SLYNES - Swirly Lights Yonder, a Never Ending Story

The doom of civilised space approaches. All bow before the awesome space-faring amoeba! Those who agree to be absorbed into the greater being that is the One will be allowed to live as part of him. Those who resist will be dissolved and eaten. It really is a lose-lose situation. Or win-win on my part.
 
It's all good. Once the worldship is completed, the Disopterans will have everything to gain.
 
The Geskani have won their first real engagement in space, defeating an enemy while systems were still somewhat crippled after a Rip. They can take on the One.

Also, great update Bil! I enjoyed reading all of it. :)
 
I have free-time this week on Wednesday and Thursday. I will see if I can write one then Bill.
 
No real pressure, I'm just always a little nervous that no one is having fun anymore :( I usually don't seem to hear much from you guys lately, except for right before and right after an update.
 
I'm having fun. I'm a blob of space jelly about to go on an inter-stellar rampage! How can that not be fun? I just don't have time to write very many stories at the moment due to the dreaded thing known as school. Luckily I have two trips, one on Wednesday and one on Thursday, so I get no homework and I have time that can be spent writing stories.
 
I have to write a stupid thesis paper this week. luckily, its only six pages, but we have to do a bunch of citing and rhetorical crap, so i'm gonna be storyless this week.

Next week is Thanksgiving Break so i'll have lots of free time
 
I'm in the middle of crunch-time at the moment. I'll be more active in a week or so.
 
I can push the update back a week further, if everyone would like? Seems like a third/half of the active players are very busy right now, so I really don't mind accommodating!
 
I think you should go ahead. One thing for me right now is that I don't have a huge amount to right about, other than further exploration into the minds of the Hletho, and some very basic settlement on the newly-discovered system. If you update sooner rather than later, it'll quickly opens up even more opportunities for exciting new situations and stories.
 
Very true, and I am very much looking forward to events coming up. I'll wait and see how others weigh in on this, but I would definitely like to keep the ball rolling (lopsided though the ball may be), even if I have to NPC a few people for this update (which I definitely don't mind doing if you guys are really pressed for time; I think I know your races enough to get the gist of it).
 
I can still send orders... and I'll try to write a story soon. My schedule should be opening up a little bit tomorrow, and... actually, yes. I've resolved to write a story tomorrow.
 
You know my plans for the next 5 turns, give or take. I would like it if this NES kept on updating. I trust your judgment when it comes to the actions of the hives. Of course, that is only if I do not get orders in, lol.
 
The Thoughts of Wahano Sam

I looked down on the twin worlds from high orbit, quietly thinking as I monitored the progress of our scouting probes on the planetary surfaces. Something in me wanted to go down, place myself down on the bizarre green world far below, the first of my kind to do so.

Mo says it’s a ridiculous idea- the others noted that I’ve still got a bit too much of the Jethan spirit, and who am I to disagree? I am only the Commander of this startraveler! Tikatikatikatik... amusing.

The star of this system has been labelled Sethkhad, and the green Planets Haefar and Joliat. The others occasionally question my arbitrariness, but I in turn question their fixedness in learning and procedure- at times I must even do this to Mo- sometimes I am amazed that he is my brother, tikatikatikatikatik.

They are named for two green creatures I saw in my youth... Mo remembers, but he has said nothing.

There has been discussion of establishing a settlement on one of these planets. I am fascinated by the idea of a research colony, or some lasting edifice of any sort. As a Hletho of Bres, I have long known the tales of colonization, passed down through generations of my predecessors in the Wahano Clade... what an experience it would be to lead an expedition of my own.

I am already doing that, of course! But I certainly wish to do more. I will endeavour to do so in the future- I do hold an amount of influence as the Commander of the Rhetho. Imagine what new fields of knowledge could be opened up in these strange worlds, were I simply able to land upon them!

