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Chapter 21 - History

  Chapter 21History

  DATE:

  7088.03.17,

  RECON

  ERA

  The

  Lotus Root

  INTERSPACE

  – WAYSTATION

  #0085

  I

  was floating on a cloud of ants that were

  crawling

  over my skin. I

  was so tired. So over the pain. Over the concept of living. I

  didn’t want to wake up. Not

  again.

  “You

  need to wake her up.”


  “Are

  you insane? She’s being prepped for another transplant! Her

  physiology-”


  “We

  don’t care. We need to verify if it’s her. Wake her up. Now.”


  “Doctor,

  we can’t-”


  “Trish,

  please — follow their instructions. We’ll take care of her the

  moment we can.”


  The

  first breath back in the world of the living was

  sharp and cold.

  I blinked at the bright lights and white tiles. The coloured lines

  that denoted different life-support systems told me I was in an

  intensive care ward of a hospital.

  I had tubes in my mouth and

  nose,

  my neck was stiff and I felt the pressure

  of needles under my skin.

  
What

  did they take this time?


  I can’t feel anything…


  I

  flicked my eyes to

  the left

  as far as I could. There

  was

  a nurse in the soft blue uniform of her station. She wasn’t looking

  at me, glancing

  fearfully to her side, her hands crimping the IV line that had the

  anaesthesia.

  I

  glanced to my other side. A doctor, wearing green scrubs, his grey

  hair and wrinkles doing nothing compared to the five crosses

  embroidered at his collar

  to show his seniority.

  They

  know.


  I closed my eyes. You don’t bring out the head of surgery for

  something as simple as an organ transplant.

  “Is she

  awake yet?”

  My eyes

  flew open. I knew that voice. The vitals monitor spiked, its frantic

  chirping echoing the hammering in my chest.

  “Yes,

  sir. Her eyes are open.”

  I

  immediately sought out the nurse, trying to catch her eyes, the

  needles in my neck tugging. I tried to non-verbally plead with her.

  She could only look on helplessly.

  Heavy

  footsteps approached the bed. Tears escaped my eyes. The beeping got

  louder.

  “Hello,

  Melissa.”

  I slowly

  looked over, my breaths became shallow and I couldn’t get enough

  air.

  Meng Su.

  Jim’s

  former

  ‘friend’

  in the Peacekeepers of the Jade Sphere. He was in his combat uniform,

  an exo-suit that reminded me of Forty-Five but was

  white

  and trimmed with gold. His

  helmet was peeled away to reveal black

  hair cut

  close

  against his scalp, and his light brown eyes bored into mine.

  “You’ve

  made a lot of people worry.”

  He smiled,

  his teeth straight and perfect, his lips pulling back just too wide.

  His eyes stayed cold, analytical, just like Jim’s when he stared at

  me. I wasn’t someone. I was some.

  “We’re

  here for your

  protection, petal.

  We’ll bring you home.”

  ‘

  ‘

  A polite

  little cage. A Core?bred nickname for a woman kept pretty and

  quiet in a rich man’s house, sitting on a shelf like a bouquet of

  flowers. A reminder of what Jim wanted me to be. What they all

  thought I already was.

  Something

  small.

  Something

  owned.

  I tried to

  scream — a vortex of anger, frustration, and fear tearing through

  the numbness. The doctor and nurse blurred at the edges of my vision,

  their movements slowing as if underwater.

  The ants

  surged up my throat, stealing my breath, stealing my voice...and

  then... the world cracked sideways.

  I wanted to

  go home. Or at least, go back before it all went wrong.

  The

  ants swarmed over me, bringing me back into the cloud. I floated

  there, the fear and panic instantly gone. I gazed at the sky, it was

  light

  blue. The three mismatched moons hanging like ornaments over me

  looked like the three Lunar

  Sisters of Klaiana.

  The sun’s rays were yellow, bathing me in its warmth, familiarity.

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  “Mel,

  you cannot be serious.”


  “She’s

  right, Cabot, you cannot be thinking of a career change! Not now!”


  “Why

  not?” I asked, the sweet

  strawberry disappearing into my mouth. My

  hair braided and hanging over my shoulder, my summer dress hugging my

  upper curves before loosely hanging around my lower body.

  We were

  sitting outside a cafe along a restaurant boulevard. The narrow

  street was pedestrian-only, keeping the city plaza quiet and

  pristine.

  “Well,

  because! You’re

  head of your department! You shouldn’t be thinking of a career

  change!” Alison

  spluttered next to me. I didn’t really know her, I realised at the

  time. Anna

  had introduced us. Anna

  was inside, ordering something extra...

  “Mel,

  are you sure this is what you want?” Jessica asked gently, only

  sparing Ali a glance. Her

  dark frizzy hair was done up in a perm, despite my protests.

  She

  was in her casual clothes, her shift at the university over for the

  week. She

  didn’t like
.

  Why didn’t she like her?


  “Yes,

  I think it is,” I

  said firmly, making sure I held my childhood friend’s gaze. We’d

  travelled to Klaiana together, leaving the safety of Gamonida behind

  to ‘find ourselves’.

  Gamonida…

  I didn’t know it yet, but after everything that happened, they’d

  court?martial me on sight.

  

  The

  memory didn’t stop for that thought. My na?ve self kept talking,

  so confident.

  “Archaeology

  lets me go out across the Spheres

  and study deactivated

  robots.

  Old ones. Ancient ones. I

  get to pull

  apart

  pre-Sev

  code and manufacturing processes–maybe

  even

  figure

  out

  what caused the Blackout.”

  I gave a crooked smile.

