The First Explorer
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    When Debra Lesley Lovelace was a very young child, she lived in the most
    dangerous region of the human continent on Ansutah. The shore was visible
    from a shipping lane that the Maramon used to transport goods between their
    own territories. The white monsters were not aware that the humans were
    there, or anywhere on their world, and this was the most valuable secret in
    the universe. Colonization was forbidden on these lands, thanks to a
    sympathetic group of highly influential Maramon from the very early days who
    declared it sacred ground. The humans were able to remain an incredibly
    well-kept secret, even as their numbers grew into the billions over the
    course of thousands of years. Despite their own unsustainable numbers in
    modern times, most Maramon respected the boundaries devoutly, and did not
    dare go near the humans. Individually, however, this rule was sometimes
    broken. The crew of these ships that passed by would occasionally take a
    detour, and rest on Shining Beach. It was an ironic name, as it was always
    very foggy and grim.
  
  
    It was the responsibility of the humans who lived in the area to make sure
    that this problem did not spiral out of control. There were superstitious
    rumors that landing on the continent would result in the death of the
    trespassers. So the humans could not simply hide out, and wait until the
    Maramon rowed back to their ship, to resume their journey. The warning had
    to be enforced. They made war. They had to, to protect everyone else living
    peacefully inland. Peacefully, blissfully ignorant, and safe. There were
    other stations on other shores, but this was the most trafficked, and the
    most dangerous. Debra learned to kill when she was three years old, and she
    killed her first Maramon when she was four. She knows how to use a gun,
    despite what these men might believe.
  
  
    “I pegged you for my biggest fan.” Bronach Oaksent doesn’t look the least
    bit concerned. It’s just some middle-aged woman with a peashooter.
  
  
    This is too much. She once admired him for his bravery and resilience, but
    her impression of him was foolish and naïve. Now that she’s standing up
    close, she realizes that he’s nothing like that. He’s been hoarding all this
    tech that the rest of them could have used on this lifeless planet. She
    can’t forgive him for it. The problem is, he doesn’t really know her, and
    probably wouldn’t care. So she has to make him. She has to incentivize him
    to apologize. “Don’t underestimate me!” she cries. They know nothing of her
    past as a Maramon Hunter. “I’m sick of everyone thinking they know who I am.
    But you never actually ask me about myself. You just make assumptions
    because maybe I complain a bit too much, and I don’t always take
    responsibility for my actions, and I find it easier to blame others for my
    problems! But you don’t know me! And it doesn’t give you the right to call
    me Airlock Karen!”
  
  
    “Okay, okay,” Bronach replies in a condescending tone. He’s still not
    getting it.
  
  
    She shakes the gun at him. “You could have made our lives a lot easier with
    your generator thing, but instead, you kept it to yourself! What kind of
    selfish son of a bitch are you? I mean, where do you get off?”
  
  
    “It was a test,” Oaksent claims weakly.
  
  
    “Oh, a test?” she mocks. “Test these bullets!” She fires the gun, but misses
    on purpose, because this is about teaching him a lesson, not killing him.
  
  
    Her plan backfires, immediately, and almost literally. He pulls out his own
    weapon, and tries to shoot her, but misses too when a masked man appears out
    of nowhere, and blocks it with his body. He stumbles back, but doesn’t fall.
    He’s likely wearing body armor. Now, this is a real hero.
  
  
    The mysterious kind rescuer removes his mask, and smiles back at her. It’s
    Elder, but clearly from the past, before he earned the moniker of Old Man.
    She has been such a bitch to him this whole time, and with good reason—might
    she add—but now she’s seeing him in a whole new light. Perhaps it’s the
    daring rescue, or the fact that she doesn’t like to go too long between
    being in love with someone. Or maybe it’s just that, unlike his duplicate a
    couple of meters away, he looks more her age. And maybe even...hot? This was
    clearly who he was before he became so annoying, self-important, and...and
    old.
  
  
    “My white knight,” Debra says, under her breath, but still probably loud
    enough for all three of them to hear.
  
  
    Hot!Elder lifts a small device in his hand, and hovers his thumb over a
    button on the top. “Oso gonplei nou ste odon.” He presses the button before
    anyone can stop him.
  
  
    A flash of light blasts out of the temporal generator disguised as a
    mountain. A wave of energy flows through all of them. For a few seconds,
    other people are standing beside them. It’s not just random strangers,
    though. It’s them. They’ve been duplicated several times. Some are standing
    up, others are still on the ground. They’re all looking confused, and in
    those few seconds, Debra wonders which one of the other versions of her is
    the real her. Is she the real one? Is none of them? Is she even
    considering this right now, or imagining that she is?
  
