The Future Spirit (Chapter 6) [WiP]

Ave, peoples,

Some of your guys encouraging comments on previous TFS chapters inspired me to continue with this sci-fi story. However, I don’t have enough time to do everything I would like to every day, so it’s pick-and-choose between projects and activities. Nonetheless, I am attempting to get this back underway. And to show you that I am indeed working on it, I decided to post the work-in-progress Chapter 6.

Enjoy! :-]

 

 

Even as he had initiated the hyperenergy charge-up, Robert knew the U.E.S.F. scanners had informed them that The Future Spirit was preparing for a jump.

And all he could do was transfer any amount of spare energy from presently unneeded facilitations to the engines to speed up the process. Attempting a retaliation with weaponry was out of the question—the penetrator torpedoes had done more than damage the thrusters—they had wrecked the energy transistors that ran power from the core to the exterior firing units.

Robert would have utilized their firepower to destroy the docking tubes and save Onvelor from having to… give himself to salvage The Future Spirit’s security. But the L.aE.A.I. Droid hadn’t, and his master had decided a fiery fate in a selfless act of sacrifice; though illogically, he could have survived, somehow.

And Robert was willing to accept an illogicality, if it meant a hope.

Evolve programming made L.aE.A.I. Droids particularly unique from most other robots; L.aE.A.I.’s automatically learned and adapted, could theoretically “live” without any instructions (existing and doing of freewill), and technically possess and express emotion based on their exposure to biological, feeling beings; humans, generally. Though their “attaining of emotion” was a debated subject. It could simply be emulation of feeling, and yet, Robert had seemingly “felt” something before.

Back on Altritious when Onvelor had succeeded in the initial, and extremely important, step of the restoration project, he had brought something back that was thought lost forever. Onvelor had emanated such passionate exuberance then, and in that moment Robert experienced a phenomenon he supposed must have been the concept of “hope”. Now he wished his system would be filled with it once again, but instead, he felt nothing; as he almost always did.

Why hadn’t he reacted when the terminal was decimated, taking his master with it? Onvelor had recovered him from a scrapyard and repaired him from certain and permanent decommission. Robert could not comprehend why such a loss would not affect him…

Unless the override program Onvelor had initiated with that specific code phrase had purposely made it so…

A notification from The Future Spirit’s scanners suddenly drew his attention. Enemy vessels are preparing to fire; signature locked on, batteries trained to discharge. Evasion to prevent destruction is advised.

Confirmed. Replied Robert, noting for himself the imminent barrage of high-intensity laserfire.

Notification: U.E.S.F. Cruiser identified as Beacon of Prosperity is moving into the path of charted hyperspace course… Path obstructed. Hyperspace jump will result in direct, fatal collision with the opposing craft if not aborted.

Confirmed. Robert could visibly understand that the third part of the cruiser trio was attempting to block him through the forward viewport. He had noticed its movement beforehand and calculated that it would, indeed, obstruct The Future Spirit’s planned—and last hope of—a hyperspace course, positioning itself lengthwise like a mobile barrier.

Unfortunately, the engines were not quite prepared for the jump at that point.

Now the only path is through it. Robert mused. How could this starvessel successfully punch through a Cruiser-class ship at lightspeed without disintegrating upon impact?

Thankfully for The Future Spirit, Robert had had a witty master and could artificially compute at a high rate; those factors combined, he developed a rash but plausible course of action to bypass this predicament in about nine seconds.

Status on the Stasis Field Generator charge?

Approximately 90.0% charged and counting.

What energy can be diverted to increase the processes speed?

Internal and external lighting consumes a minimal amount of overall powercore disbursing. However, deactivating all lighting and transferring the energy to the Stasis Field Generator will assist the charge process by several percent.

Confirmed. Deactivate and transfer immediately.

Command received. Enacting now…

All over the entire ship, the lights went out, plunging it into darkness; save for the illumination from the consoles and Robert’s digital, pixelated face. He didn’t need lights, and neither did The Future Spirit at present.

Siphon any energy that currently does not power a necessary function and transfer it to the Generator.

Command received… Life support systems deactivated, minus in Pod Chamber 02… Elevator units deactivated… Internal gravity producers deactivated, minus in the primary M.C.B… Energy transferred.

Status on the Stasis Field Generator charge?

99.5% charged and counting.

Broken Poem of Whispers

Ave, peoples,

This is a somewhat disjointed “poem” I wrote.

(Disclaimer: “Whispers” is not and is unrelated to Ben’s fictional creatures in Hell’s Children Book 1 by the same name; this is completely original work.)

 

 

Whispers.

Whispers… Sweet and soft, harsh and cold; both come from something quietly unbold. Yet one whisper can change the world.

 

Whispers… Whispers from a time past, never to reach again, forgotten and spent

They travel, light wisps of sound

So far they come, to remind and astound

They can save you from the prison, if only you allow

These faint sounds to save you now

 

Left behind something so precious

Spent and behind

Why do you forget those lessons?

Unwillingly bound, initially

But as temptation comes closer, you have to give in

You cannot flee, it won’t leave you be

Chained to something you wanted so badly

Even when you know at heart, what you once cherished has fallen apart

Replaced by another entity, taken the hope of being… truly free

 

Now you are a prisoner evermore

An impossibility made reality

Scared and confused, burning and misused

Yet you love it, what you created

And what you’ve become

 

How could you have supposed

That that which only you could see

Would manifest its own external control

And enact vengeance so deep

Erasing who you were on the outside

And working to overcome the psyche

 

Such dreams, the nightmares consume your sleep

And when you wake, the physical world is cold and cruel

Twisted and deceitful, no one will believe you

Your only shoulder to cry on, is the one that engineered this slow demise

~ TEW

Lucky

Hey, just digging around for older contest entries from yours truly, and I found this. I can’t remember the details of the contest, but I believe it had something to do with the human characters not speaking, and this is how I got around it, I think. Sorry if the tenses change, because I found that several times in the quick edit I just did. Please enjoy.

Ted, the Triple-Thick slice of bacon, had luck.

Good, or bad, he had it.

It started when his pig got caught in the bacon prohibition of the 1950s. His pig, Ol’ Lou, was wandering along when some bacon smugglers found him. Bacon had risen in price and pigs were now one of the most wanted objects in the US. Then his pig was killed, and along with it Ted; bad luck.

But, he was accidentally shocked back to life on his way into the plastic bag; good luck.

Unfortunately, plastic bags make it hard to breath.

Fortunately, triple thick pieces of bacon don’t need to breath.

Unfortunately, he was sold to a man who was planning on eating him rather than releasing him. Go figure.

Anyway, with that prologue we may enter the story of Ted and his Buddies

 

Ted was crammed between his new best friend, Fred the Frying Pan, and his fellow triple thick slices of bacon. Considering that the other slices of bacon were dead, Fred was quickly becoming Ted’s favorite person, though Ted knew not how long this relationship would last. Suddenly Fred froze and stopped his digression (If digression was a sport Fred would be olympic champion) and they both gazed up at Slimy. Slimy was a unkempt man, hence the name. His grimy fingers curled around Fred’s handle and his other hand grabbed Ted’s package of potential deliciosity. [Ask author for dictionary definition] After setting them on what appeared to be sand, Slimy looked around for a knife. Locating it he scooted over to his fire and set Fred in it. The suspense built as Slimy decided what end of the package of bacon to cut. Ted was on the top, so in the hands of any logical, and literate person, He would have been a goner. But luckily, Ted weren’t in the hands o’ no smarty-britches. He were’s in the hands o’ ol’ Slimy, infamousest ignoramusest in the whole Westesest. After cutting open the bottom of the package, despite the arrows that practically screamed at Slimy for opening it the wrong way, Slimy slapped three triple thick slices of bacon into the pan. After they were sizzling Slimy laid back and whistled a tune.

Once finished the bacon was gobbled up. When Slimy started to clean up he set Fred up against a cactus. From his view he could see nothing. Nothing, but the desert, and some cacti, and some…actually there was nothing else. Suddenly feeling a sense of urgency, Ted looked at Fred and focused his whole being on Fred. Suddenlier Fred heard Ted whispering over and over, Burn the snippets of bacon, then burn Slimy as he reaches for you, then flip the knife to me when he isn’t looking.

Telepathy was only one of many services that Ted had to offer.

Ted saw Fred’s handle wiggle and knew he had been heard.

Soon Slimy smelled smoke. Looking to the fire he saw a huge blaze coming from Fred.

It’s amazing what a well trained frying pan can do! thought Ted

Reaching toward Fred as planned Slimy unexpectedly found himself seared.

Screaming words that Fred’s mother would have killed him for saying, Slimy hopped around the campfire like a one-footed jackrabbit. As he continued his dance pattern accompanied by a profane tirade, Slimy didn’t notice that Fred had flipped the knife towards the package of bacon. It sliced through the air and continued slicing right through the package. Sliding out of the gap Ted inched his way, inchworm style, around the cactus.

Finally Slimy settled down and put all of his stuff away. Laying down to sleep for the night, he nodded of still muttering about his missing bacon.

 

Fred woke to the feel of raw bacon on his cooking surface.

“Fred,” whispered Ted.

“What’s up?” Fred replied.

“We gotta get out of here! That Slimy is a maniac! He ate three of my brothers!”

“But that’s what he’s supposed to do.”

“No it’s not! Just because we slices of bacon aren’t as big as people that doesn’t mean that they can eat us!”

“But, they do anyway. Besides, bacon pieces are inferior to humans. You are also quite tasty.”

“Inferior!?! Tasty!?! Wait a cotton-pickin’ minute!!! How would you  know how we taste?”

“You didn’t know that frying pans clean themselves by licking themselves, like cats clean themselves.”

“That makes you the most revolting person I know.”

“How so?!” cried Fred, starting to get aggravated.

“You’re a cross between a cannibal and a liposuction… uh. A cross between a cannibal, and one who liposucks. You not only eat the bacon, but you soak up their fat before they’re fried!!!”

“That was the most insensitive remark I’ve ever heard you say to me. I hate you!!!”

“Talk about insensitive!!! I’m leaving and I’m taking…uh,…er,…well I’m leaving!!!”

“Good riddance!”

Ted moved along at a steady pace, ending up swallowed in the black of night. Though he feared the worst he believed he now had a purpose. He felt called to begin an association. The National Association for the Genetic deTastization of Bacon-kind. After thinking these thoughts Ted was lifted into the air and chewed and swallowed.

“Mmmmmm Mmmmmm, good!”

Update, Who the… and Roleplaying (Arbitrary World Post No.2)

Ave, peoples!

Why is G-2 apparently so cute and yet so annoying? Why would you breathe perfluorocarbon? Why does eating foam brownies seem peculiarly choco-fabiry?

Welcome to the second Arbitrary World post, where he who is I offers a peculiar approach to blog-like posting and an odd finesse to sporadic updates.

Today, we will venture into the subjects of an update, “Who the…” and roleplaying!

First off, the rather un-droll update!

So, since Of Light and Metal began, I have posted a Pt.1 and a Pt.2, neither of which seemed nearly as popular or worth-a-read as my other incomplete science fiction story, The Future Spirit; which is fine. As stated in the first Arbitrary World post, Of Light and Metal is (presently) simply a test, something for me to experiment with. Do I plan on continuing it? Do I even have the idea for the final Part? No and yes. Until further notice, I have no plans to complete that short story, but I have the basic idea of how I want it to play out, so perhaps someday I will go back to it. Personally, I didn’t particularly enjoy it, and if my heart isn’t there, then I should move on (if only temporarily) in this case.

Now, it might be queried, “If you’re done with Of Light and Metal” for now, is The Future Spirit being rebooted?” Per say, maybe. I definitely appreciate The Future Spirit more than OLaM, and I have put thought into continuing (and hopefully, finishing) The Future Spirit. Shoot me a comment if you would like TFS to return, it might assist me in making a decision sooner than later. 😉

 

“I have a name and yet I don’t.”

“Paradox!”

*World Explodes*

 

And now onto the “Who the…” part of this Arbitrary World post:

“Who the…” it sounds kind of like “Hula”, so I’ll move right along and explain. (Note: Munchkin cannot dance.)

