"This be Earther, Lie man or something." Nicaro introduced me dismissively.
"Liam." I responded with a nod to the other two. Neither returned it.
"Like I said, or
something." Nicaro rolled his eyes. He gestured to the long boned Belter bedecked with wires dangling from his overalls. The Belter easily had a foot and half on me, with grotesquely huge arm and leg bones. His skin was pale and drawn, looking like it was stretched too thin over his large bones. I could see the individual bones that made up his face through the thin skin, and his eyes were a dark brown, unnaturally large in his sockets.
"This techie is Mansa Nelson; he going to be very important for this job ke-sa?" He looked at me specifically when he asked, as if I would question his choice in men, for a work roster that he was putting together. I crossed my arms and shrugged. Nicaro nodded his head to the black jawed brute.
"This be Solomon." 'Solomon cocked an eyebrow at the name, but after a moment nodded back. Unlike his more mutated counterpart, Solomon was slightly shorter than me, with thick bulging muscles, and a seemingly non existent neck. Though his most unusual feature, was the collection of dull grey studs barely visible on his shoulders. I could make out four - two on each side - but they vanished under his tank top, so they could stretch all the way across his back, or even down his spine. I had no idea if they were decorative or served some sort of purpose.
"For sure bossmang, Solomon my name." He had the voice of a smoker; on Earth I'd have pegged him as the man who smoke a pack a day - at least! However, I'd seen the cost of smoking out here on the belt. Real cigarettes cost about two thousand yen per stick; I'd seen vape pods filled with god knows what chemicals go for as cheap as fifty yen a pop, but you didn't seem to get the rough sounding throat from them. So that meant the guy I was talking to was one of the richest men I'd ever met, or he'd somehow got some nasty chemical burns all down his throat. Considering the situation we all found ourselves in I was betting that chemical burns were the most likely culprit.
I joined them at the counter. Nicaro looked behind me, then - apparently satisfied that the shop was empty - reached underneath the counter and pushed a button. A shutter quietly covered the entrance to the shop. Once it finished rolling into place, he pulled out a pad and held it up. On it was a pimply faced youngish looking man, with dark frizzy hair and a scowl.
"This be Niki Jacosie. He used to owe money to me. Last month he pay off his debt in full. But now I hear he steal Owkwa from Greigas. Silly, silly." He and Solomon chuckled at that. Nicaro then tapped the pad again, showing a few snapshots of Niki walking away from the camera with barrels of water underneath his arm.
"The Owkwa is already gone, no getting that back unless you want to drink piss. But he made scrip from it; so we get that."
"So ... we're essentially just shaking the guy down?" I asked after Nicaro turned his pad off.
"You got a problem with the job?" Solomon growled out, looking at me like I'd just insulted his mother. Nicaro didn't look particularly pleased with the question either. Whether it was from me butting in, or me potentially welching on the job I couldn't tell.
"Hey, so long as we all get paid, right?" My arms were still crossed, so I raised the fingers on the top hand as I spoke.
Solomon sucked on his teeth, then looked back down at the table display. Not sure if they bought my 'tough guy' act. But as long as they paid me my cut after we shook down the poor bastard I wasn't too concerned with their opinion of me. After my question, Nicaro brought out another pad, this one with a hologram emitter attached to it; he tapped the screen a few times and the emitter shone a holographic map of our area of the Ceres docks. We were all lit up in his shops as four red dots, across the docks - maybe half a mile or so - a blue dot gently pulsed. That was, I assumed, our target. Nicaro pointed to the blue dot.
"This is Niki; his favorite girl at the rosse buurt put a dotter on him when he was, heh,
busy." I actually almost felt bad for the poor guy. We were going to track him through the station like he was some sort of an animal. I didn't doubt that the guy was probably just as much a piece of shit as the three Belter criminals I was now working with; but tracking a fellow human down like this definitely felt pretty messed up to my twenty first century morals. Still, money was money, and without it I was on my arse come the end of the month.
"He normally go up to pomang embassy; got himself a techie job up there. He come back down after a few hours, and we snatch him then. Follow him when he get off the tram, find him on his way home, then ..." He slapped the back of one hand against the palm of the other, clicking his tongue as he did so. Solomon grinned at that.
