: “It… it was for the best. If he hadn’t taken the money, then that, that, that would prove his heart was true. But he did. He did take it.”
Now both women were staring at the ground. They continued down the ramp in silence, only the screech of metal on metal from below to be heard.
“Did you really have to do that?” asked PT.
“No,” answered Ubik. “Better out than in, though, as my Grandma always says.” He looked back at the two women. “She’s right, though. You find out about people when they’re tested. Not testing them and telling yourself they would pass is no help to no one. You should thank your sister.”
Weyla looked up and scowled at him. He gave her a thumbs up to help keep her buoy her spirits. He understood the difficulty in dealing with the shame and anger of being let down. How could you possibly accept it as a good thing? But reliable people were very rare, and the quicker you confirmed who was and who wasn’t, the better.
“We have to be careful about what we find down here,” said Ubik.
“Careful how?” said PT.
“Have you ever been to prison?” asked Ubik. “Locked up with a bunch of sweaty men in an enclosed space with very poor washing facilities and an uncomfortably high level of sexual tension. Actually, life onboard your ship was probably a lot like—”
“No,” said PT. “I haven’t been to prison.”
“Oh, well, I can tell you, being locked up for a long time can do strange things to people. Like our prisoner friend. Even if you’re an alien being of immense power and ability, a few thousand years of solitary confinement and it’s going to do things to you, head-wise. I mean, just look at the interior decorating in here. Black, grey, bit of purple. It’s a very aggressive colour scheme.”
Advertisement
“What point are you trying to make, Ubik?” asked PT.
“I’m saying that even though we got sent down here to turn off a switch or whatever, chances are that there’s more to it than that.”
“Yes,” said PT. “Once we do what it wants, it’s going to kill us all and go off to reconquer the galaxy. I don’t think anyone thinks otherwise.”
“Sure,” said Ubik. “That’s a given. What I’m talking about is why it wants us to turn off the switch.”
“So it can escape?” said Leyla, rejoining the conversation.
“You really think the Antecessors who locked it up would leave such an easy way out for their greatest enemy? Or that they’d send us here if that was a possibility? I don’t know if you have much experience with battle strategies in the Corps, but thinking through the worst-case scenarios before you set off on a course of action—”
“Thanks, we get it,” said Weyla. “You’re very smart and we’re all very dumb.”
“Wow,” said Ubik. “You really do get it. And so quickly.”
“Then why does it want us to turn off the sigil?” asked PT
Ubik shrugged. “How do I know? I’m not psychic. Hey, do you have any psychics in the Corps? I’ve heard they exist, but I’ve never seen one, so, mmm, I’m not convinced. What can they do, tell you what number you’re thinking of?”
“There are three psychics in the Corps,” said Weyla.
“Weyla!” her sister snapped at her.
“What? What are they going to do to me? Throw me out? Have me killed? Pay me to shut up?”
“Three? Wow.” If there really were psychic powers produced by organics, Ubik would have expected the Corps to have even more influence over the galaxy then they already had. It depended on what those powers were, of course.
“They keep them hidden in secret locations,” said Weyla. “No one knows what they do or how they do it, but they have a very high level of protection and we win every battle by making the right call. So that speaks for itself.”
PT was looking at Ubik with a weary face. “This is why you wanted to turn her against the Corps? Intel?”
“No,” said Ubik. “It’s not even useful intel. When am I ever going to bump into their psychics? And it’s not like they can predict what I’m going to do. It’s only a useful power if no one knows you have it. Otherwise, you can just not do what you were going to. You do something random instead. I was born with immunity.”
PT didn’t look convinced. Not that he ever did.
“We’re in a prison,” said Ubik. “Worse than a prison. A dungeon. Underground, dark — a place of torture to teach someone a lesson. Him.” Ubik looked up. “It. That thing. He’s been trapped here for a long time. He gave up on escaping a long time ago. You don’t last long if you hang onto hope. This is his home. He’s the master here, and we’re the new inmates. We have to take on a prison mindset if we want to survive.”
