The Apostates

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The Apostates Page 26

by Lars Teeney


  “We can ask Ravine. He’s the one who fought her at close quarters that day. He managed to sever her hand, but she disappeared after that,” Hades recalled. Hades looked over in Ravine’s direction and saw that he was sitting by himself in the far corner of the mess hall. He stood up and waved his arms to get Ravine’s attention. Ravine caught a glimpse of Hades’s summons and cursed under his breath, but got up and approached. Ravine stood by the table where Hades and Pale were seated.

  “Hades-Perdition—Pale-Silence, hope both of you are enjoying the festivities,” Ravine said dryly. He wanted to go back to his corner.

  “Hey Ravine, Pale and I were talking about how you had a run-in with that strange women the day of the Ranger attack,” Hades said.

  “Yeah, what about it?” Ravine asked, puzzled.

  “Good sir, I’m fairly certain that I know interesting tidbits about this woman. Do you remember any distinct details of our query that you can recall?” Pale encouraged.

  “Well, aside from being a lunatic, she had a shaved head, and like, a scar on her forehead—in the shape of a cross.” Ravine had remembered the homicidal lust in the woman’s eyes.

  “I honestly can’t recall the woman’s name, but I can tell you with a huge degree of certainty that I remember that cross scar on a Prelate working for the Church.” Pale was dead set on his judgment.

  “Yeah well, I wouldn’t be surprised: the Church would want us dead too,” Ravine shrugged.

  “Yes, but this is a confirmation that the Regime and Church are engaged in an internal conflict. Why? That I can’t answer,” Pale added.

  “Great work gentlemen, now if you don’t mind I’m going back to my corner to drink alone.” With that Ravine turned around and walked away.

  “That man seems to have a cloud hanging over his head. What’s the cause?” Pale inquired.

  “Oh, I think he’s having girl troubles,” Hades deduced while watching Ravine walk away.

  ⍟ ⍟ ⍟

  Ravine had left the mess hall and was strolling out on the weather deck of the Iowa. The weather was cool, and the sky was spotted with clouds that were barely visible in the night. He walked at a slow pace. Ravine had plenty on his mind. Graham had told him details that would take a great effort on his part to keep it secret from the Apostates. Ravine wanted to tell them that he had known that Graham was in L.O.V.E. custody, but he knew if he divulged this that the Apostates would make the decision to deviate from the mission to mount a rescue operation and that couldn’t happen.

  Ravine had grabbed a bottle of ale to take with him on his stroll. He popped the top and took a swig. Ravine heard footsteps approaching, and he turned his head to find that Blaze-Scorch was coming upon his position.

  “Hey Ravine, You’ve been vacant lately. Something bothering you?” Blaze asked with genuine concern.

  “That’s a tough question,” Ravine replied.

  “I mean you’re usually pretty moody, but it’s very pronounced these days. Like, shit, lighten up,” Blaze chastised.

  “Blaze, I can’t tell you everything I’m dealing with right now. But, it certainly doesn’t help my disposition to be around a woman that I used to have a close relationship with, and then have to continue to be tortured when she moves on to other men,” Ravine confessed, taking a drink from the bottle.

  “What do you mean? Is she fucking a horny sailor?” Blaze inquired.

  “No, she’s fucking Hades,” Ravine said without emotion.

  “What? No. He’s—” Blaze began to say but got cut off.

  “Yeah, I know,” Ravine quipped.

  “But why would he? It wouldn’t do anything for him,” Blaze asked, perplexed.

  “Well, maybe he’s bi. Anyway, it happened. I saw them in his quarters,” Ravine confessed.

  “Well—then just move on. You have her answer. Look elsewhere,” Blaze suggested.

  “Where? You? Are you going to take my mind off her?” Ravine was asking rhetorically.

  “God no. I don’t want some guy who is stuck on his ex,” Blaze said defiantly.

  “See, that’s the problem with you girls. You’re always criticizing men about being emotionally unavailable in relationships, but then expect them to emotionally detach instantly once you find a new guy,” Ravine was drunk.

