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Desolate Gail: Dual Enmity Chapter 5: Waking to find eternal sleep -X- Introduction -X- - Text: Third person, Narration "Kliff…what should
I do in a time like this?" Ky murmured, half asleep. His own words
echoed in the emptiness, and met back to him, waking him. He looked
around, seeing the other nodding soldiers in bits of consciousness and
sleep-induced hazes. Slowly, he blinked a few times. How much
time has passed? We're wasting time! They'll be back! Get
up! Slowly, Ky pushed off of the ground, the Fuuraiken in his hand
throbbing to life in his hand, the undulating pressure in every beat,
rhythmically, enough to set a monotone to. Standing up, his knees popped
a little, a bit of a pain shooting though his legs before the muscles felt
normal, the muscles jumping out of rest and the bones subtly cracking into the
right places, relieving a bit of tension from the awkward sitting angle. "Soldiers!" Ky
said with an authoritative voice. The sleeping seven lobbed their heads
up, to see Ky standing, his head swiveling to look at all of them. They
jumped up, pushing off walls, grunting as their joints moved back to life.
In a voice from all, the word sir echoed from each of them, in different tones
and volumes. "We move out now. We need to get out of
here." He said. "And him?" the
sergeant said, designating the mysterious unconscious private. "Him…" Ky
said, with a preordained disdain for the man who used his weapon.
"You" he said, pointing out a private, who stood erect at the notion
from a lazy, yawning stage "pick him up, and bring him with
us." The soldier kneeled down and threw the body over his
shoulder. "Now, move out. We're heading to the front of this
floor to get out through the hangar doors. Once we're out, we'll take the
walk to the ruins of Paris." The soldiers saluted, and started
walking to the front of Floor C, wordless. The general feeling amongst
them advocated the uneasiness they all felt. Who are they to be with the
single most important man in the world? Fighting with him? Walking
with him? This'd be a story for the grandchildren. The walk along to the
front of Floor C was interesting. Coming upon bodies of Gears, men,
broken floors, broken bodies, weapons without hands to wield them, and hands
without any arm on them. The bodies had dried blood around them, brown
from the lapse of time. Lifeless soldiers staring up to God, which didn't
stare back. Gears who were lifeless in life and in death, and still
retained that aspect. Along the way, Ky kneeled down to close the eyes of
the lifeless soldiers, give prayers among the dead, and give enough of God's
graces to the dead, but he did so quickly, missing a few and saying the prayer
for the anonymous few. After the first hundred, the bodies became too
many, his prayers too few. The soldiers following behind his lead had no
words, only walked forward, heads down. Oh,
I remember that guy. He had a good sense of humor. And that guy
over there, could eat a hundred servings. Now they're dead. Jeez,
can you believe it? Their
words were not said, but conveyed in their walk, shifty eyes, and general
aura. Sadness filled every pore in their body, flooded their lungs,
bloodstream, down their stomach, and flossed them like a bead on a
string. The bodies lined the walkway as far as the eye could see, and the
opposite walkway on the other side as littered with the waste from both sides
of the coin. The dual enmity between them both showed in the trash
left. Bodies and lives thrown away to the ideals of humanity
surviving. Many thought humanity had its own due date, an
expiration. Others knew only the war against Gears, and it was
life. It was there, an eight-hundred pound gorilla on their back that was
common, nothing new to think about, it's life. Then, there were the
soldiers and people who knew this was the struggle for humanity. Those in
the lap of security was provided by them, so their own ideas of the war being
useless and trivial as only because of the work the Seikishidan did. Seeing
the rows and lines of bodies only provoked Kiske to know his role. He
must end the role they had. This was the hundred-and-first year of the
war. Last year, a lot of people had thought the war should be ended, it
was the century anniversary, the war needs to end. But, when Undersn
appointed Kiske, the entire morale was lost. People lost it, they didn't
think a kid could lead humanity to victory, and on December 31st, it was
lost. He couldn't end it in the hundredth year, and through the
hundred-and-first year, people now didn't care. They thought another
hundred years was inevitable, it was life, this wasn't going to end, and this
was life in its entirety. Kiske thought differently. As a leader,
he wouldn't sit idly to watch humanity be crushed under the foot of its
creations, and even if the hundredth year was for naught, he would end it as
soon as he could. This was something not able to be differentiated or
argued, this was God's will. Humanity has to live, he would lead
them. A lamb into the lion's den, he would come out on his feet, scathed
and broken, but as God helped those in the past, Ky knew he was also in God's
pursuit, ideals holy, and actions too. Only
inwardly, his prayers to God were as numerous as the bodies lining the
catwalks. Prayer in hoping the Gears had moved out, the Floor C transport
hangar wasn't destroyed, the bodies would all find graves once they recuperated
their forces, and many others. Though, like a splinter in his mind, that
man constantly floated over his thoughts. Who was he? How could
he just pick up my sword and destroy those Gears? Maybe he couldn't
