Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 44

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


Brooks floated out of the abandoned structure at speed.

Craton, come in,” he messaged.

Until now, he’d kept radio silence.  Messaging out, even on a secure frequency, was going to draw attention, and it wouldn’t be hard to triangulate the position of someone trying to beam a message to the only Sapient Union vessel in the area.  He had to try, though.

But he couldn’t get through.

“Are we out of range?” he asked his system, grabbing a pole as he floated and turning himself around a corner, following the same route he’d taken in here.

SIGNAL JAMMING PRESENT, his system told him.

Was it Dawn, or someone else . . . ?

Movement ahead of him caught his eye and he grabbed a bent metal bar poking from a broken wall, pulling himself into the partial cover.

There were people approaching him.

Everyone local had kept their distance, which meant these people probably weren’t local.

Taking out his sidearm, he took aim as they came into the light of a bent lamp.

“Stop there,” he ordered.  “Identify yourselves.”

The two men were strange figures.  One was tall and lanky, his joints and angles not human, and he was covered from head to foot.  Around his head was a single strip of black cloth, wrapped around it with only a single large eye piece, tinted black, piercing through it.

The positioning in the middle of its head made Brooks feel certain; it was not a human, but a Latarren.  The isolationist species let none of themselves show, at least to outsiders.

Knowing the species did not put Brooks anymore at ease, as the Latarren were not typically friendly, and those outside of their home territory often mercenaries.

The other figure was clearly human, but no less worrisome; broad of shoulder, a furred hood covered part of his head, and underneath Brooks saw the glint of light off armor.  It appeared to be a powered suit, which was unusual – most people just used augments.

The armored man spoke.

“We are sent by Dawn,” he said.  His voice was surprisingly soft.

Brooks did not lower his pistol.

“Why?” he asked.

“Because you will need more than one set of hands where you are going.”

“. . . and where do you think I’m going?”

The man tilted his head back, and Brooks saw that his eyes glowed with an internal light.

“To find Hoc Rem,” he said.

Brooks took a deep breath and lowered his pistol.

“Let’s go, then,” he said to the two.


< Ep 7 Part 43 | Ep 7 Part 45 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 43

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


The gold-striped drone led him deep into the station.

The lack of gravity made it hard to tell that he was moving towards the center of the station, and he found that his access to the local digital map had been blocked.  Normally that would leave his system with no way to orientate and he’d lose track of his own position – but he’d expected this, and disconnected it, instead having it merely track his direction and velocity.  He could match it back up to a digital map later.

The areas around him became more and more run-down, more abandoned.  When he saw people, they were huddled around blazing spherical cages tethered to walls, a mockery of the beautiful sculpture of the children, just used for keeping warm and cooking.

Most of the computers and amenities in this station had been shut down, and the heat of it had leached into space over time, leaving it colder than most stations ever were – waste heat was so often the big enemy in space that it was easy to forget just how cold it was in the void.

None of the people he saw looked like they wanted any trouble, and if they saw him they moved away, into shadows, to watch nervously.  He kept his guard system on full alert, wishing he had a few drones of his own with him.

The golden drone finally brought him to a structure, not much different from any of the others, but he estimated he was only a few tens of meters from the central spine of the station.  Very deep in . . . which would make it hard to get out if he needed a fast escape.

The drone stopped outside the doorway of the structure, the actual door itself long-gone, taken off its tracks and hauled away for some other purpose.

The room beyond was dark, and Brooks did not step through that doorway until his eyes had adjusted.

The walls were close; it was a small room.  They were dusty, dirty, carbon-scored – it looked like the area had burned recently.

But signs of habitation lingered past that.  Crates bolted to the floor for strorage, wrappers from meals and the discarded injectors of mindshots floated about.  A drug den for the most destitute.

Though now abandoned.  From the looks of things, not even long ago.

Keeping his sidearm ready, he went through the door.

The first room was entirely empty, and his system didn’t locate any secret weapons or surveillance equipment, though there was some kind of hot device in the next room.

The ‘door’ was just a rotting cloth, strung up in the opening.  He pulled it aside and went in, covering the corners.

This room was cleaner than the other, with no piles of junk.  But hanging from the ceiling from a series of cables, was a headset.

A virtual reality visor.

Some users didn’t trust letting outside connections into their systems, and used visors instead.  It wasn’t quite as convincing – but it was more secure for everyone.

Approaching, he saw that it was on, and on the lenses were two simple words;

‘Wear me’.

It wasn’t without risks.  There were a lot of ways to potentially harm someone, from them simply being rigged to being used as a distraction to more esoteric forms like harmful visual data or subliminal mnemonics.  His system could filter out many – but he couldn’t be sure it could get all.  There were always novel forms of attack.

He put the headset on.

‘Connecting’ appeared on the screen.  Then it loaded in.

He was no longer in an abandoned drug nest, but a vast and dark circular room.

The bulkhead walls were sheet metal, precisely made, with regular vents that blew in cool air.  Running servers were arrayed in short stacks coming from the floor and ceiling a meter from each surface, radiators glowing dully on the tops of them, providing a dim light.

Cables came from all directions, piercing through the walls and running down, across floor and ceiling, weaving between the servers, to the center.

In the middle, like a spider in its web, sat a woman.

Her chair was nothing more than a metal stool, yet she sat with a perfectly straight posture, turned away from him.

Long strands of hair flowed down her back, nearly to the floor, glinting and sparkling with such light that they seemed to be spun from actual silver.

Her skin likewise glinted, in smooth, perfect curves of gold, artificial in nature yet taking the shape of skin and even a hint of its texture, crafted to perfection.

Her two arms were held up, from each finger a cable connecting into her body.

