《Infamous》Chapter Forty: Unwanted Vacation
Advertisement
Bain felt... groggy.
Cracking his eyes open, he blinked hard, sitting up and encountering something obstructing him. Rubbing at his eyes, he blearily looked around at the large cave he was in.
What had happened again? Nahma had fired the death beam, he'd protected Stitches, and then... darkness. He had the faintest recollection of letting Stitches know he'd been fine, but after that everything was a giant black blur.
Shaking his head, he tried to stand and failed. Something was holding him down. Looking down blearily, Bain blinked hard, squinting at the ropy thing keeping him from moving. It felt familiar, and it was a moment before it clicked. His eyes widened. "Nahma?"
A dim yellow light suffused the cave, and Bain covered his eyes, acidic tears building up in the corners from the unexpected stimulus.
When his eyes finally adjusted to the light, he discovered one of Nahma's antennae wrapped around his waist, looping several times to ensure that he would only move where and when Nahma wanted him to. The walls were writhing with sheddings holding casual conversation, and in front of him, Nahma was playing cards with the young monster girl with the tentacle-hair.
It was a bit surreal, and he wasn't completely sure he wasn't still asleep for a moment. The enormous centipede was using telekinesis to hold his cards, the young monster was holding hers with her tentacles, and a small stack of the brightly colored narwhal-themed cards was between both of them.
No, he was pretty sure he was still asleep.
Nahma glanced over at him and rumbled, "I am glad to see you awake, Bain. I am presently losing." The young monster waved her cards at him happily.
Looking down, Bain saw a hand of cards lying in front of his feet, face down. Coughing, he asked hesitantly, "Did you win? Did you beat him?"
Nahma snorted. "Of course I beat him. There is nothing left of him."
Bain nodded contemplatively. "Got it. So what am I doing here? I should be up in my territory helping people out."
Gently shaking his head, Nahma replied, "No, you shouldn't. You have been injured several times, so we are having a break from being a hero. Also, I am registered as a hero now."
Bain's eyes widened as he sat up. "Wait, what!? No, I've wanted to be a hero my whole life!"
Nahma glared at him, and Bain took a step back. He'd never seen Nahma even remotely annoyed at him - it was a new experience, to say the least. "I am aware you have desired heroism, Bain. And I have supported you along that path. But you lost an arm, you were attacked by those three-" he growled something utterly unintelligible. "-and then was injured from the meat monster. I will allow you to return to your territory after a short vacation, which we will spend having fun in some form or another. I heard cards were a good activity to perform during vacations."
Advertisement
It was very surreal.
Bain leaned forwards, arguing, "But Dad-"
Nahma's eyes narrowed. "Don't call me that."
It hit Bain like a truck. "Wh-what?"
Nahma continued, waving one of his front legs around. "I have noticed that you only call me Dad either when I need comforting, or when you wish to convince me of something. I do not presently need comforting, so you are trying to persuade me to allow you to return. I will not. Pick up your cards."
Bain picked up his cards.
Looking up cautiously, he asked, "What are we playing?"
The young monster girl looked up. "Do you have any fours?"
Nahma sighed, ignoring Bain's expression of surprise. He'd never heard the girl speak before. A card floated into the air and into her tentacles, and she beamed. "Go fish!"
Looking at Bain tiredly, Nahma told him, "I have lost five out of five games. I do not believe I am very good at Go Fish."
Speaking slowly, Bain said, "I think it's the sort of thing that takes practice."
Nahma nodded thoughtfully. "Very well. Then I will practice frequently. I have plenty of time to spare, since you are gone all the time."
Bain noticed the hint of irritation at the edges of Nahma's voice as the centipede pulled everyone's cards to him, shuffling them in a complex pattern of telekinesis. He thought about it some more, feeling a little uncomfortable. "Nahma," he asked cautiously, "Are you lonely?"
Nahma stared up at the ceiling, the cards pausing in their movement. "Lonely. A noun describing an unfulfilled desire for company. Yes, I suppose I am."
Bain stared at his claws. Why was it that people could shout names at him all day for being a monster and never get under his skin, and yet Nahma only had to say two sentences and a word to make him feel like a bad guy? "Dad-" He caught Nahma's expression and hurriedly switched. "I mean Nahma. Why didn't you ask me to stick around?"
Nahma frowned at him, dealing everyone's cards. "You wanted to be a hero. I respected that decision. You seemed happy to be in that place, even after the corpse betrayed you. What is it about the tunnels that you like less than their tower?"
