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Author Topic: Euthan Palace  (Read 6474 times)

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Rayo Azul

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Euthan Palace
« on: January 25, 2011, 07:06:07 AM »

This is an original piece of fiction, set in my Urionverse scenario. It is in a way, the distillation of ideas from a lot of my fan-fic's and original novels which I have completed and am considering publishing as e-books. I am posting this as a serialised novel on my Facebook Page, where it is and will be the most up-to-date. Bear with me on the first couple of chapters and hopefully you will see where there is a link to previous stories and ideas.

This story is set in a broken future, where modern and ancient weapons exist side by side. The Protectorate, an overly powerful Church society both runs and intends to subjugate all known and yet unexplored space. Domination of humanity is their goal and they will use whatever means possible to achieve their bloody purpose. Constant war has guaranteed that, outside of the Protectorate, a minority has achieved vast wealth and a desire to live on beyond their normal life-span. Euthan Palace was created for that purpose.

With a simple signature, access is granted to the Facility, where miracles apparently occur; near-immortality is said to be offered for the chosen few. As none has ever returned from the Facility, no doubt can be cast on these claims. Irrationally new and willing victims clutch onto this belief and a slow but steady stream of men and women give themselves to the care of the Protectorate, only leaving behind their mortal estates.

Resistance has sprung up in the form of anti-machine sects, whose sole aim is to return humanity to its original condition. They will use whatever means and justifications to carry out their purpose.

Jan Olsen is the proprietor of Euthan Palace; the portal and front office to the Facility. He is their doorman, whose only function is to receive and dispose of their wealth. An easy job, or so it seems...

Rayo Azul

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Re: Euthan Palace
« Reply #1 on: January 25, 2011, 07:07:29 AM »

Prologue

The chime rang, reverberated, rose to a crescendo and slowly died away. It was loud. Jan Olsen hated that chime. Another customer had entered his private place and that could only mean one thing, work. Grudgingly he rose from his disorganised desk, knocking the half-full glass of brandy over with a twitch of his hand. It was only ever half-full; a magical state which money and perseverance ensured.

He had not meant to be rich. Retirement from the Protectorate had left him with a modest sum, which he had invested in the facilities here. War had carried on; each day the Protectorate expanded its zone of influence and this innocuous rock had turned into a gold mine. A jump point had been found nearby, an unusual confluence of physics and impossibility. It was a nexus; warp space folded strangely here, allowing a myriad of connections and it had become depressingly important overnight.

Little men in grey suits had tried to buy him out, he had refused. Next followed threats, but Jan was not easily cowed. His aggressive demeanour, backed up by a heavy blaster and too many old friends had made them go away. That, of course, and the remains of an overzealous politician which he had nailed to the front entrance.

Eventually he had agreed to lease some of his spare land and the Protectorate had installed their research facility nearby. Things ran smoothly for a couple of years until there was no need, militarily speaking, for the nexus point. Battle fronts change, after all; a circumstance which Jan was comfortable with. He was granted the use of the assets now on his land, with only one condition; he must continue providing the service. This time his truculent nature was of no use, the Protectorate reminding him of exactly what they could do to him if they wished. So, he opened his new business, with his less than silent partner and the money just kept rolling in.

Trade was brisk. It was incredible the amount of people who were willing to pay for what, essentially was a one-way trip. They signed over all of their worldly goods to Jan, and his partner, knowing that there was no guarantee. To arrive here, they at least needed a referral and of course to be rich. All were old, many diseased, but with one thing in common; they did not want to die. The Protectorate’s facility gave them an option; die on paper and wait for the possibility of rebirth. No guarantee was given, no refund ever discussed and once you entered the facilitiy’s double doors there was absolutely no way back.

Jan did not ask what went on behind those doors; the staff was Protectorate recruited, as far as he knew military, and he just did not care. He had an unlimited supply of brandy, his own space, with only occasional interruptions. One of course was too many, but he could endure. The chime had signalled just such a disturbance and with bad grace he entered the reception area.

