Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 52

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


Apollonia looked at the screen.  She’d been steeling herself up for this moment for hours now – after a sleep, and finally.

Finally, she felt it.

Her hands moved to the keyboard, and she began to type.

He That Squats on Yellow Sand died a hero.

Not just for his actions for the good of his ship – which he gave everything to protect – but to me personally.  He saved my life when the time came, and did so selflessly, without hesitation.

Before that, he was my friend.

We knew each other only a brief time, but I have few friends and he was open and pleasant and liked to joke a lot.  I never thought that a species so different from mine would be easier to talk to than my own kind, but he was simply that way, and however short a time it was, I was privileged to know him.

Please remember him as a credit to your people, to your family, to all of you.

I know that I will.

Sincerely,

Apollonia Nor

She finished the letter and re-read it, fixing a few typos and changing a couple words.  But she resisted the urge to change it more substantially, hoping that perhaps the stream of consciousness that had created the words would impart her emotions better than anything carefully calculated.

When she felt satisfied, she selected the sender, using the routing address Jaya had given her, and pressed the send button.


FINIS


< Ep 7 Part 51 | Ep 8 Part 1 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 51

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


“. . . and what did you do with the body of Hoc Rem?” Vice Director Silva asked.

The man did not look pleased.  Brooks had expected as much, but the man had not chewed him out; only made clear his disappointment.  Somehow, that stung more.

“We made an expedient purchase of the skiff and remote-docked it to the ship.  No one was aware of the presence of Rem’s body, and we have since cleaned up all evidence.”

Silva nodded.  “Good enough.”  He paused, tilting his head.  “I realize now my mistake – in stating that your personnel could not engage in combat, I did not include you.  You exploited that fact.”  Yet he did not sound upset; only a hint of amusement and shrewd reconsidering.

“It was a calculated risk,” Brooks admitted.  “There were no witnesses on the station, other than the enemies.  I do not believe they ever even saw me, and I took precautions.”

“Precautions that could have been seen through,” Silva said.

“Rem would have died without my intervention,” Brooks said.  “That he did anyway was misfortune, but it was the best choice under the circumstances, and I stand by my decision.”

Silva scowled.  “Even with him dead, this data that your Executive Commander retrieved is more than we could have hoped.  It will take time to sift, but I suspect this will be a greater prize than even the man alive.”

“I hope so,” Brooks said.  “If I may ask – what do you know of this group, the Silent Hand?  Are they connected to the Esoteric Order?”

The man watched him impassively.  “As it stands, Captain – we do not know.”

Silva went silent, clearly contemplating, and Brooks had to bite his tongue.

The man had not brought up Vermillion Dawn, and she had said that she’d been in contact with their intelligence . . .

How much did Silva know about her?

And if she had cooperated with the Union, why had she never contacted him before?

“You are unorthodox, but your work is sound.  My congratulations to you, Captain.  You do get results.”

“Thank you,” Brooks replied, but Silva had ended the communication already.

Brooks let out a breath, leaning back in his seat.

Holding up his hand, he looked to see if it was shaking.

There was only the slightest hint of a tremor.  The result of adrenal letdown, hours after the fact.

It had been a long day, that had taken a toll on him.  The search, then finding Dawn of all people . . .

After that the gunfight.  No matter if he was a good shot and had been in shootouts before, known what to do and how best to do it – living or dying in such a situation was not skill.  Just luck.

His had held, but his mind wanted to replay over it again and again, reminding him that at each moment he could have been killed.

He had to fight that urge.

He focused his thoughts elsewhere.

He’d finally gotten the chance to talk to Kell, but the being had simply said little.  After asking him about the Hev, Kell had only smiled.  “Ask Urle,” he had said.

Brooks had also intended to tell him about the invite to the play, but after that . . .

At least he could count on Urle.  Zach had informed him of his experiences, telling him too that Kell had admitted to consuming the Hev, but thought nothing of it.

Urle had also told him of the Silent Hand, the enemy he had not even seen – and that Kell had identified them not as that, but as the Esoteric Order.

“There was a mark on the wall,” Urle had said.  “But my visual data of it is corrupted – I don’t know how, but it . . .”

“Something was wrong with it,” Brooks had ventured.

“Yes.”

“Like something tenkionic.”

“Just like that,” Urle had said grimly.  “For all I can prove, though, Kell made it.”

“And they called him a Lesser Lord?” Brooks had asked, frowning.

“Kell certainly did not like being called that.  He was ready to kill them all – and I think they would have let them.”

Brooks had pondered on it.  “And the one you shot – are you sure he’d been dead?”

“Before he got up, at least.  I guess I can’t rule out some crazy sensor spoofing, but . . .  I saw his wounds.  Yet he stood up . . .”

“Back from the dead,” Brooks said.

“Yeah,” Urle agreed.  “Like Cassandra.”

There was little else to say after that.  He’d dismissed Urle and gone over his report again.

He saw how Dawn had led Zach around to clues and gotten him to the station hub.

