There is a special brane in the bulkverse that’s called Havenverse, because it
mostly doesn’t allow crazy scifi things to happen. There’s no time travel, no
aliens, no technology too advanced for a given time period. It’s, for lack of
a better term, normal. There was a breach into this universe once, but the
window was sealed quickly, and in general, it’s the safest place to be if you
want to get away from whatever insane adventures you’re having. Of course,
because it’s so pristine, it’s the hardest one to access, and it’s pretty well
protected by outsiders who want to keep it as it is, and will do anything to
stop it from being corrupted. All told, however, it is not unique. There are
many universes like it, where its inhabitants tell stories about robot
werewolves from another dimension, or fairies that live in your hair, but
where these things are not real. Havenverse is different because it doesn’t
allow such things to exist, but many others, for all practical purposes, are
the same, because such things simply never came to be. There’s one in
particular I want to talk about that is insignificant, except for an
interesting prehistorical twist. Much like the Linsetol of the last story, a
certain species managed to survive in their world longer than their parallel
universe counterparts. They’re known as the Neanderthals, and while they did
not last through the modern day, they did have a much greater impact on human
evolution. On most versions of Earth, a human will contain up to four percent
of Neanderthal DNA, indicating that the two hominids interbred, at least
minimally, before the latter went extinct. Experts believe that homo sapiens
out-competed their brethren for food and other resources, but had they become
more cooperative, and less selective with their mates, co-existence could have
persisted, for a little while, anyway. Like I said, Neanderthals did
eventually disappear, but a lot more had to do with them becoming assimilated
into the homo sapien population. Modern humans, thusly, found themselves
walking around with anywhere between eleven and twenty-four percent
Neanderthal DNA. Not only is this six times greater than it is on other
Earths, but it also presents a much wider genetic gap amongst the population,
which at one point threatened to generate a divide between different peoples
in the modern day. This didn’t happen. Actually, the opposite happened. Upon
learning more about their own genetic evolution, the humans of this Earth
ended up uniting to form a singular society much earlier than other Earths.
They recognized that diversity was a good thing, and a source of strength,
rather than a weakness. They started working together more, and quickly
abolished war. They staved off climate breakdown, and prepared for potential
pandemics. Science progressed faster, and capitalism fell to a civilization
defined by post-scarcity. It is for this reason that antinatalist species, the
Ochivari ignored this universe. By preventing themselves from destroying their
planet, they also kept themselves out of The Darning Wars.
-
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
Monday, April 19, 2021
Microstory 1606: The Advantage of Diversity
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Sunday, April 18, 2021
The Advancement of Leona Matic: Tuesday, August 29, 2175
The Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was waiting for them when they slipped back
into the timestream in 2175. It actually showed up about a year after they
left, but such was the life of a time traveler. The Imzadi had done them
well, but Imzadi had left to start her own life a long time ago, so it was
time to get back to where they belonged. The AOC was Leona’s ship, and it
was where she wanted to be. After they launched in order to reach their next
mission in time, she and the team got themselves settled into their new
home, and she gave the newcomers a tour. It would take several hours at
reframe speeds to make it to the next transition window in interstellar
space, but they would still have plenty of time once they arrived.
As they were sitting around the central table, eating their lunch together,
Leona noticed how small the group was. As far as she knew, Sanaa was the
only team member who left in recent times, but it just felt so incomplete.
Four people? Four people were doing this all alone? She tried to shrug it
off, since she knew that Nerakali was in charge of other teams that were
doing their own work, but it still felt a little wrong. After all, Olimpia
only just joined them. Before that, it was only the three of them. She just
felt like they were missing someone, but as she thought about it, no one
came to mind. Perhaps that was the point. Perhaps something had been done to
her. Hours later, as the mission approached, her doubt only grew, and she
knew she needed answers. It was eating away at her, and it wasn’t going
away. So she called the one person involved that she knew was capable of
manipulating memories.
“You think I erased something from your mind?” Nerakali was appearing in the
form of a hologram.
“It wouldn’t be the first time,” Leona reminded her.
“What motivation would I have to do that?” Nerakali questioned.
“I don’t know, my memory was erased!” That was kind of the whole point.
“You don’t know that, because if you did, then your memory wouldn’t have
been erased!”
“Did you do it, or not!”
“Not!” Nerakali insisted. “If there’s a void in your heart, then I’m not the
one who made it. If something happened to you at all, then someone else is
responsible...perhaps even yourself, but you would have had to do it to me
as well, because as far as I know, everything is fine. I recruited Olimpia
for you, so you would have a full roster of five. I always think teams
should be no smaller than five.”
