The second time around, he awakes inside a dwelling. It’s a crash pad
shaped like a box, barely two meters tall and six in length, stuffed to the
brim with storage crates and piles of canned food, packaged bread, dried
biscuits – all sorts of bland military rations.
It’s late afternoon breaking dusk. The only tell is the clock hanging from a
nail on a wall. Soft light radiates from the kerosene lamp to the side,
warming the spot where he lies on the floor. His disheveled hair reflects off
golden yellow rays, making him look particularly soft and groggy. His half-
lidded eyes are dazed.
He shifts in his position and realizes that his head is actually resting on a
pillow – not the softest, but a pleasant surprise nonetheless. He slowly sits
up and runs a tentative hand along the back of his head. The bruise still
stings when he presses on it but it’s not paralyzing. It’s also quite
considerate for his kidnappers to have dressed the gash on his forehead and
the laceration on his shoulder. His ribs though, are visibly blue and purple.
He sighs softly.
He takes a quick glance around for his shirt and his jacket – not here – and
then pushes aside a few crates to find his backpack – not here as well, but
he doesn’t remember having it during the car ride before. The room he is in
is too cluttered to move freely and he can’t leave through the small vent
either. It’s much too small, though logically, he would prefer not to venture
half-naked during wintertime.
So, it seems like his only option would be the slightly ajar door ahead,
which is very obviously beckoning to him. Thankfully he’s not barefoot,else the cement tiles would freeze his toes off.
His brain processes things a lot faster now when the pain is dulled. As such,
he ponders on some details. First and foremost, it hadn’t been long since
he’d been kidnapped – or taken against his will, which is essentially the
same regardless. Half a day at most. Secondly, he’s likely at a refuge site,
some underground shelter not by the inner city. Then third and most
importantly, he clearly remembers being knocked unconscious, which
brings him to where he is now: still held captive.
The priority should be to make a stealthy run for it, but… well, he didn’t
expect for five people to be gathered in the adjacent room, playing a
carefree game of checkers. The young man hadn’t made much of a sound at
all when he slid open the door, but every person turns toward him, their
eyes watching him carefully. He stays unmoving, posture relaxed.
“Just in time,” whistles the man with a stubble. He gets up from his bent
position on the chair and scatters all the board pieces as if to nonchalantly
hide his losing game. “Hey hey, let’s not count this round. Yang Rong, the
pretty boy is awake.”
The player on the other side, Yang Rong, or the person recognized as the
colonel, leaves his chair as well. He glances over at him and then gestures
to the spot he’d emptied. “Have a seat.”
Not much can be done now. He recognizes that these are military men.
Maybe they’re here to gather information and not to shoot him on sight, but
he doesn’t hold it against them. He sits anyway. Tense silence overtakes the
room as Yang Rong walks off to the corner. The other four are watching
him closely, especially at his emptied hands, in case another fight breaks
out.
Yang Rong returns soon enough, holding a kettle and an empty glass.“Tea or coffee?” Yang Rong waits for a response – there was none – before
pouring a glass of warm water and sliding it across the felt table. “Water?”
He sighs and takes the latter.
Yang Rong seems satisfied. “You have calmed down now?”
The young man taps at the brittle glass, watching the reflections on water.
He cuts straight to topic. “You suspect I am an anomaly.”
“Correct,” the man replies. He leans forward, one hand propped on his chin.
“And are you?”
“Would you believe me if I said no?”
Yang Rong smiles. “It is unfortunate, but I will need to take you to the
Nexus for genetic review. There needs to be confirmation, regardless of
how slight the possibility may be.”
“You think it is slight,” he replies. “Otherwise you would have left me
outside instead of bringing me here.”
“This time, you are only partially correct.” The colonel studies him
inquisitively, eyes trailing from his face to hair, locking onto his eyes. “The
possibility is very high that you are different.”
“By what standards?”
“If not from your appearance alone, then…” the man seems to think about
it, “intuition?”
“I was born with this appearance.”
“Show me your birth certificate.”
The young man is visibly annoyed. “I don’t have one.”
“Then I cannot confirm.” Yang Rong, most definitely screwed up in the
head, seems to like watching him struggle. An amused glint makes way to
the colonel’s irises. “Any more excuses?”
The young man doesn’t want to talk anymore. He takes a slow sip of water
and opts out of conversation, already zeroing in on the exit to the far right.
The distance is five meters, easily scalable, two seconds top – he would
need a shirt first, though.
The colonel, however, wouldn’t shut up for a second. “What’s your name?”
“Where’s my shirt?” He frowns and it’s quite uncomfortable, really, to be
sitting half-naked here. It’s also not exactly warm. The shelter has little
insulation.
“In the wash,” the man responds, “we took it off to dress your wounds.”
After saying that, he turns toward one of the men in the corner. “Jae, give
the pretty boy a spare shirt. Any is fine – take one from the duffle.”
The small soldier salutes dutifully and runs off.
The young man looks around. “My backpack?”
“You weren’t carrying one when we recovered you. Where did you come
from?” Yang Rong adds as an afterthought, “Pretty boy.”
“Where is this?”
“Are you from the outer districts, pretty boy?”
Alright, so it seems Colonel Yang is hellbent on getting at least one of his
questions answered. The young man finally replies with much annoyance.