Bain's torso was stabbed by a shaft of guilt and he almost coughed in surprise. "I don't hate the tunnels!"
The young monster girl spoke quietly, rearranging her cards. "Nahma didn't say you did. He said you liked the tower more." She looked up at him and smiled. "My name is Hetty now. I am working on my confidence because I am anxious around people."
Advertisement
Nahma nodded approvingly, returning his attention to Bain. "You left the tunnels on the day you became a hero and didn't come back down unless you required something of me or unless you were sad. I understood your being sad, but why is it that you spoke with Stitches and avoided me? Am I too violent for your tastes?"
He showed his considerable array of teeth as he said it, but Bain didn't flinch. Instead, he slumped. "Da-Nahma, I'm really sorry."
Nahma folded his front legs, settling in as he paid attention to Bain. Rubbing the back of his neck, Bain continued, "You've helped me through a lot. I mean, you adopted me, first off, but you did it right. I'm happy with the person I am today because you've taught me how to stand up for myself and how to not care what other people say about me."
Nahma relaxed somewhat, his legs lowering faintly. Bain hadn't even been aware that the giant centipede had been nervous - he'd always been invincible in Bain's mind, and it didn't seem right for him to be worried about anything. It hit him like a ton of bricks, and he reeled from the realization. "Wait, Nahma - do you think I'll leave you forever if you ask me to stop doing something?"
When Nahma didn't respond, the guilt intensified to the point of being physically painful, and he leaned forward, staring straight at Nahma's eyes. "Dad, that'll never happen." He realized what he'd said and backtracked. "I mean-"
"It's all right." Nahma turned back to the card game, but Bain saw the grin on his face. Nobody else would have been able to see the expression past the hooked mandibles and razor-sharp rows of teeth, but Bain knew his adopted dad better than anyone.
Hetty pointed at him. "See, now he's happy. Don't you like Nahma when he's happy?"
Bain smiled as the antennae wrapped around his waist unlooped, curling into its comfortable position behind Nahma's forehead-plate. "Yeah, I sure do."
Folding his legs, he picked up his cards, rummaging through them. "So," he started, "how do you play Go Fish?"
Nahma coughed loudly. "Actually, Hetty seems to a bit too good at Go Fish. I have another game in mind."
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Bain's eyes flicked back and forth across the four rows of cards in front of him, searching for a combination. In front of him, several stacks of cards ascending from ace upward were placed in a messy organization. In his upper left arm, Bain held a separate deck from which he pulled three cards, examined the top one, and then put all three to the side in obvious disgust.
Hetty's tentacles were holding all of her cards at the same time, her large golden eyes wide as she examined them for a pattern. Next to her, two tentacles had sprouted similar if not noticeably smaller eyes that were desperately looking through the second deck, yanking groups of three from its top and discarding them, occasionally selecting a card to add to the four columns in front of her. She looked up and growled fiercely at Nahma.
Nahma's antennae were twitching back and forth in a careful and yet incredibly fast series of telekinetic maneuvers, cards floating back and forth at blurring speeds as he selected his cards, every one of his seventy-four eyes looking back and forth between the stacks above the aces and his own cards. He didn't even have to look away - he could literally watch all of the subjects at the same time.
Whisking a king of hearts forward to finish a stack off, Nahma said with great satisfaction, "Pounce. I win."
Bain tossed his cards into the air, and Hetty hissed at hers. "You're cheating!"
Nahma grinned as smugly as a half-mile centipede could. "No, I am using my natural and supernatural abilities, much the same as you both are. If everyone is doing it, then it is not cheating."
Bain snorted. "Fine, then. We're all cheating."
Nahma laughed deeply, the gravelly rumble shaking the tunnels for quite some distance in every direction. "Very well. We are all cheating."
Chuckling, Bain watched Hetty as she pouted, her lip curling as she curled some of her tentacles around her body, then asked, "Is there anything else you guys want to do?"
Nahma considered the option, and Hetty chirped, "We could eat rats!"
Bain winced slightly. After having eating so much Tower food, he wasn't sure rats would ever taste the same.
Less than a minute later, he confidently retracted the thought.
Rats tasted amazing.
