Chapter 7: Dead Air
"Scientifically speaking, alcohol is a solution."
— 13—
Twenty years.
You'd think after spending twenty years—working her ass off and burying herself in student debt. Subsisting off cheap microwaveables. Being anonymously gifted with chew toys and dog biscuits and keeping her tail tucked like a good little
housepet—that Coraline de Scavi would have more going on for her than babysitting a bunch of scratchers whose asses were greener than their khakis and a crippling drinking problem. At forty-four she'd already spent the last fifteen of those years thinking of herself as barely more than a walking corpse.
De Scavi reflexively white-knuckled her flask, half-expecting the smooth, polish oak to splinter beneath her fingers as the siren continued to blare. It was a gift from her father, who had also been part of the Archaeology Guild.
"Yeah, I know you don't drink, but neither did I." That was the only joke she'd ever heard from him. Looking back on it, she wasn't sure if that was his way of expressing pride in her, or if he was telling her it wasn't too late to turn back.
It didn't matter now.
Cracks formed along the crude ice walls that covered the most open parts of their encampment. It'd be amazing how fast the kids had set it up. A testament to what Huntsman could do. With just a little dust and effort, they're turned the palisade walls around camp into an icy fortress. Sure, some areas of the camp had been cordoned off by the ice to better funnel the Grimm in, but that was just proof of how smart these Hunters were. It was about the only reassuring thought she had, and she was clinging to it like fuzz on ears.
Grimm that weren't busy crashing into the walls squeezed through the gaps in its defense. Gunfire ripped through the camp. The walls and hail of bullets were just enough to keep the wave of darkness from immediately engulfing them. De Scavi's heart dipped when she saw more flakes of ice break off the walls. She wondered how black the forest would be had it not been for the ice shields.
Without realizing, she had backed off further into the herd of scratchers. The campsite was just large enough to accommodate her and twenty other junior archaeologists, so the wannabe Huntsmen rounded them up near de Scavi's tent next to the ice wall behind them covering their backs and flanks.
She was scared. Who wouldn't be with some dipshit kid from the
prestigious Beacon Academy zipping around the campsite screaming about how they were all going to die like she was tweaked out on pure Pumpkin Pete extract? All the red-hooded twerp accomplished was working the scratchers into a frenzy. Students or no, they were the Grimm specialists here. So if
they thought things were fucked then you could safely say that things were well and truly
fucked.
And then was that damn
siren. It never let up, only getting closer and louder. Where the hell was it coming from? And what was that
voice? "Don't touch that dial, folks!" Far off and warbling. Hateful. It wasn't so much speaking as it was vomiting words.
Something crackled behind her. De Scavi locked up as something warm and sticky drip down the neckline of her shirt.
"Oh shit," one of the scratchers bleated. "Oh fuck me."
She didn't need to look. Nor did she want to. Every cell in her body screamed for her not to look. Just run. Run and don't look back. Her legs were like wet noodles and buckled beneath her before she could even lift them off the ground.
Don't look. Don't look.
She looked and wished she hadn't. A gaping chasm, wide enough to swallow her whole, fell upon her. A savage tongue that looked like it could out-sandpaper a cat's. Teeth like dead men's fingers, reaching to pull her into the void. Hot spittle flecked her glasses. Everything went numb as her world fell into a sea of black. Maybe it'd be quick and she wouldn't feel it? If she just closed her eyes—?
Something slammed into the Grimm's gaping maw with an audible cracking, boney crunch. A pair of golden-bronze plated boots. It crashed, digging a shallow ditch in the dirt. A pair of elongated knives drove themselves in its skull and pinned it to the ground.
"Miss de Scavi, are you okay?!" asked one of the Junior Huntsmen, just barely audible over the sirens. The tall redhead—Pyrrha Nikos. One of two names she hadn't expected to find all the way out here. That a girl nearly half her age sounded so damned
motherly filled De Scavi with this chimera of comfort and shame.
"Y-yeah," she answered after a moment of awed silence.
"They're scaling the walls, Nikki," her knife-wielding companion cut in. The really handsome one de Scavi couldn't decide reassured her or made her skin crawl. He was the only one who didn't seem to be panicking on some level. When his indigo eyes met hers, and she caught that almost faintly amused glint in them, she looked away.
"As if things aren't bad enough," Pyrrha replied, squeezing her eyes shut. "Cielo! Ruby!"
That tall, dark-haired Junior Huntsmen with the scar across his face and blue outfit—Cielo, she remembered that Cards girl calling him—clashed with a Beowolf. The way he—
all of them moved. To her eyes they were almost blurs, just as fast if not a little faster than the Grimm. Another lunged at him from an angle de Scavi hadn't even seen. He slid under the first wolf and let it take the hit. "What?! Pyrrha, your sense of timing is impeccably atrocious!"
Pyrrha Nikos screamed over the siren and motioned at the wall, "Can you two make it up the walls and cover our backs?!"
"Nai—kay, one second!" he growled, ducking a swipe. He swung in a wide-reaching arc. De Scavi could barely make out a blue-tinted, translucent blade slash through the two beowolves. "Ah, damn, that's loud! Nai, I hear you! Red, tell me you caught that!"
"I'm with ya, Blue!" that one red-hooded brat rogered, a single booming shot smashing through a stampeding Ursa. Just like before, she turned into a vibrant red missile and took off towards the top of the wall with that Cielo kid.
"Sure, leave us to pick up the slack!" the green-clad girl with sickle-shotguns barked. It was something like Chloe, right? She shoved that one kid Jean—Jon? John—to the ground as a Beowolf sprang at them. "Have fun. I'll just be here til it rains,
I guess!"
A mirthless titter—almost a breath—fell out of de Scavi. Were any of them other than Pyrrha Nikos taking this at all seriously?
"Dig boys ain't doing theyselves no favors just standing there," Knife Boy pointed out. Still looking like he was in complete control of the situation, he withdrew a glass soda bottle from somewhere.
&pd Up Null, or Amped Up Null. Some diet amphetamine cola, she thought. His thumb glew a stronger indigo; he used it to pop the bottlecap.
Was now really the time for some shitty energy drink? Goddamnit, someone take this seriously!
