Judas Anderson stood at the spot the doctors said his brother had sacrificed his life for him, slowly kneeling at he looked at the outside of the ballroom, not stepping inside.
The memories seemed grainy and fuzzy, they were like a film, like ghosts of his past, and he didn't care to understand him.
He could remember his brother Alexander, a tall, sandy-blonde young man, though the only pictures of him were in his head, of Alexander's face distorted in pain, splattered in a rain of blood.
Judas couldn't care less what had happened, but he felt drawn to his lost past.
He bent over, removing his black glove to reveal the metal prosthetic that was his right hand.
It was shaped like a normal hand, though made of hard, cold black metal, it was quite ingeniusly jointed and almost as flexible and quick as a hand of flesh, and in the center of his palm was a red sensor whose use only he knew.
Slowly moving to a spot in the ground, he traced a large cross into the ground, remembering his lost brother.
The memories seemed grainy and fuzzy, they were like a film, like ghosts of his past, and he didn't care to understand him.
He could remember his brother Alexander, a tall, sandy-blonde young man, though the only pictures of him were in his head, of Alexander's face distorted in pain, splattered in a rain of blood.
Judas couldn't care less what had happened, but he felt drawn to his lost past.
He bent over, removing his black glove to reveal the metal prosthetic that was his right hand.
It was shaped like a normal hand, though made of hard, cold black metal, it was quite ingeniusly jointed and almost as flexible and quick as a hand of flesh, and in the center of his palm was a red sensor whose use only he knew.
Slowly moving to a spot in the ground, he traced a large cross into the ground, remembering his lost brother.