The Judgery

You wake up.

How long have you been asleep?

You look at the clock…10 minutes; A good night’s rest. You usually only sleep 5 minutes, so this is a big improvement. Your doctor told you to start getting more sleep. He gave you steps to help you improve your sleep. You followed them. They worked. 10 minutes is good, but you probably shouldn’t sleep more than that.

You remove the SleepFast device from your head and place it back on it’s stand at the side of your bed. It looks almost like a pedestal. It stands so tall that from your bed you have to look up. You only look down at it once you’re out of bed.

Your feet hit the floor. A light races from one edge of the black baseboard to the other side, turning the baseboards white, lighting the carpet beneath your feet. A voice greets you:

“Hello! Good morning! The sun might not show his face today, and it is going to rain, but don’t despair! Tomorrow looks to be sunny with a high of seventy degrees! Wednesday is always rain day! It is necessary for the beauty of the planet!”

The cheeriness of the male voice was a little too much for this time in the morning. It always was. It had a way of getting under your skin. The cheery voice was supposed to make you happy and keep you in a good mood. But it almost had the opposite effect.

* * * *

The morning commute to work is dreadful. It must be taking 5 minutes. There was a jam somewhere. Traffic got backed up for miles. You left for work a minute earlier than usual to compensate for any delays. You hope you don’t get there late. Again. And get reamed by your boss. Again.

Luckily, you reached work just in time. The doorway scans the chip in your wrist and you’re officially on the clock. In the system. The elevator wasn’t working, so you had to take the Escastairs. Up 3 floors. Could this day start off any worse? You think to yourself. You know your coworkers are thinking the same thing. Everybody has this look of dissatisfaction as they walk up the moving stairs that inconveniently wind their way around the facility with little exit points for different floors. You get off on the third and head down another moving walkway.

You reach your department. You walk into the cube matrix and take the transport to your cube. It’s in upper-middle-northeast corner. There are one hundred cubes in this matrix. You are one out of a hundred. You strap into your floating chair with the rounded bottom and back. It’s comfortable. More comfortable than it has any right to be. You guess they had to make something comfortable. You spin the chair around and look at your wrap-around desk. It comes out from the wall in a never ending loop. Everywhere you look there is desk. It sickens you. You look down. The floor is about five feet down. It would be dangerous if the gravity was turned on in here. Luckily, the gravity was only turned on for the desk to keep all papers and tools from floating away. You laugh. “Luckily”.

You decide to get to work and manipulate the chair over to the edge of the desk. It doesn’t matter where. Your arms, having been free floating all this time, latch down onto the desk like they’re being suctioned. It’s a feeling you never get used to. It’s probably not good for your arms. But they never really think about what’s good for you. They only think about what’s good for them. The bastards. Best not to think too loud. They might hear you.

You start on your paper work. Sometimes you get to thinking this job is designed so that you never get your work done and you always get more and more every day. It sucks the life out of you. It sucks the life out of everyone. Everyone is lifeless. Everyone is dead. What are we even doing here anymore? On Earth, you mean. You wonder what the point of life is now that humanity’s soul and vibrance is gone. It’s a miracle you even had a thought like that. Maybe that’s hope enough. But you doubt it.

That voice that greets you in the morning every time your feet touch the carpet starts to make more sense. It’s a last resort to try and keep some kind of life alive. Even if it is artificial. Could artificial life be more living than real life? You need to stop thinking. This is getting too deep and serious. You need to focus on your work. Maybe if you work hard enough and fast enough you can get through the whole stack of papers and have less tomorrow. Or is that just how they want you to feel?

Dammit. You have no idea what’s them and what’s you anymore. They’ve screwed with you so much that it’s fogging your mind. All the stuff they’ve done is atrocious. They made a device that allows 10 minutes of sleep to do as much good for your body as 8 hours used to do. Then they extended the work day by 6 hours. Then they made transportation go exponentially faster so you can get anywhere in a fraction of the time it used to take. Then they extended the work day another hour. How much time was there in a day anymore? How much was spent at work? What do people do in their free time?