Advertisement
- In Serial75 Chapters
Carrion Knight [System abduction]
Raided as resources by a world with a [System] interface, Mathew and fellow abductees fight monsters for survival and territory. Making a home is only the start as the ability to administrate a [Class] gives him enough power to become a piece on the chessboard of native politics. Caught up in Earth's gamble with humanity, the survivors will determine the fate of two worlds. Need more to decide? I've got you covered. LitRPG / GameLit Multiple POVs A view into more status screens and interests, without sacrificing the central story. Power at a cost The struggle between survival and thriving Exploring the world one piece at a time I want to earn a readers trust and in turn, trust the reader. I trust that you put pieces together when I don't fill in all the blanks. I trust you to bite into the bittersweet and enjoy the grit. In any way I can think a story is better for trusting you I will endeavor to do so. Schedule 5 chapters a week, average 2500 words per chapter
8 238 - In Serial96 Chapters
Paranoid Mage
Attention Amazon: ID: PRI-PSCSXB97WPG Now on Book Two! Check the Volumes selector to make sure you start at the right place! Book One: Paranoid Mage Buy on Amazon! Callum had seen things all his life. There are monsters and beasts living among people, but he learned very early not to admit such things, not if he didn’t want people to think him crazy. It turns out that the supernatural is real, but at thirty Callum has no desire to be part of that secret. Not that he has a choice when it turns out he is a mage, albeit one that hasn’t cast any spells in all his life. There are requirements, duties, and education that the powers that be insist he be subject to. To hell with that. Book Two: Renegade Mage Buy on Amazon! After escaping from the Guild of Arcane Regulation and the Bureau of Secret Enforcement, Callum has lost his greatest protection: his obscurity. Now the powers that be know who he is, and hiding is harder than ever. Nor is hiding a plan, just a reaction. Now Callum is forced to decide how he wants to approach the supernatural world, and how he’s going to keep himself secure when the apparatus of government is arrayed against him. Even if he wanted to live as a mage, that bridge has been thoroughly burned, and even if he wanted to live as a normal person, he is far too deep to close his eyes to what he’s seen. He has to make his own terms. Paranoid Mage is an urban fantasy but it goes rather sideways from the normal stuff fairly quickly. Chapters are Fridays, 5PM EST, with approximately 5,000 words per chapter. Join our Discord!
8 176 - In Serial27 Chapters
Serenity of the Crow
Fena can’t die. To most, this might be considered a blessing. To others, a curse. Fena doesn’t really care what other people call it: for her, it’s reality. She’s content to keep her head down while working for the Mercenary Guild, but a new contract arrives that threatens to drag her back to a past she wants nothing to do with. Haunted by her own thoughts and a crow that never seems to shut up, Fena is caught between confronting her past and preventing it from ever happening again. Indigo is alone. Her adopted mother is gone, and the witch that never gets her pronouns right is currently the most popular researcher at the Royal Academy. Worse still, she suddenly finds herself with shoes to fill that are so enormous they’re more like a swimming pool, while that same witch flaunts a research project that could get them all killed. With the expectations of her entire sect weighing on her like a lead weight, will Indigo sink or swim? Can she stop the White Witch’s project before it’s too late? Or will the twisted politics of the Royal Academy prove too much? This is my first published story, so hopefully it goes well! I welcome constructive criticism, and I'd love to hear your thoughts and theories about where the story is headed! WARNINGS:This story contains references to depression, anxiety, panic attacks, self-harm, sexual abuse and manipulation. I WILL mark trigger warnings on the chapters that contain such content, but read at your own risk. Additionally there will be plenty of violence and gore but I promise to put it to good use. This series is also published on Scribblehub under the same name, Cover art by me Verification has been submitted by support ticket.
8 167 - In Serial20 Chapters
System Outcast
Ray just wanted his new job. He was bored of his old one but things never work out the way you want.When the world ends and Ray dies, he wakes up in a completely new one. It turns out the system wasn't ready for him to die yet, but why?
8 186 - In Serial77 Chapters
Lancastre Academy
Parker Gray leads a normal, home-schooled life. Or so he thinks. He begins noticing some odd things happening around the house and then hears his parents talking about him behind his back. Before he knows it, he's being shipped off to a boarding school he's never heard of and won't be able to come home for six years. Right as he starts to accept this, his parents drop him off at an abandoned subway station that is supposed to take him to this new school. The next thing he knows, Parker is being led into a world he didn't know even existed right alongside him. He learns amazing new things about himself and that someone he doesn't know has been keeping an eye on him. I am still in the process of writing book 4 and doing some editing. It will begin posting in the near future.
8 105 - In Serial8 Chapters
Ask lightbulb :D
Ask me questions cuz I'm bored
8 152

