After the Besananta left its home universe in an attempt to explore the
bulkverse, those left behind eagerly awaited their return. They waited, and
they waited, and still no one came back. They tried looking for data that the
ship might have sent, or that a probe picked up at some point, but there was
nothing conclusive. As far as they could tell, the mission was a huge failure.
There were some theories, like that travel outside of a brane was possible,
but back into one was impossible. However, signals could clearly penetrate the
membrane, so that didn’t seem too likely. Perhaps the destination universe was
so amazing that the crew decided to stay there, and forget about everyone
else. That seemed strange too. They might have encountered some terrible
threat that forced them to cut off all contact with Infiniverse. That wasn’t
entirely unbelievable, but in the end, these theories didn’t really matter.
They had no way of knowing how the mission turned out. Did they make it to
another universe? If so, why did they not return? The chances were too high
that the ship didn't survive, for one reason or another. They decided to stay,
and never try again. Answering those questions weren’t going to do them any
good. Just because they could tell that other universes existed, didn’t mean
that they were any good, or worth traveling to. They didn’t find any other
life here, so they were going to have to make do. That was what they did. They
chose to expand back out into the stars, so that before too long, aliens did
exist, because a civilization that started from a colony a thousand years ago
was no more similar to them than one that had evolved on its own. Here they
remained for the rest of the age of their universe. Some cultures died out,
while others thrived, while more rose up. This was the way things were
supposed to be. People weren’t really ever meant to explore the bulkverse at
all. It wasn’t designed for travel, which is why it was such a fluke. The
Infiniversals just had to recognize this truth.
-
Current Schedule
- Sundays
- The Advancement of Mateo MaticTeam Matic prepares for a war by seeking clever and diplomatic ways to end their enemy's terror over his own territory, and his threat to others.
- The Advancement of Mateo Matic
- Weekdays
- PositionsThe staff and associated individuals for a healing foundation explain the work that they do, and/or how they are involved in the charitable organization.
- Positions
- Saturdays
- Extremus: Volume 5As Waldemar's rise to power looms, Tinaya grapples with her new—mostly symbolic—role. This is the fifth of nine volumes in the Extremus multiseries.
- Extremus: Volume 5
- Sundays
Tuesday, August 17, 2021
Monday, August 16, 2021
Microstory 1691: In All Things
Biological optimization was always sort of in the back of the minds of the
people who lived in Moderaverse, even before they earned their name. I
couldn’t explain why it is that this version of Earth was so different than
others. I couldn’t explain why such a thing ever happens at all. What changes
are made that cause this divergence, and why? I suppose that it doesn’t truly
require an explanation. It just is. The Moderaversals just reached what they
would call technological completeness, and left it at that. That’s what it
really comes down to. Most cultures develop a high level of curiosity, and
nothing can stop them from pursuing knowledge. They might be held back by
religious hangups, or they may be limited by other conditions, such as
pandemics, or extreme gravity. But the strongest of them will survive because
they had a drive to be better, more advanced. This, I suppose, is an extension
of the evolutionary concept of the survival of the fittest. The reason humans
always become the dominant species of their world is not because they decide
to be better at life. They’re better at life because those fit to survive are
the only ones who will survive. Nothing evolves to be subservient, weak, and
averse to survival. Such traits always disappear, because anytime they show up
in an individual, that individual will struggle to persist, and pass on their
genes. So once the species evolves enough to have intelligence, they’ll start
using that intelligence to improve themselves. Then it will just keep going
until there is nothing left to learn, if such a state is even possible. The
Moderaversals, on the other hand, experience no such desire. They have
determined that life itself is good enough, and as long as it never ends, they
shouldn’t worry about advancing beyond it. They don’t need faster ships, or
cooler tech. All they care about is relaxing, exerting as little effort as
possible, and living in harmony with nature.
