《Inheritors》Episode Two
Advertisement
LISTEN TO THIS EPISODE ON YOUTUBE
Immerse yourself again in blood with me. Are you there? Can you feel dead fingers grazing your skin in the red water? Good.
I kneel over the one survivor I’ve found, a Latino kid covered in gore. He stammers, his body seizing.
“Kid, you okay?” I ask.
“P-p-p-p-p-p-” the boy starts while his body shakes and writhes, his eyes locked on a point past my head. His gaze is so wide that his eyes might fall out of his skull if he wasn’t on his back. “Pan-panda-head of panda-thermos-everyone-thing-dark-evil-black-monster-kill-kill-kill-ki-ki-k-k-k-k…”
The babbling devolves into monosyllable nonsense.
“Pandahead? Is that the name of someone?”
The kid only clicks his tongue in response. He’s catatonic.
I sigh and extend my power to search for other survivors. There are none. There’s only me and this boy. I put my mask and goggles back on before turning my attention to the bodies. I search through the gore, hoping I’ve missed someone.
“Told you,” Megajoule says, staring at me from one of the corpse mounds. His face is wedged between a bleeding arm and… I’m not sure what the other thing is, but some mass of flesh. “Shouldn’t have come.”
I shake my head. “Do you know what this is? These Affect impressions are wild.”
“I know as much as you, I’m afraid. You’re right, though. These are unlike anything we’ve seen before,” Megajoule says. “Wait… do you hear that?”
I hear the click of a camera, but it’s too late to get out of the way. A Foundation surveillance drone. The drone resembles a silver dragonfly with four rotors, each as sharp as a knife. Bright, disorienting light floods into the warehouse from its eyes. Its camera is surely capturing me and the unconscious kid.
The drone sneaks in silently through the door, its engines dead cool by Affected technology I don’t understand. It’s completely hidden from my thermal sense, but I still should’ve sensed the motion. I was too focused on this tomfuckery.
I dash over with a burst of heat and slice the drone with burning fingers. The drone splits apart and falls into the mound of guts. The molten scraps scald the decay, causing wisps of smoke to rise.
I consider my situation. I look massively guilty standing in a massive grave.
Advertisement
And capes are sure to follow the drone. Could be minutes at most.
I hoist the kid over my shoulder and leave through the truck entrance. I leap to a nearby building and hide with the kid on the rooftop, waiting for someone to show up.
My someone arrives with the sound of an exploding rocket. A streak of fire lights up the sky, echoing like a gong in my thermal sense. He hammers the concrete on the street below, nearly breaking the asphalt into pieces as he lands.
Danger Close is his name. One of the Houston Heroes and one of the most famous capes in the city. On the triangle diagram that all capes sit on between celebrity, officer, and god, Danger Close sits squarely on “officer.” His camouflaged armor gives him the stature of a giant. The armor’s visor glows red, and the shoulders and gauntlets glint with bullet and blade promises of death.
“Look at Mr. Fancy Tin Can,” Megajoule whispers in my ear.
I smirk.
“Why do you suppose he showed up?” Megajoule asks me.
“Let’s not jump to conclusions. He’s the first responder, that’s all.”
“He’s one of the Houston Heroes. They are never the first responders.”
I had to grant that. There’s an army of capes in Houston beneath the Houston Heroes ready to do the grunt work. Capes like Danger Close tend to be picky about what they tackle.
I watch as Danger Close surveys the street and the Marskin warehouse, but with emotion I can’t decipher. He holds up his fist, and nothing appears to happen, but with my kinetic sense I hear the whistling of a miniature drone. I track the whistling as the drone follows a perimeter around the warehouse. Its eyes shine light through the windows. My leg muscles tighten in anticipation.
The drone enters the warehouse through one of the open windows.
“What are you after, Mr. Fancy Tin Can?” I whisper, echoing Megajoule’s name for him.
More drones whisper at the edge of my thermokinetic sense, each one headed toward the warehouse. I curse beneath my breath. My spying venture has come to an end.
The drones haven’t spotted me yet, thanks to my ability to match my heat (and the kid’s) to the air and avoid coming up on thermal imaging, but if they get close enough they’ll detect my Affect.
Advertisement
I throw the kid over my shoulder, make him weightless with my power, and flee across the rooftops.
I rise on warm currents of air into the city bramble of Houston, bouncing between buildings to create distance from the drones. With the boy over my shoulder, I flit through the urban jungle. For an instant, I am suspended in the bright amber of car lights beneath and the skyscraper lights above. All I smell is asphalt and burning rubber. All I hear is the summer night on my skin and the energy pooled inside me.
Say what you will of Houston. Say it is a cesspool of business, oil, and crime. Say it is a dead end and that the land it sits on is a bog.
But also say at night that the city shines like a galaxy. Say you can look into the swirling colors of blazing projections on the sides of skyscrapers and find something pristine. The skyline pierces the dark of night like radiant spears. When the morning comes and all you’re left with is grimy steel, all you have to do is remember the night before when Houston was beautiful.
Orange street lights and the occasional burst of color from downtown Houston slice apart the shadows, so that one street is near pitch darkness and the next is neon daylight. I glide and leap over alleys until I come to my hiding place: An abandoned Soterist chapel wedged in between the Shells and the Third Ward to the west.
Inside, the chapel reveals the source of its abandonment: A former battleground. A blackened scar runs down the left wall. Stone faces and hands sprout out from the wound. They are strong Affect imprints, the kind left by a Heavyweight using their power. Yet compared to the warehouse these are minuscule.
