Episode 4 – Home, part 14

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


“Prepare for dash entry,” the pilot called over the comm.  “ETA to Luna is 38 hours.”

“I hate these,” Apollonia said.  “The rattling makes me queasy after awhile.”

“The dashgates in Sol are very well maintained,” Brooks assured her.  “It won’t be bad.”

They entered the gate, and Apollonia found herself holding her breath.  The entry and exit had usually been the worst, that feeling of falling with rattling and shaking . . . when it came to pain she felt she was rather brave.  But she’d rather get poked with a needle in the eye than have that plummeting feeling.

But Brooks was right; the sensation was markedly lesser than any dash she’d ever taken (which, granted, had not been many).

Letting out her breath, she relaxed as they began to cruise.

“Okay, you were right . . . Ian.”  She hesitated using his name, it still seemed odd to her.

He seemed lost in thought, and she glanced over to him.  His eyes were glazed, staring into space tiredly.

“So you’re from Earth, huh?  Antarctica?”

“Yes,” he replied.

“What’s it like?”

“Cold, but the glaciers and permafrost are gone, have been since the 22nd century.  At least where I was.”  He paused.  “It was nice.”

“Was?  Has it changed much since your childhood?”

He smiled sadly.  “You could say that.”  But he did not elaborate.

They both grew silent, lost in thought.

She realized she did not know anything about Brooks; he was an absolute enigma.  Besides the fact that he was captain of the Craton – which he technically even wasn’t, right now.

“How long have you been a Captain?” she asked him.

“Nine years, all told,” Brooks replied.  “Three of them in the Trade Fleet, prior to joining the Voidfleet, and six after joining.”

A lot of that surprised her.  “You’re from Earth, but you didn’t go straight into the Voidfleet?  I thought only people on the fringes joined the Trade Fleet.”

“It’s not a rule,” Brooks replied.  “Though it might generally be true.  But yes, I spent time on the fringes of human-controlled space, worked my way through the merchant fleet, then later joined the Voidfleet Academy.”

“So how long did it take you to go from captain of a Trade Fleet ship to Captain of an SU ship?”

He smiled.  “Do you hope to become a captain, Apollonia?  I could see you attaining that.”

“Maybe,” she replied, smiling a little, feeling somewhat pleased at the compliment.  “Got to keep my career prospects open, right?”

“Indeed,” Brooks replied.  “But to answer your question – I served 18 years in the Voidfleet before becoming Captain of my first ship.”

The surprised showed on her face, and he smiled lightly again and said laconically;  “Sometimes things don’t come to us as quickly as we hope.”

She nodded, and looked away, wondering if she had just been rude.  Eighteen years, though!  She’d always heard it took just ten years to become a captain.  It had been the dream of every child to become the Captain of a starship, when she’d been growing up.  So why had it taken Brooks so long?  It didn’t seem to add up.

“I’m going to take a rest,” Brooks said, reclining his seat back into a full bed.  The lights in the cabin dimmed automatically, and she reclined as well, though not fully prone.

Brooks fell asleep quickly, and while she did wish to rest, she did not mean to fall asleep.  But then she found herself suddenly groping her way back to consciousness.

“Hello?” she murmured, sensing more than seeing the presence above her.

Opening her eyes and blinking against the lights that were still dimmed but seemed horribly bright, her heart jumped as she realized that nothing stood above her.

Yet she felt the presence.  She felt the malevolence.  She felt the will.

Her voice turned hard, almost not her own.

“You don’t belong here,” she said, a quiet power in her voice.  It was like some other force spoke through her.  Part of her but also not.

The presence observed, regarding her in a way she might regard a disgusting parasite.

“Leave,” she ordered.

Her eyes were dragged over to the side, to Brooks.  The man was sleeping, but fitfully, moving as if in a nightmare.

There was a connection there.  Something important, something vast and terrible and great and entirely beyond her understanding, she knew she had to warn him, but then-

She was being shaken awake.

“Apollonia, are you all right?”

It was Brooks.

She blinked, pushing his hand away from her shoulder absently.

The dim lights were not blinding now.  She looked about, but saw no one, felt no presence, besides Brooks next to her.

“Where are we?” she mumbled.

“Still en route to Earth,” he told her.  “Are you all right?  You seemed disturbed in your sleep.  Your heart was racing almost dangerously.”

She looked around, but the dream, the feelings, had faded to the point she was already forgetting them.  Her heart was pounding in her chest, but it was calming rapidly, and with it she began to feel calmer.

