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Character Analysis: A Separate Peace

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This is the sound of the end of the world: a billion voices raised in song, a harmony twisting and ululating around the colossal vibrating bass of the core immolators, twelve shining lances of light from the Yattari ships that pierce the now-dying planet of Korthia at equidistant points and pin it in space like a dissected animal on a metal tray.

Captain Jann Yo watches from her bridge. Doubt gnaws at her, and so she connects to the colonial beacons. She needs to hear the hate and violence of the insurrection. She needs to remember her reasons.

The beacons transmit everything. They fulfil their function blindly and faithfully, unable to question their purpose, only to follow it.

They make Captain Jann Yo uncomfortable. She wonders if she …show more content…
He hopes they learn the lesson the Yattari now make of his poor Korthia. The lesson comes too late for him. He preached resistance and uprising. He should have preached acceptance and endurance.

* * *

Tetha sings his fear, his hatred, his scorn. He crouches in the branches of a great bis tree and sings to the sky, not for the Gods to hear, but for the Yattari. He wants them to know he still fights them.

He sings the song of Sekkil, the fight with no hope but no choice. Sekkil fought the Gods though he was only a man, a war he could not win but had to fight, for pride and freedom and righteousness.

Tetha has fought this fight. He has lost, as he knew he would. But he does not regret fighting, only that he was forced to.

His dark hair is scraped back in a long braid. It swings as he howls his resentment, a song without words, a song without melody. It is raw, and it runs through a billion voices across the face of a dying planet.

* * *

Captain Jann Yo hears all this.

She does not hear, as Command had warned, the grindings of a military-industrial complex capable of withstanding the Yattari Empire.

She does not hear the myriad tongues of the subjugated peoples of the Empire, gathering at a flashpoint of

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