But with his head tilted back, his eyes went wide. His hand again flashed with a stronger bit of that strange Huntsman forcefield thing. With a flex of the palm, Knife Boy shattered the glass bottle and swung it. The sharp edges of broken glass extended upwards at an impossible speed and speared through condor-sized flying Grimm that was dive bombing for Pyrrha and de Scavi. It burst and the aging archaeologist skittered back as glowing, thick, green ichor sizzled as it splashed onto the dirt.
He paused for a moment to look a little surprised at himself, and a touch disappointed he'd just lost his drink before he turned back to the girl. He looked like he wanted to boast before he noticed her expression. "Nikki, quit spacing out. You can fantasize about me later."
"Nai, I—I'll be okay," she panted. With every passing second, the redhead seemed to be growing more winded, covering her ears as the siren grew louder whenever she had a moment.
Sure it was loud, but was it
that bad? Her partner didn't seem to be reacting much to it at all aside from some annoyance. Same as her as the rest of the scratchers.
"That isn't blood," she trailed off, staring at the green fluid. A viscous kind of acid, the way it burned the red grass.
"Maybe not. Think we can stuff them boys in the big boss' tent?" Knife Boy asked, glossing over her observation.
Pyrrha Nikos shook her head, an action that seemed to take more out of her than it should have. De Scavi felt
herself grow cold at the sight. "No, it's way too small to accommodate all of them. It'd be like gift-wrapping them for the Grimm."
That was true, but…
De Scavi leapt to her feet and pushed through the crowd of scratchers, grabbing one with horribly greasy, slicked-back hair. Basil, his name was. One of the more tolerable scratchers and a smart kid—if not horrifically irresponsible with his finances. The paper-thin veneer of calm he had been fronting had long since crumbled, hyperventilating as his fingers clawed at his scalp. Like he was trying to physically rip the nightmare around him out of his head. Not that she blamed him. Unlike the others, he at least
tried to do something aside from shitting his britches.
"Professor de Scavi?" he fussed as she pulled him toward the tent. "Where're we going?"
They hurried past that Cards girl firing an oversized revolver at a Grimm that dashed through the bullets with ungodly agility. Their bloody red eyes glowed just bright enough that de Scavi could follow them. The little police girl tripped over what had to be her own two feet as the thing zig-zagged through her fire. She thought she'd have to watch that girl get ripped apart before a white glyph hurled the beast into the air.
"W-Weiss! Thank—!"
"You can thank me later! Just focus!" Weiss Schnee snapped.
De Scavi wasn't going to stick around to see how much time it may or may not have bought the girl. She liked Cards well enough—it was like looking into a mirror and seeing a younger, dream-filled version of herself—but there wasn't any time to waste.
— 14 —
De Scavi all but tossed Basil into the tent. The tanned fabric did little to mute the carnage outside. Least of all the sirens.
"The safe," she instructed, pointing past the table holding the white Beowolf. There was a large gun safe in the back surrounded by various tools and equipment she couldn't begin to give a shit about.
Realization crept onto Basil's face. "Y-you aren't serious, are you?"
"Basil, open the damn safe!" she barked. Huntsmen or no, she wasn't going to let one of those things get to her. "The passcode's 1-2-3-5."
Nobody ever guessed 1-2-3-5.
A small duralumin case peeked from under de Scavi's bed. She pulled it out and unlocked the latch. Inside was a silver-barreled, eight shot revolver chambered in .357 Magnum. The only
other gift her father had given her. And another thing that she should have taken as a warning. Feeling its weight in her hands brought her no warmth or any kind of solace whatsoever.
There was a negatory
beep followed by a diminutive "Shit" from the back. Basil just stared at the safe and clutched his hands close to the rest of him, shivering like a newborn pup.
For obvious reasons, the Archaeolog Guild mandated rudimentary firearms training to its members. Good dig sites rarely existed within the safe confines of the Four Kingdoms. To say nothing of looters and raiders who'd smash and grab the stuff at your isolated dig site to sell to some rich asshole. Up till now, de Scavi had been one of the lucky ones. In the twenty years she had been with the guild, she'd only ever pulled her gun once. And it wasn't even during an excavation. She just picked the worst part of town to have a drink in. So of course she understood.
De Scavi strode towards the back and punched in the code. The safe had just enough time to open before she ripped the long barreled, grey 5.56mm rifles off their racks and shoved them into Basil's arms. The spares left over for the Rangers the students had replaced. About five guns in total. Enough for the scratchers who had demonstrated appropriate competence at the range.
Buncha good-for-nothings.
"Keep it together," she said through gritted teeth. It was all she could do to keep them from chattering. Couldn't let any of these scratchers think the Bitch of Arnesi was capable of feeling anything that wasn't cold fury. She spent too long cultivating that image. Besides, all of these kids were
her responsibility. Even if it meant shit all, she had to keep it together for their sake.
As the two scrambled to load the rifles, which was taking them a painfully long amount of time, an air-rippling boom shook the ten. The rifle de Scavi held tumbled to the ground as something crashed to the ground outside.
What the fuck was happening?
"Did that thing just explode?! Jaune, are you okay?!"
"I'm fine!"
Things were most certainly not fine. This wasn't supposed to be a humdrum, thankless excavation. This was an important archaeological expedition sanctioned by the Goddamned Prime Minister of Vale! She dragged her tits through broken glass for this!
The white beowolf fell into de Scavi's line of sight. A Grimm that left behind a corpse. If there was one good thing that came out of all of this, it was that.
"Look out!" cried a voice.
A solid mass of black fur and bone crashed into the tent and tumbled to a halt. A beowolf. De Scavi froze before its red eyes had a chance to meet her own. The fucking thing had to hunch over to keep from hitting the ceiling.
Soft growls rumbled from its throat. Her blood froze solid when they turned to snarls. Its fangs were slick in a thick layer of runny, viscous drool. She saw her own mangled body staring back at her from between its jaws. She felt every individual drop of sweat squeezing through her pores. Her nerves tingled. Her tail hung between her legs and her heart clawed at her ribcage as the beast leered at her.
Through her.
A bright flash blinded de Scavi as the thunder crack that tore through the air nearly blew her eardrums out. It happened again. And again. Her arms hurt. Her eyes burned. Her ears screamed. Every reverberant bang bounced off the walls of the tent.