In time. I am still young, and certainly will be returning. The rest of the crew- Mo excluded, of course- seems to be here simply on contract, although I understand that the two from Clan Lico, Taesh and Daeja, are here to continue on Aviation Director Chaeh’s work... and they said that we in Bres were strange! Tikatikatikatikatik!

But yes... I will eagerly return here, and I need no contract to make me do so.
 
Hatching

Satellians emerge from the egg in a fairly well-developed state compared to other species, both on their homeworld and elsewhere. Admittedly the hatchlings have only the front four limbs out of six, but they emerge with fully working sense organs and are immediately able to form a conscious image of their surroundings. They can move around, chew their own food, and clean themselves. Within days they even understand some rudimentary words. Youngsters develop into adults in several stages, called Great Moultings, in which the body hibernates while some internal organs are completely broken down and re-assembled. This is the most vulnerable time for youngsters, who would traditionally be glued onto the undersides of their favoured parent for the duration, a custom that has been dying out since the industrial age brought about the partial taming of Hmmaiaa. By the third Great Moulting, the rear pair of limbs are fully workable, and the sex organs also appear - it may take several more decades to reach fertility, but at this point the individual is considered an adult. The length of the whole process is very variable, depending on climate and diet, and social, mental and genetic factors, so it is near impossible to judge the true age of a young Satellian.

Durmu Nurl was a young female prior to her third moulting, and was in no great hurry to reach that rite of passage. She lived in a small outdoors kinship near one of the great undercities on Hmmaiaa. Every day there seemed to be more tremors and general disturbance emanating from below. Her parents had moved on to another kinship to hatch another egg, leaving her in the care of her extended family. Such a thing was perfectly normal; Satellian children often grow tried of their parents within a few years, and vice versa. She was happy, but there weren't many other youngsters around, so she imagined friends for herself. In fact, she spent so much time imagining them that they appeared in her dreams.

She liked to paint pictures of them, too. Being a youngster, her rear pair of limbs had yet to appear, so her method was to crawl over the canvas and work on a small area at a time, delicately holding a brush between one of her front limbs and her mouth-parts. She had quite a talent for it, so they said. But the people she painted weren't the same as her people. One resembled a flattened blob with legs; another a strange mass of jagged limbs and exoskeleton; one had something like red spikes sticking out of its head; another had a body like a cylinder, supported on three tentacles, with something like a mouth held above.

'Who are they' the elders would ask her.

'My friends'

'They look strange. You've been reading up the image-books, haven't you? Is that a swamp creatures from the Huulurr lands?'

'No, Elder. They live on other places. Sometimes I dream about it, and remember things from before my now-life. Don't you remember from before your now-life, Elder?

'Hmm.... Well now... Maybe I did once... Some people think we have special memories when we hatch out, but they seem to disappear after the third Moulting...'

'Then I don't want to moult again!'

And they would do the equivalent of chuckling, and make those comments that elders make, and then they would start to discuss philosophy and science and spirituality and politics. They would always try to involve her, but it was hard to follow their words sometimes. She preferred to leave them to it.

Ten years later.

The tranquillity of Blue Arch Cave Square Section #13 was disrupted by the sudden appearance of a noisy pod-like motor vehicle. The smaller automated wheelers of the undercity tunnels struggled to keep out of its way. The Satellian occupant, the Adjutant Director of The Agreement, was squashed awkwardly in the front section. Luckily his front limbs had little trouble manipulating the alien guidance controls. He slowed and stopped next to a friend, who was standing with a inquisitive expression. A side hatch gracefully hissed open.

'So?..'

'Snuddian, you know. Alien technology. Big kudos value on exchange, if I don't wreck it first.'

'Wondrous!'

'Yes... Our last trade mission swapped it for a surface walker vehicle. Trade in Satellian stuff is making quite a lot of Hul-ult-urg-lort back there on Snud. Millions even. Or is it thousands, I don't remember. Their money has a lot of decimal points.'

'So... Does it go fast?'

