Episode 2 – Vitriol, part 23


Her fingers flexed on the grip of her sidearm.  She felt naked in the cloning chamber.  Though the cloning tubes provided cover – likely very valuable cover to the colonists – they did not provide any concealment.

Right now there did not appear to be anyone else present.  There wasn’t a lot of need, other than the occasional check-in.  The systems that ran the place were high-spec, and seemed able to work on their own once set up and provided with raw materials.

“Phosphorous is essential for human growth, especially of bones and teeth,” Cenz was saying.  “A solution that contains it is therefore vital for the cloning process.  I can sort of see a logic – the Governor clearly decided to help boost their population by simply creating more workers.  Still, it’s a very questionable decision.”

“It’s a horrible decision,” Pirra replied sourly.  “They’re barely feeding their current population.  How are they going to feed these?”

“I presume the Governor feels he can ramp up the algae paste production to meet demand.  I agree, though, that this is a foolhardy move.  Something borne out of desperation.”

“And stupidity.  Is it me, or do these clones look unhealthy?”  Pirra pressed her face to the tube, looking at the human within.  It surprised her for a moment how warm the glass was.

It was male, though overall it appeared there were more females.  While she knew humans grew in a curled position, the spine on this one appeared too curved, to the point where he would have a hunched back.

Even the man’s head looked . . . smaller than it should have been.

“You’re quite correct.  From what I’ve seen, I would estimate that 60% of these clones will not survive to maturity.  Among those that do, most will suffer severe physical and mental impairments.”

Pirra pulled away from the glass.  “Sixty percent?”  She clicked out a curse that gave Cenz pause.

“I have no idea what you just said.”

“You’re better off not knowing,” she replied.  “But that death rate is horrifying.  Shouldn’t it be a fraction of a percent at most?”

“Yes.  Under optimal conditions, the death rate is small, even if it is frequently unethical.  But the colonists are doing things that are unusual – such as attempting to alter the genomes of the clones.  I believe their goal is to create enough variation in the population to prevent inbreeding.”

Pirra shook her head.  “Atrocious.  I wonder what-“

A clanking noise came from outside and down the hall.

“Cover,” she hissed.  Cenz was already ducking to move behind one of the larger pieces of machinery.

Someone – no, several someones – were approaching.  Steadying her grip on her sidearm, she angled a small sensor out around the corner to watch.  The view appeared in her HUD, and unless they were actively scanning it was unlikely their own systems would notice it.

Three men entered the room.  They had the emblem of colony security and were in full kit.

A thread of fear went through her.  Unlike the sloppy guards she’d seen in the rest of the colony, these men moved like professionals.  They were certainly no strangers to zero-g combat, and were holding rifles that would rip through the suits she or Cenz had on with ease.

Their armor would be proof against her sidearm, if it came to violence.  Only a lucky shot – or a carefully aimed one – would have a chance of taking one down.

They didn’t say anything, but checking for comm signals, she found that they were using an encrypted frequency.

A message appeared on her HUD, from Cenz.

They’re using a simple code.  I’m in their channel – sharing now.

She heard a voice crackle in her ear.  Their audio was clear, but she couldn’t tell one speaker from another.

“. . . passive detectors noted heat signatures.  Not one of ours,” one said.  His clipped tones didn’t sound local.  A mercenary, perhaps.

“Too much heat from the cloning tubes at living temperatures to pick out an intruder.  Fan out and find them.”

The second voice had a different accent, but likewise did not sound local.

“Do you think it’s the xenos?”  The third voice did sound local, but it had adopted the more professional tones of his allies.  She knew that meant they’d trained together for some time, he was not likely to be a rookie.

“Possibly.  They disappeared from the hunter squad hours ago.”

“Shoot if you see them, we’re taking no chances.  Even dead they have uses,” the one she took to be the commander said.

“The Governor said-” another cut in.  The local.

“Screw him, he’s not out here.  We don’t know what these SU-types are packing, but they’re armed.  I’m not risking my ass for the Governor’s games.”

Pirra had hated the idea of surrender, but that cut the option out entirely.

She studied them for further information, but aside from the colony emblem on their armor, they had no insignia.

It was the kind of move that those who had experienced the worst sorts of combat used.  They didn’t want to make their commanders a clear target, so dress them the same as the regs.

She sent a signal back to Cenz.

We don’t have a lot of movement options.

We go up at the first chance, take to the ceiling, Cenz said.  Human perceptions work best horizontally, not vertically.

It was a fair point.  Being on another plane would affect neither her nor Cenz to any significant degree.  It was the barest of advantage, but she’d take all she could get.

The three began to spread out, a slow and cautious search pattern, but one that would find them.  Her suit estimated forty-five seconds.

Reaching into her pocket, she felt for something – anything – that she could use as a distraction.  As it was, they would be noticed if they attempted to go up.  She had to create a noise to draw their attention another way.

She felt something hard, and pulled it out.

Her singing stone.

There wasn’t time for sentimentality.  Pirra didn’t hesitate, throwing the stone down the row.  She sent it at an angle where it hit the base of a tank and ricocheted, hitting another in a zig-zag pattern.

The stone sang for her as it flew.  The sharp, keening cry was like a lament to her kind, and even humans rarely failed to be unnerved by the sorrow in its voice.


< Ep 2 Part 22 | Ep 2 Part 24 >

Episode 2 – Vitriol, part 22


As Brooks left, Logus took his leave as well.

Kell moved to follow the doctor out.  It had been uncharacteristically silent this whole time, to the point that Urle had almost forgotten about its presence – almost.

“One moment, Ambassador.  I need to speak with you about what happened in the market.”

Kell glanced back to him.  “It is unimportant.”

“Respectfully, Ambassador, it’s not.  You terrified that woman.”

Now Kell turned to face him squarely.  “I spoke the truth.”

“You did,” Urle said.  “But you need to consider not just the time of how to communicate something like that, but how you broach the subject.”

“I am under no obligation to listen to this,” Kell replied.

“No, you aren’t,” Urle agreed.  “But you would do well to listen to me.  You are an Ambassador.  I get the feeling, Kell, that the title is merely a means to an end for you.”

Kell had looked as if he would simply walk away, but now his eyes narrowed.  “I would consider your next words carefully, Executive Commander.”

“I understand fully the ramifications,” Urle said.  “And that no one else is prepared to tell you this.  But you need to know it; you represent your people, Kell.  Every action you take reflects upon every other Shoggoth.  It also reflects upon the Sapient Union.  You have a responsibility to both.”

Kell gazed at him silently for long moments.  He did not blink; his eyes did not flicker even the slightest, and Urle felt a chill go down his spine.

But he met the Ambassador’s gaze and didn’t shrink away.

