I wasnât sure if it was thanks to my newly enhanced durability or Eveâs protection, but Iâd survived the crash completely unscathed.
Eve still had her tentacles wrapped around me, holding onto me protectively so I could barely move. I couldnât see much of anything now, but I could hear the moans and groans of several dazed or wounded soldiers around us.
I tapped against Eveâs side, âIâm alright now Evie, you can let me go now.â
Eve was looking around like she was on high-alert still, listening for any more signs of danger.
âEvie?â
Eve suddenly seemed to realize Iâd spoken, and slowly her tentacles retracted back into herself.
âYouâre not hurt, are you?â
I shook my head, âNo, totally fine, thanks to you.â
Eve gave me a small smile, âThink nothing of it, but I accept payment in hugs and kisses.â She said cutely.
I smiled too, but now wasnât the time to be cute. I looked around to see Eveâs tentacle netting was retracting from all over the dropship, revealing the damage; I could see around half our soldiers were unharmed and picking themselves up, surrounded by several injured troops and even a few dead bodies. The dropship itself was pretty mangled, with sparks showering down around us, and the massive hole in the front had opened to show the cockpit was barely hanging onto the rest of the ship, crushed so clearly no one inside couldâve survived.
I looked around behind Eve to check on the researchers and saw all four survived; theyâd been close enough to Eve so her tentacle netting protected them all completely.
Kianna looked quite shaky, but clearly uninjuredâthough Iâm pretty sure she just puked.
I leaned down to help her stand, âYou okay?â
She waved me off, still holding her mouth, looking like she might puke again, âIâm alright, thanks.â She turned to Eve, âAnd thanks to you of course; you saved us.â
Eve shrugged and said nothing more, still looking like she was trying to sense the dangerâprobably trying to sense Beta-09.
Doctor Gorgam stood up behind Kianna, seeming a little dazed himselfâlooking quite funny in the black soldier armor with his strangely squat frog body, âThat really was some quick thinking on your part, not that it should be surprising at all, but itâs clear the enemy wouldâve destroyed the vessel on entry if you hadnât held it all together.â He confirmed.
Together with Kianna, they collected the other two researchers, Hennor and Ryo, who were looking around with wide eyes, obviously now rethinking their decision to agree to join on with the planet-side mission team.
A few of the soldiers had gotten up and were working on helping their injured squadmates, and I decided to join in the process. Working side-by-side with the marines, we extricated all the injured in a delicate process through the open hole in the hull since the bay door wasnât working right.
Looking outside, Vyrane was kind of a strange-looking planet; weâd crashed out in the wilderness, and the surrounding trees were all dull grey that looked like a mix between palm trees and evergreens, with deep red leaves. There were other smaller trees with white bark and brighter red leaves, and some thick bushes and brush that were a much darker red so they were nearly black, while the grass on the ground was short and thick, all various shades of crimson. The forest around us looked like a sea of blood, while the sky was the same color as our vibrant sunsets back on Earth even though it was the middle of the day, with reds, pinks, blues and purples all painted across the horizon.
Together with the marines, we laid out the injured soldiers in a row against some trees as the researchers acting as field medics started looking them over with their tactical med-kits. I hovered briefly to watch them work, seeing the futuristic technology that wouldâve been great to have as a medic back home; they had some multitool that could soothe burns and cauterize injuries instantly with some laser. One of the soldiers clearly had a broken arm, and while that couldnât be fixed right away, there was a metallic silver sling they put the injured extremity in that instantly manipulated and secured the arm in a proper healing position, all after heâd been given a heavy dose of pain meds thanks to the medical multitool.
Captain Seash and Lieutenant Bryx took up their command positions easily, directing the efforts of securing the surviving soldiers, our supplies, and trying to reorganize ourselves to get back on track with the mission, looking over planetary holo-maps to see where weâd landed.
I gave them all a wide berth as I went back into the damaged ship once more to see if anyone needed any help, but saw Eve alone still standing towards the back, looking up at nothingâseeing nothing, lost in her thoughts and senses.
âAre you getting anything on Beta-09?â I asked Eve.