“I’m fine,” she said, yawning.  A sense of foreboding filled her, still, but she did not know why.

“I’m sorry to have woken you.  You just seemed very upset.”

“Yeah, just a weird dream,” she said.  A slinking thread of memory found its way into her consciousness.  “What about you?  Any weird dreams?”

“No,” he replied.  “I don’t remember dreaming anything.”

A drone brought them some fruit drinks, a yellowish-orange drink that she’d never had before.

Orange juice, it told her.  So this was the juice of an orange?  She’d had candies that claimed that flavor.  They’d tasted nothing like the actual juice.

“So when we get to Earth, what do we do?” she asked.

“We don’t go directly to Earth,” Brooks told her.  “The hearing will be on Korolev Station, in orbit around Luna.  That is the capital of the Sol System, and most of humanity.”

Her sadness showed, because he smiled reassuringly.  “Don’t worry, it’s literally fifteen minutes to Earth by dashgate.”

“Oh, good.  For a moment I thought I’d miss my chance . . .”  She stretched, and flopped back in her seat.  “I’ve always wanted to see the homeworld.  I honestly never thought I’d get the chance.”

His brow furrowed as he looked at her.  “Do you know anything about Earth’s recent history?” he asked seriously.

“Well . . . no,” she admitted.  “I didn’t watch our crappy local news, it was pretty much constant lies about how great things were.  And I didn’t chat with many people or have a system . . .” She perked up.  “But I did watch a lot of documentaries when I was younger.  Ones about the forests and the oceans and the animals and plants in them.  I always wanted to see one of those giant flowers, the ones that smell like rotting meat?”

She stopped and took a deep breath and grinned.

Brooks was silent, looking at her with concern, and her smile started to fade.

“What is it?  Don’t tell me that those shows were lies,” she asked.

“No, that’s not it.  Those things all exist – rafflesia flowers, forests and oceans full of life.  They’re maybe just not how you think they might be.”

Her heart felt like it was fluttering.

“Why?” she asked.

“Forty-five years ago, the orbital infrastructure around Earth collapsed,” Brooks said.  “In the most literal sense.  The Orbital Ring, the Space Elevators – all of them broke apart and crashed to the surface.”

He could see the alarm on Apollonia’s face, but also the confusion.  Brooks gestured to her tablet, and sent her an image of the Orbital Ring that encircled the Earth.

“This ring was around the Earth’s equator.  Elevators from the surface reached up to it, that were used to ferry people and supplies up or down.  But something happened, we-  We still don’t know what, or how.  But all of it came crashing down.”

He paused, letting her look over the images on-screen.  None showed the carnage, only the extent of infrastructure that had been placed in orbit.  It was extensive; millions of people had moved through the system daily.  To go from one side of the planet to another, there was literally no way easier or faster than to go up an elevator into orbit and then take a hypervelocity train.

But when it had broken up, all of it had become simply . . . debris.

“Billions died,” Brooks said soberly.  “And billions more were trapped.  The debris that didn’t fall remained in orbit or moved outward, creating a runaway kessler syndrome that we called the musk field – a scrapfield so dense in space that ships could not safely move through it.”

He took a deep breath.  “And the ecosystem – in many parts of the world it simply collapsed.  After the shocks of the climate catastrophe from centuries ago, there was one of the largest mass extinctions in the world’s history.

“But this was a second shock, only a few hundred years later.  The dust from all of the debris drowned out the sun.  Forest fires added to it.  The world’s average temperature dropped by nearly ten degrees.”

“So . . .” Apollonia finally said.  “It all died.”

“Most of it, yes,” Brooks said.  “I’m sorry.”

“I’m sorry, too,” she replied.

She willed herself to hold back the tears.  To keep her face calm.

Brooks looked away, and she did not know if she wished he hadn’t, or if she appreciated him letting her save some face.

Because she was struggling to keep it under control.

All these years, she’d had one wish.  And now she had just learned she’d been a fool to want it.  That it was all . . . dead and gone.

A thought shot through her, and she looked up.

“You said you’re from Earth,” she said.  “Were you . . . there when it happened?”

Brooks looked over at her.  For just a moment she saw the same struggle she was going through playing over his face.  Hiding pain, and refusing to show it.

“Yes,” he replied.  “I lived through it.”


< Ep 4 Part 13 | Ep 4 Part 15 >

Episode 4 – Home, part 13

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


The shuttle was very small, Kell thought.

