《The Last Human》93 - Easier Than It Looks
Advertisement
Agraneia held out her hand to the xeno lying on the prison floor.
Eolh took it. His feathers brushed against her scales, and it made her skin shiver. Not with disgust, though she did feel an instant shock of instinctual repulsion. But when that faded, all she could think was how strange, to touch another person who looks like this.
How different.
The only feathers she had touched before were those of hunting birds, and the chopped fowl bought at the markets. Even then, their feathers were nothing like Eolh’s.
His black down was silky to the touch, and the branches - the barbules that filled the contoured shape of his finger feathers - were soft even where they were molting. Some of them were losing their black luster from the lack of nourishment.
But then, Agraneia probably didn’t look so good either.
“You saved my life,” Eolh said, as Agraneia pulled him up to his feet. He was surprisingly light, for someone of his size. He was stringy with muscle, and one of his hands had been cut off, leaving only a stump. It looked well healed, barely scarred at all. Maybe he had lived with it for many years.
“I guess I owe you one,” Eolh said, looking up at Agraneia.
She blinked.
Everything he had said to her. All those nights, he had talked, even when she would not - could not - open her mouth to talk back. The stories he had told her. Even if they were lies, they were lies told for her benefit. To make her feel better. And all the bruises and blood and broken bones he had suffered, when he could have left…
“No, corvani. Now we are even.”
Eolh shifted uncomfortably.
“Come on,” he said. “There isn’t time to waste.”
They pulled the Big One’s body into the cell, and shut the door. The door out of the prison block was still ajar. Eolh called the ‘all clear.’
It was nothing more than an alcove at the top of the stairs, with a wooden stool, and a cramped row of lockers made of wood. Agraneia could have bashed it open with her fist, but Eolh stopped her.
He pulled out the keys that had been dangling around the Big One’s belt. When had he stolen those?
One by one, he opened each of the wooden lockers. Mostly, they found soldiers’ uniforms. One was full of Agraneia’s old gear. Her gun was missing, of course. But her boots, stiff and caked with mud were still there. The hilt of her long knives sticking out of the sides.
She ran her fingers over her old uniform. Just touching it made her skin crawl. This was the reason, wasn’t it? The cause of all her problems.
“Put it on,” Eolh said. “It’s a good disguise.”
He was right, she knew. But still...
Agraneia swallowed down her distaste, and began to tear off her prisoner’s rags. Eolh turned away, embarrassed, as she undressed herself and slid her arms into the sleeves of the uniform, buttoning it up automatically, as she had done thousands of times before.
When she was done, Eolh was fitting something onto his hand. “Idiots,” he said, shaking his head in disbelief. “I can’t believe they just left this here.”
He held his hand up. A metal hand. Each finger, flexing individually. Smooth, as if the hand were not metal at all, but something organic.
Old tech.
But it was only a hand.
There was something else, hanging around his neck. A pair of goggles, it looked like. They didn’t look special, but the way he carefully slipped them carefully over his neck - maybe they’re sentimental. She couldn’t see any other reason why he would want a pair of old goggles. Thrass was a cloudy planet, and the wind wasn’t very fierce here.
Advertisement
Eolh swiped another soldier’s uniform, and winced as he stuck his arms into the sleeves. Agraneia could see where his shoulder must be fractured. When he was done, he looked awkward. All those feathers jutting out of the uniform only made him more conspicuous.
“You can’t wear that,” she said.
“Am I not good enough to join your military?” he crowed bitterly.
“You’ll stand out.” She looked around the small alcove, and spotted a black raincoat spread over the guard’s stool. Obviously, it had once belonged to the Big One, but he wouldn’t need it anymore.
“I’m not wearing that.” Eolh’s face twisted with disgust. It was surprising. Almost entrancing, how much emotion he could display at the corners of his beak. What a strange-looking species he was.
“Why not? It’ll hide your feathers.”
“That was his.”
“And now it’s yours. There isn’t time to argue. We have to leave the city. Now.”
“Fine.” Eolh took the coat from her hands, and started to put it on. It was long, and went down to past his knees. Four brass buttons held it together on either side.
“I’m not leaving the city yet,” Eolh said.
“What do you mean? You begged me to come with you. To get out of here.”
“I didn’t beg. I urged.”
Agraneia blew a frustrated breath through her nose. Were all avians this ornery?
Eolh said, “I came here to find two people. One, I made a deal with.”
“And the other?”
The corners of the avian’s beak lifted into a slight smile. “The other is my ward. The human. I’m his guardian, supposedly. Or one of them, at least. Which means I have to find him. Which means, I have to find the Tribune. Kirine will know where Poire went.”
“A politician?” Agraneia’s eyes narrowed. She felt a pang in her chest. Not quite anger, but something close.
