ICC- Lone Wanders Chapter 2

welsh

Junkmaster
Grim was impatient with waiting, and the longer he waited the more vulnerable he felt. His few contacts outside had revealed little as to the whereabouts of his comrades.

Tabis had weathered yet another storm, and as people have done throughout the ages, those who had come out of it had begun to pick themselves up, dust themselves off, and get back to their lives.

As the center of trade and commerce in this part of the wasteland, Tabis was once again back to business. The news from Tabis, that the conspiracy had been defeated and the raider blocade broken, had spread throughout the local towns. The raider alliance had broken, first in Tabis then elsewhere. The caravans, that web of communication and commerce, had once again linked the towns.

The conspiracy had once again faded deeper into the shadows from which it had emerged. At least for now.

But things had changed. The counsel had acted quickly to replace the missing McKinder who was presumed dead from the blast in the junkyard. His wife had also mysterious disappeared, as had Kroeger. The police chief had been replaced by the head of the local border patrol and the last of the raiders, those who had not been lynched, had escaped. But also missing were the ghouls, the underclass of Tabis. Grim wished them well.

And the others, Rogue, who was only passing through? The Blade who had gone off to rescue his brothers? And the Slayer?

In the shadowy corner, Grim waited, patiently, for something to happen.

The Inn was once again humming with activity. Travelers speculated, gossiped, flirted with the barmaid, did business. Grim listened, patiently.
 
The old man wandered deeper into the bleak desert. His only company was the relentless sun beating down on his back.

Shink! Shink! Shink! Go the rusty spurs buckled onto his boot heels with each step. The minute, grinding sound is enough to make one go insane after a full day of marching. The old man doesn’t mind the noise, though. Nothing—not fatigue, cold, nor heat—can prevent his foot from moving ever forward.

Shink! Shink! Shink! With each step, the cacophony declares the old man’s passage.

The old man’s name is Caleb Rutgers. He is fifty years old and he shows his age. His back is bent forward and his shoulder length hair is shot with gray. Caleb used to be stronger but the desert had sapped much of his will and energy. Pride was what held one’s back rigidly straight and Caleb had none left.

Shink! Shink! Shink! The harsh grinding becomes his mantra. Each inch forward is like stepping on glass shards.

Caleb used to be a member of the Blades, a fraternity of vigilantes and crusaders. There used to be many tribal outposts set up around the land, monitoring and keeping the world in order. They weren’t as powerful as the Slayers, a group of fighters in power armor, but the Blades could hold their own.

There weren’t that many Blades left now. Raiders had massacred the last Blade encampment in these parts. Caleb had returned to the camp, only to find the shattered bodies of his brothers. He had buried them and moved on.

But moved on to where?

Shink! Shink! Shink! The clatter is like a reminder of what life had been these last few weeks. It’s too hard to remember everything.

Caleb remembered a lot of fighting back in Tabis. He remembered the raiders that had conspired to take over Tabis. He remembered the final fight in the sewers as the last ghoul bastion held off the raiders from completely taking over the town. He remembered bloodshed. But most of all, he remembered the quartet he had formed to fight against the raiders.

Three others: a bounty hunter who had looked like a ghoul, a giant Slayer in power armor, and a girl looking for her family. Caleb didn’t know where they were right now. Last he had seen, the Slayer and his compatriots were fighting along with the ghouls. The girl was probably with them. As for the bounty hunter, who knows? Probably causing a bit of mischief for the raiders.

Shink! Shink! Shink! It’s a slow walk with that noise keeping track of the distance. But Caleb didn’t bother undoing the spurs. It keeps his mind off the burning anger he has festering in his heart.

His brothers are gone. All four hundred men in that camp slaughtered. Killing a Blade is like a crime, considering that they are the world’s last crusaders. Four hundred Blades killed at one time was unheard of. The last ties that the Blades had were severed from the land of Tabis. Once the other Blades in the Fatherland had heard of what happened to the Blade encampment, war would be raised against the raiders. A bloody, wholesale war.

Caleb would eventually join the fray. He had four hundred men to avenge, and each man he planned to avenge tenfold. And there was the matter of the ghouls left in Tabis. The ghouls, who had lived as outcasts in Tabis, were now fighting tooth and nail to keep it free from raiders. Wally, a ghoul doctor, had saved his life and Patch, a ghoul Thompson gunner, had given up his own life so that Caleb could get free of Tabis.

Yes, there would be much avenging to do and so few bullets to achieve it.

Shink! Shink! Shink! The rusty spurs were like ringing bells of liberation. Suddenly everything became clear. Suddenly, he had a purpose.

Of all the things Caleb remembered, he kept the enigmatic Doctor Mandrake especially in mind. The shadowing assassin had caused his quartet no end of trouble. The gigantic ape of a man, dressed like a modern day mafia killer, had relentlessly chased Caleb down. The seasoned Blade had been lucky to get away with his life at every encounter. It was Mandrake who had killed Patch. And the assassin was still lose.

Shink! Caleb stopped in his pace now. He was resolved in what he must do now.

The Blade wore two Peacemaker revolvers on either side of his hip. He was dressed like a cowboy with dark jeans, open neck workshirt, bandanna over his mouth, sombrero on his head, and a serape covering him. Dozens of bullets lined his belt. He looked like a pissed off John Wayne in his elder years.

The two Peacemakers had names. It was a Blade tradition to name their weapons so that they became an entity, not just a mere lump of steel. Caleb called his revolvers Vindicator and Regulator because that was what they did. They vindicated and regulated life with the harshest prejudice.

Now, Caleb had another weapon strapped across his back. It was an old 1894 Winchester lever-action rifle, the sort that many horseback cowboys used in western movies. He had found it among the wreckage of the Blade camp. Caleb admitted to a fondness for Western memorabilia and the rifle called out to him. Now he had to name it.

Caleb gave the rifle a fitting name: Vendetta.

Shink! Shink! Shink! With his resolved determination, Caleb marched on to Tabis to reunite with his quartet, save the ghouls, and kill some raiders.
 
The early evening street of Tabis was alive with the buzzing of vendors and customers haggling over prices. Long tables made of assorted materials, covered with trinkets and goods attracted the curious. Nobbs moved through the crowded marketplace paying little attention to wares but his eyes sharp none-the-less.

Dealmaker, information broker, connection arranger, Nobbs dealt with ideas and people. But the business hadn't been good of late and his patrons made him uneasy, and so he had sought refuge outside the city walls. But his networks had delivered news of liberation. McKinner dead, Kroeger headless, and the others gone. Time to reemerge and find his fortune.

He stepped into a local tavern and eased up to the bar, his ears carefully choosing which conversations to overhear. In vito veritas, the old priest had said. In wine comes truth. A fountain of information traveled in the swill of old beer and watered down hootch. From such fountains came profits.

A pair of merchants, one more drunk the other, and the words "microfusion cells" and slowly Nobbs leaned a bit closer to that side of the bar. Easy, subtle. Buys a drink to look inconspicuous. Eavesdropping is its own art.

A hand clamped down on his shoulder. Nobbs turned his eye to the hand. It was red, dead skin pealing away, the hand strong, course and pain not unpainful.

"Cockroach." Spoke the familiar voice.

"I thought you had left." Nobbs spoke, his voice betraying a slight quiver.

"You thought wrong. We have unfinished business."

"They're all dead."

"Oh are they."

"Kroeger, they took his head in McKinner's room, but the safe was empty. He was the one you were after too, weren't he?" Ask Nobbs.

"Yes, funny about that." a slight chuckle.

"McKinner, not enough of him to bury."

"But you didn't speak to me about his wife." The voice cold.

"Ya didn't ask."

The grip tightens around his shoulder. "You are enterprising. But a weasel like you needs a patron, someone to look after you. Be mindful of your manners least you appreciate my druthers."

