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WIPs, Full Games and Side Stories (not public version)

Avanchel

Well-known member
Member
I heard there might be an update on The Sword of Rhivenia on Patreon. If anyone has it, could you please share the link or update? 😊
The last Patreon update was on August 5th. Chapter 8 is still being written, and no release date has been announced yet. In the meantime, a new POV was released: Maevra POV: Chapter 6 and Xavier POV: Chapter 7

You can find all POV scenes here

Enjoy :)
 

springuri

Member
Member
Anyone have Cafe Rouge lasted version? Someone posted it on AS but the link are dead.
Sorry but, why can't you just...ask that "someone" to re-upload it? You can leave a message on their profile or quote their post, they'll get a notification.
It feels a bit odd you're asking here when ces is (currently) a very active uploader, unless you really can't wait a few days to play that game or don't want to write a reply on AS for some reason.

I don't know if I should say this, but recently there's been an influx of requests just asking for things that can be easily found on Anime-sharing, like Trouble Comes Twice, Homicipher or a bunch of khywae games. At this point I feel like AS should be pinned alongside F95, a lot of games are already shared there, many are own-bought which means they're safer than most sites, and there's a search bar...
 

PreachersSon

Active member
Member
Hi! Anyone have all the passwords for We Wretched Creatures?
Hi! This is from her patreon (which is kinda costly in my country considering the little content it has, in my opinion, i'm sad now lol) got it today <3 ☆
1001048603.jpg
 
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Hackett Thrail

Well-known member
Member
Here
I can finally post it thanks to Hackett who did the html for me will a save feature, and picture too

Unzip the file and you can play on a browser with the html file alone (it won't have picture) or use joiplay
👍
Ana uploaded a patch fix for the Alpha, so with the help of the wonderful @Mihyo_707 I have remade the HTML to include said patch.

The Golden Rose Book 2 Alpha, Ch1-3 + Interlude. Images and Save Slots included.

Enjoy my little Romanus nerds.

Is it possible to create mod menu for this?
Yes, it is possible, doubly so for me. Will I do it? Nah, that's Dan's domain. Want an update to his mod? Request it lol.

Is it just me or the whole page turns blank after escaping Cynthia?
I believe it's a you issue, I checked the code and it all looks fine.
Also try to save - restart - load a save
 
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misaree

Member
Member
Hey guys, so I know there's already a kimono link to Doriana Gray's patreon (The person who made The adventures of Sherlock Holmes An affair of the heart) while browsing through it I found this story🌹🌶️ H's Flowers - coded short story - smutty ✨ it's on itch.io with password of course, on their Patreon it says the password is: ARoseByAnyOtherName but when I entered it it didn't work, I really want to play it, I'm really craving this game, I've been loving it from day one, so I would be very grateful if someone knew what happened or if they changed the password, thanks
Someone posted this file here but it may be removed idk. Here is the file. The password is automatically entered so you just have to click continue before reading the thing. Enjoy!
 