Eve didnât respond for a few moments, then just slowly shook her head, âNothing. With my senses dulled, I canât even feel her at all down hereânot even that distant reunion sensation. Iâm almost surprised she could sense me, but I guess the barrier doesnât work both ways like that.â
âShit, so weâre blind while she can still freely sense you? Thatâs going to keep us totally exposed.â
Eve nodded once, âExactly. I think Iâm going to have to use camouflage myself this mission.â She turned to me and smirked, hooking a thumb over her back, âGoing to need a whole new wardrobe while weâre at it.â
I looked around to see the armor on Eveâs back was totally destroyed, showing off a fair amount of pale skin all the way down to the top of her ass crack. It was a sexy little exposure that stirred some passion in me, but considering what we were dealing with now, I had to push those feelings aside until we could be properly settled.
âHere, why donât you come back out with me, and weâll see if thereâs some spare armor in with the supplies.â I offered, holding my hand out for Eve to take.
Eve smiled and took my hand as I led her through the damaged craft and back out with the rest of the survivors.
âDo they know how many we lost?â Eve inquired.
I shook my head, âNot sure yet. We have a few injured, several are dead, but even more are just missing at this point; I donât know if theyâre going to count them as casualties or what.â
Eve nodded along, âIf they were pulled out of the hull while we were still in the upper-atmosphere, Iâd be very surprised any survived.â
I was leading Eve back over towards the researchers when Vinnago and Lobae rounded on us, moving with clear purpose.
âThere you are.â Lobae announced, looking both relieved and concerned.
âAllow us to thank you for saving all our lives, but weâve run into a spot of trouble.â Vinnago continued quickly.
â
More
trouble?â I said.
Lobaeâs expression turned grim, âYes, it seems weâve had an exposure.â
I quirked up an eyebrow, âWhat, because Beta-09 could sense Eve while we made our descent?â
Lobae shook her head, âNothing to do with Beta-09, this is all about Eve.â
I was about to inquire further, but raised voices pulled my attention away.
I looked over to see Agent Kotlokk and two other agents standing in front of the regular Imperial soldiers, only four left, standing in a tight circle, looking around rather frantically.
âI know what I saw! Those tentacles that exploded out of her were
exactly
like what weâve seen inside the bodies of reanimated separatists!â Commander Reyn insisted.
Kotlokk held his hands up peacefully, âCalm down man, how could
tentacles
come out of a personâs body like that? Are you sure youâre not confused with the atmospheric entrance emergency kit? I believe thatâs what saved us.â He said calmly.
âDonât treat us like idiots; that wasnât any technology weâve installed in our vessels. It was biological, and it came out from one of your squad members!â Reyn insisted.
It was then I saw Commander Reyn and the other Imperial soldiers were all unarmed, while the clandestine agents had a hand stealthily placed near their sidearms. I wasnât sure how exactly that happened, but if I was a betting man Iâd put my credits on the agents always sliding things in their favor at the first sign of a confrontationâand I doubted the regular soldiers noticed until it was too late.
Together with Eve, Lobae and Vinnago led us over to join with the argument.
âThere, there she is, thatâs the one!â One of the Imperial soldiers pointed to Eve.
Kotlokk gestured to Eveâs exposed back, âAnd look, no tentacles at all, no black flesh of any kind. She took damage like the rest of us.â He turned to me, âHas she been checked out by the medics?â
I could tell right away Kotlokk was roping me in with his lie, and to try and keep the peace I knew I needed to play along, âYeah sheâs been cleared. The emergency kit damaged her armor when it deployed, but she didnât sustain any injuries during the crash.â I offered dismissively.
Eve seemed wary, probably unsettled around all these people with their heightened emotions while her senses were diminished, not used to being so cut-off from how people were thinking or feeling. She leaned a little closer against me, still holding onto my arm.
Reyn slashed an angry hand through the air, âWeâre not stupid! Thereâs no such kit in the entire Empire that could keep the vessel together like that, and now you expect me to believe her armor suffered such damage while leaving her skin completely unmarred? What the hell is going on hereâwho is she?â
The other Imperial soldiers joined in, demanding to know what was really going on, how Eve could do those thingsâhow we survived at all.
âWhat is she, some living biological weapon?â A soldier pressed.
âIs that what weâve been fighting down here all along, some rogue living weapons? And youâre the team to come in and clean up the Empireâs own mess?â Reyn demanded.
I did everything I could to keep it from showing on my face, but Commander Reyn and his soldiers guessed exactly right.
