Chapter 40
Kris Wicker
Know what you're doing yet?
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Chapter 40
Finished with his meeting agenda for the day, Evandor left the bridge area and went straight to the medical center of the ship. He stepped into the active medical bay, the one being used to absorb the bodies of the captives who refused to join him. It was a difficult and dark edict, but he was never one to shy away from those. He had little patience or use for those who opposed him, but this was different because these captives were once allies.
Fortunately several saw the benefits of joining him, but there were many who stubbornly refused which lead to a series of abductions that would provide bodies for his crew to live in. Not near enough, but it was a start. He had watched the first series of take overs. Confident that the system was working well, he let Major Asuna, director of personnel resources aboard his fortress, oversee the other procedures. Today's line up had one person he wanted to speak to face-to-face.
"Captain Alexander Chard," said Evandor as he walked through the door and spotted the grey man from Andorin.
"Are you here to gloat?" asked Captain Alexander Chard. He was strapped down onto one of the medical beds. Black straps around his chest, upper and lower arms, and his legs. The cyberjack support helmet was already on his head, but he was not yet plugged into the system.
"Hardly," Evandor said as he walked up to the bound man. "I am here to give you another chance."
"For what? To become a ghoul like you?"
"A ghoul?" asked Evandor, raising an eyebrow.
"What else would you call you and your kind?"
"That is a harsh and unfair assessment," replied Evandor.
"I call it the way I see it," said Chard. "You should all be put down."
"Why are you so hostile towards us?"
"Me? Hostile?" Chard barked out a laugh. "You attacked first!"
"There are mistakes we all have to live with," replied Evandor. "Don't make one yourself."
"The only mistake I made was getting captured so I couldn't kill you myself. That would have saved me and the others from what you're doing to us."
Evandor sighed and looked away, the words stung. Needing a distraction he brought up his right hand and he rubbed his fingers together feeling the texture of the flesh of his dead body. He knew he had to be resolute even as an idle thought crossed his mind as he wondered if his fingernails and hair would keep growing. "I was never known for one to keep prisoners. This is no different."
"No different? You are stealing the bodies of the living!" Chard said, his voice rose with the emotions behind them.
"If I choose to eliminate my prisoners, does it matter to them what I do with the bodies?" Evandor asked. "Dead is dead. It doesn't matter to them what happens to their remains. If I repurpose their flesh to something useful, then all the better."
Chard watched the admiral as he casually ran his thumb over his fingernails. His callous demeanor made Chard's teeth grind together. "Are you proud of what you have become? This vile creature of evil."
The words caught the admiral's attention. "Strong words, Captain," his voice flat as if he just commented that the floor plating was a medium grey color. "Hero or villain, it is all a matter of perspective. On this side of the frontier, I am a hero and called the Lion of Tomlin.
"It is not mere perspective," said Chard cutting him off. His voice terse and restrained like a hydro dam holding back megatons of water.
"Do not be naive. You are no different," said Evandor, cutting him off. "You protect your own and kill those who threaten you. You are no more noble or evil than I am or those in the other star nations. We believe what we are doing is right because we grew up in this culture and drank in what it told us to believe."
"There is more to it than that. The reasons why you kill or defend determine your character, your morals, and ethics."
"Morals and ethics?" Evandor scoffed, his ruined mouth twisted. "Those are discussion topics for those who are well fed and sit in warm chairs and are light years away from the threat of war. For those of us who put our lives in harm's way, it always comes down to protecting those that we value the most."
"Then you don't value the Republic?" Chard questioned, "The place you were born?"
"I foremost value those who trust me to protect them." Evandor's eyes went distant, he would never admit it, but the damn captain's words were hitting cords. It was no easy thing to leave one's home.
"Last year I discovered what the Tribes called me. Lou Gaurou," said Evandor shifting the subject. He saw that Chard did not react to the name. "I didn't know what that meant at first either," continued Evandor. "I did some research. It translates into 'the breathing demon,' or perhaps more like the 'demon who breaths."
Chard kept his face blank.
Evandor continued. "He is the superstitious representation of unknown deaths among the Tribes. Usually during exploration into new territories where death is often silent due to radiation, poisonous gases, oxygen deprivation, microbes, bacteria, or anything similar that can kill a person before they know what is happening. Lou Gaurou is the demon who comes and steals your soul. You do not know he is coming until you hear him breathing beside you. By then it is too late. It is like he breathes on you, and his breath takes your soul."
Evandor could see the look of recognition in Chard's eyes as he processed the meaning of the name. "I know it is not perfect, but I do appreciate the sense of irony. I find it a sense of accomplishment to be so highly thought of by one's enemies." Evandor gave Chard a half smile, pride in his eyes. "Lou Gaurou, the demon who takes your soul with a breath."
