Lift a Hand to Help (Part I)
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| Frame generated by Google Gemini Pro text-to-video AI software, powered by Veo 3.1 |
Executor Reed Ellis stood in the back of the room, not afforded a seat. He
was of too low a station to be officially part of the discussion. That was
not going to stop him from participating, however, whether they liked it or
not. He was rolling his eyes as they put forth all of these pointless
suggestions for how they could help. They could drop down food and other
supplies. They could spearhead cleaning up the orbital debris. All of that
was well and good, and they should absolutely do that, but their neighbor’s
planet was dying. They didn’t need help on the ground, they needed help
getting off of it. The rocket equation was tyrannical. It would be
prohibitively expensive to send them rockets, and then attempt to launch the
refugees over and over again until they were all up. There was a reason
people didn’t really do that anymore. There was a reason Earthans invented
space elevators, and why they had become the most common launch method in
the stellar neighborhood.
He couldn’t take it anymore. “Enough!”
“Executor Ellis!” The Mediator spat his name out like it was a bad taste in
his mouth. “You will wait to be called upon. We recognize that you have been
in close contact with the Proxima Domanians, but we all have the data. We
all know what they need.”
“Do you?” Reed questioned. He stepped forwards. A security officer took a
step too in reaction. “Really, son? Don’t forget your rank.” He kept walking
forwards, aware that the officer was still tensed up, and would not hesitate
to take him down to protect the diplomats. “We have to get our friends off
that world, and we have to go now, because it is going to take weeks just to
get there.”
The Mediator stood now. “It is not a viable option. The equator is fully
liquefacted now, and no space elevator is designed to operate at a pole.”
Reed shook his head. “Just because it wasn’t designed to work that way,
doesn’t mean it can’t do it. The Tangent can handle it. We’re gonna have to
keep the fusion torch array affixed to it just to traverse the distance
anyway. If you feed them isotopes, the platform will maintain station. It
won’t have to do it forever. My people have been running the numbers. With
the proper coordination, we can evacuate one pole in only—”
“Executor Ellis!” The Mediator shouted again. “We have read your proposal.
The decision has been made. The Tangent will remain where it is, the
christening will commence tomorrow, on schedule, and we will provide aid to
the Domanians in the best way that we are capable. You were invited to this
forum as a courtesy, but you do not have the right to be here. One more
outburst from you, and you’re gone.”
Reed stared at him as he stared back. He would actually prefer to leave.
This was the committee’s final chance to do the right thing, and it was
clear that they were not going to. He would have to take matters into his
own hands, so being in this room had become a distraction now. He might as
well go big. “You son of a bitch, you can’t just abandon these people!” He
lunged—and not even that far—but still, the security officer straight up
shot him in the head. What an asshole. Talk about overkill.
Reed woke up in his backup substrate feeling inconvenienced and annoyed, but
otherwise all right. His best friend and assistant, Shasta Clifford was
there, looking impatient and panicked. “What’s wrong?” he asked.
“They put a hold on your respawn,” she began to explain. “They thought you
might do something during the ceremony, so they sentenced you to one week
deferred reinstantiation.”
Reed flew out of his pod. “It is illegal to make such a sentence in
absentia.”
“They’ve gone crazy,” Shasta decided.
“So we’ve missed our window,” he assumed.
She shook her head. “No. I figured, if we were going to stage a mutiny,
breaking someone out of blackout hock would be the least illegal thing we
did. The ceremony is starting soon, if it hasn’t already.”
He shook his head now. “There’s no time. I need to talk to our people. We
need to make plans.”
“Everyone is already in place,” she assured him. “They know the plan. We’ve
been talking, and we all understand what’s at stake, and what you need from
us. We’re ready to go, Executor. We just need to get you on that bridge.”
“There’s no time to make it. I can’t get up to the Tangent with enough time
to execute the plan. I would have to be on the maiden lift, and
there’s no way security is letting me through if I’m meant to be in the
buffer.”
Shasta smirked. “You think you’re on Bungula right now?” She opened the
door. On the other side of the hallway was a viewport showing outer space.
“We’re not even that far from our destination, in super-synchronous orbit
with the Tangent. A shuttle is waiting for you to make the intercept.”
If they were in super-synchronous orbit with the Tangent, it meant that
Shasta had activated the terminal in a scrapper, which was made to wander
around in a graveyard orbit, reclaiming plausibly reusable components from
dead satellites. He only put an extra body up here in case he ever needed to
bug out from Bungula, or even Rigil Kentaurus entirely. “This is, like, my
eleventh back-up terminal.”
“And the one that made the most sense, given our constraints,” Shasta said.
“Still, we gotta get going.”
“Okay.” He started to bounce on the balls of his feet. “I just need to do my
acclimation exercises.” He stretched, and cracked his knuckles and neck. It
was proving to be a little difficult, so he checked the mirror. He massaged
his chin and cheeks. “There was something wrong with the stasis field. This
body is agèd.”
She was waiting for him impatiently. “It makes you look distinguished and
regal, and maybe anyone who knows you’re not supposed to be there won’t
recognize you. Now let’s go!”
They walked briskly down the corridor. Reed occasionally tipped over, and
had to catch himself on the wall, but he didn’t stop. There was no one else
here because material salvage was a fully automated task. At the end of
their journey, they did meet a bearded man, who reached out. “Hello, I’m
Trilby, and I’ll be your pilot today.”
Reed looked uncomfortably at Shasta.
“Oh, don’t you worry, sir,” Trilby went on. “I have no allegiances, and I am
no friend to the Bungulan government. I don’t care what you’re doing, and
will never have any reason to rat you out. I just push the autopilot button
and keep my head down.”
“We’re only trusting him to get us there,” Shasta explained to Reed.
Trilby picked up on Reed’s sustained trepidation. “Look, if you wanna dock
with the planet’s newest space elevator platform without being captured on
the sensors, you’re gonna need me. I know how to spoof our signature so we
just look like a hull maintenance drone coming in for a charge.” He stepped
to the side so they could see into the shuttle. “That’s why this thing is so
small. It only fits two, so I hope there’s no sexual tension between you
two, because it’s gonna be a tight squeeze.”
There wasn’t, which was actually what made it so awkward. Reed saw Shasta
like a daughter, and she saw him as a father figure. It was weird to have
her sitting on his lap, but it only took an hour, so they survived it.
“Where are you going to go now?” Reed asked Trilby once they were in the
maintenance bay, and out of the shuttle.
“I actually do need to charge up to make it to my next run, so I’m gonna sip
some power from this very spot.”
Reed was still nervous to trust someone who wasn’t already a part of the
plan, but this guy needed to understand why he couldn’t hang around too
long. “You need to go now. This station isn’t staying where it is.
That’s...sort of the point.”
Trilby winked, clicked his tongue, and pointed finger guns at Reed. “Gotcha.
I’ll be gone before you know it. Oh, one more thing,” he added as he was
reaching to the other side of his seat. “I was told to hand you this.”
It was a standard operational uniform, except there was something different
about it. The signifiers were all wrong. “No, this isn’t mine. I’m only an
Exec—”
“That’s what my ground contact gave me.” He pushed the button to make the
hatch close. “Have fun with your insurrection, or whatever...Captain!” the
hatch closed.
“Was this your idea?” Reed asked Shasta.
“No,” she replied, “but I agree with it. The Tangent must be led by a captain.”
“You can’t just declare a promotion, Shasta.”
“Frock that, of course you can. There’s historical precedent. It’s called a
brevet.”
He was shaking his head, very uncomfortable with this.
“I was wrong, what I said before,” Shasta began. “Breaking you out of
blackout hock isn’t the least illegal thing we’re doing today. This uniform
violation is. So put it on, get to your station, and let’s do this thing!
For Proxima Doma!”
He sighed, and echoed, “for Proxima Doma.” They had only been planning this
takeover for about a week, but that phrase had sort of become their group
chant. And that was really what this was all about. They had an obligation
to rescue their neighbors, and if that meant masquerading as someone with a
higher rank, then that was what it took. He was going to be court martialed
either way. What was one more charge? He dressed himself in his new uniform,
and they headed out.
They didn’t go straight to the bridge. They had to make one stop first. This
was the main armory of the platform, but it was not busy at all. War was a
thing of the past. They maintained a military and ranking system for
efficient organization and coordination. They kept it for the structure. But
people did not walk around with guns anymore. The integrated multipurpose
suits that most people wore regularly were not designed with weapons. In
fact if you wanted to carry one, it had to include a special utility adapter
since the IMS didn’t even come with holsters. Captains often didn’t wear IMS
units. It wasn’t required not to, but many wanted to give the impression of
fearlessness and steadfastness. They would go down with the ship, if it came
to that. Though, to be fair, their minds were probably streaming to a safe
back-up anyway, so it didn’t matter. The advantage it gave Reed today was
that it was easier to conceal a weapon within the loose fabric of
traditional clothing.
The weapons officer was on their side, and unlike Trilby, Reed could
personally vouch for her. She removed the gun from its holster, and
presented it to him. She wasn’t being patronizing. He hadn’t ever seen this
model before, and while he passed the requisite marksmanship tests just
fine, he wasn’t very experienced in firearms. “This is an autophasing maser
gun. You can toggle it between stun and kill, but that is not recommended,
and if you do that, it will be logged. Even if you don’t actually fire the
weapon, simply switching on manual mode will send a report to the relevant
ranking officials, which I guess is you now.” She eyed his new signifiers.
Reed looked down at himself. “These are just temporary.”
“Right.” She went on, “when autophasing is active, it will assess a target,
and determine their substrate status. If the individual has a quantum
consciousness backup stream, it will gladly just kill them.”
“I experienced that yesterday,” Reed said.
“Yes, we remember. To be blunt, sir, that was foolish. It made our
infiltration much harder.”
“Aletha, know your place,” Shasta scolded.
“No, it’s fine, I want honesty,” Reed contended. He turned back to Aletha.
“I regret it. I was just trying to get out of that room, and dying felt like
the fastest way.”
Aletha nodded. “If the individual is not streaming, it will automatically
switch the setting to stun mode. That’s why manual mode is not recommended,
because you don’t know whether the person you’re targeting will come back or
not. Now, they are developing eyewear that will show you the
substrate data, so you can make an informed decision on the fly, but they
are having syncing issues since it is very possible to point the gun at one
target, and be looking at another.”
“Okay,” Reed said. “Just so I can be completely careful, does it have a
decoherence setting?” Decoherence weapons were mostly illegal mostly
everywhere. If your consciousness was streaming to a back-up, or multiple
back-ups, decoherence would be able to disrupt those signals, and prevent
reinstantiation, possibly even permanently. In a civilization with
ubiquitous and fairly easy mind uploading, this was a way to bring back the
true death. A sophisticated enough decoherence transmitter could destroy all
signals and all back-ups.
Aletha stared at him blankly. “This doesn’t have that feature. I do have
access to weapons that do. It would require executive clearance, but I could
probably subvert that.”
“No. I’m asking because I don’t want it, not because I do,” he clarified. “I
wouldn’t want to do it accidentally.”
“That’s not a concern,” Aletha promised. She reholstered the gun, and handed
it to him. She handed another to Shasta. “The rest of our people are armed
with their own already. When you leave, I will be locking this room down so
no one else can arm up.” She gestured to the lockers behind her. “So if you
see anything else you like, you’ll need to check it out now.”
Reed scanned the lockers for anything that might be of use to their cause,
and would not be unethical to employ. “I think we’re set. Thank you for
this, Aletha. It will not make your life easier.”
“For Proxima Doma,” Aletha declared.
“For Proxima Doma,” he echoed again.
“I’m going to use the range in the back for target practice,” Shasta told
him as he was leaving. “I shouldn’t join you on the bridge anyway. I would
just make you more recognizable.”
“Very well, Shasta. I’ll see you on the other side.” He left.
When Reed stepped onto the bridge, he found himself in good company. While
the Tangent did have its own captain, a lot of people here were captains
themselves, visiting from their respective vessels, here to celebrate the
accomplishment. He blended right in, and no one was paying much attention to
who he was, or whether he belonged there. The Head Architect of the platform
was on a little circular stage that likely wasn’t usually there, though Reed
didn’t know much about it. The Tangent was of a unique design, so the
general shape of the bridge was already different than what he was used to.
The architect was going through their spiel, talking about how this was a
passion project of theirs, and how proud they were to see it finally come to
fruition. The hologram next to them was showing the interior feed of the
elevator pod, where all of the diplomats and dignitaries were sitting for
the first trip. Some were gazing out the window. Others were chatting with
each other inaudibly. A few seemed to be busy conducting business.
The trip was going to take a while. They were traveling at express speeds,
but still needed to cross tens of thousands of kilometers, so it was never
going to be instantaneous. Reed consulted his watch. They were waiting to
begin the takeover until after the pod passed out of the planet’s
atmosphere. If all went according to plan, they would sever the tethers just
under the pod, and let them drift down to the surface. The pod, meanwhile,
would be stuck with the Tangent, and when they commandeered the platform,
all of those very important people could serve as hostages. It wasn’t going
to be pretty or nice, but he wasn’t going to hurt anyone; not permanently,
anyway. He just needed the authorities to think that he would, so they
wouldn’t blow them out of the sky.