What had been her plan? he wondered.

Who were these people – the Silent Hand?  If Silva truly did not know . . .

It was, though, quite possible he did know, but simply did not feel that Brooks required the information.

And what of Cassandra . . . ?

He had not brought her up to Silva.  It was not related to his mission, and the last thing he wanted was the man demanding her for interrogation.  This was his ship, and his people.

If it was her . . . then he was thankful.  Even though she had died before he’d come to the Craton or met Iago, he’d read all about the history of his officers when he’d come on.

It was true that her body had never been recovered on the mining colony.  She’d been born outside the SU and had gone back to visit family.  The accident had just been due to a faulty piece within a liquid oxygen tank that had sparked and started a fire.

The entire dome had been destroyed, taking the life of everyone there.

Except, it seemed, for one.

He checked again on the drone that was following her.  She was in the quarters with Iago and Elliot, and he could get no feed – he could not violate their privacy that way.  But the drone itself noted that nothing was amiss.

Exhaustion had been creeping in around the edges for some time.

The rest of these problems would have to wait, he thought.  Until tomorrow.


< Ep 7 Part 50 | Ep 7 Part 52 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 50

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


Brooks had seen the altercation as they had approached and increased his speed to get there sooner.

He had heard Iago burst out his angry refusal, heard Pirra’s calmness, and now that they stared at him, he finally noticed the newcomer.

Or, really, the old face.

“Cassandra?” he said, eyes widening.

“Yes, Captain,” she said.  “I am alive.”

Brooks’s eyes went to Iago, asking without speaking.

“I don’t know Captain.  But she is alive, and we just . . . we want to come back onto the ship.”

“It was a miracle of the Infinite,” Cassandra said.

Urle’s eyes snapped to her at that, but he did not speak.

“Captain, she doesn’t have a system,” Pirra said.  “I’ve been trying to tell Mr. Caraval that we have to confirm her identity.”

“Have you tried a DNA test?” Brooks asked.

“I had not yet gotten the chance, sir.”

Brooks nodded.  “Order it done.  If that confirms her identity, then we will allow her a provisional boarding pass-“

“Sir-!” Iago protested.

Brooks stared at him.  “. . . until we can use other methods to confirm her identity.  Hopefully within a day or two she can once again be a permanent member of the ship’s population.”

Iago went, in a heartbeat, back to pleasant.  He rubbed the back of his head.  “My apologies, Captain.  I’m a little keyed up.”

“It seems so,” Brooks said.  “Perhaps understandably.”

Pirra spoke.  “I have ordered the test.  The drone will be here in a moment.”

“Good.  While your ID is provisional, Cassandra, I imagine you won’t mind if you have a drone following you?” Brooks asked her.

“No, that is all right,” she said.

Urle cleared his throat and looked to Kell.  “Ambassador . . . do you have an opinion on this situation?” he asked.

All eyes went to Kell, but the being did not seem to be really looking at any of them – or anything.  His eyes were glazed over.

He said nothing, and Urle leaned closer.

“Ambassador?  Are you all right-“

“No,” Kell said brusquely, suddenly.  “I have no opinion.  Excuse me.”

He stepped through the group, passing onto the ship.

Urle let out a breath.

Brooks gestured him on.  “Go to a debriefing room, I’ll meet you there shortly.”

“Aye, sir.”

Brooks waited until the medical drone arrived.  Cassandra nervously held her hand out to it, and it merely touched her lightly.

It pinged quickly.

“Identify match.  This is Mary Cassandra Caraval,” it chirped.

Brooks was not sure what to make of this, but looking over the woman, over Elliot and Iago . . .

He could not think of a reasosn to stop this.

“All right,” he said.  “Welcome back, Cassandra.”

Iago beamed, and Pirra frowned, her crest flat.  She stepped aside to let them through.


< Ep 7 Part 49 | Ep 7 Part 51 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 49

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


Iago felt like a new man as he walked towards the Craton‘s boarding ramp.

His arm encircled Cassandra’s shoulders, and Elliot hugged her leg, his own excitement almost uncontainable.

He was talking to her, telling her about his schooling, his friends, the trouble he often got into.

“. . . they get really upset when I kick the ball off the hydroponics towers,” he added.

“Maybe,” Cassandra said, tousling his hair, “You should stop doing that?”

“It’s helping me learn geometry!  I can get some really sick angles, and I only knock off a few leaves!”

Cassandra laughed, and Iago felt his heart swell.

An officer stepped up to him as they came to the ramp.  He was smiling.

“Identification, please?”

“Iago Caraval,” he told the man, sending his data.  “And my son Elliot and my . . .”

His words faded, and he swallowed, the enormity of it all hitting him again.

“. . . my wife Cassandra.”

The officer scanned Elliot’s data, but then frowned.  “I’m not getting any signal from your wife,” he said.

“I am afraid I don’t have a system,” she told him.

The officer looked surprised, but Iago only smiled.  “I have an override . . .”

