Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 8

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


“Captain Brooks, you and your vessel are welcome,” the sweating, bloated man said.

His name was Gedhen Hullmus, Acting President of the Human Merchant Welcoming Committee, as he had already said several times.  The man seemed to relish his title with a fervor that Brooks found disconcerting.

“Thank you,” he told the man.

The formal introductions and welcoming had become an overbearing tradition in Gohhi, where the most valued trade partners were granted extreme courtesy, while being charged inordinate fees that Brooks knew Ham Sulp suffered conniptions over.

It wasn’t that the fees couldn’t be talked down, of course.  But the Gohhians always found new, inventive ways to charge a fee or fine or service charge or . . . something.  It was complex enough that Dr. Y had once told him that he believed they had several powerful AIs actively working on developing them constantly.

“We are honored to be here,” he continued.  “And I hope that the friendship between the Sapient Union and the Gohhi Independent Trading Platforms will continue indefinitely.”

Hullmus’s eyes glittered.  “Of course, of course, don’t we all hope for that?  Of course we do!  Now, Captain, as Acting President of the Human Merchant Welcoming Committee, I am also able to present you with some fantastic special deals for your docking fees-“

“We have our requirements on here,” Brooks said, offering a data card.  He’d already duplicated and sent it to the Gohhi automated systems in physical card form.  The data cards were laser-carved with the data, unchangeable, as at times digital data had been found to be altered to bump up fees and rates.

He offered the card, and Hullmus now tried to stall, not wanting to take it, because once he did it would be official.

But Brooks pressed, politely, and eventually the man took the card, his anger evident behind a still-friendly smile.

Brooks was still offering generous terms, however, especially skewed towards the benefit of Hullmus and his patrons.  That would help it all move smoothly, and with the repairs they required and the medical needs of their wounded, he did not want to risk them twisting his arm by holding up supply shipments or something similar.

Of course, they would anyway, but not nearly as hard if their eyes were already sparkling with unexpected profits . . .

“Well, Captain, never have I been as happy to be the Acting President of the Human Merchant Welcoming Committee, as today was a most wonderful day – to meet a living legend!  Please, allow me to commemorate the occasion with a holograph.  I am sure that copies will sell quite handsomely, and I would be happy to share the profits-“

“No,” Brooks said, drawing a line.  His likeness was not going to be used for any sales.

“Of course, of course, but this way, we do have documents for you to sign, and our Human Arts and Entertainment Council – of which I am Elected Representative – would love to introduce you to several opportunities . . .”

Damn.

Brooks followed the man into the next room, signing each document with his Captain’s code, carefully scanning each one.  He caught and pointed out a few minor mistakes that would have raised their fees by a small but noticeable margin, then finally signed.

He’d hoped this would be the end, but Hullmus, without pause, began to regale him with an offering of their arts and cultural events.

Most of them were far from his interests – musical events by perfect holographic singers and dancers with proportions and features impossible on a real person, movies whose best thesis seemed to be the power of childhood friendship, and other such trivialities.

He declined, but the man had one last card to play.

“Also, as part of our Outward-Reach Arts Program to bring in non-human artists to comment on humanity, we have a special deal with the Qhenber Theatre Troupe, presenting their latest smash-hit Ussa and Usser: A Tragedy of Ancient Earth.”

Brooks paused.  He’d actually heard of the Qhenber Troupe.  They were a prestigious group, and the play of Ussa and Usser had been garnering a lot of attention.

Not all of it good – as great as many of the Qlerning playwrights were – there was always going to be a controversy about making so serious a play about another species’s history.

“. . . could even do a special performance solely for your crew, if you would so wish.  For only a nominal fee we could even-“

“We’ll accept,” Brooks said.  “Send my information to the Qhenber Troupe and ask them to contact me.  Tell them I want them to perform Ussa and Usser on board the Craton.”

“I am certain they will be deeply honored, Captain.  If you seek other entertainment beyond them, however, there are several pleasure guilds who-“

“That will not be necessary,” Brooks cut him off harshly.  “Now, as to the work we need-“

“Ah, yes!” Hullmus exclaimed.  “Conveniently, I am an acting chair on the Construction Guild!”  He bowed again, grinning.  “In the capacity of Third Chair With Honors, Twice-Crowned Richest Guild Member, may I offer my services in this regard.”

“How very convenient,” Brooks replied dryly.  “I forwarded data on the work needed to your people, I believe.”

“Which was received most solemnly,” the man said, his mirth replaced with an equally-fake seriousness.  “Shall we begin negotiations?”

“Such negotiations will be handled by my Chief Engineer Cutter, as he is most familiar with the work required,” Brooks said.

The man’s face faltered, and Brooks knew what he was thinking.

“Here he comes,” Brooks said, as the Beetle-Slug entered the room.

He suppressed a smile at the man’s concern.

An alien mind possessing a flawless memory and ability to calculate numbers easily that even a human auteur would struggle with was not an easy negotiator.

“Greetings,” Cutter said.  “I have prepared lists of work broken in hour ranges, difficulty of labor, locations and team sizes – adjusted for human norms.  Along with current costs of all such resources and fees associated with procurement and transfer.”

Hullman swallowed.  “Well, of course.  Though you know that prices can fluctuate on a dime-“

“Considered,” Cutter said.  “Prices in list adjust on the fly, checking commodity prices three times per second to ensure reasonable accuracy.  Shall we . . .  negotiate?”

Brooks stepped back.  “I will leave you two to your work.”


< Ep 7 Part 7 | Ep 7 Part 9 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 7

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


“Greetings, Captain,” the pre-recorded voice said.  “I am Vice Director Silva, and I have important information for you.”

Brooks felt his heart nearly skip a beat.  He knew who Silva was – one of the leading members of Sapient Union intelligence.

Brooks had never seen the man before; his height could not be told from the screen, but his face was broad and average, creased with deep lines, his hair a distinguished silver.  He did not seem like he’d stand out in any situation – certainly a plus in his line of work.

“We have concluded our study of the data and hardware you recovered from the colony of New Vitriol.  From it, we were able to determine several key details.

“The mercenary going by the name Hoc Rem is now under the alias of Joh Dak – and we have strong evidence that he is currently in Gohhi.”

The man’s face clenched, his next words delivered in the same calm, precise manner, but a sense of displeasure entered into them, even if vaguely.  “While we have assets in the system, none are in a position to pursue Rem at this time.  In addition, we have evidence that the man’s life is in danger.  He is connected to several deeply-embedded criminal enterprises on the behalf of his masters, and he has made many enemies among the locals.  We are unsure of the precise nature of the threat against him, but have a high confidence that an attack against his person will be launched soon.  Even if Rem survives, he will flee, and we will lose a golden opportunity.”

