I... yeah. I have nothing to say for myself except "my Muse made me do it"! I've been scribbling stuff down about this story line for the past two weeks! Between this and Martyr (Nori is being uncooperative), I have been losing sleep lol.
Once more, my brain generates craziness. I hope you enjoy it!
Disclaimer: Star Trek doesn't belong to me... neither does Khan. Damn.
Oh, and just an FYI- I'm a redhead... so my main female characters will always be a redhead. I have to experience the story that I'm writing and for some reason, the hair color has to be red or it doesn't feel real. And if it doesn't feel real, I can't write it. So you're all stuck with Gingers, Mwahahahah!
August 5th, 1993: Earth
Khan watched dispassionately as men and women shouted in protest. The crowd had grown outside his window; the War had been in progress for only a year and people still hadn't realized that they had already lost.
A man, late-30s, climbed up on the platform in the middle of the courtyard. He started a passionate speech about freedom and how his children deserved to grow up with it. Khan stopped paying attention to him a few seconds after he started talking; it was nothing he hadn't heard before. Kahn was contemplating having the man arrested when a female in her early twenties walked up onto the platform as well and started challenging the man.
Khan was not expecting that. Normally, it was men who did all of the protesting now as they didn't want to subject their women to the ramifications for standing up for their beliefs. Fools- women could be just as strong; just take Rebekah as an example. She was one of their kinds' most ruthless and yet, she looked as if she couldn't hurt a fly. It was something that had worked in her favor when she took over the former United States of America.
"… and where will you go once you've overthrown him? To France? I hear that Philippe has seized power there. Do you think he'll invent a new form of torture, just for you? Or how about America? Rebekah might actually listen to you before beheading you and your children." The female didn't shout; she spoke calmly and with such conviction that the crowd fell silent in order to hear more.
"We will stay here! We will take back our land!" The man's angry shouts were jarring to the now attentive crowd; Khan could see that they were no longer so eager to hear what he had to say.
"Of course you will.' The female's voice dripped with barely-hid derision. 'And then they will come and take it away from you… again. You will just have done them a favor and made it easier to expand their own nations. There are no other options. This is the world for now- realize that you have been fortunate."
"Fortunate? Fortunate?!" The man spat his words at the woman. "It what ways are we fortunate?"
"Your bellies are full, your children are safe, and you have no tasks other than doing your assigned job and keeping your head down. What other fortune is there right now?"
Khan had seen enough. He signaled down to Joachim, indicating that he wanted the female to be brought to him. His second in command nodded and moved through the crowd. Joachim reached the woman just as the protestor opened his mouth to argue again; one look from the Augment however, made him change his mind. Khan didn't hear the conversation between Joachim and the woman, but he did see her raise her head and look at him before nodding.
"Think about what I have said. Sometimes, it pays to bow if it allows you to live." The people started talking to one another, mulling over the woman's parting words as she followed Joachim to the Estate.
Khan strode away from the window, making for his receiving room. He was intrigued, wondering if she was an Augment from another sect. There were 11 of them, the scientists having decided that it was safer to raise them in separate sections, rather than together as a whole.
That plan had obviously failed.
Even if she wasn't an Augment, he decided that he may have a place for her somewhere. A well-educated servant perhaps, able to amuse them and calm the masses when required.
Joachim and the female were waiting for him. Up close, he saw that she was quite short, barely reaching his chest. She held herself confidently and with the air of someone always in control, which clashed with the outfit she was wearing. Worn knee-high brown leather boots, with light tan cotton pants tucked into them, and a worn leather vest over a matching cotton shirt clearly spoke of a girl from a poorer class in society. Her hands were wrapped with strips of fabric and rested casually at her side. Long copper hair framed her face and fell down her back and shoulders in waves. Her nose was small, with a smattering of freckles across the bridge. Following the line of her face down, Khan found himself looking at her lips- full and rose-petal pink- as one corner of her mouth quirked upwards in amusement. Looking away from her mouth, Khan continued his assessment of the female. Her eyes were hazel (he could see the smattering of green within the light brown and gold) and appeared to stare right through him. Unwilling to look away (he was the Superior being after all), Khan stared back at her in a silent battle of wills.