His words trailed away as he realized that he did not have an override code.  He was not a Response officer anymore . . .

“You know what,” he said.  “Call Lt. Commander Pirra.  She’ll vouch for us.”

The officer frowned and nodded.  He stepped away, his hand going up to his ear as he made the call.

“Are you sure they’ll let me on?” Cassandra asked.

Iago felt like nothing could stop him now.  “Absolutely,” he said.  “I’ve known Pirra for years.  You’ve met her, too . . .”

Cassandra nodded, looking a little relieved, but concern still creased her face.  “I wish I remembered more,” she said.

“You will,” he told her.  “Dr. Y can help you, or maybe just going back to your old life will help.”

Fear crossed her face at the mention of Y, and Iago decided he would not press that option.

He didn’t need to, anyway.  It would all be fine, he felt sure.

His hand slipped down to his pocket, feeling the small bulge of the packet that Dr. Zyzus had given him.

“You must take one of these seeds each week,” the man had told him before he’d left.  “They will help you feel calm.  Your mind has undergone severe shocks in recent times, and it struggles to adapt.  What comes is joyous, Iago, I assure you.  But you cannot take it on all at once.  What your mind has experienced thus far would break a lesser man.”

He had pressed the bag of seeds into his hand.  “Grind them up into a paste, cross them over your brow and onto your tongue.  They will give your mind the time it needs to adjust to its new understanding.”

“What about when I run out?”

Zyzus had smiled.  “By then you will no longer need them.”

Yes, Iago thought.  Now he had all he would need going forward.

Down the ramp he saw three new figures appear – Pirra, flanked by two Response officers.

He raised his arm, waving to her and smiling.

Pirra’s eyes widened as she saw him, and she increased her pace.

Stepping forward, Iago opened his arms to her.

“Iago,” she whistled as she came up, and Iago embraced her.

He felt her pull back in surprise, but then relax and let out a whistling laugh.  Her crest showed her agitation and concern, but he brushed it off, letting her go and stepping back.

“Iago,” she repeated, “I’m glad you’ve come back, but . . . who is this?” she asked, gesturing to Cassandra.

“She’s my wife,” he said.  “You know her.  You met.”

Pirra looked fully at Cassandra, studying her.  Her crest did something Iago had never seen it do before; it trembled.

She looked back to him.  “Iago . . . Cassandra’s dead.”

Iago felt much of his joy melt away.

“I thought so too,” he said.  “But here she is.  You recognize her, don’t you?”

Pirra’s crest fell and rose quickly.  “Yes . . . yes, this person does look like her.  But I don’t understand how . . .”  She looked at Cassandra again, her eyes focusing on the woman.  “Is it really you . . . ?”

Cassandra nodded, her cheeks flushing.  She looked down.  “It was a miracle of the Infinite,” she said softly.  “I remember only a little – images, really.”

She raised her head.  “But I remember you, Pirra.  Seeing you . . . I can remember the green of your feathers, how bright your eyes were.”

Pirra blinked, stepping back, putting a hand to her face and looking thoughtful.

“I don’t think we have precedent for this,” she admitted.

“You can grant an access override,” Iago told her.  “You can just use your Response Privilege Code to let her onto the ship.  After she’s on we can get her a system and get everything sorted and it’ll all be fine.”

“We can’t do that until we know for sure who she is . . .” Pirra said.

Iago felt anger rise in him, and he leaned forward.  “Pirra, I’m telling you who she is.  You recognize her.  Don’t make this a problem when it doesn’t need to be.”

Pirra shifted, holding her ground.  “Iago, this is not a personal insult.  We have to confirm who she is or else she can’t go into the habitation areas-“

“No!” he snapped.  Fury burst out of him like steam from a geyser; his vision felt like it was turning red.  After all he had lost, all he had sacrificed, would they really not let him have something good when it had come to him?

“What’s going on here?” he heard a calm and familiar voice say.

Pirra looked past him, and he turned, to see Captain Brooks, Commander Urle, and Ambassador Kell standing behind them.


< Ep 7 Part 48 | Ep 7 Part 50 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 48

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


Brooks was exhausted by the time they made it back to the skiff.

Tol entered without a word, but Brecht stopped in the hatch to look back.

“This is where we part,” he told Brooks calmly.  “You will find your compatriot Zachariah Urle elsewhere on the station.  He will take you from this place.”

Brooks hesitated, a thousand questions on his mind, but there was one he had to know.

“You’re a Seer, aren’t you?” he asked Brecht.  “You could feel the location of the people on this station, their disposition, without technology.”

The man’s eyes narrowed slightly.

“You are as perceptive as Dawn told me,” he replied.  He ducked into the tunnel, pausing.

“I wish you luck, Brooks.  Even if you are not on our side.”

He closed the hatch.

Brooks turned away, now alone with the body of Hoc Rem.

He did not doubt that Urle was here, if the man said it.  Dawn had said it, and he knew the man was seeing.  Nor would Dawn abandon him here . . .