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Garth1995

Well-known member
Member
It was so damn dark in the jungle. I’s don’t know how the men who lived there could stand it. I didn’t know why our ancestors tried so desperately to take this patch of overgrown land in the first place. Knew even less why the Erisians were so desperate for it that they’d fight us. And I knew least of all what I–a man from Duncaster–was doing in this godless hellhole.It was only the first week of the first month of our three year long war to hold the province. Rade Mozoroff wasn’t even here yet. The only real commander was the girl–and she was just a wisp of fifteen. I’s thought she was even younger the first time I met her.She’d grow up fast. Not yet, though. It was the first week. She looked so small buried in her coat of plates. It didn’t help that the man beside her was a giant. Cadarn was an enormous Kroridian knight with these startlingly black eyes that I’s never was able to read. I’d grow to hate that man in time. Hate him more than the Erisians that we’s fighting. But back then? Trudging through the jungle with the king’s bastard daughter at the head? I thought Cadarn was the real commander. The Marshal was just there to fulfill the whims of her shitty father.What were we even doing that day, I’s can’t remember. A patrol, of some kind, maybe? I just remembered the slog. Hell take the man who made us march. It was bad even before I’s took an arrow through the leg. I just remember how much of a storm I cursed up, angry at it all.But the Marshal never complained. Thought it was madness that she was here in the first place. I’s had a definite soft spot for the princess, ever since I met her. I knew she was talented. But to have her here, at the head of an army? Insanity. She of all people deserved the least to be here.But I’s kept cursing and she was quiet.For every hour spent fighting in a pitched battle, there are a dozen days spent slogging. Slogging. Slogging through the mud. It was hot. The air was like water. I’s couldn’t remember why, but we were in armor that day–all of us. We were thirty strong, maybe. Half were Kroridian rangers with shortbows and crossbows. The rest were infantry from Kanton.The violence in that jungle was always very sudden–that’s what sticks in my mind. One moment, I was marching with my head hung low. The next, someone was screaming. I nearly snapped my neck with how quickly I turned to spot the Marshal. I was relieved to see her okay. But a second later, the man in the column just ahead of me–can’t say whether he was Kroridian or Kantonian–seized up and died right there in the grass.His head was split open by a smooth stone from a sling. I saw the shiny rock embedded in the bone, coated in his brains and blood.It just happens so quickly. And the fear that seized me wasn’t even for myself. At that point, I’s didn’t care whether I woke the next morning. I was just worried about the poor girl at the front of the patrol. Never was able reach her, though. The Erisians came out of the brush around us.That was the worst part. When the fight would begin and the one person you wanted to save more than you even cared to live was out of reach. How often did we’s just throw ourselves at the feet of chance and gamble everything? Never understood how the men could play dice. They already rolled them every time they stepped outside the fortress walls.It wasn’t Erisian land. They didn’t know it like these rangers did. But they were deathly silent and had been waging their war of conquest here for months before me and the Marshal made it.I’s remember screaming her name. And I remember she went out of sight when the chaos rolled over our column. Rangers and footmen all turned to face the ambush as the horse-folk came out of the brush with swords and axes. It was the first week of the first month of our time here, and we were given quite a welcome.The Erisian came at me with a curved saber under the cover of a hail of missiles. I tried to raise my spear but he was in my face before I could. The bastard kept hitting me, his sword just bouncing off mail but hurting like hell. I had been in plenty of fights before this. I’s made a living as a career soldier. It was the only reason I was in Sobik’s employ.It never got easier. Never. The fear wasn’t something I’s or anyone can control. It wasn’t a fear of losing what I’s living for. I had nothing; my wife and child were gone. Yet I was horrified. Animal fear. Gut fear. I can still remember that same look in the Erisian’s eye as he battered me.I can still remember the sound he made when I split him open.I dropped the spear and drew my sword. He was too close for me to rear back my weapon, so I just struck horizontal and cut him right across the belly. I’s certain he died, but I never was given the chance to finish the job. As he fell I turned around, scanning for the girl, but I couldn’t find her.I then got grabbed from behind. Another Erisian had emerged out from the brush and wrapped his arm around my neck. He jammed down with a knife, aiming for my face or my throat. I’s thrashed like an animal and his blade caught my breastplate. He lost balance on the slick ground and we both went tumbling off the trail and into the mud.I got pinned there, face in the ground, as he pounced on top of me. I was drowning. He must have lost his dagger in the struggle because I didn’t end up stabbed. He just pinned my head under and kept it there. I’s remember the taste of the dirt. How it got caught between my teeth and stuck to my gums and shot up my nose. When I pushed my head back up, I heard him screaming in his foreign tongue, burning with the same fear as mine.I wanted to live–but not for myself or for the family that I lost. I just wanted to make sure the kid was okay before I’s passed. It was the only thing on my mind. If I died here, I’d never be able to get her out of this jungle alive.So I just kept bucking. Every