“Boss,” came the whispering voice of one of his compatriots through
his earpiece. “Clear your throat if you can hear me, but you are in mixed company.”
Reed cleared his throat.
“There is a problem in engineering. I’m hiding behind a coolant tank, but
the others have been caught. I’m blocking all outgoing transmissions
except for mine, but they are about to send someone out of range, and call
for help. What do we do?” This was too early. They weren’t ready yet. That elevator pod absolutely
had to come with them. There were some rather important people here already,
but the ceremonial travelers were vital to counteract the fact that they
were slower than everyone else. If a Teaguardian got in the fight, without
leverage, it would be over in seconds.
Reed quietly separated himself, and found a humming auxiliary power
monitoring station to sort of dampen his voice. “Lift control, are you in
position?” He heard a long beep, a short beep, another long beep, and
another short beep. That meant yes. “Okay,” Reed replied. “Your job
has become more important than ever. Take control. Take it now. Don’t let
that pod stop or reverse. We have to move up the timetable, so—”
“Hey!” someone shouted on the bridge. “Hey, he’s not supposed to be here!
Yeah, you, Ellis! You’re not a captain!”
“Everyone execute your directives!” Reed ordered hurriedly. “Go now! Go!
Take the platform!”
The fight began.
Trial by Fire (Part II)
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The chaos on the bridge was hard to track for most, but not for Reed. He
knew who his people were, which meant, by process of elimination, he could
find all of his targets, which they were choosing to call
tangentials. He was grateful to Aletha’s special weaponry, which
allowed him to fire nearly indiscriminately, knowing that anyone who died
would simply wake up in a new body, and anyone stunned would be unconscious
for a few hours. The advantage in this surprise attack was that they were
all meant to be friends here. No one was wearing special clothing or markers
to identify which side they were on. So the tangentials were actually
targeting each other, in addition to Reed and his people. They were clocking
everyone as a threat, because it could have been anyone. All
they saw were guns raised, and that was more than enough reason to shoot now
and ask questions later. In the past, that was only a joke, but the
tangentials actually would be able to do that here...assuming they won,
which they weren’t going to.
As Reed was taking control here, an AI voice was summarizing the progress in
other sectors of The Tangent. The plans in those other sectors were
developing more smoothly. The tangentials were caught by surprise, and
largely unarmed. Members of the security team were scattered about, and they
were firing back, but for the most part, Reed’s commandeerers were
winning. According to live reports, their biggest hurdle was engineering.
Almost all of Reed’s people had been disarmed. The one who called to warn
him about it was able to hold her own, but she was pinned down, and alone.
Reed ducked behind a console and tried to whisper, “get me more people to
engineering. All available units, help secure engineering.”
Annoyingly, someone hiding behind a nearby console heard him. It was the one
who recognized Reed despite his advanced age in this body. Reed recognized
him right back, though he couldn’t remember his name. “Security!” the guy
yelled into his own communicator. “Get to engineering! Don’t let them take
engineering!”
“Argh,” Reed complained, shooting the guy in the head, a bit disappointed in
himself for feeling satisfaction at that. Now he had to get to engineering
himself so he could assume direct responsibility for it. He assumed that the
bridge would be the hardest to hold, but that was looking fine for now.
“Seal the bulkheads!” he heard one of his people demand.
Reed got up to survey the scene. It was theirs. The bridge was theirs. Two
of the commandeerers were shooting at anyone trying to make it through the
entrance while one of them had a gun trained on the Head Architect’s head as
he was sitting in the captain’s chair, cowering.
“Seal them now!” Vasily repeated. “Do it!”
“I—I, I, I don’t have authorization,” the architect claimed.
Reed walked over there with authority and presence. “We know that you do.
There’s no way you built this thing without being able to control it. It
would have been impossible. Just close the doors, and grant me command
access.”
“You’ll have to kill me,” the architect spat.
“That can be arranged.” Reed lifted his own weapon, and pointed it at the
architect too. The autophaser switched to stun mode. “You’re undigitized.”
“Is there any other way to truly live?” the architect questioned.
Reed lowered his gun and sighed as he looked over at the other gun
threatening the architect’s life. “Vasily. Why is your weapon on manual?”
“Because this is serious,” Vasily replied.
“Take it off manual...right now.”
“He needs to know that we’re not playing around. The doors will close,
whether he wants them to or not.” Vasily looked back at his target. “Do you
want them to?”
“No,” the architect answered, growing bolder.
They heard a stirring on the floor. It was Ajax, who was not only a captain,
but the captain of the Tangent.
“Well, he can close them too, can’t he?” Vasily decided.
“Vasily,” Reed warned.
“You’re next if you don’t help us,” Vasily explained, looking down at Ajax,
who was starting to stand back up. Then he shot the architect point blank.
He was dead now; not backed-up, not set to heal from his wounds, but
completely, totally, and permanently dead.
“Vasily!” Reed cried. “What the hell did you just do!”
“What I had to!” Vasily volleyed.
Frustrated, but more afraid of losing control of the situation, Reed lifted
his gun again, this time at his own compatriot. He squeezed the trigger, but
nothing happened.
Vasily smirked. “Did Aletha not tell you that it also comes with an
anti-friendly fire function? We programmed everyone into the system.”
“That was reckless,” Reed argued. “You created an entire manifest of
dissidents. If that had leaked, they could have stopped this all before it
began.”
“Well, that didn’t happen, and they obviously know who we are now anyway.”
“But only some of us will be trapped on Bungula after the Tangent
launches.”
“Who?” Vasily questioned.
Reed pulled out his knife, and unfortunately jammed it into Vasily’s head.
“Why hast thou forsaken me?” Vasily’s dying brain asked as the blood was
running down his cheek.
“We’re rebelling against the cowardly government...not me,” Reed answered.
Vasily’s former substrate fell to the floor.
Captain Ajax stepped over the body. “You want the doors sealed, I’ll seal
them. Just don’t kill anyone. Enhanced people still feel pain, ya know.” He
tapped his code into the chair interface, and closed the doors. “That code
will do most of what you need until it expires, but you won’t have full,
permanent authorization, and I’m not going to help you get it.” He contorted
his jaw, and crunched down. The cyanide foamed in his mouth, and then he
fell down on top of Vasily’s previous body.
Already tired, Reed reached down and input the same code that Ajax had, so
his personal keylogger could capture it. After the doors reopened, Reed
began to step out. He flung the code to one of the door guards so they could
control the systems in his absence. “Hold your post, soldier.”
“Aye, captain.”
“And about Vasily...”
“We’re with you, sir,” the other guard insisted. “You did what you had to.
Now go take engineering so we can save our friends.”
“For Proxima Doma,” the first guard said.
“For Proxima Doma!” they chanted in unison. “For Proxima Doma! For Proxima
Doma!” Their voices trailed off as Reed was jogging away.
He could hear the firefight as he was coming up on the engineering section.
He saw movement in the corner of his eye, so he raised his gun once more,
but found it to be a couple of friendlies. It apparently didn’t matter
whether he had fired, though. Why did Aletha not tell him about that
feature? He held his finger to his lips, and gestured for them to step into
that hallway closet, and keep a lookout for tangentials. Reed, meanwhile,
went on to enter the fray. “Everyone stop firing!” he cried.
To his surprise, they did all stop.
“If I know statistics—and I know statistics—a great number of you don’t
agree with the government’s plan to abandon our neighbors on Proxima Doma!
You have two choices, whether you agree or not! You can lay down your arms,
and help us execute the rescue mission, or you can lay down your arms, and
stay behind! But you’re not winning this! We have the bridge, we have
elevator control, and we have everything else! We even have the main
cafeteria! This platform is not staying in orbit over Bungula!”
“We will not be party to a mutiny!” someone said. She stepped out from
behind a power relay block. “I know who you are, Executor Ellis!
Stolen valor is a serious offense, and I do not recognize your authority!
Hell, I don’t even see you as an executor anymore. The way I see it, you’re
just a criminal!”
“We’re sorry to hear that!” Shasta’s voice said behind Reed. He turned to
see her walking into the room very slowly and carefully. She was holding
some kind of scary glowing device. It was pulsing with energy, and hurting
Reed’s ears a little. He had to move away from it. Everyone else seemed to
be feeling the same thing. “Back up! Back up!” She ordered as some tried to
inch closer, likely hoping to shut whatever this thing was off. “This is
called a blueshift bomb! You walk towards it, it starts rupturing your
eardrums! You touch it, it goes off! Trust me, you don’t want it to go off!”
Reed wanted to ask her what the hell she was doing, but he couldn’t get
close enough to whisper, and they needed to maintain a united front.
Shasta didn’t walk too far into the room before stopping and setting it down
on the floor. “I’m obviously protected against its effects, but no one else
is! You should know that it’s highly sensitive to microwave radiation! You
don’t even have to fire in its direction to set it off, so unless you wanna
die, you’ll put your guns on the floor! It doesn’t care if you’re
consciousness is streaming, or if it isn’t! It’s not that smart! It is
simply reactive! I probably shouldn’t even be raising my voice! Everyone is
going to slowly walk around it, careful not to walk towards it, and
come out of the room with your hands up!”
The tangentials reluctantly complied, leaving their guns behind, and
agreeing to be cuffed and patted down in the corridor. The commandeerers
were allowed to keep their guns, of course, but they had to be holstered for
safety. The air was tense, and the process was slow, but things were moving
forward. They would clear out engineering, and then Shasta would deactivate
the bomb so they could place their own people at the workstations, and
finally get moving along.
“Screw this!” one of the tangentials suddenly said just before he could make
it over the threshold. “I’m streaming.” He took a few sideways leaps towards
the bomb before taking one final jump, and diving on top of it.
Someone thought quickly and slammed their hand against the emergency
bulkhead button. Shasta thought just as quickly when she pushed Reed through
those doors just in time for him to make it through before the doors shut,
allowing herself to be trapped inside. The bomb went off with a painful
screeching sound, and pounded dents into the inside of the bulkhead. It was
even more powerful than he had guessed. In a few seconds, it was over.
Shasta was right, you would not want to be in there when that happened. He
was angry that she was in there, and that the man who did it to her
was just as far away as she was now, tucked away safely in his little
respawn chamber.
“Felaine?” Reed asked, looking over at one of his people.
Felaine wasn’t the one who brought the bomb in here, but she was a
demolitions expert, so she definitely knew how a blueshift bomb worked. “All
of those substrates are dead. Most of the machinery has been destroyed or
disabled. The room was flooded with a ton of deadly radiation. We’re not
getting back in there anytime soon.”
“Options?”
“There’s an auxiliary engineering section on the port side,” one of the
tangential hostages said. “It’s not as robust, but it will get you moving.”
“Don’t help them!” one of the other tangentials urged.
“This is what helping gets you,” Reed countered. He took his knife back out,
and cut the engineer’s cuffs. He looked at the freeman. “Take my people to
it, and spool up the fusion torches to prepare to escape orbit. I want to
leave as soon as the VIPs are out of the atmosphere. We don’t have time for
them to get all the way on board.”
“These people?” one of his commandeerers asked.
“Take ‘em to hock,” Reed ordered. He went off to return to the bridge.
He didn’t get very far before someone called for him on comms. “Captain, there’s a problem with the elevator.”
“What problem is that?” he asked.
“News has traveled, one of the VIPs activated the emergency brakes. I
physically cannot restart it from here.”
“Can they go back down?” Reed asked.
“If they reengage the motor, I’ll be able to resume control. All they can
do is hold and wait, which I think they’re doing so someone can rescue
them.”
“We need those VIPs,” Reed reminded everyone. He took a moment to think as
he continued walking. “What is the pod’s current altitude, and can we blow
the bolts below it and still make it out of the atmosphere?”
“It’s 83 kilometers over the surface,” the elevator tech explained.
“Our Plan B set it at 121 so we could blow the 120 bolts. I’m not happy
about it, but it’s technically possible right now. I would be happier at
108 kay-em, so I suppose we’re on Plan D at this point.”
“Sir, I’m seeing a shuttle heading for the elevator,” one of his new bridge
crewmembers reported once he had returned. “They’ll reach it in under thirty
minutes.”
“Blow it,” Reed ordered. “We’ll blow the 80 bolts. We’ll have to figure out
how to drag them out from where they are. Just wait for my cue.” He massaged
his temples, noticing that his people were all watching. “We always knew
that it wasn’t gonna be easy, right? I didn’t know my best friend would
sacrifice herself to save me from a blueshift bomb, and get stuck off-site,
but we play the cards we’re dealt, and move on.”
“Sir,” the Tangent’s newest communications officer began. “I assume you
would like to speak with the VIPs? Ready on your orders.”
