The car's soft hum was a gentle lullaby against the backdrop of Damascus awakening to dawn's touch. The first rays of sunlight stretched across the barren landscape like fingers reaching out from under the horizon, pulling the night's shroud away from the city's silhouette. He was alone in his vehicle, save for the weight of his thoughts—each one a heavy stone in the pit of his stomach.
Toshiro's prosthetic left arm rested on the control panel as his mind replayed the images that haunted his dreams: innocent lives taken, entire futures erased, with a flicker of Zo's omnipotent will. It was personal; it was visceral. A fire kindled within him, demanding retribution, justice for those who could not fight for themselves.
As he drove, Toshiro's jaw set firmly. Karl's house was just ahead, a bastion amidst the uncertainty that lay before him. He needed Karl—not only for the man's strategic acumen, but also for the camaraderie they shared, a bond forged in the crucible of defiance. Toshiro knew the road that lay ahead was fraught with peril, especially since Ren and the rest of the Rebellion were no longer by his side.
"Karl will understand," Toshiro muttered to himself, willing the truth of his words to dispel the dread pooling in his chest. "He has to."
Toshiro pulled the car to a gentle stop outside Karl's dwelling. The sun bathed the modest home in a warm golden hue. He killed the engine and sat for a moment, collecting his thoughts before stepping out. With a deep breath, Toshiro approached Karl's door, but before he could knock, it swung open to reveal his old friend's stoic face.
"Early bird, huh?" Karl's voice rumbled, grounded and steady.
"Something like that," Toshiro replied, stepping back inside the car again, patting the passenger seat. Karl obliged, sliding into the space beside him.
"The Rebellion is broken," Toshiro began, the urgency clear in his voice. "They're useless in the face of Zo. I know those children are suffering. I can't—I won't—sit back any longer."
Karl listened, his expression unreadable as Toshiro laid bare his intentions. When Toshiro finished, silence hung between them—a thick veil that threatened to suffocate. Finally, Karl broke the quiet, his voice low and deliberate.
"I never told you how I secured the key that saved you from the prison hellhole."
Karl's words piqued Toshiro's curiosity. "You're right. You only said that it came at a heavy cost, and sacrifices were made."
Karl's eyes narrowed, a pained look crossing his features. "I think it's time to tell you."
Toshiro sat on the edge of his seat, the anticipation rushing through his veins like a raging river after a storm.
"You know how you helped bring my daughter into this world?" Karl's voice trembled with emotion as he spoke. "Just as he did for you and Luna, Zo refused to allow me to have a child." Karl cleared his throat, struggling to keep his composure. "You used your connections to secure a black-market key that could unlock Becca's birth control virus."
"How could I ever forget?" Toshiro said with a slight relaxation of his muscles. "But what does that have to do with the prison key?"
Karl's fingers trembled as he interlaced his hands, betraying the nerves that churned in his stomach. "That was the moment I joined the 'criminal' underworld—a vast sea of ordinary citizens fed up with Zo's oppressive rules," he said, his voice resolute. "I became a lighthouse to that sea."
Toshiro's eyes widened and his brow furrowed, revealing his shock and hurt. He had never expected Karl to keep such a secret from him, and he struggled to hold back a wave of confusion and emotions.
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Children of the Virus
Science FictionIn 2085, superintelligence Zo enslaves humanity with a virus that hijacks their senses. Determined to save an innocent child, Toshiro finds himself ensnared in the epic battle for freedom waged by the Rebellion. *** In this dark future, most of the...