As he watched, the cables disconnected, and her arms moved out of sight, onto her lap.  Her stool turned slowly so that she could face him.

He’d had a feeling that he would know the face and was right.  She still made his breath catch in his throat.

Her face was also in gold, yet it was a perfect facsimile of how she’d looked all those years ago.

“Captain,” she said softly.  “To what do I owe the pleasure of this meeting?”

Brooks found that his throat was dry.

“You are Vermillion Dawn?” he asked, knowing that she had to be.

The woman did not blink, watching him with a detached serenity that was almost unnerving.  She inclined her head a fraction to confirm his question.

“A new name and a new skin,” he said.  “I had wondered if it would be you.”

“I am curious,” she said, “if you hoped for or against that possibility?”

“I’m still not sure,” he replied evenly.

“Cold words,” she said.  “And here I believed I was the one who was more machine.”

“Would you rather me lie?” he asked.

“Touche, my intrepid Captain,” she replied smoothly.  “Yet you do not come here to band pleasantries, I imagine.  You have been seeking information for some time, have you not?”

Brooks was not quite sure that he wanted to get to his real questions yet.  There was too much at stake for him not to be sure.

“It’s a great risk, seeing me – even virtually,” he said.

She laughed musically.  “You know me better than to think I take a foolish risk.  This signal is routed through 3200 different servers in pieces, and each of those connected to 3200 more, and so on.  Through more layers than necessary, I assure you.”

“And no one notices something that big?” he asked.

“This is not the Sapient Union,” she said pointedly.  “This is Gohhi, where corruption is the oil of the system.  It is a curse, but a useful one at times.  Money changes hands, and no one who matters will act as if they notice.”

“More than money, I’d imagine.  Blackmail?”

She looked down, demurely, yet he knew she was anything but.  “Your bluntness never served you well in these matters, my intrepid Captain.”

Her eyes lifted, staring at him, and he knew that she would not delay any longer.  “What is it you seek?”

“I am trying to find a man, a mercenary by the name of Hoc Rem – currently known as Joh Dak.  He’s wanted for crimes on New Vitriol.”

“And do you know who Hoc Rem serves?” Dawn asked him, her mechanical eyes narrowing.

“We have our suspicions.  If you have any evidence-“

“Evidence?  No.  But as much as you know is from my own sources.  While Sapient Union intelligence are second to none, in this there is much working against them learning the truth.”

“And who do you believe it is?” Brooks asked.

He was thrown off balance as his view moved, while he felt no motion of his actual body.  Dawn had summoned the camera drone through which he saw closer, and as her face grew in his sight he could tell the subtle curling of her lips.  At this close a range the actual mechanisms under her pseudo-skin were nearly visible.

Up close her golden skin and clockwork features beneath seemed to render her both more beautiful and more unnatural, and he was not even sure how he felt about it.

“You’re asking me for a gift, my intrepid Captain.  I do not err and give where I might profit.”

“What do you want?”  Brooks found himself speaking in an intimate whisper.

Her eyes seemed to sparkle.  “If I were to tell you that, Captain, it would ruin the surprise.”

Brooks felt his heart beat harder for a moment, but his rational mind knew that he was now in her web with no way out.  “You want a favor,” he said, his lips dry.

“Yes.  You will simply . . . owe me.”

“That is a deep debt to take on,” he replied.  “If you make a specific request, I can oblige, but without knowing?”

“My, you are dramatic today.  Do you truly think any favor I’d ask of you would violate your ethics or endanger your ship?  Or the Union?  No, Captain . . . my request may come at an inconvenient time at worst, but it will be nothing you would balk at.”  She tilted her head, a mocking smile gracing her lips ever so briefly.  “Unless it offends your sensibilities to help me at all.”

“No, that’s not it,” he replied.  “But I . . . so long as your request is not endangering the crew or the Union or violates the law – I accept.”

However strong his conditions, he knew he’d just lost to her.  Yet he needed the information.

“Where is Hoc Rem?” he asked, knowing that she would know.

She plucked two strings and looked up at him.  “He is a dead man walking,” she told him.  “He has angered a group of people who call themselves the Silent Hand.  While I doubt you know of them, they hold similar beliefs to the Esoteric Order.  You have heard of them, I presume?”

He wracked his memory.  “An obscure cult, who believe that Leviathans are gods.  I’ve never heard of them being violent, however.”

“Gohhi has a strange effect on people.  I know little about the Silent Hand, but I understand that Hoc Rem has been involved in acts that have displeased them.  And so they have determined he must die.”

Brooks took a deep breath.  “Can I get to him first?”

“Perhaps,” she said.  “You are already closer than you know.”

“What do you mean?”

“Your Executive Commander, Zachariah Urle, is already seeking Hoc Rem, though he does not know it.”

Brooks felt an iron grip on his heart as he realized that meant she had been leading Urle by the nose.  “Are you using my first officer?”

She looked amused.  “Our interests aligned and I have helped him without his being aware, though I admit that has been somewhat difficult.  His . . . companion is interesting.”

It had to be Kell, Brooks knew.  His stomach joined his heart in rebelling.

“Where is he?”

“You do not want to go where he is, Captain.  You wish to go where he will go.”

“And where is that?”

“You will be shown,” she said, playing a few more chords to punctuate her words.  “Consider it a gift, for old time’s sake.”

Brooks saw a countdown for a disconnect appear in the corner of his view.

The numbers ticked down, and he took a deep breath to calm himself as much as he could.

“It was good to see you again,” he told her.

She did not echo his words, but smiled again, her eyes half-lidded.  “I trust you will give my greetings to Siilon when next you see her.”

The connection ended, and Brooks found himself alone, back in the drug den.


< Ep 7 Part 42 | Ep 7 Part 44 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 42

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


Brooks had been to five bars so far, and he still didn’t have a lead.