"Get him somewhere quiet, get his pad. Mansa gonna hack it then ke? Niki normally take a side path home, Mansa gonna go ahead and wait for you in there." He jutted his chin at Mansa, who nodded slowly. Every movement the man made was actually pretty slow now that I really paid attention, he was languid in drinking from his flask, slow when he scratched his head. He even blinked slowly. It made sense; he was probably pretty fragile, so moving too quickly might earn him a broken bone via bashing it off the walls, or a counter-top like we were next to.
"You understand that Earther?" Solomon barked at me, eyeing me like I was about to just up and walk out. I nodded at him.
"Yeah, I understand the plan. We follow Niki back home, I follow him down the side path, you cut him off and Mansa hacks his pad. Then we all get paid."
"Good, not sure if you were paying attention." He grunted, then turned back to the counter top, taking a swig from a hip flask. I'd noticed that actually, most of the Belters I've seen roaming around the place all carried their own personal flasks. I'd not asked about it out of politeness. I assumed it was one of those other cultural differences that kept cropping up. I considered getting my own once I had some decent cash built up - If I got some decent cash built up. Once Nicaro confirmed we all understood the plan, he told us the running tactic. He'd be back here tracking us via the hologram pad, Solomon would be waiting in a side tunnel for when Mansa and I spotted him. Solomon's tattoo's made him far too visible; if the target spotted him during the job then he'd definitely bolt, and some Ceres slum rat knew how to dodge getting caught, and how to avoid chasers far better than I knew how to track him through the tunnels. Even with the tracking device active, there was too much of a risk that he'd be able to outrun us and make a clean break if he suspected he was being followed. We all left the shop and made our way to the concourse, I checked my pad time on the way. Niki's shift should be over in about five minutes, with another five for him to get out the office and then walk down the hall to the tram station. He should be nearby within the next half an hour. If we missed our window then Nicaro would update us about where he was on the tracker.
It was when we reached the main intersection that Niki was supposed to be walking through, that my eyes suddenly throbbed as the headache from waking up too early flared to life again. I winced at the sudden flash of light that seemed to shoot towards me from nowhere, then fade away rapidly. The pain died down into a dull throb again, as if the incident almost didn't happen. I looked around to see if anyone else had noticed my sudden strange actions. Thankfully they hadn't, far too busy with the business of looking as inconspicuous as possible. Solomon vanished away into the crowd, likely to scout out the side tunnel he'd be hiding in. I picked up the pace slightly and moved to lean against the wall near Mansa, who was casually tapping away at his pad; playing some sort of strategy game from the looks of it. I nudged him with my elbow and he looked up at me, blinking slowly.
"So...Mansa? Interesting name. Any meaning behind it?" I tried striking up some casual conversation; I'm not a fan of just standing in silence, and I always got chatty when I was nervous. It was a trait I'd picked up in the forces back on Earth. I'd never seen any real combat - just service work, but the habit hadn't ever gone away after I left.
Mansa reached into his pocket and withdrew a small silver button, about the size of a British penny, then pressed it onto the side of his neck and breathed out slowly. He evidently had something wrong with his throat as well. It may even be congential, out in the Belt it was common for third generation and young Belters to be born with defects like blindness, or anosmia. It was just the bones that changed when you spent too much time in zero g; it was the blood vessels as well. The small, delicate capillaries that threaded through the eyes, nose and throat didn't cope well without gravity to help blood flow.
"I was named for two great men." He took a drawn out breathe in before continuing. "Mansa Musa, Admiral Nelson."
"Ah, parents had high hopes for their kid?" I'd met a guy called Prince William before; pretty sure the same sort of logic had applied there as it did here. Name the child something grand, and hopefully he'd live up to it. The guy I'd met was a fry cook though, so not sure if it worked.
He shook his head and grinned, showing off grey, pitted teeth. Then began to speak, every three or four words he'd stop and take in a deep breathe before continuing again. I wondered idly why he didn't just use a speech to text app on his pad, or something similar. I'd seen adverts for something that resembled a google glass contact lens for fairly cheap. A good techie could definitely afford that.
"I was a ward of the station. I think the administrator who looked after me thought he was funny." And that was that. I didn't know how to respond because if he wasn't joking, then that was genuinely heart breaking. We waited in silence after that; though thankfully not for long. Out target was making his way out of the tram from the Medina. Mansa hadn't seen him yet, so I nudged his side and nodded towards where the guy was walking from.
