Episode 10 – Star Hunters, part 15

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


Water splashing on his face was Kade’s wake-up call.

He sat up, gasping again, the water in his mouth and nostrils making him feel like he was drowning.

“Wake wake,” he heard a voice say.

It was not a Greggan voice, and he blinked, wiping the water out of his eyes before looking at the speaker.

At first glance he might have mistaken the man for rad-baked leather rather than a real human.

Stick-thin, the man simultaneously looked young and old, his skin tanned a deep red, his limbs thin and gangly yet clearly possessing a wiry strength, while his face looked heavily lined from a hard life.  He did not have a single hair on his head as far as Kade could see.

“Who are you?” Kade asked, then coughed through a sore throat.  The air in here was uncomfortable to breathe and his chest hurt more than earlier.

Just like his head; it felt like the time he had tried excite in a bar with his friends, the drug making him feel like he’d been on a cloud . . . until the next day when he had felt like he’d sunk into the mud.

This was worse, he thought.  And he couldn’t really remember why he felt this way.  He’d met the pirate Captain, then . . .  What had happened after that?

“I’m askin questions, not you,” the man growled.

He was squatting just outside the crude bars that made up Kade’s cage.

After they had taken him off the bridge, they must have put him in here, alone rather than in with the other prisoners.

Turning, he saw that the others were still in their cages, many laying down – hopefully sleeping rather than dead.  Others moved, or talked to each other, their faces all portraits of misery.

“Hey, eyes on me!” the human pirate said.  “Why did Cap’n Tarsota want you on the bridge?”

Kade looked at him a moment, but then his eyes wandered again.  “He wanted to know if I was a writer,” he said slowly.

Despite the fuzziness of his mind, he was starting to recall his time on the bridge more, though what exactly happened after meeting the Captain was still unclear to him.

“Is you one?” the pirate demanded.

“Yeah,” he replied.  He didn’t see a point in lying, but he wondered now if there were less people in the other cages than before.  He was trying to count, but it was very dim in here.

“Why you looking at them?” the pirate said, banging the bars.  “You got a girl or boy in there?”

For a second Kade thought he meant a child, but from the man’s lewd smile he realized he meant something else entirely.  “. . . no,” he said.

The pirate glanced over.  “Fancy one?  You tell me what I want, I get you whoever you want.  Look away while you go at it.  Fair trade, you’ll be happy, Cap’n’ll be happy, and then I’ll be happy too.”

“I . . . I think I’m fine,” Kade said.

“Well don’t go expectin’ me to crawl in there with you!” the pirate said.

“I didn’t want- I mean, no, I’m just fine being alone.”

“Flying solo, fits you artist-types,” the pirate replied.  “What the Cap’n want with a writer?”

Kade decided not to answer.  “What do I call you?”

The man scowled, and Kade had a terrible feeling for a moment that he was about to get tortured.

But the man answered.  “I’m Surc.  Erry’one here just called me so, but I was born Jerall.  Surc’s better.  I look a Surc, dun I?”  He turned his head, giving Kade a better profile look at him.

Kade would not have thought he looked a Surc, more like a . . .

Well, all he could come up with was Scrap O’Leather.  Not his best writing, he thought.

“Yeah, you do look like a Surc.  It’s a good name,” he said instead.

He pointed.  “What are they going to do with the others?  Ransom them?”

“Hahaha, nah,” Surc said.  “Just scraps a’ meat.”

Kade’s shock showed through widened eyes and Surc laughed again.  “Not for eatin’.  Greggans don’t eat us folks.  If they could stomach us, maybe this lot would, but we don’t sit right in their bellies.”

“Then meat for what?”

Surc ignored him.  “We’re all just meat in its eyes,” he said, his eyes glazing over slightly.

A screaming began from down the hall, and Kade jerked around.  It was a very distant cage, but he could see someone pounding on the bars.

“I shouldn’t be here!  I helped you!  I let you in, let me out of here, we had a deal!” the man wailed.

“Who’s that?” Kade asked, feeling panic welling in him.

A large Greggan came down the hall, holding a metal pole.  It shoved Surc as it went past, the man flinching away, but it headed on towards the man at the end.

“That unlucky bastard was our in-man,” Surc said, his face turning from cowed to an ugly smirk.  “Thought he got hisself his weight in creds.  Just got a cage instead.  You know how it goes; cheaters cheat cheaters.  Way it goes.”

The Greggan guard reached the man and jabbed his staff in.  The man screamed, a flash suggesting that he’d just gotten a shock.

Kade found himself wondering why he’d bother doing it himself until he heard the strange grunting that he’d realized earlier was Greggan laughter.

The guard came back, and Surc cringed away again, putting up his hands as the Greggan held up his pole threateningly.

After he was gone, Surc looked back to him.  “You hungry?  Want water?”

“Not thrown in my face,” Kade said carefully.

“Nah, nah.  Was doin’ you a favor, washin’ off the blood.”

Blood?  Kade felt his heartbeat pick up faster at the word, and he touched his face, feeling wetness from the water.  When he looked at his fingers, even in the dim light, he could see they were darker.  Stained from his blood.

Why had he been bleeding?

“We friends now, yeah?” Surc continued.  “Tell me what you want, I get it for ya, you just tell me what you see up on the bridge.  You spoke to the big Cap’n himself, right?  Tarsota . . .”

The way he said the name was wistful, almost adoring, Kade thought.

“Get me something decent to eat and some clean water,” he said carefully to Surc, “and I’ll tell you all about it.”

Surc grinned broadly.  He had only two teeth left in his head, Kade saw.

“You best not be lyin’ to me.  I’ll be back, get you some real good food!”


< Ep 10 Part 14 | Ep 10 Part 16 >

Episode 10 – Star Hunters, part 14

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


“Our drop-drones have put out the last of the fires on the colony, Captain,” Rachel Zhu relayed.  “I am pleased to say that despite the pirate drones trying to knock it out, we were able to protect most the colony’s power grid.”

A cheer went up, and Brooks felt some measure of relief.

“Casualties?”

“We do not have a complete picture yet, but we are finding that the colony’s safety bunkers are mostly intact.  One appears to be partially buried by debris, the drones are working to clear it, but scans suggest it’s intact.  However, one seems to have been emptied,” Cenz said.

“We do have another problem, Captain,” Urle said.  “And that’s the debris.  When the pirates blew up their shuttles, they really musked it up.  It’s going to be a bit hazardous for us to get close, and the orbits of most of them are unstable.  We’re going to need to clear it if we don’t want it potentially falling on the colonists’ heads.”

Brooks grunted in frustration.  “Put us into as close an orbit as we can safely get and begin clearing operations.  I want the colony safe in record time.”

“Aye,” Rachel Zhu called.

“While we’re at it,” Cenz said.  “We should analyze the debris – we may be able to learn just what was lost.”

“Do it,” Brooks ordered.  “If there are any bodies, see if they can be recovered.”

And hope they didn’t find any.  That the Greggans might have blown up a ship full of hostages was a bitter pill to consider.

“If you want me to go down,” Urle said, “I can still see some indirect approaches that seem safe enough.  It’ll just be a bit slower to get down and back up.”

“Not yet.  Let’s see if we can contact the colony from here.  Hopefully their short-range communications are still intact.”

“Messaging,” Eboh called.  “We are getting a system reply, but no answer yet.”

“Keep trying,” Brooks said.  “Once they leave the bunkers they’ll pick up.”