Screams dug at de Scavi's beaten eardrums and all she wanted was that it just shut up. No dice. It just kept going. And going. It didn't stop even after she realized it was coming from her.
Eight shots gone. Just empty clicks. Smoke wafted from the gun's silver barrel. Her arms felt loose in their sockets. Fresh tears filled her eyes as sweat drained into them. The ringing wasn't getting any better.
The Beowolf snorted in a way that was too much like a laugh. Every bit of willpower that kept de Scavi on her feet had evaporated when it reached up and casually clawed three of the eight shots she'd fired off out of its flesh and onto the ground, like a cat doing some self-grooming. It shook itself; any wounds she might have given it disappeared behind its thick, shadowy coat.
A very distant "Fuck" scratched at her ears.
The monster pounced. That spark self-preservation compelled Coraline to duck. Something—some
one shoved her closer to the dirt. Basil? Her hands flew over her head, clutching at the roots in her hair. There was nothing remotely dignified in how she took solace beneath Basil's weight. So long as
something was between her and that
thing.
She'd expected Basil's screams. His flesh ripped to tatters. His blood soaking her clothes. Just so long as it gave her a few extra seconds of life.
There was snarling. Tearing. Wet, fleshy chunks being ripped from the bone. But no screaming. No crimson warmth keeping the chills in her veins at bay.
"It's…" Basil said, voice barely even a whisper. Between the ringing in her ears and the sirens, she was surprised she could even tell it was him.
De Scavi dragged her eyes out of the dirt like a pair of dumbells had been stitched onto them and peered up at the Beowolf. It gorged itself on the white Grimm. Its blood—still vibrant green—spilled from the wheeled table it rested on.
"No!" de Scavi screamed. She didn't know how or why, but she knew that Grimm was important. It was something unique found at
her dig site! Bringing it back with them would make this all worth it, she was sure. So were the kids, too. She didn't come all this way to have her discovery ripped away when it was just within her grasp!
A roar—just another scream, really—filled the tent. She only just recognized it as that John kid. He shot through the tent, sword and shield in hand. The blade ripped through the Grimm's back and got wedged in between the small segments of bone armor.
"Crap, crap, crap, crap!" he hissed, yanking on the sword. He pried it loose on the third tug, just before the Grimm backhanded him. Sparks bounced off his shield as he went tumbling to the ground.
The Beowolf lunged at the blond kid. Another gunshot. This one louder.
Heavier. Like a shotgun on steroids. The beast flew back over the remains of the white Grimm. It clawed itself back up before another shot blew its head apart.
"Chloe?" John grunted, pushing himself to his feet. "Thanks, I owe you."
Now that she got a better look at him, he looked no better than Pyrrha Nikos. Far worse, actually. Wincing each time the sirens picked up a note or averting his gaze every time he concentrated on any one thing for longer than a second.
"Lekker! You get what I've been putting down," she replied. Her hair was ragged. Sweat and grime caked her face. Blood poured from thin cuts all over her. The cheeky, but that clearly forced grin wasn't fooling de Scavi. Same as with John and Pyrrha, things seemed to have a trying time keeping her attention.
"Is everything alright?" John asked the two, extending a helping hand. Basil had moved off her, so she accepted. She didn't think she'd be able to stand without any help to begin with.
"I'm fine. I just need a damn drink—"
"What are you two doing in here?!" Weiss Schnee interjected. That pretty white skirt she was wearing was a lot more dirt brown now. She was just as bloodied as her companions. All except for Knife Boy standing beside her, who only looked a little roughed up. "I'll break it down in case you've somehow forgotten: we're fighting a war out there, so pretend you've got your act together and help us!"
The heiress had disappeared back outside as quickly as she'd entered. John and Chloe exchanged looks with each other, then de Scavi and Basil. It probably wasn't any safer with them than it was in the tent. She decided it best not to look at Knife Boy
"We're coming," she said. "Just give us a second."
Chloe didn't waste much time jumping back into the fray outside. John nodded and took a few shaky breaths. The vice-grip he kept on his sword didn't keep it from visibly quaking. Or his legs. What the hell? Wasn't he supposed to be ready for this kind of stuff? Did Beacon really not vet the kids they let in?
Handsome McKnife remained. He had this odd look on his face as he eyed the white Grimm. Mental gears clicking. De Scavi didn't like it. But whatever he figured in the end, he left too.
Once it was just the two of them, de Scavi turned back to the white Grimm. Large, bloodied chunks had been torn from its torso and legs, but it was in better shape than she had been worrying. What the hell was going on? Grimm weren't scavengers. At least not when it came to each other. There was never a body left to desecrate in the first place. So why?
There weren't many insane enough to study a live specimen, so you only ever got those once-in-a-whole-moon psychos like Merlot who knew anything worth knowing. But this was a unique specimen. One with a corpse to study. Something that would put respect on Coraline de Scavi's name.
She gathered up the rifles and shoved them onto Basil.
"You know who to give those to," she said, reloading her revolver. She may as well have been shooting plastic darts at that thing, but she took some comfort in knowing she had options. "You aren't to fire unless
absolutely necessary. Do you understand?"
"But—hold on!"
"
Get it?!"
Basil rolled his jaw. "Y-yeah I get that, but what are you going to do?"
De Scavi poorly reloaded and holstered her—more or less useless—pistol beneath her coat as she secured the Grimm onto the makeshift gurney. They'd be sneezing dust if they lost it. "
I'm going to make sure our prize doesn't get lost in all of this." It was more for show than anything. She didn't have a plan, but that wouldn't stop her from pretending she was still in charge.
The boy, Basil actually, looked like he wanted to say something. Maybe warn her that her priorities were in the wrong place. She wasn't so unaware as to what she was doing. But no matter how you cut the proverbial shit sandwich, her future—
all of their futures—were on the line here. Chances like this didn't come around often enough. If he lived long enough, he'd be thanking her.
"Quit gawking at me and—!"
"The sirens stopped."
"What?" de Scavi made a face. He was right, they had stopped playing, but it'd more or less become background noise. Oppressive and worrisome, but the night's problems had a way of fighting over the spotlight.
