I was born with a ________ ability that, for some reason, people have ________ understanding. They think I can ________ with animals, but that doesn’t make much sense, because most animals have no ________ language, and the ones that do still can’t hold a ________ conversation. All I do is manipulate the ____’s emotions and demeanor. I can make it feel ________, or ________, or combative. Or I can do what I normally do, and just make it ________ safe and comfortable. Most of the time, it’s a temporary ________. I can prevent a rabid dog from ________ his neighbor’s young ________, or make a feral cat relax so the vet can ________ it. If I try hard enough, though, I can also tame an animal ____nently. I can ready a ________ horse for a saddle, or give zoo-goers the ability to ________ right up to a tiger, and pet it on the ________. I don’t generally do this sort of ________, however, because I kind of feel like it’s a violation. Sure, they’re not ________, but that doesn’t mean they don’t deserve to be respected, or to make ________ choices they feel are necessary. Who am I to control their ________? One thing you have to understand is that humans are ________ as well, and while commanding their ________ and behavior is much more difficult than it is for other ________, it is not im____. Obviously, it’s even ________ of a violation, however, so I’ve only ever done it ________. And that was just to ________ if I was capable of it. The subject consented to my ________, and I ________ him from any hold I had over him ________ afterwards. I possess no ambition to ________ any____, for any ________. I worked very hard to prevent ________ from knowing that my ________ could extend to humans, and while I was successful in that, I couldn’t stop a smart ________ from figuring it out on his own using ________ logic. Now I have the government breaking down my ________, trying to get me to ________ for them. I could help so many ________, they say, make the ________ a better place, they claim. I’m not interested, and I won’t do it, but these ________ are relentless. They leave a white van on my street permanently, and someone ________ on my door every day. I would change my ________ and move if I thought it would help, but they would find ________, and I wouldn’t be able to use my gift anymore either way. Today, I’ve had ________. They’re going to drive ________, and leave me alone, or they’re gonna get an earful. I powerwalk across my ________, and approach the ________. We get into a heated ________ which escalates by the minute. I’m yelling, I’m imagining the evil ________ yelling too, but they’re truthfully staying ________ calm. They still won’t let up, though, and I just can’t take it ________. I ________ at them to drive away, never return, and forget they ever knew I ________. To my ________, that’s exactly what they do. I watch my window for ________, but I never hear another ________ out of them. Perhaps I have underestimated the ________ of my abilities.
-
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, January 21, 2021
Microstory 1544: Communication Skills
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Wednesday, January 20, 2021
Microstory 1543: The Escape
Since before I can ________, I have been obsessed with being ________, and being capable of ________ autonomy. I watch all the survivalist ________, multiple times each, and I love getting ________ for the apocalypse. Do I think the ________ will actually end? No, probably ________, but there’s a greater than ________ percent chance, so I would rather ________ how to get through it than be sorry. I’ve also considered what I would do to escape a bad ________ on a more personal ________. What if the ________ doesn’t end, but my world does? I have no intention of becoming a ________, but I can conceive of a ________ where I’m wrongfully accused, or I’m in the wrong ________ at the ________ time. I store tons of ________ and other resources in and around my ________, and of course, I have a tricked out bug-out ________, which I can take to an off-the-grid bug-out ________. But I did more than that, because I’m ________ I’ll get caught up in ________, and not have any way out. I built ________ tunnels. One leads from my ________ to the ________ about a ________ away, and the ________ is only half as long, but it goes from my ________, which is already ________ deeply in the ________. I realize that my ________ goal is to disappear, not just sur____. Over time, I decide it doesn’t ________ if I truly need to or not. That’s only the first ________, and I may not even need that one. The real ________ is whether I can become a ghost in a more general ________. I have to wipe ________ from the world, so that no one can track me, or ________ me. I’m obviously going to live in the ________, but not the ones near my places. No, I have to travel far, ________ away, and I have to do it on ________, so that people don’t see me. If even one eye lands on me as I’m making my way towards my new ________ life, it will be a total waste of ________, because that one person can identify me. Even if they don’t see my ________, the authorities will be able to work out that it’s me through deductive ____ning.