“Welcome. Please be seated. There are just a few formalities...” he began to slur before his brandy-fogged mind recognized the unusualness of the scene before him.

Something hard, metallic, wavered in his vision. He recognised and did not like it. There were too many people, at least six and all dressed the same. Jan recognised their uniforms and facial features and began to sober quickly. He tried again.

“Welcome...ugh”

The pain resulting from the harsh blow sharpened his senses. This was not how it was supposed to be.

“Be quiet!” This came from their leader, a harsh-faced woman. She was the one who had slapped him.

“Marti,” she continued, “are you sure that the cameras are off?”

“Sure.”

“Good,” she returned to Jan, grasping his brandy-stained shirt and pulling him towards her, “now where is it?”

“Here,” he mumbled, his knee slamming up between her legs, as his right hand curled round her throat, “but you’re not going to be happy...”

Her hair was long, tied in a pony-tail which he used to good effect, tearing hair painfully as he dragged her round. Drunk no longer, reactions took over. Changing his grip, his hand dropped to her belt, drawing her pistol in a fluid movement. His first shot took a startled Marti right between the eyes, his second blew a hole in another’s chest. They had begun to move, but shock had given him an edge. Jan booted his angry captive towards the tight clump of his remaining attackers; part of his brain laughing at the stupidity of huddling up so close together, even whilst he killed them.

As quickly as it had started, it was over, Jan standing over his first aggressor whose pitiful cries did not move him.

“You’ll be sorry,” she gasped.

“I already am,” he said, as he calmly squeezed the trigger.

The report had barely died away when the front door exploded inwards, throwing Jan back towards his office. Armour-clad figures raced in, spraying the area liberally with weapons fire. Half-conscious, Jan heard the snapped, “Take him!” just before a rifle-butt slammed into his head, relieving him of all the troublesome questions running through his mind.

Rayo Azul

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Re: Euthan Palace
« Reply #2 on: January 25, 2011, 07:08:37 AM »

Chapter One



Resurrectionist Bomber
Upper Atmosphere


Light, noise and pain hit Jan all at once. He tried to move, but found his hands and feet bound. Blood had dried against his eyelids and so it was a hard struggle to open at least one. When he managed this gargantuan task, he really wished he had not bothered. From what he could see life was about to get even worse.

Vibrations indicated that he was in some form of transport and the rapidly widening crack in the floor suggested that he was airborne, with a distinct possibility of crashing back to earth. A pair of metal-shod boots stomped into view and a rough hand dragged him upright via his hair.

“Scum!”

The word was spat with hatred, and as he rose up the uniformed body he saw the sign he had been dreading. Resurrectionists; the day really could not get any worse.

“You killed our team, who were only trying to cleanse that abomination below,” snarled the bristle-haired figure, whose shoulders sported a Colonel’s rank insignia, “so you too will die. Fittingly, we are sending you back attached to our instrument of purification. You can contemplate your sins and pray for forgiveness on your long ride down.”

Jan knew that talking was pointless, religious fanatics were nothing if not single-minded. Closed, bigoted, usually irrationally positive, they were not his kind of people. Instead, he just grinned and let them manhandle him towards the waiting bomb. He would get one chance, when they loosened his bonds in order to strap him to his ride. How much he could make of it, he was unsure, especially the state he was in, but he was determined to take at least one of them with him.

Feigning even more pain than he felt, he scanned his surroundings. There were four of them in the bay, including the Colonel. Two waited by the bomb and another was controlling the opening mechanism; parachutes there were none and jumping out unaided from a perfectly good craft, was not his idea of fun. Then he saw his only chance and relaxed, slumping a little to make himself even more of a dead weight. His captors, in their arrogance, expected nothing less; they were after all superior.

When the first cord was roughly cut, there was no need to pretend; blood rushed back into stiff fingers and he grunted reflexively. His captors smiled and dragged him by one of his free hands to the body of the bomb. They would have to untie his legs too, but were treating him with a healthy respect. He needed to act.

