Chapter Wrath of The King
THE GREAT EXPEDITION
Rudely, I awoke to a thunderous and persistent knock on my door. I slept for twelve hours. For the first time in weeks, I slept.
They posted me up in the city’s only guest housing, reserved for those like Mark, Victoria, and Silas, and people applying for citizenship, in the isolated paradise the people of Remora had created for themselves.
The room was simply exquisite. Twenty-foot ceilings carved of marble and lined with limestone pillars. Artwork created by the locals was woven into every visible orifice; this gave the room a very dynamic quality, oh, and how could I forget the view?
This island on Remora has nearly perfect weather; the surface with the breeze stays around twenty-three degrees Celsius year-round. It is always warm and cozy and rains only ever so often. So all of the buildings in the ocean city are built openly. For instance, in my room, when I awoke, roughly ten meters ahead of me, was my balcony. I could feel the benevolent ocean breeze brush against my body as I awoke. The sensation was incredible.
So. Despite the fact I was so rudely interrupted, I was feeling so good after my rest, that I only threw a minor temper tantrum. “Collin! Hey, Collin! Wake up! We’re running late!”
“Hold on, damn it! I’m up! I’m up, you idiot!”
I jumped out of my king-sized bed, in my marble-crafted room, and managed to throw on a pair of pants before I rushed towards the decorated double doors.
“What! What do you want! I was slee—”
I stopped in mid sentence when I saw that it was her. Helena just simply smiled and cocked her head sideways towards me.
“Hey. You’re up.”
“Yeah, uh sorry about—”
“Get dressed. We have to get going; we need to eat.”
“Right. One moment.”
I quickly put on my jacket and my specialized boots that Virgil had given to me on the Alexandria. I rushed towards the door, Helena was quick to get us moving.
We walked down the hallway of the guest house and came across a strange sight. I heard some yelling in the room ahead of us. Then, out of the room ran a very large man, dressed in nothing but his drawers. He covered his chest and ran down the hallway—crying hysterically.
I recognized him as the man Victoria was talking to at the club the other night. So I was not surprised to see her stroll out of her room wearing black lingerie and shouting, “Where are you going, big boy? We haven’t even started yet!”
Helena covered her expression of laughter, and I glared, disgusted, at Victoria as we quickly made our way past her.
“My God! You are terrifying!”
“Get out of my face!” She tried to swing at me but missed, and we quickly made our way down the hall and out into the streets.
Victoria sighed and lit up a cigarette. She had a few moments to enjoy the drag before her holoband began flashing red.
[-<Commander Mark Wyman>-]
-The Citadel of Angelides-
There the five of them stood, in shock and awe of the unfolding events before them. Earlier, Victoria picked up a signal broadcasted from the crew that was transporting the gravity weapon. She quickly gathered Mark and headed to the citadel where they could present their problem to the Triangle—the founders of Remoran society. They are rumored and considered the wisest individuals in the human race—having been around since the departure from Mother Earth, and the original date of the first Alpha Genome prototype.
“The crew that was transporting the gravity weapon experienced a turbine failure in their half-light reactor. As a result, they were only able to travel 30 percent of their original speed, taking them three times longer to get to us.” Mark began, then nodded towards Victoria.
“Here’s our situation. What you are watching on this screen is one of my soldiers, cowering in a closed space, the feed is live—390 minutes ago, given the distance.”
The Crusader warships roared furiously behind the jacket transporting the colossal gravity weapon. At 37,000 kilometers a second, and with a fully functional half-light reactor, the crusader ships had no issues matching their speed across the open prairie of space.
The Crusader ships fired anchors that pierced the armor of the transport. The anchors dug deep into the hull of the jacket and began to bring the transport to a halt, using the reverse turbines of the half-light reactor.
This is where the transmission began.
“They’ve killed everyone. That’s what he said—the engineer you see hiding in the closet.”
Doctor Reselles then bolted out of his chair, rubbed his glasses on his red vest, and pointed directly at the screen. “Look!”