“I will take what you say under advisement,” Kell finally said.  “Nevertheless, you presume much, Executive Commander.  You believe I act without care, but you do not understand just what it is that I have sacrificed to be here.”

He turned away, moving to the door.  It opened for him, but he stopped there.

“Your kind live such short lives,” he said.

“While true, we don’t like to be reminded of our own mortality,” Urle replied.

Kell ignored that.  “But the people here, their lives are shorter still.  Much like in the past.”

Urle found himself flat-footed against Kell’s observation.  It was true, absolutely true, but it didn’t seem the sort of thing the Shoggoth would care about.

“Yes,” he replied.  “I believe this colony is in very poor health.”

“Can they be helped?” Kell asked.

“Technically?  Yes, we have the capabilities to improve their quality of life, to heal their conditions.  In practice?  I don’t know.  We can’t help them if they don’t want us to.”

“Would you help, if they allowed it?” Kell asked.

“Yes,” Urle replied, without hesitation.

Kell mulled on this for a few moments in silence.  Without another word he left, the door closing behind him.


The tram doors opened into a tunnel that was, she thought, the cleanest and best-maintained they’d seen in the entire colony thus far.

That didn’t mean a lot; while it appeared clean, her sensors noted a higher-than-expected level of bacterial growth upon the surfaces.

“Disgusting,” she muttered as she took a handhold to begin moving down the hallway.

“Don’t worry, Pirra,” Cenz said.  “None of these bacteria are known to be able to colonize a Moth-Owl.”

“Thanks,” she replied.  It still didn’t make it any less gross, but it was good to know.  Bacterial infections were one of the most frightening potential occurrences from inter-species contact.  While viruses were absolutely bound within one planet’s lifeforms, bacteria could theoretically – and occasionally did – find the conditions in life from another world quite hospitable.  The resulting colonizations could cause rapid debilitation or death.

Her sensors didn’t detect any security systems or . . . really anything.  But there was a heat source ahead.

“I see it, too,” Cenz replied after she pointed it out.  “Let us head that way.”

Pirra took point, keeping ahead of Cenz, as they began down the hallway.  She kept her sidearm out – she did not want to be caught unprepared again.  Her wing still stung where the crazed man had pulled a feather.

“You know, there is something that has been bothering me,” Cenz said.

Pirra tensed, feeling oddly nervous about what he was about to say.

“This colony makes very little sense.  And I do not simply mean the oddness of the name or their behaviour to outsiders.  I have been looking over public logs I downloaded upon our arrival, of arrivals and departures of ships.”

“Oh,” she said, entirely caught off-guard by the topic.  It had not been at all what she’d been expecting.

“Yes, and while this colony does trade, they do not export as much as I would expect.  We cannot know the exact contents of each ship, but by sheer quantities alone I would think there would be more bulk exports.  Phosphorous is among the more precious commodities a colony like this would have to trade.”

“For agriculture and people in the rest of the system.”

“Correct,” Cenz replied.  “The other colonies likely have a very high demand for it due to their rapid population growths.”

“This place doesn’t seem to have much growth at all,” Pirra noted.  “I get the feeling that it’s a dying colony.”

“Yes.  Much is made in their local culture of the phosphorous mining.  So where is it going?  And yet, despite this relatively small export amount, they have taken in very large imports of industrial equipment of an unknown nature.”

“Mining equipment to exploit the phosphorus more?” Pirra ventured.

“That would have been my guess, but the mining equipment we’ve seen is of very low quality and appears very aged.”

“I guess they’re getting screwed over in their trading,” Pirra replied.  “All I can imagine.”

“Perhaps.  My second thought was perhaps it was equipment to alleviate their food shortages – yet we clearly see no signs of large hydroponics.  By my observations they are subsisting largely on algae paste, the most basic of survival foods for a colony.”

“It’s certainly unpleasant stuff,” she said.  “I’ve had the Dessei version and I don’t envy any being having to live on it.”

“I will be honest that I like it just fine,” Cenz said.  “But then, what I consider appealing, I’ve been told, reminds many humans of something they call ‘fish flakes’.”

Pirra let out a whistling laugh as she neared a corner.  “I always wondered what you ate.  I’ve seen you in the officer’s mess at lunch time, but you never seem to be eating.”

“Oh, that’s simply because I enjoy the social nature of the lunch period,” Cenz said.

“Wait, so you’re saying you go to lunch just to talk . . . to . . .”

As she trailed off, Cenz stopped.  “Pirra, is something wrong?”

“I found the power source,” she said.

The corner led to a large open doorway.  The room beyond was mostly smoothed stone, but equipment filled most of the available space, attached to both floor and ceiling.

Tall, clear tubes, capped with equipment.

Beyond this room, she saw other large doorways that opened to even more cavernous chambers containing the same tubes.

In each of them, floating in liquid, were humans.  Many were on the small side, only partially grown.

Clones.

“Ah,” Cenz said, his voice bleak.  “I suppose this is where the phosphorus is going.”


< Ep 2 Part 21 | Ep 2 Part 23 >

Episode 2 – Vitriol, part 21


Brooks came onto the bridge without a word.

Logus and Urle were there, and after a moment he realized that Kell was also there, standing and leaning against the wall.

It was strange, considering the dramatic effect of his presence upon them all when he’d arrived.  He wondered just how much the Shoggoth could suppress that strange quality it possessed.

Sitting down, Brooks gestured to the two men.

“I’d like to hear your reports before I begin,” he said.

“This colony is in a bad way,” Urle said.  “I went out with my kids, and we explored some of the markets.  There’s a lot of desperation and poor health.  They seem to have an elevated case incidence of cancers and little ability to treat them.  I didn’t feel like we were in danger, but we were also in an area clearly intended for outsiders.”

Logus spoke next.  “I agree.  I took a brief walk and attempted to access what public systems I could – they have very little in the way of education systems.  Frankly, it’s bizarre how little there seems to be.  For a colony of 30,000, there should be more children.  I didn’t see any.”

“Actually, I didn’t either,” Urle noted.

“What do you think is the source of their cancer epidemic?” Brooks asked.

“Radiation,” Urle said without hesitation.  “I can’t prove it without looking at the outside of the colony, but I think their radiation shielding must be damaged or inadequate, and they lack the work force to fix it.”

“I think that some people suspect that, at least,” Logus said.  “I saw desperation in many, and one man tried to barter his way onto our ship to leave.”

Brooks’s eyes widened in surprise.  “What did you tell him?”

“That I would talk to you about it,” Logus said.  “What do you want me to tell him?”

Brooks had to consider that.  “I’m not against it.  But I am concerned that if we take one person then too many will want to go.  The Governor is wanting more people to come, not for us to be taking them out.”

