Starting in the year 2154, the city of Aljabara was gearing up for another
election. They expected to elect Sekundas Drumpf for a third term, but there
was no guarantee of that, and there were plenty of hopefuls who sought to
unseat him. He had no interest in seeing this happen, so he made an argument
for cancelling the election altogether. He was already in charge, and things
were going great, so why mess with a good thing? According to reports, the war
against the Thicket terrorists couldn’t be going any better. The truth was
that he had made little to no progress on this front, but the people didn’t
need to know that. He inflated numbers, and reframed narratives, and spun the
truth, and also just made up flat-out lies. He made himself look like the best
thing that had ever happened to this planet. He made it seem like people
barely survived before him, and that they wouldn’t survive the future without
him. He claimed to have a mage remnant seer in his pocket, who regularly
warned him of oncoming events, and that only he knew what to do to protect his
constituents. He swayed a lot of people using these tactics, but he couldn’t
convince everyone. That was okay, because he didn’t need everyone. He really
only needed the military. He had no legal authority to get rid of the election
ballots, but get rid of them he did. He declared himself the autonomous
authority over the entire planet, and challenged anyone to disagree with him
on this matter. There were a few takers, but they were swiftly removed from
their mortal coil, and no one dared push him towards the edge again. It didn’t
bother him at all that his actions meant that they were no longer living under
a republic, but a dictatorship. He wanted more power, and the only way to get
it was to hold onto what he already had. Democracy could go take a hike for
all he cared. He insisted they continue to call it The Republic, however, to
make him look good, and to make the city look good, in case Earth ever found
out about them. The history books didn’t even acknowledge a change in
governmental type when looking back at this period of time, for all the
official documentation suggested that nothing had been altered. The Durune
were now living in a totalitarian state, and it didn’t feel like anything
could make it the least bit better.
-
Current Schedule
- Sundays
- The Advancement of Mateo MaticTeam Matic prepares for a war by seeking clever and diplomatic ways to end their enemy's terror over his own territory, and his threat to others.
- The Advancement of Mateo Matic
- Weekdays
- PositionsThe staff and associated individuals for a healing foundation explain the work that they do, and/or how they are involved in the charitable organization.
- Positions
- Saturdays
- Extremus: Volume 5As Waldemar's rise to power looms, Tinaya grapples with her new—mostly symbolic—role. This is the fifth of nine volumes in the Extremus multiseries.
- Extremus: Volume 5
- Sundays
Thursday, September 24, 2020
Wednesday, September 23, 2020
Microstory 1458: New War on Terrorism
Sekundas Drumpf won reëlection for leader of Aljabara, which was the first
time that ever happened on Durus since the Republic was founded. People liked
change, and he gave it to them, and five years later, there was no reason to
believe he wouldn’t keep changing things. He even promised to undo some of the
policies he himself came up with in the first place, as if his past self were
less of a man than the version of him in the present. People didn’t see this
as contradictory or bizarre. The past was always worse, no matter what, even
if this was objectively untrue. He had their confidence, and he had their
votes. There was some evidence that the ballots had been tampered with by
Drumpf’s loyalists, but no proof, and there was definitely nothing connecting
him to this alleged crime. He would later get rid of any semblance of
democracy altogether, but for now, he had work to do. He wanted to make this
the best planet in the galaxy, and in order to do that, he had to take control
over the whole planet. The first change he made was to his own administration.
They were no longer going to call this the government of Aljabara, but of
Durus, so that if they did one day expand beyond this one city, they would
have control over everything. It wasn’t just about the future, though. It also
made it a lot easier for him to go after what he considered to be man’s
greatest enemy. Now that younger generations of girls would be indoctrinated
into the belief that they could do nothing on their own, it was time to deal
with The Thicket. These women could never change—never be taught. He figured
they needed to die, like a household pest. He and his closest allies
desperately wanted to go to war, and to leave no prisoners, but it wasn’t
going to be easy. Surprisingly few were in favor of violence against women, or
anyone. There was only one way to change their minds, and that was to reframe
the narrative. The Thicket was already labeled an insurgent organization, but
had yet to be fully recognized as a terrorist group. Making this change
required diplomatic addendums, but starting there would have been a waste of
time. He needed to make sure the public was on his side first, so he just
started slipping the word into his speeches, increasing frequency each time,
and boosting applause every moment he could. Once the civilians were convinced
that the rebels were terrorists, it was easy to get it changed in the official
documentation. That in turn made it easier to get the necessary support to
start physical attacks. Until then, they had been trying to protect the city’s
borders, but had yet to go on the offensive in any significant way. It took
Drumpf several months, but he finally got approval. Then it took even longer
for his army to find their opponents, who had grown used to hiding deep in the
thicket. The War on Terrorism began in 2151, and never really technically
ended, even when Hokusai Gimura showed up, and forced huge changes to the
government. They never reached a peace treaty, or a ceasefire, or anything.