Eolh held his hands up, the metal hand perfectly mirrored the real, in a gesture of appeal, “Hold on. It’s not like that. The Tribune… he’s different. At least, he might be, and that’s all I’ve got to go on. But he made a promise to me, and I’m going to hold him to it. If he’s still alive, that is.”
“So,” Agraneia grunted. “After weeks of being in prison, and getting nearly beaten to death, you finally get out. And you want to go right back in?”
“Yes.”
This bird - this avian - really did have a death wish.
But then again…
So did she.
“Fine.”
“Fine? No arguments?”
“I’m coming with you.”
“I can’t ask you to do that for me.”
“There’s someone I need to help, too. And you look like you know how to get in places you shouldn’t be.”
“Huh,” Eolh cocked his head. Those black, glittering eyes boring into hers. “You know, I kinda took you for a loner.”
“Hmm,” Agraneia said, not really answering him.
“So, whose your person?”
“A scribe. A weakling, who did what I could not. He stood against us.”
“Any idea where he is? Any idea where they keep political prisoners?”
“More prisons. Follow me.” She was about to say, “And keep your head down,” But Eolh was already pulling the hood of his raincoat over his face, trying to keep his large, black beak out of sight.
This one was smart. Smarter than the people she was used to dealing with.
Agraneia lead the way, moving as quietly as she could through the rest of the prison block. There were no other guards on duty tonight, which was odd. Most of the prisoners were sleeping, and those that weren’t, didn’t want to start a fight with a cyran of Agraneia’s size. Too many weeks spent in the brig had done little to atrophy her muscles.
Advertisement
Agraneia and Eolh walked through all the prison blocks on the top floor. Then, they went downstairs, and checked those rows too.
No luck. No sign of the scribe at all.
“Two other prisons we can check. Two that I know of.”
“How do we get there?”
“Quietly,” she grunted.
It was the middle of the night, which meant it was raining. Sseran Thay City had few streetlamps, given that it was only meant to be occupied temporarily, and they avoided what lights they could. Eolh seemed at ease in the dark alleys between the ramshackle huts built by locals, and the newer, brick and mortar buildings that were already cracking from the moisture. She found that the avian was surprisingly good at picking his hiding spots, and even though he was limping, Agraneia didn’t have to slow down for him.
Still, there were too many patrols out. They swept the streets, far more frequently than she was used to.
Once, they stepped out of an alley between the shabby, collapsing buildings of the locals, and almost ran into a full cohort of soldiers. They were dragging six, heavy gun emplacements. Teams of soldiers hauling dozens of rope lines attached to cannons. The cannons’ wheels kept getting stuck in the mud, or in the grooves in the gravel roads, and the soldiers were splashing in the muddy water, trying to shovel the wheels out.
Other soldiers were setting up sandbags and other battlements. All aimed at the gate.
What the hells? Agraneia thought.
“What is it?” Eolh said.
“Something is coming,” she said. “Soon.”
“What do you mean? What are they doing?”
“They’re getting ready for an assault.”
But the only assault that would come from the gate… would be cyran. Agraneia had a sick feeling in the pit of her stomach, brought on by a new understanding. Was this why they kept me alive? Did they think I would fight for them?
Cyran against cyran.
No matter who won here, she knew who would lose. Every dullscale. And even the glitterskins who were low on the ladder. All fodder for some pointless machine. All, going to the same place.
For no damn reason.
They stopped, just inside the mouth of an alley. The low, leafy roof of a bamboo hut obscured them both from the view out there. Eolh was crouched low, leaning against a building and trying to gather his breath.
Agraneia stared out at the brick facade of the prison. There were dozens of tiny windows, evenly spaced along the wall. Each one, covered in bars. The same layout as our prison.
That would make it easier.
But because they were closer to the gate, the prison block was littered with guards and soldiers. This prison was just off the main road - the only paved road in Sseran Thay City. Through the next set of buildings, she could see the soldiers lining up. Taking on positions, as if they were waiting for something to come through the gate.
As if it would come at any minute.
A patrol of greenfins, standing nervously close to each other, gripping their rifles too tight, passed by the mouth of their alley. Headed towards the gate.
Agraneia tucked herself back into the darkness of the alley. It was cramped, and rain poured off the roof, onto her shoulder.
“Well,” Eolh’s voice rasped over her shoulder, “How do we do this?”
“Don't know.”
“You could go ask them where your friend is.”
She blinked. Gave Eolh a frown, “You want me to just ask them?”
Just the thought of it made her breath catch.
“Sure, why not? As far as they know, you’re with them.”
“And then what?”
“I can do the rest.” He said, flexing the fingers of his metal hand.
This wasn’t the kind of thing she did.
Give me a jungle, to hide in. Give me a target to kill. She could be quiet, but not like this.
“I’m not like you,” she said. “The lies don’t come easily for me. I can’t make up stories like you, about gods or prisoners or whatever.”