  “For Christ’s sake, nut up. There’s that new girl, Angel, talk to her. I gotta go check on Aqua in the infirmary. Listen, sorry you had to find that out about Gale. Feel better,” Blaze offered, then sheheaded off toward the infirmary.

  Ravine considered what Blaze had said to him. He had resolved plenty of times since Gale arrived to focus on other pursuits and priorities, but then he found himself relapsing. Maybe it was just as simple as “nutting up”, but what was the secret behind doing that? Perhaps he would go make a move on the new girl, Angel? He thought that might sound like a promising idea. But, tonight was his night to feel sorry for himself. He was going to get drunk. Maybe he would approach her tomorrow.

  ⍟ ⍟ ⍟

  The sensation was sent through her skull like a jolting, bad dream waking its host. The alarm signal woke the Prelate without any external noise. Prelate Inoguchi rose to her feet and gathered her equipment. She sent a command via her neural implant to her two drones to follow her. Prelate Inoguchi struck out down the access road leading toward the Port of Long Beach. The early morning air was cold and crisp. Dew had settled on patches of grass between dilapidated structures. The sun had not yet climbed out of its hole to shine once again.

  Prelate Inoguchi came upon a sizable security wall that had been constructed around the port grounds. The two drones, which resembled two levitating, weightlifting barbells, revealed two hand-grips on the bottom side of each. Prelate Inoguchi grabbed the drone’s handle with one hand, and the drones flew higher, carrying the Prelate over the wall. She dropped from a reasonable height to the ground. The Prelate ran from cover to cover, following a series of warehouses down to the waterfront. She detected activity and loud voices originating from the U.S.S. Iowa. She surmised that most personnel were on the Iowa.

  Prelate Inoguchi spied a non-military ship, ‘The Hermes’, and approached the bow of the ship. She willed the two drones to carry her up over the side of the hull and onto the deck of the ship. The Prelate moved swiftly to find an entrance to lower decks. After searching, she found a hatch that led her down. When she looked about she found that ship was filled with medical supplies and hospital beds. She concluded that this was a hospital ship and that it would be an ideal place to lay low until she was ready to strike. The Prelate moved down several decks avoiding the odd crew member and found a large cargo hold. She found a concealed area in a corner near the stern end of the ship behind a deposit of palettes, there she settled in and waited patiently.

  ⍟ ⍟ ⍟

  That night, both groups of Apostates had passed out on the Iowa. Some personnel had gone through the trouble of tracking down bunks or had found another body to pair up with. Others had just passed out in the mess hall, on tables or floor space. Some had taken to sleeping on the weather deck, which was where Ravine had found himself. Ravine coughed, with the sensation of cottonmouth and being dehydrated. He also had a piercing headache, which waking up under beaming sunlight did not help. He pulled himself to his feet by the bulwark.

  Ravine took a gaze around the ship and found that others began to stir.

  “Jesus Christ, Everybody is drinking because they are happy about finding allies, and here I am: fucking miserable. The Second Coming can’t be soon enough.” Ravine was in a bad mood. Post-drinking depression was pervasive for him today. He gazed across the bay at the other ships in the fleet. They were smoking and warming their engines.

  “I guess we’ll be under way soon, and the new ships will be joining us,” He had thought.

  He could see that personnel on the docks were rushing material from warehouses to the ships that were moored on piers. Ravine was rest assured that they would have plenty of provis
ions for the voyage through the Panama Straits and up to New Megiddo City. He wondered what the Regime would throw at their fleet next? They must be aware by now that his group was in possession of a combat-ready, armada of ships. He knew that the Regime still possessed a formidable navy, so that it was only a matter of time before they would be confronted. He was pretty confident that the Regime did not know their location or their set path. Ravine then thought about the Prelate. He knew she wasn’t dead, and she had warned that there would be “a reckoning”. He just wondered how soon it would occur.

  The strange looking man, Pale-Silence was approaching Ravine on the weather deck.

  “Thank you, for your group’s hospitality last night. The festivities were well received by my camp,” Pale offered.

  “Yeah, no problem. Wasn’t really my idea,” Ravine was nonchalant.