'It used to... It was quieter before...'

'Hmm... Looks a bit muddy... Missing a wheel there? '

'Yes. I tried riding it through the Murnnuruu Rockfields. Didn't work so well. '

'Ah... Incompatibility... Unfortunate... The whole aura of it is... Stimulating...'

'Yes.'

'Hey... Is it true what they are saying about the Snud and their sex organs?'

---

The Lelinthian Transit Event had caused a wave of something like panic to spread across Hmmaiaa. This only intensified when it was realised what had happened to the missing flight crew. There were sympathetic outpourings of surprise and horror from the colonies. Then the arguments started...

Six days in, and the grand meeting room was thick with intoxicating Hulunnurr fumes; the plant itself had now shrivelled to a brown-blue husk, hanging forlornly from the ceiling. Some of the participants were not exactly conscious, but this time nobody was hibernating, a sign of how seriously the pressing matters were considered. There was barely a five minute pause to be found between dialogues. Everyone was unsettled by the pace of events. The Snud alone would have been more than enough of a puzzle and a concern. But then there were the Lelinthians. The participants of the meeting found themselves agreeing on one thing: the Lelinthians were dangerous. Dangerous aliens, willing and able to violate the vessels and the bodies of their fellow sentient species. Immature, unbalanced, yet with the apparent ability to reach Satellian worlds at any time and without warning. This was a most unwelcome reality.

The day before, the Adjutant Director has been lucky enough to witness the Transit Event from the observation cupola of a low-orbit space station. Some said it was bright blue, others orange, but to him it seemed like a crimson-purple halo surrounding a starless expanse of black, visually distorting the space behind it. It was a beautiful, masterful manipulation of the laws of physics. If only the Lelinthians could have fulfilled our expectations of an elder-brother species. Nobody had expected the aliens to have such alien attitudes.

When Satellians disagreed with each other, they could appeal to the community, and see who had the greatest sympathy. If that didn't settle the matter, they could have a formal duel. Disputes could be settled with honour. Groups of individuals never fought each other, not since the murky origins of Satellian civilisation. If you really wanted to express yourself, you could whip yourself with metal chains, and walk naked in the fiercest storms. Something that people would understand. But how would you resolve a grievance with an alien race? One that didn't understand you and had no intention of trying? One that had weapons mounted on its spaceships?

The venerable Core Director motioned his antennae in a way that signalled his intention to speak.

'The Lelinthians complied with our request. They returned what remained of our missing crew. They violated our ships and our personnel, but equally, we could be accused of violating their home territory. We have agreed to leave each other in peace. There is no dispute.'

One of the participants replied within moments, leaving such a short pause as to be contemptuous. 'And we should trust them? They violated our people! There must be repercussions!'

Her nearest neighbour in the room practically butted in. 'The weaponisation of space is unthinkable!"

'It's already happened! But that's not what I'm getting at. Kinships are leaving the Agreement. We must show leadership in interstellar matters, as we are expected to.'

'Well now, if you're referring to those communes seeking unregulated contact with the Snud, that's an unrelated issue'

'I'm talking about vigilante fleets patrolling the colonies...'

'Well, that's a nonsense. The dreaming of a few crackpots'

'The seeds have been planted, and will grow with time. We must regain confidence by seeking reparations from the Lelinthians.'

'What we need is to equip our ships with adequate defences and, as a last resort, self-destruct devices, so that we never has such embarrassment again'.

The Satellian equivalent of an argument was breaking out. The Core Director was stirring again when someone new entered the room. For a meeting that had long since progressed past its first day, this was most unusual. It was the representative from the Special Technical Kinship of the Ulumm-Bukk core colony. He carried a large cuboid case in one hand, and a cylindrical data pod in another. He lowered his front end in salutation as the doors closed behind him. Just enough fresh, cold air sneaked into the room to unsettle everyone and ensure that they all had their eyes on him, whether he wanted it or not.