We are writers. And, to my understanding, most of us are interested in making writing our full-time job in the future. My question is: Who do you want to become like, specifically an author, journalist, etc.? Certain traits, writing style, career status?

And of just you and you alone, who do you want to develop into? Or do you like who you are now, and want to stay that way?

 

AAHHHHH!!! Chairmode ACTIVATED. BOOP!

 

And we’re back!

Finally, today’s final subject: Roleplaying!

Roleplaying is a fun way to play out stories on-the-wing (or planned, depending). Specifically, text chat and/or IM roleplaying is an activity that is fun and simple and can be done through a messaging program between several people at once, wherever they are! I would like to present the idea (if any are interested) to begin, or at least try, P.Y.W.G. roleplaying sessions. What do you think? Leave a comment!

 

And that is all for today! I hope you typically refrain from eating those foam brownies, and if you want the best life-span out of your computer, do not sit on the keyboard! Thanks for reading. 🙂

Gladiator (short draft)

He crumpled before me as the crowd thundered in approval. Underneath my shimmering metal mask I breathed hoarsely. Adrenaline rushed through my battle-hardened body. My sweat glistened chest gleamed in the hot sun. Sand clung to my feet poking through dusty sandals. On my left arm a metal bracer ran from my shoulder to my wrist, encumbering my movement. In my right hand I held a sharp sword. The giant arena, that I was forced to preform in sat millions of visitors who wished to see blood spilt on the white sand.

They screamed, yelled, cheered. Death was their entertainment of choice. The only world that I knew was here, among killers, among animals, among gladiators. The coliseum had become our home, or at lest our grave yard. We as a group of people only knew few basic principles of being a slave, to fight, to kill, to survive. Murdering other human beings became more of a ritual to us than anything else. The silence of the multitude, then approval of the emperor, and then the sickly sound of steel cutting against bone and flesh.

The crowd of course loves it. They scream for death and lust for flowing blood. When a man killing a man is not enough they bring forth beasts. Tigers, lions, bears are just a few of them. Man and animal alike have mixed their blood on the battlegrounds of this accursed arena. I have been only so lucky as to be alive at this very moment, though I cannot say the same for my opponent.

As I drew my wet red blade from the body of my fallen enemy the crowd roared. Trumpets blared, intertwining with the enrage chanting of the fans. It was my name they screamed Milo the destroyer over and over again. Milo. Come to think of it I thought my name, above others, was a kindly one. Yet here I stood over the body of the man I had slain, his lacerations oozing. This man could have been a father, a brother, a son. I had become numb to the many killings I had preformed, with each one becoming easier.

The sound of grinding steel halted my train of thought. I turned quickly hoping to find the source. A huge gate opened before me as twenty armed guards came marching towards me. The masses booed and shouted insults as the men created a circle around me and quickly guided me back to the tunnel from where they came. As we descended down the dark pathway I could hear the ruckus of the crowd slowly fading away. Stonewalls created a prisonlike scenery. Iron bars enforced that look.

The coolness of the lower level allowed me to un-tense my muscles.

“This way gladiator,” one of the guards gestured to a cell filled with a single wooden bench hanging by steel chains and straw covering it and the floor. As I sat my strained being on the hard bed as a man littered with jingling keys hanging from his body locked the door behind me. I lay on my back and tried to slow my raspy breathing. I had one more fight. One more and I would be free. It was customary for a champion of the arena, after winning many battles, to be set free. My winning streak has been thirty-two kills; the body I left in the sand raised that count by one. Thirty-four was the perfect score. That number was my freedom.

Gladiators are not chosen; they are taken, and stolen. My small family of six was abducted from me. I was thirteen. Their shouts of terror still ring in my ears. Recalling that day from the actives of my memory is a task I preform with ease. We were eating a small meal of beans and rice. Then they came, Romans clade in blood red armor and holding viscous spears. My father rose to attack them, to protect us. My mother screamed as they thrust the sharp shaft through his body, lifting him from the floor and tossing him onto our rickety dinner table.

“Get the boy!” one shouted. Rough arms encircled me as I kicked and struggled to get away.

“Mother!” I called desperately. The last image that caught my eyes was that of my mother kneeling in her husband’s blood as a Roman strode over to her, grabbed her hair, drew a blade, and swiftly decapitated her. Her headless body fell limply on the floor as her murderer smirked under his feathery helm. He walked over to me, carrying her expressionless head and held it by my teary eyed face. The perfume from her hair wisped up my nose as tears dripped down my cheeks.

“Greeks, such a mighty people,” the well dressed killer kneeled so that we were eye to eye. My mothers crown still hung by his clenched hand.

“Not so much anymore,” in rage I spit in his face, and watched it dribble down his chin. He struck me as my world went black.

In my prison cell I fell off my bed as I sluggishly called for my deceased family. Cold sweat dripped down my face. I huddled up and wiped my sweaty face as my raggedy beard scratched my arm. How many years have I spent here? I turn my head to gaze upon faint white chalk marks. Seven years. As soon as I had entered into slavery a man had bought me with intent of warfare. Though I blame him for buying me, I credit him for training me.

“When your strength wanes, your body falters, and your spirit is crushed then you know you must fight even harder!” Titus use to proclaim. I was his apprentice, his slave, his son. Titus spent endless hours seeing to it that I would survive in the Coliseum. He even went to trouble of putting me into smaller skirmishes. I still bear the scars from fighting older men twice my size. Their graves bear witness to their defeat.

The old man’s training kept me alive. Titus had been a champion among gladiators, cutting down any who stood in his way. His fighting tactics were supreme, and better than any fighter of his day. His signature weapon were two twin knives; more fit for carving than anything else. Titus was unstoppable, unbeatable, invincible in my eyes.

Before he passed into the void he said the most profound statement, “Milo, let my training be applied in your life. May my strength, my speed, my skill, and my courage be your own.” As I kneeled by his frail form he slowly slipped from existence; his knives held crossed on his cold chest. The day after his passing I was sent to Rome to ‘perform’. Ever since I have honored his life by winning and staying alive.

Partials of broken daylight began to shimmer through a rusted grate on the ceiling.

A guard came too my door, “The emperor requested that you be released until your premiere fight this afternoon.” His silver chest-plate and bracers shone from excessive cleansing.

“So you are saying the emperor has requested a killer to roam the streets of Rome until he is ready to kill again?” I asked, my voice dry from un-use.

The man unlocked my cell door, “It is what he has requested and it shall be done accordingly without question.”

“Very well Roman, lead the way,” I responded with bitterness in my voice. Romans… the proud scum of the earth, willing to sell other man for sport. I followed the scrawny man through many passages until we came to the exit of the prison. How long ago was it when I last saw the light of day? The bustling of the crowd and the smells of the market overpowered my senses.

“Take your leave gladiator, but remember you have till this afternoon. If you are not back by that time, your chance of freedom will no longer be.”

“Very well Roman, I take your word,” I stepped down stone stairs and too the ground level below. The crowed streets bustled with life as energetic bodies moved too and fro. Rome had gotten bigger since I last was out, though that was years ago. I cam in bundled in chains and came out bundled in a tunic. They never let gladiators roam free. The cobblestone pavement felt warm under may sandals as I strode forward, itching to take in the entire city.

“Pastries, come get your fresh pastries!” a man behind a counter called out. So many smells wafted at my nose, some sweet, some bitter, and some salty. Part of the crowd knew who I was. I was deemed a killer and a savage in the coliseum. Yet I was loved by them and feared by all. As luck would have it the guard who had lead me out was kindly enough to provide me with a hooded cloak and I drew up its rough cloth to spread shadows across my face. In Rome the houses and stores are tightly nit together and separated by ally-ways and main streets. I took to the allies.

The clay rooftops somewhat shaded me from the blinding sun. Scattered here and their beggars covered in tattered rags softly called for lose change. One bold one wobbly stood and touched my shoulder.

“Sir, if you could led me something, any extra money that may burden you.” I looked upon this man in his stooped position and felt sorrow for him. We were both prisoners, one of poverty, one of war. This man and I had nothing, yet we were forced to make something of it. It was almost as if civilization expected us to conceive statues without giving the items necessary in order to gain it.

“Man, I have very little time to walk among free men. Before long I must return to my pit to fight for my freedom. But I can make you a promise, if I win my profits of the victory will belong to you.”

Tears weld up in his eyes, “You are Milo! The great warrior of the coliseum, you promise is most kind. I thank you so much,” he grabbed my hand and shook it violently.

“But in turn you must promise me something,” I stated pulling my hand away from the man’s vibrating one.

“What? Anything I would do for you. You have given me hope. Your wish is my command!” he proclaimed.

“Share the profits you have gained with your fellow brothers in poverty,” I gestured to many other slowly moving bodies that were scattered two and fro on the cobblestone.

The man gulped, “Very well, I shall do as you ask,” his gaze traveled to the ground.

Putting my hand on his shoulder I ask, “What is your name?”

“My name is Felix,” he looked up to me and asked, “What of you? How will you live if you give your winnings to the poor?”

“My good sir, freedom is living. Poverty is a cruel slave master. How can I live rich when I know so many are in bondage,” grabbing both his shoulders I continued, “That’s what makes us different than the Romans Felix. All they care about is wealth and statues. The wealthy just become more and more rich while the poor just sink deeper and deeper into poverty. We must make a difference.”

Felix looked off into the distance, seemingly entering to another dimension of thought. Then a smile drew across his warn face.

“Milo you are a wise man, I will do as you ask,” he paused, “I would like to help you as much as I can in your journey for freedom. I am not strong, but my mind works better than my body.”

“You are as noble as you are kind my dear Felix and yes I would much enjoy your company. My time of short freedom is drawing to an end and your friendship would be much appreciated.”

Flex’s smile spread even more across his face, “I know a place we could go for the day. I have some friends I would like you to meet that I think might interest you.”

I grinned, “Lead on my companion.” For a while we seemed to be going nowhere. The endless streets boggled my mind. As we traversed down the warm roads of Rome I studied my friend’s figure. He was slim, though next to me many a man seemed fragile.

Black Christmas

Just in time for summer, it’s a… Christmas story… yeah…

Half of you will remember this from back when we still did those group contests. I just wanted to get it on this site before I lost it. 😛

Plus, it is kinda cool… 😉

 

 

 

Chapter 1

 

 

December 20th

11:56 pm.

New York City, Apartment Complex.

 

The operation lasted three minutes and thirty seconds exactly.

No mistakes would made; the team was the best of the best. They had never failed, not in twenty years. Tonight would end no differently.

They sat in silence as the black van maneuvered into position. There was no need to check equipment; it was all in place, every aspect of the mission planned, down to the number of steps they would take once they entered the apartment complex.

The van rolled to a halt. The team was on the go in a heartbeat, stepping from the vehicle’s rear exit in perfect coordination. The building’s glass doors fell to pieces under a hail of silenced gunfire. Booted feet ground the fragments into the carpet as the entry team stormed down the hall.

A security guard saw them coming, grasping at his gun and opening his mouth to shout a warning. He was dead before he could get the word out, hollow-point bullets crashing through his neck, forehead, and left eye. Two of the soldiers caught him before he hit the floor, dragging him into the bathroom. The rest of the team continued on up the stairs.

One minute.

Residents peered out their doors as the back-clad men ran past. The citizens were no threat, and thus they were ignored. The white block letters on the team’s uniforms spelled out “SWAT”, but they certainly were not. The uniforms served another purpose; no one would think to call the police, as the group of people clad in body armor were clearly in charge of whatever was going on.

Third floor. The dilapidated hallway would have frightened away all but the most poor of tenants. That made it easier. The only civilian on this floor was their target, a Mr. Elric Jing. The man was well-known to the CIA and FBI, a terrorist wanted for supplying several of America’s most wanted criminals with weapons smuggled into the USA. Two days ago, the operatives tracking him had reported that he was in possession of a nuclear weapon, and was only waiting for the highest bidder to claim his prize. There would be no such claim. Tonight, Mr. Jing would die.

“Four. Lights.” the leader grunted. ‘Four’ was a nickname in this case; their members had no real names, only numbers. Names were a sign of weakness, a sign that the individual in question possessed some aspect of humanity. And humanity only got in the way.