“You don’t think he’ll consider an evacuation?” Urle asked.  “Having people who want to leave trapped on a colony is a very bad thing.  It can lead to unrest and even violence if allowed to fester.”

They all knew the stories – all very real – of colonies that had destroyed themselves with internal strife.  Violent terrorists were a whole new level of dangerous when a large enough bomb could end up venting thousands into space – whether it was what the bombers intended or not.

“I think we’re already at that point,” Brooks said.  “But I don’t think the Governor is wanting to give up.  He wants to barter the CR for our help in making this colony dominate the system.”

Logus frowned, rubbing his chin.  “That seems in line with what I saw in the welcoming.  How far do you think he’ll go to secure what he wants?”

“I’m not sure,” Brooks replied.  “He backed down when I made it clear that I wasn’t going to work around official channels, but I feel certain he’ll bring it up again.  I have an appointment to talk with him again in the morning, so I’ll know more at that time.”

Brooks looked to Urle.  “After I go to that meeting, I’d like to keep everyone on the ship until I return – just to make sure he can’t get any unofficial leverage against us.”

Urle’s brow furrowed with concern.  “You really think this could escalate, Captain?”

“Yes,” Brooks said.  “It could.  As silly as it all seems, to someone in the Governor’s shoes, this could be his Hail Mary.”

Logus arched an eyebrow.  “I’m not familiar with that term.”

“Old Earth phrase,” Brooks said.  “It means a desperate last attempt at victory.  Something unlikely to work, but you feel you have nothing left to lose, so you gamble.”

Urle exchanged a worried glance with Logus.  “I’ll be sure the defense grid is kept on max.”

Brooks nodded.  “Good.  Also, I’d like to send a message back to the Craton.  New Vitriol should have a transmitter.”

“They do,” Logus said.  “I saw a sign pertaining to it.  However, the fees are astronomical.”

“I imagine we can afford it,” Brooks replied.  “Is there some other problem?”

“Yes,” Logus continued.  “They monitor all outgoing transmissions.  The citizen I spoke to seemed to believe so completely, at least.”

“Our codes should be quite secure,” Urle replied.  “But the problem is going to be on the sending end.  If they require us to input messages into a terminal there-“

“They do,” Logus said.

“-Then they can just literally observe us punching in a message,” Urle finished.  “We could always insist on something more secure, but that will bring questions of its own.  And if they insist that all outgoing messages must be screened, well – there’s a legal gray area there and we’d have an uphill battle.”

“Then we won’t bother with secrecy,” Brooks decided.  “We can use this to our advantage.  Send a message that says that the situation is proceeding well, then ask how many new civilians have joined the ship.”

“What about repair status?” Logus asked.  “Shouldn’t the ship be nearly ready?  It would be nice to have her come as backup.”

“No, we won’t mention it at all,” Brooks replied.  “Just ask about the new arrivals, Urle.”

“Understood, sir.”

Logus glanced between them, slightly puzzled.  “You want it to look to the Governor like you’re considering his request – asking how many people we might be able to spare,” he realized.

“I’m giving him nothing but a hope.  It should keep him from taking any drastic actions.”

Brooks stood.  “If there’s nothing else, I’m going to get some rest.  Let me know if anything happens.”

“One last thing, Captain,” Urle said.  “Everyone has returned to the ship – except for Pirra and Cenz.”

Brooks stopped and checked his system for the local time.  It was 2030.  “There’s still time for them to return,” he noted.

“All the same, I’m somewhat concerned.  I tried raising them on the comm, but there was no answer, and at one point I detected a similar signal to our ship’s own tracker – now, that can be a result of deflected signals off veins of certain minerals, but it could also be that someone was creating it to lure them away.”

Logus looked concerned as well.  “Regardless of the cause, that could have drawn them in the wrong direction at the very least.”

Brooks felt his unease increase.  “If they haven’t reported back by 2130 we’ll conduct a search in the immediate area.  Keep trying to raise them.”

“If they aren’t back by curfew, sir?” Urle asked.

Brooks frowned.  “Then I’ll have to speak to the Governor about it.”


< Ep 2 Part 20 | Ep 2 Part 22 >

Episode 2 – Vitriol, part 20


Pirra felt pretty certain that they were lost.

Ever since escaping the humans that had been chasing them, they’d been trying to find their way back with very little luck.  The tracking signal of the Hurricane was clearly wrong, off, or had been tampered with; it was leading them deeper into the asteroid.

Their comm signals couldn’t penetrate the rock to call for assistance; even if they could, anyone with half a brain would be listening in and be able to home in on their signal.  It would stand out against the local chatter.

“I admit,” Cenz said, “That I severely underestimated their hostility to outsiders.”

“You and me both,” she whistled.  “I’ve heard of xenophobia like this, but I always thought it had faded, just something from the early days of contact.”

Cenz seemed to focus on her a moment as they made their way along the tunnel; she felt like the science officer was attempting to discern her mood.

It was sour, she wanted to tell him.

Even besides the obvious, the colony had the worst layout Pirra had ever seen; half of the tunnels simply led to dead ends, and others branched off in random and almost inexplicable directions.

“It seems to me,” Cenz noted, apparently giving up on telling her mood, “that they did not create a centralized plan for the most efficient layout of tunnels.”

“I think that everyone with mining tools just took to walls whenever and wherever they felt like,” she replied.  “Probably how they ended up with tunnels covered in holes.”

The one they’d escaped down hadn’t been the only one; they’d found five others and taken as random a path as they could, their only hope of losing pursuit in a place their enemy would know better than they.

That had been some time ago, though.  Looking down a corridor, it looked the same to her as the last dozen; a squarish tunnel of semi-smoothed rock, that slowly meandered off at an angle.  Like the miner couldn’t even keep his equipment moving straight – or just didn’t care to bother.

“We must be really deep inside this rock by now,” she added.

“Not to be contrary, but I believe we are actually close to the surface.  It concerns me somewhat, as this section does not have the same structural stability as many others.”

She didn’t like the sound of that.  Technically, Cenz could withstand the pressure fairly well, his suit being rated for even explosive decompression.  As was hers – except she didn’t have a helmet on.

“Perhaps we should double-back,” she suggested.  “They won’t expect that, and there’s a lot of places to hide if we hear them approaching.  Plus we might see something we recognize.”

Cenz agreed, and they began to reverse their course.  Unfortunately, the haphazard nature of the tunnels made it difficult, and despite normally having a keen sense of direction, Pirra soon found herself feeling lost.

“I’ve never seen this corridor before,” she noted.  There was a crudely-painted number four on the wall – she’d have noticed that.

