Lord Brusque howled.
Amy raised the giant belt again. āStop mentally calling yourself that.ā
M-Mr. Brusque howled.
She rolled her eyes and let the belt evaporate, but he was convinced it hadnāt gone anywhere. He still felt it! That residual sting was as bad as the real thing! The pitch of his yowls grew positively feminine as the aftermathās agony somehow escalated. Saliva dripped from his lips as he heedlessly howled his lungs ragged.
āIām surprised no oneās ever called you āJack Russelā,ā Amy commented impassively. āWell, not to your face at least ā¦ā
The burning pain stoked his wrath. How dare she? HOW DARE SHE!?
Mr. Brusque reeled to punch her. She flicked up a claw and it bounced off. Did ā¦ AMY JUST DEFLECT HIM WITH A FINGER? It didnāt matter! Heād punch until her defenses shattered!
Amy barely paid him any mind. Clicking her tongue, she casually blocked his blows with her finger as she shook her head at the frozen face of his titan avatar, comically warped. It should have been his body, but here he was floating next to her in the form of an avatar that matched his original size. Titan or not, sheād made the mistake of giving him another body.
Because of that, he could still punch her!
She sighed and turned towards the burning river of dim bomb heading their way, courtesy of John Crow. At the back of his mind, he realised it wasnāt frozen, but approaching very, very slowly. After all, she hadnāt stopped time, merely sped up their perception. The world still moved, though it crawled.
āI hand you the steering wheel for, like, five seconds, and you get John Crow to launch a finisher,ā she deadpanned. āIf you wanna be my guy on the inside, you gotta at least last ten minutes without getting merked. Sound reasonable?ā
He stopped punching. āWait ā¦ you accepted my offer?ā
āSomething like that,ā Amy smirked slyly.
Mr. Brusque deflated. āThis was a second chance.ā
āYup,ā she nodded, ābut Iād say youāre pretty far past second chances, donātcha think?ā
He wasnāt sure what to make of her mischievous tone, but for the moment, she was cool and collected. It was a far cry from the bloodthirsty abomination whoād menaced him.
āThatās a rather disrespectful way of putting it,ā Amy lightly protested.
Even so, she didnāt feel dangerous at the moment. She seemed ā¦ casual. Sure, his nerves were still on fire, but heād pick this over a bloodthirsty Amy any day. However, her vibe was very different from what heād seen in the news. Amyās resting persona was warm but jumpy, bordering on ditzy. This was calm but cold. She even used her voice a bit differently, lower and smoother. He felt like he couldnāt get her to raise it even if he punched her in the face. It was hard to say what Amy was supposed to look like. The cameras never got a clear shot, but he was pretty sure she was pinkish raspberry. Now, she was closer to purple. Was that normal? At least the predatory irises didnāt dance madly anymore. Maybe he could talk to her.
āThis is the default me, actually,ā Amy explained. āBesides, I tend to calm down after Iāve eaten something.ā
That didnāt sound good. What had she eaten?
Amy grinned, subtle little fangs on full display.
āYouāll find out soon enough, sweetheart,ā she purred.
Amy descended towards his fallen building. An invisible force tethered him to her, dragging him along wherever she went. They floated past the great mass of his titan. He mourned the loss of it, although he supposed he never had it in the first place.
āHonestly, itās not fair of me to say you did horribly,ā Amy reflected. āYou kept Crow duped and busy while I did my thing. You could have been more prudent about getting him to bring out Norman, but I suspect he would have seen through it under most circumstances.ā
Mr. Brusque stared at her. āYou ā¦ knew Iād ask him to do that?ā
āI planted the idea in your head, after all,ā Amy stated, before quoting her plead in a squeaky voice. āāMr. Brusque, please! I just want to save my boyfriend!ā Heh heh. Classic reverse psychology.ā
He mentally kicked himself.
Amy continued: āSeeing as your titan made a ridiculously large target, my biomass is gonna take a blow, but Iāve been well-compensated, so it balances.ā
He glanced at the titan. As far as his eyes could tell, it hadnāt moved since they started their descent. If she could accelerate her mind like this, why didnāt she bullet time all her battles?
āEver tried running in slow mo? It doesnāt work,ā Amy explained. āIf your mind doesnāt align with the capabilities of your body, your actions start to fall apart. Our current ābodiesā arenāt true avatars. I canāt fight like this. Theyāre basically augmented reality: POV projections within my biomass. Here, we can watch the world without interacting. Itās like observer mode in a videogame.ā
Her eyes flicked to Mr. Brusque as she sensed him spook. Staring at the wounds in his titan, he noticed something coming out of them. Red ā¦ was it filled with some kind of blood, or ichor? No. The red ā¦ things had structure.
