Even in universes where they did not have human confederates to deploy as the
infiltration force, the Ochivari were surprisingly good at keeping covert.
They wore hoods, and stayed in the shadows, and kept their distance. This
tactic did not work very well in Psychoverse. There were different classes of
psychics on this version of Earth, and varying levels within the classes. One
class in particular was simply good at detecting people around them, and maybe
a little bit of information about them. They couldn’t feel emotions, or read
minds, but could sense a few key characteristics about others, such as age,
general health condition, and basic mood. They could tell when someone was
happy, angry, or sad, and that was pretty much it. This was enough when it
came to the Ochivari, though. They exuded strange readings, which alerted one
individual that there was something strange going on in her town. Rattlesnake,
Kansas was an interesting place to live. The population was low enough to be
considered a small town, but the residents acted like a large city. They were
anonymous with each other, choosing only to associate with those in their
friend group, and ignoring the rest. This was how people liked it here, as it
was low pressure, and high privacy. Psychics weren’t outlawed, but they were
strongly discouraged, because they, of course, invaded this privacy. Psychics
didn’t bother fighting against this, because they didn’t really care. There
were better places to live anyway. The presence detector was allowed to live
there without any grief, though, since it was her hometown, and she didn’t
disturb anyone. It was a good thing they did, because the small town anonymity
vibe was exactly why the Ochivari figured it would be a good idea to spy on
the native population from right there in Rattlesnake. This psychic’s ability
was nonnegotiable, meaning that it wasn’t something she could use at will, and
not use when she didn’t want to. It was always on, so when strange figures in
robes started walking around at night, most didn’t pay them any mind, because
it wasn’t their business, but she knew there was something off about them. She
decided to investigate on her own, even though she made a promise that she
would kind of just leave others alone. When she learned the truth, she knew
that she couldn’t just let this go, so she contacted a psychic associate of
hers who could read minds. He came to Rattlesnake, and helped figure out these
aliens’ intentions. Once they confirmed that the Ochivari had sinister plans
for the world, the two of them formed a resistance army of other psychics.
They defeated the infiltrators rather quickly, and then transformed the town
into the capital of the defensive force. More psychics came, some with strong
offensive abilities, and the original psychic whistleblower suddenly found
herself at the head of one of the most powerful armies in the world.
-
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, July 5, 2021
Sunday, July 4, 2021
The Advancement of Mateo Matic: Tuesday, November 15, 2253
Flindekeldan was a beautiful planet. If they were going to be stuck on one
world for the rest of their lives, this was a good choice. They spent the
next three years here, just being normal, and not thinking much about time
travel and transition windows. There were no specific rules for what kind of
lifestyle they could choose. Though it was only populated by several million
people, it was fairly diverse. Some worked, because they didn’t like not
doing anything. Others focused on personal hobbies. Technically everyone did
have a job, though. Those who didn’t work were backfilled by an android
substitute. This was not an assistant, who fetched coffee for their human,
or washed their clothes. It was there to work when the human did not want
to. Everyone was free to choose how much it worked in their stead, be it all
the time, or none of the time. A few hundred people who came here were
androids themselves, but they were still assigned a Flindekeldanian android,
and the procedures were the same.
Olimpia did most of her work herself. She had never had a job before,
because she wasn’t part of society back on Earth in the main sequence, and
she wanted to know what it felt like. She worked her way up pretty quickly,
eventually becoming a supervisor for a Helium-3 mining operation. Mateo
learned how to surf, and did a lot of rock climbing, which he never thought
he would ever get into. Jeremy took up animal watching. He liked to go to
the other side of the world, where no one had settled, and just observe the
little critters in their natural habitat. Studying their habits was both
part of his job, and a hobby. He and his android worked together, sharing
the load. Angela really just relaxed every day. She was always rather busy
in the afterlife simulation, helping people, or learning new things. Now she
just wanted to do nothing. She spent most of her time on the beach, but she
sometimes got into an inflatable raft, and wandered the sea, letting the
water control where she drifted. And Leona? Leona was different. No one
fully understood what it was she was up to; not even Mateo. They knew it was
some kind of secret society, and while she returned home to Mateo at the end
of the day, she didn’t talk about her work.
“Again.”
Leona did it again.
“Quicker.”
Leona did it quicker.
“Good. Keep practicing when your friends aren’t around. Your legwork is
fine. Your arms need to be more precise. Remember to pay attention to the
way the air is moving. Cut through it, don’t let it slow you down.”
“Understood,” Leona said.
“All right, Ellie, your turn.”
Ellie did the same move, but she was better at it, which Leona found
annoying, because she hadn’t been here as long. This was actually an
alternate version of the Ellie Underhill that they knew from before, though
not really. Ellie was tens of thousands of years old, but not because she
was immortal, or even ageless. Her body had only been around for a few
decades, but her mind had experienced many, many lives. When she found
herself nearing the end of her lifetime, she would send her consciousness
back to the past, and overwrite her Past!Self. Everything she did in the
future was completely erased, and no one could remember it having happened,
except for her. This adventure was an exception, because it was taking place
in The Parallel, which was why Leona was here for it, even though Ellie
would one day undo the timeline.
