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Hidden 29 days ago 26 days ago Post by Tortoise
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Tortoise

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"The Earth is the cradle of humanity, but mankind cannot stay in the cradle forever.”

- Konstantin Tsiolkovsky


In the depths of space, ancient machines whir to life. A signal has been received, written in a language of code that only the Gateways know, that says: Come back. And they do. From one end of the Galaxy to the other, overlooking worlds of deep ocean or alien jungle, they come back. First with a spark, a wavering in space- and then a flash of blinding light and heat, a storm in the void, a celestial crescendo like a sun being born. And then only a steady light. Billions of lifeforms witness it. They wonder for a moment, perhaps, but then they go back to their lives, not knowing that over their heads now sits a portal to countless other worlds.



) ---(**) || (**)--- (


There is a new star in the sky, and only one man cannot see it.

That man is a revelator and, though he is a priest, he is practical. His temple is made of hard white stone, which stands out starkly in the half-darkness of this part of Acerbus, close enough to the Night that the stars shine overhead faintly. It’s a large, rich temple, politically important- he cares about that more than he does spiritual matters.

He is performing a ritual, the Third Birthing Remembrance, an overcomplicated affair which supposedly represents mankind’s journey from Earth to Acerbus. Revelator Andrea does his job dutifully, but internally he scoffs at it. His theology is the same as his mindset: grounded, skeptical, a religion with all of the fluff taken out of it.

Unlike the stereotypical revelator, Andrea is not a man of the supernatural or other flights of fancy. He scorns the sacrosanct myths the others hold to so strongly as “only metaphors,” and delights in the scandalized reactions of his fellow clergy when he tells them so. He did not choose to be a priest, he was raised in it. He would doubt the existence of Earth itself if the evidence for it wasn't so great. Everything about that old story of humans blazing across the cosmos in the wake of a dying world sounds like the kind of tale a storyteller would come up with three smokes in. He supposes it must be true, but with a suspicion that it’s all been rewritten by his more myth-minded peers.

This is ridiculous, a voice in the back of his mind complains, as he carries out the ritual. First he was burning incense and letting the smoke smudge up the open stone courtyard, now he is lifting his hands and scattering dirt on the ground. He does it all mechanically, routinely- he has done it countless times before and it is mandatory, but this time in particular he starts to sense something… off. It is a few moments, in which he stands with his hands held high, before he notices: the worshippers aren’t looking at him. This is both strange and a little upsetting. They’re leaning over to each other and whispering, they’re staring up into the sky with slack jaws and looks of awe- they’re not looking at him. He raises his arms a little higher. But the congregation does not notice, their gaze is at something over his head, in that faintly starred sky.

When he turns to look, it takes him no time at all to see it.

There’s a new light in the sky, outshining the stars. It sits right above the peak of the temple, bright and burning and reminiscent of the stories about-

“The Gateway!” someone behind him cries out, completing the thought, and the light of someone else’s device invades the holy space. “Look,” they say, fast and overexcited. “People think it’s- the Gate, the portal thing, from the stories!” It has only been a few minutes, yet the Acerbian people are already connecting the dots. But Andrea isn’t. He is staring, slack-jawed as one of the worshippers, at the burning light in the sky. And the story is flashing through his head with a weight it’s never had before. Could it be?

“Revelator! Do you know?” one of them is asking now, pulling at his shoulder. He does not answer; the words may as well be coming from a trillion miles away, from across the cosmos. “Revelator,” they say again, and now they’re saying “Revelator, are you alright?”

With a rumple of fabric and a thud on the stone, Revelator Andrea falls to his knees.

) ---(**) || (**)--- (


The Gateway is open, and only one man cannot see it.

That man is Oscaro, and he is not a priest. This is the second most important fact about him, and he has to tell it to everyone he meets. It’s because he looks like one: usually dressed in ceremonial robes, with an apparent air of spirituality and sophistication about him. He is indeed a part of the clergy, but his role is as a fidel: a specialized monk of a particular deity, who serves under the revelators, but only when that revelator’s duties connect to the fidel’s chosen deity. When they are not aiding the revelators, they live lives of contemplation, study, and service to their fellow believers.

The first most important fact about him is that he’s blind.

Completely blind, from birth. His particular condition could be cured with Acerbian medicine, and that is precisely what Oscaro’s parents wanted for him. But he refused. The law was that a child could not be “healed” of blindness until they were old enough to make that choice for themselves, and as soon as Oscaro was of age to understand his own disability and what it meant for him, he knew he wanted to remain blind his entire life. His mother, crying about it, begged him to change his mind.

But she never asked him why. She didn’t need to.

“Hallowed Oscaro,” says a woman’s voice over intercom, “the captain wishes you to know that we are approaching the Gateway. Departure in estimated two hours. He…” the voice hesitates. “He suggests you should get some rest before we reach Earth.” In his private quarters aboard the battleship, Oscaro chuckled. She’d only hesitated because he was titled Hallowed. Even military types couldn’t get over Oscaro’s special place in the clergy. Especially military types, in fact. Many times he’d noticed with amusement that they were less nervous around actual revelators.

Oscaro comms back: “Understood. They’re sure I’m the only one qualified to be our first diplomat?”

The answer came back in the affirmative, of course. Fidels, like priests, are social creatures, but they are further educated. In times past, when Acerbian technology wasn’t so reclaimed and the education system not so developed, they served as the early Temple’s only true scholars. Oscaro is more educated in history and language and politics than anyone else on this battleship, where he’s been serving as a spiritual guide only because no true priest is willing to work on a ship patrolling so far out from Acerbus.

It was the closest vessel when the Gateway opened. As such, it is the one first entering the Gateway, and Oscaro is now the one who must play diplomat if anything is still alive on the other side of it. He wonders about that. And about the other colonies, if the stories about them are true. And about- many things, so many that it sets him to repeating holy poems for peace. His goddess is the Swallower, who it is said is better worshipped by the blind than by any other humans, being called Hallowed once they embrace her, and who it is said offers the peace of oblivion to those who understand her.

He slipped into visions at his desk reciting poems about her. When he awakes, the Acerbian battleship has passed through the Gateway. They have arrived safely in Sol, not far from the Moon, not far at all from Earth. Earth! The long abandoned womb of humanity. The crew is excitable, amazed, ecstatic, all the words. They are in shock. They are gazing at the viewscreens and speaking longingly about their long-lost homeworld, however gray and ruined and empty they say it looks now. Oscaro cannot see it. But he smiles.
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Hidden 29 days ago Post by Enigmatik
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Enigmatik Recently-Medicated Thembie Supreme

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The Tale of the Khaganate of Tengri Begins Now:






A Star Is Born

A shaman experiences the Universe's splendour.
Featuring: Zenith Shamanka





Zenith's chest heaved as she finished the steps she had been carefully practicing for three long months now. Bands of brightly coloured fabric fluttered about her arms and legs, and she could feel her sweat soaking in to the heavy underclothes donned for the occasion. Her head spun - it had already been light from fasting and now exacerbated by the exercise... But there was one more step left before she was ready to properly step into her role as shamanka of Uzay.

She must experience Its majesty for herself, once properly acclimatised to see the spirits.

Her mentor approached now, holding a bowl of murky brown liquid that even at a distance nearly caused her eyes to water. Seer's Broth: tincture of hashish and poppy, ayahuasca brew, shaman's sage and a metabolic reactant to speed the absorbtion of the mixture. Reaching out, hands shaky, Zenith grasped the bowl with both hands, locked eyes with her mentor, then brought the plastic to her lips, gulping the foul smelling and worse tasting concotion down quickly so as to minimise the amount of time it spent on her tongue. She could feel its passage down into her stomach - scorching her throat and immediately throwing her body to alarm. Bile began to rise and it took every ounce of her self-control to not project the mixture back up and all across the floor of the airlock... But she managed it, just about, returning the bowl to her mentor's hands and affixing the air intake she'd require for an hour-long EVA over her mouth.

There was a soft clink as her mentor affixed the tether she'd require to her harness, and then with a bow he departed, airlock doors slamming shut behind him. Already she could feel a strange numbness begin to spread across her body, a warm flush rising to her cheeks as she exhaled fully and braced herself for the moment of jettison.

But no amount of bracing could possibly prepare her for what the feeling was actually like. Her only warning was a brief flash of red and the opening blare of a klaxon before a collossal gust of wind blew her off her feet and sent her careening out of the warm embrace of the vessel and out into the void. She spun wildly for a few moments, lost in total and utter free-fall until with a bang the tether jerked her to a halt, body too numb and limbs too slow to really process the pain that she no doubt would have been in under normal circumstances.

Her secondary eyelids shaded her eyes as she cautiously opened them, and despite having seen the sight of the system stretching out before her thousands of times, she could only gasp at what she now percieved. The stars twinkled before her, each one haloed by colours that had no right being there. Light squirmed and flowed around her like liquid, rushing past her deadened body in rivers that streamed out from the system's lonely star, a solar gale that swept across every body that orbited the burning core, binding them tight in the star's embrace. She felt herself extend an arm out before her and was dully surprised to see her hand now covered in crimson spirals, highlighted fingers piercing the wind that buffeted her body but left the fabric swirling around her to spill out in every direction.

The stars and colours before her swam. Her mind began to slowly close in on itself, darkness seeping in from the edges of her consciousness. She should have been terrified but she seemed incapable of such an emotion right now, mouth agape inside the breathing apparatus as the edges pressed in, deeper and deeper, further and further...

The winds before her began to coalesce together. Brightly coloured sparks flared to life before her eyes, exploding outwards into infinitely tesselating sets of fractals, none of which could seem to stay still for a single moment, so filled with life and energy were they. The sparks flickered, slow at first, and then firing in patterns, the wind drawn to this single inexorable spot in otherwise empty space in which what was left of her entire mind, no her very spirit was fixated upon.

She held her breath without realising it, eyes perceiving but brain numb as she witnessed the patterns begin to pulse and the wind rushed back past her, towards the star from which they had came. She stared unblinking as the patterns finally shattered and an incomprehensible brightness filled space, blasting the darkness from every crevice and recess of her mind, the image searing itself into her brain.

A great, shining kaleidescopic vortex had been birthed before her, a new center for the universe to revolve around, and the tiny spark of her mind was nothing in comparison to its glory. Zenith - no not Zenith, because the figure suspended alone in Uzay's embrace was no longer confined to the single body in which it had found itself for almost exactly eighteen years, was finally, truly conscious of the truth.

Everything - not every person, not every planet, not every star or animal or rock or plant but everything, the whole universe itself, was a single tapestry, woven from an ever-expanding thread that had burst into life so long ago. There was no difference between the iron that carried oxygen through one's veins and that which floated through space, no difference betwixt the gases tightly compressed into planets on the Far System and that which the vessel that had borne the form that she identified with was even now steadily exhaling to stabilise its position.

The human form was the universe, was Uzay, and contained within it was the universe. Carbon from those that had come before, to be shared with those that came after. All of it was the same.

Zenith's consciousness slowly contracted back into her body, and never before had the shamanka felt so small, yet at the same time part of something so incomprehensibly large. As sensation slowly returned to her fingers and her eyes began to refocus, she jolted a little, startled to see that the explosion of colour and light, the kalaidescope which she had thought was merely a particularly vivid hallucination remained steadfast before her, even as the winds that were still pulled into it faded from view. Gripping her tether, she turned about, confirming that yes, her vessel was still there... and yes, when she turned back, that strange portal was also still there, defiantly resisting even her new understanding of her place in the universe.

Perhaps her mentor might know. Her pressure gauge informed her she only had another five or ten minutes of non-reserve air and the freezing sensation that had crept into her fingers only further confirmed that she'd been out here for a while, even if it hadn't felt that long at all. Giving her tether three firm tugs, she was relieved when she felt the reassuring vibrations of the winch at the other end reeling her back in, still staring at the portal, at the...

Gateway




Hail to the Khagan

The Great Khagan sets forth the most important decree of his reign.
Featuring: Ögedei II Khagan




It had been less than twenty minutes since Ögedei was awoken with news that one of the most momentous events in his people's history had occured in the hour and a half since his head had hit his pillow. While most people would have grumbled at this, there was no time for him to be lax in his duty, and instead he'd hurried to don clothes suitable enough for him to make an appearance on the bridge of the Bai-Ülgen. Now, his footfalls sounded heavy even on the carpeted floor, while behind him tromped two Kheshigs, stiff plumes quivering with each movement they made.

He emerged out onto the bridge to a scene of absolute chaos. The High Shaman was bickering with the chief navigator, his Cherbi and Grand General were stood before a rapidly blinking holographic display, frantically gesturing at icons of vessels and diagrams of horde structures, one of his wives was trying to corral her daughter away from all the chaos... But all of it was dwarfed by the display out of the Bai-Ülgen's main screen.

It sat just outside of the middle asteroid belt, a glowing... disc of swirling light and colour that none living on the system had ever seen, yet all knew exactly what it meant. For a moment, even the Khagan was caught up in the wonder of the situation, only for one of the two Kheshigs trailing him to bellow out an introduction.

"HIS IMPERIAL MAJESTY, GREAT KHAGAN OF TENGRI AND THE ENDLESS BLACK SKY, ÖGEDEI, SECOND OF HIS NAME, IS ON THE BRIDGE."

Instantly, a hush descended across the crowded court. Squabbling figures disentangled themselves from one another, the various kheshigs and soldiers snapped to attention aiming crisp salutes towards their liege, while his daughter clapped loudly, golden eyes glittering in the artificial light.

"Initial report please, beyond the blatantly obvious." He gestured towards the view before them, raising an eyebrow. Immediately a long-fingered shinjar had scurried forwards, nervously clearing his throat.

"T-the Gateway opened itself approximately t-thirty five minutes ago, sire, and immediately began interfacing with the flagship's systems." The man took another deep breath before continuing. "We have a full list of systems that correspond with what little was preserved from the original databanks, while reports from other members of the Golden Horde suggest that their navigational computers are also able to interface with it."

Ögedei tugged at the end of his moustache and contemplated his immediate moves. He hadn't formalised his power enough over the Colour-Hordes, and there was no way he could stop all his siblings from deciding to take their fleets where they wished... So it was best to direct their energy into places where it could do the most good for the Khaganate. Shuddering a little, he pointed to his chief communicator and strode forward towards his command throne, the bridge crew that had been left standing around when he entered now scurrying to their places.

"The Obsidian and Silver Hordes are to keep an eye on the Gateway at all times. Anyone, anything that comes through needs to be immediately relayed to this ship as soon as possible. Halt any intruders, but do so without killing them unless absolutely necessary. We cannot afford to re-enter the galaxy with blood on ours hands." As soon as the words were said, they were already being relayed across to the other flagships dotted throughout the system, his scribe's fingers flying across the screen of a datapad to record everything as soon as it left his lips. "The Steel Horde will need to increase production of warships to allow us to maintain our watch properly. The Golden Horde will cover the cost, ship them enough Altun to get them to agree. We'll extract some of the value back one way or another." He sighed deeply.

"The Khaantus should be as informed as I am about all of these goings on. Any report regarding the Gateways that comes to me also goes to her. Make sure the news is dispersed, safely, through the populace. We can't hide this, and any attempt to do so would be folly. I'll leave the exact hows to her best judgement, she knows the people of Itügen better than I."