It was a long road to reach this point. As I said, the dream was always there,
but it wasn’t always practical. Everyone starts somewhere. No one quite
remembers how exactly the movement got started, or who started it, but it was
kind of like a nonreligious religion. I guess it was more of a philosophical
way of life, where people started to reject modern technology in favor of
simpler lives, but still with less work. A true simple life would involve
waking up while it was still dark, and working until it became dark again, but
they certainly didn’t want that. That wasn’t chill. They got rid of most of
their worldly possessions, which included a lot of art. That was one
interesting side effect of the movement. Art does not require technology, but
the enjoyment of it often does. For them, it meant no more movies, no more
television. If they wanted to see a play, admire a painting, or hear music,
they would have to go witness it in person. Over the decades, even as
technology progressed, the movement grew. The great thing about it was that it
was adjustable. Some people eschewed all electricity, while others just tried
to unplug more often. Eventually, there wasn’t as much demand for certain
things as there are in other universes. Most people didn’t care about looking
for life on other planets. They didn’t care about cooling down supercomputers,
or building extremely realistic virtual simulations. They just didn’t ever
want to die. So that was the kind of science that students started getting
into, and the more that started the help them, the less they relied on other
things; from the hyperfast pocket devices, to even just clothes. When you can
regulate your own body temperature, clothing seems a lot less necessary. There
wasn’t really any sort of opposition to this movement. No one decided to move
off, and do their own thing somewhere else. They all just fell in line, and
got with the program, until doing anything all day other than pretty much
nothing was essentially unthinkable to nearly everyone.
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Sunday, August 15, 2021
The Advancement of Mateo Matic: May 31, 1838
Leona checked her watch when they woke up in a completely different room the
morning after the doctor mission. It was now May 31, 1838; the largest jump
yet. Their cuffs weren’t giving them directions. In fact, they weren’t on at
all. Until now, they weren’t even aware they could be turned off. Either
they were completely dead, or Anatol figured out how to use them, and
decided they weren’t necessary this time. “I actually don’t know how they’re
powered,” Leona admitted. “I’ve never been allowed to open them up and
examine them. Yes, they could be dead.”
“Well, no one here has powers, except for Olimpia sort of,” Mateo pointed
out. “We don’t need them anymore regardless. We just have to do what The
Warrior asks of us.”
“What is it he’ll be asking of us?” Jeremy asked. He was a little down, even
though they still had no proof that the cuffs weren’t coming back.
Just then, they heard a scream in the other room. It didn’t sound like
someone was being attacked, or that they had just bumped into the coffee
table. It was more like they were in mourning, or something. The six of them
rushed through the door to find a woman on a bed, crying out in pain. She
was very pregnant, and almost certainly in labor.”
“Does anybody know how to deliver a baby?” Mateo asked.
The woman shouted at them in a foreign language. Or rather, the native
language.
“Does anybody speak German?” Olimpia asked.
Angela stepped forward. “Wir sind hier um zu helfen.”
“Ich bin allein,” the mother replied.
“Nicht länger,” Angela said. She turned to the group. “Jeremy, find clean
towels. Olimpia, give me that bottle of hand sanitizer from your bag. We
need all of it. Siria, find me some liquor, in case all of it isn’t enough.
Leona, fresh water. Mateo, how strong is your arm?”
“You need me to lift something?” Mateo questioned.
Angela took his arm, and placed it in the mother’s grip. “Halte ihn fest.”
Mateo winced as the mother beared down. “I’m okay, I’m okay. Okay.” He
placed his other hand upon hers, both to comfort her more, but also hoping
she didn’t feel the need to break his radius.
“Ich muss jetzt deinen Bauch berühren.”
The mother just nodded, so Angela reached under her outfit, and started
feeling around. Then she started to press harder. “It’s breeched.”
“What are you going to do about that?” Mateo asked, still trying to figure
out how to survive this death grip.
“Turn it.” She looked up at Jeremy when he returned with the towels. “Hold
all eight fingers right here,” she ordered. “No. Harder. Harder! You’re not
going to puncture her stomach with your fingernails. Hold until I say
otherwise.” Angela got to work, pressing on the mother’s belly as Jeremy
held in place. It looked like she was giving a deep tissue massage, and she
was feeling it more than she was looking at it. Before too long, she shook
her head. “It’s not working.”
“What else can we do?” Jeremy asked.
“Let go. Give me your knife.”
“Are you serious?” he questioned
“Give me your goddamn knife right now!” She faced the mother. “Es ist okay.
Du bist okay. Okay?”
“Okay,” the mother confirmed.
Siria returned. “I found some alcohol.”
“Give it to her,” Angela ordered. “Trink es. Trinken Sie alles.”
The mother was too scared.
“Trinken.”
Still scared, the mother took the bottle, and downed it pretty much in one
gulp.