time I thrashed and my ears came out of the mud I heard the muted sounds of dying men. I strained to listen for the Marshal’s voice and never found it. Eventually, I thrashed enough. I wedged my knee up high and pinned it into his groin. It must’ve hurt him bad because his arm slipped away.I took the brief moment to reverse our positions. I’s a few inches taller and at least forty pounds heavier than the man, and he stood little chance. He was not that much older than the Marshal, actually. Without a weapon, I had no choice but to kill him like how he tried to kill me. I’s choked him and he drowned right there in the mud.As soon as he stopped moving, I pulled myself out of the muck and stumbled back onto the road. I couldn’t find my sword. Couldn’t even hear well with the mud in my ears. I scrambled for the closest corpse and stole his weapon. I didn’t end up needing it, though. By the time I’s rejoined the battle, it was over.I tallied up the report later that night. We’d killed seven Erisians, captured one. Four Kantonians were either dead or would wind up dead later from their wounds. Two rangers were killed.I ran for the front of the column, coughing and sputtering. I was spitting out mud and hopping over the dead as I went. I found Sir Cadarn there, and the girl, too. The Marshal was straddling a man’s chest, hammering his face inward with the rim of her shield. It was a rhythmic crunch. Every second, another hit.The Kroridan knight watched her, arms folded over his chest. Couldn’t see his expression from behind, but I’s could imagine it well. Smug and approving. Happy that his little weapon had turned out so lethal on her first ever patrol.I shoved without saying anything him as I came running by. And I’s rushed over to the girl’s side and stood frozen in shock as I saw her. The Marshal let out a screech, this horrible yell as she rammed the shield back down again. Her whole body was shuddering with each breath.A second later, I came to my senses. I stepped over to the girl and touched her shoulder. She flinched and screamed, then leapt off the body. She hit the ground and rolled back, scrambling on her rear, searching for the sword she must have lost. But then she saw me, and her eyes went wide.There were still three years of hell awaiting that girl. We’s had barely started. The Marshal couldn’t speak for hours after the ordeal. I can still remember her stumbling on her words. I tried to hold her, to comfort her like the kid she still was–but she wouldn’t allow it. I couldn’t touch her, hug her. She pulled away and screamed.It haunted me more than the pleading of the Erisian as I held him under and he begged in his tongue for mercy. Haunted me more than the silence after he went still.There would come a time when the screaming would stop. Couldn’t tell you precisely when. There would come a day when the Marshal became a better killer than I, when she’d carve out a man’s throat one moment and issue orders the next. And that haunted me more than anything else in Krorid.---[Darin and Male Marshal]It was so damn dark in the jungle. I’s don’t know how the men who lived there could stand it. I didn’t know why our ancestors tried so desperately to take this patch of overgrown land in the first place. Knew even less why the Erisians were so desperate for it that they’d fight us. And I knew least of all what I–a man from Duncaster–was doing in this godless hellhole.It was only the first week of the first month of our three year long war to hold the province. Rade Mozoroff wasn’t even here yet. The only real commander was the boy–and he was just a lad of fifteen. I’s thought he was even younger the first time I met him.He’d grow up fast. Not yet, though. It was the first week. He looked so small buried in his coat of plates. It didn’t help that the man beside him was a giant. Cadarn was an enormous Kroridian knight with these startlingly black eyes that I’s never was able to read. I’d grow to hate that man in time. Hate him more than the Erisians that we’s fighting. But back then? Trudging through the jungle with the king’s bastard son at the head? I thought Cadarn was the real commander. The Marshal was just there to fulfill the whims of his shitty father.What were we even doing that day, I’s can’t remember. A patrol, of some kind, maybe? I just remembered the slog. Hell take the man who made us march. It was bad even before I’s took an arrow through the leg. I just remember how much of a storm I cursed up, angry at it all.But the Marshal never complained. Thought it was madness that he was here in the first place. I’s had a definite soft spot for the prince, ever since I met him. I knew he was talented. But to have him here, at the head of an army? Insanity. He of all people deserved the least to be here.But I’s kept cursing and he was quiet.For every hour spent fighting in a pitched battle, there are a dozen days spent slogging. Slogging. Slogging through the mud. It was hot. The air was like water. I’s couldn’t remember why, but we were in armor that day–all of us. We were thirty strong, maybe. Half were Kroridian rangers with shortbows and crossbows. The rest were infantry from Kanton.The violence in that jungle was always very sudden–that’s what sticks in my mind. One moment, I was marching with my head hung low. The next, someone was screaming. I nearly snapped my neck with how quickly I turned to spot the Marshal. I was relieved to see him okay. But a second later, the man in the column just ahead of me–can’t say whether he was Kroridian or Kantonian–seized up and died right there in the grass.His head was split open by a smooth stone from a sling. I saw the shiny rock embedded in the bone, coated in his brains and blood.It just happens so quickly. And the fear that seized me wasn’t even for myself. At that point, I’s didn’t care whether I woke the next morning. I was just worried about the poor boy at the front of the patrol. Never was able reach