"As for my siblings... The Red Horde should take detachemnt fleets as required and venture to Sol. Khulan will be responsible for negotiation with any other branches of humanity that make their way to our home, and needs to be prepared for a long stay there. Double her detachment of Kheshigs and reinforce with House Guards if required... Actually, scratch 'detachment fleets.' Send the Tömör Chadal through with her, and make sure she knows that such a thing is not negotiable. The rest of the Colour-Hordes need to communicate with each other before they set off. I do not want to hear of any squabbling between them over scraps of prestige." The Cherbi began barking out orders once the Khagan finished, and Ögedei knew that within the hour the detachment of soldiers aboard the Bai-Ülgen would drop significantly. It didn't exactly please him to do such a thing, especially since there was no doubt the system would come under the kind of pressure it had never experienced before, but it would be far worse to lose Khulan and her loyalists.

"I expect constant communication from all of them as soon as they leave Tengri. Any sustained lapse or failure to report in should be met with the highest suspicion." More salutes and called out orders followed, until at last his chief navigator turned and asked the question that no doubt all aboard the Bai-Ülgen were waiting for:

"And what of us, Great Khagan?"

"What of us? We remain here. The Golden Horde is the bedrock of the Khaganate. The Bai-Ülgen is her lynchpin. If the way is made clear by Khulan, we may forge ahead to Sol ourselves, but otherwise we hold here - our power is needed at home."

"Of course Emperor." A floor-scrapingly deep bow followed, and Ögedei finally allowed himself the small privalige of slumping down in his throne.

All he could do now was wait.

Wait, and pray.




Red Horde over Paradise

The Crimson Khatun leads her people home
Featuring: Khulan Khatun-Khuu


A true armada had assembled at the Gateway over the course of almost half a week, all spearheaded by the Konrul Ülzii - The flagship of the Red Horde and personal throne of Khulan Khatun. Assembled around it were representatives of the other Hordes joining the expedition to Sol - the Tömör Chadal of the Iron Horde, the personal trade-fleet of a Sapphire Horde Khan and a seemingly endless number of smaller clan-ship, jostling for a more prestigious position closer to the wormhole itself. With the last few stragglers having finally arrived, Khulan Khatun could take up her position in the command throne of her flagship, transmission lines opened wide so all could hear her words.

"Glory to the Great Khagan of Tengri, and greetings to all those that have asssembled upon his decrees. We have been given a chance to not only serve our sovereign and our clan, but to do what none before us, not even the great Chinggis Khagan himself, have. Almighty Uzay, its reach beyond knowing, its designs beyond reproach, has given our spirits an opportunity we must not cast aside." The High Shaman offered her an approving nod as she pressed on.

"We have been chosen, by the universe and by the Emperor, to be the vanguard of our people. To walk, as our ancestors did, across the grand vastness that is Uzay, to feel the strength of our ancestor's star across our faces, and to walk upon hallowed ground once thought lost forevermore." A quick glance across the bridge told her that the words were having their intended effect. Her brother had always been the stern, practical kind; deft with administration, confident in a war-room and efficient in business... But she had always been the orator, ever since they were young.

Perhaps that was another one of Ögedai's strengths: Strong delegation skills.

A wry smile crossed her face as she continued her speech.

"To those who join us from other Hordes, know that you serve among equals beneath the Khagan. It is through all of our skills and knowledge that we will chart this path for our people. To our soldiers, know that it will be your blades and your bows, sheathed or drawn, which will ensure our safety and prosperity in the times to come. To those who serve in my Horde, know that your Khatun is with you. Carry the Konrul high, and know that whenever one of you prospers, so do we all. Let my brothers scatter themselves among the stars to reap an unknown bounty. We will serve in the Cradle of Mankind, and we will show that them the Red Horde's glory." A small cheer went up among the bridge staff, and she had the faintest suspicion that a similar scene would be playing itself out across the armada.

"Let Uzay's wisdom guide our steps as we pass through our finest creation. I will see you all, blessed subjects, on the other side of the galaxy."

She chopped her hand forwards to punctuate her final sentence to her staff, and before she had even had a chance to let it fall the bridge staff began to brace themselves as the Konrul Ülzii's colossal engines fired. A collection of the court's spiritual leaders made slow circles around the holographic command table that dominated the majority of the bridge, voices undulating over the sonorous rhythm of ceremonial drums and the soft jingles of bells and clappers attached to their uniforms. One of their number - a dervish, no doubt, was perhaps the most eye-catching of all the priests. He had no drum and no bells, yet with each twist and turn of their form, great ribbons of brightly-coloured synth silk whirled about, colours bleeding across them with each gust of movement to create a prismatic halo of movement.

The Gateway was now the only thing visible from the bridge display. The holographic display flickered through options incomprehensibly fast, the chief navigator's hands a blur as they acquainted themselves with the greatest of Earth's technological marvels... But it wasn't hard to find what they were looking for.

Eight planets, four of them giant. A single G-type main-sequence star... And there, third from the star was a blue marble, streams of text from a language long since left behind on Tengri swirling around it. Humanity's home. Their home. Once, at least.

The Gateway enveloped the flagship and vanished from sight. The hairs on the back of Khulan's neck shot up, the display flickered, the ceremony's momentum faltered for a moment and it seemed even her Cherbi had felt something in that briefest of seconds... But then the feed resumed, and as the voices and drums reached their climax a gasp slowly went up from across the bridge. Now, instead of the portal, there was instead a large, airless... Moon? It had to be a moon, for close to it, far too close for it to not have been ensnared, was a planet, the third from its star.

And it was dead.
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Hidden 27 days ago Post by DX3214
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DX3214 God-like Cyborg

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The Old Path is open to old Gael and beyond.



A few hours before the gate opened.


The sound of engines cranking, gears spinning, and the reactor's heartbeat could be heard through the heat of the space station orbiting Vusary's second moon of Spiragîr. Walking through the cramped hallways, Aseni read a console given to her by a trade ship as she walked. She stopped for a moment and quickly groaned upon seeing the data as she soon began to walk through the hallways of the station, Aseni was a woman who looked in her early twenties she had sapphire-like eyes and long white hair, her face was plain and rather pale with a crooked nose, but rather well tight and well groomed compared with extremely expensive maid like clothes while having a collar around her neck made out of metal. Music could be heard as she entered the social areas where guards, soldiers, and some workers operated. Filled with shops illuminated by neon and industrial lights. As she walked, she overheard a conversation between workers, one saying. "Me and the boys in a ship tried to go asteroid mining, and guess what?" "What?" One of the workers replied. "Some fuckers from warlord Varke came out of nowhere and put a tax on us for mining in his area!" "Are you kidding me? Are they now gonna start taxing anyone if you cross into their lands?" One of the guards replied. "I don't know it is getting harder now thanks to the rivalry between Varke and Boss..." the man replied with another worker saying. "Maybe try to open a shop for the pilgrims or a stop? My cousins have been doing well for them since they want to see the ancient gate." "Ye… like that is cheap." The man replied to the others, Aseni soon could not hear them as she walked away from the conversation.

Heading through the industrial hallway, she saw the docks of the space station as their blast doors were being repaired together with the secure areas; some houses were even being built into the walls being adapted to the hangar. "The population was growing." she thought seeing the buildings as she once again entered the confines of another hallway. She pulled a chain hanging from the ceiling that headed up. She soon dragged up before being stopped on a floor, and stepping down a guard standing by saluted her as she passed down remarking, with few words. "Fix this damn elevator for once..." Walking through the hallway she soon noticed another opening. She froze and bowed before the statue of Lukary before saying. "Be well Your Majesty." She then finally noticed the other descendants of Lukarians that she ignored due to her hurry; the four men and two women gave light bows to her in solidarity saying together. “Cousin…” After giving a small bow of respect to the others she continued on her way.

Picking another elevator she soon began to go down rather fast seeing sections of industry and air controls an area of recreation and many others as she finally stopped at a more luxurious hallway decorated by bluish plants and carpets partially tattered with a sigil of a star being devoured by a Gnax, at the end of the small hallway was a flank of two guards walking softly they saluted her as the door opened and closed behind her looking at room that was a frank mess of books laid about and different papers the walls made out of reinforced steel and as she looked around she heard a man singing.

“Oh stars, Oh stars, sing with me”
“Oh stars, Oh stars, sing with me”


Aseni hearing it soon saw Vinaae she soon began to approach slowly while hearing the song. Vinaae seemed to have reclined on a chair while holding a half-empty glass of Nek.

“The Night that comes into the dawn”
“From Dalenndar, to Normagar”
“Where fire burns, and the bullets fly”
“Where man of steel march to die”


Aseni soon saw Vinaae. His hair was dark, his eyes were closed, his face bore many healed scars and he seemed to stay young despite being 34 she soon began to lean into him while she heard him sing.

“Oh stars, Oh stars, sing with us tonight”
“For today we shall march to fight”
“Against the heart of the beast we shall fight”
“and death and glory to be us to…”


“Nice song.” Aseni whispered to Vinaae's ear with him snapped out with a scream, his eyes flaring open revealing the sulfur glow as he quickly fell out of his chair beginning to groan in pain looking to see Aseni he soon pointed at her saying. “Sister…” He soon began to adjust himself. “You Bitch!” Asenie chuckled at the display saying. “really an old war song?” “You know me, not a fan of modern stuff… Changing Topics! WHAT THE FUCK!” He shouted as she gave a light shrug he soon said. “I said more than once to knock!” “This is also my room. I will let you know.” She replied with him groaning, rising up completely and stretching his back he then said. “What is it? I hope it's important” he soon pressed a button as the metal lifted revealing a window to space as he looked on. “Well, remember Varke brother?” He rolled his eyes as he poured a glass of Nek. “Ah yes, the perpetual pain in my ass as he constantly threatens to attack. What about him?” “Well, he just declared any ship going through his territory to us banned.” She replied stopping, raising the glass to his lips and putting it on the table again he then shouted. “What! Can he do that?!” “Technically, it's his territory and I doubt the council nor the crimson eye would step in for such a petty thing” She said with Vinaae growing concerned as he sat on a chair. “This is the worst… now we have to contend with losing 50% of our mineral production.” he said. “Could be worse…” She replied to him continuing. “Remember what father always said? Always be ready for the unexpected because sometimes the good and bad can come both ways.” “Oh please, what good can come of this? I mean, think about it we rely heavily on the…” Aseni smiled, refocusing her eyes into the window for a moment. She felt like work was gonna be thrown at her. Instead, her worries drew to something else outside the gate came into view as the station rotated, and it seemed to begin to glow her eyes widened seeing it. “Brother…” she said with a tone of fear. “We already are in some high levels of debt due to the navy expenditure and…” He continued with her saying. “Brother…” She soon began to move slowly backwards with him sighing. “What?” “The gate to Gael…” She replied, sounding scared as the room was suddenly illuminated by a blue light turning around Vinaae looked towards it and shouted. “WHAT IN THE NAME OF THE KINGS!”

The light soon glowed like a new star in the heavens across all of the star system. A new star appeared in the sky near a newly made pilgrim station. For some in Vusary the planet of old, it seemed like a curiosity. Maybe someone accidentally exploded an old ship's reactor or a major nuclear attack. For others who knew of the star maps the gate towards old Gael glowed and it awoke.




Four days later.


Vinaae coughed into an intercom to call attention before saying. “Right to all workers please get away from blast areas before we launch the probe. All workers remove yourselves from the danger zone” He soon cut comms looking back he soon saw an enormous crowd of people from all clans watching he whispered to his sister. “Is it an impression or are there more people onboard?” “Ah yes more came from abroad as the gate opened.” she replied with a light annoyance. “Ah great… now the entire system knows what is going on here.” Soon the radio fliered up with a static voice saying. “Sir this is Noxi-1 I am ready” Typing into the console he soon picked up the transmission. “Good work Noxi-1 once you think you are ready to launch give a heads up and fear not in any complication, any family member shall be richly compensated for your volunteer work” Vinaae soon turned off comms for a moment. “What are the chances he dies?” “High...” she replied. “Do we really need to pay if he dies?” he said with her turning her head to him looking rather disapprovingly he sighed, taking a moment before turning on the radio again. “Are you ready?” “Yes sir” The sound of a deep breath could be heard with Vinaae smiling pressing the intercom button. “Right, everyone! We are initiating the first launch.” Putting his hand on the console watching as the pilot readied to launch his hands shook for a moment saying. “The Old kings were said to go to Old Gael and that one day they would return to bring judgment right?” “That is how the old stories go…” She said equally, sounding nervous. “We have every cannon aimed at the gate right?” he asked with her replying. “Yes, roughly all cannons and missiles we could muster.”

As both calmly talked soon the pilot of the small craft seemed to launch the procedure as the entire station could see the small craft fly from the hangar towards the gate the cable attached to it being extended from the station and pass the blue glow of the gate seeing the transition Vinaae awaited the maximum time was one hour or so he thought to himself why they did not just attempt to experiment to see if communications would work through the gate but it seemed like a safer option seeing how they didn’t know much of how the machine operated so it was best to do a simple test first. After a moment of silence, the metal cord soon began to be pulled back with the automated system Vinaae, Aseni looked on with curiosity together with the entire station also watching passing through the blue light came the small craft came back as they looked on as communication came in from the. “Everything is fine” There is a collective sigh of relief around the station but also of concern and debate Vinaae soon said. “Right, let me see what the cameras picked up.” He soon picked a console selecting the recordings of the ship to begin to be transferred over. Selecting the video, he soon saw space with Aseni whispering. “Gael?” “seems to be close to it.” He pointed to a dot in space saying. “A moon orbiting a grey dot.” “Are you sure it's Gael and not another star system?” Aseni asked him, and he replied to her saying. “There is a small chance we don’t know how old Gael looked. Mom did say Gael had 3 moons?” Aseni replied with a dry tone. “Mine said it was two…” Vinaae looked annoyed, giving the console to her and returning to stare at the gate. “Marvelous…” He pondered for a while while standing on the balcony overlooking the hangar and seeing through a window thinking for a while before saying. “Well, I wonder how this thing works and if it can change the place to send.”

Down below the pilot was removed from the exploration craft while chatter continued. Both siblings meanwhile continued some small chatter about the gate until they were interrupted by a guard knocking at the door. “Come in” Vinaae said as the doors opened a guard then said. “Ah Lord Vinaae someone wants to talk to you;” “I’m busy.” Vinaae replied with anger the guard looked a bit worried but he continued. “He's a fleet captain of ten ships, his name is Teenizorii.” Vinaae seemed to think for a moment before saying. “Let him in.” As he picked the console off the hands of Aseni searching the man’s name as the guard left. Aseni then said as both were alone again. “What is it now?” “Just seeing what this guy wants before I send him away. Docked two weeks ago to refuel, stayed after the gate to Gael opened, interesting guy.” The door soon opened again and both saw a man in his 50’s his eyes were blood red and he seemed addoned with several dozen scars he then said. “Lord Vinaae I believe correct?” “Yes that is me what you need sir…” he gestured for his name the man replied. “Teenizorii, fleet warlord.” “Ah… well pleasure to meet a Nikorian how i can help?” VInaae replied with a smile. Teenizorii remained expressionless looking at the window, he said. “The gate has opened has it not?” “ah yes…” Vinaae replied confused Teenizorii soon continued. “...and this station and the ring are considered your domain. I would like permission to take my fleet and myself through it.”

