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RP: Lazarus [Lazarus] Unapologetic, maybe

OsakanOne

Retired Member
Continued from...

Made for walking..
Part 1, Part 2 [18+]




The construct crouched back down, narrowing his eyes in a vicious sneer.

"At least I'm still human."

At this point, Seiren couldn't stand being in the same room as that. . . Witch any longer, so without another word, he stormed out in a huff, slamming the door behind him.

Aiesu sat on her backside, feeling the glass of the broken mirror sting at her back. But mostly she just watched - seething, burning with impotent anger.

The construct's steps led him back to his own room - he hardly had a conscious decision as to his movements, by this point - and busted in, reaching into the closet and selecting a long coat from the closet - one that he knew would definitely irritate Aiesu for taking it.

Two figures stared at him like deer in head-lights, silently. The suddenness of it robbed either of them a response.

She has a way of pissing everyone off. Miles mused, as he spared a glance at Seiren as the feminine construct barged into the room. Despite how casual his thought process was, Miles was still quite revealed, with his freshly spent cock still on display.

Lalah immediately wrapped her arms about herself, hiding her body from sight as best as she could.

Seiren couldn't help but wonder why she even bothered hiding her chest if it was flat as a board.

"<C'mon>" He muttered in Nepleslian, taking her by the arm and throwing the coat over her so she was covered.

"You get the cripple, I get the maid."

"Prisoner exchange, we have an accord. Bring the luggage as well, and put anything broken in a bin. I'll discuss the bill later." Miles replied to the construct, as he flopped down on the bed, and upon the large old pillow... which he found was smeared with semen, as he frowned, and moved elsewhere upon the pile of cushioning. "And be sure to bring her back around sometime, she still needs to be housebroken."

"A-Ah... Ah... H-Hey!" Lalah struggled, not entirely okay with the arrangement.

Dragged along, she forced herself to her feet, stumbling behind the little one. She glanced back at at Miles and Sana, feeling the tightness of the construct's hand - of the synthetic strength he'd obviously forgotten he was privvy to. Right now, her body was too weak to fight it, still dizzy and woozy from the three patches that sat on her right shoulderblade, sending that seething warmth through her veins. She felt at any moment, she could pass out.

With that, the two of them were gone
 
"... He left in quite the huff." Miles mused, as a few minutes went by, and he looked to Sana. "I don't think he's coming back for a while."

"Prisoner exchange?" Sana said, possibilities already tickling through her temples as she wiped her mouth with a naked fore-arm.



Seiren clasped an arm around her, guiding her like a victim through fire. "Where do you live?" He asked, adopting Lorath once more.

"B..B..Bouliar... One fifty seven" Lalah struggled, feeling herself turning woozy again.

He flipped his phone open and plugged in the numbers. Basic GPS was handy and available for most phones, after all.
"Ah, it's a little too far for walking by foot. There's a taxi stand half a block away from this building, so we can take one of those."

Lalah wove her arms into the coat, the sweat of her body clinging to the gray fur of its insides. She looked back at the hood hanging from the back of her neck, then up at her horns in her reflection through a windowpane and tried not to laugh - buttoning the coat up. It was quite tight and didn't really cover her lower body, obviously made for someone much smaller than her: confirmed as Lalah stretched and the shoulders let out a soft ripping sound.

"A-Ah... Um..."

"Don't sweat it. . ." Seiren cooed, checking the shoulders. "I can sew enough to fix that later."

"N-No I mean..." she peered down to her lower body - both hands still over herself. She refused to leave the building, stood at the exit now.

"O-oh, right. Be right back."

He returned with a pair of sweat pants and underwear, identical to his own.

"Here."



Minutes later, the reached and hailed a taxi

Soon, the door slammed behind them and they were rolling throught the streets at some ungoddessly hour of the morning, the streets absoloutely bare.

The driver eyed her mirror, looking at the two briefly. The look on her face said she wasn't happy with something.

Slowly, Lalah yawned. A particular scent tickled Seiren's nostrils.

"Urgh. . ." Seiren recoiled, recognizing the scent, somewhat. He began, "You kind of. . ."

But then he caught the driver's eye in the rearview mirror.

"A-ah, it's not like that!" He said, glaring into the reflection. the Fyuunen up front shrugged and returned her eyes to the road.

"What's wrong?" Lalah quizzed - half awake now as she lifted her head of Seiren's shoulder. "I thought we going back to mine?"

"Erm. . ." He mumbled, shyly looking away. "Yeah, we are. But you kinda. . . stink."

"Eh? Stink?" Lalah said softly. She licked the back of her own hand, exhaling onto it a few times before scenting it. She then eyed the Fyunnen at the wheel, laughing nervously under her breath.

"Y-yeah. . ."
Seiren bit his lip. Should he talk to her about what had-

"We're here. Now pay up and get out of my cab."



Soon, Lalah was punching numbers into her door - a long string of eight numbers she'd memorized, then her thumb-print. Unlike the dorms, which had a rustic quality, everything about K'al heights was minimal. The walls were concrete, windows only where they were legally mandated. Turning about, she used her weight to push the door open, stepping bare-foot out onto smooth laminate flooring. A clap of her hands and the lights came on, though they were low, tubes along the edges where the ceiling met the wall. The far wall flickered, making a buzzing sound. As soon as he was in, she slid the door shut and did up a number of locks.

The paranoia sat with more Lorath than just Aiesu, it seemed.

"Wow. You seem to like security, huh?" the construct asked, peering around the place.

"You don't?" Lalah said, unbuttoning the front of her coat. She lifted her arm up, scenting her body, wrinkling her nose with disatisfaction.
"I um... " she said, still barely a whisper compared to the restaraunt. "I don't have much. Is there anything I can get you?"

Everything had obviously happened quite suddenly and she was running on some sort of autopilot, unsure if she wanted to be here or back in Aiesu's room. But something about her said she wasn't used to being the one who made the decisions and that she didn't even take the time to question them - and probably wouldn't until she was sober.

"I'm just a little thirsty. I ate my fill at the restaurant," he replied, observing the barren nature of the place. Barren, perhaps, might not be the right word, but it certainly wasn't a 5 star hotel. "You uh. . . you alright?"

Lalah was already undressing, the shower already running. "I'm fine."

From the way she had to lean against the wall to take off the underwear, she obviously wasn't. Carefully, she reached back over her shoulder, ripping at the patches that sat over her skin - microscopic teeth making her skin bruise as she forcibly removed them, putting up quite a right.

"Huh... I didn't know you could get these outside of hospitals" the L'manel pondered quietly, surprised by their presence.

Seiren averted his eyes from Lalah's nude form. As is the most respectable thing he could think to do.

"Huh? Those. . . don't look like nicotine patches. . ."

"A bit stronger than that, I think."

"Er. . . do you want me to remove them. . ." the construct asked, still averting his gaze. "I could also wash your ba- er. . um. . ."

Lalah looked over her shoulder curiously.

"My back?"
 
"Yeah, he's not coming back with our prisoner." Miles mused, as he went about putting on his pants again, while looking to Sana with a slight grin upon his lips. "You know, you should get a little bit of clothing on, otherwise, it'll make her nervous when I bring her--- You know what, just stay like that." he decided, chuckling on the matter.

Sana grinned ear to ear, sea-green eyes quite perfectly smug.

There was a feeling of appreciation in Miles as he looked upon Sana, seeing that grin, knowing just how devious she was, enough to measure up to him "I'll go retreive the 'prisoner' now." and with that, Miles made his way out of Aiesu's room, and into the 'guest room', where he opened up the door and took a look inside, surveying the environment before commiting to a full room breach.



Aiesu sat in a crumpled heap against the mirror, her legs flat against the floor. One of her prosthetics had come loose and sat next to her hip at her side. Her hands were still picking at the collar. Aiesu it seemed, was a great fan of futility.

"Knock knock." Miles announced, as he stepped fully into the room, and approached the legless heap, which left him feeling a touch of sympathy. "It looks like you've been digging in my luggage." he commented, as he crouched down in front of Aiesu, while eying the collar her fingers pried at with such futility. "When you put that on, it activated an automatic routine intended to keep the wearer from doing something silly, like running off."

"...You raped the waitress" she said flatly. "You subjugated Lorath in the name of whatever empire you're supposed to be from. How do you think that made me feel?"

"She consented." Miles replied, without even room for debate in the matter. "If you want, I could show you a playback from my optic." video evidence, it was something that every Nepleslian knew to love and hate. "Besides, I'm not some roving imperialist, I'm just a man, who got lucky."

"She was intoxicated. And she's a minor. You broke the law." Aiesu stated flatly. "That's statuatory rape by law."

Statutory rape, that was another thing every Nepleslian man was an expert in... it was kind of important to know how to avoid those charges, even on alien worlds. "She consented prior to any judgement impairing compounds entering her bloodstream, and more so, she's grown enough to be working and she's aspected. By Lmanel standard, and law, that's legal."

"By L'manel standards, nothing. You aren't L'manel. You aren't even Lorath. I know she's tall. And pretty. And elegant. But she's fourteen in your years. Fourteen. Doesn't that mean anything to you?"

"From what I understand, that's old enough for service in your military, old enough to vote for what few elected officials your people keep, and old enough to consent to sex." Miles countered, as he rubbed his five o'clock shadow stubbled chin.

Aiesu wasn't having any of it.

"You do realize most women don't really have a concept of no, when it comes to foreigners? They declare a boundry like... Like 'I'll do this but I won't do that' and then they see that as a challenge. If she hesitated even a little, it means no. You can't pick up on those subtelties because you're not Lorath."

She was ranting now.

"And another thing, if you think this is going unpunished, you can forget it. Yes, its legal. But is it ethical? No. And in court, laws are guidelines. Ethics come first when you deal with a jury."

"Then an appointed New Tur'listian investigator would conduct a telepathic link to sense for malicious intent, as well as a link with the supposed 'victim' to confirm if there was in fact harm done. Yes, I'm familar with the local customs." Miles spoke, frowning a little, rather unimpressed with Aiesu's posturing.

"And if there is harm found?"

"In this case, since she consented, and I have no malicious intent, I'd likely end up being forced to pay restitution in the form of currency." Miles figured, thinking of what he had read in his research on the topic.

"...So you think you're above the law because you have deep pockets? If I did what you just did, I couldn't afford it. Nobody I know but you or my mother could. Was she a virgin before you got to her?"

"Technically Sana was the one who claimed her proper virginity." Miles corrected.

"T-That's even worse! She's biologically male. This would be like... " Aiesu thought for a moment. "How old is Sana?"

There was a frown, a traditional matter of women and age came to Miles' mind, as he decided to use discretion. "Younger than I am."

"She couldn't use kaserine. Most L'manel can't if they aspect early. She's pre-pubecent. Think about that for a second. And reverse the gender-roles culturally. A big mature guy just interfered with a prepubecent girl. A cybernetically augmented muscle-house soldier against a tiny defenseless girl who just offered to help you home out of kindness. That's basically what just happened here."

"If I recall right, the species of reptile that the 'young woman'..." Miles emphathized the matter, indicating that he was indulging Aiesu in her stance of La'al being too young to really consent, but, mostly he did it as a means of debate trickery. "Rather venomous? With a jaw crushing pressure that could have easily torn through soft tissue?"

"When you aspect, you don't take everything with you unless you fuck it up badly like I did. So no."

"I know, it is selective, even able to be implimented situationally." Miles stated, as he gave a shrug. "If she felt threatened, she could have easily spit venom at us and made a break for it. Though, that is beside the point"

"And lose her job. Work is hard to come by now."

"Liar." Miles spoke with a scowl; "Your Matriarchy actually hands out jobs through a cross-reference of open positions and a full documentation of citizenry for those who are out of work."

"Not to heretics they don't."

"No wonder you're being a professor and working for a shady company outside of the Matriarchy."

"My point is. No L'manel aspects so young who isn't a heretic."

"Unless she's just spirutally attuned and is rather sure of herself and who she is." Miles addressed, as he kept up with Aiesu's continued attempts at trying to back him into some sort of corner.

"Look. When you're from a noble family and there are rumors that your child is a heretic, you distance yourself, practically abandoning them, letting them fend for themselves or the parents risk their position. The only way out is to prove you're not a heratic by passing aspectation flawlessly far before you really should. Like some sort of genius."

"At the same time, if the child and their priests and clerics kept an open communication, and were transparent in their studies, then it would not even be an issue, it would be a matter to be celebrated." Unimpressed, it was the best way to discribe Miles' feeling at that moment.

"Not everyone is religious. Not everyone is willing to entertain the idea. I'm sick of living in a theocracy. This is the side of Lor nobody talks about. Its taboo to even be HAVING this conversation."

"You're off topic though." Miles corrected, knowing he was opening a huge can of worms if he would continue at that moment, something bigger than he was ready to take on with a head full of drugs and alcohol, though, he did record the matter for later on, to address during treatment. "What you need to know is that La'al felt comfortable enough to give us her real name, which is taboo to begin with, unless it is being shared with people you're actually attracted to, or, intend to befriend closely."

"Or your superior, if you're subordinate" Aiesu stepped in, correcting him quickly. "Which she was."

"Not applicable to off-worlders." Miles corrected.

"She wanted to make you feel welcome. Off-worlders are the biggest source of economic growth we've had since moonfall."

There was a laugh from Miles, really, he could tell that Aiesu was grasping at straws. "You're telling me that one of the most rigid traditions in your culture in regard to social contact with off-worlders would be broken for a tip? No, I'm sorry, even though I'm high as fuck right now, I know better. You're just being petty at this point, trying to paint her as some sort of person who's just sniffing around for tips."

"She didn't have to wear the uniform after she left work. She wore it because it caught your eye."

"Caught your eye too. When we were at the table I could measure your pulse, blood pressure, and pupil dialation to precise values. You became aroused when you saw her." Miles spoke, entirely unsympathetic to the matter of discretion at that moment.

"It... Reminded me of something." Aiesu said. She wasn't lying.

