Monday, May 18, 2026

Oppression from the Oppressed: Chapter 1 – Past the Boiling Point


Chapter 1 – Past the Boiling Point

Approaching a stand in front of hundreds of cameras and thousands more people, I begin my speech.

“Men and women of the planet, Aushalten. It should be of no surprise to you that yet another member of our people has died, working for the people of Earth for the sake of his own, and like the other martyrs, has drawn the bloody cross that you wear on your shirts, shoulders, helmets, and capes with his dying breath. When the people of Earth first came to us, they did so out of desperation after being attacked by more advanced planets, and out of mercy, we shared our resources with them and taught them what we had learned. There was harmony between us and our planet of birth for a time, until the next generation came and took advantage of our kindness. They asked us to work harder for them, and we did so, for their sake. After that, another generation increased our workload, and again, we helped them, but this time, it wasn’t because we wanted to, but because they turned the weapons we gave them against us. This was their last mistake.

Ever since people first arrived here, its inhabitants have suffered to mine the precious resources from it. Generations of hardship have mutated its residents, turning our eyes red and our skin black and brown, but it has also strengthened us so that we can live here better than anyone else. Other men who live here are more reliant on the breathing apparatuses we make than we are and can’t endure the work we do day in and day out. Our people have suffered and died for the sake of others for our entire history, all of them martyrs who are in Heaven. As our God has said, that man has no greater love than this, to lay down his life for his friends. The people of Earth say they share the same faith, but they no longer show it through their example. While they relax on humanity’s peaceful homeworld, we continue to slave away on ours, and the few allowed to go to Earth are now looked down on or betray their brothers and sisters by not improving our condition.

Because of this, we have no choice but to fight back against our oppressors. The people of Earth, who look down on us, will learn of the beast they have awakened. Even as we speak, our people are bringing our divine vengeance down upon them. For those who stand against us, we will be a terrifying beast of the night, relentlessly tearing at your flesh, burning your riches, and erasing every last trace of your legacy. The time for talk and negotiation is over. If you wish us to pass over you, then stay out of our way and lay down your arms. Otherwise, you'd better pray for mercy, because we have none left to spare.”

The ships of Aushalten arrive above me just as explosions rock the city, and the cheers of the crowd in front of me overshadow the noise. They all take up their arms and rush into the city as our ships selectively bomb their targets. Meanwhile, a soldier from the crowd, my brother, Adalwolf, approaches me on stage as I leave through the back. He’s dressed like a normal soldier, wearing a black gas mask and armor, and a white hooded cape. His red eyes are visible through the lens of the gas mask modeled after the originals made when this planet was first established, and his armor is modeled after the knights of legend, who conquered the stars and exterminated the animals that plagued the planets.

Compared to him, I look like a plain civilian, since I am wearing a crimson officer’s uniform, with a martyr’s cross on my white armband, crimson pants, and black boots. If my brother weren’t wearing his uniform, we’d look the same, except for the breathing apparatus in my neck and different brown spots on my face.

“That was an amazing speech, Shaeffer,” he says.

“It was just like I practiced. Heh. To think I would be drawing upon the speeches I would make when we played with our figures and watched stories that made similar speeches on TV,” I say.

“Do you really have to head out on the front lines with me? A speaker and officer like you could be better off giving words of inspiration on the radio or planning more attacks with the other officers.”

“What could be more inspirational than leading from the front? Remember who we are, brother. We are of the planet Aushalten. We only know pain and suffering; therefore, we only know how to give our lives in love and service to others. There’s no better place for me to be than the front lines.”

“Alright. Since I can’t make any rousing speeches like you can, I’ll simply support you as best I can.”

“That’s what you’re best at, and all you need to do. Remember, I can inspire as many people as possible, but if the soldiers don’t win the battle, then all my words are for naught.”

“Whatever you say, brother. You don’t need to make an argument to do what you say.”

A ship meant for deploying soldiers is waiting for me out the back of the hall I went through, which is full of Aushalten’s history, statues of its saints, and paintings of its greatest leaders. Boarding the ship with Adalwolf, we rise above the war-torn city, taking in the ordered chaos. The towers and buildings, made of stone and metal, with the only color coming from the neon lights and holographic displays that decorate them, suffer little unintended damage, unless they are occupied by our enemy, in which case they are crumbling. Both the law enforcement and civilians of Aushalten turn against the men of Earth and overwhelm them with sheer numbers and force. The so-called superhuman and cybernetically enhanced heroes and members of the law-enforcing Dominion of Earth do little to slow us down, and as they are killed, their corpses are trampled underfoot.

