Chapter 3-10 Like Dogs on Leashes

Name:Godclads Author:
Chapter 3-10 Like Dogs on Leashes

The Circuits are an easy way to get out of the Warrens. Of course, by easy, I mean either you get recruited and offered a Guilder contract or you end up dead. Either way, cosang, youll be well on your way gettin a Soul grafted to you or being burned inside a Soul.

Same difference, really.

Circuits come with plenty of variety. Largest pool of recruits comes from the drone-jocks since they dont tend to fucking die the first time they make a mistake. Getting a second chance at the cost of burning a few thousand imps and all that, but dont get it twisted, adamantine-hard street squires have and will always be a commodity.

What can I say? Everyone loves a good pit brawl.

-Quail Tavers, School of the Warrens

3-9

Like Dogs on Leashes

If there was one thing Avo hated about these Syndicate types, it was their pointless theatrics. Slaughterman. Rantula. Mirrorhead. Every last one of them had a stupid concept they just wouldnt let go of. It was like tumbling from into a world where everyone liked buying new clothes for their guns and giving a themselves a new name by slamming two random nouns together or sometimes an adjective.

The paths that Rantula led him down were covered in layers of tarp. Bulged pockets inflated with gusts of wind.

Rantula continued. See the boss decided to get a new pet. She folded her arms over her chest. They were twice as thick as his, each muscle natural and not. Scaarthians were modded from times of yore. First by their environment, then by their gods, now by themselves. With Rantula, it looked like she was just the continuation of a repeatedly botched job.

The ground staggered beneath her weight, each step thumping up eruptions of dust. The patterns of the particulates were strange. Looking up, Avo understood why. Bullet holes and poorly threaded wires ran through the ceiling. Flashes of movement cut over the gaps, bobbing to the flow of thoughtstuff. People were upstairs too, heading in the same direction as he was.

Eight burning optics flashed in his periphery. Rantula was glaring right at him. Cant say I see what's so special about you. Yous just like any other ghoul I know.L1tLagoon witnessed the first publication of this chapter on Ñøv€l--B1n.

Can do the alphabet backward, Avo said.

She spat again. Didnt know she hated literacy that much.

The hallways they were walking through were cramped. Dim. Avo heard the distinct chitters of aratnids scampering through the vents. The walls were lined with half-molted battle foam. Instantly deployable cover. Probably leftovers from a gunfight some time back. The walls themselves were lined with an insulating tarp, patches of which swelled with the flowing winds.

The fact that the currents could course this deep into the structure meant a few things. The most likely was that someoneor more likely a wing of dronesput a lot of holes through the block at some point. Probably was a holding point during the last war, now reinfested with gangers and other vermin of the like.

As they went further into the block, two enforcers sharing similar aesthetic implants moved to flank her, peeling out from an intersection they passed. Their inferiority to her was evident: six industrial legs on their backs instead of eight. One was bald. The other had a translucent dome lined with twitching antennae. Probably called themselves something glib, something to do with insects. They were decidedly not-natural born Scaarthians though. They had the scarification but no bones. More evidently, their hearts were beating on the left rather than the right.

Just another questionable piece of Scaarthian biological design. Came unnaturally with a god who enjoyed molding flesh like clay.

Jareg, Issig, you see our new pet? Rantula asked.

Annoyingly, the two decided to add a grunting chorus of laughter to her words. It was like a scene from a trashy academia-setting vicarity: watch the rich vat-grown Guilder gang up on the hardworking womb-born wager who was drafted up from the Warrens on their own merits.

Unfortunately, the narrative didnt echo here. His "bullies" were closer to genetic refuse or scrap metal, and he was a cannibal created by a terror cult trying to retake a homeland that never was. Trying to make a ghoul feel bad from social ostracization was like trying to insult a fish for its lack of wings. Cant lose something you never had.

Turning, she shot him another glance. Her lip twitched, revealing clenched slab-like teeth. Hes an ugly one

He continued, walking past her. Which way? Being too slow. Got work to do.

The faint sneer drained from her visible skin, replaced by the building red of outrage. He didnt know what she was expecting. Banter? Confrontation? He was a ghoul; she was some half-strand working for Mirrorheadbasically a ganger who had to wear a team uniform. The sooner they could move this along the better.

His daily allotment of patience had long since run dry.

He had no problem getting bloody in the hallway with her, and judging from how her thoughtstuff protruded in oozing clumps from her wards, it was little wonder why Mirrorhead ordered him to keep his mind away from hers.

With how poor her Metas build was, he might literally be able to crack her just by dumping an overdose of memories into her.