The avian sighed heavily.
“Look. You’re a soldier, right? Just act like it. That’s all you’re doing. Soldier’s rounds, prisoner inspection. Tell them you have orders to interrogate one of them. It’ll work.”
She stared at him, a moment longer.
“Probably,” he shrugged.
Agraneia gritted her teeth. Rounded her shoulders, and stood straight. And walked out of the alley, and into the light.
***
The dullscales stared at her, sour expressions on their faces.
There were four of them, huddled under the awning above the door, trying to stay out of the rain. Their rifles were slung over their shoulders, or strapped lazily in front of them, so they could rest their hands. None of them looked happy to see her. Only one of them, a striped one with pale white scales and dark stripes, saluted her. The others were chewing tobacco, and staring dully at her, or down the road towards the gate.
She could feel the nervous tension permeating their group. Friends, these soldiers were. They knew what was coming.
Agraneia saluted back. She heard someone spit.
Before she could say anything, the striped one said, “We’ve already got orders.”
Another said, “We’re staying put. I’m not going up with the rest of the fodder.”
She couldn’t blame them. This one would be bloody. The best possible chance for them was to stay out of the way.
“Not here to give orders,” Agraneia said.
“Then what?”
She ran through all the other words she had conjured up. All the answers to the questions they might ask. She could feel herself sweating, more than the heat asked for. Could feel her pulse quickening. Waiting for them to notice who she was. To call her out.
“I’m looking for someone,” she said awkwardly, “A... prisoner.”
The striped one tilted his head back towards the prison. “Well, they’re all in there.”
Agraneia almost went in, and then she remembered. “And the Tribune. Do you know where he is?”
The striped one’s eyes flashed. Suspicious. “That’s classified.”
“Classified my ass,” one of the other dullscale guards said. “Everybody knows where the General’s keeping him. Prefect’s tent, so they can keep a nice eye on him.”
“Thank you.”
And that was it. She saluted them, they saluted back - a bit more eagerly, now that they realized she wasn’t going to make them move.
And then, Agraneia simply walked inside.
As easy as the avian said it would be.
The scribe was on the top floor. He was sleeping. Agraneia had to watch him a long time to see his chest rise.
She left without waking him, just in case his excitement gave it away. She remembered the cell block he was in, and then headed back outside to find Eolh.
On the way back out, she heard voices. She paused, at the door, listening.
Officers. Glitterskins, shouting at the guards.
“Get back to the front!”
“We already got our orders!” the dullscales were digging in their heels.
“Well, you got new orders, dullscale!” An officer shouted back. A desk jockey with too much confidence, thanks to his perfectly trimmed uniform. He looked like one of the Prefect’s understudies, fresh from the Academy. “Or have you forgotten that I am your superior? I think not. Do as you are ordered!”
Agraneia stepped out, hoping their argument would keep the officer from noticing her. The door creaked as she shoved it open.
All their heads turned to stare at her.
The officer’s face flittered through several emotions. First he saw her. Then he stared at her. Then, his face was filled with a vague recognition. He opened his mouth, about to point at her, when one of the dullscales spat into the mud, splattering the officer’s boot with tobacco juice.
“Fuck this. I’m not going to die for some shit stain glitterskin. You go up there, if you’re so keen.”
And the soldier turned on his heel, and stalked off into the night. The others looked at him. Looked at the officer. And then, they followed their insubordinate compatriot in solidarity.
“Soldiers!” The officer shouted at him. Ineffectual. “You! Dullscales! Get back here right now!”
Agraneia slipped away into the night.