"I do, alright. But I'm working alone now." Says Nobb

"You mix in bad company in the past." Says the voice of the other

"It ain't easy makin' a livin."

The hand eases and lets him go, by Nobbs knows better than to turn. He has seen the visage before, and doesn't appreciate it. A coin flips over the bar and lands in the drink in front of him.

"I need to know a few things." Says the voice.

"Information ain't cheap" responds Nobb.

Another coin flips over and splashes into the drink.

"I'm looking for some friends, you remember them, to pass a message." The voice.

"Friends, ya I remember. A girl, A blade and the slayer. What of it."

"Where are they? Dead I reckon."

"Don't know." Nobbs hears the distinct click of the hammer of a six shooter pulled back. "Fuck me, you'd shoot a man right here."

"Many men been shot here."

"Last anyone seen of 'em, was down below. In the tunnels. They were with the ghouls, and there was some kind of fight. The night of the explosion in the junkyard and the other to the North."

"And what became of it?"

"What I hear is that the ghouls shot up some raiders and brought down some heavy fire, but later when the raiders had a second go of it, weren't anybody there. Ghouls are all gone, and the others with 'em."

"No sign of em?" Another coin put on the table when Nobbs fails to speak.

"No, nothin. Maybe the ghouls took 'em. Maybe they got killed, hard to say. The ghouls usually collect their dead and those they protect. But there's something else." Nobbs hesitates.

"Speak it." another coin.

"You ain't goin' like it none." Responds Nobbs

"Don't try my patience."

"Well, I hear that a Blade encampment got wiped out some miles from here. Not sure how far. They say some 400 Blades lost."

The stranger doesn't speak for a long moment.

"I want you to keep your eyes and ears open, and when you learn anything you bring it here and tell Horus, you know him." Horus was the muscle of the Inn and the young brother of the owner. The local rumor was that Horus wrestled Deathclaws. "Finish your drink then be lost."

Nobbs quickly finished his drink, and turned to leave. But in leaving he looked to the corner when the bounty hunter had used to sit. But the table was empty.

In a backroom, Grim made his payments with Yacob, making the arrangements for his money and his room, and leaving instruction should Nobbs, the snitch, bring in any info.

"When do you expect to be back." Ask Yacob

"Soon as I see what's what. I'll be back. I need to take a look underneath. Why. you'll miss me?" Said Grim.

"Actually I was hoping I could ask you for a job for me." Said Yacob, but Grim could here the reluctance in his voice.

"I owe for more than that. What can I do."

"Well.... I need you to catch me a Deathclaw."
 
IC-

They said hell was a hot burning place that filled you with agony but Caleb knew better. He was walking the deserts, his very own hell, at night and he knew that hell was a very, very cold place indeed.

It’s been his ninth day in the desert and it’s been hard. But he has survived. Nietzsche said something about what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger. Fuck Nietzsche. He didn’t have to wander around a desert for more than a week with hardly anything to eat.

Caleb had survived the hard way. He hunted at night, when the animals scurried out from rocks. Until now, Caleb had never eaten radscorpion before. Apparently, there were many surprises left in life. The Blade knew that he could be prey for something else, something bigger than him in the darkness. He kept his hand near his gun.

The brahmin hide canteen strapped on Caleb’s side was nearly empty. He had last filled it with water from a cactus and it tasted brackish and murky. But Epicurean delights didn’t wait for Caleb in the desert. Now, the Blade would have happy to drink sewage water just to placate his thirst.

The ancient Israelites believed that demons roamed the deserts. To make up for their sins, they would slaughter a lamb in the deserts and believed their wrongdoings would be absolved, hence the term scapegoat. The only demon wandering in the deserts now was Caleb. He was also the scapegoat for his brothers. Yahweh, that enigmatic “I Am” of the Israelites, was placing the lives of his brothers on Caleb’s shoulders. He bore his burden willingly. The Mark of Cain was burning on Caleb’s forehead and no wayfarer would stall his course.

The sand was the worst. It whipped and waved under the control of the wind and invaded every crevice on Caleb’s skin. The Blade wore his bandanna across his face and the serape over his body to manage the sand. If not, the raging wind would strip the flesh of his bones.

When the sun wasn’t baking Caleb alive, the night was freezing him to death. The deserts were a place of extreme and varying temperatures. They are either incendiary in the morning or artic in the night. It wasn’t a place you’d hop in your Highwayman for the kids to see.

The trick was to detach yourself from the experience. Free your mind and the body would follow. All that Zen philosophy worked for Caleb. Let your weary feet inch up another damning familiar dune of sand and don’t mind the fatigue. Caleb was steel. He may be scratched and nicked but never consumed. Not even in these temperatures.

Caleb paid no heed to the endless stretch of desert before him. Every step, after all, was a minor victory. He felt like a soldier storming the Normandy beachhead: heading ever closer to the bunkers and never minding the machine gun bullets whizzing overhead.
One step ahead of the other. That’s the trick. With each step, Tabis just seemed like a hop and a skip away.

“Oh, blast,” muttered Caleb aloud. “I’m delirious. Fucking-A delirious.” The Blade wavered on his feet and inertia almost overcame him, causing him to topple. His lanky, long legs tried to regain balance but he merely looked like a newborn brahmin calf. With an exhausted grunt, the Blade fell onto his back.

The air shot out of his lungs, causing him to gasp in pain. The greedy, cold grasp of desert dustpan was already sapping his body warmth. If he could not get up, this would be his death warrant.

Caleb wheezed as he feebly propped an elbow from under him. He heard the loud crack of bones popping back in place. He winced, baring his teeth. It wasn’t a pleasant feeling. He tried to get up but his knees locked underneath him. He wondered if he had hurt his spine falling down.

Caleb fell onto his back again. The dust puffed up around him and then settled again. Caleb stared upwards imploringly but only glimpsed the callous face of the moon in the sky. He closed his eyes and waited to die.

Click! Caleb’s eyes snapped open at the noise and he looked into the barrel of a Berreta. From above his viewpoint, Caleb could see the leering face of a slaver behind the gun. His head was shaved bald and there was a tattoo on his forehead.

“Well, well,” the slaver said huskily. “What do we have here?” His mouth broke open into a grin, revealing rotted away teeth. He altered the Berreta downwards a bit so that it was pointed at Caleb’s throat.

Caleb used his last remaining strength in an explosion of muscle, his hand going for the Peacemaker at his hip. But the slaver pinned down Caleb’s hand with a boot heel and the gun flew out of the Blade’s grasp.

“Now, now,” mocked the slaver. He shook his finger admonishingly. “No need to be like that, fresh meat.”

Caleb mustered enough saliva to spit at the slaver’s face.

The slaver flinched back and whipped off the phlegm and spit with his hand. Then his face broke into another condescending grin. “You’ve got spirit, fresh meat. You’ll be sure to fetch a good price.”

The slaver turned away from Caleb and shouted, “We got a live one, boys!” The Blade pushed his head up a bit and saw a brahmin-drawn wagon in disrepair wheeling itself towards him. The wagon stopped and three more slavers hopped out.

The slaver motioned his Berreta at Caleb. “Disarm this boy,” he ordered his men. The slavers propped Caleb up and unbuckled his gunbelt, removing the Peacemaker and bullets. Then they flopped him over onto his stomach and took the Winchester on his back.

“Get him into the wagon!” barked the lead slaver. He kept Caleb covered as the other three slavers manhandled him into the flat bed of the wagon. Caleb was thrown unceremoniously among other tribal slaves chained to either side of the wagon.

The slaver stepped up and leaned in close to Caleb. “You’re a lucky man, hombre. The town of Tabis is a mess and they’ll need plenty of slavers to rebuild. I’d rather shoot you right now, Blade, but I’d rather turn a profit with you.” And with that, the slaver cocked back his fist and drove it across Caleb’s jaw. The Blade’s head reeled backwards and his eyes slammed shut as blood rushed up to his brain. Then he fell unconscious.

