
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!
Saturday, March 14, 2026
My next book is complete and out today for free!

Friday, March 13, 2026
A Gentle Hand's Influence: Chapter 4 – A Kind Heart's Guidance

Chapter
4 – A Kind Heart's Guidance
Polina and I spend so much time in
courthouses, restaurants, and dining halls that we might as well live in them,
for how often we have talks and negotiations in them. Raziel, Zahara, and the
rest of the Compassionate have the situation with the extremists and civilian unrest
under control, from what I hear, but it’s still a single excuse from igniting
into fighting again, no matter how good the excuse is. If Polina and I don’t finalize
the peace deal between Fribus and Nanpa here and now, everything that we’ve
done here will have been for nothing. Civil war will erupt. Good and innocent
people will kill one another, and the only way to bring a stop to it may be to injure
and kill some of them ourselves.
I’m no stranger to killing when I have,
but most of the people mixed up in this are good, and that’s different than
killing criminals and villains who refuse to change. The Castigators and Council
of Punishment could do it, but…I don’t know if-
“Penelope. Calm down. It’s not
going to happen if we finalize the peace treaty here and now,” Polina says as
she grabs my hand.
“Yes, of course. Thank you, Polina,”
I say as I refocus on the negotiation.
I still can’t believe I find myself
on the front lines here with Polina. I’m used to her doing most of the work and
giving her suggestions on the side. I’m still in disbelief that the influencers
and leaders from both sides want to talk to me, along with her, and want my opinion.
God only knows why He pushed me to be so talkative and proactive now of all times.
Crossing myself, I pray for the strength and wisdom to do and say what needs to
be done.
“Now that the misunderstandings are
out of the way, we can continue the negotiations to their logical end,” a
leader from Fribus says.
“What end would that be? More
taxes? Less money going to the schools in Nanpa, so the children are forced to
go out of their way to schools in Fribus, which disproportionally teaches them
the crimes of one side of the country more than the other,” a leader from Nanpa
says.
Here we go again with the two sides
going back and forth.
“No. As stated in our agreement, schools
in both regions of Ferdinand will be taught one history with no favoritism
shown. The tax is also put on both sides to pay for all the damages done and is
temporary until everything is fixed.”
“Shouldn’t the richer people of
Fribus pay for it since Nanpa has historically suffered higher taxes?”
“No, it’s even so that no one side
is shown favoritism. Like it’s said in the agreement, we are one country and
shall deal with the consequences of our actions equally.”
“You can’t expect the poor to pay
as much as the rich.”
“Penelope, what do you think should
happen?”
Being put on the spot, I stop
myself from immediately answering. I think for a second and say, “The agreement
should be proportional to what each region can give. Therefore, Fribus should
pay more, while Nanpa should pay less.”
The two sides look at one another for
a second and agree, and stamp the document together.
“Next. Let’s discuss the price that
must be paid for the crimes committed by both sides, and seeing as how you don’t
want things to be equal, then let them be proportional. The criminals of Nanpa
must repair a majority of the damage done in the areas affected by them, while
the criminals of Fribus will not do as much.”
“Then what will the scum of Fribus
do, huh? Sit in their cozy cells for the rest of their sentence?”
“They’ll face justice all the same.”
“I’ve heard the prisons in Fribus
aren’t as tough as the ones in Nanpa. In fact, I’ve seen it for myself on the
internet. You take it too easy on the people who deserve to face the consequences
of your actions.”
“Our prisons are the way they are
because we’re inspired by the ones created by the Dominion. There, the inmates
live in mild comfort away from the public and may come and go to do community
service.”
“How is that fair? Your criminals
do wrong, and they get comfy cells and have to do less clean up, while ours have
to do all the heavy lifting?”
“Are you saying that yours deserve
more comfort?”
“No, but this is the same treatment
that Nanpa got after the world war. This is why many of my people rebel against
and hate yours. I say that yours should suffer proportionally to the crimes
they’ve committed.”
“Penelope?”
To break this hang-up, I pray,
think, and decide, “The punishment should be based on what each criminal has
done. The criminals of Nanpa have done the most damage and will do the most to
repair the damage they have done, and so will the criminals of Fribus, but they
will not live in comfort if they don’t deserve it. The Dominion’s prisons have
solitary confinement and cells of discomfort or comfort based on the criminal's
actions and the validity of their repentance and want to correct their mistakes.
I also think they should be forced to work together to remind them that they
both live in the same country and are part of the same people.”
The leaders from Nanpa look more
uncomfortable than those from Fribus, and yet, they agree with them and stamp
the document.
“With the matter of reparations out
of the way, there’s only one more issue to settle, that being of whether the
governments of Fribus and Nanpa should continue to be separate or combined into
one governing body.”
“Yeah. That’s an obvious one. We
should continue to govern ourselves independently from one another with few
binding laws and agreements.”
“What is the purpose of that?” I
ask.
“We each know what’s best for our
people. That’s why each region has its own government.”
“But that only further separates
you from one another. You’re supposed to be one country, not two countries in
one.”
“I have to agree with the
representative from Nanpa. One singular government hasn’t worked since one
region has historically been favored over the other, given that the king or president
was from one of the regions.”
Great. They’re both against me.
What if…
I suggest, “What if there was a third
party that acted as your central government and brought them together?”
“Such as?”
“…the Dominion…”
The people in the crowds of both
sides start talking among themselves. Now I’ve really done it. Looking over to
Polina, I silently beg her for help, but she simply nods at me, as if
approving.
Continuing, I say, “The Dominion has
stopped Ferdinand from fracturing and destroying itself in a civil war. We can
make sure that each region is given equal but fair treatment and balances the
deals of politics and business between them.”
“No, the Dominion hasn’t done
anything. The Compassionate have done all the work, and specifically, you and
your friends,” says a leader from Fribus.
“Without the Compassionate, we
would’ve been at each other’s throats. They know and are loved by both sides of
the country. They should be in charge,” says a leader from Nanpa.
“I agree. What do you think, Penelope?”
“If…if that’s what it takes to
ensure peace for Ferdinand, then…” I’m getting in over my head by acting as the
leader when it should be Polina making all the decisions, but when I look over
to Polina, she simply nods. “We gratefully accept.”
