Magius5.0
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+106|6837|UMass Amherst
So guys, I do other things with my time besides playing 2142...I've been writing a story over the past five years,  in the process of editing the first book, and writing a second one in the series.  Problem is, I need some feedback before I contemplate publishing, which is a huge investment.  Leave your messages here, Karma if you absolutely love it, and feedback is always a plus.  Just a warning: I love playing the audience like a cello.  I'll patch it through to you guys chapter (or half chapters, as it is almost 200,000 words) by popular demand.

Aight, here it is...enjoy.  Copyright everything Mike Davis (real name).


Whispers of the Drakens, Book I:  Assembly of the Warriors
Started way back in 2002...
Prologue:
The Arrival

    Man, why is it people always call at the middle of the night?  Brian McClane thought sleepily as he stumbled out of bed, grabbing the ringing phone near his desk.  This had better be good, or I’m hanging up; I don’t care if it’s the police station again, I need some well-deserved rest, let someone else handle the paperwork.  “Hello?” he said once brought the phone to his ear.
    “Brian?  Thank god you’re there.  I was running out of people to call, and I had hoped you of all people would answer.  Listen, I know it’s late—”
    “Late?  Jack, it’s almost one in the morning,” Brian grumbled.  “You’d better have a good reason for waking me up; I’m still trying to catch up on sleep from the last case I was on, that burglary downtown by the jewelry store.  Could this have possibly waited, because if it can, I’m going back to sleep,” he said, preparing to put down the phone.
    “Brian, I know what killed those miners, and frankly the implications have me questioning my own sanity, but the evidence is incontrovertible,” he said, as Jack suddenly halted, bringing the phone up again.
    “What?” he whispered.
    “You know what I’m talking about, Brian.  The mining accident from three years ago, the one no one likes to talk about,” he said, talking in a quieter tone than before.  Brian thought briefly to the details of the case, and remembered the massive investigation that had gone on during the events that followed, but the evidence had always led them nowhere; A gas pocket explosion had been the official determination, but no one had ever agreed that was the best explanation—just the one that made the most sense.  I remember that; one of the most damned strange investigations I had ever run, he thought.
    “Okay Jack, you have me attention,” Brian said, knowing he was going to regret letting this conversation continue.  “But why call me at one in the morning?”
    “They’re after me—they, whoever they are, that orchestrated this.  They found something down in that mine, something horrible, and they killed the only witnesses.  It may not even be safe for me here,” he said.  “I’m busy gathering my things Brian, but I need protection.  I need it now, badly.”  Indeed, he could audibly detect the edge in Jacks’ tone, and he was half-inclined to be authentic.  He was horrifically afraid of something.
    “Whoa Jack, hold on a second.  You have told me precisely nothing,” Brian said, already getting his clothes from yesterday on.  “Who is this ‘they’ that you keep referring to?”
    “Brian, shut up and listen.  They are coming for me, because I may know too much, I know because they were watching my office today; I found something else, something in the mine recently when I tried to trace back the incident, and then I finally realized what it was.  Brian, please, I wouldn’t ask if I wasn’t dead sure of it.”
    “Alright Jack, fine, but I want details: what caused the accident?  And who do you think is after you?” Brian said, as he opened a cabinet beneath his desk, and he glanced questionably at his standard-issue 9mm sidearm.  If I have any sense at all, he’s not pulling my leg, he thought as he strapped on the holster, grabbing his reserve magazines.
    “Brian, these are powerful people, they’re capable of making me disappear without a trace.  All the other workers at the mines, those who knew the most, they all started vanishing.  I’ll tell you more when you get here, I don’t dare say anything else about this on the phone,” he said, almost in a pleading tone that surprised even McClane.
    “I’ll be there in half an hour,” he said as he put on his coat.  “Sit tight Jack, okay?  I can’t help you until you tell me exactly what is going on.”
    “Alright, thank you,” he said, breathing a sigh of relief.  “Look, I’ll pack some stuff, because I dare not linger here,” he said, before hanging up.
    Damn it Jack, what have you gotten yourself involved in?  Brian thought as he headed out the door, grabbing his keys off the rack and headed to his car.

*    *    *

    This is the last time I’m ever going out on a limb for anyone…sheesh, why is it so dark tonight? Brian McClane thought as he pulled up along the winding driveway.  I’m getting too old for this, he thought bitterly as he got out of the car, walking up the driveway slowly.  Why did he insist on meeting me right away, for heavens’ sake?  He thought angrily as he spotted the door to the modest two-story house.  He was seriously thinking that maybe he should just head home and forget all about this, and take a break.  Paranoia seems to be the running gag these days…people calling in the dead of the night, sounding as if the dead had risen or something, he thought, pausing for a moment.  Would this be a violation of his orders?
    “McClane, honestly, this case is closed, okay?  As much as I hate leaving things unsolved, there are more important matters to attend to, and we’re not going to solve that murder…not unless the state pursues it.  It’s been over six months since we’ve had any leads, and you stepping on toes all over the place doesn’t exactly help!  I don’t know how many times I’ve told you to stop this goose chase… I got a call from down at the mining company yesterday, citing you were trespassing.  That badge you’re wearing means upholding the law, that includes following the law yourself, do you hear me?”
    “Something doesn’t smell right, chief.  They closed that mine in a hurry after the accident, and the workers who did get out of there aren’t talking; something bad happened in there that no one wants to know about, and my buddy was killed because he knew something.”
    “Hunches and guesswork aren’t good enough, McClane.  Unless you find some solid evidence that these accidents are related in any way to the recent events, my hands are tied.  You and I both know the findings for that accident were final: it was a freak gas explosion, that’s what the evidence says and nothing more; I’ll say it so it’s official: there’s no conspiracy, and this murder and the other one are unrelated as far as we can tell.  Now, as for your friend, I suggest you let it go…take a few days off, for God’s sake.”
    “How come they never recovered the bodies from the mines up on Mount Syren?” McClane asked.  “I honestly want to know.”
    “Structural instability; all the attempts they made were met with failure, and the site has been shut down.  They’ll never be recovered, not with that much rock and stone,” he said.
    “Chief, I honestly think that these murders are related, and all the men worked at those mines at one time or another…don’t tell me it’s just coincidence.”
    “Brian…just let it go, okay?  Look, I know you’re a good detective, but you’ve taken this case too seriously.  I know he was your friend, but we have no leads…we haven’t had any for six months.  Let it go, okay?” he had said, looking rather tired.
    “Fine.  I hear you.”

