
Albert Oon: Behind the Stories
This blog is where I post everything I have including; free short stories, free book samples, song/poem attempts, links to my work, and more! I'll even post about the interesting dreams I've had, manga, comics, video games, anime, and the like which you can find on here. Read to your heart's content and I hope you enjoy!
Thursday, May 28, 2026
The last entry of the Power and Those Who Use It series is out today for free!

Wednesday, May 27, 2026
False Perfection, Truth in Weakness: Chapter 3 – Victory Handed to You

Chapter
3 – Victory Handed to You
I wake up in my bed and look for my
rosary to say my morning prayers, but can’t find it. I go downstairs to see my
parents, brothers, and sisters eating breakfast and ask them if they have it
and if we’re going to say our morning prayers together.
“Don’t worry about those, Uriel.
Quickly eat your breakfast so we can go out to the zoo,” my father says.
Confused, I say, “I’m fine. What’s
going on?”
My mother hugs, kisses me on the
cheek and says, “Come on, Uriel. We can head out before everyone else to get
some mother-son bonding time in.”
I resist my mother’s pull and let
go of her grip on my hands.
“Something is wrong here,” I say
aloud.
When I blink, I see that I’m in the
middle of a city with tall white towers, golden statues of people, and people
wearing gold robes flying everywhere. Is this Lux Mane?
“You couldn’t be kept in the dream
for a little longer, could you?” I hear a voice say. It sounds like it’s coming
from over my shoulder, but there’s no one there. “You kept praying Hail Marys
while you were unconscious, a bad habit of yours, and a waste of breath as you
can see now that you’re in our domain.”
“If I could break your spell with
simple prayers like those while I’m here, then resisting your temptations will
be a simple matter,” I say.
“Ah, you say that, but look where
you are, the heart of who you consider your enemy’s den. You are like a fly in
a spider’s web.”
My vision blurs and I see that I’m
retreating from a burning city that’s being besieged by the ships from
Aushalten.
“Remember when you abandoned your
people, your family, to the army of Aushalten to be slaughtered?”
“Why remind me of this?” I ask. “I
didn’t commit any sin. Even if I did take part in the talks or tried to
negotiate with them, then nothing would change. I’m not a negotiator or a
convincing person. I’m a perpetual penitent, so all I can do is suffer and pray
for them.”
I feel someone hit me across the
head. My head bleeds and feels even lighter than before.
“Who hit you?” the voice asks, now
even more penetrating in my mind. “You choose to rebel against the Lux Mane who
has brought an everlasting peace to a world that’s eternal at odds with one
another. There are always wars like this being fought on big and small scales
on your planet over beliefs and what people love, even if what they believe is
wrong and they love what destroys them.”
“If that is what God wills of us,
then let it be so.”
“But you didn’t want this to
happen. Your prayers went unanswered.”
“God heard them, but who am I to
ask God for anything? He heard, didn’t do as I asked, and that’s that. What I
want to happen isn’t always what should happen.”
What feels like a knife digs into
my head as my vision blurs and a light blinds me. My vision settles, and I see
people in moments of passion that I cover my eyes from.
“What’s so wrong with pleasures of
the flesh? Why not give yourself to making another person feel happy?”
“It objectifies them for a moment’s
pleasure and disgraces an act that’s supposed to be confined to holy matrimony
and the purpose of creating children,” I say. “What makes a person feel good
does not always mean it’s good. For example, I feel freer when I resist sin
rather than let myself be ruled by the wants of my weak body and mind, which
are always changing.”
Again, I feel hit across the head,
and my skull cracks. My head feels like it’s being squeezed by knife-like
fingers.
“Your halo must be on too tight,”
the voice jokes, which digs even deeper into my mind. Everything changes again
to a calming farm town that I used to stay in and frequent for food and water
as a penitent. “These humble people fight and suffer under our spell, even as
we give them comfort, happiness, and perpetual sunlight for their crops. Still,
they fall to us. Should we allow them to die or punish them for their actions?”
“Punish me first if you’re going to
do that. You know that I sin from time to sin, and give in to my weakness.”
“What of the people who are feeding
and sheltering the homeless while also believing as we do? Are they hypocrites
and deserving of punishment?”
“Who are you? Judas? Even virtuous
acts can be tainted by ill-intention no matter how good their results may be.”
Yet again, I feel a crack across my
head. Now, I can hardly stand as blood pours from my head like a fountain.
Looking up, I see that I’m back in my original home with all my friends and
family in it, enjoying themselves and laughing.
The voice explains, “We of Lux Mane
were like you. Faithful to God and ever suffering and self-sacrificing. When
angels of light gave us comfort and spoke true words from scripture and sacred
teachings, we accepted their gifts. Just as we did, they descended on us,
gifting us with many things that improved living, ceased conflicts, helped the
poor, healed the dying, and brought the dead back to life. They also taught us
opposing teachings to our faith, but because they did so much good, we accepted
them and embraced their wisdom. If they managed to do so much good, why would
we want to go back to living a life of conflict and suffering?”
“They offered you a poisoned apple.
You gave in to weakness. That’s all that happened, and I pity you for it. May
God save your souls.”
Again, I’m hit in the head.
“If you want pain so much, then you
can have it. I’ll be here if you change your mind.”
An overwhelming light shines down
on me, and I feel an immense weight pin me to the ground. It’s then that I feel
like I’m put into a blender of glass, sharp invisible shards that cut every
part of my body, face, and limbs. I’m powerless to do anything but pray, so I
pray and offer up the pain. I offer up the pain for my sins, those of my loved
ones, those who are lost, those who don’t know better, those who have given in
to weakness, and especially, for those who refuse to know better, for my
enemies.