As we near the front lines, I check my officer’s pistol, a humble laser revolver with a secondary function to shoot bullets with the strength of a tank and ship-busting rifle. Meanwhile, Adalwolf and the other soldiers with me have standard-issued rifles that fire lasers and are loaded with incendiary bullets, and have the function of being able to be taken apart to turn into a sniper, pistol, or grenade launcher. We land and are immediately met with gunfire from the defenders from Earth, who are held up at a spaceport. The men and women of Aushalten run for cover to defend those charging the enemy, then charge ahead themselves, with those behind them defending them. None of them shows any signs of fear or hesitation in the face of all the gunfire and explosions, even as their neighbors die near them. In fact, the more pain and death they see, the harder they fight.

Thus is the Aushalten way, and I will not be found wanting in following it. I charge ahead with the current leading wave, making sure to fire at the enemy with one hand and holding one arm high, while screaming to my people to charge.

“For Aushalten! For the martyrs! For our God and Lord!” I say to the accompanying cheers of civilians, soldiers, and law enforcement behind me.

During the charge, I shield several of the people charging with me from gunfire and getting hit in the process. I take a married couple into one of the deep holes left by the battle's explosions so they can be shielded by makeshift cover. Adalwolf is close behind me, gets into the cover, and continues to fire at the enemy.

“What are you two doing? Don’t you have a family, children, to go back home to?” I ask them.

“We do, but we are no strangers to risking our lives for them,” the husband says.

“What difference is there from this and the daily work we did where we could’ve died at any moment? This is more important than that work because it’ll give our children a better life,” the mother points out.

“I understand, but the family is the foundation of society. Without people like you raising your children, then this will all be for nothing. I admire your willingness and strength to sacrifice yourselves for your children, but please, if you can, stay behind me or the very back of the charge. You’re better alive than dead to Aushalten’s future.”

The married couple tepidly agree and let Adalwolf and me go on ahead before they join the charge behind us.

“Maybe you should take your own advice,” Adalwolf says.

“You can always replace an officer or public speaker. You can never replace a child’s true father and mother,” I say.

“Is that why you got shot for them?”

“I’m fine, brother.”

Adalwolf drags me into the cover of a nearby destroyed storefront.

“You’re still upset about our parents’ deaths. I can see that.”

“This is why you’re much more than a simple soldier. You have our mother’s perception, but please, let us talk about this after the battle.”

“Fine, but do not let your vengeance cloud your judgment.”

“My mind has never been clearer.”

Heading back out, I help our people break down the doors of the spaceport. Just as we are entering it, our ships are destroying the fleeing ships of our enemy, their tanks, and incoming reinforcements. Going onto the runway and chasing our enemy, I switch my pistol’s function to use its bullets to kill the heavily armored soldiers, the few superhumans, and the pilots in the plane.

“Wait, stop! You can have whatever I have in the plane!” one of the fleeing men says as he holds his hands up and falls to his knees.

We don’t listen to him or his surrendering allies and blow up his plane with our gunfire.

“No! Do you know who you’re messing with? I’m an Elio.”

“Yes, I’ve heard of the mighty St. John Elio from Earth. He helped conquer the Earth for God and was said to have been born in an adoration chapel, had a great, simple heart, and had amazing powers that inspired heroes and frightened his enemies. Your ancestor would be ashamed of you because of what you’ve done to us,” I say.

“You won’t get away with this. You think you’re in the right and know better than us, but you’re wrong!”

“We know we’re right because we know what it means to suffer.” Adalwolf and my people behind me cheer in agreement. “We know that true love means suffering for God and neighbor and the giving of one’s life for others, something you people from Earth have forgotten.”

“Can I be spared, please? I’ll do anything you want!”

I look at the descendant of Elio and his guards as they eye their weapons and us, and know their true intentions. Before they can fight us, Adalwolf and I shoot and kill them all.

“The only thing I want you to do is beg God for forgiveness, but since you chose poorly, you’ll never get the chance again.”

My people cheer at our victory. Our ships come in with soldiers to secure the spaceport, take care of the wounded, and take others to the next battle.

As we walk to the ship, Adalwolf asks, “Was that truly wise?”

“Yes. That descendant of Elio was pathetic and a disgrace to his family name. He would’ve been nothing more than a prisoner who took up space. Besides, we do not need hostages or prisoners in this war. We only need overwhelming victory.”

As Adalwolf and I fly away on our ship, I tune into our radio to hear nothing but cheers of victory in all sectors of our planet. All is going to plan, and Aushalten shall soon be under complete control once more. All that’s left is one more holdout city, and then we go to Earth to finish the fight.