A metal limb hammered down in front of him, tearing the tarp and chipping plascrete. Debris clicked as they bounced along the floor. Avo stopped to study her implant. He could see the servos, the naked hydraulics inside. A poor choice to leave it so exposed. He wondered how many technicians it took to keep her running.

More importantly, he wondered if it would still work if he lodged something inside the moving parts. Something sharp.

As he studied her limb, she drew closer. He had his new organ tight and prepared to fire. She lowered herself by a few inches to greet him face-to-face, trying to stare him down.

Avo barely suppressed a smirk.

If she thought he was going to look at her and make this a moment, she had another thing coming. These were power games she shouldve played with a human. His only interest in her was in her eventual pain. And taste.

Scaarthians were such a rare delight to sample.

Next to his ear, she drew close, a growl under her breath. Her two walking skin-tags were leaning in behind her, shadowing her as they puffed themselves up, flexing their implants. It reminded him of how nu-dogs had little contests of dominance. If she tried pissing on him, he was going to crack her mind, didnt matter what Mirrorhead commanded. Smell of piss took too long to fade.

Rantula hissed. Listen, rotlick. Mirrorhead said

Avo stopped listening at that point. Whatever appreciation he had for Mirrorheads hiring standards earlier was rapidly leaving him. From Osjane and Osjack to this. Was this the caliber of personality that he had to deal with in the Warrens?

Her breath stank of some kind of seafood as she spoke. Calamari. She wasted a few more sentences and jabbed him in the chest with a finger. A sting of pain followed. Avo looked down to see one of her jagged nails an inch into his chest. He looked back at her, unsurprised at the return of her sneer.

Calamari, he said. The sneer went away again. It was like she had two expressions. Sneer for when she was trying to provoke someone. Confusion when someone deviated from her expectations. A cheap locus was probably more complex than her actual mind. Theres a cafeteria here?

Her mouth opened and closed. Now she reminded him of the fish he had in his aquarium. Except he didnt have the urge to flay and wear the mangled heads of his fish as a makeshift dunce hat. Lets get things done. Hungry. Want to eat.

He took a step back and felt her finger slide out of him. He clotted the wound immediately, not wishing to leak anymore in her presence. He didnt know if her immune system was augmented, but he felt obliged to conduct a murder-suicide if she hatched any ghoullings. Their stupidity would be a shame too great for him to bear.

Without another word, he stepped aside from the limb she had buried deep through the floor. He continued walking until she howled a slur at the back of his head to tell him he was going in the wrong direction. Just like the nu-dog she acted, she pushed herself past him to reassert her place in this little march.

Things returned to a state of acceptable boredom after that.

She still shot him brief glares of malice beneath the swirling lights of neon green as they proceeded toward their destination. Frustration lined her posture. Hers and her two companions. Seemed they mightve had a conversation with the boss as well. Not hurting the new merchandise and all that.

And with all the reflections lining the ceiling, Avo was pretty sure the boss could've been watching at any moment.

A day ago, he wouldve doubted his odds in a straight fight against any one of them. Now, the Celerostylus gave him options. Fleeing, at the least, was quite reliable. Burning up more of his ghosts, loathe as he was to do so, to use as thought-shivs was also an option.

It was as if only then did Avo behold him for the first time. So hard had he tried to forget the useless man in the Crucible that he cast the father and the boys faces from his mind. He had not wanted to burden himself with their humanity, made to dream of them like he did Walton.

He did not feel. Not as humans did. But he knew regret, and the memories of his failures bore him more sour than secondhand injections of emotion ever could.

Oh, the father smiled. His lips curled up. His eyes stayed dead. Artad blesses me again this day. You are alive, Avo. Alive and well.

Avo doubled his pace toward the father, knowing that he would not be able to reach the man in time. That was fine. He had another goal. Ahead, the enforcer clenched a fist as currents flowed down the wire of the leash. The father did not cry out, but his body did spasm, and his eyes did roll. Cruelly, his overseer held a moment longer than was needed.

Wet stains ran down the father's pant legs. The man had relived himself.

Flat, Avo growled, hes a flat. Cant take it. He cant take

Behind him, the ground cracked to a chorus of screaming hydraulics. A shadow shot into the air. Rantula. As expected. Avo fired his Celerostylus. The world brightened, and the gears governing the pace of time ground against his surging synapses, coming to a near halt.

Spinning on his heel, he dug his claws into the plascrete and dashed toward the impromptu gun range. In the room, all the enforcers reacted with varying speeds, the fastest of amongst only barely on par with him. A faint crackle of pleasure burned inside Avo. For all the pain of dealing with Mirrorhead, this implant almost made it worth it.