“Uriel! This is it. This is the
end!” I hear a voice say again.
My body feels even lighter than
usual, and I feel pulled away from the light and towards a comforting darkness.
I reach out to whatever is calling to me, feel something in my way, and pull it
out of the way. I see that I’m back in the underground hideout with Caiaphas,
praying with him.
“Good work, Uriel,” Caiaphas says.
I see that the fruit and water that
I went out to get are untouched and there are no marks on me. My left arm is
still restrained by a rosary behind my back, and my head isn’t bleeding.
“What happened?” I ask.
“You fought against their
temptation and won. I’m proud of you.”
Hearing a multitude of screams above
us, Caiaphas and I go outside to see a starry night sky with the planet of Lux
Mane’s light growing dull. The thousands of eyes and hands I saw in the sky
retreat into it, along with its light, and being outside doesn’t make me feel
like I’m being subjected to their wretched curse. Out of the darkness of space,
two massive arms appear with bleeding, pierced hands, grab the entire planet
with both hands, and disappear in the blink of an eye.
I kneel and say, “Glory be to God!
It’s finally over! Praise be to God!”
I then leap up, laugh, and dance
around like an idiot. Caiaphas even dances and laughs with me, jumping around
like an excited child, and being more joyous than I’ve ever seen him.
As we hug, he says, “Let’s go into
town to celebrate. I’m sure the townspeople will be back to their senses and
wanting to celebrate as well if they aren’t already.”
“What about the people who will
miss Lux Mane and are devastated by its loss? I’m sure there are people out
there who will be,” I say.
“We’ll make sure they’ll see the
error of their ways, but don’t let the thought of them sour the mood. Let’s
enjoy this victory that God has given us.”
Caiaphas and I walk to the nearby
town to celebrate, and I feel better than ever. Sure, this isn’t the end of my
story; much penance will still have to be done, and more challenges will come
to test me, but with my renewed confidence, I’m sure that I’ll be able to
overcome and make it through it all. With God, my loved ones in Heaven,
Caiaphas, and the many people who pray for me and with me, nothing will ever
truly defeat me.
The End
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
False Perfection, Truth in Weakness: Chapter 2 – Resisting as Fighting

Chapter
2 – Resisting as Fighting
More days pass, and nothing
changes. I keep praying and struggling with my desire to do something. I go out
for food and water and feel more overwhelmed by temptations every time. Caiaphas
keeps giving me the same advice, and I can feel myself growing spiritually and
physically weaker as time goes on. I find myself praying for strength,
patience, and wisdom more than the world and others. I’ve lived as a
penitential nomad more than in relaxation and luxury in my hundreds of years of
living, and yet, this current saga of my life is more testing than any other.
I feel a bit of comfort, and
thinking it’s God, I let my guard down and thank God for it. Then, I feel and
see warm arms of light wrap around me, and my head begins to feel numb. Looking
behind me, I see one of the residents of Lux Mane phasing through the wall like
a ghost. Her appearance is like the rest of the people from Lux Mane, as her
body is made of a dull but bright golden light, dressed in golden robes, has
finger-like wings, and has her eyes closed with a permanent smile on her face.
“Uriel!” Caiaphas says as I’m
whisked away through the ground by the woman and into the sky.
Forced to look into the sky for a
moment, I see hundreds, if not thousands, of eyes looking at me and the same
number of fingers reaching out from the light that touch my head and body and
soul, making it more numb. I try to get out of the woman’s grasp, but my
strength leaves me, and her firm grasp on my weak body makes it impossible for
me to slip out.
“Relax,” she loudly whispers in my
ear, her voice gripping my mind as if it were a hand. “You’ll be free and happy
soon.”
The grip on my mind makes me faint.
Everything around me seems to spiral inward until my vision clears and I see
that I’m flying over one of the cities controlled by Lux Mane, its tall
buildings all white, like the buildings on their planet are said to be,
reflecting the light of the shining planet. The woman carrying me sets me down
on a roof where a party is underway. Everyone stops drinking and partying to
look at me. The woman bows before a man in white and gold robes and announces
who I am and where she found me.
“Heh, looks like you didn’t need to
restrain him because he’s done that to himself in more ways than one,” the man
in white and gold says. “So, you’re Uriel, the last descendant of the honored
Emundatio family? What’s a man like you hiding in a dark hole? You deserve to
be in one of the luxurious penthouses, enjoying all the pleasures of life.”
“I don’t need it…I don’t need it…”
I say, wanting to say I only want to serve God, but find myself unable to
because a large majority of myself is pulling me to want relaxation and
pleasures.
“I know what you want. Don’t worry,
you’ll get it, my friend. We from and of the Lux Mane don’t punish our enemies.
Instead, by the power of the god of Light, we give them what they want.”
“Stop…I’d rather die…”
“No, you wouldn’t. Don’t lie to
yourself. It’s a sin, isn’t it?”
With the remainder of my strength,
I get up, punch the man in the face, and throw myself over the edge of the
building, only to be caught and have my vision blurred and everything become
spirals again. Once my vision settles, I see that I’m in some kind of luxurious
apartment room with a kitchen, bedroom, couch, TV, computer, and many little
decorations. At the entrance of this room is the man in white and gold robes
that I punched and three robed women behind him.
“Where am I? I don’t want this,” I
say as I get up, still weak, and feeling the effects of the cursed light.
“This is your temporary apartment.
We’ll find or build you a proper place to live. A man like you deserves it, so
we’ll have it for you soon. Until then, please enjoy it as best you can and
enjoy the company,” the man says before backing away and allowing the women to
enter.
One woman has a face similar to my
mother, another has a face that looks like a woman from hundreds of years ago,
and the third looks like another family member. I turn my head as they take off
their clothes and approach me.
