Author Topic: The Husk (Complete)  (Read 3324 times)

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Offline LisaCharly

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The Husk (Complete)
« on: July 27, 2010, 12:11:13 AM »
Author's Note: Originally, I wrote an Animorphs prequel about Eva being infested, titled "Home for Dinner and Weekends". It got a lot of positive feedback and I had a ton of fun writing it, and some ideas for writing Yeerk/human dialogue and the post-Yeerk recovery process, so I ended up working on a pseudo-sequel, "The Husk", which takes place during the series from Eva's POV. You absolutely don't need to read Home for Dinner to read this one, but I do reference the earlier work sometimes. Reviews, critiques, nitpicking and suggestions are always welcome.

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I: Swordplay

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   Edriss was conflicted and concerned, not that she wanted me to know that. In hours was going to meet with the future Visser Three, the inheritor of her little pet project, Earth. And Edriss, being the proud, ambitious creature that she was, wanted him to be competent yet not too competent, not enough to upstage her, not little enough to ruin all her progress. As always, she was trying to browbeat me into admitting how fantastically powerful the Yeerk race was and how she was completely secure in her promotion, but it’s very difficult to hide your weaknesses from someone who spends every second with you.

   <Oh, for God’s sake, Yeerk,> I grumbled, <you’re just as bad as humans are. You’re worried he’ll steal your spotlight and get to the Council before you. You being a blowhard about it is just what we humans call “overcompensation”.>

   <There’s no reason for me to intimidated by Esplin Nine-Four-Double-Six. When I was stationed with him on the Taxxon Home World he was a mediocre leader at best,> Edriss told me, sounding less confident than her words. <The Council promoted Yangill Four-Four-Two and I ahead of Esplin for a very good reason.>

   <Except that he has an Andalite host body and you’re stuck in this weak little human body. You’re not even in a fully capable Hork-Bajir body. Maybe you should have thought of that before you abducted me.>

   <Your body is suitable. I see no reason for me to leave such a pleasant host.> Lately Edriss was developing a sense of sarcasm, which was about a step beneath her usual outright derision.

   <Don’t let the Council hear you using vocal inflections, Edriss. They’ll torture you for sympathy,> I jeered back. For the sake of my husband and son, I’d promised I wouldn’t fight her for control, but that didn’t mean I was going to stay silent when I had so many opportunities to taunt her.

   Edriss ignored me and continued reviewing her files on Leera. Her current assignment would keep her in space, operating from a distance overlooking the Leeran home-world. She wouldn’t be in media res, which was a change for her. She was trying very hard and failing to convince me that she wasn’t anxious.

   Instead, the actual direction of the Yeerk military forces on Leera was being delegated to Visser Eighteen. Edriss was being put in charge of weapons development, which was an insulting task for the future Visser One. It signaled to her that the Council, while recognizing that her capabilities and wiles made her well-qualified to be Visser One, didn’t trust her yet. Edriss took this all to heart, of course, and for the last several weeks I’d been subject to her complaints about how underappreciated she was, and how she’d been the first to discover a Class Five species, and how no Yeerk was more dedicated than her, and so on.

   “The future Visser Three would like to alert you that he has docked his Blade Ship and is prepared to meet with you to discuss the future of Earth.” A Hork-Bajir with a red uniform approached – Esplin 9466’s red honor guard coming to announce the Visser’s arrival. Edriss stood, as is customary, and nonchalantly looked the guard up and down, then to her own gold-clad honor guards. She’d chosen the color because it signified human royalty, even though Yeerks had no such associations. I was sure Esplin had probably chosen red for its connotations of violence; red, I figured, was probably a universal symbol. Why wouldn’t red blood be universal?

   “Send him in,” she said dismissively to the red guard. He left, though not with the usual deference of the other Controllers on this Empire Ship. An attempt at a snub? Maybe. Or maybe Esplin didn’t think Edriss would be above him for very long, so it didn’t matter if his guards were less than respectful.

   I had never seen an Andalite before. Edriss had, in her more bored moments, given me descriptions, but I had expected a smaller, nimbler creature. And Esplin’s Andalite host body looked like it could be swift when the time called for it, but there was also a natural swagger in Esplin’s step, the sort of confidence that came from not really needing the guards that surrounded him. And of course, Yeerk cruelty blazed from his eyes, the same that probably showed through mine.

   I felt Edriss’ disdain vibrating through my head.

   <Visser Five.>

   “Visser Seven.” She enunciated every letter in the number.

   <I’ve come to officially take your position as leader of the human infestation. I will be delivering the host species that you’ve been spending so much time with.> His voice dripped as much disdain as hers. <So much time.>

   “Don’t project your mistakes onto me, Visser Seven. If you’d only pressured the Council to follow up on your initial report on humans, perhaps Earth could have been your little conquest,” Edriss said smugly. “But I suppose going out to shoot at Andalites was so much more prestigious.”

   Visser Seven tensed up at that. His deadly tail twitched a bit. In the blink of an eye it could decapitate me. <Prestigious enough that I’m recognized as a military leader, Edriss Five-Six-Two. Instead of only a tactician in weapons development.>

   Edriss fought to keep from scowling. I laughed. <No smart retort to that, Edriss?>

   She picked her haughtiness back up. “I suppose I should tell you I’ve reviewed your proposal for an open infestation. Apparently the Council has a lower opinion of your military tactics than you care to admit.”

   <And yet he’s still a military leader and you’re part of a think tank,> I taunted.

   <Eva, you idiot,> Edriss snapped at me, <knowing him, if his plans are approved he’ll burn your planet to a cinder. And your precious family, too.>

   I stopped my jeering for a moment, internally pouting like a petulant child. It wasn’t as if she’d given me much choice; the alternative was to graciously accept my fate and make life easy for her. It was an option I wasn’t too inclined to take.

   <That plan was a rough suggestion,> Visser Seven said dismissively.

   “It showed a remarkable amount of disrespect for the seeds of subterfuge I’ve sown. Which have, thus far, been incredibly effective. We’ve taken hundreds of Human Controllers with a death toll that can be calculated by a Hork-Bajir.”

   <At an unacceptably laborious pace. The Council hoped I would be able to accelerate the invasion.>

   “It’s only an unacceptable pace to you because there’s isn’t an enemy body count for you to gloat over. I’ve seen the cost of your victories, Esplin.”

   <And how many good Yeerks have completed their final cycle without ever knowing a host? When we could have hosts for them all with this species? Your caution might have cost us years of progress,> he said, angrily. I could tell Edriss was pushing his buttons. I suspected it had been a long time since anyone off the Council had reacted to him with anything less than fear.

   Edriss smiled, interlacing her fingers together. The body language might have been foreign to Esplin, but the message couldn’t have been: she wasn’t intimidated, at least not outwardly.

“Esplin, you could at least be honest. You know I’ll be credited if you continue with my plan and succeed. And I hope you’re smart enough to know that your plan would leave us with a fraction of the hosts we could take. Really, the Council rejecting your proposal was the best thing that could have happened to you, so enough of this blustering. I hear honesty’s a valued trait among Andalites,” she said slyly, then added, “and their sympathizers.”

The guards, gold and red, all bristled, as if expecting Visser Seven to lop my head off and start a brawl. But Visser Seven remained still, only allowing himself to glare with his two main eyes.

<An interesting accusation from someone who spent so many undocumented years on Earth,> he eventually said, slowly, and I felt Edriss run over with anger inside my head. <I can only hope that the information you gathered during your stay will be enough to deliver the species, now that I’ve taken on your role.>

Edriss kept that snake smile plastered on my face for the rest of their meeting, which mostly consisted of her explaining the reason The Sharing worked so well, despite some mishaps at the beginning. She became quite frustrated with how little Esplin seemed to care. She used his disinterest as an excuse to take more than a few shots at his supposed love of Andalites, and he, of course, played right into it with indignant offense at each comment.

It was pathetic. It was like dogs posturing to each other over who would be the leader.

I stayed quiet, taking in every detail. I hoped someday to be free again and use everything I’d observed to take her down, but if I couldn’t have that, I could at least have fodder to upset her. I didn’t mind that it was spiteful and petty. Mocking her was the only satisfying thing I could still do, locked inside my body as I was.

   After she dismissed him, I started back in on her. <Well, that was exciting. Here I was thinking human politics were dirty.>

   She continued reviewing the files she’d earmarked for Leera. Details on new Yeerk technologies, mind-control technologies for non-sentient beings. Perhaps she could find some way to use them, some inventive plot that would deliver the Empire a powerful weapon. Or perhaps that wasn’t such a good idea, since she risked being ghettoized as a weapons and stealth specialist, with none of the glory of a military leader.

   I could feel a familiar melancholy in her. She’d officially turned over Earth to Visser Seven. Her brainchild, her conquest, the project she’d invested half a decade in, was being handed over to an inept braggadocio. I could still feel a trill of pride in her for her promotion, but being Visser One was less glorious than she’d imagined, and she had no soft feelings for the Leerans.

   <You know, you and Esplin are a lot alike. You’re both Yeerk traitors who care more about your host species than the Empire. He touched a nerve, didn’t he?>

   <Human, I’m completely capable of ignoring you.>

   <But you don’t. Sympathizer. Glory-hound. Dirty, self-servicing politician. Is this the best of the Empire? In-fighting and rivalries? Tell me, Edriss, do you hate him so much because he’s stealing your show, or because he represents everything you hate about yourself? Sympathizer, sympathizer…>

   <Was it sympathy when I stole your body from your family?> she asked cruelly, hoping to cow me, but I was enjoying myself too much.