"Uh huh." Miles was not exactly impressed by that either, since he figured what it reminded of her was likely something pornographic. "We could go on about this for a few hours you know, or, I could help you up, get you and this room cleaned up, and we can settle in and handle this matter tomorrow, and you can simply ask La'al about the situation and get her word for it."

"She's probably not coming back, you know. Seiren's probably going to be gone too for a while, judging from his hissy-fit."

"Guess that leaves you with Sana and I."

"Gghk. Stay the hell away from me. You and that augmented bitch."

"Okay." Was all Miles said, as he stood up from his crouched position, and began to make his way for the door... and notably, he had not returned Aiesu's ability to feel what was left of her legs.

"A-Ah, hey! What am I supposed to do?"

"I don't know, not my problem if you want me to stay away." The Nepleslian replied as he grasped the doorknob. and as he grasped it, he noted the distance between the floor and the knob, it was likely Aiesu would be left unable to get out on her own in her current state, he figured.

"What happened to do no harm? That's really dickish of you."

"Well, I would technically be doing harm by staying and agitating your emotional state, right? So, if you want me to help you, you're going to have to ask nicely." Miles replied as he turned to look to Aiesu, with arms crossed as he wore a frown upon his lips.

"You're kidding."

"Not one bit."

"Okay fine. Help. puh-lease" Aiesu spat bitterly.

"You don't exactly seem sincere." There was a tone of disapproval to Miles' words "If you still have room to be that way, I doubt you really need help."

"Okay fine. Just don't set your dog on me and I'll be good. Please. My back really stings."

"I'll make sure she won't bite." With the matter settled, Miles strode back over to Aiesu, before he carefully, and skillfully with the hands of a doctor who may have done the task many times before, lifted her from the ground before moving her to a nearby chair to sit properly. "Want help putting your legs on?"

"Y...Yeah." she leant forward. As her back came away, glass tinkled against the ground, falling out of the broken mirror. It was stained with blood.

Miles gave a light nod, before he went to pick up the simple artificial limbs "Alright, and after, I'll find where you've thrown my first aid kit, so I can patch up your back.". Upon a short couple-of-second long inspection of Aiesu's 'legs', it was easy for him to fix them into place as he looked to her as he slipped each one on; "Let me know if I'm putting them on too tight or too loose." as he spoke, he tightened the straps, just enough so they fit snug, but not enough to press firm into the skin, it was clear he had done it before, there was no doubt in that.

She soon corrected the fit, having her own way of doing it and reached up to brace against him.

Stiffening his muscles a bit, Miles provided a suitable brace for Aiesu as she settled into her legs, though, as he helped her he decided to ask her something worthy of note; "So how long were you up against that broken mirror? It looks like you bled a lot."

"I'm bleeding?" she said, trying to glance back at the lens. She'd slid down when the collar had closed after losing feeling in her legs - the mirror she'd already broken. It'd cut open the back of her shirt, leaving it stained with blood.
"So I am" she said with strange detachment.

"Just stay put." Miles spoke, and having not restored the use of her legs, there was not really much choice left for Aiesu to make on the matter, as he turned and went to seek out his first aid kit, in the mess that the Lmanel had made in tossing his and Sana's luggage.

"I thought I just had cramp." Aiesu laughed quietly to herself, still watching her reflection, scepticism in her eyes. "That I'd sat funny or something"

There was a feeling of interest which came through Miles in response to Aiesu's account of her pain, it was clear she was suffering from a diminished capability to interpret sensations, and he knew well enough that it was likely because of the amount of medication she was taking, and he had seen enough of her medical record to know that she was likely taking more painkillers than a Nepleslian opiate addict.

Upon shuffling about through the room, Miles eventually found his first aid kit, thankfully intact, despite the most agitated efforts of Aiesu. With the kit in hand, he approached where Aiesu was seated, before he gently turned her in the seat, so he could get a look at the bloodied clothing on her back. "I'm going to need you to take off your top, I'm going to have to get a clear look at your back."

"Uh... Okay?" she began unbuttoning her shirt, turning the mirror away from him. "I'm built like a rake so its not like I've got anything to hide, provided you're professional about it."

"I'll keep the hooting, hollering, and whistles to a distinctive minimum of zero." Miles replied, as he grabbed the other chair which was available in the rather spartan room meant for two. Once seated behind Aiesu, he began to set out the supplies he needed, but he did so behind her so she would not see.

Sure, there were the usual items for such a situation. Sterile gauze, antiseptic wash, topical antibiotic ointment with a minor coagulant compound, even a pair of tweezers for removing glass fragments. However, what was not part of the usual, was a small sample collection device, intended for the purpose of allowing Miles to gather a blood sample, without providing Aiesu the time to detox or take any sort of antagonist compound to balance out her blood chemistry to throw him off during the course of her long-term treatment.

"Hey, Miles" Aiesu said, stretching. From the way the glass had caught her, he could see muscle moving.
"Why medicine?"

"You mean my profession, or me fixing you right now?" Miles asked, as his hands moved almost on their own, as he went about treating the wounds. Even though he saw muscle moving, he had no feeling of disgust or hesitance; it was just another patient.

"Profession" she said flatly. She noted to herself the limitations of his translator.

"If you would have asked me that twenty years ago, I would have told you 'So I'd get laid'. It was a guaranteed way to make money and meet women on Nepleslia, and back then, there were ten males to every female in regard to population, so times were tough when looking for someone." Miles explained, quite honestly, as his optic focused upon her back. With tweezers in hand, he reached out, and plucked a small shard of glass from her flesh.

"And now?" she said. The thing was lodged quite deeply and took force to remove.

"And now, I do it to make a difference I guess. Put a worthwhile mark on this universe one life at a time." Miles explained, as he delicately but efficiently removed the glass in its entireity, while setting it aside in a small plastic baggie he kept in his kit for such an occasion.

"Why does everyone want to leave a mark?" Aiesu said, looking over her shoulder for a moment, hunching forward to show more of her back. Her small wings it seemed were what really took the brunt of the mirror.

Miles let out a small chuckle; "Cultural differences partially; my species tops out at a hundred and thirty, perhaps a hundred and fifty with modern medicine. If we leave a mark, it produces a legacy in which we can take comfort in." the Nepleslian explained, as he pressed his lips together between points in his explanation, as he eyed her wings, and was thankful for the structures being largely vestigial, otherwise, he was sure it would have been a bloody mess. "There's another reason too." Miles started, as he delicately worked his fingers over the feathers, seeking out any more glass, as well as the specific wound sites hidden within the white fluff.

With the white fluff, it was easier to see where she was wounded in comparison to the usual Lorath feather plumage, and that made Miles' task considerably less taxing, enough so he continued his explanation; "I suppose, maybe there are two more reasons, instead of just one other." he stated, as he found a rather nasty looking shard, which he began to carefully work out of her. "First, it is part of that 'legacy' concept, if I continue this work, I make things better if I ever produce offspring. I'll have money to feed children, I'd have advanced civilization to make things safer, and I know if anyone I love or care for is ever hurt, I can do my best to help them." He explained with a soft sigh, as he pulled out the glass shard. "Third reason though is pretty simple; I fucking hate unnecessary death, pain, and suffering, and if I could make things better, by fixing the things that are wrong, and improving upon what already is, then that means I've done something worthwhile."

"Those other things..." she began, stretching with her arms out now - those pale wings flexing and extending pitifully. "Those are fine. But leaving a mark... I never understood that." she said, running her tongue along her teeth for a moment.

"That one comes with age."

"Lots of people leave their mark though. Big ugly scars, not masterpieces."

"That's the difference between me and lots of people."

"What's that Nepleslian saying?... Sa road su hu'rell?"

"The road to hell" Miles corrected in regard to her pronunciation "Is paved with good intentions. Best translated to your species as; the path to forsaken damnation, as has befallen your God figure."

"Like I said. Nobody wants to be the bad guy." she said, starring down at her left palm, expecting to see a burn from a past experience on the Akahar. But it wasn't there. "It just happens."

There was a soft huff of breath at that, she was right, but there was one clear thing that needed to be pointed out; "Our destinations in life are never what truly matters; it is the path that is taken. Hopefully, history records the efforts made, and can perhaps provide those who look back with a context. For the spiritual... well, each action would hopefully be weighed and measured in the end." From Miles' tone, it was clear there was some 'magical thinking' as some would phrase it.

"I think... Its selfish to want to leave a mark. I'd rather leave things untouched. So the next person can still enjoy them." she slowly looked back over her shoulder.

He could just make out a bright blue, just ringing about the center of her pupil, just barely before drowning in the sunset of cerise.

"Graffiti is for children and the desperate."

"Don't your people believe in fixing broken things and mending them time and time again, instead of replacing them, for the sake of producing a legacy for a given object, giving something more worth than what it should have, technically."

"Yes" she butted in, interrupting him. "But do I look Lorath to you?"

"Yes, you're the embodiment of your people. Wounded, struggling for independence, and fighting with a tenacity that none can truly comprehend, even while hemorrhaging as a person."

"Not seeing it" she grumbled softly, hunching forward again. "I wan't tinacious under him."

"Neither were your people when held at the point of an aether shock cannon." Miles spoke, with a clear regret and sadness to his voice. "As I said, you are the embodiment of your people."

She didn't reply.

"You know though." Miles spoke after a pause; "I still want to show you how to shoot." as he spoke on that promise, he grabbed the collection device which he had ready, and began to collect the blood which seeped from her wounds, storing it away for later analysis.

"I don't like stuff like that. I already told you."

"Neither did the Fyunnen, now they sport Gatling guns on their cars."

"Nepleslianization. Everyone's either being you or siding with the cats. The conquest never ended."

"No, your Fyunnen did it because they know that adopting something which they once frowned on, would protect the rest of what they hold dear."

"More dakka is better dakka, huh?" Aiesu said flatly.

A phrase she could only know from Nepleslian television.

"Absolutely. Now look at your people since then, no one has dared to fuck with you." Miles stated, with utter confidence on the matter. "Your people have the ability to fight back now, they have the ability to make an aggressor bleed, and that is enough to make a coward set on exploitation think twice."

"I told you. They're not my people. Being born somewhere doesn't indebt you to them. Its just random chance."

"You say that, though, you bothered to try to aspect, you put that effort forward, and you risked your very life and lim---"

"If I didn't, I was going to be disowned." she interrupted him mid-sentence. "Which I was anyway."

There was a momentary silence from Miles, but only for the moment of giving her back another look-over before continuing treatment. "And that scared you?"

"You're a consultant, not a therapist."

"I'm pretty good at it though. Kind of had to go through training on the subject for being a combat medic."

"I could probably refashion your neocortex into a flowerpot" Aiesu said flatly. "I think I'm better qualified than you are to be my own therapist."

"I can install your brain into a flowerpot and keep it functional while you're growing daisies." Miles countered, as he opened the container of antiseptic wash. "This will sting, no matter how much painkiller is in you, it's going to smart a bit."

Aiesu tried to picture flowers growing out of neural matter, glancing skyward. Brains instead of soil. The image wasn't pleasant but it settled in her mind's eye.

Miles could hear her teeth clicking. She remained perfectly still. All except for those wings that extended outward, then contracted and flexed.

Knowing full well she was prepared as much as she could be; Miles doused Aiesu's back with the antiseptic, and her wings as well, making sure to give the whole area a rather generous coating of the liquid, as it washed away the excess blood.

The clicking sound built. She was grinding her teeth - hissing softly through her nose. Her reaction should have been yelping or maybe even screaming. It was instead closer to a bandaid on a child with grazed knees. Her expression was one of boredom, that this was routine and irritating more than anything.

While most would take Aiesu's lack of outward cries as a sign of distinctive resolve, Miles was not fooled in the slightest; the Lmanel before him was accustom to pain, agonizing pain, and to get a cry out of her would involve agony far greater than what he'd ever be comfortable with causing while giving treatment to a patient. He knew full well she felt the pain, every bit of it, and that led him to work with diligence.

"Y-You're right it does smart." Aiesu laughed to herself, nervously - no, stressed - with another slow hiss through her teeth. "So what did you just do? I'm not familiar with the clenser you're using. It feels like chemical antiseptic. Smells like iodine. Or acetic acid, maybe."

"Since I can't use nanomachines on your body, without causing erratic tissue growth, I decided to bring an older variety of antiseptic which would have a near-zero chance of reaction with your physiology. point-five percent hydrogen peroxide, sixty-five percent alcohol, and ten percent io-"

"Okay, I get it, I get it" she hushed him again, mid-sentence. "Just get on with it. It stings like a bitch."

"If it's hurting you, think of the poor bacteria." Miles mused, as he opened one of the sterile wrappers of gauze, before he began to dab away the excess antiseptic, while also cleaning up her wounds one more time before he would dress them.

"Hnkhgh... Its even worse like this. Please say Nepleslia is more civil than whatever you just had to use. Fffffuck this is annoyinggghhhhh."

"Far more, hey, would you like me to have the collar block the pain?" Miles asked, as he noted just how much griping was coming out of the Lmanel, and to hear her gripe, was a clear sign that her agony was near a limit.

"You keep the collar outta this" she grumbled.

Only now, through Miles' translator, would there be a detection that her dialect had changed. Something more lax. Almost country bumpkin. An accent slipping through, not unlike Lalah's. Even when she'd been drinking, it never showed this thickly.

"You sure? Because we're not quite done yet, and it could save you some grief." Miles offered again, as he felt a touch more sympathy for her, especially because so much of her usual posturing and portrayal of an image fell away.

"Yea', I don' wanna repeat mysen." she grumbled, then caught and corrected herself: "Myself."

A smirk tugged at the corner of Miles' lips as he heard Aiesu, even with the pain involved, there was a small amusement, because even in her, something he'd seen at other times came through. He'd seen princesses, samurai, supposedly cold and calculating aliens, and a score of others carry themselves with such pride and pomp, but the moment the pain came, simplicity, modesty, and a desire to get it done.

As he smirked, Miles went about slathering the gauze pads with the ointment he had for this sort of occasion. It was an ointment with a quantity of synthetic tissues suspended within a non-irritating antiseptic compound, and an assortment of additional compounds intended to stimulate healing, that and a minor coagulant to ensure she'd not bleed through.

