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Authors: Kyle Thomas Miller

Original Souls (A World Apart #1) (35 page)

BOOK: Original Souls (A World Apart #1)
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While she gave the yearly remedial speech to the masses, dark things were afoot.

 

"Keep the perimeter tight, shoot anyone that tries to escape once the aerial assault begins," a voice of terror reverberated through the microphones of dozens upon dozens of men surrounding the Pavilion while Hendrix unknowingly spoke on.

 

Dark shadows crept along the walls, as the trees in the distance were jostled by gusting winds. The Squadron force deployed for this mission moved in a swift and synchronized motion. Each step they took denoted a specific intention. Twenty moved westward from the main gate. They were pushing toward the trees to make sure any stragglers that made it past the first wave, the ones who would blockade the exits, could be picked off easily from above.

 

A man with telling dark eyes knelt at the front gate. He put one of those black & blue eyes up against the split between the double doors. The gate was large and fearsome in size, yet seamless to open. He took a look around to survey the ceremonies. He then radioed in his report. "The place is jam packed right now. If he's at the school, this is where he'd be," he relayed to the man in charge.

 

A booming voice came back over the line. "All right, keep your eyes peeled. All of you! For the signal. Out.

 

"Roger that," came several voices over the intercom, all in a sullen tones.

 

All spoke their peace except the man at the Pavilion gate. Instead of an obedient 'roger that
,
’ he spat out a cigarette from between his lips onto the ground. He didn't bother to put it out. In fact, he secretly hoped it'd ignite another fire.

 

"Damn wimp doesn't know the half of what it takes to lead," he had a sickly voice and took shallow breaths. His neck was on the line, and he was actually nervous for this first time in a long time. He pressed the dark mixture that were his irises back up against the break between the gate's two doors, and waited for the signal.

 

"I was once a child," Sena. Hendrix reluctantly  admitted. "That may be hard to believe for some of you youngsters sitting in the bleachers tonight, but I did serve out a childhood. As you do now," she spoke as if youth were a prison sentence, and not the bliss that most remember it to be. "I do understand how tempting it can be to want to exclude others based upon prejudices. There are so many cultures here at Aurora Boreal, and it would be foolish to think that some will not clash with others. It is inevitable. But we 'actively' choose to believe that there is room here for all walks of life, not just the domineering or narrow minded ones. The full staff and I will be working around the clock to ensure that we uphold the constitutes of diversity. We are all a part of one massive family now. The Aurora Boreal family. Those who choose to openly discriminate against people from other Worlds, with opposing views to theirs..."

 

She paused, as a chilled air fell over her, creeping down the back of her dark cloak. A thought occurred to her, as the screen at her back showed scenes of the exact acts she accounted in her address to the audience. She felt things that she knew to be bad omens filling the spreading void in her heart. Very bad omens! They carried a dark karma for one who lived out what they vehemently preached against. She spoke of upholding diversity, when she herself had been a boldfaced bigot at an earlier stage in her life. She cautioned herself as she knew that the true spectacle of the night had yet to begin.

 

"They will be removed without question," she continued, forcing her heart to believe the words she fed to the crowd. "If, of course, found liable for substantiated accusations against them," she added that for good measure. "Though these words should indeed echo in the minds of the students, as well, you family members and certainly the staff, please do not fret. Humans possess flaws, so you will make mistakes. But please try to think from time to time;
What if I were faced with the challenges of the person I am so unnecessarily harassing?
How could I ever stand up against such a barrage of hatred, when in reality, I haven't done anything to hurt another soul?
Unless being born is a fault in some of your eyes?
Being different isn't wrong, people. Willful murder, selfishly stealing, assaulting, and yes, sometimes even insulting people, those types of acts can be easily deemed wrong. But still questionable inside the confines of a logical mind. But what never can be wrong, is who you love and how you spend your personal time. We have laws that protect us from true dangers. From people who use their personal pain as excuse to lash out against others. So, considering these laws are firmly in place;
why do we arrest one anothe
r’
s natural behaviors?
"

 

She had come full circle since she began her speech. This was the home stretch and she felt confident that she had actually reached a few hearts and minds out there in the crowd.

 

"This is the question I want us all to try to answer before our semester is through. Why?
Why do we attempt to arrest the natural behaviors of others?
And please, don't think that I'm naive enough to fall for the age old excuse; that the behaviors you most hate in others, are not natural, and should
n’
t exist for that reasoning. I may not be the sharpest tool in the shed, but I can pierce a heart or two just with my steely stare." She made a pout with her lips and eyes that shocked some of the returning students. They'd never seen her so loose before.

 

She was being modest. She knew that her intellect was through the roof. But she also knew how much people hated a know-it-all. So she played the game. And played it well. Most of the audience stood and applauded, while others still giggled at her attempt at a humorous conclusion.

 

When she stopped speaking, a blast sounded in the sky. The fireworks had begun! Students and adults alike all ran onto the expansive field. They wanted to get a better look at all the different lights and shapes that the sparklers took.

 

Corinth and the others could see the pyrotechnics in the distance. They were still a mile or two away from the Pavilion, but kept walking in hopes of catching the tail end of the festivities.

 

Then a most unexpected sparkler shot up into the sky. It burst into a thousand little incremental pieces of a larger structure, as did all the others, but this sparkler revealed an insignia. Very distinguishable from the fun animal shapes and landmarks that popped up before it. In the night sky, floated the Squadron badge. The eight-layered plateau that sat atop the oval shaped metal badges each Squadron member possessed. The eight plateaus represented the 8ights Council members positions. Each elected Chancellor from each World. Their seat on the Council was indicated by rank. With Draconia at the very top.

