Legends of Nivarae
PostPosted: Sat Jun 07, 2014 12:47 pm
I really should finish my other stuff first, but I can't seem to help myself XD
Anyways, this is a more seriously themed work, and will contain occasional adult things. All will be handled tastefully and with the respect due its...okay, that's stupid, I shut up XD
Enjoy.
Voices...
I hear them...
I can't trust them...
No one of them...ever...
A sudden scream violated the casual serenity of the deceivingly homely outlook of Sector 3 and disturbed the rest of multi-billionaire and head scientist Reave Trust. Relaxing in the stone garden, the invasive cry jolted him from his calm reverie and forcibly returned his mind to the project at hand.
A well-built man of maybe thirty-five, he stood taller than the average man. He wasn't much to look at, his wardrobe leaning towards earthy colors, his hair a raven black and his skin tone a darker tan, but the striking contrast of his deep blue eyes commanded attention and respect. There was no nonsense to them, as serious as a funeral.
A new man entered the garden, a younger man in a crisp black suit. He stood by the entrance, waiting till Reave turned to him. No words passed between them, merely a glance was enough to convey the message. Reave rose from the bench, and the man turned to reenter the large cloud-white building just outside the garden.
The walls inside were stark white and bare of adornment. Various chemical smells scented the air, but something sharp and repugnant yet sickly sweet underlined these, a scent only the most delicate senses could discover.
It was the smell of madness.
Years ago, this scent had filled young Trust's mind with nightmares and horrors, nearly reducing him to the depths of insanity that surrounded him. Now he was its master, playing the insane as a puppeteer controls the strings. Its power was his, and he was its master.
After passing through and by many different passages, corridors and doors, they reached a door protected by one of the most advanced locking systems of the time. As the man in black proceeded to remove it, Reave Trust steeled himself for what awaited him inside. Finished, the man gave it a push, and the door opened smoothly.
Four tables, loaded with computers and various equipment, were the main setting of the room. There were four people here, one each table, and they did their work in silence. One of them suddenly leapt back, cursing at length, as sparks danced off the screen. "He's destroying the system!" he ranted, and then he saw the man in the suit and Reave. He froze.
The man stepped forward, in a stride before the static screen. He studied it a moment, then drew a pistol from his coat and shot the screen. It exploded in a shower of sparks, dead instantly. The scientist turned on him in fury and indignation.
"How dare you! That contained vital, irretrievable information! You bastard, you-"
"Doctor," Reave said quietly, and the scientist stared at him. Trust smiled gently at the angered man. "If the device was compromised, then no, it is not "vital". Our Subject is very sensitive. It is better, if it makes him...overwrought, to remove the object."
"It should be destroyed," the doctor proclaimed angrily. The other three stared at him in horror, but made no sound, no move; one returned to work with resignation in her eyes. "It is not even human! Its a monster, a danger to us all. It should be exterminated!"
Trust merely smiled and started walking the path between the tables. A door was before him, and its heavily fortified metal was dented and jarred in many places. He had a click, the doctor cry out, and a muffled shot, followed by the crash of flesh and equipment answering gravity's call. Trust ignored it all, and the door opened at his coming and closed directly behind him. The female scientist glanced at the mess on the floor, then at the man putting the gun back. "There's some cleaning solution in the closet down the hall, if you would be so kind," she said in a dull monotone. Another fool thinking her could out talk a superior. Well, he'd learned, just like the rest of them.
The room was filled with some obscure haze, though he registered it as fog. There was no sound, and to most the room would seem empty. He could feel the presence wit him, an individual as unique as himself.
"So you're back."
The voice was young, deceptively mild and gentle. Trust felt his foot nudge something and he glanced at the ground. There lay a body on the floor, a child not even in his teens. His eyes were open in mindlessness. "How are you today?" he asked calmly, ignoring the body now.
It took some time before he was answered. "Bored." Trust nodded softly. "How much longer do you intend to keep me here?"
"Not much longer," Trust replied noncommittally.
Someone stepped out of the haze. He could have passed for Trust's twin, save perhaps a brighter version of himself. His hair was whiter than the walls of the building, and his archaic robes just a shade darker. He was unusually pale, and looked almost fragile. His light brown eyes contained power and strength. "I want...out," he whispered, almost yearning. "Now," he added firmly.
"All in good time," Trust replied, equally firmly. He met the man's dark gaze, and the robed man smirked as neither dropped their gaze.
"Fine, I'll wait a little longer. Not much though," he warned. He stopped down, resting his hand on the boy's head. Trust watched him quietly, trying to probe his actions. In a moment, the boy's eyes suddenly lit up and he sat up, staring blankly forward. Trust studied him while the robed man smiled. "I've been practicing," he said. "He's almost empty now. He barely remembers his own name." He paused and seemed to be thinking. His face became more and more distraught. "What is my name?" he asked urgently, pleading.
Trust smiled slightly, amused. "How do you keep forgetting?" He reminded the worried man, "When you were found hanging over the cliff, you answered that query with Abysmaal." He remembered the first time he'd called the man by the name, and he had replied first with a puzzled expression 'that's not my name.' He'd never gotten more than that, and its absence disturbed him.
Abysmaal nodded slowly. "Yes...yes..." He stilled seemed confused. After a moment, he pulled himself back together and smiled at Trust. "I've something to show you," he told him.
Trust nodded slowly. "A new power?"