  “In an unrelated matter, I am pleased to announce that our fleet possesses a hospital ship. We’ve kept it in good repair and it was well-stocked thanks to Mr. Wynham’s financial contributions. The way forward will be wrought with danger and I believe the ship will be useful,” Pale explained.

  “Great, yeah we have a patient, Aqua, who is in stable, but critical condition. We can transfer her to the ship,” Ravine said.

  “Then it is settled. I will make the arrangements for the patient to be transferred to The Hermes,” Pale responded.

  ⍟ ⍟ ⍟

  Later that afternoon the combined fleet had steamed out from Terminal Island to open ocean. The fleet had sailed past Santa Catalina Island, which in centuries past had been a tourist trap, was now a rubbish dump for the slums of Los Angeles. The Iowa had been joined with the battleships North Carolina, Indiana, New Jersey, South Dakota, and Alabama. Which brought the count of battleships to eleven. The course had been set for the Panama Strait.

  Inside the cargo hold of the Hermes, the Prelate Inoguchi stirred. She pulled some jerky from her pack and snapped off a piece with her teeth. The Prelate still had images of von Manstein flashing through her mind, but then again she always did in times of high stress. She had immersed herself in zealous religious worship for all these years with the hope that her rage would be soothed. Her aim was that events of the past would lose their edge and that she could grant him forgiveness, but now she had concluded that it would never happen. The Prelate would not be satisfied until she had exacted retribution; all in good time. First, out here in the open ocean, she would turn the sea red with Apostate blood.

  ⍟ ⍟ ⍟

  INQUISITION

  von Manstein’s inspection tour had taken him from Philadelphia and Baltimore, and now he was headed back to New Megiddo City and on to the South. Everywhere he had visited there was a similar scene. The Pilgrimage had started too soon, resulting in massive tent cities springing up under guard by L.O.V.E. and military forces. von Manstein had done what he could to allocate more Regime provisions to alleviate the plight of the faithful camped outside the B.A.G. venues. He had some success dealing with the Church and pleading with Kate Schrubb for more resources, but it was not nearly the amount needed.

  von Manstein was on his way to Richmond, Virginia, to inspect the old City Stadium. He was told that it was fairly small for a venue, only seating twenty-two thousand people comfortably, but von Manstein had decreed that they would fit twice that number into the space, and then decided to go see the venue for himself. von Manstein figured that he had at least four hours on the road, so he was planning to pop a dose of ‘Database’. It was von Manstein’s way to consume novels that were banned by the Church and Regime. While passing through Baltimore, he had arranged to procure a particular strain of ‘base’ called ‘Lolita’ from the Barksdale Syndicate. von Manstein injected it into his shoulder and reclined, waiting for it to take effect. The words came across him retinal H.U.D., “By Vladimir Nabokov”. A massive dopamine surge occurred in the pleasure center of his brain. von Manstein had spent several hours in this state, writhing around and grabbing the seat cushions as he had read through the words coursing by his eyes. Eventually, he started to come down delved into a bad mood. He also had developed a terrible thirst, he reached for a water decanter, and poured himself a glass and slurped it all down.

  von Manstein’s neural implant was being hailed on an encrypted Church channel. He wondered what crisis would spring up now? He answered the hail: it was Vice Deacon Paulus on the other end.

  “Vice-Deacon, to what do I owe the pleasure?” von Manstein inquired.

  “Arch-Deacon, grace, Cardinal Zhukov has been detained by L.O.V.E. authorities! Actually, by Inquisitor Rodrigo himself! This is unfathomable! I thought we were exempt from scrutiny by L.O.V.E. or M.O.S.S.?” Vice-Deacon Paulus was distraught and his voice had cracked several times.

  “Well, this is an interesting development.” Arch-Deacon was beside himself. This was the best news he had received in some time. With Zhukov out of the way, von Manstein alone would curry favor with the Reverend Wilhelm. Suddenly he had much clarity of mind.

  “But, Grace, are you not worried about this event? This is terrible!” Vice-Deacon was irate.

  “Vice-Deacon, get a hold of yourself! Yes, I have known about this investigation for some time,” He spun the story.

  “Grace? What do you mean?” The Vice-Deacon was perplexed.

