Author's Note: This is a sequel series to Amy, Captured. To get the full experience, please read through that one first.
Hi again! Once more, I don't have a huge amount of stuff to say, so I'll just get right to it!
Many thanks to Isabel for her initial editing and creative input, and to Allyourbase for the same, as well as giving me some interesting ideas for future chapters...
Votes, comments and feedback are entirely appreciated. Enjoy!
Kurokami
***************
There weren't a whole lot of things to do, on Trismestigius.
Yes, it was an entire moon with its own ecosystem. But there weren't really that many people living there; just the seven person crew, the A.I and latterly Amy. No people, no civilization, not a lot of things to do.
And for Sander, for Mara, for Kanaria and Tsugi that was fine. They had their work to do; keeping the Engine, the A.I, the
whole base
operating properly. Lysithea seemed quite happy doing nothing, just sitting still and listening to her Chorus. She was an odd one. And Dulcimer meditated. A lot.
But where did that leave Ren? She was the mechanic; if nothing was broken, she was left hanging. She only really had a job here when things went wrong, or when Sander wanted her to build something. That was fine, back when the Engine was being built and she could work for most of the day. These days...
These days, she mostly just exercised.
Right now, she was lifting weights. Heavy ones. This would take up much of her morning.
It had been a long, long time since she'd actually needed to exercise, but she had kept it up after coming here. When you do something for so long that it becomes routine, it's hard to give it up for no reason, and besides, she
liked
it. She'd feel bad if she stopped, in more ways than one.
Ren kept her body in peak condition, and that was saying something; her less than human origin made her a powerhouse under normal circumstances. Like this, she could comfortably bend steel. At a dead sprint, she had a top speed of seventy miles per hour, and that had been measured scientifically. Three times, since nobody could believe the readings. It was almost
ridiculous
, they'd said. Like she was operating under Roadrunner physics.
Still, none of that really mattered; she
could
do it, that was what mattered. No use complaining that it "beggared belief," or whatever. She grunted to herself, lifting the solid metal bar up into the bracket above her with minimal effort. Sitting up, she stretched her arms over her head, working out the tension in her muscles and returning to a loose, swinging posture.
It wasn't that she had a problem with living here; living like this. It was downright peaceful, really. If there was nothing for her to do, then there was nothing
wrong.
It would be strange to wish for something bad to happen, just to occupy her time.
As if in answer to her train of thought, there was a knock at her door. Her head tilted to one side.
'Huh. That's... ominous,' She muttered to herself. 'It's open! Get in here!'
The door slid to one side, revealing Tsugi on the other side, shifting his weight from one foot to the other. When he caught sight of Ren, he didn't smile, but his jaw did set in a peculiar way. He slipped into the room, 'Hi.'
'Tsugi-chan!' Ren grinned. 'What's up?'
He stood, close to the door, making sure to close it before speaking. His eyes bored into Ren's, looking for something, 'Do you know where I come from, Ren? My homeworld?'
'No, Tsu, I don't.'
'I come from Uo.'
To her credit, Ren didn't move. Her expression didn't change, aside from the slow fade of her smile. One hand drifted up to take hold of her chin, fingers rubbing absently up and down her jaw, '
Shit.
'
'I know what you are, Ren,' Tsugi's voice was flat. 'I know what you are.'
'You could have told me you were there,' She snapped, a little too savagely. 'I would have...
Fuck,
Tsu-kun!'
'Come on, Ren!' Tsugi closed his eyes with a pained expression. 'Did you
really
think you were anonymous now? When I was a kid, you were always on TV, in the official broadcasts.
Everyone
from Uo has seen your face, and
everyone
there has an opinion of the Half in the government. Remember what they used to call you?'
Ren groaned, tipped her head back and closed her eyes, 'Sagara's
pet
. The Royal's guard dog. The Butcher. Yeah, I remember.'
'Well, as far as I'm concerned... Goddamn it, I'm not here for that!' Tsugi's palm slammed against the unyielding metal of the wall with a resounding slap. 'You're
Ren
, not the Butcher. I've known you for three years, you're my friend. My parents were loyalists, so you're alright by me. That's in the past. But I've
got
to know: is there anyone chasing you? Can they find you here?'