Four nodded, already disassembling the electrical control box beside the staircase door. In exactly five seconds, the level three entry hall went dark. The only sound was the click of night-vision monocles sliding into place.

In a barely audible whisper, the leader said, “Breach in five. Mark.”

“Orders on contact?” whispered someone. It was only a formality, they all knew their orders.

“Target is armed and dangerous. Shoot to kill.”

Two minutes.

“Breach-”

Someone was singing.

The team froze, listening. The tune was a familiar one, a common Christmas jingle, yet sung in a voice one would associate with a funeral dirge.

“…he sees you when you’re sleeping, he knows when you’re awake, he knows if you’ve been bad or good…”

The singer was inside the room, moving towards the door. The soldiers brought their weapons to bear, waiting in the dark. If the target entered the hall, they could shoot him without the tedious process of breaking down the door, saving a whole four seconds.

“…so be good for goodness sake…”

The singer paused, as if listening. The team leader lifted a hand, signaling for quiet.

For a heartbeat, there was complete silence.

Then the door opened.

The man within seemed completely unsurprised to find an armored SWAT team on his doormat. He made no move to run or grab a weapon. He just stood there, a half-smile playing across his face.

The profile matched; white beard, neatly trimmed. A forehead too smooth for his apparent age. Blue eyes that seemed to shimmer from behind a pair of round-rimmed spectacles. All striking features, but they expected that. It was his outfit that caught them off-guard. A long red coat, tethered about the waist with a wide black belt; a red hat, a rather iconic one at that, perched atop greying hair. The costume, coupled with his face and general demeanor, gave the strong impression that Mr. Jing was…

“Santa Clause,” said Twelve. It was meant as a question, but it came out as a statement; when faced with something unexpected, rationalize, then execute. One of the many directives drilled into the soldiers’ heads.

“Indeed, gentlemen,” said Mr. Jing, and smiled. It was a smile that would have cracked the ice off the heart of the most soulless man alive, but the soldiers were not soulless. They had a job, and that was to eliminate any and all threats to their country, their unit, and their families. It was this sentiment that allowed the leader to drop his hand; the signal to shoot.

The clatter of silenced gunfire was still loud enough to rattle the windows of the neighboring apartments, shaking a painting off the wall at the end of the hallway. Mr. Jing was thrown back, twisting like a rag doll. Even as he fell, a sudden wind rushed through the room, rattling the floorboards and buffeting the soldiers.

“Get down!” shouted the leader, a split second before the entire team was buried up to their knees in heavy snow. Freezing air blinded the group, cutting through their uniforms, driving the sudden flurry into their faces.

Then it was gone. The snow, the wind, everything. The apartment was as it had been before the bizarre storm, with one crucial difference.

Mr. Jing’s body was gone.

Three minutes, thirty seconds.

The team got slowly to their feet, checking their weapons for melting flakes, brushing at uniforms that were surprisingly dry.

The leader touched his radio. “Command. Jing’s on the run.”

“Just as expected.”

“Yes. As expected.”

“You get him?”

“Yes. Fifty shots, twenty-one passed through, seven lodged.”

“Good. Where did he go?”

“Tracking data is loading now.”

“Very good. Proceed as planned.”

“Yes sir. He can’t run forever.”

There was no reply.

The team left just as quickly as they had come. All that remained in their wake was the broken glass, the bullet-riddled apartment on floor three, and the dead security guard slowly bleeding out in the bathroom stall.

 

 

 

December 22nd

6:50 pm.

Vermont, Cabin outside St. Albans.

 

Jason Murray blew lightly on his coffee, then took a tentative sip. Finding it too hot to drink, he set the cup back down on the stand beside his armchair. The table squeaked slightly under the weight, leaning dangerously, and he grabbed for his cup to keep it from falling. He missed the handle, but fortunately for both him and the rug, the flimsy stand remained upright.

Taking the cup gingerly in his hand, he stood, walking to the small kitchen area near the front of the cabin. The log structure itself was brand-new, and still smelled of fresh-cut pine. It had been built as a summer cabin, but he had (wisely) had it sealed and insulated against winter weather. The process had cost him an additional twenty grand, but it wasn’t like he needed the money. The cabin, plus the mountain it was perched on, had barely scratched the surface of his sizable fortunes.

A small fire crackled in the hearth, tossing shadows across the walls and floor. That and an electric heater kept him warm and dry, safe from winter’s icy clutches.

A gust of wind howled past outside, drawing his attention to the cabin’s picture window. Still white as far as the eye could see, which wasn’t too far, considering the virtual blizzard that now assaulted his tiny shelter.

A soft beep from his cell phone reminded him that there were other things to be about. With no reception in the storm, his business calls would have to wait. The paperwork, on the other hand, wouldn’t. His employer would want the contracts all written up and ready to be faxed the instant phone service resumed, although judging from the snowdrifts outside, communications might not return until Christmas.

With a groan, Jason sank back into his chair. He had only wanted a short vacation, a few days to clear his head. Well, from the looks of things now, there was no way he would be able to make it back home in time for the celebration. His mother would kill him.

One last time, he considered trying to find his way through the storm to his car, parked about a mile away at the base of the mountain. The idea had hardly crossed his mind before it was joined by thoughts of wandering endlessly through the snow, of wolves tracking him until he was too weak to fend them off, of freezing death in the bleak winter night…

He took a drink of his coffee, selecting a book at random from the shelf. ‘The Once and Future King’, by Ian Campbell. Looked like a decent read, and he certainly had the time. No sane person would go out in this weather. Not if they had any will to live.

There was a knock at his door.

At first, he thought a tree branch had blown down against the entrance. He listened, setting his coffee on the wobbly stand.

The knock came again, definite and purposeful. Jason lunged out of the kitchen and down the front hall, throwing the door open.

A blast of icy air struck him in the face, so cold and sudden that he lost all pretense of assisting whoever was outside, falling back a step into the warmth of the entry hall. The door slammed shut, almost severing the arm of the old man as he darted inside.

The newcomer made straight for the fireplace, kneeling down and placing his hands as close as he could get them without burning his fingers. He was breathing in ragged gasps, muttering to himself in hushed tones. There was no indication that he had noticed the cabin’s owner.

Jason edged around towards the breakfast bar, never taking his eyes off the man. The poor guy was probably some homeless bum who got stuck out in the weather. Probably harmless. Or he could be on drugs, or a mental case…

As quietly as possible, Jason slid his hand under the breakfast bar. His service revolver, left over from his days as a Vermont State trooper, lay on a hidden shelf, primed and ready for action.

The visitor rose, his threadbare red coat rasping on the hardwood floor, and Jason drew his sidearm from its hiding place, training it on the man.

“Hold it.”

The man froze, slowly lifting his hands. “Now, now, Mr. Murray. Is that any way to treat an old friend?”

Jason blinked, then squinted, trying to remember the voice.

“Jason, it’s me. Cole.”

Cole. Cole Ainsbury. Of course. Jason lowered the gun, a look of shocked amazement on his face.

“Cole, what the hell man? I haven’t seen you in five years. What were you doing out in the snow? It’s miles from town. What have you been doing with your life? That coat doesn’t seem very-”

Cole interrupted him with a wave of his hand, laughing. “Slow down, Jason. One thing at a time.”

“It’s just… how have you been? All this time…”

“I’ve been fine, thank you.”

“Just… fine?”

“Yes. Never better.”

“Care to elaborate? I mean, what have you been doing? Do you have a job?”

Cole sighed. “My job remains the same as it has always been. But I did not come here for small talk. I’m in trouble, Jason.”

A feeling of unease coiled in the pit of Jason’s stomach. “What kind of trouble?”

“Well, let’s begin with the small stuff. I’ve been shot. Several times, actually.”

“What?”

Cole pulled up his sleeve. Three red-rimmed holes traced a line up his arm, the wounds surprisingly bloodless.

Jason let out a short gasp. “What on earth…”

“Don’t worry about it.”

“Don’t… don’t worry about it? It’s a wonder you weren’t more severely injured. That kinda spread is from an automatic, isn’t it? Who the hell was shooting at you?”

“To be honest, I am not sure. Someone from your government. They were dressed as your Special Weapons and Tactics force. Their manner of action suggests they were not.”

“Okay, okay, hold on. Back up. Good Lord, man, I need to get those bullets out of your arm. Is that the only place you got hit?”

“My chest and neck as well.”

Jason, already on the way to the medicine cabinet, froze.

“Wait a minute… just hold the bloody phone. If the shots were to your torso, a full auto would’ve cut you in half. You should be dead.”

“Yes, I should be. Perhaps I should explain?”

Jason snorted. “Yeah, that would probably help. Sit down in that chair while I get a few things. It’s been a while since I treated a gun wound.”

Cole did as he was told, sitting back with some stiffness. Absently, he removed his hat, staring out into the blowing snow. The wind howled over a distant hill, the noise causing the old man to shiver.

Jason emerged from the bathroom, a variety of medical utensils neatly arranged atop a metal tray. He knelt next to Cole, examining his friend’s arm.

“I don’t have anything to dull the pain, but we have to get these out before they become infected.”

“I’ve gone through worse. Do what you must.”

Selecting a small knife, Jason sanitized the blade with isopropyl. “Alright, how about you tell me the whole story. This storm’s not letting up any time soon. We’ve got time.”

Cole sighed. “Not as much as you might think, but I shall tell you everything. Whether you believe it or not is up to you.”

“Try me,” said Jason, and began to work.

 

 

Chapter 2

 

 

December 22nd

7:30 pm.

Vermont, Cabin outside St. Albans.

 

“In the first place,” said Cole, “My name is not Cole. It’s Nicholas.”

“Oh? Like Old Siant Nick?”

“Not ‘like’, my friend. I am Saint Nicholas.”

Jason paused. “What, like Santa Claus?”

“Yes.”

“You’re Santa Claus.”

“I do recall saying that you might not believe me.”

With a grunt, Jason returned to his medical efforts. “Okay. You’re Santa Clause. How does that equate to you getting shot?”

“I’m getting to that.”

“Right, sorry. Doesn’t that make you over a hundred years old?”

“One thousand seven hundred and forty two.”

“Oh? Well, you’re in great shape for an old man.”

“Indeed I am. It is due to a rather peculiar… gift, that I have.”

“Do tell.”

Cole winced as Jason swabbed his arm with a cotton ball.

“It was the year three hundred. My work in the church was well underway. I had been granted the title of Bishop, and was happy in the Lord’s work. Through Him, miracles began to happen, and my name became well known.

“It was around this time that I heard of a member of my congregation in need of some assistance. His daughter was of age to be married, but he could not afford a dowry. A dowry is a sort of…”

Jason waved his hand impatiently. “I know what it is.”

“Right. Unfortunately, the man had barely enough to survive, let alone grant money to his daughter. So I, being in possession of great riches, went to his home in the dead of night, and dropped a bag containing a small fortune in gold through an open window. I then escaped undetected.”

“I’ve heard this story! The guy had three daughters, right? And Saint Nick, er, you, gave more money the next night, and then more on the third night. But the old geezer was waiting for you on the third night…”

“Indeed. I heard him making quite a racket in the bushes, and decided to take a more unorthodox route. I climbed a tree, jumped to his rooftop, and tossed the last bag down the chimney. The fire was out, thankfully, and it landed among the ashes. I then attempted to flee, but getting down proved harder than getting up, and in my haste I was spotted by the father.

“The man thanked me with tears of joy, but I told him, ‘It is not I whom you should thank, but God alone’.

“We agreed that this would remain between us, but eventually, word spread of my deed. I cared not for the fame, but the man’s happiness left a mark in my heart. I prayed to God for the opportunity to give gifts to those in need every year. To my surprise, I was granted my prayer. Every year, a large sack of gold coins appeared on my pulpit, and every year I went out and distributed them in secret. Overnight, the gold transformed itself; it became whatever the recipient truly needed, be it a warm bed, a new cart to replace a broken one, or the exact sum of money owed to a debtor. When the people came to me, asking if it was I who gave them the gifts, I told them, “These gifts come not from me, but from my Father in heaven.” And so it was, year after year.