Silva paused, nodding towards Brooks.  “You are given clearance to send in a Response Team to locate Rem.  If possible, you are to bring him in – alive.  We will not permit him to go unpunished, but you may tell him that we are willing to commute his sentence – and protect him from his enemies.  With any luck, this will be enough to get him to come willingly.”

Brooks felt a roil of emotions.  Hoc Rem had bloodily killed in front of Brooks’s eyes, and tried to kill him and members of his crew in several different ways during their time on New Vitriol.

Only luck had prevented that.  The man was dangerous.

Silva had a few final words.

“Under no conditions are your personnel to engage in open conflict.  The repercussions would be more damaging than they are worth for Rem’s information.  We have a team inbound who will assist in this, with cooperation from some elements of Gohhi’s true power structure – including an information broker who goes under the name of Vermillion Dawn.  As time is critical, we will need to know his location if we are to stand a chance of taking him alive.”

The man leaned back in his chair.  “I have heard that you are capable, Captain Brooks.  I hope it to be true.”

The message ended, and Brooks leaned back to consider his plan of action.

There was much that Silva had not said – such as who it was that Hoc Rem was working for, or even what form of criminal enterprises he might be involved with.  There were thousands of factions in Gohhi, ranging across the political spectrum, and across every known religion and philosophical system.  Among many were extremists who might be willing to kill a man like Rem if he crossed them.

And some of whom would want to kill him, as well, Brooks knew.  His history with the place had been from many different angles, and sometimes it had been messy.

But he felt a genuine sense of excitement, as well.  Gohhi was a place that was ever in flux with time, and many things would be different from what he had known.  But he still knew how her heart worked; the way power shifted and flowed, the ways the money moved, and the ways a life might be taken.  Most importantly, he knew what sort of people would know all the names of the current players.

He was going to be busy.


< Ep 7 Part 6 | Ep 7 Part 8 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 6

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


The drop out of zerospace did not feel that exciting to Apollonia at this point.

But Brooks had made a point of inviting her to the bridge for their arrival, and she did not want to be rude.

Every one of the officers were tense, and though she was distracted thinking on other things, it felt impolite not to be paying attention.

“Surfacing in 3 . . . 2 . . . 1!”

She felt the strange pull as they came back into realspace, and then the spherical screen that surrounded the command center came on.

Ahead of them she could see a distant space station.  It was large, apparently – not as big as the Chain, but it was big.  Other dots in the distance, slightly too large and dim to be stars, glittered – other space stations.

She’d heard of Gohhi Station, of course.  Though there had once been a single station here, it long pre-dated humanity even arriving in the system.  And like how her own home system had split and split again, when people in Gohhi got tired of the leadership or felt too crowded, many simply left.  Thus the occupied area of this empty patch of space had grown and grown until it was teeming with stations great and small.

“Gohhi Main,” Ji-min Bin announced.  “We are in the queue for docking, with three ships ahead of us.  Docking wait is approximately four hours.”

“About how long it’ll take us to even get close enough,” Urle noted.

“Well, the Gohhi have to play their games,” Jaya commented.  “If we say anything they can rightly point to our velocity and make us appear unreasonable.”

“Really?” Apollonia said.  She froze, wondering if she should have spoken.

But the officers merely looked to her curiously, waiting to see if she’d elaborate.

“I mean, uh – do they not like you here or something?  Because it sounds like they’re trying to just find a way to be rude without actually causing you an incovenience.  It’s . . . you know.  Rude.”

“That is exactly what they’re doing,” Brooks said.  “Making a point in the most cowardly way possible.”

“And they’re our allies?” Apollonia asked, looking at him.

“I wouldn’t say allies,” Brooks said.  “But they are merchants and we have much to trade.  They are, however, threatened by the fact that our economy is not based on private ownership – and so they attempt to keep us at arms-length.  One way they show that is with these petty games.”

“Why so cowardly, though?”

“Because,” Jaya supplied.  “The Sapient Union represents, by far, the majority of humanity, along with Dessei, Sepht, and . . . well, all Bicet, as far as I know.”

Cutter looked over at her as she spoke, and clicked his mandibles, apparently in agreement.

“No factionalizing,” he said.  “Healthy for species.”

Apollonia was unsure what to say to that, thinking of how little she knew of Beetle-Slugs.  People had always described them as being uniform, lacking individuality and personality.  In a way, a metaphor for how the Sapient Union was viewed.

She could see it wasn’t true of the SU as a whole.  But she still hadn’t known any Beetle-Slugs long enough to know if there was any truth to the claims about them.

Cenz spoke.  “Gohhi has the largest non-solar population in the known galaxy!  And given the mix of species, both from within and without the Sapient Union, it has one of the most varied as well.”

Apollonia squinted at the distant stations, then brought up her tablet to get a zoomed view.  They were big, sure, but not as large or fancy as the Chain or Korolev Station.

“I kind of expected to see more planets,” she admitted.  “Rather than just more space stations.”

“Really?” Cenz asked.  “While most intelligent species do hail from planets, it is true, the majority of advanced beings in the galaxy live in constructed stations.  Typically around a star, but also extra-stellar like this.  They certainly outnumber terrestrial beings by a substantial margin!”

Apollonia could see how it made sense.  A world could only support what, ten or fifteen billion comfortably?  At least if you didn’t want to wreck everything.  But some systems had tens of trillions of beings . . .  Even if you colonized other worlds, the majority would have to be in space . . .

Urle pointed to the screen, and a circle appeared, zooming in.

“Glorian task force,” he noted.  “Appears to be fifteen warships, from battleships to light cruisers.”

“What are they doing here in such force?” Cenz asked.  “Though that is not enough to threaten Gohhi, it is . . .”

“Threatening all the same,” Jaya said.  “Such intimidation tactics were once common in human history, often called ‘showing the flag’.”

Brooks was watching them intently, Apollonia noted, and his face was full of distaste.

She knew about the tensions with the off-shoot of humanity . . . and of course she had heard of the Glorians.  A substantial amount of the entertainment she’d known back on Hellrock had come from their space – always violent, always jingoistic, usually centered around some team of soldiers or investigators who were former soldiers, and usually foiling some kind of alien terrorist plot in the name of defending their civilization.

“They’re nothing to worry about,” Brooks declared.  “If they were to start violence, it won’t be here – they’d get nothing except Gohhi turned against them.”

“All the same,” Urle noted.  “I think we should keep a few sensors trained their way.”

“Absolutely,” Brooks agreed.  “They’ll try to drone-dive us by ‘mistake’ a few times to see what they can learn.  Deploy our own drones in a normal formation, but ready to move into blocking positions.  I’d like to cause them some frustration.”

“Aye, sir.”

Apollonia was looking at their trajectory, noting that they were headed towards the Gohhi main station – even though there was another station not far away that was marked as belonging to the Sapient Union.