“I need you to block all signals from anyone but me.”
“Already done.”
“Open the channel.” Reed paused for a moment. “Passengers on the maiden lift
of the Tangent space elevator, my name is Captain Jean Tiberius Adama. We
have retaken control of most of the platform, but there are still some
systems in enemy hands. Please secure your persons in your seats, and strap
all the way in. Your vertical transportation specialist will assist you if
needed. You have thirty seconds. This is for your safety. Thank you.” He
motioned for her to cut the link.
There was an awkward silence while they waited for the tethers to pop. “Was
that a reference, sir?” a new crewmember asked.
“A few references,” he answered. “I needed them to feel safe, but not so
safe that they dismissed my orders, and I didn’t want to impersonate a real
officer.”
“Tethers are blown sir,” the elevator tech updated.
“Thank you, Sartore. Now that they’re free, start reeling them in. Who cares
about the pod brakes?” He took one beat. “Aux engineering, status of the
fusion drives.”
“Magnetic containment fields are at 72%.”
“All right, keep going,” Reed began. “I’ll need updates on the other
sections. Let’s start with—”
Alarms started to blare. “Sir!” the sensor officer screamed. “I’m detecting
a kinetic drone headed right for our starboard fusion torch!”
“How long?” Reed asked.
“Three seconds!
Before anyone could do anything, there was a massive explosion, and the
whole platform lurched. Artificial gravity was disabled, sending everyone on
the bridge careening into the portside hull. “We have three more torches!”
Reed cried. “They’re gonna blow them too! Burn ‘em! Burn the other three!”
“I can’t get back to propulsion!”
“I got it!” Reed looked over to see Shasta—alive and well—floating towards
the propulsion station. She tapped on the console.
This would save their lives. The torches themselves would vaporize the
drones, or at the very least, alter their orbital pattern enough so that any
other drones would face navigational issues. In the immediate term, however,
they were worse off than they were before. Since the magnetic containment
field wasn’t fully operational, this was a dirty burn. That was actually
beneficial to them. Since the plasma was unfocused, the chances that it
would meet the drone went up. But with only three of the four torches
burning, the platform was out of balance, and out of control. Even though
the burn only lasted a fraction of a second, that was enough to throw them
off. They were now relentlessly spinning in a decaying orbit, well on their
way to crashing down on the surface of the planet.
Death Spiral (Part III)
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Shasta is a very capable woman, but she is not a pilot, nor an engineer, nor
a mechanic, nor anything else that they would need to get them out of this
mess. She was able to fire the three torches because that much was obvious
from the console. Since it had been almost a minute now, and no more kinetic
drones had destroyed any part of the platform, or the propulsion attachment,
they were guessing that her initial act had worked. But they were still in
trouble, and something had to be done about it. They needed their pilot back
at his workstation. But that seemed to be impossible. The platform was
spinning like a carnival ride. Artificial gravity was down, and they were
all pinned against the wall. No one was going anywhere. Shasta was barely
holding onto the console, even if the pilot could somehow walk her through
whatever procedure needed to be done.
Suddenly, however, they found themselves slowing down. They were still
rotating, but their eyes were no longer bulging out of their heads, and what
food remained in their stomachs wasn’t threatening to follow what had
already come up. “Grab my ankle!” Shasta cried.
The pilot jumped over and took hold of her leg. He climbed her body until he
could hold onto the console himself. “Someone is controlling this,” he
announced, looking at the screen. “I can’t pinpoint where, but it’s not
remote. They’re somewhere on this ship.”
“Get me AG!” Reed ordered.
“That’s my job,” his specialist insisted. Her official title was
Transdimensional Regulator, and Reed did not understand what exactly her job
entailed. He just needed her to make it work again. She was crouched on the
wall, tapping on her tablet. “I’ve been trying to fix it this whole time.
It’s giving me so much shit!” She growled as she continued to work on it. “I
need more power. I need someone to reroute it from non-essential systems. I
don’t care which, but the portals are closed. I need one burst to reopen
them, and then they should draw normally.”
“Climate control,” Reed decided. “Reroute from climate control.”
“On it.” Shasta swung over to environmental control, and gave the Regulator
what she needed.
“Ramping gravity to thirty seconds,” the Regulator informed them. “I would
make an announcement if I were you.”
Reed placed his wrist in front of his lips. “This is Acting Captain Reed
Ellis, calling all hands. We are restoring dimensional gravity. Relocate the
floor, prepare for a sudden shift.”
“Sudden shift,” the Regulator mumbled. “There’ll be nothing sudden
about it. I do my job.” She stood up on the wall, and deftly walked
back down to the floor with perfect timing. Everyone else tumbled towards it
with varying degrees of gracelessness.
Reed got back to his feet, performed the Picard maneuver, and cleared his
throat. “Report!”
“We’re still spinning, sir,” his pilot answered, “but gradually regaining
attitude control. Soon enough, we’ll still be plummeting to our deaths, but
doing so straight as an arrow.”
“Arrows spin,” the Regulator argued.
Reed ignored her casual combativeness. She was one of the most important
people on this platform. Of course, everyone had their own job to do, but
transdimensional gravity was incredibly rare, and one could count on their
fingers how many people were qualified to operate it safely and effectively.
Again, he had no clue how it worked. Some unnamed singular genius invented
it, and doled it out very selectively. At the end of the day, his Regulator
could do or say whatever the hell she wanted, because everyone here was
replaceable...except for her.
“Did you find out who fired the thrusters to control our spin?” Reed asked
the pilot.
“Not who, but where. They’re in main engineering.”
“That should be impossible.” Reed pointed out. “I was told that it was not
survivable.”
“It might be temporarily survivable,” the pilot reasoned, “and the person in
there is about to die, or already has after fixing the issue.”
“Good point. Stay here, and get us the hell out of this gravity well. Fire
all three operational thrusters if you have to. It doesn’t matter if we have
our own gravity working.”
“It’s the elevator pod, sir,” the pilot reminded him. “They don’t have AG,
so they’re in danger as long as they’re still out there.”
“Then reel them in!” Reed turned to face Shasta. “You’re with me.” He
started walking away. “I also need one engineer.”
“Sir!” an eager young engineer said, literally jumping at the chance. He
would learn these people’s names eventually.
They walked in silence for a moment before Reed was finally ready to ask,
“how are you here?”
Shasta shrugged. “We’re immortals.”
“I didn’t ask how you were alive,” he snapped back.
“I had a back-up in a respawn sector. Not a big deal.”
“It is a big deal. I had to bring you into this. You didn’t have
Tangent clearance. I’ve never actually been up here before, yet you’re
telling me that you had time to construct a clone of yourself? You would
have had to do it months ago at least.”
“I had this substrate made while you were in blackout hock.”
“That doesn’t make any sense. No one can clone or print a body that
fast.”
“They can on Castlebourne,” she contended.
“Yeah, they use special technology that we don’t have. We got
artificial gravity, they got rapid bioprinting.”
“We got both,” Shasta insisted. “You just need to know where to look.”
“How did you know where to look, but I don’t?”
“You were asleep,” Shasta tried to explain. “There were many last-minute
details that you don’t know. We recruited others that you are not aware of.
Someone from Castlebourne came here to help. We don’t know how they knew
that we needed it, but we didn’t question it after they proved their worth.
I watched a copy of her materialize in a pod in seconds. It was phenomenal.
I’ve never seen anything like it. It does not look like what you’re used
to.”
“However it looks, it would not have been a software issue, but a hardware
issue,” Reed said. “You would have needed to get this mysterious savior on
the Tangent to make the secret upgrades.”
“She said that she would take care of it, and she did,” Shasta replied. “We
decided to trust her. I don’t know if she magically made her way onto a
secure yet to be operational space elevator platform in record time, or if
she already had someone on the inside, but it obviously worked.” She swept
her hands down in front of her chest illustratively.
They were back at main engineering, so Reed couldn’t press the conversation,
but he was determined to get more answers later. Random people didn’t just
help like that, and they certainly didn’t show up unprompted. He pointed at
the dented door. “I need you to tell me what’s happening in there without
any of us going in there.”
The engineer’s fingers were dancing in the air before her. She was
controlling an augmented reality interface that they could not see as it was
being projected directly into her pupils. These weren’t too terribly common,
probably because it was a little awkward, pressing buttons that you couldn’t
feel. People tended to prefer the haptic feedback of more traditional form
factors. “This way.” She walked off. They followed her around the corner,
and around the next corner, to the opposite side of engineering. “This door
is fine, but I don’t have authorization.”
“Are you sure it’s not gonna boil me alive?” Reed asked the engineer. He
glanced over at Shasta for a second. “I don’t have a magical back-up body.”
“You would if I had had time to ask for your consent,” Shasta claimed.
“I’m sure,” the engineer said. “This door doesn’t lead all the way into
engineering. It’s just a mechanical service terminal, but it’s undergoing
unusual power spikes, so I would start there. I promise, it’s safe.”
Reed opened the door.
None other than their shuttle pilot, Trilby was on the other side. He was
elbows deep into an access panel of some kind. Wires and power crystals were
hanging out of other panels behind him. Trilby looked over at them. He
quickly pushed his steampunk goggles to his forehead before going back to
the wires. “Cap’n. Nice to see you again.”
“What are you doing?” Reed questions.
“Fixing your ship,” Trilby answered.
“It looks like you’re taking it apart.”
“Oh, no sir. I couldn’t get into engineering, so I’m piloting ‘er manually.”
“Those are just the power relays,” his engineer said. “How the hell are you
doing anything from here?”
“Power is everything,” Trilby said. “It’s all just ones and zeroes, on and
off, stop and go. You can make a machine do anything if you pull the right
connections in the right sequence.” He let go of the wires, pulled his arms
out, and faced the three of them.
“That’s ridiculous,” the engineer retorted. “You would have to have an
insane amount of intimate knowledge of this platform’s systems to exercise
any semblance of control over it. Not to mention the fact that the fusion
torches are an attachment, not tied directly into the infrastructure.”
“Is the platform still spinning?” Trilby posed.
“No,” the engineer admitted.
Trilby showed a cocksure smirk that was eerily serious. “You’re welcome.”
“You were supposed to leave,” Reed reminded him.
“I got held up,” Trilby replied.
“Good, I’m glad,” Reed said.
“No, I literally got held up at gunpoint,” Trilby clarified. “But then
someone shot them, and I ran off. I’m not sure whose side they were on.”
“It’s all settled now,” Reed determined. “Please report to auxiliary
engineering. I know you didn’t come here for this, but no one gets in and no
one gets out. We won’t begin hostage negotiations until we’ve broken orbit,
so you might as well keep yourself busy.”
“Aye, aye.” Trilby began to walk away, but stopped. “Hey, you know you have
five hours to keep from crashing into the atmosphere, right?”
“Yes, we’re working on it,” Reed concurred. “Thanks for helping with that.”
“Sir, I think...” his engineer trailed off.
“You should go to aux engineering too,” Reed interrupted. “Keep and eye on
him for me, but don’t get in his way. We may really need him.”
“Aye, sir.” The engineer left.
Reed turned back to Shasta. “I need to see this crazy advanced bioprinter.”
“I can take you to it,” Shasta promised, “but I warn you, it’s not going to
make sense. It’s not just the same ol’ technology made faster. It’s entirely
unrecognizable.”
“Stop teasing me, and let’s go.” Reed went down the hallway, figuring that
he had a fifty-fifty chance of choosing the right direction.
“It’s this way,” Shasta countered.
“That’s all you had to say.” He spun around, and followed her down.
As they were walking, they listened to updates from engineering, the bridge,
and other sectors. It wasn’t going to be easy, but they were making it work.
They would get out of this mess and finally be on their way to the Proxima
system. Everyone was doing a fine job, and the hostages weren’t giving them
trouble after having reawoken from being stunned. The two of them ended up
in the bowels of the platform; precisely where you would expect to find a
secret respawn chamber. It was dark and damp, until it wasn’t. They entered
a different section, and found it to be pristinely new, sleekly designed and
sparkling.
Shasta stopped. “Okay. I warned you that it was different, but nothing can
prepare you for actually seeing it with your own two eyes. Nonetheless, I
assure you, it works. I woke up not an hour ago, and I’m fine.”
“Just open the door,” he urged.
She punched in the code. The door slid open.
Reed walked in first, slowly, and very confused. He was looking at something
rather gross hanging from a pipe on the ceiling. It had come out of there
apparently, and grown afterwards, and according to Shasta’s claims, it had
done it impossibly fast. “What is that, a cocoon?”
“A chrysalis,” she corrected.
“It’s organic?”
“Yes.”
“That’s even more outrageous than I thought,” Reed began. “If anything,
something like this should be slower.”
“The Castlebourner said the growth acceleration was a separate thing from
the medium. It doesn’t have to be that fast. In fact, it usually isn’t. As a
senior...rebel, I was granted the fastest development time, but not everyone
has that luxury.” She jerked her head over to another empty chrysalis a few
meters away. “I didn’t have time to learn who this was, but it was sealed up
when I was here, so they must have eclosed since then.”
