Five
It was getting on for eight months since Jas had been booted out by Gar; by now, he'd been forgotten by most, and had even faded to the back of Bea's mind. Every now and then, though… she'd wonder. Wonder how her young charge was getting on; wonder if he was even still alive after all this time… Eight months is a long time to be on your own for. On your own, and confused, not knowing how to behave to fit in…
There was a sudden commotion, out on the main square; Bea went to her doorway, curious, then scrambled down the ladder and to the overexcited gaggle by the well.
“What’s going on?” she asked.
One turned to face her, eagerly. “Haven’t you heard?” he asked.
“Well, obviously not, or I wouldn’t have to ask,” she replied, dryly.
“Uhm… yeah,” He scratched his head and thought for a second. “Well, anyway… they’re saying that the queen’s laid The Egg!”
Bea frowned. “I don’t-”
A second mudokon butted in. “What Lan’s trying to say is that we’ve been hearing rumours of a queen egg.”
“A queen egg?” Bea echoed, worriedly.
The circle had shifted to include her; several nodded.
“Yeah,” one said. “Which means that if the queen’s saved, while they’ve got the egg, saving her will mean nothing…!”
“So what do we do?” another asked, fretting. “Maybe we ought to pretend we don’t know… then we don’t have to do anything…”
Bea silenced him with a glare. “Well, isn’t it obvious?” she asked. “We sneak in and find out if they’re right; if they are, we steal it.”
A deafening silence met her words.
“Steal The Egg?” one managed, getting his voice back. “But… how we going to do that? It’ll be as good as suicide…! Think of how many guards there’ll be…!”
Bea shook her head. “I know. But we’ve got to try… if anyone feels up to volunteering for this ‘suicide mission’, meet me by the outskirts at dusk, and we’ll try to figure out what we’re going to do…”
Dusk had come and gone, and Bea had managed to “recruit” only eight to help. So she wasn’t feeling hopeful of having much success, at the moment, as they padded along in absolute silence…
"Uh, Bea?" A voice asked, by her elbow.
Bea looked sideways, to find Tam beside her. “I thought we told you that you were too young to be coming along?”
“I’m not going with you. I just wanted to talk with you before you left. May be the last chance I get.”
She nodded, silently.
"You're going to try and find him, aren't you?" he said, softly. “You know he’s probably dead, by now.”
Bea gave him a look, and frowned. "Who?"
"Jas. Everyone’s saying that’s why you suggested going. 'Specially after you gave Gar's lot that verbal beating when you found out what they'd done."
"That was nearly a year ago, now, Tam," she said, with a smile.
“Which means he’s probably dead,” the younger mudokon muttered.
“You’re being very persistent today, Tam.”
“Well… look, Bea… I’m sorry, but, well… you’re not exactly young and sprightly, any more…”
“And you’re worried I’ll get hurt.”
“Well,” he shrugged, and added, defensively; “I’m allowed to get worried.”
Bea smiled. “There’s life in the old bird yet,” she laughed. “Now you best be getting back. You don’t want to be out here alone for much longer…”
Jas lounged against the railing in front of him, and softly exhaled a cloud of blue smoke, watching as the workers below scurried about their business with an almost manic speed. With a sigh he stubbed out the spent cigarette and flicked it off the balcony, and mooched lazily off on patrol, just so he could con his conscience into believing that he was working. To start with he’d worked quite hard – until he’d realised it usually didn’t mean any more got done, and it was just as effective and a whole lot easier to sleep, most of the time. Having said that, he didn't mind being on patrol; not overmuch, any way. You could either crash out on the floor and sleep, or prat about all you liked, if you felt that way inclined; management would give you what was known in the business as the "look of death," but then go off and pretty much let you carry on. After all, some sligs had unsettlingly destructive tendencies when bored out of their minds, and took them out on the facilities – which got tediously expensive and took nearly-heartbreakingly-large chunks out of everyone’s wage-packets after a few of the more pricey machines went beyond repair…
The "egg trolleys" had a particular interest for the bored – if you got a bit of speed up with them, you could hook your feet up on the wheel mounts and "ski" down corridors, slyly hoping that someone would be stupid enough to get in the way. Find a couple of empty ones, a long corridor and some friends, and you were all set up for a bit of racing – and betting. Just had to make sure management didn't catch you; not because they were concerned about your safety, but because they didn't want the expense of buying new trolleys – which would again come out of your wage packet, in any case. If management didn't know, you could feign innocence and blame some other poor sod if anything got broken…
In his eight months here, Jas had got himself quite a reputation, and had clawed and fought and kicked and just-generally-scrambled his way rapidly up the ladder of the security hierarchy. After beating Frelik that time in the officer's mess and having Drek take him under his metaphorical wing, he'd settled in remarkably quickly – trouble was, "sweet and innocent" could never be used to describe the young slig any more. Psycho-lout from hell would probably be more apt.