“Very good, Miss Underhill, as always.”
Leona made a fake scowl at her training partner. Ellie chuckled silently.
“That will be all for today.”
“Really?” Leona questioned. They never cut the training sessions short.
“It’s November 15, 2253, according to the standard main sequence Earthan
calendar.”
“Oh, umm...” Leona trailed off. “I don’t find much significance to that
date.”
“Your husband does. Go home, Leona.”
“Thank you, Crucia Heavy.”
“Thank you, Crucia Heavy,” Ellie echoed.
The two of them started walking out towards the exit together, but Ellie
would not be leaving, because this was where she lived. She decided not to
reveal her presence to the transition team. There wasn’t any real reason
they weren’t allowed to know the truth, but there wasn’t any reason they
should know either.
“You gonna think about what I said?” Ellie asked.
“I thought you were joking,” Leona said.
“No, I think you should consider it. Today would be the optimal time.”
“Ellie, if we use your method of transitioning, I’ll have to explain how I
found out about it, and you’ll be exposed.”
She shrugged. “I can think of worse things to happen. Leona, there’s a Nexus
on the other side. You’ve completed enough of your training. You can go
back, and fight as Mateo’s champion. Isn’t that why you agreed to join The
Highest Order?”
“I joined in case The Warrior ever caught up to us. I stayed, because I
wanted to—because I like it—because I belong. And I’m not done with my
training. I’m never done.”
“Exactly, you’re never done, which means you could be here forever. That is
not what this place is designed for. You’re supposed to go out, and live a
real life. That’s what I’m going to do. You graduate when you’re ready.”
“I’m not ready. Maybe in another three years. That’ll put us back on the
Bearimy-Matic pattern.”
“Talk to him.”
“I can’t do that,” Leona contended.
“They’ll see who you’ve become someday, and then you’ll have to explain why
you claimed this was all a secret, when it isn’t.”
“I’ll cross that bridge when I come to it.” She stepped onto the first of
576 steps back up to the surface.
“I just hope you can cross it, and it’s not just a pile of ash by then.”
Leona went up to the next step. “I’ll see you tomorrow, Ellie.”
“If you say so.” She turned, and headed towards her room.
Leona walked up the steps slowly. She would sometimes run them to get more
exercise, but now she was worried about what conversation awaited her when
she got home. Would Mateo want to go back if they could? More importantly,
how would any of them react if she told them it was indeed possible; that
there was a loophole she had known about for over two years now. Angela
would probably be cool, and Jeremy liked his new life fine enough, but
Olimpia often spoke of seeing Earth again, and eating fried chicken once
more. Leona didn’t want to go anywhere. She didn’t want to stop her
training, and she didn’t want to return to the Milky Way. This was her home
now. No, she had to keep it a secret. Perhaps she would never tell them, and
they would just live here forever. It would be difficult to hold back for
quite that long, but not impossible. They had not yet qualified for full
immortality, but they were receiving longevity and youth treatments, and
there was still a chance that it would end there, and they would eventually
die.
Leona opened the door to their house to find the whole team waiting to have
dinner together, which she didn’t know was happening. It wasn’t surprising,
though, as this was the day they would have returned to the timestream if
the cuffs weren’t suppressing their pattern. They smiled as she walked into
the dining room, and sat down. The food temperature suggested she was about
fifteen minutes later than they expected, but they weren’t upset. She had
stalled for time on the stairs, and on the walk through the park, but she
still should have arrived earlier than usual. She glanced down at her watch.
Nope, it had actually taken her a lot longer than it should have. She was
more paranoid about the conversation than she realized. She was right to be.
They immediately started reminiscing about their old lives, and lamenting
not being able to do the things they once loved about Earth. It was like
they knew what her secret was, and were trying to goad her into fessing up.
Or maybe she was just imagining a tell-tale heart, and it had nothing to do
with her.
“There’s a way back to the Milky Way galaxy,” her asshole voice said before
she could stop it.
“I’m sorry?” Mateo prompted.
Leona closed her eyes, knowing there was no way to backtrack without looking
as big of an asshole as her voice. “It’s called the Suspended Pond of
Glieremé. If you swim deep enough, you’ll go through a transition window,
and end up on Flindekeldan in the main sequence, where there is a working
Nexus. It only has one unlocked destination, but we can go anywhere from
there.”
Silence.
“I suppose we wouldn’t have to swim,” Leona went on. “The AOC is small
enough to fit right through.”
“Did The Order tell you about this?” Angela asked calmly.
“I can’t tell you who told me about it,” Leona said. “Spoilers.”
Jeremy wiped his mouth on the napkin, and dropped it down on the table.
“Goddammit.” He stood up in a huff, and left the house.
“I’m sorry I lied to you about it. I don’t know why I did. I guess I was
scared Anatol would find us. I don’t know.”
“He’s not mad because you didn’t tell us,” Mateo said.