"It's him." I muttered as lowly as I could get away with. Mansa looked over, then nodded back to me. I walked off to tail the guy while Mansa messaged Solomon.
Moving through the crowd was a simple affair, I was broader and stronger than everyone else around me. Which was a mixed blessing really; it made navigating a crowd easy, but also made me stand out like a sore thumb. I kept my 'thug' scowl firmly fixed on my face and no one bothered me as I followed after Niki. He was ahead of me by about five metres or so, which sounds far smaller in theory than it actually was in practise. Ceres did have sections of wide open spaces - the governors office, and the embassy sections for example - but the dock areas consisted of tight, cramped tunnels. They wound around each other and often loops back in on themselves, forming what can charitably be called a 'maze like' network; and what could be uncharitably called a fucking mess. A mess that helped hide the fact I was following the guy around.
He stopped by a water hawker, and I was forced to side-track to a food stand across from him. I was still outside his direct line of sight, but brought a cheap protein 'burger' in case he turned around and spotted me just awkwardly standing there. It was pretty dire tasting, but it felt like chewing actual meat. Which was weird; after a few contemplative chews I swallowed down the chunk of fried meat. I kept taking smaller bites as I watched Niki negotiate with the water hawker. His prices weren't too bad actually; a single bottle was cheap enough, and you could buy chemical flavour sachets to mix into it as well to change the taste. Most of it looked pretty standard, fruit flavors and the like; but there was also something called 'Martian starburst' and 'Ganymede flare' available to buy. Eventually I turned back towards the food vendor - keeping a careful eye on Niki as I did so - and asked him:
"Hey mate, what's in these burgers?"
"Huh?" He asked, cupping an ear and gesturing with his hand at me. A lot of Belter 'language' involved hand gestures, afterall, most of them spent their lives in pressure suits where a radio wasn't always guaranteed.
"What's in the burgers?" I asked again, louder this time to carry my voice over the clamour of market hawkers, and the sound of oil fryers running. Pointing at my food for emphasis. He must have understood what I was asking, because he nodded his head and smiled.
"Whiskers." Then he made an odd cheeping noise with his tongue.
"Whiskers?"
"Yeh, little whiskers." Wait. Did he mean...
I leant back away from the stand, looking up at the sign I'd previously dismissed without a thought, Niki all but forgotten in my mind. There was the name of the stand in Chinese characters - 毛茸茸的朋友汉堡!- underneath which were three small stylized animals. A grinning rat, a dancing animated ferret, and a mink in a chefs hat.
"This is rat?"
He nodded happily, then turned away to serve up another burger to a Belter. I was tempted, oh so very tempted to reach over and punch the man that had not only just fed me
vermin, but had the gall to charge me for it. But I knew that it was probably just a cultural difference, I should have checked; I should have asked what was in the burger. Or I should have just gone with fried mushroom vegetarian option; would have been cheaper as well. Just as I was going to lose my shit and toss the burger back in the vendors face he - and me most likely - was saved from a beating by Niki thanking the hawker and walking off with a pair of lime flavored water bottles.
Unfortunately for Mr. Niki, I was now in an even worse mood, with a building headache, the after taste of rat on my tongue and a mighty need to get some shut eye. All of which was going to get combined, and remake into being a very bad day for him. I tossed my burger into a station recycler and slipped into following him again. Even more unfortunately for him, he decided to take a turn down a side alley; the shortcut home for him. I reached into my coat pocket and tapped my pad, sending a pre-written message to Solomon to cut him off. Then I ducked into the alley after Niki.
"Hey!" I called out to him, the lanky Belter looked over his shoulder at me but didn't stop walking.
"Hey, you dropped this!" I called out again, pulling a pre-paid Yen slip out my coat pocket and waving it in the air between two fingers. Still he didn't stop, he just looked forward and shouted back at me.
"No, Tumong; it not mine!" He was picking up the pace now, so I matched it. He looked behind him and saw me match speed. I actually felt a little bad for the guy from the sheer look of terror on his face, he knew I was after him. He broke into a straight run, but before he even made the end of the service corridor he was intercepted. Solomon came out of a side door and shouldered him into a wall, the guy hit the floor with a grunt.