It would have been comfortable for a human, with soft things as they enjoyed, and metals smoothed until they reflected the light.

The pilot seemed to have little reaction to him; but then, he had shuttled Shoggoths before.  His presence was altered in that way.

“Welcome aboard, Ambassador.  We will be launching shortly, and once we’re through the dashgate it will be seventeen hours until we arrive.”

Kell gave him a nod, and sat in the seat.

“If you get hungry, there is a drone ready to serve you.  And if you’d like music or entertainment-“

“I would prefer silence,” Kell said, weary of the human game of politeness.

The man did not reply, but merely nodded, and turned to his work.

Kell studied him absently with part of his attention but let the rest drift.  Now was not really a time that was safe, but few were in a period of great change.  Nevertheless, he felt no apprehension.  Anything that might happen to him was entirely beyond his control, and the humans truly seemed to wish for his safety.

An odd but useful trait.

The shuttle launched, and he said nothing.  As far as the pilot could tell, he simply stared forward, never blinking, and never moving.  For the entire trip.


As the shuttle turned around and began its counter-burn to arrest its momentum, Pirra felt anxious.

Squirming in her seat, she felt annoyed with herself.  She didn’t feel this antsy even during a mission where there were serious consequences.

Alexander noticed her fidgeting, but said nothing, just putting his hand over hers.

She appreciated the gesture, but it didn’t help.

“Do you think Iago will be released from his quarantine in time to come see my folks?” Alexander asked.

Her commander was a long-time family friend of the Shaws, but him bringing it up – something he was probably doing to distract her from her nervousness – did not help.

Alexander did not know what Iago had gone through.  The mission, everything about it, was top secret.  And liable to remain that way.

She’d taken the time to check with some friends of hers.  She couldn’t actually find out what they had done about the monitoring station, but she knew what class of ships would be best at destroying it, as she had recommended.  As far as she could tell, no ship had been diverted.

It was possible they were being quiet about it, but she had a feeling that they were not going to destroy that place.

She still awoke each day, afraid she’d still be there.  After seeing the people there – or perhaps merely shades of people? – she had thought that maybe she, too, would open her eyes to find she had never escaped . . .

It was the worst thing about some of this shit.  You did not know if you were truly free of it.

“Pirra?” Alexander asked.

She blinked.  “Sorry, honey.  I . . . I wouldn’t bet on it.  I think Iago will be fine, but I don’t think he’s going to be out of isolation for a while.”

Her husband nodded, trying to hide his disappointment.  It would be nice to be able to tell him what had happened to his closest friend.  But she couldn’t say anything.  It was beyond just about keeping security – as Iago had learned, on some things, just the knowing itself could be dangerous.

The docking went smoothly, and she felt more relaxed.  No more sitting and waiting.

As they left the shuttle, she’d already identified their best path to catch their connecting flight.  They had two more stops and connections to make, and so far they were fortunately on time.

“This way,” she said.  Thankfully, Plucharon station was set up to take on the numbers the Craton was bringing.  Ten thousand people was really nothing; she’d counted at least seven hundred ships out there, and that had only been from a cursory scan.  Each of them could easily be unloading ten or twenty thousand people.  Mostly tourists – humans come on a pilgrimage to their homeworld.  Sometimes aliens, though – because humans were, she thought, pretty interesting.

She supposed she was pretty lucky.  She’d been born on the larger moon of her world, but her parents had moved back to the planet when she was young.  She knew the world her species had evolved upon well.  The vast majority of Dessei were not so lucky, and their population was almost triple that of humankind.

They arrived at their shuttle early, but boarding was already being allowed.

The inter-system shuttle was larger, too large to actually land in a shuttle bay, instead using a long umbilical with a carrier car in it.

Going aboard, they floated down the main hall.  Without gravity, any way could be up, and there were doors on walls and floors both.  While she preferred to be in gravity most of the time, at least the zero-g made the bags easier to carry, she thought.

Finding their compartment and floating in, she took her seat.  There were six, though no one else had arrived yet.

“Can you stow these?” she asked, pushing her bag towards Alexander.

“All right.  You okay?”

“Yeah, I just want to find the head,” she said, floating back out of the room.

It was not so much that as her own need to get a feel for the ship.  She was very antsy, and she could not strictly chalk it up to anything in particular beyond the fact that she, nor anyone she knew, was in command of this ship.

But there was almost no chance of an issue occurring in a heavily-populated system, she reminded herself for the thousandth time.