"Alright, with how much you're cut up, I'm going to have to use a wrap around your torso to hold some large gauze pads in place." Miles explained, as he pulled out the needed supplies, and with that, he gently touched upon the unharmed portion of her shoulder, pushing her forward so he could have an angle to put the gauze on, without it falling off. Once she was leaned, he laid the gauze onto the wounds, carefully pressing them down ever so slightly to ensure they were in place.

Carefully, Aiesu lifted her arms up, vanity getting the better of her as she crossed them up over her head, clutching her opposite elbow with each hand - her wings crossing over reflexively trying to imitate the same posture. She looked aside after spotting her reflection - arms drooping after observing how lewd the posture was.

"Ah-ah, arms back up, that was an excellent position to get this done." Miles corrected, as he went about unrolling some of an elastic wrap, in preparation to start putting it around Aiesu's torso.

She glanced back at him as if to say 'but' before slowly, reluctantly assuming the position again. Sat like this, her legs still numb in the presence of a man. With strong hands and that ... Stink. She wrinkled her nose. Aiesu could still smell Lalah, still smell Sana and most offensively, still smell Miles on his person. She stared down at her chest, thinking about the afformentioned. In Lalah's case, it made sense but not in Aiesu's. She grumbled to herself.

"You stink."

"Like sex, alcohol, a heavy meal, and a late night no doubt. That's Nepleslian scent there, I smell like a man in his prime." Miles said, sounding quite smug, as he worked the spooled elastic around her, back, to front, pulling it across her chest, then back, then across the gauze, then front, and so he repeated, moving along the way to cover the gauze, though, not her wings.

"...Nepleslian, Et rein d'autre" Aiesu tittered to herself. "You're supposed to make a figure of eight around the roots. Not a loop. That's something everyone knows. Like infinity."

"Yeah, that's if I want to brace the wing muscles in place in the process. You need to keep them semi-mobile."

"Well, why wouldn't you? If they move, it'll rip the gauze. I'm ... Kind of surprised you didn't stitch any of it shut. Or wasn't it that bad?"

"External lascerations." Miles explained; "Since you're so thin, it looks a lot worse than it actually is. An ointment I applied to the gauze will handle things well enough by introducing a synthetic skin into place which will serve as a medium for your actual skin to heal onto... and the reason why I need you moving normally is to ensure that your new tissues maintain a range of motion, instead of healing into a scar that'll hurt when you move."

"Fun. Can I have my legs back now that you're done playing doctor?"

"No, because I do have to dress your wings." Miles spoke, in a tone that carried a hint of scolding, as if to indicate her impatience was not exactly a welcome trait at the moment, but the tone was one reserved for an adult scolding a child.

"Ugh. Fiiiiiiii~ne."

"Well, it is not like you have much choice at the moment, see, that's why the collar did that, keeps the squabbling to a minimum." Miles said with a somewhat teasing tone, before he went about the delicate work of treating her wings. In the case of the wings, it required on-site application of the ointment which he had previously applied to the gauze, due to that, he had to use a swab and carefully touch upon the wound sites with it, while getting past the plumage.
 
Building one, room 57, Bouliar prefecture
Lalah's dorm

Maybe an hour later.


♫ Leonard Cohen - Suzanne



A tall figure lingered in the doorway of Lalah’s apartment, locking the door behind herself. She was quite tall with thin pinkish skin and thick features. Eyes moved beneath their lids involuntarily, making her dark eyelashes sway as she clicked her tongue twice. From long black straight hair in hime-styling branched a pair of thick tall triangular bat-like ears beginning where Lorath ears would and ending somewhere high over her crown: each open, about the same size of her face, seeming two sizes too big for her. The dark hair fluffed up into a thick mane about her shoulders. Those ears explored the room, tilting as if they were her eyes. She clicked her tongue again, calmly striding into the room. She folded a retractible cane that she put into her pocket, making the sound every few seconds before pausing.

“Lalah? Is that you?”

“Sssshhh. I told you not to call me that. Its La’al. Not Lah-Lah. Why do you do that with everyone’s names?” she grimaced. “Its very… Yamataian. The Nepleslians even have a word for people who emulate Yamataians; weeaboo.”

The figure smiled noting the sleeping body next to her. Now seen, she moved with a strange callousness — an ease she couldn’t otherwise. Almost running despite not using her own eyes. She only had to pause upon reaching the refridgerator, the one place Lalah’s eyes didn’t carry, obscured by a wall. Here, she felt - flicking her fingernail against various containers and listening for the sound they made. She eventually took a glass of malt whisky from the refridgerator door - sliding it shut with her foot — and then felt along the cabinets. She counted four along and four levels up, reaching for a glass which she set down before closing the cabinet door — then reached into the fridge again into the cold - withdrawing a tray of ice. She twisted it before setting it back inside, picking up and dropping several cubes into the tumbler. Then she set her thumb slightly into the glass and began pouring, stopping when she felt the whisky near the top. She then took the glass, returning to the living-room. Seen again, she moved with the ease she’d lost moments ago, sitting aside Lalah with a big cheeky smile — the glass balanced in her fingertips.

“So! Who’s your friend there?” the figure said, pressing her palm briefly to the sleeping construct’s face, feeling her features. “She’s very cute..” She whispered, hand returning to her glass as she took a shy and seemingly demure sip.

“Seira Isabala. Though, male pronouns in a private space.”

“Isbala… Mmmm? That’s Su-Su’s lapdog, isn’t it?”

“Tsu-Tsu… You mean Aiesu.”

“Mmm. But that thing, next to you. Seira. Seiren. Is a construct.”

Lalah slowly glanced down at Seiren. She’d been laughing, joking and even shared a shower with him. The thought that he might be hadn’t occurred to her, not even once.

“I didn’t expect them to be so realistic.” Lalah grimaced. “I thought the tall dark skinned one was.”

“Tall and dark skin?”

“Mm. With the white haired man, with the glasses.”

“Oh~ You mean Su-Su brought her consultant? This is just perfect.” The figure cackled quietly, glancing skyward. “Thank-you Ty.”

She watched the way Lalah stared at Seiren’s sleeping body - paying special attention to the way his chest rose and fell and the faint sound of his voice.

“You look betrayed” she eventually said, taking a sip.

“Well” Lalah began, wearily watching her friend down a pair of pills with another drink.
“It isn’t a person, is it? And I didn’t even know? How do I know you’re not a construct?”

There was a silence before the figure smiled. “Simple.” Her smile became wider. “You don’t.”

“That’s reassuring” Lalah said, screwing up her features. This would be an interesting night.

“Do you really need to take those, now?”

“No. But I want to. And just because its a construct doesn’t make it any less of a person.”

“Even so, its artificial. It doesn’t have feelings. It just pretends to.”

“Your brain computes your action so does…?” the figure paused, waiting for Lalah to fill the void - snapping her fingers for prompt. “Uh…”

“His.”

“You’re sure that’s a boy?”

Lalah said nothing.

“Okay, you I understand. You’re Lorath. But …”

“Its not like he’s Nepleslian.”

“Point.”

She took another sip before offering it to Lalah. Lalah cleared her throat and soon the figure had to correct her posture - having been aiming the drink in a different direction. Lalah extended her hand, taking a slow sip before deciding the drink was a bit strong. Even so, she went back for another sip, eyeing the brown liquid suspiciously — thinking it might alleviate her headache.

“Hair of the dog?” the figure grinned. “… Did the two of you… elope?”

Lalah gagged.

“That’s a yes.”

“I did no such thing!”

Lalah felt a pair of hands settle on her shoulder.

“Oh?”

The figure leant closer — nose up against Lalah’s neck now. Lalah shrunk in her seat, squirming as she heard the figure scent her.

“Even under all that fragrance and camouflage, the smell of a man is unmistakable — Nepleslian, no less. . . And from the way you’re moving, sitting, squirming~… My precious little Lalah isn’t a virgin anymore, is she?”

“When you do that, its creepy, Arlyle. Really really creepy.”

“Do what now?” she smiled broadly, now sat in Lalah’s lap. She soon wrapped her arms about the Lmanel’s neck, pressing her dark forehead up against her collar-bone, burying Lalah’s head against her body. Her smile grew. Arlyle lavished moments like this.

“Know things I haven’t told you. Things I wouldn’t ever tell you.” A muffled voice came back, lifting her head out and gasping for air.

“Its called deduction, dear.” Arlyle’s smile sharpened into a sly grin speaking only in half-truths now, becoming haughty now, though relaxed as her eyes narrowed. “Was it Mr. Consultant? He has an intense appetite and you … Are his type.”

“No?”

“It was, wasn’t it? Though, I’ll work it out on my own if I have to.”

“The woman.” Lalah blurted. “But her man wanted me first. I could feel his eyes.”

Arlyle began running her fingernails through Lalah’s hair, shushing her.

“Among other things, I’m sure. Was it nice?”

She could feel Lalah turning her head, trying to evade the question.

“I said ‘Was it nice’?”

Nothing.

Arlyle shrugged slowly, running her index finger along Lalah’s cheek before rolling off to sit next to her - reaching to snatch her drink back with a cheeky smile. Lalah could be stubborn and there was no way to get an answer out of her when she was. It was just her nature.

“Alright. Change of topic. What’s your first impression of Su-Su?” she said, taking a sip.

“Nnn.. You’re talking about…” Lalah squirmed again in her seat, feeling something out of place. She stretched her arms up over her head, dark thighs squeezing together as she yawned before slipping her hands into her pocket. “The Lmanel again?”

“Mm.”

“In person?”

“Correct.”

“Well… She’s… Small. Frail. Child-like. Angry. Very angry. Withdrawn. I don’t think she wanted to be there. She was especially pitiable. If I told her that I pitied her, she probably would have gone nuclear.” Lalah said again, already reaching to her mouth to yawn.

“In what way?”

“Her aspectation.”

“Ah, her legs?”

“No, not quite.

“Huuh… You didn’t notice the—“

“OF COURE I NOTICED, ITS JUST RUDE TO —“

“Alright, alright. Could you explain then? The aspectation.”

Lalah stared back at Arlyle.

“I would have thought its obvious. You’re L’manel, aren’t you? You’re even aspected, and at such a young age…”

“I’m not near as young as I look. And humour me; pretend for a moment that I’m a foreigner with no understanding in such matters.”

“Al…right…” Lalah grimaced. “Its a bad aspectation.”

“That she screwed it up?”

“No.”

“A dangerous aspectation?”

“Sort of.”

“Could you elaborate?”

“Well, other than the mistakes… A shark is one of the hardest aspectation to live with. The fatality rates are very high. There’s a famous story that—“

Arlyle filled Lalah’s vision now, that smile back.

“I love your stories” Arlyle purred, pressing her forehead against Lalah’s.

“A-Ah…” Lalah felt herself tremble, her hands reaching.

“Tell me a story?”

“I’ve… Got work in the morning.”

“Tell mee…”

So bratty.

“If I tell you, will you be … Less …”

“Annoying. Mischievous? Facetious? Horn—“

“Yes” Lalah butted in, feeling Arlyle’s breath against her lips - hands on her shoulders easing her back. “That last one especially.”

“Pfft. You’re no fun. But alright.”

Despite her promise, Arlyle hadn’t moved.

“Ar. Personal space?”

“Ah, ah~” she smiled. “When I sit this close, its like looking in a mirror” she said, slowly backing off. Eventually she laid over the L shaped couch on the opposite half from Seiren, head resting in Lalah’s lap. “So about aspectation?”

“Right. Like I said, fatalities are high but… It has one of the hardest natures to coexist with.”

“Natures?”

“Mmm. Every aspectation brings some base instinctive behaviors that taint or pollute whatever base personality you have. For example, if someone who’s very distrustful and disloyal aspects for say… A dog, they’re a lot less distrustful and disloyal afterward whether they want to be or not. It just becomes part of their nature. Their way of being.”

“Huh… So aspectation is like… Knowing the boundary between what’s you and what’s it?”

“Mm, close. Its like sailing the winds. You take what advantages you get and work with them instead of against them. It can help you travel and discover yourself and better you.”

“And Su-Su’s?”

“If you’re not careful, the nature you took on can take you on and devour you whole, changing you completely as a person. A shark is one of the hardest to live with. The most intense storm to sail through. One of the last completely successful aspectation of a shark was about... Six thousand years ago. Well, the books and say six. But some scholars think its actually closer to about seven thousand, so do most oral accounts. Long before the exile. A mother of three, described as cheery. When her children left home, she aspected as a hobby, trying lots of different things and became very apt. Within six weeks of aspecting like a shark, she felt what’s called the blood calling.”

“What’s that?”

“Well, most predatory animals have instinctive drives to hunt. If they go unsatisfied or suppressed — like the medication I take for my venom glands and the fact I have to have my fangs removed every other month because they’ve grown back. And I meditate, for the aggression and the urges. Its all horribly depressing.”

“Then why do it?”

“Well, those with predatory aspectation tend to be given incredible drive and an openness you wouldn’t normally have, since you feel the need to know where you stand with others so you know if they’re a threat or not, or even potential prey. You become very observant. If you’re poorly motivated, depressed or very reserved, its seen as a good solution, since your personality and the nature balance out into a sort of equilibrium.”

“This explains a lot.”

“Very funny.”

“So what happened to her?”

“Well… She was convicted of three murders and was sentenced to penal drafting for six years as a heavy gunman.”

“Three children, three murders.”

“Yes.”

“Did she?”

“Yes.”

“Wow.”

“She became one of the first gunmen, actually. See, our military was — and still is — mostly made up of Fyunnen. Well, what would become Fyunnen. See, they didn't have castes back then, but the shift had already started. We were becoming polarized. Like how Nepleslians have different races... For the sake of the story though, I'll put the modern caste labels where they belong, just remember, its not quite accurate. Anyway, early, unscrupulous, Fyunnen viewed guns as a way of declaring an opening to a duel. You point and click at someone and the flash and the point is like asking someone to fight. If they want to fight, they do it back. The rounds almost never hit so then you pulled out your blades, dropped your gun and charged through the smoke at each other. They were less like soldiers and more like warriors, and only the best trained moved as a cohesive force as soldiers. But to carry only a gun was viewed as suicide, so she wasn’t expected to survive since guns were really inaccurate.”