“He’s mad because you did,” Angela finished for him. “I must say, I’m not so
pleased about it either.”
“I don’t understand,” Leona admitted.
“When we were stuck here,” Olimpia began to clarify, “it was fine. We all
settled into our new lives, because it was all we could do. Now you’ve given
us the burden of choice again, which means we’ll have to figure out what to
do.”
“We can still stay here, if that’s what everyone wants,” Leona tried to
promise. “I only told you, because the longer I waited, the worse I thought
it would be when you inevitably found out. The Pond of Glieremé isn’t
exactly a secret. It’s just ignored, because you can take the Nexus back to
the Milky Way, but there’s no way back to the Parallel once you’re there.”
Olimpia shook her head like a teacher whose student didn’t quite get the
right answer. “Now, no matter what we do, each one of us will worry that the
others don’t really want that. We don’t want to resent each other, or even
think that there’s any resentment.”
Leona was mortified. She had no idea they felt this way. Yeah, that was a
good point; she had no idea.
“Leona, we’re not mad at you. We understand that you didn’t know.”
“Exactly,” Leona said, standing up. “I didn’t know, because apparently you
all have this group text that I’m not on, where you discuss these things.
You made a mistake by working together to explain to me how you feel,
because now I know I’ve been left out of a lot.” She tried to walk away too.
“Leona, you’ve been so wrapped up in that fight club,” Mateo argued. “Yeah,
we have conversations that you’re not there for. What, you want us to sit in
silence in case you decide to come home on time? If we always waited for
you, we’d never eat!”
“That’s bullshit, you could have filled me in on some of the more important
things. Maybe I don’t hear about what mountain you climbed yesterday, but I
should at least know how you’re feeling. What else are you keeping from me,
and how did you know it’s a fight club? I mean, that’s not what it is, but I
can see how you would come to that conclusion if someone told you a little.”
“We see the bruises,” Mateo explained. “You’re exhausted every night. Hell,
you even walk differently than you used to. Leona, you aren’t playing board
games down there.”
“Well, I’m glad you know so much about me, and I apparently don’t know any
of you people anymore!” Leona shouted. She walked away for real this time,
but she didn’t get far.
Jeremy came back into the houses, forced there by the edge of the Warrior’s
blade. “I can’t tell you what I went through to find out where you were. I
had to do a huge favor for a timeline interpreter. You owe me the five
months I spent spotting his nephew at the gym.”
The group stood from their seats, and approached him cautiously
“Anatol, you don’t have to do this,” Mateo warned.
“You also owe me your lives,” Anatol reminded him. “Don’t think I have
forgotten about our little deal.”
“What does it matter?” Mateo questioned. “Why is everyone so obsessed with
us? My God, the powers that be, Zeferino, Arcadia, Jupiter? What’s the
deal?”
“You’re just so fascinating,” Anatol explained, possibly sincerely. “Now put
your cuffs back on, and give me the primary.”
“Anatol...”
“Put them on!” he ordered.
They did as he demanded. Jeremy carefully helped fit Anatol with the
primary.
“You’re going to regret this,” Mateo warned. “They always do.”
“Or they switch sides,” Leona added.
Before Anatol could make some snide remark, he fell to his side, losing his
grip on Jeremy’s neck which he was at it. Ellie Underhill turned out to be
the attacker. “Go,” she commanded Leona. “We can’t subject this planet to
whatever it is he would do with it, so you’re going to lead him through the
pond, and I’m going to make sure he never comes back.”
“I’m sorry, Ellie,” Leona said.
“This is not your fault. Enemies gonna enemy.”
The team ran out of the house, and across the field, where their ship was
waiting for them in the same place they had landed years ago. The
Flindekeldanians didn’t even bother moving it. They just constructed a big
tent to protect it from the elements.
“I’m sorry, Jeremy!” Leona cried as they were running.
“Don’t worry about it!” he cried back. “Now we’re back to only having one
choice!”
They climbed into their ship, and initiated rapid launch protocols.
Evidently, Angela was secretly coming back here regularly to learn about how
it worked, and maintain the systems. This was good, because it wasn’t
designed to just be left unattended for three years. They blew right through
the tent when they took off from the ground. They didn’t make it all the way
into space before coming back down at an angle, and heading for the
Suspended Pond of Glieremé, like a guided missile. The AI navigated them
right into it, and the pond did what it was meant to by delivering them back
to the main sequence.
Saturday, July 3, 2021
Sic Transit...Intima (Part VII)
This was only the fourth time Treasure had traveled the bulk using her own
powers directly, and only the second time that she could remember. She
didn’t know where it had taken them, but she knew it was far. She had the
highest reserves of bulk energy ever, having absorbed a great deal of it
once the Transit was fully operational, and transconducting on its own. The
way it was explained to her, she should have only been able to cross over
into the nearest branes to where she was. Some branes were touching each
other, and while she could probably connect to a chain, there were other
universes that were just isolated, off in the bulk, not linked to any other.