Once the bottle was empty, Angela took the fairly large pocket knife from
Jeremy. She drenched it in the hand sanitizer, then rubbed some on mother’s
belly. “Ich muss das tun.”
The mother nodded, understanding what had to be done.
Angela cut into the belly, less carefully than Mateo would have thought. She
didn’t need it to look pretty, or leave a clean scar, or maybe she just
didn’t have enough training. She had Jeremy pull the flesh away as she
continued to cut. There were a lot of layers to get through before she
reached all the way into the uterus. Mateo could see a head peeking through.
By this point, Leona was back. She sat by the mother’s head, and rubbed her
hair affectionately. Olimpia and Siria stood by, ready to receive. Angela
reached in and pulled the baby out, again less gracefully than Mateo would
assume. She just got it out of its mother, and placed it into the towel in
Siria’s arms.
While Siria and Olimpia were washing the newborn off, and making sure it was
crying and breathing, Angela reached in and retrieved the placenta. Leona
had apparently considered there might be a c-section, so she was ready with
a needle and thread. Angela sewed the mother up like a seasoned surgeon. The
baby’s cries filled the room. It had all apparently gone well. They spent
the next few hours caring for the two of them, retrieving whatever she
needed; water, food, more towels. Mother was able to hold baby most of the
time, and even managed to nurse him a little.
“Now, no one had babies in the afterlife simulation, right?” Mateo asked.
“Never. It wasn’t part of the programming. Any baby born inside the sim
would be artificial intelligence, and difficult for many to accept as real.
There were plenty of medical training programs, though. I wouldn’t be able
to perform open heart surgery, but I can do some basic things like this.”
“No one would call that basic,” Leona contended. “It’s a good thing you were
here. I learn something new about you every day.”
“I’m sure the Warrior knows my history and education.”
“I’m not certain he does,” Leona said. “We haven’t come across many people
who know about the afterlife sim. I think it’s a pretty good secret, and
anyway, it would be difficult for him to gather information about things
that actually happened to people in there. Or, I suppose, will happen.”
On the other side of the room, Siria was trying to communicate with the
mother. “The name. What will you name him?” She pointed to her own chest.
“Siria. Siria Webb.” She pointed to Olimpia with her whole palm. “Olimpia
Sangster.” Now she pointed to the baby.
“Oh,” it sounded like the mother said. “Anatol.”
The room stopped what they were doing, and turned towards her. “What was
that?”
“Anatol,” she repeated. “Es ist sein Großvater.”
“He’s named after his grandfather,” Angela translated.
“Anatol Klugman?” Jeremy asked.
“Ja.”
The grown up Anatol came into the room and regarded his mother, and his
Past!Self. Now it all made sense. The Warrior brought them here to assist
with his own birth. But obviously it went fine in his own reality, or he
wouldn’t exist to ask them for help at all. This didn’t feel like a
predestined time loop. So that was what made it actually not make sense at
all. It made no sense when considering time travel rules. This version of
Anatol existed. And no matter what they did, this version of him would
continue to exist. Any other version in any other timeline would have to be
assimilated either way, so who cares? Was it just his mother? Did he just
want his mom to have the baby, regardless of what that meant about his own
identity? “It’s time to go, you six,” he said. “Now,” he added when they didn’t move.
“She’ll be fine.”
They stood, and started to leave. “Warten,” the mother said. “Herzlichen
Dank!”
“Gern geschehen,” Angela said for the group.
“Let’s go,” Adult!Anatol said. Baby!Anatol, on the other hand, said nothing.
Once they were in the other room, and out of sight, he transported them all
to the middle of the woods. “What?” he asked defensively.
“We didn’t say anything,” Leona promised.
“I’m not just being self-serving!”
“You don’t have to explain to us,” Mateo said honestly.
“You’re right, I don’t, so shut the hell up! And if you ever tell anyone
about this, you’re literally dead. And I mean, like, real dead. All I would
have to do is take you to dinosaur times, before Pryce’s computer program
exists.”
“Anatol, it’s fine,” Mateo tried to assure him. “I don’t know if you’re just
too used to dealing with bad people, but we’re decent. We’re not going to
put your Baby!Self in danger. Do you really think that’s the kind of thing
any of us would do?”
Anatol sighed. “I suppose not. But you’re also a little unpredictable,
especially when dealing with someone who you would consider an antagonist.”