“I’m sure this is new,” Cenz agreed.  “But I do not know where we took our wrong turn.  Should we re-trace our steps again?”

“No,” she said.  “At least this suggests people live near here, if they marked it.  If we find someone, we can find out where we are.”

Theoretically, at least.  If they’d talk to her or Cenz without being threatened.  She really didn’t want to have to do that.

“I’m going to turn on my sensor systems to keep a chart of our path,” she decided.  “We can start to get a layout of the place.”

“I’m afraid we can’t,” Cenz said.  “The rules that the colonists laid out for us forbids the use of such sensors.”

“Wait, seriously?”  That was a bizarre decision, and she’d never heard of a colony preventing that.  It was only ever an issue if . . .

They were hiding something.

Cenz continued to speak.  “Apparently some of their equipment is very old, and active sensor mapping can interfere with it.  I’m not entirely certain of the specs of very old equipment design from Earth, but I suppose it’s possible . . .”

“Passive only, then.  Even if that’s against their rules they won’t know.  I can’t imagine attacking us like that was in their rules, either.”

“Ah, yes,” Cenz agreed.  “Probably not.”

The tunnel seemed like it was more built up than most; there were metal plates over particularly rough sections with handholds on them, allowing them to move through the area easily.

“Is that a window?” Cenz asked.

Pirra looked up; she’d been keeping her eyes on her path rather than what lay further ahead.  Down the tunnel, though, there seemed to be a door that was surrounded by glass.  It looked as if it led directly into space.

But that wasn’t possible – they weren’t that close to the surface.  She may have gotten lost, but she felt confident about that!

And who would build a window on a space station around a door?  Windows were just a weak spot, and cheap monitor could provide a view that few biological beings could tell apart from the real thing.

“It is a window,” she realized as they moved closer.  “Look, out there – it’s not space we’re seeing.  It’s more rock.”

Cenz moved to the window and nearly pressed against the glass.  “I see,” he muttered.  “This is a fissure in the asteroid.  It looks nearly solid from the outside, but internally it’s cracking apart.”

He turned his screen to look at her.  “What did they do?  This doesn’t look natural.”

“I have no idea,” she muttered.  “And why a door here?  Is there a tunnel to the other side?”

“Ah, that . . . No, I think I can answer that now.  They took advantage of the opening to put some kind of tram in.  Actually quite a reasonable thing, I suppose.  Better than having to carve out all the rock.”

Pirra pressed her face to the glass, too.  Yes, she could see it now.  It wasn’t a large thing, but it was clearly something akin to an elevator.

“Is it pressurized?”

“The system says it is.”  The eyebrows on his electronic screen arched.  “Care to give it a whirl?”

“Beats floating,” she agreed.

“It has an AI that is asking me my business, but it’s a very simple mind.  I have parsed the data in my response in such a way that the AI should not think to report this incident to anyone.  I cannot be sure, though, that some other part of the system will not make note of it.”

Pirra accepted that – he was the commanding officer, anyway.

She had a feeling, though, that he suspected that something was going on just as much as she did.  This went deeper than local hostility to aliens, there was something going on with the colony itself.

Despite Cenz being in charge, she felt a measure of responsibility for him.  She was the one with survival training, he . . . well, he was a science officer.  Capable, but not trained to the same level as her in this.

“Let’s use it,” she said.  “At the very least we can get back to an occupied area.  Maybe they’ll get pissed, but we can deal with it.”

Cenz popped the door, and they both floated in.

“It moves in four directions,” he noted.  “But gives us no information on where we are – given time I believe I could calculate what direction would take us nearer the surface, but I’d rather move quickly and not dawdle.”

“Agreed,” she said.  “Take us up.”  She realized there was no proper up, and pointed upwards above her head.  “That way.”

“Why?” Cenz asked.

“I have a better sense of three-dimensional places than humans,” she said.  “I have a feeling about that way.”

The screen on Cenz’s suit put on a wry smile.  “With respects, Pirra, I’m not a human and my kind live in the water.  We, too, have a very good sense of three dimensions.”

She realized her faux pas.  “Oh . . . Cenz, I’m sorry, I wasn’t thinking-“

“It’s fine,” he said, letting out a laugh.  Again she saw the flashes of light from deeper in his suit.  “But I think we should move what you would consider down.”

“You’re the ranking officer, sir.”

He chuckled again.  “Just keep calling me Cenz.  But Pirra – do you trust me?”

She blinked and considered.  But she only had to think on it a moment.

“Yes, Cenz.”

“Then down we go.”


< Ep 2 Part 19 | Ep 2 Part 21 >

Audio Delays and a Hint of the Future!

There continue to be delays in producing more of the audio stories, unfortunately. Health issues have made them exceedingly difficult, though the writing of Episode 3 continues unabated!

As a little hint, my tentative title for the next episode is “Trauma”, and we will see a very unique and important place within the borders of the Sapient Union!

That’s all for today, keep well!

Episode 2 – Vitriol, part 19


The guard outside of the isolation cell was pale.  A bead of sweat ran down his forehead, and he had jumped when Brooks entered the room.

His prior escort did not follow him in, hanging back like the room was leaking radiation.

Brooks went in, nodding to the guard.

“Open the door,” he said.

“Are you nuts?” the man asked, staring at him, agog.

Brooks gave him a sterner stare.  “Do I look like I’m joking?”

From the other room came the voice of the previous guard.  “The boss gave him permission to see her.”

The man’s face blanched paler, but he turned and pounded on the door.

“Wake up!  Someone’s here!”

The reply was immediate and vicious, if muffled by the door.  “Tell him to go fuck himself!”

The guard gave Brooks a quizzical look, asking without words; do you really still want to go in?

Brooks nodded.

The man unlocked the door and stepped back – all the way out into the next room, and then he closed that door behind him.

Brooks opened the cell door.  It was dark, almost black, in the room beyond.  His HUD adjusted his vision to match it better, and he was able to make out a cot, a very basic toilet . . . and that was it.

“I’m only here to talk,” he said calmly.  “I’m not bringing more trouble to your door.”

“You can still go fuck yourself,” the reply came.

He felt a tingling down his spine; it reminded him immediately of when he’d first met Kell.  It was far more subtle, he didn’t feel sickened by it.  But it was there all the same.

“My name is Captain-Mayor Ian Brooks of the SUC Craton.  May I ask your name?”

He couldn’t actually see anyone, yet he felt like there was someone there.

And then she suddenly was there; she had been the whole time, but for some reason his vision had simply been unable to register her; his HUD had noted her presence, but even being aware of that had been somehow difficult.

She was a short woman, very pale.  Something about her skin looked slightly sallow and unhealthy, save for her hair, which was so dark as to look like ink.  It fell past her shoulders, messy and tangled.