Stealth, initial resources, and full independence. Wherever I end up, I want to be as far from ________ as possible, and I don’t want to have to go into ________ for supplies. Everything I need should be at my campsite, and that ________ should be nearly impossible to detect, or stumble ________. I’ll live up in a ________ in a ghillie suit if that’s what I have to do. I spend ________ working on my plan, making sure every detail is ________, and there aren’t any ________. I sell all my property by the New ________, and start living minimalistically for the first ________ after that, so no one will be looking for my ________ return come next year. I want to stop being a real ________, and start being on my own, and taxes are the most ________ part of that process, but they are not impossible to avoid. I just can’t take in any income for the start of the ________, I can’t make any ________ but with cash, and I can’t be worrying about utilities, and the like. The day is finally here when it’s time to leave my ________ life behind, and become the new me. I break my outskirt campsite when the night is at its dark____, stuff everything into my ________, and head into the ________. This is amazing already. I keep my eye on the map, and away from roads, and even trails as much as ________. When I do have to walk close to inhabited ________, I do so only at ________, so no one can see me. It takes me six ________ to get all the way up to a random spot in ________, Canada, which is over four thousand ________ away. I have fresh ________, plenty of game, and a tent that’s rated for the coldest of cold. This is all I need, and I’m ________. For the first year, I’m still para____, though, that people have figured out where I ________. I’m still not certain I avoided any tax ________, so it’s pretty stressful throughout the next year too. But then I relax, and realize that nothing’s going to ________ to me. I don’t owe the world anything, and they have ________ about me. Then it hits me. They didn’t have to ________ about me, because before I left, I wasn’t anybody anyway. No one ________, and they don’t care now. I didn’t escape ________. I’m just as alone as I have always been.
Tuesday, January 19, 2021
Microstory 1542: Waterslide
As a religious ________, I’ve heard all the ________ for what happens after you ________. Some say there’s a heaven and a ________, while others really just have a ________. Some have different ________ for different kinds of ________, and some think we’re all just ________ in together. Some believe our ________ survive, while our consciousnesses do not. Lots of people believe in some ________ of reincarnation, but none of them ever came close to the ________ about how that works. I can hardly ________ it myself, and a part of me still doesn’t, even though I’m looking at it right ________. It’s a series of waterslides, which you go ________ in order to reach your new ________. Really? Water____? I don’t know what to make of it. I’m watching all these ________ choose their paths, and they don’t seem to take any ________ with it, but I’m not quite that accepting. I have to find out just who the heck thought of this ________, and why. One of the people here in ________ of facilitating the ________ tries to be as helpful as ________. No one else is asking any ________, so she seems all right with ________ mine. The slides are complex, and there is no map. You choose the one you ________ to go down, but that does not lock you in to one path. You can ________ over to another slide if one happens to intersect with yours. You can even ________ off and land on an entirely separate one if it happens to be below ________. Where do these ________ end? Well, some will ________ you into another human ________, but others lead to an ________, or even an insect. Some of them exit right back ________ at the ________, so you can ________ again, and a few will ________ you into an ________ worker, like the ________ who’s explaining all this to ________.
The first thing I note after the explanation is that there doesn’t seem to be any way to figure out which ________ path to take. She notes that a ____slider will always have a choice to either ________ their destination, or go back up and try ________. That’s evidently why most ________ aren’t asking her questions. The majority of ________ have already been through many, many times, and they just keep not ________ satisfied with their ________. Not everyone even gets the chance to reincarnate at all. Only those with the potential to contribute more to the ________ are here. The rest are sent off ________ else, and she doesn’t know where, because she wasn’t here when the system was first ________. This means that she doesn’t ________ who came up with this, or what their reasoning was. Surely early ________ would have been confused by the ________, as waterslides would not have been ________ yet. I ask her if there are any other ________, not because I’m disinclined to do what everyone else ________, but because I want to know ________ about how this works. Sure, she says. I can take the stairs. No one has ever ________ before, even though it would result in getting to pick whatever reincarnation you ________, because it would take decades to get all the way ________, and be as tiring as tedious as it would be on ________. I smile at the ________, debating taking it, just to be different. Then I hop onto one of the ________, don’t bother trying to alter course, and accept my ________ once I’ve reached the bottom. I’m ________ as a pangolin in China, and things go downhill from there.
