Hey.
Dorian Gray here. In case you guys didn't know, Seldon gave up on The Children's Crusade, and in his all-knowing benevolence (or, possibly, rampant arrogance and stupidity), he deemed I, Dorian Gray, worthy of continuing the fic, for reasons that elude the both of us to this day.
Anyway, this is really the first chapter of The Children's Crusade, Oceans of Darkness, that Seldon wrote. This was the second-last chapter that he wrote before giving it up; it is included with mine for continuity. These are also available in his FFN profile, as well as the notice saying he was giving it up.
So, seeya around chapter three, then.
Enjoy!
**********
Ah fook it. I got
bored. So I'll post this chapter and next week the second chapter of the
story...and then I've really, REALLY got to get back to work on it.
No, seriously.
Updates are going to start becoming hazy in the future: college looms across my
horizion.
The Seldon Planner Presents:
An Etherworlds Production:
The Children's Crusade: Oceans of Darkness
~~~~
Gendo Ikari watched the medical crews gently worm their way past the amber hot
edges of Unit 01's entry plug, carefully lifting their precious cargo over the
sharp ends as they went. Below him, the emergency team was coiling and neatly
disassembling their arc cutters into several piles.
"The preliminary reports say that he's going to live."
Gendo looked down at the snowy mane of his subordinate, then turned away from
the docking bay and strolled smoothly towards the door. Kouzo quickly, if
unprofessionally, wheeled his seat around and sped up to follow.
~~~~
"Chapter One: Setting the Stage"
~~~~
"He could have killed us all," Gendo's anger was boiling away the
thick, icy exterior of calm he usually had. It was an impressive sight to
behold. Kouzo signaled for one of the heavily armed Section 2 agents to follow
behind and guide his chair. Gendo had not been happy about having a helping
hand along for Kouzo, but since Ikari wasn't about to push his subordinate
along. The presence of the guard had a calming effect on Gendo though, it made
him forcibly calm himself and return to the icy, cold bastard he was. "What
of the Sixth Child?"
Kouzo eyed the floor. It's never-ending rolling sea of blank, scratched
surfaces that were always flat, always shining dull in the bright flourescent
suns that perpetuated the only light of their existence. "The reports say
that when he was extracted he started attacking the rescue team."
"Attacking them?" Gendo let his eye's fall into thin slits as he
carefully listed what few contingents and planned uses he had for the Sixth
Child, then curled his eyebrows in a brief uncontrolled moment of anger as he
realized none of those were feasible now.
Kouzo nodded, even though he knew Gendo would never be looking in his
direction. "Yes. The doctors report that Kensuke Aida suffered a mental
breakdown. Apparently from what he saw before Shinji regained control."
The trio walked a distance in silence, coming shortly to a side branch that
lead down a brief corridor to one of several banks of elevators. There they
halted and waited for the express elevator that would send them to Ikari's
office level.
"The Fourth?" Gendo asked, his eyes a perfect imitation of Rei as
they stared blankly ahead.
Kouzo coughed, sinking wearily back into the thin cushions of his chair.
"The medical autopsy should tell us exactly what he died of, but as of
now..." The door pinged and slid aside on well-greased tracks. Gendo
stepped in and the guard followed quickly with Kouzo. The door slid shut again.
"For now, the medical examiner is fairly sure he died of massive internal
trauma."
"From the infection?" The words were carefully selected, Gendo didn't
trust this guard at all. Kouzo saw through the innuendo and subtly glanced to
the empty holster at the agent's side. Gendo had required the man to remove his
pistol before even entering his presence. 'A wise precaution? Or is he slipping
into paranoia?' Kouzo thought quickly before answering in the same carefully
worded manner.
"Unknown, the films suggest either."
The agent shifted, a bare few millimeters--but he gave away his nervousness.
Gendo made a quick note of his ID badge and prepared a quickly worded message
that he would send to someone he could trust enough to handle the job.
"He is being handled properly?" Gendo phrased next.
"As all of our previous samples were."
Gendo sharply nodded once, then started walking forward. The moment his foot
neared the door the elevator pinged and halted. Gendo was out the doors with
centimeters to spare on his shoulders. The guard waited a moment in stunned
appreciation for his commander's acute sense of timing but started forward at
Kouzo's reprehensive cough.
His duty done, the guard quick timed back to the elevator and left that massive
room with the tangibly chilled tension behind. He fairly bounced from one foot
to the other as the elevator plummeted through the expansive depths of the
Headquarters building, anxious to make his report and then jump off duty to go
bar hopping through the city. He hadn't had a decent drink since two last
night, and he was really feeling the shakes now that it was nearing ten the
night after.