“No one here is gonna hurt a baby,” Mateo continued. “The Superintendent
once sent me out to kill a bunch of Adolf Hitlers from other universes. They
were all at different ages, and one time, he was an infant in 1890. I
refused, and I’ve always kind of thought it was a test. Anyway, I still
think there’s good in you, and I’m not giving up on finding it.”
“You’re right, there is good in me, and I use it every day, because what I
do is good, and it is just, and I don’t regret a choice.”
“Well...that’s what I’m trying to change. Good people have regrets. If you
don’t, you’re not doing it right. You either can’t recognize your mistakes,
or you’re not taking any risks. I know you take plenty of risks, so...”
“I’m done with this conversation,” Anatol began, “and I’m ready to move you on to another mission. After five years of fighting in all of the Prussian wars, I tried to return home, but ended up on a detour. I need you to take care of my business for me, so my Past!Self can go home.”
Saturday, August 14, 2021
Extremus: Year 5
Captain Halan Yenant is standing at the head of the table, while the rest of
the group is seated. To his left is Lieutenant Mercer, who is one of only
three people who know what’s going on, and why this meeting has been called.
Most of the rest are clueless. “To begin, I’ll do introductions. You may all
know each other, but let’s do it anyway. I’m Captain Yenant, first of nine.
This is my Lieutenant, Eckhart Mercer. Over here we have Lead Engineer, Veca
Ocean, who brought the issue at hand to my attention. Next to her is another
engineer, Omega Parker. He’s here, because he’s the clone of a very clever
man, who was partially responsible for much of the technology that we take
for granted on this vessel. I have recently named him Head of Special
Projects, which is what I believe this will be, if it isn’t already. Back on
this side is Head of Security, Karson Gideon. He’ll be present for every
meeting henceforth, and will be largely responsible for the secrecy of this
committee’s mandate.”
“What is this committee’s mandate?”
“I was getting to you, Satyria,” Halan says. “I guess I’ll skip over these
others to introduce you to Satyria Ebner. She’s Passenger Chair. While I am
still demanding that this project be kept secret from anyone outside this
room, she has the right to be included. Coming back this way, Lead Mechanic
Corey Holgersen. Across from them is our one and only Temporal Engineer,
Valencia Raddle, plus her apprentice, Augustina Voll.”
“I—”
“But she goes by August,” Halan added before realizing that she was trying
to say that herself. “Sorry.”
“It’s fine, I didn’t know you knew that. It’s not in my file.”
“It is now.” Halan points down to the end of the table, past Satyria. “Those
two down there are The Bridgers.”
The crowd looks down at them, surprised to see them here.
“I know,” Halan says, holding his hand up. “They’re not supposed to be out
in public, but it’s too important. This project is long term. It will
probably last the entire trip. If word gets out that this committee has
formed, or why it has formed, anyone here is subject to profound
disciplinary action, including me. I could be deshifted for it, it’s that
serious. Anyone who reveals anything about the Bridgers, however...will be
executed, because it’s even more serious. No one can know who they are, or
that they’re here. Does everyone here understand this? I need verbal
confirmation from every single one.” He received it.
“They probably won’t say anything,” he goes on, “and you won’t need to say
anything to them, and you don’t need to know their names.” The Bridgers are
a mystical and mysterious class of people. They live in a secret section of
the ship, and don’t participate socially. They are immortal, having
undergone transhumanistic upgrades to keep them from dying. Over time,
either their current bodies will be modified, or their consciousnesses will
be transferred to new bodies entirely, just to better ensure their
anonymity. Now that this meeting has been called, only eleven people in the
universe know anything about them, including Rita, and their personal
doctor, who lives with them. The next administration will be read-in when
the time comes for transition.
The Bridgers were created to maximize the chances that this project will
succeed. If something goes wrong during one of these administrative
transitions, they can assume authority, and put a stop to any conflict. If
something goes wrong with the entire mission, they are expected to survive,
along with embryos that are being stored in their secret section. If no one
else survives to reach the Extremus planet, hopefully the two of them will,
along with a new generation of human descendants. They can’t let this all be
for nothing. Of course, this is only a last resort, but the original
engineers, some of which ultimately decided to not even come along, felt it
necessary to stack the deck in their favor. The very idea of the Bridgers
was spread throughout the passengers and crew as a way to frighten those who
might go looking for proof of their existence, while maintaining the very
real possibility that there is no proof, and that it’s all just made up.