The four slavers climbed into the wagons and drove onwards to Tabis with a full cargo of slaves.
 
Before Yacob had gone into the hospitality industry, he had strapped on a gun and worked as a badge. Grim had known Yacob even then, and learned to trust him. Yet, this request was enough to stop even the bounty hunter.

"Catch a Deathclaw?" Grim asked, making sure he had heard right.

"Ya, well, sure. There are a few of them in the abandoned parts of town."

Like many towns Tabis was build on the ruins of ruined city from the Old Times. Like many cities, these were often the dens of thieves and scavengers, but also on many occassion the home of deathclaws that came looking for easy food.

"And you want this because...."

"Business." Was all Yacob answered.

There was no time for this. "I owe you, ok. And I will see what can be done. But right now I need to look for some friends. Can you hitch me a wagon and a couple of Brahma?"

"I got a friend who can, but it will cost ya."

"I can pay. I need it here by tonight." Said Grim. Yacob nodded. "Ok I'll be back in a couple of hours."

Grim left through a back way towards the ruins of the junkyard. He had to get underground to see if he could find any trace of the slayer or the girl, or if not them, the ghoul Skik. But he would have to be quick. More importantly, Grim worried about the Blade and what he would find outside of town.
 
Skik was hanging on the laddar underneath a manhole just outside of the town limits. Sticking his head out of the hole he brought a pair of binoculars to his eyes. Scanning the horizion he focused on a approaching cart. His eye's narrowed. "Slavers. I hate slavers." Skik picked up his sniper rifle and lay in wait.

They would never know what hit them.
 
The junkyard of Tabis had grown up from a graveyard for ancient automobiles. Cars piled atop each other formed the walls of a lybrinth of refuse. In the midst of the junkyard had been a warehouse, which even now was smoldering.

The warehouse had stored weapons that would have armed the raiders beyond Tabnis. It had also been a torture chamber and, finally, a meeting hall where death had played host. In a flash of brilliance, it had been blown apart, and with it, McKinner and the last of his allies. Well, save for Kroeger.

Before that it had been the scene of a violent firefight that had led to the end of the most powerful gang in Tabis, the Red Fangs.

It was not a good place.

The blast had strewn debries across the junkyard, knocking aside derelict automobiles and even blowing open the gate. The fire had been allowed to burn itself out, and it seemed no one had sought to return there. It wasn't respect of the dead that kept folks away. Rather, it was a fear that death still waited beneath the garbage and refuse.

Grim stepped through carefully. The placed stirred up bad memories and Grim knew that the shadows hid phantoms. A raider with a sledge had almost ended his life here, and only the care of a ghoul had saved him.

The ghosts of the dead whispered their grievances in the whistle of the wind.

Grim picked his way through until he found the man hole from which he had last seen Skik. With effort he pried open the rusted manhole cover and looked inside. He had left an X mark with a piece of old chalk. Around it now was a new circle in blue crayon.

Skik was still somewhere about.

With a torch in one hand, Grim worked his way down until his ankles slipped under the black sewar water that flowed beneath Tabis. Abandoned, save for rats and cockroaches, the sewars had become the refuge and home for the ghouls of Tabis.

"SKik?" He called.

Skik had said that he would remain close, but it was possible that he had gone off with the other ghouls.

The sewars were a complex network of overlapping tunnels, treatment works and holding tanks. Many of the tunnels had collapsed with age, others had flooded. The ghouls had used it because only they knew the pathways.

Using a spool of heavy weight, durable fishing line that he had bought in the market, Grim tied one end to the ladder and the other to his belt. Like a child lost in a forest, Grim doubted he would find his way back. The line would help him retrace his steps should he get lost, the probable result of this fool's errand.

But he couldn't shake his sense of guilt. He had left because there was not time to wait, the business needed to be resolved. The Slayer Fang and his companions? No, they could take care of themselves. Besides, it was unclear whether they merited his trust. But Rogue, the girl, had been merely indecisive and had been caught in a situtation not of her creation or choosing. He should not have left her behind. And the ghouls? Yes, he owed the ghouls. Skik especially but the others as well.

"Skik??? Rogue??? Patch????" Grim called out as he waded through the foul waters of the Tabis sewars.

He would search for a few hours, and then, if he was without luck, return to see about the Blade, Caleb.
 
“Wake up, Blade,” whispered a husky voice in Caleb ears. “You must awaken.”

But Caleb was awake, though. He had been aware and conscious for at least an hour now, since awakening from the pistol whip. The only thing was that Caleb was goddamned tired. He felt paralyzed and every muscle in his body disobeyed his brain. But the Blade was a practical man. He laid on the floor of the wagon, not entirely concerned with the lack of control over his body, and waited to recuperate his strength.

“Wake up!” hissed the voice urgently, this time closer to his ear. Caleb did not bother to tell the owner of the voice that he was awake.

Then a vicegrip clamped down on his shoulder and shook him hard. “Get up, get up, get up!” came the frantic voice again.

This time, Caleb creaked open his eyes to catlike slits. He was facing the opening at the back of the wagon and he could see that the sun had barely risen in the sky. A cloud of dust trailed after the wagon.

Caleb rolled over onto his other side to face the owner of the voice. Simultaneously, his left arm shot out and grabbed the arm on his shoulder, bending it back slightly. The voice in the darkness let out a gasp of pain but did not cry out.

Fully turned around, Caleb regarded the stony blue eyes of one of the tribal warriors. The tribal had his lips bared back in pain and he looked meaningfully at his hand caught in Caleb’s grip. Caleb unclenched his grip and the tribal immediately rubbed the angry red bruise around his wrist.

The old man then sat up. A ricochet of cracks exploded as his back snapped into place. He had been sleeping on wooden floor, after all. “Goddamn,” Caleb cursed underneath his breath, his two hands rubbing his sore back.

Caleb looked around and regarded a sad sight. He saw five tribals all sitting on benches on either side of the wagon and chained to the wooden floor with manacles. The tribals only wore dirty hide britches and their muscled torsos gleaned in the sweat of morning. Raggedly cut, strawberry blonde hair atop every head and pristine blue eyes on every face. The pure Aryan race, thought Caleb jadedly.

“I’m sorry,” the tribal who had awakened Caleb whispered. “We didn’t know if you were awake or not.” He shrugged his shoulders apologetically, causing the manacles to make a musical chiming.

“So you decided to break off my arm to make sure?” shouted Caleb.

The tribal winced at the loud noise. He pressed a finger to his lips and blew, indicating silence. Then he pointed to the front of the wagon where the four slavers were seated. Three of the raiders were apparently sleeping on the driver’s bench but one was still manning the reigns, though his head bobbed up and down.

“There was no other way to make sure,” whispered the lead tribal. The other tribals nodded their heads in affirmation.

“I guess so,” Caleb whispered back. He supposed the tribals didn’t know how to check for a pulse or anything like that.

“Your reputation precedes you, Blade.”

“What do you mean?” A cold, suspicious and worrying feeling settled in the pit of his stomach.

“We saw the fight between the Blade camp and the raiders,” replied one of the tribals. “Your brothers fought well.”

Caleb stood up. “You were there?” he asked urgently. “You saw what happened?”

The tribal nodded. “Yes, we were there.” He waved a hand at the other warriors. “Our hunting party was watching the battle before the slavers captured us along with the Blades.”

All the fatigue suddenly left Caleb’s body. He stood up and leaned in close to the lead tribal. “Some of the slavers captured the Blades? You mean my brothers are still alive?”

Caleb’s eyes blazed in urgency and the tribal replied uncertainly, “Uh, yes, we were captured with some Blades. But only a few. Most of them were cut down by the raiders. We only saw about twenty men they allowed to live as slaves.” The rest of the tribals nodded again in agreement.