If she had ever decided she wanted him dead, he knew that he would not see it coming.

The skiff of the mercenaries detached, and Brooks turned on his alarm beacon, turning the power down to only reach through the station’s local area.  If Urle was here, he would pick it up.

He didn’t think there was anyone else alive in the place who would care.

Ten minutes later, Brooks saw a new skiff signalling from outside the airlock.  Brooks sent back a coded burst.

It docked, and the hatch opened, with Urle looking up at him.

“Almost don’t recognize you, Captain,” he said, forcing a smile.

He looked as exhausted as Brooks felt.

“I’ve had a hell of a trip,” he said.

“I had some interesting times as well.”

“Is Kell in there with you?” Brooks asked, peering past him.

“Yes, he joined me on my outing,” Urle said.  “Why?”

“I’ll finally get to talk to him . . .”

Urle’s eyes went to the body that Brooks was still pulling along.  “Is that who I think it is?”

“It was,” Brooks replied.  “I’m hoping he might be more useful in death than he was in life.  Though I’m afraid he probably won’t be.”

“It’s okay, Captain.  I got his data backups.”

Brooks felt the tension leave his chest.  “Oh thank fortune.”

Urle moved back down into the shuttle.  “Come on, Captain.  Let’s get home.”


< Ep 7 Part 47 | Ep 7 Part 49 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 47

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


The gunfire had died down, and Urle had lost track of the combatants.

“Someone else joined in, shooting back at the larger group,” he said.  “Reinforcements for the chop shop, maybe?”

“Allies,” Kell replied.  But he still seemed distracted.

They had found the main part of the operation itself.  It was more professional than he had expected – at least as much as it could be, given the grisly nature of the work.  Limbs were kept in plastic bags, and bodies cut apart inside sealed chambers to keep the blood contained.  Only once the parts had been fully cleaned were they brought out.

But that foresight in the operation did not mean the rooms were clean now.  Gunfights had happened here, and the corpses of the guards, techs and butchers of the operation still floated, their blood turned to crimson spheres that floated in the air, turning everything the same disturbing pink as they had seen earlier.  And just like the men from earlier, these ones had been shot repeatedly.

He had to keep wiping his visor to see clearly.

Urle had identified at least half a dozen bodies of victims so far, all in pieces.

He doubted that all of these people had cut deals for digital immortality, and he dared connect to a few pieces that seemed like they might be intact.

Most had no data – but in two he found snippets of old information.

“Debts,” he said to Kell.  “These guys borrowed money from the wrong people.  Fisc, I’ve heard of repossession but . . .”

Off to the side, he saw something that appeared to be an office.  The small room looked out upon most of the workshop, and he saw that the security on the door was high.

It didn’t appear that anyone was in there, and neither had the lock been forced.

Or attempted, he thought, studying the security.  It seemed there were explosives in the room, and after that it would vent into the vacuum . . .

“Stay back,” he told Kell.  “This might be important.”

Carefully, Urle connected to the system.  Its security was good – but he was better.

Two minutes later in real time, the door opened, welcoming him.

“It thinks I’m the owner,” he told Kell.

Kell was still remaining silent, and Urle glanced back to make sure he was all right.  Perhaps the sight of the chopped bodies bothered him . . . ?

But Kell only seemed to be gazing off into the distance, and Urle dismissed the possibility.

Going into the office, Urle found a treasure trove.

The data went back months.  It was explicit, with names and dates and transactions.  Many of the specifics were locked behind tighter layers of encryption, but he even saw that there were more scheduled deliveries for the next few days . . .

If he clued in the right people, this entire network could be rolled up.

He downloaded everything, backing it up and stuffing hard data and hard drives into bags.

The system in the room started to get suspicious and he put it into a loop, telling itself to trigger the security protocols without actually doing it.

“Kell, you won’t believe all of this-” he began, leaving the room.

Kell turned, but behind him, a door opened, and a live person entered.

They wore an opaque white mask, buffed to a mirror shine, and a hood-like spacesuit that covered his head.

He had splatters of blood on him, and he held a carbine.  The man noticed him, and was startled, before trying to heft his weapon.

Urle was faster.

He shot three times, each shot taking the man in the chest.

He didn’t make a sound, simply crashing back into the door frame, his carbine slipping free to float away.

Others pushed his body, shoving in, pointing their own weapons.

Urle’s heart raced as his sensors told him there were over a dozen more out in the hall.  He did not even have enough bullets for them all, nevermind the odds-

Kell put his hand over Urle’s weapon, pushing it down.

“No,” he said calmly.

Urle watched him, his jaw dropping.

More of the strange figures forced themselves into the room, pointing their weapons, but not yet firing.

Finally, a taller man, his mask clear, came in.  His face was weathered by space, a dark orange from radiation exposure.  His eyes were cold and pitiless as he beheld Urle, but they did not linger long.

They then moved to Kell.

“I see,” he said, his voice strong, “that we find in our midst a Lesser Lord.”

