Things were pretty bad after the Deathspring sent a bunch of people from Earth
to Durus. The Durune didn’t want them there, and the Earthans didn’t want to
be there. Two seemingly contradictory things were happening at the same time,
which sort of fed into each other. Durus was trying to get rid of all the
misogynistic laws of the past, and become a more just society, but they were
struggling to accomplish that with all these refugees here. So they treated
those refugees poorly, and didn’t really give them that much thought. They
tucked them away in isolated camps, and got to work on rebuilding their
government from the ground up. It was years before they started listening to
the people who were trying to explain to them that the Earthans would be able
to help them do that. After all, they had just come from a world of equality
and fairness, so maybe they had a few pointers? Well, it took some time, and a
military state, but society eventually figured it out. Some of the Earthans
went back home with the Elizabeth Warren interstellar ship, along with a few
Durune who wanted to start new lives, but for everyone left, there didn’t
appear to be much chance of further rescue, so the best thing to do for the
Earthans was to dig in, and get used to the here and now, instead of dwelling
on what might have been. That got easier over the course of the next two
decades as policy adapted to the diverse population. One major thing to
further this philosophy came in 2185, when the first person to have been born
on Earth was elected as president of the Democratic Republic of Durus. They
were long past the elitism and bigotry that formed in 2161, but it was still a
huge step for the original Durune. On the other side, the Earthans had mostly
accepted this as their new home, and that was impressive as well. Everyone was
a native now. As for the new president himself, things were a little rough.
Earth had moved so far beyond a standard representative democracy by then that
he had some trouble understanding that Durus was not technologically advanced
enough for a comparable system. He had to make a lot of mistakes, and reach
some compromises, and he only lasted one term, but it was a decent start.
-
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
Tuesday, October 27, 2020
Microstory 1482: President From Earth
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Monday, October 26, 2020
Microstory 1481: Time Tech
As the first generation of paramounts was coming into their own, people
figured that disparity was unavoidable. They could treat non-powered people
with respect, and give them all the same rights, but at the end of the day,
there was a difference between them, and it was noticeable. When an individual
introduced themselves as one way or the other, people made judgments about
them; again, not necessarily borne of bigotry, or anything like that, but
there was no denying there was a difference. By the mid-2180s, some people
were feeling this more than others. They were more sensitive to the nuances of
social interactions. They weren’t worried a war was brewing, or that the
paramounts would form some sort of caste system, but they realized the
distinction was outside of everyone’s control. One could be born with time
powers, or without, and there was nothing anyone could do to change that. Not
since the source mages disappeared in 2090 was there anyone who could give
other people abilities. Even when they did exist, they chose who was worthy,
and who wasn’t. Whether their criteria were fair or reasonable was irrelevant;
they controlled everything, and if someone didn’t like it, they would just
have to suffer through. This was no longer the Mage Protectorate, however. It
was a new era, under a new democratic government, and they couldn’t use the
past as the foundation of a better future just because it was prosperous and
peaceful. Progress was about making things different, and always being
receptive to new ideas. Thanks for the Deathspring, people from Earth had come
with new skills, and a longer history. Technology had improved so much since
Springfield became trapped on Durus, and maybe that could help level the
playing field. The people in a new movement didn’t want to start giving
everyone their own powers, but make those powers obsolete. Instead of
contacting a teleporter for transportation, for instance, they could just
activate a transportation device. If they wanted water, they could simply open
a filter portal to their location. Hell, filter portals could replace water
bottles and breathing tanks altogether, and allow anyone to go anywhere they
wanted, and always have everything they needed to survive. There were lots of
applications for time technology, and if given the permission and resources,
this group knew that they could make real change in the world. Fortunately,
they were supported by the new president of the Democratic Republic, who did
not merely sympathize with their cause, but believed in it completely herself.
They had already done things like this before, like with the emergency
teleporters, and when they placed the Capitol building in another dimension.
So it was obviously possible, they just needed to expand the research, and
make this kind of technology as ubiquitous as the family car in the 21st
century. They had a long road ahead of them, persuading the public to be on
their side, and convincing the government to give them the resources they
needed to accomplish their goals, and this would only be the beginning.
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Sunday, October 25, 2020
The Advancement of Mateo Matic: Thursday, July 11, 2126
Mateo sat on the edge of the stage, and watched the presentation from there.