The crowds stand up and clap for us
as the final agreement is stamped, and the Compassionate are written in as its
new ruling party. I’m completely stunned by this turn of events, so much so
that I sit stunned with my hands on my face in embarrassment.
Polina hugs me and says, “You did
great, Penelope.”
“Are we really doing the right
thing?” I ask.
“We are. This is the only way I saw
us achieving lasting peace for this country.”
“How are you going to lead it,
along with being mayor of Meridian?”
“I’m not going to. How does being a
leader of a country sound to you?”
“Huh? What are you talking about?”
“They love you, probably more than
me. They ask for your opinion, and it was you who calmed down the crowds
without my help. You should be the representative here of the Compassionate.
Not me.”
“I…I don’t know what to say. I don’t
know if I can do it.”
“I didn’t know if I could be a good
mayor. I’ll help you in every way I can, along with the rest of the Compassionate.”
I hold Polina tightly and thank
her. The people of Ferdinand gratefully accept me as the representative of the
Compassionate, even offering me a home here, a place between both regions,
symbolizing how I keep the two together. When Raziel and Zahara hear the news
and return to us, they congratulate me and embrace me. Zahara offers to be my
bodyguard here, and I accept; she is also provided with a house for herself
that is near mine. God truly works in mysterious ways. We may find ourselves in
situations and bearing responsibilities we’d rather not have, but in the end,
we’ll find that we were exactly where we needed to be, making a greater impact
on the people around us than we often realize.
The End
Thursday, March 12, 2026
A Gentle Hand's Influence: Chapter 3 – The Scope of the Issue

Chapter
3 – The Scope of the Issue
With backup coming in from
Meridian, the Compassionate have a grip on the situation in Ferdinand. Of
course, many people in Fribus are protesting for the government to go back on
their deal with Nanpa after those extremists blew up the restaurant, and people
of Nanpa are trying their best to disassociate themselves from them. The
protesters aren’t a problem. The problem is the many extremists and
isolationists from both sides who have a bone to pick with the other and are
now motivated to act against those they perceive to be their enemy. Extremists
from Nanpa say they did nothing wrong in the world war, while the extremists
from Fribus want old sanctions placed on Nanpa and for every possible suspect
of extremism to be taken in and questioned.
As for me, I’d like nothing more
than to blow each of their heads off their shoulders and be done with them, but
that’s not what the Compassionate are about. We’re not like the Castigators,
and honestly, I shouldn’t feel that way after the mercy Polina showed me for
the extreme things I’ve done against innocent people. Right now, I’m sitting on
a hill overlooking a town where the extremists from both sides are butting
heads, daring and pushing the other to start a war between their regions.
Raziel and the other Compassionate are down there, trying to reason with people
to get them to calm down. It’s at times like this that I wish Polina and
Penelope were here, but since they’re putting out bigger fires between opposing
groups in a courthouse, we’ll have to do our best to keep things from getting
worse than they already are.
Watching the situation in the town
through the scope of my rifle that’s on my left arm, I see the chaos that my
fellow Compassionate are trying to quell by holding people back, talking to
them, and being in between the opposing groups. Some among the groups are armed
with guns and are flexing their superhuman abilities, which I keep my eye on
the most out of everyone. One of the armed groups from Nanpa starts to raise
their rifles and grenades at the opposing crowd. I may not be able to read
souls like Raziel or minds like Polina and Penelope, but my experience as a cop
and soldier has taught me the signs when someone intends to kill, so I take the
shots to kill the extremists. Their guns fire up into the air, and grenades
blow up at their feet, causing the rest of the crowds to start openly fighting.
Over our radio, Raziel says,
“Zahara, what happened?”
“A group of Nanpa extremists tried
firing the first shot against Fribus, so I shot them before they could kill
anyone,” I say.
“Good work, but switch to
non-lethal for the rest of them, and cover those who can’t. I’ll handle the
rest.”
“Roger.”
I switch my sniper to use the
non-lethal rounds in its secondary clip and begin picking off extremists. The
rounds are strong enough to put superhumans to sleep in two or three shots, and
normal people are put to sleep in one. Some of the extremists start to flee,
unwilling to fight or start more trouble, and yet, the opposing side keeps
going after them. I cover the retreat of those people and the fleeing civilians
who are trying to hide in their homes. Some of the civilians hide the
extremists and are attacked because of it, forcing me to turn my attention to
them to put the attacking extremists down, and then return my attention to the
others.
“Stop firing,” I hear someone say
as I feel the tip of a gun against the back of my head.
Damn. Didn’t think any of the
extremists would come up here. I do as he says and hold my arms up.
“Turn around.”
Turning around, I see a bunch of
normal civilians with guns and the flag of Nanpa covering their faces.
“I’m impressed that you managed to
disarm my traps without me noticing,” I say.
“We grew up in this region. Of
course, we’d notice. You weren’t here when Fribus had leftover traps from the
era after the last world war that harmed and killed innocent children and
civilians who wandered around.”
“What do you want?”
“We want you to let our side win,
and stop firing on us, especially the ones with a cross on our shoulders. We
don’t want to kill you, so don’t make a move, and when the fighting stops,
we’ll let you go.”
Now, I’m really jealous of
Raziel’s, Penelope’s, and Polina’s ability to act without weapons. These don’t
seem to be too bad, but at the same time, they’re preventing me from protecting
others. My enhanced body and armor will protect me from a few shots, and yet,
they could still easily gun me down, since the few bushes around here won’t
give me any cover.
“Huh. I’m just noticing the cross.
Does it differentiate you from the other extremists? I didn’t even know there
was a difference.”
“That’s because you’re a foreigner.
This cross is a symbol showing we’re from the Catholic division that seeks to
make Nanpa a Catholic country, opposed to those who want to make it heretical.”
“I’m Catholic, so we have common
beliefs and sense that we agree on. I can relate to you, but you’re letting
your love for your country overwhelm your love for God and neighbor.”
“How so? We’re only going after
those who have harmed us and will harm us. Everyone in us in Fribus will be
spared when the policies of a Catholic Nanpa rule over Ferdinand.”
“You may say that, but look below
through the scope of my rifle. Both sides are killing one another, and innocent
civilians are caught in between.”