The three major machines were capable of reaching these places, because they
could survive in the outer bulkverse. All signs pointed to the fact that she
could not. She was just a human, not wearing a spacesuit, or anything. How
could she survive something as dangerous as what scientists apparently
decided to call an equilibrium, in order to distinguish it from its more
commonly understood counterpart, the vacuum. However she did it, she did it.
She survived, and so did her friends. They were floating through the bulk,
watching time knives and swirling colors pass them by, protected by some
kind of bubble, and hopelessly lost.
Treasure tried to direct them towards the nearest brane she could see,
because the farther they got from where they were, the less likely they
would be able to get back. She had no form of propulsion, though. She
couldn’t control anything at this point. As best they could tell, they were
following some kind of hyperdimensional current, and traveling in a fairly
straight line. The only way they were going to be able to stop at this point
was to manage to run into a brane by chance. It was difficult to keep track
of time in the bubble. Their watches weren’t working, and obviously there
weren’t any celestial movements. They just floated there, enjoying the show,
but hoping it stopped soon. They could talk, but the sound was this weird
echoey muffle. Their voices were louder, but hardly intelligible, and quite
frankly, annoying. Plus, they didn’t know where they were getting all this
air they were breathing, so it was best to keep silent, and conserve as much
as possible. There they waited for at least a day, maybe more, until they
came upon a time knife, and flew into its sharp edge.
The odds that they would land on a planet with good surface gravity, and a
breathable atmosphere were negligible in this situation. There was just so
much more nothingness than there was nitrogen and oxygen in the right ratio,
but it happened anyway. Perhaps Treasure’s power would always take her to a
place where she could breathe. It was all about survival instinct, and she
couldn’t survive in space. Or maybe she could. Who knows now? The rules went
out the window yesterday.
“Okay, so I couldn’t really say this before, but...I’m sorry.” It wasn’t
very hospitable where they landed. It was a very dry desert, and the air
felt a little toxic; not enough to kill them right away, but enough to
decrease their lifespans in the long-run. They started walking forward,
aimlessly.
Quiet Quino was as cool as ever, and might have even been relieved to be
free of his superior officers. Rosalinda didn’t seem too terribly perturbed
either. “Fascinating. The chance to study, and learn from, a society that
rose up in a completely different universe.”
“We don’t know that yet,” Treasure pointed out. “This could be an
uninhabited universe, or maybe just an uninhabited world in a vast universe.
When you add it all up, life is unfathomably rare. Civilization is even
rarer.”
“That looks pretty civilized to me,” Quino mused, pointing to the distance.
They were standing near what kind of looked like an ice highway. It was
definitely not ice, but it was smooth, metallic, and reflective like water.
Coming down it was a hovercraft of some kind. It was just minding its own
business as it passed by, but then struggled to stop, and backed up. The
window rolled down, revealing two hard top androids, regarding them
cautiously but curiously. “Humans,” the one closest to them presumed.
“Yes,” Treasure replied. She spoke with her tiara, though, and that seemed
to confuse them more.
“How did you survive the transition?” He looked behind him, just in case
there was some kind of human reservation around here. “Better yet, how do
you survive the pollution?”
“We’re not from around here,” Treasure answered.
“Get in,” he offered. “It’s not safe out here for organics.”
They hesitated.
“We ain’t gonna hurt ya,” he claimed. “We’re just going to contact The
Transit Army, so they can come pick you up.”
“You can’t do that,” Treasure contended. “It’s a, uhh...”
“Paradox?” the passenger suggested.
“Yes,” Treasure confirmed.
The driver smiled. “So that’s how you’ve survived, not here at all. Either
way, we have to get you to a human sanctuary. They’re the only ones with
clean oxygen.”
Having lost all her bulk energy reserves, and not knowing how to navigate
the bulkverse anyway, Treasure agreed to get in the car, as did Quino and
Rosalinda.
“Go slow,” the passenger warned her friend. “Vehicles don’t come with
seatbelts anymore.”
He nodded, and went pretty fast.
“So,” Rosalinda asked while they were on their way. “Humans appear to be
rare on your world. Tell me about that. What happened?”
“First,” Treasure interjected, “what are your names?”
“I’m Apple, this is Kickstand,” the passenger said. “In case you’re
wondering, that’s my real name, but he won’t tell me his.”
“Original name’s dead, baby,” Kickstand said. “And to answer your question,
it died when my organic self did. The Ochivari came and sterilized the whole
population. They didn’t like that we were destroying our planet, so they
decided to wipe us all out...slowly. Well, our fearless leaders didn’t like
that, but it couldn’t be reversed, so they decided to just say, screw you
guys, we’re gonna become robots. So that’s what we are, robots.”
“Robot means slave,” Apple reminded him. “We’re not slaves.”
“Aren’t we, though?” Kickstand put forth. “I didn’t ask for this. I wanted
to have kids. My first wife embraced this new dynamic, but ya see, I
actually care about the environment, and I always did. I only agreed to it,
because the point of life is to leave a legacy. If I can’t have children, I
can’t leave a legacy, so my only hope was to live forever.”
