Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 21

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


A word from the screen caught Apollonia’s ear.  She turned, feeling certain she had just heard . . .

“I recognize that,” she said without a thought, staring at the screen.

Jaya looked at her quizzically, before looking up as well.

It was New Vitriol on the screen.  The floating head had turned somber.

“The latest terrorist attack in the contested territory of New Vitriol has left three dead and ten injured, as moderate fundamentalist freedom fighters attempt to force out the Sapient Union.”

Another head appeared.  “While the Sapient Union has insisted that their presence is solely for humanitarian reasons, with no military force, some are saying that their actions amount to an occupation – a charge the regime vehemently denies.”

Yet a third head appeared, floating near the others.  “And since when have we heard that?  We debunk their lies all the time.  Let’s face it; every time the Sapient Union goes into a place for ‘humanitarian’ reasons, freedoms get trampled and rights get taken away.”

Apollonia waited for some sort of rebuttal, but the last talker seemed to have the final say.

She jerked her gaze back to Jaya.

“Is that true?”

“It is not an occupation, you saw that yourself,” Jaya said.

“I mean the bombing!” Apollonia snapped.  “I know it’s not an occupation!  And I’ve seen shows like this before – they always called us in New Vitriol ‘crazed cultists’ before we apparently became ‘moderate fundamentalists’.”

That area had been part of the shopping district, an out of the way part near the mining tunnels that had been dug haphazardly into the asteroid.  They were half uncharted and probably easy for people to obscure their tracks in.

She’d spent time in that shopping area.  It was one of the few areas where she actually mingled with people, ever.  And in those images, it had been a smoking mess.

On some level, even though she hated New Vitriol, it bothered her.

“Yes,” Jaya said, answering her question.  Her voice was soft, almost gentle.  “I’m sorry to say that there has been some trouble on New Vitriol.  There is a separatist group staging attacks against locals who are cooperating with our workers.  So far they have not attacked anyone from the Sapient Union . . .”

“Does that matter?” Apollonia asked, a flash of anger hissing out with her words.  “Are people from New Vitriol worth less than you guys?”

“No,” Jaya said.  “But since they are not attacking Sapient Union personnel, it limits our reaction options.  We are not there to fight anyone-“

“That’s bullshit,” a gruff man’s voice said.

Apple jumped – the man had spoken just over her shoulder.  He was leaned over, his breath reeking of alcohol.

“You sapeholes are the ones behind it,” he sneered.  “You do it everywhere – fake attacks, come in in more numbers, and th’ next thing anyone knows, everyone’s fucking assimilated like you shits.  All the good people gone or spaced or brainwashed.”

Jaya was glaring at him.  “Mind your own business.  A bar is for drinking,” she said.  “Have a drink, and enjoy the game you were watching.”

The anger in his eyes burned brightly, and Apollonia shifted away from him, wanting to give him a push to get back, but also knowing just how easily he might turn violent.

But the man just hawked and spat – away from them – and did turn away.

Apollonia almost wanted to move, but she had a feeling Jaya would resent even the suggestion.  It seemed to have taken all her self-control not to escalate the fight.

Even just moving to the other side of Jaya was not possible, though.  Those seats were taken, filled with two old spacers who seemed to simply sit in silence and stare at each other while mulling their drinks.

Jaya’s eyes, lingering on the man, finally came back to her.  “The terrorists have little support, thanks to the fact that we are improving conditions, but they’ve set off several bombs.”

“Why, though?  I could see for myself it wasn’t an occupation.  You were giving out medical care and building infrastructure, not . . . pouring in troops.  Even though Nec Tede tried to kill some of your people . . .”

“I do not know,” Jaya said.  “But in my opinion?  It is not home-grown.”

She heard the man hawk and spit behind her again, and shuffled her stool closer to Jaya.

“Well, I guess I shouldn’t even care,” Apollonia said.  “That place was hell, and I don’t miss it.”

“Is there really nothing positive you remember about it?” Jaya asked.  “No one who was kind?”

“Well . . .” Apollonia replied slowly.  “I guess there were a few people.  I mean, I lived, right?”

“With how you describe it, it seems that it was often up in the air,” Jaya said.

“I was hungry a lot.  I didn’t starve, though.  I mean, I guess I did a little?  And I was cold a lot, the power generators weren’t rated for a colony our size and the rock drank up the heat like a sponge so . . .  Yeah, it got cold.  But some folks would help.”

“So there were kind people, after all.”

“I guess,” Apollonia said, feeling a little angry at having to admit it.  “They’d just throw some stuff out.  Made it look like garbage, but it was really giving it to us – us being me and others who lived on the fringe.”

“Why go through all that trouble?”

“Didn’t want to draw attention.  Bottom-rungers like me, we were just considered wasteful mouths, I guess.  By the laws of the religion they couldn’t just space us for being useless, and they had to at least pay lip service to that shit most of the time.”

She laughed.  “Not that they really believed, ya know?  They would usually just pick and choose.  But they did harass anyone who tried to feed us on the fringe.  If we died of cold or hunger, well that was the will of God, wasn’t it?”

She shook her head, not meeting Jaya’s eyes.  Was it out of shame?

Or did she not want the woman to see just how angry she was?  So ungodly angry that it felt like she couldn’t even hold it in, that it would be shameful to show.


< Ep 7 Part 20 | Ep 7 Part 22 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 20

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


“Now my absolute favorite,” Apollonia said, her voice slurring slightly.  “Is the Shark Hole series!”

“Oh scram it, is that the one with a black hole full of sharks?” Jaya asked, laughing.

“Space sharks.  But yes!  It’s fantastic, everything you want in a terrible movie.”  She started to count on her fingers.  “It makes no sense, the acting is terrible, the effects are terrible, the writing is terrible, but man is it fun!”

“I have not actually seen any of them,” Jaya said.  “I only know them by reputation.”

“They’re so bad, you have to see them.  All your concerns about real life just disappear when you watch someone get eaten by a flying space shark in a black hole.  Trust me.”

Jaya tilted her head.  “I’ve always wondered; are there just so many space sharks that their mass caused the black hole, or did they simply fall in and could not escape due to the curvature of space time?”