Caleb momentarily shut his eyes. Twenty men out of four hundred. The numbers were staggering but Caleb did not lose hope. “This men,” he inquired. “Why did they live when all the other Blades died? What made them special?”

“They were chieftains,” answered a younger tribal who had been silent until now. “Warriors who fought with fire and wore dark crimson masks.”

There weren’t any chieftains in the Fraternity but Caleb knew what the tribal was referring to. For every nineteen men, there was a Blade elder who was in charge of his group. Only a Blade who showed taciturn prowess and skill became an elder. Caleb was an elder himself and that alone spoke of the power an elder had.

“Do you know where they were heading? Did you hear anything at all?”

Uncertainty creased the tribal’s face. “Well, I know that we are going to Tabis. Probably to be sold for grunt work,” said the tribal dejectedly. “But the other Blades are going somewhere else.”

“The Cliffs of Grey,” piped in the lead tribal. “I heard one of the slavers saying something about a ‘demonstration’ for the Blades there.”

Caleb understood what they meant. The Grey Cliffs. A somewhat prosperous town west of Tabis. The path to Grey Cliffs was plagued by raiders, however, and the journey was harrowing. But the good news was that the Fraternity lands was just due north of Grey Cliffs.

Caleb knew what he must do. He would have to save his brothers. To do that, he would need help back in Tabis.

But before that, he would have to save himself. And he knew where he could get help.

“How far away are we from Tabis?” Caleb asked.

“Not that far. About three day’s journeying but you can probably make it there by today if you travel all day and night.”

Good. Everything was going accordingly to plan. Now everything depended on how thorough the slavers had searched him.

Keeping his eyes on the driver of the wagon, Caleb snaked his hand inside his left boot. He closed onto a comforting, leather grip and hauled the six-inch long Bowie knife from its sheath.

The tribals’ eyes lit up in surprise and reflected the steely glint of sunshine against the blade. Caleb expertly twirled the haft of the knife so that the tip of the blade pointed downwards and his hand was holding the handle in reverse. With a speedy economy, Caleb severed the rusty links on the tribals’ manacles and they feel away with little noise. The five tribals stood up and flexed their sore muscles.

Caleb pointed to the slaver driver the wagon. Then he turned around to face the tribals. With a grim face, Caleb ran a thumb across his own throat and pointed back at the driver.

The tribals nodded in understanding.

Like a stealthy cat, Caleb loped over to the front of the wagon. The slaver’s head bobbed up and down, combating off sleepiness and losing. Soon, the slaver would be sleeping forever.

Caleb snaked his free arm around the slaver’s shoulder and clamped it over his mouth. The slaver dropped the reigns in surprise and pounded at Caleb’s arm, all the while screaming his head off. Caleb tilted the slaver’s head back easily and then slit his exposed neck with the knife. He drew back his arm and the slaver fell forward like a limp doll.

The wagon had stopped by now and one of the slavers was stirring awake. Caleb noted grimly that it was the same slaver that had caught him earlier.

The leader of the slavers yawned, looked at the dying slaver next to him, yawned again, and turned around. Then he saw Caleb. The slaver reached for the Beretta strapped in its holster and managed to shriek, “Whafuck?!” Then Caleb drove the point of the Bowie knife through the slaver’s eye and into his brain. The slaver fell off the wagon, the knife still inside his skull.

Caleb jumped out of the wagon and quickly hauled the Beretta out of the slaver’s holster. The other two slavers on the driver’s bench had now awakened and Caleb pointed the pistol at them.

“Which one of you fucks wants to die first? Huh? Speak up!” Caleb waved the pistol from one face to the other.

But the two slavers were still tired and shocked to be much afraid. Instead, they raised their hands in the air and jumped off the wagon. Caleb kept them covered with the lethal point of the pistol.

“Alright,” he called back to the wagon. “It’s okay to get out now.”

The five tribals jumped out from the back of the wagon and joined Caleb. The menacing warriors glowered at the slavers. Now, they were afraid.

With his gun still on the raiders, Caleb inched back to the front of the wagon. There, he found his gunbelt, revolvers, rifle, and a knapsack full of food. The Blade strapped on all of his gear with one hand, the other hand keeping the Beretta trained on the slavers.

“You can’t just kill us like this!” insisted one of the slavers, his face streaming with tears. “You can’t shoot us when we’re unarmed!”

Caleb scoffed. Slavers weren’t the best people known for outstanding ideals. “Okay,” said Caleb. “I won’t shoot you.” He threw the Beretta onto the ground.

The slavers sobbed in relief and lowered their hands to their sides. “Thank you, sir, thank you!” cried out one of the slavers, his voice thick with gratitude.

“Not so fast,” said Caleb. “I said I wouldn’t shoot you but I don’t speak for my tribal friends over here.” The old Blade nodded at the lead tribal and the warrior nodded back.

“Uuuuuuuuuu-Suthi!” roared the lead tribal. The other warriors joined his warcry as they rushed the two defenseless slavers.
Caleb turned away as the five muscled warriors dismembered the slavers with their bare hands.

When they were done, Caleb could see the tribals covered every inch in blood. The Blade noted with grimly that some of the tribals were feasting on the organs. The slavers deserved it. Couldn’t have happen to worse people, thought Caleb.

The lead tribal, drenched in gore, walked over to Caleb. He extended his hand and said, “We owe you many thanks, Blade.”

Caleb shook his hand and shook his head. “You owe me nothing. You’re free to go.”

The tribals bunched into the wagon, bringing the slaver corpse with them (probably for food). Then they rode off to the horizon.

Caleb, having removed the world of even more scum, turned to Tabis and continued his journey.
 
"Skik!! Fang???? Rogue???"

An hour had past with little more than the squeak of a rat and the chattering of cockroachs on the rusting metal and flacking concrete of the sewar pipes. At different points in the sewar, dams of silt mixed with plastics and refuse forming pools where Grim had suck down to his waist. Other times the muck that made up the bottom had given way, and the mud had closed around his feet and legs, almost trapping him in the mire. He had nearly lost a boot the last time.

At each intersection Grim would mark an X with the chalk he carried so as to mark his path. Occassionaly he would gently tug on the line tied to his belt or wrap it down around some structure so as to anchor the line in place, reassuring himself that he could retrace his steps back.

It would be so easy to get lost down here. Torch light offered little illumination in the tunnels and even were it reflected, the light was often swallowed in the darkness. The squeak of the rats were no comfort.

Where there were little rats there were often giant rats, large massive creatures the size of brahma and almost as ferocious as a Deathclaw. But it wasn't the Giant rats that worried him for a swarm of smaller rats could easily overwhelm one man.

The thoughts slipped into his mind making him more aware of his isolation in the subterranean darkness. The mind wanders.

The torch dropped into the water fizzles out, darkness everywhere, running, hands against the sides of the tunnels trying to feel his way out, blinded and lost, tripping over his feet on loose debries until he could feel the claws of countless vermin crawling over his body, their teeth digging into his flesh. Struggling now, tearing aring them off, their teeth digging into his flesh, until a few are able to get their heads under his skin, scratching their way into his body. ...

Stop it, this is no damn good. Scaring yourself like a child. Fool, he thought to himself. You can only die down here and what do you have live for that would make you so scared.

And yet he resolved to keep a bullet for himself just in case.

How could the ghouls have made a life for themselves down here.

Skik would probably say that hte rats didn't like rotting flesh as much a smooth skin. Lovely.

He realized that he had stopped calling out for his friends. Probably that part of his mind that screamed "don't forget about the rats" at every step and squeak had manged to steal his tongue.

Foolish.

Grim opened his mouth to call out to his friends when he heard a splashing sound from further down the tunnels.

Could it be one of his companions? or perhaps a friendly ghoul?

More splashing, and now voices. He stopped, stilling himself, listening carefully. He couldn't make out the voices. More splashes, coming in this direction.