'No,' Her voice quavered, just slightly. It was clear this was a painful topic for her, 'Not the way I left. Have you told anyone else?'
'No, Ren, I haven't.
You
should have. I debated for a long time whether I should, which led me here. There are a lot of people out
there
who hate you enough to want to kill you,' Tsugi sighed, stepping across the room as he talked. 'If they found you, it'd be like the Vesperian government finding Sander. It'd be
bad.
'
He reached out and laid a hand on Ren's shoulder, shaking his head as he did so. She twitched at the sudden contact, almost shied away from it. His fingers squeezed gently, and then they were gone. Her eyes widened; she found herself almost missing his touch.
'Just so you know, I'm not going to apologize,' She said softly. 'That's my crap, there. Mine. I'll deal with it myself, if it ever becomes an issue,' The next part came slowly, as if she had to draw it out from some deep, hidden part of herself. 'But, for what it's worth, I'm glad I never... Never hurt you.'
'
So am I,
' Tsugi seemed more irritated then angry. But there was conviction in those words, tinged with a kind of bitterness that stung Ren to hear it. 'I'm not going to tell anyone. God knows, you've had enough trouble with your past without me bringing it all up again in front of our friends. I just wanted you to know that
I
knew. You are not alone, in that knowledge.'
Without another word, he went to the door, and something made him pause. He turned back with an unreadable expression, 'One last thing. The... the
creature
, with the metal skin. What was it?'
'Tsugi-chan...' Ren admonished. 'We both know that thing doesn't exist. The government said so.'
'They say a lot of things I don't believe. I saw it once, Ren. From the look in your eyes when I brought it up, so have you. At first I thought it was a robot, but I've
seen
robots. They don't move like that. And they
don't
survive direct hits from Lancer-class charged particle beams like it did. It was years ago, but I'd appreciate it if you'd put my curiosity to rest. What was it, you think?'
'I don't know,' Ren said quietly, shrugging her shoulders. 'I honestly don't. I wish I did.'
'Okay then. Remember what I said, Ren,' Tsugi smiled. 'You aren't alone here.'
The door closed. Ren remained motionless. For several minutes, everything was still.
'
Fuck!'
She screamed suddenly, the sound drawing out into a wordless shriek of anger and following her as she leaped from her seat, lashing out at the closest wall with one bare foot. There was an immense, sonorous bang as her foot impacted the wall; it faded slowly, like the sound of a gong, as she lowered her foot gingerly to the floor.
There was a deep, uneven dent in the metal where the kick had landed.
*************
'So, I introduced Amy to Dulsie.'
Mara gave a little giggle and pressed her back more firmly into Sander's chest. She shook her head, amusement twinkling in her eyes, 'Oh, that's
funny
, my love.'
Sunlight played across the two of them, filtered through the dark red leaves of the large tree they say under. Sander's back was tilted against the hard bark of the trunk, while Mara lay against him, seated between his splayed legs. Both of them were reading from actual, printed books; a rarity in a world of screens and wires. But Sander had always liked the feel of real paper in his hands, with words printed in concrete form, and moments like these
deserved
to have everything happen in a certain way. To have everything happen
right.
Moments like these, he could almost forget himself. He could
almost
be normal.
When he had designed the layout of their bedroom, Sander had made sure to include a spot like this out on the balcony, away from everything else. Just for the two of them. Out here, under the tree, with a breeze coming in off the sea and tousling Mara's hair in that perfect, oh so attractive way, they were totally alone. There were no cameras installed out here, no listening bugs or holograms. It was even the only spot on the moon that Jericho could not see. It was their haven.
This tree was a little worse for wear because of that. Numerous branches and leaves had been torn off during the pair's rougher, passionate, carefree moods. If this tree could talk, it would have
stories
to tell.
Once, on a lazy afternoon, Mara had gotten bored and carved into the bark, just above where Sander's head was now, a large cartoon heart with an arrow through it; inset in the carving were their initials: S & M.
Both of them had found that hilariously appropriate.
'Do you remember our first time with Dulsie, Mara?' Sander asked absently, turning the page on George Orwell's classic,
1984.