They just kept fighting when they could, and taking strategic breaks when the
intelligence dried up. A lot of other things happened in the meantime.
Tuesday, September 22, 2020
Microstory 1457: Extremist in Command
Sekundas Poppet Drumpf was, in no uncertain terms, an extremist. A lot of
people were happy with their little misogynistic society, because they
didn’t know of a better way, but he was into it. He was super into it. He
hated women, and thought that they were only good for making babies. There
were many tasks that men didn’t want to have to do, like laundry, and
keeping the household clean, but Poppet wasn’t like that. Men did everything
better, and he was willing to do the dirty work if it meant a woman wasn’t
involved. If he had it his way, every woman would be locked in a little room
with the bare minimum: a bed, sink, shower, and toilet. They would gestate
the babies, birth them, and then go back to their bed to start the whole
process over again. There weren’t a whole lot of people on Durus who agreed
with him to this degree. Sure, women couldn’t be trusted, but they shouldn’t
be locked up, and not because that was inhumane, but because at the very
least, they were useful as slaves. Still, he was popular, because just like
President Summerfield’s lies, he was loud and unrelenting, and people
absolutely loved that in a leader. The only reason Summerfield allowed him
to run for the second-in-command position was because the insanity would
hopefully distract from Summerfield’s attempts at pushing the world towards
progress. When he was removed from office, his whole plan backfired, for
once Poppet found himself in the number one spot, there was no stopping him.
He decided to not take the position of President. Earth had a lot of
presidents, and they also had a lot of women in power. He didn’t want any
part of that, so he decided to keep his old title, even though it obviously
indicated he was meant to be second, and not first. He then proceeded to win
the election four years later, and became the only two-term primary leader
the Republic had ever seen. He wouldn’t stop there, but that is a story for
another day. Until then, he wanted to make some changes in Aljabara, whether
the people wanted him to or not.
The biggest changes he made were to the education system. He decided that
women weren’t the issue, but the way they were raised as girls. They weren’t
taught to be independent, but they weren’t taught to be submissive either.
He deemed this too problematic. He knew no one would go for his crazy locked
half-room idea, but education was the easiest avenue towards getting close
to his goals. People cared deeply about education, but they also easily
conceded to the fact that they didn’t know what the hell to do with it. If
someone in power told them schools should be run a certain way, well, then
they just sort of trusted that, as long as that person said other things
that they liked. So he knew he would be able to get away with preventing
girls from being educated the right way. He didn’t stop them from learning
at all, but he only let them learn the things he felt weren’t important, or
useful. Language was an acceptable subject, because it was irrelevant to
their everyday lives. Understanding grammar wasn’t going to help them rise
up, and demand equality. Maybe they could conduct impactful speeches, but
without any understanding of politics, their words would be empty, and
people would recognize that. Likewise, they could make all the art and music
they wanted, but it wasn’t going to make them any less inferior to men.
Education wasn’t the only thing that Drumpf went after in his first few
years, but it was the most significant. He did all these terrible things,
and he still got reëlected. He was unstoppable.
Monday, September 21, 2020
Microstory 1456: Eleventh and Final
The forming of the Thicket rebellion did a lot more for the women’s rights
movements than the government realized. It started further back then that,
though, when Ladytown was first conceived. These developments inspired a lot
of people in Aljabara, and made them question the roles they played in the
world. If these women were strong enough to fight for their rights, were
they strong enough to fight for everyone’s? That’s what one candidate to be
the eleventh, and ultimately final, president had in mind. They were a
republic, and there was nothing inherent about that which prevented them
from being completely equal. He didn’t even have to look at Earthan history
to understand that women should be treated fairly. The world had become
ridiculous, and he felt that it was his duty to correct it; to make things
better for the whole world, including members of the Thicket. He knew he
needed to be smart about it, though. Moderates had been running for
president since the beginning, and not one of them had ever won. The louder
and more absurd the candidate’s platform, the more votes they received. Even
in the early days, people were crying for change. It didn’t matter to them
whether the promised change was good for them or not; things just had to be
different than they were before. That was why no president had lasted more
than a single term so far. Presidential candidate Summerfield knew that he
wasn’t going to get a second term, because of the plans he had for his
tenure, but he assumed it would at least last for the whole five years.