“The other Nanpa groups don’t know
what they’re doing and are getting innocent people killed. Not us.”
“Really? Not from what I can see.
There’s a good reason why I didn’t know there were different groups. You people
act all the same from what I see down there. Take a look for yourself.”
“…okay, but don’t try anything.”
“I won’t.”
I point my rifle toward the town
and allow the man to look into the town and move my arm around to see the rest
of what is happening.
“God have mercy on us all…”
“Do you see what you’re stopping me
from protecting? Get out of here. Go back to your families. I won’t go after
you, and my non-lethal rounds won’t kill your friends.”
“Okay…okay…”
“Are you sure?” one of the other
extremists asks.
“Yes.”
“But-”
“Let’s go! Innocent people are
dying down there!”
I watch as the extremists leave and
don’t let my stop tracking their movements with my eyes, until I see them go
over the hill, and hear them get on their motorcycles and drive away.
“Zahara. Zahara, are you okay?” I
hear Raziel say over the radio.
“I’m fine,” I say as I resume my
sniping.
“What happened? I just noticed you
weren’t shooting anymore.”
“I’m surprised you did in all that
chaos. I’ll talk to you later about it.”
As I continue knocking out the
extremists with my non-lethal rounds, I see the people from before, taking off
their face coverings and going out of their way to protect civilians, even
turning their guns on their own. Seeing this, I turn my attention to protecting
them to ensure they and those they protect. By the end of it, they’re crossing
themselves and seem to be thanking God.
“Good job, Zahara. The town is
secure, and all the extremists are pacified,” Raziel says over the radio.
“It was no sweat,” I say.
Sitting down, I take a breather and
remember the persistent lesson that we’re always fighting against people who
believe they’re doing the right thing, no matter how idiotic or evil they seem
to be. Some deserve mercy and a second chance. Others deserve death and pity,
and I’m grateful to have seen those who deserve mercy trying to make amends for
what they’ve done by helping those they’ve hurt.
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
A Gentle Hand's Influence: Chapter 2 – Fire, Faith, and Fury

Chapter
2 – Fire, Faith, and Fury
Polina, along with Penelope, has
become the primary focus of the people of Ferdinand ever since we saved the
debate between Fribus and Nanpa from becoming the start of a civil war. As they
take questions and talk to people from both sides of the country in a market
square where both sides do business, Zahara and I keep an eye on them, the
crowds, and the surrounding area. Given the demonic threat we experienced two
days ago, I feel that I should be more on my guard than usual, especially since
they prevented me from getting to Polina. I know she’s strong and can handle
most things on her own, but after what happened to her…I can’t let anything
happen to her. We have a child back home in Meridian to raise, and we’re
considering a second child after the situation in Ferdinand stabilizes.
“Do not allow them to worry you, my
friend. It is the way they make you sin and blind you from what is in front of
you,” my fiery angel says.
I’m trying not to. Intercede for me
so that I may never sin or allow them a way to infect my soul with evil.
Zahara bumps me with her shoulder
and asks, “Raziel, do you think we’ll ever get a break from guard duty?
Besides, the couple of Sundays that have passed, we’ve been doing nothing but
standing around, except for that one exception two days ago.”
“No. It’s the whole reason why
we’re here, after all. Why? Would you rather be in Polina's or Penelope’s
position, talking to people?”
“Hell no. That’s more mentally
exhausting and annoying than anything. I don’t know how they do it. Seeing what
they have to go through almost makes all this standing around feel nostalgic
for the guard duty I did as an officer.”
“It reminds me of my time as an
officer, too. Don’t you have a rosary or prayers to say to pass the time? I
have an extra one with me.”
“No, I’m fine. I’ve said plenty of
prayers and am just trying not to be bored.”
“Would you rather there be fighting
than talking? Fribus and Nanpa may have reached an agreement, but the wider
government of Ferdinand still has to codify it into law, and some in both
Fribus and Nanpa hate the other side.”
“No, not at all. Don’t mind what
I’m saying. I’m just bored.”
“Heh, to be honest, I am as well.
Praying and talking to my guardian angel are what keep me awake.”
Once the talks are done, the
influencers from both Fribus and Nanpa argue about who takes the Compassionate
to dinner to show us their appreciation, and both Polina and Penelope convince
them to both take us out, with the three groups splitting the bill. They agree
to it, and they take us to an expensive and gorgeous restaurant that
specializes in food from both regions, and is decorated as such. Our dinner
becomes a taste test of all foods, and we judge whether or not one was better
than the other. Things get heated for a bit, but then Penelope and Polina calm
things down by telling them the food from Fribus and Nanpa is equally
delicious.
“Fribus has the best desserts and
has the most savory meals,” Penelope says.
“Nanpa has amazing spicy food,
that’s filling, and has dishes that are easy on the stomach,” Polina says.
They go back and forth trying to
balance the scales so that both sides appear equal, another thing that Zahara
and I whisper to one another that we’re grateful we don’t have to do. Per
Polina and Penelope’s agreement to come here, others from Fribus and Nanpa who
were in the marketplace were invited to this dinner with their meals paid for
by us. Everyone gets to know each other more personally, while still expressing
the uniqueness of each other’s cultures. It was a genius idea by them to
further strengthen the bond between the two sides of the country and to create
a group of people who see value in each other’s side. Everything seems to be
going well. That is, until I see my angel pull me away from the table just as
an explosion rocks the building and collapses the floor beneath me, sending me
down from the fourth floor to the third.
People are screaming all around me,
fire is spreading, and I can hear muffled gunshots all around me. I look around
and don’t see Polina, Zahara, or Penelope.
In a panic, I say out loud, “Polina!
Zahara! Penelope!”
My angel points up to the hole
above me, where I see the three people I was looking for looking down at me.
“Raziel! Are you okay?” Polina
asks.
Thanks be to God they’re all alive,
I think as I cross myself.
“I’m fine. I hear gunshots around
here. Get yourselves and the civilians to safety. I’ll handle the perpetrators
of this horrendous attack!”