You stop yourself. You’re doing it again. Just get to work. It’s not like the faster or harder you work, the more you’ll be rewarded, but at least you can get your mind off of things. That’s all you want at this point. You just want to stop thinking. It feels like a curse. You envy the people who have fully accepted their robotness. Which brings up a good question. Why haven’t they just replaced everyone with robots?

You pick up the first paper on your pile. At first you just stare at the words. You stare through the words, into the white space between the black letters. You stop thinking altogether. You get into a sort of trance and it fills you with peace. A bright flash hits your eyes and you snap out of it. You notice an arm retract into the ceiling. It was one of those robots that scans your life systems. If it thinks you might be dead it comes down and scans you to make sure. Great. Even a robot thinks you’re dead. You look at the page again. This time you actually read it:

Name: Ben Fit

(All names and surnames were shortened to one syllable to save time).

Occupation: Construction worker
Claim: Jen Goop stole one of his spoons. He wants one million dollars in compensation.

Is this a joke? You don’t even have to debate yourself on this one. You write on the line at the bottom:

Rule in favor of the defendant.

One suit down, about one thousand to go. Why do people even bother anymore? You guess you shouldn’t complain. If people didn’t file ridiculous lawsuits against each other you’d be out of a job. Sometimes you regret going to law school, but there are worse jobs than being a Judgery. Although most of the time you feel like law school was completely unnecessary. Most people with half a brain could determine 90% of the suits that come across your desk.

You read the next one:

Name: Ron Yunk
Occupation: Cobbler
Claim: Dan Hup ruled unjustly. Wants one million dollars in compensation.

What the hell? You think. That’s your name. Why is this file on your desk? It’s clearly a conflict of interest. It’s against the law to judge yourself. This file should have been sent somewhere else. You try to remember the procedure for something like this.

“Call boss,” you say. The cube goes dark and a square pops up in thin air with your boss on it.

“Yes, Dan?” she says.

“I got a suit against myself by mistake. What do I do with it?”

“That’s a breach of the law. I’m sending someone to arrest you. Just sit tight.” The screen goes blank, then collapses on itself. Your cube turns red.

“What the hell?!” you scream.

You try to jump, but you’re still strapped to your chair, so you just kind of spin around until you’re upside down. You unbuckle yourself and start floating toward the door at the ceiling. Suddenly, gravity kicks in and you are pulled to the floor like an elevator with a snapped cable. It hurts. It hurts a lot. You try to figure out a way to get to the door. You can reach the desk. You climb onto it. From there you can reach the door in the ceiling. You open it and climb out.

What now? You can’t just take the transport down. You’ll have to scale down the outside of the cube matrix. It’s not going to be easy. No time to waste. You run down the hallway and to the edge of the cube matrix. You’ll have to break through the wall. They’re coming. You can hear them. Luckily, everybody’s very cheap about buildings. You punch the wall repeatedly and it tears and breaks fairly easily. You rip a hole big enough to fit through and look down.

The outside is smooth. Not much, if anything, to grab onto. You might just have to slide. You climb out, hanging by your fingers, then turn around and let go. Your butt touches the side as you slide down the length of a football field. You start wondering if this was a bad idea. Once you get to the last cube, you grab onto the protrusion of its wall and stop yourself. It hurts your fingers. You let yourself calm down a bit, then let go. You fall to the ground. The pain sensors in your brain go off, but you ignore them.

You run. There are guards coming toward you. All the guards. You’ve never fought. Never been trained to fight. First your first attempt here, you don’t do too bad. The guards level you within about 30 seconds and beat you into submission. It hurts. They cuff you.

* * * *

You wake up in a room. You don’t know when you went unconscious or how long you’ve been out. You’re not sure you even remember what all happened. Your boss sits in front of you. You’re sitting at a table in a bland room. It dulls the senses.

“I didn’t do anything,” you say. The boss doesn’t respond. “It’s just a mistake. The wrong file got put in my stack.” The boss kind of leans back.

