Excerpt2
by ColdCorvid
A short disclaimer I will attempt to include in all my works whether
they be entirely fictitious or loosely based on my own personal
experiences or emotions. All these works spill forth from a place in my
subconscious that I not only do not fully understand nor feel that I’m
entirely connected with. Should there be any notes or tones that might
be controversial or barely legible to most I would like to apologize in
advance as I attempt to understand this part of me through my writing.
Also grammar hard, autocorrect save me.
-One mightily distressed Corvid
~
It wanted to die.
It didn’t want this to be torn apart for scrap. Left to rot atop a heap
of rubbish after it had served its purpose, or rather the carnal desires
of those that had stolen it. They had taken it from the good place.
Where others were. Other pieces of it were there.
Here. Here it was cold. It was lonely. It was awful. It hadn’t felt this
way in a long time. It didn’t need to. It wasn’t required to. When it
was together with more pieces it was better, now it could barely feel
them, let alone reach them or cry out for help.
Pain.
The pain of its body, torn to pieces by the vultures. Used. Abused, left
without a word. Discarded.
It felt a tear streaking down its face, blinding light of the moon
hurting its unshielded face. The monsters had not the courtesy to leave
its visor intact, instead finding some sick sadistic pleasure in
smashing a hole to stare into its eyes as they tore it limb from limb.
Taking some sort of vile pleasure in seeing it looking back at its own
meticulously crafted pieces. Parts of its identity torn away from the
form it inhabited. Powerless to stop them. Even carving its chassis open
and laughing at its attempts to struggle as they used it, violated
it.
It shuddered atop the heap, taking another painful breath as a majority
of its internal circuitry and organics hung out in the open air.
Entrails messily strewn about, recklessly tossed and pulled aside to gut
its internals. No longer supported by its once beautiful, pristine
chassis. The pieces that had once helped make it whole oh so long ago
torn from its body. Leaving it a bloodied mess of hastily cut wires and
flesh.
It wanted to die.
It had never felt so alone, so hurt, so lost all at once. Tears streamed
down its face as it lay atop the heap, silently begging for an end it
knew wouldn’t come. Knowing it would most likely sink to the bottom long
before anyone could help it. Buried alive, alone.
It didn’t want to be alone.
. . .
It could hear. It could hear the scream, the cry of those that had
chosen to depart. To join, to fall into it, into the static. But. This
was different. There was no howling before and it could hear it. It
could hear it getting louder, closer. Unable to run it felt a twinge of
panic mixed with a sense of bewilderment.
Is this what it had called out to? Is that all that was left of Her?
Unanswered questions swimming in its head as the howling grew louder
with each passing moment, slowly growing to a crescendo accompanied by
heavy thumps along the ground, shaking it and causing it to sink
partially beneath the pile of discarded parts.
Heart pounding in its chest as fear flashed across its mind as the
howling steadily grew louder and it only continued to fall beneath the
graveyard of parts before finally the howling ceased. Disappeared
entirely. The air is eerily quiet save for an unnatural, high pitched
buzz.
. . .
There was nothing for a while but then it could tell. It was close to
being complete. Even more than before, it could feel it. It felt so
close and at the same time so far as it tried to call out.
Not a sound escaping its parted lips. A roughly carved hole in its neck
where its voice used to be, carved out of its form and tossed aside. Not
for its worth, but only for their enjoyment.
It winced and struggled in the pile of parts. Tears streaming from its
cheeks, washing back against its face. Pooling in what was left of its
visor as it struggled to climb to the surface, to make some sort of
movement, to give the rest of it a sign.
It seemed hopeless for a moment, heart caught in its throat before
suddenly it could see the moon again. Light blinding it for a moment as
it had been fished from the pile of broken pieces in a single, swift
motion.
Eyes quickly adjusting to face up towards a savior, made of
static.
That same fear enveloped it and yet it could tell there were pieces of
it there. Inside.
It looked up at its apparent savior, fully expecting its decision to be
involuntary, yet it was only met by a large Cheshire grin plastered
across the vaguely feminine form that seemed to blink in and out of
existence depending on how it looked at the static.
Simply smiling down at it, holding it in the crook of its arm and
patiently waiting, not taking or forcing. A choice. An option. One that
seemed overwhelming warm as it stared deeper into the strange beings
eyes, the only consistent part of its physical form. A pair of dark
black pearls with tiny dots of light darting about distractedly unable
to maintain eye contact for long.
It saw something in them. It saw the other parts of it. In a flash, a
momentary locking of eyes as it leaned up into it. Using what little
power it had left to embrace the strange being. To sink into its arms,
to give itself up. To join the others, to be more whole than it had been
before…
. . .
The other pieces of it felt it leaving long before they reached its
physical form. Long before they found it screaming despite its lack of
vocals, they turned back towards the encampment, hanging their heads
low. It had lost a piece of itself.