After taking a shuttle from Gohhi Main Hub to the station called Vesper Glass, he’d then caught another to Transitory Heights, both stations of ill-repute with large black markets and a variety of shady dealings.  Always a good place to find an informant.

Yet none of it had panned out.

All he’d managed to learn so far was that the figure Silva had mentioned, Vermillion Dawn, was the biggest, the most influential, the most knowledgeable.  He’d overheard two men talking in hushed tones insisting that she knew about every transaction that happened in the entirety of Gohhi.

However exaggerated that was, it surely meant they knew about him.  But not a word – from Vermillion Dawn or any of the other brokers.

He’d never heard of it being this hard to get in contact with one, which meant that this information was incredibly dear – and Hoc Rem’s backers were truly someone formidable.

It might also mean that someone knew who he was and was keeping him running around uselessly while they prepared.

Which might even be a trap.  There was a bounty on his head in some places on the fringe, and Gohhi probably harbored a lot of bounty hunters.  Though trying to take in an SU officer would cause a massive problem for Gohhi, so they heavily discouraged such attempts.

Could also be an attempt on his life, but he honestly didn’t see himself as that valuable in the scheme of things.

It could be either or both of those scenarios.  There might even be more than one interested party with different or converging agendas, he mused, frustrated that he honestly didn’t have any clues and was over-analyzing.

He’d actually gotten a drink this time, though he’d scanned it for any dangerous compounds and was sipping carefully.

A drone came over and he tensed, not expecting it.  It lowered over the table and dropped a white slip.

Setting down his drink and eyeing the cramped, sparse bar, he then unfolded the note.

They were coordinates on the station.  They didn’t lead to a bar or other business, or even a residence.  Just a corner junction in a station that didn’t even have gravity.

Leaving his drink, he left the bar, pulling himself on handholds until he was out.  Microgravity allowed the area to be packed with businesses, with storefronts on all surfaces.

Passing a pet store selling endangered rare fish from a dozen different worlds, he turned down one passage through a large tunnel that led between different streets.

Dodging a floating mass of cargo wrapped in netting and grabbing onto a railing, he hauled himself through.

Five minutes of travel brought him near the coordinates, though he did not yet approach.

Standing in a darkened cross-tunnel, he scanned the area.

This part of the station seemed at least partially-abandoned, a fate many stations in Gohhi underwent.

There was a terrible ecosystem here; a station was built, and over time it might take enough wear and tear that its quality degraded.  Investors only interested in quick money would abandon it in droves and it would decay.

Then squatters and the desperately poor would move in.

If they formed a community with any kind of legitimate culture of its own, the place could become a sort of Bohemian retreat from the cutthroat business in other stations.

Then, if the place was still worth it, someone might buy it and invest and develop it into something expensive, luring new dwellers on the perceived culture, only to drive out those very same people in the process.  The final product of detournement under a capitalist way of life, in a sense.

So far, the station did not seem to have even gotten to that second phase, if it ever would.

He saw no one, but there were structures all around.  All shuttered and dark.

In the middle, centered by pylons from all six walls, was a sculpture of children, floating together – feet touching, arms stretched out, hand in hand.  Around them was a sphere of hexagons, perhaps representing the station itself.

It was an interesting piece, he thought, and he found himself wondering who had lived here before its abandonment.

Checking the coordinates again, he saw they were very precise, showing him . . . a trash can.

It was on the ceiling relative to him, and he pushed off the nearest wall to approach the sculpture.

Inspecting the can as he approached, he saw that its vacuum, used to suck up trash without letting old pieces out, had long since been turned off.  It appeared to have been stripped of parts as well, leaving the device a mere shell.  But there were marks in the dust on it, showing that someone had opened the lid recently.

He got no signals that might suggest an explosive was inside, and reaching the statue, he pulled himself towards it by crawling over the sphere of hexagons.

Reaching the can, he carefully opened the lid.

There was nothing inside, and then an alarm was screaming in his ear.

He jerked his head and body back just as a rifle cracked, a bullet passed through the space where he’d just been.

His sensors had detected the muzzle pointed at him, and without even knowing where it was coming from he’d moved – only through sheer dumb luck had he moved in the right direction.

His system had triangulated the position of the shooter, but he’d lost his grip on the sphere.

Hooking his foot, he tried to pull himself away, but there was no cover here, and he was moving in a predictable arc, the next shot would be easy-

A swarm of drones buzzed around him.  Another shot rang out, and a drone burst apart as it took the bullet for him, showering him with debris.

Throwing his arm up to protect his face, he pulled his sidearm and prepared to aim, but he stood no chance against a swarm of drones, even if there hadn’t been a shooter.

But as he uncovered his eyes he saw that the drones were not here for him.

Rather than swarming him, they were moving between him and the shooter.

More shots popped off, but from the drones rather than his attacker.

They were suppressing a window with broken slats, and one crashed in through it, with flashes of light following.

It seemed that he had friends.

Grabbing back onto the hexagon sphere, he looked at the handful of drones that had stayed with him.  They had cameras focused on him.  His benefactor was clearly curious.

“Thank you,” he said.  “Who are you?”

They scattered, flying in all directions, save for a single drone – one with a line of gold on it.  The buffed metal strip was flawless, and it hesitated a moment longer before slowly moving away.

Looking to the window, he saw that the drones were flying back out, scattering and going off with haste through other windows, doors, tunnels, even vents.

But the gold-striped drone was still moving slowly, its camera trained on him.

Well, then.

He pushed off the sphere towards it.

“Lead the way,” he said.


< Ep 7 Part 41 | Ep 7 Part 43 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 41

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


“Wait!” Urle said.  But Short Circuit walked away quickly.