Her eyes were her most noticeable features.  One was brown, but the other was a vivid violet.  In the dark it seemed to glow, to shine with its own light.

His sensors told him it was not sending out light, though.  They said she had a pair of brown eyes.

“Apollonia,” she eventually replied.  She was looking him up and down, and he felt the hairs on the back of his neck raise.  He felt like she was seeing through him, in a way that could not be quantified.

And if their understanding of CRs was right, she was.

“Why are you here, Captain-Mayor?” she asked.

“I only want to talk – peacefully,” he said, holding up both hands to show they were empty.

“They all say they want peace,” she noted, turning and beginning a slow pace back and forth.

“I’ll have to show you I mean it, then,” he said.  “I’ve come to ask if you would like to leave with us – and also if you would join the crew of my ship.”

Her eyebrow arched slightly, but that was the whole of her reaction.

“You would not have to join the crew, but if you did you would become a citizen of the Sapient Union, with all the rights that entails.”

“And the duties and limitations,” she noted.

“If you have particular concerns regarding those, we can address them now.  Yes, there would be duties and responsibilities, but they’re not terrible.”

“You want me because I’m a Seer,” she said.

“Yes,” he replied.  “I won’t lie about that being valuable.  We’ve had encounters with Leviathans, beings that live-“

“I know what you’re talking about,” she said quickly.

“Then you know that people like yourself give a passive protection to those around them,” Brooks added.  “But again – you can come with us and not join the crew.  If you wished to live on the ship, you could do that.  Or we could take you to another system or station and you could live there.”

She scowled at him suddenly, suspicion rife in her eyes.  “This is all so very kind of you, Captain-Mayor.  But why?  You want what I have, but if I don’t want to give that then you’ll have come all this way just to help one woman?  I can’t imagine you spend this much effort helping every asshole who finds themselves in a hole on some shitty frontier colony.”

Brooks was not surprised by her outburst.  “I don’t have that power,” he told her.  “But when I can I do try.  I understand you’ve been accused of a crime – a crime that I think it is clear you did not commit.”

“How do you know?” she demanded.  “For all you know I did murder the sheriff.”

“Did you?” he asked.

She was silent a long moment as she looked at him.

“No,” she finally said.

“There’s never been a CR who could kill someone by looking at them,” Brooks said.  “So I view it as seriously as I would view that claim about anyone.  That is – it’s absurd.”

“Even if I was to agree to come with you, I’m still a suspect here,” she said.  “You can’t just wave your hands and make that go away.”

“I feel confident that I can solve that issue,” Brooks replied.  “But I can’t do that without your help – without you wanting to leave.”  He looked at the cell she was in; it was far smaller than was considered humane for any person to live in, and she had nothing, not even a pad.  “I don’t expect you enjoy it here.”

She pitted him with a hard stare.  Her eyes nearly closed as she looked at him, and he realized she wasn’t actually seeing him anymore; her eyes had rolled back, and through her slitted lids he could only see white.

“I’ll think about it,” she said.  “Now leave me alone.”


< Ep 2 Part 18 | Ep 2 Part 20 >

Episode 2 – Vitriol, part 18


Logus noted Urle walking with his daughters back towards their ship.  He had not had much interest in the tourist goods of the market, but rather in the people of the colony itself.

He had brought as his buddy a simple drone that followed him silently.  Honestly, it was better than a living partner in most ways, as it could watch in all directions and feed that information directly into his system.

It did seem to make the locals cautious about speaking to him, though.

Don’t jump to conclusions, he told himself.  Perhaps they believed he was more important than he was, given that he’d been in Captain Brooks’s entourage when he’d met the governor.  Or they might have been nervous of outsiders.

But there were other, darker possibilities.

Seeing how the locals glared at Kell, he wondered what the Ambassador had done.  Still, there didn’t seem to be any violence brewing.  After observing a few more moments, he moved along the railings, deeper into the colony.

The areas that catered to outsiders soon gave way to service stations for the locals, and this was far more interesting to him.

Logus knew he stood out, but that did not concern him that much.  There were a number of armed guards, and significantly more locals here.  He wondered if they avoided the tourist area for the bad prices or if they were kept out.

People gave him looks, their eyes sunken and cheeks sallow.  A number seemed to be waiting around a medical clinic.

Down from there he saw a comm center that advertised rates for faster-than-light messages off the colony.  The price seemed exorbitant, and Logus didn’t even have half the number of credits needed for sending a message.

Something caught his eye.  A man was staring at him.

He had an air of forced casualness about him, but his eyes were fixed upon Logus.  The spot he was standing in was somewhat boxed in by metal tubing and steam venting from a floor grate.  The guards nearby were not likely to see him.

Logus had seen people like this before – desperate people.

He made his way over, looking at the store fronts and signs.  He walked past the man – he saw the man twitch, as if wanting to reach out and grab his arm, but an armed guard moved past and the man just as quickly went back to looking casual.

Logus stopped outside the message center at an information kiosk.  Still paying some attention to the man, he began to scroll through the available local entertainment and news channels.

It was nearly all imported, much of it from deeper in the system.  What was from outside was at least a decade old; he knew that often these colonies would buy tens of thousands of hours of old serials and sporting events in one block and that was the entirety of their entertainment.

Seeing the selection, Logus had the feeling that they’d gotten ripped off by some trader.  Many of the shows were low in quality and were older than he was.  There were none of the famous Dessei sitcoms or Qlerning dramas – but a lot of human sporting events.  Everything seemed to be made with humans, but looked like the low-budget media that the Aeena studios were famous for.

That guard was still dawdling.  He seemed at least somewhat suspicious of the desperate man, and so Logus resolutely kept from glancing at him, focusing on the various info channels.

He’d almost reached the end.  He recognized a few shows, but realized that most non-humans in them had been edited out crudely.  It seemed remarkably xenophobic.

The guard finally moved on, and the desperate looking man peeled away from his spot and drifted over.

“Need help finding anything, outlander?” he asked.

“I think I’m getting around all right,” Logus replied.  “In a way, I envy you on the frontier.  There must be so much excitement out expanding humanity’s presence in space.”

His words were jovial, but he kept his face serious.  He hoped the man understood.

He clearly did.  Something flickered in his eyes.

“I want to get out of here,” the man whispered.  “Please.  Take me out on your ship.”

Logus was surprised; the man was being much more forward than he’d expected.  “Are you in trouble with the law here?” he asked.

“No, nonono,” the man said.  He moved almost jerkily, like a man barely holding himself together.  “I just can’t stay here anymore.  I have to get out.”

“I’d like to know why,” Logus said earnestly.

“You can help me, then?” the man asked.

