《August Ace》Chapter 23
Advertisement
They continued through overgrown farmlands in silence. Dalton West had sported a shining smirk since the incident with the dolo, while Sterling had been pouty and distant from the group. August remained alert and ready for as long as he could, but the seemingly endless roll of grassy fields and dilapidated houses had lulled him into a sort of daze. He daydreamed about what would happen whenever they finally reached the nest. What would it look like? What would they find in there? Would they even make it to the nest? And even if everything went well, as unlikely as that was, what would happen if and when they returned home.
These were all questions that had been smoldering in the back of his mind. Extended silence worked like a bellows to these worries, and now they flared at the front of his thoughts. He’d keep them to himself, of course. He was almost certain that the others wrestled with the same questions and had the same amount of answers. Even the general, who did a good job maintaining an air of self-assuredness, was just as cast away in obscure darkness as the rest of them.
As time went on, the rookie’s thoughts turned grim. They changed from logical concerns to frightening images that served no purpose other than to discourage and demoralize. He imagined himself holding Wolf dead in his arms, Sterling choking on his own exterminator gasses, and Belmont dead with vacant eyes, her herbs strewn around her. Dalton West was easy to picture dead. August had seen it many times in the movies. Rosek… his heart sank. His twisted mind had all sorts of fates drawn up for Hilde Rosek. One moment, she was set ablaze, and in the next, something dragged her away while she reached out for August to help. Here she lay dead and pale. There she stood, held up only by the horde of zombies that ripped at her flesh.
His thumping heart finally snapped him out of it. He turned to check on Rosek. He knew nothing had happened, but the thoughts had turned so vivid near the end that he just had to make sure. Trent Sterling stood inches away. August jumped at the sight.
Sterling laughed. “You alright, rookie?”
August glanced past the exterminator, saw Rosek at the rear of the group in her plodding mech suit, and breathed a sigh of relief. He didn’t answer and looked ahead. Sterling moved to his side and pulled a cigarette from his breast pocket.
“You know what this is?” Sterling asked.
August looked at the smoke and shrugged. The answer was obvious, but he wasn’t in the mood to partake in one of the exterminator’s games.
“It’s my last cigarette.”
“You went through that pack pretty quick for someone who’s quitting,” August said. “You might as well just light it up, enjoy it, then you get to quit whether you want to or not.”
Sterling lowered his head and watched his marching feet. “It’s worse than that. This is my last cigarette… before my last cigarette. I don’t know why, but the idea of having only one scares me more than the idea of having none. So technically, this is my last smoke before I start freaking out.”
“Then you shouldn’t be calling West out,” August said. “If you’re gonna be freaking out, maybe you’re the one we should be worried about.”
Sterling met the rookie’s eyes and sneered. August wasn’t sure why he’d said it. He’d been pretty good at keeping his thoughts to himself up until that point, and it wasn’t like it had accidentally slipped out either. He’d meant to say it, and he’d say it again. He braced himself for the imminent punch, but Belmont spoke first.
Advertisement
“Zombie, ten o’clock.”
His blood chilled as the squad halted in the middle of the old highway. He wasn’t ready to see those things again. He supposed you could never truly be prepared to see something like a corpse walking around, hungering for your flesh, but he felt as though he’d paid his dues, so to speak. What he’d gone through in the Westendale runs with Rosek was enough interaction with those monsters for any lifetime.
He wished he could just keep his eyes on the road and let the squad deal with it. The monsters weren’t dangerous, so long as you were wrapped up in armor and not taken by surprise or overwhelmed by a massive horde. It was impossible to resist looking. He turned his head toward ten o’clock, joining the rest of the crew, and saw it.
What looked like a man stood in the open field. He was too far to make out any detail, but the creature must not have sensed them yet, for it stood still and unwavering. August thought it might’ve been another scarecrow until it took a few steps toward them.
“That’s no zombie,” General Wolf said.
August parted his lips, intending to ask how the general knew, then he saw the gun. The man held it tight to his shoulder and aimed it at the squad. He approached. “Stop where you are.” The stranger’s voice was faint from such a distance, but it carried clear on the breeze. He spoke in the common language of the dome.
Sterling drew and lifted his pistol. Wolf immediately ordered him to lower it. Sterling obeyed. An uneasy feeling hovered over the squad as August wondered what Wolf was thinking. The stranger was easily outgunned. Why should they allow him the advantage?