'Greetings and apologies. I encountered technical problems in my travels. I also took the time to present certain special artefacts.'

He got straight to the point. He placed his case on the main table, finding a spot that avoided the Snuddian ornaments while keeping a respectful distance from the Core Director. He then hit the auto-release catch. The outer coverings slid down to reveal a glass box of murky liquid; not quite murky enough to hide the coiled and partially-dissected brain core of an adult Satellian, complete with attached eyes, ganglions and upper mouthparts.

'Gentlewomen', he began - gender specific greetings were a fading tradition, but it was customary to address a group according to its role or activity, regardless of the actual gender of those present. Meetings like this were perceived as belonging to the feminine sphere of virtues. 'This is what remains of Flight Technician Urunnan Munu Unn, a father and an only son, former resident of a small hydroponic farming Kinship on the sister-moon of Saimue. He went out into the void to seek the enlightenment of a great galactic civilisation. He returned like this.'

...

'Poor luck, that chap'

'Yes, most unfortunate'

Satellians took great offence at any infringement upon their species as a whole. But the individual tragedy regarding someone they did not know was not really a matter for concern. The Ulumm-Bukkian was unfazed. While plugging his data pod into the main console, he continued. 'Gentlewomen, I believe this is the fate that awaits all of us, unless we take action now. We must mobilise as never before'

He presented a plan that was years ahead of its time, to put it modestly. 3D projectors sprung to life as he rushed through the blueprints for new power systems and weapons, then moved onto his ingenious modular hull components, and then moved onto his greatest work, a plan for a coordinated battle fleet with a menagerie of specialised vessels. Largest of all were the 'Mothers', command ships with reinforced hulls, designed to carry masses of missiles, drones and inhabited fighter craft, as well as repair and engineering vehicles; then there were the 'Lancers', ships with extremely large and powerful laser-type weapons, designed to engage from vast distances; on the front line were 'Duelists', ships with extremely thick armour and short-range weapons of all kinds, carrying combat drones and specially-trained operatives for boarding actions; 'Ghosts' were small and stealthy craft designed to disrupt enemy targeting and communications with special electromagnetic weapons; 'Immune Cells' were similarly small, stealthy and manoeuvrable ships with masses of anti-missile and anti-drone weapons, designed to protect the rest of the formation; finally the 'Destructor Cells' were small and inexpensive craft, potentially unmanned and carrying little more than engines, targeting systems and missile launch tubes.

Exotic blueprints, calculations and projections swirled through the air. A symphony of destruction. The disembodied eyes of Urunnan Munu Unn looked on impassively from within the case of preservative fluid.

To the Adjutant Director, the sudden stream of consciousness was most welcome. Invigorating, even if its content was horrifying. While others gathered their thoughts, he took his turn to speak up. 'It is clear that the local galaxy is a more dangerous and less mature place than any of us imagined. I agree that we must protect our ships and crews against violation, but this is going too far, and assuming too much. The last thing we need is to instigate an interstellar arms race. We lack the resources, in any case.' The rest of the room was in general agreement.

'I humbly present my work and my motivations. You will judge it as you will, Gentlewomen, but it seems obvious to me that the arms race has already begun.'

That sparked another lively discussion. Finally, after another ten hours or so, the Core Director took a turn to speak.

'As you may know, there are over one billion of us now. In all of history our race has never been so numerous. We've reached the point where we can't all return to Hmmaiaa. Home doesn't have enough room for us, it would be too big a drain on her. And so we are committed to living on many worlds. We've already passed the threshold. We have not yet found a galactic brotherhood of elder species, but we must not give up hope. Ideas and imagination are to be welcomed, but we must not act out of fear. We can reach out to the Snud, to those who offer genuine friendship. The universe intends that we continue to push back the boundaries, and so we shall, in a responsible way.'

