“T-1, come in!”
Nothing.
“T-2, come in!”
Static.
“T-3, come in!” A
brief hiss.
Trexor strode across the
wreckage of the skyscraper, not knowing where to start digging. At
the ruins' high point, it would still be about half the size of the
monolithic structure it once was; Trexor could not search through the
entire mountain, and his infrared readers detected no life, or they
could not penetrate through the thick rubble. He continued walking,
sensor pointed at the ground. Bricks shifted and clattered beneath
his feet as if he was walking on snow, and, more than once, he nearly
lost his footing. The screams of those elsewhere in the city were
alien to him; his first priority was to those in this building, that
was his job. All around, other skyscrapers were still falling.
Looking up, he saw one building shaking, before breaking in half, the
top half carving a deep gash through the adjacent building as it
fell. He saw people fall to their deaths, flailing like ragdolls as
they fell. But he felt nothing for them. He felt nothing for anyone
right now, just the emptiness of failure.
To his right, bricks
moved and he heard a muffled cry. Throwing himself down, he tore
bricks and wreckage away from the source of the sound, jagged edges
reaping blood from his palms. Bricks, plaster, metal, wood, before
finally skin. A hand. It clasped around his own, and he pulled up
hard. He clenched his teeth and grimaced; he was using his left hand
to steady himself and his right to pull, but this twisted his right
side and made the blade inside him pain him again. With a roar of
pain, he pulled a black-haired woman out of the ruins. In her other
arm was what Trexor thought was a bundle of blankets, before
realising that it was a small child. The woman looked at him, blood
pouring down her face from a gash across her forehead. At least one
leg was broken; she couldn't stand. The shirt she wore was torn
across the back; obviously she had bent over the child to shield it
from the debris.
Trexor bent over to
catch his breath again and rubbed his side; he'd have to get that
checked out. “Do you know if any others survived?” Trexor panted,
barely able to get the words out.
“None on my floor,
no.” she said softly, unable to pry her eyes away from her son's
scared face. “I was in the hallway with one of your troops and a
few other families. Then the ceiling came down and...and...they're
gone!” She looked at Trexor now, before she said, “And I would be
too, if it wasn'' for you. Thank you.”
While the words sounded
sincere, Trexor knew that the woman did not want to praise him, but
wanted time to grieve. “Can you stand?” he asked.
She nodded. “Jus'
abou', I think.” She tried to stand, using one hand to steady
herself, but her legs faltered as she cried out in pain. Trexor
caught her before she fell and put her arm around his shoulders.
“Hold onto me and use
this,” he passed her his sword, “As a crutch for the other side.”
Holding the child with
one hand and supporting the mother with the other, Trexor walked
slowly and carefully back down the mountain. The son watched him with
wide blue pools of curiosity, but gave away no other emotion. “What's
his name?” Trexor asked; it's a long walk, he thought he may as
well try to interact normally with someone.
“Cane,” she said,
“After his daddy. And I'm Disa.”
“General Trexor,”
Trexor said, acknowledging the hidden question in her upwards
intonation. “Shame we couldn't meet in better circumstances.” He
dreaded to ask the next question. “And where is the father?”
“He went to Narcsia to
get some real money for li'l Cane. Got caught up in the storms, and
can't leave the planet yet.” Disa forced a weak smile. “Probably
for the best.” She coughed; the dust must be getting to her.
“General!”
Trexor recognised that
voice, but he knew that it shouldn't be there. He turned to see a
slender man dusting himself off. “How are you still alive, Trem?”
The hatred was obviously
clear in his voice, because the assassin put his hands up when he
walked over, before he pointed at a vial of green liquid on his belt.
“This is some good shit from Prauw; heals you right up.” He took
a blade out of his pocket. “This is what you left in me earlier and
this,” he turned and showed them a faint scar on his shoulder, “is
what's left.” He nodded to Disa and proffered the vial. “Here,
take it; two drops is all you need.”
Disa dropped Trexor's
sword and took the vial, before unscrewing the cap. Under the cap was
a dropped-like opening, and she squeezed two drops of fizzing green
liquid onto her tongue. Trexor faced Trem. “Why are you helping?
Doesn't seem like you.”
Trem took the vial back
and smiled encouragingly at Disa, who thanked him. “I'm helping
because I don't want to see these people die. Despite what you may
think, I have morals. I just put them aside for the money that keeps
me alive. I'd like to think that we could work well together, you and
I, Trexor.”
Trexor thought about for
a bit, until Disa supported herself and moved away, taking Cane back.
“Thank you, Trexor. For everything.”
Trexor nodded to her in
recognition of her thanks. “I guess we are kind of even, even if
you could just heal yourself up. But we could use all the help we can
get, by the looks of it.” He turned to Disa. “Get somewhere safe.
I don't know where, probably the fields on the Tapal border. Now go.”
Disa looked at both Trem
and Trexor. Her face was covered in dust and scrapes. Her clothes
looked as if they had been mauled and blood covered most of her skin.
And yet she smiled thankfully; not a happy smile, but one of relief;
she and Cane had both survived. “Thank you.” She spoke softly,
almost a whisper, before turning and walking away.
“Do you think she'll
be ok?” Trexor asked.
“I do hope so.” Trem
replied solemnly.
Silently, they ran
towards the next building. On the ground, there was silence aside
from the moving debris. In the sky, buildings scraped against one
another and fell, but not near Trexor; those had already fallen. He
looked up and saw none of the skyline that he had once despised, only
a gaping void where nothing would live.
When they reached the
next building, they began to dig.
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