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Monday, January 18, 2021
Microstory 1541: Dreaming of Days
When I was in ________ grade, our ________ asked us to start ________ a dream journal. It was a simple enough ________. Some ________ had more trouble with it than others, because some ________ just don’t remember their ________ as well. I’ve never been one of those people. I remember my dreams vividly, though I wouldn’t call that a gift. They aren’t frightening most of the ________, but they are boring. It was during the other students’ ________ that I realized everyone else dreamed of ________ things, like a world in negative colors, or having ________ for feet, and ________ for hands. I just dream about ________; about regular daily life. I wake ________, drink some ________, go to work at a boring ________, come home, eat alone, and go back to ________. Or sometimes I come ________ to a family, or a ________, or a bird. It’s never the same ________, but it’s never exciting either. I’m not myself in my dreams, but ________ else, and I don’t even think the same someone else, because I keep taking ________ routes to different jobs. Fortunately, I wasn’t the first to do my ________, so this gave me enough time to fib. I made up ________ that were more fantastical and interesting, because no one wanted to hear the true ________ if they were going to be that sad and ________. After that, I moved on with my life, but I would continue this ________ of making up my dreams, instead of relating the real ones to ________. It’s not like the subject came up a lot, of course, but people did ________ ask me about them, and I got used to the lying. I got so ________ at it that when it came to figuring out what I wanted to do with my life, being a ________ writer made the most sense. Things were going ________, I wasn’t the most famous ________ in the ________, but I was making a ________ living sending short stories to various ________ magazines. I kind of made it my thing to claim that my work was inspired by my dreams. I don’t think there’s any legal issue with that. I hope not, at least. One ________, I even slipped in one of my real ________, just to see how it would be ________. It didn’t get great ________, but they actually weren’t that bad. There were just fewer of them this time, because fewer ________ were ________ in providing their ________. It was only an ex____, so that’s fine.
Anyway, my critics and ________ aren’t the only people who get a hold of this story. A ________ contacts me, demanding to know how long I’ve been ________ on him. I tell him I’m doing no such thing, that I don’t know who he is, but he’s not ________ it. He starts ________ my latest story, which...whatever, anyone can do that, but then he adds details that I never released to the public, because they’re even more ________ within the boring. He mentions the ________ of his briefcase, and the look of the novelty clock in the ________. This ________ was somehow in my dream, and I have to find out how the hell he did it. So against my better ________, I agree to meet him at his apartment two ________ over. It’s not just familiar, it’s exactly the same ________ I saw in my dream. He takes me back down____, and down the ________, and all the way to where he ________. I’ve seen it all before, this is from my dream. We continue on our ________ through town, trying to work out what’s going on together. I start to realize everything feels ________. All of my dreams, though no two are the same; they all apparently take ________ in this same town. I think at any ________ I will wake up, and this will also turn out to be a dream, but I never do. I go back ________ to consult my ________ journal, and I start mapping out the ________. Then I return to this town to meet other ________ whose lives I’ve borne witness to. They all exist, they’re all ________. Then we go deeper, and check the ________. I’m not just watching other people’s ________, but events that would not happen to them for another ________ days. I can see the ________, but only in this one town, and that’s what makes it the least impressive power I’ve ever heard of, because the more time I ________ here—as fascinating as the ________ itself is to investigate—the more bored I become.
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Sunday, January 17, 2021
The Advancement of Mateo Matic: Wednesday, July 23, 2138
Leona started shaking Mateo, but he did not stir. He wasn’t dead, though,
that much was for sure. Nerakali evidently sensed that something had
happened, and teleported in to investigate. “What was he doing just before
he fell unconscious?”
“We were just standing here, talking,” Jeremy explained. “It looked like his
neck hurt.”
“Yeah,” Angela corroborated. “Those alien bugs stuck something in the back
of his neck to stop him from jumping to the future. They got it out in the
other universe, but who knows what kind of lingering effect it might have on
him?”
“Nerakali,” Leona began. “You can tell when someone has a consciousness,
right? I mean, if their mind was transferred to another body, and there was
just nothing there, you would know.”
“I would. It’s necessary for my brain blending power to work.” She knelt
down and placed her hands on either side of his head. She stopped, and
pulled back, not frightened or surprised, just curious.
“What is it?”
Nerakali placed her hands back on Mateo’s head to get another reading.
“It’s...very similar to how people feel when they’re asleep. Not just
asleep, but dreaming. You’re not always dreaming when you’re asleep, but he
definitely is, and...”
“And what!” Leona was growing impatient and nervous. Being asleep didn’t
sound so bad, but it was troubling that they couldn’t wake him up.
“Oh, I remember. He’s lucid. Lucid dreaming. It reads a little bit
differently, and I don’t blend people who aren’t awake, so I had to remind
myself what it felt like. Yeah, so he’s fine.”
“Why won’t he wake up?” Obvious question, Leona figured.
“I have no idea,” Nerakali answered apologetically. “But he is neither dead,
nor dying. Nor is he in a coma, or some kind of fugue state. He’s
just...dreamin’. I hope it’s a good one. Perhaps the jump to 2139 will wake
him up. Until then, I can stay and monitor him if it’ll make you feel
better.”
“It would,” Leona said. She was sick of shit happening to her and her
family.
