P R E F A C E
This story is set on Omega in 2185, a few months prior to the events of Mass Effect 2. While it has no real connection to the main plot of the games, it follows a timeline consistent with a generic male Shepard who made mostly Paragon choices during the events of the first game, e.g. saving the Council, preventing Wrex from being killed on Virmire, etc. I have mostly stuck with canon as presented in the games, with a few deliberate exceptions such as a more scientifically accurate depiction of levo/dextro amino acid chemistry, and the physical appearance of Quarians being based on the original concept art from ME1 rather than the lazy photoshopped stock image appearance from ME3.
C H A P T E R O N E
Naala'Tidall perched on the ratty but extremely comfortable couch that had been her bed for the past month or so, knees drawn up to her chest and hands folded below her jaw. If it weren't for the mask she probably would have been biting her nails. She was staring intently at the television screen across from her, which was displaying a bootleg stream of a fight that was currently taking place deep in the bowels of Omega, several dozen levels below. Naala wasn't exactly a prizefighting enthusiast under normal circumstances, and she had never gambled in her life, but she was watching this fight as though she had a million credits riding on it because the human male currently getting his face pounded into the mat by a large Turian was the owner of the couch, and Naala had a major crush on him.
It was the second round, and the human had been getting the worst of it from the beginning. The Turian was taller, had a longer reach, and the boney plates that covered his body acted like natural armor. Normally a fight like this would never be organized. It was just too unfair. But this was Omega, and you could get any entertainment you wanted here, for the right price. And the crowd was getting their money's worth tonight. The human fighter hadn't been getting in much in the way of blows, but despite the tremendous beating he was receiving he simply refused to stay down. Time and time again he had been slammed into the chain-link walls of the octagon or sent toppling to the mat, only to rise to his feet, wipe the blood and sweat from his face, and taunt his opponent into hitting him again. The crowd had been overwhelmingly against him at first, but each time he took a hit that would have killed a lesser man and got back up with a grin on his face, more and more of them had started to cheer.
What the crowd didn't know, but Naala did, was that the human was holding back. They all assumed that this fight was simply going exactly the way you would expect a bareknuckle fight between a human and a Turian to go. But they hadn't seen that human kill five armed Batarians with his bare hands. Naala had. Granted, the human had made heavy use of biotics in that fight, which the suppression collar that had been clamped around his neck as he entered the ring wouldn't allow. But the Quarian girl could tell from his movements that he was pulling his punches, taking blows he could have easily dodged and deliberately striking the Turian where he knew the alien's plates would protect him. He was dragging out the fight on purpose, and setting himself up as the underdog. As he was flung bodily into one of the posts by a particularly savage body blow, the bell rung to mark the end of the second round, and the ref moved to separate them. The Turian looked confident but frustrated, while the human's face had curled into a smug smile.
"Hey ref!" the human yelled as he leaned back against the chain-link, loud enough for the microphones to pick up his voice "what are the odds looking like?"
"Seven-one on you" growled the referee, a heavily scarred Krogan who had clearly done plenty of time in the ring himself.
"Starting to look a little too good" the human chuckled, spitting a wet glob of bloody phlegm onto the mat and cracking his jaw "they were eight-one last round."
He hauled himself upright, popped his knuckles, and suddenly seemed much nimbler on his feet than he had before.
"I guess it's time to start taking this seriously." He quipped, grinning savagely at his opponent, who simply laughed as they squared up.
"You can take a beating, human, I'll give you that. But this round you're going down."
"Think so, bird boy? I'll bet you or anyone else in this shit-shack five thousand credits right here that I can pin you in less than a minute." The human pronounced, making sure everyone in the arena could hear him.
The crowd roared with a mixture of laughter, jeers and the occasional cheer. The Turian scowled, but the bell rung again before he could respond, and both fighters charged. The Turian swung at the human with a powerful haymaker, but the human ducked under it and surged in. Where before he had stayed back, apparently kept at bay by the alien's superior reach, now he was on the attack, getting in close where the Turian's longer arms were a disadvantage. His movements, sluggish before, were now lightning fast as he pounded on the Turian with a flurry of swift jabs to the sides and gut. He wasn't striking plates now, this time every blow landed in a place where the alien was protected only by bare hide.