The broadcast of the engineer took an interesting turn. They found him and tore him from his hiding place and while quivering in fear he found himself lying on the floor, staring up the barrel of an assault rifle. I’m sure this came as no surprise that they let him live, at least so their king could have this moment with Mark.
Arcoh walked casually over to the engineer and waved aside the pawn who was pointing the rifle at him. The engineer attempted to stand, but Arcoh bent down and persisted.
“Oh please, there is no need to get up, good sir. You are fine right where you are. Kick your feet up, relax.”
The engineer then shot a stare at Arcoh and began pleading for his life. “Please, I . . . I don’t know what you want, but—”
“Shut up.”
“I don’t know anything; I’m just an engineer, I—”
“Shut. Up.”
“I will be of no help. Please let me go. I have a family.”
“SHUT UP! Shut up! Shut up!”
Arcoh then began beating the engineer with his bare fists as he continued to speak. “I - don’t - like - repeating - MYSELF!”
Arcoh sighed and then saw the blood on his white gloves. He shook his head in disappointment and snapped his fingers at one of his soldiers. After a soldier had come up to him to hand him a new pair of gloves, he addressed the engineer.
“I don’t care if you can hear me because I know you are recording. You are broadcasting to them. I have a message I want to deliver to your Good Commander, as they call him.”
Arcoh then ran his hands through his oily, jet-black hair, and formed it into a straight fashion. He smiled and laughed as he began to explain his threat.
“Mark. I am hurt. My dear old friend. Why did you take my prize away from me? You have angered me to a point to where I have become violent! So violent! You have no idea what you have done! NO IDEA! And you will have no idea of the kind of hell I am about to make you—and all of the Remoran people—experience!”
Mark and the others were speechless. Silence can be immensely horrifying for most people in situations such as these. I’m sure that at least Mark felt that—knowing what could come next.
Arcoh ceased his outrage and gathered himself before he would kneel down, and speak directly into the camera, implementing a soft tone to his voice. “The thing about violence, it is progress. One wins, one does not. And, I’m afraid that, this is just one of these situations, old buddy. It’s natural selection—conflict is the only way we can survive. Because it challenges us. But, you, Mark, the Good Commander, you will not be a challenge, you will be exercise.
“You will not beat me, and now that I have your precious weapon, I promise that I will bring the weight of the world down on your shoulders. You will collapse under my wrath. You will lose everything. You took that boy out of my hands.
“You stand no chance, I will not accept surrender. This is not a threat—this is a guarantee. This is fate. I will see you soon, old friend.”
Arcoh smiled and moved his head directly to the side, while the soldier behind him raised his firearm, and fired a round into the camera, and through the eye of the technician. Effectively ending the feed, and turning the holoscreen projection into static.
“Commander?”
Have you ever had a moment in life, where you knew you were missing something, and that it would hurt when you found out? Call it a momentary lapse in judgment. You knew something bad was going to happen, but you chose not to believe in the consequences. And it felt terrible, did it not? Mark didn’t make the wrong decisions, but he had his doubts. He was struck with a sort of paralysis, precisely how I felt there in that field of ashes on Minerva. Profound it is to be speechless.
“How did this happen?”
“I’ll tell you exactly how it happened! You have a spy in your fleet, Commander Wyman,” Reselles said as he shot a glare to Mark.
“No, it can’t be. The soldiers of the moons are the most loyal in all of Eden.” Mark walked up to the half-circle table and placed himself in the middle of the conversation. Reselles sighed and tapped his fingers together and looked towards Lady Angelides.
“Where outsiders gather so do ideas of identity, you know that this is poison to Remoran society. Not all men are as selfless as you are, Mark. That is one of the two reasons we appointed you to defend our planet. The second reason was to protect our interests in paving ways to new and healthy ideas of social, and personal evolution. Our primary concern is order and civility among our people and my fellow leaders. I fear that if news of this act of terror reaches our citizens—there will be a panic.”
“Mark, if we don’t stop him.”
Mark knew the significant power of the weapon, a tool of boundless power. He knew that he should have left it in the ocean where he found it. He was beginning to realize how careless he had been. How much damage his negligence would cost.
