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Thursday, October 31, 2013

Chapter 9, Part I

Ehoti shuddered as the elevator glided to a stop. A day ago, the first floor was crawling with mentally stable guards, watching carefully for any signs of intruders. Now every one of those guards would be infected, all of them able-bodied and armed to the teeth. Ehoti revolted at the thought of having to fight their way through more guards, the cry of “Murderer!” resounding louder in his head. But as the door opened and a wide-eyed guard rushed toward them with a scream, he gave into his thoughts without much resistance.

To their surprise, most of the guards did not give more than a passing glance to the newcomers, consumed with the desires of It. Two guards grappled a few feet away, fighting for the ownership of some trinket. Another infected sentry stridently bellowed random sentences, his voice overcoming the voices of all the other guards.

It really was an eclectic array of chaotic activity, each man’s passion based off their base interests and personalities. Some guards even stood silently in a corner, gnashing their teeth together. The entire plethora of guards, to say the least, was frightening.

Leading the way to the door, Gerate shoved an inactive soldier out of his path and raced into the airfield, followed by his comrades. Several of the aircraft were on fire, the arid stench of burning fuel stinging their noses. Hurrying along, they saw the signs of destruction everywhere they looked.

Ehoti noticed that Desidu seemed to be lagging behind, looking intently at one of the burning aircraft. The rebel’s face looked alarmingly peaceful as he slowly began to walk toward the ship, almost as if he was in a trance. Ehoti ran over to him.

“Desidu, we need to leave here now! One of these ships could explode and kill us!”

Desidu shook his head. “It is calling to me – something tells me it will bring me fulfillment.” He continued toward the aircraft, watching the conflagration with interest. There was something wrong with him, and Ehoti began to worry. Quickly, he grabbed Desidu by the shoulders and turned him around. “We need to leave, now!”

Desidu shook himself free. “I will stay, Ehoti. I will stay with this beautiful-“

“WHAT IS THE MATTER WITH YOU?” Ehoti screamed. “You are going to kill yourself!”

“If this beautiful display of color cannot bring me fulfillment, yes!” Desidu smiled. “Looked at the brilliant orange-“

Ehoti grabbed him by the shoulders, shaking him. “You are coming with us, Desidu – even if I must drag you out of this wretched place!”

Desidu screamed, wriggling out of Ehoti’s grasp. “You can have your insularity if you wanted to, you bigoted idiot! I want to enjoy life! I want fulfillment-“

A tremendous roar cut him off midsentence, the shadowy form of some large creature visible through the smoke. Ehoti continued to pull on Desidu’s arm. “We have to leave, comrade!”

The sound of a great wind reached their ears as Ehoti fell to the ground. Desidu turned too late to see the Querilon monster bounding toward him with its gaping mouth opened wide. Ehoti scrambled away in terror as menacing jaws closed on the crazed rebel, ending his tragic life in moments.

As It had taken control over the creature’s mind, the monster itself had grown in proportion. Rising up on two enormous hind legs, the beady eyes watched the two remaining rebels flee into the smoke. But it made no move to devour them. They were two men – hardly more satisfying than the mouthful it had just consumed. There were greater populations of Netopians to be found in the city, and It did not worry about a living Netopian as long as they remained ineffective. Bellowing loudly, the monster turned around and ran into the downtown area of Netopia.

*****

Yive shut the door and turned to Reshnu, anger displayed all over his face. “I told you our rules forbid a man to communicate with a woman!”

Reshnu bowed his head, his knees shaking. “I’m sorry.” He now heartily regretted defying Yive, remembering that the old man had saved his life. Who was he, a little boy, to decide what was right and what was wrong? He felt terrible.

Yive sighed. “I know it is hard for you, Reshnu – you are in a very different culture than you once lived in. The rules are foreign to you, but they must be obeyed!”

Reshnu nodded. He did not understand these rules or their purpose. Some seemed outright ridiculous to him, and he wished that the society of the Veti was not so strict. But he began to wonder whether there was a reason behind them, and asked timidly where the elder had learned the rules.

The old man’s face was transformed at the question. It seemed an eternity to Reshnu before he finally answered the question. “I created them, Reshnu.” He sighed.

“But why? Why all these rules?”

Yive shook his head. “It would be difficult to understand-“

“Please?” Reshnu looked pleadingly up at the elder.