“Huh… What happened?”

“Her platoon leader was killed, so she assumed a command position and saved her platoon in odds she shouldn’t have survived. It happened several times and eventually they let her, a commoner, keep her position as commander which was unheard of at the time.”

Arlyle nodded, taking a sip from her drink.

“She basically changed the face of war and refused to die. Eventually, sick of the ridicule she received from her higher-ups — ‘Destroyer of her own men’, since she insisted her troops not use or carry blades, she commissioned an Occhestian — a foreigner at the time — to design new guns. She complained that the weapons they were given weren’t accurate, took too long to reload and were basically useless — since Fyunnen saw them as little more than a novelty and didn’t want them to become more. The Occhestian at the time was involved in building cannons for navies overseas and designed her a gun that could shoot straight and didn’t jam. The result was what Nepleslians call “Bolto Actianu Raifu”

“Bolt action rifle” Arlyle suggested. Another sip.

“Right. The barrel was also made longer and the round itself redesigned, with a water-proof wax-paper infusion that evaporated when shot.”

“Caseless?”

“Mm. They also absorbed the smell of gunpowder.”

“How sneaky.”

“It gets better; The uniform was also redesigned. It was pitch black, to blend in well at night and for psychological purposes since all uniforms of the time were brightly colored and ornate. Hers were black with gray trim. Every world has its stories of death. Kind of intimidating. All soldiers also carried a thin loose waxy garment — a poncho as you’d call it, with a hood. It was colored after the environment and easily tucked away.”

“Camouflage!”

“Deniable camouflage. It also kept the sun off them in summer. It buttoned shut in the winter, trapping air to keep it warm. And the waxy exterior was hydrophobic, so they didn’t get wet. And a second cowl was made for the gun, too, to keep it working in all weather.”

“Clever. We didn’t start doing this until about three thousand years ago, well, give or take, we think.”

“We being Nepleslia? There were also special boots developed, to be water-proof and to be resilient. They didn’t look as pretty or as ornate but they had a grip pattern underneath, they were lighter and metal toecaps were added. Crazy durable.”

“Huh.”

“See, traditionally, we march to war in bright colors so each side can be clearly identified. They marched in neat stacked rows called formations. Formations met each other. They held a line. When a line was broken, usually the formation was broken. Rhoi refused to march in platoons to meet each other honorably and discarded the rules of engagement entirely.”

“Oh?”

“Mm. See, the enemy assumed that because her troops hid, they were small in number, cowards or undisciplined. A non-threat. So they’d be cocky and careless. By not exposing herself to the dangers of close combat and having the accuracy advantage, she surrounded opponents from great distances and waited for everyone to pick a target independently. When she wanted them to take the shot, she whistled. Reloading took a long time so they had to get it right the first time and they had to be disciplined.”

“So … Basically she envisioned modern warfare, instead of ranks?”

“Basically. Fyunnen hated the impersonal nature of it, so her unit mostly consisted of fellow Lmanel and the odd Fyunnen sympathizer who agreed that survival came before honor. Most thought Rhoi was a coward though, that because she hadn’t come from an affluent family, she hadn’t had chivalry drummed into her as a child. That she was common, dirty and a cheater.”

“Oh wow.”

“Her combat record though, would change things. Fyunnen were outraged by her cockiness and aggression. How effortlessly the 405th heavy gunners, took the placements and encampments that the Fyunnen had struggled with for years. All because of her pragmatism. Its one of the reasons there’s still problems and resentment between Lmanel and Fyunnen soldiers domestically.”

“What do you mean?”

“The Fyunnen blamed us for taking the honor, valor and chivalry out of war.”

“Hum…”

“During the 405th’s 4th campaign, she had the guns redesigned again by the same contractor. They were unable to breach enemy lines so she called a retreat. The enemy had heard word of her style of combat and had prepared by flattening the land and salting the earth so there was no vegetation to hide behind. Everyone assumed her career was over and that she was a cheater.”

“What did she do?”

“Well, when everyone assumed she was drinking her sorrows and burning nights with duqs in whorehouses, she met with the same designer and brought back a foreign weapon that you’d describe as a revolver. Inspired by it, she had rotating magazines fitted to the guns that were carried by her troops. Eight shots and she had a second barrel added: One for the caliber of the ammunition they were issued with and one for the ammunition the enemy was issued with. It was actually pretty clever. What this meant was that domestically, she could make eight shots to one of anyone else. Less time was spent reloading so her forces were more mobile: Just remove the revolver and stick in another, like a magazine and you’ve got another sight shots instantly. Three revolvers and a pouch-bag full of bullets”

“Huh.”

“Even smarter, whenever she was abroad, she had the weapons retooled to use whatever ammunition was popular with the enemy. Sometimes, they carried two or three barrel types on the same weapon, swapping as and when needed. So she wasn’t dependent on her own supply-line, taking whatever she could from the enemy and using it against them. She also taught her troops to read and speak the language of whatever nation they were in.”

“Clever.”

“Mm. Later, she had a telescope fitted to the guns and the barrels lengthened and taught her troops how to align the sights to strike from a distance. Money she could have spent on estates she poured into the development of her platoon, who were her life. Eventually toward the end, the rifle resembled what you call a zweihander — a kind of sword you hold with two hands: one on the handle, one along the blade, so you could grapple with an opponent and get better leverage, with a metal gauntlet over your left hand, which they also had. It was great for breaking the formations of pikemen which were still used: without needing horseback, the blade was whirled in a figure of eight and slowly advanced through ranks of a formation. Eventually, they’d lose their nerve and scatter. It was also great in a duel, since like I said, you’ve got better leverage in a grapple or a clash making up for the inferior strength of a Lmanel against a Fyunnen — and the way its held mean you could hold the blade with your left hand and stab with the right, like a pike or a lance, making it ideal against armored opponents.”

“So a jack of all trades, then?”

“Mmm, a real work of art. This meant they didn’t need to carry separate swords and the more expensive materials used could withstand epic punishment, which she paid for, instead of lavishing some estate with gardens and decoration she’d never see like other captains and commanders did. Her troops wore armor down their left sides and on their shoulders so they could still carry their guns; it served as a counter-balance for the weapon and served as protection for faces when they turned to face the opponent and they also wore chainmail — to minimize their frontal profile. Nicknames were printed on them, so individual soldiers could be addressed, rather than just the group.”

“That’s really strange… Even Yamatai only blends weapons like that recently.”

“Mmm. It meant they only needed to carry one weapon. Their only side-arm was whatever they took from the enemy. Later, they even got stock magazines; firing from the second barrel, so they had two triggers on the weapon; one a long-range shot and one like what you call a shotgun. Even a hundred years later, people were still using weapons based on these. Elite soldiers called land-knights who wore custom armor based on her designs would be contracted who’d serve to break enemy ranks used these same techniques and studied Rhoi’s writing vigorously. Despite their name, Land-Knights were especially popular during the golden age of the sky, but I’ll get to that later.”

“That’s… Wasn’t this heavy or fragile?”

“Like I said, she poured all of her money into R&D and contracted arms designers from many nations to improve on the design over time. By the end of the conflict, the gun literally did almost everything.”

“Weird. What happened next?”

“After her 5th campaign, she requested 500 soldiers — an additional five platoons — and the money to arm and train them, to take down the Wall of Umbrage — a Helashio fortification abroad, thought to be impossible to take. Five or six attempts had been made, numbering upward of 10,000 men — and had failed every time. It was a suicide run. Sick of a cocky commoner in a position of command, they let her do it, expecting her not to bring anyone back.”

“What happened?”

“She took umbrage inside a week. Two weeks later, she held Arkans. Two months later and she had broken their backs, breaking their supply-lines and had control of government and major infrastructure. Though she didn’t have the means to do anything but hold the position, she had an entire nation at her knees.”

“Wow.”

“Mmm. War hadn’t changed for Fyunnen in maybe two or three thousand years. Innovation at the time had all been poured into the navy, not the army. She’s also the first to use explosives and demolition tactics against fortified targets on land in this way, I think?”

“You’re really gushing, you know?”

“Well, she was a genius. She valued intelligence and kept her ear to the ground. She also valued equipment and survival. And unlike other field commanders, she lead from the front, not the rear. She was key in the vanguard of any attack.”

“I won’t lie, she’s bad-ass. What next?

“Well, she assumed political power in Huans, the capitol of this very continent and begun amassing forces. One by one, she took control of surrounding countries over the next four decades or so. The old blood who were pushed out of the military as it developed with her now took control of the banks. They misreported that she was amassing forces to strike the crown on domestic soil and that she’d fallen to the call of Arkans. The estate she’d owned and resources she’d amassed were promptly dissolved and an embargo was placed on Arkans along with a hefty bounty on her head. She… Didn’t take to it kindly.”

“Oh?”

“Mm. Eventually, the banks tried to arm domestic forces like her own, producing replicas of the weapons and uniforms but the Fyunnen, bullheaded as they were just swung them as swords and saw them as an excuse not to carry a gun. See, while they armed the troops, they didn’t teach them how to use the weapons. Their commanders only had a very basic understanding of passing, forking and almost no understanding of line-of-sight, indirect engagement or how to use explosives. They were rather undisciplined, as far as Fyunnen went, even at the time.”

“I see. How did she take to that?”

“She marched through them, effortlessly. Even better, using the same equipment, she didn’t need a supply line because they’d done all the hard work for her. They discarded their uniforms and wore plain clothes, moving like ghosts through the country, labeled as terrorists. Eventually, someone in the blue-bloods cracked and confessed to some secret plot she knew nothing about; to manipulate nations with money instead of political forces.”

“Like today.”

“Mm. It took her a while to work it out but civilians were starving to death instead of soldiers dying in battle. Soldiers chose their position. Civilians didn’t. She eventually began wiping out the families of those associated with this treason to make an example of them and spread the word of what was happening internationally. It caused a few economies to crash. She even killed the children, except for a few. Those who survived were so disgusted and outraged, many committed suicide. A few though, demanded to fight alongside her — but I’ll get to that later. Eventually, like medicine, she uprooted any and all corruption she saw and put it to death. At this point, Rhoi had overwhelming public support despite the incredible punishments for harboring fugitives.”

“I see.”

“Next, the monarch declared war on her, believing her to be part of a foreign plot and believing that Rhoi would be coming for her. Now in her eighties, maybe nineties, Rhoi came forward alone to see the monarch personally. She asked in public if she could shoulder the blame alone and her troops be unharmed. She called them her children. The queen of the time saw her bravery as strange; as something to be commended, despite disagreeing with her actions. The queen asked Rhoi about the plot. Ignorant, the queen explained. Rhoi then begged to fight the good fight. The queen demanded she swear a blood oath: the first to be sworn with the monarch since the days beneath the ground, to serve the crown.”

“Isn’t it mandatory now?”

“Mm, all soldiers take the blood oath now because of her. Eventually, she was reinstated and started from scratch since many of her troops were now raising families. Even so, the Fyunnen war counsel refused to accept her methods. But a new threat was coming. The one they thought she’d been connected to.”

“Which was?”

“A cult. It spread like wildfire through the frozen continent of Ouao. It spoke of selflessness, equality, honor, ascension and a rejection of the goddess. It put society before the individual and disregarded the monitory system.”

“Hence why they thought Rhoi was connected.”

“Right. Written to parchment and then the revolution of print around them, it flourished, even domestically and spoke of usurping the royal order, the monarch, the tower of lords and the tower of commons as so no one may be governed. Naturally, it was too good to be true; someone always craving to be ‘more equal’ than others. And it was controlled. And it grew. And swelled. Into a terrifying overwhelming force. Stories grew of farms laid barren. People disappearing for speaking out against the order. For having an opinion that didn’t match that of the order. For possessing certain books or listen to foreign music. Anything deemed ‘Un-Occhestian’ was expunged forcibly and eventually this began to include the other castes. Sound familiar?”

“Mm.”

“Famously, children disappeared around the outskirts of towns. Meat mysteriously appeared in markets where there were no animals and no trade. Unlabeled. Nobody asked any questions. People were hungry enough. And this was in a nation amassing a navy, weapons, pouring the equivalent of another nations GDP into arming itself, possessing a navy that dwarfed the combined efforts of every other nation on the planet. And the revolution of airships, held aloft by strange gasses and rocks that could sail the skies. The queen knew she couldn’t win a numbers game.”

“And what happened?”

“Rhoi happened, naturally. She lead a long and unwinnable campaign into Ouao, promising to restore order to the continent — out of guilt. If they’d never known about the banks and their betrayal, the order wouldn’t have been anywhere near as seductive to the people as it was. She called it a crusade and said it would lead to her salvation for the millions dead because of the truth.”

“Did she win?”

“No. When you fight any fight on Ouao, you fight two fronts: One of whatever army walks the ground and the other of the endless frozen barren wastes. Ouao is huge and empty. And very cold. This was an era before nuclear or steam power. Before mechanization.”

“Huh.”

“Rhoi expected to be met by elite troops. But what she encountered were Farmers. Traders. Potters. Carpenters. Blacksmiths. Untrained civilians. Using whatever they could get their hands on. They were in incredible numbers, attacked suicidally because they had no supplies. They themselves were starving. And they knew the land far far better than she did.”

“And then?”

“She attacked whoever advanced on her indiscriminately. The ponchos and uniforms were recolored white the first chance they got, to blend with the environment. There was no ammunition so they had to conserve their own, using bladed weapons — and there was no vegetation or animal life, so they ate the civilians they came across to survive.”

“And she died out there?”

“No. She made it to Dokarai, the capitol of Ouao. Dead center of the nation with just eleven troops left. Awed by her determination, the order demanded Rhoi join them. She submitted but a week later, the Occhestian who’d begun the order, who’d asked her personally died under mysterious circumstances and the controlled collapse of the order began as domestic troops poured in through the opening she’d nearly died making. One by one, for years, whoever assumed the position of the author, the creator of The Order died under similar circumstances. This lasted for years. Later, she was last seen fleeing Dokarai in uniform with her men, returning to the wasteland before disappearing.”