Then it came. That damn voice again. Like a twisted radio host. "Don't touch that dial, folks!" it retched. "'Cause you don't wanna miss this next little number!"
Consciously aware that she'd come to regret it, de Scavi disregarded every cell telling her to stay put. She followed Basil out of the tent and back into the chaos. As if to reaffirm how glenned they were, the clearing was just as much of a warzone as it was before she'd entered the tent. The ice barriers sported all new gaps and missing chunks in them. Small craters and ditches littered the land.
There was a muffled explosion on the other side of the barriers. The ice walls buckled and a large chunk fissured off.
De Scavi didn't like what she saw behind it.
A pair of colossal, black, clawed hands reached through the mess of trees at the edge of the clearing. With contemptuous ease, it pushed them aside like a child's toys. What emerged from the woods sent her mind reeling in primal panic as her tail curled between her legs.
It was tall and thin. Too thin. Even with her limited knowledge of biology, she knew that any other creature would've been carried off by a stiff breeze. Just another reason to not bother trying to apply conventional logic to these things.
Black, leathery skin stretched taut over its skeletal figure marked it out as some kind of colossal Grimm. It knuckle-walked towards the ice barriers like a gorilla, massive talons the length of a limo supporting its thin, goat-like hooves. Its most striking feature, however, were the pair of sirens attached to a pole made of wood, wires, and Grimm flesh where its head should have been. The sirens themselves were similar, the rusted metal meeting stark white hunks of bone. An ungodly melding of the mundane and the alien.
The harsh whine of the Emergency Relay System assaulted de Scavi's battered ears. Loud. The noise shook her brain like a damn newborn. The wiry siren-headed Grimm plodded for the ice walls, its foot-and-knucklefalls heavier than its thin frame suggested they'd be.
"Attention! Attention!" came its digital and pitchless, but somehow hateful voice. Someone spitefully copy-and-pasting from a radio broadcast. "This is the Emergency Relay System. Multiple Grimm sightings reported in the area. This is not a drill. Repeat: Multiple Grimm sightings reported in the area. Do not attempt to evacuate. It is too late to evacuate. Repeat: It is too late to evacuate. Please remain calm and stay tuned for further instructions."
Tonight was one for the history books. Assuming any of them lived to write this bit. De Scavi had heard stories of Grimm with the ability to mimic speech, like skinwalkers, but this was different. Its speech was already too choppy. Too erratic—from a warped, enthusiastically disdainful radio host, to robotic and coldly malicious.
"G-guys?" John faltered. A Grimm with claws like butcher's knives pressed him, gouging at his shield until an amazingly clumsy sword swipe pushed it back. "Hey guys? Please tell me I'm not the only one who has no idea what the hell that is."
Don't say that.
"I… can't say I do," Pyrrha admitted as the siren-headed freak lumbered towards the ruined ice shield. She winced at the Grimm's every word.
Don't
fucking say that!
De Scavi went cold and screwed her eyes so tightly it hurt as it pulled its giant fist back and slammed it into the ice wall. Hopefully a large enough chunk would come flying her way before those things did.
Something crashed and buckled. She'd expected shattering followed by death wails. The whole shebang.
De Scavi pried open her eyes. Through the missing chunk, she saw a circular, white glyph like the one Weiss had conjured before. Only larger. The sirenheaded thing reeled back as if it'd just taken a punch.
"Weiss! That's my girl!" Chloe hooted. "And I do mean
my girl! When this is over I'm licking you to prove ownership!"
Weiss Schnee held a pose that looked like a guard of some kind. De Scavi could almost see every puff of breath as the girl panted, every exhale pushing back the haze of dust in the air, sweat running down her pale face. She swished her rapier like a conductor's baton. The white glyph multiplied and fastened themselves onto the siren freak's limbs.
"Whoever's in charge of the single brain cell between you all, come up with a plan!" she snapped. De Scavi could
hear the dry patches in her throat. "I don't think I can—"
The sirens blared again. Louder than before. De Scavi winced, but the junior Huntsmen didn't seem to handle it nearly as well. One of her glyph locks shattered like glass. The snow-haired girl screamed—a shrill cry of searing agony—as she pulsed white and dropped to one knee.
A slug-like Grimm with arms like sickles slithered for the heiress like easy pickings. Pyrrha Nikos placed herself between the vulnerable Schnee (not two words she'd ever thought she'd see side by side) and the slug Grimm.
Her shield took the hit. Pyrrha buckled behind it, feet digging into the dirt. In what was either a well-thought decision or a happy accident, she dropped her guard and let the slug stumble forward. A quick, somewhat artless slash sliced it in two.
"Weiss?! Can you stand?!"
"Don't worry about me! Do something about that thi—" More of Weiss' glyphs shattered. Again, she cried out as she flashed white.
Another one of those flying Grimm seemed to dive for the two girls. Only for it to change its path mid-flight.
What was it—
A beowolf that Cards fought broke off from the engagement, chasing after the flying Grimm like it was running away. What the fuck? Where were they go—?
The tent. The white Grimm. Something had compelled that beowolf to tear it to ribbons. What if… was it attracting them? It was like something had sucker punched de Scavi in her soul.
"The tent!" she cried. "Protect the tent!"
Pyrrha Nikos gave De Scavi a concerned look, then eyed the tent. The sword in her hands seamlessly transformed into a rifle. The first round missed the beowolf by a frankly embarrassing margin. The next one was just a little closer.
The redhead grimaced, peering through her scope to line up the shot.
The rule of three never failed. The third bullet ripped through the beowolf's leg, sending it crashing to the ground.
She didn't know where who shot the next couple of rounds. But one true shot ignited the flying Grimm.
Ignited. Damn thing exploded in a fiery-red hell that actually knocked de Scavi onto her haunches. Had someone really been using fire Dust rounds? Fuck goddamnit!
The dying Grimm careened into the tent. Its fabric blackened, exploding into a small inferno as the smoldering monster writhed on top of it.
"No!" she wailed, head spinning. "You stupid bastards!"
Another loud siren blare. Another of Schnee's ear-splitting screams. The last of her shackles snowflaked as she kissed the ground.
"Weiss!" Chloe called out, shotgunning a stray Grimm that had gotten just a bit too close to the dust heiress. "I gotcha!"