Friday, May 15, 2026

My latest short story is done and out today for free!


Download at various online retailers found on books2read - https://books2read.com/b/mVGoNl

Daughter of a Mundr and an Emundatio, Griselda was raised to do great things. Now a cybernetic soldier piloting a mech to defend Earth from extraterrestrial threats, she finds camaraderie with two new squadmates. Just as she starts to unwind on a casual assignment, a new danger emerges: a grotesque planet appears from space, attaches to Earth with its tendrils, releases a red mist, and fleshy meteors that unleash horrors upon the world that Griselda must sacrifice everything to protect.

When Flesh Becomes a Prison: Chapter 3 – Rejection of Desire

Chapter 3 – Rejection of Desire

We have to end this soon. The number of fleshy creatures and the increasing intensity of the voice will soon overwhelm us. Because of this, we’ve decided to activate the overdrive function of our mechs to dig into the planet’s surface, covering each other while we’re doing so, and radioing over to our allies who are landing on the planet what our plan is. They join us, if they can manage to survive the initial onslaught, and even when they’re with us, the number of flesh creatures and the planet’s surface forming into tendrils fight back against them, killing some in the process.

“Destroying us will only result in getting rid of your only chance at happiness, your God can’t provide,” the voice says.

Remember what my parents taught me…remember that they love me…

“Our god gave us the supernatural and technological means to turn our planet into one being made of hundreds of millions. There’s room for you and your friends if you allow us to overtake you.”

My squad and I are deeper inside the planet. We tear through guts and jutting appendages as the inside of it tries resisting us; however, our laser rifles, transformed into laser swords, are preventing them from healing and carving a burning hole into the center. Our shoulder-mounted miniguns and shield canons are out of ammo, and our swords and mechs are starting to overheat.

“I’m not sure if our mechs can handle much more of this before they go nuclear!” Ro says.

Considering our situation and what it would take to finish this fight, I struggle to think of any other option but one.

“You’ll never feel happy again if you do. You were so close to having it today, but it’s not too late to stop and let us have control to give it to you. Take control of your life for the first time,” the voice says.

I grew up never really caring what I wanted beyond the options laid before me. Why should I care now? The people who raised me, loved and cared for me, and gave me the best life they could give, and allowed me to choose between various virtuous professions, and this is the one I chose. They raised me to be a selfless defender of Earth and servant of God, and that’s what I’ll be!

On the radio, I say, “This is a message to all forces from Griselda Emundatio! I am going to overheat my mech, causing a nuclear blast that will destroy this planet. Retreat to Earth while you can!”

“No, can do, ma’am. We’re squadmates, so I refuse to leave your side,” Ro says.

“I’m giving you an order, Ro! Get out of here!”

“One singular nuclear blast won’t destroy this planet. You’ve seen it regenerate. You need more than one.”

“How about three? I’m not leaving either,” Colina asks.

More people give their support over the radio, saying that they’re not giving up until the job is done and Earth is secure.

“Everyone…Ro…Colina…I’m sorry, there’s no better option,” I say.

“I was a scum of the earth villain before this. I didn’t expect to live happily ever after again anyway,” Colina says.

“I’m a defender of Earth, my friends, and my family. As my God gave His life for humanity, it is only right that I do the same,” Ro adds.

I struggle to hold back my tears, the voice tempting me to stop, no longer audible. In an instant, I feel the weight of my body and mech disappear as I appear far outside of the planet and watch it blow to bits and its remains burn to ashes. Around me, I see Ro, Colina, and the others who sacrificed themselves to save Earth. Above us, I see a portal of light with two hands with wounds on them reaching out to us and pulling us in with its gravity.

“Come to me, and embrace your rest, my good faithful servants,” I hear a voice from the light say.

“Heh, I guess we’re all going to Heaven,” Colina says.

“Come on, Griselda. You should go first,” Ro says.

“We’re a squad. We’ll all go in together,” I say.

Everyone is brought into the light, where I feel joy and peace, unlike ever before. What my parents and superiors said was right. Self-denial is the road to Heaven, and a joy better than any happiness can provide.

 

The End

Thursday, May 14, 2026

When Flesh Becomes a Prison: Chapter 2 – The Violence of Lust made Manifest

Chapter 2 – The Violence of Lust made Manifest

Chaos and the red mist overtake the once quiet streets of the town as people run for safety.

“Is…is anyone else feeling really weird because of this mist?” Ro asks.

“Yeah, try not to breathe it in or let it bother you,” Colina says.

