Post by kylebstiff on Feb 8, 2013 17:23:40 GMT 1
The Crush: Shepard's Final Mission
by Kyle B. Stiff
Think the Indoctrination Theory is too dark an ending for the Mass Effect series? Do you prefer the happy endings just as they are? What if those happy endings aren't really as happy as they appear to be? Let's find out what would happen if a completely paragon Shepard made all the “right” choices during the war and chose the Destroy option at the end of Mass Effect 3...
“This isn't what you promised us, Shepard!” shouted Wrex, leader of Clan Urdnot and representative of Earth's krogan population.
Shepard watched the thousand krogan gathered at the Crush, the meeting grounds. Just as Wrex had promised, they had come unarmed.
Shepard was unarmed as well. Not that Shepard could hold a weapon even if he wanted to.
Wrex and the other krogan were clearly angry. The Alliance marine holding the handles of Shepard's wheelchair was so nervous that Shepard could feel him shaking through the metal structure.
I don't blame him, he thought.
Shepard often wondered if he'd made the right decision in destroying the reapers. The explosion he'd set off had been so powerful that it had blown the Citadel to pieces. Fortunately Shepard had fallen into a particularly soft piece of concrete and twisted rebar, but his body had never been the same since. Five years later, the war hero lived in a mansion and was attended by servants who were proud to feed him and help him use the bathroom.
Shepard cleared his throat. “What promise, Wrex?”
Wrex beat his chest, then said, “We fought your war for you! We went to Palaven and helped those damned turians, then we came to this cursed planet and gave our blood to save you from the reapers! Your Alliance gave us a pittance of land, but now we... now we...”
“Wrex, be reasonable.” Shepard tried to lift himself in the chair in order to appear strong before the krogan. It didn't work. “I cured the genophage for you. The reapers were a problem for all of us. How was I supposed to know that destroying them would also destroy the mass relays? I know your people don't like being stuck here on earth, away from your women and your homeworld. But Wrex, I’m depending on you to keep your men from thieving and killing and turning into what they were before I cured the genophage.”
“How can we change?” said Wrex. “I was able to bring the clans together because we had hope for a better tomorrow. Now we have nothing. Peace? What peace!?”
Wrex's words stabbed into Shepard's broken body. It was true: There was no peace. Now that the species of the galaxy were cut off due to the destruction of the mass relays, Earth had become a prison for a dozen different races permanently exiled from their rightful homes. Many quarians had regained Rannoch only to lose it once again. Now they would never be able to remove their suits. Their dreams had become a mockery to them.
The rachni could communicate with their queen across space, but they could not communicate with any of the other Earthbound races. They were allowed to build wherever they wanted and, not wanting to rock the boat, the Alliance simply stood back and crossed their fingers and hoped that the rachni would die off before they caused any trouble. The vorcha were breeding out of control and clogging up city streets. None of them could hold a job or pay rent. Not unless they competed with the krogan in shady, violent black markets.
There was even trouble with the turians due to one seemingly minor cultural difference between them and humans. The turians held a libertarian stance on drug use: They believed that if an individual was capable of completing the duties proper to his rank, then he should be allowed to use whatever drug he chose during his off-duty hours. It was proving nearly impossible for the Alliance to pressure conservative politicians to relax their stance on the ancient and outdated war on drugs. Not only were a lot of turians being arrested for using illicit substances, but the Alliance had to spend a lot of “favors” in order to get several high-ranking turians out of trouble with the law. The hypocrisy was not lost on humans who saw this happen. The only solution that human politicians had given any serious thought to was to possibly allow turians to use drugs, but not humans or any other race; this “one law for us, another law for them” policy only gave parties like Terra Firma more power among radicals and malcontents.
On the other hand, every human was suspicious of the asari and the salarians, who were slowly but steadily taking powerful, high-paying jobs that would have normally gone to humans. Was there any news network or government advisory position that wasn't being held by a wise asari or a clever salarian? Rumors were going around that a few salarians were offering to help the Alliance with their vorcha problem by creating another genophage. How long would it be before humans found their own birthrates suddenly cut off once the planet became overcrowded?
“I promised you a chance at destroying the reapers,” said Shepard. “Nothing more. You have to understand that your demands on the Alliance are too much. Consider all the manpower and resources that have to be devoted to rebuilding, Wrex. You have to understand that... that things don't always work out the way we want them to.”
Wrex glanced down at Shepard's small body twisted up in a wheelchair. “I guess not,” said Wrex. He shook his head suddenly, then said, “But a krogan reservation on an island in the middle of nowhere is an insult, Shepard. We want to live on the mainland with everyone else. We're heroes, damn it!”
