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Sole Survivor: The Story of Kaza of Theseus: Melody and the Pier to Forever, #2
Sole Survivor: The Story of Kaza of Theseus: Melody and the Pier to Forever, #2
Sole Survivor: The Story of Kaza of Theseus: Melody and the Pier to Forever, #2
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Sole Survivor: The Story of Kaza of Theseus: Melody and the Pier to Forever, #2

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An entire world falls to war.

A young man watches helplessly as his sister is eaten by a giant demon right before his eyes. He narrowly escapes death himself; buoyed by the current of a corpse-filled canal, he bears horrified witness to the complete destruction of his country, Theseus. The invaders are everywhere--and intent on killing everything that moves or breathes.

With nothing more than the encouraging words of a dying Healer and a mysterious lens-shaped object that his sister threw to him in her last moments of life, Kaza of Theseus dares to escape the closing jaws of doom and make it to the distant renegade fleet rumored to be sailing out of harm's way along the Great Pier known as Ae Infinitus, and led by a king named Conor Kieran Faramond Benedictus I, who dares to stand against the evil and fight back.

Witness firsthand the invasion of Aquanus by Necrolius Anaxagorius in this tale of faith, courage, and hope--in a time when all three are seemingly nowhere to be found; and the rise of a singular hero who becomes a shining star in the Saerie Insu fleet.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 1, 2022
ISBN9798201789107
Sole Survivor: The Story of Kaza of Theseus: Melody and the Pier to Forever, #2
Author

Shawn Michel de Montaigne

I'm a writer, illustrator, and fractalist. A wonderer, wanderer, and an unapologetic introvert. I'm a romantic; I'm inspired by the epic, the authentic, the numinous, and the luminous. Most of all, I'm blessed.

Read more from Shawn Michel De Montaigne

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    Sole Survivor - Shawn Michel de Montaigne

    1

    ~~*~~

    A DEMON was eating his sister.

    It had lifted her off the wooden floor of the living room and, like a drumstick, sank its huge fangs into the soft flesh of her thrashing midsection.

    KAZAAAAA-A-A! she shrieked. OH GOD—!

    Kaza stood frozen. He couldn’t seem to get his legs to move; he couldn’t avert his eyes from the unspeakable sight. Lesa gurgled as the demon rumbled in sickening satisfaction, digging in deeper. She twitched one last time, and from her bloodied person a small green glass jewel flew, skipping to a stop at his feet. He was peering around the hallway corner, and bent to snatch it up the same moment the monster noticed him—

    —no, the object. The beast indifferently dropped Lesa’s lifeless body to the floor. With a vile rictus covered in her blood, tatters of clothing, and innards, it spewed, "SS-R’ACKCK LEES PFVOR! ASĒ! ASĒ!" and advanced on him—

    Kaza didn’t think to simply drop the object—which, if his singular terror had allowed, he would’ve noticed was very cold, like a cube of ice, and shaped like a lens—but pocketed it.

    His mind white with the primal urge to survive, he flew into his small bedroom at a dead run. It wasn’t to hide: he spied the curtained window in the last tenth of a second before he dove through it.

    The glass bit into his flesh an instant before gravity claimed him. He careened shoulder blade first to the slanted roof, tumbling, then over, spinning helplessly in mid-air to the earth ten feet below, where he bounced hard half on his back, half on his side, the wind knocked out of him.

    He didn’t feel the glass embedded in his shoulder and arms—or the cracked rib in his chest—or that his pinkie was bent at a perverse angle—or that a cluster of serrated thorns from the vine of a s’memine fruit bush stabbed into the base of his skull—or that he had bitten through his tongue and that his mouth was full of warm blood. He came to his knees, sucking wind in desperate, insufficient gasps, then to his feet, where he spun in place, casting about.