The command center door opened, and Apollonia came in, rubbing her eyes.

Brooks glanced at her.  “If you need to sleep, Ms. Nor, you have permission to use the command bunks.”

“I was trying,” she said blearily.  “Just got a headache, can’t stay asleep.”

“Ask Y for something, he can give you something for that,” Urle said.

“He did,” she replied.  “Didn’t help.”

Brooks frowned, watching her as she sat down in the chair next to his, sliding and slumping down into it like she was melting.  Her eyes closed, but her brow was still furrowed.

“Captain,” Shomari Eboh called.  “We are getting a response from the surface.”

“Put it through,” Brooks told him.

“Captain Brooks!” a loud, boisterous voice called.  “We are pleased to see that the Union is swift to come when called!”

An image came through, but it was more of a slideshow than a video.

“Greetings,” Brooks called.  “Who is it that I am speaking to?”

“I am the head of security for Rising Star, Commander Brene Gresset.  Forgive this video – it is not our network but this bloody camera, it’s always had issues and some of the thumps I had to give it to even turn on didn’t help!  But I can see and hear you quite clearly.”

“I’m glad to hear that.  How are your people, Commander Gresset?”

“Disappointed!  We had already prepared to give our last breath fighting gloriously for Rising Star, you see.”  The man laughed boisterously, and Brooks found himself both amused and slightly concerned.

“But more seriously, Captain – we are grateful for your timely intervention.  Those bloody pirates had only made off with one round of shuttles before you caught them.  I’m sure you gave the cowards quite the scare!”

“You say one round of shuttles – do you mean the ones that were destroyed?”

“No, no – thankfully not.  Those shuttles were on their second trip back up.  In the first one they took some of our people.  I can’t say why, but they clearly viewed that as a priority.  If only they had tried to come into my bunker, we would have given them a real fight!  As it is, though, I’m afraid I’m the most ranking officer I’ve seen yet.  So it seems we’re headless.”

Again, the pirates had taken hostages, and again it was the colony’s leadership.  It was not likely an accident, Brooks thought.

“You seem well-informed on the pirates actions,” Jaya said.  “Do you know what else they took?”

“Aye, we are.  You see, they attempted to knock out our computer system, but were only partially successful.  Their signal shut down the defensive laser grid, but our surface cameras were still functioning.”

Brooks leaned forward.  “Their signal?”

The image of the man changed to serious.

“Yes, that’s right.  As they approached, the pirates sent a tightbeam signal that entered our system through a backdoor and shut down the lasers.  If not for the fact that I changed some passcodes just yesterday, they’d have shut us all down and fried a good chunk of it, I feel.”

Brooks looked to Jaya.

“How do you believe they had the codes to your system at all?” Brooks asked.

“I cannot say, Captain, but I know I run a tight ship.  However . . . even a tight ship can have leaks.”

The man’s face looked much uglier, furious at the idea he was having to suggest, and Brooks could understand that.

“Besides hostages, did they successfully get away with anything else?” Brooks asked.

“Yes, we had a loading area filled with uranium and processing equipment that they were quick to make off with.  To be honest, that was a large reason we did not attempt a counter-attack,” the man said, his boisterous attitude returning.  “I was concerned that we’d all start glowing should that shuttle get damaged, as you can well guess.”

Brooks knew that they would have been cut down before they’d gotten out of their bunkers; even the crude drones the pirates possessed would have no difficulty killing hundreds of soldiers without their own guardian drones.

It was hard to tell if the man was only acting full of bravado, or if he actually believed he could have launched a counter-attack.  Brooks sincerely hoped it was the former, because he was likely going to be the leader of the colony for the foreseeable future.

But the theft of more uranium was even more alarming.

“Thank you for your information, Commander.  I will prepare some drop pods with supplies to help repair what’s been damaged.  I will speak with you again shortly.”

“You need not linger long, Captain!  Go after those pirates and bring them justice in a missile.”

“Hopefully soon,” Brooks replied.

“Good hunting, then!”

The call ended and Brooks looked to Urle and Jaya.  “We’re not seeing any delayed weaponry left by the pirates, are we?”

“I’ve been scanning since they left,” Jaya said.  “But I do not see anything.”

“A dirty bomb, if properly shielded, would be hard to see,” Urle noted.  “Though a proper nuke – we’d have found it by now if it existed.  I think that’s more likely, since a dirty bomb in orbit would scatter too much to cause immediate catastrophic harm to the colony.”

Brooks considered, then opened his channel to all command officers.  “The pirates were taking fissile material for a reason.  They surely did not need it as fuel, so what else might it be for?”

“I do not imagine it was for medical reasons or for making pleasant shades of ceramic glazes,” Y said.  “I believe that it must be for weapons.”

“Which we have not seen – yet,” Jaya said.  “Perhaps they are a last resort against a colony if their pretense at relic technology fails?”

“A nuclear missile is rather expensive and difficult to make as far as disposable weapons go, though,” Urle said.  “If they can’t take down a colony’s defenses without an insider code, there’s no way they’d be able to make a nuke sophisticated enough to make it through.”

“The threat alone might be enough,” Brooks noted.  “Aside from Commander Gresset, I do not believe most colonies are willing to risk destruction.”

He paused, thinking.  “Beyond the issue of the uranium, the fact that they had to use a code to disable the defenses suggests that their claims of possessing relic technology are just a lie.”

“Possibly, Captain,” Cenz said.  “But we still cannot account for their rapid second jump into zerospace.  The timeline from the colony’s sensors confirms that they jumped in with the same ship that took them out.  A ship that size should need at least twenty-six hours before it can jump again.  They did it in only a fraction of that time.”

“As strange as it may sound, perhaps there is a connection to the fissile material?” Urle suggested.  “I can run some numbers, but maybe they just have had a novel idea that’s panned out?”

“There’s another thing that is bothering me,” Jaya said.  “The pirates have gone to extreme lengths to hide their identities thus far – but then their Captain messages us his face?  He could not know that we learned he was a Greggan already, and knowing his species helps us learn far more about him.  So why the sudden change?”

“Adding to that,” Urle said, “I ran that name he called himself, Tarsota, as well as the name of his band, through our libraries, but I didn’t find anything that seems relevant.  The name itself could be rooted in the Greggan language, though I think it’s an attempt at a human-like name.”

“His accent was interesting as well,” Cenz noted.  “It was different from those of most Greggans in this region of space, as well as known Greggan languages and dialects in the Sapient Union.”

“Look into it all,” Brooks ordered.  “We have a lot of mysteries here, and I want some theories.”

“With your permission, Captain,” Jaya asked, “I’d like to contact the colony again and see if we can learn who may have leaked their security codes to the pirates.  Perhaps that may be a lead.”

“Do it,” Brooks said.  “We’ll be here at least twelve hours clearing this debris.  Do your research, get a rest if you need to, and have reports ready in ten.”


< Ep 10 Part 13 | Ep 10 Part 15 >

Episode 10 – Star Hunters, part 13

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


“Surfacing in realspace in 3 . . . 2 . . . 1!”

Reality coalesced on the screen, spreading from the center of their view out, and before them lay the colony world of Cyphon IV.

Small glints, mere chips of light against the stars beyond, were in orbit around the world.

“Unknown vessels detected,” Cenz said.  “98% matches for our pirate vessels.”