“What the hell is he talking about?” said Weyla.
PT shook his head. “He’s getting into character. He thinks this is a game.”
“Isn’t it?” said Ubik. “Don’t we have a quest to fulfil? Teams to beat?”
“No,” said PT. “You said so yourself. Whoever turns off the sigil, we all lose. There aren’t any prizes or the winner”
“Aah, I don’t know. I think you’re wrong,” said Ubik.
“It was your idea,” muttered PT.
“I think the game won’t be any fun unless we try to win. Conflict, battle, head-to-head competition. Gladiators in the arena. You know the worst thing about prison? The boredom. It is so, so dull! Our host wants some entertainment. Our job is to make sure he gets it.”
PT looked up, as though he might be able to see what Ubik was looking at. “So he’s going to give us some false hope, some incentives to fire us up?”
“Right, right, exactly. And that’s going to be our chance to turn the tables.” Ubik could sense it. An opportunity lurking in the dark, along with the dangers and disasters. It wouldn’t be any fun if there wasn’t any risk for the dungeon master. The house always wins, but no one had ever got ‘always’ to stick.
It was one of those words people used when they knew it didn’t apply. With caveats that completely nullified their meaning. Coupled with ‘unless’ and ‘except for’. Because it was good sales technique. Like saying, ‘I will always love you,’ but never showing you the opt-out clauses.
And in any crooked game, there was ‘always’ that small chance that the dice would inexplicably land the right way at the right time and someone would score big. Win the battle, lose the war. That was the trick. To only fight in battles, never in the wars.
There was a glow up ahead. The slope levelled out and there was an open area, filled with people. There were many archways going off from a central area, but they were closed off.
And there were large blocks, taller and wider than a person, being pushed around — making horrible noises as they were moved — by teams of Seneca and VendX personnel working together.
“Seems like they’ve decided to combine their strengths,” said PT. A little smugly, Ubik thought.
“You think so?” said Ubik. He took out the broken bracelet Ramon had given him and scoped out a finger of purple goo. He looked at the wall to his right, scanning up and down, and then stepped forwards and smeared his finger in a straight vertical line.
There was a purple glow.
One of the archways made a loud click, and the barrier blocking the way fell, revealing a long tunnel.
Everyone working hard to shift blocks suddenly stopped. There was a moment of inaction, and then orders were barked and they all ran, pushing and shoving to get there first. In a few seconds they were all gone, but their screams and shouts could still be heard.
“See?” said Ubik. “Let the games begin.”
“Yes,” said PT. “But the Fourth didn’t do that, you did.”
“I know. But he isn’t the only one who wants to be entertained.” Ubik wiped the wall and the opened archways slammed shut. Another archway opened. “Let’s try this way.”
Advertisement
- In Serial96 Chapters
When Plush comes to Shove
An: So the last synopsis wasn’t really all that good, it was just some mumbo jumbo with no actual point to it so I decided to make a new one that’s a bit more accurate. Leo Lush, just your average everyday (slightly chubby) schmuck, or at least he would be if he didn’t carry around a stuffed toy everywhere he went.I mean, he was a man who could read the atmosphere a bit so put it away in his bag whenever having a stuffed toy out would be rude but other than that he brought it with him all the time, it was a memento from his girlfriend who had died three years ago and keeping it close made him feel better. That’s also why his classmates gave him the nickname “Plush”, though that's neither here nor there. One day at the train station he’d lost his dearest stuffed toy, one of his classmates found it and lobbed it towards him, something that they’d already done many times before, but this time something went wrong and Leo found himself falling in front of the train due to the force of the throw. Now follow Leo as the spirit that developed in his stuffed toy and killed him forces his ghost into another world to possess a different stuffed toy. He doesn’t know much about the world or why he’s there but what he does know is that according to a magic book his girlfriend was also sent to this very world when she died in a plane accident three years ago. An: For those who want to know a bit more about what kind of story this will be: I want it to be a chill feel-good story and stay as far away from those despair-fest stories as possible (No offense to people who enjoy them, I’m just not one of you)Let me make something clear; I’m not writing this story with hope of it becoming really top tier among RRL (Though it did get above rank 500 once which I’m still very proud of even though it’s gone back down to ~850 at the time of writing this) I just want to write a story that I would enjoy reading, that’s why I’ll be mostly skipping over a lot of the parts that I skip when I read other stories, such as stats, the exact value of money and other such precise statistics that no one(as far as I’m aware) really cares about all that much. Just feels like a lot of effort for something superfluous.There’s a single exception and that’s one of the battles, it’s not a despair-fest or anything but it’s got a different feel than the rest of the story due to me being in a funky mood while I was writing it.
