[Note from Sham: Posted in response to a request for some non-awkward stories during the week. You can use the new "Categories" feature to skip straight to Awkwardland :) Enjoy!!]
The red spaceship raced forward through time and space, and the silver spaceship followed. Past the Nebulonic Cloud, past Ursa Minor, and across the universe they flew, the red always leading the silver. For many years they propelled themselves forward, for many years the silver craft pursued the red, sometimes right on its tail, sometimes as far as a galaxy away.
Today was no exception.
Captain Arod Collins of the S.S. Fearless did not live up to the name bestowed upon the argent spaceship. He was beginning to lose hope of ever capturing the crimson ship, the Déjà Vu, captained by the one man who destroyed Arod’s life and happiness.
Arod had begun his journey to capture the red vessel some 14 years before, a mission of revenge. The captain of the Déjà Vu, Wilson Hades, was responsible for a treasonous plot which resulted in the murder of the last king of the planet London V, an English settlement eight billion light years beyond the former planet known as Pluto. Arod lusted for revenge, a horrible revenge against the assassin of his father.
And so, Arod continued his hunt for the Déjà Vu and its nefarious captain. He hurled his ship through the blackness of space, far from any luminescent planetary bodies. He knew that the crimson ship was intentionally guiding its hunter to the final edge the universe. Arod understood the danger, and yet was not deterred from his path. He had risked much, and lost much. His friend Martin, his beloved Christine, his child Eric; all had been sacrificed by a purpose-driven vengeance. Each had wept before their deaths, but each had understood that Arod was driven by destiny. He mourned for them, and would continue to morn until he joined them in death.
At last, the crimson ship pulled out of light speed, and the Fearless followed. Arod sat forward at the control panel, his leather chair protesting with a rusty squawk. We must be close, he thought, or else Wilson is getting sloppy. Wilson could never be sloppy. A man with so much cunning and guile would never show weakness.
The blue grew larger, and larger, and larger. It grew to the size of a volleyball, a house, and finally a moon. A moon of steel, covered in sand, a machine. The Déjà Vu landed, and Wilson ran inside the only structured building on the face of the moon. And Arod followed.
As he entered, Arod looked around and saw a laboratory. A child’s chemistry set rested upon one of the lab tables. A box of LEGO bricks had been overturned in a corner; blue, red and yellow blocks spilled across the floor. Everything within the room was covered with a thin layer of dust. A door appeared on the opposite wall, marked with an arrow pointing up. Arod walked quickly across the room, and he heard Wilson’s voice from a loudspeaker attached to the ceiling.
“So, my friend, you have come at last. I assume you intend to stop me. That would be a grave mistake.”
Arod was startled, but could find no voice for a reply. He had not spoken since the last time he had stopped for supplies and fuel, six months ago. The man at that way station had warned him of this moon, and the dangers it could unleash, and what would happen if he went past the edge of the universe, but Arod had paid no attention. What did that gas station attendant know of honor, purpose, courage, and revenge? He shook his head and took another step towards the doors.
“Ah, I see you desire confrontation before you kill me. Very well. Join me at the top of this building, and we shall chat. Oh yes, we shall chat.” Wilson’s voice faded with the sound of evil cackling.
As he ascended, Arod noticed mirrors laid into the foundations of the walls. He looked into one, expecting to see his rough and unshaven visage, but immediately averted his gaze. The light was too bright for his eyes, accustomed to the darkness of empty space, to handle. “Impossible,” he thought. Yet he could not resist a second glance. Yes, it was true, his eyes had not deceived him. The mirror had somehow seen the birth of the universe and reflected it at passersby. The following mirrors, each six stairs apart, reflected images of the first star, the first supernova and black hole, the first moon, the first life form, the evolution of humans, the atom bomb, the creation of interstellar space travel, the colonization of London V, the birth of Arod, the murder of his father, and his journey to this moon.
Finally, Arod stepped through another door at the top of the stairs and onto a veranda. He ignored the last mirror beside the door; he sensed his hunt was near the end. Arod faced Wilson, the traitor and murderer, but Wilson’s back remained motionless toward him. He looked out at the edge of the universe, but he could not see through the dark abyss of nothingness.
“I wish to avenge my father and end your reign of terror over the universe.” The words tumbled from Arod’s mouth huskily, but he did not understand why Wilson was not more anxious.