Unfortunately, he came on too strong. During his campaign, he was louder
than his opponent by far, and often didn’t even let him speak during
debates. People liked that about him, that he wasn’t willing to even listen
to the other side of an argument. Even those who were in favor of the things
that his opponent claimed liked to hear Summerfield blather on. He was
interesting, and exciting, and most importantly, he was new. So that won him
the seat, but he wasn’t able to hold on to it, because the people quickly
learned that he had been lying the whole time.
He began to pass executive order after executive order, changing the way
people lived their lives. At first, this was okay. He was overruling
everything that the representative congress was trying to do, and people
still appreciated this behavior. Once people were used to his tactics, he
started trying to slip in other things under the radar. He gave permission
for a wife to travel to the store alone, as long as she made it quick, and
her husband would be waiting for her when she returned. He increased the
maximum age a young woman was allowed to be before her father had to hand
her off to a husband. He even tried to let mothers raise their own children
without constant male supervision, but people were not happy with this. This
was the last straw, and they recalled him for it. He was the
shortest-lasting president in history, having only been in office for a few
months. He went down in history as the planet’s first and only execution.
Though an awful place, they at least had a law against capital punishment,
which they only waived for this one exception. People weren’t happy about
this either, but there was nothing they could do about it. Sekundas Poppet
Drumpf was President Summerfield’s second-in-command, and instead of pushing
for a new election, or a promotion, he just declared himself the new leader.
Sekundas was now simply the highest ranking official in the government. That
was when the world turned to shit.
Sunday, September 20, 2020
The Advancement of Mateo Matic: Sunday, July 6, 2121
They were standing on the edge of the endeavor to replace old Kansas City
with wildlife. It wasn’t quite finished yet. They were only here to make the
transition to another parallel reality called the Fourth Quadrant. It made
Mateo wonder, if the main sequence was the first reality, and the Parallel
was considered the second, and this was the fourth, what was the third? And
were there any more that he didn’t know about? Being alternate realities,
but not alternate timelines, these apparently always existed, yet he only
heard about them recently. He learned a long time ago that the word recently
literally meant nothing. Were these other worlds really so secret that he
spent years as a time traveler having not heard so much as a hint about
them, or had people just been deliberately keeping him in the dark?
He shook off his introspection, and started to focus on the task at hand.
According to Ellie’s calculations—which Leona handily verified for her—when
they landed, the people in the Quadrant would believe that it was June 12,
2031, and that they had been stuck in this city for nearly seven years now.
Also according to their calculations, for every day that passed in the main
sequence, only an hour and forty-three minutes passed inside the temporal
bubble. If they didn’t fix their problem within that span of time, they
would return to find it to be July 7, 2121. This meant that Leona would no
longer be in the timestream, and wouldn’t return for a whole year. It was
unclear how the Cassidy cuffs worked in this scenario. It wouldn’t be the
first time the wearers were separated by time. Jupiter had some means of
toggling them on and off, or even adjusting how wearers were connected to
each other. They shouldn’t have to worry about that, as Missy’s power was
pretty much instantaneous. As soon as they got there, she could do her
thing, and take down the bubble that Tauno Nyland created to trap the
duplicates of the Kansas City Metropolitan Area. Mateo had a feeling,
nonetheless, that their mission was going to end up being a lot more
complicated.
“Everybody ready?” Ellie asked.
Everyone answered in the affirmative.
“Would you like to do the honors?” Ellie asked directly to Ariadna.
“You purposely put those cuffs on your wrists,” Ariadna began. “Seems a
waste for me to just do it for you anyway. You think you can figure out how
to travel to another reality, have at it.” It was both snarky and sincere.
Ellie centered herself with a deep breath, and took Mateo’s and Missy’s
hands. Missy then took Ariadna’s, and Mateo took Sanaa’s. Ellie opened the
window, and sent them all through.
It was freezing cold, though there was no snow on the ground. It was just
bitter and biting and a huge shock to Mateo’s system. Time travel and
teleportation always came with a little bit of shock. Instantly switching
environments wasn’t something humans evolved to do, even the people who were
born with the ability to do just that. The more experience a traveler had
behind them, the easier it got, but they could always feel it, and the
greater the transitional difference, the sharper the shock. There was
something else here too, though. It kind of felt like he was standing in a
river that wasn’t quite strong enough to knock him over, but still moving
past him.
“Mateo, what time is it?” Sanaa asked.
Leona lent Mateo her special time-teller, which recalibrated immediately
following any temporal jump. “Ten-nineteen in the morning.”
