deluge- 16.5

Content Warnings

None this chapter.



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Pheiri inched through the gates of the tomb, out into the teeth of the withering storm.

Elpida watched from inside the control cockpit. The screens and displays showed dozens of views from beyond Pheiri’s hull, via his external cameras, lighting the cockpit with ashen backwash, shot through by the dirty white of falling hail. Nobody spoke as Pheiri crossed the threshold of the tomb, as the howling wind rose to a screaming chorus and concrete grit crunched beneath his treads. Kagami had been counting down, following Pheiri’s own estimate displayed in softly glowing machine-text; but the text was washed out by the leaden light, and Kagami had trailed off long before zero. Her right hand was gripping the arm of her seat, knuckles white. Elpida held her breath as she felt the others doing the same. Even Howl was silent, a clenched jaw in the back of Elpida’s mind.

Pheiri flashed up his progress on a side-screen, in glowing green text — millimetres vanished in a blink, replaced by centimetres for a moment, then by meter after meter, ticking upward as his massive armoured form rolled from the tomb’s mouth. His exit was flanked by pressure readings, external hull integrity responses, traction estimates, and a dozen other low-level alerts which Elpida could not fully interpret.

The wind’s volume surged, suddenly close, roaring directly against Pheiri’s hull, whistling and warbling through his weapon mounts and the hidden abscesses in his outer layers, a banshee chorus held at bay by nano-composite bone-amour and sheer body weight. Sheets of lashing rain and the hammer-drum of hailstones passed across Pheiri’s skin in a humming staccato.

Pheiri paused. The cockpit rocked gently as his tracks settled.

They were out.

Elpida found herself speechless. She had thought she understood the violence of the hurricane. She had piloted combat frames down into the deep green, into environments so far beyond human norms and survivability that releasing footage to the public was considered a serious hazard. She had fought Silico monsters, giant killing machines, things that she and her sisters could barely describe, down there in the dark beneath the world. She had considered that as the most inhospitable place imaginable, where unprotected human life would be melted away in seconds. Nothing could compare, certainly nothing in nature.

But to feel the hurricane up close was like a god screaming itself to death four feet from her skull. Pheiri’s readings were all well within his tolerances — hull integrity was untouched, internal gyroscopes and accelerometers reported no movement beyond a slight swaying of his chassis, no need to activate his shields for the comparatively soft assault of fist-sized hailstones. Pheiri had been built to slay giants, his body and his armour were more than enough to withstand the storm. But Elpida felt vulnerable in a way she never had before, barely protected from a force no amount of skill or guts or Telokopolan genetic engineering could withstand, let alone defeat. Pheiri’s armour didn’t seem like enough. Venturing out into this seemed like madness. Braving the storm seemed to pull at something deep in her gut, deeper than training or pilot genetic modifications or her own determination, deeper even than Telokopolis. She felt an undeniable urge to order Pheiri back inside the tomb, to scurry away with her tail between her legs, to wait for clear skies that would never come. This was not a force for human beings to fight, no matter what they came armed with.

Could Telokopolis have fought a hurricane and won? Elpida doubted.

And this — the wind speed just beneath two hundred and thirty miles an hour — was the dying gasp of the storm. Elpida tried to imagine what it would have felt like when the wind speeds had topped over eight hundred miles an hour.

And the view—

Hop to it, bitch-tits, Howl snapped inside Elpida’s head. Stop gawking. Get moving. Move! Show them how!

Elpida did not need telling twice. She blinked hard and bottled her awe.

“Okay, we’re out! We are out the front door!” she called, raising her left hand to slap the nearest clear patch of metal bulkhead. “Thank you, Pheiri!” She whipped her eyes across the endless chatter of readouts and sensor data; many of the external camera views were rapidly encrusting with overlays, showing everything from estimated pressure changes to the nanomachine density in falling raindrops. False colour terrain maps unfolded on fresh screens, rain and hail cleared away by algorithmic image processing, accompanied by preliminary targeting solutions for hundreds of hypothetical hostile actions. “Kaga, what’s external wind speed?”

Kagami occupied the front-most cockpit seat again, the seat where a driver might have sat when Pheiri still needed human crew. She was wired into Pheiri’s guts via the cables from her bionic hand, strapped into the seat over the bulk of her armoured coat, straight-backed and wide-eyed as she stared at the view from outside. Her mouth hung open, but she didn’t answer. Her skin looked waxy with sweat.

Elpida reached over and grabbed Kagami’s shoulder, gave it a brief squeeze. “Kagami, focus. Give me wind speed.”

The question was unnecessary; Elpida could see the wind speed readouts perfectly well, scrolling by on an upper screen. But the repeated question dragged Kagami out of her own wondrous terror. She hissed, shrugged off Elpida’s hand, then gestured vaguely at one of the data-choked external views.

“Two hundred twenty five miles an hour,” Kagami snapped. Her eyes flickered back and forth across the screens, sometimes going glassy as she looked inward at the data-streams she shared with Pheiri, her face ashen grey in the reflected light. “Sustained average, mind you. Gusts measured at … thirty to forty mph in excess of that. And we’re sheltered right now, by all … this!”

Kagami gestured at the displays, at the external camera views, at what the storm had wrought.

Pheiri had paused just past the threshold of the tomb, with his entire hull exposed to the storm’s onslaught. Between the tomb and the corpse-city itself lay the tomb’s outworks — the layer of black metal bunkers and walls and bridges and killing fields, used to either trap freshly resurrected zombies or give them a chance to escape, whatever the original purpose.

The black iron tangle of infantry-scale fortifications was drowned and choked and buried in the storm’s debris, slopping with filthy grit-filled water, littered with drifts and dunes of concrete wreckage tossed from the city by the height of the storm. Spears of steel rebar taller than Pheiri stood swaying in the wind like stalks of grass. Chunks of concrete from tower blocks lay shattered across the black metal. Silt-flows of pulverized stone and asphalt poured back and forth under the wind’s voice. All of it was blurred by a never-ending haze of pounding rain and the white static of the hailstones.

But Kagami was right; the tomb’s outworks were relatively sheltered compared to what lay beyond. The last of Kagami’s forward scouts were out there now, a trio of bulky drones pathfinding the route ahead, sticking close to the ground, anchoring themselves with tiny gravitic engines, their black hides almost invisible beneath the torrent of rain and hail.

At least the direct route through the exterior wall was still open, not yet completely blocked by rubble and concrete slurry. Elpida had been prepared for Pheiri to have to blast his way out, but the debris-filled passageway looked just about navigable, at least for something Pheiri’s size.

Beyond the wall, the sky was a roiling cauldron of black tar. Pheiri’s internal clock said it was daytime, but Elpida couldn’t spot the usual ruddy red patch that indicated the sun’s position. Even that dying fire was choked off behind the hurricane.

“Understood,” Elpida said. “Danger to Pheiri?”

One of the screens at her elbow flickered with a fresh ream of green text.

///gyroscopic stability confirm POSITIVE
///pressure differential < expected maximum tolerance
///hull integrity standard output
>proceed

You heard him, he’s good to go, Howl purred.

Elpida almost laughed, surprised at the tension inside her head.

Kagami huffed and gestured at the screen. “I agree. Mostly. Winds are down low enough that nothing is going to pick us up and throw us around. Something might fall on us, but that’s what the shields are for.” Kagami added a mutter, “In theory.”

“Good to hear it. Anything else out there?”

Kagami hissed through her teeth, scanning the screens and data readouts. “Half a city, turned to pulverized concrete and gone airborne. What do you expect, Commander? Even Pheiri can’t see through this shit. I doubt I could see through it from orbit. Yes, there’s plenty of readings, take your pick, but good luck interpreting anything.”

“Nothing alive?”

Kagami went still and quiet for a long moment before she replied. “Nothing … nothing on nanomachine readouts. Nothing zombie-sized, not that we can see. There’s something … ” Kagami squinted, gaze turning inward. “Something big, to our left. Far away to our left. Getting further away.”

“Something out in the storm?” Elpida asked. “Necromancer?”

Another one of Pheiri’s screens flashed with green text.

>nanomachine control locus query
///nanomachine control locus detection NULL VALUE

“No, like he says,” Kagami muttered. “Just … big.” She tutted and shook her head. “Whatever it is, it’s leaving, heading for the edge of the graveworm safe zone. Thank Luna for that. Maybe it’s just sensor ghosts, noise from the storm, a big piece of concrete, whatever. But if it’s not, well … I’m glad we didn’t come out early enough to meet it.”

A mutter came from behind Elpida — Atyle, strapped into one of the cockpit seats further back. “A handmaiden to the gods, come to watch the hatching.”

Elpida twisted in her seat. Atyle was staring at a spot on the wall. Watching the departing giant?

A particularly strong gust of wind howled against Pheiri’s hull. The cockpit swayed, perhaps by half an inch. On the opposite side to Atyle, Sky was also strapped into a seat. She blinked hard, jaw tight, swallowing a flinch. Sky was coated in sweat.

Elpida twisted back to Kagami. “All good?”

“As far as I can tell,” Kagami grunted. “Pheiri isn’t concerned.”

“Alright, then we’re good to go. Are you pulling those final drones back in?”

“Yes, yes,” Kagami sighed. “They won’t be able to endure the wind beyond the outworks here. I’m reeling them in now.”

On Pheiri’s screens the blurry dark smudges of Kagami’s drones started back toward the tank, resolving as they ploughed through the rain and hail. Kagami pulled them in and tucked them into sheltered whorls and pockets on the exterior of Pheiri’s bone armour, sheltered from the storm but ready for quick redeployment.

While she waited for the drones to return, Elpida keyed her comms headset.

Victoria answered instantly, voice clear over the short-range connection. “Commander?”

“Everyone snug back there, Vicky?”

“For now.”

Elpida pretended not to hear the fear and tension in Victoria’s voice. They had a single screen back there in the crew compartment, a tiny window onto the storm outside.

“Everything’s going smooth,” Elpida said. “We’re about to get underway. Is everyone strapped in?”

“Right, yeah. Um, I mean, yes, everyone is strapped in. Confirmed.”

“Thank you. The line to the cockpit will be clear, in case anything happens,” Elpida said. “Keep in touch.”

“I uh … I will, yeah. I understand.”