After a few seconds, Joachim had grown tired of the posturing. "You are to kneel in our presence, Inferior."
"Hm. Unfortunately, I think I hurt my knees climbing on and off of that little soapbox out there. I'm sure his Highness will forgive my disrespect this once." Her voice was confident and clear, much like her posture, and the brief thought that she had been part of some high society before the war flashed through Khan's head again.
Joachim growled. "He will not and you shall learn to show respect of your betters." He raised his hand to strike her. The female eyed him dispassionately and without fear; the only acknowledgement she gave Joachim's threat was the subtle tensing in her body.
"Enough Joachim. I can teach her respect myself. Go make sure the crowds dissipate."
The blond slowly lowered his hand, but made no move towards the door.
"Now."
His second threw the female one last look, before bowing to him and stalking towards the door.
"It was a pleasure, Joachim." Her voice rang out mockingly through the room.
Joachim paused, his hands twitching into fists at his side, before swearing and stalking out of the room. Khan refused to show it, but he was amused by the female's defiance, especially since either he or Joachim could snap her neck like a stick without a second thought.
"You are bold for one who could be killed at any moment."
She turned her gaze back to him. "Your second cannot harm me. Neither can you for that matter."
Khan's eyebrow rose. "You are an Augment then." It was not a question.
She tilt her head and paused. "Of a sort, I suppose." She answered, as if the thought had never occurred to her before.
"Who were your creators? Did they make you similar to us or did they attempt improve you?" His mind was searching through his memories, attempting to find any record or knowledge of the woman in front of him.
"I have no 'creators'. And I am not better, simply different."
"Are you from here then?"
"The Middle East?"
'Where else?' Khan thought, his annoyance bubbling to the surface. "Yes."
"No."
When she didn't expand on her answer, Khan had to fight to keep his face impassive. He tried a different tactic.
"Why did you defend me out there?"
Her lips twitched upwards again. "I didn't. I simply said what I needed to so that fool could keep his head. He was no threat to you… today."
"You think yourself much too clever woman." Khan hadn't missed her implication.
She only shrugged. "I have been told that it's my greatest fault, next to suicidal tendencies and jumping off of large cliffs."
Khan's eyebrows briefly pulled together in confusion. "Jumping off of cliffs..."
"Large cliffs. Small ones are such a waste of time." She interrupted, waving her hand in the air.
Khan once more schooled his face. "You have yet to tell me who you are and why you are here. I warn you, I am not a patient man."
"You haven't asked me who I am; it's not my fault that I haven't answered. As for why I'm here… don't you remember Joachim? He said you wanted to see me." She was toying with him all while Khan was barely restraining himself from strangling her. Suicidal tendencies indeed.
"Who. Are. You." His teeth were starting to twinge from clenching his jaw so hard.
She smiled sweetly at him, as if she hadn't been angering him on purpose. "You may call me… An'ya. That hardly answers who I am, but it is all you need at the moment. Now, if you will excuse me… I am afraid I'm late. Be careful Khan; there are more dangerous things in existence than dissenters."
He watched her suspiciously as she gave him a little curtsy. Then, before he knew it, she was smirking at him and quickly climbing out the open window behind her.
Cursing as many deities as he could think of, Khan sprinted to the window and clambered out of it as she had. Looking around wildly, he caught a glimpse of her running on the roof of the eastern wing and shouted for Joachim.
She jumped down and ran through the courtyard before his people knew what had happened.
In the few seconds that it had taken Khan to cross the courtyard, she had disappeared.
His security force raced past him, spreading out to cover more terrain. "Who was that Sir?" Nathan, his youngest follower, asked as he scanned the horizon for signs of movement.
"I believe… that it was a rogue Augment." 'And a frustrating one at that' he added silently. "Double the guards. I want her captured if she comes back. Bring her directly to me, no matter what."
August 13th, 2258: Earth
Khan opened his eyes, the bright white room blinding him. His body no longer ached, having healed quickly during his sleep. It didn't matter though; he knew that it would hurt again today. Rubbing his face with both hands- the only sign he would give that his situation and memories were disturbing him- Khan slowly sat up.