“Get away from me! This isn’t what
I want,” I say.
“Yes, it is,” the man says. “Our
god has told us of your tastes. Your temptations gave you a liking to your
mother, a young relative, and a nun. Your mother was perverted for allowing her
stress to get to her and give in to her rapists; thus, you were also given a
similar burden to hers.”
As the women touch me and try to
drag me to the bed, the man’s words and what’s suggested make me lose my
patience and throw a punch at the face of the woman who looks like my mother,
caving her skull in, and killing her in an instant.
“Don’t talk about my mother like
that!” I yell.
The man and the two women laugh,
and the woman, whom I thought I killed, has her face restored by the light from
the outside, comes back to life, and laughs with them.
“Oh, and yes, you have an itch for
violence too,” one of the women says. “Your tastes involve sex and violence,
the two things all men and women crave the most.”
“Don’t act like you need to prove
your strength to anyone. We know you’re better than most men,” the other woman
says.
“Yes, most men just give in when
given the comfort you have now. Yes, you prove it with your continued
struggling against us. That means we should give you something as a reward
right now. Come on, let’s go find it for you,” the man says.
An intense light shines from the
outside, turning everything I see into spirals yet again. No matter how much I
try to pray and fight against it, I can’t help but allow myself to be taken and
go along with whatever is happening. My vision settles, and I see that I’m in
some beachfront mansion with a nudist beach in front of me. Turning away from
the sight, I look at the house, which is also blinding to look at because of
how it reflects the light from Lux Mane.
“What do you think, Uriel?” the man
in white and gold robes asks. “It’s one of the best in the area. Come on,
girls. Help him in. He can’t enjoy the best parts of it outside.”
Three floating women grab my arms
and legs, and carry me through the house as the man explains each room and all
the decorations. It all looks too familiar.
The man says, “It does look
familiar, doesn’t it? We’ve modeled it off your original home and the many
other homes you’ve been in and admired. Look, it’s your original room with all
your favorite statues and superhero figures, including your mother, father,
their mentor, and others. We’ve even filled it with all kinds of familiar
faces.”
I shake off the women who are carrying
me, and say, “I don’t care what they look like or even if they look like people
I’ve loved. Those people are in Heaven. You people are from Hell.”
“How could we be from Hell when we
give so much to those who are needy and in need of comfort in their suffering,
such as you?”
“You use comfort as a way to manipulate
people to fall into sin. Your gifts are tainted with poison, and I will not
accept them,” I say while tearing down everything in the house, especially the
awards with my name on them and statues of myself.
The three women push me through the
ground with the man flying behind them.
“If violence is what you want, then
you’ll get more than your fill of it,” the man says.
With a snap of his finger, I’m
blinded by a flash of light. A second after, I see myself in some kind of
underground fight club and bar where, after the victors win, they have their
way with those that they defeated in front of the crowds, take them kicking and
screaming away, or let the crowds do what they want with them. Everyone is in
their own cage, and in mine, there are many men and women with similar faces to
those of people I’ve disliked, to say the least, such as family members who
were oppressing the people of Aushalten and got what they deserved.
“Fight and kill them all. After you
can do whatever you like to them, or if you don’t, they’ll do whatever they
want to you,” the man in white and gold robes says from over my shoulder before
disappearing in a flash of light.
Before I can see what’s going on, I’m
punched in the face by the brawl that’s been started by everyone.
“Come on, weakling. Can you fight?
You can’t do anything but pray and be on your knees all day, can you?” the woman
in front of me says as she attacks me.
She throws punch after punch at me
that I dodge, losing my temper with each passing second I’m in here.
“Everyone, stop fighting! This is
what they want us to do! This is what these sick freaks get off to,” I say.
No one listens to me as they keep
fighting. Some of them even say they’re the same sick freaks and want this
wholeheartedly. I try running to the sides of the cage, but can’t find a door
or break it open, so with no other choice, I defend myself. I kill the woman
who’s going after me by clapping my hands around her head, crushing her skull.
Picking up her dead body, I use it as a weapon against the others, a tactic I
picked up from St. John Elio and his sister saint, killing a few of the others
in the process. Five of the fighters in the cage gang up on me all at once, and
I counter their attack by allowing the horns on my body to jut out, stabbing
them through their arms, legs, and heads.
The crowd is going wild since I’ve
so quickly and ruthlessly killed every combatant in the cage. Three robed women
present to me a trophy and themselves as the reward.
When I say, “Let the glory be God’s,
not mine.” The crowd goes completely quiet.
They seem disgusted by me now. The
women try pushing themselves and the trophy on me, saying that they are mine,
and God had nothing to do with my victory, but I push them away and crush the
trophy into pieces by stepping on it. Angry that I won’t accept them, the women
fly at me and threaten to rape me, but I use my extending horns again to kill
them before they can touch me.
“Come on. Stop playing hard to get,”
the man in white and gold robes says as he descends from the ceiling lights. “This
is what you want. We both know it. I can read your mind, heart, and feelings. I
know your deepest sins and brightest virtues. You, Uriel, are a violent and
lustful man, repressed from getting what you wanted for years, and with the opportunity
to finally embrace it, why won’t you take it?”
The people that I killed are touched
by the man’s light and brought back to life.
“What you’re sensing is what the
weak part of me wants. I refuse to embrace that part of me. Instead, I’ll only
embrace the true part of me that God only knows,” I say.
I extend my horns to pierce the man
several times in the face, body, legs, and arms. My horns go back into stubs as
the crowd gasps and watches the man try to continue flying and keep his smile
on his face, even as it wavers.