“Good. One more thing. Tell Shilu to come up front and join us in the cockpit. I want our resident Necromancer expert within shouting distance, in case we spot anything.”

“Will do, will do. Shilu, okay. Will do, Commander.”

“Keep everyone’s spirits up back there, Vicky. I need you to do that for me.”

A swallow. Victoria’s voice firmed up. “Got it. I’ll do that. Thank you, Elpi.”

Elpida closed the line. The drones were safely tucked away. She eyed the screen that displayed the readout from Pheiri’s external necromancer-detection equipment. It was updating every two seconds, text refreshing letter by letter.

>nanomachine control locus query
///nanomachine control locus detection NULL VALUE

Shilu appeared less than a minute later, ducking through from the spinal corridor, still wearing her human disguise. She stepped past both Atyle and Sky, took a seat close to Elpida, then dragged the safety harness across her body.

Sky said, “Do you really need a seat belt, huh?”

“Do you?” Shilu replied.

“Yeah, but like, you’re made of metal beneath that, right? What does it matter if you bang your head?”

Shilu twisted to look at Sky, grabbed a pinch of her own cheek, and pulled it tight. “Is this metal?”

Sky shrugged and looked away.

Shilu sat back. “Elpida. You wanted me here.”

Elpida indicated the screen with Pheiri’s detection readouts. “I want your knowledge and expertise. The moment we spot a Necromancer, I want your assessment, whatever you can give us.”

“Mmhmm,” Shilu grunted. “If they’re going to attack, they won’t come right away. They’ll need the storm all the way down, enough to re-establish connection with the wider network.”

“Right. Kagami, if the storm keeps weakening at this rate—”

“Then we have about two hours until it’s nothing worse than a blustery day,” Kagami said. Her eyes were wide and bloodshot when she glanced at Elpida. “Are we going to sit here yapping, or run for the worm? If we’re all going to die, I’d rather get this over with.”

Patience, patience, Howl growled, deep inside Elpida’s mind.

“Patience,” Elpida echoed. “And we’re not going to die. There’s no sense in charging the worm-guard before our opponents turn up. But yes, let’s get underway. Let’s get as close as we can.” She patted Pheiri’s bulkhead again. “Take us away, Pheiri. And keep your eyes peeled, little brother.”

>y

Pheiri crossed the tomb’s outworks at a steady crawl, descending the stepped ramp into a soup of concrete dust and storm waters, five or six feet of fluid lapping at his sides. Internal pump systems inside his structure woke with a deep, solid glugging sound, flushing silt and grit out of his track-housing, sending up a spray of vaporised water on all sides. He mounted low dunes of wrecked concrete, tilting his structure so that Elpida and the others were pushed back into their seats. Loose scree and fragmented concrete was kicked out behind him as his whole body skidded and slipped amid the debris.

Reaching the gap in the exterior wall took only a few minutes at a gentle pace. The gap was less choked than the outworks; the walls reared up either side of Pheiri, black iron sentinels watching over the way out of the tomb, their depths clogged by six feet of water.

And then he was out on the far side, shouldering past a twisted tangle of steel rebar and shattered brick, out into the open, back in the corpse-city.

Nobody spoke; silence lingered for minutes. Pheiri pressed on, nosing his way onto what had been a road, picking a likely route through the deep drifts of rubble and ruin.

The city had been pulverised. The landscape was beyond recognition. A jagged plane of grey and black chaos — buildings torn asunder and knocked apart, steel bent and buckled, brick reduced to powder, glass tuned to grit, all by the sheer power of sustained winds beyond anything which should have been possible on earth. Skyscrapers and towers had been uprooted like rotten trees and tossed through the air, lying broken where they’d fallen, shattered leviathans scattered across roads and city blocks. Smaller buildings had been scoured from their foundations, walls turned to pulp, innards minced, mixed into a gritty soup of every imaginable material, spread out like brambles. Only the hardiest and mostly deeply dug-in structures had survived, and were only visible where they occupied natural high ground — a few bunkers and other squat, well-made buildings dotted here and there, scarred and gouged by flying debris. Undoubtedly most basement and subterranean levels were intact, choked by debris and drowned by water. But the rest of the city was a sea of grey ruin and serrated steel, cut through by rushing rivers of storm-water, still pounded by an unceasing barrage of hailstones. The corpse-city had been rendered down into bone shards and gristle.

“I told you it would be … ” Kagami muttered. “Would be like this … ”

“Fuck off,” Sky muttered from the rear of the cockpit. “You ain’t seen shit like this before. This isn’t hurricane damage, it’s fucking nuclear exchange aftermath.”

Kagami grunted a bitter little laugh as Pheiri mounted a gritty dune of concrete and steel, his tracks grinding as they found purchase on the hillside of shifting debris. “Ha. More like a round of atomics would solve our biggest problem here. That’s what I’d do, blast a passageway through this crap, and don’t stop til I see soil gone to glass. Wouldn’t even need that much!”

Kagami’s voice was shaking. Sky swallowed, loudly.

“Everybody relax,” Elpida said. “Pheiri’s got this, he’s more than capable. Concentrate on staying in your seats and not bumping your heads. Let Kagami focus on helping Pheiri. Kaga.”

“On it, yes, yes,” Kagami muttered through clenched teeth. “Eyes peeled, eyes up, all that crap, yes, fine.”

Pheiri pushed on through the sea of debris, keeping to the higher ground wherever he could, tracks grinding across the drifts and dunes of pulverised concrete. The ground was uneven at best, the chunks of buildings prone to slide and settle, slipping out from beneath Pheiri’s tracks. Whenever the high ground ran out, Pheiri forded the temporary rivers of filth-choked rainwater, his hull buffeted by floating rafts of debris and hidden reefs of twisted steel. He roared back out of the waters again and again, passing forests of rebar, sludge-pits of liquefied brick, and jagged monoliths of wind-torn concrete. There was no opportunity for Elpida or the others to leave their seats now, tossed sideways and jolted upright and pushed against their straps and belts by unexpected sudden lurches. Elpida checked with Victoria every ten minutes via the comms headset, to make sure nobody back in the crew compartment was getting hurt.

Elpida felt something she had rarely experienced before, but she knew well enough to recognise — helplessness.

She trusted Pheiri with their survival, and trusted Kagami to assist him however she could. She trusted Shilu’s advice about Necromancers, perhaps against her better judgement. She trusted that Victoria had stowed everything safely, and that the others were strapped securely into their seats. She trusted Howl to let her focus. But she, Elpida, the Commander, she could do nothing but watch and wait, sitting tight in her own seat. This was nothing like piloting a combat frame through the deep green; no matter how hostile that environment had been, this was worse.

She caught herself using her left hand to gently cup the stump of her right arm. She wasn’t worrying at the fresh bandages, but she knew this behaviour might lead to minor acts of self-harm, picking at the stump, at the wound beneath.

Elps, Howl said, in the back of Elpida’s mind. It’s not easy. Fuck knows it’s not easy. You gotta let go.

I’m responsible for everyone’s safety. I’m responsible for keeping us alive.

And that’s what you’ve done, right? Howl laughed softly. You made the call, you made the decision, now Pheiri’s carrying it out. Trust our little brother. He’s got this shit covered.

I do trust him. I just …

Can’t do everything yourself, Howl snapped. I thought you’d finally figured that out.

I did. Elpida sighed, and hoped the others didn’t notice. But that doesn’t make it any easier to accept.

You’re doing great. Sit tight. Howl lapsed into silence

“How are we gonna outrun these necro-fuck things in this?” Sky muttered after about half an hour of forward progress.

Kagami snorted. “This is nothing,” she called over her shoulder. “Pheiri can go much, much faster, even in this. The ride will get considerably more bumpy when he does. And it is ‘when’, not if. Hope you picked a seat with a working headrest.”

“Fuck me,” Sky spat. “This is worse than a fucking rock-hopper ship. At least you don’t feel the void.”

Kagami barked a little laugh. “Spaceships are smooth, sure. You don’t feel the bump when something goes wrong.”

Sky groaned. Elpida wondered about the nature of space-dwellers, that two people from so far apart in history could share the same gallows humour about crossing that starry void.

Pheiri kept his sensor net extended as far as possible, peering through the sheets of rain and the barrage of hail with more than just infra-red. The contours of the shattered city were laid out in false colour on one of his screens, the rubble and ruin picked out from beneath the rain, scanned constantly for any signs of greater nanomachine density, any signs of undead life. Every two seconds the same message refreshed, glowing green letters always the same.

>nanomachine control locus query
///nanomachine control locus detection NULL VALUE

Thirty minutes crept by, then forty, then forty five. Elpida counted, eyes on the screens, alert for anything shaped like a human being, anything moving that wasn’t loose concrete. Howl brooded in silence in the back of Elpida’s mind, doing much the same, for all the good it would do. If a Necromancer sprouted from the ground, Pheiri would know before anybody on board.

With the possible exception of Shilu. Elpida kept one eye on her too.

As the minutes crept by, the rain grew steadily less intense, the static easing off so slowly that it was hard to notice the decline from one moment to the next. The hail trailed off completely; Elpida heard the final audible hailstone tap against Pheiri’s armour at fifty five minutes and three seconds, though smaller pieces fell for several minutes longer. Without the white static of the hail, the outlines of the city rose from the dark grey murk, visible without false colour or Pheiri’s algorithms picking real details out of the chaos. The wind howled on without pause, but the stronger gusts dribbled away, then ceased at last.

Kagami announced as the sustained wind speed dropped. “We’re down below one thirty mph. Dipping toward a hundred. Pheiri’s reporting less buffeting on his hull. Still dropping.”

Howl took control of Elpida’s mouth. “Any idea when your friends are gonna show up, cheese grater?”

“No,” said Shilu. And she didn’t say more.

As the storm finally began to die, a layer of black mold crept up from between the cracks and gaps in the vast hummocks and ridges of broken concrete, as if the kinetic impacts of the hailstones had been keeping it from spreading. At first Elpida thought it was mere shadows, but then the mold began to thicken and climb, as if soaking up the rain, crawling higher all across the landscape of shattered debris. It started to clog the temporary streams, lying in thickened mounds over the floating masses. Pheiri’s tracks tore through it with ease; the mold did not cling to him or bar his way, but began to cover everything else. Pheiri highlighted the phenomenon on a single screen, scanning the material and showing readouts of the composition. Bio-matter, spongy with motion, thick enough to chew.