Halan regards the people of the committee, looking for anyone who wants to
ask a question, but is too afraid to. He doesn’t plan on answering such
questions, but he needs to know if they’re there. “Okay. I’ll cede the floor
to Mrs. Ocean, who first came to me with this problem.”
“Thank you, Captain,” Veca says. “As he said, we have a problem. It’s not
one we didn’t see coming, nor are we completely unprepared for it, but it is
worse than we thought it would be, and it will probably only grow worse as
we approach Sagittarius A*.” She places her tablet in the center of the
table, and activates the hologram. “This is a rough map of the Milky Way
galaxy, based on readings taken from Earth over the last several centuries,
the stellar neighborhood from the last several decades, and Projects
Stargate and Topdown from the last few decades. Right now, we’re here, and
we’re headed to somewhere around here.” She points. “Between us and our
destination are stars, planets, and even asteroid belts and shells, but this
map is missing a key component. It’s impossible to map to any significant
detail, and difficult to illustrate in general, but it’s there, all around
us.”
“The interstellar medium,” Corey guesses.
“That’s right,” Veca confirms. “It’s composed mostly of gas and dust, but
larger micrometeoroids take up a greater share than we ever knew. The center
of the galaxy is denser than the outer arms, therefore, we assume there will
be even more micrometeoroids.” She brings up a data table. “Over the last
five years, we’ve noticed an increase in field collisions. So far, it’s
held. It teleports any incoming matter to a random spot anywhere between a
few hundred meters to an AU away. Again, everything is fine. The field has
never failed. We want to solve the problem before it fails, though, because
that is not an impossibility. However remote, the chances are not zero. This
committee was formed in order to make sure it never happens.”
“All of you need to know about this eventuality, but no one else does,”
Halan says, retaking lead. “I’m not saying that we won’t ever bring in
others, or even make a public announcement. It’s just not in the plans right
now. I want to see if the people in this room alone can come up with a
viable solution before we start getting inundated with other opinions.”
“If I may make a suggestion on how to proceed?” Omega jumps in.
Halan merely nods.
“When I was working with Team Keshida, if they ran across a problem, they
would separate from each other prior to any deep discussion. It was each of
their responsibility to come up with ideas without being distracted by other
ideas, kind of like what you’re saying with the public. It seemed to work
well with them. I propose we adjourn immediately, so each of us can return
to our lives for at least a week. Then, we come back together, and present
our solutions.”
Halan thinks this over. “The ship is not going to explode in the next week,
and if it does, nothing we decide here today will be able to stop it. I
accept the proposal. Mrs. Ocean will provide you with the relevant data. If,
during the week, you think you need more than what she provides, come to me,
and I’ll see what I can do. Sound fair?”
They all seem to think it does.
“Thank you,” he ends. They all get up to leave. The Bridgers activate their
teleporters, so no one sees where they go. Only Halan, Mercer, and Omega
remain. “Thank you, Lieutenant,” Halan says. “I’ll be fine.” He knew Omega
would want to speak with him privately. That was the point of the whole
weeklong recess thing. Once Mercer leaves, he turns to the engineer. “What’s
your plan?”
“I don’t have any specific ideas,” Omega explains. “I just want to do
something I’ve been asking for for the last two years.”
“You’ve been asking for a lot for the last two years,” Halan volleys.
“You’ll have to be more specific.”
“I think maybe someone’s already come up with a solution to this, and we
just don’t know it.”
Halan shakes his head slightly, and tries to think. Then he realizes where
Omega is going with this. “You mean Old Man.”
“We have no clue what’s in his lab. We don’t know what prototypes he’s made,
what working machines he was using, what designs he’s drawn up. Frankly,
it’s irresponsible to not look. Maybe there’s a timebomb in there that’s
scheduled to go off in a week. Somebody should look, it doesn’t have to be
me.”
“But you’re the most qualified, aren’t you?”
“Saxon was smarter than Veca ever will be. Yes, I’m the most qualified.”
Halan breathes deeply. “I supervise, and I’m putting cameras in your own
lab. If I find out you’re trying to create something unauthorized that’s
even so much as inspired by Old Man’s work, I’ll banish you to the Karen
airlock, and I won’t even let you have a wristwatch. Those are my
conditions.”