It was so long ago and yet, he can still remember the frustration and awe that the woman caused him. She had come and gone into his life twice, each time staying no longer than a few minutes and always bringing a warning of some sort.
A small part of Khan, squashed and beaten down, wished that he had, if only for a moment, taken her for himself. It was a natural reaction he knew- he wanted that which he couldn't have and he also wanted the best. The female embodied those two items: capable of taking care of herself, obnoxiously intelligent, and continuously out of his reach. Her tendency to dart away whenever he would try to grasp her, physically and metaphorically, was one of the more frustrating aspects of her personality. That small part wondered what it would have been like with her, if he would have felt differently about the universe. He stopped himself before he could continue down that line of thought.
She is dead now, he told himself harshly. What-ifs and regrets are for lesser races.
Running his hands through his hair, Khan forced all thoughts of the woman out of his mind and attempted to collect himself. Soon, the scientists would come back with their needles and scalpels, injecting him with poisons and cutting him open, just to see what happens. The irony that he used to rule over these fools had not escaped him.
He snorted.
How the mighty have fallen.
The scientists had finally finished with him for the day. Guards escorted him back to his "room", even though he could barely walk and incapable of escaping. Granted, what they had done to him today would have killed a lesser being, so he supposed that to them, it was a miracle he could walk. Clearly they didn't want to take any chances.
The door to his "room" slid open and Khan was about to take a step inside when he was shoved roughly from behind. Had he not just had both of his legs broken, he would have maintained his balance easily. As it was, the bone and muscle was still too new to be of adequate use to him and he fell to the cold and unforgiving floor. A cruel laugh and "Now who's superior?" echoed around the room before the door closed.
It was all Khan needed to identify the guard. Not that it mattered; the guard was already on the list of future dead.
With pain wracking through him, Khan remained on the floor and sunk into his mind, detaching himself from his body. He turned his situation over and over again, just as he had done every day since the time he had been woken up. He had no idea if his crew was still alive, as all the times he asked his only answer had been silence.
Khan once more felt anger welling up in his mind, tinting his thoughts red. He had promised them that it would be better, that they would find a world ready to accept them. They would not make the same mistakes that the others had- they had become too blood-thirsty, too power-hungry and had destroyed themselves from the inside-out. Khan had refused to become part of their petty squabbles that ended up killing thousands and had surrounded himself by those that agreed with him.
Now, his crew that trusted him with their lives was out there somewhere, possibly awake and in the same situation as he was now. All Khan knew was that he had to find some way out of this, no matter the cost. As he continued to think, the normal feeling of exhaustion that accompanied the healing of large wounds started to overtake him. He tried hard to fight it, knowing that he had precious little time if he wanted to save his crew. It was no use though.
Against his will, Khan started to slip into sleep.
June 19th, 1996: Earth
"You need to leave."
Khan stood up quickly from his desk and glared at the woman standing in front of him. How the hell had she gotten into his second floor office without attracting any attention?
It had been three years since her escape along the rooftops and Khan had stopped looking for her a year after that, having accepted that chasing a ghost was not an appropriate task for his people. Her outfit was the same as that day, but looked as if it had been thrown on haphazardly. The pants were tucked in to her boots unevenly and her shirt appeared to be twisted around her frame. Her wrist bindings were done up sloppily and Khan thought that he glimpsed a black material peeking out from underneath them. Her hair style had also changed- the left side was as she had worn it last time, loose and unbound, but the hair on her right side was pulled into two intricate braids along her scalp before hanging loose down her back. Her face was thinner and slightly pink, as if she had rushed to clean it. Khan could see a few spots of dirt that she had missed
"No calls for Joachim today?" Her eyebrows were raised in fake surprise, but her tone was tight, clipped, giving away the stress that her appearance indicated she was feeling. Khan looked at her, considering her words, before shaking his head.
"How did you get in here?"