control it, he did go unconscious and basically let loose far too great of the
blade's power, but he has to be strong of mind to be able for that…
Loking back, Kiske saw the private, eyes down, carrying the mysterious other
soldier. He was Seikishidan, no doubt, but he looked familiar, yet
somehow foreign. He couldn't wait to meet this interesting character. Making
his way further, Ky started to use the tip of the Fuuraiken as a walking stick,
stabbing it lightly into the ground, traversing over the bodies. His feet
making sure not to tread on bodies of humans, but forcefully smashing the
carcasses of Gears. An arid stank of death permeated the air, like stale
fish left out for days. It was constant, like an attacker, that never
left. Fanning the smell away from your nose only gave a brief second of
solace, before the stench filled the now odorless trench left by the fanning,
seeping in to invade wherever it could. Each
footstep, one after another, only laid more bodies in front of them to go
after, the fog dissipating, like removing the cover from a long awaited
present, to find coal in place. Rows of dead, splotches and pools of
blood dried and brown, like they were taken from their master, and tried to
crawl back, but died to soon to find home. "Wait,
sir." One of the four privates said. Four privates, two lieutenants,
and one sergeant made their motley crew, with the commander Kiske and the
unconscious fifth private. Ky turned around, inquisitive to the nature of
the soldier's direct statement, followed with an absentminded sir he
neglected. "Sir, this is my…friend." He said, kneeling down to
a body of another private, left arm severed, blood dripping from the mouth, and
a bit of blood left on his face, dropped from another soldier, who lie next to
him, the blood not his own. In the stink of death, which blood was
which didn't matter, it was all equally human. "It's
regrettable he died, soldier, but this is a war and—" Kiske cut himself
off, the soldier looking back up at him with tears in his eyes. Now was
not a good time to be a leader, especially when death permeated them like an
irremovable stain from their souls, which would stick with them years from
now. Ky turned around from the soldier, mourning the dead, looking
forward at the seemingly endless catwalk on the right side of Floor C. He
surmised they had walked about a mile after an hour or two rest, and they had
another half a mile or so to go. The sobs of the soldier behind him flew
past him, Kiske being a block for the sound, but it still flooded past
him. The childish rule of "if I can't see you, you can't see
me" seemed to loosely apply at Kiske not trying to humanize the dead. When
putting faces to units and personalities to soldiers, he would lose the
authority he worked to attain. The dead are more than just lost souls if
they were people, he would too mourn. But, he had to be a leader, and
lead humanity to a victory, instead of extinction. If the humans he
commanded became people, he would lose control. Sending a person to die
was harder than sending a platoon of nameless soldiers who served the
purpose. He couldn't get attached, he had to be individualistic and a
leader amongst men mostly older than him. At sixteen, what kind of God
could bear the burden of saving humanity on a kid? Ky often felt like
Christ, given something he could not comprehend or change, but had to adapt and
accept, whether he wanted to or not. Recognition of what he was given was
imperative, but comprehension was not. Christ was
God's son by birth, burdened with gifts to help humanity, but had to die for
their sins, and he knew this even from the beginning. Yet, he still
continued his life through because he knew he had to do exactly that, and not
for God, but for humanity. God was the central axis of the Seikishidan, a
very religious sanction of knights, like police with a Bible instead of a
badge. The religious undertones of the organization determined every move
and motive, despite some of the members not even believing in the strict Roman
Catholicism of the Seikishidan. God's creation was man, and they were
created in his image. In man's image, they created Gears, except Gears
backfired, but how much different is that from Adam? Christ was killed by
God's own creation because of the sentience he bestowed on them, rather
unwillingly. Gears were given sentience under the secret project in 2074,
and that was unwanted, so Gears were sent from Eden and started a war to
reclaim the planet. The difference was that humans couldn't wage war
against its creators, only showing that we didn't prepare ourselves or Gears
for the inevitable, as God had those backfire plans. I'm going to stop the story for a second because I believe that as a man
living in this time, I must say something. For all of the terror told by
media, soldiers, and God of the terrors of what Gears are, I have never seen
one live, well, that up close and alive, they’ve always been far off from
me. The most I have seen was a wasted battlefield, and not even then did
I see them as a mortal enemy so much more as a poor soul. Their deaths
were somewhat justified in a humane fashion of killing them, and releasing them
from Justice. Also, Justice, the name of our oppressor, isn't it
ironic? Justice fought to kill humans for the Justice he thought he
should bestow. Hell, even Justice himself thinks he is God, waging a holy
war against all humans to purge the land of what ails it. As much as his
own pursuits are realized, it is ironic a Gear would do that, want to kill
humans, that is. But, an atheist to God would be as bad, wouldn't it?