“I see no problem with that. I don’t want to engineer something if you
haven’t asked me to.”
“Thanks. I’ll be reporting this arrangement in the transition file I give to
the next captain.”
The two of them go down to Old Man’s old lab, which has been locked and off
limits since he disappeared in 2272. It looks the same as it did before,
which is good. He was always half-worried that Old Man was actually still
around, and secretly hatching schemes down here.
Omega slowly scans the room. “This could be awhile.”
“If I need to leave to handle Captain’s duties, you’ll leave too. We’ll come
back as often as it takes for you to get what you think you need.”
“I’ll start with the main computer.” He sits down, and gets to work.
Halan looks over his shoulder for a bit, just to make sure he isn’t trying
to access the self-destruct sequence, or navigational controls. Then he
starts to look around on his own. He doesn’t fiddle with any of the weird
inventions lying around, but he does open cabinets and drawers. One drawer
appears to be DNA locked, which means it’s the one he needs to get into.
“Oh, I, uhh...” Omega starts when he sees Halan trying to break in.
Halan rolls his eyes. “What?”
“I can...get into that...for you...probably.”
“How so?”
“I’m not just a clone. I can alter my DNA at will.”
“Why would Saxon build you to be able to do that?”
“Diversity. Each clone was assigned a different module in the Project
Stargate ships. Once we were done with our shifts—as you would call them—we
would be allowed to go off, and live wherever we wanted. In order to sort of
make it less weird, Saxon gave us the ability to change our DNA, so it
wasn’t like he was trying to take over the whole galaxy with his own copies.
He didn’t want to be seen as some kind of conqueror. The only reason we were
clones was because otherwise, over a million people would have to volunteer
for the job.”
“So you can make yourself look like anyone?”
“Not superficially. I’ll still look like me, but I can change the blood in
my finger long enough for the safe to register as belonging to Old Man.”
“Do it. But just this once.”
“You’ll have to give me six hours. That’s how fast my body can replace a
sufficient number of neutrophils. It would take longer if we wanted it to be
permanent.”
Six hours later, the DNA safe is open. Halan reaches in to find a stack of
letters that were once held together by a now deteriorated rubber band.
There are also a couple of ancient storage devices called flash drives, what
appears to be a really old cell phone, and an envelope full of hard copy
photographs. “What is this? Who is this kid? He’s in nearly every photo.”
“Hmm.” Omega takes one of the better photos, and sets it on the table so he
can scan it into the computer. Once the image appears on the screen, Omega
commands the computer to age the subject. “Just as I suspected. It’s Old
Man. It’s...Young Man. What is his real name?”
“That name is in his official records. I never questioned whether he legally
changed it at some point, or if his parents were just weird.”
“He’s from Earth. I recognize this place,” Omega says, picking up one of the
other photos. “He’s at the Mauna Kea Observatories, which were
decommissioned in the late 21st century.”
Halan shakes his head. “No, I spoke to the other older people here. I wasn’t
probing, but they talked about knowing him from before we were rescued. They
definitely saw him on Ansutah. He was there.”
“Well, he was also on Earth...about two hundred and fifty years ago, back
when they were still using actual film cameras. These sure look like it’s
where he grew up, and not just somewhere he visited as a time traveling
universe-hopping kid.”
“Who was this guy?” Halan asks, mostly to himself.
Omega flips the photo over. “Elder Caverness, 2005.”
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Friday, August 13, 2021
Microstory 1690: Fade Away
After the Eleven Guardians of Earth managed to help their foster species
evolve to the point where they could leave the nest, and do the same for
others, the original guardians didn’t know what to do anymore. Five wanted to
follow the Sheltren into the bulk, and find a new race to protect. The other
five wanted to repeat what they did before, and foster the evolution of life
in this universe. Their leader was the deciding vote, but she wanted to do
neither. They had been at this for a billion years, and she was ready to
retire. The people they created and helped were now off on their own, and
trying to do the same thing. Their numbers were great, and they were eager.
What more could a measly eleven people hope to accomplish, now that they had
to compare their abilities to those of their children? According to her,
having raised the Sheltren so well was all they needed to do. Anything beyond
that could just as easily result in terrible consequences. They could
theoretically turn a race into the next Ochivari, or even something worse.
