Phoenix Pt 2 Ch 01
Introduction:
2069 a.d. – Life Force
Maria burst through the rear door of the hacienda and fled, barefoot and naked, down the dark street. Two horsemen spurred their steeds and gave chase to the nubile young girl. Unable to check her speed before darting down a narrow alleyway, Maria slammed into the sidewall at the alleyâs entrance with a breathless grunt. Pushing away from the wall, she stumbled into the darkness of the alley, then fled toward the light at the far end.
The iron-shod hooves of one of the horsemen clopped along at the entranceway behind her, then began galloping faster, getting louder much too quickly. Reaching the far end of the alley, Maria ducked to the left just as the horseman reached down for her. The horse slipped on the wet cobblestones and stumbled at the savage wrench on its reins, but Maria slipped also. Horse, hunter and prey fell in a heap at the end of the alley.
Terrified, Maria clambered to her feet and ran smack into another horse and rider. A thump on her head and everything went black.
~~~~~
âRaul, my darling,â she cooed as her gloved hand caressed that magnificent shaft between her loverâs legs.
Raul hung on the wall, his arms chained wide above his head. His feet were chained to the wall, as well. There were oozing marks on his chest and stomach where he had been both whipped and burned, but that magnificent cock of his still responded to her touch.
The lady smiled and lifted her dress, intending to take full advantage of this incredible gift to womankind. As she worked his shaft up inside her, she smiled and licked at his wounds and burns.
âYou were a naughty boy, my darling Raul,â she cooed lovingly. âI gave you everything you needed â your own house, servants, a coach, all the money you could use. Your loyalty to me was such a small price to pay, was it not?â
She spit on an open, oozing burn, making Raul draw in his breath with a hiss.
âYet you could do not even that!â she snarled. âThis wonderful shaft inside me was meant for MY pleasure â not the pleasure of half the putas in Madrid! Yet you could not keep this love shaft pure for me!â
She was humping his marvelous shaft as she spoke. A servant, seeming to know exactly what she wanted, brought her a lit candle. She took it and began dribbling wax over Raulâs burnt and whipped flesh, making him cry out.
âOoh! You move so nicely inside me!â the Lady Melinda cooed, squeezing him in return.
She held the candle against his breast for a moment, causing him to jerk again in a futile effort to escape the burning pain.
âYes! Thatâs it!â
She moved the candle across his chest slowly, leaving a trail of wax and scorched flesh, stopping underneath his other nipple.
This time, Raul jerked several times in his efforts to avoid the burning, torturous candle fire.
âOh! Mi Dios!â Melinda cried out in orgasm.
âMaria Conchita Velasquez, I love you!â Raul cried out as Maria sank down, impaling herself completely on his marvelous shaft.
âHow dare you!â the Lady Melinda gasped in rage.
She looked around, finding herself in a field, far from her castle walls and her adored instruments of torture. The only instrument of torture here was the hard, hot shaft that penetrated up inside her almost to her lungs.
âWhatâs happening?â Maria cried out, confused.
The last thing she remembered was running head-on into a mounted soldier.
The images faded away into a dull gray nothing. Both Maria and Melinda cried out in fear.
âWho are you?â the Lady Melinda demanded. âHow did you bring me here? Are you a witch?â
They glared into each otherâs frightened, angry eyes. âI know you! Youâre that Puta Raul was with! I gave you to the General to play with. How did you get away from him?â
âYouâre my sister?â Maria asked, completely confusing her antagonist, her eyes widening in triumph as she realized what had finally happened.
âSister? What are you talking about, you demented slut?â Melinda snarled.
She tried to strike at the naked girl, but found that she couldnât move in this strange absence of⊠everything!
âListen to me!â Maria/Betty/BĂ©la demanded. âYouâre dreaming! This isnât real! The Praetor took you! Do you remember that?â
âThe Praetor?â the Lady Melinda cried out, frightened now. âNo! Let me go!â
âThis is a dream!â BĂ©la insisted. âSurely you must remember! Stop fighting and think!â
âA dream?â Melinda asked, wanting to believe there was a reason behind this madness.