“Then why did you run?” your boss asks you condescendingly. You don’t respond. “It’s standard procedure to make an arrest in this situation. Then it gets resolved. Then you go free. There’s nothing to get excited about.”

“You can say that again,” you say, to the confusion of your boss.

“Unfortunately, I have no choice but to fire you.”

“I figured.”

“I also have to send you to jail.”

“That I didn’t.” You don’t know why it hadn’t crossed your mind, but it makes sense and you don’t fight it.

“You will spend thirty days in jail. Upon release they will assign you another job utilizing your skillset.”

That is the end of it. The guards haul you off. You travel to the prison. You wonder if it will actually be so bad. You hadn’t been to prison before. It couldn’t be any worse than work. Maybe it would be better.

You reach the prison and see a giant cube of a building. When you enter, you start to get a sense of dread. You are quickly filed along and get into put into your section. You’re in prison attire and you aren’t entirely sure how everything happened so quickly or where the clothes came from. Within five minutes of arriving, you are brought to the door of your cell. It opens and you go in.

It’s a damn cube. It doesn’t look much different from your work cube. Same desk. Same chair. You have the undesirable task of building parts for machinery.

You look down. There’s a bed on the floor.

You work for hours. Hours upon hours. The walls turn black. It must be time for sleep. You float down to the bed and get situated. You see a SleepFast sitting there beside you. Not tonight. Tonight you’ll enjoy a nice long sleep. After thirty seconds of shut-eye, a robot arm comes down and scans you. You cover your eyes with your hand. A cheery voice says:

“Hey, buddy! Please use the SleepFast! It gives you all the sleep you need in a fraction of the time!”

You groan and shut your eyes again, hoping the robot will go away. It’s the same damn voice that greeted you in the morning.

“Hey, buddy! Hate to be a stickler, but I’m gonna have to ask you to use the SleepFast! It gives you all the sleep you need in a fraction of the time!”

The voice seemed a little menacing in that last sentence. Was it threatening you? You ignore it again, hoping it will leave you the hell alone.

“Hey, pal! Sorry to bother you, but I’m gonna need you to use the SleepFast! It gives you all the sleep you need in a fraction of the time!”

He was definitely threatening you that time. You ignore it again just to see what happens. The robot shines a blinding light in your face.

“Look alive, buddy! I hate to do this, but you really need to use the SleepFast! It gives you all the sleep you need in a fraction of the time!”

Or what? You think. Maybe it would just keep annoying you.

“Hey! I just got a great idea! How about I play some soothing music to help you sleep! If you use the SleepFast, it gives you all the sleep you need in a fraction of the time!”

The most horrendously happy song starts playing. Bubbling its way into your brain. Fine. It wins. You grab the helmet and strap in, then turn over to sleep. The music stops. The light fades. The robot ascends. At least the future got prison right.

The Assassin

“Some wish they would have killed the Gun of Dawn when they had the chance. Then shudder to think of the cost of such a task.” – The Coming of the Gun of Dawn by Counsel Scribe Sara Brezal.


 Private Cran Horne heard the barracks’ alarm and was up putting on his uniform before he had even realized something was happening. Years of training in the Space Marines had taught him to be ready at a moment’s notice, which was good, considering he rarely had more than that to prepare. He was fitting his boots on when a tall man entered the barracks room and shouted, “All right, Marines! I want you suited up and in the briefing room in ten minutes!” No other orders were given or needed.

Cran looked up and saw that some men were already making their way to the briefing room. He zipped up his boots and headed to join them. Once in the room, Cran took his seat and looked around. All told, there were 100 men and women here, the full count of the platoon. The lieutenant entered the room from a door to the left of a stage where a display was set up and shouted, “Attention!”

The whole platoon stood up and became silent as a short, older man walked in, placed some papers he was carrying down, and said quietly, “As you were.” The platoon sat down and the briefing began.