I’m feeling really strange, too. My body feels hot, I feel a need to take off my body suit, and do something…regrettable to someone.

“Let your lust overtake you,” I hear a voice whisper in my ear.

“Huh?” I say aloud and look around for the source of the voice, only to see no one else besides Ro and Colina.

“Great, now I’m hearing voices.”

“Focus, Ro! We’re just a few more blocks away,” Colina says, just as a fleshy meteor lands in front of us, blocking the street.

The meteor looks to have various faces in it that are all contorted in agony, that moan and scream as if they were voices of the damned. It convulses before a multitude of distorted bodies come out of them with faces on them and many sharp spider, bone-like limbs protruding out of them.

“Give yourselves to pleasure. Our god Lavinia will ensure you live in happiness forever,” that voice whispers again.

The creatures leap at us, and Ro, Colina, and I transform our cybernetic arms into canons to blast them apart. Even in pieces, the creatures convulse and crawl their way towards us, while also trying to form into one another to regenerate. More creatures form themselves from the fleshy meteor, so we run back, looking for an alternative route, while blasting back the creatures that come for us.

“Give in. You’ve been leading such a dull life, and this is the time to treat yourself to something truly pleasurable and fulfilling,” the voice says.

Continuing ahead, we see the creatures attacking the law enforcement and civilians, watching them kill them, and melding their bodies with theirs. Just what the hell are these horrific creatures?

“Become one with us, and you’ll feel the never-ending satisfaction that we’ve been feeling for centuries,” the voice says.

“Clear a path ahead! We have to rush through them. We can’t stay here!” I say as I lead my squad forward.

Ro covers one side of our advance, Colina covers the other, and I push us ahead, switching between my arm cannon and blades that come out of my other arm and legs. By the time we get to the car, I’m covered in the blood and living flesh of the creatures, and I have to clean the flesh off me as it tries to enter my skin. Ro is driving the car, while Colina sits with me in the back, and he speeds off, driving from the streets and pavement to try to get us away from the creatures and town as fast as possible.

“You love these people, don’t you? Why don’t you share your feelings for them with physical contact?” the voice asks.

The effects of the red mist are making me feel lightheaded and not myself.

“…stop…no…” I say out loud as I fight the suggestions of the voice.

“Griselda-Griselda!” Colina says, grabbing my hands and restraining me.

“What’s going on? What are you doing?”

“What am I doing? What are you doing? You were touching yourself weirdly.”

“I was?”

“This red mist seems to prey upon people’s lustful desires,” Ro says. “The creatures also moan and convulse with dead bodies sexually.”

“Of all the kinds of humanoid aliens to face, I didn’t expect to get the horny ones,” Colina jokes.

“I’m sorry…I’m sorry,” I say.

“Sorry about what?” Ro asks.

“Sorry for not saving your town and commanding you to run away.”

“It’s okay. It’s not like we could’ve done anything while we were there. Hopefully, its defenders can hold out by the time we come back with our mechs.”

Ro drives out of the town and continues to dodge incoming flesh meteors and tendrils coming from the invading planet. By the time we make it back to base, everyone is on high alert, and everyone across the planet is deployed to face this threat. I’m told by command that they’ve been having trouble communicating with others because of interference coming from the planet, so my squad and I immediately get in our mechs, where we have better communication devices and weaponry, and go back to the town to cleanse it from infection. With seemingly everyone inside, we use our shoulder-mounted miniguns to slaughter the hordes of fleshy creatures, use the laser rifles to blow the meteors apart, and the canons to blow the tendrils from the planet away. Once the area is clear, I look around to check for survivors, but don’t see any.

Seeming to know what I’m looking for, Colina says, “The townspeople are probably still hiding.”

“They should stay inside until that planet is dealt with,” Ro adds.

“You’re right,” I admit. “How should we handle this? I’m assuming we’ll have to use our mech’s overdrive function to destroy it.”

“The overdrive function is still in beta and could turn our mechs into self-destructing nukes. That’d have to be our last resort,” Ro says.

“How about we fly up there first, tear it apart, and see what happens before turning to options like that, huh?” Colina asks.

“Agreed,” I say.

My squad and I activate the space function of our jets so they can shoot us at high speeds into space. As we ascend upward, we link up with other squads of mechs, superhumans, heroes, and vigilantes, who are going to support us. This relief is quickly taken away as more meteors descend from the fleshy planet, most of which break apart in the atmosphere, so that their flying flesh creatures can meet us in the air. We try to fight them and help clear the way for our allies, but more and more enemies keep coming, forcing us to fight through the incoming hordes so that we don’t run out of jet fuel.