Perhaps they got lucky with the Sheltren, and it would never go so well again.
She voted that they find a random world to live out their eternity alone, no
longer meddling in the lives of others. She was going to do this regardless,
but she wasn’t going to force anyone else to follow her lead, or even work
very hard to convince them to agree. She spoke her peace, and then took off.
The others, meanwhile, decided to stay in their home universe, and do things
exactly as they had before. They went off in search of a really good planet,
and found a unicellular organism that had the potential to evolve into more
complex life. They watched and protected them for the next few hundred million
years, but then grew tired of it. They missed their leader, and this venture
wasn’t as rewarding as it was before. So they left. They didn’t do anything to
harm the new planet in any way, but they weren’t going to protect them any
more. If life wanted to continue to evolve here, it was going to have to do it
on its own. It did. They managed to survive, and develop intelligence, passing
all of their Great Filters along the way. It was only a matter of time before
they too felt compelled to travel the stars, but they did not have the same
idea as the Sheltren, or their absentee Guardians. They didn’t even know that
their predecessors had existed. As for those eleven, well they just stayed on
their lonely paradise planet in the void, and faded away from history.
Thursday, August 12, 2021
Microstory 1689: Connections
In the early days of a universe called Universum Originalis, a civilization
formed in a galaxy called Vertea. It wasn’t just a galaxy, but the entirety
of the cosmos, according to its inhabitants. A bizarre phenomenon known as
The Verge forced all interstellar travel to first converge in the center of
what, again, the people thought must be the center of the universe as a
whole. From there, they could travel outwards to where they wanted, but they
weren’t able to move laterally. And they weren’t able to move beyond the
galaxy, because they weren’t even able to detect that other galaxies existed
at all. Once they did progress enough to figure this out, some of them
decided to explore. They built ships that were bigger and more impressive
than anything they ever had before, and they went out in search of new
cultures. While these ships could reach incredible speeds, they still took
time, and they figured that not everyone would be so patient. If it took
them a hundred years to finally find some alien friends, it would take a
hundred years to get back. They decided to construct something known as the
Nexus Network. Machines were placed on key planets, which would allow near
instantaneous travel between the stars, and even between galaxies. They
could automate these network builders to go all over the place, so if one of
them ever did encounter intelligent lifeforms, anyone could get to them in a
matter of seconds, or maybe minutes. Well, they didn’t find anyone. They
didn’t realize how few and far between civilizations were. Natural branes
are designed to support life in one galaxy at a time, and most likely
crumble by the time a new one rises billions of years later. Fortunately,
this was just the one universe, and there were infinite places to go once
they came up with sufficiently advanced technology.
By the time they came to understand how rare life was, the small group of
scientists and their friends had figured out how to travel between
universes. At this point, they themselves were billions of years old, so
actually interacting with these others didn’t seem as interesting as it once
did. They began to feel like the wisest people in all of reality, and while
they weren’t pretentious about it, they didn’t think it was a good idea to
interfere with the children too directly. That didn’t mean they didn’t want
to help. They could remember being so disappointed about how alone they were
in their home universe. They figured that the best way to help was to create
connections, so no one else would experience the same feelings of isolation.
They built more Nexus networks. They didn’t build them in every universe
that they encountered, and not only because the proper physics in some
didn’t support the technology, but because they didn’t all need such a
thing. Sapioplantaverse needed a network, but only one that reached
throughout their home galaxy. They were ecstatic when they discovered the
Nexus on their planet, which was deliberately hidden to avoid
extremely primitive species from being sociologically harmed by the
technology. The artificial intelligence that runs each Nexus is just that;
it’s intelligent. The engineers who built the system programmed it to assess
someone’s technological status, to decide what they’re allowed to do with
the machine, and what they’re not ready for. Some are allowed to go to any
world they want, while others can only go to one. Some immediately have
access to advanced features, like evacuation mode, while others have to earn
that right, if they ever do. The intelligent plant-based were given easy
access to the control room of the machine, but weren’t able to do anything
right away. This forced them to study what they had uncovered, and figure
things out on their own. It took them years, but once they did, they sent an
exploration team to the only other planet seen to have a Nexus of their own.
It was this universe’s version of Earth, and from here, an alliance formed.