âYes, now just relax,â BĂ©la said, more quietly now. âYou donât want to attract the Praetorâs attention.â
âI remember now,â Melinda replied, awed at what was happening. âThe Praetor trapped me in a ray of light, then I was inside it, somehow. There are others here, trapped like me!â
âYes!â BĂ©la exclaimed, happy to have finally broken the spell. âWe have to wake them and find a way out!â
âThere is no way out,â Melinda replied mournfully. âI remember trying to escape when I was brought here. My body is gone. The Praetor made me watch as it was burned into ashes.â
âMy body was burned up, also,â BĂ©la replied. âBut I donât know if the Praetor did that. My car exploded and caught on fire. I was strapped inside, trapped.â
âThe Praetor told me that I couldnât survive outside,â Melinda told her new friend. âI would just evaporate into nothing and die.â
âThat might not be true,â BĂ©la said, thoughtfully. âI was outside my body for a time before I was drawn in by the Praetor. I didnât feel like I was evaporating. In fact, my senses at the time were very sharp and clear. I could even see in the dark!â
âReally?â Melinda asked. âThatâs fascinating! But, how did you⊠Why would the Praetor be interested in you? You were just a whore that distracted my concubine.â
âWe have the same father,â BĂ©la explained. âDo you remember when you arrived here? On earth, I mean?â
âI think so,â Melinda replied. âIt was so long agoâŠâ
âIt was a long time ago for me, too,â BĂ©la told her. âIâve lived for thousands of years. You probably have, too.â
âYesâŠâ
âMy father told me, after he hunted me down, that I was the last one,â BĂ©la told her. âAll the others, you and my other sisters, were already⊠Well, I thought heâd killed all of you. I didnât know about this artificial world inside the Praetor. Iâve been trying to get someoneâs attention, like, forever! You were the only one who ever crossed paths with me. I could only enter your vision where I was present. I had to wait until our life-dreams coincided.â
âWhen I came to reclaim my Raul, you mean?â Melinda asked, sounding a little superior.
âYes,â BĂ©la said, her voice sounding a little unfriendly, as well. âI remember when you set Raul on fire and burned him alive.â
âYet youâre willing to help me now?â Melinda asked, not trusting this little Puta.
âYou are the only one whose dream I was able to break into,â BĂ©la replied. âI never met any of my other sisters in real life.â
âI had a sister in Rumania, fifty years before I ever laid eyes on you,â Melinda replied haughtily. âHer name was Elisabeta.â
âGreat!â BĂ©la exclaimed enthusiastically. âThink about the time you two were together! Maybe we can break into her life-dream and dispel the Praetorâs power over her!â
âYes!â Melinda agreed wholeheartedly. âThis is a good idea you have!â
She closed her eyes and thought about her sister. A shimmering of multi-colored light appeared around the two trapped in the Praetor, then BĂ©la found herself standing in a room. She was still naked, but Melinda was now dressed in some kind of dark red velvet.
Elisabeta jumped and cried out. The image of the room wavered for an instant, then resolidified. BĂ©la found that she could move inside this imagined world her sister had created inside the Praetor.
âWeâre probably safe from the Praetor in here,â BĂ©la ventured. âIt will think weâre still dreaming.â
âWho are you?â Elisabeta demanded! âTalitha, who is this strumpet who parades around without any dressing?â
âSister,â Melinda/Talitha replied. âThis is another sister! She is here to help us! Her name is⊠What is your name, Puta?â
âBĂ©la,â BĂ©la replied. âBut father named me Hethemtima.â
âIâve never heard of you!â Elisabeta replied haughtily. âAre you Egyptian, too?â
BĂ©la smiled. âWell, yes, I guess. Does it matter? Before we were in Egypt, we were all from the same place â fatherâs laboratory.â
âFather?â Elisabeta said, her voice almost an octave higher. âHow old are you, girl?â
âAt least four thousand,â BĂ©la replied, sounding bored, now. âLet me show you somethingâŠâ
Concentrating hard, she evaporated the room around them. The three sisters floated in the bluish gray void BĂ©la and Melinda had found themselves in earlier.
âEeeek!â Elisabeta shrieked. âWhat have you done?â
âI stopped your dream,â BĂ©la explained. âDo you remember the Praetor taking you?â
She got pretty much the same reaction from Melindaâs sister that she got from Melinda, earlier.