Reed stepped over to the second open chrysalis. He looked around it, and on
the ceiling, but didn’t find any sort of interface, or anything that might
point to who this would have been. “Wait. Are all of our people in
the system?”
“Almost. Notable exceptions include you. Our mysterious benefactor said that
she wouldn’t allow it since you couldn’t give your consent in person. A few
others just straight up refused, since it freaked them out.”
“What about Vasily? Was he a holdout?”
“No,” she answered. “He was a junior rebel, so he qualified for fairly fast
growth time; just not as fast as me. Why, did he die in the fight?”
“You could say that. Vasily, this is Ellis, report in,” he spoke into his
comms. “Vasily, report in. Where are you?”
“Why do you look so nervous?”
“He murdered someone,” Reed explained. “A normal human.” He went back to his
comms. “Vasily, report in right now!”
“Captain, sorry, I know you’re looking for Vasily, but we got a major
problem on our hands,” Sartore, the elevator tech interjected. “The tethers have snapped. The pod is in a steeper decaying orbit. I
hesitate to say, but...I think they were sabotaged.”
“Sabotaged by someone here, or in the pod?” Reed asked.
“Definitely here.”
“Security, get to the tether sector,” Reed ordered. “Search the entire
complex. Shoot anyone who isn’t a part of our group.” He paused. “And if you
find Vasily, bring him to me.”
“Sartore,” Shasta spoke in her own comms. “Can we get the pod back?”
“With a shuttle, sure,” Sartore replied. “But every second counts.”
“We’re very close to the shuttle bay,” Shasta told Reed.
“Let’s go!” He ran out of the room.
“Thanks, Sartore!” Shasta yelled into her comms as she was running out too.
“Take stock of the tethering that we have left! We need to make sure we have
enough to actually help on Doma!”
They raced down the corridors, and into the shuttlebay, but Vasily was one
step ahead of them. He was standing at the top of the ramp of the shuttle,
his gun up and ready to fire. Once they were close enough, he tensed his
arms, and aimed at Reed’s head. “I know you’re not in our chrysalis system
yet, Captain. If you die, you’ll end up off-world.”
“Are you so mad at me, Vasily, that you would ruin our chances to help the
Domanians?” Reed asked him. “I didn’t tag you as that petty.”
“Well, I am. Have you ever been stabbed in the head before, sir? It’s not
pleasant. It’s the worst way I’ve ever died.”
“You killed someone in cold blood,” Reed reminded him. “I would have shot
you cleanly if I could have, but the gun wouldn’t let me, so I improvised.”
“You tried to banish me back to Bungula, where the authorities likely would
have been waiting!” Vasily screamed.
“I’m sorry about that, but we need that shuttle to go retrieve those VIPs.
The mission isn’t over yet. Let us finish it. Help us finish it.”
“Nah, I’m done with that. I knew you would come here, so I didn’t come
alone.” Vasily slammed his palm against a button on the inside. The door to
the cockpit slid open. Someone was in there, tapping on the console, likely
running the pre-flight check. “How are we lookin’?” he called back.
“We’re just about ready to go.” The shuttle pilot turned around, which
showed Reed and Shasta that he was not one of theirs, but a hostage. “I just
need to run diagnostics on the hook that we’ll use to grab the pod. It’s
never been deployed before.”
“Hook?” Vasily questioned. “We don’t need the hook. We’re just gonna crash
into it. I have no interest in dropping the VIPs off on the planet. I just
want to prevent him from using them as leverage.”
“Hey, that’s not what I signed up for,” the shuttle pilot argued. “I thought
we were gonna save them. Some people on there aren’t even backed up.” He
tried to continue arguing, but couldn’t finish.
Vasily quickly swung his arm around to shoot the shuttle pilot dead, which
was just enough time for Reed to take out his own maser, and point it into
the shuttle. Vasily smirked at it. “You can’t shoot me, remember?”
“But I can shoot the junction box, which will disable the shuttle, and if I
aim it just right, it might even blow your body up.”
“You’re not that good ‘a shot,” Vasily contended.
“But I am.” Shasta lifted her weapon too. “Put your gun down, and step out
of the shuttle, Vas. We need it.”
“You’re not getting it.” Vasily looked over his shoulder. “Shoot the box for
all I care. I don’t need it to fly. This is just a bullet now. You’re the
one who needs a fully functioning shuttle to retrieve it.”
They heard a gunshot. Vasily seemed to be hit in the chest. They all looked
over to find Ajax behind them, walking up fast. He shot again, and again,
and again, and again. Vasily’s whole body shook like a cliché as he stumbled
backwards towards the cockpit. He fell to his back, and was struggling to
breathe. “You should have gone for the junction box.” He reached his hand up
and tapped on the console. The shuttle suddenly shot forward, through the
plasma barrier, and headed straight for the floating elevator pod.
Tangent Point: Pulling it Together (Part IV)
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Ajax immediately ran over to the second shuttle. Reed wasn’t sure if Vasily
hadn’t noticed that there was another one in this bay, or didn’t think that
they would have time to catch up. But as the true, legitimate captain of
this vessel, Ajax had the authority to skip all pre-flight procedures, and
just go. Reed tried to follow him and Shasta up the ramp. Ajax turned
around, and held up a hand. “No. You don’t have a local back-up body. This
could be a suicide mission.” He turned back around and started powering up
systems.
“Why would you be concerned with that?”
Ajax just kept working. “Because I secretly agree with you. Don’t tell
anyone. Just take this thing, and go save our neighbors. I’ll be on the
ground. The Tangent is so new that I only had one local back-up.”
“Shasta,” Reed said simply as he was backing away on the ramp.
“I’ll be here to help the Captain if he needs it,” she replied. “Now go so
we can close the hatch.”
Reed stepped all the way out, and let them launch without him. It was
frustrating, sending people on missions, placing them in danger. But that
was the burden of leadership, and it was a lot better in real life than in
the space operas, where death was usually permanent. He watched the shuttle
for as long as possible until it disappeared around the bend. Then he just
kept staring through the transparent plasma barrier. Bungula was beginning
to shrink as they were breaking orbit. He breathed a sigh of relief, and
then opened his comms. “Ellis calling the bridge. Seal the bulkheads in this
shuttle bay and shut off the plasma. We need to save power.”
“Belay that order,” Shasta’s voice came on. “I’ll be coming in with the elevator pod shortly.”
Reed switched to a private channel. “You survived? How did you stop Vasily?”
“I’ll explain when I get back, but Ajax is gone. It’s just me, so have a
security team on standby to secure the VIP hostages.”
Reed went back to the main channel. “Send a security squad to Shuttle Bay
Four. We got the pod.” He could hear them all cheering on the radio, but he
couldn’t celebrate with them. There was still one more loose end to tie up.
Vasily was about to be resurrected in the crazy new chrysalis thing, and had
to be dealt with too. If he told his people what happened between them, it
would cause some internal conflict. Some here would be okay with murdering a
human, and might end up siding with Vasily on this matter. Reed could stick
him in hock, but there was no guarantee that he would stay there for long.
One ally would be all it took to set him free. This was a very delicate
situation. He had a number of options, and each came with advantages and
disadvantages. He could even just pardon the guy, or straight up keep it all
a secret in order to maintain peace. Even if he found a way to transport him
off-ship far enough to shift his consciousness stream from the Tangent to
Bungula, he might become a martyr. Vasily was a permanent problem no matter
what. “Also, send one team to the chrysalis room to escort someone who is
about to respawn.”
“Aye, captain,” his Head of Security acknowledged. “Alpha-Gamma squad, go to the shuttle bay. Beta team to the chrysalis
room.”
“Hey, Thistle. Report,” Reed asked his AI as he was starting the long trip
back up to the bridge alone. The summary ran for as long as it took him to
reach his destination. Everything was going all right. Auxiliary engineering
was holding the platform together, the security sweep of the tether complex
didn’t turn up any other traitors or spies, and the bridge crew was
establishing themselves, and settling into their new roles. The biggest job
was the cleanup. There were a lot of dead bodies scattered all over the
place, which needed to be disposed of respectfully, according to the user’s
own personal wishes. Some of these could be found in the database, while
others might have to be contacted later. The mutineers responsible for this
work knew who they were, and were doing it without being asked. That went
for everyone. Nothing was being neglected. Nothing was falling apart. They
might actually pull this off.
“Captain,” his pilot began, “we’ve started acceleration. We’ll be on our way
in six minutes.”
“Thanks, that’s good to know.”
“Sir,” his comms officer said, taking her turn. “Mediator Fenwick is on hold
for peaceful negotiations.” She used airquotes.
“You didn’t alert me right away?” Reed asked.
“We figured you would want to make him sweat,” she replied.
Reed smiled. “Good call.” He took a deep breath, then did a 180. “On
screen.” The image appeared. “Kemper, how the hell are ya? Long time, no
blackout hock.”
Mediator Fenwick was already frowning, but deepened it now. “You have the
audacity to criticize our judgment after what you’ve just pulled? What I did
when I ordered your consciousness frozen was an executive decision that I
take responsibility for, but it only affected you. You killed dozens of
people—”
“Wait, we didn’t kill anyone. We destroyed some people’s substrates.
You’re the only one here who has conspired to murder anyone.”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about,” Fenwick contended. “Did someone
die in the drone strike? That was only meant to disable propulsion.”
“Now, Kemper, we’ve known each other for decades. There’s no need to play
coy with me. I know about your spy.”
“We do not have a spy. I will not stand for this projection. It is you who
infected our ranks insidiously, and instituted a mutiny. Now, we all have
empathy for the Proxima Domanians, and we recognize where you’re coming
from, but making us out to be the villains is reckless, and the history
books will not remember it that way.”
“Well, I don’t agree with your prediction, but I’m not talking about the
kinetic drone, and I’m not talking about you fighting back against the
mutiny. I don’t even blame you for that, your people had every right to
defend their post. They will be treated with the utmost respect while
they’re on board my new platform. No, I’m talking about Vasily.” Everyone
within Reed’s field of vision winced at the accusation, and probably
everyone he couldn’t see too. “Now, I don’t know how you got to him, but he
placed the VIPs in the elevator pod in grave—”
“Executor Ellis,” Fenwick interrupted. “I do not appreciate being
accused of something that I had nothing to do with. If you suffered a
betrayal, then I would call that an internal matter. I’ve never even heard
the name before, so unless you are not done fabricating tall tales, I would
like to move on to the matter of the hostage crisis. For the safe return of
all hostages, we are prepared to offer the Tangent passage to Proxima Doma
without any interference from the Bungulan military, or the government. It
is all you need, let those innocent people go.”
Reed chuckled. “Nice try, Kempy, but I caught your sneaky little semantic
trick. The Bungulan military is symbolic at best, which is why you were
woefully unprepared for our takeover. Teagarden, on the other hand, operates
under an entirely different jurisdiction, and would be under absolutely no
obligation to uphold any promise of amnesty that the Bungulan authority
might offer. I doubt you’ve even mobilized your own forces. I’m sure your
first call was to that Teaguardian I see matching our speed on the port
side. Are we quite finished joking?”
Fenwick knew that he had been made. “Reed, you don’t wanna do this. Even if
you make it out of Bungulan space—even if you make it all the way to
Doma—how do you think you’re gonna pull this off? What, you’re gonna hover
over one of the poles for years at the shortest, and then you’re gonna fly
to the other pole and do it again? And throughout all of that, the
Teaguardian isn’t gonna figure out a way to rescue the undigitized humans,
and then blow everyone else out of the sky? You won’t survive that. You’ll
be too far from any back-ups. You’ll just be dead. We’ll rebuild the
Tangent, and the galaxy will move forward.”
“You still think you’re the good guy here?” Reed questioned. “The people
next door are dying. You really wanna do the right thing? Tell that
Teaguardian to give us whatever magical engine they use to travel faster
than light, so we can get this done, and get out! We will bring the Tangent
back. Every single one of my people fully recognizes the consequences of our
actions. No one is thinking they’re just gonna go back to their lives as if
nothing happened. We’re doing it because no one else is. We’re doing it
because you’re a bunch of self-obsessed, elitist nutsacks!”
Mediator Fenwick shook his head. “This is the last chance you will get to
talk to me, Ellis. If you finish breaking orbit, it will be out of my hands.
The Teaguardians will take over the case, and they won’t be as nice. They
may not care about the VIPs. Their ancestors pioneered neural
digitalization, and it’s been centuries. A lot of people think we should
stop worrying about humans who willfully reject virtual immortality. I’m not
one of those people, but you’re about a minute away from it being out of my
hands. Abort the burn, come back down. I’m not asking for any hostages yet,
or for you to surrender. Let’s just talk about this some more.”
“No more talking,” Reed decided. “I tried talking to you for a week. You
offered airdrops—airdrops! A coward’s hollow gesture. I’m sick of
looking at your face. Tell your Teagarden contact to bring it on!”