Jas never really did grow to full size – he kind of stopped three quarters of the way there. What he lacked in size, however, he more than made up in speed and ferocity. Lower-ranking sligs made sure he was well out of earshot before they called him "Short-Ass"; retribution would otherwise be swift, and painful. If a fit of pique Jas had even gone for Hak's throat, once; the huge creature had just laughed ponderously, stopping him with one vast hand, and told him to stop being Oddworld's biggest prat. Jas had made some ugly noises at this and sulked in earnest for the rest of the day.
And he'd earned quite a few scars of his own, the most prominent being the one that ran in a shocking line from the middle of his snout and over his right eye, from when he'd once got himself bottled by Jark. Mind you, he had whacked the other slig about the head with a chair, first. The amount he smoked would make a chimney proud.
He still had something of a soft spot for the mudokons, though, and still couldn't bring himself to beat them for slacking. Although his “colleagues” would beat hell out of them for nothing more than looking at them the wrong way, he’d only clonked one about the head once, and then only because it had royally pissed him off when he’d had the mother of all hangovers.
Most knew of his unconventional upbringing by now, but hardly any dared challenge him about it; Jark had, of course, but Jas had put him swiftly in his place. That was the comment that had lead to the fight which gave him the scar above his eye. The one exception would be with Gar. Let him stray anywhere near and Jas would probably beat him half to death…
The Four – as "the Three" didn't apply any more – were a high security team, just below the Big Bros. Although granted they were more likely at any given time to be found flaked out in a corridor snoring off the previous night's boozing, given the proper incentive and provided you agreed not to breathe down their necks while they were working, they could be just as swift, silent and ruthlessly deadly as any scrab. They were easily the equal of the much-valued Big Brother Sligs, and management liked them because they were cheaper. They didn't require the often-expensive pharmaceutics needed to maintain the vast size and impressive musculature of the Big Bros, who could be a lot lazier than their smaller cousins and didn't like to exercise.
But management also didn't like the Four, because they were openly wilful, even to the point of being insubordinate – all four pulled faces behind management backs and flagrantly disobeyed orders, at times replying to questions with witticisms and commenting on things with dryly cynical barbs. Some said they took their lives into their own hands, but they knew management would find it hard without them, as they kept the lower ranks in line with their presence alone.
Jas had grown even more daring than the others – although he daren't insult Lenk, he'd started to call Hak by a variety of stupid names, "Tank" being the usual one. The huge slig didn't seem to mind, though – as he'd said, he was a lazy, easygoing creature that took a lot to get riled – and the nickname fitted him perfectly. He was, quite literally, built like a tank, and when fully armoured it was only all the more apparent. Although most reckoned – foolishly – that he was a few bricks short of a load, Tank was surprisingly thoughtful for a slig of his upbringing, and actually pretty smart, though he hid it well. And he had the most infectious of dirty laughs, a deep rumbling hur-hur-hur, which never failed to set all the others off even if they hadn't found what he was laughing at funny.
Lenk was the one exception to the general rule; the Four obeyed him absolutely, no questions asked. As Four, they could probably best him in a fight; but he was vengeful, and they knew he'd get his own back… If he caught any of them alone, they couldn't possibly match his size and strength, and he'd likely as not kill them. So they kept well out of his way as much as possible, and tried their best not to anger him. Even so, to say they hated him didn't do justice to the strength of their feelings. One of these days, they'd get up the courage to pack together and kill him, knowing it'd probably mean management would be ever-so-slightly-more-than-pissed-off at them. Even Hak didn't like him, and that was saying something – the huge soldier either liked or was indifferent to most others.
Feelings were running especially high after the ugly brute had sent Telk, a friend of the Four, off to his death. There had been reports in of a feral scrab running in the grounds, and they'd needed someone to go out and dispatch it. Telk had been the nearest one available, but he'd only just got over running a very high fever… He'd asked that please could someone else go? Lenk had decided the smaller worker slig had been taking the rise, beat him half to death, then sent him out… He'd managed to fatally wound the scrab, but it had cut him up pretty badly; in hideous agony, he’d refused to let anyone near him, at first, so they'd shot him from a distance with the strongest sedative they had, and got him to a medic… He'd been recovering well; at least, until the bacterial infection had set in, and in his weakened state even the Vykker's best antibiotics hadn't saved him…
Jas sighed, boredly, and paused at an intersection of the two corridors. Skan’s patrol route crossed his just here – with any luck, if he hung around for a bit his colleague would be here, shortly, then they could go snatch a bit to eat and go find Hak, he was usually good for a laugh…
"We'll meet back here in two night's time," Bea said, softly, hiding behind the stack of barrels in the yard. They'd managed to sneak thus far undetected. "With any luck we'll have had some success. If you can't find what we came looking for, just grab as many eggs as you can and run for it – go back to the portal, if you can. If not, hide until the coast's clear… if you can get some of the locals to go with you, so much the better. I don't have to impress on you how dangerous this is going to be. Everyone understand? Good. Let's move out…"
Jas sniffed the air, thoughtfully, as he clumped into his room back in barracks. "Wha's the funny smell, Drek?"