“What the fuck are we watching?” Sky hissed. “What is all this shit?”

“The miracle of life after death,” Atyle said. Sky shot her a look with bared teeth.

“She’s serious,” Elpida said. “I think we’re witnessing the city’s self-repair mechanisms. That stuff is growing fast, absorbing the buildings, processing debris. Kagami, what’s the nanomachine density inside that stuff?”

“Negligible,” Kagami grunted, reaching out to tap one of Pheiri’s screens. “Wouldn’t want to risk a mouthful of it.”

“How can it be repairing the city, then?” Sky asked with a little scoff.

“Shilu?” Elpida said.

Shilu shrugged. “I was a Necromancer. I did what I was told. I have no greater insights into the nanomachine mechanisms of the world. Though … I’ve seen this happen before, on a smaller scale. You’re probably right. Self-repair.”

“Huh,” Sky grunted. “Some fucking use you are, tin can.”

Elpida held up a hand for quiet. “The storm’s died down enough. Pheiri, can we see the graveworm?”

Pheiri answered by piping his best forward-facing external camera view to one of the largest screens, up and to Kagami’s right. The view was still choked with thick sheets of rain, but thinner than before, a mist that darkened as it marched toward the black horizon. The city lay like a ripped blanket dipped in liquid concrete, jagged with outcrops of steel, being eaten by black mold.

An uneven line towered over it all, barely visible through the rain against the tarry sky, like the shadow of a mountain range.

“There she is,” Elpida said. “How close are we?”

“Close enough,” Kagami hissed. “Another half hour at this pace and we’ll be within sight of the base. No worm-guard yet, but … ” She shrugged. “Who knows when they’ll come out to play.”

“Alright, Pheiri,” Elpida said. “Take us slow, creep us in. We want to see Necromancers before we sprint. This only works if we’re baiting them.”

Kagami let out a long, slow breath. “Commander— fuck!”

Elpida almost flinched. Sky jerked in her seat. Shilu looked up, eyes quickly scanning the screens. Atyle said nothing.

“Kaga?” Elpida demanded. “What—”

Kagami sighed. Elpida instantly knew this was not an emergency, nor the arrival of a dozen Necromancers. Kagami gestured vaguely with her left hand, the one wired into Pheiri. One of Pheiri’s screens jerked and flickered with a new camera view — a distant one, to the rear, with the black stepped pyramid of the tomb dominating the view.

An indistinct blob of familiar flesh was launching itself from the exterior walls of the tomb, then snapping wide like a glider shaped to catch the wind. The blob soared upward on the remaining scraps of the hurricane, taking wing over the shattered plain of the city.

“Ah,” Elpida said.

Sky started laughing. Atyle purred with approval.

“Iriko’s following us,” Kagami grunted. “Flying. For fuck’s sake! Fool will get herself torn apart if she’s not careful.”

“What does Pheiri say?” Elpida asked. She got an answer from one of Pheiri’s screens.

///tightbeam uplink re-established
///communication protocol standard
///warning ISSUE
///warning IGNORE
///overwatch NEGATIVE engagement distance
///advise non-contact
///tightbeam uplink maintain

“Good idea,” Elpida said, patting one of Pheiri’s consoles. “Keep her in the loop, but tell her to keep away. We don’t want her getting injured in all this.”

>y

Sky snorted, then said, “You can follow all that?”

“Just about,” Elpida said. “It’s how he talks. You’ll get used to it.”

Minutes and meters crawled past in unison. Pheiri entered a canyon formed from the fallen remains of several skyscrapers, their glass all pounded to dust, their steel frames twisted and broken, creepers of black mold climbing their remains. The rain slowly died away, until it no longer drummed on Pheiri’s hull; the wind did the same, dropping below a hundred miles an hour, then below eighty, then fifty, forty, still dropping. Pheiri emerged from the long canyon of dead buildings beneath a sky just a touch lighter than before.

Elpida looked for the tell-tale ruddy-red glow of the sun, the furnace trapped behind the ever-present black clouds — and there it was, off to Pheiri’s right, a red smudge in a distant corner of the sky.

“Suns out, guns out,” Sky muttered. Nobody laughed — except Howl, in the back of Elpida’s head.

“Maybe they’re not coming,” Kagami said, eyes glued to her screens. “Maybe Perpetua was lying. Maybe the plan changed.”

>nanomachine control locus query
///nanomachine control locus detection NULL VALUE

“Shilu?” Elpida said.

“The network may be taking time to re-establish connections. This is a wide area of damage. Assume nothing.”

“Assume nothing, right. Kaga, what about—”

Kagami slapped the arm of her chair and grinned wide. “We have Hope! She’s talking to us over tightbeam!”

“Haha!” Sky laughed. “I thought you were kidding about that? You fuckers really do have air support?”

Elpida breathed a sigh of relief — Hope, Thirteen Arcadia’s daughter-machine, a sub-orbital pseudo-satellite hovering several klicks up, had made herself scarce before the storm front had hit. They’d lost contact before entering the tomb. As another daughter of Telokopolis, Elpida was delighted to hear Hope was still up there.

“Can she send us aerial—”

“Already trying,” Kagami said, the fingers of both hands twitching as she sifted through Pheiri’s external comms. “She’s too far to the west to get us any good high-angle shots. Needs to stay out from beneath the storm. She’s got— Ah. Okay.”

One of Pheiri’s screens shifted, showing a single static shot of what looked like endless grey soup studded with rotten outcrops of broken material, sinking into a deeper substrate of black. A tiny dot in the middle was highlighted in red.

“That’s us?” Elpida asked.

“That’s us. Hope can see us.”

“Fucking hell,” Sky breathed. “This goes on for miles and miles. It’s … forever.”

“Telokopolis is forever,” Elpida said. “This is only local. Big, but local. Kagami, if we can talk to Hope, that means other things can talk too. Ask her to get us as many wide-angle shots as she can. Look for anything shaped like a person, anything moving, anything that might be a Necro—”

One of Pheiri’s screens turned red.

///ALERT
///nanomachine control locus detection POSITIVE
///advise immediate priority one procedure
///seal electromagnetic ingress
///raise external firewall
///retract communications pickup net

“That’s our first Necromancer!” Elpida announced, interrupting herself. Pheiri’s screens flickered and jerked, cycling through external views; other screens locked up as firewalls rose, narrowing his sensory range, closing off comms ingress. “Kaga, get those wide-angle shots from Hope, show us where it is! Pheiri, show me what we got, show us where—”

Kagami winced, eyes going wide, face turning grey. At the exact same moment, inside Elpida’s head, Howl said, Huh. That’s weird.

“What?” Elpida said out loud. “What is it? Talk to me.”

Exactly, Howl grunted.

What?

“Something is trying to access Pheiri’s tightbeam receiver,” Kagami said, voice tight in her throat. “And it’s not an attack, not a virus.” She turned to look at Elpida. “Something out there wants to talk.”


Previous Chapter Next Chapter



Dare you answer the Necromancer’s call? Dare you hear the spooky, spooky words? What if the call is coming from inside the tank? Uh oh …

You know what? It’s a hell of a relief to finally get the cast back out of the tomb. A lot of the stuff while they were trapped down there was great, and I’m really proud of certain character arcs I was exploring back there, but phew, wow, I did not plan for them to be stuck in there for quite this long! It’s great to get back to the corpse city, to explore it once again, now reduced to this nightmare ruin. Hahaha!

Behind the scenes, I reckon arc 16 is actually going to be more than ten chapters now. I’ve just gotta let this sequence play out however it will, and ride the wave. I’m locked in with the crew, strapped to a chair inside Pheiri, and I would have it no other way!

Meanwhile, if you want more Necroepilogos right away, or you would like to support the story, please consider subscribing to the Patreon:

Patreon link! It’s here!

Right now this only offers a single chapter ahead, about 5k words. Behind the scenes I’m plugging away, and hope to offer more chapters ahead in the future!

There’s also a TopWebFiction entry! Voting makes the story go up in the rankings, which helps more people see it! This only takes a couple of seconds, and it really helps!

And thank you! Thank you for reading Necroepilogos, thank you for being here and enjoying it. I couldn’t do any of this without all of you, the readers! Even now, this deep into the story, I still feel like we’ve barely scratched the surface of some things to come. I’m very excited that the cadre is on the move again, I have such sights to show you! Until next chapter. Seeya then!

deluge- 16.4

Content Warnings

Self harm (very minor)



Previous Chapter Next Chapter


Victoria was making herself useful. She liked being useful; the alternative would drive her spare with anxiety.

Every loose object inside Pheiri’s crew areas needed to be stowed away, strapped down, or otherwise secured. Every last firearm, every plate of body armour, every piece of equipment, it all needed new homes, as quickly and cleanly as possible, wherever space could be found — up in the storage racks above the crew compartment, wedged into the little chambers and ducts and enclosed spaces along Pheiri’s spinal corridor, or just bundled up in spare fabric and roped to the walls of the bunk room. Permanent storage solutions with proper inventory and easy access could wait. Anything more stiff and bulky than a coat had to be made immobile; anything breakable had to be padded and cushioned; this whole process had to be complete before Pheiri finished his slow crawl through the guts of the tomb, back to the yawning dead maw of the entrance and the dying hurricane outdoors. Beyond that point, Pheiri’s usual smooth ride might get ‘somewhat bumpy’, as Kagami had scoffed. An unsecured handgun or a loose helmet could turn into a lethal projectile.

The Commander — no, everyone inside Pheiri, all Vicky’s new comrades — needed this job done before Pheiri hit the surface. After that, things were going to get rough.

Vicky had never set foot on a ship back in her mortal life, despite spending most of her teenage years well within range of the stench rolling off the toxic bacterial contamination of Lake Michigan. She’d never even been on a river boat, let alone served on one of the few gun-buckets that made up the GLR’s early excuse for a navy. But near the end of the long campaign to the east, when the fighting was over and the BosWash corridor oligarchies were all gone, Victoria had gazed out at the Old Empire aircraft carriers rotting in their graves off the Atlantic coast. Great humped masses of steel slowly breaking down in the salt air, corpses long since picked over by Euro-trash vultures and the braver of the coastal oligarchs. She’d seen pictures of Chinese carriers before, so she knew what they were — but those gleaming behemoths were half a world away. The dead giants in the Atlantic were too big, too real, too ancient.

