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Tabula Rasa: A time to remember, part one


Tabula Rasa lore buffs may be aware that we're quickly approaching the date of the Bane's invasion of the Earth on December 21st. To commemorate the event, NCsoft has released some fiction chronicling how the human populace of Tabula Rasa remember the world they left behind while fighting against the Bane on alien shores. Today we're publishing part one, below -- and check back tomorrow morning for part two.



Some brought photos... some brought trinkets that were now more priceless then gold. Hell... Lt. Jackson actually brought a chunk of wood from the wreckage of what was once her home before the Bane came. "Only what you can carry" was what we were told. At the time, we didn't realize we would likely never set foot on Earth again. So we took what we could carry... what was precious to us. And now, those trinkets are all that remains of earth. That and one thing we could all carry with us. Our memories.

The name is Bishop, and I've been here on Foreas longer then most. I was one of the first to be evacuated, and have been here ever since. I received my first command a few months ago... who would have ever thought? Me, of all people. But here I am, charged with the lives of the men and women I lead. Sometimes it seems like that other life, the one I left behind on Earth, was nothing but a memory.

Well, not left behind. Taken away is a better way to put it. Everything was taken but our memories. And every year that we have been fighting this War, those memories, and the memories of those who fell are honored. At the end ofweek, on the 21st of December, the Days of Remembrance celebration will begin.

Our squadron has been stationed out of Snake Pit for the last few months, and I have a few new recruits who are eager to get back to Foreas Base for the festivities. We celebrate in every AFS base, on any planet we find ourselves fighting in... but the hub of all the activity has always been Foreas Base. It's not looking good though for this year. Bane activity has increased in this area and that has increased the hostility of the local wildlife. So we're getting hit from two sides out here, and R&R in the middle of that is just not gonna happen. But we still honor the traditions. I saw Pvt. Harris grinding up some of those Forean Calla fronds so he can dye his gloves for DE Day.

DE Day, or Defeat of Earth Day as it's formally called, is recognized every year on the 21st... the day the Bane invaded Earth. Several of the larger AFS bases hold a large memorial service each year, but every soldier, every where, pays their respect for the loss of Earth and the loss of our friends and families by taking a moment of silence on that day. It's eerily quiet during that moment. I remember being hunkered down in a foxhole during the first DE Memorial service. There was shouting, gunfire... and then, at the appointed time, which differs slightly every year to keep the Bane from catching on, there was just silence. We all stopped for a moment, bowed our heads to honor the fallen, the ones that didn't make it off Earth before it was overwhelmed. That moment of silence holds our humanity, and it is that humanity that will see us through this war.

We started dying our armor that year with homebrewed dyes from the local plant life. Red, to symbolize the blood that was shed. Everyone dyes something different, something meaningful to them. I dye my boots.... to symbolize the hike to the AFS safe-zone the day I was teleported to Foreas. On the way there, our party crossed what we thought was a small stream. We thought nothing of it, though I remember feeling a little irritated. I thought, "Not only am I hungry and tired and being shot at, but now my feet are wet too." When I got to the AFS refugee encampment, the first thing I did was sit down to take my damp boots off. It was then, in the light that I realized my boots had been stained red. We hadn't crossed an ordinary stream after all, but one tainted by the blood of the fallen.

So when the tradition of dying our amour came about, I dyed my boots bright red. Harris is dying his gloves in honor of his little boy, who died in his hands after taking a hit from a Thrax laser rifle. Baker dyes her goggles to symbolize all the death she has seen. The dye eventually wears off, but it helps us remember, each in our own way.

Go to part two >>