Mateo could feel himself coming together, like a billion beams of light
converging on a single point, and building upon one another to form a solid
object. He found himself standing-floating in a technicolor void, like
something out of a Dr. Strange movie. The lights spread out from him, and
wrapped themselves around his body, and danced in the distance. He was alone
for an eternal second, and then more figures came into view. Dozens of
people were float-standing around him, enjoying their own personal color
show, until the beams let them go. They all drifted in one direction, but it
wasn’t down, because down didn’t exist in this crazy world-between-worlds.
They smiled and waved at each other, like they were all arriving at a family
reunion. It was then that Mateo noticed one man was separated from the
others, shrouded in a haze. He was crouched, and probably would have been up
in a corner if corners existed here.
The reunion continued without this mysterious other man. They were doing
their best to ignore him, but would every once in a while look over and
scowl. It took them a surprisingly long time to notice Mateo, but once they
did, they realized that he too did not belong. One of them came over and
scrutinized his face. “Who are you?” He looked back to the crowd. “Who is
this guy? He’s not part of the family.”
A woman came up, and Mateo realized he knew her. He just couldn’t remember
her name. “It’s cool, Tiago. He’s...an exception.”
Mateo finally remembered. “Sandy Clausen.”
She smiled. “That’s right.”
“What is this place?” he asked. “This is your family?”
She smiled wider. “When we met, I told you that I come from a bloodline of
dreamwalkers. Once in a generation, a child will be born with the ability to
transmit thoughts to other universes.” She breathed in deeply, and gazed
upon her domain. “A friend built us this place so we could all be together
in the same moment. We’ll be here once, and then never again. We’re calling
it The Last Dream.”
“How did I get here?” Mateo questioned.
“I’m not sure,” Sandy replied, unperturbed. “You were possessed by him once,
but that can’t be it. He possessed a lot of people.” She gestured towards
the lonely man.
“Wait, him? That’s the guy who possessed me, and had sex with someone using
my body?”
“Well, we don’t know the details, but...yeah. He is...you don’t need to know
his name. He’s just the...bad egg, I guess. To be honest, I’m surprised
there is but one. Look at this crowd. Fifty-six of us, and only one black
sheep.”
“There are only fifty-six people in your bloodline? The power disappears?”
“We disappear,” she answered. “Bloodline ends. It’s fine. Most of us aren’t
there to see it, and it’s not like this big battle, or anything. We just
stop makin’ babies.”
Mateo nodded, and watched the other family members enjoying getting to know
each other. “I won’t keep you.”
“I’m all right,” Sandy assured him sincerely. “I’ve actually met most of
them. We’re all dreamwalkers, but they’re more into creating new worlds, and
I like to travel to the ones others created.”
He nodded, and waited a moment. “Have you ever heard of the Ochivari?”
“I didn’t technically fight in the Darning Wars, but my team and I worked
against them in our own way.”
Mateo reached to the back of his neck, even though he was pretty sure he
wasn’t in his body anymore anyway, and this was about as real as any dream.
The patch was gone, as was the pain, but he still felt some connection to
it. Perhaps he always would. “Two of them put this implant thing in my neck.
It suppressed my time-jumping pattern. A surgeon got it out pretty quickly,
but could that have something to do with how I’m here?”
Sandy thought about it. “Hm. I suppose they could have given you some of
their blood, be it by accident, or on purpose. With your history of brane
possession, it’s the start of an explanation at least.”
“If this has given me some kind of universe-hopping ability, I don’t want
it.”
She laughed. “I doubt it’s that powerful. I mean, there’s not enough
Ochivari blood in the bulkverse to give someone the power to travel on their
own. It takes one of them to open a portal long enough for just two others
to pass.”
He understood what she was talking about as much as his little baby brain
could.
“That wasn’t very nice, Superintendent,” Sandy scolded.
“It’s fine,” Mateo said honestly. “That asshole can say whatever he wants
about me. What other god lets you get away with calling him an asshole?”
“That’s an enlightened way of looking at it.”
“I’m quite used to other people being in control of my life.” He decided
that he wanted to change the subject. “How long does the reunion last?”
“Forever.” She waited a good moment before shaking her head. “No, people
will start fading away pretty soon. It lasts as long as we stay alive.”
“Wait, you’re all dying?”
“Yeah, I called it the Last Dream, remember? These are our collective dying
moments. We wanted to be together once, but...no more than that. We led our
own lives, across centuries, and throughout the bulkverse. Most bloodlines
don’t even get this.”
She was right. They started disappearing little by little. Those remaining
did not frown, but let tears roll down to their smiles. And then they too
disappeared, along with all the rest, until Sandy was the only one left. Oh,
and that other guy.