Their moderator was a woman by the name of Angela Walton. She was no angel,
though. She died centuries ago, and was recently promoted to Level 8,
Counselor Class. She went over the levels, so the people under her care
would understand that life didn’t end after the end of life, as she said it.
As Mateo already knew, everyone here was dead. They had, in fact, all died
on the same day. Most of them were living in the Primitivist Circles, but
others were from the North Korean Isolate. It was harder to die anywhere
else, though in 2126, still not impossible. This was not the real afterlife,
if such a place even existed. The Designers created a virtual simulation in
order to allow almost everyone to survive their death by being uploaded into
the construct. They did this covertly by altering the brain structure of
every human being, beginning thousands of years ago. Everyone was a cylon,
reborn after death, on a Riverworld.
There were eleven levels, like membership tiers for some kind of product or
service. There was a Level 0, but it wasn’t really part of the others. If
you were a Level 0 Oblivion, it meant that your identity code was
permanently deleted, and you really were dead. This was reserved for the
worst of the worst, like Hitler, Franco, and cops who kill innocent black
people; those who the Designers determined could never learn to change their
ways. Level 1 Iced members were not much better off, but there was hope for
them. Their code remained intact, but dormant, so they could be reactivated
later, but only at the pleasure of those in power. Level 2 Statics were
isolated as well, but still conscious. They persisted within the confines of
a dark room. They could sleep, and ask to be set free, but there was nothing
to stimulate their minds. There was a debate whether it was worse to be
Level 1, or Level 2. Level 3 Hock members were prisoners, kept locked up in
what looked like an actual prison. They could interact with other prisoners,
and visitors, and they could work towards freedom. People came out of hock
all the time, and joined the ranks of normal society.
Most people awakened as Level 4 Limited. They were free to move about public
environments, but they were limited as to what they could do with what they
could see, and they were not provided with their own homes. Privacy was
reserved for Level 5 and above. Level 5 Basic was kind of like living in
base reality. Everyone started out with a basic home to call their own, but
they could upgrade to more luxury by contributing to afterlife society in
some positive way. If an individual contributed enough, they could be bumped
up to Level 6 Plus, and this would give them the ability to ask for many
amenities, but not absolutely anything they wanted. If they wanted unlimited
requests, they had to be promoted to Level 7 Elite. Think Janet from The
Good Place. Level 8 Architectural allowed members to design and build their
own structures within a preexisting world, while Level 9 World-Builder
allowed them to create entirely new worlds. Level 10 Unrestricted was the
highest possible within the simulation. A Level 10 could do pretty much
anything they wanted: create worlds, destroy them; delete other people’s
code, promote them, demote them. As one might imagine, this was incredibly
rare, and reserved predominantly for the Designers themselves. Level 11
Resurrected wasn’t just rare, it was nonexistent. No one had ever been
returned to base reality in a new body, yet.
Angela never did say who these Designers were, but it seemed obvious. This
was exactly what Trinity, Thor, and Abigail were working on when Ellie left
them. They must have gone back in time and realized their goals without her.
Or they wait until Ellie is done with all this sometime in her personal
future, and include her in their plans, just like they were meant to. That
didn’t explain where they went when they disappeared from the Parallel
Tribulation Island. Welp, they were about to find some answers either way.
Mateo was standing in front of the Head Designer’s door, waiting for him to
be ready to talk. Leona was there too, along with Sanaa, Ellie, and J.B.
They hadn’t gotten a chance to catch up with each other, but there would be
plenty of time to do that. They were dead now after all.
As they stood there, the double doors before them cracked open, but not in
the way they expected. The doors stayed together, and spun around like a
Scooby Doo castle. The floor turned with it, and swept them to the other
side. Trinity wasn’t the one in the room, though.
“Pryce,” Leona snarled.
Ellie and Sanaa looked none too happy either. Mateo never met the guy. When
he was on Bida, Pryce was always somewhere else, and their paths never
crossed. He was a bad person, though, according to stories, so Mateo knew to
agree with their revulsion.
“Welcome, my nonlinear friends,” Tamerlane said with literal open arms. “You
have fought hard to get here, and you shall be rewarded.”
“What did you do?” Leona questioned.
“Leona,” Mateo urged, “Rule Number Fifteen.”
“Mister Matic, I’m hurt,” Tamerlane said. “I am not an antagonist, I am your
friend.”
“What..did..you..do?” Leona repeated.
“Well. I suppose we can do away with the niceties. It’s true, I’m an
antagonist, at least from your perspective. But bear in mind that, from my
side, you’re the bad guys here.”