"Oh. You think you run from Griegas? Eh? You go fongi fode? Huh Jemang?" He kicked him in the side; with Ceres's low gravity, the crack of the boot lifted him into the air and knocked him against the wall again. I jogged up to him as Solomon rolled him into his back and hauled him to his feet by his shirt. He threw the babbling guy into my arms and jerked his head to the side door. Niki wasn't resisting - too busy mumbling at me in Belter creole to properly fight back, not that it would have helped him even if he had. I was much stronger than him by far; he barely weight more than my desk chair, and I could clearly see the outline of his bones through his skin.
When we entered the side door, it turned out to lead to a small storage room. There were empty metal crates propped against the side, a dangling strip light embedded in the ceiling, and all manner of loose pipes, sacks of bolts and coils of wire dangling off of clips anchored to the walls. Mansa was also there as well, awkwardly bending over in the far end of the room, setting up his pad on a nest of wires and interface modules. There had been a small green electronic lock on the door, which explained why the room had yet to be looted, but Mansa had likely hacked through that before hand. I deposited Niki in the middle of the room, then went to cover the door. While I walked away, he must have realised I couldn't understand a word I was saying because he switched to - stilted - English.
"Tumong, maybe you and I talk yeah? I pay you - No, wait!" Solomon stalked over to him.
"No, no, no." Solomon leant down and slapped Niki, the harsh '
thwack' followed by the low groan of it echoed around the enclosed storage room. I peeked my head out into the side corridor again, checking that no had gotten inquisitive. The rest of Ceres walked on by without paying us any attention; one of the benefits of living in a shithole I suppose. I looked back in to see Solomon hand off Niki's pad to Mansa, the lanky Belter got to work hacking into it while Solomon kept speaking.
"You dumb fuck! You think you steal from Griegas and get away huh?" He slapped him again, bouncing the groaning Belter against the loamy asteroid floor. "Copeng, you try pashang us? No. Fucking. Good!" Each word was punctuated with a harsh slap; by the third one, Niki was lolling in the muscled Belters grip. After a moment Solomon looked him over, sucked his teeth then pushed him back down to the floor. He looked up to me and asked. "Anyone coming?"
"No, we're good."
"We're good? Tut, what sabe?" He muttered.
"I don't speak Belter." I enunciated slowly, ducking back inside the storage room. Mansa briefly looked up from the pad, then stepped further back into the room.
"I know, tumang. Kewe to pensa ere beltalowda?" He spread his arms out and jerked his chin at me. I felt that this was one of those 'Show how tough you are.' moments that popular culture always showed gang-bangers doing. If this were a film me and him would have a quick throw down; then we'd go off each respecting the other. But I got the feeling that if I did that, and even if I won, I'd still lose in the long term. Solomon didn't like me, it wasn't the same low level hostility that the public showed me either; there was something nasty in the mans eyes as he slowly walked towards me. Without even thinking my fists clenched down by my side; he looked down slightly and grinned when he saw that.
"Oye?" He reached out slowly and tapped my temple. "Oye!" He tapped again. I swatted his hand away and stepped back.
"Fuck. off."
"Oh, you got a pair then tumang." He taunted, grinning at me.
"Oh, you can speak like a human then, Belta."I mocked his accent, annunciating the T in the final word to mimic his guttural way of speaking. I shouldn't have said it. I should have just tried ignoring the prick until Mansa did his job. Solomon's grin dropped off his face, he cocked one side of his head towards me, cupped his ear with a hand and gestured at me with the other. But I was too far gone now, I was letting out my frustration with the way the Belters of the station had been looking at me, on the one person in the room who'd probably try and kill me for doing it.
"We playing charades now? I know yo-" Solomon interrupted me with a wild haymaker. It hit me hard in the head, not as hard as man on Earth of his size would have managed; but the difference was negligible. I reeled back from it, banging my head against the door. My own fist snapped out wildly, missing him by a mile but forcing him to jump back. In that free moment I reached into my coat with my other hand and withdrew my hammer, I brandished it between us like it was a shield. Shaking my head to try and clear the dancing lights from my eyes.