“I’m sorry this has happened to you,” Rosalinda said sincerely. “Is there
hope now? Are you fixing the environment? I don’t mean you, personally...”
“Nah, we’re not doin’ that. This was the solution, and the easy way out.
This is just how we’ll live; on a dying planet. Sure, the rich people can go
off to colonize new worlds, and just fuck all, but the rest of us are stuck
here in the shit. That’s why we’re headed South, lookin’ for work. Maybe we
can save enough money to secure passage off this tombstone.”
“Easy, Kickstand,” Apple said, trying to calm him down. “I doubt these fine
organics need a lecture from you. Their worlds are safe from the Ochivari,
because their people made the right choices.”
“Actually, my galaxy is doomed,” Quino said.
“Wait, what?” Treasure questioned.
“Azura told me about it,” he explained. “The Ochivari invade a few years
after we left. We’re not going back home, because it would be pointless. The
rest of the crew intends to stay on board in a permanent fashion.”
“I...I didn’t realize.” Treasure was heartbroken. She looked over to
Rosalinda, whose world could still have been destroyed as well. They still
didn’t know how getting caught at Mizakh’s house impacted the timeline. “I
ruin everything. I should have just stayed home. I shouldn’t have screamed.”
Kickstand slammed on the brakes, and came to a complete stop. “Wait, are you
Treasure Hawthorne?”
She didn’t answer.
“You are. Oh my God, you’re a bona fide hero.”
“You can’t talk about this,” Quino said to him. “She’s not yet done anything
that you already know about her.”
“I can’t believe The Treasure of Star Mountain is in my car. That must make
you Quino Hawthorne, and...let’s see, if you’re not Azura...Rosalinda
Schreier?”
“I’m not a Hawthorne,” Quino said.
Kickstand chuckled. “Oh, ho, ho, not yet, I guess.”
Quino turned red, and closed his eyes in embarrassment. Now things were
really awkward. What little info Kickstand disclosed wasn’t proof, because
time travel, but there was really good evidence now that he and Treasure
were destined to end up together. It wasn’t the craziest idea. She had
feelings for him that she never denied to her conscious self, and he
obviously felt something too. When they were standing in a group, he always
either positioned himself right next to her, or across from her, so she
would be in his line-of-sight. If she had to go do something in another
train car, he would come up with a—sometimes terrible—reason to need to go
that direction as well. These were all things they didn’t ignore about each
other, but they didn’t talk about them either. She was sixteen by the
revolution of Earth, but equating that with Quino’s own interpretation of
timekeeping was difficult. It wasn’t impossible, but trying to figure it out
would require openly admitting why they wanted to know such a thing.
Regardless, he was at least a little older than her, and some people weren’t
jazzed about that sort of thing.
They drove into the garage, and entered the building. They weren’t the only
humans there, but there weren’t many others. According to Kickstand’s
continued rant—which Treasure only half-listened to, because she was stuck
in her own head—almost the entire population transferred their minds to
android bodies. Human survivors were living out the last of their days on an
island somewhere, the farthest they could be from pollution, but they could
all be dead by now too.
“Universe of origin,” the intake nurse prompted. It would seem bulk travel
was a tiny bit more ubiquitous than Miss Collins led her students to
believe.
“Universum Originalis,” Quino answered.
“Mine has no name that I know of,” Rosalinda said.
“Wait for me at that table over there, so we can run a cosmic frequency
test.” The nurse looked to Treasure while Rosalinda was walking over. “And
you?”
“Does origin mean birth, or where I grew up?”
“Where were you when you had your first poo? I don’t care about where you
immigrated to.”
“I didn’t have my first—that wasn’t until I traveled to Voldisilaverse, but
I was born in Salmonverse.”
Kickstand managed to walk over having been eavesdropping. “She’s the
Treasure of Star Mountain.”
The nurse was as surprised by this as Kickstand was when he first found out.
“Oh. Then why am I filling out refugee forms? You can just leave whenever
you want.”
“We can’t leave until I absorb more bulk energy,” Treasure explained.
“How long will that take?” she questioned.
“You know, I don’t know,” she said. It would be a good idea to figure out
how to gauge and predict all that. “I just have to wait until it feels like
I have enough to transport three people.”
“It would be nice if we could wait until you can take a few more than that,”
the nurse said. “The Transit hasn’t been responding to our calls. I think
they’ve abandoned us.”
“The Transit is not responsible for human refugees,” Quino argued. “How did
the humans get here anyway? Are they your people?”
“Two major bridge collapses happened on our planet,” the nurse explained.
Miss Collins taught the class about that. When Azura and her people were
sent off to neutralize their enemies, they did it by hacking into a bridge
that was only designed to connect Ansutah to Treasure’s mother’s brane,
Salmonverse. This hack had terrible consequences for the whole local bulk
group. Bridges started opening and closing at random, expelling objects and
people from their homes, to foreign worlds. Some universes seemed to have
more egresses, while others had more ingresses, like magnets. Flipverse,
Hypnopediaverse, and apparently this universe were three examples known to
receive a lot of people and things that didn’t belong there.