Almost.

Floating back to the compartment, she slid the door open and paused.

“Honey, it looks like we’re sharing the compartment with Dr. Logus,” Alexander said.

He seemed genuinely happy.  She was not so sure how she felt.

“Oh, hello Doctor,” she trilled.

“Lieutenant,” he replied politely.  The man looked rather distracted or bothered, himself.

She moved in to sit down next to Alexander.  “Do you have family in the system, sir?”

“Ah, you don’t need to call me sir.  I do have family in the system, it’s true.  But I’m not going to see them, I’m afraid.  This is . . . well, not work-related.  But it’s certainly no personal trip.”

Pirra wondered what that meant.

“What about you two?” Logus asked.

“We’re going to visit my family,” Alexander said.  “They’re Phobosans.”

“Ah, interesting.  I thought that moon had been abandoned,” Logus replied.

“It was, but my family and a few others decided to move into the place to form a kind of science commune,” Alexander replied.  “Fixed up the facilities with a grant from the Research Council and – well, that’s where I was born.”

“That’s quite interesting,” Logus said.  “I do recall reading about it, now that you mention it.  It would be interesting to meet your family some time.  You said the Research Council?  What is it that they’re researching?”

Alexander had seemed proud until that moment.  But now, he looked away, his face flushing ever so slightly.  “My father is interested in . . . applied plasma weaponry.”

“Weapons?  Oh, I see,” Logus said, hiding his surprise.  He noticed that Pirra was staring at him unblinking.  She was trying to keep her crest down, but it was bristling all the same.

If Logus had been so ill-mannered as to make a rude comment about such odd work, he could tell she’d launch into his defense.

She was a bit touchy, he decided.  Interesting.

“I can see why they would want to do such work on Phobos.  I had no idea, though, that plasma had real weaponizing potential.  Wasn’t most such research abandoned a century ago?”

“Yeah,” Alexander said.  He elaborated no further.

Logus let the topic drop.

“Well, if you two don’t mind, I think I’ll take a rest,” Logus said, smiling politely to them both.

He slid his privacy screen down around him, and closed his eyes.

Pirra and Alexander were silent.  The privacy screen would block most noises, but neither felt much like talking.

She knew Alexander hated talking about his father’s work.  However important it was to remain on the advanced edge of weapons technology in case of conflict, it was work that made most uncomfortable.  War and conflict were, after all, rarely good for anyone.

No one else joined their compartment.  An hour later, a voice came over their systems;

“Please prepare for dash entry.  ETA at Titan Station is 30 hours.”

Thirty hours to Titan Station in Saturn orbit, a two hour layover, six hours from there to Ceres with another hour layover, then just two more to Mars.

Then just getting their rental shuttle and seven more hours flying at sublight to reach Phobos.

Not short, but not bad for getting to a place as out-of-the-way as that moon.

She shifted in her seat.  She’d be happy once they were on that last leg of their journey.  Then, if anything went wrong, it’d at least be a proper emergency, instead of something as inane as a bureaucratic error . . .


< Ep 4 Part 12 | Ep 4 Part 14 >

Episode 4 – Home, part 12

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


With her tray piled high with food (and her tablet warning her about the caloric content being in far excess of what she should eat in a day), Apollonia finally made her way over to sit down at a nearby table.

There had been so many choices!

Each stall had information on the food, noting where on Earth it came from, what cultures ate it, when it had been invented.

She hadn’t imagined that people in different parts of Earth still ate different foods.  Wouldn’t all these centuries of limitless food, cheap travel, and no privation have led to everyone being pretty much the same in tastes?

She didn’t know what the truth was, but at least she could try their foods.

Looking over her prizes, she looked at her tablet for the names of them all; she had an orange spongy thing on a stick called a corn dog, apparently it had some kind of meat inside.  Fried potato sticks covered in brown gravy and white chunks called poutine, fried balls of chickpeas called falafel, a fish-shaped cake with sweet bean paste inside called taiyaki, a triangular slice of thin bread with cheese and tomato sauce on top (pizza), and pieces of fried plantain called kelewele.

And cabbage pudding.

The latter was apparently a newer invention, a creamy sweet dessert flavored with cabbage.  She had no idea what cabbage tasted like, but the color of it reminded her of the sweetened algae paste she’d once viewed as a treat.  It gave her a power trip to be able to just buy it like it was nothing.

She’d had to stop herself from continuing on, because she’d hit only about half the stalls, and the only one she had resisted had been ‘cotton candy’, which looked interesting but was apparently just pure sugar.