“Ladies and gentlemen, my name is admiral Konright and I come with a mission. Right now we are in orbit around planet 8265, better known as Trinite. Our target is a small city in Quadrant Two, Sector Five that the locals call New Pump City. Our goal is to land in the city, set up a perimeter, and secure a building in the center of town. From there, we wait until Special Operations arrives.” At this, the platoon began murmuring to one another. The lieutenant stood up and shouted, “As you were!” The room became silent.

Cran thought to himself, Special operations? This must be big. They are the best- trained unit in the guild, tough as nails.

The admiral continued the briefing. “I want this to go down by the numbers, people. You are going in hot but are not to engage any targets unless given authorization. We will be dropping in at 0700 local time, so I’m sure we will be a surprise to the people just starting their day. Your job is to keep this cool and precise. Do you understand?”

“Sir, yes sir,” was the answer in unison.

“Then I will turn you over to your commanding officer.”

The lieutenant shouted, “Alright people, you heard the man. We got a job to do! I want you geared up and ready to go in fifteen minutes. Predrop count down starts in twenty. Let’s move!”

Cran stood up and headed toward his weapon locker.

 

Cran sat, strapped in his seat of the orbital drop ship awaiting final countdown. He always hated this part. His training had prepared him for just about anything, but he never could seem to get used to drops. It was the way his stomach was flung up into his throat then; as the ship pointed nose first toward the planet, his chest was pushed back and he would have to hold his breath to keep from blacking out.

He found it best to try and keep his mind on other things, mainly the mission after the drop. Why would special ops be concerned with a small backwater town on this out-of-the-way planet? Maybe the miners there had discovered something rare, some kind of new energy source. But if that was the case, why the S.O.? They were never called out except for missions of extreme danger and secrecy. Every once in a while, you would hear of an S.O. mission where someone had to be bumped off, or a local militia was shouting about independence from the guild. Those were the type of conflicts where you wanted things done nice and quiet like. Leave no loose ends.

Cran’s thoughts snapped back to the drop as the flight master said over the intercom, “Three, two, ready, DROP!” The ship plummeted out of the hangar and began its fall toward the planet below. Cran closed his eyes and tried to force his stomach back to its normal place. Then, as the ship went nose first, he began the breathing technique he’d had drilled into his head. Cran held his breath and counted: three, two, one. He grunted the air out of his lungs and took in another breath. He would have to keep doing this for the next few seconds until the ship hit the lower atmosphere and the G forces were lowered. Then the hard part would be over.

After what felt like an eternity, the ship did just what it was supposed to and they began landing procedures. Cran grabbed the blast rifle that was secured in a rack about his head and did a final check of his gear. The lieutenant shouted, “Thirty seconds to L.Z.”

 

The sun rose slowly over the horizon as the people of New Pump City began their day. All except the patrons of The Hand Well Tavern, who were still drinking from the night before. The Hand Well was the only tavern in New Pump that never closed after they learned many preferred beer with their breakfast over coffee.

It was just about time for the shift change for the piano player when suddenly a man burst through the swinging doors and shouted, “Spacers! Spacers be comin’ in drop ships! At least a hundred men by the looks of things!”

“What in the great hell are you talking about, Frank?” asked a man playing cards in the far corner. “Ain’t no reason for Spacers to be comin’ here. Probably just smugglers come to make a buy. Now either sit your ass down and have a drink or get the hell out of here!”

Frank started to move when suddenly a large man in Spacer armor shouldered his way into the bar, throwing Frank aside. He was soon followed by an equally armored woman who stepped to the opposite side of the doorway. The whole saloon dropped to the floor at the site of the armed troops. All but one man sitting inconspicuously at the far end of the bar. The marines drew their aim on the man and said, “On the ground, now!”

The man, who was dressed in a very fine black suit, responded without looking up, “Not until I finish my drink. Maybe not even then.” The marines briefly looked at each other in confusion, then turned back to shout at the man again. Before they got the chance, a tall woman in a black trench coat and beret with a Spacer logo on it walked in and said calmly. “That won’t be necessary, soldier. I do believe he is the one we came for. Mr. Eli Warren, would you kindly come with us?”