The squad was frozen as the stranger closed the distance and became clearer to the eye. He was young—maybe even younger than August by a year or two. He moved in careful but practiced strides, keeping the gun steady and fixed on the squad. The weapon itself was a vintage double-barreled shotgun. August had always wanted to see one in person, but not while staring down the bore of a loaded one.
“Who are you?” His soft voice confirmed his apparent youth. The stranger had stopped moving about thirty yards from the squad. The vintage shotgun was just as dangerous as anything under the dome from that range.
Wolf took one step forward, which earned him the shotgun’s attention. He put his hands up. “I’m General Wolf, and this is my squad. We’ve been sent on a special mission from the dome. We mean you no harm.”
The young man spat on the ground at the mention of the dome, and a snarl took over his features. He took a couple of steps forward. His skin was the color of rust, but his smooth movements were anything but rusty. “What are you doing outside the egg?”
Egg? August had never heard anyone refer to the dome as an egg before.
Sterling laughed. “Why don’t you cut the shit? Look at us. Do you think you can scare us with that antique fire stick? You’re just lucky my general wants you alive. I was ready to blast you at first sight.”
The young man turned his upper body sharply and pulled the trigger. The blast was louder than a firecracker, and it echoed over the fields for miles. A nearby fencepost stood half as high as it had a moment ago, while its former upper half lay strewn in splintered shards about the grass.
Advertisement
August looked back at the young man who’d just finished reloading the gun and had it pointed at Wolf again already. The boy was shaking a bit now but didn’t appear nervous. Sterling stepped back and groped at his cigarette pocket.
“Let’s keep calm,” Wolf said. “We have no dealings with you or your people, whoever you or they might be. We’re out here for a single purpose, and that is to destroy a massive nest of dolorium a short ways west of here.”
The snarl melted from the stranger’s face. It seemed as if he was trying to fight off the curling of his lips, but the smile won out. “Vanno, bless you if this is true. They’ve gotten worse of late. Started out as occasional dangers, pests, really, but now they’re bigger and more numerous than ever. Attacks used to be rare and casualties even rarer, but now, both are all too common.”
“I’m sorry to hear it,” Wolf said as the stranger lowered his shotgun. “We’ll do whatever we can to put an end to it.”
“Did you guys walk all the way from the egg?”
“No,” Wolf said. “We were supposed to fly to the nest, but our craft went down a ways east of Westendale.”
“I’m surprised you made it this far,” the stranger said. “It’s getting bad out here. If it ain’t the bugs, it’s the zombies. If it ain’t the zombies, it’s… I’m glad you’re here. It’s about time you egg-dwellers remember you aren’t the only people left in this world.”
Up until Vern Slupman’s goodbye letter, August had been led to believe that the folk under the dome were, in fact, the only surviving members of the human race. That much like the centaurs, dwarves, and the aquin, humanity had become extinct outside the dome. But there one stood. He was lucid, not undead, and he even knew their language.
The stranger glanced west and met Wolf’s gaze with a worried expression. “Were you guys meaning to go straight that way?” He pointed west.
Wolf nodded.
The stranger’s eyes widened. “No. That would take you straight through the heart of Chrome Chargers territory.”
Dalton West guffawed. His laugh echoed over the fields much like the shotgun blast had.
“Colonel West, what has gotten into you?” Wolf asked in an authoritative voice.
West couldn’t control his laughter enough to speak. Rosek stormed his way in her bulky mech suit and grabbed him by the Kevlar vest with her powerful metallic fingers. Her cracked visor lifted, and she shouted. “Get a hold of yourself, movie-man.”
Her wounded face contorted in anger. August still didn’t know why she harbored such rage for West. In his short time with the squad, August couldn’t find much to complain about when it came to the old sniper. He mostly kept to himself and had also proved that he was still effective in battle.
“I’m sorry,” West said. He pulled away from Rosek, and she let go, then he moved to Wolf’s side and faced the stranger. “Maybe I misheard, but did you say ‘the Chrome Chargers’?”
The stranger nodded with furrowed brows. “Why is that funny to you? You damn egglings think everything is a joke.”
“I’m sorry if I’ve offended you,” West said, suppressing another bout of laughter. “It’s just that the Chrome Chargers were a crew of bad guys from one of my earlier movies. Are you telling me there’s an actual group of thugs out there that go by that name?”
“Yes,” the stranger said, losing patience.