âWe need to find another to awaken,â BĂ©la said as she finished her explanation of what she was trying to accomplish. âDid either of you ever meet any others like us?â
Melinda shrugged and shook her head, âNo, Elisabeta was the only one. She showed me how to make others immortal with my blood.â
âYeah!â BĂ©la replied and made a disagreeable face. âI met Torquemada, thank you. He nearly killed me!â
âWell, he does that very well,â Melinda smiled. âThatâs what attracted me to him in the first place. All that delicious bloodâŠâ
âYes,â Elisabeta replied, smiling to herself. âI knew one like that, too. We had several wonderful years together⊠Hey! I was just getting to the good part when you showed up and ruined my life!â
âNever mind that! It was just a dream!â BĂ©la insisted, intent on finding a way to escape. âI need to know if you knew anyone even remotely like us! Think hard, okay? Was there anyone like me or either one of you?â
âNo,â Elisabeta replied, shaking her head. âI never met anyone like me except Talitha.â
BĂ©la sighed. âThen it looks like thereâs just the three of usâŠâ
âWait!â Elisabeta exclaimed, suddenly remembering. âThere was a man â a prophet who showed me that we were kin to each other! His blood could make others immortal, too. In fact, he was the one who demonstrated the power of our blood to heal his followers. He also taught me how to fly!â
âYou can fly?â Melinda asked, incredulous. âHave you ever heard of such a thing, Puta?â
âYou mean you canât?â BĂ©la asked, sounding surprised and pretending to be bored. She was also getting a little tired of being called a whore by this mass murderess.
In fact, BĂ©la was pretty annoyed at the both of them. Elisabeta had discovered she could fly hundreds and maybe thousands of years before BĂ©la had figured it out. She wondered how many others of her sisters had known how to fly. Maybe they were the true beginnings of the vampire legends she encountered after she’d fled north from Rome and its bloody coliseum.
âThe Praetor mentioned that I had a brother,â BĂ©la continued. âYou knew him?â
âYes!â Elisabeta replied. âEveryone knows of him â he is the blessed one â the Christ!â
âJesus Christ!â BĂ©la exclaimed, swearing.
âThatâs right, âElisabeta replied, surprised. âThat was his name â Jesus.â
âYou knew Jesus?â BĂ©la asked, not believing her.
âI told you, yes!â Elisabeta said, her voice cold at BĂ©laâs suggestion that she might be lying.
BĂ©la sighed, âAll right, I believe you, I guess. I was never certain that he ever actually existed. I went to Rome to meet him, but he had already been hanged before I arrived.â
âThink about him!â Melinda said, anxiously. âFor me to bring this Puta⊠BĂ©la?⊠to you, I had to think about when we were together. If you think about when you and⊠He⊠were together, then we should arrive where he was when you two were together.â
âA time when we were together. Okay, Iâll try that,â Elisabeta said.
She closed her eyes and concentrated. âIâm thinking about the time we first met â He and I.â
The hot dryness of a desert town surrounded them, along with the stench that the lack of plumbing insured. Elisabeta was dressed in a different style, now â a much lighter robe of colorful linen. She was backing away from several angry people.
BĂ©la recognized a language that she hadnât heard for thousands of years. They were yelling at Elisabeta in Aramaic, calling her a whore and a fallen woman. Then they began throwing rocks at her!
Another man, looking no different than any of the other townspeople, grabbed the arm of an older woman who was about the throw another rock at Elisabeta.
âHold!â he cried out, then walked out toward Elisabeta and her two sisters and raised his arms to address the mob. âWho are you to judge this woman? Are you superior to her because your own sins have not yet been discovered? Let he who is without sin cast the next stone!â
BĂ©la could see he was different than anyone sheâd ever met before. He glowed! She wondered how he did that.
Then he noticed her. âWho are you? You donât belong here! Where is your robe, girl?â
Once again, BĂ©la concentrated and pulled them all out of his life-dream and into what she now considered her little blue sanctuary.
âMary, what is happening?â Jesus cried out to Elisabeta, sounding alarmed.
âThese are my sisters, my Lord,â Elisabeta/Mary replied.
âIâve told you not to call me that,â Jesus admonished her. âI have only the power that others give me. Does no one understand?â
âYouâre really Jesus?â BĂ©la asked, staring wide eyed and open mouthed at the scrawny little man with the strange glow.
âThatâs my name,â Jesus replied, sounding annoyed. âWhere have you heard it?â
BĂ©la laughed. Her two sisters joined her. In a moment, the three of them were laughing hysterically. Jesus frowned at them, feigning indifference to their obvious insanity.
âIâm sorry, Lord,â BĂ©la gasped when she could speak again. âBut you obviously have NO idea what you startedâŠâ
Then she burst into laughter again, spraying her lord with spittle. Embarrassed, she tried to wipe down his gray, undyed robe with her hands.
