Emp-Pimpatine

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Feb 11th, 2020
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  1. Peter Glaston was alive, but dead. He still existed, his body still moved and acted, his mind still
  2. thought.
  3. Only, it was someone else's existence that filled him, crowding Peter out until he was no more than a
  4. spectator in the theater of his own life. His body moved at the volition of an intruder. The thoughts of
  5. his conqueror blasted his own into wisps of gibbering trivia.
  6. Glaston was still inside the hidden chamber of the Gotham pyramid. He didn't know whether or not
  7. he'd been here since he found it, because his memory seemed to be playing tricks on him. He
  8. remembered bright light, like a fountain of shining blood, erupting in Gotham Cathedral. Yet he'd
  9. never been to the cathedral. He remembered a subway train screaming down its tracks at breakneck
  10. speed, a rocketship blasting off into orbit, a man with a green ring.
  11. He remembered dead men walking.
  12. Something had possessed him. A spirit... a ghost... a consciousness. It had gained access the moment
  13. he fell through the ceiling of that sealed chamber, bursting into his brain like an exploding star. As if it
  14. had been lurking across the countless centuries, waiting for him.
  15. It had made him dig like a dog in the hard-packed soil. Clutching the ancient ax in Peter's hand, it had
  16. used his lips to emit a guttural shriek of triumph. And when the blade rose and fell, burying itself deep
  17. in Robert Mills's skull, it wasn't Peter Glaston's thoughts that guided it.
  18. He remembered Mills's blood and brains splashing over him, horrifying him to the point of violent
  19. nausea. He'd tried to vomit, but with no control over his physical self, even that was denied him.
  20. He watched helplessly as his own hand was guided to Mills's chest. The stone blade began to slice
  21. through the professor's rib cage, and Peter's nausea reached fever pitch. He had a brief, sickening
  22. memory of holding aloft Mills's heart, still pumping weakly, slippery blood dribbling down his wrist
  23. and arm. Then Peter had lost consciousness.
  24. When he came to, it was with that mixture of fear and relief that invariably accompanies waking from
  25. a nightmare.
  26. Thank God it's over! his mind cried with blessed relief.
  27. But when he tried to move his hand, nothing happened. It was as if the nerve endings that interfaced
  28. between his body and his brain had been severed. He realized for the first time that he no longer
  29. owned himself, that he'd been taken over, turned into a puppet—a tool to be used at the whim of its
  30. new owner.
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