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Circle Of Stars

ThusSpokeI
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chs / week
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Synopsis
What if the stars were your only way out? Where stars are nameless, they are the only option to those who open their eyes past the veil of indifference. Some looked up, and reached too far. The realms grow decaying from utter ignorance. Now, its time to bring back the time where the realms were once beautiful, to truly give light on 'Paradise'. The world believes them to be a nobody yet beneath their quiet gaze lies a mystery so vast, it terrifies what's beyond the true veil of stars. What is one to believe when the truth is concealed like a bruise? In a world fractured unforgivingly into realms; each ruled by branches that shape reality. He’s not supposed to exist. But he does. And he’s not the only one watching . . .
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Chapter 1 - Cutthroat Javelin

Cycle: 3000. Time: 06:00

"Alright, Mercenaries of The Messengers! Roll-Call for the day!" A muscular, grizzled captain yelled atop the chrome-silver perimeters on a large naval ship.

Gray hairs on his well-groomed beard shines in the light from the skies.

Wrinkles and crow's feet form on his face as he takes a glance at each crew member.

A loose gold nametag etched on his gray uniform with black outlining. His eyes azure, bluer than the bright skies.

It read: Captain Cyrus.

Standing at the bow's edge of the warship of many memories, leaning on the shining silver rails, stomping his thick boots as if to make sure the ship maintains stability in the treacherous waters.

Clearing his old, dry throat, found a lump in it, "Ahem. Darius," he called.

"Here." Darius bobbed his head in boredom with sharp brown eyes.

"Yup." She shrugged, as her full lips puffed.

"Roshan."

"Present!" She cheered pretentiously with gleaming blue eyes.

"Layla."

"Here." She said monotone, with braids hanging from long black hair.

"Dragan?" the old man said in a grand tone.

He looked around.

"Not here," Cyrus remarked.

Then a quick pause.

"Malik, son."

Son.

Both tended not to speak of it much, so it seemed like a rumor to the other crew at times. Sitting down with long dark-brown hair nearly covering his face. Innocently, the boy, no more than seven years old, raised his hand and didn't say a singular word.

Strikingly, the sea splashed a wave grand as the clouds above. Roaring a meticulous crescendo as it rocked the ship from under, the boy kept his arm raised as not a drop of water landed on him.

He put it down, twirling his enchanting lengthy hair with a grin of malice as he looked downward.

Cyrus scratched his beard like something felt off, but he chose not to interfere. Moved on, head counting like he always does.

"That boy's like a short blade," Cyrus had once said. "Might cut you if you don't know how to hold it."

. . .

This ship was too loud. However, the young, small boy still slouched on the rails, listening to each passing wave.

After Cyrus finished roll-call for every other mercenary, everyone went onto their duty.

However, Malik had no duty, no purpose, and he spent his days alone with his own thoughts.

Laughter echoed, whirring, soldering tools were used on certain broken-off parts of the railing to stabilize it. Boots scraped the metal floor, squeaking stenciled in Malik's mind. But it felt far away, muffled, almost grainy to his eardrums.

Suddenly, he jumped up without warning, his hair bounced upward as it lay back obediently on his shoulders. He wandered the corridors like a ghost. Not quite invisible, just that nobody ever asked where he was going.

Passing Cyrus's office, and leaning on the wall, as he takes out a sheet of paper and a marker. He giggles naturally as he scribbles on the page that he pressed against the wall.

Looking down, he noticed something he never knew.

A jagged bayonet. Old. Oxidized from a lack of properly rinsing. It contrasts with the clean metal sleekness of the floor. An oblong hole through the knife leaving only edges as it spikes with ridges that can dig into flesh.

It had most likely fallen out of a weapons box at some point. Nobody saw the boy. Even if they did, they wouldn't bat an eye—he was just a child, after all.

It slipped from Pandora's box, a rusty reminder of war to the poor kid.

He folded his drawing, put his marker and folded paper in his pocket, as he knelt down to pick up the harbinger of bloodshed. Malik gripped it like a forbidden secret. A totem. A key into a realm he had yet to seek.

Suddenly, he felt a brutality he never knew, memories he never knew, and an indifference he agreed with.

