《Apex Predator》[Chapter 118] The Secret of Sizikguron Arc; Ludwig's Good Fortune
Advertisement
Several Days Previous:
"Y'know what I think is weird?" Tycho murmured as he followed the rest of the group behind Grey, "That the android's master is named Ludwig."
Barkhad snorted and rolled his eyes from atop Kisserin's black back. "Are we truly surprised? At anything?"
"Humans are always surprised by everything," Kisserin added as she slithered forward. "It's because you're unobservant."
Knowing that, of the two humans present, Kisserin was clearly calling out himself, Barkhad bristled. "Hey, I'm observant," he said defensively. "I noticed that the bedroom desk in the last room over had that secret lever, right?"
Kisserin hissed laughter, though didn't say anything in reply.
Unable to comprehend Barkhad's self-deprecating humor, Tycho piped up, "But the lever was painted red, while the rest of the room was white."
"Little mouse," Kisserin chided, "you need to learn when to be silent."
Tycho gasped. "I'm excellent at being silent. I spent days with Grey! Before he, um, went from being the Watcher to being the Hero." Tycho looked nervously ahead to Grey's babbling form. The peacekeeper hadn't stopped speaking at the android feebly struggling in his grip, almost as though he were just talking to himself.
Kisserin gave Barkhad a look. "Kids," she whispered.
Barkhad rolled his eyes once more. You're the same age, he thought to himself. Not that you'd ever admit it. To her credit, Kisserin was much more mature and aware than Tycho.
"I heard that," Tycho mumbled. "What are you even good at, Barkhad?" he asked, looking for someone else to criticize.
"Me?" Barkhad pointed to himself, shifting his position on Kisserin's back. "Why?"
"Well, I'm really fast, and I'm really good at listening," Tycho said. "Kisserin's good at digging and carrying stuff."
"Sure," Kisserin hissed softly, "that's exactly what I'm good for." Then, more loudly, "Tycho, I keep this guy around because he's funny; seems like you'd be an excellent replacement."
"Hey, hey," Barkhad muttered hastily. "I have skills, c'mon."
Kisserin hissed in short, breathy bursts, as though chuckling.
"You're such a jerk," he grumbled, climbing forward. "You guys really wanna see what I'm good at?"
"Oo, now you've excited him," Kisserin stage-whispered to Tycho, who just looked uncomfortable.
"You ready!?"
"Yeah!" said, Tycho, fist raised high, as though trying to make sense of what was going on.
"Ka-boom," Barkhad said, lips curving into a sly grin. As he did so, he stood up and ran to the top of Kisserin's head. Before she could protest, he was already catapulting off her head, spinning in a somersault to land on the floor. Without skipping a beat, he brandished an ornate, metal scepter that he immediately began to wave towards the ground. As he pumped it downward, a concussive force rappelled him down the hall.
Suddenly, Grey stopped his advance through a long, many-doored corridor. He turned around, looked a frozen Barkhad in the eye, and smiled. "You're causing property damage," he said, unblinking.
His words and manner gave everyone chills. He's cracked, Barkhad noted with a tinge of fear.
Barkhad moved the scepter back into his pack and returned to his place atop Kisserin. Grey nodded once, then continued running forward.
"This door--" the android yammered, reading off the name of each closed room they passed. Finally, they reached the end of the vast hallway.
How many miles was that? Barkhad wondered. We've been running for at least fifteen minutes; at our speed...
So far, they'd only been in one room, the bedroom, within which they'd found and activated the glaringly obvious red lever. Aside from this, the room had contained nothing of import. More importantly, the pulling of the lever had produced no visible result, leading Kisserin, Barkhad, and Tycho to conclude that it must affect some far-off mechanism.
Advertisement
However, so far, not a single door had been open: At the very least, Barkhad thought, whatever this lever is connected to must be important. Why else would it be painted red? The more logical side of him asked a different question: Why put an obvious lever in the first encounterable room? Maybe the lever only led to a trap.
A minute later, everyone stopped when the end of the hallway came into sight: a red, towering door. Is this what the red lever was for? Barkhad wondered.
"AI Ninety-Seven, How big are Fezosisn?" Grey asked, approaching the door.
"Fezo-what?" Barkhad whispered.
Tycho shushed him. "That's the species of the robot's creator," he responded, voice low.
Barkhad nodded his understanding: He remembered now. These names are too difficult to remember...Fezosisn? Sizikguron Arc? He sighed as he watched Grey address the android from Kisserin's back.
"You need to bring me back," AI Ninety-Seven alarmed. "But in response to your question, Fezosisn is the size one would expect."
"What arrogance," Grey sighed as he gave the door a once-over. "A door fit for gods, abandoned in an ancient library, left to the dark."