Eli looked up slowly at her and threw back his drink. He stood up and tossed a gold piece to the bartender, who was still cowering below the bar. He walked out the saloon door and saw the nearly one hundred or so Spacer troops securing the town square. As the marines fitted handcuffs on Eli’s wrists, he looked to the woman in black and asked, “Do you think you brought enough men?”

 

Eli was forced down into a hard metal chair. The table in front of him had all of his possessions organized on top of it. His saddle pack, a small purse of gold coins, assorted trinkets of various uses and an ancient black revolver. The room was small and barely held the two guards standing at either side of the only door. Eli sat calmly with his hands, still in cuffs, placed on his lap. Despite his rage toward his captors, he showed no emotion. His curiosity as to exactly why these people wanted him slightly outweighed his anger. They were Spacers; that was plain enough to see. No one else would have built a base this advanced out here in the middle of nowhere. But why him? Spacers never cared much for the people of Trinite, or any planet; all they cared about was the raw materials the planet produced. Eli wasn’t a miner or some town official, so he could see no reason why they wanted him.

After several minutes, the door behind Eli opened and the woman in black entered with a folder under her arm. She had taken off her trench coat to reveal an officer’s uniform. She looked down at his cuffs and sighed, “I apologize; those should have been removed when they brought you here. Allow me.” She unlocked the cuffs and sat down in a chair on the opposite side of the table. “Can I offer you something to drink? Coffee or tea, perhaps?”

Eli thought, So, we’re playing the good cop, I see. Did they really think so little of him that he would be brought in by such an old ploy? “Whiskey,” was his only response. A slight hint of confusion flashed on the woman’s face in the briefest of instants before she composed herself and nodded to one of the guards. The look on her face, despite its briefness, spoke volumes to Eli. If a man wanting whiskey at any hour surprised her, then she definitely wasn’t from here and hadn’t been stationed here long.

The guard brought a delicate-looking glass filled one-quarter of the way with a dark spirit. Eli picked it up and sipped it. It was a finer quality than he was used to. He set the glass down and said nothing. Whoever this Spacer was, she had the upper hand and Eli would do nothing to increase that hand. Silence would undoubtedly cause her to wonder what he was thinking. Slowly she paced the width of the room and began reading the folder in her hand as if it was the first time seeing it.

“Eli Warren. Age, unknown. Place of birth, unknown. Current whereabouts, unknown. You are a hard man to find, Mr. Warren. In the past week, none of my operatives could find anyone who even knew what you looked like, let alone where you could be found.”

God, he thought, this woman is hurling information at me. So her “operatives,” not her, have been here only a week. He was surprised they had found him that quickly. Still, the number of people the Spacers seem to have devoted to his location was a bit much. They must have wanted him pretty bad.

She continued, “The stories some people tell about you are pretty hard to believe, some even fantastic. One person claimed you trained under the famous gunslinger Cort Owen, but that would make you almost one hundred and you don’t look like you could be over fifty. Another man claimed you shot and killed all three of the God’s Gun assassins with one bullet.”

Eli responded drily, “I hadn’t heard that one before. Who do you think I am?”

“I think you’re just a drifter with a good shot and a lot of luck, but my superiors feel otherwise.”

This news did not please Eli at all. He didn’t like the idea of anyone in the Spacer Guild having even heard of him, especially the higher ups. He had a level of anonymity that he wished to retain. The woman sat down across from him and said, “I have a job offer.”

“The answer is no.”

“You don’t know what the job is.”

“It doesn’t matter. I know how you Spacers work. You have a problem, you nuke it from orbit. Problem solved. You don’t need me.”

She chuckled at that. “Mr. Warren, you should know that the production and use of nuclear weapons is strictly forbidden by both the Space Guild and the Emperium. Besides, the problem we have is something we wish to handle a bit more…inconspicuously.”

“Yes, I see, sending a hundred men in ships to get me should go unnoticed,” Eli responded sarcastically. He had grown tired of this game and wanted to get to the point.