“Launch all combat drones,” Brooks ordered.  “Give me everything you can about what they are doing.  Eboh, message them to surrender.  If we’re lucky, we can end this without violence.”

“There are cargo craft en route from the surface,” Cenz said.  “We have some still lifting out of the atmosphere, and others already in orbit, heading towards the pirate vessels.”

“Close the gap and launch micro-missiles,” Brooks ordered.  “I want those cargo ships disabled before they get to the pirate ship.”

“Missiles away,” Jaya said.  “Ninety seconds until impact.  We should knock out the cargo ships before they can get within the safety perimeter of the pirate fleet.”

“We are getting no response to our demands, Captain,” Eboh called out.

“A pity,” Jaya said.  “I suppose we’ll have to destroy them.”

“Not quite yet,” Brooks said.  “They may have hostages aboard.  Send forward some of our defensive drones, put them around the shuttles.”

“We are receiving a message,” Eboh said.  “It is pre-recorded.”

“Put it up,” Brooks ordered.

A three-dimensional image appeared of a Greggan.  The view was terribly close, showing every detail of its head.

It appeared large, even for a Delta, but unhealthy.  Strips of skin dangled from the sides of its face as if it had been tearing at its own flesh – or something else had.  The wounds had congealed, but were still relatively fresh.  Its eyes had a greenish pallor that Brooks knew was a sign of poor health in the species, and its lips were unkempt, swollen to the point where its own teeth pierced them, pale blood dribbling from the wounds.

Its eyes twitched, at times the pupils in one or two darting off to peer away, and it leaned even closer to the camera, the edges of its head clipping out of view.

“Vessel unwisely opposing us,” the Greggan spoke in its deep, croaking language.  “You trespass in holy space, sanctified by the presence of the Free Star Company led by Feared Captain Tarsota.  We are privateers in service to a higher power, on glorious purpose.  You will not impede us.  You will not stop us.  You will surrender, or you will die.”

The transmission ended.

“There is a simple virus encoded in the message,” Eboh noted.  “It was picked up immediately.  Deeper scans reveal some other malicious code, but nothing that poses a threat to our system.”

Jaya shook her head.  “I recommend we send a full missile barrage at their fleet, Captain.  Aim for surgical strikes to disable their vessels.”

Brooks was quiet a moment before answering.

“Status of missiles headed towards their cargo transports?”

“Hitting in ten seconds,” Cenz said.

“Prepare a larger barrage as you suggest, Jaya, but do not launch yet.  They have to see the first missiles by now – are they doing anything?”

“Negative,” Cenz said.  “We have hits on the cargo ships.  All appear disabled.”  A pause.  “We are seeing activity now, they appear to be preparing to launch their own missiles.”

Brooks sighed.  “Then we’re in it now.  Launch our full barrage, aim to disable their zerodrives and weapons systems.”

An image of the Craton appeared in his HUD, showing the launch of missiles, spat out by their launchers, waiting, and once all out, firing off their thrusters and speeding away.

“All missiles launched.  Two-minutes-thirty until impact,” Jaya said.

Apollonia, who had been quiet, leaned forward.  “What happens if we disable them and they still won’t surrender?” she asked.

“Then,” Brooks replied.  “We will have to board them and take their ships by force.”

Cenz turned suddenly.  “Captain, the pirate ships have fired on their cargo carriers!”

Brooks looked back to the screen.  Missile streaks had indeed started off from the pirate vessels, heading towards the disabled carriers.

“How long until our missiles get there?” Brooks asked.

“Still two minutes.  Their missiles will hit in thirty-seven seconds.”

“And our drones?” Jaya asked.

“Still a minute out,” Cenz continued.  “We cannot intercept their barrage.”

“Tell me what’s on those ships!  Any indications that there are hostages aboard?”

Cenz was silent a moment.  The seconds ticked away.

“I’m sorry, Captain,” Cenz finally replied.  “I cannot tell from this distance.”

They could only watch helplessly as the pirate missiles slammed into the disabled ships, blasting their hulls open and ripping them apart.

“All cargo carriers destroyed,” Cenz said.  “I am still unsure as to what they were carrying.”

Brooks took a deep breath and looked at the timer.  Just over a minute until their own missiles hit the pirate ships.

“Put our drones into a holding formation,” Jaya ordered.  “Over the colony.  We want to prevent the pirates from attacking it.”

“Full defense protocol,” Brooks added.  “If they launch so much as a single missile – especially if they launch a single missile – I want all effort made to intercept it.”

“The lead pirate vessel is activating a zerodrive, Captain,” Cenz said.  “The portal is big enough for all of their ships.”

“They had to have jumped in here just a few hours ago!” Jaya said.  “There’s no way they can have enough charge to jump again already.”

“This has to be some kind of trick.  How stable is their portal?” Brooks asked.

Cenz slumped slightly.  “Stable enough, it seems.  I’m sorry, Captain, but they are already gone.”


< Ep 10 Part 12 | Ep 10 Part 14 >

Episode 10 – Star Hunters, part 12

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


“Captain, we are receiving an emergency alert!” Shomari Eboh called out.  “The Rising Star Colony around Cyphon B are saying that they are under attack by pirates!”

Brooks leaned forward sharply in his seat.  “How far away is Cyphon?”

“It’s a three-hour transit, Captain,” Ji-min Bin called.  “Primary coil is mostly charged.  We can jump in thirty-five minutes.”

“Urle, did you hear this?” Brooks asked, his message broadcasting out to his Executive Officer.

“Aye, Captain,” Urle replied.  “We’re about to lift off from the surface.  We can rendezvous in eighteen minutes.”

“Good.  I’d rather have you aboard.”

Urle was slow to reply.  “We need to do more for these people before we finish this, Captain.”

Brooks wasn’t expecting that, but took the words seriously.  “Understood, Urle.  Let’s talk about that more en route.”

“Yes, sir.  Lifting off in less than 60 seconds, out for now.”

The call ended, and Brooks began to issue other orders.  There were still supply pods readying for deployment.

“I want those that can be ready to go in our window prioritized, forget the rest – we’ll hold onto them for now.”

“Estimating we can drop two more in that window,” Sulp messaged.  “But if you give me ten more minutes, I can do four.”

“We can’t keep a colony under attack waiting,” Brooks replied, ending the call.  “Get me the colony.”

Chairwoman Addo appeared.  Her image was far stronger than it had been before, he was pleased to see.

“Chairwoman, we have just received word from the colony on Cyphon B that they are under attack.  We will be going to their aid once my executive officer is aboard and our zerodrive is ready.”

Tension lines tightened around her eyes.  “Will you be returning, Craton?  There are still many supplies we need, and Commander Urle said that he was going to bring down more engineers.”

“We will do so as we can,” Brooks replied.  “But it will be a few days at the least, and I don’t know how many more supplies we can drop.  We don’t know what shape the Rising Star colony will be in.”

Addo looked aggrieved.  “Captain, our people are facing hunger-“

“We will not let you starve.  We have two more pods we will be dropping before we go.”

He messaged Sulp; prioritize food.

Sulp messaged him back immediately, accepting the order and yet creatively telling him off.

“I suppose that is all we can get,” Addo replied shortly.  “But I do not think our power system will hold in its present state for more than a day.  We will be mostly back in the dark before long.”

“I wish I could do more,” Brooks told her.  “But we had no chance to pick up additional supplies before leaving, so we are giving from just what we carried.  I promise you we will return when we can, however, and that other relief ships are coming.”