“We haven’t done anything wrong,” Ellie argued.
“Okay, fine, you’re more of a mere nuisance.”
“I won’t ask a third time,” Leona stated.
“My daughter and her friends had a great idea. Save everyone’s life, and
bring them here. It’s quite a beautiful thought. Now, I know what you’re
thinking.” Pryce shrunk into an exaggerated sarcastic face. “You must have
twisted it, and corrupted it, and now everyone’s miserable!” He returned to
his own side of the argument. “No, I didn’t do that at all. I followed their
design pretty closely. I made some tweaks, and it’s evolved over time, but
for the most part, this is what they had in mind.”
“Then where are they?” Sanaa asked.
“Hell if I know,” Pryce answered, and it kind of sounded like the truth.
“The Norse god and my daughter ran off together. Trini opened a photo, and
disappeared. She never came back. I’ve had to do this all on my own.”
“You managed to get yourself in charge of the entire human race,” Leona
began. “How inconvenient for you.”
“I’m nothing if not resilient.”
“Like a cockroach.”
“An honorable creature. That’s the nicest thing anyone has ever said to me.”
Pryce was really enjoying himself. “You notice that you’re all wearing
black?”
They were. Angela said this was the color of unassignment. They had not been
classified yet. The rest of the people at orientation had woken up wearing
yellow.
Pryce grew more serious as he sat down in his mogulchair. “If you keep that
on, you’ll eventually be deleted. Black is the color of oblivion. You will
experience the true death. If you want any other color, you gotta come
through me. Now, if you’re ready to go into the great unknown, you can keep
‘em on. You’ll last at least a day, maybe a bit more; enough to say your
goodbyes. But if you wanna keep livin’, I suggest you get the fuck on your
knees.” Rule Number Fifteen really did apply here. “I’m sorry, did you think
that was a metaphor? Get on your knees!”
He was the one with the power here, so they all did as he asked.
“You too.”
Angela didn’t know she was a part of this, but she conceded quickly.
“Great,” Pryce continued. “I have a rule here, something which the other
Designers didn’t think to include. Time travelers get special treatment. I
like people like you. I think it’s amazing. If you had powers before you
died, you’re automatically assigned Level 7; the Elite, at the very least, but usually higher. If I really like
you, I may even make you Level 10. Wouldn’t that be wild? For people I don’t
like, they spin the wheel.” He reached under his simulated desk, and pulled
out a simulated tri-fold display board. In the center was a wheel. On this
wheel were twelve wedges. They were not of equal size, however. The black
wedge was the largest, and between that and violet was barely a sliver of
white. White was the color of resurrection. Typical. Mateo had not yet
learned all of the colors, but given enough time, he could probably surmise
which were which. The larger the wedge, the lower the level. There was more
of a chance of spinning something bad.
“This is sick,” Angela protested. “This wasn’t in training.”
“You didn’t need to know about this in training, and just for your outburst,
you’re gonna spin the wheel too!”
“I’m Level 8,” she pressed.
“For the second outburst, now you only get to spin once. I was gonna give
you two chances to land on a high wedge, but now you’ve lost it. If you say
one more goddamn thing, I’ll spin for you, and I’ll warn ya, my hand prefers
blue.”
Angela shut her mouth.
Mateo felt responsible for getting her, and everyone else, into this mess.
“Sir, could I propose something?”
“Let me guess.” Pryce smirked. “You’ll take blue or red as long as everyone
else gets pink.”
“I was thinking they could get white?” Mateo hoped that wouldn’t piss him
off.
“Ha!” Pryce exclaimed. “No one gets white. I mean...if someone here spins,
and lands on white, I will honor that, but...no one gets white.”
“Then I’ll accept pink.”
“Oh.” He bobbed his head mockingly. This guy hardly knew how to be sincere
and forthcoming. “Oh. Oh. He’ll take pink. Please, sir, could I have some
more pink?” He went back to his regular face. “Everyone spins. Ladies spin
twice, because I like tits. Understood?”
They were just going to have to move past his crude remark. He was too
powerful here, perhaps the most powerful enemy they had ever faced. Mateo
looked over at Leona, who looked back at him. They were gonna get separated
again. Even death would give them no peace.