The Sirenhead stumbled forward into their protective barrier as more Grimm pinched through the widening gaps.
"I got it!" cried a voice. Like a kid that broke something and thought they could fix it before daddy came home and beat her with a belt.
There was a strong gale force that would have pushed de Scavi over had she not already been on her ass in the first place. A red blob trailing roses rushed for the Sirenhead. That twerp.
"Goddammit, Red, we've got a script for a reason! Quit ad-libbing!" chided another. Cielo. De Scavi's head swiveled behind her to the wall they'd been defending. The kid rained fire on the advancing Grimm clawing up the walls. One managed to just reach the peak before he cut it down.
What reprieve it brought was short lived when a four-legged Grimm—bigger than any lion, with these udder-like, murky green sacs on its back and jaws like a shark—tackled him from over the lip. Why did some Grimm have those weird mutations?
They crashed. A cloud of dirt erupted. The two wrestled on the ground with Cielo's sword being the only thing keeping his guts away from that thing's talons. It pressed down, shoving the flat side of the blade into the kid's chest.
Fangs longer than de Scavi's forearm gnashed. Its mouth was a waterfall. Cielo pushed the blade up just in time for it to catch the Grimm by the jaw. It yanked at the now
smoking blade as if to wrench it from the kid's grasp.
"Nasty bastard!" he growled, struggling beneath the beast. Thick gobbets splattering onto him. Vicious and green, like the acid "blood" they'd been leaking. He howled in pain as it dripped onto his arms, his chest, his neck, sizzling as it burned through his clothes and exposed flesh.
A bullet slammed into Four Legs' bony hide. The thing stumbled, the sword falling from between it's rippling jaws.
Cards charged them with a long-winded, strained cry of effort. Her baton smashed into its chops. It reeled back. So she smashed it again. And again. It wasn't a graceful or magnificent show of power by any stretch of the imagination. She just screamed and desperately wailed on the thing until it dismounted Cielo.
"Idiot, get back!" the boy snapped at his savior. He lurched as he rolled over, probably still feeling those burns. "Shitdammit!"
"B-but—!"
"Guys!" Blondie shouted frantically. The other blondie. The one who didn't low-key freak de Scavi out. John, she thought. "It's gonna blow! I've seen 'em!"
Cielo and Cards barely seemed to notice. But the semi-crushed Grimm with the ruined face was vibrating, the sickly, green sacs on its back undulating like a stripper trying a little too hard to earn her next meal. Not that de Scavi would know about that. Or the crippling price of college.
John just stood there, a respectable distance from the Grimm. He put his hands to the sides of his head, grabbing at himself. "Guys, listen! Move!"
"They can't hear you, John!" de Scavi shouted, pointing towards where she knew the siren-headed Grimm was.
The boy shot her a savage look, teeth grit. "Stop spelling. My name. Wrong!" he all but screamed, and threw his shield at the Grimm. It didn't really make it. Instead, it hit the dirt and bounced. Enough to hit Cards' feet and knock her to the ground. She grabbed Cielo and nearly took him down with her.
Cielo spun around to face the girl, before looking over at John. Blondie frantically pantomimed an explosion, pointing at the Grimm.
It took a stomach-churning moment for the idea to get across, Cielo just standing there looking at John like he were a vaguely annoying species of bed louse. Then with a start, Cielo grabbed Cards and the shield. He got onto his knees and held it up to the Grimm.
Which exploded into a shrapnel of green puss and smokey Grimm entrails not a moment later. They sizzled the red Forever Fall grass, steaming away the water and sweat on John's shield.
The acid burst had knocked the two back some couple of feet, but the shield had shouldered the worst of it.
"Thanks, Jean," Cielo said, peeking over the slightly corroded shield.
Jean started as if he were about to say something. Instead he simply balled his fist and chewed his lip. It was a very
keep it together kind of gesture. She wasn't sure what that was about, but Cielo very obviously had a way of getting under peoples' skin.
"Where's that damn backup already?!" the blonde shouted as Cielo tossed him back his shield.
As if in mocking reply, Sirenhead echoed in a polite (and very artificial) woman's voice, "I'm sorry, the number you have reached is not in service at this time." The way it walked was wrong. It paced the far side of the ice wall like a young baby getting to grip with the idea of leg. It only seemed steady when in knuckle-walked gorilla-style. "Please check your number or try again."
Cards helped her companion up. "Look, screw that! Weiss is down! Where's Ruby?!" she pressed.
Anxious seconds of relative silence. Cielo's face warped into a disdainful sneer. His teeth were showing, as if watching some asshole take up four parking spaces.
"Cielo!" the girl insisted.
He blinked, clenching his eyes tightly. Then he nodded at the Sirenhead. It busied itself with trying to swat an obnoxious red rose blob out of the air. But it kept the Grimm mostly stationed, focused on her.
"Bitch 'boutta get ate or somethin'," Cielo said. A look ran across his face. He jolted upright and hissed, "Shit! The back!"
He was either some kind of jinx, or the gods had a twisted sense of timing. Grimm of every flavor de Scavi never wanted to try vaulted over the back wall. If she wasn't already half-deaf, she was sure damn near every scratcher with a rifle firing at once would have done the trick. They may have well been shooting a brick wall with styrofoam pellets for all the good it did. And
that was assuming any of these under-the-stars college kids were lucky enough to hit their mark.
Two of her students either too slow or too paralyzed to get out of the way were crushed beneath the descending Grimm. Not that she was that much different from either of them. All she'd done was pick a marginally better spot to lock up.
One of them—Russett, she thought his name was—gods, he was still alive. Conscious. It was like watching a pair of guard dogs fight over a chew toy. His screams sunk into her skin like fish hooks. They shook her bones and rattled her teeth.
Dark red pooled at Russett's waistline. The shearing of flesh. The snap crackle of his bones and ligaments. De Scavi hadn't the strength to avert her gaze. Like her entire body just didn't belong to her anymore. She just felt that cold, polished sandalwood grip in her palms. Heard the click of the hammer. The distant
pop of the barrel. The screams had faded. Complete silence. Stillness.