The woman nodded sharply, her eyes cold.  “Colony out,” she said, cutting the transmission.

The doors to the command center opened, and Jaya entered.  She was blinking blearily.

“I understand we are going into action,” she said, adjusting her uniform cuff.

“The colony on Cyphon IV is under attack.  We’re leaving once the zerodrive is charged,” Brooks told her.  “But you should be getting more sleep, you’ve only been off-duty for two hours.”

“I will be fine,” she replied.  Brooks continued to stare at her.

She saluted.  “I formally request permission to return to duty, Captain, given the serious nature of what awaits us.”

Brooks nodded slowly.  “Granted.  But then you’ll take two days off to catch up on your sleep.”

“Aye, Captain,” she replied.  Her face was professional enough to give away little, but he knew she was not pleased with that.

“We’re going to need Apollonia Nor present on the bridge when we get there,” Brooks added.  “I understand she’s in a study session with Sgt. Kiseleva.  Will you go inform her?”

“Yes, Captain,” Jaya replied.

Brooks turned to look back towards the main screen, the colony world below hidden behind images showing the work going on to prepare them for the dive.


< Ep 10 Part 11 | Ep 10 Part 13 >

Episode 10 – Star Hunters, part 11

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


A horrible gasping filled the air, as abused and battered lungs struggled to operate at full capacity.

Kade realized that the sound was coming from him.

Adrenaline was surging through his body, and for a few moments he had no idea where he was or why he felt like he’d been hit by an asteroid.

Something shoved him onto his back and he looked up into dim, greenish lighting as the ugliest face he’d ever seen loomed over him.

He’d never seen a Greggan up close before, nor from this angle.  Or in person, ever, until they had kidnapped him from his home.

It had two sets of small, beady eyes, a wide maw filled with needle-like teeth, and ugly, bumpy skin.  There was no appreciable neck, its space suit going just under its lower jaw.

“He is alive, Captain, like I said!  We did not kill him.”

The barking of the Greggan above him spattered him with a fine mist of liquid that smelled like a rancid pond.  He coughed, covering his face and rolling onto his side.  As he tried to curl into a fetal ball, more hands grabbed him, pulling him to his feet.

The Greggan who had just sprayed him with spittle stepped forward.  “You see, Captain?  He is alive!”

The being the Greggan addressed was another of his kind, sitting on a large, raised chair.  It was covered in crude metal hooks, grafted poorly over its surface, from which hung dozens of objects that glittered and clinked into each other.

Trophies, he thought immediately.  The tokens of victory a pirate would see value in even beyond their practical use or trade value.

The Greggan seated upon the chair was over two meters tall, bigger and even more bulky than the others.  It regarded them with cold, pitiless eyes.

“Kill it,” it grunted.

White-hot terror flooded Kade’s mind, his body tensing, but the grip of the two Greggans holding him was far too powerful even for adrenaline to break.

The Greggan ahead of him let out a cry just before a gun fired, blasting greenish ichor across the room.  It fell, twitching and making a strangely cat-like meowling before several more shots silenced it.

Two drones began to drag the corpse away, and Kade waited for his death to be next.

“Bring him closer,” the big Captain said.

Kade was dragged closer to the being.  The smell of rancid water increased.

The Captain was far more disturbing up close.  Even without knowledge of Greggan biology, he could tell that it was scarred and unhealthy, a monstrosity of a creature.

Strips of skin had been gouged from the sides of its face, still dangling like paper.  Dark ichor had congealed in the wounds, glittering in the scant light.

The two sets of eyes on the Captain fixated on him.  The pupils were small, the greenish glow in the room making the paler parts of its eyes look the same sickly green.

The Captain’s lower teeth protruded, in some places even piercing through its upper lip, and between them dripped rivulets of a paler fluid.

Kade could not formulate words, wondering if his own death was nigh.

“You are a writer,” the Captain grunted, the translation of its language cruder than the last one, like it spoke a rare dialect.

“A . . . a writer?” Kade asked.

“Answer or be thrown to the Dark!” one of the guards holding him snapped, shaking him bodily.

“Y-yes!  I’m a writer!” he managed.

Why the hell did that matter?  He was not a good writer, he just wrote short stories that he posted on the colonynet, none of them were great art, he’d never even tried to do that-

“You will do,” the Captain gargled, making a gesture with its flipper-like appendage.

Kade felt the guards holding his arms let go, and he dropped like a rock, just barely catching himself before he smacked face-first into the deck.

Kade had no idea what was going on.  How would he do?  Did the man want some shitty fan-fiction?  He wasn’t sure what else he could offer.

Looking up, he saw that the room around them was large and circular.  The Command Center of a ship, he slowly realized.

A great amount of activity was taking place ahead of them, dozens of other Greggans hurrying around consoles, croaking and grunting to each other excitedly.

He heard the Captain bellow again, looking up to see that his throat had distended like a frog’s, producing a loud rumbling croak.  It made him shiver, but he had no idea the significance.

No one seemed to be paying any attention to him at this point, and he slowly brought himself up to a sitting position, pulling his knees up to his chest.  A Greggan passed by him, and he leaned away, but it did not even look at him.

Dark, had it just been a day since he’d skipped out on work to head to The Landing Strip for a drink?  He should have at least been writing, and he told himself he would when he was there, but he’d really just gone there to ogle the dancers.

Then the sirens warning of the pirate raid, and he’d run to the nearest shelter.

The wrong shelter.  When the pirates had broken in, they’d herded them all out with drones.  A few who tried to make some kind of stand were shot out of hand.  Or even those who just talked too much.

The pirates wanted obedience.  That was it.

After they’d brought them aboard the cargo shuttle, it had felt like hours before they’d lifted off, being brought into this ship.  The acceleration of liftoff had knocked a lot of them out, even killed one old woman.

He only vaguely recalled being dragged into a crowded cargo room with the others.  Mostly government officials, but then he’d passed out . . .

And then he’d woken up here, with the Captain.

The Greggans began to croak together towards the Captain, a strange chorus, their own throat sacks expanding.  The Captain stood, his backward-curved legs hefting his bulk up slowly, and he raised his arms.

“Open shutters,” he bellowed.

Kade did not understand the significance until the first crack appeared between the two great metal plates.

From the moment he saw the light that seeped through, he knew that he was seeing zerospace.

Fear made him look away, hiding his head.  Curiosity prompted him to look back.

He’d always heard that people went mad looking into zerospace.  Scientists said that there was nothing to see.  Stories told said that there were demons, monsters, spirits, the future or the past, or something even more confusing than all of those visible in it.

He’d seen the low-quality vids that purported to be the view.

But as he gazed for the first time into zerospace, he knew that none of the stories had been right.

His jaw opened, staring in rapt attention at the sight out beyond the windows.

He could not describe how it looked, or how it made him feel.  Words, for once in his life, felt impotent, their descriptive ability useless.  It was not like anything he had ever seen; the colors impossibly vivid, in tones he had never seen, shapes he had never thought could exist that seemed to fold and move and reform without moving, existing in planes and dimensions beyond the ones he had known his entire life.

No, they were not shapes, just . . .

Transcendence, he thought, as he felt stinging tears begin to flow down his face.


< Ep 10 Part 10 | Ep 10 Part 12 >

Episode 10 – Star Hunters, part 10

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


“So Greggans are those frog guys, right?” Apollonia asked.