She’d tried to imagine what it would be like to live inside one of those aircraft carriers, before the machines had been abandoned by the Old Empire. Always at the mercy of the sea, scurrying through those tight metal corridors, everything bolted to the floor lest a swelling wave brain you with your own coffee cup.

Now she imagined it was probably a little like this.

She had spent the last hour and a half — every minute since she had rolled out of bed and dragged Kagami after her — preparing Pheiri’s innards for the rough driving ahead. Boxes of spare ammo sealed and stowed, guns wrapped and racked deep in any spare space inside Pheiri’s superstructure, body armour bundled up and strapped to the mattresses in the bunk room. Every errant knife had to be accounted for, every stray boot, every hand-held doodad.

For the first half-hour of the job, before Pheiri had left the tomb chamber where he’d been parked, Vicky had plenty of the spare weapons taken off her hands, her task lightened. Serin, Shilu, Hafina, and Pira had been given the responsibility of carrying out the plan to arm and armour the near-helpless dregs who had sheltered beneath Pheiri’s protection. They had taken dozens of guns, plenty of fresh clothes, and more than a few bullet-proof vests and helmets.

Vicky didn’t resent that, not in the slightest. Pheiri’s crew had more weapons and armour than they would ever need, even with the addition of Eseld, Cyneswith, Sky, and Sanzhima. They could give away nine tenths of what they’d taken in the tomb and still be one of the most well armed groups in the corpse city — powered armour excepted.

Besides, Elpida was right. All those zombies back there with the crescent-and-double-line of Telokopolis freshly daubed and scribbled on their clothes, they were the real hope for any future beyond the cycle of cannibalism.

There was a good chance Pheiri was not going to make it through this.

No, Vicky told herself as she worked, don’t think about that. Don’t think about a horde of Necromancer super-zombies sprouting up from the ground like mushrooms after the rain. Pheiri is big and fast and more robust than a concrete bunker. He’s better armed than an Old Empire battleship. We’re going to get free and clear and play chicken with the worm-guard. We’re going to win. Elpida says we’re going to win. Has the Commander been wrong yet?

Victoria tried not to dwell on that.

Kagami’s ‘laboratory’ had to be carefully packed up, sensitive equipment secured in place. Protecting the meat-plant project itself had consumed the bulk of Victoria’s efforts, with Kagami supervising and Elpida helping. The three surviving meat-plants were beyond value, an ongoing embryonic miracle of nanomolecular engineering, to be protected at all costs. Victoria had strapped their containers down with steel wire and sealed them behind metal panels with air-holes in the top. By the time she was done, she was confident the compartment itself could collapse without harming the plants.

Then again, if parts of Pheiri were collapsing, protecting the plants was probably a fruitless endeavour.

Ha, fruitless.

She didn’t share that joke with Kagami or Elpida. Everyone was too on edge, though Elpida didn’t show it easily. Victoria had just dusted off her hands, said job’s a good’un, and carried on with the rest.

Do your job, focus on your role, on what you can do. Focus on what you can affect. Leave the rest to the Commander. To Kagami. To Pheiri. To Shilu?

If it came down to Shilu fighting off Necromancers hand-to-hand, they were all fucked.

Victoria didn’t say that out loud either.

Exhaustion was steel wool scratching behind her eyes, matched by the slowly increasing roar of the hurricane. The storm was dying away, dropping toward Kagami’s golden survivable number of two-hundred-thirty miles per hour — but the volume of the screaming winds and pounding hail and whipping rain was ramping up as Pheiri crept toward the outer layers of the tomb. The growing static made Victoria’s head ache and her stomach clench. She couldn’t stand the waiting. It was like being back in the artillery. Hurry up and wait, Vic, hurry up and wait! The infantry’s eternal curse.

Why did it bother her so much more than it had in life?

The exhaustion, clearly. A few hours’ sleep was not enough to banish the stress of the last day and a half.

Vicky concentrated on the physical things she could affect with her hands, tightening straps and closing hatches, locking armour plates together, making sure the buckles for the bench seats in the crew compartment all worked. She was tired, so what? She’d done worse things while more tired than this. She’d loaded and fired while tired, humped shells by hand, risked losing her fingers to the treacherous mechanisms of her beloved big guns. She’d slept in muddy holes, in the backs of trucks, beneath constellations of small arms fire. This was nothing. Do it tired!

It wasn’t as if she didn’t have plenty of help. All the others had chipped in where they could. Hafina had assisted with some heavy lifting, and even Pira had shown up to wait for orders. When other tasks had taken priority, Victoria had been left with Amina, Eseld, and Cyneswith to scurry about after her, laden down with armfuls of equipment and guns, taking her orders with gusto. Eseld and Cyneswith might be new, but they understood what was at stake, especially after Elpida had announced the plan to everybody. The new girls didn’t know exactly where to go inside Pheiri, but they worked without complaint, though Vicky wondered about the determined little frown on Eseld’s face, and the way she constantly watched Cyneswith as if the other girl might wander off at any moment.

Amina went above and beyond, squeezing herself into smaller gaps than Vicky could, clambering into the back of the storage racks to make sure everything was strapped down tight. Amina had taken to the job like a fish to water. If she was nervous, she didn’t show much. Perhaps she just wanted to feel useful too.

The others were all busy with their own jobs. Melyn had vanished through the hatch on the floor of the spinal corridor, down into Pheiri’s mechanical guts, for last-minute checks on the secret machinery of his nuclear heart. Kagami and Elpida were up front, plugged in and planning, respectively. Pira was back in the infirmary, double-checking Ooni and Sanzhima were both strapped down tight. Most of the others were up in the cockpit now, watching the screens as the hurricane’s wind-speed dropped, getting buckled into their seats as best they could.

Was it go time? Vicky wished she had a mission clock, something big and bold and objective, up on the wall. Or at least a wristwatch. The anxiety was like a rock in her stomach.

She was inside one of the cramped side-chambers off Pheiri’s spinal corridor, focused on strapping down a final plastic crate full of ammunition. Amina scurried into the compartment and past Victoria, wriggling into a narrow gap between the boxes of supplies, to test the straps Vicky had just secured. Amina’s face popped out of the gap a moment later, smiling and nodding.

“Good job, Amina,” Victoria said, flashing her a thumbs up. “Thank you.”

Amina hesitated, then copied the gesture, eyes asking a silent question.

“It’s a thumbs up,” Victoria said. “Means … yeah, sure, yes, good, and so on. It’s not rude. I promise.” She stood up and dusted off her hands, keeping her head low so she didn’t bump the ceiling.

Amina wriggled back out of the gap and bounced to her feet, flushed and wide-eyed, eager for more orders. They were both stripped down to shorts and t-shirts, the better to navigate through the smaller spaces inside Pheiri. Amina’s hair was swept back out of her face, tied up with a piece of rubber she’d found somewhere. It was the first time Victoria had seen Amina do anything different with her hair.

“What next?” Amina chirped. “What’s next? Vicky?”

Vicky gave her a broad smile; Amina had risen to the challenge with surprising clarity. “Good question. You tell me. What’s left in the crew compartment?”

“One suit of armour carapace, the one Pira stripped off when she came back in. Haf’s stowed hers already. Other than that it’s all blankets and clothes, soft stuff. Not dangerous, yes?” She blinked and swallowed, a flash of anxiety crossing her face. “Oh, and Illy’s shotgun. But I don’t think she would let us take that off her … p-probably … ”

Vicky chuckled. A few weapons and pieces of body armour were locked directly to the walls of the crew compartment — weapons that might be needed if the flight from the tomb ended in close combat.

Victoria’s chuckle died away. If it came down to close combat with a dozen Necromancers, no amount of small arms would matter.

Amina’s face was creasing with confusion. Victoria cleared her throat.

“As long as Illy straps her gun down in a seat or something, she can keep it close, sure. Can she walk properly yet?”

Amina shook her head, ponytail bouncing from side to side, the rest of her bouncing on the balls of her feet. “Not really.”

Vicky opened her mouth to reply, but a soft crackle interrupted, right in her ear. She was wearing one of the comms headsets, tuned for Pheiri’s own internal channels. Her gut clenched up, a hard fist in her bowels. Was it go time? She held up one hand to Amina, an apologetic look on her face, and toggled the headset speaker with one finger.

“Commander?” she said.

Elpida’s voice replied from the headset: “Vicky, how’s stowage coming?”

“Almost done. Ten more minutes.” She tried to keep the tension out of her voice, drawing a deep breath in through her nose. It didn’t work. “How close are we now? Are we there yet?”

“You’ve got time,” Elpida replied, slow and easy. “We’re taking it gently, giving the stragglers enough time to pull back as they hear the storm up ahead. I’m going to make another announcement on external loudspeakers, in five. Let everyone back there know, I don’t want anybody flinching and banging their heads. Understood?”

“You got it, Commander. Announcement in five.” Victoria took another deep breath. She tried to ignore that Elpida hadn’t actually answered her question.

“You’ve got time,” Elpida repeated. “As long as you need. You understand?”

Victoria swallowed. “Yeah. Yeah, seriously though, we’re pretty much done. One sec, Elpi.” Victoria covered the mic-bead and spoke to Amina. “Head back to crew, make sure Illy and the others are strapped in or getting strapped in, then stow that final suit of armour. If you’ve got time, do a final check of the bunks and the infirmary. Double-check Ooni and Sanzhima are both strapped down. Make sure Pira actually belts in, don’t let her sit loose. If she gives you any trouble, back off, tell me.”

Amina bobbed her whole body by way of salute, then darted for the hatch back to the spinal corridor. Vicky reached out and tapped her on the shoulder. Amina spun back, eyes wide for more.

“I almost forgot,” Vicky added. The steel wool behind her eyes was dragging at her thoughts. “Elpida’s gonna make another external announcement in a couple of minutes. Let everyone know. We don’t want anybody jumping too high.”

Amina nodded, then darted off again, ducking through the hatch and bouncing upright on the other side.

“And check for Melyn!” Victoria shouted after her. She sighed, then uncovered the microphone bead. “Commander. As I said, almost done.”