A fire-orange light flashed in her periphery. The heat-tinged air lightly caressed her cheek. All of a sudden, there was the painfully familiar stink of the soil. She was on the ground now. Something crashed into her. Someone. Young. Greasy, black hair. Basil?
He was saying something to her. Distantly, she noted the way his forehead vein pulsed whenever he got really heated about something. A very once-in-a-whole-moon kind of thing. Who pissed him off?
Her head hurt, like her brain had been sloshing against the walls of her skull. Her vision swam. Poorly-manicured fingers stabbed her skin through her dirty coat. He was shaking her? "—eed to get up!"
"Wha—?" she bleated.
"Get the fuck up or you're going to—!" He shoved her back down, draped over her once more like a protective blanket. A shadow-black mass flew over them. Basil took aim. The rifle went flying from his grip as the shot fired. The thing raised its claws.
Another Grimm smashed into it. Who—?
Hands roughly yanked De Scavi to her feet. "Snap
out of it, ma'am! If we don't move, we die!"
Die? Of course they were going to die. Just like Russett. De Scavi. Basil. The rest of the scratchers and the junior Huntsmen. Already dead.
But there was hope, right?
— 15 —
"Momma," Sirenhead divulged, sounding like a little girl over loudspeaker, "where are you?" Then beeping like someone was winning a game show jackpot on some distant TV. Faster than de Scavi expected, it twisted its spindly arm, clawed snatching after Ruby.
Ruby turned her scythe around and fired a round. It hit Sirenhead's hand, snapped it back, and sent her flying back. A practiced move. Until de Scavi saw the back of the siren's arm. Glowing green crystals driven in like a forest of railroad spikes. The hit to the hand bent and angled the arm just enough to clear its line of fire; the spikes shot out at red.
She spun her scythe like a whirlwind, deflected every one of them. They shattered into a haze. Ruby screamed as something thick and red fell from her to the ground. A moment later the girl followed, hitting the dirt in a storm of rose petals. The girl looked blurry, there on the other side of the ice wall.
It wasn't blood like De Scavi had expected. But it didn't matter much. The girl almost looked like she's been shot through the stomach as clutched at her melting weapon. Still sizzling in places from the green crystal stuff. It was hard to make out details.
About as hard as the knuckle that slammed into the distracted girl. She flashed a soft red as her body rocketed into and
through the ice wall, shattered a breach. Her slagged weapon went tumbled out of her limp hands.
"Red!" Cielo shouted, rocketing towards her. He used his power to create a torrent of air. It caught the girl, letting her come to a more gentle stop instead of rolling until she shattered her neck.
"Pull her—pull them all back!" Pyrrha shouted. She almost sounded drunk. Hurting, and drunk. Even the oddly in-control Knife Boy beside her couldn't ignore it; a crack in his cool façade. "Narrow the perimeter!"
"Man, watch the wall!" Jean shouted, whiteknuckling his shield.
"The white zone is for loading and unloading only," Sirenhead said helpfully as the swarm poured in through the new gap in the defenses.
"To hell with the wall! We
aren't leaving them there!" Cards rushed for the pouring deluge and the Sirenhead as they closed in on Ruby and Cielo. The blue boy swung his sword. A shining blue outburst exploded from in front of the swarm. The surge of air was almost enough to knock de Scavi onto her ass again. And it actually tossed Ruby some distance. Enough to buy her a few extra seconds while the Grimm distracted themselves with Cielo.
Or maybe not. It sliced through the front of the swarm, and strong-armed the rest, shoving them back like rows of dominoes. The Sirenhead's talons dug narrow trenches in the dirt as it reeled on its haunches.
Cielo fell forward on his sword as it stabbed the ground like a sharpened cane.
The colossal siren Grimm threw all of its weight behind a wild haymaker. Another sword swing. This time like it weighed and extra ton-and-a-half. Another flash—not as brilliant as before, but the glow still stung her eyes. The boy torpedoed through the air, flickering blue all the while. By some godly miracle he stayed conscious long enough to dig the blade into the dirt. A useless attempt to prop himself up on something, anything.
About as worthwhile as anything else anyone here could do.
Sirenhead raised its fist again, ready to drop it like a hammer on Cielo and Ruby. De Scavi just hoped it'd be that quick for her. Like a boot stomping out a bug.
It hesitated, its pole-like head facing off to the side. Towards the still burning tent. Almost like it was looking for approval from some celestial being. Or maybe making sure the Gods weren't watching.
Was it because the white Grimm was in there?
Its clawed fist dropped. Only to mash against the air above the Huntsman. No! Both of Knife Boy's extended blades, there parrying the claws enough to give breathing him. De Scavi glanced over to see him holding the knives out, with Pyrrha helping hold his arms steady, their Aura both alite. It would have almost looked romantic, if the girl didn't look about ready to pass out.
Then again, some guys were into that.
Strands of thread—oasis green like something that just
belonged in the desert—spun from Chloe's fingertips. They wrapped around Cielo and Ruby like long, skinny fingers and yanked them back. The two rolled in the dirt next to a laid-up Weiss Schnee.
"Guys!" Cards skid on her knees next to the three with Jean. Shake them as much as she liked, it rarely garnered much more than a pained wince from any of them. She leaned over the Cielo, lightly slapping him. "Cielo, tell me you've got something like a plan, right? Y-you always have some stupidly-insane idea! Remember? The Handyman? Beacon getting attacked? Doctor Merlot?"
"Rap with me a second, Cards—" A pained gasp cut him off. "Do you remember me slapping
you around like a cheap Vacuo hooker while you were all laid up?"
"Cielo," she whimpered, "why are you…?"
"Speaking thereof," he grunted, and looked at Jean, "tell your bitch I said thanks, Jean. And Jack too, I guess."
Jean just made a vaguely aggravated face.
The panicked cry of one of de Scavi's scratchers strained her ears. She saw one of them—a girl whose name she couldn't bother to remember—break off from the crowded pack.
De Scavi supposed it was her job to tell the girl to come back? Cheer her on and hope she somehow managed to escape? Did it really matter? It would have ended the same way regardless. The girl very quickly ended up between one of those acid-spitting four-leg's jaws. And all de Scavi had for her was a distant, unsympathetic "what did you think would happen?"
