Taxor_the_First
Well-Known Member
Dead Men Tell Tales, Part 3
Carolus, her decoy successful, dispelled the teleimagery before magnetizing the air directly around Azazel. The broken parts of the Mechtoids, still sparking, were immediately drawn to the living magnet and clamped themselves onto him. Or rather, onto Umbra - the Reflection had descended slightly into the ground so that its master was encapsulated in its torso. Wrapped in scraps of metal, the shadow found it difficult to move with any degree of speed, something Carolus capitalized on. With some obvious difficulty, the loyalist summoned the last vestiges of electricity sparking through the parts and focused them onto Azazel. Her muscles quivered, being in such proximity to the dynamo before her, but she held fast.
Unfortunately for her, so did he.
When she could no longer hold the magnokinesis and electrokinesis, she dispelled them, metal clanking to the floor. Azazel glanced behind her. Albina had disappeared from sight. He clenched his fists. I have wasted enough time with you! he raged, Umbra raising itself to tower over her again. If you will block the path I walk, then you will be removed from it!
With the difficulty of swatting aside a fly, the Reflection swiped Carolus away. She cried out when she hit the wall, a few shards of broken metal from her own attack sticking into her spine, drawing violet blood. A ragged breath was the first sign that she was still alive, and weakly the loyalist tried to pry herself free. Azazel watched the action with some pity before shaking his head and running forward, his purpose elsewhere. He didn’t need to kill Carolus. She was defeated, and he’d taken enough life on this day.
But Carolus was not defeated. She staggered to her feet, stumbling out until she was behind the retreating figure. Knowing that she would fail if she didn’t figure out some way to beat him here, she tried the last thing at her disposal. Something she’d only practiced on lesser beings before now. Trying it on a mind at least as willful as hers would prove a challenge. Nonetheless, she tried it. With a sharp intake of breath, Carolus reached a single hand out. Then walk it no more. Then she slumped to the ground, seemingly unconscious.
Umbra felt the override as it progressed. The original purpose, that of defending Albina, was muddied by a foreign mindset. Azazel struggled - with a dawning horror he knew what Carolus was trying to do - but her will proved stronger than his, if ever so slightly. He stopped his march forward, and looked at his arms, surprised the gambit had worked. The last amounts of control Azazel had on his own body, along with his ability to sustain Umbra, began seeping away, but not before the Reflection user issued a new directive to his shadow, one far stronger than the one to protect Albina.
Kill Carolus.
*
Samuel blinked, glancing around him as the memory ended. He was back in the armory, Umbra evidently deciding it had told him all it could. His mind swam with the new information. Umbra itself, meanwhile, was nowhere to be seen. It had retreated into his shadow once again, perhaps needing a moment after reliving its greatest failure.
“So Albina was captured,” the Russian muttered to himself. “Along with Azazel. I’m guessing from your lack of reaction to her she’s… no longer part of your directive.” The Reflection did not respond, but Samuel got the sense that he was right. “So she’s dead.”
He sighed. One more unbreakable bond broken by death. And Umbra blamed Carolus, evidently, probably rightly so. Hence the absolute hatred the shadow felt for her. And now she was Arbiter…?
The explained the Inquisitors then. Their interest in Samuel himself was less about the master and more about the servant. They wanted Umbra returned to Elder hands, or snuffed out entirely. Either way would require Samuel’s death, which he didn’t like the idea of.
Unless they want to turn me into Yakone 2…
The Aerotrooper shuddered. He’d kept a wide berth from the returned soldier, largely because every time he saw her from a distance he could feel his stomach roiling. It wasn’t fair to her, no, but it was the reaction he had.
“So I’ve got an Elder hitsquad after me, the Mavericks came this close to being completely wiped, and we’ve got Yakone and the Commander’s sister back but they’re both guilt-ridden.” Samuel sighed. “What a fucking mess.”
And then there was the issue of Carolus. Something told the Russian that he’d need to deal with her before all this was over. And he had no doubt Umbra was looking forward to it.
Azazel’s mercy had gotten him captured. And with Samuel, it had gotten him killed. The Aerotrooper’s gaze, settled on empty space as he considered it all, hardened. “When we find Carolus,” he promised his Reflection, “we fight her. We beat her. And we kill her.”
