Children of Elisium
Chapter 6: Numbers and Facts

Silas Fidi stood at the Aircraft Control Room with his eyebrows knit. His eyes kept alternating between the Aircraft hatch and the silver watch that was fastened on his wrist. The more seconds passed, the more his forehead creased. When the hatch opened and allowed a single private helicopter inside the hangar, the muscles in his face relaxed. The Great Apothecary checked the time on his Rolex and his lips curved downward in displeasure.

A woman with short navy-blue hair climbed down the private helicopter and entered the Control Room with a huge smile on her face. Half of her face was concealed by the sunglasses she wore on her head. Asha Claire sported bangs along with her symmetrical bob cut that framed her oval-shaped face. Unlike Silas Fidi’s black leather shoes, spotless white slacks and starched gray long-sleeved polo, the female wore red sneakers, shorts with torn edges that exposed her long legs and a gaudy sleeveless shirt that had neon colored print under her laboratory coat. At the sight of her Master, Asha Claire’s grinned widened as she opened her arms to hug the man.

“You are three minutes and twenty-nine seconds late,” Silas Fidi declared and went past her towards the doors leading to Elisium’s laboratories. “Hurry up. It’s time for lunch.”

Asha Claire wanted to cry. She pocketed her sunglasses and wore a pair of red trendy thick-rimmed glasses before hurrying after the man with blood-red hair. The odd-looking pair passed by different security mechanisms and doors before they arrived inside clean corridors that were surrounded by thick white walls. Without sparing her a glance, Silas Fidi turned towards the cafeteria, picked up a box of spaghetti and proceeded to eat at a table in a corner.

The blue-haired girl took a box of Caesar salad with chicken bits and sat in front of the Great Apothecary. The moment she opened the food container, Silas Fidi’s nose twitched as a smirk decorated his sharp features.

“Garlic and Neem oil insecticide,” the man stated vaguely as his piercing orange eyes glared at the green mass in front of Asha Claire. The female could only gape at him. If she didn’t know that Garlic and Neem oil were organic insecticide alternatives and not industry-grade chemicals, she would have lost her appetite. She ate the salad before talking her Master’s head off about the adorable children in Elisium while the male in front of her proceeded to dissect his spaghetti.

“It’s too bad that most of them are going to die...” Asha Claire’s voice trailed off as she clicked her tongue thrice. “But well- only 78% of them are going to die based on previous statistics so I guess the remaining 22% are lucky, I guess?”

“Don’t be too obsessed with numbers.” Silas Fidi muttered crisply. “The qualitative results are best expressed and observed as is, and not as numeric figures.”

“I know Master. It’s just that my Talent revolves around calculations and variables. So, I tend to like numbers and quantity over quality.” Asha Claire licked her fingers. Orange orbs shot her a glare.

“Unhygienic,” the Great Apothecary said with a scowl. His sunken cheeks appeared deeper than they usually did. He cleaned his serving of spaghetti before setting his box away neatly at the side of the table and wiping his hands with tissue. The master handed his disciple a pack of tissues. As soon as he looked away, Asha Claire stuffed the pack inside her pocket without taking a single tissue out.

After their meal, they headed towards the different areas of Elisium that lied beyond the classrooms where the children were being housed. Asha Claire walked down the halls in a jittery manner while her eyes shone with excitement. It had been a while since she had last visited Elisium. The last time she had visited, she had managed to discover a Talent user who had the power to heal. Would she have another interesting development during her short stay at Elisium?

“Did you cover your tracks properly?”

Silas Fidi’s flat voice interrupted her chain of thought. Asha Claire took off her huge shades and exchanged it for a pair of round gold-rimmed glasses. Eyes the same color as her hair glittered from behind the thick lenses of her eyewear. “Of course. My calls were made using an untraceable phone. I took a ten-hour flight and stopped by Salamanca, logged in to one of our laboratories and shut myself inside my room before sneaking out with an invisibility spell.”

“Margin of error?” Silas Fidi asked.

“ZERO!” Asha Claire replied, a proud grin plastered on her face. The woman’s hands were on her hips and every part of her screamed ‘Praise Me’. Her smile only fell when she saw the Great Apothecary glaring at her. “Come on, Master. My Talent allows me to calculate the most possible outcome based on a given set of unknown factors and known variables. It might be mentally taxing, but I used my Talent for an entire day just to make sure my ‘trip’ wouldn’t make it to the headlines! I’m sure I made no mistakes.”