“A show of force was deemed necessary. Besides, it should add to your already larger than life reputation. But I digress. Have you ever heard of a group known as the Thuggee?”

The royal assassins of the Emperium, rumored to be so elite in the art of killing that only the head of royal houses could afford their services. Eli thought. “I’ve heard of them, what are they to me?”

“Three weeks ago a Thuggee assassin went rogue and fled to this planet. We tracked him down to an abandoned Spacer prison facility that was set up before the planet was deemed suitable for mining.”

Eli looked into the woman’s eyes. “You know where he is. Just send in some of your troops and flush him out. You don’t need me.”

“We tried that already. After the first dozen or so casualties, we decided to try a different approach. You.”

“And what makes you think I will help you? I have no reason to stick out my neck for you or anyone else.”

“Does the name Coddingtown mean anything to you, Mr. Warren?”

Damn, he thought, now they have me by the balls and worse yet, they know it. It’s no wonder they were so cavalier with their information. They were holding a trump card the whole time.

The woman looked down at her folder. “It says here you are a wanted man for what happened to Coddingtown. It says you destroyed the whole town, killing everyone in the process.”

Coddingtown was an accident, but there is no one left alive to confirm my innocence, Eli thought bitterly.

“No wonder you went to such great lengths to hide your identity. If you do this for us, the Space Guild will forgive the town’s destruction and forget the many deaths you have caused.”

No, Eli thought. Nothing you do could make people forget those deaths. The name Eli Warren will still be known, and known for death.

“Fine,” he spit out, “I’ll do it.”

“Good, we can get you any equipment you need, guns, high grade armor, explosives…”

“Just my belongings.” Eli responded plainly.

The woman looked down at the table with Eli’s things on it. “This?” she said with a tone of disbelief. “An old revolver with no ammunition, and an ancient bullet mold? Mr. Warren, I can offer you cutting-edge technology and weapons.”

“All I will need from you is some information and I will be on my way.” He stood up and picked a lambskin roll sitting on the table, undid the leather strap and revealed a hand-drawn map that looked old and hard used. “First off, where are we now?”

“We are in Quadrant…”

“On the map!” Eli sharply interrupted.

The woman looked down and pointed to a spot just east of a mountain range.

“And the target?” Eli asked.

The woman moved her finger east about three inches.

Eli rolled up the map and began repacking his things in his saddlebag. “It will take me three days to walk there, another day to get the job done and three more days to walk back. If you don’t hear from me in a week, I am more than likely dead.”

“We can fly you out there in a few hours—” the women started.

“I walk.” There was no room for argument in Eli’s voice. If he was to do this, he would do it his way and that was that. As he finished packing his things, he turned and began walking out the door. The women in black said, “Mr. Warren, you never gave me a chance to give you my name. You may need it later.”

“No” Eli said, “I won’t.”

 

 

Eli sat over the fire working the last of his bullets in the ancient cast. As the round cooled in the mold, he whispered a soft prayer. “Darkest day and cursed night, guild my bullet and give it flight.” Six rounds, six prayers. The old man who had given him the cast told him the bullets would not work unless the prayers were said, and Eli was not fool enough to put that statement to the test. Curse that old man, he thought. He called himself The Alchemist, and Eli had sought him looking for answers. All he got was this damned mold and even more questions.

Eli ejected the round from the mold and held it in his hands. The ruin molded in the side of the round glowed a soft reddish hue. Eli knew very little of magic but knew enough to be afraid of it, and this mold scared him. He quickly put the bullet in the black revolver’s cylinder. As much as the mold scared him, the gun scared him even more. Eli had carried the black gun for years with no ammo, seeming to not be able to part with it. The ancient mold was the only way to get bullets that would fit the gun, or at least that’s what The Alchemist had told him. He looked down at the gun and tried to remember the last time he had filled all six chambers. He rarely need more than one. Still, he had never tried to kill a member of the Thuggee before, either. Eli had the stomach for killing, but he took no pleasure from it. The fact that it was his only apparent skill had to be a cosmic joke. He looked down at his hands and thought, Why couldn’t these be miner’s hands, or farmer’s hands? No these are gunfighter hands? He cursed whatever deity blessed him with them.

