NokiMo
Jess D. Astra
Jess D. Astra

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BA3 - Chapter 15

I was standing on a desk, staring up dozens of meters to the person looming over a long necked machina. She brought her eye to the end of the device and then pulled away to write something on a digital tablet.

I turned from side to side, observing more oversized people and things moving about the room. There was a creature that closely resembled a badgermouse in a cage next to me that was about twice my size. Why was I so tiny?

“Pardon me?” I asked the woman looking through the machina, but she didn’t look my way.

Suddenly, the ground shook and trembled like we were in a rockslide. The people stumbled and fell against the cluttered laboratory countertops. Water sprayed from the ceiling and a red light flashed overhead.

Speakers blared around the room. “Containment breach in B7. I repeat, containment breach in B7. All staff evacuate to the shelters in B9 immediately.”

The woman next to me opened the cage and pulled the frightened furry creature into her grasp. She reached down and grabbed me—not me, but a disc I stood on. No, that I projected out of. What was this?

“Jiyong, wake up,” a kind, frightened voice whispered.

The woman ran toward the door, but when it opened, it was only black on the other side. My skull throbbed from the front to the back like a rippling wave. I cracked my eyes to see faint candlelight on the wall beside me. I was propped up a few feet from the ground in a weightless gurney suspending my nearly naked body in pearly light.

‘Did we almost die again?’ I asked my digital friend.

“I chose the wrong boy to get trapped inside, that’s for certain,” she said with a relieved chuckle, but then her tone turned serious. “That was a close one. You almost burned me out, too. I had to shut down the majority of my functions to take over heat conversion when you blacked out.”

‘I’m so sorry, Mae. I don’t know what happened,’ I thought, closing my eyes in shame. I could’ve killed her—killed myself.

“But you didn’t, though. And, for an added bonus, look at your core,” she said with an excited squeak.

I turned inward and envisioned my munje center. It had doubled in size at the completion of the third, hexohedronic ring that circled the other two. What in Mun-de-Jayu?

“You recycled all that bear’s munje and built out your third core ring. Congratulations!” She squealed again, higher, and I winced in pain.

“Oh, sorry,” she whispered, reducing her excitement.

It had taken me all summer to get what little I had done for the third band, and I had expected it would’ve taken another year to finish it… but I had built that overnight?

“Not overnight. You built it in a few hours. By the time the Grandmaster was done healing you, you’d finished the band. It’s incredible, but enough about that. There’s things we need to discuss.”

I contained my sigh and pulled the warm blanket higher up my chest. ‘A lecture, now?’

“Not a lecture, information. I had time to evaluate the bear and the reason its nanites behaved the way they did.”

My eyes snapped open and I became alert.

“That’s more like it. The bear was not a bear. It was not a living creature as you know it, but a cluster of nanites imitating a bear. It was munje, which was why you ma dispel killed it. Well, didn’t kill it, you absorbed it, which brings me to point two.

“The nanites behaved the way they did because they were all programmed differently. I’ve been piecing together little bits of my story with everything we see, but this creature was clear evidence of something that has been on my mind—the very thing you just saw in your dream, my memory.

I scowled. ‘You’ve remembered something from the secondary disc?’

“No, and that’s the stranger part. There was an incident long ago, as you’ve seen, and this I remember from my home disc. There was an explosion of some kind and I think nanites were released from the lab. But those nanites were nothing like they are now, and,” she broke off, mumbling. “There’s a reason Dokun was able to program his drugs to affect people the way it did, and it’s the same reason that bear’s nanites surrendered themselves to your mental signature.”

She paused and I sat upright from the suspense, which was a mistake. I sucked in a sharp breath at the pain in my shoulder and leg.

Mae collected herself and went on. “Dokun’s malware tricked the nanites in your body to obey a new dominant signature, which was why ingesting just a small amount was relatively safe when it was cycled out of the body. There’s ancient programming in all these nanites, and I didn’t understand it until we encountered that bear.

“The shūspekta was made of nanites that had replicated with code that had been deactivated in your people generations ago. This creature could’ve been a fluke, I can’t be certain since we haven’t seen much beyond Busa-nan, but since there’s legends about it, I think not.

“That creature had weaponized this code that changed the dominant signature. When it breathed in your munje, it was transforming it, and feasting on it. It was fueling itself with it.”

‘Dominant signature? Deactivated code?’ I asked, rubbing the fresh scars on my right shoulder from the creature’s bite.

“There’s power in this world I still don’t understand. I thought I’d learned everything about nanites, but it seems Busa-nan might have developed differently than other regions. I think when you damaged the shūspekta, and it damaged youin return, the dormant code activated. It had been suppressed by some event in Busa-nan hundreds of years ago, but interacting with the creature turned it back on. That change allowed your nanites to adopt the mental signature of the shūspekta when it hurt you, and vice versa.

“That’s also why Cho, who’d had several cups of the laced tea, was affected so much more. He had a high saturation of the malware munje in his system that activated the dormant code in his nanites to switch dominant mental signatures. Half his body quite literally turned against itself.

“However, the malware is not complete. Whatever Dokun is trying to create, I still don’t know, but he’s trying to switch the mental signature of the recipients nanites, that much is for certain.”

Someone roused against the wall of the dark room and my heart pounded in fright. Was my mental barrier up? I blocked the glare from the candle and focused on the figure.

“Jiyong?” Hana’s voice soothed my nerves.

She rushed forward, reaching for my hand. My throat tightened as I saw her haggard face. Her eyes were red and lashes still slick with tears. She pulled my hands to her forehead and squeezed them.

“Thank Jigu,” she whispered. Her warm breath tickled my knuckles.