Without his order, his comms officer cut the call.
Reed took a breath, and looked over at his weapons officer, Aletha. “I
already know the answer to this, but maybe there was some faulty intel. Does
the Tangent have a weapons system?”
“No,” Aletha said. “It’s not a battleship. The only things keeping us from
the next salvo of kinetic drones are in that elevator pod that we hooked.”
Reed nodded, then looked back over at comms. “Shipwide message.” He waited
half a second. “New crew of the Tangent, Phase One is complete. Aletha will
be coming around to collect your weapons from you, and check them back into
the system. Only designated security personnel will be keeping their
sidearms. Thank you for everything you’ve done. I hope you’re ready to keep
going, because there’s no going back now.” He double checked the screen. “We
are officially on our way to Proxima Doma.” He could hear more cheers over
the radio, and out in the corridor.
“Congratulations, Captain,” Transdimensional Regulator Van Horn said.
“Thanks, Amulet,” he replied, “but I didn’t do it alone. In fact, I took a
nap earlier today while everyone else was getting in place.”
Everyone giggled at that.
Reed breathed deeply, and sat down in the captain’s chair for the first
time. That was when Shasta walked in, so he jumped back up. “Ajax?”
“He didn’t make it,” she replied.
“In here,” Reed decided, gesturing towards the captain’s bridge office. They
went inside for a private conversation.
“It happened quite quickly,” Shasta began. “Vasily was able to send the
shuttle forwards, but not particularly fast, so we were able to catch up
before it could collide with the pod. I programmed our shuttle to match
vector with the target, flying above it, while Ajax sealed the
airlock. He wasn’t even wearing a suit. He tethered himself to the wall, and
then swung down. I don’t know exactly what happened then, but he
immediately broke the synchrony and altered course. He eventually burned up
in the atmosphere. I think he killed himself so there would be no question
who was in charge here. He did it to protect your authority.”
“No one can know,” Reed determined. “The official story is Vasily, delirious
and dying, fought back, and the shuttle was lost. On the record, Ajax must
be our enemy. Maybe we’ll be able to thank him one day.”
“I’ll fill out the report. And Vasily himself?” she asked
“He’ll be in hock alone. We need to minimize the amount he interacts with
others so he doesn’t influence and infect my crew.”
“Understood.”
The doorbell. “Enter,” Reed offered.
The door opened. A security officer was standing next to—not only a VIP—but
the most valuable hostage asset they had on board right now. “Sorry, sir.
She insisted. She threatened to kill herself.”
“It’s all right, officer. Delegator Jodene Chariot, it’s an honor,” Reed
said without a hint of sarcasm.
She sighed exasperatedly. “Report.”
“Six months. With only two operational fusion torches, it will take us six
months to get to the Proxima Centauri system. Once we’re there, we’ll hover
over the poles one at a time, and transport as many as we can off of the
surface. Once the job is done, I will hand the reins over to you, and you
can do whatever you want with me. We’ll negotiate specifics...in six
months.”
“When I was in the elevator pod, we only saw one torch get hit by a drone,”
Jodene said. “If you absolutely must do this, and no one can stop
you, I would like it to get done faster.”
“You can thank the military for the delay. Without that fourth torch,
propulsion is out of balance. We can only actually use the two opposing each
other. The third one will just be sitting there, doing nothing.”
“Can the fourth one be fixed en route?” she pressed.
“Yeah,” Reed answered. “It’ll take about six months.”
“Why bother?” Jodene questioned.
“We’ll need it,” Shasta interjected. “When we get there to hover over the
poles, we will need as much power as we can muster. The repairs will not be
a waste of time.”
“Your crew is not equipped to handle such an undertaking.”
Reed smiled. “I’m not allowing anyone else on board. We will be releasing
some hostages as a sign of good faith, but my people know what they’re
doing. They can handle it. That’s why they’re here.”
“Still, you could use some extra manpower,” Jodene reasoned. “I just so
happen to know of a bunch of people who were literally enrolled to work on
the Tangent, and could expedite the work, as well as make sure it lives up
to code.”
Reed nodded. “You’re just talking about the other hostages. You want some
kind of work-release program? You just got on board, and you’re already
negotiating?”
“No time like the present,” Jodene said. “Immediately acknowledging the
value of the regular crew will go a long way to earning their trust.”
“It will be hard to trust them,” Reed admitted. “It would only take one
person to sabotage a vital system function, and take us all down.”
“I’ll keep an eye on them,” Jodene volunteered.
He gave her a funny face. “That doesn’t help. I would have to trust you
too.”
“I can’t tell you what to think, but you should know that I have a neural
suicide inducer. I can simply deliberately transfer my consciousness in full
to a back-up without having to shoot myself in the head, or whatever. I
don’t have to stay here.” Jodene pointed to the viewscreen on the
wall that was showing the port side live feed. “That Teaguardian over there
is fully ready to receive the digitized mind of anyone who dies. They don’t
have to have a substrate waiting for them. They’ll just hang out in a
virtual environment until a new body can be built.”
“All right, no need to make threats,” Reed contended. “We can make this
work. Let’s head to hock right now, and address the crew together, so it’s
clear that we’re on the same page.”
They did manage to make it work. It wasn’t easy, and there was plenty of
friction, but the two separate crews fell into a routine, and eventually
became one. It was difficult to remember which of them was part of the
mutiny, and who belonged there legitimately. With the extra hands, they were
able to rebuild the fourth fusion torch, negotiating for rare materials by
releasing some non-essential crew to the Teaguardian escort, including a
couple of VIPs who had almost nothing to offer. While some crewmembers were
working on that, others were fabricating the hundreds of pods that they
will need, or braiding tethers together. When you’re over the equator at
geostationary orbit, the tethers can be fairly thin, but must be ultra-long.
Over a pole, it’s the opposite. The strain causes a demand for extra strength,
but they can hover closer, so the tethers don’t need to be as long.
They arrived in the Proxima system within five months. By then, the
Domanians had been suffering their own socio-political issues. Low resources
and high waste heat led to raised tensions, and muted morale. Reed now faced
the first actual dilemma to come out of this whole thing. Should they rescue
the refugees from the southern pole first, or the northern pole? The people
on the ground sure had their opinions about it.
Consensus (Part V)
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Reed was in a virtual simulation again, along with Delegator Chariot, as
everyone was allowed to come as a duo. They were in a much more comfortable
environment than the one that they had been using separately. Now was the
meeting where they were all coming together to hammer this out. As the
Tangent approached Proxima Doma, they had to come to an agreement. There was
only one elevator platform, and it couldn’t be in two places at once. Both
poles were going to be evacuated, but each one would take months, so who had
the honor of going first?
They were all sitting around a table. It was a purple theme, evidently based
on a known diplomatic ship called the Vellani Ambassador. Portraits of the
crew were even on the walls, suggesting that this simulation took real
imagery from base reality. The meeting was small. Two representatives from
the northern pole, two from the southern pole, and two from Teagarden. Most
star systems were afforded a couple of Teaguardian ships to watch over them
in case something happened. Obviously, that had already proved insufficient,
but they were still here, and would be able to help with the evacuation
procedures. The platform was going to hover over each pole, and expend
massive amounts of fuel to do it. They needed resupply to make that work,
and for constant transport off the platform. Every body weighed it
down, so evacuees weren’t going to be staying there for long. Climbing up
the tethers was only the first step.
The leader of the Teagarden’s contingency held the rank of president. It was
one rank above captain, and the president assigned to the Proxima Centauri
system was indeed here in this construct, but in a secondary capacity since
he was not the highest ranking member. No, more Teaguardians were dispatched
from neighboring systems, including Bungula. There were presently eleven of
these ships in the system. But still, not even the coronel of those eleven
Teaguardians was in charge. This went all the way to the tippy-top. Matar
Galo was only called in for really big issues. Reed would have thought that
she was too busy with other things, but apparently, this took precedence.
None of this was real, but she was nearby in base reality, in one of
those Teaguardians. Reed really wanted to know how they traveled
faster than light.
Matar Galo cleared her throat. “Welcome to the evacuation dispute between
the northern and southern poles of Proxima Doma, Proxima Centauri, as it
relates to the emergency rescue efforts provided by the Bungulan Space
Elevator Platform known as The Tangent. I am your host, Matar Tiare Galo of
the Teagarden Stellar Neighborhood Aid Service, and I would like to remind
you that these evacuation procedures happen at the pleasure of Teagarden.
The Tangent is a stolen vessel, and while we have tentatively agreed to the
continuation of this mission for the sake of hostages, we do so under heavy
duress. This is not a question of whether Executor Reed Ellis has the
authority to maintain his command over the Tangent, nor what rights the
Bungulan government has over it. That is a separate issue, which is why no
Bungulan representatives are present. It is important to note, however, that
decisions are subject to change, and what we decide here may be rendered
irrelevant before certain actions can be completed, or indeed even begin.
Furthermore, Executor Ellis, while we recognize your leadership for the time
being, it is not up to you which pole receives aid first. It is up to them
to come to the decision between themselves. You are here predominantly as a
guest, and will listen respectfully, speaking only when appropriate. Is that
understood?”
“Yes, sir, it is,” Reed replied.
“Delegator Chariot?”
“Agreed,” Jodene replied.
“Very well,” the Matar continued. “This is not a structured debate. I am
here to facilitate discussion, but I am not an official moderator. The
representatives from the poles are free to proceed as they see fit. I will
only step in if talks devolve into unproductive or unrelated speech, or
escalate towards violence.” She paused for a moment before prompting, “go
ahead.”
Reed had already heard all of their arguments, and was prepared to hear them
all rehashed here. There were more people in the north, so they needed to be
cleared out more quickly. The south argued that that was a failure in
leadership. The reason things were better for them was because they made a
concerted effort to rescue those who lived in the lower latitudes. They
built a four-kilometer bridge in a matter of hours after the ring faults
broke apart. They figured they ought to be rewarded for their hard work, not
punished for being too good. And besides, there were fewer people
because a giant mountain range made the southeast arc of the Terminator Line
too treacherous to colonize. The northerners were going to contend that
there was a brand new dome in the south pole, which was more than enough to
sustain the refugees for a while. The north was maxed out, they needed help
the most. The south could be rescued faster due to their lower population,
but that didn’t really matter. The number of people who could be
transported—and more importantly, the number of people who were
waiting for transport—would be the same, regardless of which side got
to go first.
“We’ve already worked it out,” Delegator Sarkozi began with a weird smile.
“The southern polar region concedes its bid, and congratulates the northern
pole on its win.”
They swung their chins towards Xaovi Rue, who nodded. “The northern polar
region accepts the southern pole’s concession, and happily welcomes the
Tangent to begin evacuation procedures as soon as they are in place.”
“What happened here?” Matar Galo questioned.
“You said you wouldn’t get involved unless you had to,” Delegator Sarkozi
reminded her. “Things are fine, we came to a decision amongst ourselves
beforehand.”
“Yeah, well, that sounds suspicious,” Matar Galo says. “It sounds like we
could be dealing with blackmail, or something worse, like an abduction.”
“Your mind goes to 21st century b-movie intrigue,” Xaovi argued. “It’s
nothing like that. We’ve decided to snag the quickest win first. It will
take a little bit longer to evacuate the south as it will the north, so the
math just makes sense to us now.”
“That’s not true,” Delegator Chariot insisted. “The northern polar region
has a much higher population, even though the northern hemisphere suffered
more deaths during the initial evacuation.”
“Delegator Chariot, you were not asked to weigh in,” Matar Galo scolded.
“That being said, I too would like an explanation.”
“We’re not leaving,” Xaovi replied. “Most of us aren’t, anyway. This is our
home, and we’re going to make it work. The ground is stable, and anything
we’ve lost, we will rebuild. Make no mistake, we will not prevent
anyone from evacuating from the north. In fact, we encourage it. It
will just give us more room, which we need. The new carbon scrubbers we
added are great, but we don’t want it to last forever.”
Reed shook his head, but kept his mouth shut. He wanted to argue that they
were being foolish. Researchers still didn’t understand the long-term
effects of living on that planet. The cataclysm appeared to end
months ago, but they didn’t know for sure that nothing further was going to
happen. Lava could be trickling in through natural underground tunnels. They
just didn’t know. The whole reason he and his people stole the Tangent was
to execute this rescue. They were only here for these people. Colonizing
this world had turned out to be a mistake. It was unsafe. They couldn’t go
back in time to fix that, but that certainly didn’t mean they had to stay.
They were being stubborn and stupid. The only logical response to
this mess was to get the fuck out.
“Executor Ellis,” Matar Galo began, “I appreciate you biting your tongue.
“Call him Captain Ellis,” Delegator Chariot all but demanded. “Even if you
don’t agree with how he came to power, he does have that power now.