Except for someone to kill God, they'd have to meet Him, and know He existed,
so how could you kill Him? He cannot die, and if you saw Him, you'd be a
believer, which is where the faith comes in. I'm jumping ahead of myself,
just anxious to usurp the authority I have as a writer to tell you what I
think, and I should, but not yet. "Ready?"
Ky asked, tilting his head back to the mourning soldier. The private
closed the eyes of his dead friend, and stood up. "You
know, they used to tell me that they'd give a eulogy for the dead in times of
peace, recalling their life and shit." The soldier said, recomposing
himself. "Think I could give him one before we move on?"
The other soldiers were all standing around, looking at the bodies, hard chiseled
expressions on their faces, trying to emulate Ky. They leaned on walls,
sat down, stood over the railing, none of them seeming to notice the grip of
death around them. "Get
yourself together, you can give it to him later. Right now, worry about
staying alive and not joining him. If we make it out of here, we'll clean
this all up and commemorate every single of them dead, like God would
want. We'd risk our lives to stay, and God would agree. Let's
move." Ky said, taking his first steps forward, the other soldiers quickly
starting to walk behind him. The mourning soldier wiped his eyes with his
sleeve, looked back down at the corpse, remembering the face, where he was, and
made a silent vow to come back. Then, the soldier jogged up to catch the
back of the procession. Let's skip forward a little, and just say they
found a lot more bodies of Gears and men, and finally got to the end of Floor C
in the hangar, where they assembled earlier and evacuated back out of
after. The gaps created earlier in Floor C were traversed by using pieces
of broken railing to go across, like an outdoor survival skill. Now, to
the hangar. Coming
up on the large entryway to the hangars, the walls on the sides were bashed in,
crumbling cement holding up an equally arched top that had been busted in by
the flood of Gears earlier. The cement inside looked like a cratered moon
with the slaughtered soldiers lying in pieces and footprints of the Gears left
in the cement like reminders of the deed done. The doors to the outside,
all sixteen of them, the large loading doorways with the vertically sliding
sheets of metal allowing supplies and troops to be moved in and out easily,
were all collapsed. After the initial surge of Gears drove back the
humans, the Gears received an order to destroy the doorways. So, they
bashed the sides into rubble, the ceiling into chunks, and toppled them all
together in front of every doorway, crudely blocking them off from escape, but
effective. Justice covered all of his bases, except for the variable of the
resilience of humanity itself. "We're
fucked!" the soldier carrying the unconscious one said. He dropped
the body, a thump emitting as he did and a grunt from the body hitting the
ground. "We're entirely fucked! They've locked us in! We
can't get out! We're screwed!" he yelled frantically, almost
hysterically, running to each doorway, sifting the boulders as best he could,
running to the next, seeking exit, and finding none. "Hey!" Ky
yelled at him, but he did not respond. After reaching the last doorway,
putting all of his strength into trying to remove a chunk of ceiling panel that
had been ripped out and dropped from some sort of reptilian Gear (what other
type could have done that with the forty foot high ceilings in the hangar?),
the soldier collapsed in front of the doorway, sobbing a little. "I don't want to
die here…." he sobbed, between gasps, a childish wane in his voice.