The meeting was adjourned soon after, due to exhaustion more than anything else. The priority was to be a long-term development of resources. The Adjutant soon found himself riding around the great undercity again in his Snuddian motor pod, this time with as many of his curious colleagues as would fit into the vehicle, which wasn't very many. The auto guidance was a blessing, given his slurrly and partially intoxicated state. He didn't feel like joining the philosophical discussion going on behind him. A monotonous tunnel section was coming up ahead. He took the time to reflect on the fortunes of the Core Director; the problem wasn't so much the dangerous aliens, he figured, it was more the failure to find the promised galactic enlightenment. Reassurances were evaporating every day. No doubt many Satellians were looking into the night's sky right now with a sense of nervousness. Perhaps he would support a replacement for the Core Director. It would be difficult, though. The great Old One had such an aura of authority.

The vehicle was a little too wide for this particular section of tunnel. It ground to a halt amidst a hail of sparks and tortured metallic screeching.

'Fu*k it'.

---

Durmu Nurl had once painted alien friends as a youngster. Her wild dreams had finally faded along with childhood, but aliens had become real. In the past year she had specialised in what might be called psychiatry and emotional therapy. Satellians pride themselves on being well-balanced, but there are always exceptional circumstances. Today she was trying to help one of the victims of the first contact with the Lelinthians. Unlike most of his comrades, he had been returned in one piece. Whole except for his mind.

'So, Murrumue Ulunn, famous Gurunnamaruist. I read some of your work. You sure twitter on a bit.'

He remained completely motionless. His expression was strange... Kinda like he was annoyed at still being alive.

She had brought him up to the surface. Air, clouds, sun, plants (it was mid-summer on Hmmaiaa), anything that would take him away from the cramped confines of a spaceship, where perhaps his mind still dwelled. Although maybe the outdoors held just as many bad memories for him. A file had been compiled of his life, and it was studded with various tragic events. Anti-matter destruction of his home Kinship being just one of them. The alien encounter was probably just the final trigger for a long overdue shut-down. She was stumped, really. But the answer would come, she reassured herself. These days her dreams gave her more practical insights.

'Hmm... What are we going to do with you...'
 
OOC: I really like the image of three Satellians crammed into an almost cartoonish pod-car, driving really fast around tunnels while discussing very deep issues :)

IC:

Portmaster Vrun poked and prodded the controls of the Satellian walker, having only recently gotten the hang of its operation. He was slightly annoyed at the reports coming from the Banking Consortium about the fines to his account for damage done to various private and corporate properties while trying to make this thing go. I'll just have to sell this thing to make up for it, he thought with irritation.

The walker trundled along through the jungle, knocking down trees and leaving impressions in the soft ground as it went. He was a good ten far-lengths from his home city, the lights of which he could only barely see at this distance. Small tree-dwellers were climbing about on the vehicle, curious as to what it was and where they could make a nest on it. He wanted to climb a mountain before he put it up for auction.

A floating pod drifted by him, another Snud clearly seen within the glass dome, likely confused about the alien device. Vrun waved his one-leg in greeting, which was not returned as the floating pod went on about its business. Jerk, he thought.

The mountain was easily ascended, then easily descended, and so he turned about and did it again, then did it twice more. This vehicle was clearly designed for rugged terrain, and from what had been found out about the Satellian home world, it would seem that there was only rugged terrain where the Satellians came from. This vehicle would actually be good, if you could turn it into a harvester of some sort. He experimented by pulling up a tree, moving it about, then planting it back where he found it. He dug up some boulders from the mountain and moved them around a bit, arranging them in a comical assortment that someone might get a laugh out of some day. He walked home.

I'm keeping it, he thought, Damn the expenses.

-------------------------------

Ten minutes after arrival...

Fleet Warden Kelethlitel peered at the screens as the Satellians retrieved their previously lost vessel. She wondered how they might react to the treatment of their people. They were unbroken and disorderly, and would likely be upset; all the more reason that they must be guided into service.