Before they can respond, I speed
off toward the gunfire, all the while transforming into a form reminiscent of
my angel with fiery wings, two large arms with scythes on them, and three
flaming eyes on my face that guide me to my targets. Flying into the action, I
use my scythes to decapitate and cut the attackers in two, saving the
civilians, and then rushing them to get to safety. The attackers are mostly
masked superhumans with a few masked gunmen here and there, with some
superhumans using guns, before switching to using their superstrength or
projectile powers on me, none of which have any effect on my flaming armor.
Parts of the building start collapsing, so I use my enhanced strength by
allowing debris to fall on me so that the civilians can be saved and are
protected as they escape. One family is surrounded by flames and feels forced
to jump out of the third-story window, but I catch them and gently put them on
the ground before going back in to save more people.
Following the sounds of action, I
come across a room full of attackers fighting the superhuman law enforcement
that has just arrived. I aid them by spewing flames from my scythes, which burn
only the attackers and are harmless to law enforcement and the building itself.
Among those who are burned, few are kept alive, so I take them and bring them
outside to the ambulances. Looking back at the building, I see the fourth floor
collapse onto the third floor, which then falls onto the second floor, before the
entire thing collapses. In the chaos, I search the area for Polina and my
friends, and thankfully find them as they’re just exiting the building with
more injured people with them.
I transform into my normal
appearance and say, “Are you okay? Thanks be to God you’re all alive.”
“We’re fine. I wish we had saved
more people, but many were already dead because of the attackers, burned alive,
or crushed because of the debris,” Polina says.
“The bastards who did this are
going to pay,” Zahara says.
“My flames spared a few from death.
They’re being driven to the nearest hospital right now.”
“We should interrogate them right
now so we can see if there are any more of them and why they did this,”
Penelope says.
“Agreed,” Polina says.
Going to the hospital where the
attackers are taken, we go to the section where criminals are kept and locked
in rooms where guards stand watch. We talk to the guards, who say that the
attackers are surprisingly talkative compared to past criminals that they’ve
had here.
“It’s a result of my supernatural
flames that burn souls as well as the body,” I say to them, which frightens
them a bit.
When we question the attackers, one
of them says, “We’re from Fribus. We attacked the meeting because we don’t want
to deepen our ties with people from Nanpa. They did horrible things to us
before and during the world war! How could we associate ourselves with such
people?”
Another says they’re a veteran from
the world war, and says, “My other fellow veterans participated in the attack.
We know the horrors that the people of Nanpa are capable of. The wall
separating us and the laws that kept them down should’ve never been removed.”
One of the attackers is an old man,
who says, “What rights do the people of Nanpa deserve? None. They’re less than
animals for what they did eighty years ago. People say that it was their
leaders’ fault for the atrocities committed by them before and during the world
war, but we all know that none of those people would’ve gotten the power they
had without the support of the common folk.”
“As you said, the war was eighty
years ago. Much has changed since then. The people believe different things.
The leaders and people guilty of the atrocities committed against you and
others across the world have been punished, and many of them have repented and
are still in jail,” Polina says.
“So what? The people of Nanpa are
always backwards-thinking. Nothing that Fribus has done in its entire history
is as bad as what Nanpa did in a single century across two world wars.”
The old man in front of us suddenly
combusts into flames. He screams as guards rush in to put him out with water,
but the flames consume him until he is nothing but ash. They ask us if we did
anything to me, to which we say, we’ve done nothing. Given what the man said, I
assume that my flames consumed him since he went back on his repentance and to
his sins, and because of what he said, the guards let what happened go.
Another attacker is more repentant
and says, “I don’t know why I didn’t care for the civilians who were caught in
the attack. I thought we were just killing those who would strengthen the ties
between the two regions. I’m such an idiot for everything that I’ve done!”
I want to hate this woman for her
evil actions and idiocy, but a touch from my angel calms me down, and I
reassure her that she has the chance to make up for what she’s done, and that,
“You can help us by telling us if there are others like you out there.”
“No. It was just us, but others
think like us in Fribus and people who think oppositely in Nanpa.”
With nothing else gained from our
questioning the other attackers, Polina says that, “This is going to shatter
the agreement we’ve created between the regions. Penelope and I will smooth
things over as much as we can. Raziel and Zahara, find out as much as you can
about these other groups and prevent them from causing any more damage by any
means necessary, and call backup for you two.”
Zahara and I go our separate ways
from Penelope and Polina, and do as we’re told. These people who attacked us
weren’t possessed by demons like many people we’ve faced. Instead, they were on
the opposite side of evil, one that’s unprompted by demons to do unspeakable
things. Their souls are so impoverished of virtue that they don’t need the
forces of Hell to tempt them to do anything, since committing sins is second
nature to them, making threats like them sometimes more dangerous and evil than
the ones who are possessed, an evil that must be cleansed from Ferdinand if we
are to unify Fribus and Nanpa and keep the peace.
Monday, March 9, 2026
A Gentle Hand's Influence: Chapter 1 – Mercy Shown in Both Forms


Chapter
1 – Mercy Shown in Both Forms
“Let’s not forget whose side
started the fight.”
“Let’s not forget whose side killed
first.”
“When a person’s life is in danger,
do they not have the right to defend themselves?”
“A drunk band of kids is a danger
more to themselves than others, and should be treated as such.”
“They were young adults, committed
an adult crime, and were treated as adults. When are you going to keep
referring to this case and move on to the real issue of your high taxes on our
people?”
“Okay, we’ll talk about it. Why are
yours not producing enough and dedicating manpower so that our facilities are
well-staffed?”
“Don’t ignore my question, like how
you people ignore the suffering of your fellow countrymen on the other side of
the country.”
“We ignore it? We’re trying to run
it properly and steer it in the right direction, while you refuse to do your
jobs, like men on a boat who refuse to row. The waves of change are crashing
against the boat that is our country, and it will sink if you do not do your
part.”
“We could say the same about you.”
“Oh, here we go again,” I say aloud
as I watch from a distance as the leaders of both sides of the country start to
openly argue with one another like children.
“Let them fight it out. It’s more
fun to watch,” Zahara says.
“You should be praying harder that
it doesn’t erupt into violence,” Raziel says.
“I feel like we should use our
powers to steer them towards peace,” Penelope says. “What do you think,
Polina?”
“Remember, we don’t use our powers
on them unless it starts getting violent.”
“That was the rule in Meridian. A
fight in a city is one thing, but a fight here could be the spark of a civil
war and tear the country in two.”