    That had been a week ago, and now he supposed it was time to give it up… he was even amazed he had been allowed on the case for so long, when other cases were piling up on his desk.  One of the victims had been one of his friends, whom he’d known for years.  He had been found three years ago in his house, the building ravaged and in flames.  Whoever had done the damage had something seriously wrong with them.  Whoever was capable of doing what they did to his friend wasn’t human, after they had pulled the body out before the flames took down the roof, followed shortly by the rest of the house.  There wasn’t much left of a body…what the fire had not consumed, was horrifying.  Now Jack had called, seemingly out of the blue, to tell him all of this might be connected, and he had the smoking gun in his possession?
McClane snapped out of this horrible memory and looked at the houselights beyond the trees.  He wasn’t out here to enjoy spooking himself, or gaze blandly at the night sky, looking for answers.  Not only was he a respected geologist, he also had done some consulting with several companies in the area, including the one of the reported trajedy. 
McClane knew that Jack had always been a slightly timid person, but he had appeared even more strangely hesitant and fearful over the phone.  What was so important to him that he would want to meet in the dead of the night?  I still have half a mind to turn around and go back home, he thought as he walked up to the door.  To his surprise, the door was ajar, lights on inside; it wasn’t that fact that disturbed McClane…it was the silence; the absolute dead silence.  Pulling out his handgun, McClane cautiously approached the door, holding the flashlight with his left hand.  Something was amiss here, and he wanted to be prepared for it; he hoped it was just his imagination, but he felt a gust of wind blow by as he gently eased the door open.  The hallway was deathly quiet, and he would have felt better if he had heard some kind of noise…any noise at all. McClane noted the door was not damaged, signaling Jack may have let someone in… but where was he?
    If he was so paranoid, why would he leave the door open for anybody to walk in?  McClane began to wonder, immediately stepping away from the bitter fall air, as he walked into the living room.  The lamp by the sofa cast a soft light on the walls, creating shadows that reflected on the eerie situation.  Jack had been very organized in college, an obsessive neat freak; it still showed in this modest house.  A desk to the left of the sofa yielded a small laptop, still charging from the last time it had been used.  Sticky notes plastered his desk, ranging from the usual reminders about appointments and buying milk to other, stranger messages.  McClane, naturally born with a curiosity that had gotten him into trouble time and again, moved closer to read the notes, some scribbled that they were almost illegible.  One in particular read ‘sulfur based gases, gastric tract?’ or, ‘research history of cults, 1300-1996?’
    What has Jack been researching?  McClane pondered, gazing at the notes, and then cautiously opening the desk drawer.  Inside, he found a newspaper clipping, dating three years ago; it’s streaming headline proclaimed FIVE MEN DIE IN MINING EXPLOSION, INVESTIGATORS UNABLE TO DETERMINE CAUSE.  Looking around nervously, he folded up the clipping, and then quietly closed the drawer.  I remember that accident—I lost one of my high school friends in there; the whole thing caved in, and the bodies…never recovered.  Inexcusable, he thought bitterly, placing his gun back in his holster, he walked into the kitchen, flicking on the light switch.  Peering around it looked as empty as the living room.  Dirty dishes piled up on the counter, a coffee mug sitting on the center counter.  Cautiously, McClane put a finger in the coffee; still warm, which meant Jack wasn’t too far away.
    “Jack?” he called out, hoping to hear an answer; there was none, only the creaking of the house settling and the ticking of the small clock mounted on the wall.  Walking back into the hallway, he noted that Jack’s bedroom door was closed.  “Yeah, thanks for leaving me no clue to where you are, I really appreciate it,” McClane muttered as he moved forward.  Yet another door with the lights still on was marked by small caution signs giving reason to believe chemicals were stored within.  Probably his miniature laboratory, he thought.  Daring his courage, he opened the door; no one was there, and there was no sign that anyone had been here recently.  One desk held a large computer, with various DVD’s and flash memory sticks in neatly sorted piles, some of them with labels designating them as data analysis.  Ignoring those, he turned to look at a small table, various books and lab equipment strewn about its glossy surface.
    What was odd about the books was their genre; obviously, they had nothing to do with geology.  As he glanced at the books, he felt that they were distinctly out-of-place; some of the titles displayed works such as “Understanding Myths and Legends,” while another one was titled “A History of Subterranean Exploration,” and one final book called, “Eyewitness accounts of strange sightings in Europe, 1250-1650.”  Did all of this have to do with what Jack was so nervous about?  McClane thought, especially when he noticed a strange looking object by a microscope on the table.  Picking it up in his hand, he realized that it wasn’t a rock, but a scale of some sort, perhaps off of some reptile.  But, this scale was almost two and a half inches in length, so just how big was this reptile?  Looks like theres’ a message here,[i] he noted as he looked at another laptop, this one still on and the screen glowing with a document still opened.
    “Specimen appears to be made of a complex matrix of carbon, silicon and other organic elements.  Microscope shows that there was blood-vessels lining the inner edge of the scale sustaining a nutrient flow, meaning it was obviously biological.  No currently recorded species has scales this large, of any of the reptilian species I’ve ever heard of.  Puzzling—perhaps it’s a dinosaur fossil, but the area is very poor for fossil formation.  And carbon dating has shown it to only be a few hundred years old.  There must be a problem with my equipment; I’ll ship it out later this week to get it analyzed by my lab partners at MIT, maybe they can make sense of it.
    “I get the distinct feeling that once again, Jack bit off more than he could chew,” he muttered, wondering where Jack was; he was running out of rooms to search, and technically he shouldn’t be looking around.  [i]Arrested for breaking and entering…the irony that it was a policeman found at the scene of the crime,
he thought bitterly.
    A sudden creak of the floorboards caught him by surprise, causing him to drop the scale.  Darting out into the hallway, he saw that the bedroom door was now ajar.  Holding close to the wall, he moved to the door, and with a shaking hand, pushed the door open with a resonating squeak.
Flicking the light-switch, the lights refused to turn on at all, keeping McClane in the darkness.  Switching his own light on, he swept the beam across the room; there were signs of a struggle, judging by the toppled desk light and alarm clock smashed on the floor.  “Jack, are you there?” he whispered, seeing a shoe sticking out from behind the bed.  No response at all.
    The sight that greeted McClane as he rounded the bed was the most terrifying thing he had ever seen.  The body that had been once been Jack was nearly unrecognizable, similar to Frederick.  If he could even call it a body…there wasn’t much left.
    “Oh damn,” whispered McClane as a wave of nausea overcame him, bringing him to his knees.  Suddenly he felt very small in this giant house, the wall behind him marred by a crimson coating he could only assume was blood; an indent in the wall suggested Jack had been slammed into the wall, almost three feet above the floor, with bone-shattering force.  The thought caused him to tremble in fear.  “Okay, screw this.  No conspiracy, my ass Markus,” he said as he stood up quickly, reaching for his cell phone.  As he read the display, there was zero signal on his phone.  I always have a clear signal.  What’s going on?  He thought hesitantly.
    “There’s no reception, so don’t bother; they wouldn’t be able to help you anyways.”
    It was though a wall of evil, terrifying evil, had just slammed into him, knocked him into the wall as hard as Jack had been.  Turning quickly, gun pointed at the speaker, McClane got his first view of the person.  It was a tall man, solidly built (judging by his size), with jet-black robes, which also partially obscured his face from view by a hood he wore.  McClane’s flashlight trembled unsteadily, as he stared at he man’s face.  His eyes were not normal…no human could have those eyes.  The eyes were glowing a deep red, as if piercing into his soul; they were not human either, but of a reptile, cold and dead.
    “Who are you?” McClane said, struggling to formulate the words from his lips, still pointing the gun at the man, as if it would do any good.
    “It won’t matter…you’ve never heard of me before,” he added sinisterly, his dagger-like eyes glancing at what remained of Jack.  “Your friend here was very close to discovering the truth…he should have never become involved, when he came so close to exposing us.  Not only would I have been eventually discovered, it would have caused a cataclysmic chain of events that even I would not want presently.”
    “Hands in the air pal, and keep them where I can see them,” McClane said, who had never been frightened in his life, yet he still managed to keep his professionalism from years of work as an officer.  “I’d say judging by the blood on your clothes that you killed him, you sick bastard; must’ve been much of the same with the other people huh?”
    “My, my, a cop that understands what’s been going on, such a surprise, although that was not completely my handiwork.  I have my followers to thank for that, and unfortunately they made a bit of a mess of things, which I am finally cleaning up,” the man said.  “You shouldn’t be here either, and for that I cannot allow you to leave.  A new era dawns, and you shall be the first witness to it.”  With this, the man smiled, a smile that sent shivers through McClane's body.
    “I’m not going to ask again!”  McClane shouted, gaining newfound courage.  “You’re still flesh and bones as far as I can see!  Hands where I can see them, on the floor now!”  He held his firearm steady now, his finger on the trigger.  The mysterious person brought their arm up as if they had a weapon, and he instinctively pulled the trigger in rapid succession.  There were flashes of light from the muzzle as he emptied the clip, hearing a dry click as he realized all fifteen rounds had seemingly hit their target.  He had not fallen.
    Instead of collapsing to the ground from multiple chest shots, the man still stood, his arm extended, and it was then that Jack saw a soft glowing hemisphere around the man.  Even now, he could make out the bullets hanging in the air, deformed as if they had hit something solid in mid-air.
    “How…why…” he said, realizing this person had just stopped projectiles of lead going two thousand feet per second as if it were nothing.  “That’s not possible…”
    “Oh, but it is… did you think I hadn’t studied the modern world?  There are powers that be that some individuals can use that render technology useless, fool; then again, judging by what I have read, you would be clueless to this knowledge.”
    “That’s impossible!” he shouted.
    “Oh, far from it.  Now since you were permitted to strike the first blow, allow me to try mine,” he said, smiling sinisterly.  The hell you are, McClane thought as he reached into his pocket and got out another magazine, popping it in and chambering the shell, ready to fire again.  I won’t miss again!  He thought angrily as he raised his sights, but found himself unable to pull the trigger; it was if it had jammed, as he tried desperately to force the gun to fire.
    “Your weapon is ineffective,” The man said quietly, his eyes now just narrow slits.  “Fiero manus manilius,” he spoke, then he pointed his hand at McClane.
    McClane shouted out in pain, dropping his gun and flashlight, nursing a blackened hand.  The gun had turned molten hot for a second, for reasons unbeknownst to him.  Now he was wounded and as he tried to grab the gun again, it burned his hand, as he shouted out in pain.  This isn’t possible, it just can’t be!  He thought in a panic.
    “You should have never become involved in this, you know.  You will see, before you die, what it is you face, and what I shall usher forth upon the end of this night.  Tonight, those who have the gift of ages old shall hear the call of awakening, a call that none shall ignore.  This time, there shall be no heroes to rise to stop me.”
    With these words, the man began to change, taking a form of sleek ebony, an incarnation of death.  As the figure rushed forward towards McClane, he realized with utter despair, that he was going to die.
    God help us, they do exist--
A single scream pierced the early fall sky, and then was consumed by the night.  Then, the sirens of trucks wailed towards a raging inferno, which had already erased all passing of the dark figure…


