by Jeydon » Mon Jan 23, 2017 11:45 am
The vitals were a good sign. Even if Reinen's condition was deteriorating, his vitals remaining steady meant he wasn't in any immediate danger. Having been trapped within the confines of the shelter for quite some time, Icarus decided it was time he familiarized himself with the planet a bit more. After checking his patient's vitals yet again, and adjusting some medications out of paranoia, Icarus stepped out of the shelter, and into the alien sunlight.
The doctor's eyes adjusted to the light quickly, and he moved away from the shelter and its immediate surroundings. With no precise plan as to where he was headed, Icarus found himself simply walking - walking away.
Away from the shelter.
Away from the wreckage of the ship.
Away from his companions.
Away from everything that would remind him of the reality of his situation.
Having walked for several minutes, Icarus was now a considerable distance from his crewmates. The terrain was rather sporadic, dotted with a multitude of hills. The tall grasses at Icarus feet rippled and swayed episodically, like waves moving gently across a lake. This steady movement, combined with the near absolute silence of the environment, provided a sense of calm to Icarus. Just for a moment, Icarus was able to slip away, and forget that any of the recent events had ever happened.
"Who are you? Why are you here?" A young Icarus, of a mere thirteen years of age, inquired. His cautious tone was tainted with hints of curiosity as he spoke.
"The better question, my boy, is why are you here? Who are you?"
The man was an elderly one, with medium brown skin, a stark contrast to the young boy's pale skin, as though he were from middle eastern descent. Thin, white hairs dotted his scalp, not in an abundance, though in a quantity enough to give him the appearance of a rather full head of hair. These same white hairs coated his lower face, forming into a rather respectable beard, that fell to around his chest. The man was not a tall one, but not a short one at that, either. He rested against a lone tree amidst the pale, hazel-green grass, wearing a simple, off-white tunic and loose, white pants, as though he were a martial-arts master. Whether he indeed was remained a mystery to the boy.
"I..." Icarus was at a loss for words.
"Not as simple questions as they sound, are they? Why are you here, my boy? Why this far from what must be your home?"
"I was looking for my sister," Icarus offered hesitantly, slightly intimidated by this strange man.
"Were you? Were you really? It seems to me, that from your apparent lack of ability to answer the other question, you may have been searching for something else. Let me ask you, my dear child, do you really know who you are? Or, just possibly, could who you were seeking out here have really been... yourself?"
"I know who I am. I'm Icarus."
The man let out a short chuckle, "And you see, my boy, that is what makes me so sure you don't."
"My name is Icarus Fverilin. I'm the son of Marcus Fverilin and Saga Creos. I was born on August 12th. I'm thirteen. I -"
"No, no," The man held up his hand in a gesture to silence the boy, "Those are the facts. I'm not talking about the facts. I'm talking about you. Who are you? What is your passion? What makes you fight? What do you believe in? What are you going to do with your life? Who do you want to become? When you wake up in the morning, what makes you get up? What drives you forward, and reminds you to slow down when you're taking life too quickly? Who are you really, beneath all those meaningless facts?"
Icarus took a moment to reply, considering the strange man's words.
"Well, I... I suppose I'm just an ordinary human, like everyone else. I... I don't know. Does it really matter? Can't we just be, without having to worry about those things?"
"It is as I thought," The man responded, his tone grave, "You, like so many others before you, know not who you really are. Come here, young one. Let me tell you a tale."
The young Icarus approached the man cautiously, and took a seat on the grass beside him, hugging his knees loosely. He turned to look at the man, and -
Blood.
Death.
The man, once smiling, lay sprawled on the ground beside the boy. Blood leaked from multiple lacerations across the man's corpse, staining his clothes, and the grass, a sickening shade of crimson.
The boy screamed.
Icarus froze, ceasing his slow, reminiscent stride. No. It wasn't supposed to be like that. What had happened? It hadn't gone like that. The man was alive, somewhere, and that visit was only the first of many visits Icarus had made to him. It didn't make any sense... Why had his memory gone wrong?
Icarus cast a sweeping glance across the plain, confusion heavy across his features. He was slightly disoriented, having been lost in the depths of his memory as he walked, however that was not what concerned him. Never before had the doctor experienced a distortion of his memory that severe. He had struggled to recall things at times, yes, however in this instance, he knew what had happened next. He knew how the scene had played out and that... That wasn't how it had ended. Icarus knew, definitively, that the man who he had met that day had not died that day.
Icarus glanced down at his feet for a moment, pondering what he had seen within his mind. It shouldn't have bothered him so much, yet it did. Never before had his memory failed him in such a way.
The doctor shook his head harshly in an attempt to clear it, looking back up. He turned briskly, and started swiftly back in the direction he thought to be leading back to the shelter. A sudden impact with his foot halted his stride, and sent him hurtling forward. Walking so quickly, Icarus had failed to notice the rock at his feet, which he had ultimately tripped over.
The man hit the earth in a jarring impact, and lay there, splayed out, for a moment. It was fortunate that he had landed on no more than earth, and had likely suffered no head injury. Icarus took a moment to come to his senses and orient himself, before lifting his head to see where he had landed.
The grass was scarlet - the same shade of crimson that had coated the grass in his distorted memory, yet this time, it wasn't limited to just one spot. The whole plain seemed to have taken on a bloody tint.
Icarus inhaled sharply, eyes going wide with shock as he stared at the darkened terrain before him. The doctor squeezed his eyes shut, and re-opened them, in hopes of the vision disappearing. Instead, the hallucination only worsened, and before him a horrifyingly familiar sight appeared.
Scattered across the moor were countless bodies - some corpses, and some desperate, pleading men and women. Their cries seemed horribly real to the doctor, ringing out through the air. They were screeches of pain, and pleas for mercy. Some of this scene seemed all too familiar to Icarus. The crash.
Yet other aspects seemed older. Some of the dying people were of the recent Zodiac expedition, yes, but some of them... Some of them seemed to have come from the deepest depths of Icarus' memories, recollections of times that even he struggled to remember. None of this was right. None of this could be real... Could it?
No. He had just been walking, moments ago. The grass had been ordinary, and the air silent. Not a soul had been near, neither living nor dead. This was just his mind messing with him. Maybe he had hit his head when he'd fallen.
That was it.
A concussion.
That's all this was.
Yet still...
The logical, medical knowledge of the doctor argued with his denial. Only a severe concussion could cause visual and audio hallucinations that vivid. He couldn't possibly have hit his head hard enough to inflict this... And the distortion of his memories had begun before he had fallen...
No. Everything was fine. It was just the stress, and the foreign environment. Once he got back to the rest of the crew, he'd relax, and it would all be fine.
Icarus shook his head once more, clearing the vision from his sight and pushing it to the back of his mind. The doctor stood, and strode quickly back to the shelter.
"Officer Renegade, is there anything of importance that I should attend to?" Icarus inquired as he entered the shelter, his tone uncharacteristically cold and brisk, even for a man such as him.