I consider Penelope’s words and
keep my eyes on the crowd and everyone who’s arguing. Looking into their souls,
I see that they’re all decent people with legitimate grievances, acting out on
emotion and the suffering they’ve been through as a result of the other side.
This is why we were sent here out of all the subsidiaries of the Dominion. The
Compassionate specializes in delicate situations where both sides have
legitimate arguments for their actions or are simply acting on emotion. I am
their leader, and yet, I’ve been struggling to give them any other order than
to be behind me and not act unless violence erupts.
“This whole situation makes me
jealous of the Castigators. Kane, Idelle, and Zandro force peace onto four
countries and melded them into one in a matter of days, whereas we’ve hardly
gotten anywhere in the week we’ve been here,” Zahara says.
“Patience. Not everything can be
done so hastily,” Raziel says.
“We’re going to need to do
something because it’s been getting worse and worse. God only knows when the
civil war will erupt because it looks like they’re going to wage war over a
group of drunken young men stupidly attacking other people on the other side of
the country,” Penelope says.
We've made some progress here since
we’ve learned a lot about the people and the situation. The country we’re in,
Ferdinand, is divided into two parts: Fribus and Nanpa. Fribus is the center of
education, politics, business, and science, while Nanpa has the largest
population and is home to most of the artists, farmers, factories, and clothing
markets. Their history has been a back-and-forth struggle over who is right and
who is wrong. Sometimes, Fribus leads the country as it should, and other
times, Nanpa rebels against its leaders and keeps them in line, doing what
they’re supposed to do. There was once a time when Nanpa joined the opposing
side of an erroneous faction during a world war, while Fribus joined the righteous
side.
Currently, they’re trying to
negotiate new terms in a courthouse sitting on the grounds where the country
was first founded by a group of families, and the Compassionate are sitting
above the hall, watching for signs of trouble. I’m in my blue and black
police-inspired armor with my old badge on, and my flying wings tucked within a
back component of the armor. Raziel is dressed in his updated modern medieval
crimson knight armor, Zahara is wearing her pink and black light body armor,
and Penelope is wearing one of her simple purple dresses. I’ve made sure that
we’re all dressed and look proper for this occasion. Given my regular job as
mayor of Meridian, making sure my red eyes and red hair are in proper order is
second nature.
As for Raziel, since he’s my
husband, I make sure there’s not a single pimple or blemish on his handsome
face, and his blonde hair is as dashing as possible. However, his red, orange,
and yellow eyes can be so captivating that I get distracted while making sure
to keep his appearance in order. Zahara
doesn’t want her appearance changed at all, though she has shortened her pink
and black hair so that her pink eyes with crosshair eyeshadow are more visible,
and Penelope looks as elegant as usual, with her purple and blonde hair with a
purple flower on top. Even though she has one purple eye, one spiral eye, and
spirals all over her arms and hands, she probably looks the best of us.
“Polina,” Penelope says.
“Yes, I know. I’m thinking,” I say.
My eyes are drawn to one of the
children in the viewing crowd. I don’t need my soul-reading powers to see that
he wants me to do something too, for his side of the country, and yet, it’s not
that easy. One wrong move, and the Dominion and our country of the Columbian
Union, as a whole, will have to deal with a messy war. Agh! Screw it. The last
time I tried to wait it out for a clean solution ended in the deaths of many
police officers and civilians.
“Let’s intervene,” I say, to which
the Compassionate agree.
“Everyone! Calm down!” Penelope
says.
She uses her psychological powers
on the arguing crowd to forcefully calm everyone down. People in the observing
crowd are starting to stand up and question our actions.
“We’ve seen this situation too many
times not to know that this will eventually result in violence, and, in turn,
result in more conflict, and possibly war,” I say.
“Just let the war begin!” a woman
from Nanpa says.
“Let us have our independence!” a
man from Fribus says.
All sides of the crowd start
agreeing to wage war, with few wanting peace and unity. Again, Penelope uses
her powers to force calm among them, and I start adding my own to it. While
using my power, I try to get a better understanding of the people and why
they’re so thirsty for violence.
“Why do you crave the death of your
neighbors?” I ask in people’s minds as I try to pull on their hearts. “Why do
you put the mistakes of others onto people you only know the surface details
of? The people of Fribus are not each responsible for the high taxes and
demands, and the people of Nanpa are not each responsible for the disruptions
in your cities and towns, and are not all lazy.”
“There’s a way to come to an
agreement that you all will find reasonable. Don’t let your stereotypes of each
other and recent events of the bad actors from each of your regions corrupt
your view of one another,” Penelope adds.
“But…but they…but he…” I hear them
say in their thoughts.
“But…but they…but she…”
There’s something still pushing
them to fight one another. What is this thread that’s doing this? Concentrating
and following it, I feel that an outside actor is responsible.
“Someone is affecting them mentally.
Penelope, Zahara, keep the crowds calm and try to make them resume their talks.
Raziel, come with me,” I say.
Following the thread, I go into the
depths of the courthouse and start to feel a familiar cold touch, like icy
fingers crawling up my spine. I take out my pistol and unsheathe my sword.
“Raziel,” I say.
Raziel has already taken out his scythe
and lit it on fire as he says, “I know. The demonic is here. I can’t believe we
didn’t sense it before. Useless division and infighting are signs of demonic influence.”
“Perhaps the cult members have just
arrived or are only making their presence known now through the further
exertion of their power.”
“This can’t be anything other than
a trap. My guardian angel senses it.”
“My soul is guarded as always. Raziel-”
I suddenly fall down a hole that
opens from the floor and quickly closes behind me. There’s nothing but darkness
around me, and the overwhelming feeling of icy hands all over me. Dark figures
start peering out from the darkness as if it were a veil and stare at me.
“Polina Emundatio. This is all too
familiar to you, isn’t it?” their chilling voices say.
I fire my pistol at the figures,
but my bullets go through them until it jams. Trying my sword, I swipe it at
them, only for it to disappear from my hands when I bring it down. With only my
psychological powers of mercy left, I dig into the minds and souls of the people
around me and find something surprising.
“You’re all from Fribus and Nanpa?
You’re all working together to use the demonic to ensure that a war happens between
your regions? Why? That won’t solve your mutual grievances with one another,” I
say.