“The krogan who have shown they can blend in with society already have that right,” said Shepard.
“The krogan are one, Shepard. That's a fact whether or not we decide to live as your bodyguards... or by our own terms.”
Shepard said nothing. He knew that he was walking on a razor's edge, but he could not help but daydream about his old friends. Liara, Garrus, Tali, Joker... they were now trapped on a jungle world in a system hundreds or thousands of light-years away. They could speak via quantum entanglement communicators on board the Normandy, but they could never return home. He could tell that they resented Joker for running when he saw the explosions – but how could Joker have known that the mass relays would be destroyed? Still, the worst part was seeing his former teammates trying to hide their looks when they saw his wheelchair and his twisted, feeble body. They should feel lucky that they lived on an uninhabited planet where food could be plucked off trees. At least they didn't have to deal with this.
Seeing Shepard sit in silence, Wrex began to suspect treachery. Shepard should be cutting him a deal, using that reputation of his to push and pull, give and take, just like in the old days. It was true that Shepard had brought no weapons to the Crush, but Wrex's father Jarrod had also seemed to be unarmed when they'd had their own Crush on Tuchanka so long ago.
“Hey Wrex,” Shepard said suddenly, trying to smile through a tangle of scar tissue. “Do you ever wish we could go back to running across the galaxy and fighting reapers?”
Wrex almost answered in the affirmative, but he could hear the other krogan behind him grunting impatiently. “I never thought this day would come,” said Wrex. “The day when I'd see the strongest man in the galaxy daydream about the past.”
“I'm still a soldier, Wrex.” Shepard pulled a small communicator from his breast pocket. “I still do what I have to do. I just wonder, though... if we'll ever wake up from this nightmare.”
Shepard pushed a button on his communicator.
* * *
“That's the signal,” said an Alliance comm-man.
“Damn it all,” said Admiral Hackett. “Then the negotiations have failed.”
In the war room of his ship in orbit over Earth, he crossed his hands behind his back and was lost in thought for a moment. Shepard had done what he could to gather as many krogan as he could in one location. He'd done his part and completed his final mission. Now, it was Hackett's turn.
“Fire the laser batteries,” said Hackett.
On the viewscreen, he could see the beams unleashed by numerous Alliance ships. The land around the Crush would be decimated for miles around. The krogan problem had been solved.
“Goodbye, Shepard,” he whispered. “Hackett out.”
by Kyle B. Stiff
Think the Indoctrination Theory is too dark an ending for the Mass Effect series? Do you prefer the happy endings just as they are? What if those happy endings aren't really as happy as they appear to be? Let's find out what would happen if a completely paragon Shepard made all the “right” choices during the war and chose the Destroy option at the end of Mass Effect 3...
“This isn't what you promised us, Shepard!” shouted Wrex, leader of Clan Urdnot and representative of Earth's krogan population.
Shepard watched the thousand krogan gathered at the Crush, the meeting grounds. Just as Wrex had promised, they had come unarmed.
Shepard was unarmed as well. Not that Shepard could hold a weapon even if he wanted to.
Wrex and the other krogan were clearly angry. The Alliance marine holding the handles of Shepard's wheelchair was so nervous that Shepard could feel him shaking through the metal structure.
I don't blame him, he thought.
Shepard often wondered if he'd made the right decision in destroying the reapers. The explosion he'd set off had been so powerful that it had blown the Citadel to pieces. Fortunately Shepard had fallen into a particularly soft piece of concrete and twisted rebar, but his body had never been the same since. Five years later, the war hero lived in a mansion and was attended by servants who were proud to feed him and help him use the bathroom.
Shepard cleared his throat. “What promise, Wrex?”
Wrex beat his chest, then said, “We fought your war for you! We went to Palaven and helped those damned turians, then we came to this cursed planet and gave our blood to save you from the reapers! Your Alliance gave us a pittance of land, but now we... now we...”
“Wrex, be reasonable.” Shepard tried to lift himself in the chair in order to appear strong before the krogan. It didn't work. “I cured the genophage for you. The reapers were a problem for all of us. How was I supposed to know that destroying them would also destroy the mass relays? I know your people don't like being stuck here on earth, away from your women and your homeworld. But Wrex, I’m depending on you to keep your men from thieving and killing and turning into what they were before I cured the genophage.”
“How can we change?” said Wrex. “I was able to bring the clans together because we had hope for a better tomorrow. Now we have nothing. Peace? What peace!?”
Wrex's words stabbed into Shepard's broken body. It was true: There was no peace. Now that the species of the galaxy were cut off due to the destruction of the mass relays, Earth had become a prison for a dozen different races permanently exiled from their rightful homes. Many quarians had regained Rannoch only to lose it once again. Now they would never be able to remove their suits. Their dreams had become a mockery to them.