“I can’t promise anything, but I’m sympathetic,” Logus said.  “I need to know more.”

The man was silent.  His lower lip twitched, as if he wanted to speak, but he was struggling to find words – any words.

“I’ve lost too much,” the man finally said.  A fire seemed to have entered his eyes, a silent warning.

Logus could tell he needed to back off.  “I see.  May I have your name?”

“No names,” the man said.  “Not until I know where you stand.”

“I’ll have to talk to the Captain,” Logus said.  “However, my recommendation to him will be to allow you to leave with us.”

The man nodded.  “All right.  All right, that’s . . . thank you.”

Logus nodded towards the message center.  “Have you tried contacting anyone before now?”

“Oh no, nono,” the man said.  “They monitor every message.  They don’t want anyone to know.  They have secrets here, outlander.  Secrets that . . .”

His words trailed off, and he suddenly smiled.  “You’re not bad for an outlander.”  He gave a jaunty wave and moved away without another word.

Logus casually looked around and saw the guard.  His gaze was on the retreating man, but did not linger as Logus waved to him.

The guard forced a smile and approached.

“You’ve wandered far, sir,” the guard said.  “Are you lost?”

“Oh no,” Logus said.  “I was just quite taken with your colony.  I don’t suppose there’s any local music scene?”

The guard chuckled and waved him along.  Logus noted that he lacked the same wasted look of many of the others.  If anything, he seemed close to overweight.

He led Logus down the street, around a corner, and through a closed gate.  For a moment Logus thought he was being led somewhere dangerous, but once the gate opened he realized it was something else entirely; a red light district.

“This might be more your speed,” the guard said.  “Try the Roxy and ask for Saint Collette.  Girl is creative as hell.”

Logus forced a smile to the man.  His eyes travelled through the tunnel.  It was narrow, scarcely with room for three men to walk side by side.  The storefronts all offered something warm and human, or at least a close proximity.  Outside of some, the ‘wares’ stood, in outfits that left nothing to the imagination.  None of the girls looked healthy, but their health was largely hidden behind intricate, swirling tattoos that covered large portions of their bodies.

The guard had left already, and Logus considered for a moment talking to one of the girls.  But behind them, lurking in shadows, he saw other men, with flinty eyes.  They didn’t have uniforms or obvious weapons, but were all the more alarming for it.

Logus stepped back out through the gate.


< Ep 2 Part 17 | Ep 2 Part 19 >

Episode 2 – Vitriol, part 17


“Dad, look at this!” Hannah said, pointing to the glass cube.

Turning to look at it, he was not sure what he was seeing for a moment.

Things were moving in the cube, crawling and scurrying in odd little ways.  They were not, however, alive.

“Tedian Moon Fluffs,” the proprietor said.  She looked so very aged, and yet Urle’s system estimated that she was only in her late 70s.  “They come from our home on Tede, and before we were driven out I brought the only mating pair!”

“They’re so cute!  Dad, can we get one?” Hannah asked.

“Yeah, they’re really cute!” Persis added.

He’d forgotten to tell them about Brooks’s order banning alien pets.  It was embarrassing to be as enhanced as he was and still forget things so easily.

These weren’t technically pets, though, he considered.  Just little machines.  If they were reasonable in price he wouldn’t actually mind them.

“How much for a Fluff?” he asked.

“They do best in groups,” the old woman said.  “I couldn’t possibly sell just one – perhaps a pair, at the least?  One for each of your beautiful daughters.”  The woman offered them a smile, though something about it seemed sad.  For a moment Urle actually sensed some honesty in the woman.

But the Fluffs were just cleverly-made machines that did a good job of acting like they were alive.

On the one hand, the scam annoyed him.  But then, if they weren’t alive, it meant they couldn’t die, either . . .

“So how much for a pair?” he asked.

“For such rarities, I normally charge 50 credits a piece – but for you, Outlander, I’ll give you a pair for just 74.”

Even with the discount that price caused him to recoil slightly.  74 credits!

He was not lacking for them – in the Sapient Union they did not even use money, and External Trade Credits were something only issued for use in places that still did.  But he’d only taken 100 credits, and he’d given 15 to each of the girls already.

“That price seems steep,” he noted.

“But daaad, I’ve already named this one!  She likes me,” Persis said, pointing to a blue one.  “Her name is Penelope.”

“And what a lovely name that is!” the old woman said.  “May I ask yours?”

“She’s Persis,” Hannah said, gesturing to her younger sister.

“And she’s Hannah,” Persis said, shoving her older sibling.

“Hey, don’t shove!”

Urle put his arms on both girls shoulders.  They calmed slightly.

“Hannah and Persis?  Those are both wonderful names,” the old woman said.  “Those names both come from the Book of Dawn, the work of our Prophet Tede.  Did you know that?”

His girls didn’t reply, their confusion palpable.

It was obviously something that wasn’t true; the names were ancient, Urle knew, and Ted Corran hadn’t been born until the mid-22nd century.

The woman must have sensed their confusion – and potential objections.  “The Lord of Dawn created all things,” she added.  “From the great to the small to the adorable – including Moon Fluffs!”

Wearing a kindly smile still, her eyes went to Urle.  There was something almost pleading in them.  She was eager for the sale, but there was also something more to it that seemed desperate.

Given the conditions here, Urle realized that such sales were probably all that kept her fed and sheltered.  It was easy to forget in the SU that not everyone had the basics of life guaranteed.

He was about to agree, feeling like he was doing the right thing while also being patronizing, when a new voice spoke.

“These are machines,” Ambassador Kell said.

Urle didn’t know how he had approached without him feeling it; he almost always felt when Kell was near.

The Ambassador picked up the glass cube off the table, peering at the puffs inside.  “They are clever, but just machines.  There is no life in them.”

“How dare you!” the old woman squawked.  She jumped to her feet.  “Put that down immediately!”

She continued to rave furiously, but Kell now only regarded her as if he was eyeing an unappetizing meal.

“Ambassador, I believe you should put that back,” Urle urged.

Kell did so, but the woman continued to be furious.

“How dare you call me a liar, sir!  Is this how you Union types act towards old women at home?” she demanded of Kell.  “Or just those in the colonies?”

They were drawing attention, and Kell still only looked slightly curious.

“You should be calmer,” the Shoggoth replied.  “You are dying.”

The woman’s eyes widened, and both Hannah and Persis gasped in shock.

Urle felt the same way.  “Ambassador!” he snapped.  “I insist you leave this woman alone at once.”

Kell glanced to him.  “I speak only truth, Executive Officer.  I believe she should see a doctor soon.  There is something that grows inside her.”

The old woman sat down, in shock, as Kell walked away.

Urle was too stunned to speak, either.