“With us, you can finally feel complete. With us, you can feel satisfied for the first time. With us, you can feel like you matter,” the voice says.

“I do matter,” I accidentally say out loud.

“What was that, Griselda?” Colina asks.

“Don’t worry about it. Those voices are bothering me again.”

“Pray and focus on the task. There’s a supernatural aspect to this foe. I can feel it,” Ro says.

“The happiness they’ll give you is temporary. The happiness we’ll give you is eternal,” the voice says.

Shut up, shut up, shut up!

“Become one with our flesh. Together, you’ll feel more loved than you ever had, than you deserve.”

Hail Mary, full of grace…

“Your family and coworkers have used you ever since you were born. Have you ever made a decision that was truly yours? Have you ever done something for your own pleasure?”

Guardian angel, guardian dear…

“We have unlocked the secret of unending worldly happiness through our god and her angels. Your skin cries out for it. We can feel it. Give in.”

I scream out, activate the laser sword function of my rifle, and plunge it into the large eyes on the surface, and an eruption of blood comes out. I keep yelling and screaming until I feel one of my mech’s arms being pulled away.

“Griselda!” Ro says.

“Don’t let it get to you!” Colina says.

Stopping what I’m doing, I say, “I know I’m not supposed to. I know I’m supposed to be stronger than this as the child of a Mundr and Emundation, but I’m not! I can’t stop this voice from digging into my head and making me act out!”

“Depend on us then.”

“That’s why we’re here. You’re not alone.”

“Right…right…still, we have to destroy this place. At least my rage did something productive.”

“Sort of. Look.”

The eye that I was stabbing closes its wound, and blood stops pouring out of it. It then eerily looks at me, and whispers start crawling into my ears.

“There has to be a faster way of killing this thing,” Ro says.

“Let’s do it together and quickly,” Colina adds. “The voices are getting to me, too.”

As we move, we feel the ground shake until large creatures comprised of faces and limbs are formed out of it and swarm us from every direction. God, I’m going to need your help more than ever.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

When Flesh Becomes a Prison: Chapter 1 – Attack from Living Flesh


Chapter 1 – Attack from Living Flesh

Work, relax, sleep, repeat. Work, relax, sleep, repeat. Work, relax, sleep, repeat. This four-phase cycle is common among most people, but my family placed extra emphasis on it, making it their mantra. You dedicate your life to God, and you relax and sleep so you can do it again tomorrow, the day after, and the rest of your life as an eternal prayer. My family especially needs to be on our best behavior because of who we are. My mother is a Mundr, a member of the Castigators, and my father is an Emundatio, a member of the Compassionate. Our families control, keep peace in the world, and guide it to Heaven.

My name is Griselda Emundatio, and I am another pillar of society, just as my siblings, parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents before me, and I must be the best. Every part of my life, from my childhood to my current adult life, has been optimized to make me this way. My education, my extracurricular activities, and even the things I do to relax or the places I go on vacation are each chosen by my parents and teachers to shape me into what I am now. That’s not to say it all feels like work and routine, that there isn’t any fun to be had, or that I don’t have any freedom, but I’ve always felt like my life was one long hallway with impenetrable windows, where I could see the lives of others, who seemed to have limitless possibilities, while I only had one destination. Even though that destination is being a great protector of humanity, it still feels unearned, not something I fully want, and just another part of the cycle.

Then, again, what do I want? What would I want that would make me happier? I’m part of the richest, most influential, and powerful family in the world, and yet, part of me wants more. I’ve been told by my parents and teachers that this feeling is something all people of all levels of wealth, age, and experience feel, and that I should simply pray, appreciate what I have, and not let the temptations make me unappreciative or do something sinful, so I do as they say and focus on my work. Some humans are born with powers as gifted by God, as the blessed sciences say, and others must be given them through the same sciences, and I am one of them, a cybernetically enhanced human. It’s the calling I’ve chosen after going through my studies, praying, and talking to my parents and spiritual advisors.

At the cost of my limbs, I can attach any number of weapons to them, and can also interface with the new mechs that act as Earth’s defense force, which I’m a part of. A hundred years ago, a technologically advanced planet nearly wiped out humanity, but a single member of the supernatural Council of Punishment saved us, destroyed the planet with the help of his guardian angel, gave us a USB with information from the AI civilization, and vanished into obscurity. With the information on the USB, we discovered the secret to making mechs, new advanced weapons, and ships to sail the stars, and with them, we should be able to defend ourselves if another threat arrives. Currently, I’m leading a squad of mechs against villains who are committing common crimes, such as robbery and murder. Our mechs have jetpacks to fly at jet speeds, miniguns on their shoulders, precision laser rifles on their right arms, and a shield with a cannon. Mine is colored shades of dark red, like my bodysuit and eyes, and is nimble despite looking like a futuristic, heavily armored knight.