Two minutes ago Captain Brooks had sent out a message to the command officers – and her, apparently – stating that they have a very likely idea of the pirates’ species.

They were aliens she had heard of, but knew very little about.  They were big, ugly, and mean, if the crappy serials she’d watched were any indication.

Y’s image shifted, and he looked to her.  “I have heard the comparison of Greggans to frogs or toads, but I admit I do not see it.  I have heard them sometimes described as “Lophiiformoids”, and it is somewhat apt, though they lack the lure of Earthly anglerfish and do not live lives anything like those animals-“

“Show me?” Apollonia asked.

“Nor,” Y chided, “You are perfectly capable of searching up images yourself.”

“You’re just so much better at it,” she replied, smiling.  “I mean, I don’t think I’ve ever seen an image of a real one.  In the shit I used to watch they were a hundred percent faked.  Sometimes in cartoons they’d even be kinda cute, like mudskippers or something.”

Y paused again.  “I find it curious how you know more obscure Earth animals better than more common ones,” he noted.  “But I shall indulge you.  These are official images of the Greggan species that I keep on-record.  We have a large amount of data on their biology, though not nearly as much as we do for member species of the Sapient Union-“

“Don’t a lot of them live in Union space, though?” Apollonia asked.  The images appeared, and she studied them.  They were slightly more prosaic than the ones she’d seen in her old shows; less monstrous and more plausible.  But they were much closer to the hideous monsters than the cute mudskippers.

“There are groups of them, yes, but they do not have any centralized government.  As such we can only negotiate with individual bands.  They have become a Present Species, but not a Member Species.  This means they have full rights as citizens, of course, and they gain special rights to help protect their culture, but they cannot engage in major diplomacy and are considered specific citizens of the species whose territory they have settled in.”

“Oh,” Apollonia said distractedly, flipping through the three-dimensional images more.  “Wait, why aren’t they united?  And why are there so many kinds?  Are these just like . . . races?  Sub-species?”

So far she’d seen what seemed to be half a dozen different forms, varying hugely in size and specific shape.  They looked related, but not the same species.

“Your first question is a historical one,” Y replied.  “You see, the Greggan homeworld was destroyed in a war with the Aeena.  All of their colonies followed.  Greggans, therefore, are a diaspora people without a world.”

“Dark!” Apollonia goggled.  “Why did the Aeena do that?”

“We are unsure,” Y admitted.  “The Greggans say that it was a purely xenophobic attack, while the Aeena claim that they were attacked first and acted defensively.  Given that the Aeena have tried to exterminate other species and had an extreme technological advantage, I am inclined to believe the Greggan version of events.”

“Why haven’t the survivors settled a new world?” she asked.

“One cause of the defeat of the Greggans was the internal contradictions within their society.  To understand that, it ties into answering your second question,” Y explained.   “You see, Greggans have an interesting mode of reproduction-“

“Ew, no, I don’t want to hear about frogfish sex!” Apollonia said quickly.

“Do not worry,” Y replied, sounding amused.  “It is all extremely Nor-friendly.  I am simply saying that the Greggans have three separate sexes . . .  Oh, you know what?  I have a file here that will be far quicker to read than to have me explain it!”

A link appeared, and Apollonia considered a moment before clicking it.

File: Greggan Biology and Culture 101

As she finished it, she heard Y speak.

“Ah, and there!  My paperwork is finished.  I am now off-duty.”

“Nice,” Apollonia replied, her voice dry as she closed the file.  “I’m still on-duty.  I think I’ll be on-duty until we catch the pirates.”  She paused.  “Does you being off mean you’ll be going?”

“Of course not,” Y replied.  “Speaking to you is not a duty, Nor.  I was, strictly speaking, goofing off by talking to you  while I was on-duty.  However, our conversation did not affect my ability to perform my duties, and I feel confident you will not tell on me.”

Apollonia thought for a second that one of the lights that represented an eye winked off for a second, and she blinked, unsure.

“I’d say let’s go do something,” she said, feeling a sudden loneliness.  “But I can’t even leave the damn bridge area.  It’s like I’m a prisoner.”

“You are simply on-duty,” Y replied earnestly.

“I’m just sitting here,” she replied, her voice surly, rubbing the side of her head.  It had felt like she’d been hearing some annoying hum ever since they’d arrived here.

“Which is, in fact, your duty.  Many people have more involved jobs, it is true, but yours is invaluable.  Cerebral Readers such as yourself seem to provide a passive defense against the Reality Break Shadow effects of Leviathans – and other tenkionic matter or krahteon radiation.”

“I know,” she replied.  “But don’t I get time off?”

“Not during this time, no.  You are on duty,” Y answered, again not meanly.

“I guess I’m at least raking in the cash,” she said, caught off-guard by the bitterness in her own words.

The image of him paused, his head tilting in a thoughtful way.

“From the perspective of many your position would appear a simple and easy one, Nor.  You do clock more time of labor than most, though it is simply by being.  But I know that this view of the ease of your life does not reflect the reality.  You are uneasy sitting and doing nothing; despite your self-deprecating jokes about your own laziness, in your home system every moment of your time was spent in a struggle to simply meet the basic needs of life.  It is told in not just your person but your very genes; your stress levels are constantly elevated, your cells and body ready to react to a sudden change and threat that is not going to materialize here.  Yet you cannot simply stop these things by knowing that.  You are fighting a battle you cannot stop, and it wears on you – physically, mentally, and emotionally.”

Apollonia’s heart was beating in her chest at Y’s words.  He had seen through her with ease, seen deeper into her than she had ever even put into thought.  Her hands shook slightly, and her mouth felt dry.  She was not sure what to say.

“But you do your duty despite that,” Y continued.  “And we are all grateful for it.  My central processor is actually not far from your location, which means you are keeping me safe with your presence.  I am being quite honest when I say; I am grateful for your protection.”

Apollonia looked down, feeling ashamed now of her tantrum.  The fact that Y was a hyper-intelligent AI always seemed just a cool part of him; but it was unnerving to see how he could read her so easily.

Yet she did feel better to think that he was grateful to her.  Maybe he was just lying, but she believed that he was being honest.  His gratitude meant it was a reciprocal street, not just . . . her being the AI’s pet monkey.

Yet some of her frustration remained.

“I am glad about that, Y, I really am.  I do want to help – you and the others.  Being seen as valuable instead of a dead weight is great, but . . . I just wish my helping was more than just sitting around.  Like I could do something actively, you know?”

Y was slow to respond.  “I understand.  That time will come, however.  You are still studying for your officer candidacy test, are you not?”

“Yeah,” she replied.  “I dunno how much I’m really learning.  Kiseleva stopped having me do that ball-chasing game and has me doing a mix of exercises and reading.  But honestly?  I think she views me as too weak to be of much use . . .”

“It is best to play to your strengths,” Y said.  “So if she has you studying, then I suspect she believes you will excel more in that regard than at the physical tasks.”

“I feel like I suck at this too, not gonna lie,” she admitted.  “But . . . like going back to what you said earlier, I have to wonder; when will I actually get better?  When will my body and cells or whatever say ‘oh wait, we don’t have to be hypervigilant all the time’?  When can I feel like I actually belong in a place that doesn’t hate me?”

The words came pouring out, against her better judgment.

Y was quiet for a few moments.  “I always attempt to be honest, Nor, but I admit; I do not know.  Sometimes what the human body learns it can never unlearn.  It is a spectacular machine of evolution, capable of adapting to new environments.  But once it has been dedicated along a path, it is not always so easy to change its course.”