“We did not create this expedition to wage war against the largest nation in Eden!” Reselles shouted.
“I will do everything it takes to ensure we are not destroyed by our own weapon! That I can promise you!”
“Enough.” Lady Angelides, still dressed in light, laid her hand on Mark’s shoulder and broke her silence. “Mark knows what he has done; I know that he would do anything to protect us. He wants to fix this; I say we let him.”
“My lady, surely you cannot condone war against the Kingdom of Salaras.”
The lady nodded to Mark, who spoke out in a slower tone, obviously still quite disturbed and embarrassed by his failure as a military leader.
“I’m sorry that this happened. We had to save them. I can’t stand the feeling that the decency of humanity is fading away.”
Reselles spoke out against the commander in defiance. “Why again did we rescue those degenerates?”
“Mr. Reselles, their death tolls account for 7 percent of the entire human race. It most certainly would have spread to our sector had it not been stopped. I have already given the speech to my soldiers. This expedition will continue as planned.
“The war against the Kingdom of Salaras has always been inevitable, so we will travel to Gannon, and ask the president of the GDR for the assistance of their great armada. In the meantime, we will help rebuild what Arcoh’s crusade has taken from the people of Eden.”
After sitting for so long in silence, the fifth member finally spoke up—a conduit, an ambassador to Father Cyrus, the tip of the Triangle.
“What do you say, Father? You are the deciding vote.”
The hooded conduit—those who were the mortal voice of Father Cyrus himself. From what I understood this Father Cyrus was merged with our technology and had attained transdimensional abilities. He couldn’t be seen by the human eye, due to his transcendence over a thousand years ago, so he had these conduits, projections of hooded monks like those who surrounded the Temple of the Void.
“Was this expedition all an effort to form a front against the Kingdom of Salaras, Commander Wyman?”
Mark let out a sigh and redirected his stare out to the all-encompassing open balcony. All of it gently smothered by the beautiful weather covering the city. “In a way yes, but not only. The lady has already stated: we are striving to provide the children of Eden with better opportunities than the ones we were dealt. I want them to be able to sleep in their beds knowing that they don’t have a fear of waking up to their world on fire.”
Doctor Reselles adjusted his glasses and looked towards Mark. “Do you hope to accomplish this with the help of this Collin King? What does he have to do with your great expedition, Commander?”
Father Cyrus looked down as Lady Angelides spoke for this situation. “You have no right to drag this boy into your quest for galactic retribution, Commander. We all agree on the great expedition, but this one boy, what could he possibly do?”
Mark looked down and after a long silence he responded as a smile came over his face.
“You see, he is the answer to the question we have been seeking for so long. He is proof that we can do better. The decadence of isolation, and fear, is killing the human race. He knows how to draw a crowd, and people will follow behind. You will see, I promise you—his evolution will change everything. People will follow him because of who and what he is. You cannot possibly imagine how significant he is.”
The conduit looked intrigued as the figure leaned in towards the table.
“I plan on seeing him shortly, and what question does he answer Commander?”
“Why do we deserve to live, when we destroy everything we create?”
“Ha, how cliché, Commander. I like it, but if you foul this up—another race will die. This Arcoh, he seems to be a man on the edge of insanity; he’ll do everything he can to claw his way out, and secure this misplaced sense of greatness he hopes to acquire. Be wary, Mark, he is very unpredictable, and capable beyond anything you can imagine.”
“I understand the risks involved, and thank you for the warning. There is much to be done, we will ascend back into the heavens within the hour. Father? If you could please, when you meet Collin, tell him where he can find us.”
We were walking for what felt like hours. Maybe I had been spoiled by artificial gravity my whole life—I felt heavier on this world. Normally it would not have been a problem, thanks to PGL training. I hate to admit this, but my injuries at the time were slowing me down. I had not fully recovered from all that happened on Minerva—I don’t think I ever will fully recover.
The gravity on my injuries, especially on my leg that Legate Ivan broke, took a serious toll on my mobility. I admit, I felt a little intimidated when I saw that Helena had barely broken a sweat.