“Don’t we need repairs on the ship?” she asked, looking up at the Captain.

“Yes,” Brooks replied.

“Then why are we going to the Gohhi hub, and not an SU repair station?”  She looked out at the glinting hub for Gohhi.  She knew of the place by reputation, and from that she knew it was far more like New Vitriol than the Sapient Union.  The graft and price gouging alone would probably dwarf the cost of actual repairs.

“It’s Gohhian law,” Urle answered.  “There are guilds for things like ship repair, and if we wanted to maintain our own station, we’d have to register as a corporation.  Which, well, technically we do, but that requires very strict information sharing on our services and technicians, which we do not desire to share.  So while we maintain a repair station for certain things, we don’t actually cater to our own ships.  Instead, we cater to independent ships who don’t have a home port, which helps popularize the Union and means we can keep key proprietary technologies to ourselves.”

“So . . . we’re just going to let strangers on the Craton instead?” Apollonia asked, frowning.

“We vet all workers that come through the guilds, but we also don’t let them into sensitive areas.  By hiring a contractor we can stipulate where they can go, what they can do, and what information they can share.”

“It’s hardly ideal,” Brooks added, dryly.  “But that’s the cost of maintaining a presence in Gohhi.  They will try to cheat us, and to a certain extent we will pay higher fees to get our windows replaced, but we’ll also take our own actions to keep the graft down and force them into something roughly analogous to honesty.”

“Windows . . . irony is that everything we buy will probably have been created in an SU system anyway,” Urle grumbled.

“What do we do to make them be honest?” Apollonia asked.

“They rib us, we rib them,” Urle said.

“We push for improved worker’s rights by demanding very strict safety protocols and paying them fair wages – which is far more than they typically make,” Brooks explained.  “This means paying the contractor company more, too, but also wins us friends among the people who matter most.”

“I imagine a lot of them would want to leave with the ship . . .”

“It does happen,” Urle said.  “Which, frankly, is something the Gohhians hate.  But like anyone else, if they want to come to the SU, they have to go through the right channels.  We can’t take on refugees unless they’re being politically persecuted.”

Brooks shifted in his seat.  “Which reminds me – Cutter, would you take the lead on the negotiations over prices?”

The Beetle-Slug engineer turned in his seat to look at Brooks, then nodded sharply.  “With pleasure.”

Brooks smiled, looking to Apollonia now.  “They hate dealing with Cutter.  And he loves it.”

“Captain,” Shomari Eboh said, turning in his seat.  “You are receiving a priority message from Sol.”

Brooks nodded and looked at his HUD.  His face turned more serious, Apollonia thought – contemplative.

He rose.  “I will be in my study.”


< Ep 7 Part 5 | Ep 7 Part 7 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 5

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


They were watching him now.

Iago knew that he couldn’t fool them forever.  The ship itself would note altered schedules, unusual behavior, and especially in his case as a disgraced officer, they’d be watching.

Eyes, everywhere.  They watched and watched and watched and looked for a mistake, a fault.  Just one moment of weakness, looking at the strange shapes of reality around that accursed ship in the Terris system . . .

How many times had they been drilled?  The things related to zerospace, tenkionic matter, Leviathans, it was poison.  Toxic.

Cursed.

Any sort of contact one could think of, hell maybe even considering on it could lead to someone falling into a well of madness that they would never rise back out from.

And he had looked.

He coughed, spitting up something.  It might have been phlegm, but somehow he felt it was worse, different.

Elliot was in his room.  His son kept to himself a lot.  He had no friends on the ship until the other children returned, but – hard as it was – it was for the best right now.  All it would take would be Elliot saying a little too much and they’d swoop in and take away his son, his only reason for still going.

For Elliot’s protection, they’d say.  But who would protect him from them, when they decided his son was infected or tainted by his father’s failure?

His mysterious contact hadn’t said anything else to him since that one note, and he kept checking it, wanting to be sure it was real and not just some figment of his imagination.  Everything felt that way anymore – not real.  Food felt tasteless and weak.  Like chewing air.

Yesterday he’d been shocked when he’d put his hand into water that he knew was cold, but felt nothing.  Up to the wrist, and the basin might as well have been empty.

Nothing.  Nothing!

How much longer would he feel anything at all, he wondered.

Elliot was all that mattered.

All that was left was to wait.  There wasn’t long now, they’d arrive at Gohhi soon.  Then he’d leave, take Elliot, and . . .

And what?

The thought faded, and he could not recall thinking it.  They’d leave the ship on Gohhi, then they’d be safe and free.  That was all that mattered.

He coughed again, spit up something, but when he looked at his hand it was empty.


As soon as Apollonia began reading about Abmon, she realized that this was going to be harder than she had expected.

Despite the fact that he was a five-legged pillar of rock with tentacles, he had been . . . so personable that in her mind his people were just like humans, only different looking.

Part of her had thought about going to visit their homeworld, which she had only just read was called Golgutt, to tell his family to their face that she owed her life to Squats on Sand holding the door even after being shot through by armor-piercing cannons.

But apparently that wasn’t an option.

She had known most of them lived on planets rather than space stations, which had created an image in her mind – but they didn’t have happy little families of mother and father and two children and a space crab dog in a little house.

Abmon had complex life cycles where they started as near-microscopic spawn, only a handful of which actually matured into adults.  The majority of their kind remained tiny, barnacle-like, sticking to rocks for a few years and then dying off without even reproducing.  The eggs all came from sessile adults who had entered into a prolonged state of mindlessness, being little more than immobile, giant armored egg sacs.  They might stay that way for decades before one day waking up and returning to their mobile, intelligent form.

Which meant that He That Squats on Yellow Sand had never known his parent.  Or parents – Apollonia was not actually sure if there were two parents or one or possibly . . . seven.  The writings were a little vague, but there were odd unique stages involved that did something or other in the process, but the Abmon were rather private on the topic.

Squats on Sand had been the first fully-developed spawn of his family, so he’d never known his siblings as anything other than wild larvae.  He’d left his world not long after attaining adulthood to go serve in the Abmon navy, which was very normal for them, but even though siblings of his had grown up since then, he’d only ever written to them.

Her head was practically swimming, which was fitting since Golgutt was also a high-G world, with an atmosphere so thick near the surface that it was functionally more like an ocean.  Not only was the pressure enough to kill a human, but it was toxic and there were huge, dangerous creatures ‘swimming’ through the air that would happily devour anything they met, alien or not.

The Abmon had evolved from bottom-dwelling things like barnacles, creating civilization largely to survive against those super-predators.

It was believed that it took them a million years to develop to the point where they could leave their world, only to find that the universe was far more hostile to their kind than it was even to humans.