I.
Shattered Dreams

    “Never!”
    I sprung upright in my bed, having wakened from a terrible dream, and then realized that I was alright.  There was no monster looming before me, with death transpired in its eyes…it was only a dream.  As my eyes focused in the darkness of my bedroom, I had the mind to reach for my glasses on the desk to my left.  Still my shaking hands refused to calm down, I fumbled to put them on my face, sweating profusely in my tee shirt and shorts.  Still breathing deeply, I tried to remember what was in the dream, why I had been so afraid…and at the same time, brave.  Unfortunately, it was already fading from memory, like smoke in the wind; Turning my alarm clock to face me, I saw it was half past two in the morning, and it was a school night.  I groaned softly as I settled back into my bed, realizing that I’d never get back to sleep.
    Congratulations Drenar.  This is one of the prime reasons why it is unwise to consume copious amounts of caffeine right before bed time, I always have something wake me up, I thought as I sighed softly and turning on my side.  Four hours before I’d have to get up and go to school.  At this rate I might as well just stay awake, as I focused on what the dream had been about.  The meaning of it was lost to me, just like every other dream I had had recently.  The only thing I remembered was the whispers…of voices that came from nowhere.
    I heard motion further down the hall, and as I listened, it was in fact my brother, Tobias Rashalda.  He was talking softly to himself, though why I could not understand.  He was fifteen years old, but was extremely strong-headed and proved to be quite aggressive at getting what he wanted.  Talking to himself (or consoling himself, as I believed) wasn’t a typical thing.
    As I pressed my ear against the wall, I could audibly detect Tobias muttered nonsensical, disjointed sentences… strange things.  As I had put it at one point to my parents during his frequent foul moods, ‘Too many video games and late night Chinese food will do anyone some serious ill.’
    Hearing the padding of feet leaving the hallway and back into his room, I pulled the bed sheets back over myself, in an attempt to return to sleeping.  But, peaceful rest did not come to me; not this night, only questions with no answers.  What had I been dreaming that had been so shocking, I had woken up nearly shouting? 
    A path of two choices: to accept the inevitable, or take a stand, I thought as I sat up and began thinking slowly, trying to grasp at straws that kept slipping through my fingers.  My memory of the dream was gone for now: I couldn’t remember much else at the moment.  All I could remember was a choice: a choice between two paths.
    All I did was lie there, thinking about my dream that even now was no clearer than it had been when I had awoken.  Perhaps it never would be. 
    The sound of my alarm clock was the next conscious thing I heard the next day, as I lay in bed, pondering whether I should just shut it off and try to get five more minutes of sleep.  I hate school; I could’ve graduated early and been off to college and seeking my future rather than bore myself to death day after day, I thought as I finally decided to get up.  Before I got out of bed though, I heard something on the news that caught my attention.
    “And in local news today, a residential home is in flames today, with two departments currently on the scene putting out the last of the fire.  According to reports, the building caught fire sometime around two in the morning, and no cause as of yet has been determined.  Unfortunately this story is a sad one, as two bodies were found within the home, unable to escape the fire; local police believe one is the owner of the house, Dr. Jack Wilson, a noted geologist; the other person is still unidentified.”
    People should be more careful, I thought to myself, stumbling over to the alarm clock.  My foster parents, being paranoid twenty-four hours a day, jumped every time the house creaked or made unusual sounds; then again, with my brother around, anything would make a person nervous.
    Clicking the alarm button off, I shambled slowly to my door, quite aware that I needed more sleep than I was allotting myself.  I hate mornings…why can’t they start school later, perhaps when everyone is actually awake?  I thought in a grumbling manner.  I knew several friends who drank coffee in the school cafeteria to stay awake; then again, they shouldn’t stay out so late at night.  Oh well.  At least I don’t have to start as early as my friends in Ohio, they get to school for seven in the morning, sharp.
    Still, I wasn’t bothered by it too much; a brief trip to the shower woke me up to realize the weekend was coming up, and then I’d have some free time to enjoy myself.  Here I am, seventeen years, and I still don’t have a car or a part-time job…shame on me, I thought as I turned the faucet off and found my clothes on the towel hanger.  The problem lay within the fact that I was adventuresome, and Opechea Falls was… adventure-less.  There wasn’t much to do at all, unless you counted cow tipping or hanging out in the center of town, and even then that wasn’t too much fun.
    “Drenar, could you hurry up?” I heard my brother say.  “We’re going to be late for school if you don’t get moving!  Other people have to do stuff in there too!”
    “Alright, alright already,” I sighed, grabbing my stuff and walking by brother, who looked dead-tired this morning.  I paced back into my room, unsure of what to do next; I didn’t really feel hungry, but I knew that I always had a later lunch schedule on Thursdays.   A glance to my right caused me to turn and look at the mirror near my desk, just gazing at my reflection.  What I found was what I always saw when I had days like this: a spiky brown-blonde haired, green eyed, five foot eight teenager and an expression of perpetual searching.  Okay mirror…what am I looking at?  More importantly, what am I looking for?
    And as I looked at the mirror, no response came.  It’s official: I’m a geek for life.  Here I am staring at a mirror that shows the same thing every time I look at it, I thought as I shook my head.  Something was caught in my memory, the remnants of the dream I'd had, and I simply couldn't ignore it.  What a weird dream last night…I usually don't dream that vividly, I thought as I headed downstairs in jeans and black shirt, seeing my brother already digging into a bowl of cereal.  “Hey Tobias, what’s happening?”
    “Very little,” he said casually, not even bother to shift his attention to me as he shoveled food into his mouth.  He looked relatively tired, but then, that wasn’t at all unusual; I swear the kid was an insomniac or something, because every day he had baggy eyes and acted sluggish until about eleven.  “How about you?”
    “Weird dream… But there are more important matters in the world, like the fact that I need sustenance,” I replied as I pulled out a box of cereal from the cabinet, noting that someone had torn the bag and it was most likely the cereal would be stale.  “Where’s Dave?”
    “Getting ready for work I guess,” he said as I poured myself a bowl and got a bottle of juice from the fridge.  “Same old, same old.  Nothing changes around here, does it?”
    “Yeah, I know the feeling…don’t you just wish the mornings were more dynamic?” I asked, crunching into the cereal with the slight surprise of it still being fresh…for once.  “You know, livelier, and unpredictable?”
    “No,” he replied.
    “Wimp,” I retorted.
      “We are all going to die of boredom, if you need to know.”
    “Thrilling,” I muttered, not really wanting to hear what he had to say because it was probably true.  Then again, I’d rue the day when he ate his own words.  “Do you know I turn eighteen in two months, and I don’t even have a drivers’ license?”
    “That just reeks of badness,” he said, as if he could further emphasize that he cared about nothing and no one until he was fully awake.  “But there are worse things that could happen.”
    “Like what?”
    “Plenty of things.  Like the fact that we’re out of coffee, and I need caffeine pretty badly,” he said.  “Not a lot of sleep last night; paper due for English class and I got to bed pretty late, what about you?”
    “Oh, you know, just reading and stuff,” I said as I took a swig of my juice.  "Got anything interesting planned today?"
    "Nah, it's a weekday genius; we as teenagers only have the privilege to run amuck on weekends, as in anytime after six o'clock on Fridays," he commented.
    "Any day can be Friday Tobias, you just have to be a little inventive," I smirked.  "Anyhow, we need to get going, or we’ll be late for school.”
    “And that would be a bad thing?” he said, raising an eyebrow.
    “Yes, school is good, we enjoy our daily bouts of boredom,” I smirked, as he chuckled for a few seconds.
Last year of high school, and what fun times it has been; but where do I go from here?  I thought as we headed out the door, a short while later, walking down the road to the bus stop.  I had my own reasons to think there was some truth to his words, as in a sense, I was extremely lacking in good luck.  I had a bit of a tough time a few years back that I tried to forget every time they came up, but to no avail.  Things were better now, but for some reason that failed to shine through for many years, I instinctively thought that sooner or later the veil would be lifted and I would realize just how easy I had it.
    Nice day, I thought as I looked at the sunrise coming over the mountains, feeling the warmth of the suns rays.  It didn’t help much, but it was enough to lift my spirits so that I could keep going, if for anything, to just make it through the boredom of classes, and hope I could think of something constructive to do when I got back home.


More on the way once I fix it to go into the forums...
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|7172
Pretty good stuff mate.
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Magius5.0
Member
+106|6837|UMass Amherst
II.
A Lingering Omen