Kiske slowly walked over to him, the other soldiers all standing stationary,
like the other was insane. Kiske stood behind him, the soldier sensing
his presence, and looked up at him. "I don't need dead
weight. You want to sit here and cry, go ahead, but I need soldiers who
will fight. We'll find another way out, and you can help us, or stay here
and cry." Kiske said without resolve, in black and white. The
soldier nodded, composing himself. He was only eighteen, and unprepared
for the war, but Ky gave him some reassurance, considering Ky was only sixteen,
but had the resolve of twice that. "As for you, we're looking for
another way out." He said, looking back to the other six, nodding. "For now, we're
going to stay here and take rest. We have two entrances to guard, on the
far left and right side connecting to the Floor C catwalks. Unless the
Gears bash through these piles of rubble, we're safe for now. We'll stand
guard every hour or so, one soldier a post. Yell if you see anything and
we'll stand ground. Try and get him awake." Ky said, pointing his
hand to each of the items as he spoke. "I'll take first watch left"
pointing to the left doorway "and you" pointing at the sergeant red
level soldier "you take first right post." The soldier tried to
form words to ask why he was, and not some low level soldier, but saluted Ky,
and went to his post. Higher authorities, gotta abide. "Now, you got time
to yourself, Kiske." Ky whispered to himself, as he walked to the doorway,
his steps echoing in pace with the sergeant who walked to the other door
unilaterally. Each step of his was mocked by the following soldier in perfect
unison. Getting to the empty doorway, his vision was overcome with the
sight before him. Bodies lying as far as the eye could see, the mist from
the outside dispersing through a few tiny holes in the barricades as the day
heated up with the sun higher in the day, about noon. The rays of light
stabbed through the mist like rains of arrows on invading enemies in the dark
ages. Spears cutting through the low fog seemed to shoo it off the side
of Floor C, falling off the edge and floating into nothingness from there, the
flow from the outside cut off from the barricaded entryways, and the skylight
above Floor F being the single disperser of tumultuous, invading ambience to
the death filled H.Q. The bodies along Floor C
were strewn about like puppets cut from their master's strings. Bodies
piled on the sides, hanging off of the railing limp, lying face up, face down,
on their side, pieces floating in their own pool of blood, like a solitary
island, removed from the continent it came from, unable to return. It
almost seemed surreal. How could so many bodies be on this twenty foot
wide walkway, all this blood and death, of men who were alive at
breakfast? Sometimes, death itself infatuated Ky. How life could
transform to death through the swing of a sword, through the spilling of blood,
the life, the actual person from inside flesh and cells, could leave,
disperse. A soul collected by God, through the open wounds and last
breath, it floated out and up to Heaven for God's safe keeping, like a box of
rocks that will never be put back to the gardens. "We'll give you
just graves, brothers. God will give you justice." He closed
his eyes and leaned his head back against the bashed and crushed door frame
leading out to Floor C, exhaling upward in deep thought. Kliff, I
could use your help. What would you do here? How would tell these
soldiers to keep fighting, when everyone they knew died and is lying on the
ground they just walked over, without the ability to mourn or bury them, much
less give them God's rights for passage? Sometimes Kliff, I don't think
I'm ready. I can't handle this war, saving humanity is up to no one but
me, can I really be given that burden? I know you'd tell me that Christ
had a similar one, but I am not Christ, should I be burdened with the weight of
the world when I do not have the holy blood flowing through me? Kliff…I
trust your decision in giving me this, but I do not think I can handle
this. What made you hand over the control to me? That little smile
you gave me as you handed me the Fuuraiken, that sparkle in your eyes couldn't
make me say "no thanks" in a thousand times over, but I question
why. Your pure demeanor gave me that answer, your reassured look and
smile, knowing it through your old bones that I was the one to lead, but why,
Kliff? "We got him
awake!" a soldier shouted, ousting Ky from his inward reflection.
His eyes shot open and his head swiveled over to the sound of the voice, a
private leaning over the unconscious one, who now moved with little
vitality. "Sir, he's awake!" the soldier shouted a bit jovial,
the first thing going right of the day. Pushing off the ground with one
hand, Ky stood up, looking over to the six soldiers huddling over the one, the
seventh walking from his opposite post to see the waking up attraction. "Move" Ky
said, pushing two soldiers out of the way to see the groggy private.
"Who are you?" Ky stabbed quickly with his tongue, still a bit
venomous from this private using his sword. The soldier sat up slowly,
his hand rubbing his throbbing temple, an aching shooting through him with
every movement, the blood re-circulating and his vision shaky. "Darton" he
said, looking up slowly, then realizing whom he was talking to.
"Uh…Quint Darton, sir. Private fourth-class." He said, trying
to erase the previous remark, which was out of order with a commanding
officer. "Sir, where am I?" he said slowly, hesitantly, his
head circling the room, from soldier's face to soldier's face, broken doorways,
cracked ground, blood dripping in from the edges of the room, bodies left dead
where they lie, like an exhibit at a museum roped off from touch. "Well, private,
what are you doing on the ground? Get up." Ky said seething,
standing up on his accord, waiting for Darton to follow him. "Yes sir…"
Quint said under his breath, like it was an added bonus to his words, somehow
unjust for Kiske. A gift to a party who did not deserve it. "Private, we're
currently holding ground here at the cargo bay of Floor C. Now that
you're awake, let's get moving." Ky said, turning from Darton, starting
his pace to the right door. "Wait, sir"
Quint said, pleadingly at first, then repeated it with more force until Ky
turned. 'What…happened?" he said hesitantly, the faces of the
soldiers surrounding him set in stone. "What
happened? Well, first of all, we just lost all but nine of the
Seikishidan forces in the Seikishidan headquarters, including you, but that'll
soon be eight." Quint's eyes questioned Ky's heavy words, Kiske
being a bit frontal in his anger towards Quint for the indiscretion
before. "As soon as we make it out of here, Darton, I am dismissing
you of service of the Seikishidan." Darton was perplexed, but then
his gaze turned from confusion to understanding, and triumphant cockiness, in
defense. "Well, good then,
Kiske." Quint said defiantly, re-evaluating his posture and respect after
a moment. Ky turned around abruptly, his head lowered, but eyes standing
straight like laser guides on bombs from above. "Excuse me?"