She could not possibly eat all of this, but she was at least going to taste it all.

Taking the corn dog, she bit off the end, surprised pleasantly to find that there was a sausage of some kind inside.

She decided to try the more savory items first – the poutine, then falafel, pizza, and fried plantains, which she was surprised to find were spicy.

“Dark!” she spat, taking a drink.  She’d heard of food that burned in your mouth, but she’d never had any.

“What troubles you?” she heard.

Her skin crawled.  The voice was toneless, lifeless, and the presence was suddenly there.

How Kell had snuck up on her she didn’t know, but she turned in her seat to look at the being, her face pulled in taut lines.

“I didn’t expect to see you here, Ambassador,” she said shortly.  “Don’t you have your own flight to catch?”

“In a sense,” Kell replied.  “It will not leave without me.”

“So why not keep them waiting if you want?” she asked sarcastically.

Kell’s eyes had been on her food, but he glanced to her now, as if to communicate that yes, he knew she was being sarcastic.

“They will possess themselves with patience,” he replied, and moved to sit.

She almost snapped out that she hadn’t asked him to sit, but bit her tongue.  The damn thing was an Ambassador.

Even if she also felt he was a murderer.

It wasn’t just that it had killed Michal Denso, when she still thought there had been at least the possibility of a peaceful outcome, and not even that she had a very strong feeling that what he had done could have harmed her and Verena . . .

But he had killed something beyond them, a lifeform that she could not truly understand . . . something that had not even had a chance to live.

Was it accurate to call it infanticide if what you killed had been closer to a god than a person?

She heard footsteps behind them, and glanced back to see Brooks approaching.

“Ambassador,” he said politely.  “I did not expect to see you here.”

“I had a moment,” Kell replied, once more looking to the food.

Apollonia did not offer him any.  She picked up several fries in the poutine and ate them.

“I didn’t know you were so hungry, Ms. Nor,” Brooks said lightheartedly.

“Well, Dr. Y does want me to put on some weight,” she said after she swallowed.  “But really, I just wanted to try some things from Earth.  Please tell me these are real Earth foods.”

“Yes, they are,” he replied.  “I know most of them.”

He picked up one of the fish-shaped treats.  “We would eat taiyaki every sundown, for luck,” he said, tearing it in half and taking a bite.

It was sweeter than he remembered, probably made so on behalf of tourists.  But it wasn’t bad.

“Every night?” she asked.  “Just some kind of universal desert?”

“I grew up in Antarctica,” he clarified. “Sunset comes once a year – we made a festival of it.  I don’t know how taiyaki became so popular, but they became very symbolic of it for us.”

He ate another bite, and gestured to Kell.  “Ambassador, if you’d like some, please help yourself.”

Apollonia stiffened, and Brooks glanced to her and spoke again.  “We can’t eat all this ourselves.”

Kell said nothing, but reached over and picked up a falafel, putting it in his mouth.  He swallowed it immediately.

“How do you like it?” Brooks asked.

“It is food,” Kell simply said.

He rose.  “I am going.  Captain.  Apollonia Nor.”  Nodding to each of them, he turned and walked away.

“Good riddance,” Apollonia muttered.

Brooks caught that, but said nothing.

“We’ll have a shuttle here within the hour,” he told her.  “Let’s finish this up and then head over to our terminal.”


< Ep 4 Part 11 | Ep 4 Part 13 >

Episode 4 – Home, part 11

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


At least she could get snacks.

After leaving the office area, she headed to the snack bars to see what was available.

Food was something always present in her mind.  Not just the desire for enough to survive on (though it had been a real concern many times), but always hoping for something she actually liked.

Perhaps it was because she’d actually sometimes been able to get something coveted that it became such a deeply-ingrained desire.

It irked her that she still found herself wanting algae pudding, what passed for a dessert on New Vitriol.

There were a number of kiosks manned by real people – almost all humans, but she saw a Dessei and one of the squid-like people she thought were called Sepht.

It was the first time she could actually see one in person, but the being was actually closing up, and was gone before she could get over there.

Just as well, she thought, looking at the food on its sign.  She didn’t think she wanted to eat any of that.

Her tablet pinged; warning her that Sepht food was not good for the human palette or digestive system.

Must have been for Sepht tourists or something . . .

She moved to the human-oriented food stalls.

The first one had something she’d never expected to see; fruit.

