[IC] The Blinding Dark

A Time for remembering

I woke up a few days ago in a dark room sorrounded by scientists in lab coats. They told me of many things, of how I had died, of who I was, and of how they had infused life back into my lifeless body.

They told me that they had found me in a field of wreckage where the only surviving ship was a Black Clipper, with all it's modules offline, which they said must have been mine, since they found my dead body inside. They had found out what they could from the ship computer. According to it, I was a secret agent from the Imperial Navy, on an intelligence assignment. They took me from my ship to their hospital, and my ship to their dockyards. They said that as soon as I was off the ship all the modules went back online, although there were still no problems to be found.

I remember none of that. I'm not even sure I recognize this body. All I remember is the last order my commanding officer gave me. And I swear by the Void that, no matter where it takes me, I will complete that order.
 
The Great Escape

One of the scientists tried to scream. The sound was muffled almost before it had started, a heavy hand clamping down, then twisting the scientist’s neck. A few other inanimate bodies already lay on the ground, in positions that were most definitely not normal. The last few tried to run away, but did not get very far before they too fell heavily onto the floor. I cut off a hand from one of the scientists that I had just killed, in case I would need it getting out. I chose a random hallway, hoping it would lead me somewhere useful.

After coming to a few dead ends resulting in more dead bodies, I found what I was looking for: the Imperial Clipper they had supposedly found me in. Surprisingly, almost suspiciously, there were only a few engineers milling around. It was fast work to dispatch them. Gaining access in the Clipper was just as easy, thanks to the hand I had severed. Inside the cockpit, nothing seemed out of the ordinary, and all systems were reporting as fully functional. Another foolish scientist, trying to stop me, soon became a red smear on the docking bay, after a small nudge on the throttle. Getting out of the station was just as easy, and by the time the first viper squadron was dispatched, I was already in another system, and plotting a random route destined to confuse any pursuers.

I thought about why I had killed those scientists, back on the station. After all, they had seemed friendly enough. I realised that there was no reason, besides that it was the only thing I knew how to do. Strange, that even after I had died and come back to life without any memories, I still have habits from a life that I can’t remember living. Am I then an animal, to live by instincts alone? I can not feel any remorse, despite knowing that my actions were morally wrong. I feel somehow detached from that incident, able to analyze into calmly while questioning myself, showing behaviour that ressembles remorse, or does it?

Anyways, enough of that philosophical stuff. I’m wanted in the Empire, or at least I would be if they knew I was alive, and I’m probably not much better off in Utopian space. It’s time for this Commander to get out of the way and hide while all this cools down. And I’ve already found the perfect place. It’s time to leave this region of space. Destination: HIP 74290, Pratchett’s Disc!

 
Interlude

"Sir, Commander De La Fère has escaped!"
"As we expected. Did he take the Clipper?"
"Yes,sir"
"Good. Did you have the time to implant the tracker?"
"Yes, sir, but it won't be too long before he finds and disabled it."
"Oh, perhaps a bit longer than you think… How many droids did we loose?"
"A few dozen, sir, nothing we can't replace."
"Thank you. That will be all for now."
 
A message from our sponsor

Hey Guys and Gals,
This is Me. (Capital M)
You will have noticed that our friend, CMDR De La Fère, has a name that originates from the Old Earth country of France. To the uninitiated eye, it would appear that this name has nothing very remarkable about it. However, should you be learned in the French language, you may have noticed that, if it was said to a stranger who had never seen the name written, it could be heard as "de l'affair", which translates, in the most common language in our modern civilization, to "of the Matter". Although we will never know for sure, it is quite possible that this is not a coincidence, considering what he remembers of his background, or rather what he does not. A fellow Frenchman, recently deceased, was named CMDR Alene, although this name was modified through the centuries from it's original form, De L'Allène. Given the same circumstances, this could be heard as "De la laine", or "of the wool". Make of this what you will.
Me out.
 
In the steps of the Guild

The trip to HIP 11IFOR-GET+theREst was uneventful, too much so. In every system, at every stop, at every moment, I expected the computer to announce an interdiction, a system failure, anything… But it stayed silent, well, except that one time I tried to test out my still-rusty flying skills at low altitude over a high-G planet without shields. Could’ve been worse, still had 6% hull left… Point is, it was too easy. No bounty hunters, mercenaries, assassins, not even a common pirate. There must be a reason, but I’m glad I wasn’t forced to fight. I’m not sure I could have. I was still trembling like a Federal bureaucrat in New Siberia when I landed at the station though.

Docking Control gave a pad in the Back Row, where all the seedy and not-perfectly-legal shops were, as if they already knew I was a disreputable nobody. Not that the rest of the place was legal. The whole system was run by a gang of thieves, assassins and other miscreants, calling themselves “The Guild”. That’s one thing I noticed about this odd little system: the names. They all sound like they come out of some fantasy novel. Even the station, Pratchett’s Disc, just sounds weird. I guess that’s what happen if you leave a few million people 350 LY away from the bubble.

After hiring some of the more trustworthy engineers to fix up my ship, I decided to explore the station a bit. This place truly was the greatest hive of scum and villainy I had ever seen. I had landed in an area with relatively few lights. The first alley I walked down, I tripped over something soft that I knew instinctively was a body. I came to an intersection with a bigger street.

A crowd filled the middle of the street. In the center, several young men wearing a uniform, probably that of The Guild, were attacking an old and defenseless man. They kicked and beat the man with a sort of poised savagery, as though it was some kind of competitive dance of pain, and they would be evaluated on artistic impression as well as raw torment.

Without noticing it, I pushed through to the front of the crowd, as if drawn by the meaningless violence to which I had been used to. One of the men in uniforms caught my eye. I wondered what would happen now. We stared at each other, in a silent competition. We looked away. It was not clear who had won. One by one, the ruffians marched out, all purposely crushing the old man’s head, leaving behind a pool of blood and teeth.

Cripples were everywhere. Some were blind, some had no arms, some had no legs… all were miserable. I passed garish shops full of rubbish, drug dealers, stalls selling some unidentified vaguely purple liquid substance. I decided I needed to get out of these horrors. I chose a building at random, a bar called the Orange Librarian. It couldn’t be any worse than what was out here.

 
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