Ashes from long ago litter the floor. I kick them up as I creep into the main worship hall.
I set the kid down on one of the few remaining pews. I listen to his body with my power. To me, they all have distinct patterns—a fingerprint of sorts. I’ve developed an appreciation for how people’s blood moves through their veins the way one enjoys a violinist bowing the strings.
His blood flows normally. His heartbeat drums on rhythm. No fever or temperature abnormality in him. As far as I can tell, he’s physically fine.
He must be around thirteen or fourteen years old. He smells sour. Rank, even. Beneath the stench of his sweat there’s a vague hint of oil. His black hair is greasy, his face pocked with acne and scar tissue.
I guess the scars on his hands have nothing to do with his pubescence.
I notice a metal bracelet on his wrist, inscribed with hundreds of tiny markings that look like circuits, each one a different color of the rainbow. A Winsley power cuff dampening his emotions. No emotions. No powers.
“What the hell happened to you?” I ask.
“What are you doing, Gabe?” Megajoule sneers.
“I’m checking him out.”
“Are you actually thinking you’ll play detective?” Megajoule chuckles. I weather it, trying not to feel embarrassed. “Face it, that’s like a bull trying to reassemble a Ming vase. All you’re gonna do is break more things.”
“So, what? I head back to Thanh, tell him the gang’s gone? What do I do with this kid?”
“You tell me, champ.”
I should just drop him off outside a station house. I’m not equipped to handle this kind of thing. But when I close my eyes and turn away from the kid, I see my brothers sitting in cells and grasping at the bars. Faces in agony. My face. Megajoule’s face.
All of them are part of a rat king of clones, and I can’t help but watch them drown together.
No. I can’t abandon the kid, not yet. Need to know what happened in that warehouse. But since he isn’t waking up any time soon, I feel safe leaving him. I grab a zip-tie from my pocket and bind him to the leg of one of the pews. While I do, I glance at his sleeping face. There is sorrow and pain carved into the shape of his eyes and the curve of his frown. I can only wonder at what he dreams.
Advertisement
- In Serial2455 Chapters
Mortal Cultivation Biography
A poor and ordinary boy from a village joins a minor sect in Jiang Hu and becomes an Unofficial Disciple by chance. How will Han Li, a commoner by birth, establish a foothold for himself in in his sect? With his mediocre aptitude, he must successfully traverse the treacherous path of cultivation and avoid the notice of those who may do him harm. This is a story of an ordinary mortal who, against all odds, clashes with devilish demons and ancient celestials in order to find his own path towards immortality.
8 1050 - In Serial7 Chapters
Chromanorel
Go to work. Stare at your screen. They'll steal your soul to power their world. Lauren was having a bad week at work, and that was before a giant dragon turned up and attacked her horrible boss. Running from the fire-spewing beast, she escapes into a strange tunnel in the bathroom. Where does it lead to? Has she shaken off the dragon for good? And has she really gained the terrifying power of harming people by thought? Lauren is about to find out that everything she thought she knew about the rat race is wrong. Lost and confused in a strange new world, she stumbles into a quest that threatens to take everything she has... including her life. Chromanorel will be updated every Wednesday, and sometimes on other days if I have time. Author's note: In case you're wondering about the -"our"s and -"ise"s, they're because I'm British :)
8 144 - In Serial6 Chapters
Parasitical
Follow the wonderful colorful life of a parasite, and see how the Parasite and his host, will have fun and, well, have fun really. There isn't much else to do. Right?And... Here is the link to the cover, because I have to add that in:https://psdpetblog.files.wordpress.com/2014/07/flea-larvae.jpg?w=200&h=300Yeah, I just wanted something for a cover...But I don't actually like the cover...
8 166 - In Serial16 Chapters
Beast Master, The Makings of a Monster Master.
A young man tries to find family in a video game-like world. After, earth is invaded by monsters, all while trying to overcome his social anxiety. This is a fanfiction within takes place in Completionist Chronicles by Dakota Krout. This Story takes place begins around Books 3-4. I'm not affiliated with Mountaindale Press in any way, nor I will gain no monetary profit from this work. Any and all rights and credits are reserved for and deserved by its original creators. Please go support or check out the wonderful people there.
8 99 - In Serial17 Chapters
Quick Transmigration: Villain Counterattack
Yu Xulia dies. Betrayed by her family for her fortune, she died a painful death. She swore that if she had a second chance at life, then she will make all those who wronged her die a painful death. A certain system gives her that chance at revenge. Follow Xulia's journey in different worlds to take revenge against who try to take what's hers.
8 195 - In Serial13 Chapters
The Power of Boredom Is Limitless
Hello, my name is Ian, I have no daoist title as I have chosen to forget it long ago I over the time of millions of years achieved peak cultivation and ascended to godhood. However, after thousands of years of eternal life at the peak of strength, I feel only one thing Boredom I have never felt life was so boring, all the blood, sweat, and tears I made leads to this! A boring existence! I who cultivated a dao above the primordial chaos, the concept of reality itself, can't find a way to make his own existence interesting! Why you may ask, I believe it is due to one thing. My moral compass, This "compass" has lead me on the path of righteousness and orthodoxy, however is this ever going to fulfil the word "fun"? So I who can travel across realities, Worlds of Magic, Modern Worlds, Futuristic Worlds. Will discard my moral compass and strive for one thing. To cure boredom, No matter the cost Physics and science? Dao Laws? Magic Laws? Love? Common Sense? None Can stand in my way!
8 160