    “Mr. Rashalda, are you going to answer the question?”
    “Huh?  Oh, er…yes, Mrs. Barton,” I replied, suddenly quite aware that I was in chemistry class, and my fellow students were staring at me in odd ways.
    “How many times have I told you that you’re in a classroom, and that you can’t doze off at any time!  What if that mixture was nitroglycerin and you were dozing off when you were mixing it!  I doubt you would regard that with little interest.”
    “Er…yeah,” I replied, hoping to avoid another lecture about zoning out in class.  I’ll zone out when you’re not looking next time, I thought sarcastically as she sighed.  She hadn’t caught me off guard today.  Yet.
    “Well, keep up with us, or you’ll have no idea what to do when we start!” she snapped, turning back to the beakers and burner plate on one of the lab tables.  Sighing softly to myself, I quickly turned back to the task on hand, measuring various powdery samples for mass.  I could have cared less.  Looking up, I noticed Kristy Sharon looking in a similar disgusted fashion at Mrs. Barton, a glare that said enough that it didn’t take much thinking to figure out what it meant.
    “Isn’t she such an obsessive perfectionist?” I whispered her, all too aware that teachers have far better hearing than one would think.
    “Yes, isn’t it annoying?  It’s not like she is the most perfect person on the face of the earth; that reservation goes to my former math teacher,” Kristy replied, rolling her eyes behind her glasses.  “I’d love for her to screw up her experiments someday, maybe put in the wrong chemicals from a mislabeled bottle.  You know, like mixing up the sulfuric acid and the ammonia, that kind of thing.”
    “I’d like to have the school stay in one piece, thanks,” I said, then absentmindedly picked up a beaker of lactic acid.  “As much as I love trouble sometimes, it probably would not be worth cleaning up the mess.”
    A shattering glass brought me out of my conversation mid-step, and everyone, including myself, turned to see what happened.  Paul Halsmith had broken another beaker in class.  That, or the school board had forgotten to buy Paul-safe glassware this year, he was generally a complete klutz…I had a feeling this was not going to be a pretty scene, judging by the look in Mrs. Barton’s eyes; she had been rather irritated all class, and I was all but certain she had found someone to make an example out of.  Must’ve been a bad teacher conference week, I thought casually.
    “Paul, that is the second beaker you’ve broken in the past two weeks; you’re like the theorized bull in the China shop, if I ever saw one!”  Her rapid-fire response to his clumsiness, I admit, was rather unforgiving; it probably hadn’t occurred to her yet that the glassware sucked at being heated, it made it extremely fragile; the things were hard as iron though, when it came to dropping them.
    “Well, er, you see, the glass already had a crack in it, you see, and it must have shattered when it…uh…got heated too quickly…” Paul snorted, trying to desperately find a way out of the mess he had fallen into.  I had a feeling it was not going to be fun for him.
    “Detention Thursday afternoon, in my room,” Mrs. Barton said, “For your tone.  I should also make you pay for all the ones you’ve broke, but maybe you’ll learn from this,” She snuffed, turning her back to him, as if repulsed by his presence.
    Still gripping the beaker, I watched Mrs. Barton walking by, absolutely disgusted by how cruel she was.  No hero around to stop her evil ways, heh, I thought sarcastically. 
    What?  Where am I?
    Suddenly I became aware of the cracking of glass, and I looked down to my hand at my beaker.  Or I tried to, because it was now smashed on the floor.  Nice one, Drenar! I thought to myself, since Mrs. Barton was already in a foul mood, I would likely be stuck in detention with Paul as well.  How pleasant.
    “What happened this time, Mr. Rashalda?” she asked me in a rather irritating tone.  “And please, don’t tell me you broke it on the Bunsen burner this time.”
    “Uh, it slipped from my hand…almost nicked myself too, shoddy worksmanship,” I said quickly.  I heard a few people laughing in the background, and I hoped they weren’t making the situation worse.
    “Alright, I’ll give you the benefit of doubt this time, Mr. Rashalda… just make sure no one gets cut by the broken glass,” she said, not even bothering to give me detention; I was spared a most grievous experience for the day.  Shrugging my shoulders in acknowledgement, I grabbed the dustpan Paul had just finished using, and started sweeping up my own mess.  As I swept the glass into the bin, I noticed Kristy still peering at me, as if trying to look into my soul.  Rather than live with this knowledge and wonder what she could possibly be thinking, I turned to face her.
    “It’s just broken glass, not a container of Uranium 238,” I said jokingly as she stopped staring.
    “You zoned out completely for a minute Drenar; I was wondering if you were having some sort of episode; you okay?”
    “Fine, I think,” I said.  “Not a lot of sleep lately, but that’s it.”
    “Well…if you say so,” she shrugged, turning back to her work, leaving me to wonder if I had zoned out.  I really need more sleep at night, I thought silently, then I decided I needed to know what she wanted to say.
    “Okay, I’ll bite.  What’s bugging you?” I asked.
    “Well Drenar…the lack of sleep lately, you normally come into this class all energetic, ready for the day,” she said.  “Lately, you’ve been kind of off, and yes, I sound odd that I note these kinds of details, but it’s true.”
    “Can you keep a deep, dark secret?” I joked.
    “If it involves anything that I don’t care to hear about, then no,” she said, shrugging softly.
“I’ve had dreams lately, on and off, that keep waking me up,” I said.  “It’s kind of irritating to be honest, but I manage; it’s not like I’m being kept up all night.  The weird part I don’t get is that sometimes, when I wake up, it still feels like I’m…in the dream.” I said, finishing up the cleaning and tossing the broken fragments in the trash.  “But that’s it.  And I probably have too much caffeine for my own good, so I guess that could also be a cause.”
    “Maybe,” she said.  “By the way, you going to finish that experiment with me or not?”
    “I would, but it’s going to take me another fifteen minutes just to catch up,” I sighed, and I was surprised as she slid me her notes.  “On the other hand…more like five minutes,” I said, as we continued like nothing had occurred.