“Well in the first movie they seem to imply that it was their own mass, like further in near the core there’s even bigger, more massive sharks, which is why they can’t risk them all escaping . . .”

“But a black hole is a point object, it doesn’t really have a ‘deeper’ part,” Jaya pointed out.

“. . . But in movie three they explain that the space sharks were banished to the black hole by an ancient race of aliens they fought a war against.”

“So the sharks are intelligent?”

“Sometimes,” Apple replied.  “Depends on the movie.”

“I’m afraid I have never seen anything so goofy to suggest in return,” Jaya said, still chuckling.  “I think I mostly watch documentaries or historical series.”

Apollonia reached up and patted her shoulder.  “I forgive you.”

“Forgive me?”

“For being boring as hell.”

Jaya almost snorted her drink and then began to laugh, unable to control it for the longest time.

Apollonia glanced around, seeing new people entering the bar, more wearing an olive-green uniform she recognized as Glorian.  There were stares between them and the Craton Response officers at their own table, but the latter seemed to shake it off quickly.

It made Apollonia’s sense of alarm grow, but the Glorian officers found their own table and sat down, loudly demanding drinks, and the moment seemed to pass.

Jaya had stopped laughing, and as Apollonia looked back to her, her eyes were glued up on the screens above.

“Big savings for the mid-summer sales event, exclusives brought to subscribers on Your Pocket Watch, sign up and save 20% on a 12-month sub!  Today’s top deals are on home fabricators, starting with the mid-range Extruder 4400 by SleppCo.  While it’s a Sepht manufacturer, and I don’t normally recommend alien devices, it’s got an excellent internal service area . . .”

“Needing a new fabricator?” Apollonia drawled, trying to hide her smile.

“I’m just amazed,” Jaya said.  “How quickly we revert when our material conditions change.”

“What?”

Jaya shook her head, tearing her eyes off Your Pocket Watch and the amazing deals they were continuing to offer, all while plugging a monthly subscription for even more savings.

“In the Sapient Union no one wants for anything.  Some people leave all of that, heading to the fringes of space – like here – where there are fewer laws, fewer people, less development, and therefore a lower stage of production.  Rather than simply pushing through and developing their productive forces into full socialism or communism in a few generations they . . . simply revert to private property.  It’s not universal, of course, but surprisingly commonly.”

She gestured around.  “And here, of all places.  With Gohhi’s strategic placement, it could have developed in half a century.  Instead it is stuck in stasis, owned by a handful of wealthy lords who glut themselves on the labor of those below them, telling them they’re free because they can privately own a crumb of space while facing the constant threat of poverty and death.  And those exploited drink it down like addicts and keep scrambling for crumbs.”

Jaya grinned, her eyes sparkling, and Apollonia realized the woman had gotten a little drunk.  “It makes me wonder – back during capitalism did some people actually long for feudalism at times?  I can’t imagine it, yet I wonder.”

She shook her head and took another sip of her drink.  “We’re still so much full of the flaws that nature instilled in us.”

“Speak for yourself,” Apollonia said.  “I feel like I’m at least 50% plastic from all the weird synthesized cheese I grew up on.”

Jaya laughed.  “Well, I suppose that begs the question what natural even is?”

“Dark!” Apollonia replied.  “These are your drunk thoughts?  I didn’t expect to hang out with a philosopher.”

“I do get more talkative when I drink,” Jaya agreed.  “One reason I drink so rarely.”


< Ep 7 Part 19 | Ep 7 Part 21 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 19

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


“No way it was a real samovar,” concluded Inan.

Inan Suon has just joined Response as a marksman for Fire Team One, and his first ‘assignment’ has turned out to be a curiously peaceful one. He received an invitation from Sgt. Kiseleva to join her and the team on an informal visit to the Gohhi station.

He knew most of the Response team members by sight and some by reputation, but he didn’t know exactly what to expect from an event like that. He wondered briefly that it might involve some sort of hazing, as most tight groups relying on each other for personal safety did, but then decided to free himself from any expectations and just go and see what happens.  After all, he wasn’t a random pick – he’d put a lot of effort into becoming a candidate worth picking, so getting the spot was a reason to celebrate in and of itself.

What he got however, was a peculiarly well plotted scenic route through the giant station that included visiting obvious vistas of tall open avenues full of tourist attractions stacked in many stories on top of each other, big must-see places like the Large Museum of Planetary Arts, and also some quieter moody bystreets that deepened the many contrasts the place had.  The trip left him with a whole different kind of an impression from what he reckoned most people would take away from Gohhi.  The route pinnacled in the seediest-looking watering establishment he had ever seen – The Nozzle bar.

“How’d you know it wasn’t real?” Lorissa inquired, popping a cheese puff and looking at the new guy pensively.

She hadn’t had the time to really get to know him yet, but she liked what she had learned so far.

Inan was not particularly distinguished and he would have to go through a lot of squad alignment training, but he had consistently good performance review scores.  And above all he was a hearty, easy-going fellow off-duty, and that ability to switch tracks was a valued one in any high-stress job.

“Well, uh . . .”  He seemed to have lost his train of thought under her gaze.  “I dunno, it just seems so astronomically improbable that one of those things ended up here all the way from Earth.”

“From Earth?  Wait, what the hell is a samovar anyway?” asked LeMarr, having been distracted from his tablet by the mention of the ancient planet.  He seem to have missed that old chunk of brass because he was admiring a huge fossilized skeleton of some kind of a dinosaur on display in the next hall.  LeMarr didn’t know if the skeleton was genuine, but it was presented very well – the menacing posture and all.

Lorissa took a sip of her nitrogen beer and looked as if she had enjoyed it thoroughly, effectively relinquishing the responsibility of describing the appliance to Inan.

“Its supposed to be this glorified firewood external combustion kettle slash tea making machine . . . thing I suppose,”  Inan smiled at the intentionally imbecilic expression of LeMarr’s face.

Lorissa glanced at him too and snorted a chuckle into the beer foam. She could swear the man could drool at will.

“So, are you basing this assumption in probability then?” she got back on topic meaning to gauge how much Inan was relying on his intuition in this matter.