Barkhad counted the syllables. Phew, I thought he was speaking in haiku for a second. Now that would've been a new level of crazy.
"It's open, I presume," Grey said, manner somehow both stately and tragic. As the android began to repeat its compulsory alert, Grey simply shook his head and dragged the android over with him to the door's frame. He pushed; as he did so, a line of light appeared where the door opened, a sliver of white that fit in well with the austere whiteness of Sizikguron Arc's color scheme.
Everyone shielded their eyes when, with a decisive push, Grey fully opened the red door to behold what lay beyond. A voice suddenly rang out, echoing through the chamber ahead as well as through the AI Ninety-Seven's struggling form.
"Travelers, unfortunately," said the thundering voice. "I expected this. Regardless of who you are and what you are, I have promised you good fortune." A sigh swept out like a low, ponderous boom. "This is the Arc's control room; within, find the indices of all works, as well as controls to open the many doors in the corridor." A smirk resounded at this last sentence. "Do be careful, travelers."
The voice shut off. The android looked about as though confused.
"Everyone, to me," Grey announced, his voice leaving no room for insubordination. "They're lucky they have me to lead them," he continued, as though nobody could hear. "There are things moving in the halls, moving parts, ticking gears. A scheme, a veil covering truth..."
He turned back and actually addressed them, saying, "We shall investigate each of these rooms. Remember everything that you can; at the end of this expedition, we cannot be sure that we will be able to return. Put your scholar boons to good use."
He talks like he's addressing an army, Barkhad thought self-consciously. Do the quasi-sapients even have boons? He didn't think so, at least not the human variety.
"We'll go through the rooms in alphanumeric order," Grey announced as he walked over to a large, but unadorned, control panel on a pedestal at the center of the room. Aside from cryptic geometric markings in black and red on the floor, the room appeared only to have this single pedestal.
How do you even know how they're organized? Barkhad wondered internally. The index might be nonstandard!
Advertisement
Kisserin, aware of Barkhad's mounting frustration, hissed in his ear: "Remember...no questions."
Barkhad nodded. "I know," he replied softly while continuing to regard Grey's actions with a critical eye. The brown-robed peacekeeper was currently placing his hands on the control panel, as though randomly touching it would have some kind of effect.
"So this is how it is," Grey murmured mysteriously. "I understand, yes, mm..."
Barkhad narrowed his eyes in annoyance, but kept his mouth shut. Like hell he can talk to a shiny white control panel by touching its buttons, he thought, sitting up and crossing his arms. He, Kisserin, and Tycho all approached the pedestal in anticipation of Grey's next request.
"We're going outside," he said as soon as they were within touching distance of the controls. "We have knowledge to save."
Barkhad concealed his snort by breathing quickly. It sounds like "knowledge" is a damsel in distress. He gave the two quasi companions a knowing look as Grey led them out of the control room, back through the red door, and into the hallway.
They walked all the way back to the start of the corridor until the bedroom was in their line of sight. At this point, Grey about-faced left and stared at a door. He took a permanent black marker from a pocket--Since when did he have that? Barkhad wondered--and marked the door with the number one. Then, he pushed the door inward, and, unlike every other door, it actually moved.
A disgusting, rotten-eggs smell came from the door's opening. Beyond the threshold was a world of black: no lights were activated, even after the door swung inward. From within the darkness, everyone present could hear a steady, but almost silent, clicking noise, almost like an analog clock.
As though brandishing the Beacon of the Church (which didn't exist, but sounded to Barkhad like it should), Grey swapped his marker for the flashlight and held it aloft, clicking a button to turn it on.
"Filth," he said. "Infection on the Arc."
"Purge," the android dirged, "purge~"
"Wait, I don't see anything," Barkhad whispered.
"I..." Kisserin began, flicking her tongue. "I don't see any irregular heat signatures."
"You--you don't hear that?" Tycho said, voice hushed.
Without warning, Grey struck out, leaping into the space beyond with only the flashlight for illumination. As he ventured out, he looked back, a sad look in his eye. "You need this more than I do," he stated, promptly tossing the flashlight back.
"What the..."
Present Time:
Grey looked behind himself, smirking. They've been trying to put a name to my current personality for days. But now, as they came to the conclusion of the Arc's extermination, Grey was growing tired of their squabbling.
"You could just ask," he said, sighing. "I've been alive for quite some time, been around the block, as people like to say. Friends have called this the Cynic."
"Wait, the Cynic?" Barkhad paused, grimacing as he felt a piece of goop slide down his neck. "You're awfully quiet for a cynic," he added. "Well, we didn't know how to act around you 'cuz you didn't say anything. Worried you might've gone back to the Watcher."