*    *    *

    “It’s your move, Drenar.”
    Is it possible? Perhaps it is no coincidence…no one has ever been able to.
    “Drenar?”
    “Wha…huh?” I mumbled, snapping back to reality, only to find myself looking at a chessboard.  “Is it my turn already James?”
    “It’s been your turn for the last five minutes, Drenar,” replied my somewhat moody friend.  “You’ve been staring at that board as if you expected the pieces to move themselves.  Are you trying to developing telekinesis to compensate for your lack of knowledge of this game, or are you truly at a loss to make your next move?”
    “Oh, yeah I guess I’ll move my knight to D-3,” I said, finally deciding on a move that would set him up for a grand slam in a couple of turns.  My friend James had always been a nerd, and will always be a nerd for the rest of his life, but it is fun to hang out with him.  We play chess in the school cafeteria every afternoon, in an all-out war to determine just who the better chess-player is.  We’re fairly even, so that makes the task all the more difficult in determining a solid victor.  As I looked at his face, with the crooked glasses, the dark brown eyes, and closely cropped hair.  I suppose he’ll never have trouble finding a great career; he is a certifiable genius.  He also had a habit of saying some incredibly blunt things when the occasion called for it.
    “So James, how’s your sister doing?”  I asked inquisitively, as I did every day.  I had met her through James several years ago, and we had also become good friends.  While I was thinking about her, I could imagine her right now… brown-blonde hair, sitting at her desk patiently, with those gray eyes sweeping across the textbook at a smooth pace.  Maybe it’s luck, maybe its destiny, I don’t know… all I do know is that she is one of the smartest, wisest, most beautiful people I have ever known.  And what a horrible romanticist I sound like, I thought sarcastically.
    “You going to listen, or are you going to daydream all day?  They have philosophy class down the hall for that,” James said sarcastically as I dozed back into reality.  “She’s same as always, busy over in the agri-science wing.  Angela always did adore animals, you know,” he said as he moved one of his pawns, putting my knight on F-5 in jeopardy, a move that I had anticipated.  “She’s currently working on a report describing how vital it is to save endangered species, based on abstract effects and…oh, why don’t you ask her yourself, if you’re so interested in it.”
    “Every time I try to call your house for her, some particular brother is busy playing computer games online.  Tell me, my dear Watson, how do you solve that problematic predicament?” I joked, using my bishop to take the pawn on G-4.  “I suppose I will see her at lunch tomorrow…she had something to do today anyhow.”
    “I don’t know, Mr. Holmes,” he replied, pushing his waiting queen to take my bishop in return…A necessary sacrifice, on my part.  “Perhaps you should try a telegram.”
    “Telegrams are so nineteenth century,” I argued, moving my knight on F-5 to D-6.   “Would it kill you guys to get an internet connection that isn’t measured in bytes per second?  The government is not out to get you.  Read my bits: get broadband.”
    “Sure, so I can give the government even more bandwidth to have them monitor my every action?” James said, now aware that his king was slowly being boxed in.  In an attempt to stall my attack, he moved his rook on C-8 to C-6, now threatening my knight.  A wise move, but it would only delay the inevitable.  “They’re just waiting out there, very patiently, waiting for me to say something distinctly nasty, and then bam!  I’ll be in Guantanamo bay as a hostile enemy combatant with no rights and a very grim forty years in prison with no explanation.”
    “Or, you’re over-reacting again, because I just owned you this match,” I said in a calm manner, moving my queen to take his pawn on A-7, supported by my own rook on A-4.  “Checkmate, James,” I said, a slow grin appearing on my face, due to the fact that I had outsmarted him for once.
    “Yeah, so you won…I still beat you the last three games,” he snorted.  “Hey Drenar, I have a question…and this sounds kind of redundant, but how did you ever get a name like Drenar?”
    “Eh?  What brings that up?” I asked.
    “My random question of the day,” he replied.  “I’ve known you for like…cripes, forever, and I still haven’t figured out where your name comes from.”
    “It’s kind of odd, really,” I said, “but since you asked so nicely, I’ll tell you.  It’s a name that my mom came up with when they were creating Dungeons and Dragons characters one day, and since mom was due to have me in a month, that’s the name they decided on.  Dad said it was supposed to come from the language of the elves, meaning ‘warrior of courage’ or something sappy like that.”
    “Ha ha ha, they really said that?” he said, not even attempting to stifle his laughter.  “Man Drenar, I didn’t realize that your parents were that geeky.”
    “You wouldn’t, considering that they…you know,” I said, and he quickly stopped laughing, getting the subtle hint.  “It’s all I have to remember them by: my name.”
    “Yeah, that sucked, what happened that day,” he said solemnly.  “Sorry I laughed.  Anyhow I got to split or I’ll be late for my next class, which is all the way across the entire school,”
   “Same here,” I said, looking at my watch and realizing I had history class next with one of my more preferable teachers.  On my way out, I looked upwards to the skylights and the second floor, noting how nice a day it was.
    Is this possible, after so long?  No one else has…
    “Who said that?” I asked, receiving a puzzled look from a few people around me, as if they had heard nothing.  That was weird, I thought as I headed out the door.
    When I rushed into my classroom just seconds before the bell rang, almost everyone was crowding into the door; no one can resist just rushing the bell, except me.  I am usually the first person in class, so this irritated me to some degree.  Quietly taking a seat, I turned my attention to Dr. Jeffery Nimbul, a jolly old man who loved his job of teaching young minds for the future.  He teaches in a rather humorous manner, aloof and high-spirited, and that is why history has remained one of my favorite classes.    Currently we had been studying the dark ages, roughly after the fall of the Roman Empire to the fourteenth century.
    “All right, all right everybody, settle down, we have a lot to do in such a little time… as usual,” he said, slyly.  “This is the curse of history…if I went day-by-day account of history, we’d never catch up to the present; history is always shaping itself, and it’d take years to review what happened even today,” he added, in an attempt at bad humor; a few people groaned.
    “Now, instead of doing things by the book,” he said, tossing a text behind his desk, and I swear I heard something break, “We’ll do something different, as opposed to memorizing the boring lives of very dead people that no one will care if you know about.  I can tell by your enthusiasm that you’d love to do this,” he said, as a few people cheered lazily.  “Due to the lack of creditable records during the dark ages, the commoners’ life still remains mostly unaccounted for during the eleventh through the fourteenth centuries, especially in Europe.  What we do know is that the lives of those people were fairly simplistic, and by that standard, were susceptible to believing many things that today would seem utterly ridiculous.”
    “Now, can anyone tell me some of the folk tales or myths that may have affected the thinking of the average persons’ life?  Go ahead, fire away; this is a debatable topic, no one’s hear to dispute your opinion,” Dr. Nimbul said, slowly pacing down the aisles of seats.  A few hands went up, willing participants, who always led the classroom discussions.  Huh, I wonder where he’s going to lead us with this discussion, I thought as I made scribbles on my notes and attempted to make half-decent anime of knights slaying evil.  The only thing I really accomplished was wasting time…and ending up with a few lousy scribbles.
    “Go ahead, Ryan, speak your mind,” Nimbul said, pointing a finger at a tall, lanky kid sitting in the corner.  Aside from being six feet and several inches tall, he wore nothing but black clothes almost every single day, and wore chain mail bracers.  The part that nearly made me laugh was the fact that his shirt was stylized and had the words ‘I’m a goth, don’t mess with my demons’ printed on it.  Despite the intimidating outward appearance, he was a very intelligent person with a taste for the theatre and for acting.  One could say that for him, life was just another act on a very big stage.
    “Well, according to many cultures, the medieval ages were plagued by apparent acts of god, and equally frightening creatures such as dragons, manticores, giants, and the like.  Records of this exist, such as Beowulf’s’ encounter with Grendal and his mother, and the dragon that killed him, and many other stories that we all heard about as kids.  None of those stories have been proven utterly true… at least, not yet,” he added in a melodramatic tone.   
    Let’s hope they’re not, or life just might get interesting, I thought as I tried to pay attention; it was one in the afternoon and I was only thinking about leaving.
    “That’s a good start Ryan, but how do myths come into existence?” Nimbul slyly asked taking his turn at being the inquisitor.
    “All myths are, generally speaking, rooted in the basis of fact, no matter how ridiculous they may seem.  The point is, they are what they are: myths, nothing more than fantasy tales to keep children’s imaginations sharp; many of these stories are based on largely exaggerated eyewitness accounts, and more likely than not misinterpreted during the predictable chain of people who heard it and passed it on to the next listener.  For instance, many people who have claimed to have seen mermaids have later been disproved when it was observed that, on occasion, dolphins stick their heads above water, and appeared very similar to what they described,” Ryan said.
    “Very good Ryan.  Anyone else?  Don’t be shy, we’re supposed to be having fun today,” Nimbul chuckled, pointing to a girl with dark brown hair in the front.  “Tell me, Jennifer, why would people misinterpret these sort of commonplace things?”
    “A lack of common sense maybe, or the fact that religion still dominated the way of life back then.  Or, people wanted to draw attention to themselves,” she added, causing a few people to joke around that they had just seen a griffon fly overhead the previous day.  If anyone mentions Hogwarts, I’m going to laugh uncontrollably, I thought with an amused look on my face.
    As all this was unfolding in the classroom, I was dozing off again, a habit of late that has started to surprise even myself. But, I keep having unusual dreams at night.  This last one had been the strangest of them all; I had this uneasy feeling in my heart, as though something was…different.  I didn’t know how, or why, but I somehow just knew.
    “Drenar?”
    “Oh, sorry… brain’s turning off, it’s quite stifling in here,” I said quickly as I snapped back to my senses.  “The answer was…five?”
    “In math maybe, but good guess,” Mr. Nimbul said, evoking a few laughs as I tried to shrink from view, which was virtually impossible considering I was near the back row as everyone turned to look.  “Actually, there were about five or so different reportings in the last year in England of people seeing some sort of flying creature at long distance.  The same thing, here in the United States, and in Europe all throughout the continent, always in rural areas.  It’s interesting to think that people make these sightings even today, when science and forensics have replaced myth and legend with fact…or fiction.”
    “Yeah, what I meant to say exactly,” I said, recovering quickly.  In the corner of my eye, I saw someone shaking their head, as if he knew something to the contrary. 
    “Mr. Deshandrea, if you will,” I heard Nimbul say as he raised his hand.
    Nicholas Deshandrea…when’s the last time I actually saw him say anything in class? I thought as I looked at the silvery blond kid who had raised his hand.  He had transferred to the school about two years who always kept to himself, and almost passed for the stereotypical surfer type.  We had chatted I think at most, two or three times in that span of time.  I didn’t know much about him, other than what I could inference from his actions.  No one else knew much about him either; he was generally extremely shy.
    “I don’t think it’s really a question of proof or disproof, I think it’s a question of interpretation,” he said as he spoke in the soft voice he had.
    I seriously doubt that, I thought.
    “True, true… but there have been some undisputed things like a sighting of what allegedly was some sort of UFO over Mexico city several years ago; no one can deny the fact that thousands saw it,” Nimbul said, trying to keep the topic interesting.  “Imagine though, for a moment, if half of everything peasants believed was true: that there were monsters and demons amongst the people of the world…wouldn’t that be an interesting blow to our history class?  Everything we knew, everything we thought was true, was nothing more than a convenient lie to cover the truth…oh wait, that’s the Matrix movie…sorry, I keep forgetting this isn’t sci-fi class.  Imagine the possibilities… interesting, isn’t it?”
    Somehow, the only interesting thing that happened was me getting shivers up my spine, and everyone else laughing at his bad joke made it worse.
    “It’s true that we often are biased against what we don’t know,” Nicholas said, sitting up in his chair with renewed interest.  “It also explains the fear of science during the early days of the renaissance…did they not imprison Galileo in his home for his beliefs and his astronomy calculations?”
    “Someone has done their reading for today, for once,” Nimbul said, and this got a few half-hearted laughs.  “Who else Mr. Deshandrea?”
    “Copernicus, a few other notable names, shall I continue?” he asked.
    “No, that’s quite fine, but you’ve raised an interesting point: back then, they were regarded as heretics.  Today, they are often regarded as the great grandfathers of science abroad: in the end, despite the criticism they received, they were proven correct, and we recognize them for that.”
    “So perhaps in the end, those people who spoke about strange creatures, or unexplainable phenomena, may one day be proven correct as well?” Nicholas said.
    “Perhaps,” Nimbul said, and I started dozing off once again in class, not even whole-heartedly paying attention; it was probably due to my lack of sleep the night before.
    “So, what about magic?  Why are there so many references to Merlin and Arthur in pre-Chaucer England?” someone asked some time later, as I sat with my head on the desk, watching the clock minute hand slowly move.  It was almost time for class to end, and then the day would be over.
    “Again, there are no proven theories, but much of our literature and surviving documents speak of Merlin as a wizard of unimaginable power, along with other people who were called, how does one say it, wielders of the elements.  This is all of course unproven, and once more I lean towards the fact that they’ve never been proven…scientifically speaking.”
    “The truth is out there, someone go find it,” someone in the back of the room joked.
    “Thank you George, but I’ll leave that to the science fiction club,” Nimbul muttered.  I however was thinking something different.  Maybe the truth will find me.  What a day that would be.   "Same thing for dragons too, I suppose?"
    "Actually Mr. Nimbul, there's more truth to dragon sightings than you'd think," George interrupted, and I groaned; here he was once again, being the complete nerd that he was trying to prove his crazy theories.  I had heard at least a few of them, including that the Area 51 was moved to our town; I had quickly stopped paying attention.  “Even to this very day, there are some fossils that have yet to be identified.  And let's not forget all the sightings that people claim to this very day, which you yourself mentioned."
    That's pretty much when I stopped paying attention to him and the rest of class, only blindly taking a few notes before the day ended.  I'm so glad that all lectures aren't that bizarre; if they were, I might have gone mad a long time ago.
    Traveling by way of the school bus is not exactly one of the highlights of my day, but it did give me some time to review my lectures on most days.  The younger students on the bus were exceptionally noisy however, as if trying to prove that they were the loudest, most obnoxious people around; then again, they didn’t even need to prove that anymore; it was a given.  I instead concentrated today on watching the landscape fly by; the ride home is like a scene out of a national park, with a few mentionable sites such as the large lake nearby, shadowed by mountains on its western shore.  The cows grazed quietly in a nearby field, oblivious to the frequent visitors and traffic going by at blurring speeds.  If this were the entire world, it would be almost perfection.  Except for the fact that this town is as boring as sin, I thought sarcastically.
    Turning back and with notebook in hand, I began reviewing my notes from history class, neatly written but otherwise lacking in any sense of organization.  One particular note caught my attention, one I had scribbled furiously as someone had shared their thoughts in the classroom.
    “Although it is theorized that most dragons were cruel and evil creatures, this has been timelessly disputed.  Some in fact believe that good dragons existed, to protect mankind; however, this is only a myth, a legend told by grandparents.  Some say that they have entirely disappeared from the world, to keep the people from verifying those legends…”
    Why had I written that?  I must have been dozing off again, not paying attention to what it was I wrote, I thought.  The only thing I remembered was that the strange kid named Nicholas had said it; why I had written it down in the first place baffled me.
    Turning once again to face out the window, I saw that my bus stop -was approaching rapidly.  Grabbing my notes and stuffing them back into my bag, I walked down the aisle without incident from the younger, more obnoxious kids sitting in the front.  My brother, who got off first, had this grim look on his face that told me something had gone amiss for him during the day.  We didn’t say much at all to each other, because there usually isn’t anything worth mentioning.  Ever since my brother had entered high school, I had felt distanced from him.  Pushing aside all other thoughts, I instead listened to the wind rustling through the trees, swaying ever so gently in the otherwise motionless world I saw around me.  Finally, I decided I had enough of the silence; I had to know what my brother was thinking.
    “So Tobias, how was school today?” I asked innocently, breaking the silence like one would break a glass window.
    “Same as always… crappy,” he said, still avoiding gazing at me as we walked beside each other.  “Yeah, Mrs. Riley is such a stickler about essay formats, even though my method is probably better.”
    “Tobias, you can’t be such a lone-wolf all of the time; people have leaders so others can follow them, it’s as simple as that,” I said, trying to ease the mood he had fallen into.  “You know, in this big thing we call life.”
    “Heh, this big thing we call life kinda sucks at the moment; time for a change of venue, maybe I should start leading and stop following,” he said, then stopped as he started coughing.
    “You alright Tobias?” I said, noting that he did look a little more pale then usual.  Between coughs, he gave a wave of his hand to show that he was fine.
    “Just a little tired today, might be a cold coming on,” he shrugged, brushing aside my remarks as if they had little meaning to him.
    “We barely talk anymore, you know; I doubt you’d figure this, but I do care what you’re doing, and who you’re hanging out with every great now and then,” I said, as he raised an eyebrow.  “So, anything wrong?”
    “Nope.  Fit as a fiddle, except for the cold,” he said, killing the conversation before it could even start.  I opened my mouth to say something more, but quickly shut it; it wouldn’t matter; he didn’t really care.
    Figures; I ask him what’s wrong, and he gives me the cold shoulder.  Why couldn’t he make this slightly easier to figure out?   I wondered.