Vinaae and Aseni looked at each other with Vinaae staying curious. “You want to take your fleet to the other side of that portal?” “It's old Gael, ancestor mother who would not seek to see once again the old mother?” Teenizorii said Vinaae then said. “Well… there is a small chance that eight people may be waiting there you know…” “I don’t think they will judge us nor do I think they are there.” he replied to Vinaae sounding confident Vinaae thought for a moment before dropping the curiosity he soon turned into a wide smile saying. “Sure! why not just be careful and don’t rush into something you don’t know okay?” He gave a nod leaving Aseni soon said as he left the room. “What is your plan?” “A free scout is a free scout now we wait and study how to use this thing.” he gestured to the gate. Aseni rolled her eyes before saying. “If you say so… also it seems the attempt at information containment failed.” “How?” He asked, growing more worried. “Well, it's kind of hard to hide a giant glowing portal, glowing for days and also a few ships that left at the same time. ” “Marvelous… I wonder what is going on thanks to that” Vinaae commented with Aseni looking to the side thinking ‘riots in some places’ before returning focus to him bringing back to the topic she then said. “Right we better go back to work;” “Yes better…” he quickly replied as both left the observation area of the hangar.

As the fleet of Teenizorii arranged itself into position, his cruiser was at the head of the fleet aiming at the gate Teenizorii sat in the commanding chair. The bridge had screens showing the outside and tactical info he soon said to the bridge crew. “To old Gael, we go” He readied himself as the ships began to ready themselves and soon moved into the blue light. The fleet soon crossed the barrier into old Sol, already incredibly different; the sun seemed weaker than their own star in illumination as the ships entered Sol. Being able to see the glow of a pale moon and the shine of a grey world.
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Hidden 25 days ago 25 days ago Post by SgtEasy
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A Monastery
Breathe in. Breathe out.

Breathe in. Breathe out.

Breathe in. Breathe out.

It was a mantra. They needed to repeat it in their thoughts in every second of every waking hour. They were not allowed to stop until their breaths were as uniform as their life. In their youth, it was their first thoughts in the morning and often their last thought before restful sleep. The Good Doctor said this was “the most optimised breathing form a human can have to ensure maximum oxidative phosphorylation efficiency while preventing accelerated decay of the bronchi.” A cold, terrifying chimp that one was.

This was unlike Mother, who would always smile at their questions about the mantra and called it the Breath of Life. “Little ones,” she would start, sweeping her grey index across our brows as one sat in her rust-coloured fur “the Breath of Life gives you strength. It gives you energy. It gives you life. And most importantly, it gives me plenty more time to coddle and spoil you.” Her smile would always stretch across her face, in a way that never felt unnatural to them. Her fur felt soft against their hairless skin. Those large appendages for fingers were never feared, always so gentle and quick to caress them. It was because of her that they could breathe like this in their sleep, encouraged to stretch their fragile lives beyond the natural means. All through breathing techniques.

Mother was always like that. Through the training regimens they were put through to walk for the first time, she was there to lend a guiding hand. From learning the tones of Mandarin to the alphabet of Cyrillic, she was always quick to correct their bumbling mouths through the teething. She would hold their hands through the operations and vaccines, the constant check-ups, questioning and prodding the Good Doctor would conduct. With barely large enough fists, she taught them all the ways we could suffocate a fully grown human in case for self-defence, something even she felt was unnecessary. Yet she did it, like all of her chores and tasks, with due diligence and utmost care for them all.

Breathe in. Breathe out.

Sato himself owed a lot to her. Even his own life, or at least he suspects he does. When he started to stumble and stutter over the most basic of Swahili, the Good Doctor had almost repositioned him into therapy. No one ever came back from therapy. Mother stepped in with fury on her lips in a way he had never seen before, forcing the smaller chimpanzee into backing out. She tutored him every night from then on until he was as fluent as the rest of his class. His life near came to an end in his fifth year but she was there to help him, even sweeping the tears from his trembling cheeks and caressing his midnight hair. They could all recount a similar story of Mother helping them, in both significant and insignificant ways. Even when they were old enough to understand that biology came in the way of her being their true mother, she would always be Mother to them.

And here she was, their Mother, their sweet and special Mother, so kind and gentle, lying with flowers in her fur and stones on her eyes.

Sato knew what death was. He knew of the process of the body shutting down, organs coming to a stop as the homeostasis which kept them alive was disrupted. He knew of every detail of the process, as any self-respecting human should, from animals to plants, from Supremus to humans like himself. He knew death clinically, scientifically and what he thought to be wholly.

But he never knew grief. He knew of it and maybe he experienced things that nearly made him grieve. The kinder guards would be assigned to other places as their fur grew silver beyond their back. Teachers would be replaced as the limits to their knowledge were reached. And sure, friends would disappear at times to never come back again. But he could always deal with this with his Breath of Life. It gave him strength. It gave him energy. It gave him life. It would make everything disappear and it felt like he could repeat his mantra and everything would be ok.

Breathe in. Breathe out.

It refused to work this time.

It failed to work when Mother had first collapsed in the middle of an impromptu teaching lesson, one of the few escapes from their daily timetable. It failed to work when, after just a few hours, they were informed of her passing from a random brain bleed. It failed to work now, as he stood among many others, staring at her corpse. They stood in the small classroom, one they had used for countless lectures, with her body in an open casket for them to grieve. Each of them had been given a flower to place on her carefully trimmed fur as prayers to the spirits above were uttered on too-small lips.

Sato had been staring at her from the back of the line and now, he was at the front. His feet had shuffled automatically, following the orders of what he knew were to be his betters. His caretakers. The ones who taught him the Breath of Life. Yet none of these betters had saved Mother. From what? A random act? A trip in her genetic build which led her brain to drown in its own blood?

The boy of fourteen trembled and shook, unable to control his breath. The Good Doctor, who had been leading them to the open casket, glanced at him wearily as he held an expecting paw out to him.

Breathe in. Breathe out

Breathe in. Breathe out.

The diminutive human, who was ever so quiet, always by the side of his Mother, clutched the flower in a tight fist. Why? Why was it like this? Why were they afforded everything, every medical expense made to make sure they were healthy, perfect, living, when the one who gave him everything he had would just drop dead like this? Where was the fairness in this?

The Good Doctor was speaking to him now, hushed and gentle like he had never been before. Sato could not hear him.

Breathe in, breathe out. Breathe in, breathe out.

Why? Why was it like this? Why did she have to die? Why couldn’t she have taken his place in this world, when she had done so much for him? Sato began to shake all over, breath quickly losing its sharp control. Hyperventilating, he noted in a distant part of his mind. This was not healthy at all. But he could not bring himself to care.

Breatheinbreatheoutbreatheinbreatheout.

Before the Good Doctor could snatch his arm, Sato about turned and sprinted away from the obvious lie. Mother could not be the one laying there. She would be staying at the observatory as she always did, as she did when she marked all of the constellations personally for him to remember.

He sprinted past the bewildered guards, ignoring the shouts of the Good Doctor behind him. He navigated the labyrinth of his home, turning corridor after corridor like he knew them like the back of his hand. He slid under many a primate, escaping their clutches with the deft precision only years of training could give him. Apprehension grew within him. He was disobeying. He near stumbled out of shock of what he was doing, the shock of disobeying his betters like he was a petulant child. But Sato refused to believe it, he refused.

Breatheinbreatheoutbreatheinbreatheout.

This could not be real, Sato repeated like a mantra. This could not be real. He ascended the steps to one of the few open-air venues of the Monastery. He frantically searched for anything, anything at all that would suggest that Mother was here, playing a cruel game of hide and seek with him.

Nothing. Not a single fur on the console. Not a single breath filling this space aside from his own. And even his feverous panting was interrupted by a sudden glint in the sky. His eyes darted towards the position of New Gift’s sun and around the blue sky above. It did not match any of the known stars he knew. And what star could shine so bright in daylight. He stared blankly, distantly aware of the thuds behind him.

“Mother?” The boy whispered quietly, staring at that shining glint in an otherwise featureless sky. “Mother? Is that you? Are you there?”

Nothing. Nothing but the blazing light on a blue canvas. Nothing but the tears rolling down his cheeks.

Breathe in. Breathe out.

The rough paws around his arms and the sharp jab he felt was miles away from him now. He could only smile at his Mother, twinkling ever so brightly in the sky, giving him warmth and the tingling in his fingers he only felt with her.

The last thing he knew was a glimpse of the Good Doctor in his blurring vision, disappointment evident behind those curious spectacles of his. “I knew this one was defective. Send him to rehabilitation.”

And Sato knew no more.

The opening of the Gateway continued undisturbed by the life stopped.
Tellus
Where there was peace for some, chaos was life for others. The frontier continent of Tellus, known for its vast amount of resources was also the site of many a “small” conflict between roving warbands of raiders and the city-states which eked out an existence from the smaller landmass. It was a constant struggle for survival here and death could come at any time. Why do simians come from all around to come here? The riches and glory of course.

It was constant. The staccato rhythm of gunfire, the stamping feet around her. The blood staining her surroundings, the rubble of homes she trampled around. Even the night sky and the shadows it cast did not hide the destruction surrounding her. Corellia checked her rifle, a militia standard Kalashnikov Type IIA in a metallic grey, before peeking out of her corner and sending short bursts down range. Grenade-like rounds spewed forth, mini-rockets which slammed into marked combatant positions a hundred meters from her. She kept her fire up until the ammunition counter on her AR screen went to zero and she was forced back to her cover, scorching plasma slinging itself to her previous position, the residual heat tingling her exposed arms.

Putos! Where’s the fuckin’ Legion when you need them?!”

Her number two, a burly gorilla called Titus, merely grunted in bemusement as he swapped with her as she reloaded, shoulder cannon peeking past the melting concrete to spew hell at whatever poor bastard breathed there. Corellia’s fire team had been making headway in Neo Brasilia as part of an offensive to wrestle control from the Caesar wannabes that dared to pick on a Khanate sanctioned city. It had been door to door fighting for every inch of the way but they had gotten separated from the rest of her detachment by a surprise counterattack. They were now isolated, cut off from the rest of the militia deep in enemy territory.

Their former target was a mere hundred meters away, the former mayoral office of a now-dead Brasilian government.

“Titus.” She remarked as the bulky cannoneer displaced himself from the firing line. “Battlenet’s reporting you only have five cannon shot left. That true or is the system glitching?”

Titus backed away from the smouldering street corner and glanced back at her.

“Tis true Battle-Sergeant, I have exhausted much of my ammunition on the way here.”

Holding back a curse, Corellia glanced back at the rest of her mishmash squad. Two local chimpanzee recruits nervously clutching rifles like hers and a single shield-brother. They had been cut down ape by ape by this damned counterattack. INFOWAR chimed in her headset.

>Warning: Ten hostiles inbound from the northwest corridor from OBJECTIVE MONEYGRAB
>Warning: Fireteam designated CARNIVAL outnumbered, recommend immediate extraction
>No friendly units in a two-hundred-meter radius

Mierda! Where’s our air support?”

>Drone support unavailable, recommend immediate extraction.

They were so damn close! There was an extra ten thousand pot to choose from for the first fireteam into that damnable building. She felt expectant eyes bore themselves into her. Well, they were already in it deep, and so a plan took shape in Corellia’s head.

The raiders were whooping and hollering as they blasted plasma on the militia’s position. With their enemy cut off and running low on supplies, the scum felt exhilarated enough to begin an advance towards their enemy’s untenable position where they were cowering. Near a dozen of them advanced on orders to kill the baboons.

Instead, they were met by a sudden charge led by an albino gorilla with a massive bulky shield at least his width and height. A cannon peaked over the side and started spewing thunder at the unsuspecting raiders. A pair of raiders were cut apart in two by a shell, smeared into red paste as the militiamen charged with wordless screams.

>Eight hostiles inbound. Thirty hostiles within OBJECTIVE MONEYGRAB.

The plasma made deep marks in the shield as they continued on, rifle fire coming into play with explosive bursts making short work of unsuspecting raiders.

>Five hostiles in immediate proximity. Thirty hostiles within OBJECTIVE MONEYGRAB.

They remained in cover, peeking out to return fire as they continued a headlong charge into a wall of enemy fire. One of the locals was cut down when he peeked from cover at an unfortunate time, head burned off by the opposing barrage. The cannon barked twice in retaliation.

>Four hostiles, DANGER CLOSE.

“Charge faster, you putos! The shield is going to fall!” Titus’ cannon remarked twice more before clicking dry, killing the remaining clusters of raiders in front of them. Just as they reached ten meters from doorstep of the mayoral house, the shield melted apart in the albino shield-brother’s hands from the plasma sent from their objective, a pained shriek echoing in the streets as metal burned into unsuspecting paws. The other local leaped out of the way of the falling shield-brother but was clipped once in the shoulder and once in the chest, crumpling to the ground.

>Thirty hostiles within OBJECTIVE MONEYGRAB

After dragging the albino to the doorway, Corellia and Titus broke into the mayoral house with reckless abandon. The ground level was split between a bar and a mezzanine of all things. The Battle-Sergeant laid down suppressive fire on the raiders situated on the mezzanine as her trusty number two laid into raiders unfortunate enough to be near him. Limbs flew, apes were blown apart and the perfectly replicated Latin-inspired bar underwent a sudden makeover.

>Fifteen hostiles within OBJECTIVE MONEYGRAB
>Ammunition: EMPTY

Dispatching the upper raiders quickly enough, Corellia leaped and climbed up one of the myriad poles unto the mezzanine. “Titus you monkey! I’ll see you upstairs!”

With another bemused grunt below and a following screech from another amputated raider, the Battle-Sergeant found the emergency climbing corridor and followed through. She climbed like her life depended on it (which, with how deep in the shit they were, it probably was) till she reached the upper level door. Grabbing unto the climbing steps with her lower appendages, she withdrew her militia-issued hand club in her free hand while grabbing her rifle by its steaming barrel and with a quick pump of her legs, she crashed into upper level.

>Six hostiles, DANGER CLOSE

Corellia slammed her hand club into the first hostile she met, the orangutan’s head bursting like a watermelon from the enhanced swing. The emergency corridor had led her to a presumed secretary’s room. Weaving under a scorching plasma bolt, she used her rifle as another makeshift blunt object to send the neck of another orangutan twisting like in a physically impossible way.

The other two bastards in the secretary room withdrew their crude two sided blades and charged at her together. Corellia let one slide with a metallic screech against her club as she sent the butt of her rifle into the face of the other raider, smashing his face in so bloody that it became unrecognisable with the brains oozing out of his skull. Unfortunately, she had put too much into that jab and her rifle became a useless clump in her paw.

“Die, Khan-slave!” The chimp left alive, snarling with anger, sent a thrust to her abdomen. Corellia parried, spinning her club by its string to deflect the blade. She sent a jabbing riposte to her opponent’s skull but the crazy bastard opened his jaw to reveal serrated metal teeth which chewed into her titanium club. The spat out remains of her club sent to her eye startled her enough that she nearly missed the following stab to her stomach.