   <Esplin gets to go win the war on Earth and poor little Edriss goes to Leera with the frogs, doing weapons management like some schmuck. The Empire doesn’t trust you, Yeerk. The Empire doesn’t care about your subtlety and sophistication. No, they want strong, brutish, trustworthy Esplin to take your job. I guess brains only gets you so far, Edriss. You poor, poor evil thing.>

   <My opportunities at Leera are a chance to prove my versatility. The Empire wishes to see breadth in their candidates for Council,> she said, but didn’t believe it.

   <You know what the best part is? He’s not as smart as you, but he’s stronger, Edriss. If his host got control back for even a second, he’d lop his own head off. Every time you lose control of me I can only attack myself with my weak human body, but an Andalite? He’s got his host iron-clad. And you have to broker deals with me to not be a nuisance. Poor Edriss. Poor, poor Edriss.>

   Edriss didn’t answer, but her anger poured on me like rain.


Post Merged: July 27, 2010, 12:14:57 AM
II: The Telepathic Secretary

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-/-

   “Hey there, squirt, you school today?”

   “Fingerpainting!” Marco smiled up at me, holding hands that dripped blue paint all over the garage floor. “Fingerpainting!”

   Peter picked him up and set him on a bicycle. “Just no blue bike.”

   I took Peter’s hand in mine and stared out at the glittering ocean. It opened up before us like a clamshell, a beautiful diorama framed by our garage walls. “Beautiful out. Look, see San Marcos? Get it, squirt, like Saint Marco?”

   Marco frowned, letting his bicycle sink into water as blue as his hands. “Don’t saints die?”

   “Sometimes,” I said, pulling Peter’s ring finger off. I held it in my hand, put up to my lips and pretended to smoke it. He kissed me and, while I was distracted, took it back and put it in his pocket.

   “Come here, sweetie, let wash your hands.” I took Marco’s hands in mine, his little boy hands covered in blue, and gently broke them off. He kept smiling up at me. I put his hands and Peter’s finger in the sink and started to rinse all the paint off.

   Peter tapped me on the shoulder. “Just got off doctor phone.”

   “Yeah?”

   Peter looked deathly serious. “Hands don’t grow back.”

   I looked at the tiny hands in the sink and screamed.

   <Well, that’s enough of that.>

   I woke up. My eyes were still closed; Edriss hadn’t decided to actually rouse my body yet, but my mind was alert again. Trapped in the blackness of paralysis. It didn’t help the panic. My screams died between my mind and my lips.

   After several minutes I remembered where I was, what was happening. A dream. <Edriss, did you do that?>

   <Of course not. I don’t have any interference with your dreams. I can only watch them.>

   <You were watching that?>

   She started to wake my body up, opening my eyes and shifting my muscles around. <Don’t you understand by now that I watch everything? Your dreams are sometimes the only form of stimulation I have while your body rests. It’s entertaining to try and trace the images to the source, sometimes.>

   <Entertaining. I see.> It was always a strange sensation, to be so agitated and to feel none of the physical effects. My heart beat at the same rate it always did in the morning. My breathing was as leisurely as usual. Probably no change to my blood pressure. <There really isn’t any privacy from you, is there?>

   <None.>  

   She started to get my body up off the plush suede-lined bed. Most Yeerk infrastructure was utilitarian, but the quarters of Vissers were downright opulent. Surfaces were painted jade-green and gold, Edriss’ favorite colors. Luxurious fabrics both mad-made and alien draped the bed, down pillows at the head. Small metal tubes that emitted pleasant scents lined the corners of the room. All the sensual pleasures Edriss could only enjoy while she was stealing my body, of course.

   I didn’t mind the goose-down, chadoo-lined comforter, to be honest.

   Outside the window, the thin light of morning filtered in from beneath a hundred of feet of water. It did little to light the room. Strange, how beautiful and dark Earth’s ocean was. How forbidding, how inviting. I imagined the water pressing down on me, popping my ear drums, filling my lungs.

   <As charming as your suicidal ideations are, human, we have matters to attend to,> Edriss said as she shifted my eyes away. I didn’t protest as she started the morning routine. Enough exercise to keep me fit enough to look intimidating as a middle-aged woman could, a delicious but small breakfast, and supervising Operation 1530. While still bitter about being assigned to such a paltry assignment, Edriss was determined stay hands-on. If anything, it would show that she was a more dedicated leader than Visser Three. Or possibly one with more time on her hands.

   Besides, success here could turn the tides on Leera. Victory was uncertain there, and a race of Leeran Controllers could undercut the invasion on Earth. Not that she didn’t want Human Controllers, of course, but it would immediately minimize any victory Visser Three could manage. Politics, as usual.

   Neither of us liked the Leerans, though. I was uncomfortable enough sharing my mind with one alien, and Edriss acted as if she had something to hide. She was completely fine invading the minds of others, naturally, but repulsed by the idea of some other creature catching a glimpse of hers.

   Because of this, the Leerans were mostly assigned to administrative tasks that kept them far from her. Only one, her personal assistant, was allowed within psychic range, and he’d been outfitted with an exceptionally loyal Yeerk who’d promised to keep the Leeran’s psychic abilities inactive. So far, Edriss had no reason to suspect him of lying, but she planned to kill him anyway. Now that she was Visser One, even Visser One on a insultingly low-level mission, loyal, terrified Yeerks were a dime a dozen.

   The Leeran Controller was a Yeerk by the name of Aliss 987, a disturbingly human-sounding name. I tried to think of them by the host’s name, which I knew to be Ga Gut Hum, even though I knew that was a silly ideation. It wasn’t like anyone still thought of me as Eva Salazar.

   <Good morning, Visser,> Ga Gut Hum said in his strange Leeran voice, a mixture of thought-speak and the guttural spoken monosyllables that make up the Leeran tongue.

   “Aliss Nine-Eight-Seven, was there any unusual activity to report during the nightly operations?”

   <No, Visser. Everything is going according to schedule. The hammerhead sharks from the sodium-karotide batch should be ready to progress to the next phase. Within two cycles they should be ready to test for infestation.>

   “Good. And I trust you have reports on the recent attack that buffoon Visser Three waged on the Santa Barbra theme park?”

   <Yes, honorable Visser. You should be pleased to know that the Visser’s attempts to infest the human captain were a failure.>

   Edriss smiled. By now, the rivalry between her and Esplin was no secret to anyone. If anything, her most successful underlings were the ones who catered to it. “Of course it was.”

   For what I figured were several hours, Edriss reviewed and memorized the data her scientists had provided her. Many of the sharks died between the third and fourth test phases. Some of the survivors were incapacitated. Edriss’ many scientists had yet to figure out a process to create a suitable ear canal with a reasonable success rate.

   But sharks between the second and third phases were suggesting that there was an alternative. After the second treatment and several cycles-worth of auditory training, the sharks could be controlled. It wasn’t as exciting a development as turning them into host bodies, but with enough sharks to deliver to the Leera, they could have more Leeran host bodies. Edriss calculated that it would take about twenty cycles – two months – to complete, if she was able to bring in more technicians and handlers from the shore.

   “Aliss Nine-Eight-Seven,” she called, “before I promise the Council water soldiers, remind them that engineering new host bodies is a science no one has really succeeded at. Manage their expectations. I want them to see controllable sharks as a victory, not as a project completed below their expectations.”

   Ga Gut Hum waddled in as best an amphibian can, with a clipboard. It was a comical scene. He sagged and struggled to remain standing, a wet yellow sack of dehydrated flesh. Leerans often have difficulty holding up their own weight on land. <Yes, Visser.>

   “I don’t want you to announce our plans to the Council until we run a few more tests and decide infestation is impossible. It’s a slim chance, but delivering another host species along with Leera would put me on the Council in sixty cycles. But manage their expectations. If the shark soldiers are seen as a success, I could be fast-tracked to at least an Inspector. And you would, of course, be rewarded for your loyalty and charisma.”

An ugly smile crept over his face. Typical Yeerk ambition. <Yes, honorable Visser. Also, I believe I have located four technicians to arrive tomorrow->

   “Did I ask you to interrupt?”

   Ga Gut Hum closed his mouth instantly. I knew Edriss was just throwing her weight around to remind him that she had no soft feelings for him, but Ga Gut Hum probably thought he was walking on eggshells. What the good Visser giveth, and all that.

   “Send the technicians. Oh, and before you link to the Council, I’d like to observe the sharks for another cycle. Tell the submarine crew that we’ll be taking a tour of the current facilities, but don’t alert the workers. I’d like to observe them surreptitiously.”

   With a slight waggle of his middle tentacles, the Leeran equivalent of a nod, Ga Gut Hum left to do her bidding.

   About an hour later, we were on the submarine. It was always unsettling, given that the whole thing looked like it was made of glass, and we were now fifty feet under the water. Enough afternoon sunlight came through to light the whole submarine up aquatic blue.

   Edriss was watching, making occasional comments for Ga Gut Hum to write down. Mostly she was enjoying the beauty of the ocean, but I was the only one who knew that. She didn’t want anyone to know that she was worried about the Council’s response to her inability to make the sharks infestation-worthy, nor that the vastness of the sea eased her anxiety. “Aliss Nine-Eight-Seven, I’d like you to keep an eye out for any trace of rebellion. Observe body language. I’ve heard rumor that Visser Three is attempting to gain information on this location from disloyal followers.”

   <Paranoid, much?> I asked. She didn’t pay me any attention.