“Ten-nineteen is always in the morning,” came a voice behind them. It was
none other than Mateo’s best frenemy, Thor Thompson. “Because there are
twenty-four hours in a day, not two half-days of twelve hours each.”
“Mister Thompson,” Mateo said, “how nice to see you, looking so young.”
Thor smirked. “My name is Dupe!Thor.”
“So, you’re aware,” Ellie presumed, “that you’re quantum duplicates, stuck
in a new reality?”
“Of course we are,” Dupe!Thor confirmed. “Can’t you tell that time is moving
so much faster?”
Ellie narrowed her eyes, and filled her cheeks with air. “I kind of do feel
that. Why would I feel that? This should feel like the right pace, that’s
how time bubbles work.”
Dupe!Thor cleared his throat, and held his hand up loosely, like a
tongue-speaking Christian holding his hand up to God, but expecting God to
meet him halfway. He bounced his arm quite slightly. “If you move just
right, you can feel the veil between our world and yours, and almost stick
your hand right through it. It flows all around us, and that’s why we can
sense the passage of time. It’s unsettling until you get used to, and it
starts to feel normal. I’ll tell ya what, though, it makes sex feel
amazing.”
“Can you fix that, Missy,” Sanaa asked, “or does the thought of time sex
distract you too much?”
Missy sighed. “No, I can do it.”
“You’ll do no such thing,” Dupe!Thor ordered. “We didn’t ask you to change
the speed of time.”
“That’s why we’re here,” Ellie tried to explain to him.
“Well, the white men were here centuries ago to kill all the indigenous
peoples, and steal their land. That doesn’t mean that’s what they should
have done, or that the tribes wanted it to happen.”
“He has a good point,” Ariadna said. “You didn’t even consider the
possibility that these people don’t even want your help.”
Ellie brushed this off her shoulder. “Who do I have to talk to?”
Dupe!Thor breathed in, and exhaled a few raspberries. “The president?” he
finally said at the end of the stream.
“The president of...Kansas City?” Sanaa guessed.
“Novus Metro,” Dupe!Thor corrected. “That’s what we call this whole region
now. President Orlova will be quite interested in meeting some newcomers.
It’s been awhile.”
“But there have been others?” Ellie pressed.
“How long will it take to get there?” Mateo asked once it was clear that
Dupe!Thor wasn’t going to answer that last question.
“The Capitol is maybe three hours from here?” Dupe!Thor figured.
“We have an hour and forty minutes,” Sanaa argued.
“We have far less than that,” Ariadna contended. “Once we get there, we
still have to speak with this president, convince her to agree to the plan,
and then carry it out. We might have an hour.”
“The speed of time isn’t that bad,” Dupe!Thor said. He shrugged. “So you
don’t get back home for a few days. Is it that big of a deal?”
“It is,” Mateo said. “What can we do to speed this along?”
“I can help,” Missy jumped in. “I’ll create a nested time bubble, which
speeds up time even more, but only for us, so we have enough of it to reach
the Capitol.”
“Would anyone object to that?” Ellie asked Thor.
“I don’t see why not,” he replied.
And so they started walking across the metropolitan area, on their way
towards the heart of the city, while everyone else was just about frozen in
place. Dupe!Thor talked to them about the things they had to do to survive
in this new world. Unlike fictional stories about this kind of thing, like
Lost, Under the Dome, or The Society, the Novus Metrons came here with a lot
of resources. They had shelter, water, manufacturing plants, equipment, and
plenty of space. The weren’t completely self-sustainable, however. Though
there was more than enough farmland to go around, most of it wasn’t useful.
They were stuck in perpetual winter, so few things would grow. They ended up
inventing and deploying vertical farming techniques so much earlier than it
happened in the real world. Lots of other things came early to them, because
they had to, and because the right people were motivated. Necessity had so
many children in Novus Metro that she could have started a town of her own.
Were this not a temporal, as well as spatial, dimension, they would have
surpassed technology in the main sequence in many ways. They seemed to be
doing okay. Life wasn’t the best here, especially not in the beginning, but
they figured things out, and made it work. They accepted their state a long
time ago, and Dupe!Thor couldn’t promise anyone would agree to try to change
it.
It was surprisingly easy to be admitted into the Capitol building, and to
gain audience with President Natasha Orlova, who earned her position in a
fair and legitimate election a few years ago. She was fair herself, and very
much loved by her constituency. Missy and Ellie both implied that they had
heard of her before. Mateo was ashamed to be surprised that they elected
someone who was so obviously Russian.