“So, never,” she said.

“You will change with time.  I cannot say how; but you will always be Apollonia Nor,” Y said.  “Whatever you become, that is what you are.  The quest for self-improvement is an ancient human struggle; yet perhaps at times, the best step forward is acceptance of your own qualities.  To see those you cannot change for strengths or at least to accept them.  As much as I can cure, I cannot change people – nor would I want to.”


< Ep 10 Part 9 | Ep 10 Part 11 >

Episode 10 – Star Hunters, part 9

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


Cenz’s presentation appearing in Brooks’s HUD was a complex chart of chemicals and interactions that was hard to parse.

“I know that this may not be very clear, my apologies,” Cenz began.

Brooks wondered if his confusion had been showing.

“I can summarize the data, however,” Cenz continued.  “As you know, many carbon-based species use amino acids of some type; humans use only twenty, even though there are tens of thousands of possible permutations.  The colony’s food chemical storage contained base materials to build those proteins, in various stages of completion.  Yet our pirates did not take every kind of chemical available; they in fact avoided certain complete chemicals and took other incomplete portions.  When I saw this, I knew it could be a clue.

“Even though the process is very involved, I modeled what sorts of foods for known species could be made with the chemicals that were taken.  As a result, I feel that I can say that our pirates are Greggans.”

Brooks continued to look over the data, trying to parse it, though such in-depth biochemistry was somewhat beyond him.  He did see the patterns eventually, slowly seeing just what his science officer was explaining.

“You’re saying that what they stole was only useful for making food Greggans can eat?” Brooks ventured.

“That is correct, Captain!  Certain amino acids that humans use are indigestible or toxic to Greggans, and those chemicals were avoided.  If they had been, say, Dessei or Fesha, they would have stolen a slightly different assortment of chemicals.”

Cenz hesitated, the face on his screen turning thoughtful.  “Admittedly, the colony did not have every chemical that would be required to produce Greggan foodstuff.  However, even with those missing pieces I feel very confident that my conclusions are correct.”

Brooks continued to study the information, the clarity slowly coming through the complexity.

“So no other known species would take this same assortment?” Brooks asked.

“No, Captain.  Not unless they were intentionally attempting to fool us.  Which I doubt, as they had to use surface-lifting rockets to get these goods into orbit.  They paid dearly in resources for every kilogram they took.”

Brooks considered that.  “You’ve done good work, but this raises another question; with the thought of how much it cost them in resources and single-use boosters to steal this; why did they take the uranium?”

Brooks brought up a list of the goods stolen from the colony, skipping past the food chemicals to the end.  “Uranium is extremely dense, and has only specialized uses.  Why would they want it?”

He had an idea, to be honest.  But he was hoping that Cenz might have a different thought to allay his concerns.

“To be honest, Captain,” Cenz admitted.  “I can think of no likely reason except for weapons.”

Brooks contained the curse that came to his lips.  Fission weapons had only niche applications in most space warfare; a heavy payload would make a plasma ball only a few hundred kilometers across, which was miniscule in space.  Useful, at times, for intercepting groups of drones or missiles, but beyond that . . .

They were good at causing massive destruction on a planetary surface.  Like where colonies existed.

“They also took some equipment for refining that uranium,” Brooks noted.  “How good a weapon could they make?”

Cenz was quiet a moment, contemplating his answer.  “From the quality of equipment, they could achieve sufficient purity to create fission weapons.  However, unless they have further equipment, I do not think they could produce anything of an extremely high grade.  I expect weapons in a low megaton-range, rather than gigaton.  At least, if they are concerned with fitting the warhead into any kind of standard missile.”

“Still enough to wipe out a colony,” Brooks said.

Cenz did not seem to have words for that, and his electronic face shifted rapidly through a gamut of emotions.

Brooks pressed a button on his desk.  “Dr. Y,” he began.  “Prepare for the possibility of mass radiation poisoning and thermal radiation damage.”

Y’s reply was prompt.  “I quite understand, Captain.  I will make the preparations.”

Ending the call, Brooks looked back to Cenz.  “This may escalate, and quickly.”


< Ep 10 Part 8 | Ep 10 Part 10 >

Episode 10 – Star Hunters, part 8

Sorry for the lack of new art, I’ve been running non-stop and haven’t had time to make anything.

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


“The computer system was not a complete loss,” Urle said.  “My deeper scans found some data that was salvageable in some of the backups, though I have to admit the damage here was bad.”

“Does the equipment show signs of tenkionic disruption?” Brooks asked.

“Negative.  We don’t see any signs of that sort of corruption, Captain,” Urle replied.

The image was still somewhat grainy from bad data rate, but stronger than the earlier one, Brooks could see.  Urle seemed distracted at times, and in the background behind him Brooks could see people moving by.

“Honestly, this looks more like a software attack than anything else.  I checked very carefully for signs of alteration in the hardware, which we’d expect if there was some kind of tenkionic attack.  But I didn’t find any.”

“A software attack,” Jaya repeated.  “Did the pirates upload some sort of virus to get the system to delete itself?”

“That would be my guess,” Urle said.  He paused a second, his head tilting as if he was looking at something beyond him.  “But I haven’t looked over the entire system.  It’s possible a deeper scan will find something novel – tenkionic matter is often unpredictable.”

“Still, it’s rather good to not see those signs,” Brooks said.  Jaya glanced at him but said nothing.

“What data were you able to retrieve?” he continued.

“A few more scans of the pirate ships as they came in, nothing too amazing.  It might help add to our understanding of their capabilities, though.  The juiciest thing I found was this, though it’s still not very exciting.”

A brief, damaged piece of video played.  It was a shaky view, as if recorded by an individual’s system as he hid and peered between buildings.

Two bulky humanoids were walking, heavy drones swarming above and around them.

The two walked slowly, their suits dark, appearing armored, and fully enclosing their bodies.

It was only seven seconds long before the view abruptly turned and fled.

“Someone was unlucky enough to be caught outside and got a look at some of the attackers.  It seems a few did come down to the surface, after all.”

“Maybe not unlucky,” Jaya said.  “Perhaps brave.”

“Perhaps so,” Urle replied.  “But the person who recorded it dumped their recent data to a server and hasn’t been seen since.  The colonists are fearing the worst.”

A person’s life for a few seconds of grainy footage, Brooks thought.

“We’ll get to analyzing this data, see if we can find something that cracks this open in there,” Brooks said.

“I sure hope so, Captain,” Urle replied.  “With your permission, I’d like to stay down here a few more hours and see what else I can do for the colony.”

“Granted,” Brooks said.  “Do what good you can.  I’ll get Sulp on preparing a few more drops of supplies in the meantime.”


As the call ended, Urle could see the group behind him preparing to move in.

The colonists had been eyeing him for several minutes, and it hadn’t taken complex behavioral analysis algorithms to see that they were both angry and prepared to take that anger out on him.

Taking a deep breath, he turned to face them.

“Can I help you?” he asked cordially to the group.

There were six of them, two women and four men.  A few looked less certain than others, but the stress signals poured off them.

“Now you ask,” one man spat.  Urle decided he was one of the leaders and turned slightly to face him better.

“I was on a call.  I’m ready to go help more, though,” Urle told the man.

“Where the hell were you when we were getting attacked?” one of the women said.  She was tall, her dark hair short like a spacer, her voice quavering slightly.