   <I already know which Yeerks are loyal, Visser. I have only exempted you from my host’s telepathy,> Ga Gut Hum said nervously.

   Edriss glared for a second, then softened with a small smile. Using telepathy around other Yeerks had been forbidden by the Council since the first Leeran was infested, and Edriss felt a bit of kinship for clever rule-breakers. “I wasn’t aware that Leerans can exempt specific people from their telepathy.”

   <The Council is not aware either,> he said, slightly more emboldened.

   “And you didn’t find it prudent to tell me which Yeerks are disloyal?”

   <I haven’t noticed any disloyalty, Visser. Only distrust. Rumors have been spreading that you’re attempting to save the humans from their fate as hosts by replacing them with sharks and Leerans.>

   Edriss laughed, a sound that was much crueler than the laughter I’d made in my past life. “Another one of Visser Three’s attempts at libel.”

   <Slander is spoken. In print, it’s libel. You mean slander,> I said, but she continued to ignore me.

   Edriss suddenly became very serious. “Yeerks should be proud, Aliss. We should not fear other species. We should not fear admiring other races. If we understand Leerans, and Hork-Bajir, and yes, humans, we can take the best elements of their cultures and make our Empire stronger. We can find their weaknesses and enslave them more quickly. The Council was established before first contact was made with the Andalites. They don’t understand the benefits of curiosity.”

   She seemed to have lost Ga Gut Hum, but kept talking anyway, her voice getting louder and louder. It sounded like she was giving a motivational speech to herself, in a strange way. The crew around us tried very hard to look as if they weren’t eavesdropping. “Only weak and foolish Yeerks would confuse curiosity with empathy. Only Yeerks who have no pride in their own species would choose to become our chattel. A Yeerk with pride acknowledges the power of understanding another race and uses it to make our Empire stronger. A proud Yeerk uses knowledge to enslave.”

   The crew was silent.

   “Aliss Nine-Eight-Seven of the Hett Simplat pool,” she finally said, her tranquil mood spoiled by hearsay, “put that ridiculous host body to use and sing us a pride song.”

   Without a word of protest, Ga Gut Hum started making a deep, guttural noise in the base of his throat. A warm, proud feeling started to creep across my brain Leeran music is unlike any music humans know of. It consists of a feedback loop, using telepathy to dig out the desired emotion from the listener and then amplify it and project it back into the listener’s mind. The more powerful the initial emotion, the more powerful the song.

   “Don’t you feel any pride in your species?” Edriss yelled at her crew. “Is this all you’ll give Aliss Nine-Eight-Seven to work with?”

   Ga Gut Hum stopped for a moment, and paused to look out into the ocean.

   “What?” she demanded.

   Ga Gut Hum shrugged and pointed a tentacle towards the surface. Edriss stood up and turned around. I saw six sleek black shapes against the bright sky.

   “It’s only dolphins,” Edriss said, and ordered her crew back to work.
« Last Edit: October 08, 2010, 09:15:09 AM by LisaCharly »

Offline Myitt

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #1 on: July 27, 2010, 02:05:46 AM »
Wow. 

Just...wow.  This is fantastic!  You have a great deal of talent, Lisa.  I love your attention to little canon details, characterization is spot on, and the writing flows really nicely.  I was sucked in!

A few minor typos here and there but nothing major.  It's late right now but I think I'd like to read Home for Dinner and Weekends, too. 

 :thumbsup:


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Offline LisaCharly

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #2 on: July 27, 2010, 10:38:23 AM »
Wow, thanks so much! I'm really glad you're enjoying it and thanks for the feedback. I'll go through with a fine-tooth comb and find some of those typos. ;)

Offline isteillia

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #3 on: July 27, 2010, 02:25:01 PM »
oh man! Do you have a Fanfiction.net account? I'd love to fave your writing there.

“Esplin, you could at least be honest. You know I’ll be credited if you continue with my plan and succeed. And I hope you’re smart enough to know that your plan would leave us with a fraction of the hosts we could take. Really, the Council rejecting your proposal was the best thing that could have happened to you, so enough of this blustering. I hear honesty’s a valued trait among Andalites,” she said slyly, then added, “and their sympathizers.”

This made me laugh SO HARD, and thrill at how IC you wrote this. Your style is fantastic, and I adore how true to character you are. Look forward to reading more!
This day will die tonight and there ain't no exception
We shouldn't wait for nothing to wait for
Love me in this fable, babe, my heart is in your hand
Our time is waiting right outside your door
And maybe tomorrow is a better day

Offline Terenia

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #4 on: July 27, 2010, 03:37:56 PM »
Haven't read this yet, but I did just read Home for Dinner and Weekends in preparation and I must say I enjoyed it greatly! You have a real knack for character and emotion. I look forward to reading this as well! (and will leave a more proper review once I have. :D )

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Offline A ghost you know

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #5 on: July 27, 2010, 05:26:08 PM »
I just read both Home for Dinner and Weekends and the first two chapters of The Husk. They're great!
It's quite fascinating to see Eva playing mind games with Edriss, particularly since Edriss has a secret soft spot for humans in her heart. I think you captured that conflict very well, and I'm looking forward to seeing more of it.
Nice work on keeping details in agreement with the main series as well; this fits seamlessly with the main series, which is a nice accomplishment all by itself.
RAFdating Horsefan1023 (Seal)! :D

Offline LisaCharly

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #6 on: July 27, 2010, 06:44:26 PM »
Thank you so much everyone for the encouragement! It's really exciting to explore these characters, as both are some of my favorites in the canon series, and both didn't factor as heavily into the ending of the series as they might have. It requires a lot of research into the canon, though - I've been abusing the Ctrl+F on my ebooks. ;)

Istellia, my ff.net account is here, along with all my one-shots and other series. I'm HotPinkCoffee.

Post Merged: August 04, 2010, 11:53:28 PM
III: Under

-/-

-/-

   Different compounds of chemicals for the sharks gave different results. One formula might be quicker to take, but produce more variation in shark intelligence, or have a lower survival rate. If she had a few more months, Edriss’ staff might be able to find a compound stable enough to make infestation a possibility. On the other hand, it could be a wild goose chase, and the Council was notoriously impatient.

   Of course, it was possible Edriss could take a gamble and hope the Council was as eager as she was to discredit Visser Three. Rendering his mission moot by delivering new hosts would be a crippling blow to his chances at a further promotion. The Council had reasons to resent him, as he’d refused to turn over his Andalite host body for their purposes, even though some of the Council members were still left in inferior Hork-Bajir and Taxxon bodies. And there was always the problem of the so-called Andalite bandits, who somehow had evaded capture despite being outnumbered and stranded in a foreign world.

   Though the Andalite bandits certainly made an excellent excuse for the Visser’s failures. Perhaps that was why he hadn’t been all that upset when Edriss had released them from the Pool Ship. And he’d been remarkably quick to abandon his deforestation plan.

   <You do realize that you’re helping me by observing everything, don’t you?> Edriss interrupted my contemplation.

   <Hmm?>

   <I can access everything you notice. Sometimes you notice things I might miss. Having you paying attention is like having the thoughts of two minds at once.>

   <I didn’t know Yeerks admitted that they overlooked things,> I told her.

   <We’re powerful, Eva. But we aren’t hubristic.>

   My peals of laughter echoed through my crowded head. <That’s rich.>

   <Hubris is pride that leads to your downfall. We’ve had setbacks, but been remarkably successful thus far, through nothing but our own wits and resourcefulness. I don’t anticipate that will change.>

<Is that what you think? It’ll make so much more satisfying when I use all this information to kill you, when I’m free,> I said with just a bit of false bravado.

   <Is that what you think?> She mimicked me. <Eva, don’t you realize that no matter what happens, you’ll never be free? Even in the incredibly unlikely scenario where I die and you don’t, you’ll always be part of this Empire. They’ll shuttle your body around until you outlive your usefulness.>

   <I’ll be free in death,> I said defiantly.

   <But that’s not your ideal situation, is it? Your idea of freedom is returning to your normal life with your silly family and job. And if that were to happen – which is, again, highly unlikely – do you just imagine that all this time with me will be forgotten? How many motions will you make and second-guess your own volition? How lonely will you be in your head with no one to talk to? How will you ever readjust to human society when your idea of success is ripping me out of your head and stomping me to pieces, you violent little creature?>

   <You’re over-estimating how much you matter to me, Edriss. I can pretty much guarantee you I’ll never miss you when you’re dead.>

   But Edriss seemed pretty confident. <You know, occasionally a host escapes, or remains uninfested for quite some time. Contrary to your delusions, it doesn’t make them happy.>

   <Well,> I said, before sinking back into myself and ignoring her, <I’m not them, and I can’t think of anything that would make me happier than pouring salt all over you.>

   Edriss kept talking to me, but I was less entertaining to her when I was unresponsive, and eventually she gave up and went back to focusing on her work. It was an incredibly slow morning, mostly spent waiting on results from new trials to come in and for the new technicians to show up.

   After some indeterminate length of time, the alarm went off. Edriss looked up at the blinking red light, shrugged and waited for Ga Gut Hum. The complex was guarded by a variety of security systems that had a tendency to go off for false alarms every cycle or so.

   Ga Gut Hum didn’t enter for too much time for it to be a false alarm. Edriss drummed her fingers on the desk, maintaining a cool but impatient composure in spite of being alone. My curiosity was also piqued.