I’ve grown used to being strapped into this claustrophobic, which also has many amenities, like a bathroom, a supply of a week’s worth of food and water, and the ability to connect to the internet. The squad with me today has the designation, Section E 20:14, and the squad numbers are R:13:14 and C 3:5. I call them together and tell them to spread out to handle the minions of the villains, while I head for the leaders.

“I prefer not to be called R 13:14.”

“Why not?” I ask.

“It’s not like you have to call us that. We’re not on a secret mission or anything where we have to use code names. Just call me Ro.”

“While we’re at it, call me Colina, not C 3:5.”

“If you say so. This assignment is temporary, so I don’t really care what I call either of you.”

“Would you care if I called you by designation, PS 119:37?” Ro asks.

“Not at all.”

“You’ll come to remember and love us, Griselda.”

“We’ll show you around the best parts of the town after we’re done. How does that sound?” Colina asks.

“Sure.”

Every squad I’ve worked with has tried to get on my good side because of my connections. A lot of them I’ve forgotten about, many just want favors, and a few just wanted to be friends. What I know of Ro is that his family was once homeless before he rose the ranks of law enforcement and won a great fortune through his efforts, and Colina is a reformed villain who repented and nearly sacrificed her life to save others; neither person is particularly special or has a memorable background. Our mechs arrive at the town, and we fly to our particular targets. The bosses I go after think that having the townspeople around them means that they’re shielded by my massive weapons, but they’re mistaken.

My laser rifle switches into precision mode and fires a volley of small, thin beams that hit the villains, turning them to ash, while leaving the hostages unharmed. As I’m about to call Ro and Colina over the radio, I see them rushing to me through my mech’s cameras.

“Oh. So, you finished handling the minions?” I ask.

“Yes, ma’am,” they say.

“We want to show you around town,” Colina says.

“And get to know you better,” Ro adds.

“Alright, then. Let’s head back to base to drop off the mechs first.”

After we drop the mechs off at base, Ro and Colina run up to me. This is my first time seeing out of the mech since I first arrived. Ro looks like a typical soldier boy with a buzz cut and an army green body suit, while Colina has a scarred face and a pink body suit.

“Wow, you really are the spitting image of your ancestor, St. Idelle, with your grey hair and all,” Colina says.

“Could we have your autograph to remember you by?” Ro asks.

“Sure. Now, are we going to head out? I still have some reading and exercise I’d like to get done, if I can,” I say.

Ro and Colina hurry me along in a car that Ro drives.

In the car, Ro asks, “How long are you going to be hanging around the area?”

“Until my parents or superiors tell me to go somewhere else,” I say.

“What was your last assignment?” Colina asks.

“Quelling riots in a city that didn’t want all the research and development being used for military purposes, and handling the villains and criminals that tried stealing and turning our mechs against us. They want me to spend time out here to relax after that whole ordeal.”

“I heard that was a big mess. Sorry you got caught up in it. Those people are stupid. Don’t they know there could be other threats in the galaxy? We were almost wiped out in a day, the last time another civilization showed up.”

“Don’t get me wrong, I love the mech and get the argument, but God only knows if there are other hostile human or AI civilizations out there,” Ro says.

“What kind of recommendation would you guys like?”

Ro and Colina look confused at me.

“What do you mean?” Colina asks.

“People usually ask me to recommend them so they can get promotions to go to other places or for raises. What would you two like so we can get that out of the way?”

The two of them laugh. Ro says, “We’re fine where we are.”

“You don’t need to do anything for us. Did you think that was why we’re doing this for you?” Colina asks.

“Uh…yes?”

“This is just some country hospitality,” Ro says. “Colina and I are where God wants us to be, and that’s all that matters to us.”

“Don’t worry about giving us anything, Griselda. We just want you to be friends with us while you’re here, okay?”

“…okay.”

I breathe a sigh of relief that I didn’t know I was holding in. Guess I don’t need to do any more work and can just focus on relaxing. Ro and Colina take me to a restaurant on a farm with various farm animals. Part of me feels like a child doing this, especially with all the children around, but at the same time, I’ve never seen farm animals this close up or petted them. It almost makes me wish my hands weren’t cybernetic so I could feel them.