“Well, its also this place.  It’s so overtly by-all-sell-all you know?  I guess I just find it hard to imagine finding anything genuine here.  At least on display.  That guy can call himself a ‘curator’ all he wants, his place still looks more like a pretentious neon pawn shop than a museum to me . . .  What’s wrong?” he asked awkwardly having caught Lorissa’s unblinking stare and blank expression.  Then he realized she was looking past him towards the entrance.

“Not sure yet,” said Lorissa taking another sip, still keeping her eyes fixed on the peculiar group that had just arrived at the bar.


< Ep 7 Part 18 | Ep 7 Part 20 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 18

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


The bar was darker, smokier, and far bigger than Apollonia expected.  Hundreds of people thronged in and out, up stairs and lifts and into smaller partitioned areas, separated from the main area with elegant curved walls.

Mostly it was humans, but she also saw a number of Dessei on the right side, their feathered cloaks closed about them, staring almost aggressively at everyone who came near, along with gaggles of Sepht off to the left, packed in tightly around their tables and laughing loudly.  A handful of heavily-armed Greggans lounged in a corner, their toothy maws and large bulbous eyes watching in different directions at once while they grunted loudly, and at many tables she saw numerous Hev, hissing and barking to each other in high-pitched voices.

She counted seven floors, going up into increasing darkness – and privacy.  With Gohhi being the hub of neutral commerce, she had a feeling that the discussions happening up on the top floors were probably pretty damn private.

“Are you sure this is where we should get a drink?” she said loudly to Jaya.  The throngs of voices would make it impossible for them to otherwise hear each other.

“Yes,” Jaya said, smiling.  “I’ve been here before.”

That really surprised Apollonia, who looked at Jaya with new eyes.  This place was not at all up to military code, and she had always taken Jaya as the type to want everything neat and by the rules.

“Over this way,” Jaya said.

The woman took her arm and led her into one of the smaller side areas – which was still not small, as it was about the size of the bars Apollonia had seen on New Vitriol.

As they stepped through the door, the sounds from outside seemed to diminish significantly, enough that she could hear Jaya speaking easily.

“This area is for starmen,” the woman said.

“Spacers,” Apollonia corrected automatically.

“That’s what engineers use for separating things,” Jaya said, rolling her eyes.

“Hey, I’m a spacer and it’s what I prefer to be called!” Apollonia replied, though Jaya seemed to ignore her.  Really, Apollonia didn’t feel like it was a hill worth dying on.

Most of the clientele in the sub-bar had the uniforms of shipping companies – little more than space suits with names and logos stuck on.

Years of just below too much radiation had left most balding, their skin like scraps of old leather, and their eyes glinting with augments to fix their cataracts.

Others had more official uniforms on, though recognizing them in the gloom was difficult.  She stared a moment, and realized with a start that some were from the Craton.

The smells of all kinds of smoke from burning sticks made her lungs tickle, but she suppressed a cough.  Smoking had never been popular in New Vitriol – some kind of religious cultural hangover.  But she’d heard how certain plants on various alien worlds had become as popular if not more so than tobacco or marijuana, and she found herself staring at the strange methods people were using to take in their drug of choice.

Jaya led her to the bar, and Apollonia sat down on a stool, feeling like an awkward, out-of-place kid.

The bar itself was composed of some sort of clear metal that could be pressure-hosed down.  Despite that, the surface had scratches and marks gouged in it that made her wonder just what kind of trouble took place here.

Above the bar were screens, showing various games like freeball or chase, or news shows from various places in Gohhi or beyond.

There was a human bartender, a man who looked grizzled himself, his face set in a lazy sort of sneer, and he gave her a look before pointedly holding up a scanner.

“Approve the age check,” he grumbled.

Fumbling with her tablet, she tapped to approve his request, seeing about a dozen other pings from people she didn’t know.  She hadn’t gone to a bar in a long time, she was too widely known and disliked on New Vitriol, but she remebered that.  All of the requests were men who had set up their systems to automatically query any woman who entered.  She ignored them all, plus the ad from the service offering to automatically screen her pings for a monthly fee.

Jaya’s scan went smoother, and she ordered tharra for both of them.

Apollonia hadn’t had that before, but was surprised at not just how sweet it was – but how strong.

“Gah, this stuff could clean a sewer pipe,” she said.

Jaya smiled.  “I don’t drink often, but when I do it is something strong.”

“If you don’t drink much, how can you handle it?”

“Synthetic liver lobe,” Jaya said.  “And kidneys.  As you lack that, I suppose this means you should be careful.”

Which Apollonia had already decided she’d do.  She’d never been much of a drinker, only having hard seltzers when she managed to get anything.

Jaya was on her left, and she looked up and down the bar, seeing two spacers to her right a stool down, who were deep in a loud conversation.

“. . . fucked the place right to hell . . .” she heard one man said, then tuned him out.

“So what do people do when they go drinking besides drink?” Apollonia asked Jaya.  “I’ve never done this with anybody.”

“I typically drink alone as well.  But we can simply talk.”

Apollonia blinked and stared.  She could think of nothing to say – which was extra annoying as she often had thoughts on things that seemed trivial that she would love to ask someone.  It was the perfect moment, and yet . . .

Jaya seemed to feel none of her awkwardness, instead draining her glass and signalling for another.  The surly bartender filled it, then wandered away.

He was slower than any drone, Apollonia thought, and markedly less pleasant.

“I’m surprised there’s actually a human bartender,” she muttered.

“Starmen utilize drones in fewer interpersonal tasks than we do, generally,” Jaya said.

“Because of the sparkling personalities?”

Surprise, then amusement went over Jaya’s face, and she flashed a bright smile.  “I can only presume so.”

A silence fell, and only one thought came to Apollonia.

“So . . . you know Brooks pretty well, right?”

“As well as anyone aside from Urle,” Jaya said.  “Which is to say barely at all.  He is a very private individual.”

“So you and he . . . you’ve never . . . ?”

“. . . Ours is purely a professional relationship,” Jaya replied dryly.

“Oh.  Well, okay.  What about you and Urle?”

Jaya rolled her eyes.  “Do you truly think that the command staff are living some kind of . . . soap opera story?”

