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#playing with the orignal game script to reflect what i feel a more developed game would be like
radioactivepeasant · 1 year
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Ambush! It's an unscheduled Free Day Thursday!
It's my b-day and I can break my scheduling rules if I darn well please. And yes, it's more Meddling Mar. I'm chipping away at Faulty Info writer's block and working on a different project for a bit usually rejuvenates my writer brain.
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
As much as he hated to admit it, the monks' disgusting "desert lily" juice did do a lot to make Jak less lethargic and thirsty. Not that he would ever admit it. It was embarrassing enough when the monks would come each day to make him practice walking. He hated that he had to lean on them for support just to get to the latrine. It had been days, right? Why did he still feel so weak? He'd been able to run mere minutes after the final dark eco injection!
Part of him wondered if perhaps he healed faster when he was in imminent danger. If the dark eco merely kept his body moving and in fighting condition, just waiting for the next chance to come out. Maybe it just went back to being a detriment when he was truly at rest. But how would he know? Jak didn't think he'd actually had a chance to sleep in since- well, probably since before he convinced Daxter to go to Misty Island with him.
By the third day, he was sick of it. Sick of the medicine, sick of feeling helpless, and sick of the boring beige clay covering metal wallframes imperfectly. So when Mar once again suggested an escape, he was pretty sure he could force his legs to keep moving long enough to see something other than this stupid recovery ward.
"There's stairs right when you get through the door," Mar told him as he hauled himself out of bed. "I haven't tried going up yet, but I know there's always somebody downstairs."
"Well let's just start with me not falling down the stairs and cracking my head open," Jak answered flatly. "Did either of you see what they did with my goggles?"
Mar lifted blankets and pillows, then turned to shrug. "Maybe we'll find them upstairs?"
Tugging Jak's arm with one hand, and grabbing Daxter's hand with the other, Mar tried to pull them out of the alcove. He was eager to leave, and with his brothers both awake, now was the perfect time.
 "So!" A booming voice echoed through the ward, curtailing the boys' escape attempt. "You've come back from the dead, have you?"
Jak instinctively shoved Mar behind him and whirled to face the door. The man blocking the exit wasn't the tallest person he'd ever seen, but his shoulders were broad and his frame was solid enough that Jak knew he wasn't going to be able to just push past him. 
"And here my monks were, ready to pray for you."
The man folded his arms across his chest and smirked.
Daxter tensed up and pointed. "Jak! It's-!"
Mar scowled. "Thats-"
"The Snitch?"
The man's smirk stretched into a sharp grin that put Jak in mind of a shark. 
"I'm afraid I'm here to ruin your escape attempt again, little Secret."
"Um."
Jak frowned and fruitlessly tried to push Mar behind him again, towards the beds.
"What are you talking about?"
The horned man -- or crowned or something -- strolled into the ward like he owned the place. "Well, every time I ask his name, he says it's "A Secret," after all."
He tilted his head towards Mar, that strange smile still glued on.
"Hmm, maybe I should have asked before. Do you prefer to go by "A-Sec"? Or "Cret"?"
Mischief sparkled in his dark eyes. 
"What about "Seek"? Should we call you Seek?"
Mar's face twisted in confusion. "You're weird."
Daxter snorted. "That is not the worst nickname you coulda gotten, kid. Trust me."
"Where are we?" Jak demanded. 
Fatigue pulled at his limbs, draining his resolve faster than he'd expected. But he didn't want to go back to bed, not until he had some answers.
"How did we get here? Who are you people?!"
"The nation of Spargus, I fished you out of the Strider Range, and Damas, king of Spargus, in that order," the man answered archly.
A king?!
In hindsight, Jak thought that might have explained the weird spikes coming out of his skull. But it didn't explain much else.
"Spargus?"
He said the name slowly, and fought back a yawn.
"Wait, nobody lives outside Haven's walls!" Jak sputtered, "Not a whole city!"
"Ah, yes." The king’s tone was dry. "We are the...forgotten ones. The refuse of cities like Haven, thrown out and left to die."
Oh.
Jak supposed it made sense that he wasn't the first person Haven had done this to, but it still managed to surprise him.
"Sounds like us," he muttered bitterly.
"Mm." The king stepped forward, straight into the little alcove where the boys had been sleeping. "Right: back to bed with you."
Mar shook his head fiercely. "Go away! It's not bedtime!"
Damas didn’t look offended. If anything, he looked amused.
"It is for Jak, little one. The sooner he sleeps off this ordeal, the sooner we can integrate you into the city."
The brothers glanced at each other. 
"Who said we wanted to be part of your city?" Jak demanded.
"We're trying to get to some place called the Lighthouse."
All at once, Damas threw back his head and laughed.
"The light- the Lighthouse?" He shook his head and spread his arms wide. "Young one, you're in the Lighthouse!"
Daxter hopped up to the bed when it became obvious that this Damas guy wasn't going to let them leave. 
"Uh, hate to interrupt here but- aren't lighthouses usually, y'know, near water?"
Damas smirked. He bent down and scooped up Daxter without so much as a by-your-leave, then held the offended ottsel up to the window cut into the stone wall.
"Tell me what you see."
It was the first time Daxter had gotten close to the window. He gripped the sill as a wave of nostalgia crashed over him. 
The air was clean, and clear.
He could see so far-!
"It's...it's the ocean!" he gasped.