“What would you know? A good war
will separate the wheat from the chaff. Perhaps many of the horrible people on both
sides will die, or the horrors will teach them a valuable lesson,” they say.
“It’s not worth the loss of life!
They all have the capacity to change for the better.”
“That’s what we’re banking on;
however, we’re trying to accelerate that change. Things have to get worse
before they can get better. Our new friends will make that happen. After that,
we can go back to fighting each other as if we never worked together.”
“They’re lying! Once you fall to
sin, you’ll continue to fall unless you repent.”
“Speaking of that, they tell us
something interesting about you. How two police groups were against one another,
and you held back from doing anything useful until innocent people died. They
also told us that the weight of that choice made you act foolishly and fall
under the influence of sin. Oh, the perverted things that you allowed to happen
to yourself because you gave up for a second.”
“That’s true, but they’re
manipulating it to make themselves sound right. I’m ashamed of myself for
letting myself fall. Still, the same thing will happen to you if you don’t stop
right now.”
“Will you stop us, Polina? Will
your empathy for us outweigh your calling to enact justice? We both already
know the answer to that.”
The icy hand all over me starts
tearing at my face and my armor. They think I will hold back and let my empathy
for their pain and worries overwhelm my judgment of them. That’s not going to
happen. I won’t let anyone else take advantage of me like that anymore! I let
God have control of the situation, letting go of control of myself as my entire
body and armor turn white and grey. The darkness turns white, and the figures
in it stand out clearly.
Taking advantage of their stunned
fear, I run up to them, and with one simple touch, they evaporate into white ash.
One after the other dies as the demons scream, afraid of the power of God being
used through me. Once they’re all dead, my original body color returns to me,
and the white around me disappears, giving way to the normal electrical
lighting in the room. Now that the supernatural lighting and darkness are gone,
I see that the room around me is an old courtroom, but it’s been defiled with
blood and demonic symbols, broken holy statues, and body parts around the room.
This whole building will have to be cleansed and blessed to ensure that every
bit of demonic influence is erased.
An explosion blows open the walls
behind me. Turning to it, I see Raziel walking out of the raging flames and the
bodies of people with horns on their bodies behind him.
He runs to me and asks, “Are you
okay?”
“Yeah. I’m fine. Better than usual,
actually.”
“Really? What makes you say that?”
“I can’t put my finger on it. Maybe
I’ll know and explain it to you later. Let’s see how things are going upstairs
now that the threat has been removed.”
As we walk away, Raziel’s flames
die down. Returning to the courtroom, we’re surprised to see the two sides
talking to each other, with Penelope acting as a facilitator, expressing their
true feelings and thoughts to both sides and steering the conversation in the
right direction. On the side, Zahara looks genuinely engaged in the discussion.
Seeing us, Zahara approaches, and we tell her what happened and the motivations
of the enemies we faced.
“They were idiots to think that
they could do evil as if that could bring about some greater good. I’d be madder
at the fact if I wasn’t guilty of doing the same thing,” Zahara says.
“When did Penelope get so involved
in politics?” Raziel asks.
“She struck a chord with them and
got them to calm down. Because they didn’t trust themselves to continue the
conversation, they wanted her to facilitate it and keep the peace. Should we
tell her she should stop now that the threat is eliminated?”
“No. We’ll have security clean up
the threat downstairs, while the negotiations continue.”
After an hour passes, the representatives
of Fribus and Nanpa come to a temporary mutual agreement until something more
solid can be decided by their leaders and set into law. They shake hands, and
the crowd cheers, happy with the results, as far as I can see. I go up to
Penelope and tell her how happy I am with what she’s accomplished.
“Thank you. I didn’t know I had it
in me. I still don’t know how I did it,” Penelope humbly admits.
“We all don’t know what we’re capable
of, until God puts us in a situation where it can be brought out,” I say.
“What you did today is the first step
in securing peace and unity for Ferdinand,” Raziel adds.
“That was amazing, Penelope,”
Zahara says.
Penelope tears up and hugs me. I
hug her back and think about the current situation. It’s going to need our guidance
more than I thought, and I’m glad that Penelope pushed me to do the right thing
and that God saved me in my time of need. This reminds me of what mercy is. It’s
both a soft and firm hand that can be both kind and understanding, but also tough
and willing to force justice when necessary.
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
My latest action-packed short story is done and out today!

Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Peace Through Force: Chapter 4 – An Uncorrupting Desire for Power

Chapter
4 – An Uncorrupting Desire for Power
I stand on the side of the room
with Idelle as Kane and Bolster talk about subduing the last enemy country,
Steadfast. We’re in yet another hideout, and the question of victory is not if
we’ll win, but how, what we can do to secure peace now, and what we’ll do
after. Taking over land by force after executing the leadership and those loyal
to them naturally inspired those who were attacked to try to do the same. Fear
and overwhelming force can be used to prevent revolution in the present, but
future generations will find ways to subtly take back their country, take it
back from within, or build up a military to take their own. Guardian is only
the strongest because we’ve backed them up, and God only knows if our enemies
will ally with others to shift the balance in their favor.
This topic comes up in Kane and
Bolster’s discussion as Bolster says, “Who knows how many allies Steadfast has?
Their name is ironic since they keep shifting beliefs with every generation.
They’re spineless light-footers who believe in God, but don’t. Believe men and
women have separate but equal roles, but then say they’re each replaceable.
Believe all religions are equal, but then say every religion should get along
as one. They’re universalists, a walking contradiction, who ally with everyone
and no one, making sure always to have at least one person in an opposing camp,
just in case they have to switch sides.”
“And God shall spit them out of His
mouth,” I comment.
“Exactly, Zandro. There’s no real
way to trust them, so we have to be extra thorough about dealing with them,”
Kane says.
The ideology of Steadfast reminds
me of my own back in Nexum. They said they believed in equality, but then
backstabbed and worked against our interests in the shadows or did so in plain
sight, using various excuses to claim our actions were mutually beneficial or
justified. Nexum has always conflicted with the four countries of Steadfast,
Wall, and Hammer, and it has tried to use its alliance with the Columbian Union
to get its way with them, even trying to get our way with Guardian, despite
being mutual allies. I know much of the history of the countries, but let
Bolster say what he has to since I’ve been out of the loop, and much has
changed in this country over the course of a few short years. To me, it feels
like it’s been ten years since I last set foot on this side of the world after
trying to get superpowers from the Coronamento Corporation and ending up with
the Castigators.