Inside the restaurant, the food is good, and I get attention from some admirers. Hearing that I’m here, the owner comes out and offers our meal for free, but I deny it, saying that this place deserves payment for its services and a charitable tip for its warm and friendly atmosphere. The owner is thankful and gives us free desserts to take back to base anyway. Ro and Colina then take me to the shopping district and have me try on various outfits. They and the owner of the shop call me beautiful in the colorful dresses.

“St. Idelle was known to wear colorful dresses made by her mother, St. Josephine. Why don’t you wear them?” Colina asks.

“I never have a reason to,” I say.

“Well, you should. Let’s get a couple, so we can wear something more casual when we go out next time. Maybe we’ll even snag a few numbers while we’re out.”

“What? Am I not interesting to either of you girls?” Ro asks.

Colina and I laugh. We buy the dresses and head out to the next place. Ro sees some of his friends who are playing soccer in a field. They invite us to play. Colina and I are on one team, while Ro and his friends are on the other.

“Come on, Griselda. Let’s show these boys whose better than them,” Colina says.

We do exactly that and don’t let Ro’s team score a single goal on us. They jokingly complain that it was an unfair match with me on the opposing side and then say they have to take us out for drinks. Colina and I go along with them to a bar on a hill that overlooks the town. From here, I can also see the clear, star-filled sky and get a real whiff of the fresh country air. Ro and Colina walk up to me by the view with smiles on their face.

“What?” I ask.

“You look really happy,” Ro says.

I start touching my face, not realizing that I was smiling.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen a picture with you with that big of a smile on your face. Is your life always business?” Colina asks.

“No, I can relax from time to time. This is what my time here is supposed to be. I don’t even need to be doing anything in particular back at base or the area.”

“Yeah? I’ve heard that you turn everything into another phase of work. Hopefully, nothing else like today will pop up so you can fully enjoy your break. Maybe you’ll even come away with memories you’ll keep forever.”

“Maybe…”

As Ro and Colina talk to the others and enjoy the sunset, star-filled sky, I notice the orange hue turns crimson.

“Does the sky always do that here?” I ask.

Ro looks concerned and says, “No.”

Looking closer at the sky, I see a red light flash before an object with tendrils comes out of it. The object quickly arrives above the Earth, and it’s a planet with what looks to be a face on it. Its surface is a pale flesh color, has red tendrils coming out of it, and what look like teeth on its surface. Its tendrils bury themselves into the ground as it sends out fleshy meteors to the surface, and the mouth breathes a red mist on the surface, as people start to scream and run for safety.

“We have to get back to base!” I say.

“Yes, ma’am!” Ro and Colina say as they run with me back to our car.

I don’t know why, but I’m furious, and I hope to get this over with to protect the people here who were so nice to me and helped me feel fully relaxed for the first time in a while.

The next and last phase of the Power and Those Who Use It is starting with the first story being out today!



Over a hundred years have passed since the Dominion conquered the world. Everything seems to be relatively peaceful, until a mechanical green planet appears above the Earth to tell its inhabitants that the year is not 2200, but 22,000, that they've discovered the secret to immortality, and that they're going to share it with everyone whether they want to or not. In this chaos, a single strange man named Cassiel is trying to enjoy his ice cream and beer, and has to leap into action with the help of his guardian angel to save humanity from this mechanical threat.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Artificial Unity: Chapter 3 – Artificial Immortality

Chapter 3 – Artificial Immortality

I said that I’d finish this fight alone, but I didn’t expect that to occur so quickly. Everyone else who crashed on the Ascendant's mechanical planet is being quickly killed by their so-called soul-saving green electricity. I’m trying to save them, but I can only protect them for so long until we’re overwhelmed and they die. My guardian angel only allows me to produce so many clones of myself and so many fireballs for some reason. Why don’t you allow me to protect them all? I know the potential for what I can do is nearly infinite because of the grace of God, so why limit me like this?

Why allow everyone else to die? No, my faith isn’t waning, God forbid if it does. Let me find a way to end this battle more quickly so that no more people will die. Huh? The servers? Yes, I’ve been destroying them at every opportunity. Oh, you want me to jump in them. Won’t that be dangerous? No, I don’t think my soul will seriously be trapped in them. Okay, I’ll do it. Ow! You didn’t say to jump in that specific spot-whatever.

Huh. It looks a lot different from what I imagined. Well, I imagined it to be a digitized city, a paradise, like the voices were talking about. Everything I see here is nothing but a green and black void with a bunch of ones and zeroes floating all over the place. Guardian angel, I’m going to need your guidance more than ever, because I have no clue where to go or start blowing this all up. My guardian angel pulls me through the seemingly never-ending void of information and numbers to a place where the ones and zeroes form a video from a camera in some sort of research room.