Drek smiled, lazily, from his recumbent position on his bunk. "I can't smell no funny smell," he replied, dreamily, tracing a wiggly pattern of smoke with the hand-rolled cigarette in his hand.
Jas sniffed again. "Tha's 'cause it's you. What yer smokin'?"
"Oh, jus' some o' the nice stuff. I've only been buggin' Skan fer it fer, le's see… eight months, now… He's finally got off his lazy arse an' got some," he grinned, and held out the glowing cigarette. "Here y'are, kiddo. Have some."
"What is it?" Jas asked, lifting it to his mouth.
"Does it matter? I ain’t dead yet, am I?"
"Guess not," Jas took a pull from it. "Hm," he commented, looking at it. "That ain't too bad."
"Ain't too bad?" Drek echoed, with a chuckle. "Tha stuff's the best. Cost yer three day's pay fer jus’ ten o’ them."
"Whoo," Jas whistled, scratching the back of his head, then added; "Yer sure this is legal?"
Drek laughed, lazily, and flipped a hand. "Who gives a frack about legal? An’ who's goin' ter find out, anyways? But yeah, this stuff is. S'only the really hard stuff that management don't like us usin', an' then only 'cause we don' work so good after. "
"Point taken," Jas replied, with a shrug…
He was feeling comfortably mellow, by the time Skan finally arrived with his arms full of bottles, stretched lazily out on his bunk. Drek had fiddled around with the computer and coaxed some music out of it – though it still had the hypnotic melodies and haunting synthesised vocals of usual slig music, there were none of the pounding beats that usually characterised their style – and Jas lay crooning absently along with it.
“No Jark?” Drek asked, idly.
“Naw,” Skan bounced a bottle at him – he caught it deftly. “Said he’d come down if he got time…”
Bea sat under a ledge, just out of sight for a slig with its poor eyesight, and sighed. Jon had been caught, today – she'd caught a glimpse of two lean, muscular guard sligs hauling him past where she’d been hiding. He'd given her a haunted look as he'd passed, but there had been nothing she could have done. She'd sneaked after them, just in case, flitting from shadow to shadow, to one of the managerial offices, where she'd been just in time to hear a glukkon's harsh voice tell the sligs to "kill the slimy mud," and the sharp retort of a single gunshot…
Skan was sitting on the floor, leaning back against the wall, a bottle of brew beside him and a cigarette in his hand. "Did I tell yer me’n’Jerk found some sneaky mud tryin' ter get inter the new hatchery today?" he asked, in a not-quite-there tone of voice.
"Oh yeah?" Jas leaned out of his bunk, one arm dangling bonelessly over the side. "Wha'd yer do?"
"Dragged it off ter management," Skan puffed a smoke-ring. "And they tol' us ter shoot it. So we did," he mimed firing a gun. "Pow. One ex-mud." Then he grinned, wryly. "Oh, sorry. I was fergettin' that we has a mudlover on top bunk, there."
Jas just smiled, absently. "So where's Jerk, anyhoo?"
"Poor bastard's got late shift again," Drek sniggered, and looked pointedly at Skan. "An' I wonder who volunteered 'im fer it?"
"Hey, don' look at me," Skan protested, then laughed. "The Boss said 'e needed someone fer a 'really important job', and the stupid prick went an' volunteered. He didn' understand why I was laughin' at 'im – 'cause I knew what he were volunteerin' fer – an' were feelin' really shafted when 'e found out it were ter guard the hatchery, in case any more snoopy muds come along."
The other two gave hoots of dirty laughter.
"I would'n laugh too much," Skan said, raising a cautionary finger. "'Cause we has all got guard duty there fer the next few weeks, until the damn things hatch. Which means no more days off."
Jas snivelled. “I was meant ter have a day off tomorrow,” he whined. “I was lookin’ forward ter stayin’ in bed all day.”