   <Well,> she said, <it could be that we finally have the Andalite bandits paying us a visit. Or it could be that that incompetent fool of a Visser is deigning to see us.>

   Ga Gut Hum finally rushed in, panting with the exertion of hurrying in this dry environment. <Honorable Visser, three Andalite bandits have infiltrated the stage three trial rooms. The emergency Hork-Bajir guards have been deployed to attack them and the scientists have been relocated out of harm’s way to the stage one trial rooms.>

   Edriss stood up behind the deck. “When Visser Three presented me with his captured bandits, there were six.”

   <I have already sent words to the Taxxon dispatches to begin searching for the other three, and arranged for the integrated sharks to patrol the outside borders in case they haven’t entered yet.>

   Edriss smiled, but the muscles around my eyes didn’t move. “I am pleased with your quick thinking, Aliss Nine-Eight-Seven. Now go, meet me at the stage three trial rooms. Deploy as many Hork-Bajir guards as necessary, and authorize the scientists to arm themselves with Dracon weapons.”

   <Consider it accomplished, Visser.> Ga Gut Hum smiled grotesquely with pride before running out, huffing and stumbling as he went.

   Edriss quickly punched some codes into the computer system, configuring the Gleet Biofilters in the stage one trial rooms to identity-specific settings rather than species-specific. Most important of all was to protect her scientists and the information they possessed. If they survived, even if the Andalites killed all the subject sharks and destroyed the equipment, the experiment could be replicated.

   The door handle turned slightly. “Come in,” Edriss said, impatient. After several seconds of silence, she continued with the usual Yeerk posturing, expecting Ga Gut Hum to be behind the door with some confession of ineptitude. “I said come in. Never make me give an order twice. You won’t live to hear me give it a third time.”

   And then he entered the room.

   My mind left me. My mind, the only piece of me I still had control of, was ripped from me. I wailed and shrieked inside the body that was now Edriss’, the body she used to turn impassive eyes to the body of my son.

   Marco, his body at least, nearly fourteen years old, stood across from me. His Yeerk was struggling to control him, I could tell. I didn’t want to imagine what my little boy was thinking, what tide of happiness that I was alive was conflicting with anguish at being a slave.

Just another technician for Edriss to put to work. Edriss admonished his Yeerk for not having complete control, gloating at how she was managing me so well. She callously ordered him to his station. She did not address me. There was nothing to address.

   My kid, my beloved child, was a slave. Peter probably was too. I wept and screamed, nearly oblivious to Edriss moving my body around, meeting Ga Gut Hum at the trial room and seeing the bandits. No images would stay in my brain, no new information sticking. Events swirled around and I barely noticed, couldn’t make sense of any of it, didn’t care, couldn’t follow, couldn’t, wouldn’t, wouldn’t take.

Visser Three attacked. Ga Gut Hum was knocked unconscious by a gorilla. A bear and an Andalite chased Edriss back into her office.

   I didn’t care. Everything I’d had left had been quashed in that office. A battle was raging around me, wounds were accumulating on my body, alien corpses were littering the hallways, and I didn’t care. Not my war. Not my species. We were victims in this hellish invasion, nothing but warm bodies. Not my life anymore. Edriss fought for her survival, not even momentarily upset by my son’s infestation. Pleased, if anything. Maybe annoyed that my weeping was distracting her, if it was. I didn’t think about it. I didn’t think about anything.

   I realized water was spattering my face. Somehow, I’d been injured. Somehow I was on the floor. Blood dribbled from my mouth, mingling with spit and salt water on my chin. My hair had come down from its practical up-do and was plastered across my vision. A Dracon beam was smooth and cold in my hand.

I could fight her, try for an instant to take control of the weapon and fire a shot into my own body – I had the energy, I had the fury, I could try. But instead, I surrendered to her and let her will wash me away from myself.

Edriss fired a shot of her Dracon beam and missed.

   The bear raised a hubcap-sized paw to us. I barely had time to issue what I prayed were my last words to Edriss: <I hope this kills us.>


Post Merged: August 13, 2010, 01:22:24 PM
IV: A Flower in the Desert

-/-

-/-

   <Eva, are you there?>

   I didn’t know where else she thought I’d be, given that she was wrapped around my brain, but I didn’t respond to her. I’d lain completely fallow for tens of cycles so far – I’d long since stopped keeping track of time in days and weeks – and didn’t feel any urge to change that. There wasn’t any point to it anyway.

   <Human, how long are you going to keep this up? You know I don’t enjoy spending my time with a silent host.>

   To my surprise, this annoyed Edriss. And more than that, it annoyed her that her frustration didn’t please me. Nothing did. In a way, I was steadfastly determined not to take joy from anything, because it would be trivial and girlish and completely delusional to find happiness in my wretched joke of a life.

   <Human, you have no idea how lucky you are to have me as your ruler. I could be one of those sadistic Yeerks, or a callous one who pretends you don’t exist. Aren’t you happy to have a ruler who wants to learn? Who’s willing to tell you about her people?>

   I knew that she could just read my thoughts, but that had bored her even when I was more active. Now, I was, apparently, just intolerable. A “vacuous swamp of self-pity”, in her words. I didn’t care. Apathy was, oddly enough, my lifeline to consciousness.

   <Eva, don’t you want to talk about politics?>

   Sometimes Edriss raged at me about it, sometimes she threatened, but really, she didn’t have anything left to take from me. My son, probably my husband, were slaves. My planet was being taken over by this alien cancer. My own free will was so limited it might as well have been a figment of my imagination.

   On her kinder days she presented me with artwork, poetry, music, all the bounty from the vast storehouse of human culture she was accumulating on the Pool Ship. Edriss was a collector, in her own strange way; many Yeerks were, though the Council tried to forbid it. She’d come to appreciate many human works over the years, from Iago’s cleverness in Shakespeare’s Othello to the brazen defiance of Liberty Leading the People. And she’d kept some of the pieces I’d enjoyed in my former life – the Borges, the Tchaikovsky, the Faulkner, the Van Gogh, the Dylan – and she used them to try and coax some reaction out of me. Maybe she just wanted to see a flicker of appreciation, instead of apathy. I gave her nothing, possibly because I had nothing to give.

   On her crueler days she’d go through my memories and find all the things that had enraged me as a free person. She’d rifle through my former insecurities and spew hatred at me, racism and sexism and grave insults about my character and my family, hoping to pick at my pride and push my buttons enough for me to protest. She’d rattle off her litany of epithets for me, Eva the ****, the Wetback, the Failure, the Weakling, Eva the ****, Eva Who Doesn’t Exist, Eva the Empty Husk. Unfortunately for her, one of the few positive aspects about being one of the living dead was that I had no buttons left to push.

   <Human, I could take a new host, one who doesn’t spend all her time feeling sorry for herself.>

<Eva, you pathetic defeatist, are you trying to tell me that you’ve based your entire self-worth on your sad little excuse for a family and career? You were nothing before I took you. Working for candidates you didn’t agree with, making dinner every night like some cheap hired help – isn’t that what you never wanted to be? Just another immigrant in the kitchen? Just another stupid **** playing dress up with the American Dream? And you were, until I helped you. I made you, Eva. You’re learning things beyond your species’ imagination and you’re too small-minded to think about anything but the shallow life you had.>

   <Eva, I’m getting very tired of this.>

   Sometime between eighty cycles and ninety cycles – I lost count – she took us to the technological Empire census, a database-like system that had data on every known Yeerk, dead or alive, in the Empire. Memory dumps, current stations, feeding schedules, birth pool, identifications – and all the data on human hosts. A mass violation of privacy, from a species that knew nothing of the word.

It wasn’t unusual for Edriss to use information from the census, but it was unusual for her to access it herself. Normally, her entourage would be working the computer systems for her; a Visser, even one with a temporary demotion, had more important duties to attend to, after all, and even the lowliest of Yeerks, fresh in their first host-body, could figure out how to tease information from the census. Even more unusual was using the system to search for human host bodies, since most Yeerks considered these fairly interchangeable. I would have been mildly curious why had I not been so preoccupied with not caring.

She used my fingers to spell out the only names that could rouse me. Marco Samuel Laroche. Peter Michael Laroche.

<Why?> I asked her, speaking to her for the first time in what must have been months.

<If you’re going to sit around moping about your family, I might as well bring them near you and maybe that will bring you to your senses. I’m going to request my personal assistants use their bodies. That will make you happy again, won’t it?>

In my head, I laughed at her, finally giving in and feeling something. <You’re an idiot, Yeerk. You think watching my family be slaves to your filthy kind is going to make me happy? And you claim to know humans! You idiot. Why don’t you just kill me now and get it over with, if I bother you this much?>

<Enough of your self-pity, you spoiled, selfish, close-minded human!> Edriss raged, in a tone I’d never heard her direct at me, even at her most frustrated. <Do you think it makes you noble to suffer? You think martyrdom is admirable? Do you really think your life is so, so terrible that death would be merciful? You’re sickening. You should be sickened with yourself.>

   <Yes,> I stated evenly. <I do think death would be merciful.>

   For a long time she was silent, but I could feel her rage boiling in my head. Finally, she spoke again, this time measured and quiet. <You humans have no idea how lucky you are. You have everything, and you discard it like garbage. You tell me now that you would rather die than go on living when you have what my species has waged wars for. You have eyes that see brilliant colors and depth and light and shade. You have ears that can hear music. You have bodies that can walk and run and jump and enjoy sex and swim and kiss and dance. And you don’t appreciate any of it. You think it’s worth less than whatever melancholy you’re afflicted with today.>

   I didn’t have anything to say to that. I wanted to tell her that some good my body did when I didn’t have an ounce of control over it, but her vitriol stunned me.