“Wow.”

“The Order would eventually become what we know as Occhestian separatism, which condemns the matriarchy, the Helashio, most of our castes, the monarch and the goddess. If she hadn’t done that, we would have been overwhelmed and plunged into an unwinnable war involving all nations, all countries. The whole world at war. Instead, she sent a clear message to both sides that the age of chivalry was over and that Ouao wasn’t impenetrable. It gave Douran, this very nation the push they needed to wage what became as the 100 year war — a series of light skirmishes along our borders. Posturing, basically. It was better than all-out war. Trade and foreigners from Ouao and Douran could pass to and trough quite easily if they spoke the language and could get air travel. Eventually, it swelled and grew into huge airfleet — navel ships meant for the water re-purposed for combat in the skybattles with air-ships. Then came privateers and piracy, flying right over the borders entirely. The golden age of the seven skies. It lasted nearly five hundred years, until the primative infrastructure collapsed upon itself, resulting in a return to agrarian lifestyles, which lasted until the exile. After we finally arose and returned to the surface, the religious order decided to declare flight a gift reserved for the devout Lmanel which aspected to fly, and the Tur'listia. The greatest time of socioeconomic growth and social mobility was before we all went underground... And all because one woman did the one thing every Lmanel is told from being a child not to and gave into her nature.”

Arlyle took a slow yawn, opening a single eye to stare through Lalah as if she were a ghost. A long thousand yard stare - devoid of focus and reflection, seeming dull and cloudy — before closing it again with a smile — probably not even aware she’d opened it at all.

“And how do you know all this? Is ancient war stuff a secret hobby of yours, Lalah?”

“Mmm… Not really.”

“Well, its esoteric. Are you studying this for something?”

“My family. Wanted me to join the armed forces, when I’m an adult. I’m going to be the first not to in seven generations. Well, except for Cecel. She was a buccaneer”

“Such a shame to disappoint after they filled you with war stories. You don’t strike me as the soldiering type, anyway. Far too pretty.”

“Plus, I’m male. The first eldest male in as many generations. I mean, we’ve got the men’s equality movement but most still don’t think men are meant for war. Seven eighths of all sexual abuse a male suffers in the armed forces come from female soldiers and something like 47% of —”

“Okay, I get it. Maybe. But from the uniform you wear at work… I think you’d make a good medic. With lots of very happy patients~”

“Ggk. Well...”

“I’m teasing, teasing~! Poor thing. So why did they teach you this story? And all these weird statistics and developments. Is there some great lesson behind it?”

“Rhoi is my … great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandfather.”

“Grandfather?”

“Mm. My great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandmother was a boy who joined the service who was pretty enough to appear as a woman, since men weren’t allowed to serve.”

“Your Grandmother is male?”

“Mmm.”

“So its hereditary then?”

“What is?”

“Your looks.”

“W-Well… They can’t have been that good. Eventually she outed him. The two became really close. But he entered war as a young boy and left it a grown woman. He was at Rhoi’s side right until she disappeared.”

“That still doesn’t explain ‘grandfather’.. ‘Grandmother’ And if Rhoi was always at war, how could she conceive a…”

“Primitive drugs, kind of like kaserine. Back then most of it was permanent and really dangerous. And illegal.”

“Ooooh… So she really was your grandfather and he really was your grandmother!”

“Mm, exactly. Its funny. Rhoi disappeared. History refused to believe that she died. The Fyunnen war counsel painted her a villain; a short angry dictator with poor self-control and no concept of honor. Baqui now means ‘short stack’ and also ‘coward’ in our language now.”

“Huh. And Rhoi?”

“Blood thirsty. Murderous. Pragmatic. It replaced our word for shark in the old tongue. She redefined the aspectation and none dared follow her.”

“Did she really die?”

“Personally, I think she surrendered the aspectation and the nature to become neutral again. Afterward she took a different name. According to the books she was 5’5 before aspectation and a mother of three. Afterward, she stood 6’2 and hadn’t slept a wink since aspectation. No sleep, in nearly sixty years. Thinking about it, they’re almost completely different people. Beyond some numbers, history doesn’t make a record of who she was, outside of aspectation. I wonder. Does Aiesu sleep?”

“From what I can tell, she has to knock herself out with pills. Or she works through the night. Or skulks the halls like some ghost.”

“She’s probably putting herself out so she doesn’t abuse this one” Lalah said, motioning to Seiren. “How do you know this much about her?”

“The same way I see without seeing. And what do you mean abuse? Like, kill him?”

“Sort of. Its like a conflict. Her other half is a rabbit, of all things — the easiest aspectation there is. They only really have this need to always move. Always doing things. They can’t sit still and just like sharks, they don’t sleep either. They fidget, they’re skittish, nervous… Paranoid… And they turn shy if they don’t —“

“Satisfy themselves?” Arlyle purred seductively, slowly sitting up and settling an arm around an uncomfortable Lalah. “Nepleslian rabbits are the same.”

“Huh.” She laughed nervously. “Even so, its quite a cocktail, don’t you think?”

“Mmmm?” Arlyle drawled. Lalah couldn’t make out if she was being intentionally dense or if this was something sphinx-like on her part.

“Well… Half of her wants to fornicate, to desperately proliferate” Lalah said, shifting in her seat, taking Arlyle’s drink, sipping some. She let it sit on her tongue before speaking again. “The other half wants to dominate. To desperately eviscerate. That’s like the definition of inner-conflict though, isn’t it?”

Arlyle tightened her arm around Lalah and began running her long fingernails gently through the Lmanel’s hair, feeling along the ridges of her long slender horns - feeling the assemblies of cartilage and bone twitch as Lalah listened to the strangely therapeutic rasping resound softly through her skull.

“Ggk..Nnn…..”

“You like that, don’t you? Anyway, autonomic sensory meridian response aside, the two aren’t mutually exclusive. You can dominate and fornicate at the same time. Do you—“

“I don’t need a demonstration” Lalah drawled, struggling out from under Arlyle, breath quivering.

“A pity. Well, if you have to deal with her in future, I wouldn’t trust a word Su-Su says.”

“Oh?”

“Online, she’s … Like a child trying to be an adult. Or an adult trying to be a child. Its a bit manipulative. Speaking of which, do you want to be carried to bed? You’re walking funny, I can tell.”

“N-No, once a night is enough, thanks.”

Arlyle almost laughed.

“Goodnight. Well…”

“Mm?”

“One more thing. What’s… Kou-mou-duo? You’re good with languages.”

“Komodo?”

“Mmm. The Nepleslian pilot, she kept calling me Komodo-chan. Even after I told her my name.”

“Ah, its a place on Nepleslia, but it alludes to a type of lizard which was documented by ancient Nepleslians and Yamataians. Big scary things.”

“She’s referencing my aspectation?”

“People widely think they have bites that are loaded with malicious bacteria, since they have no fangs but they use a anticoagulant venom that stops clotting from forming… Was it a quip about bad breath or something?”

With that, Arlyle felt along the back of Lalah’s jawline, squeezing a faint softness. A sickly sweet taste flowed onto her palette as she felt the other L’manel milk the gland - swallowing after a few moments. Lalah visibly squirmed. But she didn’t stop Arlyle.

“Your venom works the same way, doesn’t it? One little nip without your medication and a person could bleed for hours and hours… Just like a Komodo. So its a clever name, isn’t it?”

“A-Ah…”

“A-Ah?” Arlyle said back, parroting Lalah. “That’s the sound you make thinking of someone bleeding to death? Say Aaaah…”

“Aaannh?”

Obediently, Lalah’s her lips parted. Arlyle slid her thumb over Lalah’s lower row of teeth, looking into her mouth, watching the way her tongue twitched nervously, the tightness of her breath in her throat and the faint play of her voice with the damp wind. She then ran her fingernail along Lalah’s palette, making her wince, finally stopping just behind her incisors.

“This is where your fangs would be, right?”

“Nnh…glkh..” Lalah whimpered in agreement before finally nodding, carefully settling her hands about Arlyle’s wrist. Even so, she knew her room-mate couldn’t see. That this wasn’t something she could just point at. Even learning Lalah’s face had been an ordeal, with so much touching involved. So she tolerated it.

“You said it depresses you, didn’t you?”

“Nnhg.”

“Oh sorry”

And with that, Arlyle removed her fingertips, wiping them on her shirt. But she smiled.

“That’s not the first time you’ve had someone else in your mouth tonight, is it?” Arlyle grinned.

How do you even… Lalah grimaced.

“Even with the medication.” Arlyle continued. “When you’re agitated or excited, its still a problem, isn’t it? The venom, I mean. You still make it if adrenaline’s present.”

“Mm. Like I said… To suppress any part of the nature you take on is depressing. It becomes your nature.”

“And to satisfy whatever instinctual urges you have is really gratifying?”

“Well…”

“Its why so many opt for dogs… Cats.. Domestic animals. With really harmless needs.”

“Yeah. Ar.”

“Mmm?”

“Your Lorath isn’t that great. And you’ve a foreigner’s name. Are you really foreigner with no understanding in such matters? Did you grow up somewhere else?”

“Nepleslia. Born and raised. On the playgr—“

Only then did Lalah notice the red framed glasses that sat hung from Arlyle’s neck in her shirt by a leg. They seemed like a sort of parody. Arlyle had no use for glasses.

“Alright, I get it, I get it. My point. You’re aspected after what you’d know as a bat.”

“Correct.”

Arlyle could see where this was going. Figuratively speaking.

“Were you always blind? Even before?”

“Lalah” Arlyle snapped.

“Yes?”

Did I overstep my boundaries?Was that too far?

“Do you ever just… Want to give someone a proper bite. No meds. No surgery” Arlyle said, leaning closer now. “Full on. Teeth into flesh Hard?”

Lalah had nothing to retort with. She visibly froze.

Arlyle settled her hands about the back of Lalah’s shoulders, grinning as she drew near.

“The thought makes you giddy, doesn’t it?” she purred, her voice seductive. “I can smell it.”

Lalah quivered, eyes exploring any part of the room that wasn’t her room-mate.

“Some time, you should just do it. Have coagulants on standby and medical stuff but…” Arlyle grinned: parting her lips and snapping her teeth back with a crisp click. “Just once. I’ll be here for you, when you do. To congratulate you. Does that sound horrible to you?”

“It… It doesn’t sound horrible, no…”

“Mmmm. Then you can dream, can’t you?”

Arlyle finally let go, stretching out across the couch as she laid on her side ready to get some sleep. “I dream too” she said, nipping the last of the malt. Carefully, she set the glass down on the coffee table. So many times, Lalah had seen Ar break glasses trying to do this very thing — not realising how close the table was. But this time, Ar just seemed to know.

“Goodnight, Lalah.”

The dragon watched, bewildered by inconsistency.

“Goodnight, Arlyle.”
 
Intersection F, Wi'den and Be'ur Institute,
700 block (floor 7), Room 01A

Aiesu's dorm

Elsewhere . . .


♫ Leonard Cohen - "Bird on the wire"



Aiesu's wings twitched in a very particular way - her hands tightly gripping her elbows as slowly they came down - reminding herself to put them back up as a dull ache built in her fore-arms and her shoulder-blades, sweetness compared to the bitter sting in her small pale parodies of wings.

"Can I put my arms down yet?"

"I suppose so, but I want you to keep your arms forward, held together in your lap." Miles advised as he worked the swab of ointment in the delicate space where feathers faded to flesh, where tendons and nerve fibers interlinked with shoulder sockets and ligaments, forming to the still robust form of the Lorath ribcage and shoulder skeletal structure, which had yet to weaken with the passage of the millenia, unlike the wings which had been the first victims of the 'adaptation' which was forced onto the Lorath.

She slowly folded her arms, fingers mingling to hold one another as they settled against him - the new balance making her lean back against him - unable to adjust her legs properly. Slowly, she glanced back at him, over her shoulder, eyeing his handiwork before her gaze settled on some neural point in the room ahead of her, contemplating something contemputous to spite him with. But it never came.

"Just let me know if it hurts, or feels uncomfortable, alright?" Miles spoke, his tone rather soft, the tone of a person who was focused, but caring.

"It always feels uncomfortable" she replied flatly. "And it always hurts."

"Do you think something should be done about that someday?" Miles asked, with that same tone, of someone set upon carefully fixing something, or someone, like a watchmaker peering through lenses, seeing the most miniscule detail, and wanting to make it right.

"I've already tried, exhaustively. I've told you. And I know more about my body than you do."

There was a soft breath, a breath of a chuckle, that washed over the wings he worked upon. "That's the problem, you know a lot of things, and a firm knowlege leaves little room for innovation brought on by a new perspective."

"Your idea of innovation is going to be to replace most of me or make me infertile. I'm not a construct."

There was another one of those softly breathed chuckles, as Miles' efforts on the little wings before him moved further along, as delicate touches of the swab against the wounds teased upon the flesh. "Mmm... you don't know that yet, neither do I honestly, but if I'm given a chance, and you and I both make an effort together, maybe we can make some of the hurt go away."

"You sound like one of those awful love songs Seiren listens to..." Aiesu spoke up, sighing visibly as her pale shoulders drooped. "On Lor, we have a saying.. 'If you try to drive away the hurt of another, you just find your own. And if you both hurt, you only rub wounds together.'... Act like everything's fine and get on with your life and everyone's the better for it."

"That sounds like an expression the Occhestians would have made." Miles replied, thinking on it for a moment, and he was quite sure it had to be an Occhestian saying. With the comradary of the Fyunnen, and the communal living style of the Lmanel, it only made sense.

"I am of a scientific background..." Aiesu said, a smile creeping across her face. "Were you expecting some L'manel glook about togetherness?"

"Yeah actually, since its kinda what got you in the mess, you know?" Miles quipped, but with a tone that was not mocking in the slightest, but still carried a distinctive tone of sympathy. As he made his comment, he gingerly grasped the tip of one of Aiesu's wings, before giving it a gentle pull, spreading it out so he could see between the larger feathers for any glass or wounds.