Breathing deeply, the Veti walked to the balcony and gazed into the night sky. Finally, he spoke.

“I used to live in Netopia City, Reshnu – with my wife and my only son. It was a time of peace on the planet. The republic we lived in allowed us to share the truth with others. But then things changed.

A young man rose to power – a young man fearful of losing that power. Though at first he was tolerant of the living and their message, the supreme authority he possessed began to corrupt him. Slowly, his heart turned against us.

Spreading the message soon became illegal and almost impossible. We were faced with a choice: to stay where we were in the defilement of the city, or to remove ourselves and start our own colony. Most agreed to move somewhere remote, where we could live in isolation and light. No evil would be allowed in.

But my son was of a different mindset.” Yive swallowed, his eyes wet. He continued on. “My son believed otherwise. He believed we should stay and spread the truth among the Netopian people, in spite of their hostility. The debate grew worse, until finally the day came for our surreptitious exodus.

He refused to come with us, instead running away to join a covert rebel group of the living. And that was the last we ever heard of him.” Yive forced his tears away, turning back to Reshnu. “May you never stray on such paths of wickedness. You have your entire life before you – do not waste it on frivolity! Heed the instruction of you father!”

The old man sighed, looking into the sky. “If only I could see Lova one last time, I would be content…”

*****

Narva stiffened as a dismal wail echoed outside, sending a shiver up his spine. How many people had this infection devastated? How many were dead? Were the infected citizens aggressive? Not much could be determined from the single window in his lodging place.

He turned away from the window and strode to the door. He couldn’t wait in this hole any longer – he had to know what was going on out there and how bad this new “infection” was! Grabbing a cloak from the rack, Narva donned it and carefully listened through the door for signs of the infected throngs.

Hearing nothing, he quietly opened the door, glancing into the empty street. It was such a strange-looking sight – a main throughway not dotted with a single soul. A sight that felt almost like an unearthly dream.

Narva shut the door and glanced in both directions, but no one was in sight, anywhere. Quickly, he strode to a near-by tunnel passageway and peered inside the dimly-lighted interior. There was not much he could see in the gloom, many of the overhead lights lying in pieces on the ground. Had there been a fight? There was no way of telling who or what had desolated the lighting.

He stiffened as a rustling noise echoed from the tunnel. Though he wasn’t sure, he thought he heard the faint but steady sound of someone’s breathing. Who would wait in a dark tunnel such as this, alone? Instinct reached his arm into his jacket, hand closed around his firearm. He was not going to be caught off-guard.

Slowly, Narva stepped into the tunnel and began to walk into the gloom, further and further away from the pale light of day. Now the overhead lights were few and far between, forcing him to trail his hand on the wall as he continued on into the depths of the tunnel. A stench arose; the smell of something long dead. Holding his breath, he removed the weapon from his pocket and pointed it in front of him.

Suddenly a figure emerged from the darkness, so quickly he didn’t have time to aim. Narva fired, the cartridge flying aimlessly into the inky blackness behind the stranger. Taking a step back, Narva fumbled for the knife he always carried in his belt. Could he have forgotten it in his anxiousness to see the city?

“Are you a friend or foe?” The voice was surprisingly young-sounding, probably belonging to a young man of about twenty-five. Flattening himself against the wall, Narva released the lock mechanism on his firearm and aimed at the newcomer’s head.

“I’m not going to hurt you – I was ordered to save, not bring down to the depths. Put down your weapon.”

“No!” Narva glared into the darkness at the figure he could barely distinguish in the gloom. “You could be lying, like I do every day!”

“So you are one of them – dead too? I was afraid so.” The voice sounded sad, as if it sympathized with him. But Narva had developed an intense apathy to sympathy. In fact, he had grown to hate it.

“Dead? You, who are veiled in the darkness of this tunnel, are more likely to be dead than I am! I don’t believe that filth about life and death! I am over life and death!”

“Then why do you fear me?”

Narva bit his lip and swallowed. “I don’t fear you – I simply serve myself and am going to keep this life, even if you must lose yours!”

The voice stopped for a moment as the newcomer contemplated this. “Go ahead, then. I kill myself every morning; I’m not afraid to die again.”

Narva scoffed. “Lies and baloney – no one kills themselves and lives to tell of it! Leave, before I kill you for your first and last time!”