“Well, hey,” Apollonia said defensively, “Most of my view of the universe comes from watching really bad entertainment.  And you’re all highly effective people under high stress.  I thought maybe you’d be going at it like – I mean . . .  Um . . .”

“Sex drive is the first thing to decrease under stress,” Jaya noted.

“I mean, yeah, I know that,” Apollonia said.  “Is it really that stressful for the officers all the time, though?”

“It probably isn’t comparable to your life,” Jaya said.  “But I am not really interested in discussing my love life,” she added, arching an eyebrow, though not seeming truly annoyed or offended, merely exasperated.

“So you do have a love life.  In some form.”

Jaya made an annoyed sound.  “I think I am done with this portion of the conversation, Apollonia.”

Apollonia laughed and realized she’d finished half of her drink.  Perhaps she should slow down.

“But what hobbies do you have?” Jaya asked, steering the conversation in a new direction.

“Well, the crappy entertainment was a big one,” Apollonia said.  “I liked stories about disasters and monsters . . . but the big military ones were probably the most popular overall.  I saw a lot of those just because they were everywhere all the time.  Like Military Inspection Service – that was hella popular.  That main boss guy was pretty bad ass, not gonna lie.”

“MIS?  Oh, that show is drivel,” Jaya said, shaking her head.  “And every episode is the same!  Some alien terrorist plot to disrupt the peaceful operation of the Glorian Republic.”

“Sometimes they were human terrorists,” Apollonia said.

“It was just crude propaganda.  Every show they make is about security forces or military forces or ex-military forces who are now in the security forces.  And at the end of every episode you are shown just why they need to maintain a brutal police state.”

Jaya’s eyes flickered over Apollonia’s shoulder, and the sound of someone shifting was barely audible, along with a break in the conversation she’d been tuning out.

“Did he hear you?” Apollonia asked quietly.

“Yes,” Jaya said.

“Was he annoyed?”

“I don’t know.  I don’t care,” Jaya replied, knocking back the rest of her current glass and signalling to the bartender for another refill.

Apollonia continued.  “There was also . . . uh . . . Fighting Force Seven, about some space fleet always battling pirates or whatever.  Some endless fictional war – that one was probably the most popular.  Probably saw the whole series about three times, and I didn’t even like it that much.”

“Actually, I’ve seen some of those,” Jaya said.  “Absolutely atrocious – not even just from a story point of view, but how they depict space combat.  Their secret weapon in season three, the giant laser?  That wouldn’t even scratch the paint on the Craton at missile distances!”

“Preaching to the converted, even I didn’t like it.  But Gerard was a pretty cool character.”

“Wait, wasn’t he the one who had a relationship with like every other character on the command crew?”

“. . . yeah.”

Jaya sighed.  “Naturally.  Now, have you seen The Guard Fleet or The Geese Have Not Returned?” Jaya asked her.

“Uhh . . .”  Apollonia wracked her memory, the latter being somewhat familiar.  She had maybe seen it once, but it had been really boring.

“I think I know the Geese one.”

“Those are films that show what military action is like.  It’s not a fun time, and people don’t come home.”

“I know,” Apollonia agreed.

Jaya nodded soberly, taking her new glass from the bartender and staring down into it.  “But let’s not dwell on that,” she said, and took another drink.


< Ep 7 Part 17 | Ep 7 Part 19 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 17

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


Brooks knew that going out onto Gohhi Station undetected would be tricky.

Nearly every ship that came in or out likely had eyes on them – friends, enemies, information brokers, even just people who made it their hobby to watch ships.  And with the Craton being such a unique and well-known vessel, she would be watched more than most.

A quick visit to the medical wing had gained him a face cover – composed of cellulite and embedded with nano-machines that would mimic genuine skin, down to hairs and shedding skin cells, allowing one to hide their face in the most believable fashion possible.  It wouldn’t hold up against dedicated scans, but such equipment would be too bulky for anyone but Gohhi officials to have on-hand.

Which meant he still had to get past those.

Because despite how much Gohhi claimed to value the privacy of individuals, in practice it was just another commodity for sale to the information brokers.  But that also meant that money could grease the wheels to preserve your privacy.

The most obvious and worst method was to bribe the customs official as you went out.  While they would likely take the bribe, it’d tip their hand that you must be someone important, and they’d make ten times as much selling you out a little later.

The best way, as he had learned years ago, was to contact the port administrator through back-channels and bribe him.  There was an automated system for it, and after Brooks made the transfer – from his own pocket – he knew that the port official who checked him would receive completely false data that would draw no attention.

The largest problem left, then, was on the Craton itself.

On the ship, people knew each other, and the information systems that enabled them to interface with the ship shared such data with everyone around them as needed.  Thus, he needed to even appear like an outsider who had simply come on the ship for business or to view the public areas.

Dressing in clothes more reminiscent of a Gohhi native, and taking back doors to bring himself into the Equator without being seen was slightly tricky, but once there he had no trouble walking out.  Any who spared him a glance would get a believable false narrative on who he was, and just what he was doing on the ship.

As he passed into customs, no one gave him even a second glance, and Brooks smiled.

He blended in with a group of engineers having a spirited debate about micro-crack sensors, considering for a moment on joining their conversation as even more cover . . . but decided he didn’t know nearly enough about such things to pass, and to spare himself the embarrassment he kept his silence.

Walking onto the station proper, he noted the watchers trying to seem casual but who were actually noting who entered and left the Craton.

He recognized a few from various Gohhi guilds, businessmen, and public figures, as well as some he believed belonged to unaligned systems or even the Sapient Union itself, spying on the spies.

Most conspicuous of all, by clear intent, were the Glorians.  They wore the stripped-down green uniforms, sans insignia, but did nothing to hide who they were.  They felt no need, and on Gohhi they had every right to loiter wherever they wished, so long as they did not bother anyone and paid any appropriate fees.

But none gave him more than a cursory glance, and he knew his disguise had worked.

Which was only step one complete.

Mingling into the crowd, he passed swiftly through unobtrusive doors and sloped halls down into deeper parts of the station.

It was a dangerous place – open carry was allowed, as nothing was allowed to interfere with commerce.  Especially not something as lucrative as weaponry.