It was hard to see on his alien insectoid face, but with his large hexagonal eyes narrowed, it looked like Kotlokk was getting angry, âStand down soldier; you have your orders and we have ours. None of us know exactly whatâs been happening down on Vyrane, and to make any wild accusationsââ
âNo, fuck that.â Reyn interrupted quickly, âOur orders were nullified when we found out you had a major connection with the enemy.â
âHow do we know you arenât
with
the enemy? For all we know youâre a bunch of spies and double-agents.â Another soldier added.
Lobae stepped forward, âOur team has the proper authorization and qualifications for the mission; we were properly vetted by your commanders, so who are you to question them and their orders?â She asked.
Reyn looked back to his soldiers, and they all seemed to come to an agreement, âWell maybe we should see if Command wants to change our orders once we tell them about these new developments.â
That was the worst thing Reyn couldâve said, as suddenly all five of our agents pulled their guns out and pointed them at the four unarmed Imperial soldiers.
âWhoa, what the fuck guys?â I shouted, trying to push Lobaeâs gun down, but she refused to budge.
âOn your knees.â Kotlokk said coldly.
Reyn stared at Kotlokk with pure loathing as he and his soldiers got on their knees and placed their hands on their heads.
âThis is what itâs come to? Kill the grunts so the cleanup crew can sweep away the Empireâs nastiest secrets? I hope you all burn for this.â Reyn said, proud and defiant.
âYouâll get yours, bastards.â Another soldier added.
Having no luck with Lobae, I moved away from Eve to stand before Kotlokk, âKotlokk, seriously, what the fuck are you doing?â
Kotlokk didnât move, still pointing his gun at Reyn, but I was in between them now, âStep aside Adam.â
âI fought for the Empire, believed in their causes, seen good men sacrifice their lives for its people, and this is how it ends, gunned down like pushkins on our knees?â Reyn said, his voice an icy whisper.
No idea what a pushkin was, I assumed it was some idiom relevant to normal Imperial citizens. But I wasnât a regular citizen of the Empire, and I couldnât just stand around here and let four innocent men be murdered because they discovered part of Eveâs identity.
âKotlokk, seriously, Iâm the handler, let me
handle
this.â I insisted.
Kotlokk shook his head, âNo Adam, this has gone beyond your role as handler; the responsibility of keeping the Predazons secret is mine.â
Before I could respond or plead with him more, a black tentacle with a razor-sharp edge pointed in Kotlokkâs face, causing him to flinch back and nearly lose his footing.
âIf you donât stop pointing that gun at my Adam, you wonât need to worry about your responsibilities any longer.â Eve said darkly, a low growl in her throat. She walked over to stand beside me with the one tentacle manifesting from her back to circle around me in a wide arc before ending in front of Kotlokkâs face.
He quickly lowered the gun and held his hands up peacefully, âEve, Iâm just following my orders here.â
Eve nodded once, âThatâs fine, but you wonât threaten my Adam while you do it.â
âWhat the fuck
is
she?â Reyn demanded, looking at the tentacle coming out of Eveâs back with abject horror. He stared down a gun like it was nothing but looked at Eve like she was an unbelievable monster, fear obvious in his eyesâin all the soldiersâ eyes.
âAdam, please, walk away and let us handle this.â Lobae said delicately, lowering her gun.
I turned towards her, âSo you can all, what,
kill
these men for questioning their ordersâgetting roped into some crazy plot they had no reason to get involved with in the first place?â
I realized why I was suddenly so defensive over the Imperial soldiers; aside from being against the idea of random
murder
, I also saw quite a bit of myself in them. I was just some dumb human who got wrapped up in a crazy intergalactic mission that was way beyond me, now bound by an evil Empire with no hope of escape. There was no way I could stand by and allow these soldiers to be victims same as meâto allow more suffering at the hands of the Tritentarian Empire.
âWe
must
keep the Predazoans secret, Adam.â Kotlokk said slowly, almost sounding sad, but it was clear he was resolved and would see his duty through.
I shook my head, âNo way, fuck that, Iâm sure we can work something out. Maybe detain them for now, explain the mission and what all is happening?â
âWe simply donât have time for that now, Agent Adam.â A steady voice called out, and I turned to see Captain Seash making his way towards us with a few of our marines.
Seash stopped just outside the circle of Imperial soldiers and pulled out his own sidearm, pointing it at Reyn, âThe is the messy, unfortunate side of the mission youâve never had to see, but itâs a necessary one.â
â
Please
, weâre Imperial citizens same as you all. We have families and friends, people who love and care forââ One of the soldiers started, the youngest of the group.