“We’re four,” Leona argued.
“What?” Nerakali didn’t know what she was talking about apparently.
“There are four of us!” Leona clarified.
“No, that’s wrong. You, Jeremy, Angela, Olimpia...” She narrowed her eyes,
and looked to the side. “I forgot to say Jeremy.”
“No, you didn’t.”
“You, Angela, Olimpia, Jeremy, and...” She pulled her head back in
confusion. “What the fuh...? There’s supposed to be five. I had a plan for
five. I always like the number five. That gives you some leeway. Two of you
can argue one side, while two can argue the other side. And a fifth person
can say, ‘screw you guys, I’m goin’ home.’ You have to be five.”
“Well, we’re not!”
“Would you stop yelling at me, I don’t know what happened.”
They took a beat
“How can we figure this out?” Leona asked, calmer now. “Do you know of
anyone whose memories can’t be erased? Evidently yours can, but what
about Tertius Valerius?”
“No, his can as well. In fact, he can erase his own, no problem. He
regularly purges memories he doesn’t care about to make room for new ones.
He never recalls what he ate for breakfast in the morning, so that way he
never gets tired of having the same thing. I don’t know anyone who’s immune
to psychic manipulation. That doesn’t mean that person doesn’t exist,
because if they did, they would be powerful enough to keep their own
existence a secret.”
She and Leona came to the same conclusion at the same time. “Retgone coins,”
they said simultaneously.
“It would explain everything,” Leona continued. “They could order us to
forget something, and we would never know it. Not even you can push through
something like that.”
“No,” Nerakali agreed.
“That’s not it.” A woman appeared, standing next to Nerakali’s hologram.
“Who are you?” Leona asked.
“Who are you talking to?” Nerakali asked.
“I’m a psychic,” the woman answered. “Only you can see me.”
“I’m having a conversation with an invisible person,” Leona explained to the
group. “I don’t know who she is, or what she wants.”
“Wull, then be careful,” Nerakali warned. “I don’t like things I don’t know
about.”
“Let’s go to microponics” the woman suggested. “Obviously, your friends
understand what’s happening, but one-way conversations are awkward for
everybody.”
“I’ll be back,” Leona told everyone. “She seems to know what’s going on.”
She climbed the steps up to the floor above, where the mysterious psychic
was waiting for her. “What’s your name?”
She walked around slowly. “Could you smell this one right here for me?”
Leona looked at the flower in question, eyeing the tag underneath. “This is
a flower carpet amber. It has no medicinal or nutritional value, I’m not
sure why it’s here.”
The woman urged her on, so Leona smelled the flower. “Could you tell me who
you are now?”
“Yes,” she said with a knowing smile. “Amber Fossward.”
“You know what’s been taken from our memories.”
“Yes, but I can’t tell you.”
“Why not?”
“Because simply by knowing the truth, you interfere with the process.”
“What process?”
“I can’t tell you.”
“Is it good, or bad, because if it’s bad, then I absolutely want to
interrupt it.”
“It’s...”
“Necessary?” Leona guessed. “Unavoidable? Inevitable?”
“Out of our control,” Amber corrected. “I’m in a different universe, so the
rules are different for me, but I can’t tell you what you want to know. All
I can say is that...everything will be okay.”
“Do you know that, or is it just something you’re saying to keep me from
asking questions?”
Amber took a long time to respond. “Yes.”
“Can you give me an ETA on when all will be revealed?”
“Five days.”
“Does that mean five days for me, or five days for you, or five days—”
“Five days for your team,” she said. “A few hours for you. Five weeks for
The Superintendent’s readers. Over forty years for everyone else.”
“Oh.” That was a pleasant surprise. “What will take so long for my team? Why
can’t I just say something once I find out about it?”
Amber took a deep breath, and said nothing.
“You can’t tell me. Right.”
Amber reached up, and placed a hand on Leona’s shoulder. Though this psychic
wasn’t actually in the room with her, Leona could feel her comforting touch.
“The window is about to open.” She lifted her hand, and caressed Leona’s
check. “What comes through it is not unrelated, but it is not the answer
you’re looking for. Still...embrace it, for it is good news.” Just before
she disappeared, she took Leona’s hand, and kissed the back of it. She
seemed like the kind of person who always knew what her friends needed,
without asking, and Leona felt lucky to have fallen into that category.