āAh, you spotted them,ā Amy noted. āThereās a pretty cool answer to what those things are.ā
He looked at her. āā¦ And?ā
Amy shrugged. āAnd nothing. Iām not some villainess who feels the need to explain every detail. Youāre not gonna remember much of this conversation anyway.ā
āYouāre a better person than I am, though,ā he flattered in his most sincere-sounding voice.
āI know,ā Amy replied smugly.
āIām sorry I turned on you,ā he continued, ābut ā¦ you were gonna devour me! Surely you understand that Iād be angry!ā
Malicious mirth darkened her eyes. āāWere gonnaā, huh? Youāre funny.ā
He didnāt think it was very funny.
They phased through the wall of his fallen building, arriving in the control room.
Mr. Brusque stilled at the sight.
The neurological tissue filling the room was scorched extra crispy. Apparently, thatās what happened when you left a ravenous avatar in what was essentially a giant brain. Her feeding tentacles were spread everywhere, searing the grey matter as they aggressively consumed its energy. It looked like a twisted mimicry of that thing John Crow did to sync up with the control room. In retrospect, John Crowās version was plenty twisted as it was. Every second he spent flaunting his so-called power over her A.M.E., she must have been feasting down here.
However, what held his attention with an iron choke hold was the sight of the avatarās tentacles engulfing ā¦ something. From the head down, they smothered almost every inch of it like snakes in a feeding frenzy, but he knew what it was.
His own body.
Amy leaned in, staring alongside him. āMaaaan, I feel sorry for the sucker whoās going through that. Well, not really, but Iāll get all weepy when this is over and I put back on my goody two shoes. Itās like a psychological hangover.ā
He blinked away from the sight and looked around. If sheād eaten his control room, why hadnāt the fail-safes activated? Wait ā¦ why couldnāt he remember what they were?
āFail-safes were the first thing I looked for while snacking around in your memories,ā Amy shrugged. āNaturally, John Crowās paranoia-addled mind drove him to hide a number of unmarked dim bombs too. Jokeās on him: my paranoia is like a jealous ex who still thinks her old BF belongs to her for some reason. Found āem, ate āem. They were nasty. Need a palate cleanser. Youāre it.ā
Mr. Brusque thought fast. āDoes your boyfriend know youāre a killer?ā
A chuckle bubbled out of Amyās throat as she slapped him on the back. Surprisingly, it didnāt hurt. Maybe she was saving all the hurt for later.
āWho said anything about killing you?ā she laughed. āEver heard that you canāt have your cake and eat it too? Well, hereās the catch: if you eat half the cake, and leave the rest behind, you can do both!ā
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He blanched.
āAnyway, back to your body!ā Amy cheerfully declared, dragging him towards the figure buried in tentacles.
Mr. Brusque pulled and wrenched against her grip. She didnāt budge. He felt like a kid, no, a baby, wrestling the casual power of a father. He heard the shrill screams of a woman, followed by what sounded like ugly crying. It took him a second to realise they were coming out of his own mouth. He could feel and see the tears and mucus splattering everywhere. Amy didnāt seem to care about the mess.
āDonāt cry because itās over. Smile because it happened,ā Amy crooned, before grabbing his cheeks and pulling them face to face. āā¦ Well? Whereās that smile? Show me dem nasty teeth!ā
She shoved him back into his body, but he knew heād never really left it. Never stood a chance. He felt those tentacles locked around him. Their icy hot touch was a skin-crawling paradox. Every nerve in his body screamed and retched as those tentacles seemed to burrow beneath flesh, beneath bone.
Then he experienced something new.
In the absence of stimuli, the human body could not be felt. No one felt their skin unless it was touched. No one discerned their internal organs until they were damaged. It was the same with the mind. Who could imagine that the psyche had form, anatomy? Mr. Brusque didnāt, but now? He felt it with a sense he didnāt know he had. There was no frame of reference for what he perceived, so his mind offered up four metaphors.
An atom ā¦ a planet ā¦ a plant ā¦ an animal.
The first was a speck circled by layers of particles. However, they werenāt really particles, and it wasnāt truly tiny.
The metaphor collapsed.
He saw a great orb wandering through space, orbited by nameless things he could best compare to moons and rings. They never quite rotated the same way. The core was no orb any more than a circle was a sphere. There was an aspect they bore that didnāt exist, and yet it existed.
The image imploded.
It became a tree. All those orbiting forms floating in space had left behind trails, but those trails were solid: spiral branches made of past rotations ā¦ It was beautiful ā¦ He looked further down the tree. Russel Musk looked back. He looked higher, and witnessed the birth of Mr. Brusque. Higher still, at the peak of it all, the spirals twinned and echoed their own movements. He felt himself looking at himself. Plants couldnāt move or react like this.
