《High Skies Piracy》Chapter 7: The Job, Part 1
Advertisement
Chapter 7: The Job
"Ain't no one got so much money they couldn't use a little more."
-Unknown.
Quintilla walked along the mud path which wound up the shrubby hill.
An old fortress stood on the top of that hill. Grand and sturdy, once, made from proper stonework. Simple, rugged, angular architecture indicative of the continent. Now, over two centuries after its construction, the stone was crumbling and choked with brambles. There were several gaps in the walls which had been plugged with wood, rocks, and other debris.
Eight guard towers overlooked the city below. These days, they served as sniper’s nests, when needs must.
The wooden gates set into the outer walls—over three meters in height—were open, with several of the governor’s personal home guard standing by, rifles shouldered. They wore red coats and angular hats to set themselves apart from the general populace.
Kurko’s heavy footfalls beat a steady rhythm behind her.
The guards gawked at him as they approached.
He wasn’t the subtlest type, that one. If this had been a covert endeavor, she would have brought somebody else. Yin, perhaps. Today, however, she could use the passive air of intimidation that his brawn offered.
She had caught a whiff of a new lead.
And it was in that accursed fucking fortress.
The guards stopped them before they could enter.
“Identify yourselves!” one of the guards said, no doubt trying to sound authoritative despite the quaver in his voice.
“Captain Quintilla Wenezian, of the Tits Up,” Quintilla said. “But you already know that, so stop wasting my time. I have business with the governor.”
The guard flinched.
My reputation has preceded me, then, she thought. Good. All this work is finally paying off.
“Alright, go ahead then,” the guardsman in charge said, and they all stepped aside to let them pass.
Quintilla and Kurko entered into the courtyard of the fortress, which placed them in shade of the beating sun. More guards watched them from the grounds and the walls. If things went wrong today, several dozen of them would come crawling out of the woodworks.
That was too many even for her and Kurko to handle.
She did, in fact, not have an audience with the governor. That had been pure fabrication. She had heard whispers, however. Rumors of a Valerian agent who had arrived in Tumba.
Which meant that, most likely, the empire had a job they needed doing.
The governorship had once been a title bestowed by the Valerian Dynasty. Indeed, they were the ones who had built the fort, and the ones who had founded the city of Tumba in a joint venture with the seafolk, although it had likely been called something different all those centuries ago.
Now, the Aiyek Archipelago was a free place, having cast off the yoke of monarchies and empires. The governor was a living remnant of the old times, a glorified clerk with just enough power to keep one half of the pirates in the city from killing the other half.
Advertisement
They were allowed into the interior of the fortress, Kurko stooping to squeeze through the narrow corridors. He bumped every other magelight with his big head, causing the little light to flit around wildly for a few moments and casting demented, moving shadows across the floor.
“Are you sure this is a good idea, Captain?” Kurko asked. His deep rumble of a voice echoed in the empty hallway.
“Good?” Quintilla asked. She grinned. “When have you known me to have any of those?”
“This is too dangerous. You should have sent me alone.”
“Learn to relax a little. I’m tough. You know that.”
Kurko grunted. “Not tough enough to survive a hailstorm of bullets.”
“It won’t come to that,” Quintilla assured him. “Just do as I say, and things will be fine. I’ve got rapport with old Orelius.”
“He hates your guts,” Kurko pointed out.
Quintilla shrugged. “And I hate him. But we do our little dance and we both get our jobs done. Perhaps you could take a page from that book with our new hiree, Mr. Lordling.”
“He’s untrustworthy.”
“So you think. I think differently, and I’m your captain. So you will allow him a place on my crew, and you will accept him until such a time as I say otherwise.”
Kurko blew a long plume of frigid air from his nostrils. “He’s weak.”
“He’s not weak,” Quintilla said firmly. “Just… understimulated. Spent his life at a fucking desk, what can you expect? But in the one day since landing on this island, he has not only doled out the street’s justice as according to our little Yin, but has also fist fought a fucking shark. What more do you want from the man?”
“He’s Concordian.”
“And you’re half Concordian. So stop whining.”
Kurko went quiet, and Quintilla nodded with satisfaction as she pressed on.
She proceeded up several flights of stairs, into the main wing of the fortress. She approached the governor’s office, and found two more guards posted outside, along with a pair of armed soldiers who certainly weren’t home guard. Their uniforms were light, and pinned to their chests were the golden sun insignia of the Valerian Dynasty. They were probably made of something a little more pedestrian, like brass, but they still struck a splendid image.
