Out of the Ashes (Maji 1) - Page 2

Our already hard lives were about to get a lot harder.

Flashes of my dead cousins and uncle covered in blood entered my mind, and then images of my sickly pale and unmoving father and cousin took centre stage. It made me sick to think I broke my promise to Jerek when my father and Zee died in my arms from the Great Illness. I failed them; I failed my entire family, and I always believed that my walking the Earth alone was my punishment from the Almighty.

I closed my eyes, forcing the images of the war from my mind. The war had only lasted a few weeks—just until the virus uploaded to the augmented’s collective chips could be rewritten—but within those few weeks, hundreds of millions had been slaughtered. Within those few weeks, families had been torn apart, and a divide in mankind had been created.

Originals—the nickname for humans without augmentations—were on one side and the augmented were on the other, and to this day, that divide still stood tall, waiting for the other to step out of line.

I focused on my task and thought calming thoughts to bring down my elevated heart rate. I didn’t want to make it easy for any augs who took up work as watchmen. My current heartbeat would act as a dinner bell to them. I focused on the building that could just as easily kill me as quickly as any aug. The roof, most of the walls, and parts of the floor were missing from the structure, so I needed to watch my step and look out for animals, and people, who could sneak up on me and attack.

With an arrow in one hand and my trusty self-made bow in the other, I crouched down and moved towards an open space in the wall and looked through it. Bright white spotlights lit up the WBO; it gave away many of the positions of the patrolling watchmen on the forty-foot wall of the building. I curled my lip in disgust at the sight of them.

Watchmen were worse than any mindless man, woman, or rabid animal. They were the humans with great power and could decide your fate with the snap of their fingers. There used to be a thing called the ‘Court of Law’ where those accused of crimes could go and fight their accusations for their freedom, but not anymore. If a watchman decided you were guilty of something, then you were guilty. No ifs, ands, or buts about it. They were supposed to be protectors of the innocents and a beacon for a new law and order, but many of them were monsters in uniform. To me and many others, they were the root of all evil.

I’d take my chances with a pack of feral mutts before I’d ever trust a watchman.

My head was low as I scanned the perimeter. I glanced at my surroundings every few seconds to keep an eye on things before I’d return my attention back to the WBO. My eyes searched the dark night sky for drones in the air, and when I saw none of the flashing red lights, I breathed a sigh of relief.

Drones were a nightmare to deal with in general, but at night-time, they were always going to cause the death of someone. They scanned everywhere for the heat signature of a living being. It gave up people’s positions to the watchmen even if they were hiding in the most unlikely of places. A traveller I met hours before told me that the power link for the drones and all operating weapons of the WBO had been shut off when the Maji arrived. No one knew why, and if someone did know, they weren’t letting the information slip.

Normally, I wouldn’t care. Normally, I wouldn’t break away from the rules that have kept me alive all these years, but I had a gut feeling I had to come to the WBO and see for myself what was happening.

So far, my gamble was turning out to be a complete waste of time … until something happened. I startled when a patch of dark a thousand or so metres to the left of the WBO compound lit up suddenly. I sucked in a choked breath. A few smaller spacecrafts came to life and lifted from the Earth’s surface, ascending to the starlit heavens, but that’s not what amazed me.

The mother of all spacecrafts was sitting in the newly lit up area, and it was huge. I had never seen an alien spacecraft up close before. When I was younger, I saw a few of them from a great distance as they descended from space and docked at one of the many trading posts stationed across the planet. This spacecraft, however, was the largest I had ever seen. I could not believe the sheer size of it, and when white lights began to flash across the hull, I found myself staring at it, my mouth agape with awe.

I was, by no means, an expert in vessels not of this world, but I had listened to my father discuss them from the moment I could understand him until the moment he died. Growing up, manmade craft engine halls were like a second home to me. I knew the ins and outs of your typical spacecraft and its engines. I wholeheartedly knew the functions of a destroyer vessel and what made up the interior and exterior of one, and this craft was most certainly a destroyer.

Being an engineer had been my father’s trade since he was twenty. After years of hard work, he had been promoted to chief engineer for many different crafts from the Earth’s military fleet when they were docked. He was so good at what he did; he even assisted the aliens with their mechanical problems when they docked at one of the trading posts. Because of my father, I understood spacecrafts, and I appreciated them, which was why this very one blew me away.

It was easily five thousand metres long, and from what I could see, the only colour anywhere on it was the blue glow of the reactor core—the heart of the spacecraft. That very reactor powered sixteen massive drive assemblies that would propel the ship at what must be an unmatched speed. Ten dorsal turrets mounted particle projection cannons in pairs, lending what I knew would be excellent firepower. Eight monster plasma blasters were on either side of the nose of the craft and a heavier alpha plasma down its centreline most certainly permitted the ship to deliver blistering damage to anything unlucky enough to be caught within firing distance … and those were just the weapons I could see.