What came through the window was none other than the love of Leona’s life,
Serif. This was 2175, which meant that Past!Leona had just left Serif in
Ubiña Pocket Dimension Four of the Elizabeth Warren. She didn’t know it at
the time, but this would mark the end of their relationship. They would see
each other a few times after this, but they would never be together again.
Serif was fated to end up in a universe called Ansutah, where she birthed
and raised her child alone, and never found the right circumstances to
return home. Amber was right in that it was good news, but it was bad news
as well, because in order for Serif to fulfill her destiny, she would have
to return through another transition window. This was the burden of knowing
the future.
As sad as Leona felt for having lost her love, she did not think of Serif
often, and looking back, she got over the loss pretty quickly; too quickly.
This was not her fault, however. It was the Superintendent’s doing. Her
mourning period should have lasted weeks, if not longer, but that would have
been a boring story to watch from the outside, so I used my creative license
as a weapon, and simply skipped that part of the narrative. It was less that
it didn’t happen, and more that I didn’t waste time describing it for dozens
of installments, and Leona’s life was far too busy after that for her to
reflect too much on her past.
They hugged “How long has it been for you?” Serif asked
“Far too long,” Leona answered. “A lot has changed since we separated.”
“You mean I won’t ever see you again?”
“You will,” Leona acknowledged, “but...not for long. We’re never given
enough time.”
“How long do we have this time?” Serif asked.
“Infinite time,” Jeremy answered, looking at his cuff. “There’s no exiting
transition window.”
“She has to go back,” Leona contended. “She has a destiny in there.”
“Maybe she doesn’t,” Angela put forth. “We already know we’re accessing
alternate realities. Maybe this version of your friend never has to do
whatever it is you think she does.”
“That’s a pretty big change,” Leona said.
“We’ve made them before,” Angela volleyed. “In fact, you could argue that it
probably is a different reality, because of how much we’ve changed. Sure,
perhaps we sometimes go back to old timeline branches but...nothing is
inevitable, nothing is unavoidable.”
“Nothing is necessary,” Leona whispered. She watched the floor remain
unmoved under her feet, and worked through the problem. She had to consider
everything she could remember about the future. “You are with child.”
“That’s impossible,” Serif contradicted. “I have literally never had sex
with a man. I was created to be with you, and with you I have always been.”
“I haven’t either,” Leona agreed, “but I think I’m also pregnant. Not me,
though; Present!Me.”
“What does that mean?” Serif asked.
Leona kept thinking on it, trying to remember what was taken from her. Amber
warned her not to interrupt the process, but it was overwhelming her, and
she couldn’t stop it if she wanted to. It started out with a feeling; a
feeling of love. Then it grew into more feelings; longing, friendship,
trust, distance, betrayal, anger, hurt, more love, resilience. Then she
started getting fragments, like a broken mirror trying to put itself back
together, and once it did, the man she lost would be standing in it. He
would be out of reach, but at least the picture would be clear. She kept
trying to put the pieces back together, but they kept just falling back down
to the floor. Repair of small objects was not her specialty. Still, she kept
trying, cutting herself on the sharp edges over and over, but not caring.
She had to know. She had to see his face. It was important.
“Stop!” came a voice from the other side of the room causing her to drop the
metaphorical glass. It wasn’t just any voice, it was Leona’s. It was some
alternate version of her, which Leona instinctively decided should be called
Future!Leona. “If you remember, you’ll screw everything up. If you want him
that bad, then I will take you to him, but the price is Serif. She walked
towards them briskly.
Jeremy was closest so he tried to step in front first, but she punched him
in the chest, which sent him flying backwards. But it wasn’t just him. A
dozen versions of him appeared, each one behind the other. One by one, they
disappeared, until the only one left was the one standing against the back
wall.
Angela stepped forward now. Future!Leona grabbed her left leg, and made it
disappear. She screamed in pain, and toppled over. Serif dropped down, and
immediately breathed on her open wound to heal her.
Now Olimpia took her turn. She removed her cuff, and let it drop to the
floor. The real Leona couldn’t see her face, but her shoulders were raised
like an angry cat.
“Get...back—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK—BACK!”
she shouted. With each echo, Future!Leona was pushed back more and more,
ultimately stumbling on the steps down to one of the grave chambers, and
falling to her ass. Her words possessed force, and momentum.