A moment of silence crept past, against the background of Pheiri’s nuclear heartbeat and the growing static of the storm. Victoria chewed on her lower lip, biting off little fragments of skin. She tasted a spot of blood, then forced herself to stop.

Elpida answered. “Actually, Vicky, if everything is in hand now, I’ve got another job for you. I want you to—”

A second voice cut in over the headset — Kagami, screeching. “No, we do not have another job for her! If those clowns want to get swept away like broken umbrellas, that’s their fucking business.”

“Kaga,” Victoria sighed into the headset. “Take a deep breath.”

“Don’t talk to me right now!” Kagami snapped. Her voice made the earpiece peak with static. “I’m choking on the forward drone scouts, I have enough to worry about without you as well!”

Vicky ducked through the opening back into Pheiri’s spinal corridor. She sealed the hatch behind her. “Elpi, what do you need me to do?”

Kagami hissed with frustration. “Let somebody else do it! Send Pira!”

Elpida’s voice cut back in. “Serin and Shilu are still outside, up on Pheiri’s hull. Haf’s back in, and she had the comms in her helmet. Serin switched her comms off, wants to ‘watch the storm’. I need somebody to poke their head out of the top hatch and call those two indoors. Or at least Shilu.”

Kagami shouted, “They’ll both scurry back in when they see the storm! They will! Elpida!”

Elpida actually laughed. “Kagami’s probably right, but I’d rather have us buttoned up ASAP. All you have to do is crack the hatch and call them home. If Serin refuses, that’s up to her. If you don’t feel confident, grab Pira.”

Victoria was already turning back to the crew compartment, picking her way through the tangle of Pheiri’s innards. “Pira’s strapped in next to Ooni, it would take too long. I’ll get my coat on and crack the hatch. No problem, Commander. I’m on it.”

“Good,” Elpida said. “Thank you, Vicky. Let me know when everybody’s secure.”

“Will do. Vicky out.”

Elpida closed the internal line with a soft beep. The headset crackled again two seconds later. Victoria reopened the line, suppressing a sigh.

“Yeah, Kaga?”

A moment of silence, full of storm-static and the soft mechanical noises from the cockpit. Then a sharp, stabbing sigh. Kagami hissed, “Oh, forget it.”

“I’ll be fine,” Vicky said. “I’m just cracking a window.”

“Don’t get your head blown off,” Kagami snapped.

“Sure thing, moon princess. You know us surface types. Heads made of iron.”

“Tch!”

Kagami killed the line, another soft beep. Victoria carried on toward the crew compartment.

“Love you too,” she muttered under her breath.

The crew compartment was clear of equipment and debris, lights turned up to full brightness, picking out every ancient scuff mark on the metal walls and floor. Half the crew was already strapped into the bench seats. Ilyusha sprawled, bionic legs and arms still ungainly after the ad-hoc reattachment process, her massive black-and-red tail coiled in the seat next to her, shotgun clutched to her chest; she looked as exhausted as Victoria felt. Eseld was helping Cyneswith get her own straps straightened out, then hopped into the next seat and pulled the safety belts over her own body. Hafina took up two seats by herself, with Melyn snuggled down deep in her lap, not strapped in but enclosed by several of Hafina’s massive muscular arms, snuggled beneath a blanket. Amina darted out of the infirmary and bobbed her head at Vicky.

“All good!”

“Well done,” Vicky told her, then gestured at Hafina and Melyn. “You two, you don’t wanna go up front? In the cockpit? Last chance if you wanna move.”

Hafina grinned, big and dopey, like an oversized dog. Victoria liked that, she grinned back automatically.

Melyn shook her head. “Pheiri knows best,” she said. “Knows best. Keeps us safe.”

“Right on he does,” Victoria agreed. “Amina, final checks, then get yourself strapped in.”

“What about you?” Amina bobbed forward again, as if trying to block Victoria’s path.

“The Commander wants me to call Serin and Shilu in, they’re up top. It’ll only take a minute. Get seated, Amina, go on.” Victoria clapped her on the shoulder, then headed for the bunk room.

She sounded so much more confident than she felt. Like she was channelling Elpida from up front. The Commander’s confidence and Kagami’s acid had briefly washed away her worries.

Of course they were going to survive this. They’d survived everything else so far, hadn’t they? And now they had Pheiri, more guns than the Old Empire, and a Necromancer on their side.

In the momentary privacy of the bunk room, Victoria dragged on her trousers, stomped into her boots, and grabbed her armoured coat off her bunk. The bunk room was even more cramped than usual, every bunk filled with spare equipment strapped to the walls or bundled up as padding. Extra tomb-grown clothes lay in unsecured piles, the lowest priority for storage.

As Victoria pulled the armoured coat over her shoulders, Elpida’s voice boomed and echoed from beyond Pheiri’s hull, amplified by the external loudspeakers, muffled by the metal of Pheiri’s skin.

“—do not attempt to follow us. I’ve told you this already, but I’m telling you again. You will not survive exposure to the storm at the current wind speeds. We’re leaving to draw danger away from you, not leaving you to your fate. Do not attempt to follow us. Wait until the storm subsides—”

Victoria checked the sidearm in her coat pocket — nothing special, just an automatic pistol. She couldn’t justify keeping her new grenade launcher loaded and slung over her back all the time. Right now it was strapped to the walls of the bunk room with everything else.

“—not attempt to follow us—”

But even if she was just cracking the hatch to shout at slowpokes, she couldn’t imagine going beyond Pheiri’s hull without a weapon, without a little armour between her skin and the world.

“—remember, Telokopolis is forever.”

If a cheer went up from the crowd of zombies who had tried to follow Pheiri, Victoria couldn’t hear it over the chaos of the storm. She shivered at the thought of that rain lashing against her, the hailstones drumming on her skull, even with the armoured hood of her coat up.

She almost laughed at herself. So reluctant to go outdoors, eh? When had she become such a homebody?

Home?

The word echoed in Victoria’s mind as she darted out of the bunk room and hurried into the narrow staircase that led to the top hatch. She cast a glance over her shoulder, to check that Amina was getting strapped in, then plunged upward into the darkness of the tiny stairwell. Her boots slammed against the metal steps as she turned the corner and groped for the hatch.

Was Pheiri her home now?

In life, Victoria had never known a home; the thought came like a hammer-blow to the centre of her chest. Her parents had done the best they could with the tent in the refugee camps south of Chicago, but even when she’d been a child, Vicky had known that was meant to be temporary. What about Chicago itself? The unconquered city, with the festering arcology at its core, the arcology that had never been cracked in Vicky’s own life? Of course not. The GLR had been home, and then the 18th Infantry, and then the artillery. The regiment was home. Her comrades were home. Always moving, always changing — is that a home?

Home had been the revolution, the road, the process. Victoria had always wanted to put down roots after the war. Change herself, after the war. Become something other than a grubby infantry brat. After the war. But she had ended before the war did.

Kagami’s knowledge of the future told her that the GLR had flowered into the best the revolution could have hoped for, but Vicky hadn’t gotten to see any of that. She’d been homeless all her life, just another pair of feet on the campaign for a better world. She’d won — they had won! But Vicky had died in Chicago’s mud.

And then this, an afterlife where everyone was homeless, where nobody could ever stop moving, where the roots were dead and the tree was rotten.

But Pheiri, this mobile bubble of safety and security. This was home now, right? In a way Vicky had never felt before, this was home.

Her hands brushed the control panel to open the top hatch. She muttered under her breath.

“Thank you, Pheiri.”

Elpida’s plan to play chicken with the worm-guard was bonkers, but it was the only way to protect home.

Victoria thumbed the hatch controls and yanked the lever. The seal popped with a hiss of pressure difference and the hatch rose an inch on smooth hydraulics. The roar of the storm rushed in — close now, a deafening static of hailstones and raindrops, echoing as if from the mouth of a cave, backed by the wind like the howling of a god. Victoria pushed and the hatch gave way, exposing a narrow slit of Pheiri’s outer deck.

Whorls of bone-armour stretched away toward his front, flanked by the craggy outcrops of gun emplacements and missile blisters and weapon domes, all lit by the soft blood-red glow of the external lights.

Victoria couldn’t see Shilu and Serin right away, they weren’t on the easily navigable part of the outer deck. Her stomach tightened; she hadn’t considered what she would do if she couldn’t contact them. She pushed the hatch wider, straightening up, the sound of the hurricane beyond the tomb roaring like some far-off monster. Fingers of wind plucked at her hair and the collar of her coat. She reached for the comms headset, to ask Elpida for further instructions.

But then she let her hand drop. Serin and Shilu were right there, next to the hatch. Serin was perched on a nodule of Pheiri’s bone armour, looking past the looming bulk of the turret at the tomb passageway to the rear. Shilu was standing upright, armoured coat whipping around her human disguise, staring straight ahead.

Victoria opened her mouth. Her eyes slid sideways, following Shilu’s gaze. The words died in her throat.

She saw the storm.

Pheiri was on the final approach to the mouth of the tomb, crawling at slow speed down the same long tunnel they had taken into the heart of the structure. The ceiling was three times Pheiri’s height, as if the tunnel had been made for worm-guard. Side passages vanished into darkness, briefly lit by the blood-wash of external lights as Pheiri crept past.

At this distance, the mouth of the tomb was no bigger than Victoria’s thumbnail — a void of roiling grey static cut into the black, split apart by the shadow of whirling debris and the visual noise of hailstones the size of fists. She stared, and did not so much see the hurricane as feel it in her guts, on her skin, behind her eyeballs. The storm demanded her attention, raw and unclothed.

Victoria felt her throat closing up. Her skin prickled with cold sweat. She felt a strange urge to draw her gun. She kept one hand firmly on the hatch, gripping so hard her knuckles hurt.

Elpida was right. A god had sent this storm — if not Telokopolis from inside the network, then something else. Vicky hoped it was Telokopolis. She didn’t want to meet the alternative.

“Quite something, isn’t it?” Shilu said.

Victoria swallowed and nodded, then forced down a deep breath; the air tasted moist and ashen. Elpida had given her a job. Whatever had sent this storm, they would beat it too.

“Elpida wants both of you down inside, ASAP!” Victoria shouted over the static. “Shilu, Serin, come on! We’re almost there!”