She had not ever seen a piece in person.  She’d seen them in shows and films, though usually on New Vitriol food was edited out or censored to fight food riots.

They looked so fresh and happy.  Apples of mottled red and green or dark red, bright oranges, something with spikes she didn’t know, starfruit, mangoes . . .

“I have this,” she said, showing the card Brooks had given her.  “Can I get some fruit?”

“Of course,” the woman behind the counter said.  She waved her gloved hand at the card, and Apollonia heard a ping on her tablet.

Looking at it, she saw that her card was pre-approved for food exchange.  In the quantity of . . .  Four thousand credits.

“How much is an apple and a mango?” she asked.

The woman gestured, and a receipt for 2 credits came up on her tablet.

Two?!  Out of four thousand?

“Thanks,” she said, taking the fruit, still staggered.

She was going to need a big tray, she realized, as he looked down the line of stalls.


Brooks moved to a private office for his call.

The fact that their shuttle was gone, and the private communications lines were in use was not an accident, he felt.

His credentials could not find out just who or what was tying up the station’s private channels.  But he had other options.

System Admiral Temohee Vandoss was an old friend, and Brooks had been in contact with the man as soon as he’d gotten his summons back to Sol.

The whole thing was unusual; he was not in the Research Bureau, but the Voidfleet.  And for an officer from Earth, that meant his direct chain of command involved Vandoss.  Leveling dereliction charges against a member of another branch typically involved communicating with that chain of command.

But Vandoss had received no word from Director Freeman, nor any of his superiors.

His suspicion about it all had caused Vandoss to give to Brooks his own unique authorization code in case of trouble.  It was an emergency military system, with several channels always available.

In the private office, Brooks sent the message off to Vandoss.  His system told him that it was late on ComStat – the seat of Sol’s military, in orbit around Earth.

Vandoss was apparently awake, however.  On only the third round of beeps he picked up.

There was no visual, just a voice.

“Ian, I hope that’s you,” the man’s gruff voice came through.

“It is Temohee.  Glad to report that there’s no enemy fleet trying to break down the gates.”

The older man chuckled.  “That is good news.  I take it that you’ve noticed your shuttle is gone, and communications are stuffed full.”

“Yes.  That wasn’t your doing, was it?”

“No.  Director Freeman’s causing mischief.  On a ‘whim’ he decided to host seven major research gatherings on and around Plucharon, that are being livestreamed back to Earth.  Ostensibly its for our extra-solar friends.”

“But it was likely to interfere with me talking to you,” Brooks said.  “And the shuttle?”

“A group of medical officers took it under his jurisdiction, not medical bureau’s,” Vandoss said.  “One of them is a Dr. Benj Genson, formerly of MS-29, and now a material witness for his case.”

“I recall the man.  He was one of Verena’s personal staff of doctors.  I believe he tipped off Freeman to begin with.”

“Well there it is.  Fortunately, I was expecting some kind of shenanigans like this, so I have four other shuttles out that way for your use, if you need them.  I’ve already signalled one – it should dock in an hour.”

“Thank you, Temohee,” Brooks said.  “But all of this concerns me.  Is corruption really spreading?”

“It’s . . . sometimes I get worried myself,” Vandoss replied.  “But I don’t think it’s systemic, Ian.  I think . . . we’re like a body that’s been healthy so long it’s forgotten how to deal with illness.  Dr. Freeman isn’t the only one, but he’s the boldest.  They step around the rules very carefully, not breaking them, but breaking their spirit.  It can’t last.”

“No,” Brooks said.  “We won’t let it fester.”

“The part that worries me the most is that I don’t know what Freeman hopes to gain from these charges against you.”

“Do you think he can stick them?”

“I don’t know,” the man said.  “I have not yet been given all of his ‘evidence’.  I do not doubt you did your duty, but given how this man flaunts the rules . . . still, I have faith in the justice of our system.”

“I do as well,” Brooks replied.  “Thank you, Temohee.  I’ll see you in a few days.”

Brooks ended the call, and took a long, slow breath before leaving the office.


< Ep 4 Part 10 | Ep 4 Part 12 >

Episode 4 – Home, part 5

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


Just squeezing through the doorway, Pirra whistled a shrill curse as something clunked in her bag.

“Was that one of the gifts?” Alexander asked.

“No,” she said, truly unsure, but knowing they had precious little time to check right now.

With over ten thousand people leaving the ship, getting on one of the shuttles to Plucharon Station was insanely difficult.  Allowance for tardiness wasn’t being tolerated, not with the numbers they had to deal with.