Ky asked instantly, a bit of malice in his words, but coming off with faux
sincerity, only magnifying his anger. "If you're going to
dismiss me from service of the Seikishidan, why should I call you 'sir' or have
any respect for your authority?" Darton asked, folding his arms
over his chest, a smirk. The surrounding soldiers all murmured amongst
each other. Is he standing up to the Commander? He's out of his
mind. What a disgraceful little bastard. Ky stepped back a little,
the words hitting him hard. He hadn't expected this. He expected
Darton to cower and ask for forgiveness in using his weapon, asking to be let
back in, to fight for God. "Soldier, you dare
defy me?" "Obviously, I'm now
out of the Seikishidan, right?" Quint said, waiting for his confirmation
answer, but Kiske stood taut, no words escaping his lips, and Darton
continuing, as if the "yes" had been muttered. 'Well, I don't
need to travel with you, do I? I'm dismissed; I can do as I please.
And with my new found freedom, I'm going to get out of here." Darton said,
taking the point and walking ahead of Kiske. "You will
not!" Ky shouted, his hand instinctively reaching for the Thunderseal. "Oh really?
You don't have authority over me anymore, you released me from the service of
the Seikishidan." Ky knew he was defeated with words, and his hand
slipped off of the hilt, his hand untensing itself and slowly removing itself,
hesitantly. "I said once we get
out of here. We're not yet." "Then I quit."
Darton said, his words parrying Ky's now defensive ones. What is with
this soldier? Thought Ky. He acts so nonchalant,
so…disrespectful. He reminds me of…him… We'll get to the
“him” later in the story, it's a biggie. "Fine."
Ky looked back to the other seven soldiers, who were lost among the quarrel.
How could this private be so disrespectful and abusive of Ky Kiske, the savior
of mankind? How could Ky be submissive to this…arrogant fool? Ky
couldn't lower his authority to this soldier and lose his authority on the
rest, and he couldn't let this one soldier best him. "Quint
Darton?" Ky said, reassuring the name before continuing, "in the name
of the Seikishidan, I request your assistance in getting out of here.
Once we're out, you're officially released of service of the Seikishidan, until
then, on behalf of the Holy Order, I beseech your assistance." Ky said,
his tone low and voice like sand paper. He hated the words, and he tried
to nail the point through he was imploring for the Holy Order, because if he
said he needed more men to help get out of here, he would be the one at fault,
but in asking for the Seikishidan, he saved himself face. Quint laughed a little
at Ky's request. "Fine, in the name of the Seikishidan, I'll help
you, until we get to my room on Floor C, and from there, I'm going my
way." Quint said, laying his terms clear, turning to face Ky face to face. "Well, we're on
Floor C as it is, so your room, and bust." Ky said. He turned his
head to the seven soldiers behind him "Move out, we're going to Floor F
before nightfall. We'll figure out escape from there." Ky said, the
affirmative nods from the soldiers reinforcing his plan. Kiske walked
forward, past Darton, both locking eyes and then Kiske continuing on.
Darton laughed a little as Kiske passed him, followed by the rest of the
soldiers, unsheathing their swords, and shooting equally malicious stares at
Quint. "I don't think you
guys like me very much,” he said with a grin. His comment was met with
someone spitting on the ground as they walked past him. "Nope, not
at all" he said under his breath, falling behind the last person who
walked by. Scooping up the weapon of a fallen Gear, he pried it from the
clammy, rigormortus stricken hand, wiping the handle off from the sticky
blood. It was a straight long blade, rusted on one side, and curved at
the top, like a pick. The handle was part of the long straight rusted
edge, except it had been crudely sawed in an inch or two to give it a smaller
grip circumference, and wrapped in some dirty, oily cloth.
-X- Author’s Notes
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