<It is a privilege to be human,> she said. <You have minds capable not only of rational thought, but philosophy. Art. Design. Love. Complex relationships. Cognitive dissonance. You have strong, capable bodies and good senses, and better yet, the brains to appreciate those senses. There are Yeerks out there who would lay down their lives for a day of what you’re so willing to discount.>

   I felt she was holding something back from me, because I could feel some kind of sadness from her. Not guilt, certainly not guilt; she always felt perfectly entitled to exploit the human race. I wondered if maybe knowledge was traumatic to Yeerks, if by stepping outside Plato’s cave and suddenly having senses and being mobile made all their host-less experiences unbearable. Maybe she was recounting all the cycles of her life that she’d spent blind and ignorant.

   <There are many humans who would lay down their lives for freedom. And have done so,> I told her.

   <I know. It’s both admirable and baffling. Your commitment to your ideals makes you fearsome, awe-inspiring opponents, but it’s an insult to everything I’ve worked for to say that our conquest is of nothing.>

   I didn’t feel all that bad about insulting her. <You took what I had from me, Edriss. First you took my volition, then you took my career and my family, and now your kind have taken the tiny hope I had that my family was happy and safe. It’s an insult to tell me to be happy when I’ve lost...nearly…everything. So you could get a promotion.>

   <You have no idea what I’ve sacrificed for this promotion.>

   I would have frowned and rolled my eyes, but as usual, had no control. And yet, I felt different than I had for months now. Peevish and bitter, instead of broken. I wondered if it would last, or if I wanted it to.

   <Well, we don’t know if your husband is still happy and safe, at least.> She punched the names into the search function.

   I didn’t want her feeding the little seedling of hope in me. It would only make it that much harder when I eventually saw him, too, under Yeerk control. But the census didn’t show anything. There was a Peter Laroche listed, but his middle name was different and he lived San Francisco.

Not my Peter, which was believable and a relief. So my husband was free, for now at least. But more surprising was that Marco’s name wasn’t anywhere on the list. He and Peter both appeared as relations to my host body, but not as host bodies on their own.

<That’s not…that’s not correct.> Edriss typed in Salazar, in case Marco was entered under my name, tried misspellings of both surnames, searched by address, by birth date. Nothing. <The census is methodically maintained. Every Yeerk and host body is registered. They have to be, to schedule feeding times.>

<Would his name show up if he was killed during the Royan Island Project?> I asked, fearing the worst.

<Yes. The census would simply mark him as deceased,> Edriss said, allaying my fears. She searched again. Nothing. Again. Still nothing. <We saw him. He was at Royan. He was a Controller. By all rights he should be in the census.>

In a remarkably human gesture, she smacked the screen of the computer-deck, as if that would change the data in front of her.

<I’ll report to the technological services that the census personnel need to be disposed of and replaced with more diligent workers,> she said, though I could feel uncertainty in her.

And with that, the little seedling of hope that had lain dormant for so long started to bloom.
« Last Edit: August 13, 2010, 01:22:25 PM by LisaCharly »

Offline Myitt

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #7 on: August 13, 2010, 04:02:35 PM »
This is great, again!  I really love how it integrates so well with the events of the series...and now knowing a little more about Ga Gut Hum's past makes the character development richer. 

The idea that the Empire afforded none of its citizens any privacy, which is hinted at in the series--memory dumps and such--is a really terrifying one.  It's like an alien Big Brother, which is partly why I've always liked exploring the lives of Yeerks who have moved outside of the system and avoided death in order to risk their lives to fight back. 

Rebellion, in all its forms, FTW! XD


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Offline LisaCharly

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #8 on: August 13, 2010, 04:10:55 PM »
Thanks, Pickled Yeerk! Yeah, the idea of a Yeerk Peace Front is so interesting that it's one of the series' big missed plot opportunities, because it could have been fascinating. I wish they'd shown up in books besides Cassie's, too. Not that Aliss/Ga Gut Hum is a YPF member, but the idea of dodging the stringent privacy laws of the Empire is definitely an interesting one.

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #9 on: August 13, 2010, 04:26:07 PM »
I'm usually Myitt on the forums, and Myitt is one of my Yeerk characters who is a member of a sort of "Peace Movement in exile", a rebellion that is much more like the Animorphs in terms of subterfuge and guerrilla war (and to the Empire, they are naturally terrorists.)  I love the idea of terrorists who are fighting for something that actually is a good thing, even though they're forced to kill for it...it does make them a little crazy, kind of like Cassie's Yeerk in that weird #41 vision...but I swear I had that idea first! ;D

I probably swiped it from 1984 and every other dystopia out there... ::) 

I'm not sure if you roleplay but there is a particular bar where some of these outcasts and criminals meet, mostly for the booze, but occasionally for a good conversation, or averting the destruction of the space-time continuum in their universe...it's in the Animorphs Roleplay thread, and we're always looking for good writers and storytellers! ^__^






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Offline LisaCharly

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #10 on: August 24, 2010, 11:20:01 PM »
V: Children with Men's Voices

-/-

-/-

Between my conviction that Edriss was barreling straight into a trap and Edriss' belief that she was diving headfirst into an opportunity for a promotion, we were both fairly optimistic when she was driving around with the Andalite bandits in her car.

"Why don't we merely take a helicopter to this Hork-Bajir colony?" Edriss asked, fishing for more information. Just because she was hopeful about the situation didn't mean that she was trusting.

For the most part, I stayed silent. I had only recently returned to taunting and jeering Edriss, and even then less than I had in the past. It had been a relief to know that Marco and Peter weren't infested, unless something had happened in the last hundred cycles, but some way or another my son was wrapped up in this hellish war, and there was really no way for that to be comforting.

But more importantly than that, I wanted to be able to pick up on every detail and nuance of the Andalite bandits, so that in the event that I was freed, I'd be able to contact them and tell them every single thing I'd noticed while I was Edriss' puppet. It was a dangerous thing to do, I knew, because Edriss could see anything I pieced together, but I was trying only to observe, not analyze. Hopefully, that would be enough but not too much.

As Edriss drove, the Andalites espoused their usual predictable reasoning behind wanting Edriss and not Esplin in command of Earth, and I tried not to take offense at their insistence that my body was "unstable" and easy to kill. Hard to contest that against a morph-capable alien with a bladed tail.

<In direct battle you will be easier to kill than Visser Three. Humans, Controllers or not, die easily.>

"And yet," Edriss murmured, and I could feel her weighing something in her mind, searching her own memories and my own. "And yet, the casualty reports from Earth are always weighted heavily toward Hork-Bajir and Taxxons. In fact…I am trying to recall when I have ever seen a report listing a Human Controller casualty."

<Visser Three's temporary possession of that technological crystal,> I muttered at her, <and of course, Royan Island, your own little pet project, weapons developer.>

<I know that,> Edriss shot back, <but that doesn't mean that I can't try to get a reaction out of the Andalite scum. You hear how they speak about humans. It would be entertaining to tempt their arrogance with a suggestion that they aren't all Andalites are made out to be.>

And yet, the car was silent. Surprise registered for both of us.

<You don't think…?> I asked her, incredulous, then realizing that any thought I put into it was as good as hers, started yelling at her, grasping at any stray insult I could think of as I tried to distract her. If it were true, if the Andalite bandits were humans, if they were humans stupid enough to let that on to Edriss, she might abandon her deal with them and not walk into a situation Visser Three might control. She might not commit us to some suicidal gambit for power. I couldn't let her think it through that far.

<You idiotic piece of slime, there's no possible way for humans to have the morphing technology. You're just chasing after ghosts. You like us humans so much that you want to believe we're capable of stymieing Visser Three, but that's just because you're a low-life sympathizer, ashamed of your own form. The Council will starve you out of me, Edriss, slug, useless blind slug, sympathizing, jealous little slug.>

<Enough, Eva,> Edriss snapped, though exteriorly a satisfied smile spread over my lips. <Do you honestly think I haven't considered the possibility of a trap? Do you think I'm so weak-minded as to be distracted by your pathetic taunts?>

I lapsed back into silence, trying unsuccessfully to fill my mind with anything other than the thought of the Andalite bandits not actually being Andalite bandits.

Edriss continued. <There must be humans among them, or at least in allegiance with them. Foolish of us to not have considered it. They must have had contact with humans or they wouldn't have survived and gone undetected as long as they have.>

<There's at least one Andalite. We've seen him with my own eyes twice now.>

<It could be a human in morph, though I find that unlikely. They're probably mostly Andalites, to have survived as long as they have, but there must be humans among them doing more than advising and sheltering. Eva,> she mused, switching to a wheedling tone, <perhaps that's where your precious Marco is now.>

I said nothing, but my thoughts raced with shame. How had I not considered that?

Edriss laughed at me. <Don't be silly, Eva. Your trusting, naïve little brat? He was doubtlessly an unauthorized host that didn't live long enough to be registered by the system. It happens, sometimes. No need to give yourself any false hope.>

Having successfully shut me down for the moment, she turned her attention back to driving, smugly considering all the ways she could use this information to humiliate Visser Three and reveling in the awkward silence of the bandits in the car. I found myself unable to stop thinking about the creatures, alien or not, who were crouched somewhere in the vehicle.

We arrived at the Visitor's Center only slightly ahead of Visser Three's forces, late enough that Edriss was nervous and hostile. The incident at the shop had shaken her, and no intuiting the bandits' secrets could quite occlude her fear of a quick, Dracon-provided death should she lose control of the situation. It would still be a while before we reached the colony of free Hork-Bajir.