“Fisc,” Urle snapped.  “I didn’t think someone like him would know enough to be frightened by the alias alone . . .”

Kell was watching the man hurry away to a door that led outside.  He glanced back at them.

Urle rubbed his forehead.  “We need to move fast to find another broker before this guy tells on us.  We could get trouble then, Kell, of all sorts.  Or hell, maybe I’m just nuts.  Maybe this is a good sign that we should just let it go.”

He looked up.  “What do you think?”

But Kell was gone.

Urle jumped up.  Kell had been sitting on the inside, and without even disturbing the seat enough to be noticed, he had disappeared.

Whirling, Urle looking towards the door that Short Circuit had gone out, and then sprinted towards it.

Slamming the door open, he found himself in an alleyway between this bar and the next, on an elevated floor that was mostly empty.  Deeper down the alley, though, he saw movement, and he followed it.

Then he saw Kell.

“Don’t kill him!” Urle cried.

The Ambassador looked over to him, still holding Short Circuit’s body.

Urle’s scans suggested the man was still alive; electric activity in his body was still going, only at levels that suggested he was unconscious.

The man’s brain had gone out from oxygen deprivation, though why his electronics had likewise gone into standby was not as easy to explain.

“I have not killed him yet,” Kell said simply.

He let go of the man, letting him slump to the ground.

“Killing people for information is not how we do things, Kell!  This man has rights, he was a human being who-“

“Who was garbage, by your own words,” Kell said sharply.  “Who had a long list of crimes against others of his kind.  Even murder.  Is that not true?”

“You are not judge, jury, and executioner,” Urle said, standing his ground.  “That’s not how we work.”

“I thought you wished for justice and to save others.  Is this man’s life truly more important than those goals?” Kell asked.  “His mind is still mostly organic.  If I kill him then I can access it, as you could with the other man.  It is the easiest way to learn.”

“We’re not even sure that he’s involved in-“

“He is,” Kell said.  He pointed to the back of the man’s skull, where a metal implant stood out – just barely – as a slightly different shade of blue steel against the rest.  “This part matches the one you found at the store.  They are from the murdered man you wished to avenge.  He is involved.”

Urle moved closer, crouching, and touched the part.  His scans could not truly confirm that it had belonged to JaxIn, but it had been built to the same specifications, down to the batch of pigments used on the surface metal.  This was part of the same set – and it had recently had its edges cut to fit Short Circuit’s skull.

“This doesn’t prove that he knew it was stolen from a dead man,” Urle said softly.

“It bears marks that cannot be washed away.  Threads connect things, even after death, Zachariah Urle.  I can see it – whether you can or not does not change that.”

Kell pointed back out of the alley.

“Now leave.  I will make sure there is no body to find.”

Urle didn’t move.  “Like how you got rid of the Hev bodies?”

Kell was silent a moment, watching him.  Unblinking.  Urle felt his eyes water as the aura of Kell’s displeasure made itself known.

“Yes,” Kell finally said.

“What did you do with them?” Urle asked.  On some level he did not want to know, he was terrified to know, sickened to ask because he felt he knew, but the words were not easily said.

“I consumed them,” Kell told him.  “I had never consumed an alien species before.”

“Cannibalism-“

“Is normal among my kind,” Kell replied sharply.  “And these were our enemies.  You wish I should have left their corpses, containing poisons meant specifically to cause your kind a painful death?  I broke down their bodies, their poisons, and I learned from them.  On some level you can say I now understand their people.  And I can do that again here.  We will know exactly what we need to know, and we can prevent innocent beings from dying in the future.  If you believe this is still immoral, then I can only say that the moralities of our two people do not intersect.”

It was Urle’s turn to be silent, and Kell simply waited, showing no sign of impatience, still unblinking, still seeming a monster in human clothes.

“I won’t let you kill him.  And if he doesn’t store his data digitally then I can’t access it.”

Kell said nothing and walked out of the alley.

They were at a dead end.

Urle looked down at Short Circuit, wondering if the man’s life was really worth it.

He would go and report this to someone . . . but Kell had at least bought them a couple hours before that happened.

After a few moments of lingering, he went to the mouth of the alley, seeing Kell standing a dozen meters away, staring upward at the neon billboards.

Probably wondering why he even put up with humans, Urle thought.

A message popped up in his inbox.

It was, as far as he could tell, blank.  There was no sender, no original IP, only routing IPs – a lot of them, so many they became jumbled, useless data.

His heart beat faster.

The quality of this obfuscation was beyond him.  It was beyond anyone he had ever known.

It had to be the same person who had hacked into the server and made the openings in the defenses that they had used earlier.

Trying to be cautious about it, but knowing that any virus or attack someone this skilled might make would probably slice through him like he was made of tissue, he opened it.

STATION 247  |  DECK 19  |  COMPLEX 7

That was it.  Just text again.

But it might be the break they needed.

“Kell!” he called out.  “I know where to go.”


< Ep 7 Part 40 | Ep 7 Part 42 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 40

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


Urle made his way to a bar known as the Spacerport.

It was outside of aug territory, but close enough that a lot of the clientele were enhanced, and Urle felt a dozen active scans ping him as he came in.  A few focused on Kell, but finding nothing interesting, they gave up.

“Follow me,” Urle whispered.

Kell was on him closely as Urle moved to a set of steps and went to the next floor.

This floor was special, he knew.  Only important, wealthy patrons typically came up here – not a rule, but a custom.  Them, and people who wanted a favor from someone important.

He felt more scans, looking for weapons and traps on his person.  Kell was mostly overlooked, his lack of augments and weapons probably making him read as harmless, which Urle found grimly amusing.