While the pressure suits existed for humans to go down to the surface, they were incredibly hard to make, so only a few hundred people did it per year, and only for very good reasons, not . . . just to talk to someone’s family.

And all of this meant that she had no idea what it was like to live on their world, no frame of reference at all for their life.

Jaya had sent her the contact information, and she had a message open, ready to put in the words and hit send.  If only she could come up with something.

What the hell was she going to say to beings so alien?

Anytime she thought of something, she began to second-guess herself – she wasn’t sure how they might even react to her words.  Most Abmon cultures emphasized sacrifice, bravery, but often joked about the dead in disparaging ways – which they meant as the greatest compliment, apparently.

She realized that she was getting an alert that someone was at the door.

As the buzz went off for the third time, Apollonia hurried over, nearly tripping over a pair of coveralls on her way.

“Sorry!” she called.  “I was . . . busy.”

She reached the door and opened it, surprised to see that it was Zeela Cann.

The name popped to mind without too much thought, which she took as a good sign.

“Oh, uh, hi,” she said.

“Hello,” Zeela replied, smiling professionally and seeming not at all disturbed by how disheveled Apollonia looked.  “I’m sorry to disturb you, but I was wondering if you had seen my messages?”

“Uhh . . .”  Apollonia wracked her memory, and brought out her tablet.  She saw there was a message icon, and it had a 60 with a plus sign next to it.

“I guess I don’t really check my messages,” she said.  “Never really had much use for a message account.  I guess it just comes with . . . being on the ship?”

Zeela frowned, visibly confused.  “Well . . . some of them may be important.  I’ve been trying to contact you about your credits.”

Apollonia’s eyes widened.  Zeela was here to collect on a debt?

Fear seemed to paralyze her, as the illusion of the wonders of the Sapient Union began to crumble.

Would they now demand payment for months of her being allowed to stay here?  And if she couldn’t pay, what would they do?

“You have an outstanding surplus of over 20,000 credits,” Zeela said, throwing a digital image to her tablet.

Numbly, Apollonia looked down at it.  It was like she was having an out of body experience as she saw the number.

“I was wondering why you hadn’t been spending them, and I feel like perhaps you were not aware of your account?”

“I owe twenty thousand . . . credits . . . ?” she asked dumbly.

“Owe?  No, that’s a positive amount, dear.  These are your labor credits for the last two months you’ve been aboard.”

“I get labor credits?” she asked.  Her brain could still not comprehend.

“You get a stipend because you just became a citizen, but you also count as working full labor-hours due to your . . . well, the special status you have as a Cerebral Reader.  Technically, you are always working.”

Realization was starting to dawn on Apollonia.  “I have twenty thousand credits?!” she yelled.

Zeela looked concerned.  “Yes . . . and you’re not using them.  I thought . . . perhaps you’d want some things?  I know you’ve been eating and such, but beyond the basic necessities you can use your credits for goods or other services.”

Zeela’s eyes went across the room behind her and Apollonia looked back.

Aside from the basic furniture the place had come with – and a plastic crate she’d asked for from Dr. Y, who had given it to her without an issue – she had very little.

“Perhaps some decorations, even.  Or nicer furniture,” Zeela suggested.  “The default furniture is only meant as a placeholder.”

Apollonia stared dumbly down at her tablet some more.  “I had no idea,” she said.

“I thought maybe not.  There are quite a lot of things on the ship that you may want to learn about.  I’m afraid you missed our orientation talks with the others from New Vitriol-“

“Hellrock,” Apollonia insisted.  “That’s what I call it.”

“Hellrock,” Zeela said, simply accepting the new name.  “But there are recordings of them, and a manual to help you adjust.”

“I . . . I guess I’ll look at them,” Apollonia muttered.

Zeela clearly wasn’t going to let her off so easily.  “I highly suggest you do, dear.  You’ll be helping yourself by understanding your rights and responsibilities in the Sapient Union.”

The woman hesitated.  “I could spare some time to give you a basic overview, if you want . . .”

Apollonia had a feeling that she’d already taken a lot of the woman’s valuable time, and shook her head.  “No . . . No, that’s okay.  I’ll just . . . look at the videos.”

Zeela nodded.  “All right, well happy shopping!  And if there are things you don’t find in our catalogues that you’d like, we are coming to Gohhi Station soon.  You can turn some of your Ex in for External Trade Credits and buy goods from one of the shopping stations.  Though . . . sometimes their prices are quite high.”

“Okay,” Apollonia mumbled.  “And, um . . .  thank you.”

Zeela smiled again, but this time it was bright and honest and beaming.  “You’re quite welcome, Ms. Nor.”


< Ep 7 Part 4 | Ep 7 Part 6 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 4

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


“I know I felt a tingle, doctor!  Are you sure that I wasn’t irradiated?”

Pirra recognized Tred’s voice immediately, and seeing Dr. Y towering over him – gangly and somehow lacking menace, despite his great height – listening patiently.

Her system had led her to the doctor’s exact position, which . . . given it had been in Engineering, had immediately made her suspect that Tred was having some sort of crisis, real or imagined.

“While I will run further tests,” Y told the man, “I feel quite confident that there was no radiation leak, as there is no evidence of it.”

“If it was intense enough, it could have killed the sensors!” Tred protested, as Pirra approached.  “I checked them, and they seem fine, but there is a small chance that they still register as functioning by-“

“If such an event did occur,” Y said smoothly, “then the amount of radiation involved would have been far above human tolerances, yes?”

Which even Pirra knew was true.  The kind of thing that only a serious reactor malfunction or an astronomical phenomenon could produce.  Not the sort of thing that could have happened personally to Tred without anyone else knowing.

She stopped a few feet away, making her own presence at least a little imposing by dint of her stare, though unfortunately Tred had yet to notice her.

“If such a burst occurred, then you almost certainly would not be conscious,” Y continued.  “Or many of your cells would be dying.  There is no sign of any of that, I am pleased to say!”

“But the tingle!” Tred said desperately.

He finally noticed Pirra, and turned in his chair, asking her quickly; “Does it look like my hair is falling out?”

Pirra did not take her eyes off his face.  Her crest rose and spread slightly; a look that any Dessei would have known was the equivalent of a sharp glare.

Tred did not recognize that, however, and she tried to force her best approximation of a human scowl.

“No,” she said.

“I know I felt it,” he quickly replied.

“On your head specifically?” Y asked.

“Yes!  I think it could have been a collimated stream of-“

“Or,” Pirra interrupted, “Have you perhaps used some Dessei feather wash by mistake?  Alexander did once, and his head tingled quite severely afterwards.  He even lost his hair for several months.”

Tred’s eyes widened and he stood.  “I . . . I’m not sure,” he said in alarm.