The elevator slowed, then stopped. The doors sliding open with greasy
efficiency.
The guard never felt his face explode.
Gendo impassively watched from the elevator camera as one of the janitors
pocketed his silenced pistol and started to clean up the mess with a near-
mechanized efficiency. Japanese were efficient if nothing else. The small
screen wavered out of existence and he turned to where Kouzo was slowly guiding
himself around one corner of his massive desk.
"About the Sixth...his psychiatric report should be placed into top
priority. With the petulance the Third has shown I don't pretend to keep him in
his position. The Sixth can pilot Unit 01, so I will use him." Kouzo
parked his chair and watched Ikari with speculation written across his brow.
'If we can't use the Sixth, you'll still have Rei and Sohryu to work with
though. But you already know that Sohryu won't pilot Unit 01. And you won't be
able to use Rei if you have her assigned to your best defensive weapon.' Kouzo
sighed, 'It's all a game. Just a game.'
He turned and watched Ikari silently activate the room's main holovid. The
text, oft familiar with the grassy green words, floated evenly in the air as
Ikari read them. And read them, and read them, and read them. Kouzo watched
with tired resignation. He was getting tired of this game.
***
Asuka and Rei were as mis-matched a pair as robins were to silver trout.
Deep red hair to ice blue. Ice blue eyes to blood crimson. Olive tan skin to
pale flesh. Flamboyance to silent meditation. Even their poises and where they
decided to wait for the third of their group was strikingly different; one
choosing to stand and wait with mild irritation and anxiety, the other
patiently waiting with a practiced position on the nearby bench. So different,
but with the same goals.
Neither of them looked especially well. Asuka having a small wind of medical
gauze wrapped around her head; a precautionary measure they told her.
'Precaution for what?' was the thought running through her mind as they did the
service. Another bandage patched across a small cut along her cheek. It wasn't
deep, and it wouldn't scar but heal rather nicely up. She worried about it
nonetheless however.
Rei was in bandages as well, but hers were more superficial than having any real
benefit. The soft fabric of her sling was just for her arm to rest and relax
enough for the nerves to calm down and re-orient themselves. The arm itself
felt fine, apart from the sporadic feeling that it was no longer there; but the
doctors told her not to strain it until a few days had passed by, and she
trusted their judgement.
"He's really done it now...hasn't he?"
Rei reacted slowly to Asuka's question. Her mind delicately probing all
possibilities for answering her query and then quickly narrowing down
possibilities. The whole process took little more than a few nanoseconds,
occurring so fast that she didn't even realize her acting it out until her mind
had reached two possible conclusions and left it up to her decision. She chose
and answered.
"Yes."
Asuka looked over briefly, a small glance of irritation at the brief answer.
But she could only fault herself. Rei really wasn't the one to enjoy chatting
about nothing and the world under the sky. "Did you see when they took him
out?"
Rei had seen. She was still conscious enough to have even watched Shinji's
angry expression and hear his sorrow scream out across the comm lines. She saw
the blank, staring look that Kensuke Aida had adopted--how his lips moved ever
so slowly in a constant cycle, repeating one word.
Touji.
"I saw," was her short response.
Asuka finally grew tired of waiting and flopped down into the bench farther up
from Rei. "I wonder what they'll do to him now." She warily studied
the two suited guards that so casually waited beside the only entrance or exit
to the room that held a critically listed Shinji Ikari. Rei silently watched
the guards as well, then turned aside to study a sudden motion nearby her foot,
sheathed in the thin white material of her plugsuit.
The ladybug slowly crawled along, followed by a small white moth, and the
smallest of grasshoppers. A silent chirruping scratched out from it's legs as
it slowly hopped further along the steel halls. Soon it reached even with the
gently fluttering moth and passed it by, easily sliding underneath as the frail
creature struggled to rise in the air. Then it landed near the ladybug, the
shock of it's landing and the brushing glance as it rose again into the air
knocking the smaller creature askew; the ladybug struggled and thrashed as it
rocked on the smooth shell covering its back.
Soon the grasshopper was far ahead of the two following bugs, the moth passing
by the smaller red insect as it slowly shifted itself back to its natural
position. Then the green grasshopper took a small rest, scritch- scratching his
legs together to make the wonderful music he made.