So, he saw an animal.
It peered into the waterhole. Therein, its reflection stared back. However, behind its eyes he saw something more than a beast: something beyond his understanding. The creature was long, like a serpent. Its tail stretched back through the passage of time. It didnāt walk. Walking was an insufficient metaphor. Instead, it dipped beneath the aetherhole and swam.
It swam for its life.
Strange particles bombarded the atom, tearing away electrons and protons. The atom began to split, unleashing energies unimaginable.
A yawning void warped the stars. Its hunger was a force of nature. Moons tore from orbit. Hypersonic winds raked across the lands as the atmosphere peeled away from the surface. Forests uprooted into the sky. Oceans rose from the seabed in a cataclysmic inversion of rain. Tectonic plates cracked, rocked, rose and crashed down like ships on a sea of magma. Landmasses split. Lava poured out and upwards to sate the hunger of the blackhole.
Vines invaded the garden, choking the life from the tree as they spread along it like a disease. Branches old and new broke under the pressure. Invisible paws ripped away fruits into the maws of chittering creatures.
From the depths beneath, tentacles snared the sea serpent, dragging it down. The beak of a kraken awaited it. Its shriek poured forth gouts of bubbles before a tentacle squeezed its jaws shut.
And so, the beast feasted.
Every metaphor collapsed and he was left with the truth: that which could not be seen, but felt. Feeding parts pierced, plucked, pealed, cleaved, cracked, scooped and sucked. He felt them ā¦ he felt them: chunks of his mind, chunks of him, vanishing, and there was nothing he could do. Mr. Brusque couldnāt even scream. The tentacle clamped over his mouth forced the air to go nowhere.
At the back of his consciousness, he felt something shatter around him. The briefest peephole opened between his tentacled prison. He saw that Amy had flown through the wall. The G forces were ferocious. Like a squirrel in the talons of an eagle, she carried him across the cityscape at breakneck speed. A fraction of a second later, his peeping building collapsed under sniper fire. Hypersonic bombardment tore his titan avatar asunder. From its injuries, out poured swift, red things that darted through the air like hummingbirds. The snipers had orders to shoot down Amyās constructs before they finished forming, but how could they know sheād built these things inside his titan? Had his avatar been a Trojan horse the whole time?
The peephole closed up, leaving him in the dark with nothing to distract from the sensation of Amyās ā¦ feeding.
Finally, he was dumped onto the cold, hard floor, like a bone spat from the craw of the predatory bird. His staff surrounded him, bound by webs spun from aerosol. It appeared that they were in the vault of an abandoned bank. He didnāt feel any webs around him, but ā¦ something was off ā¦ He should have scrambled to his feet by now. His cheek remained planted on the chilly concrete. Why werenāt his limbs responding?
Amy floated upside down, bringing her head close to the ground so that they were eye to eye.
āItās like youāve forgotten how to use your limbs, huh?ā Amy asked.
Despair dawned upon him. No ā¦ had she actually-?
āIāve eaten most of your motor skills,ā Amy explained all too casually. āYou literally donāt remember how to work your limbs. Twenty three years of knowing how to walk makes for a big but boring meal. Your athletic abilities were much tastier.ā
She sucked her claws as though savouring the residual flavour.
Mr. Brusqueās mind spun. Sheād crippled him?
Just like Ashley.
His thoughts scrambled to take inventory of what was left. He knew heād been an ace in sports: could sling a keychain as well as a football. He knew heād ridden a bike, and typed on a smartphone. He knew heād walked and ran, but he couldnāt remember doing any of it. The details were gone. Had she really taken so much from him? He couldnāt even feed himself anymore!
āā¦ You should have just killed me,ā Mr. Brusque stated quietly.
Amy laughed. āSince when does the enemy get a say in his punishment? You wanna take the āeasy outā? No. Youāre going to live. Youāre gonna learn and relearn it all from the bottom. Thereās still hope for you, even if you gotta be spoon-fed for who knows how long.ā
Mr. Brusque couldnāt meet her gaze. In every way, he was a loser.
Amyās gaze softened. āI know it feels like Iāve violated your rights, like Iāve taken something sacred. Maybe I have. There are things that you just donāt do to another person: subhuman things. People make mistakes, but you? You embraced them, rolled in the filth, smeared the slop across your face and declared it tasty. You were not gonna stop. Not by choice. If you refuse to live up to the gift of personhood, donāt be surprised when someone treats you as lesser. The only way to stop a monster is to treat it as less than human. Sooner or later, something would have stopped you, in life or in death. Youāre lucky that āsomethingā was me. There are greater things to fear than monsters.ā
She floated upright and wagged a finger at the other landlords, who flinched away. āSit tight and be good little boys and girls. This vault is one of the safest places on the battlefield ā¦ probably.ā
āKEEEEEEEEEEEE!ā
Amy paused at the sound of the eldritch shrieks coming from outside. A couple landlords lost the luxury of dry pants.