Additional dark figures around the room shifted in their bedrolls and sat up. With a flick of my wrist, I launched a ry glimmer to the center of the low ceiling, illuminating the room. Cho, Shin-soo, Sung-ki, and Yuri were clustered around me in a loose semi-circle. Long River was packed into the corner, but only Ko-nah roused. The other three boys were covered in a shimmering purple blanket of ry, a dream spell from Ko-nah, no doubt.

“How are you feeling?” Hana asked, looking up from my hands with a hopeful smile. The dark bags under her eyes said she hadn’t slept a single second. I didn’t wish this for her. How could she be effective on this mission if she was always so worried for me that she couldn’t sleep?

“I’m good, better than good—aside from a few new scars,” I whispered. “I forged my third band.”

“In one day?” Sung-ki asked incredulously.

I nodded.

Tamashioku,” Ko-nah whispered and all eyes fell on him with a glare. Ko-nah swallowed hard, and went on. “It means something like soul eating. It’s stuff of legends everywhere else, but in Kokyu its part of the old religion. Soul eating was the process of a battle victor consuming the magic of another.”

Mae projected through the speaker. “This could be what Dokun is trying to accomplish.”

“Mae!” Hana yelled and placed her hands over the device on my chest.

I smiled and pulled her away gentle. “He knows. He was the one who told Kumiho who I was.”

Hana’s frightened scowl turned to anger and her eyes went black. Her hands pulled away from mine in a blink and she flew across the room in a rage. She pushed Ko-nah against the wall, her hands tightening on his throat.

“Stop,” I called to her, though I took some enjoyment in seeing his feet dangle like that. “He may be useful to us and killing or hurting him will directly compromise our mission.”

Ko-nah slid down the wall slowly and he gasped when his feet touched down, but Hana did not release him. Her muscles thrummed with zo and her shoulders heaved with heavy breath.

“You’re implying we should collaborate with a traitor?” Sung-ki asked.

“Like hell_tk we will,” Shin-soo said with an angry snarl.

“What do you know that we don’t?” Cho asked me, though still with side-eyed glares aimed at Ko-nah.

I pulled back the sheet and stepped off the gurney. It hurt, but I didn’t limp as I walked to Ko-nah. “You’re still working with him, aren’t you?”

“Who are you talking about?” Ko-nah asked with that cocky, upper hand tone. He thought he was moving me like a pawn on one of Mae’s chess boards.

Hana’s grip tightened on his neck. “Play around and find out.”

“Let’s just kill him and be rid of his interference,” Shin-soo said as he stepped up behind Hana. “If you’re scared to do it, I can. I’ll take him out to the woods and they’ll never find him.”

“Doubt that,” Ko-nah managed to say with a gasp.

Yen tossed beside us and we all went still.

“Enough.” I pulled Hana’s arm away from Ko-nah and he gasped again.

Ko-nah ringed his neck with a grimace. “You’ll have to be more specific about whoyou want to know I’m working with. I work with a lot of individuals.”

“You’re still working for Dokun,” I said, not asking.

He nodded. “I’m also working with Rabatasan_TK.”

“So where do your loyalties lie?” Yuri joined the conversation.

“To himself,” I said. “And his mother.”

Hana’s gaze snapped to me and she groaned. “Jiyong, no. Please don’t tell me you fell for his sob story.”

I looked to her, my face stern. “We have an opportunity to get exactly what we need.”

“But he’s a snake,” Shin-soo protested.

“Snakes protect themselves instinctually,” I reminded him.

Ko-nah scoffed. “I’m right here.”

Hana’s hand flew up to his chest and pushed him against the wall. “Do you want to be dead in the woods instead?” She looked to me. “Jiyong, we’ve trusted him before and Bastions died.”

“I know,” I said, my gut churning. I wasn’t going to trust him, but it was obvious he had some kind of connection within the school to Rabatasan_TK, our local allies. They were more interested in liberation from the King, but we could use one another to a mutual end.

“And you still think this is a good idea?” Shin-soo asked, his face screwed up in annoyance.

“No, I never said it was a good idea. And I never said I was going to trust him.” I paused and pulled Hana’s menacing arm away from Ko-nah once more. “You’re despicable, but useful. I’m certain as soon as you wear out your use, the Rabatasan_TKwon’t need you either, and you’ll need a way out, again.

Ko-nah didn’t move but watched me carefully. He didn’t want to let anything slip, but he already had. The brief encounter at dinner was more than enough for me to piece it together.

“We can’t offer him clemency. We don’t have the authority,” Sung-ki said plainly.

I nodded to my instructor. “But we can help him escape when it’s time.”

The room was quiet.

“I can’t believe we’re considering this,” Shin-soo said with a scoff and returned to his bed roll. “May as well just tell Dokun why we’re here, might get this over with a little faster.”

“I need something from port customs,” I said to Ko-nah, ignoring the obstinate Shin-soo.

“Name it,” Ko-nah replied.

“They took a picture of my family, and I want it back.”

Ko-nah’s eyebrow came to an inquisitive point. “Just a picture?”

“And the frame,” Yuri said.

A smug smile crept onto Ko-nah’s face.

“Can you do it?” I asked, not letting the frustration show on my face.

“Sure, we can get your family portrait. It’s going to take a week, maybe two.”

I took a deep breath. I was making a deal with a demon_tk. “Fine.”

I turned away and Ko-nah grabbed my arm. Hana was on him just as fast, pushing him back from me.

“What assurance do I have that you’ll help me when I need it?” Ko-nah dared to ask.

“None. Nor will I give you any.” I looked over my shoulder. “You’re going to have to trust us.”


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