him, though. The Erisians came out of the brush around us.That was the worst part. When the fight would begin and the one person you wanted to save more than you even cared to live was out of reach. How often did we’s just throw ourselves at the feet of chance and gamble everything? Never understood how the men could play dice. They already rolled them every time they stepped outside the fortress walls.It wasn’t Erisian land. They didn’t know it like these rangers did. But they were deathly silent and had been waging their war of conquest here for months before me and the Marshal made it.I’s remember screaming his name. And I remember he went out of sight when the chaos rolled over our column. Rangers and footmen all turned to face the ambush as the horse-folk came out of the brush with swords and axes. It was the first week of the first month of our time here, and we were given quite a welcome.The Erisian came at me with a curved saber under the cover of a hail of missiles. I tried to raise my spear but he was in my face before I could. The bastard kept hitting me, his sword just bouncing off mail but hurting like hell. I had been in plenty of fights before this. I’s made a living as a career soldier. It was the only reason I was in Sobik’s employ.It never got easier. Never. The fear wasn’t something I’s or anyone can control. It wasn’t a fear of losing what I’s living for. I had nothing; my wife and child were gone. Yet I was horrified. Animal fear. Gut fear. I can still remember that same look in the Erisian’s eye as he battered me.I can still remember the sound he made when I split him open.I dropped the spear and drew my sword. He was too close for me to rear back my weapon, so I just struck horizontal and cut him right across the belly. I’s certain he died, but I never was given the chance to finish the job. As he fell I turned around, scanning for the boy, but I couldn’t find him.I then got grabbed from behind. Another Erisian had emerged out from the brush and wrapped his arm around my neck. He jammed down with a knife, aiming for my face or my throat. I’s thrashed like an animal and his blade caught my breastplate. He lost balance on the slick ground and we both went tumbling off the trail and into the mud.I got pinned there, face in the ground, as he pounced on top of me. I was drowning. He must have lost his dagger in the struggle because I didn’t end up stabbed. He just pinned my head under and kept it there. I’s remember the taste of the dirt. How it got caught between my teeth and stuck to my gums and shot up my nose. When I pushed my head back up, I heard him screaming in his foreign tongue, burning with the same fear as mine.I wanted to live–but not for myself or for the family that I lost. I just wanted to make sure the kid was okay before I’s passed. It was the only thing on my mind. If I died here, I’d never be able to get him out of this jungle alive.So I just kept bucking. Every time I thrashed and my ears came out of the mud I heard the muted sounds of dying men. I strained to listen for the Marshal’s voice and never found it. Eventually, I thrashed enough. I wedged my knee up high and pinned it into his groin. It must’ve hurt him bad because his arm slipped away.I took the brief moment to reverse our positions. I’s a few inches taller and at least forty pounds heavier than the man, and he stood little chance. He was not that much older than the Marshal, actually. Without a weapon, I had no choice but to kill him like how he tried to kill me. I’s choked him and he drowned right there in the mud.As soon as he stopped moving, I pulled myself out of the muck and stumbled back onto the road. I couldn’t find my sword. Couldn’t even hear well with the mud in my ears. I scrambled for the closest corpse and stole his weapon. I didn’t end up needing it, though. By the time I’s rejoined the battle, it was over.I tallied up the report later that night. We’d killed seven Erisians, captured one. Four Kantonians were either dead or would wind up dead later from their wounds. Two rangers were killed.I ran for the front of the column, coughing and sputtering. I was spitting out mud and hopping over the dead as I went. I found Sir Cadarn there, and the boy, too. The Marshal was straddling a man’s chest, hammering his face inward with the rim of his shield. It was a rhythmic crunch. Every second, another hit.The Kroridan knight watched him, arms folded over his chest. Couldn’t see his expression from behind, but I’s could imagine it well. Smug and approving. Happy that his little weapon had turned out so lethal on his first ever patrol.I shoved without saying anything him as I came running by. And I’s rushed over to the boy’s side and stood frozen in shock as I saw him. The Marshal let out a screech, this horrible yell as he rammed the shield back down again. His whole body was shuddering with each breath.A second later, I came to my senses. I stepped over to the boy and touched his shoulder. He flinched and screamed, then leapt off the body. He hit the ground and rolled back, scrambling on his rear, searching for the sword he must have lost. But then he saw me, and his eyes went wide.There were still three years of hell awaiting that boy. We’s had barely started. The Marshal couldn’t speak for hours after the ordeal. I can still remember him stumbling on his words. I tried to hold him, to comfort him like the kid he still was–but he wouldn’t allow it. I couldn’t touch him, hug him. He pulled away and screamed.It haunted me more than the pleading of the Erisian as I held him under and he begged in his tongue for mercy. Haunted me more than the silence after he went still.There would come a time when the screaming would stop. Couldn’t tell you precisely when. There would come a day when the Marshal became a better killer than I, when he’d carve out a man’s throat one moment and issue orders the next. And that haunted me more than anything else in Krorid.