She felt another Warden pressing the idea that the defenses here were weak and the system could be easily subjugated, but her and several other Wardens rejected this. These creatures were not yet understood, and might prove to be dangerous subjects. They must be watched.

Ten days after arrival...

The Satellians were slow people, clearly. They had gotten their lost ship back to a port of some kind, but otherwise seemed to be doing very little. Ships were cruising about the system at a relaxed pace, and some were even venturing out of the system, heading spinward. The computers attempted to calculate possible destinations, but the possibilities were too many. Several of the Culud crew on Kelethletel's ship were getting bored, and her impressions were taking more work to take root in their minds to put them back at ease.

Another Warden was busy dissecting their language, attempting to gain an understanding of what the aliens were going on about. Transmissions weren't plentiful, but there were enough.

Ten weeks after arrival...

The computers were beginning to narrow down the destination of the departing ships, while the alien language was further decoded. One Warden had begun rearranging the orbits of comets to create vague images, though it was entirely abstract, not likely to be deciphered for any meaning. These creatures seemed intelligent, more so than the Culud, but unlikely to be nearing the mental capabilities of the Lelinthians. Warden Holetheletleth began using the Culud language to transmit message between ships, pushing her beliefs that a written language would be more accurate than the conveyance of emotions, and was currently being chastised by other Wardens. Kelethletel agreed with her, though impressed that it was not their decision.

Ten months after arrival...

The alien language was an open book. Various blocks of data were being analyzed for their values, though the messages continued to arrive in slow, laborious pieces, as if their conversations were being carried out over the course of hours and days. It was tiring to keep track of, but Warden Lolenetel kept at it, intrigued by the alien psychology.

The mural had been completed, the comets arranged in a pattern that, when viewed holographically, was quite pleasing to the rest of the Wardens, and completely lost on the anxious Culud, many of whom were beginning to neglect their duties to pursue combat-sports and eating. The mind of Warden Jeleleth impressed that the Culud were clearly not suited to duties such as this, and new servants would be required. The argument of what to do with the Satellians resumed, and again, Kelethletel had to insist that it was not their decision to begin subjugation.

Vessels were not only departing, but were arriving at this point, though the new ships were of another alien species. Kelethletel insisted that the coordinates of this alien home be determined, and with help from the deciphered Satellian communications, the area was narrowed down. Many were anxious to travel there now, hoping that they could escape the boredom found here. Kelethletel denied these wants, for it, again, was not their decision. It was, in fact, almost time to go. She began work on her Culud, putting them back in order and getting them back to work, while the other Wardens did likewise. It would take a few weeks to be ready, at which point they would be gone.
 
@Bil I seem to have made a massive misunderstanding in that I just assumed the Lelinthians had jumped back through the wormhole and were on their way home again. I didn't realise they were hanging around in my home system! Perhaps there can be some IC explanation for this? :o

Anyway I'm glad the walker is getting some good usage on Sneed :)

Earlier today I typed the following for the fun of it:

Addendum: Superfluous

Spoiler :
On the top of a rocky mesa, overlooking the Jurnnu Fields Spaceport (one of several that served the Great Undercity on Hmmaiaa), were Gurunn Jurr and Maian Unun Gurr. They were true veterans of space travel; as veteran as any before them. They had been part of the great expedition that reached as far as the Lelinthian homeworld before turning back. They were among the lucky ones who did not get lost, did not get blown up or thrown into deep space by accidents, and did not get captured and dissected by the Lelinthians. When they finally returned home after their epic journey, it seemed everyone was more interested in the Snud, who had been found living next door, in galactic terms. It was unsurprising really; conversations about the Lelinthians tended to be short and ended in uncertainty.