He’d brought a small sidearm from the armory, and something that he hoped would keep him alive; a small and unobtrusive sensor pack on his shoulder.  It functioned the same way as a Guardian drone’s sensors, watching all around him at all times, looking for a weapon – especially one pointed his way.  It had no capacity to defend him, that wouldn’t be legal or wise, even on Gohhi.  But seeing an attack coming could be the difference between life and death.

Gohhi in general was darker than the Craton.  A perpetual gloom soaked many of her stations, as no one bothered to pay for lighting the open areas.  It didn’t make profit, so why bother?  Deep in, it was more true than ever, and everything seemed to be rising from darkness, islands of light and neon growing from the shadows.

It was more humid than he remembered, with drips coming down walls and lichens growing in spots.  Others were clearly cleaned regularly, owned by someone who cared about appearances.

Making his way deeper, he found he still knew the routes well enough.  Like any old spacer, he’d spent a lot of time in this hub . . . nearly a capital for all of those who called space home, Gohhi had a special place in his heart, despite its many, many faults.

The stink of so many bodies in so small an area grew, the scrubbers just not quite enough to make the air pure.  The glitter of styles from a thousand or more worlds filled each area, people showing off their individuality until there was no similarity at all between them besides their ancestors having come, at some point, from Earth.

The entertainment district was as vile as he remembered.  It was similar to the Equator ring on the Craton, but nearly ten stories tall, the gravity at the outer most layer noticeably lower than Earth norm, making him bounce upwards with each step.

Neon lights glowed in the humid darkness, and people plied trade in food, drugs, alcohol, and bodies equally here.  The press of people grew tighter, and he kept his eye out for the data thieves who he knew would try to connect to his system to steal anything he had of value.  He saw a few eyeing him, but after they saw he was vigilant they averted their eyes to try and find easier marks.

Scantily-clad beings, mostly women, danced in window bubbles in the brothels, trying to entice people in.  This part of Gohhi was almost entirely human, and so most of the prostitutes on show were likewise, though he did see a few aliens for those who had such fetishes.

The fact that such exploitation was still allowed anywhere disgusted him, but in a place stuck in an ancient mode of development as Gohhi was, it was inevitable.

Passing by a medical clinic that specialized in sexually-transmitted diseases, he finally reached the bar he’d been aiming for – The Black Hole.

While many bars on Gohhi were giant, this one was small and secluded, with lighting set so low that if one wasn’t careful they might walk into something.  But that was just how the clientele wanted it, and he surreptitiously took a seat in an empty booth.

A kiosk activated for him to request a drink, and he put in a custom order.

‘I need a face,’ he keyed in.

Then he waited.

In time, a drone came hovering over, carrying a cup of a pale, weak beer.  Inside it, when he looked, was a folded slip of paper, and on that a name.  It was already dissolving in the drink, and in moments would be completely gone, leaving no trace.

The name was of another bar, one he didn’t know, called the Crooked Door.

His system informed him of the fastest route there, and he saw that it was deeper in towards the core of the station, where the gravity lowered, the light grew yet dimmer, and the poorest and most destitute lived.

Leaving a tip to pay for the information, he got up and headed for the door.

His search had only begun.


< Ep 7 Part 16 | Ep 7 Part 18 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 16

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


A looming shadow approached, and Urle saw that the figure was over a full head taller than he was, and even more augmented.  Urle had to crane his neck to look the man in the face.

“What name ya?” the man asked.

Unlike many augs, Urle had never taken on a new name.  “I’m Zach.”

The man clearly judged him for that, but Urle found it childish.  “Madspark,” he said as his own introduction.  “What you search here for?”  His voice came from not just organic vocal chords, but two synthetic voice boxes, one tinny and metallic, the other so deep that it seemed to vibrate the floor.

An odd choice, Urle thought, but effective.  With his size and the strange voice, Urle doubted that anyone messed with him or his business.

“Looking for the bleeding edge,” he said.  “You carry that?”

“Aye,” the man grumbled.  “Take a look.”  His one real eye looked beyond Urle, at Kell.  “Your friend a baby?”

Among augs, anyone without upgrades was little more than the flesh they’d been born into – a baby.

Urle took a moment to decide how to respond.  He couldn’t pass Kell off as a realskin, hiding his augments.  Madspark surely had scanners that would see through that.

“No,” he decided to say, reckoning the man could not tell if Kell was entirely bare of augments.  “But he’s pretty bare.  I trust him, though, yeah?”

Madspark considered that, glowering, but then nodded.  “Trust like.  Don’t let me go find out you been tellin tales.  Just have sure no touching, yeh?”

Urle nodded, and turned to Kell.

“Man doesn’t trust unmodded people,” he told the Shoggoth.  “Try not to touch anything.”

Kell was looking over at Madspark, but at least his face was calm.  “I have no interest in touching them.”

Urle took that as compliance enough, and started to browse.

He’d been right to pick this place, just from what he was seeing on the shelves.  Many of the pieces were one of a kind, at the absolute forefront of cybernetic tech.

Most of it was for humans, some able to multi-species, and some for the other major species – Dessei, Sepht or Qlerning.  Somewhere on another station, he knew, there would be communities of augs of those species, who would surely have stores catering mostly to their own kind’s specific cybernetics, but here they were really just a curiosity.

“What is a Glef?” Kell asked, peering at a sign for a piece.

“Ah, to be honest – I’m not sure,” Urle said.  “That may be an alternate name for Latarren, a species outside the Sapient Union.  We don’t have a lot of contact with them.”

“Then why is a piece of one here?”

“It’s just tech,” Urle said.  “I guess occasionally one might come through.  We had conflict with them decades ago, but we really didn’t see them much.  They cover themselves completely for cultural reasons.”

Kell did not reply, which Urle was frankly used to.  He browsed on.

He considered an eye piece that could give him an even broader range of vision, but without the appropriate brain implants to help, it was not nearly as good.  And he wasn’t even sure it would interface with his current ports.

Getting those redone would be a much bigger deal, but not out of the question.

He moved on, looking at external scanners more sensitive than his current set – though only barely – but also more compact.

The Sapient Union did not lag in this tech but they did insist on thorough testing before approving pieces for common usage.  It was wise, really, as people would expect things on the market to be trustworthy, while experimental tech could be finicky.