“I hope you find your way out of here,” she said. “If you’re not dying, I
really don’t know.” She did kind of frown, and then she disappeared.
Only now did the possessor stand up. He looked around, and while Mateo could
still not see a face, he was somehow exuding a deep sadness. Mateo
approached cautiously, growing worried he would recognize the guy from
somewhere else, and it would shake him to his core. Or maybe the darkness in
his soul was hiding everything about him except for the sadness, and the
form of his face didn’t really matter. Mateo took a calculated breath, and
let some time pass. They just stared at each other for another eternal
second. “I forgive you.” The man said nothing, and then he died.
Mateo woke up in a bed, having spent an unknown amount of time in the void.
The lights didn’t just blink away. They faded over time, as if also dying,
until he was left alone in the remote darkness. His return to the world was
a welcome relief.
Leona was beside him. It was nice to know that whatever his body looked like
while he was gone, that it didn’t worry her. She sensed his alertness.
“You’re back. Oh my God, what happened?”
He told her the story.
“But you’re okay?”
“I’m all right. It was hard, watching all those people die, but I’m fine.
Let’s not tell anyone else about this. It was kind of a dark and personal
experience. I’m not traumatized, but I need to carry it with me, and I don’t
want help.”
“They’ll understand,” Leona agreed.
“These Ochivari,” Mateo began. “They’re going to become a problem in the
future.”
“Angela said that our universe was safe, that we stop negatively impacting
our environment, and they choose to leave us alone.”
“Yeah, but...”
“But what?”
“When I was in the void, I had a sort of special connection to the
Superintendent. I couldn’t read his thoughts, or hear his narration, but I
did kind of get a sense of the oncoming story. I can still kind of feel him.
We have a lot of work to do in our universe, that much was clear,
but...there was something else.”
“Something, like what?”
Mateo was trying to recall the feeling that the Superintendent was likely
attempting to hide from him. “The Ochivari might not come back to destroy
our universe, but I think we’re gonna fight in the war anyway. It won’t be
tomorrow, but that train that keeps showing up and recruiting people? One
day, I think we’re gonna get on that train. I think it’s just not our time
yet. They conscript fighters, and we’re not that now, but we might become
that over time. Hell, the Superintendent may even be preparing us for it.”
Leona nodded solemnly. “Then we’ll cross that bridge when we get to it.”
Little did they know how right she was about that bridge.
“What was that you said?”
Don’t worry about it.
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Saturday, January 16, 2021
Exemption Act: The Ends Justify the Means (Part III)
Carbrey spent about a month studying this universe’s technology, so he would
understand how it worked before he even thought about engineering something
real. He picked it up pretty quickly seeing as the tech wasn’t too
dissimilar to what he was used to, but he said he would rather be safe than
sorry. The laws of physics, he claimed, were exactly the same, so that was
nice. The facility they were staying in was mostly a gigantic underground
hangar, with a few other rooms attached to it. They each had their own place
to sleep, but it was nothing fancy. This place was obviously not designed
for boarding. Freya wondered what they once kept in here, and why it was
abandoned. While they were relatively close to the nearest population center
in Kansas City, Khuweka assured them that no regular human would show up. A
few temporal manipulators were aware of it, but none had much reason to use
it in this particular time period. There appeared to be at least one,
though. They were eating lunch together in the middle of the hangar when a
ceiling suddenly appeared above their heads, starting from a single point,
and then extending outwards. Of course, there already was a ceiling, but it
was many stories above them. This one was only a few stories up, and while
that was more than enough room to clear their heads, the force of its abrupt
arrival knocked them all to the floor.
“What the hell just happened?” Limerick asked as he was sitting up and
massaging his head.
“I don’t know,” Khuweka said honestly. She had been thrown down as well, but
Maramon were physically superior to humans, so she wasn’t hurt at all.
Andraste, on the other hand, was very hurt. Blood was seeping out of the
back of her head, and spreading out on the floor. Her eyes were closed, and
she wasn’t moving. When Landis saw this, he started crawling towards her.
His wing appeared to be hurt as well, perhaps broken, but he knew that
Andraste was priority. He took a deep breath, and exhaled over Andraste’s
body. “Injuries heal faster than terminal diseases,” he explained, “but it
will still be a few minutes.”
“What if she’s dead already?” Zektene asked. “I don’t mean to be negative,
but can you cure death?”
“Death is a process,” Landis answered. “It doesn’t happen in one moment. I
can’t go digging up graves, but if she died, it was quite recent, so it
should be fine. She will not have even experienced permanent brain damage,
which is the one thing I cannot repair.”