The figure made no sign of moving, the steady sound of breathing still the same distance away. “Should I run from you when He ran to me? If anyone could have been repulsed, it was-“

Narva had had enough of this conversation. The stranger was not going to move, and the resolute courage was unmatched to any criminal he had ever met. Something was different about this person – and he did not want to find out what it was.

The shadowy figure did not flinch as Narva took aim, his finger tightened on the trigger. Was he bluffing, despite the possible cost? Who would bluff in the face of certain death? Something told him this was a bad idea, but that something was overweighed by the survival instinct wielding the gun.

The figure started as two loud reports split the air, followed immediately by silence. He was shocked to find that he felt no pain anywhere on his body, even though he was still in the same tunnel. Had his antagonist missed on both shots? The stranger cautiously stepped forward, gazing at the slumped figure of Narva leaning against the wall. And then he realized the truth.

The weapon had backfired – Narva had shot himself.

A brief moment of elation consumed him as he surveyed the injured Narva. He wasn’t dead, but would be out cold for some time, and this would provide enough time for the stranger to disappear into the city. He had been delivered!

A voice broke the stillness, drawing away his attention – a voice that was so deep it could barely be heard. “I should leave, now. He’ll be better for the experience, and now I won’t be a target-

“What if He had done that?” Another voice, more shimmery and light-filled, cut off the first. “You know I have to stay!”

“No, no! I would be crazed to do that! We need to leave, now!” The deep voice began to get louder. “I am not going to put myself in danger!”

“But He did, and I know-“

“I don’t care! I should have trusted me all along, and not gone with ridiculous reasoning that did not belong to me. Helping in times of trouble! I like that – putting myself, the most important, before others? Stupid and-“

“My express command.”

“Who cares out the ‘express command’? No one listens anyway – He even said that not all would accept!”

The stranger began to shake, his face breaking out into a cold sweat. His arm reached out and took hold of something he couldn’t see. The deep voice vegan to drown out the lighter voice.

“Is myself with me or not? There can only be one head-“

“And that rightly should be me!”

“No!” The deep voice was furious. “Besides, I cannot be stopped! I have the power of the darkness to crush all other heads, and the other side can’t do a thing without Him and His light!”

The man felt his fingers tighten around something, as if he was grappling for a lethal hold on a man’s throat. Horrible visions of his past life began to fly before his face, condemning him.

The lighter voice let out a muffled scream. “I can’t do this alone! You need to help me overcome my foe! I need to-“ The voice broke off with a yell as the deep voice screamed, shouting but gradually reducing in volume. It bellowed as the lighter voice grew louder and louder, until the bellowing faded out into silence. With a final yell, the lighter voice faded away too, leaving the man in the silence of the tunnel.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Chapter 8, Part II

Music filled the air, intermingled with merry conversation and frequent laughter. Servants poured in and out of a kitchen, bringing food and drink to the happy partiers. Confused, Desidu crept back to his friends, wishing he was back home in peace and quiet. “What are they doing?”

Ehoti shrugged, also bewildered at the merry festivities they heard. “A celebration of some kind, no doubt. Perhaps a birthing party?[1]

Gerate shook his head. “Whatever it is, it will not stop us now. We’ve come too far to be stopped by a birthing party. But listen!”

The rebels strained their ears, making out the voice of a little girl that was begging for more drink. She giggled as something swept her off her feet – probably her father or mother, giving her a warm embrace. Almost like one of the rebels might do to one of their own family.

Ehoti shook his head. “We need to do this quickly – I’m already sick at the thought of it.”

“What? The partiers, or the thought of killing them?” Desidu checked his magazine load again, procrastinating.

The guard sighed, wiping his forehead with the corner of his jacket. “Both. The man celebrating this party is probably the greatest source of evil on the entire planet. If anyone should die, it would be he.” He paused as the little girl squealed again, prompting a chorus of laughter from the merry-makers.

“But who appointed us as judges over the land? Assassinating the dictator might be as wrong as him killing us! What if we have fallen into the ways of darkness, through our pursuit of light-“

“What if, what if, what if!” Gerate glared at Ehoti. “This is hard enough without you adding guilt to our load! We all know that under normal circumstances, we would all agree to the morality of such an act! It is simply the gravity of such a decision that makes us falter at the doorstep!” He tightened his grip on the weapon, a shaking finger resting on the cold steel trigger. “Let’s get this over with.”