    Half the house was aflame—Where are Mom and Dad?—the barn, too. In the distance—Look up! Look up!—dark freakish monsters stalked about, or circled overhead with huge batlike wings, screeching hideously. There were men as well: armored men, the brass-colored metal of their shields etched with a symbol—a broadsword thrust down through a flaming ring. They were sweeping through the farm, setting fire to everything. One noticed him, shouted, pointed—

    Lesa’s killer suddenly burst through the back door, wood and glass flying everywhere—

    UCC’C-KRSI! the demon bellowed, pointing at him. KRSI SSE!

    More had seen him. He was very rapidly being surrounded—

    He turned and bolted away. He heard in very clear Thesean: Kill him!

    Arrows zipped over his head, very close. He sprinted, zigzagging, for the high trees at the edge of the farm’s property.

    He stood no chance. The trees were too far away.

    Through a barren, exposed field—the winged beings were diving for him—only seconds to live—

    He didn’t see the half-buried log and tripped over it, falling into a shallow mud-filled cart track. The object Lesa had thrown to him in her last moment of life shot out of his pocket up by his head. He grabbed frantically for it, encasing it in wet dirt; he flipped over onto his back as the first winged monster swooped hungrily in on him, its shadow snuffing out the daylight. Without thinking he held up the object between them and shouted, GO AWAY!

    As the demon descended, its bloody talons stretching open, the object got abruptly much colder. Green light flashed—

    He bellowed, turned his head, closed his eyes—

    —a heavy THUMP! just next to him—dirt falling on him—an eardrum-splitting screech.

    He opened his eyes, looked—

    A thousand pounds of winged black demon flopped in the center of a respectable crater just a couple arm lengths away. One of its wings was broken. By some miracle it had missed him—

    He scrambled to his feet and ran, his ears ringing. An arrow buried itself in the earth just next to him—the trees were seconds away—another arrow—another—he made the forest just as another screech sounded directly above him: a white flash: a loud crash—

    A demon fell on him, along with several large branches and thousands of leaves. Dazed, his entire person throbbing with pain and shock, he struggled, screaming, to pull himself out from under it.

    The monster was injured and bloodied. Blood covered him: sulfuric, hot, rotten, greasy, puke-green. Its slickness helped him pull free.

    He stood just as the beast focused on him with yellow cat’s eyes, slashed at him with wicked claws. It was the abomination that had killed Lesa. Shreds of her clothing still hung from its slack jaws. He ducked, tripped, and fell backward—

    —onto the beast’s broadsword. Without thinking he grasped the hilt with two hands—he had to grasp it so, it was massive—and, wrenching it from under a splintered branch, lifted and swung it over his head. The damn thing had to weigh what he did, but it didn’t seem to matter to the adrenaline pulsing through him; the blade swished through the air and into the meat of the monster’s neck, where it stuck halfway. The demon slashed again for him just as the blade slammed against bone. It gurgled richly, grasping for the sword instead of him, thick green blood spouting from the wound, covering the blade.

    He turned to run.

    Men. They were in that same evil armor, combing through the trees just a short distance away. Several looked right at him—he ducked—but then they went on milling about as though they hadn’t seen him. He thought that he should hide here, in these woods, but ... where—?

    The monster gave a huge rich cough and keeled over. He scrambled away on his hands and knees as the soldiers made quickly for it, shouting.

    He held up under scrub brush surrounding another tree. The soldiers were inspecting the demon’s massive corpse.

    Several flashed into gulls. One flew right over him—he was sure it had spied him—but it just kept flying, just as though he was invisible.

    He needed to catch his breath—no time! His ribs twinged agony with even the slightest intake of air. Bending over, holding himself, he tore out of the brush for the large irrigation canal bordering the farm. It was flanked by a wide road—way too wide! He held up, glancing around, before making for the sluggish water at a hard limping sprint.

    The canal was full. Ignoring the pain shooting through his entire body, he dove into the frigid water, surfacing several seconds later. He allowed only his face to come up, holding himself vertical to its insistent flow.

    The canal was deep—at least three times his height when it was full like this—but he was a superb swimmer. He hadn’t planned this escape; it was as though something inside him had known exactly what to do, and now all he had to do was disappear underneath the surface should he spy more soldiers or demons.

    Maybe not. Because he was already very close to fatigue. He knew he would have to rest, catch his breath, and soon, or he would drown.