"ggk..Ggk...owowowoowwwnnghk..." she fidgeted, leaning forward quite sharply - only to fall flat on her front. She soon tried to sit up, before realizing that her legs weren't working and her arms were pinned beneath her - grumbling quietly.

With a quick reflex, Miles released the wing from his grasp before Aiesu slipped away from him. "Hey, be careful, I don't need you getting hurt more." he spoke, though, as he looked down he noticed something very apparent; Aiesu's shorts did not exactly work well with her tumble, and it left him getting quite the eyefull, as her toned flesh was hugged so tightly by the skin-tight shorts she wore, revealing every detail of the more intimate portions of her curvature.

There was a moment of gawking before he knelt down beisde Aeisu, and gave her a light smile. "You okay?" he asked, while deciding that the floor was just a good a place as any to work on the last of her mending.

Her biceps shook as she pressed her palms to the ground, lifting herself back up with something of a struggle - fighting hips that weren't interested in working with her. It visiblyhurt her, doing this. Her back rested against his chest and slowly - wearily, she glanced up at him with wide Lorath eyes.

"I'm perfectly fine."

"Not exactly, you're getting blood on me, I haven't wrapped your wings yet." Miles spoke, entirely practical in mind at that moment, trying his best to remain focused, despite the lingering effects of the consumption of alcohol and various substances over the course of the evening. What was his only saving grace was the fact of his conquest just prior in the other room.

Immediately, she leant forward to give him room. In Lorath society, the passing or sharing of blood had many meanings, as evidenced by the heat in her cheeks as she held herself up. But a foreigner wouldn't know that.

"Its only blood" she said, in a rather matter-of-fact way.

With gauss in hand, Miles decided some expedience was in order, for his own sake, as he felt a distinctive creeping in his gut, and in his loins, which spoke of questionable judgement, most certainly questionable when that poor judgement concerned the person who was hosting him as a guest. With nimble fingers, he wrapped her wings, with just enough pressure to stop her from bleeding, yet, not exceeding the pressure which would result in discomfort. "Don't worry, you haven't bled much... not enough to be too significant."

What was unspoken was another matter; Miles was an educated man, in all matters which would get him drunk, fed, or laid. Blood being involved in Lmanel displays of conveying emotion was one of those things which he was aware of, though, he did wonder just how much that applied.

"Its fine" she hushed, just wanting to get it over with. Her gaze explored the many things she'd gone about ruining and displaying in her little whirlwind - more of disappointment on Lalah's behalf than anything the foreigners did.

Foreigners were foreigners. They were strange. Every Lorath knew that. Lalah should have known better, so that made her the guilty party.

"Why do you always bring that woman with you?"

"I have a number of reasons." Miles started, as he went about giving her back one more inspection.

"I thought a male would want his independence. To mate with as many females as he could. That's how foreigners work."

What Aiesu earned from Miles at that point was a chuckle, before he continued; "Judging by what just happened in the other room, does it seem that having Sana in my company has any bearing upon how much fraternization takes place with prospective sexual partners?"

". . . Point." she glanced back over her shoulder for a moment, trying to quash the sounds she'd heard from her memory with a shudder of slick disgust.

"Though, I keep Sana around because... well... I really like having her around." Miles spoke, it was rather lame, but it was the truth, he loved Sana, there was no denying that, and that was a major part of keeping her around.

"Just so you know" she but in. "I won't tolorate you doing that to me."

"Doing what? Keeping you around or putting something in your backside?" Miles quipped.

Aiesu felt parts of herself she had in common with foreigners tighten, disgust lingering in her belly like a warm heat sinking into chills.

"Neither. I'm not a commodity and I'm not..." she became quiet. She could feel her ears ringing - her knuckles whitened.

"Shh, you're getting worked up again." Miles spoke in a hushed tone, as he reached to the collar which Aiesu wore, as he worked his finger tip against a small metal plate on the back of the device, maknig a subtle change in settings, mostly in the form of regulatory processes.

Aiesu felt her toes curl. Phantom toes, but they were toes of some sort.

"T...That thing can come off." her hands rose, pulling at it - trying to hook her thumbs underneath.

"As a Lmanel, your people were the ones who implimented the use of these devices en masse, to control the impulsive and irrational behaviors of the Helashio. I'm simply using the collar to control the impulsive and irrational behaviors of my patient."

"They... Had to be subjugated. I'll behave. Just take it off. Its weird, a Lorath wearing one of these things. If anyone knew, noone would talk to me again."

"Just tell them you're wearing it as a diagnostic device... and actually, that's the truth. Right now I know your pulse rate is one-hundred-ten beats per minute, your blood pressure is one-fifty over ninty, and your metabolisim is showing excellent signs of processing the food from earlier, though, the neurotransmitter levels are indicative of addi---" Miles was cut off by Aiesu's speech.

"Enough!" she shouted, loud enough for the whole dorm to hear, a quiver in her wrists.  

"Its a perversion. I don't want it near me. I don't need to be subjugated; I'm Lorath, I'm civil. I'm TALKING to you, aren't I!?"

"Only because you can't hop away" 

She eyed the door thoughtfully.

"besides, you're talking to me after wrecking half my luggage."

"To be fair, you did just conquer a minor in the name of whatever savegry you're supposed to represent. With that thing of yours. I can still smell it."

"It is a sign of a Nepleslian's capability you know, to be able to use that 'thing' to conquer. Its a tradition that goes back many centuries, so far back, it even predates the records that exist detailing our history."

"A minor" she butted in again. "If she were Nepleslian, she'd only just be getting 'the talk'. "

"... She'd be six?" Miles asked, furrowing his brow, doubting that.

"Six? You can't be serious? You're like rats..."

"What? You have to know when to pull the trigger and how to maintain trigger discipline." It seemed, Miles was thinking of another 'talk'.

"No. THE talk. Didn't your mother ever sit you down and explain everything to you? What all the parts were? How to treat eachother? Didn't you practice?"

"... Uh... my father told me"

"Your father? So that's how Nepleslians are..." Aiesu said. The mental image made her smile more than she would have liked.

"He showed me some pictures, and textbooks" Then, Miles pieced together Aiesu's statement, as he furrowed his brow even more so and replied with a distinctive displeasure "and we sure as hell did not practice!"

"Did your parents not love you or something?" she wrinkled her lips with a mischevous smile. "That's pretty deprived of them, to neglect you like that."

"Cultural differences. My mother and father showed their love just the same as any other Nepleslian parent, they gave me guns, chemestry sets, bullet resistant clothing-" Miles was again interrupted by Aiesu's curiousity.

"But they never taught you how to be with another?" Aiesu said softly. "That's parental neglect, isn't it?"

"Not really, not in our culture, though, my father did pay for me to go to some strip clubs when I was a teenager." 

"You looked upon others before you ..." she covered her mouth, grimacing behind it. "It explains so much about you."

"Oh hush, you know that is part of some portions of your culture as well. Don't play that game with me." It sounded, from Miles' tone, that Aiesu was perhaps winning said game, having struck a chord.

She laughed softly to herself. 

"Your family sounds... Dysfunctional... Your mother ... Didn't...?" she pondered for a moment, working hard to turn herself about - settling her hands onto Miles' cheeks, her forehead butting against his softly.

"Poor neglected thing. Do you need a mother's touch?"

Those bright pink cerise eyes burned before his - her skin untouched, like a child's. He could smell her, that animalistic foreignality just as Lalah had been. Her breath, against his lips. 

But those eyes, like the blood moons... They surrounded everything.

If Miles' braincase had a cooling fan, it would have came alive with a whine, as his fleshy meat encased within worked and pieced together what was laid out before him. Incest must be big in her family.

"Well?"

Her voice seeemed to echo. His hands had found their way into the small of her back, draped from her wings. The faint rivlet of sweat running down her neck, swallowing audiably. Only then did he realize, she was straining herself, just to do this.

It took a moment of contemplation, a moment of debate which resounded within Miles' mind. He had just made love to a local in the other room, the other room were his fiance was waiting for him... or perhaps was sleeping, but none the less, she was there. However, Miles was also intoxicated, and Nepleslian, and male. 

Her lips curled faintly at the corners, maliciously. He could barely see it, but it was there.

"Show me what a mother would do, so I'd know just what I've been, allegedly, deprived of." At this point, Miles justified it simply; a cultural study.

Aiesu became very tense. He could feel it, in her back. 

"Well..." she began.

Her heart-rate rose again.

Slowly, her nose brushed against his as she drew closer. Was she really doing this? With ... THAT? One of THOSE? She held herself there, feeling, smelling his breath and the heat of his body - eyes dipping to glance at his lips then back up into his eyes. 

But nothing happened.

"Touching noses? That's the mother's touch?" Miles asked, as his own malicious grin tugged at the corner of his lips.

"No, its..." she said, feeling her lips brush up against his even as she talked - making her inch back just a little.

Again, nothing. She'd become rather quiet now. Scared of heights, at the top diving board, staring into the abyss. He was that abyss. She couldn't look ; her eyes falling closed.

But then her body moved by itself. A hand settled against his bare neck - pulling him down to her. Soft. Warm. A strange smell. One she wasn't familiar with. Her lips opened but tongues, not words were the point of exchange.

It was a moment that did not surprise him, but, it did bring about a feeling in his chest, and in his loins, one he recognized as that poor judgement again, as the feeling had climbed up from his gut, and began to work its way up and up, destined to settle as a tightness in his throat. None the less though, he pressed softly into the kiss, as his tongue played against hers, as he was careful not to chase her probing tongue too far into her mouth, for fear of the razor-sharp teeth beyond her lips.

It seemed... Much less clinical than how she'd imagined it. Dizzy. Dreamy. Strange. Foreign. Disgustingly foreign. She could feel her stomach rolling, body becoming stiff again before slowing herself. She could feel herself, exploring him, as the aggressor.

Her hand tightened against his neck as she felt herself trying to stand, trying to push him onto his back but her hips, silenced by the collar, didn't listen. Lorath instincts were telling her that, like most foreigners, he had to be put in his place; and it was the role of a female to do so. Not a barbaric idiot like Sana but someone with tact, poise and intelligence like herself. She wanted to break him, desperately.

Was this really happening?

A sensation would be clearly felt against Aiesu's lips, before Miles parted from the kiss, the sensation was a smile forming, before he broke just a short centimeter away, as he spoke softly; "Conquerers from abroad rarely begin by taking by force... They take what is offered." It was spoken tenderly, alluringly, disarmingly, but the meaning was still very present.

She didn't open her eyes immediately, feeling several meanings in those words - wondering if some play had been lost in translation.

He's.. Mocking me?

Her eyes opened, dipping to sight the smile, then his eyes again. But she said nothing - seething, boiling in fustration of many many kinds.

"Even a motherless dog like you?" she said, sweetly.

"Mmm, I have a mother, and mama taught me to be kind to a lady."

She tried not to laugh. "Lady? What kind of archaic language is that?"

There was a moment where Miles' cybernetics quickly communicated with a local server, as he gathered a translation, speaking the Lorath word which roughly came out to 'A woman who was vulnerable and was to be served because of it'

"Isn't that you?" she said, staring up at him. It made perfect sense in her mind.

"No, it's you." Miles assured her, before he gently put his arm around her, as his hand slipped between what was left of her legs, his fingers teasing the space between, just a glancing touch, before he brought his hand away, that touch, was just to make his point clear.

Her hand tightened agaisnt his neck - heads butting again as she pushed him onto his back. Her breath was ragged. Angry. The look in her eyes. She repeated unto him as he had her - slender fingers cupping something, squeezing almost painfully as she stared in emasculated contempt.

In that moment, Miles allowed her that shove, that pin, as he was 'forced' upon his back, as he looked up to her. He saw that expression upon her face, and the look in her eye. So much was spoken without words. He had struck exactly on the mark, and as her hand grasped him, he released a ragged breath, as he did not shy away, not in the slightest, as pressure in his vascular system shifted, blood pumped to places that demanded it at that moment, causing what Aiesu held in her grasp to become firm against her touch.

Disgust. Pitted in her belly. It burned hotly - her fingertips sliding lower, boading with her thumb before squeezing again with the intent to hurt - thumb squeezing down on his adam's apple, making his breath hoarse.

His place, in her mind, was to be pitied. She couldn't have it any other way.

There was a feeling in that moment, a pressure which built above his neck, a pressure which brought a redness to his pale cheeks, but also made his head swim, even with the pressure regulators installed in his braincase. It was that painfully blissful feeling of the onset of asphyxiation, as he figured his O2 level in his blood was dipping to somewhere around ninty-two percent, and was dropping a point a second, he reckoned. It was that moment where he knew it was time to make his move as a proper conquerer should.

At that moment, he smiled, widely - catching her off guard - even in his gaze upon her, there was a wild amusement there. It was not the expression of someone who was 'put in their place', it was the expression of someone who was being amused, delighted even, in the most perverse of ways. "Harder." he whispered, "You choke like a little hatchling."

Without thinking, she obliged - Though not with the grip upon his throat.

There was that sharp pain, the pain that surged up his spine, and made his belly turn cartwheels, as he grit his teeth and surpressed an urge to vomit from the feeling, as he resisted the immediate urge to give her a punch on the nose to get her off (ironically a known technique when dealing with sharks).

She leant closer - flashing a dark smile with those teeth. 

Spending time with another predator, with a maw just as threatening, and an attitude as toxic, Miles had learned something quite noteworthy about Aiesu's people, and it would serve his purpose at that moment, as his hands went to her wrapped wings, grasping, it was a precision operation, but one he had seen well enough, used by the Sourcian to reign in her prized New Tur'listian which always attempted to elude her grasp, except when the proper 'pressure' was applied.

Miles' grasp was upon the inner-most bones of her wings, where they connected to the sockets which comprised the elaborate shoulder joints of the Lorath. It was like taking a bull by the horns, or, in this case, flipping a shark onto their back. With his longer reach, granted to him by his Nepleslian masculinity, he was able to assert the leverage to deliver a distinctive push, while applying enough directing force with his foot upon the floor to reverse his position, to place Aiesu upon her back, resting upon his hands which would still hold her.

