Aretsuya
Jan 18th, 2008, 03:01:10 PM
Where are they now?
They are gone.
I saw them run,
run to the sea.
Under the waves all has been said.
Their voices are free.
Free from the sun's stare,
free from the noise of lost souls.
An exiled sound washed in with the tide.
Their voices are free.
Free from the sun's stare,
free from the noise of lost souls.
On the waves their voice carries on.
“The Tide” – Neurosis
---
The landscape was almost like one out of a picture book, of the variety resplendent with all manner of gore and menace coveting whatever the little effect the writing had. The text would probably be representative of the emptiness of space there, like a vacuum, sucking away the inhabitants, while the gore would be the asphyxiating ambience. The trees sadistically traipsed along the jagged rocks, whereas the ice suffocated the lonely ground beneath. So this was Ilum, eh?
The engine screamed out in protest against the frozen wasteland it had been forced to wade through. The hazy fog didn’t help either, as condensation wrapped the exterior and the front view screen of the ship. Aretsuya huffed at the prospect of having to fumble through the flurry, extending for vast regions of emptiness above and beyond the sheer horizon; either way, getting supplies for this junk was a waste of time. The shuttle had undergone its last journey, and if it wasn’t for the fact that Aretsuya was planning on performing whatever small repairs were possible here, she’d probably have dumped the disintegrating pile of junk into a scrap yard much sooner.
“We live and learn from our problems, honey. But not the wise. We just throw out what we don’t need.”
Cautiously, she stepped away from the ship and straight into six feet of snow, grimacing at the chill and the excruciating thought of having her expensive boots go to waste. This wasn’t going to be much fun. The hope that some random being would come into sight and help her out was just pure wishful thinking, owing to the ludicrousness of the possibility of anyone being crazy enough to live there to begin with. She’d be treading on air as soon as she was out of that place.
Mr. Allen had sent her to sign a contract with an opposing firm quite some time ago, and the instructions accompanying the assignment permitted no room for mercy should the rivals in question opt not to sign. The gruesome consequences of such a turn of events would be deemed a mere technicality – a series of casualties considered only as fearsome as individual semantics allowed. It was good to keep an objective mind whenever such matters were concerned. Sadly, any such endeavors were still a long way off, and she needed basic supplies in the meanwhile to keep her going.
Aretsuya sauntered aimlessly, delving deeper and deeper deeper into the misty divisions of the ice planet. With hair standing on end, frigid to the root, the woman secretly wished she had more money to spend on better (warmer) clothing and, furthermore, superior equipment with which to swathe her meager ship. As disheveled as it might be, the vessel had served her well, and she’d formed with it quite possibly the most endearing bond that could be shared between woman and machine. Such thoughts were not aided much, however, when she stumbled over a stray branch littering the gravel and fell headfirst into the cavernous piles of snow, the frostbite becoming more apparent by the second.
“Bollocks…”
Frost tinged the edges of her lashes and settled stubbornly atop her brow. Even her skin appeared a paler tone of ivory, and her long fingers clasped the blaster attached to its worn leather holster in instinctive anticipation of some clandestine warmth. She had been quietly wagering upon the notion of shooting the next irksome entity that crossed her path – be it sentient or not. Extending her arms into the nothingness, she trudged along warily, although her vigilance did little to ward off the callous breeze that nipped viciously at her bones. Her own breath smoked up the atmosphere, and little did she know what she was wandering into.
She avoided venturing into the snow-encrusted conifers that closely bordered the bleached trail, glittering in the pallid sunlight like little diamonds, and chose instead to wind along the slippery path of stone and shimmering sediment. Holding onto the trunks for guidance, she couldn’t help but notice the foreboding shadows that marked the many evergreens clustered densely upon the land. In fact, hadn’t she seen the same row of lanky brown stalks ten times already?
“Goddamn tree, why do you look so happy anyway?!”
Kicking the innocent conifer with all her power, she tripped over for the umpteenth time, injuring the back of her perfectly styled head in the process. Bits of grime and dirt were embedded within her otherwise lustrous tresses, and if that wasn’t enough, her blaster jabbed into her back from where she had dropped it.
She was giving up. No mission thus far had been as frustrating as this.
Aretsuya hustled further and further into the dark abyss, the green needles spearing into the back of her arms and face, mocking her mere presence. She wasn’t going to survive this, and she wasn’t masochistic enough to tolerate it any longer. Grabbing the blaster and firmly stroking its barrel in a gesture of self-assurance, she grinned malevolently at the lined structure ahead. No tree was going to get the better of her, and she wasn’t going to keep circling around the damned waste of ice either. She tightened her gloved fingertip over the delicate trigger and aimed at the barrage of geometrical oddities clouding her field of vision, and –
– Well, she almost fired a shot until, that is, she caught sight of a far more interesting structure lying just a short distance ahead. More interesting only because it was the one different thing she had spotted after a long time, and the change in scenery was more than a pleasure for the poor lass. She slogged forward and collapsed in front of the stone building, grasping the knob of the wooden door and banging it wildly in hopes of a response.
No answer. She turned the handle.
It was locked. No surprise there, really.
Aretsuya needed supplies, and she wasn’t going to wait around for her nervous system to numb away from the biting cold of Ilum. She peered through the cracks in between the corroded slabs of granite, etched with patterns painted by the harsh weather, and tried to catch sight of anyone or anything worth looking at.