“Then, one year, I found myself in need of finances. Instead of turning to God for help, I kept a single gold piece for myself, hoping for a similar transformation. Instead, the gold turned to coal, and I grew sick with a holy plague, aging at a terrible rate. By the time Christmas came around again, I had grown to be a man of eighty, wracked with pains. The gold manifested once more, and I hobbled out to give it all away. It was only by the grace of God that I did not perish that frigid night, but somehow, I managed to dispense the blessed coins.

“As the last piece fell from my fingers, my youth was miraculously restored, but my curse was not lifted. As long as every piece of the gold was given out, I grew older in number only. I discovered, from numerous accidents, that I could not die, nor did injuries vex me. I felt cold, pain, and hunger, but death ran from me.

“It has been almost two thousand years since then. Seasons come and seasons go, and still I remain, forever suffering for my sin. Ouch,” he added, as Jason drew the fifth bullet from his skin.

“Oh hush, ya crybaby. If you’re immortal, pain’s nothing new to you.”

“That does not mean it does not hurt.”

“I told you it would. So, let’s say I buy your story, which I don’t. How does that get you on the bad side of a hit team?”

“Your government learned of my gift. At first, they were merely curious. They wanted to capture me, to study me, to learn the secrets of immortality. In short, they wanted to dissect me. Then they learned of the gold, and the power it contained. And they were afraid.”

“What? Why?”

“Think of it this way: What if I gave a coin to a terrorist, and it became a machine gun? Or a nuclear bomb? Or a weapon stronger than both?”

“Can it truly do that?”

“No. It cannot. If a person is impure, if he has killed a fellow man, the gold becomes coal in his hands. Only if the person has good intentions will it alter form. A failsafe, to prevent that exact scenario from occurring. But of course, your leaders did not believe me. They seek even now to catch me, to lock me away. Of course, I have other, limited abilities, which until now have allowed me to evade capture. Still they hunt me.”

Jason pulled the final slug from Cole’s shoulder, dropping it on the pan. The wound leaked a single drop of blood, sealing itself with unnerving rapidity.

“Huh. You do heal pretty quick.”

“I have not lied to you.”

“Okay, so, if you’re unkillable, why shoot you up? They must’ve known you’d get away.”

“Indeed. I do not know. Perhaps they are more desperate than I thought.”

“Or maybe there’s another reason.” Jason held one of the bullets up to the light, turning it over. The bullet had something nestled in its core, some kind of circuitry. And he’d seen that circuit before.

“A tracker. They put these things in ankle cuffs. Never seen one this small… Oh hell, Cole! They’re tracing you! They know you’re here.”

“Indeed? Well, I suppose it doesn’t matter.”

“What do you mean it doesn’t-”

“Jason, I need you to listen to me. This world has no place for me anymore. The gifts cannot be given to those not truly in need of a miracle. Christmas has become a holiday of greed, of excess. Soon, I will be unneeded, unwanted. I cannot die, but if there is no one left to give my gifts to, I will live for all time in the agony of weakness and old age. The end will come even sooner if I am captured and locked up. I won’t let them take me alive, Jason. I won’t spend the rest of eternity as a lab experiment. I came here for a reason.”

“Yeah? What’s that?”

“I want you to kill me.”

For a long time, Jason stood in silence. After several minutes, he said, almost to himself, “You can’t be killed…”

“I will give you a gold piece. If you want with all your heart to let me die, it will become a weapon capable of ending this miserable existence.”

“But…”

“I chose you for a reason, Jason. I know your soul is pure. That’s why you lost your old job. You couldn’t kill that boy, even when he attacked you, a police officer. Even when he shot your partner, and shot you in the leg. You still carry that wound, Jason! You still carry that memory!”

Jason turned violently, placing his face inches from Cole’s. “You’re right! I failed everyone! I couldn’t kill the kid. I saw his gun, I knew he’d pull the trigger, and I still couldn’t put him in the crosshairs. I can’t kill anybody, so why the hell did you choose me?”

“Because you are the only man alive that I trust. It has taken me two hundred years to find a person like you.”

There was a noise outside, different from the rushing wind. Cole stopped, listened. It was the distant roar of an engine, growing steadily closer.

Jason stiffened. “Snowmobiles. They’ve found us already!”

Cole leapt to his feet with a sudden burst of energy, upsetting the tray of surgical tools in the process.

“Now, Jason. You must end this now! Here,” he drew from his coat a small sack the size of his fist. Reaching in, he brought out a single round piece of gold, offering it to Jason. “Wish, Jason. You must wish, you must need me to die. Please. Please let me go. Help me.”

Jason didn’t move, his thoughts in turmoil. Beyond the snowy hills, the snowmobile’s whine was joined by several more, drawing ever nearer.

“Jason…”

“Hold on. Just give me a minute. I can’t-”

“There is no time!”

The blowing snow cleared for a brief moment, and Jason caught a glimpse of one of the machines, black and sleek, skipping through the snowdrifts about a quarter kilometer out from the cabin.

Cole saw it as well.

“It is too late. Goodbye, Jason.”

Before Jason realized what was happening, Cole was already out the door, running into the blizzard.

“Cole, wait, no!”

Jason raced after his friend, snatching up a coat from the rack as he passed.

The outside air was a frigid twenty-two degrees, and the cutting wind did little to make it better. Jason’s ears were numb within a few seconds of exposure, but he didn’t care. He had to catch up with Cole before the old man did something stupid.

A gust of icy air slapped him in the face, and he stumbled in the deep snow, falling to his knees. His fingers sank into a drift, sapping what little warmth remained. He struggled up again, stuffing his hands into his pockets as he looked around desperately for Cole.

Somewhere behind him, wood splintered with a rending crash as black-suited men stormed his cabin. He didn’t care. He had to stop…

There. A flicker of red fabric as Cole ducked behind an evergreen. Jason ran as hard as he possibly could, overtaking Cole as the man leapt a small gully, tackling him to the white-frosted earth.

“Let… me… go!”

“No!”

“Why, Jason? Why won’t you help me?”

“I’m not going to kill you, man. You’re crazy. You need help.”

“I’ve lived a thousand years…”

“You are NOT Santa Claus!”

Cole stopped struggling, looking directly into Jason’s eyes. “Then how can I do this?”

And the world twisted and bent with a sound like thunder, and both men were gone in a flurry of shimmering snowflakes.

 

 

Chapter 3

 

 

 

The trip took only seconds, but it felt like forever to Jason. His senses were disoriented, spread between a million particles that somehow formed his body. The two men smashed through dimensional boundaries, slipped between atoms, crossed lightyears of space, yet never left Earth.

“Cole!” Jason shouted, but there was no sound, just a thought that became a rainbow of colors before wiggling away into the fabric of the universe.

Then, with an explosion of light and sound, they were whole again, standing in a snowy field.

“What… how…,”

His eyes locked on the nearest landmark. “The Washington memorial… D.C.? We’re in Washington D.C? But…”

“Leave me!” Cole shouted, and they whirled away again. Reality folded itself into a box, then shattered, mixing with snow and electricity in a storm of impossibilities. They were in midair over the Eiffel Tower, then tumbling down the side of a towering mountain. Cole fought against Jason’s hold every time they became solid, but Jason had his arm in a death-grip, gritting his teeth as they whisked from place to place across the world.

Finally, they came to a stop, right back where they had started from. Cole tried to vanish once more, but whatever power he had possessed was spent.

Jason let out a breath he hadn’t realized he was holding.

“Holy… What was that? How did you do that?

Cole sighed in defeat, letting his shoulders slump. “This power was granted to me by God, to assist in the delivery of my presents. I can go anywhere with a thought, pass through walls, become a snowstorm and slip down chimneys. And, on Christmas Eve, I can even bend time. Now do you see? I was telling you the truth.”

“So, all this time… you’ve really been alive for a thousand years?”

“Yes. I have been witness to things no man should ever see. I have watched history unfold, I have seen events that you have only read about in text books. I have been shot, stabbed, crushed, run over by a locomotive, and despite the agony, I survived. Imagine it, Jason. A thousand years of suffering, all punishment for such a small sin. If you do not help me, you will be dooming me to another year of anguish. I can’t go on like this, Jason. I will ask but one more time; will you help me?”

And Cole held out the coin once more.

For a long time they stood together in the snow, oblivious to the howling storm. Jason neither took the gold nor turned away, weighing his options.

“If I touch that, it will change immediately?”

“Yes.”

“And it has limitless ability? It will become whatever I need most?”

“Yes.”

Jason hesitated, then reached out, taking the coin from Cole.

The gold let out a soft ringing sound as it expanded, its colors flowing and shifting as it changed. Jason was left holding a neatly wrapped box, about a foot tall. He tested its weight, tipping it slightly as he examined it.

“Well? Open it.”

He undid the ribbon binding the box together, then lifted the top. The wind tore the lid out of his hand, sending it spinning away into the whiteness, but it was already forgotten as Jason reached into the present.

In one smooth motion, he drew out a long red robe, identical to Cole’s. Dropping the box, he spun the coat around his shoulders, pulling its hood over frozen ears.

Cole was in shock. “A coat. You wished… for a coat?”

“No. I didn’t.”

“There!” someone shouted from the house, and a rifle bullet tore a hole in the tree beside them, missing Cole’s head by inches. The old man sighed.

“I don’t have enough energy to jump again. We need to run, Jason.”

Jason smiled, adjusting his sleeves. “No. We don’t.”

And so saying, he grabbed Cole’s shoulder, and slipped sideways through the planes of existence.

The journey was much smoother than the last, and shorter, too. They stepped from the rift, still in the snow, but miles from the cabin. Jason’s car sat nearby, sheltered from the winter weather by a stand of trees.

Cole faced his friend in confusion. “What did you do? How could you know to do that?”

“Easy. I wished with all my heart to take away your suffering. I wished to become you.”

“But… what…”

Jason’s smile widened. He reached into the folds of his coat, pulling out a set of keys.

“My car’s right over there. I don’t think I’ll be needing it anymore, so it’s yours now. Merry Christmas, Saint Nick.”

Cole caught the keys, staring at them blankly. A thought struck him, and he felt inside his pocket. “The gold…”

“Oh, this?” Jason held up the bag, shaking it to make it jingle. “Don’t worry about it. From now on, I’ll be taking care of it.”

“My power…”

“I have it now. It wasn’t ever really yours, anyway. You’re mortality has returned. If you want to die, that’s up to you, but killing yourself would be pretty ungrateful, don’t you think? Besides, there’s so much to live for. You’re human again. Go live.”

Cole started to say something, then changed his mind. “Goodbye, Jason.”

“Goodbye, Cole.”

The wind whistled past, and when it was gone, there was only one man in the parking lot.

 

 

Epilogue

 

December 25th

11:59 pm.

New York, the Leuwman Household

 

 

 

James Leuwman, age seven, was supposed to be sleeping. The household had long since gone silent, it occupants, or at least most of them, sound asleep. But James didn’t want to sleep. It was Christmas Eve. And that meant that Santa Claus was coming.

He had heard his parents discussing Santa. They thought he wasn’t real. They thought that Santa was imaginary. They were wrong. Tonight, he was going to prove it. He would meet Father Christmas in person.

Stepping carefully over the squeaky floorboard, he descended the staircase, his footfalls as quiet as he could make them. The Christmas tree in the downstairs living room was brightly lit, throwing colorful patterns across the walls as James approached.

There was a man there, too, clad in a fluffy red winter parka, with a black belt around his waist. He was placing something on the floor, between the gifts that James’s parents had wrapped. Something that looked like a coin of some sort. It must have been a trick of the light, because when the man stood, there was no coin; only a small, neatly wrapped present.

“Santa?”

The big man turned, smiling at the boy. “Well, hello there! You’re supposed to be in bed, my little man.”

“I just wanted to say hi.”

“I see. Well, hello to you too, James.”

James’s eyes widened. Santa knew his name!

“Come here, James. I have something for you.”

Santa held out his hand. James walked over to him, reaching up and taking the small gift from Santa’s palm. He began to unwrap it, but Santa placed a hand over his. “Not yet, my good fellow. You have to wait until morning!”

“Oh, okay.”