-Sorry, I don't know how to convert it to HTML. If anyone knows, feel free to do so.
 
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Mihyo_707

Well-known member
Member
I don't think you understand how difficult or time-consuming it is to convert a WIP with thousands of words into HTML. I personally don't know how to do it, but in that series of Patreon leaks, the SOH WIP wasn't converted into HTML for the reasons I mentioned above. Sometimes, if you really want something, go and get it, you know? Instead of being prone to abusing other people's generosity.
Jeez, it's blocked through a Patreon account (just like Dao Ascension, Samurai of Hyuga, Golden Rose) so it's really hard to post these Wips here. I don't doubt that someone would be happy to post them here if the case were different (But disclosing your Patreon email and password on the internet is another story, it's like disclosing your credit card number for God's sake). But I saw that someone posted SOH book 6 in HTML a few days ago, you don't play the Wip, just read the text so... yeah (Another thing, can the owner of this thread Itachi put a notice on the front page about these blocked Wips so that people stop asking for it again and again? Thanks

I can't say for the other WIPS you mentioned, but i did post The Golden Rose WIP when I was on patreon, it was rather easy. The time consuming part is that i needed to do an entire playthrough, but i didn't have to do it in one go, i could just save and continue afterwards. (no need to copy paste every page 😂)

Then, the actual conversion part was made by Hackett, i only gave him the files needed, so i can't tell you exactly how time consuming it was on his part but in my memory it was ≈10 minutes.

But i did convert the side story, it was a short story, and it took me less than 5 minutes.

So if anyone wants to share the wip and don't know how to, don't worry it's not hard, you can just dm me and i'll explain it more in details to you.

Edit: @Sokrates, Ana don't share her code you can have the proof on her Tumblr, it's still possible and easy (and i didn't need to use python)
 
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Garth1995

Well-known member
Member
High school Revenge September demo:
Interact with the Fighting Rooster (Olivia, Lydia, and Ramon, + special guest with a weirdly familiar name)
Interact with the drinks table and have a bit of fun with your date
Interact with the inner garden while taking a break from the dance (WIP)
Homecoming royalty coronation!
Reveal the Creep is back!
Extra words for solo homecoming-goers
Popular kids choice has evolved, you can now torture poor kids
Kiss booth choice has evolved, extra content if you don't get a kiss
Enjoy!
 

starbunny

Member
Member
Sanguine sky last update
first time doing this so the proceed to new content doesn't work and the images don't want to show but tbh I didn't try to hard to fix it, the rest should work fine
edit: Oh I saw the error but I can't fix it rn sorry! (not at home) but what I can do is leave the files here in case someone else can make it
---