Pryce had everyone stand up again, so they could start spinning. They would
all spin once, and then the women would go back for round two. He even did
end up deciding to allow Angela a second spin. However, instead of taking
the better of the two, she would have to risk the second one being worse
than the first. Or she could skip it, and go with what she had. She got red,
which was the color of Hock, and even though that was scary and humiliating
for her, she couldn’t take the chance that the next spin would be black. Her
shirt immediately turned red, handcuffs appeared around her wrists, and she
disappeared with a whimper. Ellie got Plus indigo on the first spin, and
Oblivion black on the second, so her assignment reverted to the first. That
was good, she would be free, and have her own really nice place to live.
Sanaa spun Limited yellow on the first try, and refused to spin again,
because she was a rebel.
Leona and J.B. both spun Basic green. They too would have places to live,
though not as fancy as Ellie’s. And Mateo? He spun white. Before he could
try to negotiate for his friends, Pryce snapped his fingers, and whisked
Mateo away, so he could receive his new body.
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Saturday, October 24, 2020
Glisnia: Superstardom (Part VIII)
Everyone who didn’t need to be in Glisnia anymore left. There was no reason
for Katica to stick around, since she wasn’t really welcome here in the
first place. The rest of the hopefully now disbanded Shorter List, and the
remaining members of The Shortlist needed to return to their lives as well.
Holly Blue was still around, though a lot grumpier than before. Futurology
Administrator Viana Černý wanted to conduct some business here, and she was
welcome to do so. She was welcome pretty much anywhere she wanted to go in
the stellar neighborhood. She probably wouldn’t be too involved with
Operation Starsiphon. Ambrose Richardson, who evidently hailed from an
entirely separate universe, was here to help Jupiter Rosa realize his full
potential. Jupiter could access alternate microrealities. These potential
worlds only existed for fractions of a second, within a higher dimension,
and represent what might have been if different decisions were made. It was
possible to steal matter and energy from these realities, because they were
going to collapse anyway, so no one should miss them. Most of the time,
Jupiter could use his power to make a copy of himself, or in rare instances,
many copies. He couldn’t siphon wholesale resources from an alternate
version of Gliese 832 without a little boost from Ambrose. Or rather, a huge
boost.
According to Ambrose himself, he had never boosted anyone’s ability to quite
this degree before. If they were going to pull it off, he would need time to
practice and prepare. The two of them went off together, while Hogarth and
Holly Blue started working on the technological side of this endeavor. At
the moment, they were trying to figure out if there was any way to boost
Jupiter’s power even more. They needed as much as they could get, and there
was no reason they couldn’t tackle this problem from more than one angle.
“Are you mad at me?”
“Why would I be mad?” Holly Blue questioned.
“Because Jupiter gave me this project?”
Holly Blue adjusted her magnification goggles to get a better look at the
logic board she was making. “Aren’t we calling this an operation?”
“You know what I mean,” Hogarth noted.
She stopped working, and looked up for a moment, but didn’t remove her
goggles, so she couldn’t really see Hogarth’s face. “Do I strike you as some
kind of narcissist? Is that really what you think of me?”
“Well, you’ve been really antagonistic lately, so I didn’t know if it was
something I did, or...”
Holly Blue went back to work. “I just didn’t agree that we should steal
resources from elsewhere in the galaxy. I’m allowed to have a different
opinion.”
“I know that. It just felt very personal to me.”
“It wasn’t, Hogarth. I assure you, we’re good.”
“That’s nice to hear.” She went back to triple checking her fusion equations
for a bit, but couldn’t do it for long. “It’s just...what do you have a
problem with exactly? Those star systems aren’t inhabited. Brooke and
Sharice Prieto have a method of detecting future life potential, so that
shouldn’t be an issue either.”
Now Holly Blue figured she had to stop working, and take off her goggles.
She sighed heavily. “Take a look around, what do you see?”
“My lab? I mean, our lab.”
“This is a matrioshka brain.”
“It is.”
“And you’ve started on the neck of a matrioshka body.”
“Indeed.”
“This whole system is here to benefit the Glisnians.”
Hogarth narrowed her eyes. “I suppose so, yeah. But the whole neighborhood
will benefit in the long run. With this much processing power, we could make
so many breakthroughs, it’s...it’s beyond what we can even fathom today.”
She nodded, like she agreed, but then she said, “bullshit.”
“What?”
“It’s bullshit. This project is about ego, and peacocking. The mechs are no
more sophisticated or evolved than humans were four hundred years ago. They
all just want to show off, to be better than everyone else, and make a mark.