I should have control or some power
over the four countries because of my knowledge. I know when violence is
necessary, and when to use extreme violence for the greater good. There’s no
action I am unwilling to take, nor does killing or harming others bother me.
This is a problem. A problem I’ve
been dealing with, and that’s lessened over the years, but still a problem. The
sinful side of myself has to have its short time in control, and I’m in
constant prayer to keep it down. I don’t want control or power of any kind. All
I want to do is the will of God. Everything that I have now is everything that
I need, and it is all in service to doing what I was created to do. Nothing
more.
A member of the Castigators walks
into the meeting room and mentions to Kane how the leaders of the Steadfast are
willing to negotiate, to which he says, “Given their history, part of me wishes
they said that they want to fight to the death. It would make it easier and
less complicated, but let’s see what they have to say.”
A nagging feeling pushes me to say,
“I think we should be extra careful, given their history. Let’s assess the
situation and have backup on standby, just in case.”
“My thoughts exactly. Thank you,
Zandro. Let’s make it happen,” Kane says.
We make the calls we need to and
then leave to go to the town where we’re meeting the leaders and people of
Steadfast. The area of this country reminds me of Nexum, being that it has many
deserts, while also having luscious greenery and rivers that run through them.
Ahead of us, the town has elements of the other countries, with ugly,
futuristic-looking military walls from Hammer, old medieval-style buildings
from Guardian, and houses that look like they’re from the colonial era. As
Bolster, Kane, Idelle, and I enter the town, we watch the rooftops and corners.
The civilians are out here throwing petals and flowers at us as if we were
royalty, allowing them the grace of our presence, but part of me feels that
it’s all done to obscure our vision from threats lurking in the dark.
We should call it off now. My
instincts have improved ever since I got better in control of myself, and they
are right most of the time. The safeties should come off, and we should let the
slaughter begin.
No, we shouldn’t. Let’s see what
happens first before we act, and only do so if we have something other than
instinct to tell us that something is wrong. We meet the leaders in the center
of town, where a sizable crowd of the media and civilians is kept at a fair
distance. Kane and Bolster get out of their vehicles, and Idelle and I slow
down to walk normally with them. I look at Kane to see if he sees anything in
the leaders, and he looks agitated. The leaders tell them to take a seat with
them, but Kane immediately draws his ebony pistols and points them at them.
“Don’t think you can play me for a
fool,” Kane says with disgust in his voice. “Don’t you know that I can see if
God judges that I should kill you or let you live?”
“Yes, I’ve heard of that, but don’t
we all do that with our own God?” one of the leaders asks, trying to remain
composed.
“You all have five seconds each to
give me a reason why you should live before I blow your head off.”
“We just want to negotiate the terms
of peace. We don’t want to fight!”
Kane blows the head off the leader
talking to him. The crowds are frightened by this, some of whom start running
away, and yet, no one does anything to save the leaders, and the leaders
themselves are still sitting in place, but are now shaken.
“You’re lying. You all want peace
just so you can stab us in the back, politically and militarily, just like you
do with every peace agreement you get.”
Kane goes up to the next leader. She
says, “You can’t shoot people who are surrendering and trying to talk! This
isn’t lawful!”
Again, Kane blows the head off
another leader. He says, “Your surrender isn’t honest. God reveals it through
my eyes. I don’t care if this is lawful or not. All I care about is doing the
right thing.”
Now the crowds are really starting
to flee, and the leaders are holding their hands up and are on their knees.
Still, no one is intervening, and I don’t see anyone sneaking up on us.
The next leader that Kane goes up
to says, “What do you want? What do you want us to say?”
“I want you to change your hearts,
and actually want something beneficial to us, and not solely for yourselves. I
want conversion, your salvation, and the peace for the four countries and
mine.”
The leader starts and stops several
sentences before Kane has enough and shoots him. Kane looks at the rest of the
leaders and sighs.
“There’s nothing more to be said.
No prayer will save you, and mercy has run dry. Kill them all.”
Idelle and I do as Kane says, as he
and Bolster shoot the leaders who try to run. Finally, my instinct proves
correct as a force of robots, superhumans, and law enforcers emerges from the
crowd and nearby buildings to attack us. I fully transform, with armor covering
my body. The left side is completely white, with a halo on its head and a left
shield. The right side has spikey fingers reaching out, horns on its head, and
a large hand with razor-sharp fingers. I throw myself at the enemy, tearing
them to shreds. During the fight, as in every fight, I try to cover Idelle and
Kane. I’ve killed my own family, but theirs is still alive, so their lives
matter more than my own.
Below, I hear Kane calling for our
reinforcements, who shortly come in to aid us. This is especially timely since
the civilians and the enemy have their own military coming in to help them. A
new surprise happens as missiles come out of the ground, and we hear from the
other Castigators that the missiles will detonate and kill everyone in the
city. Hurrying to get rid of them, I run to the nearest missile and throw it up
into the air. Running to the next one, I tear through my enemies trying to
defend it, and throw it away from the town.
“The missiles are going to blow! There
are also others coming at you from a distance! All Castigators retreat from the
town now!” I hear said on the radio.
Since I’m close to a missile, I
throw that away, and then see Idelle running at superhuman speeds next to me.
“What are you doing?” I ask.
“Trying to save people. What are
you doing?” Idelle asks.
I grab Idelle and throw her away
from the missile, and say, “Doing the same.”
Running back to the missile, I
manage to grab it and throw it into the air, just as it explodes. The missile's
force is felt on the ground, and it rains fire down upon the town. One other
missile explodes in the town, and a few others come at the town from a distance
and head towards it. Running towards the missiles, I leap at one of them, grab
it, and use the force of it to spin it around and throw it into the air. I run
towards the next one and find Idelle trying to stop it.
“Get to safety!” I tell her.