  
    While she’s in the middle of her existential crisis, a force begins to pull
    her away from the planet. She can feel herself being shredded like cheese,
    tugged in basically the same direction, but not in one piece. The planet
    falls away, as do the stars around her, which are stretching out to white
    streaks. A darkness begins to chomp on the front ends of the streaks, like a
    video game about dots that eat smaller dots. Before too long, it’s all
    black, though she can still feel herself being spirited away, and torn
    apart. Finally, it all stops. Now she’s just in the middle of nowhere, and
    apparently no longer has a body. She can’t feel anything, nor see anything
    but the infinite void. If this is death, it’s a pretty boring afterlife. She
    would like to speak to a manager.
  
  
    Debra hangs here in the nothingness for an unknown period of time. It’s
    hell, it must be, so she needs to figure out where she went wrong. Sure, she
    wasn’t the best person in the biverse, but she always tried to help, and
    doesn’t that merit some consideration? Every complaint she made was done in
    the service of making the world a better place. If she asked for a tofu
    burger with no ketchup, and they put ketchup on it, who was it helping if
    she kept quiet? They can only get better if they know that they’re doing
    something wrong. But people were always getting pissy with her, and now
    she’s in this god-forsaken void. How is that fair?
  
  
    It starts as a pinprick of light, in the corner of her eye. Well, she
    doesn’t have eyes anymore, but that’s how it seems anyway. She can’t force
    it to be fully in her field of vision. She can’t focus on it. She can’t
    focus on anything. Again, there’s no telling how long this lasts, but the
    point begins to grow. As it does so, it occurs to her that it’s not really
    an image. She’s not seeing anything. It’s more of an understanding.
    Yeah, that’s it. She’s gaining knowledge about the world around her,
    starting out with very little, but gaining more by the arbitrary unit of
    measurement. She realizes that she’s witnessing the big bang of the
    universe. She can feel the unimaginable density, the explosion of energy,
    and the expansion of space. It’s hotter than anything ever turns out to be
    in the future, and she can feel that, but of course it doesn’t hurt, because
    she doesn’t have a body anymore. The expansion continues, forming dust
    clouds, stars, and planets. Now she’s watching the whole history of reality,
    unfolding in her own mind. She starts to question this. Maybe she’s not just
    watching it happen. Maybe she’s making it happen. Maybe she is the
    universe. Maybe she’s God.
  
  
    “You’re not the universe, and you’re not God.” It’s a voice. Did she hear
    it, or just become aware of it?
  
  “Does it matter?” the voice replies.
  “Who are you?”
  “Aitchai,” the voice answers.
  “Who am I?”
  It waits a bit. “A baby aitchai.”
  “I don’t understand.”
  
    “I am the energy that pervades all universes in the bulk. I am everything,
    everywhere, all at once. And you...are a few things, in one place, but also
    all at once.”
  
  “I...still don’t understand.”
  
    “I don’t either. I just found you in my pocket. You’ve not always been this
    way, as an ethereal energy construct?”
  
  
    “Uh...no,” Debra says, not any less confused than before.
  
  
    “Perhaps we could both corporealize to make this an easier conversation to
    have. Your mind is preoccupied watching the passage of time. You need to
    focus on one thing, so that one thing makes sense. Make sense?”
  
  
    “Okay. Except I don’t know how to do that.”
  
  
    “The trick is to want it. That’s the only ingredient. Imagine yourself with
    a body. I can’t really do it unless you do it too, or we would stop being
    able to understand each other, so I can’t show you what I mean. You just
    have to try.”
  
  
    Debra is frustrated. This guy is being vague on purpose. She wants to
    scream, or at least calm herself down with a deep breath. And that’s what
    does it. Feeling the uncontrollable urge to have a physical reaction to this
    situation gives her the ability to make that happen. She has a body now, and
    so does he. Looks a bit like a nerd. She widens her eyes, afraid that he
    heard that thought of hers.
  
  
    He’s stretching his neck and yawning at the same time. “It must feel a bit
    odd to you now, having a body, but feeling nothing. When you get good at it,
    like me, you’ll begin to replicate the rest of the normal sensations. Touch
    is the hardest, followed closely by smell.”
  
  
    “I feel,” Debra contends. “I smell too, though I can’t describe it. I’ve
    never smelled this before.”
  
  
    “Interesting,” Aitchai says. “I suppose you’re so new at it that your brain
    instinctively gave your senses back. Good on ya.”
  
  
    “Great. Now tell me what this is. Are you...the manager?” It can’t be that
    simple, can it?
  
  
    He laughs. “I suppose you could think of me in that way, but I would argue
    that I’m more like the infrastructure in this metaphor; the building. I am
    that exists. I control nothing.”
  
  
    “But you could, if you wanted to. You could rewrite reality to your
    liking? You could destroy all, seed new life.”
  