“I had to stay indoor for an entire day just for Elisium,” the blue-haired female whined. “Master, don’t you pity your disciple?”

“0.5% chance of error.” Silas Fidi stated plainly.

“Fine. 0.5% chance of error. It’s not as if something below one percent could possible cause something to go wrong.” Asha Claire mumbled.

They turned towards a section of the Laboratory that was off limits to everyone but a select few of Silas Fidi’s most trusted aides. Before they could enter, Asha Claire stopped in the middle of the hallway. She slowly faced the opposite direction and crouched on the floor. With a quick tap on the floor, her expression changed. Although a smile was still on her face, the ditzy air around her turned cold. She brought her hand close to her face to examine her fingertips. When she did, the smile on her face was replaced with a smirk that made Silas Fidi stop in his tracks.

The Great Apothecary faced his disciple with interest. “What.”

Asha Claire stood and crossed her arms. “Master, you don’t go around Elisium to personally check energy fluctuations and the like, do you?”

“I have no time for that nonsense,” the man replied. “If the guards can’t do it, they don’t deserve to be here.”

“Master, I’m afraid you might have a someone unauthorized that’s sneaking around your beloved laboratory.” The female walked towards him and tiptoed. She whispered something in his ears which made the man’s eyebrows shoot up. She wove her fingers together and quickly turned towards the direction they were originally heading to. Asha Claire smiled. “Won’t you praise me now?”

“Hmph.” The man huffed. “Since you’ve pointed out the problem, then make yourself useful and solve it.”

Asha Claire stopped in her steps and faced Silas Fidi with her mouth hanging open and her eyebrows slanting downwards. “Master! Can’t you phrase it in a nicer way? Can’t you at least say, ‘Thank you Asha, you’ve been a help’, ‘Good Girl’, or ‘That’s my Disciple’?!”

The Magno Deorum grunted before waving her off. “I have more important things to do. Don’t touch my ongoing experiments.”

“Don’t go in my room.”

“Don’t alter the settings on the apparatus I’ve turned on in the 4th Basement.”

“Don’t forget to wash your hands with disinfectant.”

“Don’t forget to wipe your hands dry before you touch anything.”

“If you can, don’t touch anything-”

“-Just don’t touch anything...”

The woman just stood rooted at the same spot as she watched Silas Fidi walking towards his room as he barked out things the female wasn’t supposed to do. If she wasn’t a grown woman, she would have cried and bawled her eyes out. Asha Claire shook her head. When she was sure that her master was out of earshot, she muttered under her breath.

“Master… you’re really too single-minded. Can’t you even show me to my room?”

Researchers in white coats filtered in and out of the different research laboratories in the lower levels of Elisium. Once the news of Asha Claire’s arrival spread throughout Elisium, a lot of the resident alchemists had paused their work to look for the legendary successor of the Great Apothecary. Michael Caelum had been pulled into the excitement by his mother, much to his chagrin. In the confusion, all the amber-haired boy had been able to see was a girl with dark blue hair that was style in a short bob-cut that only made her look as eccentric as her master.

As soon as Michael was free from the mob of adults, he silently made his way to Elisium’s lockers where he took his white standard-issue laboratory coat and headed out to one of the operating theaters in the massive facility. Wide metal doors secured with hydraulic locks kept the room closed from the rest of the world. He took out the identification card that he always kept in his lab coat’s right pocket. Michael Caelum tapped his ID card on the black box right beside the door and with an audible hiss, the theater’s metal doors opened for him.

He took a few steps inside the viewing room and stared at the metallic clip-boards that were hung on one side of the room. These were the medical reports of the children the adults were operating on today. His eyes slowly skimmed through the numbers that was written on the charts while making sure that her number – 373 – wasn’t in the list. When he was sure that Aria was safe for another day, he let out a long and deep sigh as his eyes took one clip board and read its contents.

The child’s number, body temperature, age, ethnicity, facial features and other vital statistics were printed on the first page of the report. The proceeding pages were more complicated. Each page contained detailed observations of the child’s growth, potential as a Spellcaster or alchemist, and a description of the child’s Talent. After that were the pages Michael hated the most. They were the pages that contained the details of the medical procedures they were going to do. Each page was more detailed, more graphic, more inhumane than the last. Michael resisted the temptation to shut the report close and read the entire thing until he was overcome with the impulse to gag.