Pushing the bastard away and scrambling from the crazed raider in front of her, Corellia felt bile rising from her throat. Alright, time for her backup.

With an unceremonious splat, she covered her opponent’s face with a precise spit ball of her own. The raider blinked once, then another, before he started screaming in agony as skin blistered and fur melted away. “You fuckin’ Legion freak-!”

Corellia flashed her teeth at the now-melting face of her adversary, his eyeballs sliding to the ground as she casually picked up his discarded weapon. Acidic bile was a beloved enhancement among former Legionnaires like herself after all. The raider scum fell to the ground in a pile of whimpers and curses. She spun the blade in her hand to feel its balance before steeling herself, gazing upon the ornate double doors leading to the mayor’s office ahead.

>Two hostiles, DANGER CLOSE

“Third times the charm huh? Spirits bless my culo.” The Battle-Sergeant muttered before barging through the doors, blade in hand and splinters flying.

The chaos, the fighting, the blood spilt. It masked the explosion which shone bright in the sky. One that would change the course of history itself. One that would make these petty conflicts, and the lives lost within, feel so insignificant in comparison.

The opening of the Gateway continued undisturbed by the lives ongoing.
Terra Supremus
The aging gorilla scratched his arse, picking a tick out of his silver fur and inspecting it before crushing it in his paw. Perhaps one should have more emotion to such a momentous occasion but he grumbled more about the utter unfairness of it all. This was supposed to be his retirement post. Who thought the colony ship would be needed at any point in his lifetime? It was a museum piece which sat stationary over the Khan’s capital on New Gift, occasionally making the rounds to take the Khan around the system in their flights of fancy.

At least his extensive drills were proven to be effective in a real-life mission. The bridge crew were dutiful as ever, tending to their many tasks over the command bridge. Everything had been set in place as it should be, every system checked thrice, every inch of this museum ship cleaned. Despite the fear of flight the primates held in their hearts, the entire crew had been hard at work in getting this, ancestors forgive him, pile of buckets and scraps spaceborne.

He swore under his breath at the mountain of paperwork awaiting him at his desk. He did not want to be here.

“Must you be so crass, Admiral?” A soft voice spoke behind him, taking him out of his revelry at the cosmos stretched in front of his floor-to-ceiling monitor.

Admiral Sun-sin snorted, nostrils flaring in playful annoyance. He took a glance at the one furless being on the ship, now standing next to him on the bridge. A long red-fur carpet lay under her bare feet, preventing any of the cold metal of the ship to touch her. Not a single thing could come to harm her on this trip, not even the subtle temperature change of metal on furless skin.

A handful of simians came up from their stations to look at her in awe before Sun-sin glared them back into submissive duty. He could not blame them. She was likely the first human they had ever seen.

“Forgive me Princess Ndongo but I am no admiral. What is an admiral without a fleet?”

“A poor one?” She smirked at him, eyes filled with mirth. Sun-sin snorted again.

“The Khan may be changing that soon enough.”

As soon as word came of the Gateway opening, the Khan had come to swift action. He opened the treasuries for plans to future shipyards and a diversion of Khanate spending sent towards the Legion. He sent for ambassadors far and wide from each city state, for delegates must be present in case of contact with other beings beyond the system. He sent a detachment of his own children, most significantly a Herald and his one human daughter, to lead the Khanate into the stars.

”Let no expense be too much, no detail too little. We will set forth into the stars with a swiftness that no other can rival. To be proper inheritors of mankind, we must be first. to see our home. If we are not first, then we must be second. If not second, then third. We must take fast action lest we embarrass the spirits.”

And so it was, that they now blasted towards the Gateways at sub-light speeds greater than any ape has ever gone since the first exodus. Though the Terra Supremus was unarmed beyond a detachment of void-drones magnetically clamped to its hull, it was built with great engines that spanned near the entirety of its length. She was a swift ship, despite her age.

“Indeed, Admiral. Our father has spared no expense in making sure we get to Earth as soon as possible.”

Sun-sin flicked his eyes to the other voice, an orangutan held aloft in an ornate wooden palanquin coming to his other side. The Herald was always a stickler to traditions and thus, his feet never touched uncleansed floors. Unbecoming of a Khan’s son after all, to bump shoulders with the rabble.

“I assume that all precautions have been made for my sister’s safety?”

“Of course, my Herald. Beyond being first to Old Earth, the Khan has decreed your sister’s safety to be of utmost importance. Our Legion attaches and their modified void-drones will be enough to ensure swift escape if we encounter hostile forces.”

It was strange for the Khan to let a human, let alone his most precious Orator, out of his sight. He likely trusted that Sun-sin, her old bodyguard from the Monastery, and her closest playmate in Herald Temuujin, would keep her safe enough. Oh, that and the Legionnaires in the hundreds sworn to protecting her like their lives depended on it. Which it most likely did.

“Good good. Let us enter the Gateway then Admiral. We must follow our father’s orders to be there first after all.” The orangutan’s palanquin turned to face his sister, worry evident in his otherwise listless blinded eyes. “Perhaps you should return to your quarters, sister? It may be unsafe.”

In that sing-song voice of hers, Ndongo declined. “My fathers and mothers of before came to this system through the Gateways. I would do them no disservice by cowering away from what they bravely set forth into.” Great was the power she wielded, Sun-sin noted, for her to openly deny a request from her brother.

Setting this aside, Sun-sin lifted himself off his knuckles and spread his great arms wide. “Let us set forth into the dark cosmos! Helmsmen, lead us to Old Earth!” And thus the ship blinked out of New Gift’s cradle.

“Corny old ape.”

“Yes, that was quite embarrassing Admiral.”

Bloody youth, they never appreciated the beauty of grand gestures.

They would soon end up in a system no Supremus had ever stepped forth into. Into an eight-planet system none of them had laid their eyes on. Into the pages of history they went, naïve of the troubles which laid ahead.

The Gateway blazed “behind” them, undisturbed by history in the making.

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Hidden 25 days ago Post by Enigmatik
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Enigmatik Recently-Medicated Thembie Supreme

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The People of the Qinglong Accord Now March Into The Future:






A New Input for the Machine

A solar system recalibrates itself around an Anomaly.
Featuring Executive Optimiser-Cog Dai Yi





Executive Optimiser-Cog Dai Yi had been having an impossibly busy past few days, but sat as he was- eyes slightly glazed as he stared out the window from a small foyer of the Harmonious Engine, it was hard to tell that was the case. He saw, without really seeing - the glittering lights of Xiwang, the towering skyscrapers, their interior stories dim now that the working day had ended, the steady gleam of streetlights interspersed by darts of light from EVs or mag-trams... And above, blotting almost any of the natural light from the sky, the twinkling clusters on Mingxian's surface, the moon itself thrumming with energy and innovation.

And past even Mingxian... A light which had not been there for centuries, if the reports were proving to be accurate. An artificial star that refused to be dimmed out by five hundred years of history, beaming its strange light out over a system that had only begun to comprehend its true meaning.

The appearance of the Anomaly in the space just outside of the Accord's defensive perimeter had sent shockwaves out across the entire system. Initial reports from the QIDF implied that it certainly hadn't been anything they'd done, nor did it seem to have a direct correlation to anything the invaders were up to. Their vessels hadn't even been near the area of space where it emerged. Sighing, Dai Yi took another small sip of the soda water in his tumbler.

It just didn't fit with anything they knew about Shenjian tech. Bright and flashy - sure, but sustained? And so large, so impressive, so far away from their deep-space holdouts? None of it had made sense at first. The timing was auspicious too, to say the least. 500 years, if you counted them as old Earth had, since CoB day. The turn of a new century - Qingyuan was still getting over the collective hangover from the Arrival Day festivities and had already refocused its efforts towards the Spring Festival, due in just under a month now - Xiwang's stationary shops were churning through hongbao at their usual rate. Surely, with all of this together, it couldn't be an accident of some kind. Such an idea was near-anathema to the organised minds of the Executive Machine, which had had to scramble to release an initial press-statement on the Anomaly to allay early concerns while they tried to figure out what exactly was going on.

He was roused from his contemplation by the appearance of a new figure poking her head through the open doorway to the foyer. Clearing his throat, Yi addressed her, the full weight of his role crashing back down on him as he spoke. "Do we have a proper report on the Anomaly? Can we confirm what the Shenjian had to do with it?"

"Well, we do have new information on the Anomaly, yes, and we can safely state that the Shenjian aren't what caused this." The aide - a young bureaucrat who'd only really just begun their career among the halls of the Machine, glanced up from their Omnilink. "Would you like a digital transmission, or-"

"Just... Tell me the relevant datapoints." Yi hissed out, before slowly pulling himself back together. "Apologies, it's unfair of me to take this out on you. Please, just give me the overview. Unless we've scheduled another emergency meeting, I'm not really on the clo-"

His own Omnilink - currently wrapped around his arm and concealed beneath the sleeve of his jacket, vibrated, but he didn't bother to check it. His suite already told him all he needed to know. He'd spoke of Cao Cao, and here Cao Cao was. Another emergency meeting of the Machine's biological intelligences. Setting down the tumbler with an uncomfortably loud clink, he rose up to his full height, smoothed the edges of his suit down, and gave a curt nod towards the aide. "Scratch that, we're on the clock again. Give me the full sitrep while we walk, I process things better when I can hear them, instead of just getting everything beamed into my head. You know how many notifications I get each minute? Even with the secretaries and the admin NCMs going through the majority of them?"

The woman gave a chuckle. "I can imagine it'd be a little overwhelming, certainly Optimiser-Cog. The uh... Main thrust of the matter is that the Anomaly isn't 'an Anomaly.' I know we didn't want to think it was the Gateway at first because that would have been 'too easy,' but that's what all the data suggests. The IDF has been able to interface with it, it matches all the old records on its appearance and location from the Megaconglomerate era..." She had to take two steps to keep up with each one of Yi's, but the man couldn't exactly slow down with the meeting already called. "This very much seems to be the 'real deal' if you will. The return of the system that let us traverse the stars."

Dai Yi chewed these facts over slowly in his mind. If that was true, if this was the Gateway that Qinglong Megaconglomerate had used... The pair turned a corner and nearly ran headfirst into another group of functionaries, also trailed by aides, likely also being brought up to date before the meeting. Slotting neatly into the crowd, the group continued deeper into the building, the aide rattling off the more specific details of the Anomaly... No, no, it was the Gateway, Dai Yi's mind could accept that, even if it was implausible. Reason told him that when one excluded the impossible, whatever remained, however improbable, must be the truth. Minds greater than him had determined it was the Gateway, many minds greater than his, in fact, and he was ultimately a functionary, not a scientist - his Merits could attest to that. Now what was left was not to bicker about fine details but instead take the defined input and carry out the processes of statecraft, to determine what the appropriate output was.

And that process began as the group emerged out into the Crisis Centre, already bustling with a wide variety of the Executive Machine's hierarchy. Many of the holographic projectors installed beneath the seats representing those from Mingxian or further afield had already sprung to life, a wide variety of different faces flickering slightly as they mimicked the pacing and twitching of a real person eager for the full scale of what was going on to be revealed. Of course, they weren't literally here with them, nor would the information be processed immediately by the actual people these proxies represented - they were engrams - extremely good proxies, but proxies nonetheless.

The chaircog cleared their throat and began. "My thanks to all of the Qinglongren currently present here, and to those being represented outside of these halls. As we will soon be hosting a maximum secrecy meeting, I must request that everyone who lacks the relevant clearance levels please leave the Crisis Centre. Oversight-Coordinator-Cog, could you kindly disable the Engrams, in line with the usual procedures? Thank you." A few murmurs came from the group within the Crisis Center, and the aide gave an easy-going bow to Dai Yi, returning the way she came. As the Engrams flickered out and people began to move towards their tiered seats, Yi settled down, feeling an uncomfortable quietness settle in as the Crisis Centre's doors closed and wireless communications were shut off.

"Fellow Cogs. This meeting has been called because we have received undeniable confirmation that the Anomaly is the Gateway, reopened almost exactly 500 years after it once shut. Full details of the report have been transmitted to the slates before you. While the last of our colleagues filter in, can you please inform yourself of the facts. Once everyone is present..."

"We will begin."




The Voice of the People Speaks Across the Stars

The Accord calls on one of its retired heroes, and tentatively reaches out.
Featuring Cog-Ace Guan Liang, Cog-Envoy Xue Bao and Wellness-Harmoniser Zhang Zan


It was a cold and bitter day in northern Qingyuan, and in a small veteran's community, an old soldier stared out at the ice and slushy remnants of last night's snowfall, its colour startlingly like their own flint-grey eyes. Their name was Guan Liang, they were rapidly approaching their eighty-third birthday, and although they may not look to have aged gracefully by the standards of many within the Accord, they were no less keen or able despite that. Still roped with muscle, their speckled hand rested on the silvery handle of a walking cane, the only real outward sign of vulnerability from an otherwise steel wall. They twirled the thing back and forth idly, one hand reaching up to stroke their chin in an archetypally contemplative pose - appropriate, perhaps, for someone who had taken their leave of the military and sought a quiet community for their retirement.

For that was what Guan Liang was - retired. For over forty years they had served the Accord with all the harmony and strength expected of them and more, and now that they were older and slower they had been rewarded with a comfortable pension and the Gratitude of the Machine Merit, a feat that not many could claim to have achieved. Of course, they still worked - eighty two was a venerable age, but no excuse to let idleness seep into their bones... But it was simple, gentle stuff these days. Talks and speeches, PR appointments... And here, in their adopted community, gardening. Oh, so much gardening.

All that was to end today though. The door behind Guan Liang whirred open, and the veteran stiffened their back. They'd suspected this was coming ever since they'd noticed the new light in the sky, and they'd had confirmation for a full day now. They might have the Executive Machine's gratitude, but... "When I stepped out of my Baihu that last time, I thought my service was over with." They turned, fixing their gaze onto the trio that had entered the building. "So how am I to reconcile that with this new request?" They raised an eyebrow, shifting the cane from left to right and back to left.

"Gracious Cog-Ace, I-" The first of the three - a Yin Zholou, bulky and squat with mottled grey-beige skin began to talk, but the veteran raised their hand up, a small smile splitting their face.

"I reconcile it easily. I know how this conversation will go - you will apologise profusely, and say that I am not being called upon, but requested. That I will be treated with respect and dignity, and that if it is my final decision to not take on the role you've brought for me to fill, the Machine understands, and it will find another cog who will accept the position. That I am free to spend my days as I have done for many years, here in this community." They chuckled at the slightly startled reactions they'd received, but pressed on nonetheless. "I shall shortcut this for all our benefit. There is only one task that you would suddenly call upon me for in light of what has happened, and I will accept the position, regardless of its finer details."

He raised an eyebrow. "What, you thought I didn't know the news? Couldn't put two and two together? Come now, this may be a remote place, but I still have the news. I saw the official statement the Executive Machine released. The Gateway is back, and you need the right people to go through the Gateway. I am here. I am ready. I have said my goodbyes and packed my bags, broken the cauldrons and sunk the boats. Let's not dither when a galaxy awaits us, no?"