Skan sniggered. “Try tellin’ that ter Management…”
The next few hours fled past as a smoke-hazed blur; morning reared its ugly head only too quickly. Dimly, Jas became aware of the rumbling sound in his ears – he thought it was probably music, but his brain hadn’t got round to deciphering that bit, yet – barely seconds before the headache attacked like a rabid cobra, sinking its teeth into his skull. He groaned and rolled to face the wall.
"Oh, yer awake, are yer?" A voice said, then yelled in his ear; “Come in, Shortie, time to get up now!
"Go 'way," he mumbled, burrowing under the bedding.
"Drank too much again, hey Jaskie?" The voice laughed, and added, in a loud, patronising tone right next to his ear; "Come on, sleepyhead, time ter wakey wakey, rise an’ shine!"
Jas pushed the owner of the voice smartly off the edge of the bunk; there was a resoundingly-satisfying clatter, and a soft curse; "Jask, if you ain't up in ten seconds, I'm pullin' yer onto the floor."
"Aww, c'mon Drek, jus' ten more minutes…?" Jas whined, trying to burrow further into the cocooning warmth.
"No, get up! Now!"
"Aw, go on, please…? Ten minutes ain't goin' ter hurt, is it?"
"Yer half-an-hour late already, an' Skan ain't jus' fumin', he's after yer blood," Drek retorted, gripping the covers firmly in both hands and hauling everything off the top bunk. "I've made enough excuses fer yer, now GET a MOVE ON!"
"B-leugh," Jas said, disgustedly, and tottered unsteadily to his feet, untangling his blanket from round himself. “Slave driver.”
“I know, terrible ain’t it? Drink this,” Drek thrust a cup full of a vile-smelling dark-green liquid into Jas’ hands. “Painkiller,” he supplied, at the confused look he got in reply.
Jas sniffed it and wrinkled his face up, then upended the cup and swallowed it before he could change him mind. And almost choked to death on its acrid bitterness.
Drek hooted with laughter. “Yer obviously never had that one before. No-one, an’ I mean no-one, drinks the lot in one go like that…”
Jas gave him a glower. “Could’ve told me sooner…”
Bea hunkered down in her hiding place, and looked toward the door that had cost at least two of their number their lives – Ren had got himself caught yesterday. It wasn’t a big door, certainly, and there was only one small slig – admittedly a very menacing-looking one – posted by it.
At least, he'd probably look menacing if he was awake. He was crashed out on his back in front of the doors, snoring. Frowning, she wondered briefly if she could sneak over and get his gun before he woke up-
There was the clatter of two sets of approaching footsteps – she whisked back into her hiding place and watched…
"Thought yer said he was pissed off?" Jas asked, pausing and peeking round the corner.
"Well, he was when I las' spoke to 'im, the lazy bugger," Drek replied.
Jas smirked. "I c'n think o' a way ter wake 'im up…" he said, and whispered something. Drek grinned and laughed.
Bea listened as the footsteps paused, and there was a murmur of hushed voices and a faint laugh. Next second and the two sligs rounded the corner, moving more cautiously, now, their metal pants making far less noise. They exchanged looks, and sneaked up to their colleague.
One grinned, and drew himself to his full height. In a passable impression of a glukkon, he barked; "Hey! What do yer think yer doin', yer lazy bastard! Up on yer feet, I don’ pay yer ter loaf!"
The sleeper leapt to his feet and stood bolt upright, and was halfway through his gabbled reply when he realised he’d been tricked. With a snarl, he leapt for the throat of the nearest, and the two went rolling off down the corridor.
The one remaining honked a noisy laugh after them, and yelled; "See yer later, lads!"
Bea’s eyes widened. "Jas?" she whispered, faintly, barely recognising the young slig; he could hardly have changed more from how she remembered, no longer the frightened, scrawny little creature she'd known but lean, scarred and dangerous-looking.
For a while, she watched as he mooched boredly about in front of the door, then slumped back against the wall and slithered to a seated position. He sighed, and closed his eyes, with the yawned comment; “Nap time…”
No, she couldn’t let him go to sleep. She picked up a stone and flicked it smartly across the small gap separating the two of them. It scored a tidy hit between his eyes.
He was immediately up on his feet on the snarling offensive, gun cocked. "Whoever’s chuckin rocks at me better have a good reason ter be!" he barked.
"Jas!" she whispered, urgently, not daring say it any louder.
He straightened up, looking startled, the steel-etching expression falling rapidly off his face; everyone here either used the slig equivalent of his name, Jask, or else called him just plain Spider… "Who's tha'?" he asked, looking the wrong way.
“Behind you! In the shadows!”
He turned, looked in the right direction. "Can't see yer…" he said, wandering over.
One of the shadows moved, slightly.
"Bea?"
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