Her contact at Sweet Devil had been right, then.
The guards sized her up as soon as she got close, including the Valerian soldiers, and they moved their rifles into a more ready position.
“State your business,” one of the home guards said. “The governor is occupied. He isn’t seeing any of you riffraff today.”
“You must be mistaken,” Quintilla said, settling into a confident smirk. “Orelius has asked for me.”
Advertisement
Kurko stepped up behind her, and the guards backed up almost imperceptibly. The home guard steeled himself, however, drawing in a large breath and puffing out his chest.
“No, he hasn’t,” the guard said. “We would have been informed. Now, unless you want to end up in a cell, you will be escorted from the premises.”
In two long strides, Kurko was in front of Quintilla. He glared down at the guard with eyes that bugged out of his skull, nostrils flared. His breath froze the tips of the guard’s sparse mustache, and he seemed to shrink into himself, rifle trembling in his hands.
“Was that a threat?” Kurko asked, voice like rough sandpaper. “Or did I hear you wrong?”
Before Quintilla could tell him to stop, Kurko had three rifles pointed at him while the fourth fumbled with his.
The ornate door to the governor’s office came open. A small, bespectacled man stepped out, dark eyes half-hidden beneath bushy eyebrows.
A thinning ring of white hair contrasted his charcoal skin. His features were weathered with age, but tempered with the prolonging qualities of an honest, simple life. He wore a long, dark coat that split at his legs, embroidered with gold threads.
Orelius Chaesim, governor of Tumba and its territories.
“What is all this ruckus about?” the governor asked. His eyes, magnified by the glasses, took in the hallway with a glance. They fixed on Quintilla, and his frown deepened, forming creases around his eyes. “Oh. It’s you.”
He closed the door with a foot.
“Your ever loyal servant,” Quintilla said with a sarcastically exaggerated bow.
“Why are you here?”
“To see you.”
“I didn’t call you here.”
Quintilla smiled and spread her hands. “How fortunate, then, that I thought to come before you even figured to call upon me.”
Orelius snorted. He glanced inside his office. “You know I’d see you hanged for you impudence if it wasn’t for that deadeye of yours, don’t you?”
“I do. I also know that the rope would break before my neck. I’m more stubborn than I look?”
“More stubborn?” Orelius chuckled. “I cannot imagine it.” He sighed and rubbed his balding pate, hand shaky with age. “Fine. Come in, you parasite. But nothing that happens inside will leave you or your crew, got it?”
Quintilla nodded and walked towards the door.
Orelius held up a hand. “No, I’m not sure you do. Because if you speak a fucking word of this to anyone, paladins will come in the night and eviscerate you and yours. Won’t be a fucking speck left of you.”
Quintilla resisted the urge to roll her eyes. “Got it.”
Orelius glanced over his glasses up at Kurko. “And your… associate must stay here.”
Quintilla looked back at her first mate.
Kurko stiffened. His massive hands clenched into fists.
“You know I can’t agree to that, Captain,” he said. “You’ll be in danger in there. I have a duty to protect you.”
“You do,” Quintilla said. “But you also have a duty to do as you’re told. Right now, I’m telling you to stay put. You know me—I’ll be fine.”
She winked at Kurko and let the governor guide her into the office.
Orelius’s office was more disordered than one might expect by his neat appearance—a reflection of his overtaxed mind. A desk was squirreled away by a window in a corner, most of the available space taken up by dusty maps, volumes, and documents.
A pair of bookshelves stood along the back wall, filled almost to bursting. Most of the room, however, was taken up by a sitting area, several chairs aligned around a circular table. A tray on the table held some sliced fruit, cheese, and crackers.
A man sat in one of the chairs, watching Quintilla enter with a discerning gaze. He wore a set of short, white robes with a striking, scarlet red sash over one shoulder. He wore a full beard, curly and black, head shaved bald. He wore Valeria’s golden sun pinned to his sash, this one truly wrought from gold, as well as a few other gleaming brooches below it.
Orelius put on a wide, false smile as he entered, shepherding Quintilla towards the man with one hand.
“Magistrate Io Moricus, this is Quintilla Wenezian,” he said. “You may remember I spoke of her earlier. I sent for her because I believe she may be able to help with your, ahem, problem.”
A magistrate? This must be important, then.
Magistrates were major political players in Valeria, most with blood ties to the God Ruler herself.