Voices blanket his mind as he thinks of words he never knew, and lives he never lived.

Something that made sense of a world that didn't. He wasn't sure why he took it. His intuition felt that he needed it. A thought murmured throughout his skull, then a voice.

"Stealing is okay. If nobody gives you anything, then take everything."

. . .

Standing tall next to Malik, towering him by at a meter and a half.

His low haircut grazed the ceiling, as his face carved in cruel lines like broken ashes of rock scattered across magma on dull skin.

Its name was Dragan, a brute of Kharzan. An outlier amongst the rest, except Malik of course. He didn't pick on Malik like others would by teasing, joking, or naming. It was purely pressing on sight, when nobody was around on watch.

"Someday, not today, not tomorrow, but someday. I will end you. Little sh*t. Think you're hot stuff, huh? Nobody here likes you, and you make it so easy to be targeted!"

Pressing a large ashy hand, slamming the helpless boy to wall. Dragan cackled as he moved Malik's hair out of his face, "You sure ya ain't a girl? You're awfully petite too . . ."

With eyes closed, layered with thick eyelashes, he opens a gaze like staring directly into the soul of an insecure specimen.

"What the hell's with those eyes, freak?" Dragan said in a disgusted tone as his lumpy, rough-skinned complexion bounced as he stepped back.

Gray storms swirled with a black hole in the eyes of two hurricanes.

Sadness? Loneliness? Hatred? No emotion was discernible. With a look of mixed signals, the boy's eyelids drooped like he spent all his energy in that stunt.

"You falling asleep, dumbass?" Dragan watched the strange boy like he was a lab rat.

Dragan noticed the slip of paper in his pocket; he quickly snatched it before Malik could react.

"What's this? Aww . . . is that you and your daddy? He ain't your dad, kid." The behemoth insulted him as he crumpled the paper and threw it wide, into the ocean.

The wind allowed the paper to enter the ocean . . . there was no resistance, only acceptance. Malik never screamed. Never told Cyrus. Or Darius. Or Roshan, Layla, or anybody for that matter.

He only kept thought of it.

"I did you a favor, kid. Cyrus would've burned that paper right in your face. He doesn't pay attention to you for a reason."

. . .

In a low whisper the boy spoke: "I'll remember that. For that, I accept you." The boy marched away with strength for a kid of his stature, covering his eyes as if they blind those who stare into it.

Dragan frowned, "It wasn't fun this time." He scratched his faint eyebrows as his skin creased with every fold of movement.

Malik turned, and found Darius working with welding tools to enhance the railing.

He wears a clear mask with buttons and fans on the interior. Cyan glows from it to flash whatever he focuses on to precision.

"What's up, buddy? You need something?" he asked softly.

"No . . . I just wanted to watch. There's nothing better to do." Malik said coldly, looking down.

"Ok, well this stuff's dangerous, so step back." He grinned tightly.

Past Darius, Roshan and Layla walk near them to initiate conversation.

The cheerful Roshan asks, "So, what'cha guys doin'?"

Darius flips his mask, "Nothing much, just fixing up. You girls shouldn't be so close here."

"Oh please." Roshan giggled.

Layla smirked, "Hey Malik."

The sickly pale boy looked at the woman, "Yes?" he said in a forced-deep voice.

She laughed, "Ya' know, I can help you out with your hair. You want me to?"

"I-I didn't know what to do with it, sure I'd like that." Malik could only ponder.

Nobody wanted to do something so nice to me before.

Malik blinked, and then he felt the kindness behind every time they brushed his hair.

Malik didn't mind. He stared for what felt like hours at each drifting azure wave, but it didn't bore him.

Time passed quick, "Done!" Roshan said gleefully.

Malik wanted to thank them, but another voice covered his mouth.

Layla peered at Malik having a staring contest with the ocean.

She asked him what he was doing.

He only muttered, "Listening."

"To what?" she added.

"The ship, the ocean, the waves, all of it."

Layla didn't understand, but she still sat beside him.

The sun began to set, another day spent tangled in an endless sea.

Roshan had to go, and so did Darius. They waved goodbye, but the pale boy and the mercenary woman remained.