“You left us here to get massacred!” a man said, his emotions clearly roiled by the woman’s outburst.

Urle knew it was not, truly, an indictment against him, but against the policies the Union had put in place about these colonies.

Ever since Terris, colonization of new systems had been stopped and the newer colonies restricted in supplies.

No one had known what had caused the Leviathan to attack Terris.  But it had been a fast-growing colony near the fringe of settled space, and many found it easy to think that reckless expansionism had awoken a sleeping giant.

“I’m sorry you were left vulnerable,” Urle said calmly.  “It never should have happened.  But we’re here now, and-“

“You being here won’t bring back our families!” the woman said again, tears bursting from her eyes.

“Jeciza . . .” the other woman said, trying to comfort her.

“Why did it have to take an attack before you people would listen to us, huh?  We’ve been out here for seven years just asking for the assistance we were promised, stuck and helpless!”

Urle bit his lip against pointing out that they had been offered transport back into Union space; but that was almost certainly another sore point, given that many had taken that up and stripped these fringe colonies of population they desperately needed.

“We don’t know what the pirates have done with the captives,” Urle said, still calm but now with some firmness.  “Most likely they want to ransom them back.  And I promise you, we will do everything we can to help return them unharmed.”

But his words only seemed to raise more ire.

“Fuck you!” a man cried, flinging something at him.

Ducking it easily, Urle took a step back, adopting a defensive stance.  The last thing he wanted to do was fight these people, and yet-

“What can a fucking machine know about what we’re going through?” another man said.  “You traded in your fucking soul when you-“

Urle saw Addo step out, saw the weapon in her arms – but when she raised it, she only fired into the ground.

The sound made the mob jump.  Urle looked to her calmly.

“That’s enough,” the Chairwoman said.  “Gen, Hiyo – what the hell are you doing?  This man is here to help us and you’re blaming him for a policy beyond his control.”

“He’s one of them!” the leading man spat.  “We all know why they keep us weak, so we’re easy to control!  And with these attacks they’re only going to use it as an excuse to press down harder!”

Another man yelled.  “They probably did the attacks themselves to-“

“Quiet!” Addo yelled.  “Gen, Hiyo – that’s enough of your conspiracies.  Disperse, now!  I won’t listen to any more of this garbage, and I do not want to hear you’ve been harassing the other Union officers!”

One of the women, the one who had seemed unsure about this whole thing, took Hiyo’s arm, pulling him.  “Come on,” she hissed.  “Let’s go!”

The man glared at Urle a moment, then turned sharply, taking the woman’s hand as she left.

The rest of the group began to disperse, but Gen lingered the longest, looking between Urle and Addo.

“I can see whose side you’re on now,” he spat, finally turning and walking away.

“I’m very sorry that happened,” Addo said, approaching Urle and holstering her sidearm.

While she had broken up the situation, Urle thought, he did not really think she had solved it; her words and actions would only be fuel to the fire.

“Is that view widespread?” he asked.

“Somewhat.  I would not say it’s a majority of people, but just a few loudmouths,” Addo replied.

Despite her actions, Urle could tell she was wary of him still, but he did not know if it was because of her seeming distrust of transhumans or because she agreed on some level with that group.

“And where do you stand on it?” he asked.  It was very straightforward, but he was prepared to study her reaction more than her words.

She surprised him, though; “I am outspoken in being against those people,” she said.  “It’s why I was quick to take control after the previous leadership of the colony were taken by the pirates.”

“Wait,” Urle said.  “The kidnapped people were the rest of the leadership?”

“Yes,” she said.  “They were having a session when the pirates showed, so naturally they went into the same bunker.  There wasn’t time for anything else.”

The fact that they hadn’t mentioned this yet . . .  Urle found himself with a bad taste in his mouth.  “And you weren’t there?”

“No, I was not an elected official at that time,” she said.  “Yet I knew if I waited, people like Gen would take this as a chance to take control – and I have no idea what they would do.  They see traitors and spies everywhere.”

“Spies for the pirates?” Urle asked.

“No,” she replied.  “For the Union.”

Urle was quiet a moment, rocked.  “I had no idea things were this bad . . .”

“Like I said before,” Addo said.  “It was only a few people.  They’re just loud, and I fear potentially violent.  To be honest, since the Union has restricted shipments out here, we’ve been trading with independent merchants quite often.  They often bring their own mass culture and news.  Quite a few people listen – and take it seriously.”

So it was outside sources spreading these ideas, Urle thought.

He’d known there was resentment, but honestly – this was worse than he expected.

“I’d like to ask,” Addo continued.  “That you keep this off the record.”

He could detect a note of nervousness in her voice as she spoke.

“I don’t want these men getting detained or . . . harassed or anything like that,” she added, seeming to have steeled herself to say the words.

“I have to tell my Captain that the situation is getting serious here,” he said, speaking carefully.  “But I will not reveal anyone’s identities.  Is that all right?”

Addo did not look happy, but nodded.  “So long as it doesn’t come back on them, I suppose.”

“You still seem unhappy with me,” Urle added.

“Honestly?” she asked.  “When we saw your ship arrive . . . we were hoping for a full relief.  Dozens of pods of supplies and hundreds of engineers.”

She gestured towards the door and beyond.  “The help that you and Commander Cutter are giving is appreciated.  But in the face of what has become of our lives, it feels so, so small, Commander Urle.  I know you are doing what you can, but we feel more alone than ever.”


< Ep 10 Part 7 | Ep 10 Part 9 >

Episode 10 – Star Hunters, part 7

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


“As you can see, Executive Commander, the pirates hit the colony hard.”

Urle took in the devastation of Presna colony grimly, the destruction so much worse than it had looked from orbit.

The damage was precise, almost surgical.  Every major routing junction for the power grid had been hit, utterly breaking the system.  It would take weeks to restore.

Other key equipment had been taken or destroyed that would set back even attempts to repair the power grid.  Heavy lifting machines disabled by cutting or fusing critical components, even key tools had been taken, and the raw materials to fabricate more.

On the one hand it seemed like it was designed to hurt, but many of those things taken would be just as invaluable to a nomadic pirate fleet as they would be to the colonists.

And their critical damage would, under most circumstances, keep the colony from being able to call for help in a timely fashion.  It had delayed the colonists, but a heroic effort by many of their own engineers had enabled them to cobble together enough equipment to make a distress call – likely sooner than the pirates expected.

That could prove critical, he thought, though the sheer level of technical skill shown in the attack worried him.

And nowhere did he see the sort of unprofessional acts of vandalism he’d expect from a buccaneer force.  There was no graffiti, no breaking or theft of personal property, and – aside from the people kidnapped, no one had been assaulted in any way.

“Take me to see the bunker they broke into,” Urle said.

Chairwoman Addo nodded and led him on.  “It’s a few blocks away, not far.”

As they strode through the colony, he saw Cutter leading his team of other Bicet engineers in helping the colonists in their work.  Heavy loader drones trundled after them.

Everywhere, the colonists were working without complaint.  It was cold here by human standards.  He did not feel it, but even the Bicet had donned downy bodysuits.

The colonists had to be hungry, too.  They’d been rationing their supplies, and only with the Craton‘s arrival would any be going to bed with a full stomach.

But none of the workers complained.  Men and women sang as they worked, an old song.