A little bit of the tension in her shoulders bled away and she gave him a small smile. "Would you believe 'magic'?" Khan raised an eyebrow, unamused. She chuckled quietly before moving to his armchair and perching on one of the arm rests. "I crawled in through the window at the end of the hallway and walked into your office. Are you going to eat that?" She pointed to the apple that Nadal had given him earlier. Khan shook his head and threw it to her.
"That has to be the most information you've ever given me. And what is with your aversion to doors?"
"Oh do stop being dramatic Khan, it's really unbecoming for a man of your stature." She took a large bite out of the apple. "And I do not have an aversion to doors- in fact, I prefer them. Unfortunately, I do have an aversion to your people and they like to stand in front of your doors. Therefore, I use your windows."
Khan supposed that made sense; granted, the sentries were supposed to discourage people from entering his chateau entirely, not to encourage them to find other means of entrance. He decided that it wasn't worth getting into at this moment however. Therefore, he decided to argue with her about her first statement.
"Dramatic? This is not dramatic. What it is, is the second time that you have inserted yourself into my life and taken up my time. Tell me why you are here and quickly, before I show you dramatic." Khan all but growled out.
Of course, the woman merely smiled knowingly at him. "And what would you do Khan? Break my neck? Order me shot? Keep me captive; a slave even?" She stood up and stalked over to him, stopping a few inches from his chest. Her eyes burnt into his like the sun and Khan felt a thin trickle of apprehension run down his spine. Slowly, she took a deep breath, quietly getting her anger under control.
"I am not here to frustrate you on purpose Khan.' she informed him quietly. "There are just some things that you aren't ready for yet. Your constant use of threats proves that to me." Here she paused and took another slow breath. "But, you are the best of your peers and so I'm helping you."
Khan continued to look down at the female, refusing to break eye contact. "I do not need help."
She quirked an eyebrow as she turned away and walked over to one of his decorative tables. Picking up a rock, a conglomerate from the Himalayas he had acquired from his first conquest, she turned it over and over in her hands as she stared out the window. "That fool whose life I saved has become stronger. Millions of voices have now joined his." She turned and looked him in the eyes. "As we speak, Rebekah is being overthrown. Philippe is next. Yang has already been murdered. Their methods caused their down fall Khan; they will cause yours next."
"What do you mean 'Rebekah is-" Khan started to ask her before his intercom interrupted him.
"Sir!" It was Henri, one of his liaisons between the other Augment leaders and himself. Pressing a button on the desk, Khan kept eye contact with the female standing by the window as he answered.
"Yes Henri, what is it?"
"Sir, we just received a report: the humans launched an attack and Rebekah was dragged out and murdered in the street. Her province is in complete disarray. Reports are also coming in that Yang was found beheaded in his study and that there are dozens of bombings occurring all around his territory." Khan stared down at the intercom speaker in horror. "What of Philippe and the others? Have you heard anything from them?"
"No Sir,' came the immediate reply, 'and our monitoring isn't picking up anything yet."
"Keep searching; I'll be right there." Khan looked up only to see the red head leaving his study. "Stop!"
She paused briefly as Khan moved around the desk, sparing a glance back at him as she did.
"What are you, honestly?" Khan asked, his tone level and not betraying his tumultuous feelings.
She looked at him sadly before glancing past him, as if remembering something. "Tired." She said quietly. "I am tired." Glancing back at him, she straightened her shoulders and tilted her chin up, defiantly. "You will not be safe on this planet anymore Khan. Gather those most loyal to you and leave."
With that, she turned and quickly walked down the hallway, heading towards the window at the end. Khan, however, wasn't quite finished. He walked after her. "Why are you helping us?"
He was about to repeat his question when he heard: "You are Frankenstein's Monster Khan. They created you and now, they don't wish to take responsibility for those actions."
"So it is pity then." He spat out bitterly.
"No,' she looked over her shoulder at him as she opened the window, 'I admire you. You, who could have become like your kin, rose above them and became something they could never accomplish. You truly are Better." She paused. "A King, even. Now get off this planet." And with that, she climbed out the window.
Khan didn't bother going to see where she went; he knew that he wouldn't find her. Instead, he stood in the hallway thinking over her warning. As he stood there, an idea came to him. Turning and striding away quickly, he made his way to Joachim's rooms.