“Well, it was nice meeting you, James. I need to be leaving, though. I have a lot of gifts left to deliver!”

“Okay, bye!”

Santa turned, walking towards the fireplace.

“Santa?”

“Yes, James?”

“I thought you had a white beard. Or did you color it black on purpose?”

Jason smiled, stroking his goatee. “I thought it was time for a change of style. What do you think?”

It looks cool. You look like my dad, except more hair on top.”

With a chuckle, the man who was Santa Claus turned again, stepping into the fireplace.

“And laying his finger aside of his nose

Then giving a nod up the chimney he rose

But he heard him exclaim as he drove out of sight

“Merry Christmas to all and to all a good night”.
– Clement Clarke Moore

D.R.E.A.M. Unit Helth Leaguer

Ave, peoples!

This is the official, edited and complete, Flash Fiction project I wrote for Injoy’s Flash Fiction Class. It was definitely a new experience for me and the class was excellent. :.)- (That smiley has a goatee!)

I plan on entering “D.R.E.A.M. Unit Helth Leaguer” in the Flash Fiction Contest Injoy is doing October 18, 2013, and I wanted to know what you guys think of it!

Prepare yourselves for something that can be read before you can properly eat a candy bar without choking!

 

 

Helth Leaguer stepped lightly into the small clearing, admiring his illumined surroundings. It elated his spirit to occupy such a place of wonder and beauty.

He was in a landscape of bioluminescent life. The organic flora and fauna that the alien jungle comprised was a cosmic mass of natural life, radiating a variegation of both iridescent and non-iridescent glows produced by the chemical reaction of chemiluminescence.

Helth typically stared impartially at the drab, dull features of his  purlieu. Such a fresh and colorful scene as this brightened his outlook; it was just what he needed to convalesce and continue on.

He brushed aside a plant stalk that had a bulbous luminescent protrusion at its top as he pushed out of the clearing and again plunged into the fray of flora. The terrain wasn’t an impassable obstacle, though Helth had to ensure his movement was planned and deliberate, else he lose his footing and accidently tumble headlong into one of numerous haphazard chemical pits.

There were many dangers here, some lethal, others more decidedly of a foci to inflict pain and tormenting harm rather than simply kill. Beauty often comes with deceitful threats, and this alien jungle shared no immunity against that. A single omission could easily lead to fatality.

An out-of-place noise in the bioluminescent forest’s harmony caught the attention of Helth’s acutely trained ears. A rustling of sorts, a quiet animalistic clicking; the identifiable sound of discreet movement from above in the twisted branches.

Making it seem as though he had heard nothing, the explorer sustained an even gait, while avoiding hazards, for two miles until the noise suddenly adapted into a shrill shriek. It was then that Helth raised his attention to the upper tree branches. With only his naked eyes, he quickly scanned the surrounding vicinity.

He occupied a dense area of vegetation and towering trees—a cliff drop into a deep grotto nearly hidden by overgrown plants was to his right—to his left was the thickest flora, while the front and back were moderately clear. It was not particularly the ideal location for a skirmish.

His attention was drawn to a point behind him, in the overlying branches near where he came. His stalker had abandoned all secrecy. It cautiously lurked from the concealing shadows and revealed itself in the unsettling blue glow of a branch’s bioluminescent foliage.

It was a Nightarch Spider, a forest-dwelling arachnid of considerably larger mass than was typical of its general species classification. The Nightarch Spider belonged primarily to a family of half-shadow, half-solid creatures identified normally as “Nightarchs”. They were enigmatic creatures, and Helth, nor anyone in his line of work, knew very much about them.

Nonetheless, Helth remembered from the uncountable hours he had spent drilling the classifications into his mind that this particular type of Nightarch Spider was a Stalker type.

The Stalker hissed intensely, vehement urgency to overcome and subdue its prey evident. Helth surmised it must have  begun recently suffering from lack of sustenance and was bent on satisfying its ravenous hunger by consuming his flesh.

The explorer drew his weapon—a submachine firearm called a D.E.G. Subgun-AM5—slowly as to not entice the spider’s anxiousness to attack him.

It did not require any inclination. The Stalker fluxed into shadowlike matter and lunged forward, deadly forelimbs extended to enact a felling double stab.

Helth instinctively rolled to the left, avoiding the Nightarch Spider’s attack with a small fraction of space to spare. Upon completing the roll, he turned about, crouched, and pulled his weapon’s trigger. A burst of stunning sapphire light ejected from the Subgun’s barrel-end.

The Stalker, now solid matter again, utilized its own agility and evaded death. Nonetheless, the bolt tore off one of its lethal forward appendages from the second joint. This elicited a ghostly cry from it and the laceration spilled forth unnatural midnight-black blood.

Infuriated, the creature aggressively sprang at Helth with greater vehemence than its previous attack. He initiated three more blasts from the AM5 in an up-to-down straight arch in front of him, forcing the spider to abandon its jump. But to the explorer’s dismay, it immediately leapt sideways onto a tree’s cylinder trunk and taking advantage of the momentum, darted back directly at him.

Unable to react quick enough, Helth was barreled into by the Stalker’s armored head. The impact sent both flying in a fray of sprawling limbs and dark blood until they crashed to a halt at the grotto’s edge.

Helth’s new adversary spared no time in resuming its attack; it thrashed about, using its legs and fearsome mouth of fangs in a continued attempt to kill Helth.

Jarred, injured and covered in a pool of dark blood, Helth shifted and turned beneath his opposition to avoid its myriad of frantic stabs. If his next move didn’t end the skirmish, he would never reach his destination.

He rapidly assessed his situation and realized that his Subgun had remained connected to him even through the jostling. Immediately putting it to use, he roared with a burst of adrenaline; the weapon reacted likewise to his emotion as he pulled the trigger.

A sphere of roseate energy erupted from the weapon, propagating an aura of dazzling, passionate light. The Stalker retreated from atop its prey and the sphere of light flew unguided into the thick flora. It exploded, flames shooting forth like fiery demons released from a cage. The forest was immediately set ablaze. Chemicals reacted; the alien jungle surged a large bellow of thick, unstoppable fire in every direction.

Helth knew what was happening, and he—if for only the smallest moment—pitied the Stalker. Subsequent to the roseate energy sphere, it had involuntarily shifted to shadowlike matter in self-defense. Now, brilliant light illumined the area, and it was obliterated almost instantaneously.

The explorer punched a hole in the foliage covering the grotto and descended on one of its walls, narrowly escaping the torrent of raging flame that engulfed the area he had occupied moments ago.

The White Flame: Chapter 1/Prologue

The White Flame

By Nathanael Sniatecki

War Forges The World

Prologue

Aquilius. A vast world filled with a great diversity of creatures and places. By cartographers, it was said to be a massive island, hundreds of miles long. In the earliest age, which was temporally uncharted, the majority of civilizations were tribes.

They were composed of two or three scores of people, ranging in age and likeness. Few of them bore weapons evolved from primitive spears and bone axes, but as the centuries passed, they began to grow in knowledge.

Swords, bows, and other forms of similar weaponry were invented and used for hunting and intertribal combat. Most tribes were found in the northeast, among the lush mountains. Eventually, they joined and rallied under one flag, and one king, Crinis.

Sovereign he was, having command over dozens of tribes in a peaceful and just reign. For three decades, he ruled the tribes as their king, and they were contented with his rule.

Then there was another power. Rorganoth, a beastly ruler forged by the sorcery of necromancers in the depths of the unforgiving Red Mountains, rose to oppose King Crinis. He was both the servant and the ruler of the Red Sorcerors, created by them to rule them.

Rorganoth, by his own will, challenged Crinis to a massive battle, after he had slain the Red Sorcerors during the night. Only he remained as the power of the Red Mountains.

Crinis had heard of Rorganoth’s sheer might, and knew of the destruction that would ensue if he refused the challenge. If Rorganoth would not recieve an answer, he would begin a bloody conquest across the tribes, killing all inside them.

So in the eve of King Crinis’ thirty-second year, he gathered his armies and marched them to a massive valley, which was wide and deathly. When he arrived, Rorganoth was already standing in the valley.

There he stood, the infamous enemy. Sixty feet tall he was, gripping a black mace large enough to bash away an elephant. He was solemn and sinister, showing no emotion. He was made completely of a hard, black armor that was thought to be entirely impregnable.

King Crinis stood with his army, facing the terrible foe with great valor in their hearts. Without a warning or sign of attack, he swept away the first line of soldiers. Crinis was knocked back, but soon regained his standing position.

In a vigorous charge, Crinis led his soldiers to vicious clash against Rorganoth and his superior, dastardly might. They swarmed onto his legs and bashed them with their primitive weapons, which were of no use.

By the dozen, he shook and smashed them off, killing them with the impact of hitting the black rocks. Men and morale were running thin, and Crinis directed a retreat away from the might of Rorganoth.

The next day, in the morning, he led his men in another strike, but their charge was beaten back once more. Crinis knew he could not drag on such a battle for a longer time. Though retreat would bring only inevitable death.

So instead of retreat, he decided on a temporary shelter in which his soldiers could rest and create a plan. He found a deep chasm in the side of a mountain, and brought his soldiers there to rest and recuperate.

Their numbers had been brutally diminished, and their morale was battered. However, it was in those caves, while spying on the terrible foe, that Crinis realized the power of Rorganoth was of his crown.

Atop the enemy’s head was a black, spiked crown embedded with one dark jewel. That night, Crinis told his soldiers of the discovery he had made while spying on Rorganoth and discussing the matter with his generals. In the morning, they rallied for the last time, to make their last patriotic stand against the foe of the smog shadows.

Rorganoth looked down upon his pitiful adversaries and spread his arms in a bellowing, mocking laughter. A blanket of dark clouds had covered the sky and deflected the sunlight from above. It was assuredly the darkest hour of mankind.

Knowing well his chances of victory were slim, Crinis led the tribal soldiers into their final charge against Rorganoth. While laughing in mockery of his petty opponents, he had tipped himself over and fell straight onto his back.

Crinis led the last troops in a vicious swarm, and they bashed at Rorganoth’s head with all the ferocity to be found in a man. He rose, however, and shook off the tribesmen. Crinis and the others fell, bruised and battered even more than they were previously.

The king of the tribes gazed wearily up at his foe, who stood over him with untouched power. King Crinis learned that day Rorganoth would not be defeated by men.

Then, just as his hope was going to fall completely, Crinis saw something in the sky breaking through the dark smog. Rorganoth, harmed by the sunlight, looked upward and caught sight of mankind’s first ally, the gryphon.

A pack of gryphons had swooped down from above to come to the aide of man. Directly they dove down upon Rorganoth, who soon became crippled by the sunlight. The chief of the gryphons, Roinil, stretched out his talons and clutched Rorganoth’s dark jewel.

After plucking it from the crown, Roinil sent the jewel crashing down to the hard stone where Rorganoth had slain so many and with such brutality. In one bursting shatter, the jewel of Rorganoth was broken, and he with it.

Rorganoth fell to his knees, and with a surge of wind, he was brushed away into ash. The soldiers rejoiced, and were joined by Roinil and his great host. The gryphons spoke not, but joined in the cheer nevertheless.

King Crinis, in his old age, knew similar foes would arise, so he took the fragments of Rorganoth’s jewel and used their magic to construct a white tower far in the northeast, in place of his tribe. The tower stretched upward with great sovereignty, and its construction was aided by the gryphons of Roinil.

Atop the tower was a wide platform, wide enough to fit a small city. So, by the final decision of King Crinis, the tower was named the Citadel of the Sky. The descendants of Crinis and his people dwelled atop the tower in peace, thriving more with each passing year.

Many centuries later, King Antropus arose, but not by the same method. He conquered four of his brother-kings, and seized their kingdoms to be his own. His deeds of betrayal were executed using a dragon, whose origin was unkown.

The Dragon War, which thus ensued because of his outward strike was known to be the most costly of all the wars to ever come about in Aquilius. There came to be a rising necromancer beyond the Red Mountains, known as Draossiphus, who took a sinister interest in the affairs of King Antropus.