The heavy shoe of the nearest guard quickly silenced that chirruping music. Rei
would never forget that look of disgust and revulsion that crossed the guards
face as he scraped his shoe across the smooth floors of NERV, vainly attempting
to clean off the mess he made.
She would even have dreams about it.
***
The room was, as it always was and would ever be: a dark ocean of nothingness
perpetuated by nothingness in itself. Only a thin desk that had seen better
days in the light of day and the smallest of straight-backed chairs occupied
this place of dark emptiness. And in that small chair at that thin desk in the
ocean of darkness, one man sat and contemplated.
'The Sixth Child. That boy has much anger and hatred at the Angels for what
Ikari told him. We could use that anger...shape it, control it. Direct it.' A
small diode lit up on his thin desk, the light seeming strangely foreign amidst
the endless sea of cool midnight. "Yes?" Keel imperiously said.
"The Council is ready."
The diode flashed once and then dimmed, while around the room thick blocks
started thrumming to life. Soon all the members of his Council had appeared and
were awaiting the first word from his own mouth. "The Sixth Child...an
unexpected turn of events. And an unusual tactic for Ikari to suddenly
employ."
One of the members spoke up, the numbered insignia of his holographic
projection lighting up brighter than the others as he spoke out his thoughts.
"It is a dangerous choice for Ikari. One of my men managed to transmit the
actual Entry Plug footage from inside Evangelion Unit 03...the Thirteenth
Angel. That pilot was most certainly alive at the time Ikari ordered the Sixth
to destroy his target."
"And with such ferocity too!" another spoke up, "I've also
learned of a secret funeral that Ikari ordered carried out two days before this
latest Angel incident. From the reports I've received, and from certain friends
we all know, the sister of Unit 03's pilot died and her brother was never made
aware. In fact, the only reason he joined at all was because NERV gave him a
medical deal to help heal his sister."
Keel smiled at that, 'Just another reason...'
Seele 04 spoke out, "Our own pilot is still undergoing duplication for the
dummy plug systems developed by the good doctor. But indeed, I confess that the
Fifth seems a pale comparison to what the Sixth showed us he could do."
"Never forget what he is though!" Keel very nearly shouted out,
"No matter how peaceful a facade he presents to us; Never forget what he
is!" The room was quiet for a moment, then the members continued.
"What should we do about the Sixth?" Seele 09 asked with his old
man's synthesized voice.
"Our mutual friend suggested to me that the Sixth's psychiatric analysis
could be arranged," said the one who had so exclaimed over the Sixth
Child's ferocity. "If we could convince Ikari that the child would be of
no further help to him, our agents could easily find a way to 'liberate' him
for our own uses."
'Excellent.' Keel stroked at his chin, a purely sentimental gesture as he knew
the others could not see him do so. "Ikari would be suspicious if his
cast-off suddenly went missing."
"Let him," came a brutal response from a thick, masculine voice.
"Ikari will speculate what we are doing, and he will ask questions that we
will deny. It is all part of the game we play. We ask him, he asks us, each
knowing what the answers are. He will do nothing..."
"Because we will have our mutual friend make the Sixth worth nothing to
Ikari."
'Perfect. Now we will have another piece to play in the final rounds,' Keel sat
forward and rubbed his hands together, another gesture of no importance.
"Then it is agreed. We will have our mutual friend handle the child until
he is ready for delivery to our own men. We will discuss other matters after
the Sixth Child has been safely delivered to our training facilities. Seele
Nine, your part is still of the utmost importance. I expect to hear an
excellent report of how your project is progressing."
Seele 09 had been silent to this point, but briefly broke that cautious quiet
to acknowledge his master. Then they all faded back into the ocean, that sea of
darkness that surrounded this chamber of secrets. This holy of unholies.
Keel quickly pushed a diode and spoke quickly.
***
"Yes? Yes. I understand. Goodbye."
"Who was that?" the Old Man asked as he set out the well-prepared but
fairly sparse meal that Father Sanders had prepared for both himself and Kaji.
Kaji looked up from the misting dish to study the Father's face but turned away
before the middling priest could see his studious watching.
"Hmm? Oh, just a man from my church. Wondering if I could come back for a
few days to handle a problem. No big deal." The Father bustled about,
pulling out plates and silverware and glasses for the three friends as the Old
Man gingerly slid into his seat by the head of the table. Soon the Father came
back and passed around the accumulated dishes before sitting himself. "Um,
alright..." The men took each other's hands and bowed their heads over
their empty plates.
"Our Father, who art in Heaven--"