“Only on my father’s side,” the president explained. She asked to be called
Natasha. “...as well as my mother’s.”
“Madam President—I mean, Natasha, we were hoping to speak with you about the
speed of time in your reality. This is my friend, Missy Atterberry. She has
the ability to create time bubbles herself, and we believe we can undo the
one that Tauno Nyland trapped you in.”
Natasha nodded, not in agreement, but understanding. “Will she be doing this
by creating a new bubble, or by dismantling the one that’s already here?”
“Oh, I should be able to dismantle it,” Missy assured her. “I’ve never done
it before—”
“Yes, you have,” Mateo corrected, “on Durus.”
Missy was confused. “I’ve never been there before,” she told him. “You may
be thinking of a future version of me.”
“Oh, right.” Yikes.
“I’m afraid we cannot do that,” Natasha apologized. “I’m sorry you made the
trip, but it is simply not possible. We need it.”
“You do? For what?” Ellie questioned.
“You didn’t tell them, Representative Thompson?”
“I didn’t think it was my place,” Dupe!Thor responded. “It is dangerous
knowledge.”
“That it is,” Natahsa agreed.
“You’re a representative?” Mateo asked.
Natasha went on, “there’s a reason we know that we’re in a temporal bubble
in the first place. Scientists studied a phenomenon for weeks before they
realized what was happening, thanks to a few people who had experience with
temporal manipulation, giving them a little insight. The main reality is
flowing all around us.”
“Yes, he did tell us about that,” Ellie said.
“Well, that’s not all it does,” Natasha continued. “This flow is more than
just something that makes sex feel better.” Why does everyone keep talking
about that? “It’s energy. It’s ambient energy.”
“Oh,” Ellie said. She literally slapped herself on the forehead. “You’re
using it to power the city.”
“It’s the ultimate renewable resource,” Natasha said with a nod, “time
itself.”
“Why didn’t I think of that?” Missy lamented, having realized something
important about her own time power.
“Because you’re an idiot?” Sanaa alleged.
“Why do you hate her so much?” Mateo asked.
“Don’t worry about it,” they said in unison, as if having rehearsed it.
“It doesn’t bother you?” Ariadna went back to the conversation with Natasha.
“You can’t go to space, or even another continent. And if you ever did want
to go back to the main sequence to visit, it would make switching back and
forth really difficult.”
“This is how we live now. Yes, it sucks to be in the snowglobe. I wouldn’t
mind going back to see my childhood home in Russia, or checking out Machu
Picchu, but we’re realistic. We’re already too far behind. We don’t belong
in your world anymore. If we tried to return, people would wonder who the
hell we are, and it’s not our place to reveal time travel to them. We’re
stuck here whether someone unlocks the gate or not.”
Missy separated from the group, and started pacing the room.
“What is it, Atterberry?” Ellie asked her.
Missy took her time before answering. “You need a bubble of time that moves
faster than the time around it, so the point where these two dimensions
collide generates energy. I never thought about the fact that I’m doing
that. Well, if that’s what I’m doing, then I can do for you.”
“What’s the point?” Dupe!Thor questioned. “Like she was saying, this is just
our lives now.”
“This Tauno’s world,” Missy explained. “But it shouldn’t be. I can give you
freedom. I can cut him out of it, and give this world to the people.”
“Won’t he be upset about that?” Natasha assumed. “We know who you’re talking
about. He hasn’t done anything too terrible, but he has made it clear that
we’re under his thumb, and that there’s nothing we can do about it.”
“You let us worry about that,” Mateo promised her. “We’ll lead him away from
you. I’m pretty good at antagonizing antagonists...when I want to, at
least.”
“You would do this for us?” Natasha asked Missy. “You would stay here, and
build us these temporal energy generators?”
“It would be my honor,” Missy pledged.
“You won’t have to do that,” Sanaa said, apparently upset about suggesting
something that might help her sworn enemy. “Someone get me a phone, and a
pen and paper. It’s a lot easier to regurgitate the fifty-two digit number
when I write it down first.”
“Who in the worlds has a fifty-two digit phone number?” Mateo asked. He knew
of people who could be reached across time using special means, like a lucky
penny, or a jenga set, but this seemed excessive.
“Who do you think? Holly Blue.”