“…Noah. My name.”
“Noah,” the man rolls it off his tongue. “Why did we find you half-dead in
a restricted area, Noah?” Yang Rong doesn’t wait for a response before hecrosses both of his arms, leaning back to assume a languid, yet predatory
posture. “And you do know it is restricted, do you not?”
The younger man meets his eyes and smirks slightly. “I had no idea.”
“The creatures that reside in these alpines are highly lethal and infectious.
Executive orders have prohibited entry into such places due to staggering
mutation rates. No one, civilians and common military troops included, has
been allowed in here for decades.”
The colonel is coming strong with the interrogation. Every sentence he says
with emphasis, not like recounting a story, but more like redefining the
narrative. He’s manipulative but subtly so, knowing how to speak the right
things to get the right reactions.
“This morning, I stumbled upon someone with silver hair and different
colored eyes. He also had a bite gash on his shoulder, not from falling off
the plateau but from a pterodactyl that he interestingly managed to escape
from. I would like to ask…” Their eyes are deadlocked when Yang Rong
finishes, “Would this person be a human?”
Noah pushes the glass cup toward the center of the table. “Possibly?”
“It is strange,” Yang Rong muses. “Anomalies that take on human form are
usually easy to identify by behavior. You do act human but…”
“But?”
“You do not look human,” he finishes. The colonel seems to struggle with
the right words. “How do I put this – you are too, hm, pretty… or is it
ethereal? Like a different organism but not quite like those creatures.”
A loud snort comes from the corner. The gruff-looking soldier who had
stayed silent all this while can’t contain himself any longer and guffaws like
a madman, hands slapping his own thighs. He gasps out an apology half a
minute later – “ha…sorry, sorry for interrupting…haha!” – before
dragging himself next to Yang Rong, head dipped low to share a secret.
The elder man switches from English to botched-up Chinese, thick accent
and all, and says conspiratorially, “Yang Rong, are you flirting with him or
are you interrogating him? I knew he was your type but really…”
“Shut your mouth, Hannes,” the colonel also responds in Chinese but it’s
clear, crisp, fluent. “I am not flirting; I am simply saying he is pretty. I can
think someone is good-looking without insinuating that I want to fuck them,
okay?!”
“You’re not wrong.” Hannes nods in agreement and sends over a lecherous
look his way. “He’s a beta? His body is white and slender, like a doll.”
“Do you think omegas roam freely outside the Nexus?” Yang Rong smacks
the soldier on the head.
“That’s a shame,” Hannes laments. “I would’ve liked to have a taste of—”
A glass cup comes hurling their way at Mach speed, cutting off the
conversation and crashing into the wall behind them. Glass shards
avalanche in all directions, startling everyone in the vicinity. If not for his
quick reflexes, Hannes would’ve been smashed right in kisser.
Contrary to the flabbergasted faces around him, Noah calmly picks up a
large piece of glass. The bottom of the cup had remained miraculously
intact. It had ricocheted from the wall to where it is now by the leg of his
chair. He holds it in between his slender fingers, raises it up and slowly
places it back on the table.
The edge of it is sharp enough to pierce. The young man flicks a pair of
harrowing eyes over to the two soldiers. He speaks, dangerously, in fluent
Chinese, “Shut up.”
Hannes blinks owlishly at first but regains composure promptly afterward.
He speaks in English again. “Just talking outta my ass, kid. I have a foul
mouth. We joke around often, so don’t take our words seriously.”
Yang Rong frowns and, knowing the conversation had taken a turn for the
worse, tries to mediate. “Noah—”
At this moment, Jae returns with a cotton shirt in his hands. He’s obviously
nervous from the way he’s walking, taking hesitant steps toward the young
man at the table, avoiding the spills of water and the glass shards on the
floor.
“I…found a shirt for you,” Jae says cautiously. “I hope the size is not too
big.”
Noah takes it expressionlessly and shrugs it on. His ribs strain at the
movement, appearing even more bruised than before. The discoloring is all
too obvious on such pale skin. He senses Yang Rong staring at him from the
corner of his eye and mentally curses the man out. Sure, Noah takes some
of the blame for threatening the latter with a knife, but he was delirious as
well as kidnapped. The colonel showed zero mercy back there.
Fortunately, the black shirt covers the bruise nicely. It’s not made of the
softest material – he hardly has the energy to nitpick though. His head is
hurting again and he’d much rather leave.
“Will you run away?”
Yang Rong leans against the table. He’s just watching him without doing
anything. He probably isn’t worried either if Noah tried to leave right now –
with these injuries, the young man can only go so far.
“Will you stop me?” he asks back instead.
Yang Rong replies, “I am not allowed to let a potential threat go free.”
He actually despises how weak he is right now. His head throbs in reminder
and he frowns, raising a hand to touch the cut on his forehead. It’s bandaged
and cleanly wrapped up with gauze, just like his shoulder. Quite the
handiwork – whoever’d done it has had years of experience.
He turns and starts heading back to the storage room. Even at this careful
pace, Noah staggers in his step.
“I won’t run yet.” His voice comes out lower than usual, a half-whisper. “…
A little tired.”
Yang Rong curves his lips. “Alright.”
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