"Come on then!" My hands were up, one holding the hammer; the other clenched to a fist still. Solomon bounced slightly on the balls of his feet; his eyes were locked on my hammer and there was a cocky grin on his face. He was loose, bouncy and confident. I could physically feel the muscles in my neck tense so hard I was worried they were going to rip. The man across from me was used to this, used to fighting. We were both in an enclosed space. I had my hammer, but there were loose bits of piping all around us. He could grab a weapon in a short enough time to make us equal in terms of weapons. We both knew no one would be coming if they heard anything either.
"Heh, Tumang. Maybe my cut be bigger than yours? Maybe I
get your cut?" He whispered menacingly, rolling his shoulders easily. I had to hit him first otherwise he was going to dominate this fight; and I was going to get beaten down - I couldn't even
think about dying here or I'd lose my nerve and bolt - by this arsehole. Before it came to that though; Mansa interrupted our fight.
"Hey!" We both ignored him, still staring each other down. Me with a clenched snarl, and him with an easy grin on his face. Mansa got between us, staring Solomon down.
"Hey, it done!" He held up the now unlocked pad. Solomon looked around his taller friend at me, then shrugged. Mansa walked off to the side again, tapping away at the pad. He was likely copying down all the details we needed to clean out Niki's accounts. Solomon clapped his hands together and let out a throaty chuckle.
"Look at that Tumang. All done, all er... good? Ke?" He held out his open palm and nodded to my own still clenched fists. "Shake and relax, like you Earthers do?"
I looked at his hand for a long moment. He clearly wasn't actually good with me, nor did I doubt that given the chance he wouldn't hesitate to immediately stab me in the back. Hell, he'd probably stab me right in the chest, and laugh in my face about it while he rooted through my pockets. Our little scuffle before wasn't even close to being resolved; not if we were going to work together again. There was no way he and I would be getting on after this incident, I mean, I don't think he was going to get along with me anyway; but now? Now he definitely wanted to stab me in some dark alley and leave me for dead. Still; I reached out and shook his hand briefly. He grinned back at me.
"See, no problem. Mansa, what you got?" He turned his back on me to look over the pad.
"Everything bossmang. We got accounts, messages, replies, whatever we need."
"Good work, beratna." He gently patted the fragile Belter on the shoulder, then looked over his own at me.
"We go back to the bossmang now. You deal with him, ke?" He jerked his head at the unconscious Niki. He didn't mean?...
"Deal with? You want me to kill him?"
"No! When he wake up, make sure he know not to fuck with us again ke? You tumang so
bloodthirsty." He had the gall to actually look offended at my question; as though it wasn't implied that I should be killing him when he told me to 'take care' of the unconscious man we'd just beaten the shit out of. I didn't want to kill the guy, hell if he had insisted and told me to kill him I'd have probably refused. I wasn't some murderous lunatic. As they all moved to leave, I leant against the inner wall of the room; letting both of them pass me by. Solomon went first, shooting me a smirk as he shouldered past me. Mansa went after him, he pressed his speaker to his throat again as he did so.
"I tell bossmang you here doing this, he send your cut later, ke?"
"When will he send it? I don't want to get screwed on this." Mansa grimaced at my question, then raised a hand, doing a so-so gesture with it. I politely ignored staring at his fingers while waiting for his response, each bone on there was nearly as long as one of my entire digits by itself.
"I say maybe two hour? Three max."
"Okay." I sighed through my nose, then sat down on a storage bin against the wall. Mansa bobbed his head and left, closing the door behind him.
While I was waiting for Niki to wake up, my headache started to ache in a truly monumental way; when the day had started it was a dull throbbing; now it was an outright pounding. I had a growing feeling of dread that I knew exactly what was going to happen. It was the same growing pattern of pain. It seemed earlier when my eyes lit up, I was just dodging a bullet, and now it was going to come back around and hit me again. Like before, I was flying towards the ring in the middle of a constellation, and just like before a star had detached from the constellation and was shooting past me. Unlike before, I didn't even have time to see the middle of the ring, or the things that were moving around inside it. The star didn't take up place behind me, instead it shot straight ahead of me without slowing. Maybe my brain was adapting to whatever this whole 'star system' thing was. I was still knocked clean on my arse though. I must have hit my head on a pipe though, because when I eventually regained my senses, the lights inside the room had dimmed to simulate nighttime. I'd been out cold for a good few hours?