They are gone.
I saw them run,
run to the sea.
Under the waves all has been said.
Their voices are free.
Free from the sun's stare,
free from the noise of lost souls.
An exiled sound washed in with the tide.
Their voices are free.
Free from the sun's stare,
free from the noise of lost souls.
On the waves their voice carries on.
“The Tide” – Neurosis
---
The landscape was almost like one out of a picture book, of the variety resplendent with all manner of gore and menace coveting whatever the little effect the writing had. The text would probably be representative of the emptiness of space there, like a vacuum, sucking away the inhabitants, while the gore would be the asphyxiating ambience. The trees sadistically traipsed along the jagged rocks, whereas the ice suffocated the lonely ground beneath. So this was Ilum, eh?
The engine screamed out in protest against the frozen wasteland it had been forced to wade through. The hazy fog didn’t help either, as condensation wrapped the exterior and the front view screen of the ship. Aretsuya huffed at the prospect of having to fumble through the flurry, extending for vast regions of emptiness above and beyond the sheer horizon; either way, getting supplies for this junk was a waste of time. The shuttle had undergone its last journey, and if it wasn’t for the fact that Aretsuya was planning on performing whatever small repairs were possible here, she’d probably have dumped the disintegrating pile of junk into a scrap yard much sooner.
“We live and learn from our problems, honey. But not the wise. We just throw out what we don’t need.”
Cautiously, she stepped away from the ship and straight into six feet of snow, grimacing at the chill and the excruciating thought of having her expensive boots go to waste. This wasn’t going to be much fun. The hope that some random being would come into sight and help her out was just pure wishful thinking, owing to the ludicrousness of the possibility of anyone being crazy enough to live there to begin with. She’d be treading on air as soon as she was out of that place.
Mr. Allen had sent her to sign a contract with an opposing firm quite some time ago, and the instructions accompanying the assignment permitted no room for mercy should the rivals in question opt not to sign. The gruesome consequences of such a turn of events would be deemed a mere technicality – a series of casualties considered only as fearsome as individual semantics allowed. It was good to keep an objective mind whenever such matters were concerned. Sadly, any such endeavors were still a long way off, and she needed basic supplies in the meanwhile to keep her going.
Aretsuya sauntered aimlessly, delving deeper and deeper deeper into the misty divisions of the ice planet. With hair standing on end, frigid to the root, the woman secretly wished she had more money to spend on better (warmer) clothing and, furthermore, superior equipment with which to swathe her meager ship. As disheveled as it might be, the vessel had served her well, and she’d formed with it quite possibly the most endearing bond that could be shared between woman and machine. Such thoughts were not aided much, however, when she stumbled over a stray branch littering the gravel and fell headfirst into the cavernous piles of snow, the frostbite becoming more apparent by the second.
“Bollocks…”
Frost tinged the edges of her lashes and settled stubbornly atop her brow. Even her skin appeared a paler tone of ivory, and her long fingers clasped the blaster attached to its worn leather holster in instinctive anticipation of some clandestine warmth. She had been quietly wagering upon the notion of shooting the next irksome entity that crossed her path – be it sentient or not. Extending her arms into the nothingness, she trudged along warily, although her vigilance did little to ward off the callous breeze that nipped viciously at her bones. Her own breath smoked up the atmosphere, and little did she know what she was wandering into.
She avoided venturing into the snow-encrusted conifers that closely bordered the bleached trail, glittering in the pallid sunlight like little diamonds, and chose instead to wind along the slippery path of stone and shimmering sediment. Holding onto the trunks for guidance, she couldn’t help but notice the foreboding shadows that marked the many evergreens clustered densely upon the land. In fact, hadn’t she seen the same row of lanky brown stalks ten times already?
“Goddamn tree, why do you look so happy anyway?!”
Kicking the innocent conifer with all her power, she tripped over for the umpteenth time, injuring the back of her perfectly styled head in the process. Bits of grime and dirt were embedded within her otherwise lustrous tresses, and if that wasn’t enough, her blaster jabbed into her back from where she had dropped it.
She was giving up. No mission thus far had been as frustrating as this.
Aretsuya hustled further and further into the dark abyss, the green needles spearing into the back of her arms and face, mocking her mere presence. She wasn’t going to survive this, and she wasn’t masochistic enough to tolerate it any longer. Grabbing the blaster and firmly stroking its barrel in a gesture of self-assurance, she grinned malevolently at the lined structure ahead. No tree was going to get the better of her, and she wasn’t going to keep circling around the damned waste of ice either. She tightened her gloved fingertip over the delicate trigger and aimed at the barrage of geometrical oddities clouding her field of vision, and –
– Well, she almost fired a shot until, that is, she caught sight of a far more interesting structure lying just a short distance ahead. More interesting only because it was the one different thing she had spotted after a long time, and the change in scenery was more than a pleasure for the poor lass. She slogged forward and collapsed in front of the stone building, grasping the knob of the wooden door and banging it wildly in hopes of a response.
No answer. She turned the handle.
It was locked. No surprise there, really.
Aretsuya needed supplies, and she wasn’t going to wait around for her nervous system to numb away from the biting cold of Ilum. She peered through the cracks in between the corroded slabs of granite, etched with patterns painted by the harsh weather, and tried to catch sight of anyone or anything worth looking at.