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Ashkelon

Establishing Nation
Joined
May 31, 2008
Messages
718
Location
Laguna, Philippines
Capital
Hebron, P.D.
Nick
Zalo
Dolsk, Orazvocziema Republic, South Eastern Upper Swiecziema

The man hushed his wife and child into the corner as he tucked the manifesto under the dead ash in the fireplace and blew out the candle. As a border village, Dolsk was situated in that little grey zone where two ideas clashed. However it was pretty clear which side Dolsk was on. It was once in a province of the Swieczieman Imperium, until a little over a generation ago, when the Mezhists kicked out the Imperial Family and established a new order...

Of course the precursor to this new order was much older, writings that had been influencing the populace of the Imperium at large for nearly a hundred years now. Dolsk, being further from the heart, was only slightly affected, and overall had more leanings towards the other idea, the one from across the border.

"They'll be here again soon..."

The man pushed his family down under the floorboards, in the hope that he could hide them.

"Papa, I'm scared."

"Don't be. I will make them go away." He replaced the floorboards and climbed into the bed, just as the sound of a motor vehicle pulled up to the front door.

The engine stopped, and heavy footprints made their way close by. After a pause that felt like forever, there was finally a slow, rhythmic knock on the door. From under the covers, the man peered out at the window. Another knock, just as slow and rhythmic as the last one.

They weren't going away.

Mustering every ounce of courage he had left, the man sat up in bed and nervously walked to the door. A third knocking. No different from the first two. There was something different about these people from those who had come before. It was far more patient... usually, they would start banging by the second time.

Swallowing a lump, he slowly removed the wooden block lying in the way and pulled the door open.

His face went pale at the sight. Of course they were different. Of course they were more patient.

His greatest fear was not having to face those black clad paramilitary agents in the Federal Bureau of Security. This was his greatest fear: a kindly-looking old priest, slightly stooped, receding hair as white as snow, in the dark blue habit of the United Catholic Church. "Good evening, my son. Am I disturbing your rest? If so, then please accept my humble apologies." The old man said this with such a warm, sunny smile. As one should expect from a member of the clergy.

The man was however, distracted by how the priest was nevertheless accompanied by a pair FBS Agents who towered over the clergyman and himself.

"O... of course not, Father!" he lied. "There is always time for a Servant of the Almighty."

"Then, may we be allowed entry into your home?" The priest raised a frail old hand to gesture at the house. "There are certain... matters... of urgency that need to be discussed."

The way the question was phrased and how he moved reminded the man of an upier. The irony was of course, not lost on him, considering how this was a clergyman of all people. Understanding that the only way out was to get it over with quickly, so as to avoid suspicion from stalling, he nodded with a renewed conviction.

He stepped aside from the door. "It would be an honour, Father. Please, come in."

When the priest and his posse emerged from the house 15 minutes later, they carried with them two large sacks and a third, smaller one all bound in a certain way. If one looked carefully enough, they would see these sacks squirming. Of course, in this rural darkness, nobody would see that. These sacks were tossed into the back of the truck, and were taken away.

At the next sermon, the Dolsk Parish Priest pointed out how a lack of faith left one vulnerable to the Devil. Perhaps to the possession of demons, or perhaps to simply to the commission of sins worthy of divine punishment. Either a family of three disappeared because they were possessed by demons and fled into the wilderness, or the Almighty Himself decided to mete justice out on them.

Either way, there was now a newly emptied house in Dolsk.


***

OOC: So yeah, props to whoever can figure out what the title refers to. It can't be too hard to figure out, right? :D
 

Ashkelon

Establishing Nation
Joined
May 31, 2008
Messages
718
Location
Laguna, Philippines
Capital
Hebron, P.D.
Nick
Zalo
ŚMIGIEL, NOWY TOMYSI ADMINISTRATIVE REGION, ORAZVOCZIEMAN MEZHIST REPUBLIC
UPPER SWIECZIEMAN FEDERATIVE MEZHIST REPUBLIC
29-12-1952


The man shouted as he suffered from the effects of being put into the "comfy chair" for the second time that day. It was a dark dungeon, reserved only for very special purposes. Once used by the Swieczieman Imperium for very special guests from the steppe of what was now Miroslavl, it had since been re-purposed by the Unity Church for, well, other things that they considered appropriate at the time. Suffice to say, the comfy chair was one of the dungeon's highlights, and usually provided the most interesting results. He squirmed in pain.

In front of him stood a priest in the immaculate Cerulunian Blue habit of the Unity Church. His kind, sincere eyes contradicted what business he had here in this horrible place, and the soft, fatherly tone of his voice, indistinguishable from if he had been giving a sermon in a parish, created a paradox with what words came from his mouth. "My son, there is still time to confess. You can still earn your salvation."

The man struggled in his binds. The "comfy chair" became even more... "comfortable". What salvation was there to be found in this place? It was a dungeon, a torture house where the condemned were sent. If he spoke, they would kill him anyway.

The priest sighed. "We really don't want to do this. Your words, or lack thereof, can either save, or damn, an entire village, my son. Would you be able to live with such a thing on your conscience?"

The man remained unanswering. How does one speak of conscience when his was clearly seared beyond functioning? What man calls himself a Christian and subjects a fellow man to torture the Almighty would never approve of? The Unity Church spoke of mercy, salvation, guidance, enlightenment... but where was all that here?

"We only wish to save the souls in that village, my son. Please give us your confession. Are they subscribing to the heretical teachings of the Miroslavan Church?"

And so that was the game. It would be another entire village disappearing into nothingness, possibly sent off to be re-educated in a camp, to ensure that their beliefs conformed to that of the Niebswi Sarmatian Identity.

"Are they?"

...

The priest motioned for the FBS officer nearby to flip the switch for the "comfy chair".

"... no... wait..."

The officer paused, and the priest turned back to face his captive. "Yes, my son?"

"... the... Mierskis. th... they... lead... communists..."

The priest nodded. "You have done very well, my son. And your sins are now forgiven." He motioned for the officer to undo the man's binds.

The officer complied, and helped the man stand. It had been weeks since he was taken, and now, it seemed as though it was finally over... "... free...?" Maybe, maybe there still was some true Christianity in this nation that was throwing away the very God it claimed to follow, perverting His word to mean the opposite of what it says, all because of some overinflated sense of racial pride...

He had once been a professor at the University of Giecz, a learned man, who studied hard and found that he could not reconcile the divinely inspired word of God, the Bible, with the filthy teachings of the Unity Church that so horrendously distorted the beloved word of God. He found himself travelling to the west, searching for the truth... unsurprisingly, upon his return, he was taken in, suspected of treason, of communism, because of how he had also experimented with it... But he was no communist. He too, found it deplorable, and the Miroslavan attempts to reconcile such an idea with Christianity were equally perverted.

Nevertheless, he knew some people who were communists... And they were now doomed because of him. How ashamed he now was...

The priest nodded. "First, however, you must be made... fit... to return to society."

The man became even paler. There was no question where he was to go now... a re-education camp. He crossed himself as the officers carried him off, to a room with comforts. This was a consolation, for all these weeks he had been kept here. But to him, it felt hollow. What good were these physical comforts, when you knew that you were on the way to being sapped of the soul?

He was close to crying. It was now the beginning of further despair.

~~~

The priest submitted his report. Now with the new bill in effect, the FBS had the power to do whatever it deemed necessary to quash communism in the southeast.

In the dead of the night, a tactical was deployed to that small village, and rounded up all those suspected to have been exposed to the Hated Enemy's propaganda. These were hauled off to be re-educated into fine, upstanding Sarmatian Citizens.

It would take time before they finished.
 
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