Jan threw his weight forward, his bound legs levering him into the nearest man, who automatically caught him. He let his hands hang slackly by his side, making his opponent take the full impact of his unresponsive body.

“Give me a hand!” the soldier grunted, bending his knees.

“You look like you’re having fun...” laughed his mate, reaching down for Jan’s feet.

Jan jerked his knees towards his chest and used the first soldier as his support, as he slammed the heel of his boots into the second soldier’s stomach. An explosion of air confirmed his accuracy and the reaction of his attack, pushed the first soldier over. Now was his weakest moment. He could not afford to wait for feeling to return to his abused limbs and so he struck, using his swollen hands as clubs. He had half-risen, as best he could, and pounded both hands down into the soldier’s upturned face. It took four blows, and too much time, to render him ineffective. The hand grasping Jan’s hair told him that.

“Scum!”

It was the Colonel, whose repertoire seemed particularly limited. Jan did not speak. Instead, he concentrated on finding an advantage, any one.

“Look at me!”

There it was. The Colonel twisted Jan around, allowing him to use the only weapon he had available. Jan bit hard. Skin tore, as he wrenched his mouth from side to side, and ripped a chunk of flesh from the Colonel’s hand. One arm swung over as he fell, smashing into the whimpering Resurrectionist’s face. It only bought him a little time, as feet tied he slammed full-length to the floor.

Rayo Azul

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Re: Euthan Palace
« Reply #3 on: January 25, 2011, 07:09:17 AM »

Colonel Radimir Vladic stopped cursing and smiled. It was over. He had the heretic clearly in his sights. His hand hurt, but that was nothing in the greater scheme of things. Carefully he took aim, fired and missed, as the heretic rolled away from the shot and slid out into the void. He took one of the soldiers with him; a casualty of war.

Grinning, Vladic moved to the controls and punched in the firing sequence. The plan could not be stopped now. His name would be remembered.

*

Desperation is a funny thing; Jan’s choices were extremely limited. He took his decision quickly, grasping the still groaning soldier by his belt and taking him with him as he fell out of the ship. One of his hands half-worked, and it was the fingers of this hand which activated the contra gravity belt. It struggled with the extra weight but his feet caught over one of the stanchions helped. The upwards motion twisted him round, leaving one of his feet half in the bay and his torso crushed against the underside of the craft.

The wind tore his breath away, the soldier beneath him struggling for air. Jan saw the external hatch controls and clumsily punched the standard entry code. As the door slid open, the belt’s action pushed him chest first into the widening space, stripping skin from his face as he was forced inside. There was little chance of releasing his foot and he screamed in pain as ligaments tore in protest. He was inside, the soldier pushing him further, although incapable of joining him there. One more ridiculous decision to be taken; he entered the code to close the hatch.

A cry of agony was torn from him as his ankle broke, twisting at last free from the stanchion’s hold. He used his knees to effect, pushing up on the body below him, but it was taking too long. The door closure was mechanical, ignorant and uncaring of his predicament. He screamed once as his ankle was crushed between flesh and metal, his frantic movement and distorted bones releasing the bindings. One free foot was used to push himself up on the now terrified soldier, who grabbed onto his ankle. Jan screamed again. There was nothing he could do.

Momentary relief came as the door slid shut, cutting off both the soldier’s pleas and Jan’s right foot.

*

Colonel Vladic ignored the alarm flashing on the control panel; he was far too interested in the numbers counting down on the display before him. Soon, very soon, all of their wishes would be fulfilled. A beatific smile crossed his normally grim face as the bomb began to move forward, servo-mechanisms positioning it in its optimum launch mode. He laughed as it was elevated hydraulically and cried in salutation as its rockets fired.

The insistent alarm broke his jubilation. From the video feed inside the emergency capsule, he saw Jan Olsen as he lay bleeding out. Life was good. Perhaps the heretic could not physically join the bomb in its righteous journey, but he could at least share in its final deliverance. Grinning savagely, Vladic sent Jan to meet his fate.
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