Fighting against the still present headache, I sat up, groaning at the sharp pain in my eyes that the movement prompted. Niki was gone from the floor, there were a fresh set of footprints pressed into the asteroid loam leading out the door. That meant he'd walked away, so at least he was alive. I patted myself down as gently as I could to avoid sparking more head pain, all my gear was still on me, even the few slips of prepaid Yen credits I'd stuffed in my pocket. Niki didn't rob me while I was out cold? Maybe he thought I was just sleeping, and didn't want to risk me waking up and attacking him while he tried leaving. I withdrew my pad and turned it on, there were three new messages that I'd gotten in the last hour.
'18'000 Ceres Yen has been deposited in your account.' Nice to see I actually got paid then. I didn't know if that was a fair cut or what, but money was money. Eighteen thousand wasn't a bad bit of change to have.
'You got paid.' Yeah, thanks for that one Nicaro.
'I call you tomorrow maybe. Might have more work.' Not a bad concept. I wasn't looking forward to the idea of working with Solomon again, especially since he seemed so dammed volatile. On the other hand I did want more money, and - passing out aside - it had been a nice and easy job. Kicking in criminals wasn't particularly morally objectionable to me at the moment. But, I wasn't too focused on any of that right now. Because just like the first star, this second one had deposited something new in my 'workshop'. I pulled myself to my feet, and very delicately walked back home to inspect it. On the way back I had another 'attack'.
It followed the same pattern; again though, it was much shorter than the last, and shorter still than the first. I didn't even hit the ground this time. I still had to cling to the tunnel wall though. Unlike the other two, it didn't herald anything arriving in my workshop, but instead felt like I'd been granted knowledge. Hard to describe really, like I'd learnt something and for ages I'd simply forgotten I'd known, but then the star had reminded me of how it worked. It was to do with mining. No, turning mining equipment into weapons? That was ... worrying. I'd barely even seen any of the mining gear that they used on Ceres; but know I knew exactly how to convert one of the handheld plasma torches into a reliable and potent flamethrower. Same with turning the crates of blasting charges into directed, armour piercing explosives. Was this constellation system trying to prepare me for something? It didn't matter now, I couldn't stop these 'attacks' from happening, best thing to do was get home and inspect what the previous star had left in the workshop for me.
It turned out to be a leather satchel containing tools. Very dammed sharp tools. They were stored in an ornately patterned leather roll up inside the satchel, next to which was a small sack of semi-precious gems which I tossed in my storage bin. All together I could use what the star had provided to make some very nice looking jewelry - if I had the talent, which I didn't. What turned it away from being an interesting if mundane little collection of gear was the final item stored in the satchel. It was a waterproof tube, inside which were sheets of parchment covered in hand written notes on 'rune crafting.' Which after read the papers, turned out to be essentially magic; even more so than the philosophers sand had been.
Each small gemstone could contain within it a spell. That spell could be a curse, or an explosion, or something that enhances the person wearing the rune. If it was integrated into a piece of clothing or a weapon, it would then pass on the enhancement or curse to the person struck or wearing the armour. I knew all that from the notes that came with the gem-cutting kit; it even covered some of the more basic runic languages and symbols I could integrate into precious stones. Strength enhancement seemed to be the simplest - and easiest - with other things like intelligence, dexterity, and charisma enhancement being harder than that. Which made sense I supposed, making someone stronger was probably easier than buffing more abstract things like charisma. Directly casting a spell with a rune was the hardest of it all though; the notes contained information explaining how to insert simple spells like 'fireball' and 'frost nova' into runes. When I first read over it I had hoped it might be able to make something like an actual wand; unfortunately that wasn't the case.
They turned the gems into more of a single use grenade, that when thrown at something, or someone, would cast the spell on whatever it hit. Which meant that I'd need to either be fairly close to someone, or I'd need to use them as a trap to get the most effect out any runes I made for offensive purposes. There were also references to more advanced forms of runes that I could learn to make as well, possibly formed by combining several runes together like a sentence. The papers warned that this was much harder than simply putting them next to each other though, and warned that it would take a lot of research and practice to achieve. This was of course, all in
theory. Theoretically runes I carved would have all these effects. The other option was that I had somehow had a break down since that sideroom with Mansa and Solomon. I'd woken up with Niki gone, which could mean I got lucky and he'd woken up and run away without shanking me or taking my stuff. Or I could still be completely unconscious right now, passed out in the storage room waiting to be shaken awake by a stranger.