People thought that people would lose ambition once they cracked
immortality, but that hasn’t happened. They’re even more obsessed with
making a name for themselves, because now there’s too much competition, and
it’s all so fleeting. Tens of billions of independent conscious entities,
it’s impossible to be famous. Who’s the one who wants this from us, the one
who asked you to build him the time siphon?”
“Mekiolenkidasola, a.k.a. Lenkida.”
“Yeah, he’s gonna get credit for this. I’m not saying he’ll steal all the
glory, or anything; he won’t have to, because you and I don’t have the same
goals as him. He’ll go down in history as the person in charge of making the
matrioshka body happen. What he doesn’t realize is that it’s a fruitless
pursuit. He’ll be big for a while, but then someone will come up with an
artificial great attractor, or a singularity siphon, and he won’t matter
anymore. Used to be, a man could die, feeling like he was the most important
man in the world. Now, though, everyone lives to see themselves drift into
obscurity. That’s gonna start causing a lot of problems. Immortality has
downsides that they did not predict. You understand what I’m saying?”
“Sorry, yes, I did hear you. I’m also thinking about the black hole siphon,
and the hypergravity generator you mentioned. I understand your meaning. You
don’t seem to take issue with Project Stargate, or Operation Starseed,
though. Aren’t those designed to do the same thing? Boost ego?”
“I disagree with the time siphon exactly because of those two endeavors,
Starseed especially. It was created to create life. Civilizations will rise
on those planets. If evolved aliens existed, I would probably be against it,
but it would seem we are the only ones here, and our species has a right to
those worlds. Because when new life springs up on them, they will make it
their own. They will work hard, and make mistakes, and they’ll fail each
other, and they’ll create amazing things. The time siphon would have
interfered with that. The way I see it, Starseed is like the modern day
version of turnover. We don’t die anymore, but if we seed life somewhere
else, and don’t interact with them for a long time, it’s like we’re dying,
and making room for new generations. The only good thing about death was its
ability to force new ideas. Starseed fosters that; the time siphon hinders
it. That, Madam Pudeyonavic, is why I pushed back so hard.”
“Why didn’t you say any of that during our first meeting?”
Holly Blue turned back towards her work, but didn’t pick up her tools. She
stared into blank space for a few moments. “I didn’t understand it myself at
the time. I felt it, but I didn’t know it, and I couldn’t formulate my
argument yet.”
She nodded. “Well, we’re not doing it. It was a tough road, but we got here.
We have an alternative, and I think it’s good. I’m glad you pushed back.
Unregulated science leads to mad science, and I don’t wanna become that.”
Before they could get back to their work, Hilde rushed into the lab. “You
need to come quick. There’s something wrong in the training grounds.”
They jumped up immediately, and ran off to follow Hilde down the hall. She
led them past where Hogarth thought Jupiter and Ambrose were training, and
into a different corridor. They came to a room so large, that it looked like
they were outside. Holographic imagery simulated the sky, and the sun. They
quickly redirected their attention to the middle of the field, where
something Hogarth wasn’t certain how to classify was hovering over the
artificial turf. A glowing orb was spinning and pulsating before them.
Jupiter and Ambrose were watching it from opposite sides, and holding their
arms down and behind themselves, as if anticipating being knocked over. By
the time the three of them made it across the field, the orb was already
larger. It was growing.
“What is this?” Hogarth demanded to know.
“We’re not sure,” Jupiter cried. “We were hoping you could tell us.”
“Back up!” Holly Blue ordered. “Stop letting it catch up with you.”
There was a way to figure out what this was, and how it got here, but it
might be impossible for Hogarth in her current condition. When she was a
child, time itself spoke through her. It compelled her to create a special
book. She didn’t have to write it. She drew on a door with a pencil, and
once she was finished, the seemingly random assortment of lines and curves
lifted from the wood, and combined with each other to essentially make the
book out of nothing. They called it the Book of Hogarth, and if you had a
question about the universe, and how it worked, it would have the answer.
You weren’t necessarily entitled to read it, and find that answer, but it
would be in there somewhere. She could once summon her book at will in
desperate times, but that was in her OG body, so she might have lost her
ability to pull off that trick. The worst that could happen was the attempt
overloading her neural network, and killing her permanently. So no big deal.
Out of instinct, Hogarth stretched her neck out, and shook her arms and
legs. Holly Blue apparently recognized this. “Don’t do that. We don’t need
your book.”