The nurse went on, “the Transit came for the first, and agreed to deliver
the people back to their homes. Then another bridge dropped more people off,
and they’ve not returned.”
“Where was the bridge?” Treasure asked.
“Which one?” the nurse asked.
“Closest one,” Treasure figured, but thought better of it. “No, not the
closest one. Most recent one.”
The nurse found a map on her tablet, and projected a hologram. “The closest
one is here.”
“That’s where we found you,” Kickstand pointed out.
“We came through a bridge without even knowing it,” Quino realized. “It
wasn’t so random.”
“That’s why I need the most recent one,” Treasure said. “There aren’t any
bridges in Voldisilaverse, so my teacher hasn’t been able to study them, but
she has this theory that they’re all still there, even though they’ve
collapsed. If you get me to the other one, it could have a higher
concentration of bulk energy, which could plus up my reserves much faster. I
don’t know how many human refugees you have, though, and I don’t know if I
can transport that many people. I’ve only ever taken two others at the same
time. It could be like diving in the ocean naked when what you really need
is a boat. That’s why the Transit is as large as it is, and airtight.”
“I understand now,” the nurse declared. “The Transit isn’t responding to us,
because they know the refugees have already been saved. You save them, using
this concentration of bulk energy, and a vessel that our people are going to
build for you. It won’t be as large as the Transit, but it will be large
enough for everyone to fit. I know someone who will be quite excited to do
this for you.”
Treasure was hesitant, and not because she didn’t want to put anyone out, or
make them do a bunch of work for her, but because she wasn’t sure she even
wanted it. Another machine? The Crossover, The Transit, and The Prototype.
These were the three bulk traveling machines. This other thing has never
been on that list, and when it comes to time travel, if something ever
exists, then it has always existed. Then again, Azura once noted that
Treasure herself wasn’t on the list either, and she had already proven
herself capable of harnessing her power, even if she couldn’t quite control
it. It was also entirely possible that, knowing what would become of
Treasure, people intentionally kept her own story from her, in order to
avoid any paradoxes. The nurse did say she knew someone who would want to do
this, and if it could help a lot of people, then it wasn’t really Treasure’s
right to put a stop to it. “Okay. If someone builds that ship, I will
provide power to it.”
“Great. Until then, let’s get you set up in the penthouse of the refugee
building. Someone like you deserves to have the best.”
“Hell yeah, you do,” Kickstand agreed.
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Friday, July 2, 2021
Microstory 1660: Understanding the Trinary
For the most part, the residents of the Hypnopediaverse trinary system don’t
think too hard about how that system works. They travel to another world in
their dreams, and then deeper into yet another world, where time moves faster.
There, they can commune with each other, and learn new skills, which can be
brought into the real world later. Exactly how it works, and why it works, and
why it doesn’t work unless they slip into that third world, is not relevant to
most of them. They accept it and move on. Some are not so satisfied with this
nonexplanation. They want to understand the physics of it, and find new ways
of utilizing the power, if that is even possible. A few like-minded
individuals came together, and formed an organization dedicated to this
research. They did not have malevolent intentions, but they recognized the
possibility that the dreamworlds could be weaponized in some way, or otherwise
abused. Knowing about these risks only fueled their motivations. People
criticized them for potentially letting those possibilities fall into the
wrong hands, and perhaps it was best to just leave it alone, but really, there
is no telling. It could just as easily happen on its own, and the world would
end up defenseless. I won’t bore you with the details of what they learned
during their research. Their primary objectives were to figure out if they
could travel to the other worlds physically, and not just in their dreams, and
whether they could transport resources between them. They never did figure
that out, because bulk travel is so rare, but they learned a lot about the
fundamentals of this branch of physics. As far as the general public goes, it
didn’t really do them any good. They didn’t need any more resources, and most
weren’t interested in understanding it, but it was probably best that someone
explored these options.
Thursday, July 1, 2021
Microstory 1659: Self-Sabotage
I told you about how the people in Area Doubleuniverse primarily use their
alternate realities to protect witnesses. Seemingly unrelated to the fact that
this universe possess thousands of concurrent realities, there’s a lot of
crime on this version of Earth. It’s just rampant and no one really knows why.
I mean, they don’t have access to other universes, so they don’t know it’s
abnormal, but from my perspective, as I watch history unfold, I can’t explain
how it happened. I can say that the prevention of crime is neither a priority,
nor technically possible. It’s not illegal to plan a crime, and a lot of
things you or I might consider crimes are not actually illegal until certain
things take place as a result. For instance, it’s perfectly fine to grow or
manufacture recreational drugs. It only becomes a problem once someone tries
to sell it, or use it. If the authorities discovered the location of a drug
plant, they wouldn’t be able to do anything about it, and in fact, they
wouldn’t be allowed to surveil the people working there, waiting for them to
commit a crime later. Surveillance just isn’t a thing there. Furthermore,
physical evidence alone is not usually enough to convict someone of a crime.
