Author's Note:
This is a brief synopsis of the choices made in the prologue of the CYOA. As such, parts of the character's background have been clarified and expanded upon for the sake of the narrative. Enjoy!
His name was Deckard Pryce, savior of
Dread Harbor
.
Deckard Pryce was born an infant refugee on a transport freighter, spending the first years of his life traveling from place to place throughout Wild Space.
Deckard's parents died young, He was adopted by a caring Catian Pryde.
Deckard's family eventually settled on the Catian-owned colony world of
Jai-Na-Yoh
, selling off what little they had left to share a cramped flat with several large Catian Prydes. Within a year, both of his parents were dead, and he was left stranded as an orphan on an alien planet.
However, one Catian Pryde living in his flat had grown fond of Deckard. One of the family's Catian mothers, Senara, had just lost a child, and in their shared grief she grew quite close to the young orphan. The two formed an inseparable emotional bond. Even as an adult Deckard would refer to Senara as his 'mom.'
Lacking any blood-related relatives within ten thousand light-years, Deckard was adopted by the alien family. Most of Deckard's earliest memories were fond ones. Neither his eight parents nor his seventeen Catian siblings ever judged him for being different. He lived in a distinctly Catian environment, developing Catian quirks and speaking the Catian language with a fluency few humans were capable of. He still learned the common tongue of Humanity, but even at this early stage of his life he often struggled to connect with his own species.
Once he was old enough to join, Deckard signed up for the
Jai-Nah-Yoh
Colony militia. After a few years as a recruit, he was discharged for insubordination. Out of options and with no real opportunities remaining on his adopted homeworld, Deckard joined the GFP: the Goblin Frontier Patrol.
His large Catian family bid him an emotional goodbye on the tarmac of the starport. Senara clung to her adopted son with tears in her eyes. She told him he was bound for great things, that she knew in her heart he had a great destiny ahead of him, and how immensely proud she was of who he was and everything he would become. It would be several years before Deckard saw his family again, though he would vid-call often.
Once enlisted in the GFP, Deckard went through months of extensive training on a starbase light-years from his home system. It was the farthest away he'd ever been from home before. Most of the recruits at his base were Human, and his alien upbringing became a point of ridicule. He soon earned a derisive nickname: 'Simba,' an old slang term from Earth that had translated into a racist insult of Catians in the modern era.
Deckard took Medicine as his secondary specialization
After proving himself to be a model recruit, Deckard entered officer's training in the GFP's Marine Assault Corps. It was a difficult challenge joining the elite of the elite, but he passed with flying colors, earning the rank of Second Lieutenant.
Over the course of his studies, Deckard became drawn to medicine and anatomy, learning how to heal wounds and tend to soldiers in battlefield conditions. His natural empathy towards others and studious attention to detail with regards to the subtle differences between Human, Catian and Loupian physiology made him a perfect fit as a battlefield medic. He excelled in his medical training, becoming a trusted frontline medic, with an acknowledged ability to improvise when the situation called for it.
Several years passed, and aside from a few boarding actions against small Goblin pirate bands Deckard saw little action. He spent most of his career stationed aboard the
GDF Bastion
, patrolling the space lanes running between the numerous scattered outposts, colonies and starbases of northern Wild Space. All of that changed when the
GDF Bastion
received a Priority 1 distress call from a remote, Dwarven-built starbase, a place called
Dread Harbor
.
Deckard was among the first Marines to enter the superstructure of the station, where he and his men found a massive Goblin force occupying the station. Before they could coordinate an attack, his squad was wiped out by the cloned slaver's horrifying experiments. He was the only survivor of the first wave, his men dying around him as he fought for his life in the gore-soaked halls of the space station.
The
GDF Bastion
was forced to retreat, stranding Deckard on the station with no hope of rescue. Desperate, low on ammunition and surrounded on all sides by psychotic gene splicers, he began a one-man mission to liberate the station.
Deckard chose to focus on saving lives while stuck on
Dread Harbor
Military protocol demanded that Deckard stay true to his soldier's instinct and focus on survival first, and saving lives second. He ignored protocol. He was a human being, and the suffering he saw on the part of the innocents on the station was inhuman in the extreme. Taking such a selfless course meant taking risks and giving up on huge opportunities, but Deckard slept better (when he could find time to sleep).
He rescued prisoners, freed slaves and attacked Goblin raiding parties who were scouring the dark corners of
Dread
Harbor
for any lingering survivors. He helped the hidden groups he found whenever he could, providing them with food and making supply runs when he could manage. He never stayed in one place, but he kept the flicker of hope alive for the citizens of the station, and the survivors would remember his selfless actions for years afterward.
Deckard was hit hard by those he couldn't save, the near-misses and desperate choices he was forced to make while stuck in the bleak halls of
Dread Harbor
. It came as an immense relief when he finally found someone who he could honestly say he'd rescued from certain death: Corani.
He stumbled across her while traversing a horrific Goblin 'nursery.' Deckard just managed to save the surgically-modified Catian from a chemically-induced mental reprogramming by the pitiless scientists. He escaped with her in his arms, carrying her to safety. He promised to find her a quiet place to hide until GDF reinforcements arrived, but Corani protested.
Deckard decided to take Corani with him on his mission.
With some reluctance, Deckard decided to keep Corani with him. He knew he couldn't afford to spare his ever-dwindling resources on a risky extraction mission, despite his worries about her safety. He realized that he had no choice: he would just have to trust that her.
Deckard did his best to show Corani the ropes: how to hide, where to go if cornered, how to stay calm in a life or death situation. Deckard could tell Corani was intimidated by his curt orders and frank assessment of the dire situation on
Dread
Harbor
, but she did a good job of hiding her fear.
Deckard came to count on the morphed Catian, sleeping just a little sounder when she took watch. They grew close - as close companions often do in life or death situations. Deckard told her about his family back on his adopted homeworld, and Corani told him about her (now deceased) Pryde-mates. It was a bittersweet way to learn more about one another, but they found comfort in each other's empathy. Deckard enjoyed speaking to her in her native Catian in the few quiet moments they got between dodging Goblin patrols and crawling through air ducts.
A week passed. Deckard and Corani moved from place to place, their food and ammunition dwindling. Things took a turn for the worse the longer they stayed: Goblin patrols became more numerous, scavenging trips grew more harrowing and less fruitful. The two made a broad circuit around the superstructure of the station, learning the Goblins' patrol routes, gathering valuable intelligence on their strengths and weaknesses.
It was growing harder and harder to feed both of them. More than once Deckard surreptitiously skipped a meal and gave it to Corani. She never said anything, but he saw her knowing eyes staring at him when he handed her his food. Finally, she broached the unavoidable subject:
Was
there any help coming?
They wouldn't last much longer, even working together. It became apparent that they