The youth took a deep breath. This was the reason Elisium existed : Silas Fidi wanted to research on Talents and everything related to it, so he created a research facility hidden from the rest of the world to experiment on Talent holders. Maria Caelum had explained that the children in Elisium were all orphans. No one wanted these children and all these children were destined to suffer and die painful deaths. His mother had called it an act of mercy – that by taking these orphans off the streets, Silas Fidi had shown the children a few years of heaven before they died.

But there was no heaven in Elisium. At least, not in Michael’s eyes. Some of the children they had ‘saved’ were currently strapped on the beds to be sent to their executioners. In the eyes of the adults in Elisium, these children were not human. The way the researchers looked at them was similar to how a butcher looked at poultry: they were only concerned on the amount and quality of the meat in front of them and not at how the animals squealed and cried before they killed them.

On his first day, Michael Caelum had made a mess of the operating theater’s viewing platform. He had emptied his stomach on the spot as he saw the sight of blood and what the researchers did in the operating room. The adults had consoled him that his reaction was normal, that he would get used to it the more he was exposed to Elisium’s research. Although Michael had stopped vomiting at the sight of a human being opened up, the sense of nausea still persisted. He couldn’t see the children the same way the other researchers did. He couldn’t accept Elisium’s research like his Mother did. He was in a place he didn’t belong in. All because there was someone he wanted to protect inside Elisium’s walls.

“Yo, Michael. Why the long face? You’re not gonna puke again, are you?” A tall beefy man with a six o-clock shadow and sunken eyes approached him with a wry grin. An ID card was hanging around his neck from a dark-green lanyard that matched his socks. His wrinkled clothes and haggard appearance screamed ‘overnight in the office’. In the other man’s left hand was a cup of coffee with the name ‘Bob’ written on the cardboard holder. Bob was the man’s nickname. His real name was Jeorge Marcus Grin. He just liked being called Bob for no apparent reason.

Bob graduated from Luminae Academy two decades before Michael started his internship. Although they weren’t close, the two males had become acquainted with each other because of Michael’s mother. His senior never left his room without a cup of coffee in his hands. Although he seemed like someone who would cram all his research the night before the deadline, Jeorge Marcus Grin had the skill and the brains to do it. He was known as Elisium’s God of Cramming. Although he wasn’t as mystical as Asha Claire, he was someone who was trusted by Silas Fidi and had access to almost all the facilities inside Elisium.

Michael gave a man a strained smile. “I’m just trying to wrap my head around-” he waved the file in his hands, “-this.”

“Oh Shi-,” Bob’s eyes widened as a curse escaped from his bearded lips. “You’re done with that are you? Pass it over to me so that I can read through it before the operation. I effin’ forgot!”

The man chugged down his coffee before dunking it in a trash bin. He quickly gathered the report from the walls, flipped over them like a tempest and returned each clip-board to its respective place on the wall.

“Okay, Caelum! Quiz me! Or ask me anything you don’t understand!” Bob shook his hands and hopped in place like an athlete doing his warm up. “If my answer’s wrong, pass me the report with the correct answer so that I can read it again. Come on!”

Michael Caelum cleared his throat. This senior of his didn’t even give him enough time to read through the other reports. Just what in the world could he ask about?

Just when he was about to take one of the reports to read through it’s contents, the equipment being brought in the operating theater caught his attention.

“Then, Mister Grin-”, Michael began.

The bearded man interjected, “Drop the ‘Mister’ and call me Bob. Bee – Oh- Bee. Bob. Say it.”

“-Er, Bob.”

“Good!”

Michael pointed to the machine being set up at the operating room. “What is that?”

“You’ve been here for almost a month and no one’s explained that to you? This year’s internship mentors are too darn irresponsible.” Bob muttered like a machine gun that didn’t seem to run out of ammo. “I’ll explain, okay? Nod your head if you understand. If you don’t then raise your hand.”

For some reason, Michael felt like Bob was the reincarnation of a rapper who loved rhyming his stanzas off. Regrettably, Bob wasn’t a rapper or a lyricist. If he was, it would have been interesting.

“So, listen here. That thing is a Talent extraction machine that they just modified and they’re testing out for the first time today. If you notice, there are loads – and I mean LOADS – of new equipment downstairs...Half because of that weird power surge and half because the Great Apothecary requested for them. They’ll be using the new extraction machine today and maybe they’ll use the other one which is for Talent Implantation.