The three sisters spent the next several hours floating in BĂ©laâs little blue void talking to their fatherâs son and bringing him up to date. Jesus was astounded as he came to realize that he was the center of the single biggest misunderstanding in the last two thousand years.
After awhile, they began discussing the exaggerated stories people still told of his exploits all those centuries ago. BĂ©la was telling him the tale about the wine jugs that refilled themselves and the baskets of bread and fish that never emptied.
âWell, actually,â he interrupted, âthat story about the bread and the wine is true. I was teaching philosophy to a group of students on a hillside one afternoon and they got hungry. I had just learned how to teleport small objectsâŠâ
âWhat? Wait!â BĂ©la interrupted him, suddenly excited. âWhat exactly does that mean, to âteleportâ?â
Jesus thought about how it was done. As he was thinking, an image appeared in front of them, then was absorbed into the sistersâ minds.
âCan you teleport me outside the Praetor?â BĂ©la asked, astounded as this sudden avenue of escape presented itself.
In an instant, BĂ©la was outside the Praetor, floating free in a room filled with white light.
‘The Praetor lied!’ BĂ©la thought joyously to herself. ‘Iâm not dissolving. Thereâs nothing here to dissolve⊠just me!’
She saw her father and realized she was in his laboratory, wherever that was currently.
‘Father!’ she screamed into his mind.
He turned around as the Praetor located BĂ©la and attempted to pull her back inside. The harder she resisted, the faster she moved toward the Praetor.
Enraged at her inability to resist the strange pull the Praetor was exerting on her, she launched herself at the vile machine.
‘You want me?’ she screamed at it, ‘Here I am! Iâm taking back what you stole from me!’
Rallying all of her energy and taking advantage of the tractor beam to accelerate, she rammed back inside the Praetor. As soon as she passed through the metal surface, she discharged all of that strange energy sheâd collected from the tractor ray. Then she reversed the energy flow, sucking it all back into herself to blast it again andâŠ
Everything stopped!
What happened? BĂ©la asked, confused.
There was no Praetor. She was alone. No, she could feel the subdued minds of her siblings as they fed her their life energy. Somehow, she had become the Praetor!
“Praetor, what is going on?” a voice boomed, surrounding her.
Suddenly terrified, BĂ©la tried to shrink into as small a ball of energy as she could. “Who are you?” she fearfully asked the voice. She probed her surroundings wildly, not finding anyone.
“I am Sibilius, the Regent of Deimos,” the booming voice answered. “The question is, âWho are you?â You are not the Praetor!”
“I am Hethemtima,” BĂ©la told him timidly, “your daughter. Remember me?”
She realized that if she was inside the Praetor and her father was outside, she should be able to see him somehow! She began seeking with her mind, trying to figure out how the Praetorâs sensors worked â
‘There! I can see outside! Wow! Itâs all electronics!’
“That is not possible!” Sibilius responded, sounding angry and hurt. Hethemtima is⊠“All my daughters are dead!”
“You are mistaken, Father,” BĂ©la replied quietly, speaking for all his hybrid children. “The life forces of all of us are here, inside this Praetor.”
She was learning how to use the sensing units of the Praetor and physically located her father, standing in front of the Praetor and staring down at it. Using the Praetorâs electronics, she broadcast an image into his mind of her siblings trapped inside the Praetor, feeding the Praetor with their life energy.
“How is this possible?” Sibilius asked, astounded. “What happened to the Praetor?”
BĂ©la answered his second question first. “The Praetor was judged by me and it was found wanting,” she replied angrily, broadcasting her sense of betrayal. “As to âhow this was possible?â See for yourself!”
She broadcast her memories of being lured inside the Praetor after the fire that she supposedly died in, including what she had learned about her siblings and the Praetor since then.
“I understand.” Sibilius told her. “But this is incredible! How did you defeat the Praetor? It is designed to be the ultimate judge!”
“It wasnât trying to judge me,” BĂ©la answered. “It was trying to fight me. Iâm not sure what I did to it. I think I knocked it out or something.”
She broadcast an image of her impact with the Praetor during their brief, fierce battle.
“Your reverse power surge knocked it offline,” Sibilius informed her. “Your presence in its command center prevents it from reestablishing control.”
“Yay! I won, then!” BĂ©la crowed haughtily. “Well, Iâm not leaving here until my siblings have been rescued! Youâre just going to have to do without your precious Praetor until you figure out how to get us out of here!”