He walked up to the grey-skinned captain strapped to the bed and hovered over him. He peered down on the restrained man, bringing his face uncomfortably close to Chard's. "You rejected the first offer to join us, now I have come to ask you personally." Evandor said, focusing eye to eye. His voice became a whisper, meant only for the two of them, "Captain Chard, of the 2nd fleet, join me. Join us, the new Immortals. This is your chance to write history, to create a new and better universe where each of us will have time to achieve everything we may desire."
Chard held his gaze, steadfast and strong. "You do not understand, Admiral. This is no different from a Tribes' warlord asking me to join them, or a priest from the Dynasty of Peace or a baron from the Syver Dominion. There is nothing that you can offer for me to betray my loyalty and my people. I am not a traitor like you."
Evandor stood up straight, "You have my respect. If I were in your position I would likely make the exact same choice. Yet it is the wrong choice. We are on the edge of evolution."
Chard stared back hard, lips pressed tight in a thin line.
"I see that you value your old way of thinking too much. You will never understand." Evandor said. He let out a sigh, it sounded of disappointment.
"Take him," Evandor said to the medical clerk, one of the few who survived the event. The man reached over and plugged Chard in, moved back to his control pad and tapped a single key. Evandor kept his eyes on Chard's face and his stoic expressionless mask. "You may find this hard to believe, but I am more disappointed in what is about to happen than you."
Chard glared back at him, strapped to the medical bed, a look of stubborn defiance about him. He held a certain smugness. They all did at first, believing they could beat the system. The first sign of him cracking was his eyes bulging ever so slightly. He recovered quickly, but his pupils started to quickly dart side to side. Evandor knew that he no longer saw anything as he was fighting the invading souls of the dead. His body started to convulse as the internal battle intensified. It was not long before he threw his head back and let loose the silent scream. It looked like he was screaming from bone rattling pain, but not a sound escaped his outstretched lips. This was the death of his soul, going from the spark of life to the lifeless data file stored in the computer to analyze and pick through later. Everyone went through this part the same, the silent scream.
Chard's body came to rest, looking at peace, eyes closed. A smile came across him, his eyes fluttered open, and he gave a deep satisfied smile.
"War Admiral Evandor, Sir," said the person hosted by Chard's body.
Evandor glanced at the monitor at the head of the bed. The body now held Private Scott Everly. "Welcome to the new world, soldier."
Finished with his meeting agenda for the day, Evandor left the bridge area and went straight to the medical center of the ship. He stepped into the active medical bay, the one being used to absorb the bodies of the captives who refused to join him. It was a difficult and dark edict, but he was never one to shy away from those. He had little patience or use for those who opposed him, but this was different because these captives were once allies.
Fortunately several saw the benefits of joining him, but there were many who stubbornly refused which lead to a series of abductions that would provide bodies for his crew to live in. Not near enough, but it was a start. He had watched the first series of take overs. Confident that the system was working well, he let Major Asuna, director of personnel resources aboard his fortress, oversee the other procedures. Today's line up had one person he wanted to speak to face-to-face.
"Captain Alexander Chard," said Evandor as he walked through the door and spotted the grey man from Andorin.
"Are you here to gloat?" asked Captain Alexander Chard. He was strapped down onto one of the medical beds. Black straps around his chest, upper and lower arms, and his legs. The cyberjack support helmet was already on his head, but he was not yet plugged into the system.
"Hardly," Evandor said as he walked up to the bound man. "I am here to give you another chance."
"For what? To become a ghoul like you?"
"A ghoul?" asked Evandor, raising an eyebrow.
"What else would you call you and your kind?"
"That is a harsh and unfair assessment," replied Evandor.
"I call it the way I see it," said Chard. "You should all be put down."
"Why are you so hostile towards us?"
"Me? Hostile?" Chard barked out a laugh. "You attacked first!"
"There are mistakes we all have to live with," replied Evandor. "Don't make one yourself."
"The only mistake I made was getting captured so I couldn't kill you myself. That would have saved me and the others from what you're doing to us."
Evandor sighed and looked away, the words stung. Needing a distraction he brought up his right hand and he rubbed his fingers together feeling the texture of the flesh of his dead body. He knew he had to be resolute even as an idle thought crossed his mind as he wondered if his fingernails and hair would keep growing. "I was never known for one to keep prisoners. This is no different."
"No different? You are stealing the bodies of the living!" Chard said, his voice rose with the emotions behind them.
"If I choose to eliminate my prisoners, does it matter to them what I do with the bodies?" Evandor asked. "Dead is dead. It doesn't matter to them what happens to their remains. If I repurpose their flesh to something useful, then all the better."