Shilu allowed a heartbeat to pass, then turned away from the storm. Her eyes were as calm as always, her face unchanged, despite the way the wind dragged at her hair and pulled on her coat. But she locked eyes with Victoria for a moment, then nodded. Victoria nodded back.

“Lead on,” Shilu said.

Serin hadn’t moved. She was staring the other way, back into the tomb. “Serin!” Victoria shouted. “Don’t make us leave you out here.”

“You’re leaving her out here,” Serin muttered from behind her mask, barely audible over the roar and crash from up ahead.

“What?” Victoria shouted back.

Serin unfurled from her outcrop of bone-amour, dozens of limbs shifting beneath her robes. She turned her moon-pale face toward Victoria, dull amusement in her eyes; the wind made her black robes snap against the jumbled form beneath.

She nodded sideways, back down the passageway. “Iriko. She follows us still. Follows Pheiri. She wishes to ride the storm. Ride it she will, I think, no matter what we or Pheiri say.”

“Can you send her a message, from me, right now?” Victoria shouted.

Serin’s eyebrows rose. “I can. But it will be more of the same, won’t it? Stay back, for your own safety. See you when this is over. We will—”

“Tell her we’re all going home. When this is over. Her too. Tell her she’s coming home with us.”

Serin blinked. A moment passed. The skin around her eyes crinkled with a hidden smile.

“She liked that.”

Victoria nodded down, into the hatch, and stood aside. “Now inside, both of you!”

Serin and Shilu slipped through the hatch. Victoria cast one last glance at the storm, then followed, sealing the hatch behind her. The noise of the hurricane cut off, muffled by Pheiri’s skin. She pumped the hatch handle twice, to make sure it was sealed.

She hurried down the stairwell, back into the crew compartment. Serin was bracing herself at the far end, half a dozen pale hands grabbing the walls and looping her thin and bony arms into spare straps. Shilu slid into a seat, dragging belts across her body. Amina was strapped in next to Ilyusha.

Victoria found a seat and yanked the straps over her chest. Then she keyed the comms headset.

Elpida answered a split-second later: “Vicky?”

“Everyone’s in, Commander. Serin too. We’re ready. Ready when Pheiri is. It’s go time.”


Previous Chapter Next Chapter



Amateurs talk tactics, professionals study logistics. Vicky really shouldn’t disparage her own value so much. A good quartermaster is worth her weight in gold. Or bullets, as it were.

Anyway, it’s go time.

Behind the scenes, things are going great! The arc edges toward a chunky middle, sort of, and I’m very happy with how it’s all going so far! It’s been a while since we caught up with all these nooks and crannies of the cast, so it’s been great to spend a little narrative space on that.

And yes, I’ve once again got more art from the discord server! Just one this week: Ilyusha doing a pounce, with a particularly, um, ‘thick’ interpretation of her bionics, (by Elek-tronikz, commissioned by SoylentOrange). It’s always so flattering to see more fanart of my characters, thank you so much!

Meanwhile, if you want more Necroepilogos right away, or you would like to support the story, please consider subscribing to the Patreon:

Patreon link! It’s here!

Right now this only offers a single chapter ahead, about 5k words. Behind the scenes I’m plugging away, and hope to offer more chapters ahead in the future!

There’s also a TopWebFiction entry! Voting makes the story go up in the rankings, which helps more people see it! This only takes a couple of seconds, and it really helps!

And thank you, dear readers! Thank you for being here and reading my little story about zombie girls. As always, I could not do this without all of you, the audience, watching from inside the network. Seeya next chapter. Until then!

deluge- 16.3

Content Warnings

None this chapter.



Previous Chapter Next Chapter


For the first time since her earliest resurrections, Eseld prayed to something other than God’s empty throne among the ashes of heaven.

She prayed to Telokopolis.

Eseld was alone in the bunk room, with only her own denuded skull for company; Cyneswith had departed some time ago, though Eseld was uncertain how much time had passed. She had been dozing for hours, lingering on the periphery of sleep. The meagre lights were turned down low. Each bunk seemed a vault of shadows, extending off into grey infinity. The confined air was filled with the soft sounds of slow breathing; the saint’s disciples filled the other bunks, doing their best to follow the saint’s commandment of rest before the trial ahead. Beyond their chorus of shared breath, beyond the hull, beyond the tomb, the hurricane still raged on. But Eseld no longer felt as if the storm wept inside her own head.

Her mind felt as empty as the naked skull pressed to her belly, like the world itself would be, once the storm had passed through and scoured clean the rot and the ruin, ready for the green shoots of a spring that would never come.

Eseld lay on her back, staring at the underside of the next bunk up, and filled her empty mind with prayers to Telokopolis.

Her petitions felt weak, no matter how she phrased them: ‘Please protect the saint and her disciples and myself through the flight we must endure’; ‘Armour us with your walls against the devils and demons who seek to hunt us’; ‘Grant this pitiful flesh the protection of your regard’; ‘Please, please, please, please.’

Eseld moved silent lips over the words of a dozen variations, but they all felt wrong, as if the thing to which she prayed did not speak her language. When praying to God, in her mortal life, she had done well enough by copying her parents, her priests, the words of others. But she did not know the proper form for addressing Telokopolis. A great lady? A high queen? A loving mother? None of those? Was it proper for Eseld to call Telokopolis the ‘Mother City’, even though she had not been born there, had never walked those streets, and had only the vaguest notion of what the city even looked like? Pira had told Eseld so much about Elpida’s long-lost city-mother, about what it now meant to be a daughter of Telokopolis, and about where the saint and true first-born of the city was taking them, both physically and spiritually. Pira had said we are all now children of Telokopolis, if we wish it so. Eseld did wish it, very much. The promise of Telokopolis was the promise of an end to the cycle of predation and cannibalism. It was the promise of reunion with her dead friends, with all that had been lost, and with that which she had never known she lacked. Eseld knew she should doubt, and she did, for this was not divinity as she had believed of in life — but the benefits were self-evident. The saint, Pheiri, the warmth in which she now reposed, the abundance of food, the banishing of Lykke, all of it!

But Pira had not spoken about Telokopolis in the way one might speak of a true god, so Eseld did not know the right words.

She could ask the saint herself, but her insides cringed and coiled at the thought.

There was little else she could do but pray. She and Cyneswith were still on the periphery of the group, not quite trusted, not quite with the disciples, not yet — but they had not been kept in the dark. Eseld knew what was coming. She had heard Kagami return to the bunk room some hours earlier, to join Victoria in her bunk; the two of them had shared soft whispers, and Eseld had not needed to overhear the words to recognise that Kagami was terrified. The others were catching what sleep they could, because as soon as the hurricane weakened far enough, this whole mobile fortress would have to move, and quickly, with scant hope of avoiding the coming assault.

A dozen things like Lykke. A dozen or more Necromancers. A score or more of demons, hunting this seed of Telokopolis.

So Eseld prayed — not to God, who was surely dead and gone, but to Telokopolis and her first-born daughter, the saint, the monster, the bloody teeth that had torn Eseld’s own flesh, and had her flesh and blood consumed in return. The Commander, the leader, the pilot Elpida.

“Telokopolis, mother city, shining spire,” Eseld whispered as softly as she could, little more than a breath. She tried to picture Telokopolis as Pira had described it, as the crescent-and-double-line symbol showed it — a needle of steel piercing the heavens. But she couldn’t imagine something so tall and grand, not when she’d spent lifetimes down here in the frigid ashes of the world. “Please protect us, please grant us speed and strength. Please gather us behind your skirts. Deliver us from the demons who are coming to hunt us. Please. Please.”

The prayer didn’t feel like it was going anywhere. Then again, prayers had always felt that way. Did Eseld trust Telokopolis? Better question: had she ever trusted God?

Did she trust the saint, Elpida?

She thought about that for a while, and found, oddly enough, that she did. Despite everything. Or perhaps because of everything? After committing the fundamentally necessary central sin that all zombies were bound to, Elpida had found Eseld again. She had found her, and apologised, and fought for forgiveness — or at least for redemption. Had any zombie ever before dared to dream of such a feat?

It was that realisation — not the promises of Telokopolis — which had lifted Eseld from her black pit.

Eseld rolled onto her side to face the back of the bunk, the metal wall touched with scraps of peeling paint. She lifted her own skull and stared into the shadows behind the eye sockets. Should she pray to herself, instead? To this relic of her previous body? Her fingers strayed to the other three skulls lined up at the rear of her bunk, touching the fleshless brows of Andasina, Su, and Mala. Should she pray to her old friends and her lost lover?

Eseld knew she was being ridiculous. If Telokopolis really did exist, then it was a machine-city, thousands of miles away, with a machine-mind that could not hear her praying in silence on her bunk. Or else it was a machine-ghost, lost yet found once again, hidden in the underside of reality forged by the tiny machines that made up the ashes of the world. If it was listening at all, then surely it listened first to its own flesh and blood.

But praying felt right regardless. Eseld closed her eyes and tried one more time.

She prayed to the saint directly, to Elpida, to intercede with her mother. She touched the wall and prayed for the departed. She prayed for Pheiri’s safety, and the safety of everyone within. Finally, she prayed for herself.

Good enough.

Eseld tried to sleep again, but she had slept too much already. She leaned forward to kiss Andasina’s skull, then wriggled out of bed and stood up in the narrow open space in the centre of the bunk room. She carried her own skull with her; she did not want to leave herself behind.

The bunk room was an unimaginable luxury that Eseld still could not quite believe was real — the mattresses, the blankets, the warmth, the security. It was small and cramped, two of the lowest bunks were crammed with equipment and body armour, and there was no question of privacy, but Eseld could not bring herself to care about any of that. She had not slept in true security for so many lifetimes. She had not experienced such abundance of resources since true life, since sunlight and grass and open skies. Here, within Pheiri, for the first time since her first resurrection, she was safe.

She was safe, among zombies who had once eaten her flesh.

The contradiction was impossible to resolve. She did not feel afraid when she looked at the others asleep in their bunks — Pira had made sure of that, had explained in detail — but she could not help seeing their teeth filled with her own meat.

They had killed her and eaten her, and now she was one of them.