The sky was doing its wonderful orange-red thing, as the sun was sinking into the outer cloudscapes of big brother planet Ahrmm. It was no longer bright enough to hold back the lights of the spaceport. A vast, irregular pattern of circular and square landing pads was stretched out below, interconnected by trackways and cables. Near the centre, the outer framework of the great launch tube extended nearly a kilometre into the sky. The metallic monolith and its company of landed aerospace vehicles cast long and strangely warm shadows across the dusty plain. The campfires of simple farming-gathering Kinships twinkled defiantly in the distance, reminding the viewer that space-farers and city-dwellers were still technically a minority on the homeworld.

Maian stood tall on a large boulder, passively absorbing the environment and taking time to reflect on life. Gurunn was lying on his back nearby, with his four rear limbs folded up against his chest. He held a small computer console in his front hands. It was making a lot of bleeping noises.

'Hmm... What are you playing there?'

'Blob Lines... I have to get five on this level...'

To compensate for a relatively slow thought process, evolution had gifted the Satellians with the ability to multi-task. Or at least, it was possible for them to hold a conversation without distracting from whatever else they were doing.

'Hmm... Wouldn't know it was summer, would you? So dry around here since the last storm.'

'Yeah... I remember how lush it was, that day when we set off, you know. Come here yellow blob.'

'They say there was a big landslide in the south, changed the microclimate...'

A sudden gust of wind swept the top of the mesa, carrying off some empty bottles of mild narcotics along with a flight of winged seed-pods from some species of plant. Maian watched them spin-glide down towards the spaceport below. 'So, I hear they got hit by a false storm, up in the Gallunnur Mountain Kinships. One of the lakebeds got sucked up, dumped a ton of sediment on everyone, filled up the caves...'

The wind had set Gurunn rocking back and forth on the curve of his back. 'Yeah... Still months to go before the true storms, you wouldn't believe it. Damn, missed that red one. They're still digging for survivors... Suffocation is the worst thing...'

'Sticky mud, not pleasant. I was buried under a gravel fall once, at least you can kinda breathe under there. Hmm... They say the cycle is getting more unpredictable since the latest space boom. All the rocket thrust disturbing the atmosphere.'

'Yeah, nah... Irregular is when you look too close... It all part of a greater cycle, I think. Ahah, bonus points!'

A cargo craft was coming into land. It was a large, upright, rounded metallic cylinder descending from the sky, slowed by a pair of giant counter-rotating rotor blades which had unfolded from the top of the vehicle. At the opposite end, blackened by long a history of re-entries, a sturdy set of landing gear was now extending into place. There were occasional discrete pulses of rocket thrust to keep everything on course. Dust-sprites whirled and danced beneath it.

'My great-grandmother worked on the rotor systems for the cargo cylinders, you know,' Maian tracked its progress with his extruded big-eyes. 'Very complex. But won several Technical Elegance recognitions. Still earns her colleagues a lot of Kudos.'

'Hey... No blue blobs please... Your great-grandmother still this side of life?'

'Hmm... No... She auto-euthanised after her 400th... Had some health problems, but mainly just got bored with life, I think.'

'Hmm...'

The big craft touched down with only a slight wobble. It was saluted by various electronic sounds that were audible all the way up to the mesa-top. The craft had landed on a mobile pad; after unloading it would eventually be hauled away and lowered back down into the bowels of the great launch tube, rather like an artillery shell into a cannon. A combination of electromagnetic forces and hot gases trying to expand in a confined space would then give the craft a sizeable chunk of the velocity it needed to make orbit again, cutting down on the amount of fuel needed onboard.

'Hmm... Reckon that's another boatload of Snud stuff coming in. Its got the Special Trade Mission markings.'

'Alright... I wanna see those Snud helicopters... Or those giant cybernauts. Red blob, yay. I'd like a big robot buddy.'

'Me too, ha!.. Hmm... The Snud have assigned a standard monetary value for just about everything, so I hear. On their planet you can amass great wealth just by manipulating the price differentials. To them we must seem very strange, obsessed over kudos and simple things.'