He would listen to her advice- there was nothing left here for them. They would leave and go find a planet ready for them, or wait for Earth to finally appreciate their kind.
February 23rd, 2259: Earth
Khan didn't know what was worse: the scientists with their experiments or Admiral Marcus as a whole. At least now he knew that his crew was alive even though he still didn't know where they were being kept. Settling back against the wall of his cell, Khan knew that it was only a matter of time before a guard would become sloppy, or Marcus over-confident. Khan was fine with waiting- to a certain extent. Knowing that the next set of guards would come by as relief for the current guards in exactly 2.54 hours, Khan closed his eyes and began to meditate.
As he sunk into his mind, he thought he felt something brush along the edges of it. Startled, Khan's eyes shot open and his body tensed, waiting for an attack. As he looked around his cell cautiously, a sensation of reassurance washed over him. It was accompanied by an urge to once more close his eyes and resume meditating. Wondering if it was some sort of trick of Marcus's, but also knowing that the Admiral didn't have the capabilities of an act like this, Khan warily gave in.
When he opened his eyes, he found himself standing on a black plain with a dark and rolling sky. Far in distance where the horizons met, the clouds were tinted orange and pink as if a sun had just set. The ground was dry and cracked; nothing grew from it and Khan got the sense that nothing had for a while. What the place was, he did not know. What he did know was that he wasn't alone in it- he could feel the presence again, just on the outskirts of his awareness.
"I demand to know who you are and you want." Khan ordered out to the empty plain. His response was silence at first, but then disjointed voices echoed around him.
Alpha.
I am…
Alpha…
BG12.
Protect him, Alpha. Watch him
The phrases kept repeating before gradually dying away. Khan looked around himself in surprise- most of the voices he hadn't recognize, but one of them he had.
"Protect him, Alpha. Watch him. Don't be dramatic Khan. You truly are Better."
"How do you know her?! Tell me!"
The voices came back as the ground under Khan's feet gave a shaky rumble.
No time
They are coming
"No time? Then why am I here?" Khan shouted out, frustrated. He was hardly surprised though; anything associated with her was probably obligated to be vague and frustrating.
I have…
Found your people.
They are…
In holding…
Block
B13.
The multiple voices echoed around him once more and Khan suddenly saw something rushing towards him. Crouching into a fighting stance, Khan prepared himself to meet it.
The object slowed and Khan saw that it was not a threat, but a viewing screen. A hallway was being displayed and quickly moved through. Khan memorized the twists and turns that the screen showed, quickly realizing that he was being shown the way to his crew. Abruptly, the viewing screen was filled with the image of a gray metal door, the symbols "B-13" written on it.
Khan stared at it before glancing away. "Why are you helping me?"
The view screen changed, no longer the gray door. Instead, it showed a cliff overlooking a compound of buildings, one that Khan recognized almost immediately. It was evening and Khan could see people assembling below him. However, the cliff appeared to be vacant, until a voice suddenly rang out.
"Go with them Alpha. Watch him. Protect him."
Khan knew what he was seeing- it was the night that they had left Earth, had snuck out like criminals instead of the Kings that they were. Somehow, she had been there and had assigned this "Alpha" to watch over them. But how… how could it have survived for so long?
"That doesn't answer my question. Why would she have you protect us? Wewere safe!"
There are more dangerous things in this world than dissenters
… Evil of a world long Gone…
Mother! No! We have to go back!
…The name of Lions it will take…
They killed my people, my family! Help us!
…Without the other, both shall fall.
The final phrase faded from Khan's mind as he came back into awareness. What didn't fade were the screams of pain and anguish that came from the woman's mouth as she tried to get back to her mother.
Khan knew what she must have been feeling. He had felt it every day since his awakening as he failed again and again to find and save his crew. He didn't know what the words spoken by the old woman's voice meant- nor did he know the time line of any of the things revealed to him. His question had been answered, but at the same time, hadn't.