 

"If that's not the sign, then I'm not a Draconian," Geary said as he stood up from his crouched position at the Pavilion gates, and kicked the door in with the force of a superhuman.

 

Sen. Bernard turned quickly when he heard the loud bang. Squadron members poured into the school gaming arena like cockroaches. Dozens and dozens of men all holding automatic absorption guns. People screamed and started running across the fields like madmen. Everything went from a calm serenity to horrid chaos in a matter of seconds. People nearing the gates to escape were shot down on approach. The Squadron members all sported black eyes. Excepting Geary, who didn't quite have his bright blue eyes as normal, but hadn't gone fully dark yet. He must have only taken a small dosage of the El Muerte Vivo serum to enhance himself.

 

Sena. Hendrix turned to Bernard and yelled down to him from her podium. "Did you not do as I instructed!"

 

"Yes, I did," he said quickly. "I was certain I achieved my goal, and was informed by an 'Evan Gambit' of precisely that."

 

Sena. Hendrix eyes didn't go as wide as one might expect. She knew Evan had been corrupted. And she knew this wasn't his choice. "S
o—
Sebastian had no intention of being civil at all," she said.

 

"I apologize!" Bernard shouted up to her as he pulled his llave from his coat pocket. "If only I had known he was your son! I would have never filed that report!"

 

"I know," she said with a great deal of respect in her voice, as she watched innocent children be shot down because of her negligence. "I shouldn't have kept you in the dark for so long, my friend."

 

Sen. Bernard was already running toward the gates. As he did, helicopters pulled up over the mouth of the arena. The fireworks were abruptly interrupted and now ceased to sprout off any longer. The helicopters took place of the loud noises the firecrackers once made. But the sound they introduced was one of dread and terror. A single rope ladder was cast down, and a lone man began the long trek down from one of the copters that hovered at the relative heights of the Pavilio
n’
s outer walls.

 

Bernard snapped his llave back like a wand, and shouted. "Perturbo!" Over and over again he shouted this chant, "Perturbo," as he ran through the ranks of Squadron thugs. Instantly, they were afflicted with treacherous images in their minds as the silvery translucent light was emitted from the tip of his key-shaped figure to wielding magik. The ones the Perturbo spell landed on, fell to the ground, dropping their weapons. They convulsed and shook like swirling snow-globes. Some were even forced to turn on fellow Squadron members.

 

He ran to the gate as quickly as he could, using the protection of the Squadron members he'd turned. The men had closed the doors behind them to lock everyone in, but Bernard had a better idea. "Annihilate!" With a gold and silver spiral rush of dust shooting out from his llave, he smashed the gate in half. "Run ... run, don't hesitate, just run away! As far away as you can!" he shouted to the screaming people on the fields at his far side.

 

The students and family members were reasonably scared. There were so many people that it was hard to see where anyone was going. People were afraid of getting trampled to death by those behind, but also didn't want to stampede those ahead of them. The main gate was wide, but not wide enough for everyone to run out at once.

 

Bernard noticed the dire need for space, so he took a chance. He knew he couldn't use the English spell Annihilate again. Much too messy of a spell. Not with that many people right beside him flooding the gate. So, he put his llave into rotation to generate more power for his next spell. He only hoped no one would be hit with an absorption dart before he could finish.

 

"Por-Rata-Dissuo!" Like a crumbling sand dune, a proportional exit to the Pavilion's gate began slowly opening up beside it. In order for that to happen, the wall near the gate of the Pavilion had to disintegrat
e
… molecule by molecule. It was a powerful spell. To strategically pull apart a fully formed, massive structure, down to dust and bits took loads of strength. He did this so no one would be hurt while he tried to save the day. It was a spectacular sight that caught the attention of many. Mainly a special Squadron member whose feet had only just touched the ground since the assault began.

 

While people where escaping through the new exit, Bernard felt cold steel on the back of his neck. He put his hands up defeated, dropping his llave in the field. "That was quite the show you just put on," came a terrorizing voice from behind. "But I'm calling the curtain!" The finger he used to firmly clutch the trigger of his absorption gu
n—
pulled inward. Releasing a single dart into Bernard's neck. The more magik someone uses, the worst the toll it takes on them to recover. It's called "overdosing," and Bernard is certainly at the limits of it with how many times he emitted the Perturbo. After his last powerful Maledictus spell, he may not have anything left to recover with from overdosing.

 

People were running out wildly into the open fields shrouded by trees. The space between Olympia and the Pavilion was a vast one. Most of the scared people assumed they had made it out safe, so they tried to calm themselve
s
… until others around them started dropping like flies.

 

The men in the trees above released a barrage of darts toward the refuges' way. The fear of their unseen attackers in the dark of night sent them back into a panic. People were pushing one another, thinking they were fighting off the ambush by fighting off one another. They had no idea where the darts were coming from.

 

Corinth and the others walked in on this horrific seen without any warning. Before any of them could say a word, Claudia set up a force field around them.

 

"Vis Aura," she whispered to the wind as Emma walked into the blue constant field of light that sprung up around them. Her face grazed the force field, and Claudia immediately said. "Sorry about that."

BOOK: Original Souls (A World Apart #1)
9.76Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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