Draossiphus gathered two armies, the Vilons and the Grey Shrimps, to oppose Antropus and capture the dragon for the purposes of Draossiphus. This dragged on for decades, with no end in sight, until Antropus’ death. His son, Ornok, died shortly afterward while attempting to live on his father’s legacy.

A short while later, a merchant from the Eastern Islands, known as Ching Hao, won the hearts of Antropus’ senators, and thus assumed power as the new king.

Draossiphus held back his armies from then on, for the dragon was no longer a threat, nor was the former kingdom of King Antropus. However, the time for war would soon be upon Ching Hao…


Chapter One: The Forsaken Tooth

“Let them come.” These words were uttered by Ching Hao after the attack made on his life led by Petrici Shugaz. He had already suffered many other attacks and assassinations prior to that. Little did he know the storm was still brewing in the west. The storm that few would emerge from.

After his death, Ornok’s tooth fell below the gaze of every nation. Most objects of its mass would have sunk instantly. It was heavy and dense, like an igneous stone. However, it floated and stayed as such unless tampered with. The flowing current carried it downstream for miles, undetected.

All other teeth passed from kingdom to kingdom, but this particular tooth remained hidden deep in the foliage of the hills. Kings and emperors deployed search parties into the area at which Ornok was said to have been slain, but all came back with empty hands. They did not take into account that the tooth had gone downstream.

After many years, a young boy by the name of Moslo found it and took it out of the water. The boy was at the age directly before adolescence, but he built his body up to appear larger. His clothes were shabby and rough, made primarily from slabs of bark sewn onto leather. The reason for his poor care was his lack of parents. His mother and father disappeared in a blaze when Moslo was of a small age. For the first year of his life, he was nursed to health by local animals, then he moved on from cave to cave, treetop to treetop.

Eventually, he gained a longing for a solid structure to call his own. So he scouted out a wide, well flowing creek with several lush trees at its border. It was there that he established his small hut made of tied reeds, branches, and long logs. Over the next few years, he added various other modifications to his home, such as a roof deck, a one way door, and a small platform over the creek upon which he could stand and catch fish.

Though he had a contentment with his solitary life, part of him knew of a severe aching for the outside world. Once or twice a week, a traveler, merchant, or simple messenger would pass by on the trail ten meters from his hut. He paid them no attention, for fear of danger from them.

His heart became hard with loneliness and primitive thinking, as the seasons passed.

It was the summer of his twelfth year, the day was barren of both radiating sunlight and pouring rain, and a young woman was riding her native horse down Moslo’s path. She wore leather clothes and a long, tattered robe. She held a gnarled, wooden staff in her right hand, and the horse’s rein in her left. On her belt was a machete in a sheath. Her brown hair was braided back with small wooden clips holding it.

The young woman stopped her horse and brought a bark map out of her satchel. She looked at the map, then at the surrounding forest. With a perplexed look on her face, she rubbed her forehead and studied the map once more. After scanning the forest again, she saw the shack and shouted, “Hello! Can you tell me how to get to the nearest town?”

Moslo, who was fishing on his back pier, heard her call. He sighed with frustration and set his pole onto the moss covered logs that made up the platform. He walked through the hut and yelled in reply, “Uh, it’s down that way. Keep riding for twenty or thirty miles to find it. If those directions are false, I cannot help you further. Now be on your way.”

The young woman looked at Moslo and asked, “Where are your mother and father? Perhaps one of them can provide better directions.”

Moslo turned his head to the side and looked at the trees. “They’re gone,” he muttered.

She squinted her eyes and tilted her head in realization. “Are you?” she began to ask. “Are you from the Hill Villages? If so, I have an explanation for your missing parents.”

Moslo lashed, “How dare you speak of them? They–urm, fine. My first memory was finding myself in the woodland with the two of them running away. There was a fire, and people were scattering about, screaming. Where are they? Where are my mother and father?”

The young woman dismounted. She answered, “They are dead. But they placed you here to protect you. The event was a nightmare for all. The village guards…they turned on us. They set fire to the village and killed every villager, including some of their own. The guards hunted down every last villager by order of the king. To my knowledge, you and I are the only survivors.”

Moslo put his forehead to a tree next to him and closed his eyes tightly. “And what you’re saying is complete truth?” he doubtfully asked.

She nodded solemnly. Moslo retreated to his hut without a word coming from his mouth. The young woman got back onto her horse and continued to ride down the path. “My name is Gojiing! And yours?” she called out one last time. There was no answer at first.

Just as she was leaving, Moslo called back briefly, “Moslo. My name’s Moslo.” Gojiing grinned to herself and rode on.

Gojiing was very eager to make friends, so meeting Moslo was seen by her as an opportunity. She intentionally rode down the path on multiple occasions, making conversation with him each time. With each visit, Moslo became more open and friendly. Gojiing’s plan was successful.

As the visits passed, Moslo received bread and meats from Gojiing, for she had access to such things. She was good friends with the family of the Citadel, and thus, was able to bring her orphan friend decadent food from the Citadel’s stores.

The day was 10 months and 9 days after the meeting of the two Hill Village orphans. Gojiing rode swiftly and furiously through the forest, her hair flowing in the warm breeze of early summer. The sun bountifully shone atop the scant clouds. A buck was bounding in the forest in a perpendicular path to Gojiing and her steed.

She kept her eyes locked on the beast all the while, with her staff prepared to send a blow to it. She glanced at the approaching area, and saw a gap in the trees, enough to send her blast to the buck. She rode on with her salivary glands stimulated for the taste of well cooked deer meat.

The opening appeared. The buck was in prime position. Gojiing lifted her staff and aimed the head at the unfortunate buck. In an instant, she yanked the staff back and propelled a thin, green burst of energy at the animal’s chest. The buck tumbled into the ground, causing a momentous uproar of dirt.

Gojiing reared her horse and dismounted. She rustled through the thick foliage at her feet and knelt beside the dead animal. As was tradition in the native culture, she gave a brief but meaningful thanks to the animal for its body and vowed to utilize it to the best of her ability.

With the buck strapped across the rear of her horse, she approached Moslo’s hut. Moslo heard the horse’s hooves clomping down the path and walked outside. He looked at his makeshift sundial which Gojiing helped him create. “A bit early in the day for a visit, isn’t it?” he asked as he rubbed his eyes. “If you don’t mind, I think I’ll go back and…”

He noticed the particularly fat beast on top of the horse and stopped what he was speaking. His eyes lit up with excitement. As Gojiing assumed, he was very eager to stay awake. He rubbed his hands together and exclaimed, “Let’s get a fire going, shall we?”

As Moslo arranged rocks in a circle and stacked branches and small logs, Gojiing butchered the buck with her hand created knife. As Moslo worked at making a spark, he asked, “Gojiing, could you grab one of those racks in my hut? They’re next to the door as you’ll walk in.”

Gojiing set down her knife and walked to the house. She bent herself over to get inside, for the doorway was built for someone of Moslo’s height. The ceiling was, however, spacious so that Gojiing had a full inch above her head while standing erect. She scanned the room, turning to and fro, looking for the cooking rack. She realized that for a boy living alone in the forest, Moslo had quite a collection of belongings.

On his desk was a pair of identical knives, displayed as if they were a pair of axes in a Dwarf emperor’s great throne room, a stack of parchments with scrawled attempts of writing on them, a small, sharp stick with which letters could be written, a few particularly large leaves, and an assortment of woodland creature skulls.

She moved on and ruffled through the mound atop his bed. There were four different animal hides stacked on top of each other, a plump pillow stuffed with hundreds of well cleaned feathers, a simple book he used for practicing reading, and a crude candle. Gojiing huffed and moved on, still searching for the elusive cooking rack. “Right beside the door?” she thought, echoing Moslo’s faulty advice.

She rummaged through the other items which were of no order. The rack was missing, to her knowledge. Just as she was going to walk out, she noticed the corner of the rack peeking from behind an old, broken crate Moslo found. Gojiing moved the cumbersome crate aside and grabbed the rack. Then something caught her eye.

This object was much more important than any cooking rack or even any gold pendant. This object was far more elusive than the rack. This object had evaded the grasp of kings for years. There, amongst the rubbish that boy had stashed and hoarded, was the missing dragon tooth.

Gojiing dropped both the rack and her jaw. Her hands scrambled through the old bones and fractured wood slabs to reach the tooth. She brought it slowly toward her face and stared at it in utter awe. From her teachings of Pritan himself, she heard only tales of the king and his dragon. She remembered pretending to do battle over the control of the dragon when she was young. Her hands trembled to feel such a sought after object.

She blinked a few times and asked, “Moslo, uh, w-where did you get this tooth?”

Moslo looked up and replied with apathy, “Oh, that? I found it in the creek a long time ago. I haven’t a clue where it came from. Would you like to keep it?”

Gojiing proceeded to regale Moslo with the story of Antropus, the dragon, and the scattering of the teeth. This telling took over an hour, and, while his stomach rumbled, Moslo remained drawn to the tale. After finishing the story, Gojiing asked anxiously, “May I take this to King Pritan? He will want to know of my discovery.”

Moslo objected, “But what of the venison? My stomach growls at me!” Gojiing tossed an apple into his rough hands and briefly stated, “I must take this to the Citadel immediately. I shall return by nightfall.” She mounted, unstrapped a bag of hearty food and tossed it to Moslo, then her horse galloped off into the woodland.

Over many tall hills was the point known as the depot. It was atop the largest hill in that area, which rivaled the altitude of mountains. Gojiing rode underneath the lush canopy and halted her steed near the peak. She temporarily got off of her horse and climbed to the very top of the hill, which was officially the depot.

Gojiing looked out towards the Citadel, which was built on top of the highest mountain in miles. It was a peculiar structure, built like no other of its time or land. Hundreds of feet tall was a pillar made of dense, white stone. It was a massive tube that withstood the elements for decades. The pillar’s purpose was to hold up the city itself, which was a long, flat slab wide enough to fit a large fortress. It too was white. The tower’s peak reached even the clouds. It was truly a Citadel of the Sky.

Gojiing shone a small but potent light in the air, as a signal. At the Citadel’s walls, guards stood watch with magnifiers to monitor activity, if any arose. Most of the people who came to the Citadel traveled by gryphon or flying lizard. There were, however, some who had neither and thus needed to be taken up by one of the catamarans.

For each catamaran, there were four gryphons. Two were at each side, and the pilot sat in the connector. The gryphons’ wings propelled the catamaran through the sky, and all four were strapped up to large side poles which connected to a middle rod. In the early days of the Citadel, creating these machines were incredibly difficult.

The pilot flipped up his grated visor. “Hello, Gojiing. How’ve you been?” the pilot asked with a rather jolly manner.

Gojiing said solemnly, “Splendid, Jonage, just splendid. But I’m afraid this is pertinent.”

Jonage temporarily aborted his friendly manner and switched to his professional mood. He cleared his throat and affirmed, “I see. Get inside, please.”

The catamaran carried the two up to the port of the Citadel, where supplies and passengers were normally unloaded. The port was underneath the wide plate, like an exposed basement. During every hour of the day, it was bustling and active.

Gojiing gave a brief, thankful smile to the pilot, exited the catamaran, and was escorted to the throne room by awaiting guards. The guards, unlike Jonage, were robotic and rigid. None of them spoke unless spoken to, and when they did, their voices were cold. Their silver armor clinked in unison as they stepped. When people in the street saw guards coming, they parted to the sides. Pritan made absolutely certain his guards were respected for their difficult duties as emotionless troopers.

The guards and Gojiing turned a corner and walked toward the glorious palace of King Pritan. The base of the tower was a large dome, like a massive bowl was tipped so that its bottom faced up. Atop the dome was a spiraling tower with small windows along the spiral lines. At the dome of the palace was a large, semicircular doorway, with heavy doors that fit perfectly into the shape when closed.

Gojiing, despite the fact that she had been to the palace many times, still marveled at its beautiful architecture when she visited. The guards at the gates halted the ones approaching and one ordered, “Papers.”

The leader of the approaching guards screwed off the head of his spear. Inside the head was a curled up parchment, which the leader unfurled and gave to the gate guard. The gate guard examined the papers thoroughly with his helmet removed. “Hawk Company Captain?” the gate guard began as he rolled the parchment.