If Khan was a lesser being, he would have scoffed at the implication of Seers and Prophesies. As it was, he knew that there were beings out there capable of "viewing" and influencing the future through their predictions. He also knew that the future was too convoluted, too full of possibilities to actually be able to predict it- it was why he typically considered the Seers as influencers. They gave people ambiguous descriptions and allowed them to make of it as they will.
This, however, sounded certain. It couldn't have been the entire Telling- no one could make any concrete interpretations out of that- but "without the other, both shall fall" was more direct than Khan was used to. He had met a Seer once, had spoken to him and had listened to the man explain his experiences. He had refused however, when the Seer asked if he wanted to know his destiny.
Perhaps he shouldn't have.
Sitting cross-legged on the floor, his head leant back against the wall, Khan allowed his thoughts to take him where they will. As expected, they repeatedly brought him back to her and he wondered if her people's death had occurred after he had first met her, or before. He still was no closer to figuring out more about her, only that she had ordered this "Alpha" creature- Khan didn't believe it to be human- to watch over them. Its habit of speaking through piecing together, what Khan assumed to be, conversations that had already happened seemed to indicate that it didn't have a functioning set of vocal chords.
Maybe it's a short Empath.
Khan snorted quietly in amusement. Around and around his thoughts ran before Khan was given the welcomed interruption of the sound of automatic doors sliding open. The arrival of Marcus and his men gave him something else to focus on besides the growing list of questions he had discovered today.
Things such as revenge.
It was another three months before Khan attempted to contact "Alpha". The being had been silent ever since that day, as if waiting for Khan to figure out things out. Or maybe it had just known somehow that Khan didn't have any need of it yet. Either way, Khan was unsure of exactly how to signal that he needed to talk to it.
He decided that meditating and somehow finding his way back to that same location in his mind would be a good place to start. The only problems with that was he didn't know how he had gotten there in the first place, how long it would take him to find it, or if he would even have time to speak to "Alpha". Khan had at least decided to wait until he was placed in his cell for the night- that would give him at least 6 hours without interruptions.
Settling cross-legged on his cot, Khan closed his eyes and let his body relax. He wandered aimlessly inside his mind, randomly stopping and trying to feel for the sense of some other being there. He even attempted projecting his mind, in the hopes that it would reach the strange entity.
He was unsuccessful. After what felt like hours of wandering aimlessly, he threw what would be considered the equivalent to a "hissy fit" had he been anyone but Khan.
"I know you can sense me dammit! Now answer!"
In a whirlwind of color, Khan found himself once more on the blackened plain.
You called
For me?
"I have been calling for you for hours now." Khan bit out. How many hours had he wasted?
I
Only heard you
Just now.
"Perhaps you should get your ears checked then." Khan shot back, gaze narrowed. "I have been projecting my mind to you. How did you not sense that?"
Your mind
Is not like
Mine.
You must
Call for me.
Khan sighed. "Information that will be added onto the 'It would have been nice to know that earlier' list. I have a question Alpha."
Yes
Khan?
An'ya's voice surrounded him and he almost turned around to acknowledge her. "Do you have to use her voice?"
She is
One of the ones
That taught me 'voice'
Khan assumed that meant 'yes'. Resigning himself to another frustrating conversation, Khan proceeded with his questions. "Is she still alive then? And can you take a message to her?"
There was only silence. Just as he was about to add Alpha to his list of things to find and kill, Khan's questions were answered.
Yes
She says
'Tell him to start walking'
Please
Start walking.
Khan raised an eyebrow. "I will not."
An'ya would like
Me to tell you something.
Khan looked around expectantly. "Well?"
'Stop being dramatic Khan.'
Her voice was too amused for the situation. "I am not being dramatic! Where exactly am I supposed to walk? There is nothing here!" Crossing his arms was a sign of firm defiance, not petulance.
Forward is often
The best choice.
There was a pause.
And it is petulance.
Khan growled in frustration before running a hand through his hair and stalking forward. "It's not polite to listen to my thoughts Alpha." His teeth were clenched together so tightly that he barely got the words out.
It is how I
Communicate.
I cannot stop.
"Then do not comment on them!" Khan snapped back.
