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It has been months since the paradigm shift, and the Extremus is thriving
like it never has before. Waldemar has been living as a completely different
person than he was. His ability—or curse, rather—to absorb other people’s
psychic darkness is entirely gone. He only trusted one medical professional
with this information, and it’s because he had to. She said she doesn’t know
what caused it. She doesn’t know if it’s permanent either. They checked the
sensors. If anyone did this to him on purpose, they did it remotely, perhaps
remotely in time, or in space. He wants to be mad. He wants to call it a
violation, but that’s the old him. He doesn’t want to hurt people anymore.
He doesn’t want to throw people in the brig. And that is what he’s calling
it still. What happened to him, it doesn’t change the fact that the
traditional word has always been more logical. It doesn’t change who he is
in every single sense. He still holds many of the same beliefs.
Waldemar is not reversing every decision he’s made, but he’s trying to put
things right. He’s better—he believes that now—but he doesn’t hate who he
once was. He understands it better, and unlike in the beginning, he is no
longer actively trying to go backwards. He accepts his new reality, even
though it’s scary every day just to wake up.
Some people are upset. They’re not all entirely upset about the decisions
themselves, just that they’re reversals. He’s basically putting the ship
back to how he found it. No, he’s almost putting it back to the pre-Jennings
days, when Tinaya was captain. Oh, Jennings. Waldemar has killed people.
Here’s the thing, if was totally cured of his problem, he would confess to
his actual, unambiguous crimes, wouldn’t he? But he has no plans to do that.
He’s not even telling anyone about them, even though it might be pertinent
to his new situation. He used to have a drive to kill—not like some serial
killer, but it was always an option if he needed it. Now he doesn’t want it
at all. Now he has a strong aversion to it. A part of him regrets those past
actions, but he still remembers why he crossed those lines. He was
protecting himself, and honestly, the Extremus. What good would it do to
throw himself in the brig now, and risk someone even worse than him coming
in as a replacement. No. Stay in charge, just do better.
He is no longer trying to figure out what happened to him, or if it can be
undone. He mostly fends off his critics. That’s a big downside. He has lost
a lot of support, which he’ll need if he decides to move forward with the
secret master plan. The people who didn’t like him before were either in the
brig or better about hiding. Just because he’s let them out doesn’t mean
they’re grateful and happy. And the people who agreed that the old critics
should be there are now mad that they’re not. He can’t win; not since he
didn’t start out this way. It’s his mother’s fault. She made him this way.
If you have a curse, you don’t risk passing it on to a kid. You leave it as
it is. That’s really why he killed her, and if he regrets nearly all of his
kills, that one will remain an exception. She had to go. She was hopeless.
But then again, so was Waldemar, and look how that has turned out. Every
once in a while he grows terribly curious about who might be responsible.
Sable may be a good candidate. She’s special. She’s special and powerful. He
doesn’t know how, but there’s definitely something different about her. He
has a strong memory of killing her too, but then she was totally fine the
next day. He wrote it off as only a dream, but what if it wasn’t? What if
she has actual temporal powers, and is the one who changed him? Now his
curiosity is returning. Should he confront her, or simply continue to accept
the gift? He has to be strong. If he starts playing with fire, he will get
burned. He doesn’t want to change now anymore than he wanted to change
before, even though that change was good. Stay the course. Save
lives. Thrive.