Advertisement
- In Serial72 Chapters
Alpha Physics - Post Apocalyptic LitRPG
A LitRPG Post Apocalyptic Novel. I would just like to thank everyone who has left comments and suggestions. I am confident that your feedback has made this a better series. Book 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 are now on Amazon unlimited!!!!! Book 6 is currently being published and will be pulled down in the first week of August. I have also left the first two chapters of book 1 up as sample chapters for those who have not read the series yet. Word of warning the first third of the book is apparently very slow and then gets a lot better. Synopsis In the apocalypse, the first weapon he’ll have to upgrade is himself. The end of the world as we know it couldn’t come at a worse time for Adrian. One minute, he’s an operations manager who’s overseeing a construction job in the wilderness. The next, an unknown energy force changes the very nature of life itself, from the smallest organism to the top of the food chain. The earth’s surviving inhabitants, its environment, and the very laws of physics have all undergone fundamental transformations. Many of those changes aren’t pretty. Plenty of them are deadly. Luckily for Earth, this has happened to other species before, and everyone receives an interface that survivors of similar events have used to navigate through an alien landscape. Adrian’s going to need every advantage he can get. He’s stranded in the middle of nowhere, there are days, maybe weeks of travel between him and his family, and in a world full of monsters and mayhem, survival means beating the learning curve…
8 157 - In Serial48 Chapters
Heart of Fire
Five stones, two estranged siblings, one ex-fiance, and not one spark to protect herself. Syra is the firstborn heir to the Montari Dragon Clan. She is also a flameless runt--a fact her younger siblings, Cassius and Petra, often repeat. But, she is also a Lightblood. Blessed with high affinity to the land's mana flow, her magical prowess is her one redeeming quality. But when the Ignis dragon, Marrak, attacks the neighboring human kingdom and kills her father, it is her trademark skill that provides hope: shapeshifting. Nine years after she infiltrated the human city, Marrak resurfaces. With her cover blown, she's sent into foreign lands to hunt down five powerful crystals and stop him from rebuilding the weapon that would leave him invincible, and both human and dragon lands destroyed. But war is brewing in the human kingdom. Social unrest is shaking every city and the web of rebellion is on the hunt for Lightbloods, making her a glowing target. Enemy ears are everywhere and secrets run deep, even in the people closest to her. And as a wyrmling who can't breathe fire, she is left with bickering twins and a bitter prince in a world where monsters don't always wear scales. **Contains depictions of: PTSD, substance abuse, child abuse**
8 71 - In Serial20 Chapters
War, Honor and Vengeance
In a world where there is no right or wrong, justice and injustice, good or evil, it is the world where only the strong persists while the weak slaves. A world filled with lies, treachery and betrayal. There is no two way. Only one way. One way to either Hell or Heavens. Some call it Destiny, some call it Providence, others call it The God’s Will. But I call it Fate. My arch-nemesis. Something so invisible, out-of-reach and strong, that no matter how much you fight, there seems no end. But tell me, will you succumb to your fate, as others rise on it. Tell me, will you let your family, your children, your wives be slaughtered and slaved on this so-called Fate. No. War. In a world where lives are nothing more than livestock, either you rise up and rule in passion or go down in flames. Will you stay mum and accept this so-called Fate and be slaughtered by your enemies, or will you rise up. Wealth, fame, fortune, desires are not ever-lasting. Only War is eternal. Vengeance. In a world where with no rights and wrong, the weak would be preyed upon while the strong will wreak havoc. But, will you accept your fate of being weak…. No. You rise up and exact revenge for all the wrongs done to you. You rise for Vengeance. Honor. Honor… something which runs deep within our blood, but yet forgotten in dust. Something, so intangible, so frail, yet so over-powering. Villains justify it as useless, Lords deem it as unnecessary and Kings mock it as worthless, but yet, it flows ever so deeply within. Deeply… like our thirst of wealth and power. Without this so-called useless, worthless and unnecessary piece of intangible force, we, as Knights are nothing but mere foot soldiers. So, rise up! Rise Up! RISE UP, my Knights. For War! For Vengeance! For Honor!!!! ………………………………………………………… The release rates are going to be a bit sloppy with my college entrance exams upcoming, so please don’t be angry, my avid readers. I also want to inform you that my college entrance exams are coming up and so, I wont be making regular updates like Im doing now and the chapters will generally be around 1.5-1.7k. Along with that, Im inclined to inform you that, the story will be progressing slowly, so be ready to wait. The promised release date will be every Tuesday, generally at 7:00pm (IndianST) and there will be a guarantee of 7 chapters per week. Not one bit less but if you want more, well ...well...
8 146 - In Serial399 Chapters
For Irision - Book One and Two Complete!
Book One: Labeled as both traitors and heroes, Aries and her Space Corps trainee crew try to reestablish their lives after being imprisoned by the Council after disregarding their orders and trying to rescue the inhabitants of a doomed planet. Book Two: Forced to leave the place they once called home, Crew 761 must now come to terms with their own losses and try to rescue the person they left behind. Once more, they’ve been labeled both traitors and heroes but this time, they plan to earn the titles. New chapters every Tuesday!
8 132 - In Serial25 Chapters
The Mob in His Novel
Through his hard work, Arthur Bennett has achieved what he thought was the pinnacle of life: wealth, prestige, and power. However, achieving those came with a price; he lost everything and everyone he loved. One day, out of boredom, he mindlessly wrote a fantasy novel filled with numerous clichés and superfluous conflicts. However, he never imagined he would be reincarnated into that world after his death. No, not as the protagonist, not even as an important supporting character, but instead, he became a mob in his novel. Will Arthur use his abilities and knowledge as the author to make the right decisions and make it through the end, despite the fact that there was a greater, more powerful threat that he was unaware of even as the author? ==========-I will also be posting it on Webnovel, Scribblehub, and Tapas (TBA) under the same name
8 260 - In Serial175 Chapters
Phelps twins imagine!
Hi! I just wanted to write this just for fun! I love George and Fred. Why not write a imagine about Oliver and James? What could go wrong? I hope you all enjoy this story!
8 109

