Chapter Two: A Human Speaker!?
Chapter Two: A Human Speaker!?
“How did it go?” She said in hushed tones. Tomes took out a pair of neat spectacles and slid them up his nose, responding in an equally low voice.
“Something's not right here captain. I’ve been at war long enough to know how humans react to us, and I know what a frightened human looks like, and captain, she ain’t frightened. She might have twigged me and Dagon are playing dumb.”
“Anathor and I think she might be a Speaker.”
“Captain!” Tomes blurted out, starting to move back, pulling out his firearm but stopped when Serena grabbed him by the arm.
“Wait!” she hissed. Tomes was one of the smartest soldiers she had ever had the privilege of commanding, but he always had a blind spot in rationality when it came to his sworn battle-brother, Dagon. “She hasn’t done anything yet, right?”
Tomes caught himself, but didn’t look back at her, instead keeping his focus on the other end of the cells. “Not yet. Captain, if she can Speak then those chains and those bars aren’t going to stop her. Seven hells captain, the munitions!”
Below this deck was the munitions hold, where several thousand four-inch shells lay sitting, patiently waiting to greet the Republic. They were sailing heavy, in anticipation of the upcoming bombardment, but this preparation was a double-edged sword, and an unknown human Speaker added a domain of risk Serena never thought she would deal with on the Vengeance.
“I have Anathor moving them as we speak, the rest of the crew are helping. The deck armor is strong Tomes, and she indicated she’s from a healing branch. If she only knows the First Word from one of those branches, we'll be fine.”
Tomes was silent for a moment. “Anathor told you she could cast a defensive spell, right?”
“Yes. A ward-spell. She probably cloaked it so…”
“So we can’t just shoot her in the head when she's distracted?”
“Afraid not, and believe me Tomes if she’s a danger I’ll do what needs to be done to protect this crew but…” she trailed off, causing Tomes to turn and look at her with a quizzical expression forming on his face, “…remember the ship spoke to Anathor, it doesn’t consider her a threat.”
“Is he sure he understood the ship correctly? It’s not exactly speaking modern Imperial to us, is it?”
“He seems confident.”
“Well then, ship hasn’t done us dirty yet, has it?” Tomes took his spectacles off, cleaning them with a bit of cloth before putting them away. He shrugged his shoulders and sighed. “We about to get friendly with a human Speaker then, captain?”
Serena felt herself grimace. “I’d rather not, although I have a gut feeling.”
“A gut feeling.”
“That she might be... alright.”
“Korvus will never accept that. He’ll try to kill her.”
“Anathor is keeping Korvus distracted. I don’t want him knowing of her existence until the battle is over.” Korvus was definitely going to be a problem. If she wasn’t a Speaker herself then controlling her best storm-trooper would be impossible.
“How are we approaching this? We got a plan to find out if she’s a Speaker or not?”
“I, not we. You and Dagon will go help move the rest of the munitions. As for the method… I’ll just ask her.”
“If she says no?”
“I’ll stab her proportionally to how smug she’s being. Find out if she’s really a healer.”
“If she says yes?”
“Might just stab her anyway. Let’s go.”
Serena walked back to Dagon who seemed to be recounting the tale of when she’d hung some thieves that were selling off cargo behind her back. Those thieves, who had been demon mercenaries she hired, seemed to have been replaced in Dagon’s retelling as a band of human women.
“… and then, the cap’n took a fire poker, as hot as the sun and - ah cap’n, you’re back!”
“Your brother has a job for you. Go to him.”
“Yes, cap’n!” Dagon hurried past her, and as he did so he fixed his eyes to hers.
Careful, he mouthed. She gave him a subtle nod in return.
Serena looked at her captive. This one was tall for a human, her blond hair was more golden than any she had seen before, and her bright blue eyes seemed to almost sparkle. Her button nose wrinkled as she scratched it.
Gods, this human really pissed her off.
“Enjoying Dagon’s stories?” She asked, keeping her expression and voice neutral.
“According to him, you hang and or torture everyone who looks at you funny! Ever thought you'd catch more flies with honey?”
Serena watched the human closely. The psychological battle had already begun. However, was the human even playing?
“What does that mean? That expression?” She asked, pulling a crate and then a barrel in front of the cell as an impromptu table and chair. Barrels in her experience made excellent seats from which you could leap from quickly when attacked.
“Hmm? Oh, you don’t… It means you can get more people to your side by being nice and offering something, rather than being forceful.”
Serena had already figured out the meaning behind the previously unheard expression, she was just trying to keep the human talking. The earliest stages of an interrogation were the most risky, where the captive was most likely to clam up.
“And if you’re the fly on my ship, what honey are you looking for?”
“Uh, yeah. I’m sorry about this, you know?” The human rubbed the back of her head, looking to the side, taking her eyes off Serena and her sword arm.
Ignorant, or fearless. Serena thought.
“Sorry about what?”
“Turning up like this, on your ship. It really wasn’t my intention.”
“A moment.” Serena put a hand up then fished out a small box from about her person and placed it on the crate between them. She opened the box, revealing a rotating blue crystal, shining lightly.
“This is an Axiom Crystal. It will record our conversation.” Serena did not mention the other, smaller crystal embedded in the side of the box which was positioned so that only she could see it. “Now, if we start again, did you intentionally board my ship?”
“No!”
Serena kept her eyes on the human, but she was paying equal attention with her peripheral vision to the color of the crystal that faced only her.
Green.
“Through what method did you board my ship?”
“I… don’t know.”
Green.