“If that’s how it’s going to be,
then let me introduce you to a happiness beyond comprehension,” the man says
before grabbing me and flying me into the light.
“Uriel!” I hear Caiaphas say.
Below, I see Caiaphas tearing through
the crowds with barbed wire that comes out of his empty face, his back, and his
arms. Usually, he fights people within a half-second, where he also tests them.
I’m not sure if he’s doing that or is simply tearing through them as I’m
seeing. I try to break out of the man’s grasp, but since we’re going through
the ground and are back outside, I feel weakened by the cursed light.
“You’ll thank me for this, Uriel,”
the man says. “Prepare yourself to get exactly what you’ve always wanted.”
I no longer feel the strength to do
anything with my body as the man takes me into the sky and toward the shining
planet of Lux Mane. Looking up at it as I fall unconscious, I see the thousands
of eyes in the sky looking at me as their many hands reach for me.
“This is it. The end,” is the last
thing I hear a voice say as unconsciousness takes me.
Monday, May 25, 2026
False Perfection, Truth in Weakness: Chapter 1 – A Life of Ever-Revolving Problems


Chapter
1 – A Life of Ever-Revolving Problems
Life is an ongoing penance. Since
the moment we’re born, there’s sin on our souls that needs to be washed away,
and I’m thankful that I was born in a family that knew how to correctly raise
their children by having us baptized soon after we were born and raising us in
the Catholic faith. It’s been hundreds of years since then, and somehow, I’m
the only one who’s outlived my parents, siblings, the children of my siblings,
their children, and so on. I was the first child my parents had and the one who
was cursed at birth with horns.
My mother was raped by a
demonically possessed man of a long-forgotten cursed family, and even though
she was pregnant and knew I would be cursed, she still had me, and my father
still married and had other children with her. My horns have had to be cut
since I was a child, so that I wouldn’t be more inclined to sin, and I have to
take special care to pray and be more aware than most people of my thoughts and
actions. The spiritual advisors I’ve talked to say that the demons taunt me
more than others because of the resistance I put up to them, and I’m much
closer to God than I think. I hope that’s true.
“Uriel. Are you praying or losing
your concentration?” my mentor, Caiaphas, asks.
“I was losing my concentration
again,” I plainly admit. “My past was coming back to me. Even though it was
hundreds of years ago, when it gets brought back up, it feels like it was
yesterday.”
“I completely understand that.
Nevertheless, you must focus on the task at hand, friend. Humanity’s future
depends on it.”
Caiaphas is an ancient man with
gray hair and a void for a face that he covers with a mask with a single mouth
and four eyes on it. He wears a gray suit, red tie, white dress shirt, gray
pants, red dress shoes, and white gloves. In my teenage years, he appeared to
me and began mentoring me, since we both focus on evangelization and saving
souls. My father and mother’s mentor, St. Timeo Severe, knew of him and received advice from him as well. Caiaphas was one of the priests who got our Lord,
Jesus Christ, crucified and has been trying to save souls ever since. He goes
where God leads him, mostly trying to get sinners to repent of their sins, and
other times trying to give repentant sinners his wisdom so they can better do
God’s will.
Currently, we are both praying in a
dark room for the sake of the world. Earth has been invaded multiple times, one
time justly so, but this time is completely different. No weapon can defeat
this newest foe because they attack people’s minds and souls over their bodies.
A planet of light appeared out of a portal and started shining its light down
on Earth, trapping it in an Eternal Morning. The people from the planet say they
are the Lux Mane, and seemed to be good and virtuous at first, worshipping the
same God and sharing their seemingly boundless resources with us.
After a while, they started showing
their true colors by teaching opposing truths to the Catholic faith, such as:
the honor of false gods, that there is no Hell, all demons are now in Heaven, no
sin will be punished, there are no sexual sins, and so on. Despite there being
some resistance to the Lux Mane, the light emanating from their planet makes
men’s minds and hearts faint and simple to manipulate. Not even the
self-sacrificing people of Aushalten can hold up long to the light of the Lux
Mane and have gone off with their people to infect the planet of Aushalten with
their falsehoods. The only people able to resist these temptations are men like
me, Caiaphas, and other penitents who are hiding in dark places untouched by
the blinding light. Others have tried fighting with force or convincing our foe
with words, but they’ve all either fallen under the spell of our foes, been destroyed
with overwhelming force, or taken to the planet of light and never heard from
again.
“If only this were as easy as
destroying that planet controlled by an AI,” I unintentionally say aloud.
“It could be worse. That grotesque planet
that my friend, Lavinia, had a hand in creating was far more deadly since they relentlessly
attacked both body and mind,” Caiaphas says.
“Have you heard from her, or do you
think she died when that planet was destroyed? She was supposed to be undying
and indestructible like you, right?”
“Right, but that doesn’t mean that
God won’t let her die. I hadn’t heard from her in a while before the planet’s arrival,
so it’s possible she was assimilated into the planet like its other inhabitants
and destroyed with them.”
“Makes sense. I’m still proud of my
niece, Griselda, and miss her, even though I know she’s in Heaven.”
“She gave her all to protect this
world, along with the other soldiers. The only possible way I see humanity
getting out of this situation with force is if Aushalten sends its forces to
invade Lux Mane like how they did with Earth. They keep sending people there,
which must mean they’re putting up resistance against them.”
“Well, they must have an easier
time doing so. They don’t have a planet shining down on them like the sun on
them day in and out. That and they’re so headstrong about self-sacrifice and
sticking to the truth that it’d be easier for our enemies to move a mountain with
their hands than to get them to budge.”
“Still, many of their people on
Earth have fallen to them.”