    Soldiers stood at the ditch’s edge, just past an upcoming bend, guarding a long line of children.  They were drowning them. One by one. Children he knew, children from the bordering farms (where were their parents?). A pair of soldiers held them under until their small forms stopped thrashing. The kids were waiting their turn, crying in helpless horror.

    Other soldiers nearby were leisurely washing their bloodied weapons. Two or three were swimming upstream, their armor and weapons piled on the far bank. They were laughing and splashing each other.

    He gagged, sucking in a mouthful of cold water. He sank beneath the surface coughing, his lungs emptying themselves in a single burst of bubbles which rose placidly to the surface. The men were just ten or so body lengths away ...

    In the frigid, flowing, wet blackness, as he struggled to keep from coughing again, as the want for air became the single point of concern for his mind and body, he could hear a child—a little girl—cry for her mother as she thrashed in the ditch water.

    She and her killers were just above and to the left of him now. He could hear the ghastly muted counterpoint laughter of the swimming men; he passed just next to them, grateful beyond words that they didn’t see him. He could just make out their legs and feet, kicking in time to keep them afloat and stationary against the current.

    He was close to drowning, could feel his lungs buckling, his mind blackening like the inky murkiness swirling around him. He would have to surface now or die.

    He came up as slowly and as far away from the grisly scene as he could. At the surface it took everything in his person to keep from loudly gasping and coughing. He disconnectedly considered suicide, how he could end his own life before the soldiers got to him, before the demons did. The unspeakable image of Lesa crying out for him as the demon bit into her was indelible, unforgettable.

    But, somehow, no one noticed him. Gulls and pigeons passed overhead in regular intervals; so too demons. Surely he was visible from the sky!

    Something hard bumped into his head.

    He submerged so fast that his face barely made a ripple as he went under, his heart hammering in his chest. The thing had latched onto him; he twisted violently to push it away. It was substantial, heavy, like a log. It was floating free ... pink ... and brown ...

    A little girl.

    She floated face down in the current, her long brown hair almost lovely as it drifted around her face. He very cautiously surfaced and carefully turned her over, a constant eye on the banks, on the skies. He looked to see who it was, if he knew her.

    He didn’t recognize her. Her pretty visage was almost serene in death, her nose bleeding water. Her clothing had snagged weeds and reeds from the water’s edge. She couldn’t have been more than three Aquanian-years old.

    Tears stung his eyes at the same time a helpless rage surged through him.

    He, like so many of his countrymen, had listened to the Thesean government’s many assurances that rumors of an imminent invasion were baseless. His father—My God, I hope he’s all right!—had friends in Puowbalpom, the capital, officials of the government who insisted that all reports of an invasion were nonsense. His father had trusted them, and so he had trusted them.

    The little girl was sinking. He let her go, wondering how many other bodies were floating in the water with him.

    The canal was choked with them. Men, women, children, even animals. Many were bloodied; many more were missing heads, arms, limbs. Countless were burned, more often than not beyond recognition.

    And furniture: rocking chairs, table legs, utensils, drapes. As he floated farther downstream, the water’s murky blackness changed slowly to blood-red.

    At one point, exhausted, he eased himself to the bank, to an outcropping of small round rocks. He grabbed one. It was a head. The outcropping was comprised entirely of human bodies.

    He almost let go, but his exhaustion won the day. He hung to the soft skulls and hair and submerged, rubbery shoulders and legs and torn, clinging clothing as he fought for energy, for the tattered threads of will to continue on. The current here was insistent; the bloody water gurgled richly as it swirled around him. He kept as much of his head under as he could, bringing his nose above the surface only when the need for air became urgent, breathing as deeply as possible as quickly as possible before sinking low again.

    When he thought he had recovered enough to let go, even for just a little bit, he did so, floating away from the submerged massacre, his tears feeding the stream.

    The canal widened and shallowed as it wound its way towards the capital city coming into view beyond a low, barren range of rocky foothills. Blind terror had compressed time: Puowbalpom was hours away by horse, but only minutes seemed to have passed since he dove into the ditch. He was surprised to be astounded by such a trivial fact.