They rely much more heavily on witness testimony, so the human element is far
more important, and that makes it much more dangerous to be a witness. That’s
why the Alternate Reality Witness Protection Program exists. Instead of trying
to keep witnesses away from the criminals who would have them killed to
prevent them from testifying, they just relocate that witness to a reality
where the criminal doesn’t exist at all. This is an extremely delicate dance,
and there is pretty much no room for error. For the most part, the people in
charge of the program know what they’re doing, and they don’t make mistakes.
But of course, it wouldn’t be a story if it never happened. Knowing which
parallel reality to relocate a witness takes a lot of data, so they can make
sure the criminal they’re hiding from doesn’t have an alternate who may want
to harm them as well. It would probably be okay most of the time, because even
if the criminal did exist, they probably didn’t commit the same crime, or
weren’t going up against the same witness. This is what happened once, when a
woman named Azalea found herself face to face with the man she was trying to
avoid at all costs. Fortunately for her, the alternate version of this man was
not the same one she knew in her reality. He wasn’t that bad of a guy, and
even wanted to help. This particular case came with all sorts of errors, which
resulted in the original criminal figuring out where Azalea was. After
breaking out of jail, he snuck into Area W, and traveled through a portal, to
search for the one woman who could send him to prison forever. His alternate
self, meanwhile, didn’t want this to happen, so he vowed to protect her. But
would he be able to do what needed to be done to keep his promise?
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Wednesday, June 30, 2021
Microstory 1658: Exceptions to the Rules
The excelschians in Excelschiaverse are all pretty much the same. They’re
like AI assistants, except that they can only be seen by the person to which
they are assigned. The form spontaneously, to about half the population of
Earth, and there appears to be no common link amongst the people who are
chosen. No evidence has suggested that some kind of higher being is
responsible for this in any way. Some see it as proof of a God, but it’s all
just circumstantial. Those who study them have not come to any definitive
conclusions. All they have found is that if someone were to hypothetically
exchange their excelschian with someone else’s, nothing would change. It
would still be able to transform itself into whatever shape the human
wanted, it would still look human, and it would still not be able to
interact with the real world. There are a couple exceptions to the rules. In
one case, an excelschian appeared to develop some kind of personality, and
personal agency. It started considering itself to be an independent being,
and believed that it had the same rights as any corporeal individual would
have. Unfortunately for it, and its physical human, there was no way to
prove this either way. Only the human could see his excelschian, and while
he made every attempt to fight for her rights, it was impossible. The human
could have been lying, and no one would know. And even if the right
authorities agreed to grant the excelschian her natural rights, what would
that mean? How would that play out? She still wouldn’t be able to
communicate with other people, and she couldn’t get a job, or contribute to
society. All she could do was ask her human to let her make her own choices,
which he did happily, and that’s as good as it ever got for the both of
them. They even later fell in love.
There was another exceptional case, where the excelschian did not have
trouble with people seeing him. Quite the opposite. Overtime, people around
the human to which he was assigned started being able to see him, but only
those who did not have their own excelschians. He didn’t develop his own
personality, but he did end up with the compulsion to help everyone who was
able to see him. He wasn’t exposed to just anyone who happened to pass by,
but it was still a lot of people. So he began to serve as a sort of
community excelschian, but this started causing problems. Who deserved him
the most? Who decided what questions he answered, and when. It became so
confusing that the original human had to run off to the other side of the
country, and never come out of her apartment. The last major exception
involves a human who found herself capable of seeing any and every
excelschian. The world became a crowded place as she watched others ask
their questions, and heard the answers. They didn’t answer
her questions, which she tried as an experiment, but that was fine.
The real problem was that it was difficult for her to move around in the
world, because though she still couldn’t touch the excelschians, she never
lost her instinct to give them space, and walk around, as she would do for
anybody. She too had to run away from civilization, though not quite to the
same degree. She just had to make sure she wasn’t around too many people who
had excelschians. She actually tried to join a community of
non-excelschianed humans on the edge of town, but those were pretty
exclusive, and always at least a little racist, so they rejected her
applications. These exceptions were not heralds of the future, or changes to
the status quo. They were just different, and the chances of them happening
were never zero.
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Tuesday, June 29, 2021
Microstory 1657: Portrait of a Universe
Most versions of Earth advance technologically at about the same rate. This
is due to the fact that the majority of them are only c-branes, but I won’t
get into the specifics of how that works. The reality is that this can be
altered moderately by changing a few key conditions, or more dramatically by
something insane, like time travel. In Muxleyverse, an alien descended from
a group of Ansutahan who were expelled when The Crossover exploded, came to
Earth to decide whether it was worthy of being brought into the galactic
community. He brought with him highly advanced technology, which ended up
being sent backwards in time. This changed everything about human history.
