Read Homo Avatarius: ( Your Consciousness is an Alien ) Online

Authors: JT Alblood

Tags: #genesis code, #alien, #mongol, #gladiador, #black death, #genghis kahn, #warlord, #time travel, #history

Homo Avatarius: ( Your Consciousness is an Alien ) (8 page)

We thought about where to go next, but, with the news that they had established a new army using all their country’s resources, the Georgians made the decision easy for us. With half of our forces, Sobutay and I marched toward the city of Ardabil where the enemy was waiting. After a short engagement, we rapidly retreated before the giant army. As they chased us, Cebe and his soldiers, who were lying in ambush, surrounded them from behind. We stopped running, turned around, and slayed all the Georgian forces. We smashed their bodies with our horses and buried them in the soil.

Next, we entered the Terek Valley from the north through the Derbent passage. There we found an ancient community of Persian Christians . They fought better than the Georgians. But what was the good of it? Before we left the valley, we had erased them from history.

After fighting with a nation called Alans without knowing where their territory was, we continued north and were again welcomed by wide steppes, our favorite climate and geography. Like a hurricane, we tore through the land of the Jewish Cumans and loomed over their fate like a nightmare. We recruited their enemy, the pagan Pechenegs, to come along with us. We massacred the Kipchak people, and then, we turned around and killed the Pechenegs.

The news of our merciless wrath stirred those who lived in the faraway land of Crimea, the principalities of Kiev, and the Russians. These nations united their armies and marched toward us. We sent them a messenger with a spurious reproach.


We have no dispute with you; we don’t even know you. Why do you advance on us?” the messenger asked.

During our withdrawal, we passed through the lands of the Kipchaks—a shamanist Turkish tribe brought up in the steppes bearing similar culture to our own—and slaughtered the people there. Meanwhile, a huge, fully equipped Russian army of one hundred thousand soldiers continued to pursue us. We led them a great distance, wearing them out for three weeks. Finally, we welcomed them in a river region called Kalka, near the Sea of Azov.

We caught them off-guard, this multi-national army, and divided them in two around a hill. The war lasted for three days and nights and was a complete massacre. Without exception, we put everyone to the sword and crushed those who surrendered by squashing them under wooden boards. We gave the commander, Mstilav, Prince of Kiev, special treatment by crushing him on a carpet so that his blood would not mix with the earth.

By then, our appetite for war was satiated. Just as we had wanted, we headed toward our headquarters by crossing over the Caspian Sea to the north.

As we passed through more lands we didn’t know, we needed permission to pass through a big and powerful Turkish country known as the Kama Bulgarian Kingdom. We were done with war; however, they objected to our offer, saying that they wouldn’t allow us through. They even killed our messenger. So a new war began and, as always, we chased after the runaways and their supporters and crushed them. We invaded their capital city of Bolgar, and, after the spoils were collected, we set off to join our comrades.

We had traveled more than twenty-thousand miles, fought with countless forces, superior to our own, won every battle, destroyed two great kingdoms without even knowing their names, and changed the destinies of all the nations we encountered.

Once when Sobutay and I were looking over the main camp from some distance, I asked him, “Did you like your reward?”

Sobutay grinned.


I do not like long speeches and farewells,” I continued. “You know what I would say, anyway. I wish you and Selen long life and happiness.”


Cuci, but...”


The best guest is the one who goes when his visit is over,” I said.

I quickly turned my horse and rode away.

I never looked back.

 

Limbo

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On a remote corner of a Crimean harbor next to rippling waves blown by the north wind, a dead body of a haggard man lay in ragged clothes, his dead eyes still on the horizon.

A piece of a wolf pelt was in one hand and, in the other, a red handkerchief.


[STOP]

 

I suppose I regained my consciousness first. My first perceptions were a feeling of lightness, a sweet sense of happiness, and a combined sense of ease...


Hey! What’s going on?” I yelled in my mind “How did this happen?” I reached for my sword, but it wasn’t there. Neither was my hand. I looked around for shelter. But then everything melted away as awareness slowly returned.


Wow!” I said. “Was that all a simulation? It was so real. I can still smell the salt air.”


It is beyond a simulation, sir, but it’s something like that. It is an advanced memory program formed and configured by the data of your previous life.”


How long did it take me to experience that entire life again?”


Time does not exist here, sir. However, through the entire process, we haven’t even completed one revolution around the earth, if that makes any sense to you.”


Did I have other lives like that? How many did I have? Why is it like this? What’s the aim?”


Sir, calm down. This was the first phase. It is the beginning of the process of you becoming yourself again by going through the data. First of all, you are going to adapt to your previous selves so that your consciousness can be integrated without causing any harm to you.”


How many more stages do I have?” I asked.


At least two. If necessary, there might be a third. First, we will formulate and integrate the memories you just recalled. We will give explanations, if necessary.”


Sobutay. What happened to Sobutay?”


Sir, he lived for a long time and shared happiness with Selen as you wished. When he died, he was almost ninety years old. He was remembered as history’s greatest commander. Napoleon recorded only two or three victories. Alexander had six or seven. But both tasted defeat. Sobutay won sixty wars and never lost a battle. He brought all existing communities to their knees. He was the only commander who ever beat two different armies on two different fields at the same time.”