Continuing to pray, I switch to
reading and then cleaning the bare, dark underground house we are in. There are
no tables, decorations, sinks, or bathrooms in this place. There’s only a bed
of straw and a shelf with Bibles, stories of the saints, history of the Church,
and spiritually enriching fiction. There are no electronics here since the Lux
Mane can teleport through electronics and places where there’s light. We do
have an ice box, specifically for me, as Caiaphas doesn’t really need to eat or
drink. I may be superhuman, and fasting is important for our task, but I can still
die if I don’t get any.
Speaking about nourishment, I ask
Caiaphas if I can get some fruit and drink from the nearby river, and he allows
it and reminds me to be careful. Going outside through the trap door, I move
aside the branches and leaves over our hideout and quickly make my way to the nearby
abandoned farm, grab some apples, grapes, and peaches. I unintentionally eat
the grapes that I have with me when I mean to eat them when I get back. The
light that I’m in feels relaxing and makes my head feel light. It makes me want
to stay out here, never go back to Caiaphas, and forget all that he has taught
me, but I resist by offering up my holding off on eating the fruit in my hand. My
left arm is tied to my back with a long rosary rope so it can constantly pray,
and part of me is restrained from acting on emotion.
Quickly heading over to the river,
I put my fruit into its bag, use the river water to refill my bottle, and run
back to the hideout. I’m about to start eating and drinking, but stop before my
lips touch the fruit. Putting it down, I say my prayers of thanks, take a
breath, and then start eating and drinking.
“Good work, Uriel,” Caiaphas says.
As I finish eating, I say, “What’s
so good about it? It’s just surviving.”
“You survived the temptations of
the enemy. Not many can say that, and it’s the task that God has for us.”
“I still struggle with accepting
that’s true. I feel like there’s something more I can do, and yet, I also feel
that this is the end for humanity and God’s second coming is imminent.”
“Whatever happens, happens
according to the will of God. We can only do what we know to be right, and go
from there. Be calm, and continue praying, Uriel.”
I sit down and do as Caiaphas asks.
As I pray, I feel the residual touches of light from Lux Mane be peeled away
and calm return to my heart, body, and mind. Every day is the same day in and
out, and yet, I must endure. If this is what God wants from us, then I have no
choice but to accept it. Lord God, give me the strength and wisdom to accept Your
will with all my heart, and come soon to save humanity. I’m not sure how much
longer we can go on without a miracle to save us.
Saturday, May 23, 2026
My latest short story is done and out today!

Oppression from the Oppressed: Chapter 4 – Finalizing Justice

Chapter
4 – Finalizing Justice
This is it. After three days of
fighting on Earth, the end of the war is in sight. Once our enemies saw our
strength, zeal, willingness to give our lives for our freedom, and the
cowardice of their leaders, many quickly folded and surrendered, giving us
immediate control of their territories and resources without a fight. The
groups on Earth that are on our side have joined up with us in many of our
fights and have been given better weapons and armor so they can fight better
with us. Now, all that remains is one last place to conquer, a town controlled
by the remnants of our enemy’s forces, held together by the Compassionate and
members of the Emundatio family.
The Emundatio family says they want
to end the war and to instill a lasting peace for the peoples of both planets.
Wary of their claims, our leaders task my brother, Shaeffer, to talk to them
and negotiate the terms of peace. Knowing that my brother’s voice and efforts
have surpassed every other officer and leader, they say that he’s the one they
trust the most to carry this out. Shaeffer looks to me, as if looking for
permission or assurance that he can do this, and I nod.
“I’ll do it, but I’ll need my
brother by my side,” Shaeffer says.
“Do whatever you think is
necessary,” one of our generals says.
“Could we also have a backup of
forces on standby just in case these talks are a farce? I have a feeling they
may be.”
“Yes. Forces will be on standby to
extract you and your brother if the talks fail.”
“If the talks go sour or are a
farce, then don’t worry about me. If God wants us to escape, my brother and I
can make it out ourselves. Otherwise, we get what we deserve.”
Smirking, another general says,
“This is why you’re so well liked by everyone, Shaeffer.”
Shaeffer finalizes his plans with
the generals, and we head off. A ship takes us to the capital town of the
Compassionate, a town with green fields of grass and every kind of flower in
the area. There’s something weirdly nostalgic and dreamlike about this place,
even though I’ve never seen anything like it outside of the bombed-out fields
I’ve trampled over. As we land on the landing platform, we’re met with crowds
of people cheering, throwing petals into the air, and a path for us to walk
down that’s guarded so we can walk down it.
“Thank you!” I hear the crowd say.
“Welcome, heroes of Aushalten!”
“God bless you!”
“You’re living saints!”
Leaning over to Shaeffer, I say,
“This is too strange for me.”
“I know. Simply wave, smile, and be
on your guard, Adalwolf,” he says.
I do as my brother says, and he
does the same. We both have our weapons sheathed and ready to be taken out at a
moment’s notice, and I can already feel my hand tingling to grab it to feel
safer. Down the path, Shaeffer and I walk into some illustrious restaurant
decorated with flowers and statues of saints. It has many stained glass windows
and plain windows that let a lot of the outside light and fresh air in. In the
center of the restaurant are the negotiators, the children of Emundatio. They
smile and offer to shake our hands, to which Shaeffer does, and I do the same.
As we sit down, the doors behind us
close, muffling the sounds of the crowd outside. We are offered many kinds of
Earth-made desserts and drinks, many of which are a bit too sweet for my
liking. Shaeffer seems to stomach it, if nothing more than to be courteous to
our hosts, who are also eating and drinking and exchanging pleasantries with
Shaeffer, such as sharing names, talking about what they like at this
restaurant, and telling us random life stories that they laugh about. Shaeffer
reciprocates their pleasantries with simple stories of his own, to which they
all share a laugh.
