Setrákus Ra is already lurking inside me?
‘I believe there was at least one question in all that vitriol,’ Setrákus Ra says. He maintains his infuriating smile, made even worse now that he’s wearing a handsome human face, and gestures towards my plate. I shovel down another bite of the horrible food. He clears his throat like he’s about to give a speech.
‘We share the same blood, granddaughter, which is why you will be spared the fate of those Garde who foolishly oppose me. Because, unlike them, you are capable of change,’ Setrákus Ra explains. ‘I may have been Loric once, but over the centuries I have made myself into something better. Once I control the Earth, I will have the power necessary to changethe lives of billions. All they need do is accept Mogadorian Progress. Then my work will at last bear fruit.’
I squint at him. ‘Power? From where?’
Setrákus Ra smiles at me, touching the pendants that hang around his neck. ‘You will see when the time is right, child. Then, you will understand.’
‘I already understand,’ I reply. ‘I understand that you’re a disgusting, genocidal freak who gave himself a bad Mogadorian makeover.’
Setrákus Ra’s smile flickers and for a moment I wonder if I’ve pushed my luck too far. He sighs and drags his fingers across his throat, the skin of his assumed form parting to reveal the thick purple scar around his throat.
‘Pittacus Lore gave me this when he tried to kill me,’ he says, his voice cold and level. ‘I was one of them, but he and the other Elders cast me out. Banished me from Lorien because of my ideas.’
‘What? Did they not want to elect you supreme ruler or something?’
Setrákus Ra passes his hand across his throat once again and the scar tissue disappears.
‘They already had a ruler,’ Setrákus Ra replies, his voice dropping lower, as if the memory makes him angry. ‘They just refused to admit it.’
‘What’s that supposed to mean?’
This time, he doesn’t make me take a bite of food. He’s on a roll now. ‘My dear, the Elders were ruled by the planet itself. Lorien made their choices for them. Who would be Garde and who would be Cêpan. They believed we should live as caretakers and let nature determine our fates. I disagreed. The Legacies granted by Lorien are simply a resource, likeanything else. Would you let the fish in the ocean dictate who is fit to eat them, or allow the iron in the ground to decide when to be forged? Of course not.’
I try to digest all this information and compare it with what I learned from Crayton and his letter.
‘You just wanted to be in control,’ I say after a moment.
‘I wanted progress,’ he counters. ‘The Mogadorians understood. Unlike the Loric, they were a people ready to be elevated.’
‘You’re insane,’ I say, pushing my plate away, done with this whole question-and-answer thing.
‘You are an unenlightened child,’ he replies, that condescending patience back. ‘When your studies begin, when you see what I have accomplished for you and what the Loric have denied you, then you will understand. You will come to love and respect me.’
I stand up, even though I have nowhere to go. Setrákus Ra has been gentle with me so far, but it’s been made crystal clear that I can only move around the sterile hallways of the
Anubis
as he allows it. If he wants to keep me here and force me to finish my dinner, he will. It would probably be smoother for me if I let all his distortions and half-truths go unchallenged, but I just can’t do it. I think of Nine, Six and the others – I know they’d never hold their tongue when faced with this monster.
‘You destroyed our planet and all you’ve ever accomplished is hurting people,’ I say, trying to mimic my grandfather’s mocking patience. ‘You’re a monster. I will never not hate you.’
Setrákus Ra sighs, his handsome features creasing briefly in consternation.
‘Anger is the last refuge of the ignorant,’
Alan Cook
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