It is a bit of a running gag, it's true.
Anyway, last chapter of Book 47!
CHAPTER TWENTY:
A New Threat
As it turned out, the Fmeks had just recently become aware of the "Radioactive Seal From A Forum Near RAF" incident. They deduced that FYI was responsible. Though that took several months.
The RAFians gave them a subtle ultimatium -- leave and never return or die.
They chose the former.
But Cloak still felt unease. He didn't know why. It was just . . . just that it felt like . . . like they were being . . .
watched. He couldn't Earthsight or Metalsight anything within the perimeter. But this unsettling feeling of unease would not dissipate.
He turned to go to his thread, as the Aquillians left to resume their peaceful lives in their exosuits. It had been a long day.
However, Cloak's instincts were right. There actually
was someone watching them.
***
Night had fallen. The moon was big and bright. The stars twinkled almost lazily. Cloak was standing at the end of the forest looking up, marveling at this. The Nexus had no stars, no moon, just inky blackness.
"Hello, stranger." said a voice. One that involuntarily filled Cloak with terror and dread.
"M-mother?" he said, hating how his voice trembled. "How'd you find me here?"
"Oh, I heard the sound of utter betrayal and my heart shattering, and followed that." she said, concealing her fury. "C'mon, son, we're going
home."
"No." Cloak said, at once. Then he gestured to the buildings that made up the forum. The boards, the infirmary, the mess hall, the thread quarters, the auditorium, the training simulator, etc. "
They like me.
They care about me. I
am home."
"Like you? Please, son." his mother said, dismissively. "This is why you should have never left."
"You kicked me out." Cloak snarled.
"I didn't mean it," she said, still in that infuriatingly dismissive tone. "Dear, this whole
fantasy that you've
invented just proves . . . you're too naive to be here."
She stode over to him, getting rather closer than the prerequisite six feet diameter that Closk wanted to keep with her. "Why would they like you? C'mon now, really! Look at the state of you! You think they're
impressed?!"
Then the music started.
"Don't be a dummy!
Come with Mummy.
Mother --"
"NO!" Cloak snarled, with a tiger growl intermingling with the word.
"No?" his mother said, looking miffed at the defiance. "Oh, I see how it is.
Cloak knows best.
Cloak's so mature now.
Cloak can never go admiss.
Cloak knows best.
Fine, if you're so sure now --"
She seized his arm and showed him the Mark.
"Go ahead and break THIS!"
"How'd you know --"
"This is why they're here!
Don't let them deceive you!
Break this and watch, you'll see!
Trust me, my son."
She snapped her fingers.
"That's how fast they'll leave you!
I won't say, "I told you so"!
No, Cloak knows best.
Go ahead and put them to the test!
If they're lying,
Don't come crying!
Mother knows best!"
Then she was gone, and all was blackness. Cloak felt horrible and hollow.
***
With a gasp, Cloak sat straight up in his bed. He was shaking. No matter how he tried to deny it, part of him was always afraid of his mother, even now as an adult.
But why? Why was she this way? Why was she so narcissistic, so arrogant, so unwilling to find fault in herself? No one is just
born like that.
Okay, maybe Helmacrons, but thats beyond the point.