posted on Oct, 27 2004 @ 02:50 PM
Jodee sat on the cold concrete floor and watched, nearly trembling with excitement. Her knuckles were white around her own katana. This event -the
birth of Chris' child- was the culmination of three year's events. Her thumbs worked its way across the wrapped cotton of her sword's handle, worn
smooth by constant use.
It had begun when she was fourteen, and the War had started. At first, nothing had changed. She had been living in Boston with her parents, typical
white rich kid. Colonel Bouchard had taken the city with minimal resistance, laid siege to the nearby corporate arcology. She had heard rumors of
nuclear devastation and poison gasses, but it all seemed so far away. Her life continued as normal, minus the sounds of battle in the distance. She
still went to the mall with her friends, looked out for herself, and didn’t care. Her parents didn't, either- both were doctors, with absolutely no
stake in either side. They just wanted to help people.
She had started hearing rumors about a man in New York, a swordsman. He was an urban legend among the troops that patrolled the streets downtown. Some
called him a butcher, most a hero. As the year progressed, his fame spread to the highly politicized youth. DeusEx, they called him. He was a freedom
fighter, courageous and strong. He had liberated prison camps, fought tooth and nail against the corporate forces. He was inhuman, they said. Survived
a load of buckshot to the chest, multiple gunshot wounds. The stuff of legends. Jodee listened and shrugged. He was in style, so why not let him have
his moment in the sun?
Three days before the corporate forces broke the siege of the Boston arcology, her parents were called out to an emergency at their office. It wasn't
that far from their house, so they ran over and got to work. They were there day and night for almost a week, working on one special patient. They
wouldn't say who in their rare calls home. Then, the corporate invasion happened. They swept past Jodee's rich suburbs in Concord, but the city of
Boston proper fought like a cornered wolverine against the corporate thugs. Two weeks after the invasion, she was walking over to the clinic to visit
her parents for cash. That's when everything changed.
Jodee turned the corner on that fateful day to see a five-man squad of corporate soldiers knocking on the doors to the clinic. They were fully geared,
with gas masks, assault rifles and body armor. Terrified, the fifteen year old hid behind a mailbox. Both her parents came out and objected loudly,
only to be dragged to the ground and shot. Jodee screamed and ran to them as the soldiers burst into the clinic. She wept over the bodies, their blood
already cooling in the winter air as the battle continued in the clinic behind her.
She couldn't remember anything after that. Worldwatcher apparently found her crying and frostbitten in the snow. The young Indian woman became
Jodee's foster mother in the coming years, dragging her inside and warming her up as the gentle snow continued to fall. The next thing Jodee
remembered was helping wheel a heavily scarred, unconscious man out of the clinic, towards her home. She remembered jaded bodyguards, armed with
stolen weaponry protecting her. Then, her memory shifted to lying about the presence of mystery man, trembling before another group of mercenaries in
her nightgown. She pretended hadn't been there. Asked about her parents. Broke down again. They left in disgust.
She lived with Worldwatcher for three months, helping her and Gothique tend to the man. Her parents had helped rebuild his leg, day after day. It was
the man himself, DeusEx. They told her of the battles they had fought together, from the prison camp to the Hour of the Wolf. With no one else to look
to, she bonded to them. She sold the practice, her parents house and almost everything else in the world. Deus and the others didn't ask her for
money, they had other things to worry about. Their fledgling resistance group sundered in a hundred different ideological directions, each advocating
a different approach to the guerrilla war they now waged. Each day, with nothing better to do, she read to the recovering Deus. His favorite story was
an account of the legendary Forty-Seven Ronin. She watched him, laying there and clutching his own battered sword as pain wracked his body, and read
chapter after chapter.
By the time the both of them had finished the story, things had been decided. Of the survivors of the Bunker disaster, only Intrepid and Gothique were
to stay with him. The rest were to head out in any direction, separate and form their own cells if they saw fit. They could fade from the fight, with
no repercussions. They had fought longer and harder than most professional soldiers. Jodee's choice was much more personal- she became Deus's
personal guard. She became Oishi to his fallen Asano. As his health got better, she demanded he teach her sword skills. He did, of course. Gothique-
his wife- and Intrepid did what they could to help found the movement in Boston while he slowly recovered with Jodee. Day after day, he recovered his
strength by sparring with her. He kept his mind sharp teaching her and his other acolytes.
As the war touched more and more people in the passing year, Deus's support base spread. Before too long, Jodee was training three young men in
swordmanship. Then, another three. Then, three of her best friends. The three girls had sought her out, and after many months, found her in Deus's
employ. More than that, they envied her for it. They soon joined, full of youth's passion and rhetoric. Her funds bought them all equipment, the
finest she could get. For his birthday, Deus received a custom-made wakizashi from her. Then, another disaster struck.
The authorities had been following her banking. They saw the purchase of body armor, swords, and supplies and cracked down. They froze her accounts.
The resistance members managed to get out of town, dragging Deus along. Jodee practically carried him herself, groaning under the weight. Then and
here, helping him along, she decided to make a personal guard for him.
Now, six months later, she sat in a basement apartment in the walled out Free Los Angeles, clutching a sword to herself as Gothique went into
contractions. Two more of Deus's guards sat rigidly at the 'door'- nothing more than a nailed-up tarp. Some called them his Keshik, others his
hatamoto or personal guard. Jodee didn't care. Her place was to serve him, because he had been fighting for her freedom so long. She owed it to him.
She was their nominal leader, his first and finest student. She led the younger soldiers, was looked up to their link to him.
Jodee was jerked from her memories as she heard the pounding of boots down the halls. Through the tarp, she watched two of her men tense up and draw
pistols. They sprung to their feet, stopped midstep, and bowed. Holstering their guns, they sat back down and pulled the tarp aside with reverence.
She stood and smiled at him, the center of her world, only to be ignored as he walked past her to his wife. She sighed to herself and accepted it.
When he smiled, her world shone.
When he scowled, she felt indescribable shame.
But when he ignored her, it hurt worse than anything else in world because of all the time they had spent together.
DE
[edit on 8-4-2005 by worldwatcher]