“This thing could explode at any moment,” Hogarth contended.
“True, but your book isn’t going to help us with that,” Holly Blue tried to
explain. “I think we all know that this is the sun. We’re looking at it as
filtered through some kind of dimensional barrier, which is why it appears
so small right now, but it is bleeding into our reality, and we will
eventually be able to detect it in three spatial dimensions. I don’t know
what happens when two versions of the same star suddenly occupy the same
space as each other, but it is not good. We have to evacuate.”
“The book can help us stop it,” Hogarth argued. “It will have the answer.
There’s a specific page that I know will help.”
“This shouldn’t have happened,” Ambrose apologized. “I’m not that powerful.
I was only trying to help him gain access to another reality, not bring a
whole star into ours.”
“No one could have predicted this,” Hogarth assured him. “You were doing
what we asked. Now, everybody stop talking. I need to concentrate.” She took
a deep fake breath, and closed her artificial eyelids. As she was standing
there, the temperature rose slightly, indicating that the mini-sun had grown
yet again. A hand landed on her shoulder. She opened her eyes to find
Ambrose.
“It’s okay. I can help.”
The book was never meant for her. It was designed to help others, which was
something she knew deep down inside, even though no one ever told her that.
Still, she had an unbreakable connection to it, so if she needed it, she
should be able to get it. Ambrose added the extra energy she needed. She
held out her arms, and let the book fall into them from the invisible portal
it came through. She flipped it over. Back in the day, she would have needed
to procure a scanner from somewhere, or make one from an industrial
synthesizer. Her new sensory detectors, however, were capable of scanning
anything, from optical signals, to RFID tags, to QR codes. It was that last
one that she needed right now. She tried to scan it a long time ago, but a
voice in her head warned her that it was dangerous, and that she should only
do this in a terrible emergency. This surely qualified as that. Before she
activated her scanner, she just stared at it in the visible light spectrum.
“Start the evacuation procedures,” she ordered no one in particular. “I
don’t know what this is going to do. It may not even be our best option, but
it’s the one I got, so get everyone else out.”
“Wait,” Hilde tried to stop her, but it was too late.
Hogarth toggled her retina, and scanned the code. She could feel a darkness
overwhelm her from behind, and tear everything in the room away from her.
She was standing in a void, and she wasn’t alone.
A hazy violet figure appeared before her, but she couldn’t tell if it was
small, or far away. It either grew, or drew nearer, until it was about
Hogarth’s size, and looked like a man. “Hello. I am Aitchai. What can I do
for ya?”
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Friday, October 23, 2020
Microstory 1480: The Serpent and the Bear
Ever since Durus avoided a collision with Earth by a hair, scientists had
been trying to figure out where they were going. There wasn’t any particular
reason for this. They could alter their speed using time powers, but
altering direction was an entirely different matter, and could lead to
disastrous results. Calculating the exact vector of the planet’s journey
through interstellar space was quite difficult, what with its random
accelerations and decelerations, and the lack of proper equipment. It wasn’t
until 2183 when they were sure they knew where they were headed. If they
continued on their present course—which they expected to—they would
eventually encounter a binary star system that the Earthans called 70
Ophiuchi. While the speed they were traveling was constantly going up and
down, the average was pretty steady, so barring any dramatic change, it
would take them over a hundred years to arrive. Now, there was nothing wrong
with waiting this long. Not only did they still have the connection with
Earth that kept them alive, but the close encounter seemed to have made it
stronger. The borrowed sun was shining, there was now more than one source
of water, plantlife was spreading at an alarming rate. Perhaps all of this
was exactly what drove the people of Durus to want to break free from their
mother world’s protection and support. They wanted to go off on their own,
orbit their own sun, and provide for themselves. It was what they were
supposed to do. This was going to be the largest endeavor they had ever
tried, and if they wanted to do it faster, it was going to be even more
difficult. Not only did it give them far less time to prepare, but they were
going to push the speed of the planet faster than it had ever gone before.
They were already traveling at relativistic speeds, so time was passing
faster for anyone outside of the planet, but the disparity was going to grow
so large. If they went through with this, they would reach their destination
by 2200.
Of course, the first thing they needed to do was to make sure the majority
of Durus was on board with this. There was no election coming up, but they
wanted to decide on it quickly, because the longer they waited, the faster
they would have to accelerate the planet in order to make their timetable.