Even so, she hadn't let go. To the contrary: With the stubbornness of a L'manel, they'd tightened - as had the one about his neck. Like a limpet, she refused to let go.

Foolish was his effort, that was what Miles did not realize, due to Aiesu's unique biology she was afforded a degree of protection from matters of the nervous system, the vulnerabilities of pain or sensory input which would just be too much for her to bear. In this case, Miles was left with only one other option; to play dirty, as a signal was sent to the collar, a signal which was designed to interfere with nerve impulses along the fibers which led to the fingers. Certainly, it could be constituted as 'chickening out', though, he was not about to play the stakes involved, not with his patient. After all, what doctor would?

She became linp - slowly sinking against the floor - her hands thudding like meat against the wooden flooring. There was fight but it was squeezed out of her - muscles shivering and twitching. She knew what was happening. Even her gaze went limp, like a doll. She was still there but she didn't have a say in what her body did. Her breathing was sharp, quick. He could hear the terror, like a prey animal anticipating the worst.

"You know, your culture has a strong teaching that the women are supposed to know when to back off in a conflict. Men have been, and are, notorious for taking things too far, thus their downfall. That does not apply well in this case." Miles spoke, as he sat upright upon his knees, as he looked down at Aiesu, with a look she shared with him just a minute ago; a look of pity.

She couldn't stand it. That look. It was toxic to her. Her eyes hadn't left him, even if she couldn't turn her head by herself now - a twitch in her thighs and her arms every few seconds; she was still fighting it.

Some how, she'd over-ridden it --  just barely; her hands ever so slowly reaching for the collar - pulling at it weakly. Her determination was impressive, to say the least. Fortunate for her, that the installation procedure Miles had chosen was the 'lite' version.

"Ah-ah." Miles sounded, as he saw her effort to continue the struggle. "That's exactly what I'm talking about. That is the vulnerability as well." He informed Aiesu, as he got up from the floor, soon taking a seat in the nearby chair, as he granted her mobility, in full, including to what was left of her legs.

Slowly, she sat up, eyeing him. Trying to find words, to orient herself. With that, she made her way toward him again - arm against the wall above him as she stared down at him. It took a slow sigh for her to calm her nerves enough to enter discourse.

"Not only didn't your mother love you but your father taught you to cheat, didn't he?" she said calmly.

"That's how it worked in Funky City, otherwise, you'd be dead." Miles replied, unphased by the accusation, because it was the truth, and in that moment, as his balls ached, and his head spun from the return of oxygen, he wished he had something to smoke.

"Its going to be your downfall, foreigner" her lips curled into a smile.

"Perhaps, though, it saved you the indignity of having to explain to your father why you had a dead out-of-towner in your dorm."

"My father's dead, you moron" she snapped.

"Step-father, your mother's mate, the one which you've taken as a paternal figure."

"He's not my father. He's just that. My mother's mate. If I did with him what I did with my father, I'd be encroaching on my mother. So he can't be my father, Idiot."

"Interesting dynamic your family has then, but, we're not going to discuss that at this hour." Miles spoke, in a tone that was sharp as a dagger, as he thrust into places he was only glimpsing at.

"Then what, pray tell could you want to talk about?" she said, half tempted to step between his legs again. Or squeeze.

"That lovely fragrance that you're carrying, perhaps?" At this point, Miles was content to merely fuck with her head, until she'd give him the berth to get some shuteye, without the worry of her shark-like maw finding him while he slept.

"F-Foreigners are quite interesting. Its quite common among Lorath to hold that opinion. It doesn't mean we like you. Nobody gets to decide what affects them" she said through clenched teeth and something of a grin.

That stammer, it was like a green-light to Miles to force his way into a standing position, to assert his dominance over the moment, as he casually went about rounding up his first-aid kit.

She didn't even watch. Indignant. Aloof. He was still dirt and nothing would change that. She'd chosen to view it as him being unable to remain close to her, that he had to escape. 

As weakness - like some floozy collecting their clothes after some brief intense romp that wasn't supposed to happen, tail between his legs where it belonged.

"You know." Miles spoke, as he closed up his kit.

She wasn't in the mood for smalltalk, only briefly glancing in his direction.

"If I were a barbarian, a true conquerer, I would have let you continue to touch me. You kiss nice."

"Conquerer?" she rolled the word as she said it, trying not to laugh. In her mind, he was clearly the submissive party. Even now, she couldn't imagine him any other way.

"You're the consultant, aren't you? On my payroll?"

"Kind of, I kind of get pay slips from a few branches."

Slowly she turned about, those eyes locked with a dark and endless smile.

"I'm still your boss, then. You're still my employee" she said, rather liking the sound of it.

"You're still my patient, and I do what I do for you out of mercy." Came the Nepleslian's reply.

"Mercy was me letting go of you." she said, her voice becoming more whimsical now. "What face would have you have made if I kept going? Something nice, I imagine" she purred, only half lying.

At that point, he knew Aiesu was trying to claim her ground, her place high on her little hill, most especially as she claimed she was the one who let go. "I'm unsure of what you deem as cute, so I can't be sure." he replied in earnest.

Slowly, she advanced in on him again, him who'd chose to evade her, backing away from every advance, having to cheat to stop her. Carefully, she set her hand upon his cheek.

"Cute is as cute does. I think that's the Nepleslian saying. And if its cute..." she began, making her point - a pat before her hand fell to her side, lips sly, coy and just a little smug.

"As I said, true conquerers begin by taking what is offered." 

"And you've been offering since you got here." she said. 
"Oh, but the L'manel. Wasn't she meant to be some play of dominance? To make you feel better about yourself? I'm not impressed. Subjugating a male is easy. Everyone knows that."

"But it was Sana's idea." Miles corrected, with a beaming grin.

"Even better then, that she knows her place. Why can't you learn from her shining example, like a good boy? You're such a waste" she scoffed.

A laugh was what Aiesu drawn from Miles at that point, her pompousness was simply to the point of it becoming a point of amusement. How quick she was to build a proverbial castle about her made of delusion.

But she smiled back - as if she knew something he did not.

"You're here out of my kindness, Miles. Among friends. I know the people who aren't your friends anymore. And I know why you're not friends anymore. They miss you, you know?"

"Yes, and they express that longing with offers of cash. I'm quite aware." Miles was clearly unphased, unbothered by her words in the slightest. "While you speak of my 'friends', I look at you, and can immediately tell that your 'friends' are mostly there by third-party appointment and assignment. Your position is vulnerable, prone to breaking down, at the slightest misstep."

"This is supposed to bother me?" she replied, butting in again. Her expression was flat. Unamused. Bored?

"What's worse, is the only person who is... maybe was your friend, made you into who you are today, because you tried too hard for them, and lied to yourself."

She squinted, trying to make sense of his words.
"Come again?"

Miles stared at her for a moment, before he rattled off in Yamataian, sharply accenting his words in tones that belonged to the less upstanding members of society; "What are you, dense? I don't have time for this, it's bed time, I don't have time for little girls."

Her smile spread uncontrollably. Just the way he spoke; he detected her heart-rate rose by six points and some of her pleasure centers were flaring. In much the same way one might seeing something they consider cute.

"Tsun...Dere?" she aped Yamataian primatively.

"Not exactly." Miles replied in trade. "It's an accent that belonged to the Geshrin population back in the day."

She could only smile, making her way to the door now as she watched.

Slipping his hand into the pocket of his slacks, as his other hand cradled his first-aid kit, Miles made his way for the door, before he looked down to Aiesu with a gaze that spoke of being tired of her pomp; "By the way, you would do well to sleep in here, I kind of jizzed on your bedding."

". . . Marking terratory. . ." she reached up, running her fingers through his hair with a sour smile, indignant as she was. "You're a forigner. You're not expected to know any better."

"Well, at least it'll improve the smell of that big smelly pillow, it had to have not been washed in decades."

"Smelly pillow. . . " she thought about it for a moment. The sourness flourished in her gaze. "You're serious, aren't you? My father gave that to me."

"Feh." Miles sounded, his sympathy for her had been taxed by her behavior, behavior he associated with that of a spoiled child or a stubborn bitch.

She reached forward, clutching his balls again through his pants and pushed him back into the room, using them as a leash to get him away from the door before letting go.

"You are never to enter my abode again. Do I make myself clear?"
 
Aiesu had slammed the door shut in Miles’ face to make a point. But. Only as she settled by the computer, did regret set in, rushing to fill her guts like ice as she watched the door.

Half of the dorm was probably woken up with that. And they’d certainly know where it came from.

Eyeing the floor now, she had to think of something. People would come marching to the door, complaining, demanding an explanation, people she’d never even met that she’d gone out of her way to avoid telling her exactly what they thought of her.

Phantom toes curled in disgust.

But. But. Buuut. Maybe the foreigner could be blamed. Haaa. That would be perfect. It would work in her favor.

With a smug smile, Aiesu slowly spun in her import computer-chair, the cheap metal creaking. Most were usually content with a stool but she’d gone out of her way to get something different with even basic back support. Her prosthetic legs hooked beneath some altered part beneath - a bar, like the cross-guard on the hilt of a sword.

With that, on went the head-band.

Aiesu could feel the network like a cool lightning in her fingertips, worming up her arms and then white noise riding on the edge of her hearing. Things fell out of focus for a moment, pupils widening. The monitor flew back against the wall as her depth perception failed — the room suddenly very big and then…

Very small.

As if every inch of her filled the air, the books, the grumbling CPU fans, her desk, the array of strange objects in her work-bench. She eyed the cork-board above it, the notes scribbled up. The pile of exam papers ontop of her parts-bin.

A slow breath came. Trembling in her fingertips.

Aiesu could feel her teeth tense and grind and tried to imagine what silly expression she was making as memories trickled into her from elsewhere.

She was synchronised.

And thus she was whole again.

She began skimming news-sites. Opening article after article. Dumping it all into tabs. For later reading, obviously. Videos came next. Then chat. Talking to people who, in all likelihood thought she’d been neglecting them or if she was ill perhaps, since she hadn’t been on during her usual hours. A certain sense of guilt lingered in her stomach.

The hours flew. The sun was coming up. She could feel it on her shoulder, and then again in her eyes, through the kitchen door’s slatted metal blinds. Wheeling herself over, she took an umbrella, took the tip of the head and caught the door-handle with that of the umbrella, pulling the kitchen door shut.

She spun in her computer chair again, coming to a slow stop until she faced the soiled bed-pit.

She’d ben avoiding this all night. She felt tired, likely because of some meddling on Miles part with the collar, or the alcohol maybe. It wasn’t normal or natural and it scared her, but she had to find somewhere to sink or she’d ache in the morning if she didn’t.

Unhooking the other prosthetic foot, Aiesu stumbled toward the bed-pit, clutching to a book-shelf for stability. After downing a pair of pills dry, she screwed the cap back on in a motion so well rehearsed, she didn’t even have to think about it anymore.

All eyes were on her Nahur.

To the untrained eye, a nahur would be a scruffy but charming looking blanket sewn out of patches of smaller fabric, each with something embossed, opening up into a sleeping bag or in this case.

It wrapped and buttoned shut into almost a sort of L-shaped dutch-wife not unlike a Yamataian daikimura or wife-pillow, granted, without the ludicrous erotic printed designs.
It was common to spray it with whatever scent one’s parents wore, to overcome home-sickness — an amber bottle for such a purpose sat on her book-shelf with simple words embossed on the glass and filled in with metal, giving them a floating quality against the golden fluid.

And her’s was soiled.

Sweat… Something unmistakably similar to saliva… Blood.

But something she didn’t recognise. It took her a moment, bringing the thing closer to her nostrils and careful breaths to suss.

It has a certain bittersweet quality, an oceanic scent of some sort. It was heavy and yet it clung to the palette of her mouth and refused to leave her sinuses. The pheromones were all foreign to her, alien and very strange but they still made her light-headded.

Whee.. What was that?

Glancing back at the door, her expression sunk as realisation set in. Staring back at the nahur and remembering her reaction, disgust would promptly follow.

Aiesu turned the thing inside out, spraying it with scent from the shelf again and buttoned it up. A small box caught her eyes as she sunk against the bed-pit, exchanging its place with her glasses.

Seiren’s sleeping pills. Foreign. And in her memory, potent. Perfect!

A bitten fingernail scored into the card, thumbing out the tongue and then fishing out a plastic tray. She popped her thumb against the plastic and pushed it out through the foil, promptly downing it.

Sinking in the dark, she closed her eyes and wished for the best.

She sunk against the sheets and reached up, clapping twice. The lights went dead.

Her mind still ached. A thousand miles an hour. An angry bee-hive of thoughts, wishes and demands that refused to just shut the fuck up, that wouldn’t tolerate sleep.

Sleep paralysis was a very real risk. If she left the head-band on though, she could just put herself somewhere else. Maybe.

Ugh.


* * *​




To be awoken by a strange noise was usually the seed of most of the arguments in this house-hold. Especially at such an hour. Sizzling. She scented the air. Meat. Oil. Was Seiren really this eager to cook? Really?

Cerise eyes panned from under the nahur, which had decided to unroll in the night for whatever reason and slowly sunk beneath it, hiding her whole body beneath it.

Please, not at this hour. Please no.

“Seireeen..” She drawled.

Her voice had a curiously gravelly almost drunken quality to it at this hour. Her head though, was pounding.

Silence. Is he deaf?

“Seeeireeen! Go be somewhere else! I’m trying to sleeeeep!”

Still nothing.

Memory of the night former and the nahur specifically came back sharply. It was thrown off the bed like a dead carcass into the book-shelf - scrambling back against the opposing case. Her chest rose and fell, panting sharply in shock. She then wiped her hand furiously against the bed-pit, trying to get whatever sticky stuff she’d felt.

Realization set in. Shirt and tie had been exchanged with a thin slip-dress. Underwear had just been stolen. And her prosthetics? They sat neatly stacked by the 3D printer, on the other side of the room..

On the other side of the room.


The L’manel crawled across the ground, indignance burning in her pale features - wondering if this was Seiren’s attempt to be considerate or if this was part of some clever passive-aggressive attack on his part that he could always blame on stupidity. “Well, you always call me an idiot, so it can’t be helped”. Really, would he go that far? The ache of her stumps meant she had to move on just her elbows, legs dragging behind her.