He thought of the dark man, the one who had stalked them. and who had dispatched more than a few of the ghoul sentries. The single phantom. But if this was the phantom, whom he had learned was called Mandrake, then he was not being careful. Mandrake's moved with the silence of the moon, owning the night and seeing all in the darkness.

The ghouls he knew were more careful as well. Whoever they might be, for certain they were unfamiliar with the tunnels.

Grim stepped forward quietly, trying not minimize the sound of his splash, but curious none-the-less. The sounds were nearer still, but the echoes of the tunnels were deceptive. They could be further away or even in another tunnel. They weren't talking now.

And then Grim thought, "perhaps they were looking for me? They heard my calls and were coming in this direction?" But were they friend or foe?

He touched the torch against the foul water, turpid water and heard it fizzle out. He listened, but the voices seemed to be moving away now.

Grim didn't hear the person come up behind him, nor become aware of his presence until he felt the cold leperous hand clamp clamp down on his shoulder.
 
"Greetings!" Skik couldn't help but smile at the frozen expression on Grim's face. "What brings you here?"
 
Skik might have just as well as said "Boo!"

Grim felt his heart palpitate, even as he reached for the arm to twist around.

In mid spin he stopped himself. Even if he could barely see the figure, he could recognize the voice.

"Holy Hubologist Spincter, you scared the shit out of me."

"Bringing a bit of fright in a Humies heart is the best part about looking the way I do. How is the ole ticker?"

"I've been looking for ya."

"Ya," Skik picks up the twine he has been reeling in behind Grim, "I kind of figured it was that or you were fishing for a giant rat."

"Don't speak to me about giant rats." Said Grim remember his vision.

"Well, you know they have a better sense of smell than a Deathclaw, even down here. Happily they don't like their flesh rotten but smooth. I think it's because smooth skin is more creamy and chewy and less after-taste."

Although Grim couldn't see Skik, he could tell the ghoul was smiling.

"You don't think those are rats down yonder. do ya?" Grim.

"Only the worst type, smoothskin sort. Slavers, I figure, lookin' to give a ghoul a dirtnap."

"Slavers hunting for Ghouls, must be a depression in the slavin' business. Who the hell would want to buy a ghoul?" Said Grim.

"You'd be surprised at the sexual prowess of the average ghoul, that and the disposable parts." said Skik.
 
OOC- Okay, folks, we haven’t heard much from our old “shadow” so I think I’d like to give him a try. He’s your idea, welsh, so here’s an apology in advance if I butcher his character.

IC-

The sun had fallen from the sky by the time Gary Jones decided to call it a day. The young trader began the daily ritual of “closing up shop”, which involved a little bit more than locking up. He had to make an inventory on his “merchandise”.

Gary’s shop, The Populace, was located it the slum quarters of Tabis along with the seedy brothels and watering holes. The medium-sized shop was in better shape than the other businesses and Gary was making a healthy living. The trader could have branched out into the district quarters, where richer customers went, but Gary preferred the simple and overlooked niche he had made in the slums. His “trade” depended on discreetness.

Gary was no more than twenty years old but he had a good thing going for him. He had learned of the “Way” early on and had profited on it. Men who were decades older than him yearned for Gary’s prudence and knack in business. Gary was the sort of man who was envied; a man who has uncovered the formula of success at a young age.

But Gary Jones also had his share of secrets. The alchemical formula of success contained dire ingredients. He was only twenty but already his hair was thinning out and being replaced with gray. In truth, Gary Jones was a nervous wreck.

It was obvious that there was something strange about the young and successful trader. For one thing, he lived in the slums when his business could provide for a richer life. He also lived alone. A young man, and a rich one to boot, would be practically plagued by enterprising young ladies. But nevertheless, Gary’s home was an empty one. There was some talk about him fooling around on the wrong side of the bed but they were merely rumors. Gary Jones donated large sums of money to the community and he was a well-liked man, but oddly enough, he had no friends. Of course there would be a lot of talk behind his back.

Now, Gary began his ritual of “closing up shop”. The first part he called the “shutting down” process. He started turning off all of the shop’s fluorescent lights. The luxury of electric lights when lanterns were the norm was the only visible sign of Gary’s wealth. He flicked off the switches and the lights went off.

Then, Gary “checked his inventory”. His shop was like a miniature market. There were clothes, medicines, guns, tools, and whatever you needed. Gary’s brain was as reliable as a calculator and he began marking up his revenue as he checked today’s haul. He walked through the aisles of his shop, counting products and making a mental list in his mind. When all was done, he walked back to his cashier, counted up the money, and then made a minor notation in a black ledger he kept in his pant pockets. Just today, Gary had made over five thousand bucks.

The next part was the last and most excruciating part of the “closing up shop” ritual. Gary’s heart rate always increased at this point. His composed and calm demeanor fell away as his hands shock uncontrollably.

Trader Jones first made sure that none was watching. He pulled up the blinds around the windows that advertised his wares. He flipped the “Open” sign on his door to “Closed”. Then he pulled up the iron grating across the stores entrance and locked the door. He was just by himself now. No one could get in.

No one could get out.

With shaky hands, Gary returned to the front counter. Even though his store was locked up, he still locked behind his shoulder. The young trader had the feeling that someone was watching him.

Gary steeled himself for what came next. This was his dark secret. This was the hard part that he had to hide from everyone else in Tabis, the part of his life that had both made him profitable and prematurely old at the same time.

He dropped to his knees behind the counter. His hands felt around the wooden floor, probing and feeling for the indentation. Finally, he found the break along the floor. Gary looked up from the counter, looking around just for good measure, before pulling open the secret door in the floor of the shop. The false wooden panel pulled away, revealing a dark manhole with a ladder running down it.

Gary descended down to his own personal hell.

For beneath the shop was another type of business, an entirely different world than the one Gary had crafted to disguise himself. Gary climbed down the last wrung of the ladder and entered the “Factory”.

Any experienced eye would notice what the “Factory” was. They needed only to look at the chemistry set, vials, bubbling toxins, fey odors, and dripping solutions to know that it was a drug lab.

Set inside a hovel and surrounded by the earth, the “Factory” waited. It was a large and cavernous room, at least twice as large as the shop above it. A dozen tables filled with its own chemistry lab occupied the middle of the room. Racks containing raw materials lined the walls of the room. But what was even worse was what awaited in the other room adjoining the “Factory”.

Gary sighed as he unlocked the dungeon like door of the other room, the one he dubbed as the “Pen”. The trader, amidst his drug factory, pushed opened the door and revealed what waited inside.

The door cracked open and a dozen slaves, huddled together, blinked their eyes at the unaccustomed darkness. Some moaned but most were comatose and laying on the floor with drool dribbling from their mouths.

Yes, this was Gary Jones’ dark secret. He was not only the largest manufacturer and supplier of illegal drugs in the city of Tabis but a prominent member of the Slavers Guild. This was the true Gary Jones. This was how he made his money.

Gary walked over to a counter and picked up a brace of hypodermic needles. They were filled with a military designed amphetamine that increased strength. Super soldiers had used the drug during the war. While under its effects, the user would not only have super strength but he would also be engulfed in a world of euphoria. Someone could blow out their guts with a softpoint bullet at close ranges and the user wouldn’t feel a thing. But there were side effects. The drug was considered to have Pyrrhic effects. The user would be at the peak of his health until the drug wore off. Then they would crash and never recover.

Gary prepped three of these needles and injected the nearest slaves with the test drug. The slaves did not fight back. They were too weak and malnourished. The daily cocktails of drugs had distorted their symptoms. Gary did not worry about the super strength effects. All of the slaves were too stoned by other drugs. They only sighed as the chemical rushed through their system.

Gary threw away the hypos in a wastebin. He then started up all the Bunsen burners in his lab. A dozen of new chemicals boiled happily away. Gary turned on a fan that would carry the fumes to an exhaust pipe through the shop. Then he began the dangerous and careful work of making poisons.

