We were lucky we had only known each other for a few hours, so it was easy to change the way we addressed one another, and we decided not to risk mentioning each other's pasts again for fear of 'instantaneous death'. And of course, it was shocking that there were 998 other people who had also been abducted and shoved into a hole like me and Neo, but we decided to focus on the problems at hand before worrying about that.
The days after the announcement had been quiet, and we realized a few things. First, we assumed there were people observing our every move. We could tell because every three days a small basket hardly bigger than my head was lowered down into the hole with our 'food'. It was barely enough to sustain two people, and consisted of moldy bread, a flask of water and some slightly rotting leftovers from what looked like a wealthy person's meal. We would divide the food every time it was delivered, eat it all on the day it was delivered, and then either fast the other two days or catch some of the lizards and insects in the cave. It was disgusting, but we had no choice if we wanted to live, and I spent every day longing for the soft bed of home.
Another thing we had to come to terms with was that this was a competition – 600 vacant spots remaining out of apparently 1,000 contestants was scary. Every time the food came down, there would be a scribbled note telling us how long we had left. And one time as it was lowered down the pit, the note told us that we had two and a half weeks left to escape the pit. We were still working on that part. Since we're suffering from malnutrition and losing weight, the climb has naturally been harder.
"Shit!!"
My hand slips off the rock I'm holding and plummet back down onto the rock hard floor of the pit. Neo shakes his head at me.
"I estimate about thirty feet," he says. "Barely three-quarters to catch up to me, Sword."
"Oh, shut up" I groan, my voice slightly high pitched as my whole body aches from the fall. "Damn combat graduate monster."
"Do we really have to keep the lights off like this?" Neo asks, helping me up to my feet, and I dust myself down.
"Yes," I reply. "I already told you why."
It was simply because I want us both do develop better vision in the dark. I'm pretty sure that after this crap we weren't gonna be allowed to just go home, and I have no idea how much longer we were to stay in this cave, so getting better vision in the dark would hopefully prove useful.
Over the one and a half weeks that have already gone by, me and Neo have been training ourselves for the climb we are going to make soon to survive, honing our bodies, and practicing climbing the wall. Another thing we found out was that for some reason, our bodies seemed strangely sturdy compared to before, as well as stronger – in the past, it would have been a dream for me to climb up an almost flat wall with my bare hands, and even if I could the fall would have smashed every bone in my body to dust and turned me into a grease spot. Now, all I get are aches and bruises, it's probably got something to do with the high concentration of chronoplasma lingering in the air that gets absorbed into our bodies every time we breathe.
"Fine," I tell Neo. "You climb up then. I'm going to take a break since I just climbed up the wall six times in a row."
"Alright," Neo decides, cracking his knuckles, "I'll see if I can reach the top."
"If you do, then don't just run off by yourself!" I call after him, as he begins to ascend at frightening speed. "We're in this together!"
"This is 36th time you've said that!" he shouts back down to me, his voice bouncing off the walls.
I sigh and slump against the side of the cave, fiddling with a piece of flint and a rock. I've been trying to carve a knife out of the flint since day two – but unfortunately we have no access to the chronatech we use for everyday tasks. Oh, what I would give for an auto-shower or nanotech wardrobe.
I'm hopeful that we would regain access to at least some of it like a fucking light when we escaped the pit, but it was better to be safe than sorry.
At that moment, a spine-chilling hiss echoes through the darkness. In an instant, I'm on my feet and I have the knife ready in my hand. And it comes gliding through the darkness like a ghost. It's a ghastly white snake, with bright red, bloodthirsty eyes staring straight at me. It's about two foot long, and as it's hungry eyes fix on me, my mind flashes back to a certain lecture in the past.
"Students, this is the pale viper," the professor said, showing us a snake with pearly white scales and red eyes on the large screen. "I doubt you'll ever come across one, since it lives in the Central Region deep underground in dark caves. It has enough venom in one bite to kill a hundred healthy combat graduates."
"What happens if I ever do meet one, sir?" I had asked, out of curiosity, ignoring the laughs of my classmates.
"Run," he had said. "And pray. Although you'll probably die anyway because it can strike in half a second."
How fucking helpful. Sir.