But he looked to the woman; his sensors had detected no abnormalities in her health on a cursory glance, but he set for a deeper scan and saw that Kell was correct.  The woman had a malignant stomach cancer.  It was small currently, and likely she had few if any symptoms yet.

He let his sensors scan over others nearby.  He kept his scans to passive detection of chemical signals.

Several others near them had tell-tale chemical signatures that suggested they were likewise suffering from cancers.

“Let’s go, girls,” Urle said.

There were many sets of eyes on them, but most were on Kell, who continued to browse along the stalls, seemingly ignorant – or uncaring – of their stares.

Urle was furious at the being, yet part of him was unsure if it was correct.  He sent a private message;

Ambassador, you should not be out alone – return to the ship and speak with me later.

If Kell got it immediately, he offered no reaction, just continuing to walk along the market stalls, looking at their wares.

Not wanting to wait any longer, Urle then continued moving his children along and back to the ship.


< Ep 2 Part 16 | Ep 2 Part 18 >

Episode 2 – Vitriol, part 16


The tunnels and districts of New Vitriol were narrow and cramped.  Each and every section had been laboriously cut into the rock with hand-held equipment, it seemed.  In some areas, they hadn’t even bothered to cover the stony metal walls, just fusing metal sheets into them or even just buffing the stone itself to be a sort of bulkhead.

There was no gravity, either – at least none appreciable – and they had to use handholds stuck into the walls, floors, and ceilings.

It was interesting, in a way; small stores and proprietors could be over their heads or under their feet.  Pirra just wished there was anything interesting in them.

What food stalls she saw seemed to mostly sell different flavors and textures of algae paste, with even pre-packaged survival rations being presented as delicacies.

The prices were all in local work credits, and the prices seemed exorbitant.  Something that looked like it might have been a decent meal cost twice as much as good work gloves.

Not that she was wanting to buy anything; even besides how unappetizing the food was, she had a hunch that the shop owners wouldn’t want to deal with xenos.

It might have been the glares they kept giving to her and Cenz that told her that.

She was glad that Alexander had opted to stay on the ship.  He’d been born on the Phobos colony around Mars, he had little interest in seeing what he called ‘a worse version of that’.

She thought he was just worried he’d say something stupid and cause a fight.  He wasn’t a combative man, except when it came to others reacting poorly to her.  As good a feature of him as that was, this was not the time or the place to go looking for a fight.

“This rock is fascinating,” Cenz said, leaned over and intently studying the wall.  “The composition makes me think it must be an inner-system object that migrated to the Kuiper Belt, rather than something that formed out here naturally.”

Pirra was hardly paying attention.  Something was making her nervous – it was hard for her to tell if it was just the confined nature of the tunnels, the local sentiment or something else altogether.

She was probably overreacting with the locals.  Despite the stares they had gotten, no one had said anything or made a move, and the majority of people just seemed content to ignore them.

Probably they had seen aliens before – certainly they did if any mass-media made it out this way.  Dessei produced even more than humanity in that regard.  Theatrics were a very popular past-time among them both.  And Qlerning dwarfed even Dessei and humans combined in that passion.

She just thought of it in a human term; peacocking.  Some beings just really liked attention.

Sometimes she wished she had been born with a more muted feather scheme.  Some were mottled brown and white – plain, but at least not standing out as much as her bright greens.

But one couldn’t change the colors of their feathers.

“There’s a higher concentration of phosphorus-bearing minerals than I would normally expect.  That’s a good sign!” Cenz continued.  “No wonder they picked this rock.  Phosphorous is vital to carbon-based life, as I’m sure you know.”

She had learned that at some point, but it wasn’t the kind of information that popped up in her mind a lot.

“This might account for the high bacterial growth,” Cenz continued.

The Coral continued to walk along, one of the fingers on his hand opening to reveal a suite of sensors.  As he began to scrape at the wall, evidently taking a sample, a few heads turned their way.

Pirra flicked on her comm.  “Sir, I feel like the locals might be finding your tests a little suspicious.  I think it’s better not to antagonize them.”

“Hm, that’s good thinking,” he replied, standing upright.

“Looks so sturdy,” he said, just loudly enough that the words could carry.  “They’ve done such a good job with this place.”

Perhaps he thought that would help placate them, but she wasn’t sure if they cared about his view of their architectural skills.

“Let’s move on,” she suggested, wrapping her wing drapes around herself and heading away.

Cenz said nothing, but followed her, a calm smile on his face screen.

She noted that her tracking signal for the Hurricane blipped out for a moment.

“Cenz, did you see that with the tracker?” she asked.

“Yes,” he replied.  “That was odd, I’m not sure why it happened.  But we have the signal back.  Would you like to head back towards the ship?”

“Yeah, I think so,” she answered.

As they moved, she saw figures coming out of shadows around them; humans wearing crude cloth masks.  Everything about them appeared to be trouble, from their fake loitering to the tools they gripped.  They seemed more ready to use them as weapons rather than labor.

“This way,” she said to Cenz, taking a turn.  The signal for the Hurricane blipped out again, and this time it stayed off.

“Damn it,” she hissed.

“I’ve got it,” Cenz said.  “It might be getting scattered by something in the asteroid itself.”

Pirra saw the tracker return, but it seemed to be suggesting a different path for her.  Had the signal changed, or had her system calculated a better path?

She couldn’t be sure.

The masked humans had followed them.  Her systems could see right through their masks, figure out the shapes beneath, but the faces of individuals she’d never met had no meaning to her – and importantly, faces scanned this way were frequently inadmissible in trials.

One of them had armor on, she saw, that of the station’s security.  Tape covered his badge and other identifying marks.  His rifle was unslung in his hands.

“Cenz, we might have trouble,” she noted.

“I saw them.  Let’s just keep moving and see if we can head back towards the ship.”

“Understood.”

Cenz took a sharp corner and she followed.  The men behind them seemed to hesitate, and she knew they had good reason; she’d let them see her hand on her sidearm as she’d ducked through.  This narrow tunnel would be a death zone for them if they forced her to use it.

Glancing down the path and following Cenz, she realized that this route had been a mistake; while defensible from the mouth, it was lined with bore holes large enough for a human to hide in.

She had no idea how deep they went.

“Cenz-” she started.

“I know.  Just get through as fast as you can.”

Her scanners tried to measure the depth of each hole, and she strayed nearer the shallow ones, but they were hard to get a good read on.  The metals in them were scattering her scans.

Passing with her back to one, she saw the man too late.  He wasn’t wearing a mask and looked different from the others, grungier.

“Hah!” he said in a cracking voice.  His hand lunged out, grabbing at her wing shrouds.  His hand closed upon a feather and yanked at it.