*    *    *

    We came home to an empty house that day, as both of our foster parents were out working.  Our real parents had died in suspect car accident several years ago; I didn’t even find out until partway through the school day, when one of my parents’ friends picked me up and took me and my brother to the hospital.  After that, Diane and Dave Matthews, my parents’ long-time friends who didn’t have any kids themselves, adopted us, and we kept the family name.  It was the only real thing that I could really relate to my past now, and I still missed them, even after this many years.  I hate this silence, I thought some time later as I was reading through my calculus book in my room.  Well, relative silence.  I don’t know how many times I’ve pulled the plug out of Tobia’s radio, or hidden his favorite CD’s of demonic music…or rock, whichever it is.
    Closing my Calculus book, I sat back in my swivel chair, taking a short breather from the obscenely difficult problems. “I’d rather run through traffic than do these right now.  What’s Mr. Salazar’s problem, anyhow?” I muttered, tossing the textbook aside; I’d get back to it later.  Realizing that I had to check some things online, I whirled around in my chair to my computer and accessed the internet, looking for my e-mail.  Various bits of junk mail littered the screen, all of which I scrapped; it’s amazing how desperate people must be to think that there’s a person out there interested in armchairs with built-in cup-holders.  I finally found some relevant mail, a news attachment from the local TV station.  As I opened it up, I could see a picture of a burnt out building, somewhere near the outskirts of town.
    According to local authorities, the two bodies found within the housing that burned down last night have been identified as local police officer Brian McClane and Jack Walson, both residents of the area.  McClane, a veteran of the police force, was found within the home, severely burned and pronounced dead at the scene.  Investigators believe that a gas leak is the cause of the.  Currently the area is scheduled for clean-up, as the families mourn for their loss…
    Very strange, I thought for a moment, pausing before reading the less depressing news around town.  Nothing that interested me in the least, and I wasn’t surprised either.  Gazing blindly at the screen as if something else was there, I noticed I had an unopened e-mail on the bottom of the screen; without thinking I opened it.  It read:

    Thank you for releasing an utmost contagious virus…I will now melt your hard drive and steal all your precious personal info prior to do doing so and go laughing all the way to the bank.  Ciao!

    -Tobias (^_^)

    “I swear I’m going disown him,” I muttered under my breath as I heard him laughing downstairs, apparently aware that I had triggered his instant reply back to him.  Storming down the stairs as though the heavens themselves were collapsing, I glared at my brother, who was no longer laughing, but suppressing loud coughs.  “You aren’t funny, you know that,” I said, unmoved by his pathetic antics.  “Come on, bro, I have more important things to do than read junk e-mail that you send me on a nearly daily basis: don’t you have anything better to do with your time?”
    “It was just a joke, Drenar…  live a little on the wild side, laugh at something for once; after all, no one’s around forever,” he added in a dark, sinister tone that was most uncharacteristic of him.  He didn’t look like himself, either; his eyes were bloodshot, his face lacking that perpetual smirk that he always wore.
    “We may not be around forever, I’ll give you that Tobias, but I at least will make use of my time, you know, constructively,” I said slowly, hoping my words would have some effect on him.  “Look man, I’m out there trying to save the world one homework problem at a time.  I’d like to have some peace, please.”
“Right,” he said with a sarcastic drawl, then shrugged and turned off the computer.  He didn’t care at all, just like I figured.  He’s just so full of hatred and contempt for others, it’s a wonder that anyone can tolerate him for more than a few minutes, I thought as I watched him walk up the stairs, thinking back several years ago when I’d first met him.  He wasn’t a real brother, my parents had adopted him when I was four and he was about a year old.  He had been bullied for the longest time, and I wasn’t there to help him out; he insisted on fixing the problem himself… usually the wrong way that only lengthened the taunting rounds.  I wasn’t going to do anything either: if he wanted to solve it himself, I wouldn’t get in the way.
    A short while later, I heard a car door slam, and I could see my foster mother, Diane, walking up the sidewalk.  I paid little attention as I sat back down at my desk, working on some pointless reflective essay on some historically vague author that wouldn’t matter to me in the five minutes it would take to finish the stupid assignment.  As I heard footsteps in the kitchen, I could hear the scurrying of furry-footed animals running down the stairs, waiting for their feeding at precisely five in the afternoon.  Same old, same old, I thought to myself as I flicked off the light switch and headed downstairs.
    “Hey guys, how was school?” I could hear Diane say up the stairs, who, while trying to be a good mother, wasn’t perfect; this routine was old.
    “Eh, fine.  About on par with the day before… and the day before that… and the day before that,” I said, trying not to let my sarcasm get the best of me.  “Is dinner going to be ready at the same time as yesterday?  And the day before that? And—”
    “Half an hour, give or take a day… or two… or even three, based on how many days you want to be specific about,” she said, trying her best to counter my humor.  I could have fallen down the stairs head first and laughed more than I would laugh at her joke.  With the information in mind, I walked back to my room pondering many things…like how a geek like me ever got a girlfriend…