Almost.

Bounding on unsteady legs, he ignored a sharp snap in his left leg as he slid knee first into the ankles of one of the gunners turning to shoot him. His hyper-accelerated mass greeted the enforcers ankle in a popping crackle. Something was broken. Another problem with these gutter types. All bone and muscle, no ligament protection; less aesthetic to have smart-gel cartilage than bone-lacing.

As the enforcer toppled, their face a blooming howl of pain, Avo shook away the spots in his vision as the heat built. He seized his falling prey by the neck in one hand and caught their falling gun in the other. Next time he did this, he would make his Metamind manifest a timer.

Twisting his hip, he launched them backward. They careened, arms whipping wildly from the sudden thursut, and slammed back-first into their other two cohorts.

Avo didnt press the attack. Not even as they all went down. Instead, he shouldered the only thing that would truly give him some breathing room once he quelled his Celerostylus.

A gun.

Picking up the weapon that his most recent victim dropped, its specs began flashing into his mind, its ghosts lacing with his. It had a small locus embeded, something to compensate for his nonexistent shooting skills. Good that he had some experience with the Mirrashard Draus gave him. Wouldve looked a fool trying to figure it out now.

IYYGUA-2O RECOILLESS ORDINANCE RIFLE

Twenty shots. High explosive. Rated to shred nine hundred and fifty millimeters of armor in a single shot. Currently condition-yellow: some maintenance needed. These enforcers were filthy.

Avo spun around, raising the gun barely in time to plant the barrel against Rantulas throat. Her eight limbs froze scant inches away from closing around him.

A headache spiked, feeling as if nails were emerging from his eyes. He stopped tensing his Celerostylus. It took most of what he had not to drop his gun from pain. It took the rest of what he had to hide the fact that he was in pain at all.

The room was tense, but not silent thanks to someone wailing about their broken ankle. The remaining enforcers were standing, weapon implants bared and fists clenched. The biotechs, meanwhile, were making as fast they could for the doors.

Rantulas face broke into a snarl. Fuck me, Moonblood. Boss wasnt lying when he said he gave you the good shit.

Avo responded by spitting phlegm on the ground next to her. He needs to go.

She backed away from him slowly, hands raised. Trust me, Im not interested in a soft-belly like him. Not even a little. But the boss has found a use for him so She shrugged. Hey, hey, ghoulie. Were all dogs here. Nu-dogs, heeding the hand that feeds us. You know you cant help him. Mirrorheads got a use for him now. Best you can do is let him go.

The headache was receding. Slowly. Avo counted the number of enforcers in the room. More than twenty shots. Good thing he had more than one gun to use. Flicking a glance at the father, he reactivated his Phy-Sim and began estimating impact trajectories. He would have to kill Rantula first. Her threat was clear

Avo, the father said, lifting his hands in a near shrug. It is well. It is well. I am fine with it being this way. II dont care. It doesnt hurt. I dont care. The man laughed. "I don't care."

Deserve to be free, Avo said. That was promised. You were supposed to get into city. Survived Crucible.

A crackle of laughter came from Rantula. Deserve. Fucking crackling me the fuck up ghoulie, shit. The laugh drained out of her eyes as her voice rose to a braying roar. What fuck do you think 'deserves' got anything to do with our lives?

Doesnt, Avo admitted. Should.

Jaus. A fucking ghoul optimis

No, Avo stopped her. Not optimist. Just honest. Seen the way you live. He deserves better.

And there it was. He needed her to understand. This wasnt her world. Her miserable little life didnt mean any more than he did up the Undercroft, where contracts and agreements were enforced by the Paladins.

New Vultun wasnt about optimism, cynicism, or any ideology. At its heart, New Vultun was enforcing it. Whatever that it may be.

A dark shadow passed over Rantulas face. That guns got

Twenty shots.

Youre holding it wrong.

Linked to the ghosts.

Youll miss.

Not this close.

She glared at him. He stared past her, keeping an eye on the father.

Sighing at the struggle, the man gave him a nod. What was he doing? I appreciate all you did for my son. I will tell him of you when I see him. Again. Again. Again.

And so the metaphor played on. The father tugged on his leash, and, like a nu-dog asking to be walked, was led out into the flashing neon of the mall proper.

Avo, struck by the sight, just stared, gun frozen in hand.

All that for nothing, huh, Rantula said, shooting a victorious grin at the door that the father just left.

Avo grunted his non-answer. For the first time, he met Rantulas gaze. Still need to get me ready?

Her sneer returned. Nah. You look plenty ready enough to me.

Before this day was over, he was going to make a victim of her.