  “Yes, I had been contacted by L.O.V.E. authorities and they had suspected that Cardinal Zhukov could be the Apostate’s mole. They had asked for permission to investigate and surveil Zhukov. I gave them my blessing. I apologize, but I could not tell the Church leadership, not even the Reverend or risk jeopardizing the investigation,” von Manstein stated.

  “B-b-but, Holiness, L.O.V.E. is going to tear the Church apart! We have secrets! I—” Paulus was cut short.

  “Compose yourself, Vice-Deacon! Are you a man of God or a little girl? The Second Coming is all but upon us. Do you think L.O.V.E. would risk putting that in jeopardy? The event that President Schrubb and Reverend Wilhelm have been working toward for the better part of a century? Don’t be a fool,” von Manstein made Paulus feel small and he said nothing in return. “Now, don’t bother me with these matters anymore! Arch-Deacon out.” He concluded the communiqué.

  The Arch-Deacon smiled widely to himself. His revenge was complete. The upstart Zhukov would be put into place by the Inquisitor Rodrigo, and most likely submitted to cruel torture. The Inquisitor was named so for reasons pointing back to the medieval period. Now von Manstein was free to destroy the Apostates for his own glory. The President, the Reverend, and Jesus himself would be thankful to him for ending the biggest threat to Faith.

  von Manstein realized that he would need to act fast if he were to claim the credit for stopping the Apostates. He knew that the most effective individual Prelate had been ordained to destroy them, and she was probably hot on their heels. von Manstein would need to pour over Regime reports and intelligence about the current location of the Apostates. He activated his retinal H.U.D. once more and reviewed material related to the Apostates. Doing the research made the time fly by. He was interrupted by his driver who had announced that they had reached Richmond, Virginia. von Manstein had told him that he needed several hours to himself so that he could continue his research in the armored vehicle. At long last, after reviewing mountains of material, he found something of value: there had been a report by a Church devout from the slums of Los Angeles, California, that he had witnessed a massive armada of ships leave the port of Long Beach, sailing south. The report had been archived, but no one had acted on it.

  von Manstein thought that this had to be the Apostates, after all, L.O.V.E. had failed to destroy them at the Great Lake of California, and that they had been on ships there. He thought about what he should do now. There were no Prelates left worthy of this cause—Prelate Inoguchi was working for Zhukov and the Reverend. He needed a wild card. von Manstein remembered that the Church of New Megiddo had once joined forces with a Catholic Order to track down enemies of the Regime that had fl
ed to Latin America. It’s true the Evangelicals had their differences with Catholics, but at their hearts they were all Christians, and besides, this was an emergency.

  Arch-Deacon von Manstein had decided he knew who he needed for this job. He activated his retinal H.U.D. and sent out a ping to the general Church directory, which contained the contacts and allies of the Church throughout the years. After some time, the hail was sent out, but the encrypted hail went unanswered, then, as he was about to give up, contact.

  “Habetis vir iniuriam. Placere duplum conpescuit,” a man spoke in Latin.

  “Societatem Pentagram,” von Manstein said one phrase in Latin. That was enough to peak the man’s attention.

  “So, you seek the services of the Order of the Pentagram? Tell me, follower of the Church of New Megiddo, why do you reach across the isle to find us?” the man asked suspiciously.

  “Our Lord is coming back very soon. We have much to prepare for but not enough resources to take care of all our enemies. There are...Apostates who do not want to see the return of our Lord,” von Manstein explained.

  “So, someone wants to stop your suicide cult, Protestant? Last time we checked our Lord was not ready for the Second Coming,” the man mocked.

  “You watch yourself! We are merely accelerating the Lord’s plan. Everyone will still wind up in the same place. Now who am I talking to?” von Manstein demanded.

  “You speak to Monsignor Pietro Carafa of the Societatum Pentagram. Wielder of the Spear Destiny. Spear Wound of the Lord!” All the titles were almost too much for Monsignor Carafa to remember himself. It reminded him of a “fantasy genre” encoded strand of ‘Database’ he once popped.

  “Yes, yes. Listen, I am authorized to transfer funds should you be willing to be ordained for the mission,” von Manstein tried to speed up the conversation.

 

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