The Turian grunted and buckled under the assault, momentarily stunned. As he recovered from his initial shock and moved to grapple, the human slipped away as quickly as he had advanced, juking around the Turian and swinging his leg up and then around and down in a vicious hammer kick that drove the heel of his tall ring boot deep into the Turian's right kidney (or at least, where his right kidney would be if Turians had kidneys). As his opponent staggered forward, the human recovered and shifted, sending his other foot into the Turian's left non-kidney in a swift straight kick. The Turian stumbled and fell forward, but before he could recover the human had leapt into the air and came hurtling down on top of him with a rib-crushing elbow drop that plowed the alien face first into the mat. In less than a second, he had the Turian in a headlock, using his opponent's own head spines for leverage to twist his neck.
"Now kiss my hand and say you're a little bitch!" The human cackled, stomping down on the back of the Turian's digitigrade leg with his heel as the alien struggled to get out from under him.
The Turian roared with pain and anger, but all he could do was thrash about fruitlessly as the referee began the count.
"And the winner is Ricky Rasputin, by submission!" the Krogan bellowed as the bell rang for the final time.
The crowd exploded in a chorus of boos and cheers as Ricky climbed to his feet and threw out his arms wide, circling the ring and howling like a madman. Naala shut off the TV and sighed with relief. It was strange, she hadn't had any doubt that he would win, but seeing him beaten like that had sent her heart into her throat.
About half an hour later she heard the locks on the door of the apartment cycling and the human stumbled in, making a beeline for the fridge and digging a massive icepack out of the freezer compartment. They called him "Ricky Rasputin" in the ring, but his real name (or at least, the name he had given her) was Ricky Nikto. He was tall for his species and powerfully built, with limbs like tree trunks and a broad chest that rippled with muscles. His dark hair was buzzed very short, and pale grey eyes with deep bags under them stared tiredly out from below a heavy brow. He was still in his ring attire; tall laced boots that extended halfway up his calves, fingerless gloves that weren't padded like boxing gloves but served more to reinforce his wrists, and loose, baggy trunks. The strange part was that under all of it he was wearing a skin-tight bodysuit which covered every inch of flesh below his neck apart from his hands. Naala had seen some of the other human fighters wear shirts made of a similar material in addition to their trunks, but never a full body suit. Come to think of it, she reflected, she had never seen him show any skin that wasn't on his face or hands before.
The reason became apparent as he unzipped the front of the suit and peeled it off his arms and shoulders, letting it flop open and hang down over the waist of his trunks. Naala couldn't help gasping at the sight of his back. Huge, gnarled scars ran up the length of his spine and down the backs of his arms. Indeed, now that she knew to look for it, she could see the ridges of similar scars going down the backs of his legs as well, through the suit. These weren't fight scars, she could tell that immediately. They were too precise, too regular. More like the aftermath of surgery performed by a doctor who was a master at cutting but had no idea how to close wounds properly, or just didn't give a shit. There were other scars too, hexagons and ovals in an inscrutable pattern that was mirrored on either side of his horribly disfigured spine. Was this how he had gotten his biotic abilities? Naala knew that humans, like most species, needed implants to use biotics, but she found it hard to believe that the process could be so crude.
"Ah shit, you're still awake?" Ricky said as he turned his head at the sound of Naala's gasp and noticed her staring at him.
"Of course!" Said Naala, feeling both embarrassed and vaguely indignant at the same time. "You were fighting, I couldn't go to sleep until I knew you hadn't gotten hurt."
"Ya shouldn't worry so much." He grunted, slapping the icepack against a large bruise on his shoulder. "I've survived a lot worse."
"I can't help it." She said, pouting behind her mask. "Seeing you get beat up like that freaks me out."
"Don't watch then." Ricky said, somewhat flippantly, as he fished around in the fridge for a beer.
"But not watching freaks me out more." Naala crossed her arms.