The hike was difficult, to say the least. I would have never pushed myself to the pace Edriss kept. She could feel my pain, but only a fraction of it – I was taking the full brunt of the burning lungs, the blistering feet, the scraped palms, the quaking legs demanding 'stop, stop'. Edriss registered the exertion but pushed through it, doing a fair job at having my body keep up with the Hork-Bajir guide.

At the very least, it was giving me something to think about besides the bandits, whatever they were, whoever they were.

<They're trying to tire you out, Edriss, so they can kill you when they reach the top,> I said. I was allowing myself a little jeering since she seemed dead-set on continuing anyway. <But I suppose you already thought of that, didn't you? I'm sure you've already considered all the ways they're going to kill you and set me free.>

<You know, human, you may find it unusual, but I do prefer your snide remarks to your silence. Especially when my only other companionship is a Hork-Bajir.>

<Well, I'm so incredibly happy I could cheer you up, Edriss. You might as well die happy, right?>

Edriss hauled my body up the final cliff face and let me lie down, staring upwards. Even her sheer force of will couldn't rouse my exhausted legs to hold me up, so we lay. Her ships were up there, though shielded. The fluffy clouds and blue sky we saw was only a mirage, a façade for death and weaponry.

After I was no longer gasping for breath, we stood. The view from the cliff was stunning. If it really was a last view for me – if my prayers were answered and Edriss and I were both about to die – it was a satisfactory one.

<Beautiful,> Edriss muttered to herself, before turning and facing the mountain goat in front of us. "Andalite?"

<No, Yeerk, there's just a friendly goat up here,> I sneered.

As if reading my mind, the goat answered <of course.>

"Well, Andalite or human, whatever you are behind that morph," I felt she added that part specifically for me, "you'd better know one thing: my loyal forces fill the sky! Betray me and you'll be blasted apart!"

<We have a deal. Visser Three will join us soon. He will be alone or nearly alone.>

Neither Edriss nor I believed that second part even for an instant, but Edriss was confident that her ships and sensors would be enough to prevent anything too dangerous to us. "The Hork-Bajir colony. I don't see any colony."

The goat turned its head slightly, then said <not to get all Prince of Egypt on you, but…behold!>

<Prince of Egypt?> Edriss and I both thought at once, but at that moment the ground before us shimmered and vanished, replaced by a steep drop and a valley of free, happy Hork-Bajir. The very sight of it wiped any semblance of skepticism from us as we were overcome with emotion: me with wonder and sadness at the thought that this place existed and would soon be destroyed, and Edriss with sick anticipation and glee. The Hork-Bajir guides behind us said something, but neither of us were paying attention, transfixed by the sight of free, oblivious Hork-Bajir.

<Okay, we fulfilled our end of the bargain. Now it's up to Visser Three,> the goat muttered, and suddenly all the skepticism came rushing back. I felt Edriss flipping through memories, flipping through sounds I'd heard, voices in my memory.

"I know you," she said, with a disarming smile. "I know you, don't I?"

<I am an Andalite warrior. That's all you need to know.>

It was the feeblest attempt at an excuse I'd heard in a long time. Neither Edriss nor I believed it, and I was torn between curiosity and wanting to hide whatever conclusion I reached from her.

"No. Andalites don't make jokes, let alone human pop culture references. No, you're a human, and someone I used to know. Long ago, maybe. But someone I knew," she said to him, and then to me <I can't match the voice to any of your memories, but I'm certain we know this human.>

<I am too,> I answered, sad and surprised, unable to keep anything from her.

The goat said nothing.

<We'll piece it together,> she said to me, putting special emphasis on "we". Not letting me forget that I was aiding her every step of the way, even when I tried to sabotage her.

But right as she started to delve into my memories again, Visser Three appeared and we were both too distracted to do anything but react to him and the many soldiers he'd brought. Edriss and I were both taken aback – we hadn't anticipated he'd be in morph, nor that he'd bring so much backup.

<Well, well, well,> he gloated, <what's this? Visser One perched on the edge of a free Hork-Bajir colony? Chatting amiably with two free Hork-Bajir and, unless I miss my guess, an Andalite?>

To her credit, my body showed no physical stress response. She kept her unease, her utter panic at the situation taking a turn for the worse, completely internal.

Rather than cower, she turned her arrogant words on Esplin. Between the goading Edriss and Esplin did – traitor, incompetent, the usual nauseatingly pathetic song and dance – they were calling down ships to attack each other. Edriss was fully planning on switching the call of attack to the Hork-Bajir the instant before it would be too far gone to look like an accident. I had no doubts that Esplin was as well.

What neither of us expected was that he'd have the audacity to rush and attack us without pretense. As he lunged forward, Edriss pulled a Dracon beam from her bag, but much too late to stop Esplin's momentum. His claw slammed into my shoulder as the Dracon beam shot a superficial hole in him.

The pain caught both of us off-guard – Edriss fell, bleeding and screaming, to the rock floor, and I let out a howl of agony in our head. His claw hadn't punctured as deep as it could have, but it must have been barbed; it had ripped a messy hole down to my collarbone. Blood spilled onto my shirt.

The goat that wasn't really a goat lunged at Visser Three with a very public, very loud cry. Two minds worth of confusion swirled in my head, but everything was happening too quickly for either of us to piece together whom our strange protector and trickster was. The earth beneath us was splitting, Dracon shots going wild, Edriss and Esplin screaming at each other and at their fleets.

Thinking quickly, Edriss retrieved her communicator and demanded to be picked up and removed from the action, but we were isolated on one side of the now-split cliff. Isolated with the goat. With whomever it was who was simultaneously willing to set us up to die and try to defend us.

Edriss moved my eyes to stare at it, face it and try to decide if it was friend or foe. But years of her own paranoia pushed her to raise her weapon at it, rather than grant it temporary trust.

The goat said <I love you.>

<Peter?>

<No.> Edriss reached the conclusion first. Her voice was hollow with disbelief. <No.> And out loud, "The boy! It's the boy!"

Marco lunged for us, and I had never been filled with so much relief and such crushing despair all at once. Nor so much terror as when a tiger appeared over the edge of the cliff and pinned him. Or when Edriss raised her weapon to murder my son with my very own hand.

<No! Edriss, don't! Please! Please don't kill him! No!> I wailed at her, impotent, helpless, utterly helpless to watch her slaughter my child.

I would have gratefully lived a hundred years of torture if it had meant I could have had control over my body at that point, enough to toss aside the weapon, enough to smile and run over to my son and embrace him, enough to just not shoot him. But Edriss had anticipated my bid for control, and repressed me easily. She leveled the weapon at him, followed his tumbling body until she could be sure she could kill him and the tiger both in one shot, and completely dispassionately, twitched her trigger finger.

I didn't know if what happened next was divine intervention, fate, or sheer luck. Perhaps God was answering my silent prayer to save my son, if God is capable of hearing unvoiced invocations from helpless slaves. Perhaps Edriss had a moment of sympathy and paused for just a half-second too long. But she never pulled the trigger.

A black and white bird nearly slashed our eyes out instead, and while Edriss reeling with the pain, while I was reeling with the knowledge that Marco was not only free but a warrior, somehow one of my feet left the cliff ledge. Gravity finished what it had started, and I caught a last glimpse of the goat that was no Andalite, the goat that was a human, that was my sweet and clever son, before I plummeted from the edge of the cliff.

Rather than falling the entire way down the cliff face, I hit a ledge first, sending a lit fuse of pain up my spine to burst in my brain. I must have hit my head on something after that, because time skipped forward, and the next thing I was aware of, I was blind and incapacitated in a bed, bandaged and groggy.

<Edriss?> I asked in the blackness.

<Your son tried to kill you,> she said, and I felt myself slip into an uncomprehending, semi-conscious state.

I was incommunicable for a long while, probably days, on some type of alien anesthetic, drifting in and out of awareness. Edriss spoke to me, but I was beyond understanding words. Eventually either she was silent or I was incapable of hearing her, but I could vaguely understand that she was repeating the memory of the encounter with Marco over and over again. I could feel her being removed for feedings and reinfesting me, but had neither energy nor capability to even make a superficial attempt at fighting her off. She must have been bored, stuck perpetually awake in an amaurotic, bound body, so she started sorting through every memory I had of my son.

Sometimes, when the anesthetic wore off and the pain returned, so did my lucidity. <Edriss? Why can't I see?>

<The morphed bird attacked your eyes, human. They're damaged, but will heal with time. The bandages will be removed soon,> Edriss said clinically, detachedly.