    The city was burning. There were many more soldiers here, at its outskirts, many more demons. Birds of seemingly every kind flew overhead with alarming military regularity; the black-winged monsters, too. He marveled that he hadn’t been spotted. But the bodies floating with him were ghastly in number; perhaps their patrolling killers saw nothing but bodies, reckoning them all to be dead. It seemed perverse to him that he felt intense gratitude that this was so. The genocide’s sheer volume was protecting him.

    The canal widened, the gory current picking up speed. At points his feet scraped bottom; several times his knees knocked painfully against submerged rocks (what he hoped were rocks).

    The current tossed him mercilessly about. Without regard to how it had to appear from above, he tried floating on his back. He knew he would have to leave the ditch before it made it into the city—but ... where? The hiding spots sliding past his watery vantage point were all wholly inadequate.

    Up ahead another bend came into view, a sharp one. The channel narrowed considerably at that point, calming the water. A grove of trees hung over the ditch along the right bank just where it angled out of sight. He could rest there for a bit while he considered his options, knowing full well he was only kidding himself. He had none.

    It was very difficult getting to the bank. He had to navigate through more floating bodies, all of whom he had no idea were next to him until just then, kicking and stroking furiously between and over them. He reached a barely submerged, slick tree root, grabbing it and hanging on for dear life. He crawled along it, fighting the sucking current all the way, until he could put his feet down under him.

    No bodies here. He waded ashore on his hands and knees, wheezing, spitting out bloody water.

    No. Even here in these peaceful shadows there was death. An old man lay partially covered in heavy foliage, twisted half on his side, his legs submerged up to his knees. He appeared to have gotten stuck in the roots.

    He spied a dry spot not far from him and was making for it, trembling with cold, when he heard him groan.

    2

    ~~*~~

    KAZA STARED. Did the old man groan? He wasn’t sure. Perhaps it was only the heavy swaying of the branches over the ditch. He was too weak to expend the energy to go and check, only to find it was his imagination. He sat heavily on his butt and waited, taking regular visual sweeps to verify that no soldiers or demons were coming for him.

    Minutes passed. Suddenly the man twitched. He couldn’t imagine that. Feeling guilty for not having gone to his aid sooner, he crawled to his side as fast as his exhaustion allowed. The man was groaning with every exhale of air, in fact, but so quietly that he could only hear it here, right next to him.

    The man was old enough to be his grandfather. His white hair was matted and littered with dirt and detritus. Where the left half of his bushy moustache should have been was a nasty injury, as though something had grabbed it and yanked it from his face. Purple blood had dried over the wound, down his cheek and neck.

    "Sir? Sir? pressed Kaza. Here—let me help you—"

    He kneeled behind him, fed his arms under his shoulders, and tugged to free him from the ditch. The man didn’t groan this time, but yelped in pain.

    Kaza released him immediately: not because he thought he might be hurting him, but for the sheer volume of the cry—it was loud enough to alert any soldiers nearby. He impulsively said Shhh! and, standing, backed away quick, glancing around. But ... as far as he could tell there were no soldiers or demons in the vicinity.

    He returned. The old fellow was conscious, his eyes open. My ... foot, dear boy. It’s ... stuck. You don’t need to move me; but if you would be so kind as to free it, I’d be most appreciative.

    His voice was low and kind and filtered through pain. Kaza nodded wordlessly, then crawled to the bank, gazed into the bloody water. The man’s foot, just visible under the swirling red murk, was stuck between two roots. It appeared twisted grotesquely out of true. Broken.

    He stepped back into the water where he braced himself against a half-submerged white slab of rock, his other foot burying itself in soft mud, and reached under the surface. The man’s foot was scissored securely between two thick roots.

    Kaza thought this task hopeless. He had nothing close to the strength required to free him.

    He was pleasantly surprised when the top root gave way relatively easily. He grabbed his leg—

    The man bellowed in agony.

    Kaza, alarmed, hissed Shhh! again, but it did

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