The rachni could communicate with their queen across space, but they could not communicate with any of the other Earthbound races. They were allowed to build wherever they wanted and, not wanting to rock the boat, the Alliance simply stood back and crossed their fingers and hoped that the rachni would die off before they caused any trouble. The vorcha were breeding out of control and clogging up city streets. None of them could hold a job or pay rent. Not unless they competed with the krogan in shady, violent black markets.
There was even trouble with the turians due to one seemingly minor cultural difference between them and humans. The turians held a libertarian stance on drug use: They believed that if an individual was capable of completing the duties proper to his rank, then he should be allowed to use whatever drug he chose during his off-duty hours. It was proving nearly impossible for the Alliance to pressure conservative politicians to relax their stance on the ancient and outdated war on drugs. Not only were a lot of turians being arrested for using illicit substances, but the Alliance had to spend a lot of “favors” in order to get several high-ranking turians out of trouble with the law. The hypocrisy was not lost on humans who saw this happen. The only solution that human politicians had given any serious thought to was to possibly allow turians to use drugs, but not humans or any other race; this “one law for us, another law for them” policy only gave parties like Terra Firma more power among radicals and malcontents.
On the other hand, every human was suspicious of the asari and the salarians, who were slowly but steadily taking powerful, high-paying jobs that would have normally gone to humans. Was there any news network or government advisory position that wasn't being held by a wise asari or a clever salarian? Rumors were going around that a few salarians were offering to help the Alliance with their vorcha problem by creating another genophage. How long would it be before humans found their own birthrates suddenly cut off once the planet became overcrowded?
“I promised you a chance at destroying the reapers,” said Shepard. “Nothing more. You have to understand that your demands on the Alliance are too much. Consider all the manpower and resources that have to be devoted to rebuilding, Wrex. You have to understand that... that things don't always work out the way we want them to.”
Wrex glanced down at Shepard's small body twisted up in a wheelchair. “I guess not,” said Wrex. He shook his head suddenly, then said, “But a krogan reservation on an island in the middle of nowhere is an insult, Shepard. We want to live on the mainland with everyone else. We're heroes, damn it!”
“The krogan who have shown they can blend in with society already have that right,” said Shepard.
“The krogan are one, Shepard. That's a fact whether or not we decide to live as your bodyguards... or by our own terms.”
Shepard said nothing. He knew that he was walking on a razor's edge, but he could not help but daydream about his old friends. Liara, Garrus, Tali, Joker... they were now trapped on a jungle world in a system hundreds or thousands of light-years away. They could speak via quantum entanglement communicators on board the Normandy, but they could never return home. He could tell that they resented Joker for running when he saw the explosions – but how could Joker have known that the mass relays would be destroyed? Still, the worst part was seeing his former teammates trying to hide their looks when they saw his wheelchair and his twisted, feeble body. They should feel lucky that they lived on an uninhabited planet where food could be plucked off trees. At least they didn't have to deal with this.
Seeing Shepard sit in silence, Wrex began to suspect treachery. Shepard should be cutting him a deal, using that reputation of his to push and pull, give and take, just like in the old days. It was true that Shepard had brought no weapons to the Crush, but Wrex's father Jarrod had also seemed to be unarmed when they'd had their own Crush on Tuchanka so long ago.
“Hey Wrex,” Shepard said suddenly, trying to smile through a tangle of scar tissue. “Do you ever wish we could go back to running across the galaxy and fighting reapers?”
Wrex almost answered in the affirmative, but he could hear the other krogan behind him grunting impatiently. “I never thought this day would come,” said Wrex. “The day when I'd see the strongest man in the galaxy daydream about the past.”
“I'm still a soldier, Wrex.” Shepard pulled a small communicator from his breast pocket. “I still do what I have to do. I just wonder, though... if we'll ever wake up from this nightmare.”
Shepard pushed a button on his communicator.
* * *
“That's the signal,” said an Alliance comm-man.
“Damn it all,” said Admiral Hackett. “Then the negotiations have failed.”
In the war room of his ship in orbit over Earth, he crossed his hands behind his back and was lost in thought for a moment. Shepard had done what he could to gather as many krogan as he could in one location. He'd done his part and completed his final mission. Now, it was Hackett's turn.
“Fire the laser batteries,” said Hackett.
On the viewscreen, he could see the beams unleashed by numerous Alliance ships. The land around the Crush would be decimated for miles around. The krogan problem had been solved.
“Goodbye, Shepard,” he whispered. “Hackett out.”