“Do they actually ride around on motorcycles and wear leather like the vintage folk used to?” West giggled after the question.
“They do,” the stranger said. “They also kill, rape, steal, and terrorize. I’ve lost many loved ones to them, and our community has taken in many refugees from places that no longer exist thanks to their destruction. But you can continue laughing about it all you want.”
West’s face sobered, and he returned toward the back of the squad.
“I’ll be honest with you, mister,” General Wolf said. “I don’t know anything about the world outside the dome. I thought I did. But up until a couple of days ago, I wasn’t even aware that anyone other than us existed. I’m a high-ranking officer, and so far, this whole mission has done nothing but teach me how little I know about the world outside the dome and that I might not even know what the hel is going on within the dome. Just know that no matter how offensive we might be or how much you hate us, our sole intention is to destroy that nest.”
“I believe you,” the stranger said. “But I can’t let you continue on your current route.”
“You don’t have a say,” Sterling said.
Wolf glared at the exterminator, then softened and met the stranger’s eyes. “We’re going to that nest by any means. We’ve already fought off dolo, and a couple of our squadmates were unfortunate enough to encounter some zombies. We’re ready for anything.”
“What if I said you didn’t have to take such a risk?”
“I’d ask you to elaborate.”
“There’s another way,” the stranger said. “You don’t have to go through Chrome Charger territory. There’s an underground pass that leads to my village. You can come with me, resupply, then be on your way from there.”
“I’m surprised you trust us enough to bring us to your people,” Wolf said.
“I’m a pretty good judge of character,” the stranger said. “I can tell by the look of someone’s eye if they’re evil or not. You guys aren’t. Even the trash-talker over there,” he nodded toward Sterling.
“Give us a second,” Wolf said to the stranger before turning to face the squad. They huddled and discussed in lowered voices. “What do you guys think?”
“Oh, now you want our opinions?” Sterling said.
“Could you cut it out for just one God-damned second, Sterling?” Wolf said.
“I don’t trust it,” Rosek said.
“Why not?” Belmont asked. “He seems harmless to me.”
“It’s just weird,” Rosek said. “How can he speak our language so fluently? He even comes out with terms like ‘trash-talker.’ He speaks as though it’s his primary language, and we didn’t even know there was anyone alive out here. It’s just weird.”
“My movies have definitely had some influence outside the dome,” West said. “Chrome Chargers. I seriously thought he was pulling my leg there for a minute. I think Rosek’s right. Something’s off.”
“Well, motorcycles and vintage guns are definitely outdated,” Wolf said, “but they can still hurt. Just look at what happened to that fence post. I’d say if we have an opportunity to avoid running into a gang like that, we should take advantage.”
“What if there’s more about the outside world that we don’t know?” August said. He always felt nervous when adding his opinion, but the squad just looked at him and awaited elaboration. “Look at everything we’ve already learned. Do any of you really think that the mystery stops there? Or is it more likely that we’re simply scratching the surface of a whole pile of secrets?”
“What are you getting at, Private?” Wolf said.
“Maybe I’m just paranoid, but—”
“Understandable after everything you’ve seen so far,” Belmont said.
August nodded and continued. “What if this village he’s leading us to has a bunch of people waiting for us with modern technology? What if these guys outside the dome hate us and would kill or torture us on sight? What if—”
“I see where you’re coming from,” Dalton West said, “but you can come up with a list of ‘what ifs’ for just about anything. What we have to do is determine what is most likely based on the evidence that’s presented to us. Look at his clothes. Denim bottoms and a woolen top don’t scream advanced tech to me. He’s got a vintage gun. He looked damn near petrified when he saw us.”
“I thought he seemed calm,” August said.
West chuckled. “Trust me. That boy was shaking in his boots. Slupman said the dolo nest was real, and this kid’s eyes lit up when we mentioned we were here to torch it. And to top it all off, he seems legitimately frightened of the…” he held back laughter, “the Chrome Chargers. One of you might say he’s acting or trying to trick us. As a veteran thespian, I can tell you beyond a shadow of a doubt that the boy ain’t acting. If he is, he deserves a golden dome award.”
“It’ll have to come down to a vote,” Wolf said. “Those in favor of following the boy?”
West, Belmont, and Wolf raised their hands.
“Those in favor of continuing our current path?”
August, Rosek, and Sterling raised theirs.
“Even votes goes to the general’s decision,” Wolf said. “We’re following the boy.”