  “And if I accidentally blow something up —

  well, they’re already dead, they can’t dob me in.”

  Jess

  snorted. Ali looked horrified. But she was only human. She didn’t

  understand. Not fully.

  “Is this

  for that guy?” Ali asked, whispering across the table.

  I blushed,

  looking away and rubbing the back of my neck.

  “Oh

  Melissa H.

  Cabot!” Jess had shoved me lightly, her face contorted between

  smiling and scolding. “You are not

  making a major life decision over a boy!”

  “No!”

  I denied, but the smile on my face betrayed me. “Ok, maybe. He

  might have given… me some ideas. Like…

  maybe travel with him...”

  “He’s a

  security guard, Mel! You’re… way out of his league!” Ali was

  affronted, as if my love life had anything to do with her.

  “So?”

  I asked seriously. “He’s cute, he’s funny, he’s hot, he’s

  smart! And did I mention he’s really

  attractive?

  And corrected

  on an energy system schematic?”

  Jess

  laughed, “No, really? You think he’s good-looking? You only ever

  told me every single day since you met him!”

  There

  was more to the conversation, but all I remember was that Anna

  came back out, pulling back the chair directly

  in

  front of me. Her blonde wavy hair loose around her shoulders, her

  professional suit the only indication she was

  on

  her lunch break

  as a university secretary.

  “Mel,

  come on.” Ali cut in, pulling on my arm. Why

  was she so pushy?


  “That

  guard is

  not

  worth it. He’ll bounce the minute he can!”

  “You

  don’t know him.”

  “Know

  him.”


  The

  words echoed in my head,

  the ants going back and stealing my voice again. But

  I wasn’t screaming. I was crying. I missed Jess. I missed .

  As

  much as I hated it at

  the time,

  I missed that life.

  She

  had been right.

  did leave. Disappeared without a word. I waited. And waited. Even

  keeping an eye out when I started my new job. I wanted him back. Even

  after I tried to forget him. Burying

  him deep in the years of work.

  Dirty-blond

  hair, mischievous light brown eyes, that soft smile meant just for

  me. And whenever he leaned in for a kiss, his earthy scent mixed with

  worn leather.


  I

  gasped, blinking as I stared at the ceiling, bathed

  in yellow light from the Klaiana

  sun

  outside.

  I

  could hear voices off in the distance, mumbling and glasses clinking

  together.

  “Az,

  she’s just some spacer. Why are you so…


  A

  woman spoke, but the rest slipped away, the voices drifting in and

  out like I was underwater. I couldn’t move.

  “Call

  it a

  bad feeling,”

  
came

  the calm reply, low and husky, the sound of it curling through me.

  “That

  bounty is 50,000 CoreBits. She’s meant to be an

  Iron Wall nobody...”


  The

  voice slid closer, memory bleeding into sensation — his firm tongue

  tracing the veins along my neck, whispering against my skin.


  “We

  should call Mills. Or Shi-shi-”
the

  woman spoke again. ,

  the cyborg with the eye and arm.

  “And

  tell them what?”
A

  gruff voice cut her off. Striker

  Jake,
the

  other cyborg with the big metal arm. “That

  dress she wore, Az. That material’s from the Core.

  She

  ain’t from the Wall.”


  They were

  the mercenaries.

  “...do

  you know that?”
The woman

  spoke, the soft slap of cards hitting the table punctuating her

  words.

  “That

  job out in Alpha Vol… crates full of Core goods...fabric...” Jake

  paused, as if taking a sip. “...stuff was worth more than ships out

  here.”


  .

  I thought. I

  hope this is a dream. If I’m actually hearing them. Have

  they figured me out?

  


  You

  know they

  have.


  A little dark voice purred, the smile pulling too wide.

  “said,

  the low baritone sounded...familiar in my ear. “Someone

  will come by to pick her up.”


  I

  need to get

  up.


  I started trying to swim away from the ants, climbing higher and

  higher up into the sky. The sky turned to water, and I had to hold my

  breath. I

  have to breathe, I have to stay calm, I have to-


  A

  giant figure loomed over the horizon when I finally could see the

  surface. The large broad-shouldered form was

  tall and strong.

  The

  memories

  shattered like glass.

  Pain

  rushed in to replace it. I gasped

  for

  air,

  launching myself into a sitting position. And

  immediately regretted it, crying out and falling

  to

  the side, my arms snapping around my middle. I

  rolled

  slowly onto my back,

  breathing through the dizziness and pain, my eyes screwed shut. There

  was no feeling

  of extra

  wetness leaking

  from my suture site. Just the burn. The itch. The deep, angry pull

  right through my abdomen.

  The

  blinding, mind-breaking pain that had filled my whole insides was

  gone. Pain scale was a six out of ten. Better than the eleven and ten

  from before the medications.

  I

  opened my eyes and blinked away the tears,

  staring up at the dark ceiling.

  At least the

  pain meant I

  was awake. And

  alive.

  Alive

  meant dangerous.

  I couldn’t pretend to be the

  simpering

  girl

  from Klaiana again — the one who thought archaeology was about

  lost history and pretty ruins, in

  love with a boy and ready to explore the worlds.

  I

  couldn’t be the broken wreck from Ruenov either,

  not while the ghosts were closing in. I

  was Gamonidan. Survivor.

  Fighter.

  And I knew how to wake dead systems and make them listen.

  If

  Meng found

  me again,

  I wouldn’t be a bounty. I’d be a trophy.

  I

  needed to be gone before he realised who

  I really

  was.

  I turned my

  head.

  Cold,

  dark

  brown eyes met mine.

  PS: Oops, forgot to change the chapter title in chapter.

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