Kell turned sharply.  “Do not ever call me that.”

The man smiled, but inclined his head.  “I mean no offense, Great One.  Only honor.  Even given your cursed nature . . . we offer you homage.”

As one, the men lowered their weapons, placing their boots to the floor and connecting magnetically – then bowed.

Urle’s voice had caught in his throat.  Kell – Lesser Lord?

“I will kill all of you,” Kell said, his body almost shaking with rage.  He began to move forward.

Urle grabbed his arm, watching the men, but they still had not moved from their bows.

“Kell stop!” Urle snapped.  “You can’t just kill them!”

The being moved like a rolling boulder; Urle could not even slow him.  Yet after a moment, he did stop, looking down to Urle.

“You truly wish me to spare these men?” he spat.

“Who are they?” Urle asked.

“We are the Silent Hand,” the leader of the group said.  “We are the knife of the Infinite, excising that which It Wills.”

The others spoke, their voices low.  “Praise the Infinite, the most Perfect.”

Urle’s eyes swept over the group, and he saw that many were wounded.  Bullet holes, rimed in blood, covered their suits.  Droplets of blood still floated from many, showing that they had not even sealed their wounds.  Yet none seemed concerned.

“If you wish to kill us, we accept your decision, Lesser Lord,” the man said.  His face was calm.  “We will call it the Will of the Infinite.”

Kell tensed again, and Urle grabbed onto his arm tighter.

“You truly wish to spare these men?” Kell asked Urle again, tearing his gaze away from the group.

“You owe me,” Urle told him.  “Yes.  They’re not attacking us.  I can’t justify-“

“They are your enemies.  They are my enemies.  Why would you not strike them?” Kell asked, so emphatically that he seemed to writhe.

Urle could sense on some level he could not quantify that something else was moving.  Something invisible, beyond his comprehension, was writhing, pulsing with anger and impotent bloodlust.

He felt his stomach churn, suddenly wanting to vomit.  All strength left his arms, and all he had left was his voice.

“This is how we are,” he told Kell.  “We are not killers.”

Kell closed his eyes, and for a moment Urle had no idea what he would say.

But as they opened, his face was once more calm.

“I owe you,” he said.

Urle looked back towards the group.  The leader went to the body of the man he had shot.

“He should not have raised arms against you,” the man said.  “It was the heat of the moment, and none blame you, Zachariah Urle, for what you did.”

“How do you know my name?” Urle demanded.

The man did not reply, instead arresting the slow tumble of the dead man, bringing him back upright.  He pressed his head to the man’s chest.

“Rise, my son.  If you wish.”

Then the dead man coughed.

He moved, his arms coming down, his legs moving to the floor.

“No,” Urle breathed, as the dead lived.

The leader looked back to them.  “We thank you for your mercy, Lesser Lord,” he said, offering another bow to Kell.

Kell jerked his head, telling them to leave.

The group unlocked from the floor and moved together, out the door and away.

Urle looked at Kell.

“What the hell was that?” he demanded.

“A miracle,” Kell spat.  Urle had never heard him sound more disgusted.


< Ep 7 Part 46 | Ep 7 Part 48 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 46

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


“Do you hear those shots?” Brooks asked.

To his flank, the human mercenary nodded.  The Latarren said nothing.

The man had introduced himself as Brecht, and his companion as Tol.

Brooks knew that in the Laterren language that meant ‘zero’, so he took it that the alien did not wish to give away much.  And he had not said a single word.

“Follow,” Brecht said, turning and heading swiftly down another route.  He pushed off the wall and through a hatch, and was gone.

Tol watched Brooks, clearly not trusting him.

Which meant little, most mercenaries trusted no one.

Brooks followed Brecht.

They’d landed twenty minutes ago, and Brecht had informed him upon arrival that the faction that wanted Rem dead were already here.

“How do you know?” he asked.  His face mask fogged up slightly as he spoke, and he longed to take it off – there was air in here.  But it was thin and a leak could take it out, leaving one stunned – and soon dead.

“They leave behind signs,” Brecht had replied, but added nothing else.

“We don’t have much time, then.  We need Rem alive.”

Brecht had not replied to that, and Brooks still wondered if the man was truly here to help him find Rem – or to make sure he didn’t take him in alive.

It seemed impossible to think that Dawn could be involved in an operation murdering and chopping Augs, but it was always possible that the man knew too much about other things.

He knew, deep down, that she was not a member of the Sapient Union.  She had her own agenda.

He’d asked Brecht what he knew about Rem, his operation, his enemies, and this station, but he’d gotten little useful information.

“The ones who want him dead are a new player in Gohhi,” Brecht had said.  “The breakup of Rem’s operation was always something we had wished, but he was untouchable – until this faction arose.”

“Who are they?” Brooks had asked.

Brecht had ignored the question.  “We suspect that their issue is simply over power – Rem’s organization was connected to a great power outside of the system, and has worked his way into the confidence of many of the wealthy in the station.  That makes him a threat.”