“He is the only thing I care about,” Future!Leona explained. “I don’t know
you, bitch.” She lifted her fists in front of her, then let a bird fly out
of each one. At the same time, Olimpia disintegrated, her individual
molecules sent to different points in spacetime. Now that there were no more
obstacles in her way, she was free to take the real Leona. First, she kicked
the back of her younger self’s knees, dropping her to the floor. Then she
took her by the hair, and started dragging her across the room, back to
wherever it was she came from. The real Leona reached up, and tried to peel
Future!Leona’s fingers away, but it was no use. Once they were across, she
tugged one last time, and dropped her past self into the portal.
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Saturday, April 17, 2021
Big Papa: Horror Vacui (Part VIII)
Hogarth holds up her hands, and takes a quarter step back. “Relax, Cadet,”
she says. “We’re not here to hurt you. We just want to know what happened.
How did you get to this universe?”
“We were in The Crossover,” Ukodenva explains. “Something went wrong with
the engines, and we were sent, I guess to your universe. We did not come
here on purpose.”
“What was that thing that crashed into my planet?” Hogarth demands to know.
“That would be the fighter bay. We happened to be doing some training in
there when everything fell apart. The six of us managed to escape in this
simulator, but we don’t know if anyone else did. Please understand that we
possess no working weapons, not even on the ship itself. This is just
designed for battle training.”
“I understand,” Hogarth assures her.
“Who are you training to fight?” Nerakali questions.
Ukodenva hesitates.
“Be honest,” Nerakali urges.
“Humans,” Ukodenva says, “but only if we need to. There are a lot of
universes out there, and not all humans are as warm and welcoming as you. We
have to be able to protect ourselves.”
“We’re not at war,” Hogarth says. “Not with each other anyway. There is a
far greater threat that we both face. I built this brane to insulate my
people from it, but it would seem your fighter bay has discovered a
weakness.”
One of the other cadets stands up. “We will help you.”
The other four stand up as well, and regard Hogarth respectfully.
Ukodenva looks back at them, and smiles. “You are our commanding officer
now.”
“That’s not what I—”
“It cannot be reversed. What you say, we must do.”
“What if I say—?”
“Unless you tell us that we no longer have to do what you say.”
Hogarth has no response to this. She turns her head to look back at us. “I
need to effect repairs, and deal with this...development. Would you be
terribly offended if...?”
“If you asked us to leave this brane?” Nerakali guesses.
“Not at all,” Lowell finishes the answer, presuming a consensus.
“You too, please,” Hogarth says to Pryce.
He has a bit of a sour face. “Very well, but I would like to return one
day.”
“We’ll see.” Hogarth breathes in with her eyes closed. As she breathes out,
our bodies break apart into tiny little bits, only to be reconstructed in
the afterlife simulation interface room. Gilbert has returned with us, but
Aldona has not, because that is where she belongs now. Trinity isn’t here
with us either. She’s already home.
The technician smiles at us. “You have finally returned. Would you like to
be connected?”
“Finally?” I question. Glisnians have a very different perspective of time
than regular organic humans. They’re more like travelers and temporal
immortals. We’ll regularly go years without seeing a loved one, and pick up
right where we left off upon reuniting. Finally is just not a word someone
like this would use to describe us coming back after less than a couple
months. Something happened, and we can all feel it.
Lowell steps forward. “How long have we been gone?”
“Sixty-three years,” the tech replies. He doesn’t think this is weird,
because while it’s his job to provide outsiders access to the afterlife sim,
he probably doesn’t grasp how important it is, and how problematic it is
that I left it unattended for all this time. There’s no telling what it will
look like when we go back.
“Six decades,” Lowell echoes, shaking his head. “They’ve not had a leader in
all that time.”
He is wrong. The simulation has not been without a leader for the last sixty
years. It found a leader in someone. The most likely suspect is
Avatar!Pryce, but there are billions of other possibilities...hundreds of
billions, if you count the Glisnians. We have no idea what it is we’ll be
walking into. “Nerakali and Gilbert, you may go now. You’re Level Eleven
now. You’re free.”
They both shake their heads. “There’s nowhere for us to go,” Gilbert
explains. “Our cycles are complete. Everyone out there expects us to have
finally died, and dead is how we’ll stay.”
“We will go with you and help, in any way we can,” Nerakali agrees.
“I don’t know how bad it’s gonna be,” Pryce says. “My avatar has been
changing in the prison, and I lost connection with him as soon as that thing
crashed into Hogarth’s planet. He’s unpredictable.”
“We don’t know that he’s the one in charge,” I remind him as I’m sitting
down in the interface chair. “I have the gearkey, and the rainbow clothes.