That was Gary’s skill in life. Along with a meticulous organization, business sense, and intelligence, Gary had gravitated to chemistry. He was a natural. Hardcore depressants and amphetamines were equally under his reign. Gary Jones was simply a prodigal genius.

Soon Gary was enthralled in his work. The young trader/drug runner was consumed in concentration. He was so enchanted, in fact, that he didn’t hear the door of his shop slam open. And his ears must have overlooked the sound of footsteps declining the manhole.

Gary was in the middle of cutting a pure powder of cocaine when a gloved fist slammed down on the back of his head. The razor blade flew out from his hand and the precious dust of coke puffed up as Gary was pushed head long across the table he was formerly sitting next to. Lab equipment and beakers fell onto the ground as Gary crashed through them. He slid across the table and then dropped to the floor on top of broken shards of grass.

The young trader tried to scramble to his feet, his heart thumping inside his ribcage. He got up, digging his hands into the sharp pieces of glass, and managed to get up into a bent over position. Then a knee impacted into Gary’s side and he fell over onto his back again, cutting himself on the glass again.

Gary’s eyes lost focus as his attacker pressed their knee into his chest. The trader’s lungs burned for oxygen with his airflow cut off from him. He could only make out a dark outline of his attacker amidst a fog of blurriness in his vision. Gary stretched out his hands imploringly.

“Can’t…breath,” choked Gary.

“Oh you can’t, hmm? Poor boy.” The attacker’s voice sounded distant to Gary and the trader thought he would die of asphyxiation when his attacker finally lifted up their knee from his chest.

Gary took in a deep and gasping lungful of air. Still pinned to the glass-littered ground, he choked and sputtered, turning his face red. Gary had just gained his breath when he caught a full look of his attacker. Then the blood drained from his face.

Looming above Gary was a cold and collected killer. A taunt and corpse-pale face smiled down at Gary and the trader shuddered in revulsion. Shades covered the killer’s eyes but Gary could still feel the eyes hidden behind them peering into his soul. The hair on top of the skeletal head was slicked back and shiny with grease. The killer was dressed in a brand new business suit and he wore dark black gloves.

“Jonesy, Jonesy, Jonesy,” scolded the assassin in a disappointed tone. “You have got to be kidding me.”

Pinned down on the floor with his back grinding against the glass, Gary was still surprised. “What?” he cried, indignant.

The assassin backhanded him across the mouth and Gary felt his lips crack open. There’s a knuckle-duster in his fist, thought Gary.

“Did you think you could get away with it, Jonesy?” asked the assassin patiently. “Didja think you had the balls to get away with it?” The blacksuited killer had his hand cocked back just in case Gary made a wrong answer.

“What do you mean?”

Wrong answer. The assassin slammed his loaded fist across Gary’s mouth again. The trader spat out teeth and blood.

“I mean you pissed off some very high up people, Jonesy,” answered the assassin. He looked around the lab and nodded his head. “You’ve got a pretty good deal set up here. A damn good deal.”

“And so what? I make all the products and keep all the profits. Its mine by right.” Gary flinched back as he finished these words, thinking that he would receive another backhand.

But the assassin merely shook his head. “And that’s just the thing, Jonesy. You kept all the profits. Never sharing with anyone else.”

“I didn’t see anyone helping me out,” retorted Gary. This time he did get a punch across the face, a hard enough one to make him see birds.

“On the contrary, Jonesy! You sold your shit on the streets, on an open market. And those streets belong to McKinner.” The assassin smiled his fish belly grin.

Shit. Gary knew this would be coming. McKinner was obviously becoming corrupt. This was pure extortion, even if Gary’s business wasn’t exactly legal.

“Okay! Fine!” shouted Gary. He knew what the assassin and his employers wanted. “Fifty, sixty percent? McKinner can have whatever he wants!” Gary threw up his hands in disgust.

But the assassin only shook his head. “This isn’t about McKinner anymore. McKinner’s dead, Jonesy. He’s been worm food for a while now.”

“Then what do you want?” whispered Gary, his eyes reflecting true fright. Suddenly, the trader had lost his bargaining chit.

“Information,” replied the killer. “I need some facts on a few of your special friends.” He slipped the brass knuckles into the folds of his suit and took out a mean looking knife.

Gary’s eyes widened at the sight of the knife. “Alright. Anything! I’ll tell you anything!” He cringed and gasped as the assassin rested the tip of the knife against the fleshy part of Gary’s throat. “What do you want to know?”

The assassin’s eyes gleaned in delight. “I know you’re one the Slaver Guild’s dickhole, Jonesy. This whole setup was probably funded by them.”

“So what?”

“So, I know you also got some high place among those butchers. I want to know where to meet them.”

Gary’s expression turned into curiosity. “Why?” he asked, helpless of asking despite himself.

The assassin grinned and pushed the tip of the knife closer to Gary’s neck. “It ain’t your place to ask questions, Jonesy. But, hell, I think I’ll tell you anyways.” The smile slipped from the assassin’s face, replaced with pure hate. “As I understand it, your guild has acquired some fresh meat. Blades to be exact. I want them. There’s a certain tough customer I’ve got to finish some business with.”

The words quickly spat out of Gary’s mouth. “I don’t know nothing about any Blades but I can tell you where to met up with some slavers. There’s always one of their representatives hanging out at that seedy bar around here.”

“You mean the bar with that bastard Horus muscling for it? The owner’s younger brother?”

Gary nodded, ever mindful of the knife at his throat.

The assassin smiled. He got up and carefully dusted off his suit. “Thanks a lot, Jonesy.” He turned around to leave.

Gary Jones let out a relieved sigh. He stood up and brushed the fragments of glass off his back. “You’re most welco—urgh!”

The rest of Gary’s words were drowned out as the assassin’s knife flew across the air and embedded into the young trader’s throat. The rest of Gary’s short life ended in a gasping struggle as he tried to force air into a pierced windpipe.

The assassin Mandrake merely laughed a dark, sickly bellow as he knocked over the lab equipment and dropped the Bunsen burners. He climbed up the ladder as the volatile toxins exploded into a fire.

As Gary Jones shop and secret life exploded into a plume of flame, Doctor Mandrake faded into the shadows.
 
Under the streets of Tabis-

Grim decided to disregard the ghoul's humor.

"I don't these slavers are knee dip in shit because of sexual prowess" Said Grim.

"Oh then They don't know what they are missing. Certainly this is personal however."

There was splashing now, but on two different sides. But in the darkness, Grim couldn't make out which direction exactly. In the darkness the sounds and the echo of water splashing against the pipes was disorientating.

"Certainly." nodded Grim.

"Ok so I shot a slaver, maybe two." Shrugged the Skik, "And this upset them."

"Yes, I would imagine it would." muttered Grim, his hand on his pistol.

"Well even a ghoul is entitled to his hobbies. And besides who in the world would really miss one more slaver." objected Skik. "Apparently his friends want a little payback."

"Explaining the rather fine mess we are in."

"Well you didn't have to come down, and calling around the tunnels my name wasn't helpful." chided Skik.

"I was looking for you and the others."

"And so look what you found. The ghouls are around, somewhere." Like most ghouls, Skik had learned secrecy among outsiders, even allies.

"The Slayers and the girl Rogue?"

"Yes, the girl is around somewhere. Nice for a smoothskin, but not my type. The Slayers, well, we'll see." Skik left the last part unclear which only fueled Grim's suspicions of the Slayers.

"I think your friends are on either side." Said Grim.

"Encirclement is standard slaver strategy." Said Skik. This did little for Grim who, in the darkness of the tunnel couldn't even see his hand before his face. This would go hand-to-hand.
 