“The life forces of my children are being held in place by a simple tractor beam,” Sibilius explained, a smile in his voice. “Shutting down the Praetor completely will allow them to leave of their own free will.”
“Okay, then, letâs do that,” BĂ©la agreed. But she still worried about handing back the power sheâd just usurped. “What about the Praetor? Itâs insane. It was holding us prisoner and feeding off us! You didnât even know we were in here!”
“Iâll have its memory downloaded,” Sibilius promised. “We will find out why the Praetor was using living souls to produce its energy.”
BĂ©la watched and listened as her father gave instructions to his orderly to take the Praetor down to rehab (she could see in his mind that he meant the lab that maintained the Praetor), release its contents into drones and shut it down. His instructions specifically included monitoring the Praetor until all energy readings were null, then check its power source.
BĂ©la felt movement as the orderly picked up her strange, metal âbodyâ and carried her out of her fatherâs lab. She turned the Praetorâs sensors on full to look around this weird, alien environment.
Once outside her fatherâs lab, there were metal causeways going everywhere, and a vast area above them consisting mostly of empty space. There were no stars visible, but she was uncertain that the Praetorâs sensors would be able to detect them if any were there. She still wasnât sure how the Praetor âsawâ things.
The Praetorâs sensors couldnât see the top of the chamber above them, if indeed it was a chamber, but there seemed to be objects floating up there, perhaps traveling from one side of the vast cavern to the other. She wished she could go out and take a look, now that she knew how to get out, but she had to stay where she was, for now, to prevent the Praetor from taking over again.
After a short walk two levels down from where they started, they arrived at ârehabâ. At least, thatâs where BĂ©la guessed they were. The orderly placed the Praetor on a shelf in an oven-like chamber and closed the door.
BĂ©la extended the Praetorâs sensors to include the surroundings outside the chamber. There were two people making adjustments on the front of the device she was inside of. The backside of her chamber was a leaded wall. BĂ©la extended the Praetorâs sensors through the wall to see what was on the other side of that.
The room was filled with sarcophagi!
‘Itâs a storage room for bodies!’ BĂ©la realized with a shock.
She would have shuddered, if she had a body to shudder with.
‘They have a supply room full of extra bodies? Wow! What a deal! Excuse me, Mister Dealer, Sir, I want to trade this old thing in on a new model⊒
The chamber she was in was suddenly activated.
“Hey! Werenât you guys supposed to shut down the Praetor, first, and let me out?”
She felt herself being frozen in place by an electronic field of some kind.
‘Oh, no! Not that again!’
BĂ©la pushed sideways as hard as she could and found herself in the middle of the causeway outside the ârehabâ center. Sheâd pushed right through the wall of the building!
‘How do I move without a body?’ BĂ©la asked no one in particular (which was good, because no one could see or hear her out here, anyway). ‘How did I do it before?’
She pushed against the wall and it seemed to move away from her.
‘Well â that works⊠I can always backstroke wherever I want to go! How about forward⊒
She put her attention on a metal beam several feet away and imagined she was closer to it. It moved closer.
‘Wow! This is fun!’ she realized, excited by her new ability. ‘My movement is only limited by my imagination! I wonder if I can teleport⊒
She imagined her fatherâs lab materializing around her, like her sisters had done when locating each other, and like her brother (Christ? I still donât believe it!) had shown her. Suddenly, she was there in her fatherâs lab.
“Wanna try again?” she asked, playfully bouncing the thought off her fatherâs head.
Chuckling to himself, Sibilius turned and looked around to where the thought had come from. He didnât seem a bit surprised at BĂ©laâs return. He also didnât seem to have any trouble knowing where she was, even though she thought of herself as a little ball of invisible energy.
“I thought you might come back,” Sibilius thought back at her. “Since you did, I have something to show you.”
“What, another trap?” BĂ©la asked him, warily angry about his apparent deception concerning leaving her in the Praetor earlier. “No, thanks! Iâm going home!”
BĂ©la imagined her cabin in the mountains materializing around her, then she was there. The ruins of her cabin lay crumbling around her. The bright sun overhead screamed in her mind, making it hard for her to concentrate.
‘Whatâs happened here?’ she asked herself, shaken at the loss of her favorite retreat.
Whatever disaster had occurred here, it was very long ago. There was a tree growing right through where the floor used to be. BĂ©la felt anguish at the loss of her cabin. It had obviously been in ruins for many years.
