It can be said that the colonel’s ability to both direct and redirect is
praiseworthy and to be able to muster an excuse with such shamelessness –
truly legendary. Hannes does, however, still go down the slope and Jae
follows out of caution.
They haven’t much time. The blizzard rages on. Any longer and their
already low visibility will be limited to just inches in front of them. They’d
overstayed their visit and they look like easy prey, hiking up a snow-
covered mountain with nothing but a few firearms low on ammo, not nearly
enough medical supplies and some heavy carts on tow. They’re not even
properly dressed for the inclement weather.
At this rate, they’d have to wager what would kill them first – the frostbite
or those flesh-eating creatures.
Not even a minute later, a loud shout cuts through the storm. The noise is
even more deafening than the gale and that’s because it’s Hannes, that
loudmouth who can project sound waves across tens of miles. “Yang
Rong!”
“What is it?”
“So! The verdict is!” The sergeant is huffing and puffing on the other end,
trying his hardest to bellow the syllables. “There is indeed! Blood! Not sure,
but I think—is dead!”
“What?!” Yang Rong repeats himself louder. “Speak properly, you fool!”
Still, he stands on his feet and makes way to the rest of the group who are
now crowded down the mountain slope. The younger ones, Li Jiayun and
Jae are craning their heads as if to watch a spectacle. Yoo Seok hardly
seems to care. He’s huddled up for warmth in the corner.
“Come and see for yourself.” Hannes sniffles. “I’m freezing my ass off and
I can’t see nor smell anything.”
“I see it,” replies Yang Rong. “A person?”
On the banks of the ravine where the ice pellets have coalesced in thick
sheets, a black coat covers the person underneath. The fur hood has
accumulated three inches of snow and nearly blankets him whole. The
young man is faced down, head tilted to the side, unresponsive.
In actuality, most of his features are hidden by the padded coat and it’d be
difficult to tell the gender if not for his mildly tall stature. All that’s visible
is the lower portion of his face – high-tip nose, pale lips, prominent jawline.
His skin is ironically, eerily snow-white, blending in so much with the
backdrop that without the dark coat as an identifier, he’d be lost in scenery.
There’s a long-running gash on his shoulder that’s still bleeding out. It’s
recent, less than ten minutes, and if left untreated, the frostbite will not be
pleasant. The wound is deep but not fatal enough to knock the person out –
which means, conjectured, he suffered a blow to the head. His posture also
denotes he might’ve fallen off from the steep incline above.
“C-Colonel,” Li Jiayun has also started to stutter from sheer cold, “what
should we do?”
“The anomaly we encountered had an injury on its left arm and bloodstains
on its neck,” Yang Rong muses. “There were three slashes on the pectoral,
two by the skull and a clot in its eye. None of you are reckless enough to
engage a flying… pterodactyl with a knife, so… what do you all think?”
The redhead replies dutifully, “I think I am awed by your dynamic vision,
Colonel!”
“I-I also think it’s awesome, Colonel Yang!”
Leave it to Jae and Li Jiayun to hype up their commander. Yang Rong looks
pleased by the attention and his ego is boosted even more. The real matter
at question is only addressed thirty seconds later.
Hannes sloppily blows his nose. “So this little kid scuffled with it. Morals
say we bring him to the safety zone but it’s your call, Rong.”
“We can’t take chances.” Yang Rong presses his fingers against the
unconscious person’s neck and feels up the artery. The heartbeat is faint,
though he’s more surprised by how cold the young man is. It’s not just the
blizzard – it’s as though there’s little to no warmth radiating from him. He
feels more like a corpse. “His appearance…”
Yang Rong carefully pushes aside the hood, revealing silvery-gray locks of
hair. It’s damper and darker right now but well… it’s also unexpectedly
soft. He brushes up a strand and uncovers the young man’s forehead. A
laceration runs diagonally from browbone to forehead, deep red in its center
and slightly smeared.
The colonel finds himself thinking that it’s a shame – it really mars his
porcelain skin. Flakes of white are caught between long lashes, and he just
might be the prettiest person Yang Rong’s ever seen.
Looks are distracting, however, and he needs to focus on the important parts
– namely, the level of threat and also, why on earth was this person hiking
up a hazardous mountain in the middle of nowhere?
They’ve stalled for too long. The beasts here are ravenous. The squad is
fresh bait just offering themselves up. The crates are jam-packed from their
hunts and the scent of blood would attract all unwanted attention.