Abysmaal smiled softly. "I think you'll love it," he purred.
Anyways, this is a more seriously themed work, and will contain occasional adult things. All will be handled tastefully and with the respect due its...okay, that's stupid, I shut up XD
Enjoy.
Epilogue:
Voices...
I hear them...
I can't trust them...
No one of them...ever...
A sudden scream violated the casual serenity of the deceivingly homely outlook of Sector 3 and disturbed the rest of multi-billionaire and head scientist Reave Trust. Relaxing in the stone garden, the invasive cry jolted him from his calm reverie and forcibly returned his mind to the project at hand.
A well-built man of maybe thirty-five, he stood taller than the average man. He wasn't much to look at, his wardrobe leaning towards earthy colors, his hair a raven black and his skin tone a darker tan, but the striking contrast of his deep blue eyes commanded attention and respect. There was no nonsense to them, as serious as a funeral.
A new man entered the garden, a younger man in a crisp black suit. He stood by the entrance, waiting till Reave turned to him. No words passed between them, merely a glance was enough to convey the message. Reave rose from the bench, and the man turned to reenter the large cloud-white building just outside the garden.
The walls inside were stark white and bare of adornment. Various chemical smells scented the air, but something sharp and repugnant yet sickly sweet underlined these, a scent only the most delicate senses could discover.
It was the smell of madness.
Years ago, this scent had filled young Trust's mind with nightmares and horrors, nearly reducing him to the depths of insanity that surrounded him. Now he was its master, playing the insane as a puppeteer controls the strings. Its power was his, and he was its master.
After passing through and by many different passages, corridors and doors, they reached a door protected by one of the most advanced locking systems of the time. As the man in black proceeded to remove it, Reave Trust steeled himself for what awaited him inside. Finished, the man gave it a push, and the door opened smoothly.
Four tables, loaded with computers and various equipment, were the main setting of the room. There were four people here, one each table, and they did their work in silence. One of them suddenly leapt back, cursing at length, as sparks danced off the screen. "He's destroying the system!" he ranted, and then he saw the man in the suit and Reave. He froze.
The man stepped forward, in a stride before the static screen. He studied it a moment, then drew a pistol from his coat and shot the screen. It exploded in a shower of sparks, dead instantly. The scientist turned on him in fury and indignation.
"How dare you! That contained vital, irretrievable information! You bastard, you-"
"Doctor," Reave said quietly, and the scientist stared at him. Trust smiled gently at the angered man. "If the device was compromised, then no, it is not "vital". Our Subject is very sensitive. It is better, if it makes him...overwrought, to remove the object."
"It should be destroyed," the doctor proclaimed angrily. The other three stared at him in horror, but made no sound, no move; one returned to work with resignation in her eyes. "It is not even human! Its a monster, a danger to us all. It should be exterminated!"
Trust merely smiled and started walking the path between the tables. A door was before him, and its heavily fortified metal was dented and jarred in many places. He had a click, the doctor cry out, and a muffled shot, followed by the crash of flesh and equipment answering gravity's call. Trust ignored it all, and the door opened at his coming and closed directly behind him. The female scientist glanced at the mess on the floor, then at the man putting the gun back. "There's some cleaning solution in the closet down the hall, if you would be so kind," she said in a dull monotone. Another fool thinking her could out talk a superior. Well, he'd learned, just like the rest of them.
The room was filled with some obscure haze, though he registered it as fog. There was no sound, and to most the room would seem empty. He could feel the presence wit him, an individual as unique as himself.
"So you're back."
The voice was young, deceptively mild and gentle. Trust felt his foot nudge something and he glanced at the ground. There lay a body on the floor, a child not even in his teens. His eyes were open in mindlessness. "How are you today?" he asked calmly, ignoring the body now.
It took some time before he was answered. "Bored." Trust nodded softly. "How much longer do you intend to keep me here?"
"Not much longer," Trust replied noncommittally.
Someone stepped out of the haze. He could have passed for Trust's twin, save perhaps a brighter version of himself. His hair was whiter than the walls of the building, and his archaic robes just a shade darker. He was unusually pale, and looked almost fragile. His light brown eyes contained power and strength. "I want...out," he whispered, almost yearning. "Now," he added firmly.
"All in good time," Trust replied, equally firmly. He met the man's dark gaze, and the robed man smirked as neither dropped their gaze.
"Fine, I'll wait a little longer. Not much though," he warned. He stopped down, resting his hand on the boy's head. Trust watched him quietly, trying to probe his actions. In a moment, the boy's eyes suddenly lit up and he sat up, staring blankly forward. Trust studied him while the robed man smiled. "I've been practicing," he said. "He's almost empty now. He barely remembers his own name." He paused and seemed to be thinking. His face became more and more distraught. "What is my name?" he asked urgently, pleading.
Trust smiled slightly, amused. "How do you keep forgetting?" He reminded the worried man, "When you were found hanging over the cliff, you answered that query with Abysmaal." He remembered the first time he'd called the man by the name, and he had replied first with a puzzled expression 'that's not my name.' He'd never gotten more than that, and its absence disturbed him.
Abysmaal nodded slowly. "Yes...yes..." He stilled seemed confused. After a moment, he pulled himself back together and smiled at Trust. "I've something to show you," he told him.
Trust nodded slowly. "A new power?"
Abysmaal smiled softly. "I think you'll love it," he purred.