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Saturday, September 19, 2020
Glisnia: Out-of-Body Expo (Part III)
The good thing about dealing with a mech was that it had the ability to
erase memories from itself. Hogarth was free to tell the candidates for her
associate all she needed about time travelers, her former affliction, and
the Nexus replicas. There was no guarantee that they actually would erase
their memories of the interaction afterwards, but she was pretty confident
that they would. People lied a lot in the past. They lied about having
completed tasks they didn’t want to do, or liking people they hated, or
whatever. Vonearthans of all types didn’t generally feel the need to do that
anymore. Prosocial lying wasn’t completely obsolete, but it wasn’t usually
necessary. People rarely felt embarrassment or awkwardness. If someone asked
them to do something, and they agreed to it, then it would get done, because
if they couldn’t make it happen, then they would just say no. They would be
able to say no, because there was little incentive to not be honest about
one’s intentions. It probably all came down to the fact that each generation
since the mid-twenty-first century bought less and less stock in judgmental
people, until being judgmental was far too out of fashion for it to be
instilled in the young.
Hogarth interviewed dozens of candidates, and only one checked all the
boxes, and passed all the tests. Its name was Crimson Clover, and it
preferred it as its pronoun. It didn’t say a word about its old life as a
human, except that it possessed extensive knowledge of human
biology/anatomy/physiology, and went through the background to back it up.
It also implied prior experience with time travelers, though did not confirm
it. Hogarth just felt comfortable opening up to it about everything that had
happened to her and Hilde.
“So, this is it, huh?” Crimson said as it was standing over Hogarth’s old
body.
“Yeah, you don’t think it looks the same as I do now?”
“I can tell the difference,” it replied.
“So, what do you think?” Hogarth prompted.
“Well.” It started to go over the body’s specifications on the interface
screen. “You call it a time affliction, correct?”
“Yes.”
“Yet you did eventually learn some control?”
“Yeah, kind of like how a person with allergies can hold back a sneeze, or
anxiety can be treated with certain stress-reducing activities. I suppose I
never tried too hard to fix it with science.”
“And you think this is our best avenue for getting the resources we need
from other star systems, or interstellar space?” It asked.
“We could use the replica, but I don’t want to give vonearthans
faster-than-light technology. If anyone is going to do that, it’s going to
be my colleague, Hokusai Gimura.”
It nodded, and confirmed, “that’s Hilde’s mother, yeah?” As a mech, Crimson
had perfect memory, so the question needn’t be asked. It was just exercising
social grace, and keeping Hogarth part of the conversation, instead of
internalizing its thoughts.
“Yeah, and she’s in charge of what the galaxy knows about space travel. I’m
in charge of transdimensional work.”
“Why isn’t she here, then?”
“I don’t know where she is in this time period.”
Crimson nodded again. It opened a small panel on the back of its neck, and
removed a syncing disc. “Well, the best way for me to understand your old
body is to take it for a test drive.”
Hogarth stared at it, but said nothing. It wasn’t a surprise, but it was a
shock.
“Do I have your consent to upload my consciousness into your former
substrate?”
Hogarth stayed there, narrowed her eyelids, and stared at it. She stared
into its eyes for eleven minutes. Neither one of them moved a micrometer the
entire time. This was a test; a test of Crimson’s patience and commitment.
She didn’t know why she felt the need to do it, but she barely knew this
person, so she had to do something to give her peace of mind. She was going
to let it upload its consciousness, as it asked, but she couldn’t let it be
as easy as asking the question once, and receiving an immediate affirmative.
Finally, after the time ran out, she responded. “I consent to the temporary
use of my former substrate.”
“Great.” Crimson made all the necessary connections, then performed the
upload. It was a lot quicker, and a lot less involved, than before.
Technology had come a long way, even in the future, where a lot had long
been invented.
Crimson woke up in Hogarth’s body, and took a couple minutes to acclimate.
It was much lighter, and more fragile now, and it had probably not been so
squishy in centuries. It walked around the room to get a feel for how the
muscles worked. “Fascinating,” it said, like some kind of alien who has made
a moderately interesting discovery about another species. “I can feel it.”
“You can feel what?” Hogarth asked.
“The power,” it continued cryptically. “The energy.”
“I didn’t feel energy,” she contended. “It was more...pressure. Like I was a
covered pot about to boil over. It never built up, though, so I couldn’t
ever predict it. I suppose when I figured out how to control it a little, I
was just tightening the pressure on purpose.”
Crimson shook Hogarth’s head. “Nah, it’s not pressure; it’s moving, flowing.
I can work with this.” It slowly lifted its new hands from its sides, and
spread its fingers. It closed its eyes, and released some air from its
lungs, through its nose and mouth at the same time. As it gradually turned
its lips into a smile, tiny pieces from its fingertips began to disappear.
Her body was breaking apart at the molecular level.
“Where are you going?” Hogarth asked.
“I’ll be back before you know it.”