<Why am I still being kept alive? As a host body? Surely I'm so damaged I'm useless to you, especially to a Visser.>

Edriss was quiet for a while, or possibly I slipped into unconsciousness and re-awoke to her. <I requested that you be kept alive unless your body is completely crippled. I didn't want to give you the satisfaction of dying. You still have many uses to me, more now that I know what your son is. His attempt on your life made you more than merely an ordinary host body.>

<Oh. Thank you.>

Edriss sounded surprised. <Changing your mind about freedom in death, human?>

<No. I just don't want my son responsible for my death. I don't want to burden him with that.>

Edriss' voice was heavy with disdain. <Self-sacrificing Eva, is that it? You'll give more years of your life for the ungrateful child who just tried to kill you. Your son attempted matricide, Eva.>

<No,> I said, with deep certainty, certainty she couldn't shake, even as I was drifting back into a dream-state, <he tried to kill you, because he knows what you are. I was just in the way.>

The next time I woke, Edriss, fresh from a feeding and with new information from her pool-mates, told me <the other reason I didn't forfeit your body was because the Council forbid me to take another host until the trial is complete. I'm to be tried for a variety of crimes.>

I might have smiled, were I capable. <Took them long enough to catch you at it, didn't it? Playing footsie with Andalite bandits, killing henchmen, messing up Royan Island like you did? And sympathizing, of course. I wondered when they'd finally get you for that. When does the trial start?>

<As soon as this body is well enough to stand in court. No treatment beyond what is absolutely necessary to ensure your survival and basic mobility. And that incompetent Visser Three will probably add a few injuries of his own while we're in his captivity,> she said darkly. <Should I be proven guilty we'll both die painfully.>

<Sounds lovely,> I said dryly. <You deserve it, you know.>

<Everything I've done has been in service of the Empire.>

<We both know it's in the service of you, Yeerk.>

She didn't answer that. She, and by proxy I, lay sightless and motionless. I thought of my little son, the eleven year-old I'd been torn from who'd grown into a fourteen year-old soldier with a voice so like his father's. I hoped he knew I was alive. I hoped he wasn't burying himself in guilt and regret and fear. I hoped the war wasn't rotting his soul the way it was rotting mine, my corroded mind that couldn't even recognize my own child.

But one can only hope for so long before they start to dwell on the alternatives, so I focused instead on the black canvas of total blindness until I slipped back into the darkness.


Post Merged: September 02, 2010, 01:37:05 AM
VI: Won't Come Undone

-/-

-/-

Edriss was watching my memories again. Since her sentencing, she did it pretty frequently, every night before she put my body to sleep, and surely while my mind was asleep. She reminded me of the way Peter had sat in front of the television for two weeks watching old movies after his mother died. To be honest, it bothered me, but not enough to argue with her about it. If she was going to crouch in my head, despondent, absorbing all my happiest memories, I couldn't fight her anyway, and reminiscing was what I'd be doing with or without her.

In another cycle we'd be taken back to Earth for her public execution. When she finally starved to death, I'd be briefly given over to another Yeerk so my mind could be searched for any posthumous charges they could slap on Edriss, and then probably disposed of. My body was already damaged from torture and unhealed injuries, and probably would only get more battered before her death. I would be useless as a host.

Our days were numbered. In a way, it brought out a strange camaraderie between us, one that hadn't existed when she was safe. Yeerks, when facing certain defeat, don't fight it like humans do. After a while, it made all my gloating deeply unsatisfactory. And I didn't want to die either – I was eager to finally be free of her, but some base human instinct in me recoiled at the idea of death. Edriss had explained to me that very few species are capable of the amount of cognitive dissonance that humans manage on a regular basis. I looked eagerly on to the freedom of death, and wanted nothing more than to live, all at once.

So instead of fighting with each other, we lay in the guarded quarters of the Pool Ship that had once been hers, sifting through my memories until we were both nearly delirious.

I held a newborn child in my arms, a boy, with chubby little fingers and a full head of hair. I knew the numbers. 9:27 a.m. Fourteen hours of labor. Thirty-eight weeks of pregnancy, maybe thirty-two being aware of it. Twenty-nine pounds gained, a number I'd fastidiously kept between the recommended twenty-five and thirty-five. Sixteen inches, six and a half pounds, an inconvenient for my job, but not unhealthy, fifteen days early. Peter told me all the numbers first because hard, concrete facts were so much easier for him to process than the fact that he was a father now.

"Which name did you put on the certificate?" I asked him, not taking my eyes off the foreign little thing in my arms. Peter was not the only one having trouble processing the whole thing.

"I went with Marco. You were right, it's not too Anglo-sounding, not too Spanish. And he looks like a Marco. Don't you?" He gently poked the baby's tiny fingers. Our son didn't yet have the motor control, or maybe the interest, to grasp at the intruding digit.

"I don't know if he looks like much yet. A Conehead, maybe. Look at the shape of that little skull."

"It'll get to normal shape soon. And we're not naming our baby Conehead," Peter said laughingly. "I think we'd know if he traveled here from Remulak."

"Oh, believe me, I would know. I think I know exactly where he was coming from for fourteen hours." The baby began to cry. I'd always assumed that parenting would be instinctive, but it was awkward and new, moving the baby's delicate, squished head into position to breastfeed. "I'm sorry, baby. Marco. Your head doesn't look that much like a cone."

I felt the memory distort. Edriss' mind was bleeding into mine. The images of twin newborns, half-Korean, of Hildy Gervais at my side, of my own arms paler and shorter cradling these babies, overlaid my own memory. A little bit out-of-sync, a little bit more faded on top of the memory of Peter and my single baby Marco in my arms.

The images of Peter and Hildy moved together towards the door. In a strange, overlapped voice, they said "your father's in the waiting room. I'll tell him he can come in."

<Edriss, stop trying to pretend it was your family. You have your own memories of them,> I told her.

<Yours are more clear,> she replied.

<This isn't yours. This is my memory.>

<Eva, my memories are fragmented and deteriorating. Yours are as well, but I can access the forgotten sections of them that even you can't. I can dredge up details you never would have remembered without me. Why shouldn't I be able to relive my happiness in the same vivid color and texture as I'm allowing you to relive yours in?>

<Because,> I growled, <it's not your happiness. It's mine. This is my happiness and my love and my family, not your sick murderous excuse for it. Don't even dare compare your idea of love to mine, murderer.>

<Is it so different from yours? Was it different for me to kill Allison Kim and Essam than it was for your brat to try and kill you?>

<Yes,> I said with complete conviction. <Yes, it was different, because Marco was trying to kill you, not me.>

I expected her to argue back more, almost wanted her to so I could tell her a hundred times why she was wrong. But the inevitability of her death had taken the fight out of her. Instead she just flipped over to a memory of my father teaching me to drive.

There had been times when, despite myself, I had admired Edriss' pragmatism and determination, her all-but-delusional confidence. It was difficult to admire her at all when she had completely given up all hope. She was only a memory of her former self, no acerbic insults or vindictiveness left to her, no ambition, no applied cunning. If an opportunity to escape presented itself, she would seize it, but she had no expectation of any chances showing up. All that was left of her were the faded memories she fixed atop the picture-show of my mind.

I almost felt for her for all the months she had spent sharing a head with me, when I was despairing.

She switched over to a memory of my first promotion, when I was in college managing a gas station, going from cashier to assistant manager. I felt the shadow of sympathetic pride and gratification. There was nothing much I could do if she was trying to use my life to remember her own feelings of joy. I didn't feel motivated to futilely try and start a row with her anyway.

<You know,> I said, neither accusing nor empathizing, <there's a certain irony, that you were sentenced to death partially because you were convicted of sympathy, and yet here you are going through my memories because they remind you of you.>

She didn't answer me. A memory of Peter and me at a university-sponsored classical music recital. Extra irony, there. Peter and Marco's escape from infestation had been presented to the Council as evidence that Edriss, empathizing with her human host and already in communication with the Andalite bandits, had orchestrated their protection. Of course, both of us knew it wasn't true, but she couldn't explain that they'd escaped because Marco was an "Andalite bandit" without admitting that she'd kept vital information from the war effort on Earth – which was, like so many Council rules, punishable by some form of painful death. Not that it mattered much anyway; after Edriss had failed spectacularly as a military leader in the Anati system, the Council had been looking for any little reason to reinstate her original sentence.

Last I'd heard, Visser Three was sending out assassins to kill my family. We hadn't heard news beyond that. I would have prayed for their safety, but I had faith that my son was smarter and better equipped than any thugs Visser Three could assign to him.

I slept while Edriss continued to watch my memories. I woke up hours later and found she hadn't stopped all night. I was opening a letter that was awarding me a scholarship; I was taking a bath Peter had prepared for me; I was intimidating an intern from a rival campaign; I was teaching Marco to read; I was excoriating a disliked co-worker; I was shooting some guy down at a bar; I was ten years old and beaming as my mother tasted my first attempt at cooking a whole meal.

Pride, love, power, satisfaction, affection. My life wasn't flashing before my eyes; it was loping along like a disjointed movie for the two of us, the two doomed viewers.

<Edriss,> I said, no longer expecting an answer from her, <in a few days we'll both be dead.>

<Yes.>

<I'll be free.>

<Yes. You will. You'll be free in death, like you always said. Though I don't see what the freedom is in that.>

<It'll be nice, to die on my home planet. To die and be free of you,> I repeated for the thousandth time since her sentencing, but she had made me, too, doubt the freedom of death.
« Last Edit: September 02, 2010, 01:37:05 AM by LisaCharly »

Offline Myitt

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #11 on: September 06, 2010, 04:12:06 PM »
This is exactly the kind of stuff, the unsaid stuff, that I wish we'd gotten more of in the series.  Like, a retelling of the books from Edriss' point of view.  Awesomely well written!  I almost got choked up at the end of the last chapter, the sort of hopelessness they both are feeling was very powerful.

Is there gonna be more, huh huh? ;)


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Offline LisaCharly

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #12 on: September 08, 2010, 10:23:34 AM »
Wow, thanks! I'm glad you're enjoying it. There are a few more chapters following what happens to Eva.

Author's Note: Trigger warning on this chapter for some mentions of sexual violation.

VII: Crawl Home

-/-

-/-

I was angry. I was free, but mostly I was angry.

I don't know why I'd thought my life would return to the way it was once I was freed. I'd known it wouldn't, but I was still disappointed when I came back to world that had moved past me and changed without my permission. And I'd thought Edriss' death would be the final key to re-open the door of my life, but even in death she was hanging over me like a lead coat.

