Twilight of a Hybrid, стр. 37

the glass jars and within the jars were some type of liquid water filled to the glasses’ brim and the insides found only in animals.

He circled around half way around the lab room. Vaeludar saw only the broken tables and jars everywhere. Even if the lab was a large size to fit three Dragons, Vaeludar didn’t seem to be finding what he could be looking for with his eyes. His parents conducting experiments and were trying to bring them back from the dead using blood DNA from a single embryo was confusing his hybrid mind. “Where do I fit into all this?” he asked. “Did these experiments make them decide to come together in a union not for love but for experimentation?”

Marina sadly looked at Vaeludar trying to find if he was somehow connected between the experiments and Ralenskrit and Belverda. She looked back at the book and the pages she kept reading had all the same failed experiments. There was nothing new, just dead creatures mixed into a single monster.

Just as she turned to the last few pages near the back of the book, there were notes regarding the embryo Ralenskrit and Belverda found in this dark, underground chamber. The letters, like most of the other words in the book, had been flared and Marina’s fishy eyes could easily see what had been written there. She read a few lines in her mind, and instead of reading out loud, she decided to point to important facts she was finding interesting.

She loudly spoke so Vaeludar could hear: “The embryo found seemed have been very old like ancient old.” Her face showed a large interest of the embryo. “This embryo, according to Ralenskrit and Belverda, is tens of thousands of years old. The location they found it in was in a mountain, a lone mountain they state, close to these three hills right by this lab, and on the mountain’s top is a ruined fortress that is also tens of thousands of years old.” Marina seemed very excited to read that this thing Ralenskrit and Belverda found was very ancient and yet found it reading, “The embryo is still alive and well, despite being trapped underground for thousands of years. The dark chamber, which they found the embryo, looked more like a tomb with a memorial picture of what the embryo must have looked like.”

“What else did Ralenskrit and Belverda say in their notes about this embryo they found?” asked Vaeludar, now studying the hole.

Marina read into the next page and she then lost her excitement. “Let me recap first. The two scientists found a millennia old embryo in a dark chamber that was placed on an altar and a picture painted behind the embryo. Then they took the embryo from the chamber where they wanted to use its blood to bring mutated-bodied creatures to life.

“Okay, they theorized of how the ‘living being’ was before the person or creature was turned back into an embryo. They think that the person used some kind of time control power on his or her body and made the body grow from older to younger so that the person would grow up again and live a second life. They lastly state whoever this living being was had to be incredible powerful to do a time control power on his or her own body.

“And… by the great goddess Adelpha, they also theorizing the man has to be a demigod, the child of… of the Crystal Dragon.”

Marina reading the book stopped and looked at Vaeludar and gazed at his dragon wings, legs, and tail. Geraldus and Flarefur also turned from the book and turned to see Vaeludar looking at the hole. “Could it possibly… him?” Marina asked herself. “Is it possible the scientists could have…”

Marina shook her head and paid more attention to what other things the embryo was involved in. Then she turned to the next page, which happened to be the one of two last pages of the book of experiments and read something quite shockingly that could cause her to die of an immediate heart attack.

Geraldus saw the great shock in Marina’s eyes and decided to read what was left. There were only four pages left the two currently opened and the last two that remained folded and hidden and the pages weren’t burnt. The words in Geraldus’s eyes were small to read, but he could it make those letters out. He also read the first line even he grew shock too, but his mind couldn’t believe it and read out the title: “Project… Vaeludar!”

Vaeludar was glaring outside the hole in anger. “Project Vaeludar?” he muttered. “They exterminated on me?”

Geraldus read: “Ralenskrit and I are naming the ancient old embryo Vaeludar. The DNA we used from this embryo and inserting into the animal experiments is not working. The animals did come to life as we had expected, but they aren’t showing human intelligence; they are wild beats. So, we both have decided to use the DNA from the creatures to insert them into the embryo. A Unicorn’s DNA from a horn and fur DNA of a Minotaur’s hide it uses as its armor.

“These two DNAs would be just a small fridge on what we’ll plan on doing; we’ll be inserting all magic DNA from all the mythical creatures into the one embryo. And so when the embryo awakens from its slumber, it will have power greater than any living creature and man; it will become a god of this island, if we can just keep it under control, the possibilities of the awakened embryo.”

Geraldus spiraled through the next few lines before turning to the next page. He another title that was took shocking: “Project Failure.” It seemed Ralenskrit and Belverda had deemed this project (maybe the last one they ever did since Geraldus was on the last two pages of the book) a complete and utter failure.

The man continued reading: “We don’t know what went wrong! Ralenskrit and I, Belverda, dripped two blood drops