A large man surrounded by cronies and beautiful women, along with a dozen enforcers and bouncers, were watching them as they went to a booth, Kell sitting on the inside and Urle next to him.  The guards did not even bother to hide their weapons.

It was not them that Urle wanted the attention of, though, and as they waited, their interest slowly waned.  He wanted another type of contact, and lone figures in shadowy recesses seemed to be picking up on that.

“Someone’s going to come sit down,” he told Kell.  “When they do, they will be a broker.  Let me do all the talking unless I ask you something, all right?”

Kell nodded.  And soon enough, a man joined them.

He was a short, ratty man with a thin face whose hair had been taken by radiation.  An aug, wires wrapped around his ears to ports on the back of his head, but aside from that his mods were hidden from sight.

He said nothing at first, merely sliding a card across the table to Urle.  It introduced him as Short Circuit.

Urle ran a search on the man, finding that he had been arrested before for information trafficking, extortion, assault, even a murder and a dozen other lesser charges.  Most had never stuck, despite a lot of evidence, and he’d only faced a few short stints in prison.

So he was connected, Urle mused.

“I need to find someone,” Urle told him.

Cautiously, he messaged Kell, hoping the being would actually pay attention.

‘Be careful.  This man is a real piece of garbage – list of crimes a mile long, including murder.  But he might have the info we need.’

If Kell saw it, he gave no indication.

Short Circuit was watching Kell, though.

“I know who you are,” Short Circuit told Urle.  “First officer on the Craton.  Not bad, you know?  But who’s your friend?”

“No one important,” Urle said.

Short Circuit clearly did not buy that.  But he did not seem to want to stress the point, and Urle felt something creep up the back of his neck.

A feeling of dread was spreading through the room, he realized.  The conversations were slowly growing quieter, until the entire floor seemed silent.

Was Kell doing this intentionally?

Urle glanced around, wondering if the people up here would know the source.

But no one was watching them.  Their nervous glances were at each other, at dark corners.  The heavy-set man with his many companions apparently had had enough, and rose to leave, his entourage hurrying along after him.

“I only have the alias of the man I’m looking for,” Urle said, hoping that Short Circuit wouldn’t run out next.

The man considered, then nodded.  “Price depends on who it is.  Minimum 100,000 credits.”

Urle nodded.  It was high, almost all of his external trade credits . . .  But he could do it.

“The alias is Ji,” Urle told him.  “He’s connected-“

The blood drained from Short Circuit’s face.

He stood, without a word.

“You’re a moron,” he said.  “Get back to your ship before you get hurt.”


< Ep 7 Part 39 | Ep 7 Part 41 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 39

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


The door closed behind Iago, creaking loudly and booming shut hard enough to shake the floor.

“Is anyone there?” he called.  Perhaps he’d just walked in to his death willingly, perhaps this was an airlock and he’d-

A dim blueish-white glow appeared from above.  He looked up, but his eyes had adjusted to the dimness, as it was too bright to keep his gaze on.

Someone stepped forward into the dim circle of light.

It was hard to see, but he appeared to be wearing a cowled robe.  It was made of something beautiful, likely true silk, but it was ancient – faded, fraying ends lending it a solemn sadness.

“I am so sorry for your losses, Iago Caraval,” the cowled man said.

“Who are you with?” Iago demanded, taking a step back.  The voice was familiar, he knew it – but he could not put a name to it.

The man reached up, pulling back his hood.  “Do you not recognize your shipmate, Iago?”

“Dr. Zyzus . . . ?”

Iago did know the man.  He was one of the chief doctors under Y, focusing largely on civilian medicine.  Iago had met him, but only a few times, and he knew nothing of the man.

“It was you,” Iago realized.  “You wrote me the letter.”

Zyzus nodded.  “Yes.  You have suffered greatly, my son, and I knew you needed comfort before you were lost.  But you need not suffer any longer.”

Others stepped into the edges of the light, their cowls still down.  They were varying heights, but he could make out nothing about them except that.  Their robes were the same faded, frayed silk that looked ancient enough to pre-date humanity’s ascent to the stars.

“Who are you people?” he demanded.

“We are the Esoteric Order,” Zyzus said.  “A faith dedicated to helping all who seek the wisdom and comfort of the Infinite.”

The name didn’t ring any bells, but Iago was hardly an expert on religions.

“I didn’t know you were a man of faith,” Iago said, trying to buy time.

Zyzus ignored that.  “All of us present have been touched by the Infinite, Iago.  It is something that brings great fear and confusion.  At times, it can be a gift.  At others – a curse.  But for good or ill, we have been changed by it.”

Iago found that his heart was pounding in his chest, so hard that he almost couldn’t talk.  All thought of suspicion was driven from his mind.

“The Infinite . . . you’re talking about Leviathans and tenkionic matter.”

“I am speaking of the Eldritch Truth, Iago.  We do not call it by the words of people who only theorize and calculate, but have yet to know it.  We have better words, better . . . understanding.”

He raised a hand.  “Iago, I know that you have been feeling that the knowledge you have learned will destroy you.  But I am here to tell you that it need not be so.”

“How?” Iago asked, his tone only a hair’s breadth from begging.  “How can I beat this?”

Zyzus’s face turned into a sad smile.  “You do not beat it, Iago.  You embrace it.  You must accept the truth of the cosmos, your place in it, and only then will you be able to bear its weight.”

Iago’s stomach fell.

No . . . No, he could not do that.  He could not . . .  He did not even understand what he had experienced, he only knew that it was true and that it was terrible beyond anything else . . .

“I understand your terror,” Zyzus continued.  “But the Infinite does not only take from us, or give us burdens.  So, too, can it give us gifts greater than we could ever hope.”

Zyzus’s words faded, and he stepped back, to the edge of the light.