She shrugged. āPrison be soundinā reeaal nice and cozy now, amIright? Relax. Reflect. Retrace the events that brought you here, and make sure it never happens again. Some of you were forced into this lifestyle. Others welcomed it with open arms. Quite the mixed bag, but Iāve snacked accordingly. Whatever it was that enabled you to live as landlords, Iāve taken it away. So, be happy, or mourn. Either way, it works for me. Iāll check in on you jailbirds sooner or later. If I pick your minds and find signs that youāve changed your ways? Iāll vouch for you. If not? Go ahead: plot your escapes, scheme your revenge. Rebuild the skills and knowledge I took from you, so that I can suck them out again.ā
āYOUāRE A MONSTER!ā shrieked a landlady.
Amyās head turned 180 degrees to look at her.
The landlady shrank back, her inverted bob cut bouncing with the sudden movement. However, she pressed on.
āW-WEāVE DONE NOTHING WRONG!ā spat the landlady. āWEāRE ALL ANIMALS, TRYING TO SURVIVE IN THE JUNGLE!ā
A few voices murmured their agreement, giving her courage to continue.
Amy smiled.
āWE-WEāVE ONLY EVER DONE WHAT WE MUST TO SURVIVE!ā continued the landlady, her voice quaking with conviction. āDONāT PREACH TO US, YOU SELF-RIGHTEOUS LITTLE-!ā
Amyās tendril shot to her forehead.
āWhagh muh meveemm?!ā exclaimed the landlady. āMAGUGUH AGUM! PFTAFAAAAAAAAAAAT!ā
āAnimals donāt care what their prey has to say,ā Amy declared simply.
The other landlords looked on in horror.
āDid she just ā¦ eat Ms. Karynās ability to talk?ā mumbled one of them.
āI think I did us all a favour,ā Amy quipped, āalthough Iām not sure why Karyn is so upset. Did anyone catch the irony?ā
Amy waited. Eyes opened across her avatar as she scrutinised each and every one of them. The landlords exchanged glances. What was she going on about?
āIāM EXPECTING AN ANSWER,ā
Amy thundered.
More landlords lost their dry pants privileges. What did this psycho even want them to say?!?
āMs. Karyn wants the benefit of being seen as an animal, without bearing the consequences,ā answered one who hadnāt spoken before. āYou treated her like one, and she acts as though it violates her viewpoint, when it does not. The fact is that no one wants to live it out to its logical conclusion.ā
He felt the sneers of his peers. It looked like he was agreeing with her, which made him a traitor, a sympathiser. It looked that way because he was. All that time, plotting the demise of himself and his fellow landlords for their crimes against humanity. Was it for naught?
They needed someone to blame for all the shame sheād put them through, but Amy was untouchable. He, on the other hand, was not. The moment she left, theyād do everything in their power to break free of her bonds. If not there, then in prison, or wherever they ended up. Maybe a black site. They would plunge their keychains into his-
Amy clapped, interrupting his thoughts.
āVery astute, Mr. Specs! ā¦ Even if you were just saying what I wanted to hear.ā She growled that last part, vibrating the air.
The threat was clear.
His fellow landlords looked upon him with eyes anew, nuanced with appreciation. Who knew what sheād have done if he hadnāt given the answer she wanted? Maybe heād saved them, and maybe sheād accidentally saved him. If Amy hadnāt said those last few words, they would have surely ā¦ wait a minute ā¦
She wasnāt quite looking at him, but he caught the slightest of winks.
āKEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!ā
Another screech, closer than before. The landlords felt it in their skin, a prickling tickle. That wasnāt just a screech, was it?
A chill spiked through Mr. Brusqueās heart. What on Earth has she unleashed from his titan?
Dry pants were officially an endangered species.
Amy ignored the palpable fear in the air. āKaryn had a point, but Iām not a monster. Iām THE monster. If you ever forget that, please. I beg of you. Give me a reason to eat your dreams, and give your nightmares the breath of life.ā
Her avatar vanished in a ghostly gust of vapour.
*THOOM!*
The heavy vault door had shifted shut, as though moved by the hands of an invisible spectre. Its mechanical lock rotated into place, leaving the landlords in a darkness their night vision couldnāt penetrate.
From the thick silence came a cackle. It effervesced to roaring laughter.
āYESSSSSSSS! MS. KARYN CANāT TALK NO MORE!ā cheered a landlord.
āYOBU MUKABABABABAAAA!ā screeched said landlady.