“Khuweka,” Carbrey began, “what is that thing?”
“I think it’s a ship,” Limerick assumed right.
“Zek,” Khuweka said, “could you take Mister Genovese to investigate? Jump
back here at the first sign of trouble.”
“Okay,” Zek replied. She took Carbrey by the hand, and teleported away.
A minute later, Andraste sat up, and checked the back of her head, not out
of pain, but because it was still wet with her blood. “What happened?”
They told her.
“Do you feel okay?” Freya asked.
“I feel great,” she answered. She started opening and closing her hands. “I
think my arthritis is gone.”
“Yes,” Landis said. “I’m a holistic healer. I couldn’t cure only one disease
or injury if I wanted. It’s all or nothing.”
“We should all get treated,” Limerick suggested excitedly. “I know my liver
could use a little TLC. You guys know what that acronym means?”
“Yes,” they replied in unison.
Five minutes later, Zek and Carbrey reappeared before them. “It’s an
interplanetary warship called The Sharice Davids.”
They all looked to Freya. “I’ve never heard of it. Sorry.”
“Is there anyone in it?” Khuweka asked.
“Totally empty,” Zek said.
“Based on what little of the system I saw,” Carbrey started to say, “an
emergency escape maneuver recently completed its sequence. It was traveling
all throughout time and space, spending only seconds at any one point,
evidently so no one would have time to board it. It had to stop eventually,
though. This last jump depleted it of all its power, except for what little
was able to eke out in order for me to get this information, but then it
died completely.”
Limerick was staring up at the bottom of the vessel admiringly. “We should
keep it.”
“It isn’t ours,” Khuweka argued.
“Why did you choose this hangar?”
“Because no one else was using it.”
“No one else is using this ship either.”
“You don’t know when they’ll be coming back,” she contended. She turned to
face Freya. “It is your job on this team to know these things, or find out.
Please make some inquiries for us. Meanwhile, Carbrey, power up some of the
internal systems, just to gather more information. We’ll only refuel if we
all decide we’re allowed to.”
“How do I...?” Freya began to ask, but thought better of it. She was right,
this was her job. She had to figure this out herself, or she should just
quit. Out of everyone here, she was the most dedicated to the cause. Not
even Zek totally wanted to be here. She mostly joined the mission in the
first place because she didn’t want Freya to be alone. “I’ll take care of
it.”
“I’ll go with you,” Zek offered for the upteenth time.
“Good, because I need a ride to Giza.”
They teleported to the benbenet of the Great Pyramid of Giza, which was
invisible to all who did not know it was still there. A man was standing
before them. “Stargazer,” Freya began, “you once told me that you owed me a
favor, even though I had done nothing for you.”
“Not you, per se,” Stargazer corrected. “I consider alternates to be equals.
Another version of Saga helped, and I honor that.”
“But if you do me a favor, am I not taking it from her?”
“You are not. What can I help you with?”
“We need to find someone familiar with advanced temporal technology,
specifically in regards to a spaceship,” Zek said.
“This is my friend, Zektene Cormanu,” Freya explained. Stargazer was polite
and accommodating, but wary of strangers. “She’s cool.”
He nodded with his eyes closed, then turned to Zek. “What time period?”
“This one, I think,” Zek answered. “It’s called The Sharice Davids.”
Stargazer was taken aback. “That should not be here in this moment. You must
take it away. It is too dangerous. The future depends on no one else ever
finding out it survived. I didn’t even know, and must now have my memories
erased once you leave to protect it.”
“We’re sorry,” Freya said with a frown.
“No, it’s quite all right. It’s good that you came to me, since I know what
to do with this information.”
“It’s only an interplanetary ship,” Zek pointed out. “Where could we
possibly hide it?”
He shook his head. “It was designed to protect against external threats to
the solar system, but it eventually became outdated, and time travelers
later retrofitted it with interstellar capabilities. It was destroyed before
reaching its first exoplanet, so if it was put back together, it means some
very powerful people came back to reclaim it for themselves. You cannot let
that happen, so you cannot trust anyone.”
Freya looked for answers in the layer of sand on the floor. “There might be
a way to get rid of it.”
“Tell me nothing,” Stargazer warned before she could continue. “I’m happy to
erase my memories, but the less I ever knew, the safer the information will
be.”
“Understood,” Zek said. “But just to be clear, there is no one in this
timeline who deserves this? Does it not belong to someone else?”
“It does,” Stargazer confirmed, “but it is best that they also believe it
was destroyed. The knowledge should not go further than you two.”