*    *    *

    “Tobias, can you pass the salt?”  I asked, pushing my vegetables around my plate as if I were more or less dissecting a frog.  Begrudgingly, he slid it over to my spot, and then turned back to his own meal with a rather painful look on his face.
    “Tobias, you okay over there?” Diane said, looking at him with a concerned look on her face.  He looked the worse for wear than before, with a wearied expression, as though he had just run a few miles without a breather.
    “Oh, been better…between the two of them, I’d take the opportunity to have my tonsils removed without anesthesia, rather than go to school tomorrow.  I feel completely rotten.”
    “If you feel any worse, then let me know,” she said, sighing as he got up and left the table slowly, staggering up the stairs.  “Poor kid… looked fine this morning.”
    “His temperament wasn’t too good, but then, what else is new,” I said.  “But then, can you blame him?  Especially considering how his luck has sucked so badly since the day he was born…then what happened on that day and…yeah, you get the point,” I said quickly wishing not to open old wounds.  I still had bad dreams of that day on occasion how it seemed only luck had saved my brother and myself from the fate our parents shared.  “He never has been the popular one in school; if I were around more often maybe I could help shake those bullies off him, but I’m not; not much I can do about it either, which makes me mad,” I said, finishing off the last of my meal and placing the dirty dishes in the pile by the sink.  I wasn’t in the mood to finish my homework; I needed to talk to someone, someone I could trust.  As I walked upstairs, I knew in an instant who to call; after shutting my door, I unhooked the phone and hit one of the instant dial buttons, and waited momentarily for the line to connect.
    “Hello?  Someone asked on the other end of the line.
    “Hi Angela, it’s me,” I said to her over the phone, wondering what to say next; it was so strange, talking to her over the air and not being able to see her face, which is how I communicated best.  “You have a few minutes?”
    “Sure; so, what is it that’s been troubling you?” she asked in her soothing voice, giving me a momentary bit of calm in my cluttered mind.
    “Oh, the usual things: fear of persecution, fear of being poor, getting sick, losing to James at chess, that kind of stuff.  My brother’s been acting funny too, but I’ve just kind of let it slide for now: he’s always acting in one strange manner or another,” I said.
    “Yeah, I know what you mean.  I know it’s something else though, besides your brother… I can tell by your tone,” she said.
    You always know what I’m thinking Angela,   I thought, as I thought about last nights dream… pieces of it were coming back to me now for some strange reason, but disjointed and out of order.  “Well, I guess you’re right, but I’ll get to that later.  The problem is, my brother is acting a bit… weirder than usual, and though this sounds like nothing new, I’ve got thoughts to the contrary.”
    “Like what?”
    “He woke up at two in the morning, pretty much traumatized when I heard him pass by my room, then started muttering strange things…nothing out of my boundaries of strange, but…”
    “But what?”
    “Call it over-cautious, but I think something odd is going on.”
    “Overreacting again?” she asked.
    “Maybe I am… if you had as much time to think about things as I do sometimes, you’d think some pretty strange things too,” I said.  “There was just…something odd about it, I don’t know quite how to explain it.”
    “So, what were you doing up that late in the first place?” she asked coolly, as I paused.  Should I tell her what was beginning to emerge in my memory?  As I had begun putting it together, I knew it was going to sound weird… out-right crazy perhaps.  I think I’m going to chicken out from this one, I thought.
    “Drenar?  Something troubling you?”
    “Umm…”
    “You don’t want to say it because you might sound silly…yeah, don’t worry about it,” she said, once again as if she could read my mind.  Darn, I just lost my last avenue of escape, I thought.  Well, why not.
    “Well, I had… a dream last night…a really weird one, and pretty much the reason I woke up.”
    “I thought you never dreamed at night.”
    “Not often, but yeah, I do dream sometimes,” I shrugged.  “It’s probably nothing—”
    “No, it might be interesting to hear Drenar,” she said, and I could tell she was surprised slightly at my coming forth.  “What was it about?”
    “I honestly don’t know myself…I mean I remember some parts about it, but I don’t know what it meant, only that it was something about a choice,” I said, trying to relive the dream as though it were a memory.  “I only remembered it a little while ago while I’ve been sitting here, but I’ll try to tell it as best as I can remember.”
    “Well then, I’m all ears,” she said as I sat back.
      “Where to start…in my dream, I woke to find myself in the middle of forest, near the mountains: I was alone and had nothing with me but the clothes on my back, and it was starting to storm.  I realize that I should seek shelter, so I climb towards the mountains.  Something draws me there, like a magnet that cannot be resisted.  I don’t know what I’m doing or why I’m doing it, and when I get to the top, no one is there.  Nothing I can see, except for a cave.  Lightning is flashing around me, and I think that it might be best for me to seek shelter inside.”
    “Sounds scary,” Angela said.
    “It was…and that’s not the creepy part,” I said, thinking for a second.  “I turn to walk into the caverns…I walk and walk and walk, not caring that I can see nothing.  It is as though something guides my feet inevitably closer to whatever my goal is.  I emerge from the darkness…only to find myself right back where I started, in the howling fury of the storm.  It is then that I hear a voice distantly.  I’ll try and paraphrase it as best as I can remember.”
    “No problem,” she said, sounding amused.
    “Okay,” I said, pausing for a moment as I thought through what little fragments of memory I could recollect.  “So you have made it this far, only to find yourself once again at the same point you left.  That is a shame…so many out there are lost, treading water in circles until they drown.  Many eventually end up passing up that and seek dry land…others seek the deep part of the ocean, to see what is at the bottom.  You are one of those, people, Drenar.”
    “As I hear this in the dream, I am at first confused: I don’t know who is speaking, or more importantly, how they know my name.  I call out to the darkness demanding answers, wanting to know who is speaking.  I turn around and see a mysterious figure dressed in black robes and a cape, blowing in the wind that forces me to squint my eyes.  He speaks again, in the same voice before.
    “So you live up to expectation, Drenar; I thought you would…what you see around you, everything, is but a veil that covers your eyes.  The people you know, the very core of who you are, are veiled.  I am here to help you see what truly is, and what can be, by removing that veil.”
    “I’m getting chills,” Angela said, and I was a bit frightened of it to, just by remembering whatever I could.  “Oh wait, a window’s open,” she added, making me laugh: she knew when to throw in one-liners to completely mess me up, as I continued.  I knew large sections of the dream were still missing, but I chose not to say this.
    “I know Angela, isn’t it weird?” I asked.  “Where was I…he stands there in the rain, as I do…I have questions, he answers some but leaves many open to suggestion.  I begin to suspect that whatever he offers may be something that would change me forever.  I ask him why he would be so interested in me.  He replies, “You have always been uncertain of who you are…do not deny it, you have gone round and round and only ended up right back where you started, as if your very identity was sealed from you.  I have brought you here to unlock a potential within you that you could not envision even within your greatest dreams.  I am here to help you see who you are and what you can attain, Drenar.   All I ask in return is that you consider what I have to offer in the future…you have lived your life without knowing who your friends are, or who you can trust.”
    “By then I wasn’t sure this was a good idea: in fact.  I had this dreading suspicion that whatever he was avoiding talking about must be something dangerous.  That is when I hear a strange voice in my mind, whispering to me that says—”
    “It says to trust only yourself, for that is where the power lies…no amount of his persuasion can force you to become something you don’t want to be,” Angela said, and I almost dropped the phone. 
I sat there for a moment, shocked…it wasn’t possible that she could have guessed that purely at random.  How did she know?   I wondered.
    “Drenar?”
    “Yeah, I’m still here…but you… how did you know what I was going to say?” I asked her.
    “It was… kind of a guess, since I know how you think sometimes,” she said, which seemed possible; we had on occasion said the same thing at the exact same time, the timing sometimes very uncanny. “What happened afterwards?”
    “I told him no…that perhaps some things are left well enough alone.  Then he spoke something that still echoes in my mind.  “Regardless of your stance, you have no choice in the matter…those who will resist us will be destroyed.  Embrace the person you will ultimately become sooner or later…or embrace your own death.”   At that point, he began to change, and when he was done, I was… afraid,” I said.  “I couldn’t make out the form as he lunged towards me…and the last thing I remember before waking up is something odd happening to me, as death rushes towards me with wings,” I said, still trying not to shudder.  “I woke up shouting Angela… that’s never happened to me before.  I felt like I was there, as if it were happening.”
    “Yeah, that is scary,” she said.  I didn’t speak for a minute, as I considered my options: should I ask her?  Oh, why not… I have nothing better to do, I thought.
    “Angela?  How did you know what I was going to say?”
    “It was mostly a guess…but there is something else, something that I thought of that gave me the insight; maybe I’ll tell you tomorrow,” she said hesitantly, and I let it slide: whatever it was she wanted to reveal, she would do so in due time.  “It’s getting late, Drenar…and I wish I could talk longer, but I have work to do.”
    “Yeah, I know.  Bye Angel.”
    “Bye.”
    Without another word we both hung up, and I just sat on my bed, thinking of the possibilities in silence.  Something is going on, something I can’t comprehend yet…nah, that’s just silly.
Magius5.0
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+106|6837|UMass Amherst
III.
The Other Guy is Always Crazier


    The night passed before me in the blink of an eye, and the next thing I knew, I was listening to the annoying buzzer on my alarm clock which I quickly clicked off and crept out of bed, nearly stumbling down the stairs as I went down to the kitchen.  When I got there, I noticed a new note posted on the door, along with the usual items of grocery lists and other small memos.  This one in particular was addressed to me, so I took a look at it.  In short, it was an obscure note from my dad (curse his terrible handwriting) telling me that he had to go to work all day, and that Tobias was sick as a dog, and wouldn’t be going anywhere.  Figures, I get to walk to the stop again; well bro, I hope you feel better soon, I thought as moved around the counter, grabbing a breakfast bar, and then proceeded out the door, checking my bag once before I headed out.  It was Friday, which I suppose lightened my mood a little: no school tomorrow.
    Leaving the house quietly, I strolled without mishap up the road, noting the bitter chill in the air.  It wasn’t cold enough to really be much of a hindrance, but a sign that autumn would be ending soon, and winter would set in with a vicious roar of snow and wind.  The dim, overcast sky did not help to lighten my mood either, as I sighed softly and looked around, wondering just what the future for me would be like.  I remembered all my aspirations to become some kind or writer, or to become an astronaut and to sail across the vast darkness of space, looking for the unseen.  I was too self-absorbed to notice that I had already reached the end of the road, and the bus was due at any minute.  All of a sudden, I heard something very distant, nothing more than a whisper, and I turned rapidly to see if anyone was behind me.  Nothing was there, and I circled slowly, puzzled by what I had thought was a voice.  Need to get my hearing checked, I thought gruffly, noting the bus coming up the road.  Finally, a chance to get out of the cold.