Like watercolor paintings, a violet and orange mixture filled the sky, shading the clouds with elegant lights.

"Purple sky . . ." he whispered.

Suddenly, a voice finally spoke.

Yes, Malik. It is quite ethereal.

Looking around calmly to not make a scene, Malik knew the voice wasn't from anyone he knew. Deep down, he wanted to be scared, but the voice felt like an old friend.

"Yes, Malik, purple sky . . . so, do you like what we did?" She pulled out a mirror.

Malik smiled behind a mask, "I like it."

Was the beast right?

Layla stares at the sickly pale boy. She smelled his lie, but didn't acknowledge it.

Malik never spoke of his 'thoughts'. He said to Darius that he "believed in broken things."

He's unfinished. Not broken.

From his minds, anger thrives, wrath, an urge to pierce through walls.

Layla got up and helped Malik to his room.

. . .

Malik lay in his empty corridor that only consists of one thing: a white mattress.

I'm alone. What do I want to believe?

No. Nothing's real. It's just my stupid head.

Dragan's hand hurts. I felt my heart squishing with every push. That's real.

Malik scrunched his head as he lay in drowning emptiness.

Hate is real.

. . .

Nighttime.

Malik had taken a nap. Yet awoke. A black sky filled with blinking lights that Malik was told to never speak of. It fills his room with faint white moonlight and dust as the sea rocks his bed like a crib.

He looked like a child to them.

But really, was he?

Deep down, he wanted more. And he would do anything for more.

An avarice, such greed unquenched.

He wanted to be seen. Felt. Feared. A thirst for such despair in others' eyes. Did he want that? Maybe he did, if it meant becoming a beast like another. But a worse one.

Bummer. I know they're real, but not to them.

Slowly, he gets up like a mummy from a tomb. Smiling, cynical. He felt real.

"I am real," he whispers as he pulled something from his pocket.

Then the voice arose again.

Yes . . . we are.

"Who are you?" The boy asked.

I am your bayonet. Pick me up.

I can bring your desires to fruition.

You've always hated your inability to take action, I am that catalyst to your rebirth.

"How can I trust you? There's so many other voices that try to reach me."

Has there ever been another voice that knows you as well as I do? 

You are weak, but that shall not remain.

Let me cease your troubles, Malik.

. . .

Dragan snores loudly in his room that resembled a prison cell with barred windows.

Suddenly—Dragan instantly heard a sound. He quickly leaned up, examining his room.

Nothing.

The bed frame absorbed all light, making it near impossible to properly see. But something glinted.

What in Zaleth's name?

A rusty bayonet glistened above him, quickly—vanished. Dragan rushed out of bed with paws up. An attack?

No . . . an ending . . .

A quick flash of shadow then—

It weaved, locking its left arm on Dragan's thick, scarred neck. The Bayonet had outmaneuvered the beast. The giant felt the tip of a ridged blade grazing his neck.

All of a sudden, the Bayonet spoke in its glide, like a message from demise.

"Your hate is real . . . But you aren't."

Dragan struggled, but the Bayonet had locked itself onto him. The giant attempted to shake him off, but the blade persisted. Its rustiness glided in its full glory.

Slowly—

"GAHHHH!" howled the brute.

Drips of blood leak off the small gash.

The sea muffled his screams. But the moonlight shone on the Bayonet.

"M-Malik?" he muttered.

"No . . . the Bayonet only hisses in thirst of ablution from your bursting arteries of Kharzan. I am the stage, and the harbinger of my inundation . . . is the performer."

The Bayonet is no longer a boy. The boy was pulverized. This is all that remains.

"Malik!"

"Hush, child." The Bayonet pierced, vocally.

Kneeling, the giant closed his dust-filled eyelids.

"You told the boy we will end. I apologize . . . but not in this lifetime." His words stabbed through his ears.

"I wanted respect. You failed." It said.

The Bayonet unrestricted the large beast, yet it remained hesitant.

"I let you go, yet you seem scared." He smiles as he locks eyes with it.

The giant didn't speak, more blood still leaking droplets onto the metallic floorboards.

"Who do you think you are?" The beast mumbled. "The only reason you aren't dead is because I'd be the one to blame for your murder."