They winced.
“You’re not the only two, are you?”
Freya straightened up, and put on her poker face. “I will tell you nothing.
No comment.”
He smiled. “Good. Carry on.”
They returned to the hangar, but no one was there. A hatch was open on the
bottom of the Sharice, suggesting that everyone made their way into it while
they were gone. Zek transported Freya up to the bridge, and then began
sweeping the corridors using a series of rapid jumps. A minute later, she
returned to ferry Freya to the group. They were in an auxiliary control
room, which Carbrey said was where the emergency temporal displacement drive
was housed. Based on its remoteness and lack of signage, he guessed that
very few people were made aware that this TDD existed. Freya and Zek relayed
what they had learned from Stargazer, and it seemed to mesh well with what
Carbrey was able to learn from the computers.
“So, not only can we take it, but we actually should?” Limerick was happy to
hear this.
“I’m not sure that’s true,” Khuweka disagreed. “Stargazer wants us to get
this thing out of the timeline, and the safest way to do that is by sending
it to some other universe. That’s not something we can do, and even if we
could, we need a ship to get to Worlon first, and this can’t do that if it’s
supposed to remain a secret.”
“Aren’t we going to Worlon before anyone else arrives?” Andraste reminded
her. “We should be able to keep it secret until the mission is over. Perhaps
this is fate. It certainly came at the opportune time. Mr. Genovese was just
about to start building us a new one, and now he doesn’t have to.”
“It’s not that simple,” Carbrey said, pulling himself away from the screen.
“I was working on a minimalist design. It would incorporate the reframe
engine, but it was otherwise only large enough to accommodate the seven of
us. This thing is far more than we need, and I don’t think it has a reframe
engine.”
“We don’t need it if we can travel through time,” Limerick noted.
Carbrey shook his head. “The TDD is gone. It was only ever meant to be
activated once, and as it was sending the ship to this last location, it
evidently self-destructed somewhere else in time. The logs called it a...”
he squirted at the screen, and rediscovered what he read before, “Lucius
last resort. Whatever that means.”
Something was distracting Freya from the conversation. “Landis, are you
still hurt? Can’t you heal yourself.”
“I can’t,” Landis answered. “I cannot heal myself. After I got my foundation
going, my security detail was composed of hundreds of people.”
“Anyway. I think we’re destined to use it.” Limerick was so sure of himself.
“Build the reframe engine thing, put it in here, and let’s get on with it. I
know it’s not easy, but you still have two years.”
“That doesn’t help us with the real problem,” Khuweka reminded him. “Once we
destroy the Ochivari, someone would have to take the ship to the
Triangulum galaxy, or something. I’m not sure anywhere is safe, not when
considering time travelers.”
“I thought you said I could travel to other universes,” Limerick said.
“Yeah, you can, and other people can follow you through. You can’t create a
shatter portal large enough for a spaceship, and even if you could, you
can’t breathe in outer space. You would have to be outside the ship to make
it happen. Look, the Sharice came back here for a reason. It believes this
is the safest place for it. I say Carbrey builds us what he was going to all
along, and we just leave it alone.”
“I can’t accept that,” Limerick fought. This is a warship, and we’re in a
war. And who knows, maybe our mission will change enough about the future to
stop these evil future people from even existing? I say the ends justify the
means.”
“I agree with him,” Freya finally said. They looked at her, a little shocked, but not completely surprised. They knew she was all gung ho about killing the Ochivari, but she was also quite protective of her universe, and if keeping this ship around put it in danger, was that worth the risk? As they were arguing, she was working
through that conundrum in her head, and ultimately decided that yes, it was.
“We don’t know what we’re going to encounter out there, and this is our best
shot at surviving. If we don’t succeed, we can use this in the war, and
we’ll always keep it far enough away from whoever is trying to steal it. I
don’t know how we’ll actually get the damn thing to another universe, but
that’s not our problem at the moment. Let’s stop the Ochivari, then worry
about that later. Hell, we might even find a solution on Worlon. We still
don’t know how it is they were born with the ability to bulkverse travel.
Perhaps it has something to do with their home planet. We can take whatever
that is for ourselves.”
“I think it’s too dangerous,” Khuweka said, shaking her head slowly. “But I
am nothing if not a fair leader. I will concede to whatever the group
decides.”
They continued discussing, letting Andraste moderate the debate. In the end,
they decided to use the Sharice Davids towards their own goals. At least if
they always had it with them, they could control other people’s cognizance
of it. They figured it was better than just leaving it here, and hoping that no
one happened to show up.