Finally! I fixed it, proceed to new content should work too
Sanguine sky
 
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Garth1995

Well-known member
Member
[Ulysses/Ulyssa and Male Whiskey]
I so desperately wanted to leave Sahara.It was almost feverish. Whenever I sat and looked up, and I had Whiskey at my side, I’d imagine the stars and I’d imagine us getting the hell off of this damnable world. It was terrible. It made me feel almost sick to my stomach.Though, of course, the boy with me wasn’t “Whiskey-Four” yet. He wouldn't be for about two more decades. He was just a kid, then, a kid with a name that was way too complicated for a little street urchin.We weren’t uncommon. None of us were. We spent our days in the bottom ten layers of the city. The Uvarov Headquarters–or at least, the office that would eventually become it–was in the upper ten. Hundreds of floors separated us. The irony is goddamn palpable to me now. Had I’d known how life would turn, maybe I would’ve spared myself the trouble and dragged my child-self up there and bombed it earlier.That’d leave Whiskey alone, though. And I couldn’t do that. Not just out of loyalty or whatever bastardized form of love we had then, but for very pragmatic reasons. It was hard to survive in Sahara alone.I remember we slept in the backroom of an abandoned storage facility that had effectively become a homeless encampment. We slept surrounded by people–and that was actually arguably worse. But it was a warm place, a known place. It was hard to leave that. The city was so terribly cold. Concrete. Steel. Glass. So anything where the heating still worked, sapping off the power grid, was valuable.The facility was huge, but most of it wasn’t accessible. The walls were thirty feet high, easily, and the metal beams supporting them must’ve rusted away. It collapsed inward and blocked many of the hallways. Other rooms were just colloquially known to be way too dangerous.It’s where being a kid helped. We were like spider monkeys. We could clamber up and down the debris, squeeze into the little spots. In the half-sunken remains of a century-old employee bathroom, we made ourselves a safe box. If you climbed onto the top of the urinal and pushed up the rotting ceiling tile, you could slide right into the ventilation system, the metal of which was intact enough for a seven year old.It was our first home–Whiskey and I. We put our things in there. The money, the food we stole or begged for. It was a place that was ours, and that was what made it special. We had nothing. We were specks of dust. We were little kids surrounded by the poor and the addicted.I wanted a place like this one, but away. A little cozy corner for the both of us. Some place on a distant world with a bright red sun and a soft blanket and a pillow. I didn’t even know what stars looked like, but I imagined they’d be warm.It didn’t take long for some ****er to ruin the only thing we had.I was gone for most of the day. Whiskey had a cold, so I went up a level to the pharmacy to get him some medicine. The local clerk there was a kind young guy, a teenager maybe, and he didn’t care a whole lot about making me pay. I went up and asked for cold medicine and he gave me a whole bag of chewable tablets (neither of us could swallow pills yet) and even a paper list of instructions–what to take and when.I got lost heading back. That didn’t happen often. When it did, usually Whiskey was with me–but not this time. I took a few hours to get back to the warehouse. I slipped in through the front door and weaved between tents and gingerly stepped over legs. I found the hallway–the one on the left with the flickering light–and followed it. Then I found our bathroom; we marked it with a pen on the doorframe.And when I walked inside, I saw a man standing there. My heart shot up into my chest. I was horrified–but even more than that, I was furious.He heard me approach and spun around. He was unstable, rocking back and forth. His legs were jittery and rubbed his face and clenched his jaw.“Here for your little boyfriend?”“No.”“What you got there?”“Nothing.”“Nah. Hand it over. Then show me where you put the rest of your stuff.” He held out his hand and emphasized his request with his fingers. “And the other kid, too. I know he’s in here. I heard him crying.”I stamped my foot and pointed down the hall. “Get out!”The man just snorted and walked right up to me. He towered over my seven-year-old self and tried to snatch the brown baggie of children’s ibuprofen from me. But I held it away and took a few steps back.“Don’t be a little ****,” the man said. “I don’t wanna hurt you.”“I do!” I shouted. And it wasn’t a bluff. If we had come across each other a decade later, I’d have killed him. I’d have shattered his skull against the sink. But as a kid, I had to settle for just running and screaming and battering him with useless fists.He stepped toward me again, made another demand, and then Whiskey fell on top of him.The boy dropped out of the ceiling, screaming like a banshee. Already, he embodied his future as an airborne infantryman, attacking from the sky. He landed on the man’s head and shoulders and immediately began to savage him.It was goddamn ridiculous. The whole situation. He found himself being clawed in the face by a pair of seven-year-olds. And as tiny as we were–young and malnourished–the sheer surprise granted us a serious tactical advantage… for a few moments, at least. Then the man recovered his senses, and now absolutely livid, tore Whiskey from his head and threw him onto the ground. Then he turned to me, and with the full force of an adult, kicked me in the chest.I broke a rib. I didn’t know it then, and I wouldn’t until the x-ray before our forced enrollment into the Academy. As I fell, I hit the back of my head against the concrete ground and got my first ever view of what stars looked like.