Grimm from the front. Grimm from behind. And whatever winged Grimm from above. If she looked down she was sure she'd see them digging out from below.
She could hear Russett screaming again—
see his body breaking—right before she ki—she
saved him. These things were drawn to suffering. Human. Faunus. It didn't matter. They lived for pain. If they could help it, they'll take their time. Draw it out.
Savor it.
And they would. Each and every one of them. Just like with Russet. Just like what was happening to that girl. She didn't need to be an expert to know that much.
De Scavi fingered the cylinder of her revolver, her warped reflection staring back at her with a vacant stare.
No. No no no no! Not her. Not her, Goddammit! She wasn't anyone's to savor! Her pain won't be used to make more of these things! Her pain wasn't going to be their pleasure!
It was her fucking life! She spent too long letting people tell her how to live, but no one was going to tell her how to die! That choice was hers and no one else's!
She saved Russet. Now it was time to save herself!
She wouldn't even feel it. Right between the eyes. Easy. Like switching off the lights. Just darkness.
Easy.
Over.
Easy.
"Hey, old lady," a boy said, sounding in thoughtful control of himself.
She tore her eyes open, and had to look away from the dark barrel before her. Towards Knife Boy, standing there over a collapsed Pyrrha. He looked so clean. Scratched up, a little dirty, but like he'd avoided almost all the fighting. Wearing those dark colors. For a moment she wanted to turn the gun to him. He couldn't be human. He
couldn't be! A skinwalker. A Grimm in human form. It was the only way he could be that clean, that self-collected. But she was shaking too badly to move the gun.
That's because his power is long-ranged, a voice somewhere reminded her.
"The white beowolf is still back there, right?" he said, kneeling a touch and putting his fingers in his teammate's mouth. "In the burning loot tent."
"Yeah." The word tumbled out. Like the boy was black hole, he just pulled it out of her.
He wiped Pyrrha's spit on the bit of his arm he exposed. "Tet la tête, Nikki." Then slapped at his own skin four times. He was sticking something there, using her saliva to keep it in place. Had he put something in the girl's mouth too?
"Thanks," he said to de Scavi, rolling down the sleeve. He inhaled sharply, and suddenly there were knives in his hand. "I got this here ins."
If she wasn't shaking like this, she'd be aiming at him. Something was wrong with him. On a deep, deep level. But she lost track of him as he surged forward, towards his downed teammates. Fast, too.
Pyrrha jumped up with a frantic start, sweating swords. She'd gone from being unable to stand on two feet, still wincing at the siren, and looking about ready to vomit, but she was somehow standing.
De Scavi only caught sight of the boy sticking something small in Ruby's mouth before she lost track of him. No mean feat for a boy that tall. He disappeared into the packs of Grimm that… were only barely paying the survivors any mind. They almost looked to be searching for something. In-between eating the dead.
No, not searching. Pacing. Anxious. They were around the burning tent, which had gone from small fire to outright conflagration in a matter of minutes. If she had anywhere left for her stomach to sink, it would have. All that work. All those finds from the ancient Final Empire. Priceless relics. Everything was burning. It was almost funny how little willpower she could muster to care for everything she'd worked for for hellish, sleepless months.
The Grimm didn't seem to want to rush into the fire. They wanted in. Wanted after the white wolf, she somehow knew. But as suicidal their attacks on humans were, they seemed to gain some level of self preservation towards the fire. So they just pace around it. Even the Sirenhead, which its massive arms, seems hesitant.
"Mom?" Ruby said, stirring from her half-conscious state as Pyrrha had. Then, roaring: "Mom!" She whirled to the side, cutting a beowolf's head off using the white haired girl's sword. "Where's Crescent Rose? Where is it!" She was frantic in a way that would have scared de Scavi, if all those fear neurons hadn't overworked herself to burnt crisps.
The air hissed. De Scavi looked up. It was from around the forest. Bright orange emergency flares. A score of them. Was this Knife Boy's doing?
The emaciated Sirenhead monster stopped lumbering near the tent. It reared its pole-head up, standing tall. The mouths inside the siren horns were gnashing the dead air. "Would you like to place a collect call? Please wait one moment while we route your number."
Wolves howled. The main tent ripped apart in a storm of long, whirling blades. Fire and debris erupted outwards, like the haphazard debris of a tornado. De Scavi almost didn't care about whatever dig-up treasures that had to have been destroyed. Until she saw one of the boy's long blades stab high in the aim. The boy had impaled the dead white wolf on it, and was holding it high in the air.
The Grimm in the camp all snapped their attention to it. They stopped eating, or going for the students, or pacing around the tent, all to stare at the high prize. The very thing this would have all been worth it for if only de Scavi or someone could recover it.
"Those damn Duke boys; they drive me to drink!" the Sirenhead klaxoned, knuckling for the wolf as fast as its lumbering gait would take it. A chorus of howling, roaring, screeching voices joined it.
Still high in the air, the wolf wolf darted towards the treeline. And the Grimm started to chase it.
They were after the white beowolf, she dimly noted, still there on her knees, gun to her head.
That was their goal. It's what they all wanted. And now he's using it as bait.
What was left of the woman's stomach dropped. Without nowhere to go internally, it fell right out her ass and onto the dirt below.
She saw Knife Boy in the air for a moment, emerging from the top of the conflagration, still spearing the wolf above him. He came down hard on a Grimm, and wasted no time jumping up onto another one. Glowing a bright electric indigo, he went running over the top of the herd like an overeager border collie.
He should have died, but it was like the Grimm were barely aware of him, too busy jumping and swatting at the hooked wolf none of them could ever hope to reach. There was an angler-like rhythm to it. Lower it to get their attention, and extend the blades to pull it out of them reach. Fast and rapid. It reminded her of days back at Arnesi University when some bitch had tried dangling a dog toy in front of her. De Scavi had eventually got so pissed she'd tried tackling the toy, only to have it pulled back as part of the cruel game. And while de Scavi was smart enough to just break that bitch's jaw, the Grimm just kept going for their toy.
He used the advantage to get up onto a rampart of the temple they'd been excavating. And just kept running. And running.
Then he was gone. Her prize—the reason for all this had happened.
Gone. She couldn't help but laugh. The irony was going to kill her long before any Grimm might.