Eli looked down into a valley at the building set at the base of a mountain. It had been built at a time when Trinite was to be used as a prison planet, but the discovery of the alloy trinitanium had laid that plan to rest. That was over 150 years ago, and the prison, advanced for its time as it was, had sat there unused and abandoned.

Eli collected his things. It would be dawn soon and he wanted to be done with this job. It was full-on morning by the time he made it down the hill to the main prison building. He found the front entrance door barred but was able to climb in a side window. Pulling his gun from its holster, he made his way through a maze of pipes and air ducts. This must be a maintenance corridor, he thought as he groped in the darkness. The corridor led to a large room where the pipes and ducts went out in all directions. The room’s only light source came from hundreds of little candles that lined the ductwork. Eli thumbed back the hammer on his revolver. This is not what he had expected, not even close.

“Eli Warren.” A voice called out to him, echoing off the steel walls. Eli spun, trying to determine where it had come from.

“Eli Jacobs Warren.” Eli’s blood went cold. No one knew his whole name, his true name. There was power in one’s true name, dangerous power, and if this assassin knew even a little magic, he could kill Eli with it…or worse. Eli circled around, his back as close to the wall as possible. He tried desperately to slow his breathing and heartbeat down; he had to stay in control. Any sympathy Eli had for this man, any thoughts of sparing his life, were gone. His death was now a matter of necessity. No one could know his true name.

“Yes,” the voice called out, “I know much about you Eli, much and more. I know you have been to The Alchemist. I know you have the gun and I know its true purpose. You are Shakti, and that is why you must die.”

The title, if that was what it was, had no meaning to Eli. He had never heard such a name before.

“That is why I instigated this whole charade,” the voice continued. “Simply luring you here wasn’t enough. I needed someone to force you.”

So, this man had used the Spacers to force him into a trap, Eli thought. The Spacers had no idea that they were being used. Eli’s eyes darted all over the huge room, looking for any sign of movement. No matter what this person knew, Eli was still what he was, a gunfighter—and a damn good one. That’s when Eli heard the thwomp of a dart gun and saw a small shaft appear in his upper thigh. “Damn!” he grunted.

“Yes, Eli, the poison works fast, a death far to simple for someone like you, but it will do. If I don’t kill you, the Necromancer will, and all of creation will be his slave then.”

Eli felt the dart’s venom start to course through him. His vision slowed and started to blur; his mind was starting to fog. Eli fell to one knee, struggling to remain upright. A figure emerged from a mess of pipes and began walking toward him. The man was tall and thin, wearing flowing silks and a turban on a head of black hair and dark beard. Eli aimed and fired but missed, the drug taking its hold on him.

One chance, he thought, must get him close. Eli dropped his other knee as the man approached, drawing a large dagger.

“Your limbs should be very numb by now. Please forgive me, Eli. I have no hate toward you, but you simply must die. If I could find you, then surely the Necromancer will, too. If he has the gun and your blood…well, that simply must not happen.” He raised the dagger over his head and started chanting in a tongue that Eli did not know.

Now, Eli thought. With all the strength that remained in him, he stood up and thrust his gun into the man’s stomach, firing. The man dropped the dagger and slumped to the floor.

“How?” he choked, spitting up blood. “The poison…”

“Didn’t work.” Eli finished, struggling to remain standing.

“You don’t understand,” the Thuggee whispered. “You must die. You have to die. You are Shakti. It has been prophesied..” The word trailed off as the man died.

Eli returned the gun to his holster and started limping back toward the window he had come in through. Shakti. Eli didn’t know what the word meant, didn’t know if he wanted to find out. The word had a foul taste to it and left unsettling questions in his mind. Who was this Necromancer and why did he need Eli’s blood? The thought of a prophecy left him even more unsettled. Eli was unsure what had started here today, but he was sure that it would end in blood…and rage.