“Hurry up, slowpoke!” she shouted.
“This heat is killing me.”
“It’s 24.7 degrees Celsius, with a light breeze. You couldn’t ask for better weather!”
“It’s the gravity, I need to stop for a moment.”
“Huh. Didn’t you used to be a professional gravityball athlete?”
I was panting and sweating profusely, then I fell over to my side, collapsing onto a rock embedded into the side of the vegetation-covered mountainside.
“Collin!”
Helena hastily came to where I fell, and kneeled down to me as I groaned in pain.
“I’d like to stop here. Yeah. We’re stopping right here for a minute.”
“Let me see.”
I pulled up my pant leg and she took a look at my thigh. It was swollen, but still healing—my bone was no longer broken, but the pain was still there.
“Why didn’t you say something!”
“I didn’t want to make us late.”
“Collin, I know this is hard for you, but you have to let in eventually. Hmm?”
“What is it?”
“Well, your bone has already been completely repaired, and this happened how long ago?”
“Like a week or two now. Do you know what’s happening to me? The idiot doctor ran out on me before I got an explanation.”
The stress of climbing up on the mountain had further damaged some of the tissue in my thigh, which had not completely healed—hence the pain I felt. However, the minute I took the time to relax I instantly began to feel better.
“When you took the injection, it collided with a genetic code that you carry. I’m not sure how—Cyrus can explain more than I ever could.”
She smiled at me and took a step back. “Can you stand now?”
Without any resistance I was able to stand, and once again my body was feeling great. I felt like I could walk for another four hours. That is before my tissue and ligaments began to tear again.
“I feel great.”
“Good. I wanna try something.”
“Helena, we don’t have the time to—”
Through the corner of my eye I saw it, she flung a large rock at my head. I quickly turned around, and like an athlete’s instinct, I deflected the rock.
Although I didn’t block it by touching it with any part of my body, it was a motion. Like a fluid response—my body somehow sensed that it was in danger and it protected itself. It felt like there was an energetic casing around my body, my vessel in this life.
“Hey! What the hell did you do that for!”
“For proof, and it’s just as I thought! Instantaneous energetic transference.”
“Instant blah-blah-blah?”
“Yes, smartass. We have instantaneous information, instant food and drink with the capsulette. Now we have you. A man with the ability to manipulate energy by absorbing his surroundings.”
Helena began to walk back up the mountain and I followed closely behind her. I had never liked the feeling of relying on people—when I first arrived on Remora I couldn’t bear that feeling: asking someone for help, asking someone what to do. That wasn’t me, I liked to figure things out on my own.
Helena ran far ahead of me. I shouted to her and our conversation began to echo through the valley we had almost reached. “Hey! What is energetic transference!”
“You are a terrible listener, Collin!”
I won’t say too much about our trek across the forest in the valley for several reasons. To be honest, those are moments that are just for me. I don’t want to share these moments with anyone else but her. I never wanted our time to end, even before we got to the temple. It was a time in my life where I had actually gained something that mattered to me. In insight and humanity, and love.
During our trek to the temple we encountered all sorts of strange wildlife and beautiful scenery through the forest. We also had our share of unfortunate mishaps. It took us fifty hours to traverse those woods, but with her it was only a fleeting moment. It was when we passed that last tree and ran out into the open that I decided I wanted to stay with her, no matter what happened in my life.
I guess we all have these moments in our life, but we have to learn to let go of time. Time will always be relative, we need to learn that we can chase it, but never capture it. I came to this when we walked out into that grassy plain where we first dropped. I laid my eyes on it; they were fixated. The temple was so close. I don’t ever think I have been so nervous in my entire life. I did not get nervous, but that moment we reached those footsteps before that great temple, I got the shakes again, like I did every time before a match but infinitely worse.
I had a thought—what if we entered the temple and I did learn what I was? What the answer could mean for humanity (if they found out). Most importantly—what it could mean for me. I was afraid that I would not be ready for the truth soon to be unveiled to me.