Above the tunnels of Tabis-

Nobbs, information broker/snitch/informant/eavesdropper, listened patiently as two merchants did business. The first, the seller, was a trader who was rumored to have acquired some items of antiquity from a gang of Raiders. The other, the buyer, was a merchant and lender, among the higher of Tabis society, who had recently taken a third wife. This wife, a young and willful firebrand, was also one who demanded she be spoiled.

"What is this wonderful fabric" Murmured the Banker, his hand feeling the texture.

"It is soft is it not?" Said the trader.

"Aye, this is a sensation I have not experienced. So soft, it feels like the breeze on your skin, and cool."

"yes and absorbant, it hold much water as well. However, you can wet it only once and then no more. Sad." Said the trader.

"A shame, yes." agreed the merchant. "Is it a fabric?"

"Perhaps, but it is a mystery of the old ones how it was made. It may be paper." Said the trader, nodding his head as the merchant let out a gasp." But no fear I have rolls and rolls. you could wrap your new wife in it and she would please." The trader stopped his thought short, fearful to insult the merchant.

"What did they call this material?" pretending he was ignoring.

"Charmin' Bathroom Tissue" Said the trader, "and aptly named for such a charming substance."

"Aye."

Nobbs listened to the exchange patiently, hopeful that the trader would eventually lead him to this stockpile. Patience was part of the game, but more unobstrusiveness. The trick, he had learned, was to be as if invisible. To be unnoticed and thus the speaker are unaware that they are being listened too. Like a fly on the wall, no one should notice.

And so no one did notice when a hand clamped around Nobbs mouth.

Or when a large shadowy figured dragged him back into the darkness to vacant ally, with little more effort than a large animal stealing a sleeping baby.

Nobbs never saw the assailant, but felt the sharp edge of a knife against his throat, and the hot, harsh breath against his ear. "Shhhh little rat, not even a squeak." warned the voice as the hand came up from his mouth.

"I didn't do it!" Gasped Nobbs. Plead ignorance and innocense first regardless of the charge.

"Oh but you did little one, and I will have recompense."

"What did I do?" pleaded the snitch.

"You were McKinner's little eyes."

"Yes but he's dead, but I didn't kill him."

"But you changed sides, didn't you. You were supposed to kill a blade, some nights ago. Remember." McKinner had asked Nobbs to watch the Blade and, if possible, to kill him in his sleep and take the Blades belonging. But he had failed.

"Not my fault. The other one..." Nobbs pleaded.

"Yes," interrupted the stranger. "the scared one, the headhunter, got the better than you."

"'He's silent and quick. Was looking for Kroeger, and now Kroeger's dead. Maybe the headhunter killed 'em"

"Yes, well poor Kroeger apparently lost his head." a hint humor in the voice. "as might you." The tip of the knife drew a bead of blood.

"He's here. At Yacob's inn. The Rusty Nail. Yes, he has me looking for the Blade and the Slayers and the girl."

Oh, thought Mandrake, the girl. Yes, he had almost forgotten that morsal. How convenient to have the slavers, the blade and the bounty hunter all in the same place.

" Well, 'cept he ain't there no more. He went underneath." Said Nobbs.

"Yes, to look for his friends. Well, what will we do about you though."

Mandrake was first aware of the smell, than he heard the voice, "Tsk tsk tsk." Mandrake stiffened but recognized the voice.

"Let him go, we have business to discuss." said the newcomer.

"You will not speak of this meeting, or you will be like Kroeger, understood." Whispered Mandrake.

Nodds shook his head and then felt the push of the strangers foot, as he was pushed out of the alley into the street.

Mandrake turned. On a blackened plastic crate, a long slender brown skinned man picked at his nails with a long assassins blade.

"You are not supposed to be here." Said the dark man casually.

"I have unfinished business." replied Mandrake.

"But your business is with us and we have something we would like you to do." said the stranger.

"This is important, personal." Betraying a bit of emotion.

"Personal? This is unlike you Doctor. You are not known for taking things personal. Your reputation is a cold emotionless killer. Did we misunderstand."

"There is Blade who needs killin'" Said Mandrake.

"There are many Blades that need to be killed but that's a matter best done elsewhere. And there is the business with the former Mrs. Mckinner."

"I have made the arrangements."

"We still need to make an example of her, but not in Tabis but in Red Water." Said the man. He was eyeing Mandrake carefully, his knife still ready.

"I don't need much time." whispered Mandrake, "It will be quick."

"Regretably, your fun must be put aside for now. Time is precious, my friend. Besides there has been too much happening in Tabis of late, and it brings with it unwanted attention." Said the dark man.

"And you would prefer to do without the attention." Said the assassin.

"Yes. I think you understand us. But fear not, your services will be rewarded, as usual. And you will not be denied your revenge."

"The Blade deserves me." Said Mandrake.

"Oh and you shall have him. Our eyes are everywhere, and he shall not escape you."
 
Skik motionted for Grim to stop.
"Yes encirclement is a slaver strategy. Fortunitly I was ready for this. Look here." Skik pointed to a box, well hidded in a pile of old bricks. Skik got down on his knees and, after clearing the bricks away, managed to open the lid. With a 'I'm loosing it get pointy objects away from me' grin he started handing Grim lumps of C4. "They make fair grenades. I would be using real grenades but the boss informed me that 'The day i let you near grenades again is the day hell freezes over'"
Gosh i wonder why. Grim thought.
Skik then pulled the final item out of the box. It was a 3/4 of a foot wide, square device made out of cordex, a timer, 2 AP rockets, and some unidentified device with the nuclear symbol stamped on it.
"he he he BOOM. er... we probably won't need this but just to be safe." Skik tucked the poor mans nuclear weapon under his arm. By now Grim was convinced that Skik had lost it. Skik stood up. "Lets go."

OOC: Much as Skik wants to he really dosn't plan to use the big bomb. But he can if he needs to. The fighting will still be mostly HTH but the grenades should still kill a fair number of slavers first. Finally since this section of the sewers is somewhat far from the main city sewer gas isn't a problem.
 
OOC: Sorry my last few posts have been so short. I've been hit by homework and so don't have much time.
 
IC-

Caleb’s footsteps stopped before the entrance of the Tabis gate, his boots just on the verge of entering. From there, he could see much of what represented Tabis; a few bleak buildings in the middle of reconstruction.

There were a lot of bad memories hanging around Tabis. There were many shots Caleb had fired, leaving behind blank handloads. And the old Blade was sure that he had bled at least a quart of blood in this damn town.

Caleb had to muster up his will. This bleak and dreary little town was misleading. The Blade knew that there was a gauntlet of fighting hidden in this town. A conspiracy had forced the ugliness out and the aftermath of a war would have the same effect.

The last time, Caleb had literally shot his way out of town, both revolvers blazing and the rotten smell of sulfur whisping in the air. He had taken lives and left as quickly as a wraith. But this time, he would have to use discretion. Caleb was old enough to admit that Tabis had whipped him. He had survived but it had taken all his skill.

Last time, Caleb had embroiled himself in the conspiracy because he had wasted a group of raiders in a bar for touching a barmaid. It wasn’t the best course of action, considering that the raiders were poised to take over Tabis. He had to waste even more chicken shit raiders as the battle progressed. Blade honor and morale had gotten him in trouble and Blade training and skill had bailed him out.

But now, things would be different this time around. The town was cooling down and Caleb wasn’t planning on wakening it up. He would let sleeping dogs lie. This time around, Caleb would wait for the stay poised for the right time to attack.

The Blade, strapped down with bullets, revolvers, and a rifle, walked into through the entrance of Tabis and rejoined the little town’s miseries.
 
Skik passed the C-4 into Grim's hands, but it was only by touch that Grim realized that the ghoul was placing explosive in his hands.

He sniffed at the air, worried at the danger of explosive gases.

"You know Skik, I can't see what you're up to."

"Trust me. Once upon a time I knew just the right about of C-4 needed to blow open the most pesky safe. But that was a long time ago. Boom Boom Boom, out go the lights.... Oh don't worry, this little thing won't go off easy." Skik seemed delighted, a boy with a new toy

Not very reassuring.