*    *    *

Aside from the disastrous pop-quiz in my Chemistry class, courtesy of my evil teacher, the day up until lunch was fairly uneventful, until I noticed something at lunchtime that caused me to wonder.  I was looking around for Angela in the lunchroom, and it hit me that a few people were missing…no, quite a lot of students were missing, to be more specific.  Conspiracy theory suggests that there might be a case of the stomach bug going around, or the local gangs got enough people to go truant today in some sort of political statement, I thought as I spotted Angela sitting at one of the tables, and promptly sat across from her.
“Hey Drenar…how’s it going today?” she asked politely.
“Eh, so-so day; the world hasn’t ended yet, so I’m still holding out on some bets I make on a daily basis,” I said, as she made a face at me.  “Yeah, you can tell I was sarcastic with that comment.”
“It wasn’t too hard to notice,” she teased, taking a sip of canned iced tea.  “What’s on your mind?”
“Not much…except for that dream I had, and the typical senior-year pressures of finally being done with high school,” I sighed.  “Ugh, why am I obsessing over this stupid dream?”
“Because it bothers you?  And it points out something on a subconscious level that you don’t want yourself to acknowledge?” she suggested, as I raised an eyebrow.
“You’ve been paying too much attention to psychology class,” I commented.  “You must sleep more, and take notes less, like the rest of us.”
“Oh, but that would be boring,” she teased, then set her drink down, leaning forward slightly.  “Well, there has been something that has bugged me lately as well.  I was kind of afraid to tell you last night, as you had enough things to worry about, what with your concerns for your brother, but I had a dream a few nights ago, too.  I didn’t think it was important at first, until you mentioned your dream to me, and then something triggered in the back of my mind that they might somehow be related.”
Back out now Drenar, you’re heading for a mind-tripping series of revelations about subconscious thought that you don’t need to know about, I thought frantically, but instead of saying that, I instead said, “Okay, go ahead.”  I am such a moron sometimes.
“Well, it was just so weird, living through it the first time… like something inside me that had been lying dormant had suddenly come to life again,” she said, adjusting her glasses ever so slightly.  “My dream took place in some sort of dark chapel, something from the medieval times…I could tell the age of the building not by the dust scattered about, or the general decay of the place, but of the feeling of comfort that still pervaded the air.  The altar and stained-glass windows were perfectly preserved, and I could see moonlight filtering in, casting everything in a soft light, and I felt… like I was at home there.  I walked to the altar, looking upwards towards the magnificent ceiling, looking for something that was no longer there… and I didn’t even know what it was I was looking for in the first place.”
“Well, I’ve heard of stranger things happening,” I said, trying to picture the dream as though I had been there myself.  “Do go on, I want to hear all about it.”
“I didn’t know what to expect to find in such an old place…or maybe it was some sort of sign, some presence that I was looking for.  I was walking down the aisle, towards the front, when I noticed a soft glow on the ground, my shadow looming before me.  When I turned around and looked upwards, I saw what I thought was… an angel, or something similar to one.  I don’t remember much about her, except for her face…it was there, but it was like a ghost, in a sense: her face was a perfect expression of beauty, but it was missing that lustrous sparkle of life and energy that I would expect to see.  Sadness seemed to cloud her beauty, and it made me sad to see her like that.
Don’t speak, my child, she whispered in a mellifluous voice, but I, like the air itself spoke for her.  There is much to be said, but I have too little time to tell you all of it…dark times are coming for the world, and so few know of the approaching dangers.  You may be uncertain of what I am saying, perhaps even afraid, but don’t be…you are a child of destiny, a courageous follower of light, about to meet the evil of ages past.   I was, of course, naturally afraid, not of her, but of what she was talking about, even though I knew nothing of this great evil.  When I asked her why she was telling me, she would not say.  Those who begin the journey to stop the tyrannical and evil-tinged people of this world will know that this is their choice…a choice not easily made, but one pure of heart.
“What a weird dream,” I said, sounding surprised.
“I don’t know Drenar, I felt…I felt like it wasn’t a dream: it felt like I was actually there, that she was actually there as well, just like yours in a sense.  As I was standing in the dream, taking it all in, she spoke again in my mind, her words imprinted into my memory as the stars imprint themselves in the sky long after they are gone.  The time is coming again when the world will change, for good or for evil, and the few true defenders of the world will rise to the call of duty again.  Another seeks to corrupt the hearts of those left from another age, people unknowing of a power within them that has begun to find its way back into the world.  Tread lightly, dreamer…the friends you know of today shall be your greatest companions in the coming dark times, but together, you will perservere.”
“As she stopped speaking, the room became dark, and I stood there, still stunned by what she had told me.  I cried out to the darkness to ask her why me, why she would tell me this, and she replied one last time before I woke up.  You will know what to do when the time comes, as every hero does when the call to arms rises rings through the air…   I was so surprised to see myself in my bedroom when I woke up that morning,” Angela said, sitting back as I tried to process it all.
“Weird stuff galore, but the way you describe it…there’s only so long someone can call it a coincidence, you know.  I’m getting that feeling that either I’m becoming paranoid, or something… is about to happen,” I said, unsure of what to say at all.  I was distracted by some of the kids walking by, causing a lot of commotion amongst themselves. 
“Really weird, eh?” she asked.  “It sounds like some kind of prophecy, a foretelling of things to come… as though the world was coming to an end or something like that.”
“See, it’s thinking like that which drives James and his crazy theories,” I laughed softly.  “All I know is that I don’t need any more theories to feed my over-imaginative mind,” I added, laughing at the last thought.
“True.  So, what’s your next class?” Angela asked.
“Calculus, the one I truly despise,” I said.  “I hate that class; the teacher is evil, and many people are willing to agree with me.  I’ve never met a person like Mr. Salazar that I haven’t disliked more,” I said, rolling my eyes at the very thought of him.  “What about you?”
“I’m heading to Biology.  Say, if you aren’t busy this weekend, we could go to a movie together,” she said, her eyes flashing with deviance for a second.  “Sometime this Saturday?”
“Wish I could, but I can’t… too much work to do…are your parents ever home, considering I’ve almost never seen them before?” I asked, remembering her mother or father were always on the road in one form or another.
“They just say they’re out saving the world in one form or another—makes you wonder what they really do in their respective businesses,” she sighed, heading out towards the door.  “With my dad being a big-wig in defense contracts, he has to get around…same as mom.  We just manage…oh and Drenar?  See you later.”
“Yeah… you too,” I sighed, watching her blend in amongst the crowd.  Physically I was fine, but I got that nagging feeling that all was not all right, that something was amiss in the world.

*    *    *

    Minutes later, I found myself in the endless dungeon of misery of calculus, listening to our teacher, Rubin Salazar lecture on about derivatives or some strange concept.  Derive this, derive that…get me the hell out of this stupid memorization crap, I thought with a bit of sarcasm as he scraped out some more equations onto the board for us to solve.  Long and difficult problems, I might add, because that is what Mr. Salazar insisted on.  He had lectured for a long time one day about how important it was to prepare for the most difficult problems imaginable, and that by doing them, we could do anything: his plan had a single flaw, though.
    We weren’t exactly learning as fast as he wanted us to.
    “For the third time, Jackson, pay attention to the board…if you really want to waste my time in this manner by just sleeping at your desk, go home and take a nap,” Mr. Salazar snapped, stroking his long black goatee unnervingly. 
    “Yes, Mr. Salazar,” he said, his head snapping to attention in the blink of an eye.  One did not simply disregard this teacher: they feared him for sending them to the office, the worst place in the world for a bored teenager.  Without another word, Salazar turned back to the board, explaining how to reach the proper equations so that we could figure out the solution.  Personally, I could have cared less if he was sticking forks into the electrical socket; this was boring as sin.  When the class phone rang, it was regarded with much interest: Salazar hardly ever got calls in-class from the office.
    I can imagine what this conversation is like: a one way monologue to a brick wall, I thought sarcastically as Mr. Salazar simply listened.  “Yes…uh-huh…Yes, he’s here right now, and… I see.  You want me to send him down now?  Alright then, bye,” he said cryptically after a moment, leaving us to guess at who was getting a trip to a mystery destination.  As he hung up the phone, he glanced in my direction.  “Drenar, your father is here to pick you up now…don’t forget the homework due Monday,” he added, as if mocking me.
    As I walked down the hallway with book-bag in tow, I wondered what could have been so important that dad (Dave, as I called him; I suppose it was a small quirk considering they weren’t my biological parents) had gotten out of work early to come and pick me up before school was even over.  What’s so important that this couldn’t have waited? I thought as I walked down the stairwell, opening the front doors.  Dave was waiting in the parking lot, the car still running as I opened the door, tossing my bag in the backseat.  “So, what’s going on?”  I asked as soon as I closed the door.
    “Tobias is in the hospital right now, under careful observation… he had some kind of fever when I called earlier, and he complained about what I deduced to be delirium.  As soon as I got home, I took him to the walk-in clinic, and they’re utterly baffled by it…sent him right to the emergency room, no explanation whatsoever for me,” Dave said as we drove out of the parking lot.
    “What?” I said, unable to think of anything more intelligent to say.  “He went from flu to exotic disease in the span of six hours; just wonderful,” I muttered.  “Okay, let’s hear it from the top: what exactly happened?”
    “I don’t know, Drenar…though he is in some onset of delirium and flu-like symptoms, he seems to be okay.  I hope you’ll excuse the informality of dragging you out of school…I was hoping you’d come and visit him before visitor hours close up,” Dave said, and I just nodded complacently.  Countless thoughts flashed in my mind, both logical and illogical explanations for what was happening to my brother.
    “No… it’s okay, you pulled me out of one of my classes that I could care less about,” I said, remembering the sour expression Salazar had on his face when I left.  As we drove down the road, I just looked blankly at the scenery, questions flowing through my mind with no answers.  How was it that through the marvels of modern science, the doctors couldn’t tell what was wrong with my brother, for one thing?  “Don’t you think we’re over-reacting just a little bit?  I mean, he’s not on his death-bed, is he?”
    “No, most certainly not,” he replied as we took a turn, nearly hitting a trash bin that was too close to the side of the road.  “But it seemed rather urgent to me, and the fact that he almost seemed completely out of it when I got home.”
    “Think he’s going to be okay?” I asked, knowing that I probably didn’t want to hear the answer.
    “I’m sure he’ll be fine: he’s not in any sort of serious condition, as far as they’ve said,” Dave said as we got out of the door and walked in by the front door.  He said nothing else.

Last edited by Magius5.0 (2007-04-04 10:47:54)

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