Whatever has become of this place, we’ll deal with it...just like I dealt
with you.”
We jack into the Matrix, appearing in my office, except it’s not my office
anymore. It’s been redecorated. I knew that someone took over, but why would
they operate out of here, when Pryce’s office was more central, and a lot
nicer? Apparently answering our question of who it is has been running
things since we’ve been gone, Avatar!Pryce comes into the room. He does look
a lot different, though. He hangs his head down low, and he’s not wearing
his rainbow clothes, or his orange Hock clothes. It’s a sort of tie-dye mix
of blue and pink. There’s a sliver of black at the hems of his shirt and
pant legs. He’s also carrying a rag and spray bottle.
When Avatar!Pryce notices us, he recedes into his shell even more. “Oh, I’m
so sorry. I didn’t know anyone was in here.” The black of his clothes rises,
overtaking part of the other colors. “Oh, no.” He tries to leave.
“Wait,” I urge him. “What’s happened to you.”
Avatar!Pryce’s hands start to shake. “I’m not supposed to talk to you.”
“I’m asking you to.”
The black rises even more, and I realize what’s happening, I just don’t know
why. He now lives under constant threat of being zeroed. It’s regulated by
his behavior. The more he acts against the demands of whoever did this to
him, the closer he gets to being killed permanently.
“This is cruel,” the other Pryce points out. He’s right, not even he would
do something like this. Say what you will about him, but he never controlled
people through fear. He believes in agency, and free will.
“I’m sorry,” Avatar!Pryce apologizes again. “I have to leave. I’ll come back
and clean later. I think that should be okay. I have two hours before I go
full dark.”
“No,” Pryce stops him. “You can clean now. Do your job, and do it well. Just
answer one question, who’s in charge now?”
“The one in charge has always been in charge. It’s Pinocchio.”
Pryce shuts his eyes. “Shit.”
“Who is that? You know this puppet?” Lowell questions.
“I’ve never heard the name, but...I can guess who that is.” He suggests that
we leave the office, so his alternate self can behave, and protect himself
from dying. We will try to help him later. “Before Leona Matic reached Level
Eleven, she was a Basic, which afforded her the right to visit people in
prison. My other me made the counselor who dealt with the Matics and their
friends spin the wheel, which landed her in Hock, and Leona started working
on a plan to break her out. She ended up needing help, which she found in a
non-playable character who had no name, because he didn’t need one. She
altered his code, I still don’t really know how. She gave him consciousness,
which honestly, shouldn’t have been possible. We kind of lost track of him,
because he was unique. We didn’t have any need to track an NPC, because they
were never where they weren’t supposed to be.”
“What’s he doing now?” Gilbert asks. “What’s become of the simulation?”
“Obviously, he found my old plans,” Pryce answers. “I had this idea that we
would have janitors and maintenance workers. Their clothes would be of two
colors, their actual station, and the color that grants them access to
wherever they need to work. I decided against it, because this place
maintains itself, and it doesn’t even get dirty. I just had not yet figured
out how similar life here would be to base reality. It was a bad idea. The
levels allow you to live however you want, and however you deserve. Some
here are perfectly happy as Yellows. They don’t need to ask for things, or
own personal possessions, because you don’t need anything. But the old plans
were different. They created a class system, and moving up to a higher
station was about as possible as it is in the real world. Meaning that it
wasn’t impossible, but not as easy as rich people have to claim in order to
not feel like pieces of shit for treating others badly.”
“How powerful is this guy?” Nerakali asks. “What can a conscious NPC do?”
“I don’t know,” Pryce answers honestly. “I can tell you that he doesn’t have
the gearkey, and he’s not wearing rainbow, like Ellie said. She should be
able to get him in line, though it’s not gonna be like it was when my avatar
deliberately stepped down. He’ll probably put up a fight, and if he’s
convinced enough of the residents that he’s what’s best for them, they’ll
fight too.”
“We need information,” I say. “So far, all we know is that he’s punished
Avatar!Pryce. He may have otherwise improved things.”
“I can find out what you need to know,” Gilbert announces. He stretches his
arms out like Jesus, and lets his clothes change from white to indigo. Level
Six, Plus was a good middle-0f-the-road place to pretend to be. It’ll allow
him to go where he needs, but not stir up any commotion while he’s there.
Indigos aren’t impressive, but they’re not ignored either. People will
answer his questions.
“Thank you,” I say to him. For obvious reasons, I would be useless out
there. Even if I masked my clothes, they all know what I look like.