"No." Grim said, slower, "I can't see. Really, I mean blind. I can't see what you put in my hands. "

"Why not? "

"Fuck do I know why not? All I know is my eyes don't see in pitch black darkness." Impatient.

"Maybe you should have that looked at." Said Skik trying to help.

"No, its perfectly normal for me."

But even as Grim was about to explain further, he could see the reflections of torch light. It wasn't much, and Grim's nightvision was generally good. Enough so he could see that they were near an intersection of tunnels. The water was lighter here because it was pouring down a culvert below them. But the tunnels were filled with debries in all directions. Enough cover that the slavers would get very close. Hand-to-hand.

The torches were coming from all four corners now.

"Skik, how many slavers are we talking about."

"Four." Skik responded.

Four was not so bad, not great odds for hand-to-hand, but acceptable.

"But probably there are more." Skik added. " I know at least four went down the tunnels. But there was another one who might have gone back for more help. And I figure that the slaver gang, minus those I shot, might be a couple more."

5,6,7,8? Thought Grim.

"Couple dozen, maybe. But I doubt they would all come down here." Still sounding delighted. "I don't think I got them that angry."

Further down the tunnels the light was getting brighter. It was clearer now and Grim figured that if the slavers rushed he could use his six shooter. Just in case he also readied the 10 mm, glad he had hollowpoints.

From one tunnel, a slaver said. "You ready?" Another said "Ya, I think they're down this way" from another tunnel. "I say fuck all that catch'd she-it, I say we smoke 'em down here." form a third tunnel. Grim expected something more encouraging from the fourth tunnel, but no sounds came from that direction.

Grim thought about the C-4 in one hand, and the danger of explosives in a narrow area. That he had a .45 cal pistol in the other hand didn't make him feel better. Oh, I'll just toss this down one tunnel and try to shoot the first six that come in down the other.

Skik readied the fuse on the C-4. He glanced up at Grim, "Ok, so what does that really mean. I'd venture a guess between 4 and a dozen, but maybe more. But I figure that if they kill us both, well I can still detonate this little beaut."

"How much of that C-4 do you have?" Asked Grim, the grenades were looking a lot better.
 
OOC- Back once again, i really hope that i am able to stay loyal to this RP this time. I will try my best!

IC-

The loud sound of disregarding footsteps travelled through the tunnels. Voices were approaching and coming up fast.


“I’m gunna smoke that fucking ghoul, I'm talking big time revenge for our falling”.

“Shut the hell up, you’ll get your chance”, “Yea, we’ll teach um to mess with slavers”.

Rogue waited patiently in the shadows till the sounds passed her by. Her vision in the dark was exceptional but little did it count in this murky place.

“Slavers” Rogue murmured to her self. What the hell were they doing in this hole?
She climbed up from the position she was crouched in and turned to continue down her own path; however curiosity got the better of her and her mind was allready heading after the four men. Previous encounters with slavers had taught her that the only good slaver was a dead one and four of them talking of revenge against a ghoul didn’t meet her likening.

Anyway, the ghouls had helped her and near saved her life, she wasn’t about to let that go unforgotten. “Lets see what these dirt are up to shall we” She whispered to her self, turning in the direction the slavers to take up pursuit.
 
A block of C-4 in one hand and a pistol in the other, Grim didn't like waiting for the trap to close. Slavers were clearly on three sides, and probably waiting for the fourth. The C-4 should come as a surprise if the Slavers were trying to take them alive, but once the first ground of improvised grenades were tossed, the Slavers would offer no mercey.

Skik was holding block of C-4 in either hand, holding them as if he were about to start juggling.

Skik was whispering " boom, boom, boom" His sniper rifle was in a long rifle holster over his shoulder but there was a shotgun strapped over his shoulder. The shotgun was a better weapon for the closed in spaces of the sewars.

Think tactically. Grim forced his mind. "We should be able to suprised them with these grenades." he whispered more to himself than to Skik.

"You come looking for a fight?
Boom, boom Out go the Lights!"

Sang Skik quietly, some ancient otherwise forgotten song.

"Yeah, we get the first blast. But, if the slavers have grenades then they could flush us out towards them." Said Grim. Lately a lot of dangerous weapons had been placed in circulation thanks to Grim's old nemisis.

"Or maybe send us back down that tunnel" Skik pointed to the fourth tunnel, form where they had heard not a single word.

"Yeah, unless that's the plan. They figure to smoke us out and allow us only one viable escape. They think we'll run in that direction, and that's the trap." Said Grim. "That's why I think we need to fight our way out another way."

"No slide for skin merchants to catch a Ghoul ratlike in his own hole." Said Skik.

Over the tinkle of the water, Grim could hear them approaching, unseen behind the mounds of garbage in the tunnels.

"Meet their attack with an attack of our own and break through?"
nodded Skik.

"Yes, they'll expect us to run or hold, not to attack. They won't know what to expect." Grim replaced his .45 with the 10 mm automatic and screwed on the silencer. "Be better if they don't know which they their actually going."

Skik pointed to a tunnel then to Grim back out, then to himself and Grim and with his open hand pointed out, meaning Grim would lead and SKik follow. Grim would lead. Grim nodded.

"Let's rock their little world. Ready?" Asked Skik. "Just pull tab to open."

Skik pulled a fuse and threw the block of C-4 down one of the other tunnels. Grim pulled the fuse on his block of C-4 and tossed it down the tunnel where they were going, while Skik prepared yet a third of his grenades.

Before the first could explode a slaver rolled over the debries and stumbled down towards the two friends. Grim waited to the Slaver, a fat but strong man, came to a stop at their feet, before aiming the silenced pistol at the man's head and firing a single, hollowpoint into the man's cranium.

In the first tunnel a Slaver said, "Hey what the.... " Before his voice was lost in an explosion of water and debries, the sound amplified in the tunnels. "Holy.... " the second explosion killed the sentence. Grim was over the debries wall and down the tunnel before the sound had stopped its echo.

Crawling over the waste, he readied his pistol and removed a combat knife. This would be upclose and personal, then moved down the tunnel.

Third explosion tore through the tunnels. Now someone was screaming in pain, but the echoes left it unclear from which direction. Grim moved forward, towards the next mound of garbage. Before jumping over, he looked over his shoulder and saw the shape of Skik crawling over the mound, his combat shotgun ready. Skik crouched down, aiming the shotgun behind them.

"Grenade the fuckers." Grim heard the voice in front him, not more than a few feet.

A grenade sailed over his head, back, back to the place where the two friends had left. Behind him he could hear, in rapid succession, three explosions, and the sound of sharpnel dinging off the metal of the sewar pipes.

Grim scrabbled over the mound, pistol ready, and came upon three. The first he shot in the throat, dropping the man who was trying feebly to stop the flow of arterial blood.

Turning to the other two, Grim, still scurring over the garbage pile, shot again, missed. Then twice more, both times hitting a slaver who had grabbed a grenade.

The third Slaver swung up a long heavy stick at Grim's, connecting before Grim could fire again. The blow caught Grim in the midsection, and knocked him off the garbage pile and down to the floor. Grim, on his back in the tunnel, slashed with the combat knife, missed, and then felt the stick hammer his arm, the shock of the blow knocking the knife out of his hand. The slaver swung the stick twice more, both time connected against Grim's chest and shoulders. A fifth swing came down at Grim's head, never connected. A shotgun blast from Skik peppering the man with shutgun slugs.

His chest and shoulders would be sore for awhile but he's live. Grim got to his feet with Skik's help, then bent over to pick up his knife. Skik's skeletal face gave him a grisly leer, which Grim took to be a look of concern. "I'll be ok."

"I think we suprised 'em." Smiled Skik.

And that's when the rest of the Slavers fell on the two.
 
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