If only you could see this, Papa.

Again, my eyes watered, but I rubbed them until the stinging threat of tears subsided. Apart from being in love with the crafts, my father was a space fanatic or ‘space freak’, as I liked to tease him in my younger years. He loved the other species and was fascinated with them. Their differences, their similarities, their history, their culture—everything. He loved it all. He was part of a small faction of humans who believed the other species had a right to exist just as we did. He always said, “No planet or race lays claim to the universe; it lays claim to us.”

My father was a wise man, and if he were with me, experiencing a spacecraft of this magnitude up close and personal, he’d be beside himself with happiness. The emotion I felt at that moment distracted me, and that distraction was about to cost me dearly.

When I heard softly creaked movements come from close by, I jerked away from the crack in the wall, reached back, withdrew an arrow from my quiver, and readied my bow. I heard a gruff curse then the sound of heavy footsteps began to pound up the stairs of the building I was in. It caused my heart to slam into my ribs as it thrummed in my chest.

Watchmen.

“Civilian female at HQ,” a muffled voice said. “Armed and dangerous. Alert the Maji of a possible attack.”

Alert the Maji? My brow creased with confusion. Not alert the watchmen patrol?

I took aim, steadied my breathing, and like a reflex, I released an arrow when I saw the head of a watchman breach the hole in the floor beneath the stairway. Not a second later, the arrow penetrated his exposed eye socket, and he dropped onto the stairway with a thud. It was only as my arrow pierced his skull that I realised he hadn’t worn a helmet, and he had no protection against my weapon. A yelp was heard after the watchman dropped then vile cursing followed.

“She kill’t him!” a deep voice bellowed. “That fuckin’ whore kill’t Kiker!”

The reality I had just killed a person did not sink in. Instead, stomach-churning fear did. If they weren’t going to kill me before, the watchmen surely would now that I had killed one of their own. I sucked in a breath, and with rapid speed, I released another arrow in warning. I didn’t wait around for the second watchman to call for backup or to come after me. I turned, and without thinking, I jump

ed from the first floor of the building. I turned midair and landed on my left side, almost instantly falling into a roll as I tumbled down the side of a ditch.

Searing hot pain vibrated through my body, but I couldn’t pause to soothe away the aches because I had to get on my feet and get moving. I pushed myself to my feet with my right arm when I realised my left one was burning with pain and wouldn’t move. I looked down at it and saw the joint was clearly dislocated and the bone was possibly broken at the elbow. White dots splashed across the back of my eyes, and I had to close them to get control.

Don’t think about it.

I opened my eyes, reached for my bow and quiver, but then abandoned them when I saw they were in pieces and scattered around the ditch. I used my right hand to hold my left arm against my body as I scrambled up the mud bank and ran like the devil himself was on my heels. I bit down on my lip when each step caused excruciating aches to tear through my arm. Twice more, my vision was spotted with white dots, but I forced myself to continue running as the area I was in began to come to life with light that was betraying my position. Sheer determination to get away was the only thing that kept me moving, but it wasn’t enough.

Less than a minute after I jumped out of the building and began running, I was tackled to the ground from behind.

A scream of agony tore from my throat as fresh pain surged through my body, mainly from my left arm. I was flipped onto my back, and a quick glance downwards gave me a revolting picture. The bone of my forearm was snapped in two, and a prodding piece stuck out of my skin for all to see. All doubt was wiped from my mind—it was definitely broken. I turned my head to the side and promptly puked up my stomach contents. Not a second later, I was pulled up to my feet by my hair and forcefully shoved. I stumbled backwards away from the watchman who tackled me. I looked up at him and saw he was pointing an old-fashioned handheld gun at me.

“This is for Kiker!”

I closed my eyes and awaited my release from this prison sentence many called life.

I’m coming home, Papa.

A bang rippled through the air, but surprisingly, it was the gurgled male scream that startled me and caused my eyes to open. The watchman who was about to take my life was on his knees before me with a large gaping hole in the centre of his chest. It smelled like his flesh was burning, and from the slight puff of smoke that rose from his wound, I’d say a plasma blaster made the hole. I switched my gaze to his face and felt the blood drain from my own. His dark, panicked eyes were focused on me, but his mouth was agape, and blood was spewing from it like a river.

“Help,” he choked out around the thick liquid before he fell forward.

Tags: L.A. Casey Maji Science Fiction
Source: readsnovelonline.net
readsnovelonline.net Copyright 2016 - 2025