“I don’t care how powerful this NPC is,” Gilbert says as he steps over, and
rubs his palm slowly on mine like it’s a furry pet. “Nobody gets past the
lock on my house. Except for you now. Make yourself at home.” He tears a
breach in the virtual pocket dimension, and goes out to the main simulation
to get us some answers. The rest of us walk over to Gilbert’s abode. He
called it a house, but make no mistake, this is a palace. It’s the Purple
Palace. I unlock the door for all of us, and we step inside. We don’t just
sit around waiting for his return, though. We start to come up with
scenarios, and determine how we’ll overcome any obstacles. Pinocchio could
be bad, or he could be good, or he could be somewhere in between. We have to
think of every possibility. Pryce has a particularly haunting contingency,
which he calls Ice in the Hole.
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Friday, April 16, 2021
Microstory 1605: Linsetol Evolved
As I’ve explained, the closer a universe is, the easier it is for me to
access. That’s why most of my stories are going to be about humans, and will
mostly take place on some version of Earth. In truth, most universes aren’t
centered on Earth, and in fact don’t even have an Earth. The ones that do,
we’ll just say—out of no desire to fully understand the physics of it all—are
considered spinoffs of the original. The first rule of probable reality is
that any world that can be conceived—and whose consistent physical laws don’t
countermine the laws that are true of every universe—can exist. Furthermore,
if such a qualifying world is conceived, then it will exist. It may only be
stable enough to last for a brief period of time before it collapses, but the
very thought of it will conjure it into being, unless it’s something crazy and
impossible, like many cartoons. It is important to understand this, because
it’s possible for there to be a version of Earth out there where the mesozoic
extinction events played out differently, and while most of the life during
these times were still wiped out, the diversity of life that survived and
continued to evolve was slightly greater than what you’ve learned about in
your own universe. By cross-referencing paleontological studies from the more
familiar branes, I have determined that the one we’re discussing today
contains an intelligent species that evolved from what you would call troodon.
While they resemble their ancient counterparts significantly, the similarities
are not enough to draw a definitive conclusion, but they are very clearly not
human, and the time of their reign as the supreme species on their world took
place millions of years before humans would have evolved anyway. This is the
troodon world, but from what I can gather about their society, they do not
call themselves this. It’s hard to tell what anything they say means, since
their language is unlike anything I’ve ever encountered, and I am not a
linguist. I can make some assumptions about their history as I watch it unfold
from outside of time, but I can’t get a clear picture, because their customs
are so foreign to me. There is no true equivalent to how humans operate, and I
can only understand so much about them. The Linsetol ultimately developed a
highly advanced civilization before they met their final fate. They didn’t
dispatch any manned missions into space, but they did send up satellites, and
they had a pretty decent understanding of how the cosmos worked. Their history
isn’t riddled with as much war as most human Earths experienced, but that
doesn’t mean they were peaceful and kind. The Linsetol were isolationists,
whose nations each stuck to their own corners, and kept mostly to themselves.
They liked to be independent and self-sufficient. If they were living in a
region without a particular resource, then they either found a way to live
without it, or they moved somewhere else, as long as it didn’t interfere with
any other group’s territory. After all this moving around, all the best areas
were taken, and while they made attempts to develop more sustainable options,
the population of each faction dwindled until the species went extinct. There
was no reason to war against each other, because everyone was in the same boat
at around the same time, so it would only delay the inevitable. They were
unable to cooperate, so they were always doomed to fail.
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Thursday, April 15, 2021
Microstory 1604: White Savior
This next one is a very sensitive topic, the answers to which I do not claim
to know. I hesitated to tell this story, but have determined it’s better to
let the truth be out there, than to pretend that it didn’t happen. Like I’ve
explained, I am a voldisisil, which makes me a spirit type of human
subspecies. I was born this way, due to the existence of a third parent that
participated in my conception unbeknownst to my biological parents. But
there are other spirits, in other universes, with different reasons for
being. Some would be considered good, while others are pretty clearly bad,
but most end up in a gray area. Unlike mutants and witches, spirits
sometimes don’t take sides. They let their soul guide them, and don’t
necessarily try to rationalize against their impulses. This doesn’t mean
that they’re evil, but they don’t always think things through, and they
actively repulse any attempt at criticism. There’s one man in particular
that I believe we should discuss. His given name was Wyatt Bradley, but once
he discovered what he could do, he started going by the moniker White
Savior. Different versions of Earth have different historical experiences
with race and nationality. Some are undeniably worse than others. Wyatt
Bradley was born to one of these. Racism was prevalent, insidious,
institutional, systemic, and seemingly insurmountable. He saw it all over
the place. Everyone saw it, and anyone who didn’t see it was lying. Do not
think that Wyatt discovered his abilities, immediately threw on a white
suit, and started running around. He wrestled with the idea, and ultimately
succumbed to his urges, which is what I was talking about. He surrendered to
his soul, and did not heed the lessons that the wise people around him
taught him as he was growing up. There is a reason that humans are a trinity
of mind, body, and soul. All three are required to make a person. A mind
alone is a computer, a body alone is a pile of viscera, and a soul alone is
a ghost. None of them is meant to be without the other two.