“Well it’s not dangerous beyond that,” Pirra said.  “But perhaps you should go check to be sure?  Run a spectrographic analysis on your shampoo.  Make sure it is what it appears to be.”

The man nodded, pale now, and ran from the reactor room.

Dr. Y seemed to be side-eyeing her.  “I have checked all requisition logs, and Boniface Tred has not even gotten new shampoo recently.  Nor was his last batch anything but normal human hair wash.”

“Doctor, I need to talk to you,” Pirra said, ignoring his words.  “About Iago Caraval.”

Y hesitated, and she knew that he took the confidentiality of medical cases extremely rigidly.

“As you are head of Response Team One and personnel for all teams falls under your purview, I suppose I may discuss some limited details of his status,” he finally said.

“Acting head,” Pirra insisted.  “He’ll be back in command eventually.  I’m only keeping his seat warm.”  Loyalty compelled her to say it.

Dr. Y did not comment on her clear lie, only waiting and watching.

“He’s hiding something,” she said.  “I think he’s using a Blank Box to spoof nearby sensor readings.”

“. . . I am aware,” Y told her.  “I have been monitoring his situation.  And while the devices are restricted for good reason, his . . . current rank status is somewhat in flux, and we hesitated to confiscate it.”

“. . . and?” Pirra said, irritated.  “Why did you not tell me?  Why haven’t we done anything like talk to him?  He’s clearly having a very difficult time!  We should bring this to the Captain and Commander Kai!”

“They are aware,” Y told her.

“Why haven’t they done anything?”

“I am not at liberty to tell you that,” Dr. Y said.  “Though I admit – I am not clear of their motivations in this.  Your concern for your former commander is admirable, but-“

“He needs help,” Pirra insisted.

“I agree,” Y said.  His voice had a somber quality that she rarely heard from him.  There was no light-hearted joke to be made or deflection to be attempted.  “However, our psychologist is not currently available.  The Captain, therefore, has the right to make decisions on his behalf until there is a clear medical need for me to intervene.”

She knew Dr. Logus was injured, and that Y was close friends with him.  But she was friends with Iago, and she was not about to let this go.

“I’m going to bring this up to the Captain,” she said.  “Will you go with me?”

Y hesitated.  “I have already spoken with him, Commander Pirra.  I have been instructed to drop this line of inquiry, and therefore – I cannot.  However, I wish you greater luck than I have had with finding a satisfactory answer.”


The door pinged for her to enter, but Pirra paused a moment, trying to calm herself before going into Captain Brooks’s study.

She had run here, nearly knocking over two people, and causing no small amount of alarm.  Seeing the head of Response in a hurry rarely boded well.

But she hadn’t wanted to waste a moment.  Every bit of time wasted was one where she could be helping Iago out of whatever pit of despair he’d fallen into.

Smoothing her feathers as best she could, she opened the door and entered.

Brooks looked up from his desk at her, barely lifting his head, only his eyes.

“Lieutenant Commander,” he said with a slight nod.

“Captain, I need to talk to you about Iago.  He’s using a Blank Box – I figured that out just a little bit ago, and I think that he needs more help.”

Brooks was watching her calmly, and she felt compelled to continue.

“With your permission, I’d like to stage a medical intervention and bring him in for a full scan-up, full psych – the works.  He’s . . . he’s not acting right, sir, and I think that we have to do something!”

Brooks’s expression had not changed, and he looked down.  “I’m afraid not,” he said.  “I’d like you to drop this topic.”

“What?” she demanded, shocked.

“We are aware of the Blank Box and Iago’s aberrant behavior,” Brooks said.

“Aren’t you alarmed, sir?”

“I am concerned,” he admitted.  “But Iago’s condition is . . . very special.  Dr. Y has run every medical test he can and finds nothing wrong with him.  He has refused to talk to the doctor further, and our only psychiatrist is currently barely alive.”

“All the more reason to let me help him.  I’m close to him, Captain, he trusts me-“

“I’m sorry, Pirra, but I think that’s a bad idea,” Brooks said.  “I ask that you trust me on this.”

Pirra felt anger surging, wanting to tell the Captain to go to hell, that she was going to help her friend no matter what . . .

But she was an officer.  She had taken an oath of loyalty.

Her hands clenched, trembling.

“Request to know your reasoning, sir?” she asked.  “To . . . to better understand the orders.” 

Or argue them.

Brooks sighed and leaned back, watching her.  His brow was furrowed, and it was clear just how concerned he was about this.

“Right now, Iago has withdrawn into himself.  He underwent several traumas, and one of them is something about which we understand very little.  While all tests come back normal, people affected by Leviathans often appear that way – yet it doesn’t mean they’re fine.

“If we should push him, right now, then he may feel trapped – and worsen his condition.  We are all stuck here on this ship until she reaches Gohhi.  Once we get there, there are psychiatrists in the medical facility that may have a better time helping him than we would.”

He raised a hand to forestall her arguments.  “We are continuing to monitor him, however.  He has no access to weapons, and I do not believe that he is any danger – to himself or to others.”

He shook his head.  “So all I can think to do is wait just a little longer.”

His eyes met hers again.  “Do you understand now?”

Pirra hated his reasons, wanted to argue against them.  But she would not win that argument.

“I understand, sir,” she said.

He hesitated, studying her, and she knew he was wondering if he’d have to make it an order.

But he said nothing else, and neither did she.

Feeling numb, Pirra left his study.


< Ep 7 Part 3 | Ep 7 Part 5 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 3

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


The reports were generally all positive.

Repairs to the ship’s most vital systems had been completed, the hull patches were holding well, and the internal damage to the Equator Ring had almost been entirely repaired.  Even Watchito’s, heavily damaged by the detonation of the Hev boarding pod, was about to re-open.

There was a great amount of heavy work remaining to be done – replacing the outer seal with proper hull plates and very precise technical work on computer systems – but for being outside of a shipyard, it was very good.

Shifting away from the internal matters, Brooks looked at incoming messages.  It was an incredible thing to receive semi-regular mail so far out in space.  That they’d managed to build the millions of relay stations across their territories, to beam out compact streams of data through micro-portals in zerospace, and then detect and decipher the information was nothing short of miraculous.

There were messages for him from command, but none vital.  He’d already received a message from Admiral Vandoss, congratulating him for the successful mission, and promising further support for the T’H’Tul to leave their old system.  His old friend, Siilon, who was currently in charge of SU assistance to their migration would be glad about that, perhaps she’d be able to escape the place sooner than she had hoped.

Another message was noted as confidential; curious, he brought it up, but it would not open for him.

‘For Ambassador Kell’s Eyes Only’ it said.

It shouldn’t have even come to him, but then he saw attached instructions, for him to pass it on to Kell . . .

That the Ambassador never checked his messages was well-known.  Brooks himself could attest to this from how rarely the Shoggoth answered him.