I stare at the pale viper oozing towards me, and the knife feels slippery in my hand because of all the sweat. I blink and the snake's gone and there's a flash of white before me. Without thinking, and my heart leaping into my throat, I jump back and lash out with my other hand. My palm hits something hard and cold and next thing I know, two feet of writhing white muscle is pinned to the ground under my hand left hand. In a split second I strike the snake hard on the head with my knife.
It stopped writhing around and went stock still, blood pooling around its kite-shaped head. I breathed heavily, and then let go of it. The corpse went limp on the ground, and I was about to hurl the thing into the darkness until I remembered something else my professor had taught me about pale vipers.
"As said before, pale vipers are incredibly dangerous," he had said. "But they are still in high demand both in the black market and between aristocrats, and thousands of people still risk their lives hoping to catch one every day. This is because if you kill a pale viper, then remove it's venom glands and squeeze out the dead viper's venom, it has unique properties which increase your bone and muscle density by several-fold, making you much stronger and durable along with higher stamina. Call it an elixir of sorts."
He had then proceeded to show us a clip of how to remove the two venom glands of the snake, and back then I had thought that the fact that we were being taught that was ridiculous, but now I am nothing but grateful for that lesson.
I take a hold of the sharpest edge of my flint knife, and look down at the snake's corpse.
"I'm sorry," I mutter. "You were just hungry and trying to survive, but… I need to live too."
Neo slams back down to the ground a few minutes after. He had climbed up about sixty feet, and then climbed back down before jumping the last twenty like the stupid monster he was.
"Whew," he pants, dusting himself down and stretching. "That sure d- what the hell?"
He stared at the snake carcass lying next to me in a puddle of blood.
"Oh, hey Neo," I say, turning around and showing him the venom glands. "You know what these are?"
"Isn't that a pale viper?" he asks, examining the corpse. "You managed to kill this thing?"
"Why do you look so surprised?" I demand, miffed. "I did also graduate at hand-to-hand combat. Maybe I won't give this to you after all."
He stares at me incredulously, like I just grew a third eye.
"You're gonna eat that?"
"Yes."
"I know that pale viper venom IS an elixir that only the super soldiers on the front lines have the privilege of getting, but that's after refinement with about nineteen-thousand chemicals. Right now, that raw thing has a ten percent chance at succeeding, and even if you do, you'll have to endure extreme pain. And like by extreme pain, I mean like stubbing-toe-on-the-doorframe pain."
"Don't exaggerate."
"Fine" Neo agrees. "It'll feel like you're having molten lava poured down your throat with a siding of shredded glass, seasoned with fresh metal-corroding acid and boiling water."
"Yeah," I say, looking at the glands, "But its effectiveness raw is thrice that of a refined one."
I hold on out to him.
"For the sake of our survival," I tell him, "We need to do this. We don't have long left and any moment these days another group will make it to the top."
"No thanks," Neo says, pushing the venom sack back at me. "You have both. I'm not enduring that pain even for the possible benefits."
"I'll leave you in the dust."
"It doesn't matter. I'll climb up behind you anyway and if I get tired you can carry me, can't you?"
"You've got it all planned out, huh?"
He grins at me mischievously.
"Came up with it on the spot," he says. "You just told me didn't you?"
He made a fair point, so I left it at that.
"Are you sure you want to do this?"
"Yes. That's the sixth time you've asked me."
"If you're that sure, then I won't bother you anymore.
I've cut off one end from both venom sacks, and I am holding them both together in one hand, with purple liquid venom inside gazing back at me, like, drink me.
I'd be bluffing if I said I'm not having second thoughts just looking at it. Neo pretends to turn away, but I know he's sneaking peeks at me over his shoulder in the dark. I take a deep breath. My fingers are trembling, and my insides are squeezing in on themselves. I want to stop what I'm doing right away and hurl these tiny sacks of death across the diameter of my rocky prison. But no. This is something I have to do.
I will survive. And when I get out of this hellhole, I'll survive then too. I'm too young to die!
I steel my nerves, and raise the venom up to my lips. I can do this. I can-
"Remember you have a ninety percent chance of dying on the spot," Neo says at the wrong time.
I forgot he was there. My hand jerks in surprise and the venom shoots down my throat.