Idelle punches me, sending me
flying into the distance. I quickly get back on my feet, run with every ounce
of strength that I have, and get to the missile before Idelle does, only for it
to detonate in my face, sending me hurtling into the ground. I’m in a daze and
feel seriously hurt for the first time in a while. Still, I try to get up, even
as I stand up and fall again. In the distance, I see the other missile
exploding before it hits the town, and Idelle running to me and yelling as I
lose consciousness.
Was it worth it? Is this the end of
my life? Was it all just to get to this moment and die for a town full of my
enemies and the Castigators, who roped me into helping them in place of execution
or jail time?
Kane and Idelle helped save my
life, and more importantly, my soul. It’s only right that I give my life for
them in exchange. The strength in my body leaves me, until it suddenly comes
back, and I wake up on a bed with needles in me, reminiscent of the ones put in
me when I was experimented on. I take them out of me, see that I’m some sort of
mansion, and wander its hallways. Where am I? I don’t think I’m dead.
Eventually, I find Idelle and Kane
in a room with a bar, fireplace, and a view of the town we were just in. It’s
still standing, and yet, it is burning. Bolster is sitting on the side,
drinking and watching the news, talking about the Castigators taking over the
four countries and forming them into one, under the Dominion.
They knew as well as I did that the
only way to instill true peace in the region is to take control of it all ourselves,
and since I’m a primary member of the Castigators, I should have my own land
and servants. Perhaps, I could take it all for myself in time with the right
moves and allies.
Kane turning his head to see me
makes my temptations cease. He springs up and says, “Zandro! I’m glad you’re
awake and walking around, brother.”
Kane walks over and hugs me, and I pat
him on the back in return. I ask him, “What did I miss? What’s this about the
Castigators taking over the countries?”
“First of all, I’m glad you did
your best to save my wife, but you had to know you’d get sent flying if you
tried to prevent her from doing what she wanted, right?”
“I knew that, but I never thought I
could survive a missile to the face.”
“You were out for a couple of days.
We had to get the Coronamento Corporation to send over fluids that they used on
you during their experiments to help speed up your regeneration and make sure
you healed properly.”
“Thank you for saving me, again.”
“Don’t thank me yet, because our
job here isn’t done. As you heard, I decided that the Castigators should take
control of the four countries under the Dominion. The people of the countries
respect our strength, and our enemies here will only stay in line if we’re the
ones ruling over them, and not some leader or group that the Columbian Union
puts into power.”
Bolster comments that, “That is how
things have been in this region for hundreds of years, and nothing that any
foreign power has done has changed that in the slightest outside of taking
direct control of it.”
“I guess the new country’s king,”
Idelle says.
“And that makes you its queen,”
Kane says.
“What about me?” I ask, half curious
and half wanting some kind of power.
“You’ll rule by our side as always,
fighting where you want to and giving your opinion to help shape the new
country’s future.”
“So, I’m just doing the same thing
as always on a bigger scale?’
“Basically.”
“What did the Dominion have to say
about your decision?”
“They were strangely quiet about it
at first. I had to call Timeo, and Idelle called her brother to make sure they
heard the news, and it turns out that they completely trust that we’re making the
right decision.”
“If the heads of the Dominion are
fine with it, then that’s all that matters.”
“Well, all the other countries are
concerned about this. Even the Columbian Union and its allies are uncomfortable
with a hero association taking over foreign land and ruling over it as an
independent nation.”
“And?”
“My point exactly. I prayed to make
the right decision, and if this is what God wants us to do, then we’re going to
do it, no matter how illegal or extreme it may seem, which is the entire point
of the Castigators. We force the law to serve true justice, and don’t make
compromises with it or any evil in any way.” Kane goes over to the balcony and
says, “I think this land and its people have grown on me in the short time I’ve
been here. I like how they do things, how blunt they are, and how they’re
willing to do anything to enact what they know to be right. My children are being
moved here, along with many more members of the Castigators, so we can make
this our permanent home. What do you think, Zandro?”
“I’m fine with that. Just lead the
way, brother. I’ll be right behind you.”
“Maybe we can finally find you a wife
in this country. What do you think, Idelle?”
“If God wills him to have one, then
we’ll find him one.”
In the distance, a group of cars
arrives with superhumans, men with cybernetic enhancements, and robots behind
them.
“Looks like we have challengers to
the throne,” Kane says.
“It looks like a small army
comprised of forces from all four countries,” Bolster says.
“It’s a fair fight then.”
Bolster, Idelle, and I follow
behind Kane as we exit the mansion. The crowd yells at us with their weapons in
the air. A man from the crowd steps out, covered in armor, scars, and weapons.
The man holds up a hand to make
them quiet down, before he says, “Do you think you can simply take our
countries from us? That we’ll let you rule over us just because you’ve taken
out our leaders?”
“It’s in your best interest that you
do,” Kane says.
“Ha! You care only for your own
people. You don’t care about the people of any of the four countries.”
“If I didn’t, I’d let the missiles
destroy that town behind you. I would’ve had my Castigators slaughter civilians,
surrendering soldiers, and those who weren’t involved in the fighting at all.
Instead, I’ve only killed those who want to kill me and my allies and plotted
against us. Your last words will decide whether or not you will live in the
peaceful and secure country I will create.”
“You’re going to create a peaceful
country? With all the destruction and killing you’ve done?”
“Sometimes, the only way to calm a
rabid dog is to put it down. As such, violence has quelled the conflict between
all four countries, and the rebels are the only ones trying to continue the endless
war. So, what will you do? Will you join me or die where you stand?”
The group of people talks and then
starts arguing with one another. Some say they will stand with us and move over
to us, while others call them traitors and say they will fight and die for what
they believe in.
These people are savages.
But then again, Kane managed to
reason them to his side. It’s no wonder that God inspired him to take control
of the four countries for himself, the Castigators, and the Dominion. He’s a
true leader, unlike me, who’s a mere follower at his side.
It’s no matter. I’ll have my moment
to take power for myself.
What I have now is all I need. A
fight begins to break out between the two groups, which have now separated. Our
supporters are close to us, while the opposition is farther away, making it
easier for us to tell friend from foe. Kane tells us to help our new friends
and calls in backup for them. Even though this is how our rule begins, I’m
confident that we’ll turn the four countries into one singular, peaceful
country, and perhaps help the wider world with our particular brand of establishing peace
through force.
The End