Wyatt wanted to do something about the racism in his country, and perhaps
the world, and it felt to him like his soul powers were the best way for him
to accomplish his goals. He was an aidsman, meaning that he was called to
action against injustice, but in a literal sense. He possessed a general
psychic connection to the human collective, and could let himself be drawn
to pockets of extreme civil unrest. On the surface, he simply appeared to be
a teleporter, but he couldn’t just go wherever he wanted. He could only go
to these places of turmoil, or back home. Like I was saying, he put on a
white suit, and wore a steel mask. Basically, he wore a fencing uniform. But
he was not a fencer. The weapons he carried were all blunt instruments, and
tasers. He used these to attack people who were attacking minorities, and
this regularly meant attacking the police. Wyatt’s public identity was
extremely controversial, but he paid no attention to his critics, even
members of the black community who saw it as wildly offensive, and
altogether unhelpful. He didn’t think that he could conquer racism with his
methods, but he believed he could deter some of the more violent components.
“If the white cop is worried about getting a dose of his own medicine, he’ll
stop giving it to his victims. If he does it anyway, he answers to me,”
White Savior was once recorded saying in a rare case of him saying anything
to anyone. He was predominantly quiet, though not mute, instead allowing his
baton to do the talking for him. They eventually got the message. Whether or
not any given individual respected this message was another story, but
Wyatt’s actions were not without a little progress. Instances of police
brutality against minorities dropped within months of White Savior’s
arrival. It would seem that law enforcement was taking notice, and changing
tactics. Unfortunately, this meant that they learned to be more subtle with
their racism, because he was only drawn to the violence, not general
mistreatment or abuse, and definitely not systemic oppression. After a few
years, his activity took a toll on his body, and his sanity. I’m not sure if
he ever admitted to himself that he wasn’t really helping, but he retired
just the same, and withdrew from society completely. Within the year,
everything was back to normal.
Wednesday, April 14, 2021
Microstory 1603: The Dichotomy of it All
Flipverse seemed like an okay brane in the beginning, especially once people
realized that they could commune with their deceased loved ones. There was no
inherently nefarious reason that they could do this. The people who set up the
system didn’t do so as part of some grand plan to harm humanity, and they
weren’t as evil as some others of their kind, but they weren’t particularly
fond of humans either. They were Maramon from a universe called Ansutah, and
were only in Flipverse when The Crossover suffered a cataclysmic failure.
Stranded, they created the afterlife world for reasons I’m not able to detect,
but everything bad that happened as a result of it was because of human error,
or unforeseen consequences. Things took a turn for the worse near the
beginning of the 21st century, when a dark organization rose from the shadows,
and decided it was time they took over the United States. Their power was
fleeting, but their impact was everlasting, and profound. This was how the
universe earned its name. From there on out, those in power found that they
could only ever hold onto it for a short period of time, until another
appeared to take their place. Each new faction formed in response to the last,
and promised that things would be better under their rule, but it was actually
just different. A hunger for power and control pervaded everything in this
universe, starkly contrasting the period of peace that preceded this age, and
making everyone’s lives more complicated by the year. Everything was about
some sort of dichotomy, from the living world versus the underworld, to the
wealthy versus the wanting. Even the most popular reality show contest was
about pitting two groups against each other that were distinct for reasons
unrelated to the competition itself. This wasn’t only about two sides
literally fighting against each other, but a society that was no longer
capable of allowing two opposing forces to co-exist. There had to be conflict,
and there weren’t many people left who wanted to see things return to normal,
or reach some form of enlightenment. The interesting lesson from this story is
not that civilization kept falling, but that it kept getting back up. They
kept trying and trying, and even when things grew worse, most people involved
only intended to do what they felt was best. It is for this reason that
Flipverse ended up becoming a vastly important strategic position in the
Darning Wars.