What was she supposed to make of this? A human, unknowingly and unintentionally was placed into her quarters? Is one of the fell gods playing a joke on her? She would have to approach this another way.
“What is your name?”
“Amelia Thornheart! Pleased to meet you!”
Green.
“Where did you come from, Amelia?”
“… the hospital.” A fleeting moment of sadness flashed across Amelia’s face. Serena remembered everything Anathor had said about the girl. She would watch and remember every word now, looking for the smallest inconsistency.
“Why were you in the hospital?”
“I was dying… I was getting better but… it takes many years to cure what I had and not everyone survives… but I’m better now! And if it comes back I can just heal it again with my magic!”
Serena paused. She would always tactfully pause and let silences linger a little too long. It was an interrogation tactic to extract more information, as well as maintain a perception of control. With that said, every time this human, Amelia, opened her mouth she felt she was the one losing control.
“What… affliction did you have?”
“Chronic Endothelial Collapse Syndrome.” Amelia spat these words out, and for the first time, Serena saw an emotion that she found familiar on the faces of humans looking at her.
Hatred.
“What are the symptoms, and the cause?”
“A spontaneous disease marked by rapid deterioration of the endothelial cells lining the blood vessels, resulting in systemic circulatory failure. That’s the textbook definition. Heard it a thousand times. No one knows where it comes from.”
She’s educated. Serena took a mental note. A noble? But Anathor said she couldn’t read.
“Is it contagious?”
“No.”
“Why did you not use magic to cure it?”
“It… wasn’t an option.”
Questions upon questions. The green light informed Serena she wasn't being told lies, at least not knowingly. Then again, if you were careful with your answers you could give half-truths that would be reported as truths, although this human didn’t seem to be trying such deception.
“Yet you were cured, by non-magical means?”
“I… maybe?” Amelia gave a little shrug.
“Your body is healthy. You do not have the appearance of someone who has spent a long period fighting an affiliation, what-“
Serena closed her mouth. A healthy person not knowing how they were cured. It didn't add up. Something Anathor had suggested suddenly flashed in her mind. A question formed that needed to be asked, one she really didn’t want to know the answer to.
“Amelia, is the body you are in now, the same one that suffered this affliction?”
Amelia’s eyes locked with hers, a solitary tear running down her cheek.
“… No.”
Green.
A darkblade! A lifecheater! A heretic! Serena leaped up, drawing her cutlass, and started twisting the aether inside her, letting it froth and layer upon itself, the pressure and heat building up, as she felt the First Word forming, felt it want to be Spoken. Anathor would see what she was doing and warn the rest of the crew but first, she would seek confirmation!
“Did you knowingly transfer your soul into another body? Answer me!”
“N-no! I didn’t know that was possible!”
“Are you a darkblade!?”
“I don’t know what that is!”
“Do you follow the Anathema scripture!? Are you a heretic!?”
“No!” The human threw up her hands, an action that almost made Serena attack on reflex. “I’m not even religious! Will you calm down! Stop being so hot-headed! You’ll blow us out the sky if you Speak!” Amelia was glaring at her now.
They stared at each other for a few seconds. Damn this entire situation! What was this human? Why did she look upon her as if she was… a friend admonishing another friend?
“Amelia, do you plan any harm upon me, the crew, or the ship?”
“I don’t!”
“Even though we are of demonkind? Waging war against the human Republic?”
“I like demons!”
Serena felt herself blink at that. She slowly sheathed her cutlass, sitting back down on the barrel. She took a slow breath, cooling her aether down but keeping it simmering, just in case.
Time for another difficult question.
“Are you... a Speaker of the Words?” She saw the human visibly gulp at this and knew the answer before it came.
“… Yeah. I can speak the First Word of a healing branch.”
This was definitely going to be a headache. A human Speaker on her ship, right before battle!
“How many years have you lived, across any and all bodies your soul has inhabited?”
“… Twenty-five.”
“Tsk!” She wasn’t lying. Twenty-five and a Speaker! What awful talent had she stumbled upon! She had to make sure. “Could you prepare to Speak now, without Speaking? As proof of this claim?”
“Uh, sure. But I’ve never Spoken in this body. Give me a moment.” Amelia’s eyes became unfocused and then started to shine. Light started to flow from her body, brightening up the dark deck, hues of aetheric blue and gold danced from her skin, and Serena saw, in the eyes of that human, the depth and breadth of the ancient power waiting, wanting to be released.
It was beautiful.
“Stop.” She commanded, and Amelia obliged, her radiant body dimming and her eyes becoming focused again. Serena took out a key. “Come here.” She said. Amelia came closer, pressing her cheeks between the bars. Serena unlocked the chains on her and they fell to the deck floor with a thud.
“I have never had a human Speaker on this ship.” She said, watching the Amelia closely. “And I have never had a human Speaker be non-hostile. I can only request you forgive me for the way you have been treated. As a Speaker of the Words, you are entitled to a level of dignity you will now be afforded.”
With another click of a lock the cell door opened with a whine. The human looked up at her, only stepping out when Serena gestured.
“However,” she continued. “Keep the matter of your… new body a secret. You seem wholly ignorant of too many things, and that’s dangerous.” She jabbed at Amelia with her finger. “In fact, don’t talk to anyone but me, Anathor, and my Trusted: Dagon and Tomes - the latter is our bookkeeper and quartermaster and is the one you’ll need to have a conversation with. I’ll take you to his office now.”
“Sure! Why do I need to have a conversation with him?”
“Well…” Serena said, peering down at Amelia.
“For salary negotiations, of course.”
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