He felt confident that he could check these parts himself.  But for many of them he was really going to need that new socket . . .

He moved towards the proprietor.  “I want piece 472,” he said.

The man glanced at him.  “Not with that port.”

“You do hands-on, yeah?  Not afraid of the wet?”

“Not afraid,” Madspark said.  “Get wet often.  Got suite that chop real clean, no one feel thing.”

“Good.  I’ll get a port upgrade, too,” Urle said.

Madspark considered.  Then; “40k.”

The price was high, even for top-end work like this.

“30k,” Urle countered.

He hated haggling – he’d rather things just be priced reasonably, but he knew he had to play the game at least a little.

“37,” the proprietor replied.

“All right,” Urle said.  He’d given up too easily, but it wasn’t the worst price.

“I prep the suite,” Madspark said, his voice still with that odd combination of rumbling and tinny.  “You wait.”

He left, and Urle continued to glance through the shelves.  He’d already looked at every item on them, but he derived some pleasure just looking at the pieces.

“You replace your flesh with machine willingly,” Kell stated.

“Had you not noticed before?” Urle asked seriously.

“Of course I had.  And while I had seen others like yourself, I assumed they were replacement for defective or damaged anatomy rather than a conscious choice.”

“Some of us want to be more,” Urle said.  “Our biology can only take us so far.”

“I see,” Kell said, looking at a device intently.  Urle realized that, while it was not a particularly cutting-edge piece, the connective mesh to attach it to a body was uniquely fluid, able to move even with a body as it flexed and contorted.

Kell, he surmised, had grasped the significance of it in relation to his own biology.  Urle felt a tingle go down his spine for some reason.

“Are you considering an upgrade?” he asked Kell, feigning simple curiosity when he was burning with deeper questions.

“No,” Kell said.  “But they are a curiosity.”  He looked up to Urle.  “In what way did you feel inadequate?”

Urle was caught off-guard.  “Ah, well . . . I wasn’t, really.  Not by the normal standards.  I got interested in weight lifting when I was young, but I also wanted to be a runner.  I tried to strike a balance, and became good at both.  Other sports as well, but those were my main ones.”

He paused.  “But I never liked that people who focused on one or the other exclusively could be better.  I tried, for a long time, to overcome it by just working that much harder, but . . .”  He shrugged.  “Like I said, biology has limits.”

“Yours, at least,” Kell replied.  “But I believe I understand.”

“Are you suggesting your biology doesn’t have limitations?” Urle asked, his curiosity burning harder.

“Have you not wondered why we never developed technology?” Kell asked in return.  “We never needed it.”

“But you can’t go to space,” Urle said.  “You needed us for that.”

Kell said nothing, only looking into the case again.  Urle realized what he said might be construed as insulting, and continued.

“Not that your people aren’t incredible.  I feel honored that I’m getting to know a Shoggoth better.”

Kell looked up sharply, surprise on his face for a moment before disappearing.  “You feel you are getting to know a Shoggoth?”

“Yes, of course.  Am I wrong in that?”

“You are getting to know me,” Kell replied.

Urle noted the particular way he said it, but wasn’t sure what to make of it.  “Well, as I said, I’m honored – but I do sometimes wonder why you seem to like me.”

“You are more human than some,” Kell replied.

Urle laughed.  “Sorry, that’s . . . well, it’s in the eye of the beholder, I suppose, but most people wouldn’t say that about an augson like myself.”

The door at the back swished open, and he heard Madspark call.

“Zach, ready for chop and replace.”

He turned and moved towards him.  “Kell, you can wait here if you like – or go out, this might be awhile.”

But Kell was already following him.  “I will stay,” he said.


< Ep 7 Part 15 | Ep 7 Part 17 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 15

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


No one around them looked the same, and Urle revelled in that.

This part of Gohhi was only marginally less busy than the main area, the clientele mostly but not all human, and every single one of them was an augson.

Mechanical parts replacing eyes or limbs or adorning the tops of heads in fantastical configurations made the outline a riot of shapes and even hues – many were embellished with lighted strips in neon colors.

A being passed them – whether man or woman a mystery, as so much of their body had been replaced that they simply moved on mechanical tendrils, nearly hidden under a long cloak.

Urle watched the being pass, considering for a moment the pros and cons of such a form of movement.

Not today, at least.

He looked at Kell.  “Amazing, isn’t it?”

Kell looked to him.  “Do you believe that you have a soul?” he asked.

Urle sputtered.  “Wait, what?  That came out of nowhere.”

Kell did not reply to that, and Urle had to beat down his disappointment.  He’d actually expected Kell to be full of questions about the beings around him, and he had looked forward to discussing the matter in depth.  But after a moment Urle made himself consider the actual question Kell had asked.  When he took it seriously it was not a hard thing for him to answer.

“No,” he said.  “I don’t really believe anything happens within us except the physics and chemistry that makes up our bodies.  Why, do you think people will lose their soul if they become augs?”  It had been a common resistance to this lifestyle in past periods, though rarely brought up now except by the most fringe of organic fundamentalists.

“No,” Kell replied with finality.

“Good, I’ve always found that a silly thought.  But what about your people?  Do Shoggoths have a concept of a spiritual essence?”

Kell’s laugh was deep and honest.  “No,” he said.

Urle puzzled on that a moment.  “Just curious – why ask me, then?”  He rarely got the sense that Kell wanted to know much about humanity.  It seemed more a tolerance at best, with the occasional superficial curiosity or amusement.

“I wished to know your stance.  Many humans have believed in such a concept, in older times,” Kell replied.

“Depends on the times, really,” Urle said.  “Nowadays, less than one percent of humans in the Sapient Union identify as strongly religious.  The whole concept has lost a lot of traction over the centuries, starting in the Enlightenment era.”

He turned to look at Kell.  “And the concept has varied quite a lot.  In the Germanic cultures of pre-Christian Northern Europe, they believed that humans consisted of four parts; the physical form, the mind, the fate or luck, and a familiar that existed externally.”

Kell looked at him in silence, but Urle sensed a curiosity in him.  “The ‘familiar’ existed outside of their body?” he asked.