“****ing psychopath kids! My ****ing eyes!” He stumbled around, groaning and shouting curses. He braced himself on the sink and peered into the foggy mirror. And whatever he saw pissed him off. “I’ll ****ing kill you!”I heard Whiskey shout my name. His voice startled me to the present. Woozy and coughing, I raised my head and saw the boy running toward me, arm outstretched.But then he got taken. The man seized him and lifted him up and Whiskey began to cry and thrash. He kicked off the wall and sent his captor stumbling around the bathroom. I tried to stand, I tried so hard, but with the concussion and the broken rib, I couldn’t. Every fiber of my being willed me to stand, but my body refused. I was left there, tears streaming down my face, watching the only boy I’d ever cared about being manhandled by a junkie.The struggle stopped once the stranger slammed Whiskey–a goddamn child–against the wall of a bathroom stall.“What you got up there, huh? ****ing kid. You got some candy up there? Or maybe some pills… you hiding pills up there?” He nodded to himself. “You got pills, don’t you. Keeping them from me.”“I’ll murder you!” screamed Whiskey. We’d just learned that word, and he was eager to use it.“What the **** is going on in here?”The sound of another adult’s voice startled the stranger. He tensed up and reflexively dropped Whiskey to the ground. As soon as the boy was free, he sprinted out of the bathroom and practically dove down to my side. He cradled my slumped body, then dropped me back down, horrified. He raised his fingers to his face and saw blood.“Are you okay?” I asked him.He shook his head. “No! No. You’re not okay. We need to go to a hospital.”“It’s okay,” I said. “I have the medicine for you.”The new arrival had entered the bathroom, and the shouting inside intensified.“I knew you were a ****ing creep, Kent!”“Creep? What the **** are you saying?”“Bro, you do not mess with kids. I don’t give **** how–”There was a crash. The attacker slammed his fist through the mirror. I could hear it, but the only thing I could see was Whiskey’s face. I reached out and threw my arms over his back.“They got pills, dude!” he snarled. “I just know it. I’ve seen them climbing up and hiding **** up there. They must got pills.”“They’re probably hiding ****ing candy or something. Leave them alone, for Christ sake.” A pause. “You drunk or high right now?”“Get out of my goddamn face.”“Yeah? If I do are you gonna go messing with the kids again?”“**** you!”I could hear the struggle. Fighting here was vicious and unrefined. Whiskey and I would become artists in comparison. We learned lethality. Quickness. This was not the battle of two professionals; it was a savage street fight.“We gotta go,” Whiskey insisted. He pulled on me and started dragging me away. “We gotta go, Yoolie.”I made a few tries to stand, but couldn’t. Several more adults had now joined the scene, forming a semi-circle around the door. The fight inside continued. Nobody paid us any attention. Nobody stopped to help. Like two little insects, we slipped through the screen and flew away.Whiskey dragged me. The noises grew more distant. I gripped him on the arm, and finally, on my fifth attempt, I managed to stand. Even then, I could understand the relief in his eyes.“I’ll ****ing shoot you, Kent!”“Yeah? Yeah? Do it, *******!”I stopped.“Wait!” I said, turning back toward the chaos. I could see the brown baggie on the ground. “I gotta get your medicine–”A gunshot rang out.I would grow very accustomed to that noise in time. It would become as familiar to me as the sound of my own breathing. But then, it was so horrifying that I slipped backward and fell right into Whiskey’s child-arms. He screamed. I did, too. Someone inside did. The adults in the hallway trampled over each other to flee.Whiskey pulled me upright, and stumbling and hobbling and tripping down the hall, we ran for the closest exit. He led the way; he slammed into the door with his shoulder, and adrenaline and speed carried us through it more than our weight. As he fled into the abandoned streets in the lowest levels of Sahara, another shot rang out.We ran until we couldn’t, and then we fell. Fell onto the cold, hard concrete. Fell and slumped in an alleyway, bruised and bleeding.I could feel consciousness beginning to slip away.I didn’t realize it, but I was seriously injured. Had Whiskey not gone on to haul me to the hospital, I would’ve died there, no doubt. But he did. He dragged me all the way to the nearest hospital, and unwilling to let a kid die, they saved me. When I woke up a week later, we ran away together, but our flight was not long.Soon, we’d be taken. Saved from the streets and delivered to the hell of the Academy, and then the Army.Then the AIU. In that alley, Whiskey cradled my body and held me so tight his nails dug into my back. We’d never return to our nook. The only thing we had now was what we always had.“I won’t let you go, Yoolie,” he said.I smiled at his words and passed into a dreamless sleep.
 
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