“Excuse me, what’s your name,
soldier? You can share it and tell us stories of your own, if you’d like.
You’re our honored guest here,” a daughter of Emundatio says.
I’m too focused on trying to taste
any poison in the drinks and food to even begin where to speak, so I simply
say, “My name is Adalwolf. I’m my brother’s keeper. There’s not much for me to share
that wouldn’t dampen the mood.”
“My brother is a soldier of
Aushalten through and through that throws himself into danger for the sake of
others without a second thought for better or worse,” Shaeffer says. “He’s
pretty much been my side for my entire life and supportive through it all. He’s
like my mother, while I’m like my father.”
“I see. So, he’s basically glued to
your side. Do you two double date all the time then?”
“No, we don’t have any girlfriends
yet, but I’m sure that’s what we’re going to do. We’ll probably also share the
same house, as is common in Aushalten.”
“Really? I can’t imagine that,
given we all have separate houses, and many more houses for vacations in
different areas of Earth.”
“Mmm. It’s a nice luxury.”
“Now that the mood is sufficiently
lightened, may we begin the peace talks?”
“Yes, of course.”
“I will be talking for my brothers,
sisters, and all under us, since we are all in agreement. Let us talk about the
most pressing matters first, that being the cost of the war. We’d like it to be
split sixty, forty, with Aushalten paying the majority of it in all aspects.”
I ought to shoot them all for this
suggestion. Shaeffer looks to me, as if sharing my sentiment before speaking,
“For what reason does Aushalten have to pay for most of the damages?”
“I think the reason should be
obvious. You started the war, did the most damage, and killed the most people
during it. You’ve even killed civilians and surrendering leaders and soldiers.”
“The war was waged because we were
wronged to begin with and negotiations for better conditions got us nowhere. As
for the unfortunate casualties, we had given all areas we invaded sufficient
notice to escape. We have also faced resistance from civilians and vigilantes whom
we were forced to defend ourselves from. Additionally, we killed surrendering
combatants because they either faked surrender or deserved execution for their
actions. Your offer should be flipped and altered. Earth pays and does seventy
percent of the repairs, while Aushalten does thirty.”
“We are severely weakened by you
scorching the Earth and destroying our cities and towns. It’ll take years to
get back to the way life was before.”
“So be it then. You have it better
here than we do back on Aushalten. We are more than willing to lighten and
share your burden if you show yourselves truly repentant to make it sixty,
forty, but you have to prove that over the course of years of sweat and
penance.”
“The people of Earth aren’t like
those of Aushalten. We can’t endure, as you people can.”
“We are all human. You’ll find a
way, and we’ll help you where needed. What are your other terms of peace?”
“We must agree on Aushalten doing
more to repair the damages of war first before going onto those.”
“We won’t get anywhere then. What
happened to the Compassionate being the charitable arm of the Dominion?”
“Our offer is the most
compassionate that we can come up with. We can only do so much.”
“That’s exactly what I’m talking
about. True compassion doesn’t know what ‘too much’ is. What happened to the legacy
of your saints, St. Polina Emundatio the Ever-Sacrificing Mother, St. Raziel
Emundatio of Holy Fire, and more recently, St. Griselda Emundatio the Loyal
Daughter and Soldier? None of you know the true compassion and unlimited giving
that your ancestors were glorified for.”
The room is silent for a few seconds.
“How about we increase our dues for
the war by ten percent?” a son of Emundatio asks.
Shaeffer sighs and says, “This war
didn’t start because my people hated yours. In fact, I’ve killed many of my
traitorous own and found kinship with the men and women of Earth. Did you know
the last martyr of Aushalten before the war started was a man from Earth? Even
though he wasn’t one of us or anyone of importance with any kind of power, he
threw himself in front of gunfire to save the people behind him, and with his
dying breath, drew the martyr’s cross on the ground as a prayer for his enemies
and friends. Such people go to Heaven to sit directly next to our Lord, and are
holier than any of us will ever be. The martyrs are the ones who give the most
to God and the Church. Suffering for another is the most valuable gift and most
powerful sign of love.”
“So, what do you want us to do
then? We’re not going to hurt ourselves in exchange for our percentage due,” a daughter
of Emundatio says.
“No, you won’t. You won’t do
anything for anyone if it seriously discomforts you. People like you don’t
change in your final moments even when confronted with the blunt reality of
your sins. That’s why people like you are shot on sight and given no fair trial.
If actions, prayers from others, and words won’t change your mind, then even
God can’t change you. That is why I say to my brother that I can inspire people
as much as I can to fight, but it is the soldier who wins the war.”
Hearing the signal phrase, I get
up, draw my rifle, and shoot the children of Emundatio, while Shaeffer draws
his pistol and shoots the guards. Outside, explosions and sounds of fighting
ring out as our soldiers blow up key areas of our enemies, fight, and kill all
who oppose us. Shaeffer and I walk outside to see it all unfold, but don’t join
in.
“Shaeffer? Is something the matter?”
I ask.
“I didn’t want it to end this way,
and yet, I had a premonition it would,” he says.
“Our enemies are unredeemable. It
is a mercy that we ended their lives, so they could not continue their sinful
ways and dig themselves deeper into Hell.”
“That’s true. Thank you for all
your support, brother. I couldn’t have done this without you.”
“We couldn’t have won the war
without your inspirational words, brother. The credit should be all yours.”
“All glory should be given to God,
the martyrs, and those in Heaven who prayed for us.”
“That’s even more true. I’m
guessing that we won those negotiations and things will go our way?”
“Force is always the most powerful
form of negotiation and law enforcement, so yes. When the dust settles, we will
have the peace we’ve worked so hard for. Come. There is still much to be done
to solidify it.”