And they had to catch their flight to the inner-system, or else their entire time-table would be thrown off.

There was still time, though, she felt sure.  But they couldn’t stop.

“Are you sure?” he asked, heaving up a bag on his shoulders and wincing.  “God, how tightly did you pack this?”

“It’s not that heavy,” she chided.

“I don’t have your augments,” he muttered.  “It’s got to be almost fourteen kilos.”

“Well, I had to bring my wing covers, it’s important to look good,” Pirra replied matter-of-factly.

“You’ve met my parents before,” he said.  “And how many did you bring?”

“Six,” she replied.

“Six?  We’re only going to be there for two days!  Why do you need more than two?”

She knew her expression – crest rising purely vertical, eyes opening as wide as she could, had to look, to him, like a massive overreaction.

But she was scandalized.

“I need at least two per day!” she said.  “And what if one of them gets dirty?  Do you expect me to be in front of your parents with dirty wings?”  She looked away, making a sound of emotional pain.

It wasn’t feigned on her part, and she definitely was not vain by her own kind’s standards.  It would be humiliating if she ran into that situation.

“It’s too late, anyway, we have to hurry,” she said.

Alexander sighed and tromped after her, bearing up with the weight of the bag hanging from one shoulder.

He could handle it, but it’d be uncomfortable for their journey to the station.  Maybe she did over-estimate his strength sometimes.  Even though his limbs were massively thicker than any of her kind, Dessei muscles were more efficient, rendering the two species loosely similar in strength.

Still, even as a thin human, he looked positively swole to a Dessei.

She felt a tug on her sleeve, and distractedly looked down.

It was a boy, Elliot, the son of Iago Caraval.  She knew him well.

“Dad asked me to come and tell you he wishes you both a safe trip,” the boy said.

“Oh, thanks Elliot.  Tell your dad to focus on feeling better,” Pirra replied, trying to force her smile while juggling the luggage in her hands.

“Okay,” the boy replied.  He seemed disgruntled, and Pirra knew he must be worried about his father.  “He wanted to come himself but Dr. Loogie didn’t give him permission.”

Though Caraval seemed much better the last time Pirra had seen him, he was still confined to quarters for a few more days, she knew, pending Dr. Logus’s approval.

“Elliot!” Alexander said, shifting the bag on his shoulder.  “Don’t call him that.  It’s Logus.”

“That’s what I said,” Elliot replied innocently.  “Anyway, see ya later!”  He ran off down the hall, yelling back over his shoulder.

The door three meters away opened, and a familiar face peered out.

“Sorry Tred,” she said before he could talk.  “I’ll try to remember to be quieter in the future.”

He seemed half-sorry himself, and half annoyed.  “You said that last time.”

“I’m in a hurry,” Pirra replied curtly, and pushed on down the hall.

This bag was so lumpy.  It wasn’t heavy, but it managed to be awkwardly large, and she couldn’t let it swing at her side without bashing her legs.  Why did he have to bring so many gifts?  She wasn’t aware that that was a standard human thing, and giving people things always seemed odd to her.  There were few things one could give that were worth keeping.

She saw the time flash in her system HUD.  They’d wasted too much time, and now they needed to really rush.

“Hurry, Alex!” she said, breaking into a run, almost crashing into the Apollonia girl as she came out of her own cabin.

“Sorry, excuse me,” Pirra breathed, hurrying on.

Alexander said more sedately as he passed her next; “Excuse us, we just have to catch our shuttle.”

“Me too,” Apollonia replied.  “Mind if I just follow you?”

Alexander had gone on, but shook his head.  “Not a problem, just keep up!”


< Ep 4 Part 4 | Ep 4 Part 6 >

Episode 4 – Home, part 4

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


“Y!  I’m going to Earth!” Apollonia said excitedly over the comm.

“You seem quite excited,” the doctor replied.  “I am very happy for you, Nor!  Is there someplace in particular you wish to experience?”

The question actually caught her off-guard.  She hadn’t given much thought to where she was going to go; she didn’t really know of many particular places by name, barring some of the large Ark Cities.

“I . . . guess just to see the homeworld?” she replied.  “Have you ever gone there?  What would you recommend?”

Dr. Y seemed to hesitate in answering.  “No, I have not been to Earth before.  I hear nice things about it from members of the crew, however.”

She would have thought he’d been everywhere.

“Well, I don’t know if you have any free time or anything but . . . do you want to go with me?” she asked hopefully.