How many times had Liang been into space? The first time they remembered well: barely eighteen years, when their ticket had first been punched in an exercise to familiarise fresh conscripts with transport procedures. The time after that had been their first deployment... but the next? And all the hundreds of times after? But certainly, in all their many trips, they'd never been on a shuttle quite like this one.

It was... Quaint. Smooth and slightly stylised, with pleasant flowing lines in its design and clean paintwork, the Seal of the Executive Machine imprinted into its loading door. Turning away from it, Liang refocused on the soldier who had escorted them here.

"I appreciate the escort cog."

"On the contrary, the pleasure is mine. My thanks for your service." His salute was quickly waved off.

"You needn't salute an old soldier like me, I don't hold a rank over you. May you serve with harmony." With a nod of their head Liang finally turned and headed into the shuttle, its door sliding shut shortly after they'd made it inside. Already strapped in were two others, dressed formally in civilian wear much like Liang was.

"Good morning. I hope I haven't kept you long?" They broke the initial silence easily and moved towards one of the seats. Before the battlesuit veteran sat, they gave their walking stick a firm strike against the ground, causing it to spring up and collapse down into just its slender silver handle - small enough to be slipped into a pocket.

"Cog-Ace Guan Liang?" The first to speak was a young, confident looking man, wearing the lapel pin of a harmoniser. "I've just been reading through your file, and it's a great honour. I'm looking forward to supporting you!" Liang took the opportunity to size him up, and found... Very little to comment on, in truth. He was the archetype of the young harmoniser - neat, short-cropped hair, a friendly smile to put those around him at ease... And if the ace had to guess, they'd say he was no more than twenty-six or twenty seven - barely out of active reserve duty. He must have been training for this role for quite some time then... But hardly enough time to become a truly meritous cog. Still, every part must be machined before it could perform.

"Indeed. And who am I speaking to, aside from a harmoniser?" The ace's tone was polite, if a little perplexed.

"My deepest apologies. Wellness Harmoniser Zhang Zan, He/Him. I'm assisting those who may need extra care aboard the Voice of the People." He gestured over towards the final passenger, a slender woman sitting stock-straight in her seat, fingers slightly tense across the armrests. "Would you like to introduce yourself?"

"Yes." She gave a quick nod. "Xue Bao, She/Her. I'm part of the envoy's diplomatic staff." Her suit, neatly trimmed to fit her figure without overly accentuating her figure, the neat, clipped and precise yet even-handed words, and the unfailingly polite movements that accompanied them... Liang could certainly believe she was a diplomat. Her almost shining black hair was pulled back into a neat bun and fixed into place and she was bereft of any makeup bar a little mascara, if the veteran's eyes weren't failing them already.

"Nervous?" Liang's seatbelt finally clicked into place and they settled down properly, watching as the light above the door clunked from red to amber.

A thin smile split Bao's face. "Never a fan of the shuttle flight. I'll be fine once we're in orbit. Well... Better. We're going through the Gateway after all."

The quiet conversation was interrupted by a clipped sentence over the shuttle's intercom. "All aboard, preflight checks complete. Liftoff in one minute, please make sure you're secure in your seats."

"Worried about the Gateway, or what's through it? I'm sure the IDF has made sure the crossing's safe, and we can't do anything about the latter, so." They gave a small shrug. "No use worrying either way. We must take the current when it serves."

"Sage wisdom," the diplomat responded without a hint of sarcasm. "Where does that spring from?"

"Couldn't tell you if I wanted. Saw it on a dorm wall, a long time ago, but I'm sure they didn't come up with it." Before they could continue any further, the engines ended the conversation for them. They rapidly grew from a soft, barely audible whine to a thrumming crescendo, Bao's fingers digging harder into the armrests. Liang simply settled his head back and waited, feeling out the vibrations of this new shuttle as it the ground pulled away, and they were surrounded by the swirling of the wind as it tried to stop their ascent.

As the atmosphere thinned, so did the volume of their ascent, until finally all that was left was a soft hum and a slowly growing feeling of weightlessness, the sensation bringing a slight smile to Liang's face. "Smoothest ride I've ever had."

"I'll agree once we're in gravity again," Zan attempted to make a joke, but the slight paleness to his skin undercut the attempt at sureness. "This is only my fourth time up here, if you'd believe it. Training, Jingyu, and then back to Qingyuan."

"Only a dozen or so," Bao added, seemingly feeling much more comfortable now that the bumpiest part of the ride was over. "But they've been long deployments. I've served with the Voice before, was on shore leave just a few days ago. I'll miss the Spring Festival I suppose, but I caught Arrival Day so I can't complain too much."

"I'm sure we'll be able to mark the occasion aboard." The harmoniser offered a grimace trying its best to be a smile.

"Pilot speaking: We've fully left the atmosphere now and our space thrusters are on. We'll be arriving aboard in five minutes. Thank you for your attention."




Five long days. Five days of the humdrum reality of life aboard a smoothly operating vessel like the Voice of the People, interspersed only by the ever-constant companion of the regular meetings to keep the envoys up to date on the latest information. The QIDF had sent several craft through the Gateway to both intentionally and randomly selected systems to test if it was functioning properly, every single one had managed its brief excursion without issue. Some had even picked up strange signals and broadcasts, in languages that Qinglong linguists could recognise, but often wildly different from what their old, pre-CoB language banks told them. Oddly however, Sol had been silent, its secrets locked away until something more than a probe could make a jaunt through.

Finally, though, the announcement that Liang had been waiting for echoed out across the ship. "Attention. Attention. Attention. IPC Voice of the People is approaching QGL-* 'Gateway.' All hands prepare for instantaneous transmission. This is not a drill. Repeat, all hands prepare for instantaneous transmission." Unfolding a seat from the wall, Liang settled down and placed their cane across their legs, and waited, expecting... Something? Anything? It seemed peculiar that after decades of spaceflight, the most momentous journey they had ever taken - a stride across a gap so vast it was quite literally incomprehensible to the human mind, could be carried out between two heartbeats, imperceptible without a view to the outside world.

So, Guan Liang waited patiently, fingers running across the handle of their cane. Their hand drifted slowly, up past their cuff, across the strap that held their Omnilink in place, to where the muscle of their arm gave way to an unnatural divot, its edges firmer and tougher than the surrounding skin, and within the divot, protecting their body from the outside world that would so gleefully take the open neural port as an opportunity, the thin, fragile membrane, spider-webbed with scars from where it had been pierced and re-healed a thousand times on a hundred deployments. The undeniable and irreversible consequence of serving the Accord in a battlesuit.

"Attention. Attention. Attention. IPC Voice of the People has completed instantaneous transmission to Sol System. You may now move freely throughout the vessel."

Well then. What now?
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TEMPLE OF THE EVERLASTING UNITY // THIRD MOONRISE OF SECOND SEASON
All language within - { } - is translated to 'English' from Native.


Requires Discipline winced as the scalding hot water poured over his leathery skin. The stench of burning flesh reached his nostrils, and his entire body convulsed and shivered. As the water stopped, he shook himself dry before limping out of the purifying chamber. Grabbing his furs he pulled his hood over his head, hunching his back over he walked through the hallways of the Temple. The Holy avoided looking at him, as they shuffled awkwardly through the halls to avoid coming too close to him. He could hear their murmurs, and while it wasn't entirely unheard of for a Tainted to be within the confines of the temple it certainly wasn't a daily occurrence.

R-D as his friends called him, approached the Holy Ones quarters. Pausing as he looked up at the door. Normal protocol for anyone else was to knock, however R-D was tainted. He couldn't touch anything in the temple, even after his wash. Let alone the Deacons quarters. Perhaps the fact he had been asked for would overrule any traditional barrier that had been put up before him? He stood staring at the door for what felt like an eternity before it finally slid open in the seamless way that only the ancestors' technology seemed to achieve. Not even the sorcery of the Demons came close.

As the door opened, R-D immediately dropped to his knees when he was confronted by the Holy One, pulling his hood even lower to conceal his tarnished and bruised face.

{Rise young one.}

The Deacon swept with her hand, her hand moving far closer to R-Ds chin than any of the Holy had ever come. R-D nearly flinched in response, again all his years of learning protocol and what they could and couldn't do were useless in this current situation. R-D stood but kept his head bowed, staring down at the Holy Ones taloned feet.

{I have called you here because of who you are.}

Underneath his cowl, R-D raised his eyebrow, who he was? He hadn't been named Requires Discipline because he had behaved himself throughout his youth. He had pushed boundaries, convention, and the sanity of his elders to their limits. His crippled leg and lower arm were a result of the Discipline that had been required of him.

{Speak, Child.}

{I apologise Holy One. I do not understand, I am just one of the many, one of the Tainted and the dishonoured. The will of the Gods is yours to interpret.}

The Deacon chuckled slightly. {I understand child, come in-} She raised an arm to guide him into the room. {I understand that on many occasions, you have attempted to understudy the Shapers?}

Inside his head, RD winced slightly. Was this what it was about? Was he to be punished for heresy? What sort of punishment could The Holy One place upon him?

{To my shame, I have. I always felt that despite my duty I could better serve the Gods if I-}

The Deacon turned and raised her hand to stop him. Her face looked calm and peaceful. He recognised the caring expression, it mirrored that of the Nest-Fathers when he was a child. {I did not bring you here to punish you Child-} Did she know his thoughts? Was this one of the gifts that the Gods had bestowed upon her? He had heard tales of Deacons and Prophets who had gained fantastical and mystical abilities. Was the ability to read minds one of these abilities? {-instead I have come to encourage you.}

R-D couldn't help but look up to her in shock, several demon profanities spiralled through his mind at the sheer disbelief of what she had said. Throughout his entire life, he had been told to remain in his place, remember his station and what he was. Now, this?

{What I say next, does not leave this room-}

RD bowed his head. {I understand, Holy-One.}

{-the new star in the sky. Is the Demons Gateway, it has re-opened, and we need someone to go through it.}

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Red Horde over Paradise Part 2

The Crimson Khatun learns the truth of Sol
Featuring: Khulan Khatun-Khuu


It was as if all the atmosphere had been let out of the Konrul without anyone realising.

The crew on the bridge gawped at the sight - refusing to believe what their eyes told them was the truth. Communications specialists and navigators desperately checked and double-checked their readings, trying to find something, anything that could prove that life was still here in on Sol. Surely there must be some sign - the thermal signature of ships burning far out in the belt, the reassuring crackle of a pirate radio station broadcasting from a moon or asteroid, even the flicker of artificial light from the shadow of a lunar crater... But no. There was nothing.

One of the shamans let out a long, keening wail, thrusting his hands into the sky and collapsing to his knees with a single sharp clatter as the various bells and clappers fell silent at once. Even some of the other figures that Khulan would never have expected to see strong emotion from now simply stood, deflated, tears rolling down their faces.

She pushed herself to her feet and stepped forward slowly, fingers coming up to the screen of the display that showed them what was happening just outside the hull. Her fingers trailed down across the display, leaving behind no sign of oil or dead skin cells, while her tear ducts managed to stay dry... But only just.

Only just.

She lowered her arms back down and slowly retook her seat, clearing her throat once to refocus the throne-bridge's crew. "We-" She began, but the words caught in her throat, and she couldn't manage to continue. Swallowing it back down, she tried again. "We now know that the worst has happened." She sighed. "But we cannot allow ourselves to fall into despair. There must be remnants of our ancestors, something we can-"

"My liege!" One of the communicators risked interrupting their sovereign. Normally, such a thing would demand an authoritative response... But surely nobody would so stupid do it now of all times, without good reason. "We have... We have signals here. Other signals. There are ships here, talking with the Gateway."

Others had survived. The Khaganate was not alone.

This changed everything.

Reaching up to roll her sleeves back a little bit, Khulan quashed the last of her sorrow and her rage and rose to her full sight. "Send a message out to any foreign vessels in the system. We must let them know who they stand before."

Translators were rushed up from the archaeology bay, the vessel's communication systems adjusting themselves for broad-spectrum broadcasting. The message went out - not only in the Khaganate's own noble revived Mongolian tongue, but also in Mandarin, in Turkish and in Russian - along with half a dozen other old-world languages, in the hope that if one failed to get through, the others might be understood.

"Hail to those who travel the stars! I am Khulan Khatun-Khuu of the Red Horde, the most beautiful of the royal family, the righteous, the commander of the phoenix, first herald of the Great Khagan, undisputed ruler of Kyzaghan. We have sailed on Uzay's currents, taken from our creator the bounty that has been given to us, and returned after so long to the seat of our ancestors!"

"After so long in isolation it would please us greatly to meet our cousins, those others who have been lost among the stars. On behalf of the mighty and terrible Ögedei II Khagan, I invite you aboard, so that we may take tea and sip arkhi as civilised people do, and discuss great and important matters."





A Flock of Fleets

The Khaganate seek to pierce the mystery of the Gateway, and chart the final frontier.
Addressing: @Tortoise, @Eventua @SgtEasy


Yulan Station - formally an out-of-the way minor stop along the Imperial Highway, was now responsible for keeping track of each and every vessel making its way through the Gateway... And there were many, many vessels going through the Gateway now that the Red Horde had departed and the way was open for the Colour Hordes to explore.







It wasn't just the great Colour Hordes though - it seemed every other day a new fleet or even lone ship wished to travel out, to stake their claim or simply gamble on being able to meet some strange foreign power that would bring them enough wealth or fortune to climb the ladder. Yulan cared not - the same three questions were asked of them all, and those with satisfactory responses were able to pass through without further comment. The Khagan's decree was clear - now all that was left was to see who had the strength to follow it.




Reforging the Sickle

The Khaganate return to the home of their ancestors.


The Tömör Chadal's descent thrusters roared, bulky landing legs unfurling themselves to hold up the massive bulk of the Iron Horde's flagship. Above the vessel, support ships flitted around, scanners illuminating the surface below the behemoth to provide second-by-second feedback on the predicted touchdown. The RCS system hissed and unleashed a storm of superheated gas to make sure everything was properly aligned, and then with an almighty thump and a jolt to all the ship's inhabitants, landing was complete.

Lights flicked to green in the vessel's bridge as cargo bays and airlock doors opened themselves up, and with a cheer the first humans to walk on Ceres' surface in nearly half a millennia disembarked, bounding, marching or driving out across the icy substrate and towards their target; the entire reason this out of any other area of the dwarf planet had been selected to be the landing point of the core of the Khaganate's industrial might: Ceres Station. The heart of human colonisation in the asteroid belt before the Cataclysm, it had lit up on the long-distance scans of the surface near-immediately, its regular, straight angles of refined metals, concrete and the cracked and deflated domes of former hab-blocks a stark contrast to Ceres' surface of ice and clay.

The Tömör Chadal had actually landed nearly two clicks away from the main body of Ceres Base, because like any great project, there had to be strong foundations to build atop. For the Khaganate, establishing these foundations came down to a finely-honed checklist that everyone aboard knew near-instinctively at this point. With the flagship settled and its massive communication dishes now working on behalf of the rest of the fleet, grading machinery rumbled across the surface, grinding down the top layer of substrate to allow workers to set down blinking landing beacons. With the landing site prepared, other ships that had been waiting to land were now calmly guided in, traffic controllers sweeping brightly coloured paddles through the barely existent atmosphere to lead craft safely down to the surface.