And since the battle, Brooks had been unable to speak to him at all.

The Ambassador was, at least, alive.  He continued to send out requests for several hundred kilograms of food daily, but even the delivery drones had not seen him, only sent the carts into the room and then left.

He sent an override to Kell’s room; it would give him an audio alert that he’d received an important message.  It was all Brooks could do, as Kell had not answered him any other time he’d gone in person.

So far, Brooks had been able to accept that.  Eventually, though, he would need to talk to the Ambassador, and would not be able to be put off.

Several minutes later, he noted that the sensors in the hall detected movement inside.

Brooks could not confirm if Kell had looked at the message.  But he’d at least moved.

Perhaps that was progress.


Apollonia’s finger danced over the call button for a moment before she sighed and pulled it away.  For twenty damn minutes now she’d been trying to make this call.

Her system had even noticed her reluctance and asked if she wanted to just give a verbal command.  But she’d told it to shut up, which wasn’t a very nice thing to do, though the computer in their systems did not seem capable of being offended.

Jeez, she hated talking to people.

And some people were easier to talk to than others.  Dr. Y was very easy, but she wasn’t sure if she could deal with his light-heartedness on a matter like this, and Dark forbid he start making jokes.  It would just make her feel far more awkward.

The only person she really . . . spoke to that would approach her question with the seriousness it deserved was, well . . .

Jaya.

If she didn’t do it, she knew she’d regret it.  She should have brought it up earlier, when they were running, but panting and out of breath, she hadn’t felt quite able to muster the words.

She didn’t have any excuses left.

“Fuckitalldarkdamnit,” she muttered, and hit the dial button.

The connection was almost instantaneous to Jaya’s system, and she hit the message option immediately.

“Hey, Jaya, it’s Apollonia . . .  I know you’re busy, so just get back to me whenever, but-“

The message cut off – and Jaya came on the line.

It was an image call, just as Apollonia had feared it would be.

“Apollonia,” Jaya said, looking surprised.  “Why were you leaving me a message when I’m available?”

Apollonia froze for a moment.  She had seen that Jaya was there.  But she’d rather hoped that she’d sneak this message in without having to say it face-to-face to the woman.

“Ah . . .  I guess I mis-read your status,” she said.  “And I didn’t want to bother you if you were busy.”

“It is no bother.  I can make time to talk to you.”

“It’s just not that important.”

Jaya frowned.  “Just say what ‘it‘ is, please.”

Apollonia hesitated, then ploughed in.  “Okay, I guess it is kind of important.  At least to me – I wanted to find out if I could write to Squats on Sand’s family.  I mean, I’m sure they got informed of . . . how he died.  That he was a hero.  But I wanted to tell them myself.  Tell them that . . . that he was a hero to me, too.  That he saved my life.”

Jaya was silent a moment, then nodded slowly.  “I understand.  That is not at all an unimportant request, and something you most certainly can do.  Though . . . perhaps you should learn a little more about Abmon families before you write to them.  It would help if you understood a little more of their culture and biology.  But I will send you all you need to know in regards to contacting them.”

“Thank you,” Apollonia said, her mouth feeling dry.  “Maybe it won’t mean much from me – if I say it to them.  But I feel like I have to try.  Someone . . . just needs to know, right?”

“Yes,” Jaya replied, and then studied her for a moment.  “But why didn’t you ask me about this earlier?”

“I was too nervous,” Apollonia admitted.

“And so that’s why you wanted to leave a message.”

“Yeah . . .”

Jaya seemed a little amused.  “If you wish to leave me a message in the future – do so.  You could even just put it in writing if you like.”

“I should . . . you know, try to be braver about person-to-person contact,” Apollonia said.

“You are right to say that – but let’s agree that you can take things one step at a time, all right?”

Apollonia felt like a weight had been lifted off her shoulders.  “Okay.  Yeah . . . thanks.”

“One last thing,” Jaya said, studying her.

“Yeah?”

“I just want to say; your heart is truly in the right place, Apollonia.”


< Ep 7 Part 2 | Ep 7 Part 4 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 2

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


Pirra’s head was pounding, an ache in the center of her forehead that was the result of too much work.

She checked her system for how long she’d been at it; she’d come in early, far more so than normal, hoping to knock out this bureaucratic work before her proper day started.

How naive she’d been, thinking she could power through bureaucracy.

She understood its existence, of course.  Even with a thousand layers of minor AIs trying to cut the clutter and reduce such work to a minimum, you could not run an interstellar society with quadrillions of members without a bureaucracy to match.  Organization on this scale was probably their greatest invention, even moreso than breaking the laws of physics.

It was near the hour she should clock out, she noted.  So much for getting to her normal work.

She didn’t feel as if she had really achieved much.  Only homeostasis within the system, which could be considered a feat so soon after a major combat event, but it felt like treading water.  Not forward movement.

And she’d just taken over command; there was a lot to do to continue to bring the position fully into her own before she could feel things were really back to normal.

Iago had had his own system, and . . .

The thought faded as she considered the man.  He’d had such a hard time after that mission to Terris.  Elliot, too – like a nephew to her.  They were from the same island, after all, weren’t they?

A world of archipelagos like her homeworld of Enope meant people became attached to those of their island in a way that she didn’t think most humans understood; perhaps those from islands did, but to her people it was far more than that.  To be from the same island as another meant a kinship that was as deep as blood.

And what was the Craton, if not their island?

The paperwork could wait, she thought, standing, and folding her wing drapes around herself.  Iago had been strange even during the combat, and she’d barely seen him since.  Part of her had been angry with him, with how he’d run into the action instead of away, as she had ordered.

But she would have to learn not what people should do, but what they would do.  She put him in the situation where he’d been presented with combat, and expected him to go against all his training and desire to help.

If she was going to have him out there, she should have put him in a team that could keep up.

Thankfully, Kessissiin had been with him, to give him someone equally brave, equally talented-

She felt annoyed thinking of the young Dessei officer.  He was capable, well-trained, disciplined, and bold.  It was a fantastic and terrible combination, as it meant he knew he could be more and would reach for it, even before he was ready.

And she did not know whose side he was really on.

Not that there should be sides; the fact that her opponent here was her brother – which really meant their mother – who were both from her island, too.

But her mother had always had ideas of just what Pirra should do with her life.

Realizing her crest had gone up in indignation, she soothed it down with a hand, then left her office.

She couldn’t do a thing about Kessissiin right now.  Hopefully, once his Detachment Training was complete, he could just go back to the Dessei Republic Fleet and not bother her anymore.

She began towards Iago’s cabin, trying to focus on the issue at hand.


Pirra’s hand had barely pulled away from the entry request button when the door opened.

“Iago!” she chirped, pleased.  “It’s good to see you!”