'Yeah... Well... Green, what can I do with that? Maybe not so different though. Kinda like the days of the great trading ships of the south seas. Red's better. Or the famous airship captains. Ahah. I still daydream about living in those times.'

'But no computers then.'

'Haha.'

'So you ever wonder, hmm, what if it was our expedition that came across the Snud?'

'Yeah... You've asked me before, and yes. We wouldn't be the same interesting people we are today.'

'Well... Lelinthians, they were a wake-up event. It was good to get it earlier rather than later, I think. Agreement on wrong track, I think also. Still looking for enlightenment out there. False expectations, not healthy... Reality is always more mundane, but more glorious, at the same time.'

'Couldn't agree more... Are you quoting Gammannar the Wise?

'Maybe... Subconsciously. Similar viewpoint.'

'Haha. Triple bonus! Anyway I don't see why people are all freaked out over the contact incident. Its like when people die from natural events. The aliens are just another extension of universe, another force of nature, which we need to be wary of. Sure it sucks, but we shouldn't take it as an affront. You know, I say that, and I was there. I lost friends, as did you.'

'Hmm... Not sure I agree... By extension, we ourselves are just a force of nature... Are you saying we are absolved of all responsibility for our actions? It doesn't matter what we do to other planets, other races?'

'Oh, I thought I was the philosopher here. Haha. Responsibility yes, but acceptance also... Egotism makes us feel special, but its just an illusion. Quad bonus!'

'Hmm... I kinda agree with you now... I think.'

'With ambiguity like that, you should get into politics.'

'Hmm. Maybe I will. Ha!'

The sun was in the last stages of being swallowed by the giant shadow of Ahrmm. Maian watched the fading red arc struggle to compete against the emerging stars and artificial lights of the landscape. The band of orbital facilities was now visible in gaps between clouds, like a strangely linear and animated constellation. 'So, hmm, you hear what they are planning for our old ship?'

Gurunn was still mashing buttons on his bleeping console. 'Yeah, gonna be permanently crash-landed on the jungle world. What are they calling it, Ulann? Our ship's gonna be a habitation pod for some research colony.'

'Hmm... I heard it was going be sealed up and used as a hydoponic farm down there. Illogical... With a little alteration, that whole planet could be a never-ending food basket, you know, supplying several times more food than we all need.'

'Yeah. But it would fight back. Its nature would resist invasion. Diseases and monster bugs all sorts. Bad kudos for us, galactic scale.'

'Don't start on that again.'

'Damn, getting jammed up here, too many reds. We saw some amazing things from that ship. Remember the close-trinary system we passed at the edge of the Marrjun Nebula? The 3D scans don't do it justice...'

'Yes. I remember it all. Too much to mention. Really... Hmm... I don't miss dealing with all the technical problems though, that's for sure. But I was hoping they'd keep the old ships. They were in the middle of upgrading them and everything.'

'Yeah... These days, there's no agreement that can't be un-agreed. Haha. The new gear will be stripped out for new ships they are building. Still too many reds! I hope they keep some of the old gear too, you know, to pass on the resonance.'

'I hope so. That would be most fitting.'

'Yeah... If I was Captain I'd have a say in these things. You'd think with all the attrition in our expedition, we'd have risen through the ranks, so to speak.'

'Hmm... We're losers. Ha! No, that's the problem in being a genius with special talents. To remain forever a specialist.'

'Ah... I lost my game. Damn. Haha.' Gurunn made an attempt to walk while still upside-down; in his youth, and in low-G, he could bend his limbs just far enough to do this. Today he seemed unable. He reverted to some Marammaiaa limb stretching exercises. He let the console fall to his side and wriggled his front-end around to take in the scenery. 'Hey, Got any more bottles?'

'Two more. Hmm... Lets salute the sunset, my friend.'

'Aye that. But listen, a salute to more happy adventures, too. I'm not giving up on us yet.'

'I love you. Ha!'
 
Back
Top Bottom