My apologies
I was told you
Appreciated 'wit'.
I have never used it before.
Did I do it wrong?
Khan sighed in exasperation. "Clearly not." The giddy feeling he felt surround himself after that statement was as unwelcomed as the damn thing's comments. "Why are you so happy?"
"He has never successfully mastered wit before. I knew you would be a good person for him to practice on. You get flustered oh-so-easily."
Khan stopped short. He had only been walking for a few seconds, yet in front of him stood a familiar figure.
"You."
"Come now Khan, I do have a name."
He ignored her in favor of taking in his surroundings- well, her surroundings. He was still standing on the same black ground, but she was standing on white sand. Mountains rose in the background and in-between stood a forest- tropical, and Mediterranean, if Khan had to guess. The sky was a brilliant blue and it gave Khan such a feeling of wistfulness that he had to subtly pinch himself.
"What is that place?" He couldn't hide the awe-struck look on his face.
An'ya regarded him sadly. "It is my 'being', just as the plain you are on is yours."
Khan glanced around himself. "How… why is it like this? What happened?!" At his sudden outburst of emotion, the ground beneath his feet groaned and started cracking. Alarmed, Khan grew even more agitated, which make the ground start shaking violenly.
"Khan! Khan, look at me! Come here, walk up to me!" An'ya had stepped closer and appeared to be pressing her hands against a barrier of some sort. Confused and still angry, Khan walked towards her and mirrored her actions. When his hands lined up with hers, he felt a measure of calm and control fill him and he took deep, shuddering breaths.
"What is going on An'ya?" he whispered, his head down and hair falling into his eyes. It was the first time he had used her name and she felt a pang of sadness shoot through her. With his head bent, she had never seen him look so defeated, even when she watched the images of him being experimented on. All she wanted was to comfort him.
"It will be alright Khan. The past year has been difficult for you and that is why your 'being' is like this- it reflects the hatred and anger that you have. You are also closer to your emotions here- it is why you keep experiencing such extremes."
"Then why is yours like that? I heard your voice calling out- screaming- for your mother, for help. How are you not the same as I?"
"Oh Khan…" she pressed her forehead against the barrier and Khan once more mirrored her actions.
"Beyond those mountains," she began "is a barren landscape just like yours; I can't get rid of it completely. Trust me, I have tried. What you see before you has taken years to achieve and it could be consumed by my anger at any time."
Khan processed her words before nodding his understanding. "How are you still alive?"
She smirked. "What, were you afraid that I'd die without having you to frustrate?"
Khan smirked. "Perhaps. You do strike me as the co-dependent type."
"Careful, or I'll strike you with more than co-dependency." Her lips pulled up in a smile before she turned serious again. "I cannot stay much longer Khan- what was it you wanted to speak with me about?"
Khan answered her quickly. "Marcus is having me design a new type of torpedo- one that is conveniently large enough to instill a cryotube in. I will be placing my crew in them and loading them on a ship, but I don't know where to go afterwards. I was wondering if we would be welcomed on your planet."
She smiled at him. "You have realized that I am not from the Middle East then?"
A raised eyebrow and an answering "Yes well, the being that speaks to me in my mind with different voices, your voice included, may have given it away" made her snicker and glance away.
"Your people would be most welcome on my planet Khan. There are things I must tell you though-"
She was cut off though by a male voice resonating around them. Hatchling, the remaining wing members have returned. There are several wounded.
An'ya's eyebrows contracted together and Khan saw fear in her eyes as she looked back at him. "I am sorry, Khan. The next time you have a chance, contact Alpha again and he'll find me. Or perhaps-"
Perhaps I shall show him the information he desires to know. I will do it now- Alpha tells me that he still has hours left before the human Marcus comes to get him.
An'ya exhaled, her eyes searching Khan's. Slowly, she moved away from the barrier. "I guess today is your lucky day then. Until next time, Khan." Her tone was sad, sounding more like Khan was being sentenced to something instead of finally getting the answers he had been waiting for.
She turned away and vanished before Khan could wish her farewell.
Let us begin.
The voice reverberated around him as everything went black.
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