Well, things didn’t go according to plan. People were not happy about being
forced to respond to the question quickly, without any real discussion, or
time to gather all of the evidence. Plenty of people were against the idea,
and if the proponents wanted to convince them, it was going to take time.
They still had two years left until the next election, so they were just
going to have to be patient with this, and get it right. Like always, the
people weren’t going to simply say yes, and leave it at that. There were
questions about how they were going to accomplish their goals, and whether
they needed to rethink those goals in the first place. After careful
consideration, they realized that the 2200 deadline was not a viable option.
As powerful as the paramounts were, and as durable as the rogue world had
proven itself to be, they just could not handle such high speeds. The speed
itself wasn’t a problem, but acceleration was a tricky thing. Any change in
velocity would seriously throw off any normal planet’s stability. If the
Earth were to start spinning or revolving just a tiny bit faster, or slower,
it would cause mass destruction all over the world. It’s not the speed that
kills you, but the changes in speed. The only thing allowing Durus to
fluctuate this much was its unique relationship with time. Still, there were
limits for how far this time magic could go, and by the time the vote went
through, if it passed, and everything was set up, 2204 was a far more
realistic goal. They did vote, and it did pass—with the necessary conditions
and precautions—and Durus did reach 70 Ophiuchi in 2204.
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Thursday, October 22, 2020
Microstory 1479: Social Harmony
In the late 2170s, the first generation of Durune born post-Deathspring was
coming of age. Many of these adults-in-training were paramounts, with some
of them even having no lineage that could be traced back to the mages. It
would seem that time powers were becoming less hereditary than they once
were, and a lot of people attributed this shift to the Deathspring, or
rather to the fact that Durus was no longer on a collision course towards
Earth. They were finally becoming their own civilization, free from many of
the horrors and burdens of the time before. A sort of religious movement was
forming, founded upon the idea that the paramounts were part of some grand
design. They didn’t claim to know what this presumably conscious entity
would be, or where it was, but they could see patterns. There were
paramounts who were helping build the outposts, and ones who were securing
society through law enforcement. Some were making transportation faster and
more convenient, while others were designing therapeutic pocket dimensions,
or treating patients using psychic connections. The seers were protecting
the future, while the retrocognitives were teaching students about their
past. Some were born with the rare ability to alter the aging process, which
would ultimately create a population boom, because death was no longer such
an inescapable certainty. Everyone had a place, and it sometimes felt like
they were placed there on purpose. They weren’t religious zealots yet, but
they did have their spiritual beliefs, and for some, it kept them going.
There were those who were concerned that this could lead to class warfare.
They wanted to make sure that the paramounts weren’t treated as gods, and
that they weren’t raised to believe they were superior. In order for this to
go smoothly, they had to work together, and everyone had to believe that
everyone else mattered, because they did.
In the early 2180s, this generation was starting to take ownership over the
future of Durus. They were born without their ancestors’ prejudices, and bad
blood. They could see that they had to become a single population, with the
goal of doing what was best for the world, even if they disagreed about what
that meant. Being a paramount became a huge responsibility, and while it
opened up certain career opportunities, it also closed some off. It might
seem like this would discourage feelings of equality, but there were other
issues to consider. Sometimes a paramount’s powers gave them an unfair
advantage in the workplace. If one could read minds, for instance, they
would always be one step ahead of the competition, or they could otherwise
violate people’s privacy. Their potential for job promotion was hazy and
difficult, but if no one kept them in check, then their influence over
others could grow out of control. If a mindreader were to be a therapist, it
would make it harder for a patient to reveal their secrets on their own
time, and could make them feel uncomfortable, or prejudged. On the other
side, some of the more dangerous jobs were being left to the paramounts, who
were often better equipped to protect themselves. When one could teleport
off of a cliff at a moment’s notice, it seemed a little irrational to make
anyone else go up there. This would stop being a problem in the future, with
developing technologies, but for now, this was the way things were. And it
was pretty good, considering how problematic things had been before. They
called it the social harmony, and even though the Durune had more
tribulations ahead of them, they would at least be mostly taking them on
together. Not everyone wanted that, but their time would come later, and
they would get what they deserved.