Quintilla kept a straight face, but she had either stepped into a very fortunate situation or a very dangerous one. She suspected a little of both.
She shook the magistrate’s hand, and they all sat.
Moricus cleared his throat and leaned comfortably back in his chair, hands folded before him. His gaze didn’t slip off of Quintilla’s face for a moment.
“I will be succinct,” he said. “Do you have the means to incapacitate a Concordian warship?”
Advertisement
- In Serial10 Chapters
Hazardous Debugging: Reanimation
Once upon a time, there lived an ordinary man. He lived among us, maybe some of you even knew him. And then he died. Explosive rounds shot to the chest aren't very good for your health. His body was buried, his brain preserved. Three centuries have passed. Our descendants discovered the old refrigerator with the brains of their ancestors, took our hero out of the ice, digitizing his persona, and implanting him into a videogame.Little did they know that they fulfilled the terms of a contract to their demise. Because Fillin doesn't intend to spend an eternity in this digital playground even if though there's no difference from the real world.But the only way he can return to reality is to become God in the game. And so our hero sets foot on the Path of the Gods, ignoring the facts that he is followed by a walking nightmare named FreakHead, that the skies mock his every step and that anyone who looks upon him sees the title "Bringer of Chaos."
8 369 - In Serial15 Chapters
Other Tales of En
Welcome to The Other Tales of En, a place where I put short stories that didn't get to be told in the main series. These are scenes and tales of characters I just had to have more of, moments I needed to see, and self-indulgent interactions. I hope you love them as much as I do! Chapters are labelled with initials of the Tale first and have notes for their beginning and end. Any chance of spoilers are listed for each tale below as well as their initials. TABLE OF CONTENTS Tale 1: Taff and Adon (T&A) The tale of when Taff and Adon first met. Slight spoilers for Starchild but not really, let's just say Adon's version of the story in Stormspeaker wasn't *quite* accurate ;) Tale 2: Vai and Echa (V&E) The tale of the meeting everyone tried to prevent. It was bound to happen and this is how it went. Spoilers for Children of the Bear, particularly Fiona's Tale, I recommend reading when you are finished with that series. Tale 3 [IN PROGRESS]: Echa and Tryst (E&T) The tale of how the cowardly pirate and the bitter slave fell in love.
8 156 - In Serial15 Chapters
Potato Chips Level You Up in Another World
Same Manuals, his friends, the school bully, and a random 5th grader were all ran over by a semi-truck. Thinking his life had come to a close, he ends up waking up in what he thinks is the after life, a fantasy world govern by a system of stats. But not only did his friends transport here, but so did boxes full of potato chips. What would be considered junk food in our world have the power to cheat the system and level up anyone extraordinarily who should eat even a single chip. Now Same must find his friends and gather all the bags of chips left to level up to OP status and defeat the Evil Overlord. Warning: Some foul language. -- Updates Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Accepting suggestions for chip flavors and effects they could possibly have. Tell me a flavor, type of chip, any stats you think it can augment, or any crazy idea you think may work for this story.
8 93 - In Serial8 Chapters
There's No Gods For Traitors
In the Kingdom of Blackpoint all Heroes were granted abilities by the gods. Each of the 'skills' had the power to evolve into somthing much greater. When the traitors were at an all time high, The council of Blackpoint needed to find a way to withold these abilities from Infiltrators. Thus enabling the creation of Fear Tech, an island only accessable by use of the access passes on the ships of Ace'sEnd, of higher difficulty than the Fortress's built by the Dwarves, of technology higher Level than any before, An island of Machines.
8 162 - In Serial42 Chapters
A little Kitty's journey though a random world
Hello - this story has been completly stopped for a long time, and while I had planned to continue - I have chosen to stop adding on to this story here. But FEAR NOT. For I have quite literally came back from the dead to write another story that will tie in a good portion of this story that I had already written - just, you know differently. So if any of you people still liked this story .... I HIGHLY RECOMMEND YOU NOT TO READ THE OTHER ONE. Because well reasons... So for those who have never read this crap story here, please proceed to my other story that may or may not come out. But seriously, the other story is not written the same way I was writing this one. You have been warned.
8 108 - In Serial14 Chapters
psy·cho·log·i·cal
Psychological-Related to the mental and emotional state of a person* What happens to life when a happy wife isn't really a happy wife?.... " I'll fucking do and you know I would, watch that pretty but yet annoying ass mouth of your's Hiaden "
8 219