The freedom I'd prayed for didn't include a damaged body that barely responded right to my commands, but responded all too viscerally to my fear and sadness. After years of disconnect, suddenly I could barely walk, but my throat could quickly seize up against my will and tears would force their way out, my mind once again overpowered by some other force. And I resented every moment when my mind wasn't in complete control of my body.

More terrifyingly, my mind wasn't in complete control of itself, neither in sleep nor waking. During sleep I was trapped back inside my head with her; during the day, I was bitter and paranoid. I'd always been a bit combative and cynical but never like this. I jumped at small sounds and said harsh things and I hated. I hated like I'd never hated anything. I scared myself with the sheer volume of hate I could contain. I scared myself with how much more I hated Edriss now that she was dead than when she was living in my skull. In my memory I stripped her and her whole race of anything sympathetic and turned them into glowing targets of hatred. The hatred, the all-consuming, feverish, unreasonable hatred fueled me and gave me the energy to continue to use my broken body and mind, and that I had to do that only added to my anger and to my hatred.

Hate. Not loathing, not disgust, but hate. The ugliest word in the English language and its furnace in me stayed so diligently tended.

The hatred hung in my brain like another person. The empty space Edriss had left behind had been filled with rage. It draped itself over everything. It was an intruder, pushing into the space between my body and Peter's.

The intimacy came back first. If Peter and I didn't know each others' minds anymore, we could at least go through the motions. A kiss, a hug, the gentle stroke was always as loving as it had been, and it took the place of the clumsy, stupid words we knew. For so long, words had been my only respite, and now they failed me at every turn. But our bodies, gradually, came back to us. The familiar, private motions that had been unique to us replaced the generic kiss. He traced a heart on the small of my back. I lay my face perpendicularly on his, our noses and cheeks touching, the every exhalation mingling.

But I was rough whenever I stopped focusing on being gentle. One night, when we'd snuck away into the woods and away from the Hork-Bajir for some sexual healing, I ripped up his back.

"Oh God, honey, right there, that feels…ow! Ow! Eva, that's a bit hard!"

"Sorry, sorry!" I broke the embrace immediately, pulling hands away from behind his back. It was too dark to see, but something dripped down one hand. I pushed myself off him. "Are you okay?"

"Yeah, I'm fine." His hand found my shoulder. "Sorry I ruined the mood."

I found the flashlight entangled in my bra and jeans. I flicked it on and flinched at the sight of blood on my fingers. I stumbled around him to see his back. Seven red welts where my fingers had been, and one crimson line where my middle finger had broken the skin. "Oh, God, I didn't realize I was scratching that hard."

He shrugged, pulling on my wrist to bring me back down to the earth. "It's okay. You're getting used to being in control of your body again. Nothing serious."

"I didn't mean to hurt you," I said flatly. I started to put my bra back on.

"Honey, really, it's okay."

I shook my head and put my hair back up. No, not okay. Edriss had only had my body for seven years; I'd had it for over thirty. I knew my own strength. It wasn't my body that was foreign; it was the anger that seeped into every moment of the day, even the private ones. Private, intimate moments that were rife with memories of him having sex with my body while Edriss went through the happy motions and I was trapped unwilling in my own head. Memories of him having sex, with her, unknowing, unaware that he was being violated by her sick mind, that there was another participant in a moment that should have been private.

Victims and perpetrators, both of our bodies. Yes, I knew my own strength.

"Honey, it's really okay. I think I've gotten bug bites out here worse than this."

I let my hands fall to my thighs, sitting cross-legged on the ground half-clothed, and sighed. "You don't have to be understanding. You don't have to think you're so damn understanding."

Peter laughed, never one to back away from one of my challenges. "Think? I know I'm understanding. I'm so understanding our kid turns into a gorilla and asks for help building a space radio, and I say "sure, is the centaur alien gonna help?". And then it turns out you're alive and newly freed from extraterrestrial slave-masters and you expect me to think it's weird that you're a little messed up from it?"

"I resent the implication that I'm "a little messed up"."

Peter looked at me with the same honest eyes I'd lost five years ago. "Yeah? Well, you are."

I lay down in the grass next to him and turned off the flashlight. The stars glittered above us. I reached my hand up as if I could reach them and tear them out of the sky. Peter rubbed my thigh comfortingly.

"I'm not the same person you married, Peter." My voice cracked. I didn't want to admit that I might not ever be that person again. That Edriss had stolen more than my body.

"I'm not either," he said. "Actually…"

"Actually, what?"

He released a heavy sigh and removed his hand from my leg. "You probably wouldn't have married me if you knew what a bad parent I'd be."

"You aren't a bad parent."

He sat up. "Not while you were around, no. But after you, you left…that's why Marco's so self-sufficient. He probably didn't tell you how much of a failure I was."

I didn't say anything to that. If he wanted to confess, I'd let him. I sat up next to him and kept my eyes trained on the sky.

"I mean, I got better," he continued "I got my job back and started actually paying the bills and all. But I just forgot things. And it was two years of me doing nothing but crying and sitting there and sending Marco down through King Street at midnight to get groceries from the Rite-Aid. I was awful. You'd have wanted to kill me."

"I kind of want to kill you now," I said, meaning for it to sound more light-hearted than it did. It's always difficult joking while pointing out someone's deep personal failures. "Flattered as I am that my death meant that much to you."

There really are times when humor is not the best solution. I used to know those times. I used to know when to be kind and understanding to my husband and when to be flippant. But spending years away from someone puts you out of sync. My mood was a bit too biting; his was a bit too ashamed. The humor that was an occasional salve was mud in the wound.

Both wounds, really. I had loved him, loved him still, hoped my death hadn't devastated him, but there was a private hell for me. Guilt over the other wife. Anger, betrayal, paranoia over the other wife. But bringing her up wouldn't do any good. So I didn't.

I didn't know if he wanted me to protest that he hadn't been that bad, but I hadn't been there. I could only take his word. "Maybe it's for the best. He's had to be self-sufficient in this whole thing. Maybe it was all for the best. Maybe it kept him alive."

It came out harsher than I hope, but I could see the silhouette of his head against the sky nod a little. "Yeah, maybe. I'm making an effort, at least. I don't understand most of what's happened in the last month, but I'm doing my best."

"You're doing a wonderful job, may I add."

He wrapped his arm around me. "So are you."

I gave him a smile that was lost in the darkness. "I forgive you, you know. I don't know if that's what you were looking for, but I don't blame you for anything."

He put his face in my hair and took a deep breath. I probably smelled like sweat and river water. "Thanks. I just wish I'd known."

"Focus on knowing now. You're doing a pretty good job at this "being understanding" thing."

"Thanks," he said, drawing me closer. "So we focus on the now."

"Right. Here and now." I was never a touchy-feely emotional baggage type, even before everything. I pulled away. "We need to talk with Toby. Find a way to set up an alternate escape route, if the valley gets attacked."

"That's what you're thinking about?"

"No." I chuckled grimly. "But you don't want to know what I think about these days."

I saw him nod again. "You're angry."

"Aren't you?"

"Of course I am. Just not as angry as you are. I mean, everything that happened to you was out of your control. Everything that happened to me and Marco, maybe I could've done something about that."

"So you're tempering it with self-pity and regret? That's great."

He fell quiet for a moment. It made the night sounds of the forest insufferably loud. Eventually, he said, "you have a right to be angry. I do too, but indirectly. But don't pretend like you're happy being this angry, or that you'd be happier if I was."

I sighed. "This just isn't the time for self-pity, Peter."

"I know. I happen to think I'm doing a pretty good job keeping the self-pity to a minimum. I mean, compared to how I used to be." This time, more tentatively, he just put a hand on mine. "You be patient with me and I'll be patient with you, 'kay?"

"I have an excuse. You've just always been a sad sack," I protested.

"Please. You've had a chip on your shoulder since before I met you. It's just a big honking fissure now."

He started to withdraw his hand, but I took it into mine, even as I sardonically said "oh honey, you're so romantic when you're pointing out my faults."

He laced the fingers of his other hand in the hair behind my ear. "I try my best."

I started to kiss him again, pulling our chests together. His fingers fumbled again with my bra straps. I pressed myself to him, to all the memorized parts of him, the skin and hair and the smooth appendectomy scar and the collarbone.

I still felt the anger and betrayal and harshness beneath my skin, but I felt it contained and dimmed. "I promise not to draw blood this time."

"It's only a scratch," he whispered. "I don't want you worrying about it."

Even with our minds unfamiliar, I could trace the pilgrimage across his familiar body. He could follow the path to the parts of me that never changed, the physical elements that stayed relatively constant. Our bodies knew each other still, thank God.

We had sex in the grass and I crawled a little closer to what I'd had.

Offline Myitt

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #13 on: September 09, 2010, 07:02:42 PM »
All I've gotta say is, I hope they were far away from the rest of the group! XD  This was really good too.  You've gotta wonder how Eva would've really recovered from being Visser One's host for so long.  I wish we'd gotten to see more of her at the end of the series, after she was freed. 

Only a minor grammar thing, when quoting within a quote you should "quote 'like this'." ...and not "like "this"."

Semantics! ;D


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Offline LisaCharly

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Re: The Husk (Work in Progress)
« Reply #14 on: September 09, 2010, 07:52:53 PM »
Haha, thanks for pointing that out, I have so much trouble with quotation marks. :) I've always found Eva incredibly interesting and the idea of recovering from such a long time as a total slave is fascinating. I'm only hoping to scratch the surface of it.