  
    He seems uncomfortable with these suggestions. “I could, yes. I don’t.”
  
  “Wasted opportunity.”
  “Says the baby,” Aitchai snaps back.
  
    “What does that mean? Will I one day be as powerful as you, not confined to
    only one universe, or whatever?”
  
  
    “No. I guess that’s a bad metaphor. You’re more like a pet. You’ll never be
    greater than you already are. It’s not something that you learn. It’s what I
    became when I was made, and you will always be what you became when you
    became it.”
  
  “I should be offended,” Debra decides.
  
    “That’s your human side talking. You’ll get over it one day.”
  
  
    “Is time even real for beings like us?”
  
  
    He nods. “That’s a common misconception, that time has no meaning beyond the
    boundaries of a brane. But the truth is that time matters more here
    than anywhere. It’s the only time that exists in its purest form. Yes, I
    feel time. I experience all of time.”
  
  
    “You can’t expect me to be like you, sitting on the sidelines, changing
    nothing.”
  
  
    Aitchai crosses his arms, balancing his chin on the base of his palm while
    his fingers are curled up against his cheek. Suddenly, he pulls his hand
    away, and snaps his fingers. They’re still in the void, but now standing
    underneath a huge stone fountain. Water is falling from the lip in a wide
    sheet, like the perfect waterfall. An empty swimming pool materializes
    underneath. They’re standing on the edge, watching the pool fill up slowly.
    He points at the fountain. “Change the shape of that water. Change how it
    falls into the pool.”
  
  
    “Easy.” Debra reaches out, and sticks her arm through it. The water begins
    to cascade over her skin, and continues to fall into the pool where it
    belongs. She’s pretty clever. It may not have changed much, but it fulfills
    the requirement.
  
  
    He looks down. “Hm. Nothing’s really changed,” he reasons. “It’s all still
    going in there. So, try to stop the water from going into the pool
    entirely.”
  
  
    Debra smirks. He’s asking her to do something physical, but they are not in
    the physical world. This is all in their shared consciousness. The rules
    don’t apply here, not for the water, and not for anything else she’ll want
    to change about reality. She puts the fountain at her back, and lifts her
    hands up like a righteous evangelical. The water shifts directions, flowing
    over their heads, and falling onto the ground a few meters away from them.
    It’s not going into the pool anymore.
  
  
    Aitchia doesn’t break eye contact with her. He waves his arm behind him, and
    materializes a second pool. The water begins to fall into that instead. “No
    significant change. The pool is identical.”
  
  “That’s cheating.”
  
    “I’m illustrating a point,” Aitchai begins. “It doesn’t matter where you put
    the water, it all ends the same. Sure, it’s mixed up differently. Different
    atoms bond to different partners, but who cares? It’s just water, falling
    into a meaningless pit. As I said, you will forget the old ways one day. You
    will stop seeing the atoms, and start seeing the pool. And then you’ll stop
    caring what happens to it. Trust me, I made plenty of changes before I
    noticed that nothing made any real difference. You’ll get there too.”
  
  “Never.”
  He smiles. “Okay, Karen.”
  
    She hates that name. “You know more about me than you let on.”
  
  
    “I am everything,” he echoes himself from before.
  
  
    “I’m everything else,” she says with determination.
  
  
    “Is that what you want? You want me to give you the one brane, and stay out
    of it?” He sounds sincere.
  
  “Would you?”
  “It depends.”
  “On what?”
  
    “On which brane we’re talking about. You got triplets.”
  
  
    Debra looks away to focus on the passage of time again. She’s watching it
    all from the highest vantage point possible. The universe splits in two. One
    twin floats off away from the other, while the larger one splits a second
    time, but doesn’t let the third baby go. Hogarth Pudeyonavic. You know her
    too.”
  
  “I do,” he confirms quietly.
  
    “She’s as powerful as me.” Hogarth too was born from an explosion. It took
    her some time to figure them out, but once she did, she became one of the
    most powerful beings in the universe. She began to create, like a god,
    starting out small before moving on to more ambitious projects. A sister
    universe to her own was her most impressive creation. And that makes her a
    threat to Debra’s own power, whether she realizes it or not. “She’s a
    rival.”
  
  
    “You don’t have to frame it that way. You can exist in harmony. This is not
    a competition.”
  
  
    “She may have done what she did on her own, but her triplet is smaller.”
    Debra rewinds and zooms in to watch as Hogarth uses her vast scientific
    knowledge and cosmic powers to literally create an entire universe according
    to her own design. She calls it Fort Underhill for some reason. “I can take
    her.”
  
  
    “You don’t have to frame it that way,” Aitchai repeats.
  
  
    “Thank you, you can go now. I’ll take the big one.”
  
  
    “Very well,” he concedes. You are now the new...Powers That Be.”
  

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