If others in Sol had been playing close attention to Ceres, they might have been astonished by just how rapidly the Khaganate seemed to make it home once again. Prefabricated buildings were deployed and assembled on-site, first a power plant, then utilitarian synth-silk domes sprung to life, the grading machines rumbling out to clear thoroughfares between the fresh infrastructure. Suited workers, equipped with jackhammeers pounded out sockets for floodlights and cabling towers to be slotted into, soon followed by electrical workers who scurried around to connect all the new infrastructure up.

Next came the plumes of ice and snow that jetted out from a core collection of resource drills, the surface churned up to be shuttled to electrolysis chambers where it could be broken down into its component parts. Around the initial landing grounds, teams had been hard at work to turn the icy fields into a bona-fide landing port, with hard-packed and brightly painted rock used to mark out where vessels should come in without the risk of kicking up snow and soft clay.

With the foundation complete, rovers could now prepare themselves to begin exploring what their ancestors had abandoned so long ago.

---


"Comms check, 1... 2... 3... All receiving?" Enkh gave the crown of her helmet a firm rap, the feedback echoing out across the rest of the expedition crew and causing a few winces among those with their radios set a little too high. A chorus of 'affirmatives' followed on, and the leader gave a thumbs up. "Alright folks. Treat this like you would reclaiming any other failed or abandoned colony. It'll be older and stranger, but that doesn't make its dangers any different." She took a long pause, and then gestured across towards the slender figure of this team's shaman. "Any words before we go inside Elio?"

The man offered a serious nod, unbuckled his seat straps and rose up as much as he could in the cramped confines of the enclosed rover. Unlike the rest of the crew who were wearing plain grey EVA suits, adorned only with the Iron Horde's customary burnished gear-and-anvil, Elio's was properly suited for his position among his people, although significalty trimmed down for the demands placed upon expditionary work. A short cape edged with tightly-braided tassels stretched across his shoulders and across the top of the suit's flight pack, while stellar charts were engraved around his visor and cuffs. Most of the panoply had been left behind however, replaced instead by a profusion of the equipment required to take care of the more physical requirements of the crew.

"Gracious Uzay, vast and infinite
We give our thanks to you for reopening the passage of our ancestors
We give our thanks to you that we have passed safely through your embrace, as our ancestors once did
We give thanks to the great spirit of this body - Ceres, that we may walk upon it and share its bounty
We petition the spirit so that we may walk safely where our ancestors once dwelt
And though we leave behind the light of great Sol, we know that its burning soul will protect and warm our spirits, as it did for our ancestors
And we may learn of their triumphs and sorrows, to carry them in our hearts."


"Feels strange without the usual accompaniment," one of the engineers commented after the moment had passed.

"If you'd like me to leave behind some of the medical equipment and the spare suit patches so I can bring my drum, I can make sure they're the ones marked for you Nikita." The smirk was audible in Elio's voice, even if the polarising lens stopped anyone from seeing it on his face.

"No further comment, shaman," came the response, along with a smattering of chuckles from the rest of the crew. The rover finally rumbled to a stop, nearly toppling the spiritualist over if not for his arm shooting out last minute to grab onto a handle, and the driver's voice rumbled out across their helmet frequencies.

"We're less than a hundred meters away from what the scans suggested was the main entranceway to Ceres Base. Cutting the air supply to your suits in T-60, so make sure you're running on your own air. Conditions are as good as they get around here. Little bit of snow being kicked up, but nothing bad enough to compromise visibility. We'll stay here as coordination and to relay communications."

"Our thanks to you and your vehicle Ailin. You serve our clan with pride." The last few words were drowned out by a chorus of hisses as the crew detached themselves from breathing pipe, their suits now running off their own internal air supply. Taking the lead, Enkh gave the lever for the disembarking lock a firm pull, and then stepped out, the tether on the rear of her suit quickly picked up and locked to the front of Elio's suit, the shaman giving it a quick tug to make sure there was enough slack.

The procedure was repeated all the way down the line until they had assembled out on the planet's surface, a vast metal gateway, easily big enough for a vehicle three times the size of the small Jol-Tor they'd arrived in to pass through stood before them, ajar just enough for humans to comfortably fit through.

"Showtime."



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Elfydd's Door, Outer Belt Monitoring Station


There was a light in the darkness, a small and timid turquoise in the gloom.

Most of the station's five person crew were resting – after all, 'new year' based on the calendar of old Earth had long fallen out of favour for most, with the exception of one city – but Chicago Singh, the team's medic and hydroponics lead, could never sleep when New Year's Eve was coming to a close.

On the tiny view screen in front of him, the broadcast redirected through from Pwyll station with surprising clarity – from the central square garden at York-Mumbai, nearly midnight at their local time. All throughout was spread a thick crowd of both locals and visitors, mostly near-baseline humans – though parades of any kind always attracted some measure of gremlin attention. A 20-something woman stood in the view of the camera, form fitted well by the novelty red jumper, with a nearly invisible microphone curled under her right ear and just in front of her chin and a bright green synthcarb cup full of lemonade in her left hand.

“Well everybody it's just 43 minutes to go till the timer for 'new year' back on Earth! As you can see behind me,” she said with a big smile, “last minute preparations are happenin' for the floats. We've got quite the range, everything from classics of Earth film like 'Fast and the Furious' or 'Transformers', multiple sports themed floats, and...”

She leant in close to the camera and gave a slightly cheeky grin, sipping her lemonade before gesturing for the camera man to follow, revealing the long line of machines being made ready to start their journey down the ring-shaped 'main road' of the arcology. Second to last of the line was a slightly sheepish looking float, still mostly covered in hefty tarpaulin.

“...the-”

Three alerts on the terminal to his right. Chicago swivelled his chair and put the tablet down as he tapped the main screen, moving the unfinished game of solitaire off to one side. It was a fairly minor warning, in theory – fluctuations in the station's fusion reactor, quickly restabilised without issue. The second warning seemed unrelated – a new light source detected further out in the system, close to the First Maiden... probably nothing more than a homestead cargo ship that had failed to dim unnecessary visual signals, that's all.

But the third warning? Chicago scratched under his chin at the stubble that had just about started growing long enough to curl slightly. He paused, his mind racing for some connection.

A slight, ever so slight, gravitational pull.

Caused by one of the maidens? He thought, But this is much closer, even Fifth Maiden's orbit doesn't bring it this close. So...

Once again a pause. A familiar whisper in the back of his mind, as he glanced back at the now increasingly disrupted broadcast of the old earth new year's parade.

“It...” he felt the words started to fade on his tongue even as he started to speak, “...after, five... five hundred years?”

It wouldn't be impossible, echoed in his mind.

He forced himself to blink, to breathe, and felt a hand on his shoulder that wasn't really there. With lightning purpose his hands dashed across the terminal, prepping and launching a pair of monitor drones as he turned on some of the full visual external cameras.

The light from the camera feeds was blinding, a fractal of colours endlessly turning in upon itself. Like a star its intensity was unyielding... and then just as quickly the light was gone, but the gravity was not. Whatever was there might be imperceptible to a human eye, but it was definitely there.

The hand on his shoulder squeezed ever so slightly, a reassurance that would never leave him. With a deep breath he tapped a button to open up a comlink with the rest of the station's staff.

“Attention, one two three, uh... I know you all just went to catch a bit of shut-eye but, well... I think you should come see this.”

----

GN Hunter's Eye, Green Table Naval Patrol Vessel


The click-clack of dark green office shoes against astroyard steel only made everything feel even more like ice, and Mabelo Kerina did not appreciate the cold. Dry, pristine, but cold...

I miss the humidity, said the tall purple creature that lingered at every doorway she didn't intend to use, and the midday views.

Me too, Archie, she thought, before entering the door she was aiming for – the closest that any of the near identical silver-white slabs connecting each segment of the ship had to a 'grand' entrance. A stylized green crown symbol served as the primary indicator that beyond it lay the bridge. With the push of a button to its side she watched as the door gave a click and a hiss, opening to reveal a rounded, multi-layered control room with wide view screens and roughly a dozen staff in neatly pressed white, green and black uniforms were sat at a number of controls.

Mabelo put an ornately ringed hand through the thick curls of her hair, wincing slightly as the room's leading figure – dressed from head to toe in pure white – turned to her, placing his right hand firmly against his own heart. The thin-rimmed naval cap he wore was trimmed in green and black, and had been designed in the traditional captain's style – resembling an iron crown of flowers and swords.

“Captain,” Mabelo said through a tight-lipped smile as she glanced at the one remaining seat.

“Representative Kerina, thank you for joining us. We were about to depart – please take a seat, we are expecting Gate departure to be, uh... vigorous, for civilians unused to space travel.”

“I know, I've...” she sneered, “I've done the training exercises in preparation. I wanted to be here.”

“I never said otherwise.”

Mabelo could feel eyes in the back of her skull, and something in her chest, but she held it back. Thankfully, she could breathe again as a gentle voice cut through the intercom.

“Please, take your seats. We will be departing for Sol in three minutes. All checks are currently complete or in-progress. Thank you.”

Mabelo took her seat to the captain's left and strapped herself in with a click. As the countdown ticked away on her seat's personal viewscreen, her mind wandered to that balcony. She knew the journey would be safe – the Hunter's Eye was being accompanied by a pair of armed escorts from Kilohaven, and on the other side of the gate they would meet 'forward team' and their drone supports which had already entered the orbit of Earth's moon.

The roughest of ground had already been smoothed out... and yet, she couldn't help but feel like she might never see another sunrise from her balcony again.

Don't panic, whispered a voice that her mind knew was coming from both the bridge doorway and somewhere small in the vast space in front of them, it'll be okay. And besides, soon you'll be able to compare-.

“Opening the gate.”

The voice, and the knowledge of a creature unique to her mind's eye, was cut out. An enigma unfolded before her eyes, and for a moment Mabelo wondered if the prism that was unravelling before her was truly real.

But it was. Her heart was full and beyond that spiral was a home once so like her own...







“We have arrived,” said the intercom, and the kaleidoscope was gone.

Mabelo could breathe again. The great darkness, and the cold, and light of a star so much like Annwn. And there came the readings, and the imagery – a strange marble of grey and dull greens. She could faintly overhear the captain speaking something to his crew, word of signals being detected of vessels unknown to Avalon, but Mabelo was only focused on the planet below, and of the arching of the sun's light across it.

It's cold down here too.

----

KH Wait In Gold, Kilohaven Shield Hauler


There were three things Magnus loved, and three things he hated.

Magnus loved his ship. Just like his wife, it was big and beautiful and decorated for the practicalities of carrying a wide variety of industrial-scale multipurpose fabricator machines. It wasn't a flagship of the merchant fleet, of course, but it was right up there, a credit to him...

...or, according to everyone else, his homestead. Magnus hated his homestead, which often surprised people, but Kilohaven was mostly famous for being green and covered in trees, just like every other ass-forsaken settlement on Avalon.

For you see, Magnus loved the certainty of steel, the churning of engines, the raw might of the launch and the loading and unloading of cargo. He had risen through Kilohaven Aerospace Logistics to become an esteemed upper senior member, a well-respected titan of industry...

...or, as some of the lazy bum-rags would whisper, a 'syndicate baron'. Magnus hated how the Table watched him, scrutinized every inch of his dealings. Even now, when they were offering this position to assist with escorting the second wave of visitor vessels to Sol, something about the nature of it just felt like a spit in the face. A backhanded compliment.

But what if... whispered the talking pig that leant against his ankle.

Yeah Francis Aubergine? he thought, because Magnus loved to hear Francis Aubergine's ideas.

What if you did something really bold? The Wait In Gold doesn't have to go to Sol, you know...

...huh.

If he went to a different system and established first contact – surely not too difficult, he'd made sure to bring a translator gremlin or two, could get a gestalt or two running in the background to puzzle out any odd spots... why, he had everything needed to make some real money, and be known as the first man to wherever the hell place he visited.

...but if he went to Sol, he would just be running a mostly unneeded escort role for Table bureaucrats.

He sneered through his moustache.

Magnus hated bureaucrats most of all.

Without another word he punched in some alternate coordinates and set about the checks for gate departure.

The Table might notice, of course, but by then it'd be too late. In a kaleidoscope of light, he was gone... and almost immediately regretted his decision.
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SHELTER OF THOSE WHO SHAPE // THIRD MOONRISE OF SECOND SEASON
All language within - { } - is translated to 'English' from Native.


Requires Discipline let out a string of expletives passed down through generations of Tainted. The Demons once referred to them as 'swear words'. Sometimes it felt apt to put voice to his frustration, rather than simply let loose a roar like his other brethren. He stood up and walked away from the workstation where various computer chips, circuit boards and various combinations of biological tissue sat. He scratched his head furiously with his right arm, using his twisted and warped left he scooped up one of the nutrient slugs from its container. Opening his mouth he savoured the acidic feeling as it squirmed its way down his throat.

Being Tainted RD was used to the bottom of the barrel foods and supplies, however since becoming the Deacons Chosen he had known nothing but the greatest comfort. He was still in the lowest caste in society, but he was now the top of that caste.

He tried not to allow the bitter sensation to enter his stomach, that the most basic luxuries for the common people were a Utopia to him. RD looked back over at the bench, as the nerve endings and tentacles flopped around uselessly on the table looking for some sense of connection. The idea in his head had been so simple, the human - Demon. He corrected himself. The Demon radios worked by transmitting high-frequency waves, that were - he tapped his chin looking for the correct term. Electrotorpedic? No that wasn't right.

Walking back over to the table he eyed his work. Either way, when the Great Journey began in earnest they would need more vessels. These vessels would need sensors and communication suites and the matter of the fact was that there may have been enough Tainted to make, operate, and maintain the systems required for spaceflight. They just didn't have the resources, Demon technology was scarce these days. The few ships found adrift in space were often destroyed by Zealots before any useful parts could be harvested from them. The most useful parts were always the most delicate.

That is why his work was so important, RD was trying to use organically grown organisms to generate the same results. Communication within the system was easy, their vessels already did that. All living things had Electromagnolia signals that were transmitted around their nervous systems. The trick he was trying to develop was passing these signals through space from one to the other. It was difficult, especially when no one truly understood the Demon technology.

A knock at the door shook him out of his reverie. A knock at the door, rather than having someone just barge in. How quaint.

{Excuse me, Maven.}

Maven, not Requires Discipline. It may not have been a true name, but it was likely the closest he would ever get to and he certainly never expected to gain this title, nor see it used in his lifetime. To become Maven you were selected by the Deacon herself, almost as a leader of the Tainted. It was a title that many Deacons had neglected through the years and hadn't been used since the last main Demon colony had been wiped out from the stars.

{Yes, Slow To Think?}

The brother bowed at him, she was nearly a head taller and his bow brought the top of their heads in line. His armour an emerald green and clean. It was always incredibly clean, he suspected he had an acid shower several times a day to clean himself of the uncleanliness.