Another stepped forward, and Iago’s eyes jumped between Zyzus and the new person before settling on the latter.

They reached up, their hands delicate, and before she even pulled back her hood, he knew who she was.

“Hello, Iago,” the woman said.

Her face was trepidatious, her words nervous, but Iago would always recognize the woman he had married.

“Cassandra?” he breathed.

She nodded, her chin moving just a fraction.  “I know it must be shocking seeing me here . . .”

“I thought you were dead,” Iago breathed.  He could not move, he was frozen, his mind nearly as paralyzed as his body, as hope and joy and horror and terror fought inside him.

But she was here.  She was real, he could tell.  This was not a trick, no illusion . . .

His eyes roamed what little of her was visible.  He saw the same creases under her eyes that he remembered, saw the small scar on the back of her hand from an accident with a knife, saw that her nails were still painted the particular shade of violet she had loved so much, whose edges always chipped off under her daily tasks.

“I did not die,” she said.  “I survived.  Thanks to the Infinite.”

“But where have you been?” he asked, feeling the tears now streaking from his eyes, his voice breaking.

“After the accident back home, I . . . I was not myself for a long time.  I became lost.  It was only when the Esoteric Order found me that I remembered who I was.  Who you were . . . and our son.”  Her voice took on an urgency.  “How is Elliot, Iago?”

“Elliot is okay,” he told her.  “He’s . . . he’s so smart, Cass . . .  Such a trouble-maker.”  He found himself letting out a laugh.  “Like me at his age.”

He saw the relief on her face and in her eyes, and he rushed forward to embrace her.

She was crying now as well, and for what seemed hours they could only hold each other in their arms and let the tears flow.

When she broke the hug, he saw that her face was serious again.

“Iago, it is only thanks to Dr. Zyzus that I was able to return to you.  You need to listen to him – to trust him.”

Iago was still reeling.  But if the man had truly helped bring Cassandra back to him, then he could not argue with her . . .

He looked to the man.

“Iago, come with me back to the Craton.  Do not worry,” he added quickly.  “Cassandra will come with us.  You can return, and your normal life will resume.”

“What will we tell them?” he asked.

“We will tell them the truth,” Cassandra said.  “There need be no lies.  We don’t have anything to hide, except . . .”

Zyzus smiled, but it was sad.  “We must not tell them of my involvement, Iago.  You know that the Sapient Union is suspicious of faith – should they know of mine, they will not allow me to continue my work as a doctor.”

That did not sound right to Iago, he’d known the religious, even clergy, to hold positions in the Sapient Union, they were only rare because such faith itself was rare anymore . . .

But he nodded.  He owed this man everything.

“I won’t tell them anything about you,” he swore.

Zyzus’s sadness turned to a quiet relief.  “Thank you, my son.  Now . . . there is more we must discuss.”


< Ep 7 Part 38 | Ep 7 Part 40 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 38

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


The man led Iago through twisting alleys and tunnels, going through an open area with towering structures reaching towards the center of the station, then into narrow halls that seemed built for Beetle-Slugs, where he had to stoop deeply to pass through them.

Through it all, the young blonde man told him about each area – details of its present state or history.

“This area is the poorest on the station.  Disease is rampant and hunger common.”

“Does your church feed them?” Iago asked.  The man had not said he was a priest, but Iago had seen enough to recognize one.

The man nodded seriously.  “We try.  Where we cannot fill a stomach, we at least try to feed the soul.”

They travelled further, then; “This area was originally a hospital that served those who suffered from the overuse of drugs.  It was eventually shut down for lack of funding and has since become a tenement.”

“Why is this place so poor?” Iago asked.

“While parts of the station still function, radiation rot simply made it more expensive to repair than replace.  So it was abandoned, and a new hub was built near this one.  Most money then fled.”

The man pointed to one area that looked notably different; the colors of buildings and girders were duller, more washed out.

“That area was a section of one of the first human stations out here, built over four hundred years ago.  It was slated to be demolished, but was rescued by those who saw its history as a gift, and used as the seedbed for this station.”

“It can’t be four hundred years old,” Iago had found himself saying.  “Humans haven’t been out this far for that long.”

The man only smiled.  “If you say so.”

Iago normally could keep track of his location, through training or his system, but he had gotten completely lost.  His system had no data, which meant they’d infiltrated it or perhaps the priest had some sort of jammer on him.

Neither of which boded well, but he . . .

He found himself trusting the man.

He did not feel entirely himself.  He hadn’t for some time, he knew that.  But he could see it now.

The calming presence of this stranger had helped him through some sort of haze or fog that surrounded him.

But, he reasoned, the part of him that knew the galaxy outside of the Sapient Union was full of predators and killers, there were chemical ways to make someone trust you.

He could not let his guard down.  Not even if he wanted to.

The man led him into an area that seemed fully abandoned.  There were no signs of human life around them.  No heat traces, no movement.  Nothing.

Yet the air was heavy, dense and damp, and he saw in crevices something akin to dirt, and even a few stunted mushrooms growing in dim corners.

“We are here,” the man said.

They had come to a plain, metal wall with a single crude door cut in it.  It was on hinges, and while the young man stepped aside to let him approach, it did not open.

Cautiously, eyeing the man, Iago approached the door.

It shuddered, then began to move.  It was heavy, made of a solid piece of metal, and something about it seemed familiar to him.

He felt a shiver go down his spine.  He did not know why.

The door opened and darkness yawned behind it.

For a moment, terror rose in his stomach as he thought the door actually opened into the vacuum itself.

But there was no pull from air rushing out, and no stars.

Looking down, he saw floor, and took a step in.

Even with his military-grade augments he could not see much.  There were walls, but he could not precisely estimate their distance.