*****

Just as the waiter handed the glass to the little girl, a loud crack split the air, followed by a shout. All eyes turned to the waiter, who looked blankly at all those around him with an expression of fear. The glass fell to the ground, shattering on the hard surface. Slowly, he sank to the ground, laying to rest at the feet of the dictator.

All was silent for a moment, everyone too stunned to make a move. The waiter had been shot in the back – a tell-tale circle of red stained his white uniform. Crying, the little girl ran from the dead man to her father, hugging him tightly and looking apprehensively toward the three men that emerged from the curtain.

Gerate felt all last remnants of hate leave him as he tried to avert the gaze of that little girl. Were they men of hate and vileness themselves? Killing men, and even entire families? Could they-

“NO!” He could not bear to take another glance, another look into those pleading eyes. Even the sight of the horrified father sickened him, wrenching his stomach. Gasping, he pulled the lever on the side, releasing the safety mechanism. It would all be over in just a second…

Ehoti almost choked as he aimed for the dictator, pulling the trigger with a finger that shook violently. His conscience told him no. His entire being told him no. Everything that was within him screamed in opposition, reminding him that the life he possessed had not been given because of his love for He who gave it. The rebel shuddered as the man fell over, hitting his head against the refreshment table.

Desidu felt his heart race as his finger tightened on the trigger, sending a spray of bullets into the midst of the party. Almost crying, he swore to himself that the little girl would not die by any bullet of his, purposely keeping his line of fire away from her. Tears blinded his eyes, forcing him to shoot randomly at the assemblage of people.

He was furious with himself, dabbing violently at his eyes with the corner of his jacket. What kind of monster had he become? Why did his convictions not stop him from the evil he was committing? The scream of a dying man jolted him from his thoughts, bringing him back to the horrific present. And then, too late, he realized where he had been shooting in his moments of blindness.

“NO!” The rebel fell to his knees, crying without control. “I didn’t see her move until it was too late!”

Maybe Inusha was right, Ehoti thought to himself as the last man fell to the ground on top of the heap, slain by one of his own shots. We are murderers – murderers who do not care. Murderers who excuse their wicked crime, believing they are in the right.

The sight was unbearable to his eyes, forcing him to turn the other direction. Was he becoming soft, a wretched excuse for a gritty hulk? Or could it be that they had the wrong definition of strong, even of right and wrong? He forced his tears away and turned back to the gruesome spectacle.

Gerate had just finished piling the bodies up in the heap, his face anything but triumphant. Desidu did not make a move to help him, for the rebel was a complete mess of emotion. He sat in the corner, trembling and weeping – an ironic contrast to the Desidu of before.

And then a forgotten figure stepped into the room, countenance lit with triumph. It was Sahure, the rebel that betrayed their confidence and sold his alliance for a bribe. But his face did not remain triumphant as his mouth dropped, surveying the room he had left thirty minutes ago.

Ehoti suddenly understood. The dictator and his family were celebrating the discovery of the plot, elated that the dictator had eluded assassination – they had simply celebrated too early. The traitor stiffened as Gerate approached, sadness replaced by hatred.

“So you betrayed us, did you?” The lead rebel’s face was electrified with fury, his eyes flashing. “You betrayed our trust for the temporary pleasures of this darkness?” He reached his hand toward his belt, fumbling in a pocket.

Sahure bowed his head. “I needed the money, Gerate! If you were in my shoes, you would understand-“

“No I would not! You betray our confidence, our cause, and our reality?”

Sahure shook his head. “You’ll never understand-“

“And I don’t need to! Your actions have explained you, Sahure – a traitor to-“

Gerate stopped his tirade as the traitor began to tremble violently, his breathing sporadic and shaky. Something was not right – he almost looked as if he was suffering a severe case of shock. But there was more to Sahure’s strange behavior than biologic shock, Ehoti reasoned as Gerate backed away suspiciously. And then suddenly the rebel realized what was happening.

“He’s infected!” Ehoti jumped back, motioning to his friends. “It has finally arrived in the capitol of Netopia City!”

The commander backed away further, examining Sahure with some alarm. “It could be shock...”

“Just look at him!” Ehoti pointed to the traitor’s trembling limbs. “It takes over a host’s body, leading it to desire the lusts of the flesh! We all knew that It was coming – what else could it be?”

Gerate was just about to retort him when Sahure rose to his feet, eyes opened wide. Struggling to keep his balance, the man slowly walked toward the rebels with outstretched arms. The rebel quickly changed his mind.