Friday, January 15, 2021
Microstory 1540: First and Last Blood
I have never been to the ________ before. Or should I say that I’ve never been to any sort of medical ________ for any reason. I haven’t even ever needed to go to the ________ nurse for a tummy ________. I’m twenty-five years ________, and I’m only now starting to realize how ________ that is. It’s not something most ________ are aware of; how often they don’t have ________ problems. I should have kept it to myself, but my old college ________ is in town, telling me about her recent ________ surgery, and it came up. Now she’s ________ by me. She tells me she’s seen this movie, and that I have super____. I’m supposed to start walking through ________, and lifting ________ above my ________. I don’t know about all that, but if it’s true, I don’t suppose it could ________ to let her cut my ________ real quick—or try to, anyway. If I’ve just been lucky all my ________, then the worst that can happen is I need to wrap the wound up in a ________. But if she’s right, who knows what will become of my ________? Maybe I should be a ____hero. I can’t believe I’ve never thought to ________ this before. We leave the ________, and head to my ________, because we don’t want anyone seeing us do it. She grows more excited the ________ we get, and she can barely contain herself by the ________ we reach my door. I roll my ________, and take a kitchen ________ out of the ________. I hand it to ________, and before I can lay down some ________ rules, she slides the ________ across my ________. It ________. I don’t know what I ________ was going to ________, but not this. This hurts. This is what ________ feels like? ________ feel this all the time? I have to say that I’m not a fan. She seems even more ________ than me, and that’s saying a lot, because this is my first ________ ever. I tell her it’s okay, that we can ________ it up, but she’s watching the ________ flow out of my ________, and she can’t handle it. She desperately tries to cover it up with a paper ________, but it soaks through, so she grabs another, and another. Then she uses a ________ towel, but it’s no good either. She calls ________ services, but I don’t think they’re going to make it here in time. I don’t know how much blood the human ________ is meant to hold, because of course, that’s not something I’ve ever considered before, but this looks about that amount. The ________ is drenched in a matter of minutes, as is much of my living room ________. She apologizes, and tells me she was ________ about everything. I still don’t understand what’s happening. Is this why I’ve never been ________ until now? Am I actually more susceptible to injury then other ________, and some unseen force has simply been protecting me this ________ time? I’ve never just not been hurt before, but I’ve never gotten close. I never fell off my ________, or ran into a ________ ________. This must be why. Something out there has been guid____ me through life just so this very thing wouldn’t happen, and now I’ve gone and ________ it. The last drop of blood leaks out of the unstoppable cut, and the world turns black.
Thursday, January 14, 2021
Microstory 1539: The Case for Skipping College
I did not like ________, so I’m not sure why I’m being asked to attend ________, let alone speak to my ________ class about some nonsense or ________. I wasn’t bullied, or ________, but I was always very ________. The subject ________ never mattered to me, and I barely ever tried. You can actually make pretty good ________ as a car ________. Some treat it as this really ____y job you have to get if you’re not ________, but that is not ________. First of all, you do ________ have to be educated; it’s just the kind you’re not going to get from ________ school. Sure, some ________ have special programs, but that takes up a lot of ________, and costs ________. It’s much easier to ________ by having a car—preferably a really old and beat up ________ that needs a lot of ________—and working on it on your ________. I could not convince my ________ to let me opt out of college, but I’m doing it ________, so they’ve pretty much disowned me. They’re only here ________ because they’re hoping ________ across this stage is somehow going to magically change my ________. It’s not. I’m not going to spend ________ years and thousands of ________on a waste of ________. It’s 20__, we don’t have to do this stuff anymore. Plenty of ________ don’t go to ________, and they lead very ________ lives. Not ________ can be the CEO of a multinational ________, and it’s foolish to dig yourself into a mountain of ________ just on the fraction of a ________ chance that it all comes ________ for you. I choose to be ____istic, and I won’t ________. Don’t worry, I’m not going to say any of this during my ________ speech. I just have to get it out so it doesn’t weigh on me. The ________ is that I don’t care about any of ________, or any of these ________, and nor do ________ care about ________. I was only asked to speak because I managed to ________ up the highest number of ________ service hours. I did it on my own, and didn’t tell my ________ in the hopes that she would have me recognized. I was just trying to explain why I never got into ________ or other after school ________, because I was too busy. I don’t know how to talk about ________, or the things that I ________. I was just trying to ________, and the way I see it, getting ________ for it publicly defeats a lot of the reason I do it. So, what do you ________? What should I tell these numbnuts that’s both what they want to ________, and what still lets me stay true to ________?
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