Advertisement
- In Serial33 Chapters
From Nothing
Rejoice Humanity! You have been invited to join the Galactic Hegemon. It is time for our Centenary Caste Competition. The best 1% of humanity will be given a 1 cycle tutorial before the 5 cycle contest. Be brave, be bold, but most of all, be strong and earn your place and privileges. Burning red letters hung large in the vision of everyone on earth that knew a written language. At the same moment that smartest, fastest, and strongest people on the planet disappeared with nothing to mark their passing. After a cycle of training and growth they would compete to earn their place in their suddenly expanded galaxy. This is not their story. Joe did his best to take care of his parents house and stay healthy. He was the only one of the four family members not chosen. The societal upheaval made by the announcement made the inflation and purges of the 20's seem pleasant by comparison but he keeps his head down and survives. Once the next message arrives 11 months later about the contest starting, even that society broke down into city states around large population centers. Joe tightened his belt and looked forward to the day that his family returned. Two years later burning red letters once again filled his vision. Humanity, the last of your competitors have been eliminated. Your determined caste level is 13 of 13. As such your planet has been claimed and will be repurposed for ideal resource production. Rifts will be seeded across the planet to increase resources and mana density. Your orbit will be corrected to ideal Hegemon standard. Do not interfere with any Hegemon activity, as the bottom caste you have no rights. Rejoice that all castes receive at least the basic Hegemon Growth System. Better luck next century. Joe didn't comprehend any of it. His family was dead. Everything he cared about was gone.
8 139 - In Serial6 Chapters
The End of Apocrypha
God eventually arrived to save humanity, but the term "save" means "butcher," since his creatures slaughtered every life on Earth before setting it ablaze. When a bright light arose in the sky and various things with horrific features emerged from the clouds, Nathan, a college student, was getting ready to travel to his university with his friend Deo... Will he be able to protect the people he loves about, or will he succumb in a fate worse than death?
8 102 - In Serial30 Chapters
Red Wheat
Skylar Kylee Wintersong was born an Indigo Child. Celebrated by her parents, who ensured that she suffered no restrictions that might hinder her powers, ability or genius, she has grown up knowing that she was a member of the elite, born to rule and guide. However, the cruel whims of beings who are Gods have intervened, and not only dropped Skylar in a savage reality of magic, muscle, steel, and blood, but granted her all the powers she thought she was entitled to. Her knowledge that she's been born to rule and guide, that she was a chosen one, has been made real, with all the terrible burden that entails. How will a 21st Century Earth girl survive on the Six Worlds of Shtar? A place known as "The War Worlds." The entire thing is somewhat tongue in cheek, fun high fantasy with a touch of satire. Rather than adding in likable and relatable characters, the three Earthlings are supposed to be caricatures and somewhat satirical, as I was making fun of the type of fantasy that was being spit out all over the place at the time I wrote this about a decade ago. It is currently unfinished and on hiatus.
8 200 - In Serial7 Chapters
The Worlds We Leave Behind (GameLit Novellette)
Some days are better than others for Holly. Today is one of the good ones, one of the ones where the crushing grief of losing her son eases back a little, and she's able to face the memories of who her son was, maybe even the potential of who he could have been. She feels like she's made tangible progress over the past three weeks, having progressed from crying on the couch to crying on her son's bed, in the room that he spent so much of his time. When it all finally threatens to overwhelm her again, she stands to leave, bumping his chair and awakening his computer. The voices filtering through the illuminted virtual reality headset are from three of David's best friends. Seperated by thousands of miles in the real world, they had come together inside of the virtual world of Silenia to quest for fame and fortune. At first she is unable to face them, unsure how to tell them that their friend is gone. Once she enters Silenia herself, she discovers that the virtual friendships David forged are as strong as any in reality.
8 222 - In Serial46 Chapters
Hostage
25, Angel White moves into her father's mansion in Los Angeles, California. She didn't know her father had money stashed away in the house. She also didn't know that her father had a lot of enemies who wanted that money. She soon gets an uninvited surprise when a couple of men broke inside the house. Will Angel survive being hostage for days ?
8 126 - In Serial16 Chapters
WRONG NUMBER, park solomon
the famous 'all of us are dead' star gets an unknown message from a stranger who's later revealed as one of the actress he had known over years. things start to get out of hand when they are reported to be in a relationship which unknowing sparks up their popularity and they are forced to fake date as the result. ( social media fic )
8 164