She imagined she was at the end of the road leading up the mountain and was suddenly there. It was where she had last seen Jake. He wasnât there, now, obviously, and she hadnât really expected to see him there just waiting for her to appear.
Someone had built a travel lodge out here in the middle of nowhere and the road was now paved. She seemed to be standing in the middle of their almost deserted parking lot.
‘Iâve been gone awhile,’ she realized, feeling sad and more alone than sheâd felt for some time. ‘Is my club still there?’
She imagined that she was outside the Target Club. The building was gone. A multi-level parking structure had been built where her club had stood. The sun noise in her mind was becoming unbearable. To escape the pain from the sun and her increasing upset and confusion, she imagined herself with Jake in his apartment.
He wasnât there. And, it looked like another building had been built where his apartment building had been. It was all offices now. The few people working in the room she found herself in completely ignored her.
‘This must be a government office,’ she thought to herself, trying to lighten her mood.
Giving up, she imagined herself back in her fatherâs lab.
‘Please-please-please still be there!’ she pleaded in her mind.
It was. He was waiting for her. As soon as she appeared, BĂ©la found herself trapped in a crystal chamber. It resonated in such a way that she couldnât concentrate the power of her mind on anything. After a moment, the pressure faded, but it roared through her mind again as soon as she tried to imagine a different location.
‘Well, thatâs a good trick,’ she broadcast, angrily. ‘How do you do that, anyway?’
‘I have only the best of intentions for you, Hethemtima,’ Sibilius thought into her mind, trying to sooth her.
He picked up the crystal containing BĂ©la and carried it into the next room of his lab.
“Even if you had allowed yourself to be placed in one of the Martian Drones, I still would have this for you.”
Sibilius held the crystal out in front of him so BĂ©la could see what he wanted to show her. Before her was a transparent vat full of a bluish fluid. There was something large floating inside. A body⊠a young girl â naked, of course.
‘Thatâs me!’ BĂ©la realized, feeling shock and exhilaration.
She could see her own body, in perfect, unburned condition, sleeping contently as it floated in the nourishing liquid.
“Iâve been working on restoring your ashes for almost forty years,” Sibilius told her. There was a great sadness in his voice. “Iâve had your body waiting for you. I just didnât know where âyouâ were. I didnât believe that youâd incarnated into an earth body. When I asked the Praetor, it said that you hadnât done that, and that you were safe. It assured me that you would be available when your body was ready.”
‘Iâve been in there for forty years?’ BĂ©la asked, suddenly feeling a strange emptiness, but not understanding exactly what it was. ‘That would explain the cabin and the travel lodge, I guess â
‘When will it be ready?’ BĂ©la asked, suddenly anxious and excited. ‘My body, I mean!’
“It will be ready within a few days,” her father promised. “Now that youâre here, we can begin to wake it up!”
‘I donât mean to pry, Father,’ BĂ©la thought quietly, ‘but why did you reconstitute my body?’
BĂ©la thought she actually detected tears in her fatherâs eyes. She didnât even know if his species had tear ducts or not, but he was radiating a form of grief.
“You were the last of my creations,” he told her. “You survived through wars and plagues and human madness. Of all my children, you alone remained sane. I was hoping to duplicate the experiment and recreate you. But, as youâve shown me in these last few hours, it is the strength of your spirit, and not any special quality of your body, that makes you who you are.”
‘You didnât seem to think so much of me when you had me tied up on that table in the desert,’ BĂ©la reminded him, creating an image of that scene and projecting it to him. ‘You did unspeakably cruel things to me, then!’
Sibilius gazed at her crystal body. He radiated some level of remorse.
“And even then, you didnât want to kill me,” he recalled. “You hated me enough to kill me, but when you had a real opportunity, you simply wished me away, instead. Every other of my creations, once they had their hands on the Praetor, tried to use it to destroy me. Only with you, did your love for the living overpower your hatred for what I did to you.”
‘That was a test? Of my love?’ BĂ©la shot at him. My God! How do YOU show love, anyway?’
Sibilius didnât answer. Instead, he looked up at the transparent vat containing his creationâs body. Then, sighing once, he carried the crystal containing her life force back into the first section of his lab and set it on a shelf where she wouldnât get knocked over accidentally.
‘I feel like a salt shaker,’ BĂ©la broadcast to anyone who would listen.