He commands a full channel of crewmembers.” The two of them had grown closer
over these last few months. Jodene had a hard time rectifying this in her
head. The mutiny was immoral, that much she believed, but she had come to
believe in the mission too. She was quite conflicted about it, and he tried
not to push her. They held their philosophical discussions when they weren’t
putting out fires together, but they never argued. She had come to see
things in a new light due to the success of their work. They suspected that
the Teaguardians felt about the same way. Their attempts at stopping them
midflight were laughably weak...almost unbelievably ineffective.
“Very well,” Matar Galo said. “Captain Ellis, I think we all know
your position here, and in this case, I must admit to agreeing with you.
Premier Rue, I urge you to reconsider. You and your people can
always return, but if you don’t leave now, there will be no second
chances. After evacuation is complete, I will be demanding the Tangent move
on from here. Whether you’re first or second, once the platform leaves, it’s
gone. You won’t be able to change your minds.”
“Actually, I won’t bite my tongue,” Reed jumped in. “If you do end up
changing your minds after we’ve left, I will not be returning. Matar Galo
and the Bungulan government will not need to convince me to leave
permanently. The hostage crisis will be over at that point, and I will
relinquish my leverage. Xaovi, don’t do this. Clarita, persuade it not to do
this.”
“As I was saying,” Xaovi went on, not letting Clarita speak, “I will force
no one to stay, but I won’t force them to leave either. If you would like to
try your hand at convincing them to get in those pods, go ahead. I’ll give
you the broadcast codes freely. We’ve been listening to our people. They
want to stay. I will be staying with them.”
Matar Galo breathed. “Captain Ellis, Delegator Chariot, I assume you have a
plan in place. You know the logistics of how you’re going to get people up
the tethers?”
“We do,” Reed responded.
“Then do it,” the Matar ordered. “Maneuver the Tangent into position over
the north pole, drop the lines, and start pulling people up. No more
decisions need be made, this meeting is over.” She stood up. “Thank you all
for coming. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I must get to a quantum meeting with
the Altaren ambassador.” She de-resed. There was something different about
it, though. It didn’t look like it did from most simulations. It was more
like the flickering of a hologram. Maybe this wasn’t so virtual after all.
Reed and Jodene de-resed as well, waking up in the former’s office. He was
leaning back in his chair while she was lying on the couch. Shasta was still
in the guest chair, doing something on her handheld. “How did it go?” she
asked them.
“We’re going north first,” Reed answered.
Shasta started to leave. “I’ll inform the pilot, and prep the ground crew.”
“I wanna be on that,” Jodene said to her.
“We’re meeting in Drop Bay One in twenty minutes to go over safety
procedures,” Shasta told her without turning around.
Jodene turned back to Reed after the door reclosed. “Don’t think I didn’t
catch the way you worded your little speech in there. You said you would be
giving up the hostages, but you never said you would be giving the Tangent
back to Bungula.”
Reed only cleared his throat.
“You’ve said you would before. It was one of your main arguments, that this
was temporary. What’s changed?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
She smirked. “You think you can escape. With four torches, you think you can
escape? Reed, the Teaguardians have FTL.”
“Not all of them,” he reasoned.
“The ones who do will catch up. They could be clear on the other side of the
neighborhood, and they will still eventually catch up to us.”
“Us?” he echoed.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” she echoed him right back.
She stood up. “You said you would go to jail willingly. Obviously, you don’t
actually—”
“I don’t care about me,” he explained. “I care about them.” He
gestured towards the door. “Even the original crew has been helping us, and
some without much convincing. I’m worried about two things here. I’m worried
about Teagarden’s superior firepower, and I’m worried about Bungula’s
grudge, and plans for revenge. Neither party has what the other does, so we
either need to take away Teagarden’s advantage, or Bungula’s
motivation...not both. And I do mean we. I want you with me...all
in.”
She nodded. “Let’s see how the evacuation goes. I won’t place my chips on a
square until I see where the ball is gonna land.”
“Well, you can’t wait, the casino would kick you out. It would be an illegal
move.”
“This all started because of your illegal move.”
“Touché.”
Sixty-nine days later, the northern polar region was evacuated to the extent
of their inclinations. Matar Galo stayed in the star system to spearhead a
campaign to change people’s minds, but it was impossible to know for sure if
her words made any impact. On an individual level, they didn’t know what
anyone was planning to do before she started speaking on it. The numbers did
seem to go up in her favor, but that could have been the result of poor
polling methods. It was now time to move on to the southern pole. The very
last elevator pod was just coming up the tethers. It was mostly only
carrying the Bungulan ground workers, but also a few Proxima Domanians who
agreed to stay down there for over two months to help coordinate.
“Wait, they’re already here?” Reed questioned. “As of thirty minutes ago,
they hadn’t even left yet.”
“They made it an express trip,” Shasta explained. “A quarter hour total.”
“I didn’t approve that.”
“They were anxious to get back up here.”
“Were the Domanians with them even trained for the high-g acceleration?”
“The report didn’t say, but they were on it, plus one single final
straggler.”
“I would like to meet them,” Reed ordered, “the Domanians, and whoever
decided that it would be an express trip.”
Shortly thereafter, they arrived. He first spoke alone with the two
crewmembers who claimed responsibility over the decision to pull the
elevator up at extremely high speeds. Express trips were not uncommon, but
they did not have time to install inertial dampeners in every single pod,
and the stress it placed on tethers outweighed the benefits of it anyway.
That was why they hadn’t been doing it like that the whole time. Now those
tethers would have to be thoroughly examined, and potentially repaired or
replaced entirely. They were sent to hock—probably while covering for other
responsible parties—for twenty-four hours, and would be assigned tether
testing duty. They accepted their fairly light punishment without any
argument, and would not be a problem moving forward.
He was now standing before the five Domanian volunteers, looking over the
report. “What’s this thing with you?”
One of them peeked over the edge of his tablet to see what he was seeing.
“That’s Heracles, our beetloid. He saved Calypso’s life, and has been
all-around helpful.”
“A beetloid,” Reed thought out loud.
“You don’t have those on Bungula?” the apparent leader asked.
“We do not. Something like that might come in handy on the Tangent. Would
you be willing to provide us with its specifications?”
“We don’t have them,” a man said. “He’s a survivor, like us. None of us
designed him, though.”
Reed nodded. “Forgive me. I should have started with introductions. I’m
Captain Reed Ellis. And you are?” he asked, holding his hand out to the
leader.
“Breanna Jeffries,” she answered, shaking his hand. He shook the hand of the
rest as she listed them off. “This is Cashmere Hartland, Notus Konn, Calypso
Rotola, and Sorel Arts.”
“It’s nice to meet you all. According to this report, you did a fine job on
the ground when you could have done the bare minimum to satisfy the
Delegator’s impromptu enlistment. If it were me, I would have just let you
up here with a tight nod, but she was in charge down there. I am wondering
what the plan is next. Have you thought about where you might want to go?
Teagarden is facilitating ferry trips to the interstellar cyclers. Some are
going to Earth, others to Bungula, but that’s proving...politically
challenging in this situation.”
“Are you asking us to stay?” Breanna questioned.
“There’s plenty of room for a bunch of go-getters like you,” Reed explained.
“We could sure use your help with the southern evacuees. It’s going to be a
much bigger job, and you already know what you’re doing.”
“I wasn’t a part of that,” Sorel said. “I was transferring people off-world
digitally, mostly to Castlebourne, and would like to continue doing that, if
you’ll allow me to take a pod back down to the surface.”
“That can be arranged,” Reed determined. “The uploading option makes it
easier on us, so we’re in favor of it. And the rest of you?”
They exchanged looks and came to an unspoken consensus. “Yes, I think we can
keep going. We never made any plans for the future.”
“Great,” Reed said. “One more thing. What can you tell me about these two?”
He showed them a picture of this group from Elevator Ingress months ago,
standing next to a man and a woman who looked like they could be related. He
had seen the man before, in a portrait at the meeting on the Vellani
Ambassador.
Reads Like Science Fiction (Part VI)
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Breanna Jeffries didn’t want to tell Reed about the man in the photo, but he
didn’t actually need her to say anything. He asked his AI, Thistle instead,
who informed him that the man was still on board, and also where to find
him. His daughter had recently given birth to a baby girl, and while most of
the evacuees were gone, she had chosen to stay here. The child had already
been through so much, they wanted her to wake up every day with some level
of familiarity and comfort. The doctor who delivered it eventually evacuated
from Proxima Doma as well, and was still here too. She asked the mother if
she could continue to look after the baby, and the mother agreed. “You said
there was something weird about the birth?” Reed asked this doctor.
Dr. Duward looked almost paranoid. “You understand that most kids being born
these days gestate in artificial tanks, right?”
“I do.”
“That’s because giving birth kinda sucks,” Dr. Duward explained the obvious.
“Proxima Doma has—I’m sorry, had—more live births than anywhere in
the galaxy, which is why I still have a job. I’ve been doing it for 550
years now. If you’re trying to do that math, I was twelve years old when I
had to deliver my older sister’s baby. Mama was drunk, daddy was at work,
and I was in charge. Since then, I have successfully welcomed over 100,000
new human beings into this universe. Every single one of the mothers was in
pain, whether we gave them drugs or not. Granted, traditional births are my
specialty. Nanomedicine can make even live births painless, but
that’s just not what I do. They come to me because they don’t want that.
This woman, Aeterna refused any sort of pain relief. She refused an IV;
everything. The baby just slipped out. She came in to inform us that her
water broke, and it was time, then she crawled in bed, and let it out. No
struggle, no contractions, barely any labor time. It started, and it was
done. We have some impressive transhumans in the galaxy, but I’ve never seen
anything like her.”
“How’s the baby?”
“Little Dilara is fine,” Dr. Duward replied. “We performed the very basic
tests, and followed procedure, but didn’t have to provide any unusual
treatments. She cried a little bit but stopped quickly. I hesitate to say
this, but it was almost like she was putting on a show...like she knew we
expected her to cry, but after that, she quieted down and just lay there
against her mother’s chest.”
“Who else have you told about this?” Reed presses.
“No one,” Dr. Duward answers. “Like I said, she came in so quick, the only
people there were me and my nurse. And she won’t tell anyone unless I order
her to.”
“No bots need their memories erased?” he suggested.
“We didn’t use bots down there. Traditional births, remember?”
“Right. Well, I need this family on my side, so keep it to yourself. In
fact, if you could just move on and pretend like it never happened, that
would be for the best.”
“This sounds important to you,” she noted.
He sighed. “What do you want?”
“I want the quantum signature for New Earth.”
“I don’t know what that is,” Reed replied honestly.
“I gave a consultation to a Teaguardian a few weeks ago, and overheard them
talking about it. They’re about to go on assignment there, and are actually
happy that you delayed their departure. It’s very hush-hush, but they said
it was 121 light years away. They’ll have to give it a huge berth because I
think it’s a protected human preserve. No advanced interference. It sounds
like it’s basically a base reality ancestor simulation. They’ll need a good
OB/GYN.”
“Well, I certainly wouldn’t have access to that. I’m just a Bungulan
captain.”
“I suggest you find it,” the doctor said. She was not who he thought she was
just a moment ago when they first met.
“I don’t like being blackmailed.”
“I don’t like being ripped from my home, but things happen.”
Reed nodded. “I’ll get you to this New Earth place, but I need to
speak with the family first.”
“Go right ahead.” Dr. Duward stepped off to the side.
Reed walked down the hallway, and rang the doorbell.
A man quickly opened it. “Hey. They’re both sleeping,” he hissed.
“That’s not what the door indicator says.” Reed pointed at the indicator
tube, which lit up for different conditions, such as sleeping, emergency, or
unoccupied.
“I don’t know how that stuff works,” the guy said. He looked back to make
sure that mother and baby weren’t awakened, then slipped out of the room,
and closed the door behind him. “Can I help you?”
“First of all, I’m Captain Reed Ellis—”
“I know who you are, I’m not impressed. What do you want?”
“The Vellani Ambassador. You seem to be a crewmember of it. Tertius
Valerius?”
“Not really anymore, why?” Tertius questioned.
“There are whispers that it can travel faster than light,” Reed said.
Tertius folded his arms. “Lots of ships can do that.”
“Well, I wouldn’t say lots. It seems to only be Teaguardians, and yours. Do
you work for Teagarden?”
Tertius snorted. “No. The Ambassador is a stateless vessel. Well, I think it
technically flies the Castlebourne flag now, but that’s more of a matter of
logistics.”
“Well, anyway. You are aware of the circumstances of the Tangent, aren’t
you? I commandeered it.”
“I know.”
“Your daughter bene—”
Tertius waved his hand dismissively to interrupt Reed again. “Don’t play on
my sentimentality. Just spit it out.”
“As of today, we’re maybe one-third of the way through our rescue efforts,”
Reed continued. “Months from now, when it’s over, and the last evacuee is
safely off the platform, I have promised to release the hostages, and forgo
my leverage. What I have not promised is to return the Tangent and
turn myself in. My crew hasn’t done that either, and I don’t want them to
have to. I don’t know where we would go, but if we try to run with what
we’ve got, they’ll catch us. I don’t want to hold hostages past the rescue.