She had plenty of time to formulate a mental image as a dull burn built in her biceps…His stupid face, that bastard catty girly cuisine obsessed Yamataian manchild beast pig with his upturned nose, glaring through a made up face and laughing haughtily down at her like some Yamataian sentai villainess.

Clicks sounded as she fastened the buckles on her prosthetics. The image almost made her sick. Was Aiesu Kalopsia the kind of person to let Seiren get away with something like this?

Fuck no! Absolutely not!

The small figure marched through her room with fire and purpose now, hand clutching the sliding door of the kitchen.

She flung it open, lungs heavy with air, ready to scream abuse.

But the sight she was met with was not one she’d anticipated.

And the words just wouldn’t come, except for just one.

"Y...You!"
 
Customs and traditions, they were a key part of Lorath culture, in fact, it was not just Lorath culture in which custom and tradition was king, or perhaps queen, no, it was most cultures in fact; Yamataians had their customs and culture, as did Nepleslians to a lesser extent. What played out in the kitchen belonging to Aiesu was just a Nepleslian custom, but one that was so obscured in history, that it could almost be called a genetic memory, one that was carried upon the 'Super Y' chromosome which had permeated the Nepleslian populace, rendering Nepleslians as manly as scientifically possible, manly enough so even the most lethal combination of rabbit and shark, exclaiming with such fury, could only draw one response while the morning ritual was practiced.

From lips on which a thin electronic smoking device was perched, came the most casual of replies; "Yo."

That was all Miles had to say, as he stood behind the kitchen stove. His top half was bare aside from an apron, not one of Aiesu's or Seiren's, it was one of Miles' own, sleek, black, functional. He looked almost as if he had belonged behind the stove. Though, the slight scent of charring made it clear he was not an expert cook, but, it was so minimal it was clear he had not ruined the food at all.

What was cooking upon the stove top were three distinctive dishes, eggs, a pastry-looking item which would be alien to Aiesu, and strips of what qualified as bacon in Lorath meal planning. Notably though, on the pan that Miles was working with most, there was a clear sign that the bacon was actually embedded into the pastry, which was a pancake, the Nepleslian was making bacon-pancakes.

"Want some?" Miles asked while vapors of a variety of stimulants and other chemicals rolled from his lips, as he went about slapping additional bacon on a pan, with crackling and sizzling accompanying his question, as grease enveloped the strips of meat, almost flash-frying them, as the lipids were heated to just on the brink of smoking point... it was the precision of a scientist at work, at least for that much of the cooking process.
 
Aiesu stared, hung in the door-way out to dry with wide profuse eyes which shook with a mixture of confusion, a feeling she would later learn to her utter chagrin was arousal and cold bloody rage.

This isn't happening.

She took a step back and closed the door, then opened it maybe two or three times, each time surprised to see he was still there when she opened it.


This is happening.

Shit. Need to something, need to do something...

Finally, she leant against the door-arch, crossed her arms and went on the attack.

"You've got a lot of nerve coming here" she said, hooking her thumb under the collar to make a point.

Yeah! How do you like me now? Mistress of the dorm. Nobody to be fucked with. That miserable shit must be trembling in his boots... Eee hee...
 
While Aiesu's stance was one of a sort of reckless authority, one which seemingly demanded attention, it did not earn anything of the sort from Miles, who had a racial coping mechanism toward reckless authority figures, it was a simple mechanism, it was the process of not giving any fucks from his surplus quantity of fucks which were earmarked to be given to worthwhile matters. All that Aiesu's words earned was the sound of his inhaling a deep breath of vapor from the smoking device, before giving a slow exhale as he continued his food preparation.

"I'll take that as a yes, it seems your glucose may be a bit low." Miles spoke, as he seemed casual, it was a distinctive casual, the kind of casual that would only be seen from him after a night of vigorous lovemaking and indulgence in illicit substances.

While Miles did seem casual, he was also aware that there was some need for explanation as to why he was in her home, in her kitchen, cooking breakfast. "I'm in here though because this is where the food is, and I have a woman who has earned a good hearty meal, and one woman who half-earned a meal, and is also half-entitled to a meal, thus obligating me a bit." What was unspoken was the simple fact that Miles was making breakfast for Sana, that was the custom, the practice which needed to be satisfied, a man making breakfast for the woman, or women, he made love to the night prior. As for the second meal, that was meant for Aiesu; who he had flirted with, riled, and put into quite the fuss, and who had also earned by meal by being a host.
 
The L'manel stared back, her expression frozen. Was this really happening? Was this really happening in her dorm-room? Her uninterrupted nest of productivity and experimentation, a place for only herself (possibly maybe Seiren but he didn't count anyway) and absolutely noone else? How did he even let himself in? Wasn't the door-locked?

Can he even hear how stupid he sounds?

How can you wear that getup and then completely flip everything on its head?

Then again, isn't that sort of thing supposed to be popular these days?

What's the word . . .

Tsun . . .

. . . Dere ?



"H-Huuh. L-Looks like Lalah went home." she squinted, pale fingertips tweaking the cheap red plastic frames of her glasses. She lifted them, rubbing at the bags under her eyes before setting them back down again, gnawing at her thumb thoughtfully. Something wasn't right here.

Did I really just stutter?

Maybe if . . .

"S..So what even happened last night, anyway?" a nervous smile came across her lips. She then caught her eyes exploring the contours of his back and instead focused on the ceiling above herself.

Neutral ground. No man's land.

Well, no woman's.
 
Another deep inhale sounded from Miles, soon followed by a billowed plume of vapor. It was like a cup of coffee for him really, well, a replacement for coffee, since there was nothing approximating the Nepleslian beverage readily available, at least, nothing that he was wanting to palette, or even risk ingesting at the start of the day. As he drew that breath, he listened to Aiesu speak, and as he heard her tone, he wrapped a delicate string around the moment, and tucked it away in a drawer within his mind. Cute he thought, as a smile tugged at the corner of his lips.

"Yeah, she left in the middle of the night." Miles explained, with a bit of a wistful tone, thinking on the night before.

Though, that in itself was somehow a rather interesting coincidence in regard to conversation, with Aiesu's awkward feeling fueled question about the previous night. Oh, he knew she was perfectly aware of what went on, in fact, he still ached from the way she made it clear that she was so aware. "You know what happened last night. We ate a feast fit for a party twice our number. We had to be escorted home by our waitress, who Sana seduced, and then we fucked on your bed. Then, I went to check on you since you ransacked our luggage, then we had a bit of banter, you squeezed me in a rather distasteful display of agitation, made some distinctive proclamations, then from what I gather, you medicated yourself and passed out in a bed still reeking of our activities." Miles spoke so casually on the matter, as he gave a flick of his wrist to the pan, causing the bacon impregnated pancake to flip quite beautifully.

"Awesome dorm though, the other tenants are pretty neat. One of them actually has some Nepleslian chickens they keep for eggs to sell. Thus I was able to whip up some... ah... how do you like your eggs anyways?" Miles asked, sparing a glance to Aiesu.
 
"Uhhh... " Aiesu drawled, scratching at the back of her neck. She took a long long yawn to collect her thoughts and try putting things together. She felt her jaw ache, distending as those pearly triangular teeth came into view.

She caught them in her reflection on the stasis unit, pondering. Maybe they were the only reason the Nepleslian hadn't jumped her.

But proclamations? She felt for her head-band.

I didn't have it on.

So I have no real record of last night unless I remembered it naturally.

. . .

'The fuck does he mean by proclamations anyw-

Her eyes had wandered. She made out the slip-dress. The collar. Huh... Aiesu's yawn locked, frozen in a mixture of confusion, awe and revulsion, making her grumble audibly. . She'd seen this exact getup in something she'd read about a few weeks ago and even gone to the trouble of seeing the trailer of just so she could talk smack about it on the public video hosting page of the Lazarus network.

And this set-up. A Lorath and a Nepleslian. Not a L'manel but close enough.

And with the man cooking but still talking smack to the woman. HA! Even if she was younger, she was in charge, obviously! A man was to know his place.

The comparison made her almost smile, trying not to laugh. What was it even called...?

鳥を楽しむ...?
Uhh...
I can't read moon-runes...

A faint light on her head-band flickered, automatically translating.

"T-Tori o tanoshimu?"

Squinting, Aiesu thought she saw something about Miles had changed. Something she couldn't put her finger on. But had it? The experience was replayed in memory using the head-band maybe 20 or 30 times inside the few seconds allotted before determining that she was projecting -- and more importantly, that she was thinking aloud.

How bothersome...

She didn't care to check the meaning of the words. But her head-band went to the trouble of doing it for her.

Having "fun"
With Birdy


From the producers that brought you duq duq goose comes 'having fun with birdy'. Blending elements of the imoto/sistercon genre and real Nepleslian muscle.

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And with that, icy dread tickled through every vein and artery in her body, prosthetic feet now cement-blocks below her prematurely terminated calves.

Haa this is bad...
M-Maybe he thinks I mean the chickens...
Y-Yeah. Uuuu...

"T-The chickens . . . " she tried, eyeing the pan, eyes almost bulging now.
 
Those teeth... they're a deal breaker, no doubt about it, biggest deal breaker ever. I mean, I thought Rebeka was bad with that DNA exchange and sampling appendage, and the acid, and the... Oh, she had a razor-maw too, you know, Aiesu ain't that bad. I mean, I could treat her for bleeding without having to worry about losing my fingers, right?

Miles' thoughts were quite distant, far away from anywhere that Aiesu's thoughts were... well... perhaps around the corner and down the road a bit, but still, no where near being direct neighbors in relation to reasoning. Though, Miles' thoughts were interrupted by the words which came from Aiesu, it was enough to draw a stifled chuckle from Miles, and fortunately for Aiesu, his thoughts were brought much closer to her original train of thinking, as opposed to the chicken, which even then, would be an irony in itself.

Then, she spoke, she spoke her panicked words, and it evoked that irony, and the amusement it delivered. Laughter came almost immediately, as Miles flipped the completed bacon-pancake onto a plate, then he set it on the counter-top beside him "You've earned it, that was a good one, this plate is yours, you're first to eat." and that was it, he took it as a joke, little did Aiesu know, Miles took her words as a sort of racial humor, referring to her own species as chickens.

It seemed, Aiesu dodged a bullet, barely.
 
Begrudgingly, Aiesu accepted the plate, eyeing him for a moment - eyes trickling down his back before returning to her plate. She reached forward, fishing out a split knife almost resembling a pick comb, with a knife along its outer edges and a curvature not unlike a spoon.

She soon retreated to her desk and beyond some quiet sulking, Miles would hear something following a wince.

"Isss... Its not bad. Could you get some water? I um.. I fink I've burnt my tongue."
 
Even with the process of cooking going on before him, Miles paid mind to the distinctive sounds of an injury being inflicted upon an unsuspecting victim. With a touch of a dial, Miles lowered the heat on the burner to avoid any sort of catastrophic disaster regarding the food that was in the process of cooking. "I'll be right there." He spoke, assuring Aiesu there was help on the way, as he grabbed a cup, and filled it from a water dispenser, before he retrieved ice from the refrigeration unit and placed it in the cup before taking it to Aiesu.

"Here, just what you need to avoid burning your tongue, choking, and dehydration and all of the undesirable effects of such." Miles spoke, as he set down the cup upon the desk. Normally, he would not be so catering, though, he knew that Aiesu did not exactly have a wonderful night, and he was not about to put her through the fuss of having to get a simple cup of water when it was not necessary. "Remember to blow on it, that helps if its too hot." Miles advised, before he started on his way back to the kitchen.
 
Aiesu could only scoff, downing half the glass before setting it back down on the desk. Fingers once again settled on the collar, peeling, tugging and worming at it.

Nearly reaching for a scalpel, she remembered her last experience and the scar beneath her thumb, grumbling softly.

"Its sick, you know. Putting something like this on a Lorath."
 
Again in front of the stove, sounds of sizzling filled the air, along with the aroma of food, as Miles worked on Sana's dish... where ever Sana was, but he knew better than to leave her without a meal. As he cooked, a light chuckle left him, before he replied to Aiesu; "Yeah, about that, tell that to your Matriarchy and the Occhestians they rounded up. Plenty of collars abounds in that case." Miles was about to let the matter rest, before he added; "And stop messing with it, otherwise I'm going to enable the tamper deterrent features."
 
"Maybe I should just go to the police about this" Aiesu laughed nervously, audibly struggling from the living room, a metal clink of some sort of tool at work.

"Its a civil matter and you'd be crucified in court."
 
"I'm a doctor." Miles stated flatly from the kitchen. "In your legal system, and culture, it'd be hard for your courts to touch me... Besides, you need that collar on for proper treatment to be administered, since due to psychological imbalance you are unable to make an informed decision about your own care." Even as he spoke, Miles' cybernetic link-up communicated with the collar, giving some distinctive instruction.

There was an audible sharp beeping tone, a warning, as audio stimuli was fed into Aiesu's brain; "Tamper deterrent now online, do not tamper with the collar, and/or cease tampering with the collar if you are already doing so at this time. You have been warned." Along with the fed in stimuli, there was the unmistakable sound of miniature capacitor cells embedded within the collar building a charge, the implication was clear, tamper, and get a taste of what the capacitor bank was packing.
 
And with that, Aiesu slumped over the desk, arms crossed, head on its side. She stared up at her monitor, sighing quietly.

Huuugh . . .
. . . Nepleslians have some really fucked up ideas about medicine.

"I'm... Not really hungry anymore" Carefully, she slid the plate to one side, its barely a bite missing. And she just seemed to lay there over her desk, slumped. Like she'd given up on life.

He turns up. He soils my private dorm. He sets me in bondage. He thinks he can feed me like a house-pet. And he claims its all for my health . . . ?

She looked aside, lips buried behind her arms as she crossed them. She slowly drummed a rhythm with her prosthetics before stopping.


Its almost certain he's getting off on this or something, sick and twisted bastard.

"What do you want, really?"
 
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