“What power?”

Brecht had ignored that, too.

Perhaps he actually didn’t know.

“The enemy are striking at Rem now,” Brecht said, moving quickly.  Brooks was falling behind, and he had to rush to try and catch up.

“How do you know?  Do you know how many there are?”

Brecht paused, as if thinking.  “Thirty-two,” he said.  “They are coming from the outer layers . . . moving inward to trap the man.  He has fallen back.  He is bleeding.”

He looked to Brooks.  “We must move swiftly.”

The time for stealth was over, it seemed; the man activated thrusters, jetting along quickly, and Brooks had to turn on his own emergency thrusters to keep up.  He had precious little fuel, and if he got blasted out into the vacuum without any, he’d have very little chance of survival.

Tol passed him and Brooks was almost glad, as now he could follow the Latarren – Brecht was out of sight already.

Though soon he’d lose the alien, too.

He couldn’t call out; someone might hear, and he could only redouble his efforts of keeping up, pushing off every surface he could, grabbing and pulling at every chance to supplement his meager thrusters.

The sound of gunfire was growing closer, the thin air making it seem more distant.

Taking a left, his system lit up red warnings as it detected rounds piercing the walls.

Tol had already crossed but was slowing down – which was fortuitous, given that Brooks’s thrusters were already out of fuel.

Brecht had stopped outside of a door, clearly listening.  Another round ripped through the hall, between him and the two mercenaries.

Tol attached some kind of sensor to the wall, connecting it to his system.

Random bullets were still going through the wall, but Brooks felt he had no choice but to risk the crossing.  Bracing, he crouched against the bulkhead wall to push off, aiming low.

Brecht waved him to stop.

Brooks paused, and the other man made a rapid display of hand signals – spacer’s code.

He wanted Brooks to shoot through the wall.  From their different positions, they’d have good angles on one of the parties.

Brooks couldn’t be sure who he was going to be shooting at.  He could just hope that it was not going to be Hoc Rem.

He nodded to Brecht, and the Mercs pulled their assault carbines, while he took out his pistol.

Tol gave him the sensor feed and now Brooks’s system could hazily pick out figures and movement through the thin wall, though with little detail.  He aimed for center mass and pulled the trigger.

Tol and Brecht fired, shooting bursts of rounds through the walls at the targets.

There were muffled screams, shouts of confusion, targets moving.  A smattering of shots returned, but mostly the figures seemed to be moving away.

Brooks looked down at the mercenaries, and saw Brecht had opened the door, going in low, weapon still ready.

Brooks pushed off the wall carefully, watching Tol.  The Latarren watched him back.

Reaching him, Brooks finally tore his gaze from the mercenary and looked through the door.

It led to a small foyer of what had been a laboratory.  Brecht had stopped inside, watching the far wall for the enemies they’d driven away.

Brooks moved forward carefully, and a shot went over his head.

“Who are you?” he heard a voice call out.

He recognized the cold voice of Hoc Rem.

There was pain in it, and Brooks ducked out of the door, moving to the right of the man.  It would put him in a bad position if the attackers returned, but right now he had to keep Rem from gunning him down.

Reaching a sturdy metal counter, he peered around cautiously.  Blood droplets splattered his face mask, and he saw Hoc Rem.

He had shoved himself into a corner of the room, bent over, droplets of blood floating from his body.  He was not moving, but Brooks’s system suggested he was still alive.  For how much longer, it couldn’t say.

“We are here to help,” Brecht said, moving closer, his weapon holstered.

Brooks scanned for signs of the mysterious enemy, but saw none at the moment.  They might feel they had already trapped him . . . perhaps even knew he was wounded.

Brooks came closer as well, to get a better look.

The man’s face had been surgically altered, but his height was unchanged, and Brooks’s system estimated a 98.9% certainty that it was indeed Hoc Rem.

“He’s crashing,” Brecht said.  He had had nearly reached him-

Then Rem raised his gun.  His eyes shot open, and he grabbed Brecht by the collar.

“Who are you?” Brooks heard him hiss.  “No games, give me names.  You’re not with these bastards, are you?”

Brecht’s hands went up, his face through his mask calm.  “We are not.  We are your only chance of survival.”

“Yeah?  Well who are you with-“

The man’s words cut off as he looked over and saw Brooks.

Even with his own disguise, he could tell the man’s system figured out who he was.  He froze, shock on his face, and Brecht’s hand darted in to grab his weapon.

They wrestled for a moment, but Brecht punched Rem in the side, causing him to groan, and lose control of it.

“As I said,” Brecht now continued calmly.  “We are your only chance of survival.”

Rem looked back to Brooks.  “If I flip I’m dead.”

“If you don’t come with us you’re dead now,” Brooks replied flatly.

The man cursed, throwing a hateful glare at Brecht.

“I want full amnesty,” he told Brooks, not looking at him.

“You’re in no position to deal,” Brooks replied.