It appeared to be right. A couple meters away, tiny pieces were popping into
existence, and coming together to form larger pieces. There was something
wrong, though. Present!Crimson started demolecularizing from its hands, but
this new shape was forming from the feet up. Was this an entirely different
being? What was happening? Still, they were traveling at the same pace, so
when a quarter of the first body was gone, a quarter of it had reappeared.
And when half of it was gone, half had returned. Now it was even clearer
that there was something different about the returning figure. It was
wearing different clothes, and standing in a different position. The fact
that it was happening at the same time was a complete coincidence.
Present!Crimson was on its way to somewhere in the past or future, and the
fact that it returned to this very moment revealed nothing about how long it
spent away. That was how time travel worked.
Just as the last of its feet faded, the last of its head appeared. “Did I
get the timing right?”
“That was perfect,” Hogarth replied. “For how long were you gone?”
“Centuries,” Crimson answered.
“How is that possible? This body looks as young as it did, and I wasn’t
immortal.
“You were anything you wanted to be,” it started to explain. “You had no
idea the kind of power you had. You gotta try this thing out. I can teach
you.”
“Maybe later,” Hogarth said. “I’ve agreed to do a job for the Glisnians. I
need to see that through before I think of doing anything else. What did you
learn, besides how much more complicated my condition apparently is?”
“I learned that your ability sprouted from your brain, and rewrote your DNA.
Adapting it to technology in order to create a time siphon may be more
difficult than you thought, or impossible. You were smart to keep it alive,
for we may need it to power the machine.”
“I know someone who might be able to help. Adapting powers to technology is
her thing. If it can be done, she can do it. To put it a better way, if she
can’t, it means no one can.”
“Do you know how to contact this person?”
“I don’t suppose anyone in this system has a phone.”
“Like, with a dial pad?”
“Yeah, it has to have physical buttons.”
“Well, I mean, someone could build one for you, but you wouldn’t be able to
call anyone. We use a completely separate communication network to stay in
touch with each other now. You may as well ask me to sign you up for cable
television. All those shows have been cancelled, so you’ll only get static.”
“It doesn’t have to be on a network. It just has to look like a phone, and
generate electrical signals. The signals don’t have to go anywhere; they
just have to exist.”
“Yeah, sure, that’s easy.” Crimson walked over to the industrial
synthesizer. “Hey, Thistle. One obsolete push-button telephone, please.”
“Thank you,” Hogarth said. She graciously accepted the phone replica, and
prepared to dial. “I’m glad I got these upgrades. Her phone number is really
difficult to remember. She made it so long to keep the riff raff from
reaching her.” She then proceeded to push the buttons. There were fifty-two
digits in total.
Crimson tilted its lizard brain jokingly while she was still in the middle
of it. “I recognize that number. That’s the code Data uses in episode three
of season four of Star Trek: The Next Generation.”
Hogarth shrugged while she was waiting for her friend to answer. “Just
because it’s hard to remember doesn’t mean it can’t be fun. Her direct line
is a hundred and eight digits long, and completely random.”
“If this isn’t her direct line, what is it?”
“This line lets you put in a request for me to come to you. My direct line
would take you to me, and I only give it to the people I know won’t give it
away to a stranger.” She was here. Holly Blue.
“Thank you for coming,” Hogarth said to her.
“Why are there two of you?” Holly blue asked.
“Oh, that’s just this thing. We were hoping to procure your services. Do you
think you could turn my ability into a gadget? If you do, I’ll get you back
to your son.”
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Friday, September 18, 2020
Microstory 1455: Institutional
For a few years, The Thicket rebel force didn’t do anything. They were
there, and defying the Republic, but they weren’t attacking the city, or
rescuing women, or even protesting. They were hiding, and they were
training. This was getting on the nerves of some of the members, though.
They wanted to make real change in society, and better the lives of everyone
in it, even their enemies. Well, that was the problem. There was little they
could do, because the easiest course of action was to rise up and fight
against the establishment violently. They didn’t really have any rights.
They weren’t allowed to walk down the street alone, so they certainly
weren’t going to be able to march on the Capitol. After half a century under
this form of government, things were pretty well defined, good or bad. A lot
of people had been alive during the Interstitial Chaos, and the Mage
Protectorate, but the majority of Aljabaran citizens these days had only
ever known the Republic. So getting the public on their side was not going
to be easy. No one in the Thicket wanted to go to war, and no one wanted to
make a big public demonstration. They wanted their voices heard, but maybe
kind of in secret. Maybe they didn’t even want anyone to know that they were
involved in whatever it was they ended up doing. What could that be, though?