“There is nothing first you wish to ask me? Why I killed your father?”
Arod shook his head violently, he was not interested in postponing his destiny.
“Your impatience is your weakness. I shall tell you why I killed your father whether you want to hear it or not. Quite simply, I killed him to bring you here.” As Wilson spoke, Arod’s eyes flew open wide. “I needed you, Arod, though you had no wish to aid me. You do not fully understand who I am, and so I must tell you.
“My brothers and sisters created the universe. You saw their work in the mirrors along the stairwell. They did a good job, did they not? Everything was controlled by their power, but they forgot one thing. They had created light, but with the light came darkness. I was that darkness, Arod. For each good event they caused, I was obligated by the rules of the universe to cause evil. You could not understand how much this grieved me. I brought you here to learn the truth. You see, it is their fault that I killed your father. I see your skeptic eyes. No, my remaining siblings murdered your father, for I had set him upon the throne of London V and they seduced him to the light side. Your father began as an evil man, Arod. He caused death and devastation to most of your home planet.”
“I don’t believe you!” Arod shouted as he stepped backwards and leaned against a wall. “I can’t believe you. No. NO!”
“Yes, Arod, you know this to be true. You cannot avenge your father simply by killing me. I am the reason that you exist!” Wilson’s eyes grew hungry. “However, you are correct in thinking that you must still kill me. It is your destiny.”
Arod slid down the wall until he was crouched over his boots. His mind ran in circles, attempting to understand. “No, no, no, no, no. I don’t believe you. YOU LIE! You want me to believe that I owe my life to you. I will not serve you. You and you alone are responsible for my father’s death, but you have caused so much more devastating evil as well, and for that I will kill you now like the scoundrel you are.”
Arod withdrew a knife from beneath his jacket. His father had presented that knife to him the day he became a Captain in the British Starfleet. He slid the blade from its leather sheath, kissed the hilt, and prepared to plunge it through Wilson’s cold, black heart.
“Kill me. Kill me now. It is your destiny!” Wilson repeated his mantra until Arod lifted himself from the ground.
Arod looked at him with questions in his eyes. He almost dropped the hilt of the dagger and walked away, thinking of the utter waste of time his journey had been, but the face of his beloved Catherine, slain by a creature created by this evil monster, urged him on. He raised his hand high, and brought it down swiftly.
Wilson screamed once as light shot from his flesh around the knife puncture. He groped for Arod and gripped the front of his jacket. Wilson whispered into Arod’s ear.
“Now, Arod, you belong to me. My motives were even darker than you could ever imagine. You will understand.”
Wilson plucked the dagger from his breast and placed it within Arod’s trembling hand. He raised his arms high but was weakened by the gesture.
“Now, Arod, obey me.” Arod fell under the influence of Wilson’s magnificence. “All that I have is becoming yours. When I die, my powers will surge through you and you alone must balance good and evil in the Universe. Do you understand?”
Arod nodded. He had no willpower, for it had been sucked out of him by the black orb. His final act of villainy complete, Wilson collapsed and breathed his last. In a moment, Arod’s vision exploded with light and his body shook from immense pain. All of the secrets of the universe opened up to his disbelieving mind. He finally understood everything. But more than that, he understood why this was happening. A universe filled with good and devoid of evil would begin to take everything for granted. There was no happiness without sadness, no love without hate, no peace without war, and no light without dark. There must be balance. But the knowledge was too much. Arod was not the right person for the job. He needed to find the one who would bring the balance to the universe.
Shortly thereafter, Arod traveled to the planet known as the New Terra Empire in Wilson’s spaceship; Wilson had no need of it anymore. In truth, the Déjà Vu was a far superior craft than his own Fearless. Arod gained entry to the palace, bided his time as he grew close to the old Emperor, watching him turn from evil tyrant to benevolent ruler. If allowed to live, the Emperor's sons would only undo all of his good works. Arod plunged his knife through the heart of the old ruler, and fled. The Emperor’s sons were furious. They pursued Arod and the Déjà Vu. Two of the three sons would not survive the journey. Arod knew this. It was inconsequential. All that mattered was balance.
The red spaceship raced forward through time and space, and the silver spaceship followed.
Written by Samantha Shoemaker, age 17. Was awarded a Scholastic Gold Medal in 2007.
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