A stab of sharp pain went through her, but she didn’t let it take her attention.  The feather came off in his hand, and she lashed out with a boot, smashing the reinforced toe into his cheek.

The man’s head snapped back, but he wasn’t stopped.  The look in his eyes grew more crazed, and she realized that he was under the effect of some sort of drug.

He crouched against the rock and lunged for her.

She likewise kicked off the wall, just barely dodging his flailing arms.  Her sidearm came up-

“Don’t!” Cenz cried.

She didn’t shoot.  Instead, she smashed the butt of the pistol against the man’s temple.

In the lack of gravity, he went into a sideways tumble, crunching painfully into the wall and bouncing.  His eyes still looked crazy, but he was, at the very least, stunned.

His cries had attracted attention – or perhaps the others following them took it as a signal.  Silhouettes crowded the end of the tunnel, and someone cried out in anger.

“Get them!”

“Go!” she shouted to Cenz.  The Coral clearly had been figuring out an escape path, and he dove down into one of the holes in the wall.

Giving herself a great push, Pirra followed him.


< Ep 2 Part 15 | Ep 2 Part 17 >

Episode 2 – Vitriol, Part 15


The head of security stood outside the Governor’s office – Hoc Rem, as he recalled.  As Brooks approached, the man let him in without a word, holding the door but making no move to follow him.

Brooks looked the man up and down out of curiosity.  He was heavier set than most people he’d seen so far in the system, and as subtle as it was, it was an important detail.  After many generations away from Earth, it was common for colonial humans to take on slightly different characteristics to better suit their conditions.

The man caught his look and gave him a warning glare.

Neither man said anything, but their looks conveyed more than words could have.

He would be a man to keep an eye on, he thought.

Stepping past the man, Brooks entered the office.

Nec Tede’s seat of governance was notably less beautiful than what Brooks had seen on New Begonia.  It attempted some semblance of dignity, with its vaulted ceiling and arches carved and buffed to a mirror-like finish.

But the trophies, proclamations, monitors, and storage cubbies that lined every surface robbed it of any grandeur that it might have had.  The lack of gravity meant none of it was ever out of reach, and the room seemed to serve as an archive for the colony as well as the Governor’s office.

“Your head of security does not seem to be from here,” Brooks commented to Nec Tede as he came in.  “May I ask where he’s from?”

“You think so, huh?  Well, he’s local, and there’s no man I trust more,” the Governor replied, eyeing him.  “Now pop a sit.  It’ll hold ya down.”  The Governor gestured to a chair bolted onto the floor paneling.

Brooks saw that it was lined with touch fasteners, and decided against it, instead just holding onto the back to push himself to the floor in a standing position.

“You say that the CR has killed a person?”

“CR?” the Governor asked.

“We call them Cerebral Readers – they seem to have a kind of sixth sense for things that others cannot sense.”

“That, and they can kill people by lookin’ at ’em,” the Governor added grimly.  “She did in the last sheriff, ya see.  He came to question her about another death, but she wasn’t gonna listen.  Just looked at him – and like that he had an aneurysm.  Ugly kinda death.”

“And you’re certain it wasn’t a natural death?” Brooks asked.  “I’ve never heard of a CR being able to cause harm.”

Tede did his rather disturbing grin again.  “Captain,” he said.  “Are you implying that I would lie about this?”

“I don’t know why you would,” Brooks replied.  “But I have been sent to find out about this person.”

Tede stuck himself to his chair with a crackling sound from the touch fasteners.  “Well, we can come back to that Captain.  I have some other things you should hear about first.”

Brooks knew that the man was going to haggle with him for the CR.  She wasn’t a human to him, or a criminal, he reckoned.  She was a bargaining chip.  “Go ahead,” he said, keeping his voice neutral.

“This colony here – we face a lot of troubles.  Kicked out, not once, but twice from what was rightfully ours.  We all had a proper legal claim to this system, Captain.  Isn’t a single soul here or on the homeworld that would disagree.  Yet here we are.”

Legally, the man had a point, Brooks knew.  A colony was equally the property of all who set out to settle it.  But there was the matter of what the democratic majority of that colony chose to do – and what a minority chose to do.

If they had left the rest of the colony to found this place, then they couldn’t now be making claims on the parts they had left behind.

“I sympathize, Governor, but I’m not sure why you’re telling me,” Brooks said flatly.

The Governor continued his push.  “There are things we both want, Captain.  How’d you like to bring another system back into the SU, huh?  I’m sure it’d be a shiny pin on your cap.  And you’d get what you want – your CR.  She may be a criminal here, but bonds can be paid in other ways.”

“With membership in the SU?”  Brooks asked.

“That’s just the first part.  And trust me, you’ll be covered in glory.  Saving the last vestige of good people in a system overrun by religious fanatics?  You guys don’t care for this religious shit anymore – it’ll be an easy sell for ya.

“But what I need are colonists.  It’s not like I want you to come in and start blasting the other colonies.  I just want to make us the biggest, best colony.  It’s why we even picked this god-forsaken rock, Captain.  It’s big – big enough to be the start of a nice-sized space port.  Your entry point into this system.  When we control the trade coming through here, we can . . . get the other colonies to change their ways.  Help them to move forward.”

His face turned to an ugly smile.  “But I have to have the bodies.  We’re not even 30,000 people – not even enough to be a viable population.”

Brooks stared at him for a long moment.  “You’re free to apply for membership to the Sapient Union.  You always have been.  You have to meet the criteria for acceptance, however – and you are free to put out calls for colonists.  As long as you disclose all conditions and laws, confirmed by an SU emissary.”

The man scowled.  “That’s it?  You’re not willing to work with me at all?”

“I just laid out the way in which it will happen, Governor.  Now – when can I meet this CR?”

The man continued to scowl, staring at Brooks, and he realized that the man was trying to stare him down.

Brooks mentally tallied his odds.  There were only twenty in his party, and this was a colony of nearly 30,000.  Yet he did not feel afraid, not in the slightest.

The Governor blinked first.  He pressed a button on his desk.

“Rem, tell ’em down in the jail that someone’s coming to see the seer.”

“Right away, Governor,” a voice returned.

For the first time Brooks heard the man’s voice.  His accent was heavy, and nothing like the Governor’s – or anyone they’d encountered thus far in the Begonia system.

Definitely not local, and it explained a lot about why he hadn’t talked.  For such an insular colony to have an outsider this high in command, especially in security, likely meant he was a mercenary.

If the Governor needed that, Brooks thought, then his control of the colony might be in question.

Nec Tede’s eyes had flickered away, but now they came back.  “I’ll have someone take you down there.”


< Ep 2 Part 14 | Ep 2 Part 16 >