Eseld crept the short length of the bunk room, peering at the other zombies. Victoria and Kagami were sleeping together, curtains tugged tight for privacy. Ilyusha and Amina were also snuggled up together, on one of the highest bunks; Ilyusha’s massive bionic tail hung over the side, out in the open, dangling in the air, red tip retracted inside the black bio-polymers. Atyle lay flat on her back on one of the lower bunks, sleeping in all her clothes. Melyn — the little robot with the massive eyes and grey-white artificial skin — was tucked up in a bunk of her own, covers to her chin, surrounded by spare pillows. Eseld had watched Victoria tuck Melyn in, coaxing the machine-girl to much-needed sleep. Those same gentle hands had once peeled Eseld’s former flesh from her abandoned bones, and stuffed morsels of Eseld into Victoria’s hungry mouth.

She looked at Victoria again, through a crack in the flimsy blue privacy curtains. She struggled to imagine that soft, kind, warm face, with blood down the chin from a mouthful of Eseld.

Her skull echoed, empty of hate or pain. The storm inside her had raged itself out.

Eseld didn’t feel the need to put on more clothes before she left the bunk room. She was perfectly comfortable in the tomb-grown grey t-shirt and shorts. Pheiri’s insides were warm as a hearth, the warmest she’d felt in all her afterlives. But she did grab a weapon — a combat knife in a black sheath. She stuffed it into her waistband. She didn’t stop to reason or question why she did that; she did not feel threatened, she simply wanted a knife close to hand.

She cracked the hatch to the crew compartment and slipped through the gap, then eased the door shut behind her.

The lights in the crew compartment were deep and dim, blood-red illumination for Pheiri’s internal night cycle. An irregular black lump was sprawled across one of the bench-seats, between the various pieces of armour and equipment and boxes of ammunition looted from the tomb armoury. The lump was topped by a sliver of pale flesh and a hard metal half-mask painted with jagged teeth.

The sniper — Serin? Eseld was doing her best to learn everyone’s names. She suspected her long-term survival might depend on it. But some of the crew were elusive, hard to know, or short with words. Serin especially.

Serin was either asleep or pretending. Eseld did not fancy waking her, not alone.

Eseld padded across the crew compartment and peeked through the open door to the infirmary, where the lights were harsh and bright. The wounded zombie — Sanzhima? — was still unconscious, perhaps in a coma. At the far end of the infirmary Ooni lay on the other slab bed, fast asleep. Pira sat beside her, holding Ooni’s hand, eyes closed, breathing softly.

An infirmary, here in the ash-choked afterlife. If Eseld needed more proof that this was the way, that Telokopolis was the way, then she could not think of any better sign.

But for now she retreated back into the crew compartment. Where was Cyneswith?

She and Cyn had not been confined to the bunk room, not formally. They had not been kept out of any part of Pheiri they wished to visit. But Eseld had not yet found any reason to explore further than these few chambers. Pira had described Pheiri’s layout, the central spinal corridor which led to a control cockpit, but surely Cyneswith would not have wandered off on her own, purely to explore? Then again, Cyn didn’t understand where she was. Her world-view seemed incompatible with the reality of the nanomachine afterlife. She attributed everything to fairies and magic. She didn’t get it. She was vulnerable.

Eseld ran through a short mental list of who was not present in this rear section of the mobile fortress, and felt a sinking sensation in the pit of her stomach.

Eseld had not forgotten the way that Sky had treated Cyneswith, after their shared resurrection. She had not forgotten the possessive aggression, the strange sense of dominance, or the implicit threat that Sky had made so clear.

Perhaps Cyneswith was with the saint and Shilu, and that would be okay. But maybe she was alone in some tiny chamber with Sky, and that was not good.

Eseld fought against the urge to plunge into the darkness of the spinal corridor. She barely knew Cyneswith. Just another tomb-mate, thrown together by chance; if not for the saint and her disciples and the storm, Cyn would not have lasted fifteen minutes out there in the corpse-city. Perhaps Eseld would have killed and eaten her. Another victim, another bottom-feeder, another nobody who would be insane and naked and starving within days.

But the world was different now. It contained the saint and her chariot, and the possibility of more than mere survival.

Eseld pulled the sheathed knife from her waistband and stepped into Pheiri’s spinal corridor.

The passage between the crew compartment and the control cockpit was an overgrown forest path of dangling wires, ancient computers, broken seats, and jutting remnants of removed machinery, as if Pheiri possessed a hundred internal scars of organ replacement and bionic enhancement. Eseld clambered over a great hump in the decking, and beneath a ladder that led upward into the darkness of a gun emplacement. She passed open hatches that led into tiny compartments — some of which had seen recent occupancy — and other hatches firmly closed and bolted. Her only company on the short journey was the tick and hum of Pheiri’s body, the distant static of the weakening storm beyond the tomb, and her own empty skull hugged tight to her chest.

Eseld wriggled past a kink in the corridor formed by a bank of old computer terminals; sickly green light struggled through thick gloom from just ahead. Was that the control cockpit — this cavern of flickering shadows?

She slowed her footsteps and slipped sideways, into concealment, at the sound of a voice.

“—nothing strange about her body.” That was Shilu, with her flat affect. “I’ve examined her half a dozen times with everything I’ve got. She’s clean. Just another revenant.”

“Uh huh.” A grunt — Sky. “And she did come forward with this. Why tell you if she was trying to hide it?”

“True,” said a third voice, soft and knowing, full of steel. Elpida, the saint, the Commander. “But not until Shilu overheard her first. Cyneswith, can you explain why you didn’t tell us this before?”

Cyneswith replied, voice light and airy as petals on a breeze. “I didn’t think it was important. I don’t know your ways, it’s so hard to tell what matters and what doesn’t. I feel as if I barely know what is happening, even now.”

Eseld peered around the corner of a dead computer console, peeking into the green-washed glow of the control cockpit.

Cyneswith stood, delicate hands folded before her, wearing only tomb-grown greys. Her head was slightly bowed, as if in supplication. She was surrounded, a waif ringed by ogres. Shilu stood at her rear, blocking her exit. Elpida and Sky occupied two seats, haloed and flanked by tangled machinery, by dozens of screens, many glowing with faint green text or flicking through camera views of other places, scrolling and flowing with information from beyond Pheiri’s hull. The space was lit like a cavern in hell, a cold dark place full of unseen terrors.

The cockpit was a technological marvel, proof of the grand and bizarre machine in which the saint held her court. But Eseld could not spare a thought for awe, not when Cyneswith was being interrogated.

Sky spoke again, full of scorn. “I understand this place well enough, it’s not that fucking hard. Stop being obstinate, get your head around it already. We’re dead. We were dragged back from hard-copy engrams somehow. Zombies, Necromancers, so on. And in your case apparently, a direct line to the cunt in charge of this pyramid—”

Shilu interrupted. “That is not what she said.”

“Oh yeah?” Sky snorted. “She said she fucking woke it up. Didn’t she?”

“That could imply anything. Or nothing. We need more information.”

“I’ll imply your information, you big metal cock,” Sky said to Shilu. “Shouldn’t you be able to explain this, being one of their bloodhounds and all? Or are you holding back on us too, rust-head? I bet you fucking are, you—”

Elpida made a chopping motion with her left hand. “Stop.”

Sky gestured at Shilu. “I was just—”

Elpida turned to Sky and was not Elpida anymore, not the saint. Her expression was different. It was the other woman who lived inside the saint, the demon-grinning maniac miracle-worker who had beaten Lykke with nothing but Elpida’s fists, the one the others called ‘Howl’.

“You’re not impressing Elps with this act, you thirsty bitch,” Howl said. “Down, girl. Don’t make me muzzle you. Not yet, anyway.”

Sky eased back in her chair. She looked away, silent.

Elpida straightened back up. The grin vanished, along with Howl. When she spoke, she was Elpida again: “Besides, I think Cyneswith here has another advocate. You can come out, if you want. There’s no need to eavesdrop here, Eseld.”

At the sound of her own name, Eseld froze. She stopped breathing. She fought against the urge to burrow or flee. It was a hard won instinct; in every resurrection before this, to be noticed by well-armed, well-fed, well-augmented revenants was to invite the strong to cannibalise one’s flesh. Elpida’s purple eyes pierced the shadows, digging Eseld from her hiding place. Sky looked up and around, alert and predatory. Shilu just tilted her head, without bothering to look.

Eseld almost turned and ran; but then Cyneswith looked over her narrow shoulder, freckled face framed by feathery blonde hair, eyes wide and wet and very scared.

Eseld shot to her feet and stomped into the cockpit; it was like plunging into the ocean, surrounded by greenish glow from flickering screens. She jammed her knife back into her waistband, stalked past Shilu, and grabbed Cyneswith by the hand.

“Huh!” Sky grunted. “You. Maybe you’re the traitor here. Skulking about like a weasel. How much’d you hear, huh?”

Eseld showed Sky her teeth, nice and sharp. “I’ll bite your cheeks off. Gimme an excuse. Come on. Give me one!”

Cyneswith tugged on Eseld’s hand. She murmured, lips close to Eseld’s ear, “It’s okay, it’s okay, please don’t, please.”

Shilu and Elpida both said nothing. Sky held Eseld’s gaze for a moment, then smirked and made a vague gesture, as if parting cobwebs, looking away. That’s right, Eseld thought, avert your eyes. Sky might be big and strong, but Eseld’s teeth were many and sharp.

“Welcome to the cockpit, Eseld,” said Elpida. “I don’t think you’ve been up front yet, have you?”

Eseld had thought she might struggle to look at the saint, but she didn’t.

Bright purple eyes, long white hair, missing right arm, muscular body still partially encased in armour. Just a woman, a zombie, not glowing with divine power, not haloed by a light from beyond sight. The woman who had killed her, who had killed her friends, who had killed Andasina. The monster who had eaten her flesh and the flesh of her lover. The saint who had saved her, and banished a demon.

Pira had made it clear to Eseld that any attempt on Elpida’s life would not be tolerated. But now, standing before the soiled saint, Eseld felt nothing as clean as anger or the need for revenge. As the storm was dying outside, the storm inside her was already gone.

She had more concrete concerns.

Could Elpida be trusted to understand what was happening here, with Cyneswith and Sky? What would that even mean, to trust a saint with affairs of heart and flesh? To trust the avatar and instrument of Telokopolis, a goddess who Eseld did not yet know?