The man’s face had looked excited, even eager, as the door opened, but in just a moment it changed – closing to her, his eyes darkening.

In fact, everything about his body language, as far as she could tell of another species, had just turned borderline hostile.

“Oh, Pirra,” he said.  “I didn’t realize it was you.”

The room behind him was dark, she noticed.  All the lights were out.

“Expecting someone?” she asked.  “Maybe Watchito’s?  I heard they just started up again.”

“Something like that,” Iago replied passively.  “What can I do for you, Commander?”

Pirra blinked, surprised and uncomfortable.

“I just wanted to see how you were doing,” she said, now feigning her cheer.  “It’s been some time since we just talked.  I miss you.”

The last words were not very . . . her.  At least not something she’d care to share with anyone outside of perhaps Alexander.  But they came anyway, and a part of her felt hopeful it would have some effect on the man.

But nothing changed on his face.  “It has been awhile, yeah,” he said.

“May I come in?” she asked.  “I thought we could catch up, and-“

“No, sorry,” Iago said curtly, cutting her off.  “I’m afraid that Elliot and I are kind of busy.  Just waiting for a drone courier.”

“I could . . . just wait with you until it arrives, then?” she asked hopefully.

“Best if not,” he said.  “We’re growing Lily of the Valley in here.  Pretty sure that Dessei have an allergy to them, don’t they?”

Something prickled in the back of her mind.

‘Lily of the Valley’ was a very specific plant for Iago to have, one that she was particularly allergic to.  He knew that.

It was serious enough that she was automatically informed by the ship’s system if anyone grew them.  The risk of her having a severe reaction to the pollen was too high.

She hadn’t gotten any such notification.

“Oh, of course,” she said.  “Sorry for bothering you.  But . . . perhaps we could get a drink on Gohhi when we get there?”

Iago nodded sharply.  “Yeah.  That’d be great.  See you then.”

The door shut.

Pirra stayed a moment longer, wondering what else she should do.

Turning, she began to walk away.

Then, on a spur of the moment, she checked her system, looking for Elliot.

He was on the garden level, it seemed.  She checked back to look at his room.  Nothing looked wrong, but she connected to the Response system and checked the room again.

It said that there were two occupants; Iago and Elliot Caraval.

She paused trying to figure out why there would be an anomalous reading such as that.  Checking the power usage logs, she saw that the room had been using a normal day/night cycle, like every other room.  In fact, right now it should be brightly lit, and at no point since last night had the lights been off.

But she had seen that they were off.

There was only one explanation she could think of; Iago was spoofing the data with a Blank Box.

Whatever he was doing in there, he didn’t want anyone to know.

She started walking again, quickly.

“Pirra to Dr. Y.  May I see you?” she asked.

“Of course!” the doctor replied.  “I am in engineering, but I can-“

“No.  I’ll meet you there.”


< Ep 7 Part 1 | Ep 7 Part 3 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 1

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


Captain Brooks’s Log:

In the aftermath of battle with the P’G’Maig, the Craton is hurting.  Though we have patched the holes and are under power, there is deeper work to be done to bring the ship back to her full strength.

As a result, we are headed to the nearest shipyard capable of effecting proper repairs, at the neutral Gohhi Confederation.  The Sapient Union maintains a small repair shipyard in their territory, in accordance with our treaties with them.

The territory, inhabited by species other than humans for several millenia, is outside of an inhabited system in an area peculiar for being the terminal point for many commonly used safe paths in zerospace.  As unnatural as it is to think of routes in ordinary space, zerospace behaves as it will, it seems, and the inhabitants of the many space stations of Gohhi have turned this to their advantage.

Though non-federalized, with each station largely minding its own business – and there being several thousand stations – the locals jealously defend their neutrality.  So long as one is willing to pay them, they will allow anyone entry – meaning people can access goods and ideas from all over known space.  The advantages to staying on good terms with them are obvious, and ultimately our trip will be diplomatic as well as practical.

I remember it well – it is a wonderful and terrible place.  I’ve missed it.

*******

Apollonia was amazed at how quickly the Equator had been repaired.

Part of it had been sealed off by heavy blast doors for a time, as the hull had been ruptured here during the battle – the entire block of transparent titanium having been blasted out in the landing of a Hev boarding pod.  Amazingly, though, in less than twelve hours it was being re-opened.

And not simply some crappy patch-work that seemed like any stray micrometeoroid would take down; the missing areas were replaced with seamless gray bulkheads that looked like armor plating from a warship.

Even the planters that had been destroyed or sucked out had been replaced, though the plants in them would take some time to grow to match the glory of the originals.

She had heard that a non-combat Volunteer team – granted, one higher grade than hers – had tried to stop the Hev here and suffered heavy casualties.

There was even a plaque to commemorate them; one of the first pieces that had been put in after the place had been pressurised, and she stopped to take a brief look at it.

On this spot, four Citizen Volunteers

Len Ackerman

Jane E. Heffo

Julio Hernandez

and

Perso Kynz

Gave their lives to protect the Craton

and her people against overwhelming enemy forces

They will be remembered and missed

Seeing the place now, she was amazed any had survived at all.  Such a large area had been taken out, and the signs of violence were still evident – bullet holes, entire walls blown out, though not even a drop of blood or drone scrap or bullet fragment.  All of that had been meticulously cleaned, and now even those damaged internal walls were being replaced.

Watchito’s looked like it had been hit hard, almost gutted.  New walls were being trundled in on rolling drones, with more machines and workers inside, repairing and replacing quickly and efficiently.

She had seen a lot of work projects on her home colony, but at those times the process had been painfully slow, shutting down areas or paths for weeks or months.  Not so, it seemed, when the work was actually being planned centrally and people weren’t paid by the hour.

A few of the staff were standing outside, and she saw them directing some drones towards putting up a new sign over the door, which read:

WATCHITO’S II: THIS TIME IT’S PERSONAL PAN PIZZAS

She snorted out a laugh, and one of the employees turned and smiled brightly at her.

“Oh, Ms. Nor!” the woman said.

It took Apollonia a moment to remember the woman’s name – Ann, the woman from the bunker she’d gone into during the battle.

“Oh, hi Ann,” she replied.  “You can just call me Apollonia.  Or . . . Apple, I guess.”

Brooks had given her the nickname, and she’d kind of hated it.  But really, it wasn’t bad, was it?  And it seemed odd to be so formal when the woman was being so friendly.

“Apple, all right!” the woman said cheerily, then gestured at the sign.  “We’ll be back open for lunch tomorrow!  Though if you’re hungry, we do have a couple things available now, and I’d be glad to get something for a Volunteer!”

Apollonia felt her stomach drop.  She had been out to get something to eat, but . . .

She didn’t deserve special consideration.