“White hair,” Hannes comments. “Albino?”
“It doesn’t look like it,” Li Jiayun says. “The color is different. It might be
dyed or maybe he’s…”
“There isn’t time.” Yang Rong redirects the conversation. He examines the
shoulder wound and does a careful elevator sweep, in case there were
anything else he’d missed. There isn’t any, minus the fact that the
unconscious young man also has a very…pretty neck, and that’s only
because Yang Rong has stared far too shamelessly long.
“We’re taking him back. Stop the bleeding and dress his wounds.” The
colonel reaches into his backpack and throws out a heavy-duty rope. “Also,
tie him up.”
—
[november 2035, 31 years ago]
“T-minus 20 seconds and counting.”
The intercom crackles from pressure. The voices on the other end are
interrupted by shuttle thrusters and engine flares. All the hissing, the
banging, the thermal pops are being broadcasted live right now. Tens of
million are tuned in, waiting in anticipation for the launch of the latest
reusable spacecraft.
The takeoff to space is no new venture, but the idea of going above earth,
the idea of landing on Mars, terraforming a whole planet – humanity’s
always had dreams beyond.
“T-minus 15 seconds.”
The astronauts are quietly listening to the instructions being repeated to
them – visors adjusted, subsystems assembled, tools secured. These are ex-
military men with decades of flight time. They’re no amateur pilots.
They’re relaxed during standby, chatting quietly amongst themselves before
launch.
“Ten, nine, eight…” The countdown continues till zero and the spacecraft
throttles up. The dashboard shakes at the lift and all around the world,
people are shouting in excitement. All their lives they’d wanted to be in the
cockpit of these spacecrafts, the beautiful bright birds engineered to
perfection.
The AX-10 space shuttle has seen five years of gorgeous flights. This was
its final.
The engine failure was as unexpected as all accidents – a fragment had
broken off during reentry, clogged the booster and led to a catastrophic
downfall. When the AX-10 was recovered, hundreds of thousands of
outcries blamed faulty engineering. Five exceptional astronauts were lost.
Then later, when official reports documented a strange phenomenon, the
sudden loss of communications, data collection, seemingly random
shutdowns, no one was appeased.
Telemetry retrieved snippets of the conversation taking place during the last
moments.
“AX-10, we’re going down,” reports the co-pilot, a middle-aged brunet.
Records indicated he had a wife and a newborn son in the outskirts. They
lived in a small village somewhere, far away from all the city commotion.
He was due to be back by Christmas season.
Modular data indicated there were a few seconds of pause.
The former naval officer shuffled around, tapped his captain on the
shoulder, smiled and asked, “Do you have family?”
The conversation was eerily calm, like they’d resigned to their fates
instantly. Poetically, at 160 kilometers above, four men and one woman sat
in absolute quietude. The only signs of calamity were the batter and clatter
of the engine. Someone cracked a joke about vanishing into thin air. Soft
chuckles followed.
The intercom fizzed in and out, the static making it hard to hear. “Calling…
AX-10…irregularities…please report…”
No one responded and the voice stuttered again, “System failure…
communications lost.”
The pilot took his hand off the controls. He unclenched his fist slowly and
stretched his fingers. His ring finger was bare, but the entire crew knew he
had a lover – he’d spoken so often of her pretty black hair and ocean-green
eyes.
“No,” the pilot finally replied. “I have a girlfriend and a close friend.”
“You will meet them again,” the co-pilot said, unsure if trying to convince
himself or his superior. “I’m sure of it.”
“I didn’t think you were one to believe in reincarnation.”
“Not reincarnation.” His coworker laughed. “The afterlife.”
The pilot also laughed along. He tapped the intercom on the brink. The
emergency flares were all going off, dyeing the shuttlecraft in code red. The
sleek white interior cracked and broke apart instantaneously.
“This is AX-10,” the pilot said. “One day, the stars will be at our reach.”
The next sounds that followed were explosive. The connection cut off
completely. On the other end, inside the control center, a man in his mid-
twenties sat in silence. Behind him, the aero scientists were staggering to
collect data, the assistants were tracking the remains, the medics weregearing up for retrieval and the rest were trying to mediate the live
broadcast.
The black-haired man took off his officer hat and placed it by his chest,
where a silver insignia shined brilliantly. He sighed and spoke softly to a
dear friend.
“Thank you for your service, Captain Yang.”
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Updated 76 Episodes
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