Elpida smiled. “I would say there’s to be no fighting between any of us, but that would be hypocritical of me. If you must fight, if you and Sky have a problem with each other, then — no teeth, no weapons, no permanent injuries. Understand? And you won’t need that knife, Eseld. I promise.”

Eseld tightened her grip on Cyneswith’s hand. “Of what does she stand accused?”

Elpida raised her eyebrows. “Cyneswith? Nothing. This isn’t a court or an interrogation. She was telling us about something that happened in the gravekeeper’s chamber, while you were first confronting Lykke, just before we arrived. Shilu and Sky didn’t notice it, but apparently you may have been close enough to see it happen. Perhaps you can tell us about it too.”

Eseld frowned. “What?”

Cyneswith tugged on her hand, eyes bright and shining. “Eseld?” she said. “Do you remember, just before Lykke summoned all those other people, when I touched the lady inside the coffin?”

“The gravekeeper’s interface,” Shilu supplied softly. “Just a corpse, wired up to the gravekeeper, so it can speak with a human mouth.”

Cyneswith smiled, almost a giggle. “She looked like a lady to me! Eseld, do you remember what happened?”

Eseld frowned harder, trying to cast her mind back. The fight in the gravekeeper’s chamber had been rendered into a nightmare by the work of remembering, between the stress and the panic and the terrible dark revelation of the saint.

Shilu said, “The gravekeeper would not respond to me. The interface wouldn’t even open its eyes.”

“But it did for me!” Cyneswith chirped like a little bird. “When I saw her face, she looked so lonely, like she was crying with her eyes closed! She looked like a girl I knew, somehow. A girl I’d seen in a dream. So I reached out and touched her! Eseld, don’t you remember?”

Eseld did remember.

Lykke had been gloating and boasting about how she was going to kill them all in such painful and humiliating ways. But Cyneswith had been distracted by the gravekeeper’s interface — that half-corpse of a zombie, plugged into the exposed guts of an upright resurrection coffin. Cyneswith had reached out and cupped the cheek of the interface.

“I … yes,” Eseld said. “I saw it too. Cyn touched the face. The eyes snapped open. It spoke. It said … ”

Cyneswith opened her mouth to echo the words, but Elpida clicked her fingers. “Cyneswith, let Eseld remember. Eseld, what did it say? From memory is fine, even if you don’t get it entirely correct.”

Could Elpida be trusted with this? Could the saint truly be a saint? Eseld saw no other path.

“Crowned and veiled,” Eseld said, dredging the words from memory. “Once again revealed. Do you wish this?”

The words floated upward, to join the lingering static of the hurricane beyond the walls, beyond Pheiri, beyond the world. The cockpit was silent for a long moment. Eseld glanced at the other zombies, clutching her own skull to her chest, and Cyn’s hand in her own.

“At least their stories match,” Sky grunted. “What the fuck does it mean?”

Elpida leaned forward in her chair. “Are you certain that’s what it said?”

Eseld nodded. She held Elpida’s eyes in her own; the saint looked tired, worn out, in need of a dream. “What does it mean?”

Elpida sighed and ran her left hand through her long white hair, like pale seaweed beneath the cockpit screens. “We don’t know. Cyneswith is just an ordinary zombie, like the rest of us. She’s not a hidden Necromancer, or anything else in disguise. Shilu and Pheiri have both attested to that. Why did the gravekeeper respond to her?” Elpida shrugged, then briefly waved the bandaged stump of her right arm, as if she had forgotten it was not there. “We don’t have enough intel.”

“More like why did she do it,” Sky grunted, nodding at Cyneswith.

“Cyn?” Eseld said. “Why did you feel you had to … touch it?”

Cyneswith shrugged. “The masters of time and space, I assume.”

“ … what?”

Shilu said, “Religious culture from her time period. It doesn’t mean anything.”

Cyneswith continued, her brightness undimmed by Shilu’s dismissal. “The masters of time and space! They stand above and beyond the world, and they watch over us, though most of the time they don’t really care. They just watch. I thought they had reached into the world and made me recognise the girl in the coffin. But … ” Cyneswith’s smile turned strange and sad. “I keep trying to remember who she is, and I can’t.”

Elpida opened her left hand toward Eseld. “It could be a meaningless coincidence. It could be that Cyneswith merely triggered the gravekeeper to speak by touching the interface, and the message was not meant for her. Or, Shilu, your suggestion, from earlier? Please repeat it, for Eseld.”

“Mm,” Shilu grunted. “It’s not impossible that the body for that interface was taken from somebody who Cyneswith knew in life, either before or after Cyneswith’s own death. A coincidence, but possible.”

Sky let out a low grumble. “I don’t like coincidences. They rarely are.”

Shilu looked at her. “In a system on this scale, it does happen. Wrinkles are inevitable.”

Sky snorted and looked away, folding meaty arms over her chest.

Eseld returned her attention to the saint, the only one who mattered. “Cyn isn’t under any suspicion, then?”

Elpida shook her head. “No. None at all. Shilu has checked, more than once. Cyneswith, Sky, and yourself, I’m satisfied you’re all just like us.”

“Good.” Eseld pointed at Sky with her own naked skull. “I don’t trust her.”

Sky sat up straight. “Fuck you! Alright then, I don’t trust you either, you little shit. Carting around a fucking skull. This is all a bit convenient for you, isn’t it? You two are already thick as thieves with each other. Now you cover for each other’s bullshit too?”

Eseld ignored Sky, spoke to Elpida. “She’s a killer. And more. She wants Cyneswith for herself.”

Cyneswith squeaked. “Don’t say that … ”

Elpida said, “We’re all killers here.”

Eseld stopped. Her insides went cold. At least the saint was honest.

“But,” Elpida added, “point taken.” She gestured at Sky, then at Eseld. “If you two have a developing personal problem with each other, you either steer clear, or you bring it to me. Understand?” She waited for nods and grunts of acknowledgement, then gestured at Cyneswith. “And Cyn, I’ll talk to you after this, alone.”

“Okay … ”

Eseld tugged on Cyneswith’s hand, drawing her a step away from Sky.

Sky sighed and rolled her eyes. “Why can’t we put these two in front of this ‘gravekeeper’ again? Have her touch it, see if it responds?”

Elpida shook her head. “Out of the question. We’re too close to our departure window to risk another expedition into the tomb. I will not run the risk of leaving people behind. Not again.”

Sky gestured at Shilu. “What if it’s just her. Maybe the blob thing out there too—”

“Iriko,” Elpida said.

“Yeah. Shilu and Iriko. They can take Cyn, have her touch this thing’s face again, then come straight back.” Sky looked at Cyneswith, but not at Eseld. She spread her hands in her lap. “No objections, right?” She looked back at Elpida before Cyn could answer. “Commander? You still opposed to that?”

Elpida did not answer right away, watching Sky’s face.

Hesitation? Or suspicion? Eseld couldn’t tell.

Cyneswith opened her mouth with a quiet click of her lips. Eseld knew exactly what she was about to say — she was about to volunteer. So easily swayed, so easily led. So easily eaten up by the big bad monsters who lurked in the dark, or the ones who sat in warm rooms and didn’t seem like monsters at first.

Eseld squeezed Cyneswith’s hand, hard and tight and sudden, to grind the bones of her fingers against each other. Cyneswith’s words died in her throat, strangled by a muffled gasp of pain. Eseld was careful not to look at her, not to give away what had happened. Sky and Elpida were too focused on each other. Shilu saw, but Shilu was wise and kind, Shilu had fought Lykke first, without the power of the saint to ensure victory. Shilu would understand. Shilu would say nothing.

Cyneswith glanced at Eseld with a sheen of tears in her eyes, a confused question on her lips. Eseld ignored her, loosened her grip, and prayed to Telokopolis that Cyn had gotten the message — or at least that she had been delayed for long enough for the saint to make the right decision.

“No,” Elpida said to Sky. “Once again, it’s too close to our departure window. We have under two hours, and that’s including the time to distribute surplus supplies and reach the gates of the tomb. No more expeditions.”

Sky raised her hands in easy, lazy, mock surrender. Cyneswith gently pulled her fingers from Eseld’s grip, rubbing them with her other hand. Eseld let her go.

“Now,” Elpida was saying, “you all need to go back to sleep. Get some more rest. It might be a long time until we can rest again, understand?”

Sky waved a lazy, two-fingered salute. Cyneswith nodded her fluffy head up and down, smiling at the Commander.

Eseld turned away from the saint, wondering why she had helped Cyneswith at all, wondering why she cared so much. She barely knew the girl — and Cyn wasn’t a girl, anyway. She was a grown woman, a few years older than Eseld by the lines of her face and around her eyes.

But something compelled Eseld, something she had not experienced in too many resurrections, too many pointless deaths in the churn of god’s leftovers.

She wanted to protect Cyn from Sky, from that predatory gaze and those grasping hands.

Eseld had to, because the saint seemed blind to it.


Previous Chapter Next Chapter



Been a while since we last saw Eseld! She’s a difficult little zombie, too many conflicting things in that there meat-filled skull. Now, if only she can do her best to keep the meat on the inside this time.

Behind the scenes, this arc is still looking like a longer one. At least 10 chapters, maybe more? It’s been a while since we’ve caught up with the nooks and crannies of the cast, after all. Though they better be quick about this, because the storm is dying away and it’s time to run, sooner than they might think.

Also, I have another piece of fanart this week, from over on the discord server! Another piece from the very talented and skilled cubey: Elpida dressed for the tomb, Howl’s distinctive grin on Elpida’s face, and a study of a submachine gun. I really love seeing my characters brought to life like this, it’s incredible. Thank you!

Meanwhile, if you want more Necroepilogos right away, or you would like to support the story, please consider subscribing to the Patreon:

Patreon link! It’s here!

Right now this only offers a single chapter ahead, about 5k words. Behind the scenes I’m plugging away, and hope to offer more chapters ahead in the future!

There’s also a TopWebFiction entry! Voting makes the story go up in the rankings, which helps more people see it! This only takes a couple of seconds, and it really helps!

And thank you, dear readers! Thank you for being here and reading my little story about zombie girls and the footprints they’re leaving in the ashes of the world. I couldn’t do this without all of you, the audience and readers! You’re the ones with the magic nanomachines, I’m just putting them all together from my hidey-hole inside the network. Onward we go, back out into the corpse city, very soon indeed. Seeya next chapter! Until then!