Chard watched the admiral as he casually ran his thumb over his fingernails. His callous demeanor made Chard's teeth grind together. "Are you proud of what you have become? This vile creature of evil."
The words caught the admiral's attention. "Strong words, Captain," his voice flat as if he just commented that the floor plating was a medium grey color. "Hero or villain, it is all a matter of perspective. On this side of the frontier, I am a hero and called the Lion of Tomlin.
"It is not mere perspective," said Chard cutting him off. His voice terse and restrained like a hydro dam holding back megatons of water.
"Do not be naive. You are no different," said Evandor, cutting him off. "You protect your own and kill those who threaten you. You are no more noble or evil than I am or those in the other star nations. We believe what we are doing is right because we grew up in this culture and drank in what it told us to believe."
"There is more to it than that. The reasons why you kill or defend determine your character, your morals, and ethics."
"Morals and ethics?" Evandor scoffed, his ruined mouth twisted. "Those are discussion topics for those who are well fed and sit in warm chairs and are light years away from the threat of war. For those of us who put our lives in harm's way, it always comes down to protecting those that we value the most."
"Then you don't value the Republic?" Chard questioned, "The place you were born?"
"I foremost value those who trust me to protect them." Evandor's eyes went distant, he would never admit it, but the damn captain's words were hitting cords. It was no easy thing to leave one's home.
"Last year I discovered what the Tribes called me. Lou Gaurou," said Evandor shifting the subject. He saw that Chard did not react to the name. "I didn't know what that meant at first either," continued Evandor. "I did some research. It translates into 'the breathing demon,' or perhaps more like the 'demon who breaths."
Chard kept his face blank.
Evandor continued. "He is the superstitious representation of unknown deaths among the Tribes. Usually during exploration into new territories where death is often silent due to radiation, poisonous gases, oxygen deprivation, microbes, bacteria, or anything similar that can kill a person before they know what is happening. Lou Gaurou is the demon who comes and steals your soul. You do not know he is coming until you hear him breathing beside you. By then it is too late. It is like he breathes on you, and his breath takes your soul."
Evandor could see the look of recognition in Chard's eyes as he processed the meaning of the name. "I know it is not perfect, but I do appreciate the sense of irony. I find it a sense of accomplishment to be so highly thought of by one's enemies." Evandor gave Chard a half smile, pride in his eyes. "Lou Gaurou, the demon who takes your soul with a breath."
He walked up to the grey-skinned captain strapped to the bed and hovered over him. He peered down on the restrained man, bringing his face uncomfortably close to Chard's. "You rejected the first offer to join us, now I have come to ask you personally." Evandor said, focusing eye to eye. His voice became a whisper, meant only for the two of them, "Captain Chard, of the 2nd fleet, join me. Join us, the new Immortals. This is your chance to write history, to create a new and better universe where each of us will have time to achieve everything we may desire."
Chard held his gaze, steadfast and strong. "You do not understand, Admiral. This is no different from a Tribes' warlord asking me to join them, or a priest from the Dynasty of Peace or a baron from the Syver Dominion. There is nothing that you can offer for me to betray my loyalty and my people. I am not a traitor like you."
Evandor stood up straight, "You have my respect. If I were in your position I would likely make the exact same choice. Yet it is the wrong choice. We are on the edge of evolution."
Chard stared back hard, lips pressed tight in a thin line.
"I see that you value your old way of thinking too much. You will never understand." Evandor said. He let out a sigh, it sounded of disappointment.
"Take him," Evandor said to the medical clerk, one of the few who survived the event. The man reached over and plugged Chard in, moved back to his control pad and tapped a single key. Evandor kept his eyes on Chard's face and his stoic expressionless mask. "You may find this hard to believe, but I am more disappointed in what is about to happen than you."
Chard glared back at him, strapped to the medical bed, a look of stubborn defiance about him. He held a certain smugness. They all did at first, believing they could beat the system. The first sign of him cracking was his eyes bulging ever so slightly. He recovered quickly, but his pupils started to quickly dart side to side. Evandor knew that he no longer saw anything as he was fighting the invading souls of the dead. His body started to convulse as the internal battle intensified. It was not long before he threw his head back and let loose the silent scream. It looked like he was screaming from bone rattling pain, but not a sound escaped his outstretched lips. This was the death of his soul, going from the spark of life to the lifeless data file stored in the computer to analyze and pick through later. Everyone went through this part the same, the silent scream.
Chard's body came to rest, looking at peace, eyes closed. A smile came across him, his eyes fluttered open, and he gave a deep satisfied smile.
"War Admiral Evandor, Sir," said the person hosted by Chard's body.
Evandor glanced at the monitor at the head of the bed. The body now held Private Scott Everly. "Welcome to the new world, soldier."