“You want me alive.  I know it.  So I get amnesty.”

Brooks considered.  He did not want the man to walk, but he also did need him.

“I’ll promise you that the death penalty is off the table,” he said.  “And your sentence can be commuted based on how much you assist us, with protection and a new identity.”

Rem cursed, hawked, and spat out blood.

He looked back up at Brooks, his face contorted in anger and pain.  “Seems I have no choice.”

“Let’s move,” Brooks said.  “Before our enemy-“

“Behind,” he heard a hissing, strange voice call.  It was Tol, who was now in the foyer, but looking outside.

Shots came down the hall – the enemy had found their way behind them.

“Cover!” Brooks called.  He moved to cover Rem, and fired pre-emptively at the far wall.  Shouts and return fire came back, but Brecht got to cover and fired out more bursts from his carbine.

But the fire was concentrating on the corner where Brooks and Rem were.

It had been a mistake to keep shooting from here, it had made them think Rem was in the same spot, and now the bracketing of fire was forcing Brooks to keep his head down.

Rem had no such option; wedged in as he was, he could not go any lower, and Brooks rose marginally, braving the fire, to shoot as fast as he could back out, giving Rem a path under him to crawl away.

“Go!” he shouted, barely able to be heard over the fire.

A round hit Rem, passing through his arm.  The man grimaced against the pain and moved, forcing himself under Brooks, trying to hug the floor.

Rounds still flew around Brooks, some so close he flinched

The next piece of cover was only a meter away from Rem, and despite his wounds he was floating quickly.  Then a stray bullet went through his head.

Brooks’s jaw dropped, and the fire coming at them slackened almost instantly.

He looked to Brecht, who had grabbed Rem and pulled him closer.

Brecht shook his head.  Rem was dead.

Looking back out, Brooks did not know why the attack had ceased; they clearly did not have a good view into here, or else they would have been putting out far more accurate fire.

Yet they knew he had died.

Tol leaned in, his voice low, hissing.  “Rear attackers gone,” he said.

Brooks moved to better cover.

“Bring his body,” he told Brecht.  “Maybe we can still learn something.”

The man said nothing, gazing at Rem.  His face was twisted into impotent rage.

“For months I have wanted him dead,” he said softly.  “But Dawn told us that even if we could it was better to know who our enemy was.  Now he is dead, and it isn’t by my hand.”

He turned and spat.

“If you want his corpse, bring it yourself.  I will not touch him.”

Brooks holstered his sidearm and grabbed a strap on the body.

The data in his mind would be gone, he knew.  The bullet would have done a lot of work, and a man as important as he would have mind-wipes set up in case his life signs ceased.

But maybe they’d get lucky.


< Ep 7 Part 45 | Ep 7 Part 47 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 45

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


The station was fully abandoned, as far as the public data said.  The companies with stakes in it had formally withdrawn them, the large fusion reactors had been gutted, and rumors and stories Urle found on the net said that much of it had been picked apart for scrap by scavengers.

Yet that was not the case upon approach.

Urle used every passive scanner he could to probe the area, seeing several other small skiffs near the station.  When they noted him, they quickly moved out of line of sight, behind the station.

Which could be scavengers, but there were lights on the station, and heat signatures.  The main reactor was gone, but other smaller reactors remained.

“People are definitely here,” he told Kell.  “I was skeptical, but . . .”

“Your people lie easily,” Kell said, looking out the glass at the station.  “Such a secluded space seems obvious for criminals to use.”

“Yeah, that’s true.  I guess we only see it rarely in the Sapient Union, no one is stupid enough to go live in abandoned wrecks.  Space is hostile enough.”

He pointed.  “I see a docking port there.  It’s a small one, probably in use by smugglers.  We can attach there and force the airlock.  I think there’s a spacesuit in the back-“

“I do not need one,” Kell said.

“There’s a lot of radiation and no air,” Urle warned.  “None at all.”  He could only hope Kell truly understand what this meant-

“I lived before the oxygenated atmosphere existed,” Kell told him.  “Before the atmosphere.”

Well, that was that, Urle thought.

They docked, the clamps on the station showing no signs of functionality, but Urle was able to use the skiff’s electromagnets to create a firm seal.  Still, the tunnel was not pressurised.

And as Kell had said, he seemed untroubled.

Urle only need turn on his own air storage for the crossing, putting rad-reflecting sleeves over his exposed real skin.

After they were in, he brought up the map of the station – no true map existed, but he’d cobbled one together from all the bits of information he’d found on the nets.  It seemed coherent enough.

“I’ve marked the heat sources that could be people,” he said, pointing.  “Let’s head to this one first.”

Kell was looking around, his head upraised, eyes partially closed.

“I feel something . . .”

“What?” Urle asked.

“I do not yet know,” Kell replied.

Urle did not like the sound of that.  He wished that he’d thought to bring some small drones to scout for them.

“This way,” he said, having to take lead himself.  “I think this is the most likely location . . . though I did detect a lot of air leaks in that area.”