Carolus, her decoy successful, dispelled the teleimagery before magnetizing the air directly around Azazel. The broken parts of the Mechtoids, still sparking, were immediately drawn to the living magnet and clamped themselves onto him. Or rather, onto Umbra - the Reflection had descended slightly into the ground so that its master was encapsulated in its torso. Wrapped in scraps of metal, the shadow found it difficult to move with any degree of speed, something Carolus capitalized on. With some obvious difficulty, the loyalist summoned the last vestiges of electricity sparking through the parts and focused them onto Azazel. Her muscles quivered, being in such proximity to the dynamo before her, but she held fast.
Unfortunately for her, so did he.
When she could no longer hold the magnokinesis and electrokinesis, she dispelled them, metal clanking to the floor. Azazel glanced behind her. Albina had disappeared from sight. He clenched his fists. I have wasted enough time with you! he raged, Umbra raising itself to tower over her again. If you will block the path I walk, then you will be removed from it!
With the difficulty of swatting aside a fly, the Reflection swiped Carolus away. She cried out when she hit the wall, a few shards of broken metal from her own attack sticking into her spine, drawing violet blood. A ragged breath was the first sign that she was still alive, and weakly the loyalist tried to pry herself free. Azazel watched the action with some pity before shaking his head and running forward, his purpose elsewhere. He didn’t need to kill Carolus. She was defeated, and he’d taken enough life on this day.
But Carolus was not defeated. She staggered to her feet, stumbling out until she was behind the retreating figure. Knowing that she would fail if she didn’t figure out some way to beat him here, she tried the last thing at her disposal. Something she’d only practiced on lesser beings before now. Trying it on a mind at least as willful as hers would prove a challenge. Nonetheless, she tried it. With a sharp intake of breath, Carolus reached a single hand out. Then walk it no more. Then she slumped to the ground, seemingly unconscious.
Umbra felt the override as it progressed. The original purpose, that of defending Albina, was muddied by a foreign mindset. Azazel struggled - with a dawning horror he knew what Carolus was trying to do - but her will proved stronger than his, if ever so slightly. He stopped his march forward, and looked at his arms, surprised the gambit had worked. The last amounts of control Azazel had on his own body, along with his ability to sustain Umbra, began seeping away, but not before the Reflection user issued a new directive to his shadow, one far stronger than the one to protect Albina.
Kill Carolus.
*
Samuel blinked, glancing around him as the memory ended. He was back in the armory, Umbra evidently deciding it had told him all it could. His mind swam with the new information. Umbra itself, meanwhile, was nowhere to be seen. It had retreated into his shadow once again, perhaps needing a moment after reliving its greatest failure.
“So Albina was captured,” the Russian muttered to himself. “Along with Azazel. I’m guessing from your lack of reaction to her she’s… no longer part of your directive.” The Reflection did not respond, but Samuel got the sense that he was right. “So she’s dead.”
He sighed. One more unbreakable bond broken by death. And Umbra blamed Carolus, evidently, probably rightly so. Hence the absolute hatred the shadow felt for her. And now she was Arbiter…?
The explained the Inquisitors then. Their interest in Samuel himself was less about the master and more about the servant. They wanted Umbra returned to Elder hands, or snuffed out entirely. Either way would require Samuel’s death, which he didn’t like the idea of.
Unless they want to turn me into Yakone 2…
The Aerotrooper shuddered. He’d kept a wide berth from the returned soldier, largely because every time he saw her from a distance he could feel his stomach roiling. It wasn’t fair to her, no, but it was the reaction he had.
“So I’ve got an Elder hitsquad after me, the Mavericks came this close to being completely wiped, and we’ve got Yakone and the Commander’s sister back but they’re both guilt-ridden.” Samuel sighed. “What a fucking mess.”
And then there was the issue of Carolus. Something told the Russian that he’d need to deal with her before all this was over. And he had no doubt Umbra was looking forward to it.
Azazel’s mercy had gotten him captured. And with Samuel, it had gotten him killed. The Aerotrooper’s gaze, settled on empty space as he considered it all, hardened. “When we find Carolus,” he promised his Reflection, “we fight her. We beat her. And we kill her.”