- Joined
- Nov 3, 2021
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- 9
Imported post - by Whisper
In the outskirts of the Tahlula Expanse lies a planet known as Archios. Its extensive land masses were once nothing but dense jungles and thick forests, but had been slowly replaced with signs of civilization over the millennia as the local apex species had grown in intelligence and capability. Now its dark side shined with specks of light, like a star field unto itself.
Above it, a rectangular box about sixty feet in length sat in orbit. The box was richly decorated with cathedral motifs and even seemed to have intricate stained glass windows. It had no visible propulsion systems, cockpit, or anything of the sort. Aboard it were three individuals, each wearing white robes with orange trim. One had a dominant, commanding personality as they spoke - the two listeners paled in comparison, but held their ground regardless.
"Below us is a world called 'Archios' by its natives. Its peoples have reached a sufficient level of development that they now possess fragments of the dying light."
The two listeners nodded respectfully.
"Additionally, the planet's population has grown enough to warrant our interest. Losing the planet would not harm our goals significantly, so it is a prime opportunity for the two of you to prove yourselves and grow in strength."
One of them lifted a hand. This one had an angelic appearance, with wings and everything. "You wish for us to capture this world, Speaker Riverst 9?"
The Riverst nodded. "I do. Properly cultivated, this world could provide us with a reliable source of fragments for some centuries to come. The specifics of
*how*
you capture this world have been left up to you. The only restriction placed upon you, as always, is that you do not harm the Chorus' image in the event that you are discovered."
"Yes, Speaker," they both replied. As members of the Hymnal Choir, they were firmly in the camp of maintaining a good impression on others. To do otherwise would make it that much harder to achieve their purpose. With an undertaking as large, and important, as the one that the Chorus was involved in - well, it wouldn't do to make it
*harder*
.
"Good," the Speaker replied.
- **
It had been nearly two weeks since the two choirmen went planetside. During that time, things had not gone exactly as expected - but they were recovering.
The first challenge had been the locals. In a sector that seemed to be predominantly full of human-like creatures, they were.. well,
*not*
. One of the two had made a joke about them being quite curvy the first time they'd seen one. Which was true. In fact, they were mostly curves. The Archiosi, as they called themselves, were somewhere between a jellyfish and a caterpillar in appearance. Their blobby bodies produced pseudopod-like protrusions whenever they needed them, which gave them surprising dexterity. Even stranger was the tank-like fashion that they walked in, for their bodies seemed to stay still while a conveyor belt of small legs appeared, moved down the length of their body, and then were reabsorbed as they moved around.
To say that their beautiful angelic forms were ill suited to the task at hand was an understatement. The Archiosi found them positively grotesque.
But they still persevered. They had a mission and, with the right plan in place, were still confident that they could generate results.
Čehrāzād awoke from the long, dreamless slumber. Pieces of that vision returned to her, sensations sounds and images thick as chains weighted around her neck. As if a noose had been placed around it. The in-between, the world between worlds. Of the waking and the dreamer. The twilight the false awakening. Her mind, dead, black, the little death of being frozen for decades. The process of awakening, of neurons, firing and the heart begins to pump blood which had been replaced with a foreign cocktail within her veins to prevent cell death.
She had been so very afraid... her life had been in the hands of the Creator. Those she had loved had been reduced to but two. Clinging to her in desperation while ascending to the stars, the waiting ark in orbit. Terror, sweat, and sobbing had made the air rank with the ash of the dead, dust from crumbling works once standing proud. And on the horizon of their world, the land had glowed. Not with the lights of cities, of civilization. But the open wounds of a world dying. Its children ripping into it in a mad frenzy of greed, lust, and desire for power. Once white clouds replaced with ink stains that had marred the skies. An orange fire raged across their continent and beyond. Once blue seas seemingly dead.
And then on that mockery of a view a detonation. Bright fire, a small star in the distance. Blue fire pushing back the clouds, the fire, and likely the masses that fought over the remains, the scraps left behind in the exodus. It had been a detonation. Pure energy is released as a ball of cleansing fire. Bellowing forth it had cracked the land, visible even so far away that distance had not mattered. Even to her eyes. It had been her city. Her home. Hidden away from the vulgarities of those other nations. Protected by a skin of thick stone, composites, and bones cast from titanium. A city built within the earth itself.
The reactor had been an achievement. A breakthrough in clean energy using fuel readily abundant and distilled from the waters now choked with radioactive fallout and who knew what else. The fractional might of a star, fusion energy brief and beautiful and the death knell of those that had remained. They had done it. They had killed themselves. Taking the accumulated knowledge of generations with them in that brief flare of defiance. That final stand and gesture to a world on its knees. Her people would not go quietly. A bold statement was made. And rendered. To see such a thing again as her mind came to life. The dream, the memory ending in confusion as she lurched forward from the pod.
Hands had grasped her, words fallen on deaf ears as she keened. Towering over some, Čehrāzād felt weak but strong enough to have shoved one of those monotoned drones aside in her confusion.
Her arm was afire from where an injector site had drawn the substance out, and blood flowed in. Warmth had returned. And it had felt like that star on the horizon. Bright and furious. Something had come up, something they had given her. Made her drink. Even for her palette, it had been the vilest thing she had tasted. And now it coated the interior of her mouth, tasting as if it had curdled in the desert sun for a season or more. But it went back down even as she felt that hunger begin to cause a fierce pain in her stomach.
Dressed now, a line moving slowly, Sherry felt dead inside. Even with food before her, familiar yet so very foreign she simply stared at it. Hands in her lap as her mind turned over just how everything had turned out so wrong. Why the world had turned on itself. Foreign power against a foreign power. The ancient tale of a titan, a being of colossal power feasting on its children out of fear of what was to come to pass. And for an unceasing hunger threatening to consume the titan lest they continue.
And then as quick as her modified form allowed, a copper-skinned fist slammed into the table out of frustration and hurt. Her tray emitted a little rattle as the utensils clattered against it. Why had things turned out as they had?
"Hayawan!" she cursed in her native tongue. Thick with hate. Animals she had said. For those that had bothered to ever learn her language. Now endangered to extinction for the ignorance and avarice that had held a world in thrall causing it to end.