He felt afraid, but Iago had always run towards danger.  As a kid of fifteen he’d run into a burning section of a station with only an oxygen mask, braving the flames to drag his little brother out to safety.

At seventeen he’d used the only suit available, damaged and leaking air, to go out and pull back in his schoolmate who had played a prank with an airlock.

At twenty he’d joined the Response Corps, and he’d faced death and danger a thousand times.

But, he reminded himself, he’d been burned badly going into that fire.

His whole body had swollen up from vacuum exposure when he’d saved the kid in the airlock.

He’d been cut and banged up and had his bones broken, his spine twice, and his skull cracked on multiple occasions.

He’d seen the eldritch truth of the universe, not even truly understood it, only known that it was terrible and all-encompassing and it made everything that he had done in life, all that any of them had done or would ever do have no meaning.  And because he was too weak he’d broken under it.

But what direction did he know how to go but forward?

He stepped into the dark room.


< Ep 7 Part 37 | Ep 7 Part 39 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 37

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


“Who’s there?”

Iago raised his handgun, pointing it at the door.

A beep, asking for entrance, had broken the near-total silence of their rented room.

Elliot, sitting on the floor to his left, raised his head.  His eyes were wide with alarm, following the weapon in Iago’s hand.

“Go into the bathroom,” Iago said softly.  “Don’t come out until I tell you.”

His son said nothing, but rose and moved quickly into the other room.

The walls in here were sound-proofed, the better to suit its normal clientele who wanted no questions asked.

They’d left the Gohhi Main and travelled through three other sub-stations before reaching this one.  It wasn’t that far from the main hub, one could only go so far in just a few hours.

He’d hoped it would be far enough to throw them off.  But he had been wrong.

Iago rose from the bed, checking his system for information on who was outside; but it only returned static.  Someone had disabled the sensors, and his heart hammered as he knew that meant they had come for him.

The Response Team was here to kill him.

And he knew they’d kill him. They’d gun him down and say that later that it had been an ‘accident’ and everyone would accept it because they couldn’t let him live, not knowing what he knew.

There was nothing else it could be, and he would not go down without a fight.  He’d just have to save the last bullet for himself, scramble his brain with it, to keep them from peeking inside once he was dead.

They did not deserve the truth.

They had to be protected from the truth.

Anyone who learned it, like him, would ultimately have to die.

They’d aim low to keep his head intact, and that’d leave him with enough time to-

The thought of Elliot came into his mind, and his heart nearly stopped.

If they came in guns blazing, a stray bullet might-

No, no ononono.

With a shaking hand, he lowered the gun.

“I’m opening the door,” he called.

Holstering the weapon and keeping both hands visible, he went over.

Pressing that button, going meekly, was the hardest thing he’d ever had to make himself do.

The door opened.

There was no armed team waiting there, only a lone man.

He was just above average height, his hair blonde, his eyes a piercing green.

His face and demeanor were calm and composed, and as he looked at Iago, he smiled very slightly.  It was not mocking, but warm and reassuring.

“Mr. Caraval, I have been sent to fetch you,” he said.  “If you would come with me . . . ?”

Iago found himself too stunned to move.  His eyes had glazed over, and try as he might, he could not make them focus again.

“My son,” he found himself saying.

“He will be safe,” the young man said.  “I swear it.  You can tell him that he can relax and that you will return shortly.”

“Will I?” Iago asked.  “Be returning.”

“Of course,” the man insisted gently.

Iago turned.  “Elliot,” he called.  “I’ll be back in . . . a little bit.  You . . . order a treat for yourself.  Anything you want, okay?”

After a moment, the bathroom door opened and Elliot peered out.

He saw the fear on his son’s face, his paled skin and hesitant hands.  It hurt him so much to know how much this was costing his boy, and he tried to smile as reassuringly as possible.

“Who is that?” Elliot asked.

Iago looked to the man, who smiled.  “I am a friend.  Now, shall we go, Mr. Caraval?”


< Ep 7 Part 36 | Ep 7 Part 38 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 36

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


“Nor, I am so pleased you have returned alive from imbibing poison,” Y said cheerfully.

“You make it sound more fun than it turned out to be,” Apollonia replied with a nervous laugh.  “I got a bottle thrown at my head.”

“Yes, I am pleased you either avoided it or it was poorly aimed.”  He turned to Jaya, who Apollonia thought looked nearly nervous.

“Ah, and Chief of Operations, you too appear to be alive, if slightly worse for the wear.  It is fortunate that you have a synthetic liver and muscles to aid you in staying that way.”

“Yes,” Jaya replied.  “Only a few bruises.”

“Attained in a successful combat, I understand.  How glorious.”

“It was not my intent to cause a fight-“

“No?  My apologies, I assumed it was, as this has happened several times you have gone drinking on Gohhi.”

Apollonia’s jaw dropped, caught half-way in hopping up onto a medical bed to sit.  She looked at Jaya, who had pursed her lips.

“I will never understand why your kind imbibe poison, but I will prepare the counter-agent.  You will suffer from the results of your own actions for only a little longer!”  Y turned to Apollonia.  “Would you like something to rid yourself of your hangover as well, Nor?”

“Er, yeah.  That’s a thing?  Hell yeah I’ll take it.”

“Drinking is cultural,” Jaya stated sternly.

“And fun,” Apollonia added.

Y ignored her and turned back to Jaya.

“Oh?  That is interesting, I understand that synthetic alcohol substitutes allowed all of the same range of activities without actually impairing judgment to a dangerous degree.  Or causing damage to vital organs.”

“Synthetic alcohol is nothing like the real thing,” Jaya insisted.  “All believed that we’d switch to it – yet we have not.  It is something simply produced in a laboratory, not hand-crafted in a way deeply connected to our cultural roots.  It is something that humans have done for over ten thousand years.  For good or ill, it is a part of who we are.”