Grey rolled his eyes, though a seriousness pervaded his features. "I've been hoping you would figure it out," he replied. "Isn't that funny?"
"Grey," Tycho began, "Why do you switch personalities all the time?"
The brown-robes snorted. "When you've lived as long as I have on Earth...sometimes, you just need a change of face to make sense of everything."
"You've been in this one for so long, though," Tycho added nervously. "Are you, uh, gonna switch again?"
"Who's to say?" Grey replied with a disdainful smirk.
Barkhad narrowed his eyes, staring intently at Grey's back as though he could see into the man's mind. "What made you switch to the Cynic, anyway? It happened when you opened the third room."
"Yes, it did."
"So...?"
"Kisserin, you've been awfully silent," Grey observed, voice emulating that of a superhero villain.
Kisserin, eyes suddenly alight with focus, flicked out her black tongue. "It was when he realized why Ludwig left Sizikguron Arc."
Grey began to laugh, a booming, almost manic chuckle. "Our good fortune," he explained, "is the evacuated lair of a pirate." He laughed unabated. "Fezosisn isn't a species; it's an outlaw organization. Ludwig isn't an actual name, but a fake identity. The Arc?" He turned around and looked at their startled faces in the eye. "What is this place, if not a library, hmm?"
Everyone present gave him blank stares. How does he...?
"You all need to pay attention," he chided. "Was there a theme to the information you were reading?"
No response. Grey's expression turned dour. "Did any of you actually read anything?" he asked scathingly. "Or did you only come here to wipe estevek juice off your tongue?"
Barkhad looked at Grey in horrific fascination. Maybe it was best that he kept quiet before, he reasoned. I don't know if I could take several days of this. But seriously, tongue? It's not like I'm eating these disgusting centipedes with my mouth. He glanced down at Kisserin. Wait, maybe he's actually criticizing someone other than myself for once. He wondered if he should feel relieved.
"Since you're all so timid, I'll explain this for you: this place is freshly abandoned. Maybe one or two thousand years ago, give or take a few centuries. This vessel's lovely pilot, Ludwig, was transporting this vessel to an unidentified location.
"However, somewhere along the way, he was attacked from afar; the assailant planted a sac of estevek eggs on the ship. Ludwig, unable to locate them, departed, leaving AI Ninety-Seven behind, along with the rest of this cargo ship. Now tell me, lady and gentlemen," he said, exhaling and catching his breath. "What was Ludwig's cargo?"
Everyone seemed surprised to find that, while absorbed in Grey's display, they had walked back to the pedestal at the center of the red-doored room.
"They...they were just stories," Kisserin blurted, tail weaving behind her in agitation. "Boring, without context. I didn't understand more than a handful. His only cargo was rooms upon rooms of books!"
Grey smirked, putting a finger to his chin. "You're trying. I'll bite; here's a hint: what format were the books in?"
"Format?" Kisserin hissed, indecision clearly visible on even her inhuman features.
Barkhad felt like the answer was on the tip of his tongue. Grey stared at him in anticipation, as though he knew that Barkhad knew. Fucking creepy, Barkhad thought, shivering.
"They're hard copies," he said slowly, thought solidifying in his mind. "They're actual books. If you were smuggling books for the sake of their content, you'd put them into a digital form." His face screwed up into a frown as he said this last phrase. He gave Grey a questioning look, like a pupil looking for guidance.
"Good enough," Grey sighed. "The books are relics, stolen from Ildr, if that means anything to you." While Grey had learned basics about the universe from Lepochim, he knew such basic information was online.
"From...the Core Worlds?" Kisserin breathed, freezing in place.
"This is Sizikguron Arc," Grey chuckled, holding his arms up and out, as though beholding the heavens. "The Library of the Ninety-Seventh Era." His laugh became increasingly manic; soon, he was doubled over."
Grey recalled when AI Ninety-Seven first introduced itself.
"What is your name?"
"AI Ninety-Seven. Creativity was my master's strong suit."
"Ludwig...he really was creative," Grey said between guffaws. Without warning, his laughter stopped, and his visage once again became serious and sharp. "You all do realize," he began, "if any sapients leak this information, what would happen?"
They all looked at him in stunned confusion: his transition away from maniacal laughter to apparent lucidity was shockingly sudden.
"Ildr is a place with nothing but time on its hands," Grey said, voice eerily quiet. "They would send sapients to investigate." A cool, slightly crooked smile stretched across his face. "Now that would be disastrous," he said quickly, rolling his eyes and snapping out of his quiet, predatory gait.
"We should leave this place," he said, his voiced clipped. "AI Ninety-Seven, open the back exit. I'm impatient," he said, hissing this last word and thrusting the android forward by its neck.