I certainly don’t want to hold them forever. I don’t want to condemn my
people to decades of prison either, though. You have no obligation to do
anything for us. If you refuse, you and your family can stay as long as you
want, or leave whenever you want. You are in no way hostages. I’m asking you
with my tail between my legs, and my hat in hand, will you help?”
Tertius stared at Reed, presumably in thought. “Over a hundred years ago,
the brightest minds in history you’ve never heard of held a meeting. It was
called The Edge. They had developed certain advanced technologies, and
limited their use to a select few who needed it. I won’t get into who these
inventors were, or anything about our subculture, but the year 2400 marked
the end of that exclusivity. It was inevitable that the general population
would uncover the truths. So these inventors agreed to hand out some of
these technologies to some others, in some ways. Don’t ask me for details,
anything I happen to know about The Edge is still not common knowledge. What
I’ll tell you, however, is that The Vellani Ambassador operates under a
special form of FTL that was not a part of any agreement, with
Teagarden, or anyone else. That will probably never be made public. It’s too
powerful, it’s too dangerous, and it has some serious theoretical
applications that could quite literally destroy the universe. The reframe
engine, however, is a different story. That is what the Teaguardians use. It
caps out at 707c. That’s a fundamental physical limitation of the mechanism,
and there’s no going beyond it.”
“Okay. I’m not picky. Even simply being on par with them would be useful.”
“Well, I’m not an engineer, I don’t know how to build a reframe engine. The
way I understand it, it’s only half of the equation. In order to reach
maximum reframe, you have to already be able to reach maximum sublight. Can
the Tangent do that?”
Reed sighed. “It can’t. It uses classical fusion, not antimatter.”
“That’s going to be a problem,” Tertius said. “Let me put it this way, if
this thing were moving at its maximum speed, and traveled one light year,
how long would it feel like on the ship?”
Reed tapped on his wrist device to make the calculation. “About 1.73 years,
but it would take two years in realtime.”
Tertius nodded. “If someone smarter than me installed a reframe engine, it
would take you 1.73 years. That’s what you would experience, and that’s how
much time would pass for everyone not on the ship. That’s what the reframe
engine does. It makes those two numbers the same. It doesn’t just
arbitrarily go fast. You still have to reach certain speeds, the engine just
consolidates the reference frames. It reframes the passage of time so
everyone ends up on the same page.”
Reed leaned his head back at hearing this, and regarded Tertius. “That’s why
there’s a maximum speed overall. You’re not actually breaking the light
barrier.”
“Bingo.”
“But this Ambassador, it goes faster. It indeed breaks the light barrier.
True FTL.”
“I wouldn’t tell you how it worked, even if I understood it. I won’t even
name it for you, because that alone would give you too much
information.”
“Would they be willing to help, though?” Reed pressed. “Maybe they can just
pull us away once, and then leave us wherever, just so we can find someplace
to hide, and maybe some lasting peace.”
Tertius looked up at the walls and ceiling. “The VA’s mission is not unlike
yours. They rescue people from bad situations. The difference is, they
didn’t steal their ship to do it. The intelligence that designed it is still
there. Well...the person who designed the special FTL tech isn’t, but they
gave their contribution away freely. Anyway, the people they rescue are
innocent. The people they’re rescuing them from? Not so much.
You...are neither. Mirage would understand why you did what you did, but she
wouldn’t reward you for it. She would expect you to accept the consequences
of your actions. I know her well, I can hear her say that in my head. Before
you ask, the person who came up with the magical FTL isn’t available
until...” He tapped on his handheld device. “Let me do my own
calculations...August. And even if we were able to find him on that date, he
would only be able to help you for a day, and then you would have to wait a
whole year for his return.”
“Huh?” Reed didn’t understand all this FTL stuff, but he wasn’t even
following the logic of what Tertius just said.
“It doesn’t matter,” Tertius replied, shaking his head. “The point is, it
can’t be done. I would love to help, but it’s just not gonna happen. I can
reach out to Mirage, but I wouldn’t hold my breath if I were you. And if by
some miracle, she does say yes, you’re not keeping the Tangent. It would be
like trying to stuff a skyscraper in the trunk of your car. At best,
she would ferry all the people somewhere safe.”
“That’s all I can ask.” Reed pulled up his contact card. “You can reach me
any time. It has my quantum signature on it if she’s on the other side of
the universe, and wants to talk to me personally. Now, before I leave you,
how big is this reframe engine?”
“I think it scales to the size of the vessel,” Tertius answered. “I can
probably get you the specs, but you’re gonna be done with the evacuation in,
what, a few months? It’s gonna take longer than that for you to build one
from scratch.”
“I’ll keep that in mind. Thank you, Mister Valerius. I’ll let you get back
to your family now. Please do stay in touch. I’ll give you anything you
need.”
Reed walked away and returned to his bridge office.
Shasta was already there, which was good. “Hey. I wanted to let you know,
Vasily has been asking for you. I have no idea what it’s about.”
“That can wait,” Reed decided, possibly forever. “We have more important
things to worry about. I need ideas for how we can prolong the southern
evacuation. We need to stall for time while we come up with a more long-term
solution to our little problem.”
Shasta considered it for a moment. “Well, if that’s what we need, that
unauthorized express trip was actually good news. Maybe we need more time to
inspect all the tethers. Maybe the constant up and down placed too much
stress on them, and they all require maintenance. And maybe to prevent that
from being a problem again, we need to slow the trips moving forward.”
“Okay, those are all good ideas. Let’s start working on it, but obviously
don’t explain to anyone why.”
“I don’t even know why,” Shasta admitted.
“Good. I’ll tell you later so it’s easier for you to spread the new plan.
Slower ascents and descents. But not too bad. It doesn’t need to take
years, and in fact, that would backfire on us. Just maybe another month.”
“Got it, I’ll talk to Trilby to calculate the math on that. He won’t ask
questions.”
“Actually, I need to talk to him myself. I’ll go with you.” His device
beeped, so he stopped to check it.
It was a message from Tertius.
Found this while I was digging up the specifications for the reframe
engine. I didn’t realize that The Shortlist gave Teagarden access to this
tech. It might have come in handy a few months ago.
Reed tapped on the file, and read the overview. “On second thought, I’ll
talk with Trilby later. Go ahead and do your thing. I need to set up a
meeting with someone else.”
It was only a few hours later. Reed was back in the dusty hot interrogation
room of a virtual environment. President Burkhart Abrams resolved in front
of him, sitting in the chair. “What am I doing here, Ellis? Something wrong
with the evacuation? Can’t stay in place? Are you demanding pizza for all
the gunmen and hostages?”
Reed threw a tablet on the table hard enough to make it break in the real
world, but it landed undamaged. “If you already knew, then this won’t come
as a surprise, but if you didn’t know, then I encourage you to verify
it...quietly.” He needed to test him.
Abrams reluctantly picked up the tablet, and started looking over the info.
He threw it down with nearly as much gusto. “This reads like science
fiction.”
“It’s not, it’s real. I’m guessing you didn’t know about it, because you’re
not that good of a liar. So now you have to ask yourself, for the first time
in all of this, are we on the same side?”
“Why the hell would we be on the same side? Teagarden is only letting you do
this because you have leverage. You and I are not friends.”
“What about Matar Galo? Is she a friend?”
“She’s my superior officer.”
“Right.” Reed leaned forward, and repeated, “right” as he was swiping to the
next page. “And because she’s your superior, she had no obligation to tell
you about this.”
“If it’s true...if it exists, then no, of course she didn’t. She didn’t
invent military secrets. What are you driving at here?”
Reed shook his head. “You commanded two Teaguardians for Proxima Doma. These
people were your friends. You were here to protect them, and the
one time when they really needed you, you couldn’t do shit.
You just sat there, staring at the screen, utterly hopeless. Useless. A
giant paperweight floating in space.” He angrily pointed at the tablet. “If
you had this kind of technology, you may have been able to save them all.”
Abrams scoffed and shook his head.
“Maybe not all, but a lot; at least more. I wouldn’t have needed to steal a
damn thing. It wouldn’t have occurred to me. I just didn’t think we had any
other options. But she—she had this. Your military had this.” He
swiped over again. “Apparently, Gatewood has it too. Why does Gatewood have
it? Nobody lives there!”
“You’re right. This would have been a game-changer, but if she didn’t
come here with it, she must have had her reasons. Maybe it’s not ready.
Maybe only a tiny shuttle has a prototype of it. We don’t know. This
document doesn’t say anything about the actual operational deployment. It
just claims that it exists, and it’s in the Teagarden’s privileged data
vault. I’m not going to ask how you got your hands on it, but this...this
means nothing. It proves nothing.”
“Burkhart, this is real. They have teleportation, like freakin’ Star Trek.
They left your friends to die when they could have just beamed them into the
sky. They didn’t even read you in. They did nothing.” Reed pointed to his
own chest. “I did something. I came here. I risked everything to save the
people that you were sworn to defend. Aren’t you angry about that? I
would be livid. I am.”
“Maybe I am. Maybe I believe you, and I’ve never been more pissed off about
anything in my whole life. What the hell does it matter? The south is
stable. The elevators are working. There’s no point in rocking the boat now.
Just finish your mission, and turn yourself in, like you promised.”
“I never promised that.”
Abrams dismissed it. “That’s not my problem. They’re not gonna give us
teleportation. What are you gonna do? Try to steal it?”
Reed shook his head. “No, not that. Like you said, we don’t know where it
is. But I need to steal something else, and to make up for being unable to
do anything for the Proxima Domanians before I showed up...I want you to
help me.”
Farther Than I Can Throw (Part VII)
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Reed Ellis and his people were better prepared for this mutiny than the last
one, when they only had about a week to plan. This time, it was months, but
the mission was four times harder. Actually, it was probably harder than
that because the Teaguardians were infinitely more competent than the
security guards on the Tangent. The platform could be moved with four fusion
torches. It was designed for balance and power. But those torches could be
removed, and that was how it was meant to be most of the time for a stable
geostationary orbit. The only reason the torches had stayed on for this long
was because they were evacuating from the poles, and stationkeeping in these
positions was a whole hell of a lot more difficult. They were, at last,
about to be removed, but outsiders were not expecting it. They assumed the
Tangent would be returned to Bungula while the mutineers boarded a
Teaguardian, and faced judgment. Well, they were boarding all right, though
not for judgment, but self-preservation.
Matar Galo was expecting Reed to surrender, but they had other plans, and
everything had to be perfectly timed, because once someone noticed something
out of place, like the sudden detachment of the torches, or the near
complete abandonment of two of the Teaguardians, they would react. The last
of the evacuees were now gone, having been transported to other vessels, but
before the mutiny could begin, the stragglers had to be dealt with too. For
various reasons, these were the ones who chose to stay here for an extended
period of time. Tertius, Aeterna, and baby Dilara were here, along with
their associates, Breanna, and her people. Most of the others felt some debt
of gratitude to the Tangent, and an obligation to stick around and help out.
This was great, but it posed a problem now. He pointed to the shuttle. “This
is large enough to fit all of you. A course has been plotted for the
asteroid known as PC-1124E. It has become a staging ground for interstellar
journeys headed for the Varkas Reflex. VR is a popular destination for
evacuees looking to start new lives with the special energy credit
dispensations that you have all received since your exodus is not your
fault.
“Now, the reason this is being offered to you is because my people and I are
about to stage another mutiny. And the reason I set this shuttle aside is
because it has been stripped of its communications system. You will cruise
towards the asteroid at a fairly slow, fuel-saving speed, but not so slow
that it looks like there’s something wrong with you. You will not be able to
course correct, and not be able to reach out to anyone else. I have to do
this, because I can’t have any of you revealing the truth about what we’re
planning to do. I decided, instead of simply shipping you off, and wiping my
hands clean of you, that I would give you each a choice. You can stay, and
you can help, or you can stay, and stay out of the way. You just can’t
betray us.” He looked down and swept his foot across the floor a few times.
“Let’s call this seam the boundary. If you stay on that side, you get on
that shuttle, and leave the Tangent for good. If you come over here, you’re
with us, and you face the same consequences that we do. If we end up getting
caught anyway, you might argue that you were under duress, but I will argue
that you made the choice. Because that’s the truth. This is your choice. I’m
not here to sway you one way or the other.”
“Why are you doing this?” Breanna asked. “Exactly why, that is? Just so you
won’t get caught?”
“Yep, that’s it,” Reed explained. “There’s no convoluted secret agenda here.
We just don’t want to get in trouble, so we’re gonna keep fighting. We like
all of you, which is why we kept you around, but this isn’t your fight, and
we don’t expect you to stay. If you choose not to, I thank you for your
service.”