The leader and the guards stood at attention. The gate guard handed the papers back. “You are free to pass,” he said. All guards saluted simultaneously, and the escort passed through the gates.

They walked through the memorial halls, which was dark, but had enough light from the throne room to see. There were also torches lining the walls. The reason for them being called the memorial halls was the decoration. There were suits of armor, royal paintings, artifacts, and war trophies along the walls.

The Citadel princess waited at the end of the hall, wearing a majestic gilded dress. She bowed to Gojiing and the same was returned to her as an orthodox sign of greeting. “Come, let us go to see my father. Your urgency is apparent.”

The guards were dismissed by the princess, and the two friends made a turn toward the throne room. They walked towards the king on his high throne, with other wise men arranged around him sitting in lower seats. The throne room was semi circular, and the ceiling was far up. The massive tube atop the dome was the extended ceiling, with stained glass taking place of the back of the tower wall. The vertical strip, when scanned up to down, told the story of the Citadel’s origin in wordless pictures.

The king sat in the highest chair, which was held up by three rods, as were the chairs of the advisors. Their chairs lined up in a slope formation, with all arcing down either side of the king. As sunshine rained down upon her face from the stained glass windows, Gojiing asked, “King Pritan, I have a favor to ask of you.”

“I can do a wide palette of tasks for one of my daughter’s friends,” the king’s calm voice replied.

Gojiing answered, “Your majesty, I believe I have found the eighth tooth, in the hands of a boy, of all people. My advice is to hold it here. Your fortress has not been penetrated before, and it shall not ever. If Draossiphus does gain knowledge of its location, he will have much difficulty gaining it.”

King Pritan leaned back in his chair and put his hand to his jaw. “What have my advisors to say?” he asked, looking down at them with his well wrinkled hands open. The advisors looked at each other and nodded in agreement. Pritan observed this and nodded to himself.

“Retrieve it,” he ordered with a sovereign manner. “And we shall hold it here.” Footsteps pattered through the memorial halls. There was rapid breathing, and a matching heartbeat. A messenger turned the corner and burst into the throne room. All heads turned toward him.

“Your highness!” the messenger announced, panting wildly. “A-an army is marching on a path for…for Capitox! They are under the command of a man named Skrysos! H-here is the transmission orb. He sent out a public frequency only five minutes ago.”

Transmission orbs were small orbs, the size of grapefruits, which displayed and recorded messages. One would record a message, with a visual screen and an audio recording that was synchronized. When displaying a message, it would project a translucent screen and speak the audio to accompany it. Public transmissions were sent to major transmission orbs, at town centers, castles, forresses, etcetera.

The messenger removed the orb from his bag and set it to the floor. “Project!” he ordered it. The screen appeared, and displayed something that instantly caught the king’s eye. One man, in a white robe was standing with a staff in his hand in front of an army of monsters. The monsters were heavily armored and stood well above the man in front. “Hello,” the man greeted peacefully but deviously. “My name is Skrysos. I am supreme commander of this army, known as the Sparsh. I refuse to tell of their numbers, however, I will give you comfort by telling you that you need not fight; they are sure to overwhelm you, so you can surrender, and the pile of your dead will be minimal.

“I am in possession of seven of the eight dragon teeth, and, before any of you wonder, I am on a direct path to Capitox, to unlock the dragon and use it as my ultimate weapon. First, Capitox, then…the rest. Though I speak of total domination, I will ally myself with Draossiphus and his armies. Vilons, you are my allies, Grey Shrimps, you are my allies, Rodenki, you are my allies, and the lot of you other brigands, raiders, and pirates, you are also my allies. The armies against Draossiphus, however, are wholly against me as well.

“So throw what men you can at Capitox! They will be all the more fodder for my army!”

Pritan climbed down the set of stairs behind him with haste. Without so much of a head turn, he strictly ordered, “Gojiing, come with me immediately.” Gojiing nodded and was quickly behind him.

They rushed down a few halls similar to the one leading to the throne room. “Here it is,” he said as he reached for his key. “The Citadel library.” He grabbed the key from beneath his robe and inserted it into the hole. The door opened exempt from a creak, as most old doors did not.

Gojiing looked at the door and asked surprisedly, “You consult this room often?”

Pritan opened the door and answered, “Yes, I do. It holds accounts of every morsel of known crimes, mythology, political altercations, battles, and even some things that are not known by most.”

Pritan lit a candle and led Gojiing through the ancient library. There was a forest of dark bookshelves, all fully stuffed with old, dusty books. There were desks laiden with random parchments, ink smudges, books, and small artifacts.

Pritan scanned past the shelves, each of which had a specific label stating what was contained in it. He muttered to himself as he walked by, “Kra-Hadad, mountain creatures, war chemistry, blacksmithing…ah, here it is: Capitoxian history.”

He turned and traced horizontally across the shelf. After a few minutes of careful searching, he stood up and had a vexed expression on his moderately wrinkled face. He set his jaw and tapped the shelf board twice. “Oh!” he exclaimed as he reached for a particular book. “Here it is. ‘King Antropus’ Dragon: A Detailed Book Regarding the Beast.”

He opened the dusty book, and two moths fluttered away. After blowing away the heavy dust layer, he held his candle over the page. He flipped through the pages, which were filled with detailed ink pictures and sloppily written notes. “Finally!” he exclaimed, his finger pointed to the page. “When a party inserts all eight teeth into the head, the dragon will be released and must submit to total control of the one who inserted the teeth.

“However, when only seven are inserted, the dragon is free, bound to no master. If such an event occurs, the party possessing the eighth tooth has a limited time to insert the last tooth, which will eternally lock the dragon, never to be released.”

Gojiing paused. “Why is it designed so?” she inquired with a tilted head.

Pritan put his hand to the page and insisted, “No, you must listen. If Skrysos inserts only seven, and we are not there to stop him, Aquilius will perish by the dragon’s malevolent fire. We must send someone to stop him.”

Gojiing argued, “No one can go alone, not even one of your knights. The open path is dangerous. There will be Vilons ambushing, brigands, and a plethora of others who would want the tooth for selling off to their king. We need a small band, half a dozen, at most. The band should go undetected, but will have adequate protection against the scum of Aquilius.”

“It will be done. And in no longer than two days will this gathering be accomplished, I guarantee you. The band shall consist of yourself, and whoever I can conjure in my search. Now fly! Become prepared!”

Gojiing shuffled down the stairs into the hangar bay with haste. Jonage the pilot stood up from his leaning position against the wall. He set down the apple core he was nibbling onto a barrel and asked in his unchanged, pleasant mood, “Oi, welcome back! I’m off duty during this hour, but I’d be happy to give you a ride down to the depot. O-or farther, if you needed so.”

Gojiing nodded, and they climbed into the catamaran closest to them. Jonage whipped the reins twice, and the catamaran was pulled off the bay into the cool evening air.

After a few minutes of sailing, Jonage asked curiously, “Why is it you don’t live up ‘ere? You’re good friends wit’ the royals, so I don’ get it.”

Gojiing replied over the strong wind, “I’ve always enjoyed the forest. Living permanently in the Citadel would not be fit for me. Though your hospitality is always appreciated.”

Jonage fastened his leather pilot’s helmet and shrugged. Many minutes of silence passed, where no conversation was spawned from either person. Finally, the depot arrived. “Well, alright,” he concluded, “have a good evening, miss. Stay safe tonight. I’ve heard there are–”

Gojiing interrupted with a small smile, “I know these woods, Jonage. I can ward off attackers, if need be. Thank you for your concern.” She walked down the hill with her staff lit. Jonage stalled at the depot a moment more. He blinked a few times, looked back into the sunset, and rode off.

Gojiing approached her horse, who had been waiting at his original position since she left him there in the noontime. He was fast asleep, but when he heard his rider coming, he stood as if she had only been gone five minutes. Gojiing smiled and told him, “You were wise to have rested yourself. We have a harsh journey in the night before us. Go! Like your legs are wings!” The horse galloped fiercely down the path and into the mountains, while the sun fell.

Gojiing stopped her horse at Moslo’s hut. The fire had been stamped out, and the buck carcass was taken elsewhere, as drag lines in the ground showed. “Moslo?” she called out.

Moslo opened the door and held a candle in his hand. “I’ve been waiting long enough for you!” he exclaimed, with an obvious glance to the moonlit sky.

Gojiing held out her hands and apologized, “My dearest apologies, my friend. Something very unexpected arose at the Citadel for which I had to be present.”

“Well you have returned now. I’m going to my bed for the rest of the night, so you can go back to your home,” Moslo said as he began to close the door.

Gojiing stopped him, “Er, actually, Moslo, I will not be coming back for a long time. I am needed for a mission.”

“Oh,” he exclaimed. “Do well at that, then. I shall see you when you return.”

Gojiing asked surprisedly, “You will be well without my presence?”

Moslo looked at his feet and answered, “I’ve survived here long enough without you. I can do it again. Now go. You’ve work to do.”

She bit her lip and swung herself to the top of the horse. “Goodbye, old friend,” she said. Moslo had already walked inside. Gojiing’s horse bolted up the hill as Moslo watched from his hut.

Once she had rode for a good, long distance, Moslo grabbed his travel pack. He stuffed all his necessities into it and walked outside, his back laden with a heavy burden. The hut to him looked empty and barren of life. He walked away and hiked south. Something beckoned him.

Of Light and Metal: The Droplets Fall (Pt.2)

Ave, peoples!

The next part of Of Light and Metal: The Droplets Fall is here.

Pardon me if it turned out as scrap. :/ My heart isn’t really “in” this project as with others; not to say I’m not putting any effort into it, but that because I’m not particularly passionate about it, the writing is inherently not as good compared to workings I really enjoy.

Note: This does contain more language in it. The reason: I’m experimenting. 😉

Nonetheless, I give you, Part 2!

 

 

“Creain Crosspiece!” Sevent Graves called out from his vantage point atop the formidable Entrant in Bay 5-3. He promptly descended the access ladder and stepped onto floor level.

“Sevent Graves,” Creain replied in kind.

“How have you been fairing since the… incident?” Sevent inquired.

“As well as I can be. My machine is definitely irreparable and I haven’t been assigned a new one yet.”

“Well, it looks like you’re stuck with me for now. Maybe our combined wit can keep us from encountering another bombshell, eh?” said the other Pilot, chuckling.

“Maybe.” He responded, though no trace of a joking mood was in his voice.

“That aside, my Entrant is about ready for deployment. The engee’s are completing the load up of the rocket pods, then we do a quick stats check and we’re set.”

Creain nodded, observing a Bay crane and two engee’s as they inserted rocket pod missiles into the Mech’s second left 8-C. Rocket Pod Units. (“Engee” was an informal nickname for “Engineers”.)

“Shall we proceed to our seats?” Sevent asked, gesturing to the hatch on the Entrant’s hull.

Creain noiselessly agreed and they ascended the access ladder to the primary entry hatch. Sevent opened it with an ID code and dropped down into the pilot section. Creain followed and was greeted by a smell he hadn’t experienced in years—the “new Mech” aroma, which was something like the “new car” aroma. He coughed at the unexpected assailment of his nostrils.

“The smell hit me hard the first time I boarded this thing too.” Sevent commented, flipping a switch on a panel near the hatch to seal it. The round portal shut and locked.

Aside from the “new Mech” smell, the interior of Sevent’s Entrant was semi-dark and as Creain recalled his machine’s pilot section to have looked like, minus the personal touches. The blast shield was obviously engaged, as the forward viewing window did not admit any light into the cabin.

Creain seated himself in the rear of the two Pilot chairs and attempted to become situated. It didn’t feel like his machine, but there wasn’t anything to do about that. It wasn’t his machine, point and simple.

He gripped the two joystick-like control devices on both armrests. He was somewhat anxious. How would he operate in this new vehicle? Command would have acquainted him with a newly-assigned Entrant H.A.-Ver.55 if time had permitted it. Unfortunately, this new development had occurred too soon after the last Altercations Skirmish for a new machine to be processed and sent. The reason Sevent had his new vehicle was because the Entrant belonged to a “spare” selection of war machines the Mother of Operations IV carried onboard.