"I'm only satiating. A hunger that feeds. A hunger that needs." The Bayonet cackled, with layered brown wooly hair on his scalp reflecting in the gray moonlight.

The beast sighed, and charged with a leaning shoulder.

Slam!

It clashed into the wall, but Malik had disappeared when he looked around.

Suddenly, he felt a slash at both his feet.

A sudden pain that he hadn't felt before.

Then, the beast fell hard onto the ground.

"How the—"

Malik stood before him with the bayonet coated in red.

Instantly, the blade grazed the beast's neck.

"Any movement from now will end you. Be smart."

Dragan grumbled as he gritted his teeth.

"Look into the eyes of the Bayonet. The same eyes you judged. What do you think?"

"T-They're nice," muttered the giant without thinking.

"Liar. You used to be real. Not anymore . . . This is for you, as you don't suffice for me. A crimson-wrapped gift from what was found below my feet." He held the blood-coated, rusty knife—pressing softly on Dragan's rough neck.

The Bayonet laughed uncontrollably as the giant couldn't move a muscle in shock.

Dancing, the blade danced on his throat like a ballerina, swaying its movement, with just teasing force—enough to not cut, but leave a mark.

Then, the giant felt the blade let go.

Opening his eyes, the giant smiled maniacally.

He's gonna let me live?—

Gash!

The Bayonet speared through his throat. His head lay back with pulling loose flesh, sprinkling blood as he embraced it.

"I'm sorry . . . my only real comrade. I have given you a performance of ages. Tell me, are you willing to watch until the curtains close?" He murmured.

He kneeled down grabbing the beast's arm, took the stiletto, and—

Cleanly sliced off his hand.

"This was the hand you crushed my heart with. You killed the boy. Now, he in tranquil with you, for he accepts you gracefully." The spewing bloody body toppled over as he spoke.

Normally, a Kharzan native shouldn't be so fragile, yet he let it happen. For this wasn't an assassination. It was a send-off of venerability. 

Malik pressed the bleeding hand to his chest.

He closed his eyes anew. They are gray storms that begin swirling profusely.

Suddenly—

A huge figure entered . . .

"Father?" Malik whispered weakly as the Bayonet let go.

A scene beyond comprehension.

Cyrus stared in dismay. No, dismay would be an understatement. He saw every memory of when he saw Malik as a child, and flashes to every small experience, until now.

A blue-white birthday cake with seven candles not even months go. It filled Cyrus's heart to see the ear-to-ear grin on the innocent boy's face. The smeared cake on his lips with blue and colorless frosting.

"He's still ma' boy." Repeated the old captain. "He's still ma' boy . . ."

He is no longer boy.

He slowly came closer to Malik.

Then, Cyrus closed his eyes, took a deep breath, and placed Malik into the corner of the room like a ragdoll.

I can't act foolish now.

Cyrus observed the mutilated corpse, and assessed that only Malik could've done it.

"What happened." He said strictly.

"He touched me, Father. I was defending myself."

Cyrus told Malik to leave the room so that he and the rest of the crew could discuss the matter. As time passed, the crew let out screams at the horror, and decided the best course of action to let his body out at sea.

Though cruel, there was nothing that could be done.

. . .

Cyrus felt an emptiness. He knew he wasted his time and it led to this.

The captain didn't want to let the bayonet go. He gripped it firmly until he bled, but would never let go until he would bled out every drop.

" I know you're still a boy in there. You would never do such a thing on purpose."

Malik gave a psychotic smirk, "I'll be more careful, Father. But I had no choice. It was me or him."

Cyrus felt like crying for the first time in decades, but he knew now what was important.

"Don't stress, Father. We can fix this. I'm still a boy, right?" Malik handed a faint, deranged grin.

Cyrus immediately stood up. A frown traced, imprinted on his face. "Come on, son. From today on, this will never occur again."

"Yes, Father." The Bayonet hid a maniacal laugh under a veil of guilt.

The moonlight shined brighter—it applauded.

. . . .

Cycle: 3010 Time: 06:01

Ten cycles pass like a flowing river.

There stands the Bayonet, pondering, pure, cleansed.