It sounds like the tactics we worked on as children helped,” I continued. “What about my father, the empire, my family?”


Your father established the greatest empire in the world and forced submission from all the civilizations within its physical borders. He died older than eighty, in his own lands, in peace. Of course, Cagatay didn’t replace him. Ogheday became the Khan and pushed the empire to its widest borders. It is an odd coincidence that the name Ogheday has evolved in time and has been changed to Oktay in recent Turkish. The Mongolian empire reconfigured the lifestyle and behavior of the entire world. Just like Noah and the Flood, it changed everything by defining power through death and exile.”


How so?”


Sir, you must know of the ‘Butterly Effect.’”


Of course: A butterfly flaps its wings on one side of the world, and a storm breaks out on the opposite side…But, did we really change that much?”


Do you remember entrusting a few surviving children to a Turkish tribe?” the program asked.


Yes, I remember something like that,” I said.


They escaped from their camp that night and ran away from your torture. They moved to the east of Anatolia and found fertile lands to settle. They established a dynasty that would be known as the Ottoman Empire. After you altered the fate of the entire world, Ottoman rule followed and had the widest dominion of any empire for 500 years.”


Wow. So, that young man was Osman Ghazi?”


Yes, indeed. Additionally, you destroyed the Georgian empire as they were about to become the rising power in the land. You also erased the Bulgarian Kingdom, which was about to become another great power. Those are small examples. If you want to look at it from a broad perspective, you brought China to its knees, dominating a civilization that had existed for five thousand years. You also jailed them in their own lands, causing most of the population to perish. Your empire decimated nearly half of the population on the lands it ruled and integrated its own population. Those who are from the blood of Genghis Khan form one-fourth of the living population today. It’s impossible to fully comprehend the Khan’s influence on the world’s genetic map.”


Okay, okay, I understand, but why did it all happen? What’s the purpose?”


Think of wheat, sir. When it was first grown in Mesopotamia, it was of a tiny grass variety, insignificant and weak. Even its seeds were impossible to see. However, the grasses with high nutritional value and those with coarse grains grew taller while others were destroyed. Over time, the coarse grasses adapted to people’s tastes, and in return, people planted them all over the world and destroyed their rivals. The products with useful mutations were allowed to develop. As a result, a very different plant that had nothing to do with its first form was developed.”


What do you mean? Is this a process like breeding? Do you mean breeding the desired human race, and eliminating those who aren’t desired? Do you expect me to believe this? Men waited for their fate like sheep, and we selected the useful ones and shut our eyes to the deaths of others. And I—we—slaughtered them. Is this what you mean?”


Have you ever seen a sheep that doesn’t produce milk and whose meat is not eaten, sir? Have you ever heard of taming such a thing and making an effort to continue its blood line? Have you ever worked for the survival of a living being that would do you no good?”


Dogs were the first animals that were tamed, right? I had a wolf, and it was loyal to me. It always protected me. And I didn’t eat its flesh, although it was rumored that it breastfed me when I was a baby. But no one would breed a dog for its milk.”


Sir, there are sheep dogs around flocks of sheep to protect them. They serve the shepherd.”


But the wolf...”


The wolf was always around you, protecting you. Let’s say it prevented you from dangers you weren’t aware of.”


This is too much for me to digest. You’re a computer program, so if you tell me that I’m hanging out in space, I’ll believe it. But it’s too much.”


Sir, have you ever noticed the common history of the Turks and Mongols? The same story is always told. A race was locked somewhere behind the iron and a bluish wolf fell down from the sky and led them as they passed through the iron and spread their rule all over the world.”


That is just a legend, right?” I asked.


Truth exists under everything. The sequence is beyond coincidence, sir.”


Is it something like my father’s name, Temüjin? ‘The one of iron.’ And my name, Cuci, ‘The one from outside?’”


It is more than this, sir. As you may know, there is a story similarly told in the major holy books. Judaism and Christianity have Gog and Magog. Islam has Yecüc and Mecüc: beings that passed over high walls, attacked all of humanity, and flooded and wiped out everyone. It was unknown where they came from nor what they wanted. They would kill and destroy. They passed over the walls of iron that the prophet Zulkareyn Ilyas had built. It is more than just a coincidence that the same tale has been told in every civilization and in most legends.”


So, were Gog and Magog mentioned in the ancient beliefs of the Mongolians?”


Sir, at the first stage, you were overloaded with too much information, and this stressed you a little bit. You partly perceive things, and I assure you that you will understand everything as you grow into your old abilities and reacquire old knowledge. But in order to digest the recent stages and move to the next one, you need to calm down and keep quiet.”


Who will I be in the next stage? What will I experience?” I asked, desperately.


You weren’t always in the world as a human, sir. And this next experience will be very different. I’m unsure of whether it is right to let you experience something like this after you had such difficulty with the previous one. However, I will act in accordance with the protocols you set. I can only advise you to trust yourself.”


What? I won’t be human? Tell me what I will be. Even if I won’t remember when I experience it, at least tell me now.”


Trust yourself, sir. This is your program, and I merely restart it. Are you ready?”


No, of course not.”


Sir?”


Okay, okay! Start it, goddamn it!”

 

Subconscious

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