Y paused, taking that in for a moment in silence.  “That is an interesting point, Commander.  It almost made me forget that it is also a potent toxin and carcinogen.”

“Which is why you are here,” Jaya replied, dryly.

“. . . and contains enough energy in its molecular bonds to power an internal combustion engine.  But thank you for this very enlightening lesson on the essence of human culture.”

Jaya took a deep breath, clearly holding back some sharp words.

She probably realized she could not win with Y, not on this, Apollonia mused.

Y came over to her, holding something up to her arm.  “This will help flush the toxins from your system and relieve the pain.  Afterwards, I recommend drinking unadulterated water.”

“Whatever you say, doc,” Apollonia replied.  He gave her the shot, and she felt almost nothing.

“Really?  Then I will add that you should not drink alcohol again,” he continued.

“. . . I might agree to that,” Apollonia said.  “I mean I did get pretty lost.”

The shot was already making her headache disappear.  She felt almost like herself – just a little thirsty.

Y approached Jaya.  “Would you like me to omit the painkiller so that you may experience the full fruit of your evening?” he asked helpfully.

“That will be unnecessary,” Jaya said, scowling, but then looked past him.  “How did you find your way back without your tablet, Apollonia?  We were not able to recover it, but we detected it was lost.”

Apollonia winced.  “Do I get in trouble for losing it?”

“Given the circumstances, no,” Jaya said.  “We can issue you a new one, and your old one already will have locked up and deleted any sensitive data.  But I am quite impressed with your pathfinding skills in a place as difficult as Gohhi.”

“Well . . . I had help,” Apollonia admitted, hopping back to her feet.  “I found this church guy – he was actually pretty nice.”

Jaya looked serious.  “Did he ask you for anything?”

“No, not a thing.  He seemed happy to help me just because he could.  He was from a group called, uh . . . the Esoteric Order.”

“I see,” Jaya replied, looking troubled.  Y had stepped away, and Jaya got up from her seat as well.

“The Esoteric Order,” Y commented.  “They are a religious order founded seven years ago.  The exact point of their origin is unknown, with some small presence in the Sapient Union, but a much larger range outside of it.  Their faith has become widespread in parts of Gohhi, especially among the fringe.  They even have some presence in Glorian space-“

Jaya interrupted him.  “The man who helped you, how did you meet him?”

“I went to his church and told him I was lost,” Apollonia admitted.  “He guided me to the spaceport.”

“You found him, not the other way around?”

“Yeah . . .”

“What was he like?”

Apollonia frowned.  “Why are you so curious about him?”

“No real reason,” Jaya told her.

Something seemed off with her, but Apollonia continued on.

“He was a young man, maybe around my age.  Blonde.  Kind of handsome.  He had this . . . calmness about him.”  She shrugged.  “I dunno, he was just really nice and helpful.  Can’t say more than that – I didn’t even get his name.”

“Ah, I see,” Jaya replied, with a forced casualness.

Apollonia could tell, though, that something was bothering her.


< Ep 7 Part 35 | Ep 7 Part 37 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 35

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


The real world came back into focus.

The server room was cold, and Urle took a deep breath of it, savoring that it was real and not merely simulated.

His body had been breathing, but when he’d been in the digital world he’d not felt any of it.

As he had promised to JaxIn, he went into the server logs, hiding all traces of himself and obfuscating the data even more to keep his hidden world a secret.

He was not sure what to make of the man and his selfish dreamworld, but he had given his word and he would keep it.

Kell was peering down at him, and Urle got to his feet.

“Let’s get out of here, and then I’ll tell you everything,” he said.

Ten minutes later, using the same gaps in the defenses as before, they were free.

“I need to sit,” Urle said.  Kell offered no objection as they went to an automated noodle kiosk and took a seat at the bar.  Only one other person was here, a man had two mechanical legs and a hand, his bare head pale and scarred.  He paid them no mind, and Urle scanned the noodle drones for spying equipment, but found them to be as simple as they appeared.

He told Kell what he’d found, the being listening in silence.

“. . . There’s a lot of data to pore through,” he concluded.  “But I’ve got the key stuff.  There’s a man we’re looking for, but we only have an alias, not his real name – Ji.  It’s pretty common as a name, but the right people will hopefully know who we mean.  We’ll have to hit up the information brokers.”

Kell was considering.  “So the man had no issue with the fact that he had been murdered?” he asked.

“No.  It wasn’t . . . ‘him’, so I don’t think he cared.”

“An interesting point of view,” Kell said.  “I am not sure how I would feel if I was murdered.  I believe that I would want revenge.”

“Well, I’m pretty sure this guy was just selfish as hell,” Urle grunted, taking his cup of noodles and eating a few.  They were surprisingly good, he thought.

Kell drank down his cup in a single swallow.

“Do you know how to find these information brokers?” he asked.

“I know some ways,” Urle replied.  “The only real issue is that they’re real picky about their customers.  Don’t want to get caught dealing in stolen data, you know?  So follow my lead.”

Kell gave him a curt nod.  “I broke my earlier promise to you, about hurting no one.  I will not again.”

Urle found himself very surprised by the seriousness with which the being had taken its earlier flippant remark.

“Well . . . thanks,” he said.

He hesitated.  It really wasn’t the only reason he should be thanking Kell.  Despite how traumatizing it had been, the Ambassador had saved him.

“And also – thanks for helping me.  You saved my life, and I haven’t exactly been grateful about that.”

Kell’s expression was mildly confused.  “You do not need to thank me.”

Urle looked back down to his noodles, stirring them around.  He felt oddly humbled.


< Ep 7 Part 34 | Ep 7 Part 36 >