"Jak! Jak, we made it to the ocean! And the water is still clean!"
"You serious?!"
Jak scrambled up onto the bed to peer out the higher window overhead.
Sure enough, seabirds wheeled over an endless expanse of blue. Waves rolled and crashed as though they'd never heard of all the pollution of Haven, and Jak could have sworn he glimpsed something absolutely massive moving under the water. 
It was so much like the view from Sentinel Beach.
Even after standing in the ruins of Samos’s hut, Jak knew that this was the closest he'd felt to home. 
Damas set Daxter down and leaned casually against the wall.
"So. A couple children from Haven, trying to make it to unmarked shores. What were you hoping to accomplish?"
Caught up in nostalgia, Jak absently answered, "As long as I can see the ocean, I'm still free."
Surprise creased the king’s forehead, followed by an unexpected understanding.
He nodded slowly. 
"You'd be surprised how many of us come to Spargus with the same thoughts."
Something wry and a little self-deprecating crossed his face. 
"And how many of us get here on the edge of death’s door, like you. The Lighthouse represents the hope of both freedom and rescue to those stranded by their enemies. Once we're rescued, though, our lives belong to each other and the nation of Spargus, to be used for the city's good."
Jak dropped from the window to crouch on the bed, and a dark, suspicious look entered his eyes. 
"What do you mean "belong to"?" 
If he noticed the boy’s abruptly hostile tone, Damas didn’t indicate it. He shrugged and tipped his head back as though deep in thought.
"Out here, strength and survival are what Wastelanders respect the most. We live in a harsh land, boy. In order for there to even be a nation to accept the exiled, we all had to work to reclaim enough desert to live on."
Damas pushed off of the wall and scooped up the mortar and pestle on the table. Ignoring Jak's groan, he began methodically grinding up one of the last two leaves of Desert Lily.
"Everyone pulls their weight in Spargus," he said, lifting the pestle to point at Jak, "Be they king or recent rescue. Some serve as warriors, some as scouts. Some make things, some tend animals, some teach and tend to what few children we are granted. Without one link, the chain falls apart."
Damas straightened and looked from Jak to Daxter to Mar, more serious now. 
"Let that be your first lesson in this city: through unity, we survive. If one person shirks or throws their work onto the shoulders of another, we all suffer for it."
Daxter folded his arms and scoffed. "Somebody tell Haven that. Right, Jak?"
Jak's frown was more pensive than suspicious now.
"Does everyone live by that?" he asked pointedly, "Or just you?"
The shark grin came back.
"Oh I learned it from an old woman here, when I was the half-dead stray. Those who have been here longer than twenty years all learned the value of unity long ago."
While Jak pondered the implications of that, Damas poured a little water into a bowl. Carefully, he tipped the mortar just enough for the bitter, gel-like juices and eco of the plant to slide into the water without splashing. After a moment's stirring, the king lifted the bowl to his own lips and took a sip. Instantly, he made a face and put it down.
"Ecch. That's not well filtered. I'm going to get a cheesecloth."
He stepped out of the alcove and began rummaging through the supplies the monks had lined up neatly on carts between alcoves. 
Mar blinked twice. "What...what does cheese have to do with Jak's medicine?! Why are you so weird?!"
Bemused, Damas shook his head and turned his attention back to the search. "It's- It's for straining. I do not know -- Ah, there's one! -- I do not know why it is called a cheesecloth either."
"Because you pour the whey into it to catch the curds when you're making yakkow cheese," Daxter supplied idly. "Whey goes through the weave, curds don't. Get it? Cheese-cloth, for cheese-making."
Catching Mar's surprised look, Daxter shrugged. "Kid, I went from the brat who mucks out the barn to owning my own pub. I know everything we use yakkows for. Everything."
Mar wrinkled his nose. "We didn't have any yakkows left when we got the Rift boat working. Metalheads ate em all."
Jak recoiled. "All of them?! What- what about old Zeb? What happened to him?"
He wasn't sure he wanted to know.
Sure, he'd known on a cognitive level that everyone who had lived in Sandover was long dead now. But when Mar had been living in the immediate aftermath of his departure, it was hard to think of the old folks dying. Especially if it had been in front of his younger self.
Mar shrugged with the careless nonchalance of childhood. "I dunno. Everybody that didn't get eaten moved to the jungle to hide in the Precursor ruins. We went back and forth a lot the first two years."
Jak's shoulders fell, and he nodded. "At least somebody survived, I guess."
"Samos always complains that it woulda been more if you'd gone back with us." Mar rolled his eyes. "Like he wasn't the guy who made you stay behind in the first place."
As he returned to filter the medicine, Damas read the small boy's signs in mild bewilderment. Rather quickly, he decided he wasn't going to poke that bear. Not while the boys were still recovering and in a potentially volatile state.
Samos was a name he recognized -- that Precursor History nut from the court of Haven, as he recalled, grandson of the last Green Eco sage. Damas had always found the man irritating. It seemed as if the little one, at least, shared his opinion.
"Mar, stop." Jak set his jaw and kept his signs low, partially out of sight. "We'll talk about it later."
The boy probably thought he'd been very discreet, but considering they were communicating with the lingua franca of Spargus, it was really pretty obvious. It was as if they believed they were the only signers present! Damas tucked the thought away to ponder later, preoccupied with the sign he guessed was little "Seek's" abbreviated name.
It bore a distinct similarity to his own son's nickname.
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