Joining up with our forces, they cheer
for the glory of God and my brother. Other pockets of enemy resistance may be
out there, but they won’t last. The peace and harmony we’ve been fighting for
is now ours and will be shared between the people of Earth and Aushalten. All
glory and praise be to God and those who lived and died for love and truth.
Amen.
The End
Friday, May 22, 2026
Oppression from the Oppressed: Chapter 3 – Day of Due Vengeance

Chapter
3 – Day of Due Vengeance
The ships of Aushalten slow down
out of warp speed, stopping outside of a shielded Earth where its space
military is waiting for us. I was chosen again by our leadership to rally the
troops, talk down the people of Earth, and scare our foes, and not wanting to
let them down, I accept, as always. Looking at Adalwolf, he nods at me like the
supportive brother he is, who will always have my back, no matter what. I
breathe in and out, and begin my speech.
“What a glorious day it is, men of
Earth and Aushalten! Today, both peoples meet the truest versions of each other
on this day of battle, when the masters of both worlds will be decided. It
didn’t have to be like this. Honestly, we wanted to help you against foreign
invaders. Still, after you took advantage of us in ways that we are all too
familiar with and would not let us work in due harmony, you gave us no choice
but to fight against you, so we could have our proper freedoms and prevent the
worst of you from sinning against yourselves. Today is a day of justice,
salvation for the innocent, glory for the martyrs, and the slaughter of the
guilty.
Just as before, if you wish to be
spared, lay down your arms and do not resist us. You will be an honored friend
if you turn against those who have turned against us, such as the Dominion, who
promised us brotherhood and fair treatment. The Castigators, who once punished
corrupt leadership and acted outside the law when it no longer served God, will
be put to the sword. The Compassionate, who once did everything to help the
poor and oppressed, will be gunned down with the money and weapons they
obtained off the backs of the people they were meant to protect. The Council of
Punishment, who lost the grace of God and their guardian angels, will be burned
in the fires of our wrath.”
Our defense breaker ships come in
through warp speed, immediately ramming the ship at the front of the defense
line and pushing their way through Earth’s meager space ships with our own
backing them up. Our ships, who got here sooner than us, uncloak themselves,
fly out of the oceans, and destroy the space stations that shield Earth. More
ships of Aushalten arrive at Earth and descend at full speed toward Earth’s
surface with us.
Continuing, I say, “Forward, men
and friends of Aushalten! Bared your teeth, raise your weapons, and show our
enemies our unrelenting strength! Show them the terrifying justice of the God
they have forsaken! Kill all who stand in our way! Give nothing but justice and
death to the scum that oppresses you; this is your mother’s prayer! This is the
honorable task your father has given you! Do not waver! Do not retreat! Do not
lose hope! Kill and be killed, and give all honor and glory to God!”
Our invasion ships are met with
enemy fire from the Earth’s surface as they quickly mobilize more ships to meet
us in the air and use their air defenses, which we gave them, to shoot our
ships out of the sky. We do not break from formation even as we sustain heavy
fire, and instead, sing and pray as we continue our descent. Leading the men in
song, we sing a common patriotic song of Aushalten.
“God bless the hands that bleed,
the man that dies for his family, the woman who suffers for her children, the
servile child! For the way of love is suffering and death, and I will die that
death today! Pray for me, mother. Help me, father. Stand by me, neighbor. Lift
me higher, my angel. Look upon me, heavenly mother. Give me strength, foster
father. All for God and Aushalten, I live and breathe, and all for everyone, I
will suffer and bleed joyously!”
As our invasion ships crash into
the ground, they split apart skyscrapers and flatten targeted buildings
underneath them, all the while being unharmed and still functional enough to go
back into space and to Aushalten. From here, we get on our infantry ships and
deploy our mechanized armor upon the Earth. With Adalwolf and various soldiers
on a ship with me, our ship flies out from the invasion ship and into the
war-torn city.
“I’ve never breathed air in a place
that didn’t require exertion from me before. Earth is truly a soft planet to
live on,” Adalwolf notices as we fly through the city.
“It truly is humanity’s homeworld,
and a place that can soften a man. It’s no wonder many of our own fell to its
comforts when they were invited here, but don’t get too relaxed, brother. We
have heads of armies to execute,” I say.
Our target is the leader of the
Castigators, a member of the once-honored family of Mundr. The skies are choked
with our ships ramming into their enemies and blowing them out of the sky,
while the armed and armored forces relentlessly charge at and shoot all who get
in their way, with little care for their own safety. The war that was Aushalten
has been brought to Earth, and now, the men and women who took advantage of us
are facing our wrath firsthand. Earth will never be the same again.
“Shaeffer,” Adalwolf says, “there
it is, the white, red, and crimson house of Mundr. They have heavy air defense
and superhuman and so-called hero guards around them.”
“How disgraceful. This is the most
heavily defended area on Earth. Their heaviest defenses should first be around
the civilians and families rather than their leaders. Nevertheless, it should
soon fall,” I say as our ship lands a ways away from the Mundr house.
Adalwolf, our accompanying
soldiers, and I follow a charge of armor and soldiers who have the same target
as us. The armored soldiers have mechs made in the image of Aushalten knights
with gas mask-styled faces, tanks, and spider mechs that were once used to mine
on steep mountains and deep caverns, but are now used to scale buildings to
give heavy sniper support. The soldiers with us are a mix of specialized
soldiers such as heavies and snipers, normal soldiers who are dressed in armor
like my brother’s, and civilians who volunteered, wear spare or handmade armor,
and wield spare guns. Given the nature of Aushalten, its people know how to
wield and make weapons and armor of war and give their lives for the sake of
others. Our ships from above knock out ships from the sky and intentionally ram
those ships toward our target, getting rid of some of the threats in our way
before bombarding the house of Mundr’s air defenses.