Without saying a word to Reed, or even to each other, Tertius and Aeterna
spun around, and began to walk into the shuttle. Reed let out a quiet sigh
of relief. He liked them as much as everyone else here—that was not a white
lie—but he couldn’t guarantee that baby’s safety. That was the thing about a
posthuman society. As advanced as they had become, infants and children were
still mortal. They were still developing, and thor brains were still
plastic. Digitizing them that young was a hurdle that researchers still had
not cleared. Around half of the helpers elected to join them in the shuttle
while the other half crossed that line. Breanna, Cashmere, Calypso, and
Notus expressed interest in taking a hands-on role in the mutiny, while the
majority of the rest didn’t want to fight, but still wanted to stay. It was
unclear what their motivations were, but they would be guarded in case it
was only a ruse so they would retain the ability to warn Teagarden of their
plans.
“Wait,” Reed said. “I forgot one thing, and it hopefully doesn’t change your
mind.” He snapped his fingers. One of his guards opened a door to let in two
more guards, who were escorting a chained up and gagged Vasily. “This man
did betray us, and I finally have my opportunity to be rid of him. Now that
we’ve finished the evacuation, I no longer need to worry about his
influence. These two fine guards have volunteered to hold onto him en route
to the asteroid. You will not be in danger from him. We rigged up a little
hock in there for him, but he will be present, and I understand if you feel
uncomfortable with that. Since I think you deserve to know, his crime...was
murder. The permanent kind.”
“And I would do it again!” one of Vasily’s guards shouted. He took out his
sidearm and shot his partner. Then he grabbed one of the men who was about
to get on the shuttle, to use as a human shield. “Now that I have your
attention, I want you to unlock my brother, get in that shuttle
yourself...Captain,” he spat, “and fly yourself out of here. As a
great man once said, I’m the captain now!”
“Packard. You’re brothers? Since when?” Reed questioned. It may have sounded
like an irrelevant question, but he needed to understand what he was dealing
with here.
“Since I’m not Packard at all, but figured out how to hijack his download,”
the guy who looked like Packard volleyed. “Ever since that Sorel guy took
over the consciousness backup department, your system has been for shite. It
wasn’t even hard.”
“We had to upgrade it, it created vulnerabilities. That won’t work a second
time. Now put down the gun, you dupe, and release the nice man. Last year,
you killed what many would consider an enemy combatant. Today, you have
someone innocent, which is a whole different ballgame. If you pull that
trigger, you’ll start losing sleep over it.”
“I’ll live,” the duplicate version of Vasily contended.
“But you won’t remember anything,” Tertius said as he was casually walking
down the ramp.
Dupe!Vasily’s eyes glazed over as he loosened his grip on the hostage, who
managed to pull himself away from his captor, and rush into the shuttle.
Dupe!Vasily, meanwhile, looked incredibly confused, and scared. When he
realized that he was holding a weapon, he dropped it to the floor. “I
don’t...I don’t know anything.”
“What do you mean by anything?” Reed questioned.
“Anything,” Tertius echoed. “He won’t be a problem anymore. His memories are
gone.” He picked up the gun, and held it up in offering to Reed. “If you
have the consciousness of the true owner of this body stored away somewhere,
you should be able to overwrite the parasite. If you don’t, I can try to
restore him myself.”
“Restore him how?” Reed asked while another guard secured Packard’s weapon.
He looked down at the now husk of Vasily’s host, who was now on his knees,
seemingly trying to figure out what his hands were all about. “You didn’t
even touch him. You didn’t do anything.”
Tertius shook his head. “I didn’t need to touch him. It’s just something I
can do.”
Reed stared at him for a moment, occasionally looking down at the victim
again, and also the other people in the room. “How much can you scale that
up?”
“Oh, God,” Tertius said before sighing. “That’s not what it’s for.”
“Let’s do it,” Aeterna said as she was coming up from behind him without her
baby. “We all know what the Captain is thinking. This mutiny is happening,
whether we help or not. We have the chance to make it bloodless.”
“We could stop it altogether,” Tertius argued, “by erasing everyone’s
memories.”
Aeterna placed a hand upon her father’s forearm. She looked over at Reed.
“This man, and his people, came for us. They came for all of us, and they
did it as efficiently and as humanely as possible. Now they need to get away
safely. These mortal affairs; we inserted ourselves into them. We are
partially to blame for what happened on Doma. It cost lives, it might have
cost more if not for people like Reed Ellis. Let us do one last thing for
the humans before we take ourselves off the board and focus on my daughter.”
“This is why we lost touch for two centuries, my sweet girl,” Tertius said
to her. “You wanted to help, I wanted to walk away. But now you have to
think about the baby.”
“I am,” Aeterna insisted. “I want to teach her to do the right thing, and I
want to be able to teach it by example.”
Tertius thought about it. “Fine, but we’re putting their memories on a
timer.” He approached Reed, and pointed at him fairly aggressively. “You
will have one day to bug out, which I believe gives you a head start of
around two light years. I suggest you don’t leave a trail. These people may
be your enemies, but they deserve to move on with their lives in whatever
way they choose, so I won’t be taking their agencies away forever.”
“That is more than I could ask,” Reed told him. “I don’t know how you do
what you’re evidently about to do, but I want you to know how grateful I
am.”
Aeterna took a half step forward. “We’ll need a list, of everyone whose
memories you don’t want suppressed. Preferably with faces.”
“We’re also gonna wipe your memories of this conversation,” Tertius added.
“You’ll know what happened, but not who, or how it was possible.”
“That’s fine,” Reed promised.
Reed was aware that people’s memories were going to be erased. He believed
that. He trusted that. Seeing it was a whole different animal. This was no
longer a mutiny, but a humanitarian mission. He had Thistle compile a list
of everyone they wanted to be immune to the temporary memory suppression.
The rest were wiped. After it was done, a mass silent confusion fell upon
the Proxima Centauri system. The targets, which were mostly Teaguardians,
though some Bungulans too, didn’t freak out. They had no idea who or where
they were, but they were calm and trusting. Instead of fighting them, Reed
and the mutineers spent most of the energy on helping them.
They rounded up anyone with memory loss and consolidated them to three
Teaguardian ships that they were not intending to commandeer. They told them
to sit tight and wait for medical assistance to arrive. The targets accepted
their instructions without question, without a single voice of dissent.
There was only one hiccup. Well, two if you counted the infighting. All of
the key participants were in their first and only face-to-face meeting. “Why
the hell were my people targeted?” President Abrams questioned with
surprising anger.
“We don’t need them anymore. We don’t need them to hand over your two ships
willingly. We are facing no opposition.”
“That wasn’t the agreement,” Abrams argued. “I don’t like seeing my soldiers
like this. They’re like...children. They’re dumb children. It’s sad. They’re
all sad.”
“It’s better this way,” Reed contended. “Now they never betrayed Teagarden.
When they wake up from this—and they will wake up from this—they will be
able to claim plausible deniability. Not even that, they will have done
nothing. They won’t have to defend their actions at all. Honestly, I
probably should have kept you off the immunity list too, to keep your hands
clean. If I had had more time, I might have, but the window was closing. We
had to act, either with the original plan, or the new one. There was no
third option to delay entirely.”
“Oh, actually, there was,” Abrams said. “You could have turned yourself in,
which was the noble thing to do. It still is.” It took more than the one
conversation to convince him to get on board with this, and he still fought
the plan every step of the way. Reed regretted making him immune. He should
have put him on one of those Teaguardians as just another oblivious docile.
“He’s right,” Ajax agreed. He survived the runaway shuttle last year by
jumping to a new body on the surface of Bungula after his death. He
maintained his captaincy, and had since become an ad hoc liaison between the
Teagarden forces and the Bungulan military. No one ever seemed to suspect
his true loyalties, and he had restrained himself from demanding control of
the Tangent. Which was actually kind of weird, because the baseline command
structure for a captain included overseeing 256 troops, and you only needed
a certain sized ship to accommodate that number. An elevator platform like
the Tangent didn’t need a higher crew count, but it was orders of magnitude
larger, and probably the best assignment this side of Earth. “I would have
gotten my platform back.”
“I’m sorry I couldn’t talk to you about this before, but I didn’t know that
mind-wiping was an option until it was time to act,” Reed defended. “But
this is objectively better, so I don’t understand why we’re still arguing.
There’s work to be done. Those Teaguardians aren’t going to attach
themselves to the Tangent.”
“They kind of are,” Delegator Chariot reasoned. “I believe in our crew. This
meeting is important. You have still not told us how you suppressed
all of these people’s memories. You didn’t give them anything to eat or
drink, you didn’t disperse any sort of bioweapon, or we would all be
affected. Unless it was a DNA-targeting pathogen, in which case, you would
have needed to plan this for days at the shortest. So are you lying? Did you
cook something up in secret, or was it really just earlier today, and you
genuinely accomplished the impossible?”
Reed blinked. “I don’t know.”
Abrams rolled his eyes. “What?”
“I don’t...I don’t remember.”
“Oh my God, you’re claiming you were bit by your own creation? You expect us
to believe that?” Abrams scoffed.
“He’s telling the truth,” Shasta said. “I don’t remember either. I remember
knowing that this was going to happen, and that we asked for it, but I don’t
remember who or how, or any details. We may have asked for our own memories
to be altered, possibly permanently, or they did it without our consent. But
I know that the targets will recover. I know that we will get
through this if we stick together, and stop arguing.”
Abrams crossed his arms and shook his head. “It smells fishy. Someone with
the technology to do this doesn’t just let us use it for nothing.”
Ajax looked to his left. “You’ve been quiet. I have never seen you without a
bag of opinions over your shoulders. Can we trust Reed?”
Vasily nodded, also with his arms crossed, but in a more authoritative than
closed-off way. “I trust Captain Reed Ellis more than anyone in this galaxy.
If he says that this will work, then this will work. I say we keep moving
those empty Teaguardians into position, fire up their fancy reframe engines,
and bolt.”
“I’m not bolting,” Ajax reminded the group.
“Neither am I,” Abrams said.
“As long as you don’t interfere,” Reed began, “that’s fine. No one has to go
anywhere. In fact, I will afford the same opportunity to all of my people.
They can pretend to have also lost their memories, and maybe the authorities
will go easy on them.” He paused for a moment. “I want to thank you all for
all of your help. I know it wasn’t easy, but I believe the history books
will shine a bright light upon us...eventually. If that is all, this meeting
can come to a close, and those staying behind can leave the Tangent.”
They all went their separate ways. Reed returned to his office, and found
someone sitting in his seat who he did not recognize. Her legs were propped
up on the desk, and she wasn’t scared of him at all. “Security!” he shouted
over his shoulder.
“They can’t hear you,” the mysterious woman explained.
“Security!” Reed shouted again. He turned to walk out of the room, but was
completely unable to. The door that was meant to lead to the bridge had
become a mirror. He reached out to it, but instead of hitting glass, his
hand slipped right through. Meanwhile, that hand reached out
towards him, superpositioning with itself going the opposite
direction. He stepped forwards, all the way through, and ended up back in
his office, his back now turned to the impossible mirror.
“Tripy, right?” the woman said. “You can thank my liver for that little
trick.”
“Who are you, and what do you want?”
“The chrysalis bioprinting room you have. I made that for you. I gave you
that tech. I knew you needed it.”
“I’ve been wondering who our mysterious benefactor was.”
“Now you know.”
“I don’t, actually.”
She stood up. “I don’t really use my name anymore. I try to interact with
others as little as possible. I used to go by Leona Delaney, but if you ever
meet someone who looks like me, it won’t be me, and she won’t remember
this.”
“You’re, like, a future version of her, or something? You’re a time
traveler? Time travel is real?”
She laughed. “Of course time travel is real. Teleportation is real, ain’t
it? That’s just a form of time travel.”
“And the second question?”
“You can’t daisy chain reframe engines,” she began. “It would be like
duct-taping four pairs of scissors together. You end up with no scissors.
This won’t work.”
“Trilby assures me that he’s synced them up properly.”
“Compared to the woman who invented them, Trilby is a drooling buffoon. I’m
telling you, don’t do this. The results are unpredictable. Whatever course
you laid in will become meaningless.”
He approached her menacingly, but he had no plans to harm her. “I don’t know
you. I don’t trust you. I trust my people.” He looked at his watch. “Last I
checked, we were on schedule, which means we’ll be leaving in less than
thirty minutes. I’ve already given the greenlight. You can kill me right
here, and they’ll still launch.”
“I’m not your boss,” Leona clarified. “I’m just warning you.”
“Either way, you should leave. These people are my responsibility, and
whatever comes to pass, I’ll get them through it.”
She shook her head in disapproval. “No one thinks they’re Dr. Smith.
Everyone thinks they’re Captain Janeway.”
“Thank you. You can go now.”
Leona literally disappeared. When he turned around, the magic mirror was
gone. A half hour later, they spooled up the antimatter engines of the
Teaguardians, now affixed to the Tangent where the fusion torches once were.
They activated the reframe engines, and flew away from Proxima Doma. The
traveler turned out to be right. They got lost immediately. But at least
they weren’t in prison.







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