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Tuesday, April 13, 2021
Microstory 1602: New House
In 1981, after Japan House was finished being built, the Bicker Institute
started trying to think of other ways to allow the human race to survive.
Eight full bunkers were already up and ready to go, with another House in New
Zealand, which was designed to maintain its population mostly above ground.
Jumping off of that idea, they decided that keeping people underground wasn’t
necessarily the only way to survive the end of the world. In fact, it may not
even be the best way. The organization was not founded upon the basis of some
specific disaster. If they had those answers, they probably would have
channeled all of their efforts into stopping it. They wanted to prepare for
anything, and massive global earthquakes, for instance, might just bury all of
their bunkers, so they wanted to come up with new strategies. People in the
ocean could conceivably survive such a thing. It wasn’t guaranteed, but
nothing was, and again, this was all about preparation. They needed a ship.
They needed the best ship in the world. And they needed it to potentially
endure a tidal wave or tsunami. Their next interim deadline was in seven
years, which was important, because the hope was to support a certain
percentage of a growing population. The project leads started looking around,
hoping to find something that would meet their requirements. It didn’t have to
be perfect, they had time to modify it, and bolster its features, but after a
few months, things were getting ridiculous. Nothing fit the bill. Nothing was
good enough for them. All ships were made to weather storms to some certain
degree, but none of them could last through the worst storm in history, should
it occur. Before wasting any more time, they decided their only solution was
to build their own vessel from scratch, which they did over the course of the
next eight years. They went about a year past their deadline, but that was
okay, because the actual end of the world wouldn’t start happening until
around 2021, and even then, things weren’t bad enough to warrant populating
the Houses. This latest project made them better with their time management,
and before it was finished, they ended up getting to work on the next plan for
survival, which was a submarine. As for the ship, it was a magnificent beauty,
far beyond anything else 1989 had to offer, and probably even superior to the
ships built in 2021. I won’t tell you whether it, or its Inheritors, survived
what came to it.
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Monday, April 12, 2021
Microstory 1601: Whatever Floats Your Kaya
Let’s start with a fun one. Perhaps my favorite universe is bladapodoverse. I
don’t like it because of all the crazy things that happen there. I like it
because of the way that people handle it. This version of Earth was infected
with little creatures from another universe, which they ended up calling
bladapods. The bladapods released gases into the atmosphere, and sometimes,
when an individual encounters these gases, nothing happens, but sometimes it
changes them. It changes them in unpredictable and often unique ways. It can
also change objects, so it’s not just a genetic thing. This could have
destroyed society. Some people essentially walk away with superpowers, while
other people’s lives objectively become worse. But people accept these
changes, and stay united, and support each other. I’ve never found such
strength on any other world. They make accommodations for each other, and
exercise immense patience. I’m so impressed. There is one case I wanted to
illustrate. A woman, who we’ll only call Kaya, encountered the bladosphere
when she was kayaking down the river alone. She tried to avoid it as she
approached, but couldn’t get out in time. It’s best not to undergo a base
modification while you’re alone, because you may need immediate assistance,
but if there are other people around, there’s a chance they’ll be impacted
too, so it’s really just a crapshoot. Anyway, Kaya kayaked right into the
gases, and came out wildly different on the other side. She transformed into a
human kayak. She was much taller and wider. She didn’t have a place for
someone to sit, or anything, but she floated on top of the water better than a
normal person should be able to, her arms and legs were gone, and she was
undoubtedly kayak-like. The kayak didn’t turn into a human, but to understand
the way this world works, that was absolutely not outside the realm of
possibility. That’s why base modifications are so dangerous, because the rules
and limitations are unclear, if any exist at all. Since she could no longer
walk, Kaya couldn’t get out of the water, and since she went out alone, there
was no one around to help. So she just kept floating down the river,
occasionally bumping into rocks, and hoping that someone came by within
shouting distance. She eventually got her wish, a few hours later, when a
group of hikers happened to be walking by. They pulled her out of the water,
weren’t afraid of what they were seeing, and helped her get to the nearest
Base Modification Center so she could learn how to survive her new life. I
wasn’t surprised that they treated her so well, but it always brings joy to my
heart, and makes it easier to deal with all the other worlds, which are
considerably less virtuous. Kaya moved on as a human kayak living on land.
They provided her with a permanent live-in nurse and aid to make sure she had
what she needed at all times. She never got back into the water, for
understandable reasons, but her life wasn’t terrible, and she even managed to
find happiness under extreme conditions.
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