Statues. The government had erected statues, glorifying the worst criminals
and leaders Durus had ever seen. They couldn’t even argue that the statues
themselves were an important part of history. The one they built last year
made Smith look like Superman. There were so many statues of that man that
you would think he invented air. But no, Keanu ‘Ōpūnui was the one who did
that, but he only had one statue, and it wasn’t even in the city; it was at
his gravesite.
Earth had enjoyed a long history of protestors tearing down statues, so that
sounded like the most reasonable next step for the Thicket. It was something
they could do in secret, under cover of darkness, while most people were
asleep. If they procured the right tools, and had enough womanpower, they
could get it done quickly, and get out before anyone saw them. If anything
went wrong, they could bolt and scatter as needed. They started with the
latest Smith statue, then worked their way down the line, but they stopped
at four. By then, the government had figured out the pattern, so in order to
avoid being caught, they started randomizing their vandalism, not always
going after statues, but other buildings. But they were only able to destroy
a handful of things before it became impractical. The government was tired
of trying to guess which statue or building would come next, so they just
positioned guards at every single one of them. Aljabara wasn’t exactly the
largest city in the galaxy; just the largest on the planet. It wasn’t that
hard to protect all of them simultaneously. It wasn’t a piece of cake
either, though. Seeing this, the Thicket switched gears, and developed their
own version of the underground railroad. With personnel stretched thin, the
Republicans were unable to cover all of their bases. They were so obsessed
with only letting men perform the important jobs, and only promoting the
best of the best for the most important jobs, they ended up with too little
manpower. Of course they realized their problem, and corrected it by filling
up their ranks. They obviously still didn’t allow women, but they didn’t
worry too much about skill or experience. It was too late, though. The
escape network was by then entrenched, and primed to rescue a lot more lives
for the next two decades.
Thursday, September 17, 2020
Microstory 1454: Growth of the Thicket
One of the rules that the government on Durus set forth in regards to the
Ladytown outpost was that Aljabarans would be allowed to visit whenever they
wanted. As it stood, this had never actually occurred. The condition was
there to make it so that they could enter the town limits in case they ever
needed anything from the townsfolk, not to encourage camaraderie and
community. For any Aljabaran to leave the city, for any reason, they needed
explicit permission from someone pretty high up in the ranks, and no one had
ever been granted this permission in order to travel to Ladytown. So while
life was difficult in the outpost, and the Republicans had made numerous to
destroy them, they were generally free from prying eyes. This all changed in
the year 2140. A psychic spy sought audience with a government official, and
claimed to him that he had heard the sound of crying babies through a
vision. Now, he was only a mage remnant, and not a very good one at that, so
no one believed him without question, but it was enough to spark an
investigation. A team was sent to visit Ladytown, to see if it was true.
This visit turned into a raid, and although they saw no actual babies, they
did find signs of young life; cribs and the like. It was a miracle that they
didn’t find the stolen books, or combat training paraphernalia. It would
seem the psychic was telling the truth. Having been built on top of the old
town of Hidden Depths, there were a lot of secret passageways the
Ladytowners could use to keep their secrets protected, but that wasn’t going
to be good enough forever. The government was going to send more goons, and
they knew that it was only going to get worse. They were right.
A second team came through with a life signs detecting mage remnant, who
found the babies for them. Without orders from on high, this team attempted
to abduct the children, and the women were forced to show their skills by
fighting back. No one was seriously hurt, but the proverbial shots were
fired, and unless a remnant was born with the ability to reverse entropy,
the bullets were not going back into that gun. This changed everything.
Whereas before, they were training to defend themselves, now they were
training to actively work against their oppressors, and drive real change
for women on Durus. When Ladytown was founded, people just wanted to live
how they pleased. And when the men were wiped out, they just wanted to
prepare for the worst. But the government was forcing their hand, and
building a real rebellion was the only response at this point. The town
itself still needed to be preserved, however, so they could no longer
maintain a base of operations there. Many would stay behind, in case another
team came by to threaten the children, but the rest would move away. They
set up shop so far from Hidden Depths that the government could not make any
reasonable connection between the two groups. They could no longer live in
houses, for they were too easy to spot, and impossible to move when one area
became too dangerous. They lived in the wild, and scrounged for food
wherever they could find it. When one campsite lost its value, or the
government was too close to catching them, they packed up, and headed to a
new location. Most of the planet was now covered by a sea of plant life that
had always been referred to as the thicket. So this was what the insurgents
decided to name themselves. This was the start of The Thicket Revolutionary
Faction.
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