This one little bit of tech transformed Earth from the youngest and weakest
civilization to the strongest, and most powerful. This was where the mess
began, and why most bulk travelers tend to avoid Muxleyverse, even the
Ochivari. Now the dominant race in the Milky Way galaxy, the humans went
around exerting their will upon all other worlds. They didn’t enslave
anyone, and they didn’t kill unless provoked by a resistance, but they
weren’t exactly pleasant either. They knew where they came from, and how it
happened. They knew that the aliens would do the same to them, if given a
chance. They felt that their only hope was to keep control of the situation
at all costs. Unfortunately, one you introduce time travel into the mix,
control becomes a laughable concept. Eventually, a rebel group of aliens
managed to steal time travel technology. They used it to go back to their
early days, and become the dominant race over all others. They were
especially ruthless against the Earthans, for obvious reasons. But it did
not stop there. An alliance of humans, and a different planet of subjugated
aliens, stole time travel technology, and went back so they could become the
dominant species. Can you guess where I’m going with this?
As you know, I have the ability to witness events in other universes, but
that gift gets complicated when alternate realities are in the mix. You see,
since each universe operates on a completely separate timeline, I’m actually
watching these other events having happened, not as they’re happening. The
past, present, and future don’t just happen all at once; they don’t even
exist from my perspective. It’s all just one giant picture to me, which
allows me to piece together stories. Alternate realities of all kinds make
piecing those stories together more complicated. Concurrent realites are all
but impossible for me to see through, because they add extra layers that
block each other from sight, but sequential timelines aren’t easy either.
The metaphorical picture of the universe is larger than a normal one when
that happens, but my perspective hasn’t changed, so every detail is smaller.
The point is that I don’t know how many loops these people went through. I
only know that it was bad. They just kept going, always trying to gain an
advantage over each other, until things got to be so messy that it all fell
apart. For the most part, unlike what you might hear in time travel movies,
the universe can’t be destroyed, even by a paradox. The paradox simply won’t
take place, and everything will be fine. You can overstrain the fabric of
spacetime, however, especially for a brane that was never meant to have
temporal manipulation in the first place. Everything that those people did,
it still happened. The end of the universe didn’t negate the past, also like
what you might see in movies. But it did end prematurely, and it’s a shame.
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Monday, June 28, 2021
Microstory 1656: Purebloods
In the universe where Neanderthal DNA managed to survive as a higher
percentage in the modern population, most people were genetically diverse.
But there were a few outliers; bloodlines which they would often call pure.
While knowing how much Neanderthal DNA an individual contained wasn’t
something people generally knew until DNA testing became available, there
were those who could detect it naturally. It appeared to be a survival trait
shared by few. It would seem evolutionarily important to be able to know
such information about a potential mate. Members of these so-called pure
bloodlines became impure by the 21st century, because it just stopped being
so important. Younger generations were making their own choices, and didn’t
really care about tradition, or perceived purity. It was also getting harder
to accomplish without committing incest, which was not out of the question
for some people, apparently. The rest wanted to fall in love with whoever,
and not worry about what people thought. One particular bloodline kept their
traditions going much longer than the others, until the youngest of the
latest generation met someone with the highest known percentage of
Neanderthal DNA. She was 24.4% Neanderthal, and honestly, considered to be
not so attractive because of it. That didn’t matter to this man, nor should
it have. They had a lot in common, and they wanted to be together, but his
family was not having it. At first, his parents threatened to cut him off
from the family fortune, hoping that would be enough to straighten him out.
He was not so easily swayed. He already had a decent education, presently
had a good job, and could probably get a better one with time. He didn’t
need their money. Since that didn’t work, they resorted to intimidation, and
even stalking, but still he would not budge. He was in love, and there was
nothing anyone could do about it. That was when they grew violent.
They attacked the couple in their home, but they didn’t kill his fiancée.
No, they murdered the pureblood son, and didn’t even bother covering it up.
Though he was one of them, the purebloods had no qualms about murdering him,
because they couldn’t risk contaminating the family tree with what they
deemed to be inferior DNA. They had previously resorted to inbreeding to
prevent this from happening when no viable candidates were available as
mates, but that wouldn’t help in this case. He wasn’t the last in his
generation, or even the parents’ only son. He was just the best choice for
passing the baton. His DNA was strong, and so were his reproductive
capabilities. If they couldn’t have him, no one could. Yeah, they were that
sick. The others could continue on without him, though, and everything would
be fine. Of course, it wasn’t fine. The public was outraged by the
development, and wanted something to be done about it. Law enforcement was
able to arrest the suspects, and most of them were convicted of something.
Some actually carried out the crime, while others conspired to make it
happen, but in the end, they were all mostly gone. That wasn’t enough for
everyone. A group decided to fight fire with fire. They didn’t murder
anyone, but they did chemically sterilize the survivors. The pure bloodline
would end here, no matter what they did, or who they tried to introduce into
the family. The sterilizers were convicted of their crimes as well, but it
was too late. The very idea of a pure human would forever be eradicated from
the public consciousness. A new age of enlightenment sprang from this,
fostering innovative ideas, and promoting social unity. Now they were all
the same, because they were all different, and there was no need to fight
about it anymore. The purebloods, meanwhile, died out, and became nothing
more than a terrible footnote in the history of the world.
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