“Well, in their beliefs, yes.  It represented something about their personality.  Like someone who was excessively violent might have a wolf that preceded them, and people who would meet them might first meet their familiar in a dream or something like that.”

Urle cleared his throat.  “My point is really that the whole conception of a single ‘soul’ within a physical body is hardly the sum of human spiritual belief.”

“I see,” Kell said.  “You say that most humans in the Sapient Union are not spiritual, but what of those outside it?  Like here?”

“There are still faiths.  It is much less than it used to be – most don’t survive unless they have a lot of psychophants or are profitable schemes, but most historical faith has been simply the gasp of the oppressed.  A hope that one day things will be better, when it never seems like it will be.”

Kell was quiet again, and Urle continued.  “One thing I’ve seen among Augs is a belief of something like a . . . ‘spirit in the code’ or similar.  Some of them feel that machines have a will beyond just what’s coded into them, especially once melded with the body.”

“And you do not believe that?” Kell asked.

“It’s utter nonsense,” Urle replied.

His scanners had been checking each store as they passed, small data signs outlining each store’s products and services.  It alerted him that it had found something that met his search criteria.

The sign above the storefront was small and unobtrusive.  Not even a fancy name was writ on it, though the letters of the name were glowing dimly in the darkness of the station’s long halls.

‘Upgrades Available’.

Urle scanned the code beneath the sign in more depth, getting a series of simple, informative ads on what exactly they stocked.

“Let’s go here,” he said to Kell.

The Shoggoth said nothing as they entered the store.  It was dim, lit only by neon blue and red lights that dominated different sides of the store.

Cases made of translucent titanium formed the shelves, and within them each item lay in a box of darkened glass.

“They are machine parts,” Kell noted.

Urle glanced at him.  “You can see them?”

With the lighting, only an aug could even have seen in and to the product beneath – which was no accident, he surmised.

“Yes.”

“Your eyes are better than they scan as,” Urle replied.  “Most people wouldn’t see any details.”

“These eyes are inadequate,” Kell replied, but said nothing more.


< Ep 7 Part 14 | Ep 7 Part 16 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 14

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


Brooks’s return trip to the Craton had been in solitude, after Dr. Y had elected to stay for a bit longer on the medical station to lend what aid he could to their other patients.

Brooks had no issues allowing that, and took the trip back planning out some of his own moves.  The work ahead of him was important, perhaps most of all to him.  To find Hoc Rem would help answer not just many questions and perhaps provide new leads, but would also be a personal victory.  It was bad enough Rem had assassinated Nec Tede in front of him, but he’d also tried to kill multiple members of his crew.  Brooks would not let that stand.

Which meant he would not be sending out a Response Team.

While he had confidence in them in many things, covert operations were not one of them.  Pirra was very recognizable, and she had little practical experience in covert ops.

He’d go himself.

The loss of Iago’s personal skills panged, and Brooks thought again of the man, vowing to check on him as soon as he could.

Though he was not even sure if the man would still be here when he got back to the Craton.

Iago had experience in covert operations and could blend.  He would have made a good partner.

He’d considered the other officers, even Kai herself, but the former were too inexperienced in this, and Kai had old injuries that kept her from field work.

It would just be him, then.

Still with a few minutes left to wait, he checked on Ambassador Kell, but found that the Shoggoth was still unavailable.

It annoyed him, but there was little he could do about it.

“Send a message to the Ambassador,” he said.  “Invite him to a showing of Ussa and Usser when it premieres on the ship.”

The computer produced a message, and he checked it before approving it and sending it off.

He did not know if Shoggoths enjoyed plays, or were even capable of enjoying plays.  But if it was as good as people said, then surely it might have some interest, to learn more about humankind.

The shuttle docked, and he exited, finding Cutter waiting patiently.

“Chief Engineer,” he said.

“Captain.  I have completed negotiations with Hull-man.  His crews will begin in one hour.”

Brooks arched an eyebrow.  “That is quick.  I thought we’d have to wait another day at least.”

“I negotiated,” Cutter replied.

Brooks smiled.  “I hope Hullman didn’t walk away hating us too badly.”

“Hate?  No.  I allowed a certain margin of ‘graft’ within my budgeting.  I believe that Hull-man is quite pleased.  His suppliers, however?  Not so much.”

“And the workers . . . ?”

“Well-compensated.  Their Guilds will likewise be pleased.  But the laborers themselves will receive very generous pay.”

“Good,” Brooks said.  “Cutter, as of now, Jaya, Urle, and myself are taking some of our leave time.”

Cutter’s head twitched, and Brooks knew that the Beetle-Slug was severely disapproving.

Not because of the three commanding officers going off-duty at once – Brooks had no real concerns that there would be an attack on the Craton, and anyway Jaya and Urle should both be reachable in an emergency, even if he would briefly not be.

But he knew that Beetle-Slugs truly, deeply did not understand the concept of taking vacations.

They simply lived their work, and even when not on-duty were frequently doing other tasks related to work.  Their concept of a hobby was doing things that made you more skilled in your labor, and they took extreme, almost religious pride in doing work well.

It would have made them extremely popular on less developed places like Gohhi as wage-slaves, if not for the fact that they also had no cultural concept of private property.

So Brooks knew that Cutter was alarmed, offended, and in some ways disappointed that the other officers might be taking some time off.

He would, however, have to simply deal with it, and he was a professional officer who could certainly manage that.

“Very well, Captain,” Cutter replied.  “Who acts in your stead?”

“You will,” Brooks said.  “Since you are also in charge of repairs.”

“Understood.”  The Beetle-Slug saluted, and Brooks returned it.

Brooks then turned and headed off into the ship, seeking first the armory, then the printer rooms and finally the medical section.  It was time to get into costume for his trip onto the station.


< Ep 7 Part 13 | Ep 7 Part 15 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 13

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


Apollonia’s mind was not on her macaroni and cheese as she sat down at the dining table.

Poking at a noodle and watching it slide away from her spork, she frowned.  This had been one of the staple non-algae based foods she’d eaten on Hellrock, and the stuff on the Craton was better than any she’d ever tasted.