âQuiet Jokalve, theyâve made up their minds; weâre all already dead men. Donât give them the satisfaction of seeing you beg.â Reyn said coldly.
I tried to take a step forward, but Eve held me back from stepping in front of another gun, â
Why
? Why
canât
we all just calm down and talk things out? Theyâre soldiers, they understand duty and orders and everything, right?â
I felt like I was going crazy now, the only person who seemed to have any problem with the idea of just murdering these poor menâeven Lobae and Vinnago, our supposed friends seemed resolved to see their orders through; to obey their Empire and do anything it might demand of them.
I would bet if it demanded they kill us, they would see those orders through too.
The tentacle retracted back inside Eve, and she pulled on my arm to get me out of the way of the confrontation, âCome on Adam, let them get on with it.â She said gently.
I looked down at her, horrified she was so unconcerned.
But what should I have expected? Eve fully admitted she would be fine with everyone else on the mission dying except me, and now that someoneâs life was on the line right in front of meânow that I could
see
how dismissive Eve was over life and death, I realized how much it actually bothered me.
Despite how much I loved Eve, it was hard to accept this inhuman side to her sometimes. I understood she was fundamentally different from regular people; what god would be concerned over the lives of insects? But since I was still human, her attitude was rather unsettling.
However, I could deal with my feelings later, for now I wanted to do all I could to protect the soldiers.
âPlease, Captain, just let me talk to themâexplain the mission and what weâre doing here.â I insisted.
Seash shook his head slowly, âIt doesnât matter what you say, even if theyâre completely convinced our mission comes from the highest authority in the Empire, itâs still too dangerous to allow them to move freely amongst regular citizens on Vyrane, risking our exposure. The most we could ever do would be to detain them aboard
The Radiance
and perform a comprehensive memory wipe.â He explained.
I waved a hand towards the soldiers, âThen letâs just do that!â
âWeâre on a hostile planet with very limited resources; we need to pick up and move as soon as possible, reorganize and reorient ourselves, and get back within mission parameters even after almost half our team is injured, missing, or dead. Thereâs no way we could detain anyone now and arenât in the position to request aid from
The Radiance
while evading enemy forces. Logistically, itâs simply not feasible.â Bryx added methodically.
I tried to step forward again, but Eve held me back once more, âAdam, please, leave it, come away with me now so we can get ourselves sorted; we have a lot of work to do and things to discuss before we head out.â She insisted.
I couldnât believe it,
everyone
was complicitâokay with just executing these men like it was nothing. I looked around to see any soldiers not tending to the wounded had formed a perimeter around us, watching and waiting for their orders, ready to obey any monstrous duty that could be requested of them. I looked off to see the researchers try to busy themselves with their tasks, sneaking glances our way all the while, but they refused to get involvedârefused to stand up for what was right.
Seash nodded once, âWalk away, Agent Adam. Thatâs an order.â
Eve manifested a couple tentacles again to wrap around me as she finally led me away, holding onto me protectively while she made sure I wouldnât be a part of their nefarious plot. I felt numb and sluggish as I walked away, sick to my stomach even. There was nothing I could do, no way I could reason with them to spare innocent lives. It was then I realized it wasnât just Eve and I who were bound within the Empire, they were all slavesâtools to be used and disposed of whenever it was deemed necessary.
I tried to turn back again, but Eve tightened her grip around me and continued to lead me into the forest, away from the soon-to-be dead men.
I felt an emptiness in my heart I couldnât really describe, but it reminded me of a time long ago when I walked into a scene back on Earth when a man murdered his family, spraying blood and brains all over the walls. I felt like a piece of my soul died back then, and now again I felt a deep loss within my spirit.
Eve didnât say anything as she led me away, holding onto me protectively, but also forcing me to move forward. Her only concern was for me and my safety then, and honestly, it really upset meâmade the differences between us and our humanity more obvious.
It was then I heard the shots ring out, quick and precise laser blasts, and then all was silent.
Eve stopped with me then and embraced me, held onto me with her arms and tentacles, silent as I stood there with my arms down to my side, numb and dumb with no idea how to move on from there.
Men Iâd just metâ
innocent
men were gunned down, all for learning the truth of the Predazoans.
And I just stood there and let it happen.