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Microstory 1478: Bicentennial
The first known human to set foot on Durus was a little girl named Savitri. In
1980, she fell into some kind portal, and ended up here alone. She had to
figure things out, and fend for herself for ten years before anyone else
appeared. Even though the Deathfall wouldn’t happen until 2016, many believed
that 1980 should be considered the dawn of man on Durus. They wanted to honor
and respect Savitri, for all she had been through. Sure, technically the
Bicentennial should mark the beginning of a city, or some other form of
civilization, but this was their own planet, and they felt entitled to make up
whatever rules they wanted. They could celebrate the start of the new
Springfield later, if they even really wanted to do that at all, since life
was pretty crappy back then. In the 2175 elections, people voted for the
Savitri Act, and preparations were able to begin for a massive worldwide
celebration, and it would indeed be massive. Their population had always been
in flux, as most populations are, but in general, their numbers increased
predictably. It was estimated that there would be 500,000 people living on
Durus by the time 2180 ended. The celebration would mark this occasion, as
well as the Bicentennial, hopefully appeasing those few who disagreed that it
had been 200 years since the beginning. The party was huge, spread out across
the surface, in Aljabara, and the other towns. They had rides, dinners, time
power games, music, and other entertainment. They also had quiet, reflective
events, mourning those they had lost, and remembering the heroes of yesterday.
There was something for everyone, and everything for a precious few. A
paramount with time traveling abilities offered his services to a select group
of people. Many entered, but only ten people won tickets in the lottery. If
you wanted to enjoy every single event that the week-long Bicentennial
celebrations had available, even the ones that conflicted with each other on
the schedule, you had to be one of these eleven people. The paramount took the
group back in time as many times as it was necessary in order for them to
participate or watch everything. For the most part, time travel was illegal on
Durus. It was dangerous, and possibly paradoxical, and the government agreed
that no one should change history, even the bad things that happened. But for
this one time, one paramount was given the freedom to use his powers. He had
to stay within the loop, however, and take all necessary precautions against
messing something up with the timeline. It was a success, however, as was the
Bicentennial in general, and it had people already starting to think about
what they might want to do for the Tricentennial.
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Tuesday, October 20, 2020
Microstory 1477: Reconstruction
For the 2175 elections, the people of Durus were not only voting for the
people they wanted to lead them. There were certains laws and projects the
current administration wanted everyone to decide on. One of these projects
proposed that the city start rebuilding all of the towns that they lost during
the final battles of the war against the monsters, and afterwards, when the
remaining structures were all pulled together into the city of Aljabara. By
this time, there were already several outposts built away from the city.
Before powerful builder Andromeda retired, and later died, she agreed to help
people spread out into new communities. There was nothing wrong with these
towns, but some thought it might be nice if they went back to their roots, and
honored their history. They weren’t intending to break Aljabara apart, but
construct new buildings where they were once standing. It wasn’t necessary,
but it could be kind of cool. This would be yet another symbolic gesture, to
signify the rejection of the former Republic, and a return to the glory of the
Mage Protectorate, though with more democracy. Polls suggested that it would
be a tight race, because not everyone was convinced. Sure, these towns were
part of their history, but their downfall was no less part of that, and some
were worried people would forget that. If they just ignored the last eighty
plus years of their past, and made it look like it would if it had not
happened, were they doomed to repeat their mistakes? No one was really worried
about who their next elected leaders would be. The incumbents were fine, and
their competition was fine. They weren’t going to end up in some kind of
fascist state because of them, so the 2175 elections were more about debating
the reconstruction issue. People from both sides made arguments in the
streets, and in more organized forums. The news was dominated by the topic,
and everybody had their own opinion. The more people talked about it, the more
they realized that this was far more complex than just a single yes or no
response. Some of the original town sites were already being used for other
things. Ladytown was already built on top of Hidden Depths, and even though
that had a history of its own, it was still standing and still going. The
original Springfield was already being revitalized, the Earthan refugee camp
that came up after the Deathspring was built right next to where Shieldon used
to be, and they were already starting construction near Watershed. In reaction
to these arguments, the vote was scrapped, in favor of a more long-term
approach. They would still consider doing this, but they weren’t going to be
able to figure it all out by the time election day rolled around, so the next
administration would be in charge of solidifying whatever plans they were
going to go through with. One thing was for sure, they weren’t going to remain
exactly as they were. They were absolutely going to build new outposts, so it
was just a matter of what and where, and whether they would have anything to
do with the old towns. This didn’t mean they wouldn’t make any decisions at
all when it came to the reconstruction effort. Everyone agreed that they
wanted to move forward with the completion of Town Sixteen, which was famously
unfinished by the time the war ravaged the lands. They just needed to know
what to call it. The people chose Gimura.
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