Dr. Y hesitated again.  “I am sorry to say that that is not really an option for me at this time, Nor.  I am still very busy with work.”

“Oh, I’m sorry to hear that,” she said.  “Hopefully I can see you before I go, at least.”

“I am positive you will,” he replied.

For a moment, she smiled.  Then he continued.

“As you need to get several more vaccines if you are going down planetside.”

“What?  Why?  You gave me so many already!”

“And those are all still valid,” Y replied.  “However, you will be exposed to yet more diseases on a planet.  They are, after all, teeming with life.”

Her brow furrowed and her mouth turned into a scowl.  “Just how important is it that I get them?”

“You will not be allowed onto Earth without them,” he said.  “Some actually serve to kill off non-Earth microbes that you may be harboring that could pose a danger to the natural biome of Earth.”

“Oh,” she replied.  “Just how many are we talking?”

“Only seven,” Y replied happily.

“Dark take me,” she moaned.

“This is to prevent that,” Y said.  “Now, I have you scheduled for a 1300 appointment.  Will that work for you?”


The Craton had a crew complement of nearly 20,000 beings.

Brooks looked over a tenth that number, arrayed before him in serried ranks.  Their dress uniforms smart, metal gleaming.  All at attention, waiting for his words.

He’d looked over a much different crowd not long ago, people joining into the Sapient Union.  He’d felt a pride then, and he felt a different kind of pride now.  The people of New Vitriol had been entering into something that would enable them to change their lives for the better.

These men and women had climbed higher still, joining the elite of the voidfleet and rising to join one of the finest crews on the finest ships in the Sapient Union.

“Before his official departure from duty, the Captain will be conducting an inspection,” Urle said.  His voice was artificially amplified, reaching every ear easily.

Those officers and crew who could not be in the room with them watched from elsewhere, only those on the most essential duty still at work.

It was rare for so many of the ship’s crew to not be on duty.  The infinite emptiness of space was hostile, and they could not let their guard down.

But now, with the ship in the home port, surrounded by pickets and friendlies uncountable, it was, they were, at long last, safe.

He’d have liked to stand before the entire crew, but there was no space on the entire ship large enough for all of them to comfortably fit.  Even fitting a mere 2,000 filled the largest room on the ship.  Normally it was a storage room, but it had been cleared to create temporary housing for the emigres from MS-29.  With it emptied, its occupants now in queues to leave the ship, and the walls taken down in haste by Commander Sulp, there was just enough space.

Brooks stepped up as Urle moved aside.  He said nothing, but walked down the row swiftly.  Urle was surprised, and moved to follow him.

“Lt. Srul,” Brooks said to a man, smiling.  “You were on the bridge crew of the Kilimanjaro at Terris, weren’t you?”

The man smiled.  “Yes, sir.  I was pulling my second shift when everything went south and you pulled us out.”

“I recall you did well.  I was saddened when you transferred to Quartermasters, though I’m sure you do them credit now.”

He moved on.  His system could have told him the name of every crew member he saw, but he knew many of them just from memory.

He stopped to speak to some – Sturmer, who’d been a midshipman on the Sunspot, the first ship Brooks had served upon.  May, who had been in his same year at the Voidfleet Academy.  Chi, who he’d helped through the jitters of her first deployment.  And so many others; Hensel, Inderhock, Postemsky, Nizami, Xiao, Anh, Keita . . .

He took care to look to every face he could, to show just the hint of a confident smile that calmed the nervous and bolstered the already-strong.

There were so many he could not hope to reach, no matter how much he wished.  If only life had enough time that he could get to know all of them, he thought.

Every single face in that crowd – human or alien – had a story to their lives.  Their own hopes and dreams and fears.  Fully realized beings.

He reached the end of the row, gazing to the last face, then began a slower walk, returning to the middle.

“It is an honor to serve with you all,” he said as he walked, his voice now amplified.  “You are the finest crew I could ask for, serving on the best ship in the Sapient Union.  I leave my station soon, to attend a hearing on Earth.  But I shall return, one way or another.

“In my absence, you are in the hands of Acting-Captain Urle.  He has my full confidence.”

Stopping his stride, Brooks turned to face them all head on, and gave a slight bow.

“For the years we’ve served together and the years yet to come – I thank you all.”

“Salute!” Urle cried.

As one, two thousand beings brought their hands to their brows to salute their captain.


< Ep 4 Part 3 | Ep 4 Part 5 >