8 203 - In Serial29 Chapters
Angel of Death
While walking home from a hospital visit to his dying girlfriend, Cody happens across a mysterious jewel-clad book whose pages tell of powerful and frightening """"Soulless Ones,"""" and the means by which he could become one. Spurred by hope to save the love of his life, Cody finds it a small price to cast out his soul if it means she can be saved.Had he only read the book more thoroughly, however, he would have seen that the price of becoming a soulless one was far higher than he had believed.
8 223 - In Serial10 Chapters
Magician's Pact
A young boy with a special key finds himself caught up with an old wizard, an ancient prohpecy, and a possibly conspercy. This sounds like the sort of thing most childern would love to be a part of, but there are just three small problems. The first is that he is not the hero. Someone already got that role. The second is that he isn't a wizard. He is a Magician which complicates things. The third is that there might be a chance that the whole 'problem' might be comming from his end. Personally he never understood (or interacted with) the 'secret' magical world, but that becomes a problem when the magical world apparently has what his role is supposed to be according to their ancient book... and they are not to happy about him not matching their book. Still it shouldn't be to hard right? All he has to do is go to a school, learn some wizard magic, make sure nobody takes his key... also avoid dying. Thankfully he has had a lot of expereince with that last part and a bunch of Twig Twirling childern can't be too dangerious? Right?
8 105 - In Serial12 Chapters
A Canopy of Stars
Arden, planet of a billion souls, has been destroyed. A solar body, known only as The Dark Star collided with the world, shattering it. Through the actions of ancient heroes, and the sacrifice of the Gods, life found a way. Floating through the black sea of space, orbiting the destructive beauty of The Dark Star is Shatter, a coalition of continental rocks, surviving as best they can. Through magic and technological advancements, the fractured remnants of the planet have been made halfway habitable. In addition to shattering the prime material plane of Arden, The Dark Star’s destructive force also fractured the planar system, collapsing ancient barriers and forcing the wild elemental and chaotic magics of the planes into conjunction. The Kingfisher, helmed by the enigmatic and powerful Captain Thunder and her miscreant crew, do odd jobs to survive, operating outside of the law. One such job takes them to the shard of Evergreen, a fragment of planet covered in brilliant forests and the capricious and deadly faerie folk who call them home. Unfortunately, while the job seems simple enough from the outside, it quickly embroils the crew of the Kingfisher in a dangerous storm. Can Thunder and her crew keep to the sidelines when war is brewing around them?
8 145 - In Serial40 Chapters
The Demon and the Beast
As darkness descends upon the little town of Wadena, so does a hungry Demon looking for its next prey... Andrew Cross is one of the many police officers trying to catch the creature terrorizing his town. He has always led a simple life of trying to do what was expected of him and not wavering from the path that was set for him. But after he comes face to face with the Demon his life is forever changed. The line between good and bad suddenly becomes less clear and he is forced to rethink his morals and everything he has been taught. He is suddenly forced to figure out what he wants and who he wants to be. Will he find the Demon again? And will he still be himself when he does? This is M/M fantasy! There is only one sex scene though and the romance part is only a side thing. It is heavily story focused.
8 148 - In Serial8 Chapters
tAGs AnD wAGs!!!!????????
I have too many Tags piled up!! Gotta go and finish them!!!!! UGHHHH!!!????????????
8 205