Of course, thinking that way wouldn't get me anywhere, so instead of ruminating on it, I took out a small gemstone from one of the storage bins that the workshop had provided. Semi-precious stones were a dime a dozen on Ceres; in some places you could even pull them right out of the walls. Mostly just discolored or misshapen peridots. They weren't valuable in the slightest; I'd tried selling my own collection when I'd arrived, and a man had offered to take them off my hands if I paid him, rather than he pay me. But for rune carving they were supposed to be good enough. With that in mind I sat down, unfurled the toolkit and began following the instructions on the paper.
An hour later I was done; I'd shaved away half the mass of the peridot - and in doing so caught the edge of my thumb, leaving a nasty gash - carving the '
Tal' rune into it, then fitted it onto my hammer. Each rune would have a different effect when it was fitted to clothing, a weapon, or a shield. I didn't have a shield, and bejazzling my clothes wasn't a fashion statement I really wanted to make, so weapon rune it was. I'd considered attaching the rune with a drop of resin at first; but my knowledge of weaponizing civilian tools had nixed that idea. Instead I'd drilled out a small crevice on the head of the hammer and inserted it. Then, just for the hell of it I'd re-enforced the handle. It wasn't much to look at - just a thin layer of wrapping and two support struts - but now when I hit something with it, none of the force bounced back into my hand.
I hefted my hammer overhead, bringing it down on the workshop anvil with a sharp 'clang' that echoed around the room. I lifted the hammer back up again and checked where I'd hit, there was the expected small dent in it - that would be fixed in forty eight hours - but as well as that, there was also a very small smear of bright green fluid left behind. It soon sizzled away to nothing but rapidly fading green fumes when I moved the hammerhead away. It proved that the rune magic actually worked; I wasn't going crazy - or if I was, then it was a much deeper psychosis than I was willing to contemplate. Not just because I could see the effect, but because I could feel the effect. Just holding the hammer gave me an electricity-like thrum running up my arm; an tingling sensation that seemed to anchor me in reality far more than anything else did. When I put it down I could evens still feel it on the table, the notes did mention that could happen, that the runes could be linked to people on a personal level. I guess this is what they meant.
"So, if it works on my hammer. How about everything else?" I mused, drawing out a handful of various semi-precious stones. Purple amethysts, green peridots and bunt orange citrines. I had enough to carve runes for my current wardrobe; with enough left over to even make a couple of 'trap' runes to take with me in case of another potential fight. Though it was getting late, and my head was still pounding - a combination of lack of sleep and being punched earlier - so I was tempted to just crawl into bed and try sleeping it off.
"Hmmm." I decided to just wing it, I'd make as many runes as I could actually stay awake for, then hit the hay. I wasn't needed anywhere urgent tomorrow as far as I knew. If Nicaro wanted me tomorrow, then he could call me after I'd woken up.
E-=-X
I'm torn on dialogue. Belters have a thick accent, and I'm unsure if I should just keep writing them normally, or try and write their words phonetically. Such as 'this' becoming 'dis' and 'something' becoming 'someting.' It might get really old, really fast. Also, at an average of three rolls a chapter, I may need to dump the rolls for words system as ryune suggested. Otherwise I may end up snowballing like crazy before I get a decent story going.
-Plowshares from Swords from Plowshares (Warhammer 40k - Squats) (100CP)
You might have noticed most of the best Squat vehicles and weapons are repurposed mining and industrial equipment. This is no accident, for not only do such things have to be tough, they are intimately familiar to operators and engineers alike. You have a particular genius for weaponizing civilian technology, and finding constructive industrial uses for weapons.
-Carving kit (Diablo 1&2) (100CP)
The tools within this leather satchel are of exceptional quality and have been ritually prepared for work with delicate magical reagents. Having these will make Gemcutting and runecarving much easier. A sheaf of paper in a waterproof scroll case notes useful details on several basic runes and the most common semi-precious gems, but it lacks details on multi-rune sequences and the rarest stones. Still, the papers make a good reference, and they will automatically update themselves when you discover new information through experimentation or research. If lost or destroyed, the kit will reappear in your possession the next day
Points banked this chapter: 100 (Overall points 200)