“We need to leave – now!” Sprinting towards the door, Ehoti heard a screech echo dismally through the throne room, grating on his ears. As Desidu slammed the door shut, something hit against the door violently, falling onto the floor with a crash. It wouldn’t be long before Sahure found the other exit into the hallway.

The mass decay of Netopia had begun.

*****

Inusha stiffened as the sound of footsteps echoed through the dark corridor, the beam of a flashlight visible fifty feet ahead of him. For a brief moment he reached his hand into his jacket, groping for his weapon. The guard would never know what hit him in the darkness, and the passageway was secluded enough for the rebel to hide the evidence. It would be an easy way out.

The weapon clattered to the ground. This was not the way of a figure of light, nor the way of someone who cared for his fellow man. This was the way of the dead flesh that he had discarded, the body he resolved to avoid.

A shout arose from the sentry as the flashlight revealed the intruder in the hallway, standing weaponless with his arms outstretched. Why was he here? What was he doing? The guard’s voice shook as he ordered the stranger against the wall, fumbling for his communications unit.

Suddenly he screamed, falling heavily to the ground with a crash. Something was grabbing him from the inside, clinging to his brain. He struggled for control as the guard felt this feeling take control, subjecting him to its will. Picking himself up, the sentry vainly struggled to throw the creature off, but the creature was inside of him.

His hand reached for his weapon against his will, a voice inside ordering him to kill the captive. But the voice was his own – the creature and the guard had become one together. This was not what he wanted, and yet it was. The infected sentry looked up, scanning the hallway for the intruder.

But Inusha had fled. It may have not been the most courageous action at the moment, but the action saved him from almost certain death. Screaming in rage, the guard raced down the tunnel after him, his limbs shaking violently. Though Inusha’s head-start provided little chance for the man to catch up to him, It wasn’t concerned.

It had the rest of Netopia to chase him with.

*****

Reshnu wandered through the garden, gazing in awe at the colorful flora surrounding him. Though a few species of the vegetation he had seen in old manuscripts and environmental records, most were foreign to him.

He stopped as a sweet-smelling orange bush, marveling at the little flower-like buds sprouting from the vines. A small insect landed on one of the sprouts, drinking in the small protein fibers the flowers produced. Reshnu began to notice similar insects on the other flowers, a strange sight to a city-dweller.

And then he saw her, walking down the garden pathway, humming to herself. It was the same girl that Yive had forbidden him speak to, the one that seemed so understanding and kind. Her face was beautiful, the radiant white glow lighting up her delicate features like a rainbow.

Reshnu was usually a very obedient little boy, submitting to the authorities placed over him. Yive had told him he was not to speak to the girl because of their culture. But Reshnu had begun to resent the old Netopian and his constant deprecation of minor things. The boy had travelled to the Veti to learn about Lova, not to obey a list of rules. And even though something inside him told Reshnu that disobeying the Elder Yive was unwise, he resolved to speak to her anyway.

“Excuse me!”

The lady turned in surprise, noticing Reshnu for the first time. She smiled, but shook her head. “Hello Reshnu! But Yive must have told you that our culture forbids a man to talk to any other woman than his wife, except on matters of life and death.”

“Do you know Lova?” Reshnu looked pleadingly at her, hoping for a sign of recognition but certain of her dissent. The girl shook her head sadly.

He slumped. Was his entire trip in vain? If no one knew of Lova here, what had he accomplished? Was he now integrated into this community until he died? He looked up as the girl spoke again.

“My name is Tacia – I am the Elder Yive’s daughter.”

She seemed so affable and friendly that Reshnu threw all caution to the wind and boldly asked what Yive would never tell him.

“Why is your father so strict?”

The girl gasped, looking at Reshnu in shock. No one had ever asked such a question of anyone in their community, and she had never dreamed of such a thing. It was so natural to accept these superficial rules that thinking of anything else was revolting. Finally, she turned and swiftly walked in the opposite direction.

A heavy hand landed on his shoulder, whirling him around to face the imposing figure of the Elder Yive. Reshnu suddenly felt very small in the presence of this glowing one, almost afraid of the old man. The elder’s face was stern.

“Come with me, Reshnu. We need to have a talk!”



[1]A Netopian party held on the date of someone’s birth, celebrating the accomplishments of that individual. Though similar to a birthday party, the birthing party was more significant and more focused.