{The Deacon has sent word, that the first vessel is away.}

RD turned away from him. {Good. Good. May the Gods watch over it, and allow me victory in my work. For I believe we may soon need it.}




SCOUT SHIP - HIDDEN TWILIGHT // THIRD MOONRISE OF SECOND SEASON
All language within - { } - is translated to 'English' from Native.


Pathetically Lame opened his eyes after a brief prayer. The Gateway loomed ahead of him. He had heard tales, and sermons about the Gateway before, how the Gods had used it to seed life throughout the Galaxy. Until the Demons had come forth to spread their disease and taint, corrupting everything they touched like a great plague. The Gods had severed the connection, and the Nameless had seen through the Demons facade, eliminated them and reclaimed the system in the name of their Gods.

Now it appeared the Gods saw them ready to rejoin them in the stars. They couldn't however, risk the bulk of the fleet. There was talk, whispers. That the Demons may have spread to other systems, spreading the darkness and death to other worlds the Gods had placed in the heavens.

This is why Pathetically Lame was the first to transition through, the small cargo vessel had been retrofitted with the most advanced sensor system that they could put together. A sister ship was currently being put together by his brothers, as whenever nearing the Gateway it seemed to communicate with the Demons systems showing a whole host of destinations. Perhaps the Demons had based their heretical 'technophacy' on that that the Gods had left behind?

{Status, Disobedient Runt?}

It felt wrong to use his whole descriptor, however everything said was being relayed back to the flagship of the Fleet of Unending Fury. Thus if they didn't wish for a dishonourable death, they had to ensure that all protocol and doctrine was followed.

His brother turned his misshapen and burnt face towards him. {The co-ordinates locked, and the portal is stable. We are ready for transit.}

Pathetically Lame nodded his head and pushed the controls forward. Feeling the acceleration push him back in the seat slightly, in the background he could hear the praying coming through the speakers.

{-and on the First Moon the Gods created the heavens and all that they contained-}

{Speeding on approach, contact in twenty seconds-}

{-for this was the Gods promise, to create a perfect system, for all living things to live in peace, harmony and worship-}

{-fifteen, holding steady-}

Pathetically Lame felt his stomach lurch and drop.

{-there was peace and prosperity for all life. Everything was truly perfect, and happy-}

{-ten, getting some turbulence now-}

The stars stretched before him, as he strained to keep his eyes open. As if closing them would dishonour the Gods, they had provided this majesty, this perfect creation. The minor discomfort was worth it for being part of this incredible moment. One of the first to travel through to the home of the Gods.

{-Until the demons came-}

Static broke out over the line as the ship 'made contact' with the portal. Pathetically Lame wasn't entirely sure if there was anything physical to contact. All the Demon systems short-circuited as the ship came tumbling out the other side of the Gateway. His eyes burned, and his stomach ached as the vessel tumbled through space, he briefly caught sight of a star in the distance and what could have been worlds before the darkness overtook him and he passed from consciousness.
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Eventua

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Blue Horde Over Avalon, Part 1

Avalon gets to learn about the customs of their neighbours.
An @Enigmatik & Eventua co-production




When the Blue Horde emerged beneath the horizon of a foreign sun, they were presented with what was perhaps the simplest choice imaginable to a nation of born-and-bred spacers. On the one hand - a vast gas giant, orbit speckled by moons and illuminated by the faint but reassuring sight of high-powered drives burning across the endless darkness of Uzay’s embrace. On the other… a small, terrestrial icy body - barely worth a moon in and of itself, the distant glow of greens and the faint trickle of smoke and steam leaving a barely-present atmosphere confirming that its greatest riches were likely already taken by others.

So it was that the vast majority of the horde checked their transfers and started to burn - first the Boyans, then the Kinships, and after them the flotilla of support vehicles needed for an interstellar operation like the one they were meant to embark on. Soon, those living on and around Bran were met with a very unusual and likely quite unwelcome sight indeed - foreign ships, with foreign weapons, and foreign languages filling the communications wavelengths.

Even an infant could guess at what they were up to. The aerostats, tethered to massive orbital supply ships via a slender umbilical cord. The atmo-divers, with massive remass scoops and even bigger engines, burning almost as much as they could pull out with each risky swing into the giant’s gravity well… And the lurking threat of the largest vessels, railguns and missile launch tubes starkly visible even with their more ornate styling. Really, there was only one word to describe it - colonisation.

And now, a small, isolated Homestead on one of Bran’s smaller, out-of-the-way moons, was learning what it was like to be on the receiving end of such an interaction. For days now the station’s supplies had begun to be choked out - first it was just one delayed shipment, but that was soon joined by another, and another by another. It wasn’t just the obviously valuable goods they were stopping either - even ice and volatile hauls had dried up ever since these new craft had emerged out into Annwn.

In a small, crowded office that visitors to the docks had often mistaken for some kind of elaborate broom closet, the view of the Crow’s Landing dockyard below was narrowed and contained to just an aged, dirty polymer window. The man in the chair tapped the fingers of his pale, sturdy hand across the records and reports that had been coming in over the past few days.

Inhumanly tall astroworkers, spear-wielding giants, cyborg translators, on behalf of some kind of wannabe feudal lord? A few homesteads had tried shooting back and distress signals had already been on their way, but word was that all contact had already been lost at Elfydd’s Door and distress calls had been coming back from Avalon itself, though thankfully whatever danger had come to there was brief. But between it all, little news had come back from the navy and none of the merchant fleet vessels in the area had been coming to their defence.

It’s too much news, all of it bad, thought Rhys as the fingers of his left hand moved through the brush of his moustache, not a fan of that at all.

As he followed the signal reports from their monitoring bouys, how they had been drawing steadily closer to their quiet little station, Rhys’s mind wandered to an estimate given by his partner up in the central monitor before he'd left for the morning: If they come here, we don’t have enough guns for everyone.

A beep and a whirr knocked Rhys out of the pounding that had built up in his chest. He turned and raised an eyebrow to see Gangler, one of the station's hobots, standing by the door.

Its’ beeps sounded agitated as it gestured for him to follow with a too-long arm. Rhys let his nerves be channeled into a deeper sigh - tiredness, not nerves - and gave Gangler a tight, grim smile as he went to follow. With the thunk of steel-toe caps against corrugated steel, Rhys walked with a heaviness to his chest, his mind wandering back to the garden at the center of the station – Essme would be playing there, but was she worried? If they came here, what would this mean for her and the other children?

They rounded a corner as he followed Gangler’s rickety form, who suddenly swung out an arm to the right, pointing at where a couple of workers were crowded by a small radio monitor close to the main dock.

“Boss,” spoke up one of the workers who stood to his feet and gave a quick two-fingered salute, “you better hear this. We’re gettin’ a transmission through old Guyver’s privy channel.”

Rhys frowned, but said nothing. Council decisions from even a week ago already felt like a lifetime – he wasn’t going to chew anyone out for ignoring something from decades back.

“The situation, then?”

“The Colhurst’s been taken, and the captain told them where they were headed. Old Guyver’s wife was just letting us know to get ready.”

A pause, followed by a single quiet exclamation:

“...fuck.”




Jetei Boyan of the Blue Horde had been placed into a peculiar position. To move beyond Yulan Station was to take a tremendous leap into the unknown - away from the steady routes laid out by the Yam, beyond even Kök Tengri’s outer hinterlands, and in doing so, relinquish one’s ability to rule properly. Of course the Blue Horde hadn’t abandoned their great holdings… But here, so many stars away from home, he wasn’t foolish enough to think that things would run smoothly. The way of the Khaganate had always involved a certain decisive level of physicality. Yes, the distances might be vast and all served the Great Khagan, but running a station, a habitat or a fleet couldn’t be done with mere transmissions and idle chatter. A lord had to be seen to be followed - if you hadn’t shared air with a man, drunk from his stockpile, drank the water from his reclamation systems, what bound you to him? Oaths? Phah.

So, Jetei had already anticipated that his territories might be squeezed, the kinships beneath him swayed aside and the clans turned to someone not currently hundreds of lightyears away… But that was alright, because as the station (which his men had reliably informed him was named ‘Crow’s Landing,’ based on their chats with waylaid spacers,) slowly changed from a strange, oddly-coloured and shaped speck into the lines and domes of a habitat, new opportunities had sprung out before him, to be seized if only one had the wherewithal to do so.

“Get me a direct transmission line through to the station,” he rumbled out, his communicators nodding and setting to work. They’d long since tuned their translators to the strange patterns of speech these… ‘Avalonites’ used, so despite its oddly synthetic sound and occasional pop and crackle, the message came through loud and clear.

“Hail, Crow’s Landing. This is Jetei Boyan, Fleet-Master in the Blue Horde, loyal subject of Toqoqan Khan-Khuu and lord of Erleg’s L2 Lagrange Point. We have you besieged and isolated, but as neither of us have broken the bonds of hospitality, we hold no ill-will to you and your people. Concede the victory, and you will be placed under my protection and well-treated for as long as it takes for your rulers to agree upon what comes next.”

There was a long, quiet pause, as the channel returned nothing but static.

Then, just as things would seem to grate, there was the beep of a microphone being activated followed by the sound of a thin, synthetic whirring. For close to a minute the whirring raised and lowered in pitch, as if someone was playing some sort of electronic piano, before at last coming to a stop.

Then a click, as the return transmission ended.

Jetei glanced at one of his communicators with a quizzical expression - in turn, they could only respond with a shrug. “Automated tone to indicate the message is received but not processed? Error in the communication line? Some sort of electronic weapon? My apologies, my liege, but we cannot be certain what this means to these foreigners. We will repeat the hail again.”

Jetei nodded. That only made sense, after all - no telling what strange customs these very strange folk had.

The answer, from such a surprisingly patient response, was yet more synthetic whirring – this time slightly slower.

Sometimes, visitors to Crow’s Landing who Simon would insist on inviting to dinner – ‘We don’t want to be rude all the way out here, do we?’ – would seem surprised when they found out Rhys was on the council.

‘Bit odd to be down in the dockyard as a councilor, surely?’ they’d ask.

This was why Rhys didn’t like to spend time with the council.

“We must demand they leave. I mean, it’s outrageous! This, this…” a nervous glance from the councillor to his right, to a hastily loaded read out, “Joti Boi Blue or whatever his name is, we… he doesn’t know what he’s dealing with! Let him know the knight-marshalls will be right around the corner any minute now, that’ll show him.”

A thicker voice, feminine, cropped up across the table.

“Are you mad? Who here has even seen a knight-marshall that weren’t just dancing on broadcast or telling the youth about the dangers of drinking too much when you cross a bridge? Whatever the hell’s been going on back on the inner system, no one’s coming to help us out. I say we turn over what he asks and politely just… work with him.”

The nervous drone overseer started to speak up with another point, then another, backwards and forwards. An impasse – Rhys’ least favourite step in a debate.

Idly he held the locket open, of those fifteen years ago when he’d been promoted to upper senior, and of the ‘family’ photo taken by the Dockyard Syndicate, with Simon and Essme there as well, and his gut sank deeper and deeper. Then he sighed, snapped it shut, and stood up – the debate fell silent.

“If we fight them, we will lose people, good people. I know the crew of the Colhurst – they’re some of the toughest bastards this side of Bran, and if they felt they couldn’t handle it, I don’t fancy our chances much more.”

“Yes, well… that’s why we just… we warn them first.”

“And if they call our bluff? We’ve got, what… thirty drones in actually decent nick? Thirty-five at a push? I guarantee you best we’ll manage is we gum up an engine, and then when they breach our airlocks and smash our dock to pieces to get in, what then, Haymes? Are you going to stop them shooting or stabbing people till we give up anyway?”

The air was uneasy. As the garden’s senior representative began to chime in, Rhys raised a firm finger of silence.

“...but that does not mean, Barbara,” he sighed again, “that we will just roll over and do nothing. If this ‘Jetei’ wants to stroll in and demand the people of Crow’s Landing will just do what he says, then we’ll make every step as deniably painful as possible, right? Whoever these people are, they’ve been causing trouble for homesteads bigger than us – even if Avalon is having trouble of their own, they will send help, sooner or later.”

“...so we let them in and knuckle down?” chimed another councillor.

“Aye,” said Rhys. There was some faint murmuring, but most agreed – it was the path their predecessors had followed during the final republican war, and it had served them when needed in the years since then. With a brief vote and a show of hands, it was decided – now it was just a case of letting others know.

Rhys turned to the thin, delicate man by the monitor-station, who was currently trying to stifle a nervous laugh as Gangler sat in the vocal booth next to them, responding to the looping hails with whatever it felt like beeping about.

“Alright love, they’ve settled on it. I trust you to handle things with everyone? I’m going to get Essme, make sure she’s home safe before I head for the docks.”

Simon gave a gentle smile and a thumbs up, before signalling for Gangler to leave the booth. With a clunk and a whirr the hobot left to join Rhys on his mission, before at last he restored the communication channel to himself. As he spoke, he was simultaneously relaying high priority warnings and messages to the residents and workers of Crow’s Landing – there would be some panic, but he was confident cooler heads would prevail. If nothing else, Rhys would make it clear what was needed.

“Roger and pardon, Fleet-Master, we read you loud and clear. Apologies for the slight delay, we’ve been having some minor technical delays on our transmitters due to it being the annual homestead astrogolfing tournament. Very important local custom, not to be disturbed. Could you repeat your instructions, please? There may be some errors with your translation software, we heard something about a ‘Blue Man Group’?”

“What in the name of Great Uzay’s pendulous ballsack is an ‘astrogolf?” The words had come through loud and clear to the translator, and he’d certainly seemed sure that that was exactly what had been said, but not a single soul on the throne-bridge actually knew what the hell such a thing meant, and Jetei’s roar of confusion could not and would not be satisfactorily answered until they were down on the habitat itself.

As previously stated, came the response, a little terser now. “You are besieged, a fact that cannot have missed your notice. We have control in and out of Crow’s Landing for people and material both, but no honour has been lost and no blood has been spilled. Surrender, and you will remain protected subjects. Resist, and we will be forced to conclude this affair with force, and I cannot guarantee your safe-keeping.”

There was a pause.

There was a click.

“Astrogolfing,” came a small, droning electronic voice, clearly pre-recorded, “is a zero-gravity leverage-ball sport first dated to 2598 CE, though predecessors to the sport appear to have been played as early as the mid 22nd century on the space habitats of Mars and Ceres. It comes in many varieties, but the most widespread variant – first popularized by the former Republic of Ra-Onoff – involves a series of competitors attempting to bat a ‘scoring bee’ – a kind of simple miniature drone – through a sequence of small targets spread throughout the enclosed space of a habitat in as few shots as possible.”

Another pause.

Another click.

“Major astrogolfing tournaments of the 28th century have included-”

”<ENOUGH!>”
Came the response. Not in Avalonian English this time, no, and not through the crackly, synthesised voice of the translator either. A torrent of words in the guttural tongue of the Khaganate followed this single, authoritative command, before almost sheepishly the somewhat familiar voice that had been addressing Crow’s Landing previously spoke again.

“What Lord Jetei means is that although this is a no-doubt fascinating custom that we would be intrigued to learn more about, you have twice received clear communication to clarify your status as to our occupation. Further delays will be considered proof that you have no intention to surrender, and we will deploy our houseguards.”