At least the swarm had gone with the boy. Well, not all of them. But nothing like they'd been, and no longer focused on any of the survivors. Just enough stragglers that they could rally and defend themselves against the monsters, just as Ruby and Pyrrha were doing.
The flares still burned in the air.
So, that was it. Just like that? They were saved. Rescue might not be here, but the Huntsmen in camp were able to hold off. And it somehow felt… anticlimating. Here she was, alive.
Part of her hoped that counting her birds before they hatched would jinx her. That in saying she would survive, some twist of irony would kill her.
It didn't. Pyrrha decapitated the closest Grimm to de Scavi. She was still soaked with sweat and dirt and blood. De Scavi could only imagine how she must have smelled. How she herself had smelled. She had a vague feeling she'd pissed herself somewhere along the way.
The Jean boy was barely standing too. He seemed to have nowhere to look, either. Like de Scavi, he didn't seem interested in catching sight of the corpses. It made him have to hold his head at an angle, one hand to the side of his face.
"I think we're gonna make it," Chloe said, walking towards him with a slight limp.
Jean just looked at her like he didn't know her. "I guess."
She stopped before him. Before eventually smiling. "So I learned a long time ago it was bad form to—"
He held up his hand. "Chloe, no. Not now. Just, stop being
you for a moment."
The girl winced. "I… okay. I was just trying—"
"People are dead, dammit!" he snapped. "Please just stop being you. Just help us clean up."
"I… yeah." She hugged herself. "Yeah okay."
Jean sucked on his lip. Before his attention turned to the flares still slowfalling to the earth. He squinted at something past them. "Wait, what's that?"
A harsh whir separate from the now distant Sirenhead erupted through the air. The forest around the camp erupted in a storm of bright, burning energy and roaring explosions that shook de Scavi's guts. She fell to the ground, feeling her inner throat vibrate.
"THE CAVALRY HAS COME," a massive voice boomed over the sky. As more explosions ripped the surrounding apart, de Scavi was able to see it. The massive outline in the sky of an Atlas airship, firing its main battery to wipe out the swarm. "PLEASE REMAIN STATIONARY. AND THANKS FOR THE TARGETING FLARES, KIDS."
She somehow felt she'd caused that to happen. Rescue was here. It'd just been a little too late.
"The fuck took these guys?" Cielo asked, struggling to pull himself up with his sword. Cards tended to him until he shrugged her off. A harsh gesture. "Worry about them other two." He nodded at the frantically moving around Ruby and frantically unconscious Weiss Schnee.
Pyrrha slumped, like she'd released a long pent-up breath. She eyed the forest with a suspicious glare. How she was still on her feet amazed de Scavi. "Targeting flares?" she repeated. "There were no targeting flares. Were there?" She squinted. Rubbed her eyes. Seemed to see the flares for the first time.
She looked about ready to faint. And then, in a lower, concerned voice meant for herself: "Skata, Jack, what did you
do?"
Honestly, at this point, de Scavi couldn't care. She hadn't had nearly enough to drink. Not nearly enough golden liquid to help stay awake anymore. If even Pyrrha was ready to knock out, there was no shame if de Scavi closed her eyes and just letting thing take their course
No shame at all.
Even if it didn't come from the barrel of a gun, the sweet embrace of dark oblivion overtook her.
a/n: Easily our longest chapter yet.
Glossary of Colloquialisms
a.) "Ins/innie" — 1) (Slang) Intuition, a gut feeling, hunch —
Contrary to folk etymology, the term is slang shortening of "inland empire
," a now dated psychological term referring to one's unfiltered emotions, dreams, and forebodings. The original term is sometimes used, although its meaning is almost always in the colloquial term (usage: Vale, primary Catchfire)
b.) Lekker — (Interjection) 1) yum!, yummy!, delicious!, 2) goody! hah!, used sarcastically to show disapproval, disrespect or contempt —
Literally means "licker," of which is it a localized corruption found mostly in the outer Vacuoan kraals. The slang term originally just meant something was tasty, nice, or (informally) "sexy."
c.) "When/till it rains" — 1) An indeterminate faraway time. 2) Never —
It doesn't rain in Vacuo very much. So, to say "I'll do it when it rains" or "wait till it rains" in Vacuo could be a very long time, and by extension, "never."
d.) Nai — 1) (informal) yes, "yeah" —
From old north Mistrali ναι (yes). Sounds very much like "nah/neh," which can cause confusion between Mistrali and outsiders. Due to both "nai" (yes) and "ochi" (no) sounding like "nah" and "okay," but meaning the exact opposite respectively, a common derogatory stereotype is that Mistrali are date rapists.
e.) Skata — 1) (vulgar) shit, fuck, damn it, crap — F
rom old Northern Mitralia σκατά (skatá). Ancestral to Common "scat." Due to dialectical nature, it is seen as a vaguely more polite or refined way of swearing.
f.) Once in a whole moon — 1) (idiomatic) Very rarely; very infrequently —
Every so often, the rotations and orbits of Remnant and the moon will line the shards of the moon up such that the moon looks whole. This is a very rare occurrence.
g.) Tet la tête, to — 1) (idiomatic) To hit with a rush of energy; to suddenly see clearly; to wake up — A multilingual corruption meaning
"Tetrameth to the head." Said like "tay-la-tay."Often used ironically. Can be used as a verb or a stock phrase. "Tet la tête, girl." "The good news gave him the tet la tête."
h.) "Housepet" — 1) (derogatory) A faunus who is very subservient to human authority.
—
The term "housepet" is used as a derogatory epithet for an excessively subservient faunus, particularly when that person perceives their own lower-class status based on race. It is similarly used to negatively describe a person who betrays their own group by participating in its oppression, whether or not they do so willingly. It is similar to snitch, betrayer, or coward.
i.) "Under-the-stars" — 1) In a situation which one is poorly prepared or unprepared to handle; to be way out of one's depth. —
Most people live in brightly lit cities without stars. To be under the stars is to imply being far from home and/or in alien circumstances
j.) "Sneezing dust" — 1) To waste something (often valuable) —
Dust is fine particles which, if inhaled, can cause sneezing. That ruins Dust, which is valuable.