Despite the crashing ships and
falling buildings around us, we fight on, even going through the crashed enemy
ships, executing survivors, and using the explosive weaponry that we gave them
for our purposes. To our surprise, the enemy starts retreating back to the
house of Mundr, rather than holding their ground. There are even some who run
in the opposite direction of the house.
“It figures that the defenders of
Earth were soft. Even their elite troops are retreating,” Adalwolf says.
“Yes, but be careful that this
isn’t a trap of any kind. They may not be tough, but they could be crafty,” I
say.
Our forces are now on the grounds
of our target, with it in sight and a wreck of what it once was. The statues of
its honored saints are shattered, like its defenders, and its automatic
defenses and robotic servant soldiers are failing. Our armor support focuses on
securing the area, and ships move onto our targets, while the infantry heads
into the large house to face and execute the enemies within. Given the assault
from outside that defaced the house with gunfire and explosives, the house’s
defenders are further within, hiding behind makeshift cover like tables,
chairs, bookshelves, and statues. They disgracefully hide behind statues of
saints, our God, His Mother, and other blessed figures, but that doesn’t stop
us from shooting them. Instead, we have to be more accurate so as not to incur
sin upon our souls.
Through our zeal and love of God
and those blessed by God, we become deadlier and more accurate with our attacks.
Some with us even run at the enemy with steel swords, once used for cutting
rock, so they don’t have to worry about shooting and hitting the blessed
statues. With that disgusting obstacle out of the way, we head into the inner
sanctum of the house, as our forces continue to cover every inch.
“I heard this place used to be a mall,
some kind of Earth marketplace with an expansive number of shops,” Adalwolf
says.
“I can see it, but the only thing
sold here are the spoils of crime and the souls of men for sin,” I say.
“Nothing here sold was cheap or did
not result in some good,” a woman’s voice says.
Appearing before us from the
darkness are three boys and three girls, all of whom are descendants of Mundr,
dressed in expensive suits and dresses, and wielding black pistols.
“The so-called good results are
good results only for you,” I say.
“The people of Earth needed the
weapons and resources of Aushalten to protect itself from threats from space.
It was almost wiped out two times in a row. Something like that can not happen
again,” the daughter of Mundr says.
“And yet, no real threats to you
have appeared since our ancestors allied themselves with you.”
“That is until now.”
“This is due justice for the ill treatment
of our people.”
“That’s not how we see it. Do you
know what these are?”
The sons and daughters of Mundr
hold up their black pistols.
“I know of your ancestor’s
legendary power. St. Kane Mundr could read souls and see if God fated them to
die or be spared. His ebony pistols would kill anything they shot, no matter
how powerful they were, and his white revolvers rendered men unconscious.”
“We were blessed with similar
powers to him, and we see you are deserving of death.”
“Given your history, I doubt your
vision is clear.”
“If that’s so, then you’ll survive
being shot by us. If you do, then we’ll willingly surrender, and tell our
allies to as well. Isn’t that a good deal?”
The sons and daughters of Mundr
start streaming what is happening through a floating news robot and let the
public know what is happening.
Leaning over and whispering to me, Adalwolf
says, “Do these people think we’re stupid? They just want to shoot us with our
weapons down.”
“It wouldn’t surprise me if they
do, but I see a great opportunity here,” I say. Turning back to the Mundr
family, I say, “I will endure your bullets myself for all to see. If I die, I
die, but if I don’t, you have to hold up to your end of the bargain.”
“Deal,” the daughter of Mundr says.
“But also, if you each continue to
shoot me more than once, then I must be allowed to defend myself.”
“Sure. You people from Aushalten may
be durable, but you won’t survive a single shot from us.”
“I will endure your assaults as
well. I am his brother and am charged by God to suffer with him,” Adalwolf
says.
“Okay. You people really are
masochists for pain.”
Looking over to Adalwolf, I want to
say something, but knowing that he won’t back down, I hold myself back. I see
the ghost of our mother over him. She never hesitated to throw herself over
people to cover them from being hurt, and he carries on her legacy, something I
cannot deny him. Our people behind us back off, while Adalwolf and I hold out
our arms like how our Lord was crucified, and prepare to endure pain as He did.
The sons and daughters of Mundr aim their pistols at us, first starting to
shoot us with a dishonest shot to the head, then hitting us in the body. I count
a shot from each of them, and seeing that they’re shooting us more than once, instantly
bring up my pistol and start shooting them back, along with Adalwolf, who does
the same with me in unison, killing all of the Mundr siblings.
My brother and I check to see if we’re
both okay or in need of medical attention, and are thankful to see that neither
of us is. We embrace one another as our people cheer.
I go up to the robot that’s still
streaming and say, “See, men and women of Earth and Aushalten? The leaders of
Earth are dishonest, weak, and pitiful, whereas the men of Aushalten like my
brother and I are self-sacrificing and can endure anything thrown at us. We are
blessed by God, while our enemies are abandoned. To those who still fight us,
you have only one course of action to save yourselves: beg for mercy from Him!
Lay down your arms or face imminent annihilation and damnation!”
I then shoot the robot, ending the
stream. My people continue to cheer before heading out to see if there are any
more roaches to expunge from this overly large house, only to find soldiers and
politicians who surrender. This was a great start to our invasion of Earth, but
it’s not the end. The other territories of the Castigators must be conquered,
and then we’ll move on to finish our war by punishing the so-called
Compassionate, thereby satiating divine justice and securing peace for both the
people of Earth and Aushalten.