“Experiments have proven to hit a standstill. The machine can replicate a person’s thought patterns, but not their entire personality exactly as it was. It also results in the subject’s death, which is not exactly unplanned,” a researcher says.

Another researcher says, “We’re not trying to replicate people. We’re trying to put their souls in our immortal machine. Come on, we can’t give up now. We’ve drawn up plans to expand our machine and the accompanying maintenance for it.”

“What’s the point of it all if it doesn’t capture our souls?”

“Our so-called souls are nothing but patterns of behavior in our being. The machine works fine. It just doesn’t get the whole person’s personality in it. We’re on the verge of complete success. We’ve already obtained the secret to immortality. It just needs a few adjustments.”

The video ends, and my guardian angel pulls me over to another. This one shows me people being strapped in, being hit by green electricity, and a robot coming to life, pretending to be a person. Some of the robots rip the skin off the person they’re supposed to be and wear it.

“See? We’re getting closer to perfection,” a researcher’s voice says off-screen.

“They’re ripping the skin of their former selves and wearing it,” another researcher says.

“Wouldn’t you want your original face after you died? Then again, if I were you, I wouldn’t want my old face. I’d want another. I think it’s time we made a production of faces so the subjects can make a face they’ll wear after they die and enter the system.”

“It seems like a vain pursuit in comparison to what we’re trying to do.”

“It’s either that or having them rip the skin of their old bodies to wear.”

“Okay, okay. We’ll do it, and I have no problem with wearing my old face again.”

This video ends, and I’m brought to yet another video that shows the two previous researchers talking in a crowded room with two groups behind them.

“We shouldn’t force people to use our technology to save themselves. It’s their choice to make, and not everyone believes that they’ll live through the servers,” one researcher argues.

“What better choice do we have to permanently end world hunger, wars, and to save ourselves from death itself? This is our only shot at it, and to not save one person is to say that the rest of us don’t deserve it,” the other researcher says.

“This isn’t salvation. You know what it is. It is a flawed replication. The green electricity transfers an approximation of a person’s personality into the system to create an AI of them. They don’t come back to life in the servers. Their behavior is merely mimicked in artificial life. It isn’t true immortality.”

“Believe what you want. I already have the government, and the majority’s okay on this. Humanity will live eternally.”

The video fast forwards to a later date where the researcher and others are banging on the doors of the facility as green electricity lights up the sky before striking down everyone. It again fast forwards, showing mechanical people building up the servers, and fast forwards one last time to show them building the planet into what it is now. Okay? What do you want me to do with this information? I figured that something had to happen on this planet that made it so mechanical, and there’s no one that human souls can be captured within machines. My guardian angel teleports a USB into my hands, and the ones and zeroes around me are sucked into it. Alright, I see now. I’ll show this to everyone on Earth so they can learn from the mistakes made by the people on this planet.

I still need to destroy this place, though. There’s no reason to hold back whatsoever. All that’s here are the echoes of past sins and machines pretending to be the ghosts of men damned long ago. Agreeing, my guardian angel lights up my body and allows me to spew fire from my hands. I fly out of the servers and into what looks like the planet’s core and start blasting everything in sight.

Through the speakers, I hear a mechanical, distorted voice say, “Stop! This is humanity’s only hope for immortality!”

I don’t say anything to it. What’s the use of talking to a machine? It can’t feel. It can’t come up with new ideas within its established parameters. It can only do what it was programmed to do and nothing more.

The machine continues to beg me to stop, using its automated defense turrets and sending out its robotic defenders against me, all of which are destroyed by my never-ending firestorm. My guardian angel gives me the go-ahead to start leaving, so I do so, while continuing to burn and blow up machines on my way out. Outside of the planet’s core, I see the planet blowing up from the inside and the mechanical men turning off. Seeing that the planet is so close to Earth, I put both my hands out, and a large blast of fire comes out of them to push the planet into space, so that it explodes far away from it.

Well! Job’s done. That was a fun way to spend the day. I go back down to Earth, giving the USB to the world leaders of the Dominion, and just as quickly leave to go to the nearest bar café for some well-deserved beer and ice cream. Usually, there’s something to learn from every conflict, but what was there to learn from this? Nothing, besides, the reminder that men are more than flesh and blood, and superior to whatever artificial intelligence that we make, like how God is superior to men. Now that I’m looking at my meal in front of me, I realize something else. That I have to have double the dessert for what I’ve done! I will be getting a fat paycheck for it, so why not?

The End