Barkhad only realized now that, during Grey's explanation, the robot had finally shut up its alarm. He had learned, along with everyone else, to tune it out after a few hours of arriving at the Arc; he'd even been able to sleep with it blaring in the background. However, now that he noticed the alarm's absence, he couldn't help but feel a sense of foreboding.
The android turned around and bowed its head, facing Grey's now-narrowing eyes. "As you wish, Master."
Advertisement
- In Serial11 Chapters
The Copper Queen's Bride
Katya is in love with Azovka, the Mistress of Copper Mountain. Katya's fiancee Danilo dares carve Azovka an impossible flower of stone. They witness the ruthlessness of the Romanovs and clutches of corrupt Bailiffs in the Ural Mountains, where Azovka's Copper Men have ruled since they were first mined out of Mount Azov. But when Azovka begins to turns to stone, Katya fears the worst - and that Danilo will follow Azovka to a Hell of malachite shadow. With Baba Yaga's guidance, and the magick in her veins, Katya must save them all!retelling of pavel bazhov's "the stone flower"
8 187 - In Serial37 Chapters
Strings Of The Orchestrator
Intro: The system swept over the earth, wrenching everyone from their normal lives and throwing them into new worlds made of chaos and insanity. The rules that once governed the world have shifted. The laws that once bound people, both the dangerous and the kind, have vanished. Now, life is all about advancement, pushing your numbers and skills higher and higher. Alone on a distant world, Max Grand instead must now prove himself, not to the system that now governs his entire world, but to his companions and best friends. Follow Max on his journey through space, through time, through space again, meeting people, going places, and doing things. All the nouns. Note About myself: I am only a hobbyest writer. I hope the internet doesn't expect novel level content from me. I have seen what others on the internet, and even more so this website, can produce and aspire to reach their level. I have no Idea what will come of this, but it should at least be a fun experience for all involve. The writing improves gradually as the chapters go on. I invariably learn some stuff after writing a bunch, finding what works and what doesn't. I definately need to work on paceing and dialouge and flow. Those are the three main goals for now. **Chapter lengths float around the 2300 to 2500 word range as of current chapter Thank you and happy reading.
8 83 - In Serial36 Chapters
Recovery of a Life
The prince of a kingdom was erased from the world. His very existence an enigma. Follow Xopil as he forces his life into a world that refuses to acknowledge his presence. I tried to write a novel without including all the standard things you find in certain genres, or if it is included, I hope it's at least a fresh take on it, this includes me breaking the fourth wall, probably too much. I'm wondering if that helped with humor at all, and also reconsidering if that should be a part of the story. I'm going to be rewriting every chapter at this point... and that chapter I'm extremely disappointed with could likely be deleted if not redone entirely. Now that this story is marked 'completed', I'll be going through each chapter and fleshing out the story a bit, as I found it severely lacking, and I've been saying to myself "I could have done more with that." way more often than I should be. And that speaks to my own dissatisfaction with my writing. I make no warranty-express or implied-as to the quality of these chapters, or the story as a whole. Cover art by Roman Valeyev
8 103 - In Serial9 Chapters
When You Transmigrate Into a Harem Novel
Tired of the repetitive OP MC trope? You won’t be disappointed. You’ll still have that. This is a story about a MC with missing a nerve and the life she leads as she is transmigrated to a harem cultivation novel. Prologue might be dark, but it's important- please read. Please leave your brains behind!! Disclaimer: Any similarity to persons or other works are merely coincidental and this work is not representational of the author’s viewpoint or beliefs. Enjoy as entertainment only. ***** Update once/twice per week over weekend******
8 167 - In Serial16 Chapters
The Luna
Renee is the Luna of the Full Moon pack. The Alpha, Jonathan, is one of the most powerful Alphas around. After shifting in front of humans to save some of the pack children the word gets out about werewolves, but that is the least of there problems. What happens whens when other packs in the area find out that she is the legendarily White Wolf born underneath the blue moon? Will her pack be able to defend against the other packs and keep their Luna safe? Or will her pack be destroyed causing her to lose everything and everyone she cares about?
8 406 - In Serial34 Chapters
I Changed My Mind (1D)
Camila Cabello is a teenage girl, not the stereotypical type. She gets homeschooled and for that reason, she doesn't have many friends. Over the years, she becomes really close with her music tutor and he seems to be her only true friend since they are close in age. That tutors' name is Zayn, Zayn Malik. What if she wants to be closer than close friends? What if she falls in love along the way? The sad part is that the only thing she lets out those feelings into, is an old black journal that Zayn got for her years back. Will she change her mind about her feelings toward him? Will she go through a lot along the way that might make that happen? Teaser : I closed the book, I didn't know what to think, she has feelings for me....
8 98