After ten minutes of travel they had found the site.  Urle had guessed right, but the cause of the air leaks was not something he had expected.

The flickering lights and holes in the walls made pretty clear that a gunfight had happened in the room.  Some of the bullets had pierced the outer hull, letting the station’s limited air leak out.

No one had come to patch the leaks, he saw.

Urle approached the door carefully, but he detected only low heat signatures inside.  Nothing in the range of the living.

He gestured for Kell to stay back, but the Shoggoth ignored him.

“They are all dead inside,” he said, approaching the door.

“They could still be trapped- Kell, stop!”

The Shoggoth had reached up, slipping his fingers into the space between door and frame.  The power was out, but he forced the door easily.

“There are no traps,” Kell said.

Urle cursed.  “Well, there could have been damn it.  Maybe you’re not worried about them, but I am.”

“Don’t worry,” Kell told him.  “I won’t let them hurt you.”

Urle could feel the mocking in it, but ignored it to peer into the room.

He had detected the blood that had seeped through the holes in the wall, but now that the door was open he could see just how bloody a fight it had been.

The whole room had a pink hue from the floating droplets, much of which had settled onto surfaces.

“Oil amongst the blood,” Kell said.  “These men were like you.”

“Yeah . . . were,” Urle said, seeing the dead.

The bodies still floated, their limbs moving freely as they tumbled slowly in the microgravity.

They had not simply been shot, he could see, but nearly shot to pieces.  So many rounds had been put through their bodies and heads that no details remained, only a splattered mess of blood, bone, and augments.  On several, their limbs had been severed completely, floating around on their own.

A quick scan showed no active major components, and looking closer at a body it appeared that someone had even gone through the effort of putting a round through such parts.

“Someone was sending a message,” he murmured.

“The bodies have not cooled much,” Kell noted.  “This occurred only a little over an hour ago.”

“I agree,” Urle replied.

He did not want to enter a room and get covered in a blood mist, but he really had no choice.

Floating in, he carefully avoided the surfaces.  “Kell, it’ll be best not to leave traces of our presence.  Try not to touch-“

He turned as he spoke – and saw Kell wiping his hand along the wall.

“. . . nevermind,” he said.

“I will leave no trace,” Kell said.  But he seemed troubled.

Urle couldn’t blame him, seeing the fate of these bodies.  Approaching one, he analyzed the man’s hand, and saw signs that he’d been firing a weapon.

Which was gone now – stolen, most likely, by the ones who had shot him.

Tracking the holes and estimating calibers, he got an idea that the attackers had started firing from the outside, opposite the door that he and Kell had entered through.  The firing pattern appeared planned, but blind – not just random spraying, but they had lacked the ability to pinpoint the targets through the wall, which suggested they were not Augs themselves.

The Augs inside had fought back, but so much lead had been poured in that they’d been massacred.

Approaching the back door where the attackers had been, he saw that it was mostly shredded.  Poking a scanner through, he saw very little blood outside, and no bodies.

So the attackers had taken their own wounded or dead with them . . . it made sense, but something was still wrong here.

Looking back around the room, seeing how devastated it was, it was hard to figure out what purpose it might have served, but there were still some clues.

A box of electronic components was floating by, its contents spilled.  Grabbing one of the wafers, Urle saw that it was a specific type he knew – a type used in augments.

“This was part of the chop shop,” Urle said softly.  “These were parts from people . . .”

Kell was looking at his hand that he’d wiped on the wall.

“Someone did not take kindly to their work,” he commented, frowning.  “And I may know who.”

“You do?” Urle asked, dumbfounded.

Kell moved, not pushing off anything, simply moving forward, towards a hole blasted in the window and went out through it.

Urle moved hurriedly to follow him, tucking in tightly to fit through a shattered window, and saw Kell stopped at a wall.

It appeared blank, but Urle could tell something was odd about it.  Static began to tinge the edges of his vision.  Errors were creeping in, and he felt his hackles rising.

“Kell . . . what is it?” he asked.

“Without intent, a mark was left,” he said.

Holding his palm up, Kell brutally slashed his own hand with his nails, gouging the skin easily.  Dark red blood, too dark to be human, welled up in it.  As Urle watched it seemed to grow darker still, until it was nearly black, no tinge of red left.

Kell took his bleeding hand and pressed it against the wall, wiping it across the surface.

His blood spread across it like a living thing – and a shape emerged.

It was a symbol that Urle could not place.  Almost like an eye.

“The Esoteric Order,” Kell said.  His voice was void of emotion, his face set in sharp lines.

He turned to Urle, as if to say something, but then they both heard it.

Gunfire from deeper within.

“They are still here,” Kell said.

He turned and went deeper.

Drawing his sidearm, Urle followed, his eyes drawn to the symbol on the wall.  The blood appeared to be fading already, or perhaps the mark itself was, but as he looked at it, he could not help but to shiver.


< Ep 7 Part 44 | Ep 7 Part 46 >

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 >