It is we who built these towers
We will build them up again
No more will we cower
With the dawn sun flies the wren

Addo stopped.  “I’ve got that full list of what was taken, if you’d like it now.”

“Yes, send it,” Urle said.

He began to peruse the file as they continued on.

A lot of foodstock chemicals – very specific ones, he noted.  He marked that as important.  Equipment, all of which seemed reasonable for pirates to take.  Nothing too concerning there.

But then he saw the uranium ore and refining equipment.

“You mine uranium here?” he asked.

“Yes, it’s one of our more valuable resources,” Addo told him.  “A large reason we decided to colonize this world.  The geology of it is rather interesting and resulted in a larger amount being near the surface than one would expect.”

The geology behind it was interesting, yes, but right now he could only focus on the details.

Quite a lot of what had been taken was already heavily refined.

Despite fusion being the most widely-used form of power generation in space, there were still a lot of niche uses for heavy elements.

Not least of all weapons.

“This is the secure bunker,” Addo said, stopping and pointing.

Urle put the list away to take a look.

The entrance was sunken and reinforced, but it looked as if heavy drilling lasers had been used to cut through it.

“They burned through a few laser drills trying to get in,” Addo said.  “Unfortunately, we did have to remove them, we didn’t want that kind of thing just laying around.  But if you want to inspect them we can get them out.”

“Was there anything unique about them?” Urle asked, still looking at the bunker.

“No.  They were all our equipment – and they left no DNA or anything behind on them, though even if they had left some traces the overheating would have destroyed it.”

“I’ll get Cutter to look at them later, it’s not a priority, then,” Urle said.

He stepped closer to the door, scanning with every sensor he had.  He extended several mechanical arms containing even more sensors, and in his rear-view cameras he saw Addo retract slightly.

Looking into the logs, he saw that there was very little incidence of transhumanism on Presna.  He did not know why, but it didn’t really matter.

“If my alterations disturb you, I assure you I won’t be here for long,” Urle told her, curious how she’d respond.

“I’m just not very used to them is all,” Addo replied, still seeming unnerved.  “I mean no offense.”

“None taken,” Urle said, though he wasn’t sure if she meant it.

Stepping down into the bunker, he swept his scanners all over.

Biological traces were prevalent in here, but outside – nothing.  Not even as much as there should be from dragging the inhabitants out.  Hell, there should be something from just the other colonists stepping in.

Stepping back out, he scanned in new ranges, finding a residue.

“They cleaned up a lot,” he noted.  “Even debrided the first few atoms of the surfaces here to remove any traces.”

He fell silent, and Addo finally spoke.  “But why do that?”

“They didn’t want us to know who they were,” Urle said.  “Trying to cover their tracks.  Which suggests that some of the actual pirates were down here.  If they’d left even a single skin flake or hair, we’d be able to sequence it . . .”

Withdrawing his sensors, he looked back up to Addo.  “Let me see your computer systems.  Maybe we can find something – anything left in there.”


< Ep 10 Part 6 | Ep 10 Part 8 >

Episode 10 – Star Hunters, part 6

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


“We are in orbit above Presna II, Captain,” Ji-min Bin called.

The blue and green world loomed in their view, just rising above the centerline of the command deck.

Brooks was quiet a moment as he studied the world.

Presna was only 0.98 Earth’s mass, a little smaller and denser, which made the surface gravity just 1.04 times that of Earth.  A tiny difference.

The records indicated that the life on the planet was still simple; a single species of microscopic life similar to Earthly cyanobacteria grew across much of the world’s shallow, watery areas.

There were notably unique qualities, but physics were the same here as on Earth; and so under similar conditions, life itself was similar.

He wondered how, in billions of years it might look.  Would it get the chance, or would the presence of Presna colony forever alter the world’s evolutionary trajectory?

His officers were awaiting orders, though, and he put that thought aside.

“Deploy defense drones and send probes to check out the remains of the colony’s orbital defense systems – see if we can learn anything.”

“Captain,” Eboh called.  “We’re receiving a signal from the surface.  It is the Acting Chairwoman of the Presna Colony.”

“Put her through,” Brooks said.

A box appeared on the screen in front of them; an image of a woman in it.  The resolution was low, pixelated from the low data rate.

“Greetings Captain Brooks!” the woman said, her voice slightly fuzzy.  “We send greetings and thanks for your quick arrival.”

“We are glad to render what assistance we can,” Brooks told her.  “We have seven drop pods with emergency supplies ready to go, once we get landing coordinates from you.”

“We’ll send you that data, Captain,” the woman said, relief flooding her voice.  “It’s been a week since their attack and we still haven’t restored most of our power grid.  What the pirates didn’t steal they wrecked.”

“Presumably to keep you from calling for help in a timely fashion,” Urle said.

“We’ve got a lot of cold people,” the woman continued.  “Please prioritize thermal suits and power grid materials.  Long-term we’re going to need a lot more food production supplies; the pirates took most of our reserves of raw chemicals for algae farming.”

Cenz spoke.  “Madam Chairwoman, do you have a list of what specific chemicals you need?  We can begin synthesizing more of them immediately.”

“Of course, and our thanks again,” the woman said.

“I’d like to send down a team to assist with the engineering and also to view the damage personally,” Brooks said.  “If that is all right with you.”

“Yes, Captain, we’d appreciate a few more skilled hands down here.  I will make sure your officers get access to all the data we have, though I’m afraid we have very little in that regard.”

Brooks saw a pop-up in his HUD that the landing coordinates for the drop pods had been received.

“We will be sending the supplies presently,” Brooks told her.  “And we will speak again before the Craton departs the system.  Farewell for now.”

The transmission ended and Brooks turned.

“Urle, I’d like you to lead the surface party.  Get a good look around and determine how much of the colony’s damage was planned and just what they took.  I think that there may be clues in the specific chemical supplies they targeted.”

“I agree, Captain,” Cenz said.  “From the list the Chairwoman sent, it seems that they were very selective.”

“This all seems very well-organized,” Jaya noted.  “Most piracy is an act of desperation, not a well-conceived scheme.”

“I agree,” Brooks said.  “But for now all we can do is try and learn more.  Cutter, you will lead a team of engineers to go with you to aid the colony’s repair efforts.  The shuttle is getting prepped, so have them all ready to go in ten minutes.”

“Yes, Captain,” Urle replied, rising.

“Already selected preferred team,” Cutter hissed, scuttling from his seat after Urle.  “Contacting now.”

Apollonia started to rise as well, first excitedly, then hesitant.  “Captain Brooks, I’d like to go, too!”

Brooks looked at her, his expression slightly curious.  “Permission denied,” he told her.

Apollonia pulled a shocked face, still rising a moment before pausing.  “Really?  But I’ve never been on another planet before!  Besides Earth.  I just want to see one while I can!”

Jaya’s head turned, staring at her.

Apollonia suddenly felt her knees go weak.  She had just questioned the Captain’s order in front of the entire bridge crew.  She felt, imagined, that everyone was now looking at her judgmentally.

“We need you on the ship,” Brooks said calmly yet firmly.  There was a note of warning in his voice, not to question an order in that way again.

Her cheeks felt like they were on fire and she sat back down.

Jaya turned back to her console, not saying a word.

“Begin releasing the drop pods,” Brooks ordered.  “And after that, we’ll see what we can do to leave this colony some defenses after we leave.  We don’t want to leave them vulnerable to another attack.”


< Ep 10 Part 5 | Ep 10 Part 7 >