‘After this, I’ll inquire about obtaining a new machine.’ Creain told himself, donning the Pilot helmet from the hair’s headrest, which held the general communications, intercom, HUD visor, and the necessary ear protection (the combined sounds of the machine’s weaponry discharging and typical combat noise made the ear protection mandatory).

You are set and clear for departure.” The voice of Bay Control announced through the integrated headsets in the Pilot’s helmets. “Proceed to initiate systems for pickup via transport gunship.

Sevent had seated himself in the forward chair and was already running systems checks in preparation for the coming fight, and, more relevantly, the aircraft pickup that would carry his Entrant to the designated drop zone. Readouts flashed across Creain’s HUD, a solid indicator his fellow Pilot was doing silent checks.

The roar of transport gunship engine’s perforated the Bay and the metallic sound of clamps securing the Entrant to the aircraft’s underside resounded through the hull, accompanied with a brief jostling. As was regulation, the blast shield remained in place over the forward view window; it would disengage once they arrived at the drop point.

Both Mech Pilot’s safety harnesses fastened around their waists and torsos. “We are all set in here.” Sevent informed the pilot of the transport gunship consigned to their Mech.

Copy that.” The pilot replied.

Arm of Judgment,” The Unit Commander said through the Mech unit’s separate linked communications channel, using their official title. “Sound off!

“Entrant 1, reporting in.”

“Entrant 2, here and set.”

“Entrant 3, ready to go.”

“Entrant 4, reporting in.”

“Entrant 5, raring to move.”

“Entrant 6, we are awaiting launch.” Sevent answered.

“We got number six?” Creain asked.

Sevent looked back and replied humorously, “We got blown up last time.”

The linked communication crackled to life again. “Good! Now let’s go meet the opposition!” The Commander ordered. Launch!

Outside their Mech, the Bay’s ceiling, floor, and walls slid away on their frames, exposing the attack force to the semi-hostile environment of Destitute. Several thousand feet below, the moon’s surface appeared as a massive plain of green and ruddy tan, as though it had a strange, gradually-increasing skin disease. The process of terraformation was still ongoing, and it was yet a while off until the moon would be prepared to safely accommodate human life.

The transport gunship’s engines were set to max thrust capacity, emitting a teeth-jarring wave of artificial thunder. Then, with a lurching sensation, the gunship and Mech launched from their home ship. Creain was used to these launches after approximately eight years in the armed service, but it remained an irking experience every time his stomach went into his throat.

ETA is approximately three minutes, Pilots.” The Commander announced. “Unfortunately, aside from radar scans, Command was unable to gather Intel on what we can expect to find when we arrive. The radar feed—which should be appearing on your HUD’s now—tells us that a composition of the enemy’s bulk land and air forces have assembled in the Veridep sinkhole. From the feed, we can identify that this composition includes their Mechs, tanks, ground troops, portable offensive operations systems, and the variable grouping of their air forces. Our attack group consists of the Mother of Operation IV’s marine brigade, multiple air-support wings, a contingent of support tanks, and Mech units L1 through H10, which should prove to wipe out the opposition in good time and have a minimum casualty number if we do our jobs right.

Arm of Judgment has been specifically assigned to deploy around the edge of the sinkhole and provide artillery support. We have had no contact with the generator base’s personnel since the enemy moved in, but watch where you shoot; we don’t want to end up killing our own people. That is all for now. Our ETA is now one minute. Commander out.

“I may just be paranoid,” Sevent said over the Entrant’s intercom after the linked communication was silenced. “But it seems like we’re going in more blind than informed, as if our enemy wasn’t already a mystery of sorts.”

“I’m not keen on it either, but the radar clearly tells us where the opposition is and what they have, at least most of the way down the sinkhole.” Creain answered, steeling myself for the coming fight as the gunship descended to their drop point.

“I’ll be more consoled when we land. It isn’t top on my list to get a missile up my ass.”

The Mech’s powerful legs touched down on the moon’s rugged surface and a great pneumatic hiss could be heard as it momentarily supported the weight of the gunship that had carried it and its full weight combined. Then the clamps released and the aircraft lifted back into the sky. “May fate favor you.” The gunship pilot said as a parting phrase.

“And you.” Sevent replied.

The blast shield folded into the Entrant’s hull and light from the nearby sun flooded the cabin interior. Before them was the massive sinkhole Veridep—over a mile in diameter and at minimum two or three times that in depth. It was a natural wonder of Destitute. Openings to ancient catacombs perforated its uneven sides to the very bottom and dozens of outcroppings protruded here and there throughout. The remains of four outposts which had been established on the edge now smoldered in ruin, but the fires were small and struggling; the oxygen there was barely enough to sustain flames. Built into the ruddy rock were elevators that had—up until recently—taken personnel from the outposts down to the generator base far below. It was a silent, depressing scene; foreboding to what destruction may be discovered as one traveled into Veridep.

Further down the sinkhole, any light was swallowed in thick darkness, obscuring what lie in the bowels. None of the artificial illumination typically produced by the base was visible.

“No greeting party. Nothing.” Sevent observed. “You’d think they would leave something up here to initially attack us.”

Creain felt the same. Overall, it disturbed him that the opposition hadn’t shown any of themselves, expect on the radar. The ruins of the outposts were proof someone had come and inflicted damage on the base’s operations, but otherwise no indicator of the enemy’s presence was there.

Arm of Judgment, set yourselves up around the edge according to your drop point. Two scout probes have been sent down to assess the situation and until they report back, we are ordered to remain on standby.” The Commander informed.

“Understood.” Sevent confirmed, followed by the five other Pilots verification of understanding the information and orders.

The Pilot proceeded to move the Mech into the designated position, which was highlighted on their HUDs. “Initiating Emplacement mode.”

The Mech settled down to the ground where it stood and support arms extended out, automatically securing themselves to the rock. Then, the perimeter defense system activated. Four hatches opened on the vehicle and auxiliary turrets came out; they were unmanned and would defend the Mech from close, land-based attacks. Anti-air guns were stationed on the top of the Mech to fend off air-based attackers. It was a basic defensive system, and as already proven it wasn’t even close to perfect, but in average cases it served the necessary purpose.

Next was the deployment of what truly made an Entrant H.A. Ver.-55: The mobile artillery cannon. A collapsible, single-barrel mortar capable of decimating anything within fifty yards of its shell’s touchdown point. The “Lurking Ire”, as it was dubbed, held a title of destructive beauty amongst war machines. It was originally its own separate weapon, but the design was converted into a mobile version that would serve as the primary cannon of a Heavy-class Mech. Thus, the Entrant H.A. Ver.-55 Mech was born and manufactured as a mobile artillery emplacement.

With Emplacement mode active and the standby order in effect, there wasn’t much to do but wait for the expected Intel from the probes.

Ten anxious minutes following, the Commander finally contacted his unit. “The techies lost contact with the scout probes before we could obtain any information from them. We can only expect that they were destroyed. At this juncture, Command has given Lightfeet squad clearance to investigate. Evidently, this is a manned recon mission, and we will keep in constant contact with the team as they head down. Continue on standby. When we have results—or lose communications with Lightfeet—I will inform you.” The linked communication was severed, again.

Even Creain was becoming impatient now. The situation was quiet to begin with, but he had expected a clash of forces by now. Why hadn’t a skirmish broken out yet? Why were the opposition keeping so low? Hopefully, Lightfeet squad would give the N.A.H. some answers.

Seven Ver.2 Hoppers, which comprised Lightfeet, came into view and then promptly disappeared as they bounded into the sinkhole.

‘Those men are going to die.’ Creain thought solemnly. He had an unsettling feeling that sending Lightfeet squad in, was sending them to a mysterious death. He voiced his thought to Sevent.

“I know… I was thinking the same thing.” He replied, shifting slightly in his chair. “The fact we haven’t fired a single shot or seen a single foe is getting to me.”

“Hm. Maybe that’s what they want.”

“Damn them if they do.”

The linked com ignited with the Commander’s urgent voice. “Lightfeet squad is under fire and communications with them are strained! Hoppers 04 and 07 are gone, and at this rate we will lose the rest of them. It is useless to send in reinforcements now; however, the captain of Lightfeet has sent trajectory markers back. We may not know exactly what’s down there yet, but we can sure as hell hit them now. The squad has distanced themselves from the general vicinity of the enemy as best they can and should be clear of any damage from friendly fire. The trajectory markers are on your HUDs now. Fire when ready, Arm of Judgment. If we can provide the necessary cover fire, the remainder of Lightfeet has a chance to escape.

As secondary Pilot, it was (mainly) Creain’s task to man the Lurking Ire. Now, he wasted no time in positioning the mobile artillery cannon into the correct position as mapped out by the trajectory markers.

“Fire!”

A shell launched from the mortar, the sound and recoil reverberating through the Entrant. From there it flew in an arc and then plummeted downward towards the sinkhole’s bowels. Five other selfsame shells joined it.

Impact points were spot-on, Pilots. Keep it up!

And so it ensued, shot after shot into the depths of Veridep, while the attack group waited in anticipation of their comrades safe return. Updates from the Commander let them know that Lightfeet was making progress with their retreat and every shell made the difference of life or death for the Hopper Pilots.

Then: “This is Overhead 01—I have a visual on Lightfeet.” It was a report from the pilot of a Combat-class support gunship, who was hovering only a short distance above Veridep. “Gunships 02 and 04, you’re with me. We’ll move in to—

Her sentence was never completed. A streak of fire shot up from somewhere in the sinkhole and pierced into the bully of 01’s gunship, which exploded in a shower of flames and metal. The four personnel aboard died instantaneously. It was a moment of sudden shock.

The first casualties of the 8th Altercations Skirmish.

Update, Critique Query, and Strawberry Fishes (Welcome to the Arbitrary World)

Ave, peoples!

Why is the “megaton of TNT” a unit of energy equal to 4.184 petajoules? Or why does taping paper to trees seem like morbid cruelty? And why does VORPAL sound so cool and yet so aggravatingly complicated?

I selflessly welcome you to the Arbitrary World (aka: the randomness of my spontaneous updates). What do we (as in “I”) do here? Updates, queries and arbitrariness, peoples! And why not throw in some cake while we’re at it!*

So, what’s on my Sufficiently Long And Perpendicular list today? Hmm. First off is an update concerning the (presently) incomplete short story, Of Light and Metal: The Droplets Fall!

Unfortunately, Part 2 is still in-the-works. I didn’t finish it nearly as fast as I initially wanted to, and thus I haven’t posted it here nearly as fast as I initially wanted to. Rest assured I am trying to complete it ASAP, but lack of ambition, distractions, and real-life happenings has been giving me a run for my money, so to speak (the irony of saying that right now is that I have a twenty dollar bill next to my hand here). When can you expect Part 2? I can’t answer that question with full confidence, because I have no idea; and, as we’ve seen in the past, I’m sadly not very good at sticking to things when I say I’ll continue with them (I’m very sorry about all that). Generally speaking, Of Light and Metal: The Droplets Fall is an  experimental, short-story side project that I decided to put some effort into and post here–to show you guys I’m still alive in the realm of writing and all that. 🙂 We’ll see where it goes from here.

Moldy potato chip break!

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Annndddddd, we’re back!

What’s next on the list… Ah yes! It’s query time, with Professor Pat!

*Ahem* I’ve noticed recently that there is a substantial lack of critique on the site, excluding Munchkin’s comments. The P.Y.W.G. exists as a group of young individuals who came together to share ideas and manuscripts, have writing-based conversations, and offer support and constructive critique to one another. Unfortunately, critique and feedback seem to be neglected. Busy lives and important events may keep the writers from being ever-present and always giving of their time to read over another’s work and then inform them of their thoughts on it, but only a bare minority have actually conversed here in recent posts! I believe the group can do better; don’t you?

That’s all for now from Professor Pat.

Oh dear… someone suffered an irreparable stomach disease from the moldy potato chip break! Moment of silence.

And now I present to you, Strawberry Fishes**:

Thank you for reading the first Arbitrary World post. I hope you like 1598/1599 plays, and have a fantastic day. 🙂

 

*The cake is a lie!

**Strawberry Fishes comic is not original by Munchkin. Source: The Sanctum Facebook Page.