“Thank you,” she said.  “But that’s okay.”

“Are you sure?  Well, all right, but be sure to come by once we’re fully open – we’re giving a free desser to all Volunteers!”

The woman started to suggest some other places that were open and were giving extras to Volunteers, when Apollonia noticed a familiar person jogging by.

“Oh, sorry, gotta go,” she said to Ann, trying to sound properly nice and polite.  “My jogging partner is here!”

“Have a good one!” Ann called as Apollonia sprinted after the jogger.

Jaya did not slow her pace even when she saw it was Apollonia running next to her.

“This is a surprise,” the woman said, eyeing her critically.

“Uh, hi,” Apollonia said.  They hadn’t spoken since Jaya had chewed her out for being too afraid and hiding during the battle.

But she found herself glad that the woman would still talk to her.

“Do you . . . mind if I join you?” she asked the commander, starting to breathe hard from the effort of running.

“You may.  But as I recall, previously you turned down my offer to go jogging together,” Jaya replied, and not sounding even the slightest winded, despite the sheen of sweat on her brow and bare arms.  “You referred to the idea of running when unnecessary as ‘a cruel and unusual punishment, devised in the deepest pit of hell’.”

“And I stand by that,” Apollonia said, panting more.  “But the only thing worse is an awkward conversation.”

Jaya studied her through half-lidded eyes, then picked up her pace, leaving Apollonia struggling to keep up.

“Slow down!  I’m not as strong as you,” she said.

“Exercising is how you get stronger,” Jaya told her.

“I don’t have-“

“I know you don’t have muscle enhancements.  But do you think those simply make you strong?  No.  You still have to work at it, make your body understand how you wish it to be – and then follow through.  It takes willpower.”

Apollonia bit back a retort, but on some level felt stung.  Jaya was absolutely right, and she knew she was being whiny.

But it was just so easy for the other woman, wasn’t it?

“I never ran or exercised before,” Apollonia said, trying to force it out simply as a statement.

“I can tell.”

“Because I never had the energy to spare,” Apollonia continued.

Jaya didn’t have a retort to that.  But she slowed slightly, and it made it easier for Apollonia to talk.

“You’re right – it’s in my head, the ability to make myself do it.  It’s just . . . beyond me being unfit and noodly, it’s against everything I’ve ever learned.  I always knew I had to conserve.”

She reached up and tapped her head.  “So I guess this is the real struggle.”

Jaya slowly came to a stop, and Apollonia gladly stopped with her, hands on her knees, panting.  She didn’t know how much longer she could have kept up even that light jog.  Her lungs and chest were burning with exertion.

“And though you don’t need to go hungry again,” Jaya said.  “Your body does not know or accept that yet.”

Apollonia nodded, not saying anything.

But when she could, she looked up to Jaya.  “I’ll run with you.”

“You still want to go on?  I typically lap the Equator Ring two times each morning,” Jaya said.

“I can’t do that.  But I’ll run for as long as I can,” Apollonia replied.

“And then next time, perhaps you could run just a bit further,” Jaya added.

Apollonia nodded, feeling physically miserable, but hoping that maybe someday she wouldn’t.  “That’s the best I can do.”


< Ep 7 Prologue | Ep 7 Part 2 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Prologue

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here!


Prologue

The ship hummed in the peculiar way of zerospace, something you could only barely hear or feel, or sometimes even taste.

At least Brooks had always had that sense of the quasi-realm.  Even in his study, deep in the heart of the ship, he could feel it as easily as at any other location.  There was no shielding against it, and though it had long been deemed harmless, he found it both bothersome and comforting.

It was something interesting to consider, a sensation that humanity, nor any form of life had ever evolved to be used to – the feel of another dimension.

But that was not something he could focus on now.  The business at hand demanded his attention.

“What are your results?” Brooks asked the two before him.

Urle and Cutter both set out a case containing pieces of the Hev weapons and equipment that had been recovered from their boarding parties.

As Brooks looked at them, holographic data tables appeared in his HUD over each piece.

“We can’t prove who made them,” Urle said flatly.  “There are no direct traces of any major power’s tech in them.  Not Glorian, not Aeena, not Tsabax Arms . . . none of them.”

Brooks looked to Cutter.  “And this in itself tells us much,” the Beetle-Slug told him in his precise, clipped voice.

“Go on,” Brooks said, steepling his fingers.

“We have considered every piece of tech, symbol, design detail, material,” the Beetle-Slug said.

Urle continued.  “On initial inspection, the designs are common, the parts are all off-the-shelf, they lack any symbols except those that the P’G’Maig added, and the materials were mined across numerous systems, mostly in independent space.”

“But looking close,” Cutter said.  “We see each piece is finer.  Fabricators used in production were better.  Sought signs of fabricator origin – but even those were not produced by any specific power.  Even tools used to put fabricators together were not identifiable.”

“You can tell the tools used in the fabricators that made the weapon?” Brooks asked.

“Sometimes.  Infer from minor details – some tools may leave atomic-scale marks in certain elements of fabricator, which carry into fabricated weapon.  These marks can be connected to tool designs and alloys favored by specific powers.  No such traces exist.”

“So the machines that made the weapons were themselves made to give nothing away,” Brooks said.

“There is more,” Cutter said.  “While all parts appear stock – they are not.  They are common designs, but with expert eyes that corrected design flaws, increased efficiency, lightened and strengthened.  They were meant to seem stock while being far more.”

“A great amount of effort was taken to make excellent weapons that looked close to garbage,” Urle summarized.

Brooks leaned back and took a deep breath.  “So that means Aeena.”

Cutter hissed.  “I possess no proof.  But my lack of proof is my proof.  I would place a bet of all I own on this.”

“You bet?” Urle asked.

“Only when I am certain to win,” Cutter replied.

That the Aeena – a xenophobic and reclusive species – would do such a thing and take every possible action to hide their involvement was news indeed.  Decades ago, the Sapient Union had fought a war with them, after the Aeena ethnically cleansed several member systems.  The war had been long and bloody, but the Aeena hated to lose anything, and had ultimately sued for peace.

But only, it seemed, for the open conflict.

“Good work, both of you,” Brooks said.   “Submit all your data and I’ll forward it – include your conclusions and I’ll add my own stamp to it.”

“Have we had any more success with the Fesha ship?  Been able to track anything down?” Urle asked.

“The ship had never been seen before, her radiation leakage rates suggested she was new but meant to look older – it’s the same story as these weapons.”

“Too much secrecy,” Cutter hissed.  “Suspicious.  Alarming.”

“If we’re seeing these clues, then there are surely others being found by other ships and intel teams,” Brooks noted.  “Whatever the Aeena are up to – we will figure it out.”


< Episode 6 Part 61 | Episode 7 Part 1 >