“The kids here are divided into twelve sections which are named after the twelve zodiacs. For Aries, Taurus, Sagittarius, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Cancer, Capricorn, Pisces and Gemini, the kids under these eleven groups are all Talent holders with mostly latent Talents that need to be awoken. Are you listening- ah- you’re obviously listening,” Bob chattered. “The other researchers usually group the children under the zodiac which is closest to the kid’s Talent. For example, poison-type Talents go under Scorpio and Ranged Talents that focus on attacks will be grouped under Sagittarius.”

“The kids under Aquarius are the most special. They may have talents, they may have none. But they have bodies which can be used as ‘bearers’ - or containers, whichever you want to refer to them as. They’re being trained specifically in spells and maximizing their bodies’ potential,” the senior researcher explained. “You’ll know if we have one on the operating table because they’ll be using the Talent Implantation machine and not that big hunk of metal over there.”

“Basically, people believe Talents are passed on to a different person upon the original Talent holder’s death.” Jeorge Marcus Grin took a huge breath of air before he continued. “But Silas Fidi wants to know if that’s really the case. He also wants to know how Talents work, if Talents can be contained, and if Talents can be passed on to other people using a scientific or alchemic process.”

“Ah- speaking of children...” the senior researcher massaged his hairy chin. “There’s a betting pool that the other researchers are going crazy on. They’re betting on a specific kid in the Aquarius class and how long she’ll last.”

Michael’s mouth hung open in disbelief. “A… betting pool...”

“She’s a strange kid, I tell you,” Bob said, his expression oddly conspiratorial. “The kid’s been smack-dab in the middle of their class ranking for the past three years. But it turns out, she’s a hidden gem. She started shining a few weeks ago by toppling a huge guy in the top ten.”

“The kids who ranked higher than her have been challenging her non-stop and she’s won half and lost half the matches. But what’s interesting is how she lost because she wanted to lose.” The other man chattered on without signs of stopping. “The so-called teachers may not be as smart as us researchers, but they’re not dumb. It was clear to see that the kid was throwing the matches out of the window because she didn’t want to win. What kid does that, huh?.”

“She’s reeaaaally interesting. Last week , the guy ranked second in class Aquarius managed to make a huge scar on her face and she just stared down at him like she didn’t give a shit.” Bob laughed. “Then, I heard the poor boy went ballistic and the teachers had to separate the little girl and number 2. They filed it under the female kiddy’s loss but it definitely wasn’t.”

“What was her number again? 200? 300?” The research snapped his fingers as he looked up the ceiling in search for an answer. “Hmmm...”

“Ah! 373! It was 373 from the Aquarius class,” Bob remarked.

Michael’s heart thudded in his chest. He tried to keep his expression calm and uncaring as he probed his senior further, “Small quiet female with brown hair and black eyes?”

“Yup! That’s her. The teachers have been pairing her off with whoever’s in the top in order to bump up her rank and send her to us. But I think they’ll come up with a good excuse to send her down here some time next week? Or the week after that? Hmm…” The more Bob spoke, the darker Michael’s expression became. But Bob didn’t seem to notice the change in Michael’s face since he continued to chatter in the same energetic tone, “Oh, shoot. Don’t tell anyone I told you. This is supposed to be kept exclusive to senior researchers. But you’re a junior from Luminae Academy and your mom’s one of us so it should be okay if you keep it a secret? Okay? Okay, okay, okay, okay?”

“Don’t worry senior. No one will know a thing.” Michael nodded his head. A small smile graced his lips. His colorful irises hardened and grew cold. “Not even you.”

Before Jeorge Marcus Grin could react, Michael’s hand shot out and touched the researcher’s hand. Bob’s eyes turned dim and glassy. After a few seconds, Michael retracted his hand and forced a smile on his face. Bob snapped out from his daze and stared at the young male in front of him before giving out an embarrassed laugh.

“Uh… hahaha. Sorry. I got lost in thought. What were we talking about again?”

“You were explaining about the twelve zodiac groupings and the operating procedures per group,” Michael replied as he took one of the charts on the wall and flipped through it nonchalantly.

“Right! Right! So as I was saying...” Bob talked non-stop and was completely oblivious to the seriousness that lied behind Michael’s serene gaze. The senior researcher had no idea that Michael had erased his memories and that the youth was thinking of a certain brown-haired girl whom he had to rescue as soon as possible no matter what.

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