But right now she was still just confused as hell, her mind trying to figure out some words.  Time felt like it was slipping away, and sending a message off to Squats on Sand’s family a month after his death felt horrible, like she’d be ripping open a wound that was just closing.

She didn’t even notice as Jaya approached, until she sat down across from her.

“Oh!” she said, jumping, her motion jerking the noodle she’d been poking until it flew off her plate onto the table.

Jaya looked at the macaroni with an arched eyebrow.

“I shall take that as a sign that you are having difficulty with your letter.”

“Yeah,” Apollonia agreed, wiping up her spilled food.

“I imagine you know that ranking officers typically write such letters to family after someone has died.  While there are many things that are the same in all of them, they remain the hardest part of the job,” Jaya told her.

“Have you . . . ?”

“I’ve written them before, yes,” Jaya replied, but did not elaborate.

Apollonia couldn’t think of what to say; it was a difficult topic, and there was no easy method, no way out.  Yet she wanted to do it.  It was important, right?

If she had had family, she knew she’d hold them close, and if they had died, well . . .  She’d want a letter, no matter how much it hurt to read.

“After a battle I have a tradition that I hold to, and being on Gohhi makes it even easier,” Jaya said.

Caught in her own thoughts, Apollonia took a few moments to register Jaya’s words.  “What’s that?”

“I am going for a drink,” Jaya replied.

“You drink?” Apollonia asked.

“Of course, at times.  And sometimes I even get drunk.  Do you?”

“I . . . not really,” Apollonia admitted.  “I mean, I have had alcohol, just not often.”

“That surprises me,” Jaya replied.

“And that’s my line about you!  I thought you’d be the responsible type who never touched the stuff.  I can’t even imagine you letting your hair down – literally, do you always keep it in a bun?”

Jaya chuckled.  “Yes, well even I’m human,” she replied, sounding like it was only somewhat a joke.  “And it is not healthy or wise.  But sometimes we need something to break the monotony, to help us release the tension.”

Apollonia considered.  “I guess it can’t hurt, can it?”

“Only a little,” Jaya replied.  “We won’t be the only ones, several other officers will be going, though they’ll be drinking apart from us.  Response have their own traditions, after all.”

Apollonia nodded, feeling both cautiously excited and nervous.  “Thanks for inviting me.  When are we going?”

“Right now,” Jaya said.  “Or did you wish to continue playing with your macaroni?”


< Ep 7 Part 12 | Ep 7 Part 14 >

Episode 7 – Puppets, Part 12

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


The ship began its automated docking procedure, and Dr. Y performed a cursory check of all the algorithms, sensors, and math involved in the process.

Normally, he took a delight in running the numbers himself; agonizing over the tiniest of fractions, wondering if he could perhaps squeeze a slight time save here or there, or increase safety margins without impacting anything else.  Usually, even on the incredibly advanced systems of Sapient Union ships, he could.  Human code made lots of little neat shortcuts that worked, but often made rounding errors or minor truncations that were not as precise as possible.

But today he did not have the desire to seek those out to solve.  His mind was focused on many things always, but right now there was a much more important concern.

Keeping a constant eye on all of the diagnostics of Logus’s medical system, he communicated to the medical station, sorting out docking clearances in microseconds.

There were other injured of the Craton that had come over before Logus.  Seriously injured, triage dictated that they be given priority due to the likelihood of Arn Logus dying in transit.

It was not a high possibility, not under his care.  Already he’d caught seventeen minor bleeds and fixed them with micro-drones without a thought.  As well as two potential clots, and several times sent out chemical signals to prevent his body from going into shock from each movement.

A human in his condition should be dead a dozen times over, he thought.  It was only through the most advanced of technology that he clung to life.

It was better if he was here.  The Gohhi Medical Station was not the best the Sapient Union had to offer, but its Extreme Care Unit was very good.  His own checks on the staff had reassured him.

They docked, the ship moving gently, and Y preventing Logus from bleeding twice more.  It was constant work, and he would be well-pleased when the man was in the stabilized ECU.

The airlock opened, and they floated over.  Y counted the cosmic rays that passed through them in the less-shielded tunnel, finding that they were a trifle high for his liking.  He made a note in Logus’s file to his future doctors.  Only more damage to repair, this at the molecular level.  It was doable.

Three doctors and a team of drones met them, taking charge of Logus.  It was safer moving him through the air, to prevent vibrations and bumps, and a series of thrusters on the bed floated him gently down the hall.

“Captain Brooks, you should wait here,” one of the doctors said.  The Captain had come across with them in silence, and remained that way, only nodding to them.

His eyes tracked Logus, though.

Y went through with the others, and watched as Logus was put into their care in the ECU room.  Machines were connected, drones monitoring him, along with dozens of sensors.

“His condition is quite serious,” Dr. Ghaelj told him, the Qlerning blinking slowly and out of synch.  “Our system estimates a one-in-three chance of him not surviving.”

“His odds are better here than anywhere else we can reasonably reach,” Y noted.  “If he does not live, I know that you will have done your best.”

“Of course,” Ghaelj said.  “You may stay however long you like, to observe, Dr. Y.”

Y thanked him, and Ghaelj left to go confer with the rest of the medical team.

Building a human was easy.  Parts could be cloned or replaced with cybernetics or the body modified to survive without.

But saving one already alive?  It was so much harder than even the organics had ever thought.

Y knew that he was free to leave any time.  Logus would not know that he was on the other side of the glass, and he could not go in.  But he did not wish to leave yet.

He calculated that three hours passed, his systems working at overtime so it felt more akin to weeks.  He continued to parse his data as best he could, but where emotions came in, even he could be . . .

Lost.

There was an eternal war to accept that a being he interacted with often, who he found unique and interesting, who lived a full and complex mental life of their own could – in a heartbeat – simply cease to exist.  Their uniqueness gone forever.

It made it all almost feel futile.

He could back up his memories, his states.  If his current form was destroyed, it would experience something akin to death, but his last backup could carry on.  For the totality of him, only a gap of time would be lost.

“Goodbye, Doctor Logus,” he said softly.  “I will hope that I encounter your uniqueness again.”

And if he did not – he would at least remember him.


< Ep 7 Part 11 | Ep 7 Part 13 >