Because what they discovered was that they weren’t the only two cultures in
the Milky Way. The Ochivari chose this brane to reconsider their options.
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Wednesday, August 11, 2021
Microstory 1688: Unstable Universes
Perhaps now is a good time to talk about brane stability. Not all universes
are created equal. Some are naturally occurring, while c-branes are created in
someone’s dreams. Most dreams last for only minutes before they end, and
unless something else steps in to maintain the dreamworld, the universe that
was born out of it will collapse as well. Even if the dream is strong enough
to survive, that doesn’t mean it will last forever. It is only as strong as
the people who are responsible for it. What does this mean? Well, if the
dreamer continues to deliberately explore the new world, it can last longer.
If they create something semipermanent from it, like a written story, or even
a painting, that can make it last even longer. If this art reaches some kind
of audience, that can make it last indefinitely. The most popular stories make
for the most stable universes. They have room to expand, and become more
detailed, and most importantly, interesting. They might also be able to
survive on their own merits, by the force of will of their inhabitants, but
this is fairly rare. I was expecting to give you another story about the
universe where zombies take over the world only briefly before dying out, but
like Vacuumverse, there is nothing more I can say. The events that occurred
here did not follow any level of logic, and the inhabitants weren’t strong
enough to hold up their story on their own. History began the moment zombies
were first created, and ended centuries later when civilization was all but
rebuilt. Little happened in the meantime, and nothing happened afterwards. The
whole universe collapsed under its own unstable insignificance, and that’s all
you need to know.
Tuesday, August 10, 2021
Microstory 1687: Licensed Genies Only
There are many differences between a spirit, a witch, and a mutant. A spirit
uses their soul to develop special abilities, a witch uses their mind, and a
mutant uses their body. But it goes deeper than that. Witches use something
called Craft (they don’t call it witchcraft), and while there is more often
than not a biological component, it is usually a learned skill. The temporal
manipulators in Salmonverse are a major exception to this, as they seem to
have some kind of innate understanding of their own respective abilities,
but for the most part, it takes work. Mutants obviously have some kind of
genetic difference that allows them to do whatever they do, or even hinders
them in some way. While their mutations aren’t always beneficial to them,
they do generally figure out how to express them through survival instincts,
because it’s rooted in that part of their neural makeup. Spirits, on the
other hand, don’t have to learn anything. They don’t have to be changed, or
be descended from those who were changed. It’s just something they are; or
rather, it’s something that we are. We’re born knowing that we’re different,
and also how we’re different. There’s sometimes a learning curve, but we
typically grow up with a fairly high understanding of ourselves. We know
what we can do, and we have a pretty good idea of what we intend to
accomplish with our gifts. Some are good, some bad, but none is lost. The
Genies in Genieverse were the same way, except pretty much all of them
wanted to help people with their spirit abilities. Of course, as we know,
they totally fail to live up to their own expectations, but this story isn’t
about that. It’s about how they came together to organize, and how any
recalcitrant ones were left with no choice.
For reasons I’ve not bothered to figure out, the population of this version
of planet Earth was only at about a billion when personal computers and cell
phones became ubiquitous. This is unusual. Even with heavy religious
influence, the global population should be beginning to see a much steeper
increase by this time. They kept changing their calendar, so I’m not sure
what year it would be comparatively, though, so it’s hard to gauge what’s
different, and what’s on track. Still, at this point in history, Genies were
starting to feel like they needed to do more to help. They numbered about a
thousand when a few of them got together first. They wanted to start a local
organization, which would service people hoping to be granted wishes. They
were the ones who came up with the majority of the rules and procedures that
would end up becoming the norm. Up until this moment, Genies operated
individually, and granted wishes very rarely. It’s unclear how they chose
their clients, but they included some of the most powerful people in
history. A few other Genies caught wind of what this small group was
planning, and wanted in on the action. They had some ideas on how to improve
the system. Genies just kept showing up, and wanting to make sure the system
operated smoothly. Some fought against it. This was the way they had done
things their entire lives, as had their predecessors, and they didn’t think
there was any need to change things now. Unfortunately for them, once word
got out to the general population that Genies were real, there was no way to
grant wishes without being part of the association. Even without an
understanding of how Genies worked, people were suspicious of anyone who
wasn’t considered licensed. Each Genie was ultimately responsible for about
a million people, which was just one more reason why this was all such a bad
idea.
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