The recording clicked off as Simon’s voice returned, a politely apologetic lilt to his voice.

“Oh! I’m so sorry, we had been meaning to answer your questions in order, but I can see that might not have been appropriate. My apologies to Lord Jetei, of course he and his guards are welcome to visit his new domain – in fact our most senior dockyard management will be glad to welcome you aboard in person. When would you like us to schedule his landing party?”

“One moment please for the trajectory calculations…” The transmission line was dead air for a few moments, but soon crackled back to life. “The Boyan’s vessel will be able to initiate docking procedures in forty six minutes, Uzay be willing. As a show of good faith, we are releasing some of the suspended resources to your station now, to prevent discontent and shortages. Flagship out.”

As promised, the Homestead’s sensors would soon pick up new movement coming from the fleet that had approached - one large vessel, several smaller ones trailing behind it like tugs being pulled to a port, and several even larger tankers adjusted their trajectories and began to burn. For the tugs, this was a slow, methodical thing, their grid drives humming to life without pomp or circumstance, but for the flagship itself, four fusion engines couldn’t help but make a statement when they burst to life and began to push, the trajectory chart on Crow’s Landing updating in real time as its orbit drew closer and closer to the Homestead’s.




How best to show himself to these strange people? How best to demonstrate the might of the Khaganate, the wisdom of their honourable surrender, and the pledge to protect their lives that he had laid out before his fleet? Jetei tugged at his beard as he pondered these issues, earning him a few fussy comments from the servant who was currently fiddling about with his sleeves.

Some things were tradition - wrought into the unspoken codex which every noble had to learn if they were to thrive in Kök Tengri. He would descend, with his bannermen and houseguards. His steward (or, in this case his translator on behalf of his steward,) would inform them of the new leadership and the appropriate conduct expected from them and the vows the Blue Horde made to them in return, and then the most loyal of his subjects would disembark, to establish firm control over the essentials of any artificial habitat. But aside from that, the system was his oyster.

It was a small shame he had never been very good at these sorts of things, Jetei mused idly. He was sure that, given the opportunity, there were a bevy of Khans and Boyans and perhaps even a Noyan or three who might jump at the chance to integrate foreigners into their horde, to be the first to claim rule over these foreigners and show them just what their new overlords were capable of… But this was not him.

No, he was far more worried about the practical aspects of the whole affair. How were his subjects to understand foreign machines without interpreters? How were they to navigate a station that did not abide by the centuries of informal and formal architectural decisions the Hordes were used to? How were they to know if a creak or gurgle or bump from the equipment was something to be concerned about, or merely the local spirits trying to sniff out these stranger’s reactions? These were the things that troubled him even after his deel was fitted and belted and his blade, sat comfortably in its scabbard, was settled in place.

It troubled him even as he felt the lurch of the vessel as the main engines died down and the backup thrusters began to slowly push them into the correct position, and it troubled him even as his bannermen and houseguards assembled out around him, spears held stiffly and armour freshly polished. With his steward and the translator by his side though, he couldn’t afford to let these thoughts grace his face, the only sign of his interminable inner monologue coming from the slow grinding of his molars against each other.

There was a clunk as the ship came into position and the mating interface locked home. No more fussing, he supposed. Time to show his face to these strangers.

The airlock opened to reveal what was in all a shockingly empty dock – despite its two primary bays littered with hastily dropped sets of tools and parts, or unopened containers. A few workers or drones were present, but appeared mostly to be just sat around, playing cards or listening to some kind of quiet music. Actually facing Jetei’s entourage was a single individual stood at the main entry – tall, unshaved and broad-shouldered, dressed in ordinary green and white workman’s slacks. To his right was a figure almost 6 and a half feet tall, dull grey metal limbs and plating, with a ‘head’ that appeared to consist of a sealed plastic bowl full of plant roots, algae-rich sludge, and mycelial tendrils woven together. It happily beeped and whistled at the arrivals, giving a gentle, creaky wave of its motorized arm.

The man stepped forward, looked between Jetei’s accompaniment, and stroked his hefty but neatly trimmed moustache.

“Pleased to meet you, Lord Jetei,” he said with a warm smile that didn’t bare teeth, “my name’s Rhys. I’m the upper senior manager for our little dockyard, and a lead member of Crow Landing’s council.”

He gave a slow, genteel bow, then stood upright and offered a firm, hefty handshake.

The difference between the two groups couldn’t have been greater. Rhys and his hobot, were practical and industrial, while on Jetei’s side… The lord himself wore a rich blue deel with a silver-coloured belt, fastened firmly to not flap about in microgravity, an intricately decorated scabbard at his side. His steward was dressed similarly, but with much less flair, while the houseguards stood resplendent in their grey-black armour, two banners held aloft before them.

Each one was identical, but completely unintelligible to the crew of the Crow’s Landing. To those that knew however, it delineated exactly who they’d come under the control of: because it was a noble seal, assembled vertically and following the same pattern as every lord within the Khaganate’s did: First, there was the soyombo of the Golden Horde, bourn by every man and woman loyal to the rightful Genghis of Tengri. Beneath, the seal of Toqoqan, to show allegiance to the Blue Horde. Beneath that came Jetei’s own seal, and then two further lines of the rights and privileges that he had been granted in his rule.

The man himself didn’t take the proffered handshake, and instead gestured across to his herald, who ceremonially unfurled a length of digitised synth-silk, cleared his throat, and began to proclaim out names and titles. Next to him, without any prop to hide behind or the surety that came with reading such things more times than one could consciously remember, instead awkwardly shifted back and forth on his heels, was the translator, a cumbersome looking device belted to his hip and snaking up to a mouthpiece and headset affixed over his head.

Around the group had assembled the Boyan’s soldiers. Perhaps if it had just been the banners and spears held aloft, one could almost trick themselves into seeing this as a cultural event - it was certainly odd enough to be one… But then there was the dull gunmetal glint from their holstered firearms, the steel in the glare of the Nokud carrying his lord’s banner, and the general atmosphere that things were not going the way they were supposed to for the Khaganate.

Once the steward had finished with his part, the translator filled in the rest for the benefit of the Avalonians. “In accordance with the customs and Yassa laid out by the great Genghis, Jetei Boyan, vassal to lord Toqoqan Khan-Khuu, has taken control and authority over this station in the name of himself, his liege-lord, and the Great Khagan Ögedei II. In accordance with the peaceful and bloodless surrender, Boyan Jetei has issued a formal decree ensuring the safety and security of those within the station. Those within are free to remain protected guests of his lordship or to swear fealty without suspicion or treachery. They are to be posted and supplied to ensure their continuing good health, and once accord has been reached with the relevant superiors, may leave without threat or ill-will.”

He took a slow breath before continuing. “The duties of the station are as follows: to not obstruct or prevent the habitat’s necessary functions, to not interfere or harm a subject of the Boyan and to obsequiously conduct themselves when under the lord’s protection. Should the lord break his vows, may Uzay shun him, and the Khans settle their fate. Should the conquered break theirs, Jetei is empowered to reassert authority and prevent disorder however he may see fit.”

Jetei nodded a few times, then with a thin smile turned back to face Rhys. “<And we would hate to see this lovely station stained with blood, wouldn’t we?>” The tone carried, even if the words didn’t.

Rhys meanwhile had taken the hint at simply stood to attention, patient as titles were read and duties stated. He was not a political theorist – he’d barely passed on his political theory exams in school after already failing the first time – but Rhys recalled enough of the basics, and the unspoken first rule of feudalism: the conqueror stops keeping his promises when it becomes convenient.

He gave a firm, flat smile and nodded at the translator.

“Well, we appreciate your honesty in what you say. I’m sure Lord Jetei will find this station and her staff very obliging, you know. I’d love to give you all a tour, if you’d like? Crow’s Landing has been the home for some of us going back, oh, four, five generations or so.”

The lanky mechanical figure gave a synthetic whistle followed by a series of hefty beeps.

“...and Gangler, it’s been here for the last century and something. One of the old prototype models before they got too popular back home you know. Helps around here with odd jobs, maintaining the hydroponics and central gestalts, that sort of thing-”

Rhys suddenly snapped his fingers as if remembering something.

“Where are my manners, I’m so sorry. Can we sort you all something out to eat? Come with me and we’ll head for the kitchens.”

“<A tour and a meal? He takes me for the commoners this station is clearly filled with? If they cannot bother to share air with the man who rules them, the rest of this is a waste of my time, by the Khagan’s moustache… Just… Go. Let the Hordepeople do as they need.>” With a wave of his hand Jetei pivoted and turned along with his steward, but the translator would hurry to fill in the gaps.

“The lord Jetei is terribly busy at the moment and must administer to the rest of the fleet in this complicated time. However, we are not inhospitable people - please give a few moments for some essential crew to come aboard, and we will be more than happy to enjoy a tour of the station.” He gave a bow - shallower than the one Rhys had given to his lord, before nervously turning to the airlock that the Boyan’s synth-silk clothes had just vanished through.

Sure enough, he was quickly replaced by a veritable crowd of other… Very different people indeed. Where Jetei had had sparkles of gold in his eyes and an odd sense of beauty about his features, these were… Normal? They wore boilersuits stained with grease, toolbelts and welding masks. A few were armed, certainly - plain scabbards holding blades that looked infinitely less beautified than the silver-and-leather hilt of Jetei’s, and a few even had firearms jutting out from under their arms or strapped to their hips… But none of that would have jumped out to the Avalonites at first glance, because everything else about them was just so damn weird.

They were tall and lanky, towering over Rhys and the rest of the workers at the station. Their skin was pale, their heads (where they were visible at all) were almost universally bald or close to it, and their eyes… Pitch black, shining pools that only showed you your own reflection when you gazed into them. One of the men leant down and said a few, incomprehensible words to Rhys, before holding out a plastic-wrapped package of brightly coloured… something. Next to him, one of the men holding the banners approached, offering a sharp, shallow bow towards Rhys.

“Systems communications specialist Behzad, and Yusuf Nokud, who will be taking over day-to-day running of the establishment in the absence of Jetei.” The translator introduced them.

Rhys strained himself a little to follow the figures who had entered, a solid head taller but inhumanly thin – it looked like beneath their suits they surely couldn’t have organs at all. But he was careful as always, and when some of the workers nearby glanced up from their procrastination to look baffled he just smiled and took the offered gift.

“Thank you Behzad, we greatly appreciate your gift. I have some colleagues in the council and drone control teams who will welcome your insights, I’m sure.”

Then he turned to Yusuf and gave a polite, shallow bow.

“And a pleasure to work with you, Yusuf, thank you for your protection. The council will be glad to help get you up to speed on how things work around here.”

He gave a big smile as he stepped back slightly, quickly checking his watch before clasping his hands together.

“Now, who’d like a tour? We should head for the gardens, close to the kitchens, we can show you your rooms…”

A few hands were raised from the crowd - there was an almost sheepishness about them, less conquerors and more schoolchildren on a trip, trying to figure out their place. There was a brief discussion between everyone and the translator, before finally he turned, and with a synthesised sigh spoke. “It is the opinion of the group here that we should head to the reactor first, in order to better know what needs handling aboard the station.”

Rhys gave a slightly puzzled look, before nodding in something of a gesture of ‘fair enough’.

“Make sense. Carry on then.”

And he waved them on to follow.




The route to the reactor was not a long one – nowhere on Crow’s Landing took more than about fifteen minutes to walk at a good pace – but it was packed. Walking down a central corridor some five meters wide and divided by the outline of what were clearly module ‘walls’ designed to seal shut in an emergency, they passed dozens of doors spaced a few meters apart as they went with simple signs stamped on the front.

“Apartments,” Rhys explained, “or storage, though that one got turned into a karaoke room by the boys a while back,” before taking a sudden swerve to a wide, spacious door that looked slightly newer and shinier than the ‘well loved but worn out’ feel that seemed to permeate so many of the other doors they’d encountered.

“Fancy a lift?” he said with a smile and a waggle of the eyebrows, seeming slightly disappointed at the puzzled looks from the visitors. Gangler seemed to appreciate it, at least.

“The elevator, sorry. We’ll be passing about four floors for this, the reactor’s fairly near the ‘base’ of the central tower. Maybe about 300 meters or so underground?”

Some more chatter from the gaggle of dwellers as they examined the rooms around them while moving through the halls. Oddly enough, once they arrived into the dimmer elevator itself, their eyes suddenly peeled back, revealing that these strangers had a very normal set of eyes after all. One of the figures - a tall woman wearing near-pristine overalls and carrying a heavy pair of gloves tucked into her belt, rested her hand against the wall as they descended, eyes closed as if focusing intently.

Rhys couldn’t help but give a slightly quizzical look, as Gangler glanced between the various visitors before imitating the gesture, the sound of its terrarium-dome giving a dull ‘clang’ as it leant against the wall.

At last the elevator came to a halt and opened, revealing a wide but densely packed room. Replacement components were neatly stacked in half-open storage, as a computer specialist was busy patching up an aged monitor and replacing some of its diodes. A pair of workers – two of Crow’s Landing’s local fusion engineers, still mostly in simple white working slacks, were sat nearby, monitoring the station’s energy levels and the reactor’s output.

Their gaze followed the tall, foreign observer with suspicion, but didn’t make any attempt to stop her.

The woman who had been resting against the wall once again reached out, placing her hand firmly against one of the steel bulkheads that separated them from the reactor core itself. A slow smile began to spread across her face, fingers flexing lightly as she felt the metal’s hum and purr. “<Magnetic confinement… Proton-Boron?>” She didn’t need a translator to relay the question, but once it was confirmed with an initially awkward nod or two, her grin only grew wider. She spoke another few sentences and bowed deeply towards the engineers in the room, straightening up to hold her hand out and offer a firm shake.

“She says your station has a strong spirit and a loyal heart, tended to by good stewards. High praise,” the translator filled in, and the engineers relented to shaking her hand.

While it didn’t show on his face, Rhys’ nerves were fading slightly. As strange as these people looked, there was a commonality to them that he recognized – for all Jetei’s finery and handsomeness, he was not a man Rhys could ever likely consider a ‘friend’ or an ‘equal’.



Across the many lights and moons of Bran, there was fear across the wide open darkness for the first time in almost two hundred years. But it was not, for once, the fear of endless storms and dense gravity, of debris and radiation and the suffocating cold… no, a different kind of fear had taken hold, one not seen in Bran for almost two hundred years.

It was a harsh place to call home, after all, but Bran was also a place of opportunity. No matter where you had come from or why, sooner or later you could be forgotten. All that the people of Bran could care for was that you had a worker’s heart and a survivor’s wits, and the willingness to extend that courtesy to others.

It was not an easy life, but it was a fair one – it was not a place that liked bullies.

And so a cry for justice rang across the airwaves, and somewhere on the fringe of an outermost moon – so small and weak it had no name, merely a code in a database somewhere far away – the lights of a rocket began to bloom.

“Lance, do you hear it? The clouds call for justice – there are giants to slay.”

With the draining of fluid and the clicking of steel and the steady illumination of a tomb disturbed, a dead man was waking up.
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Hidden 14 days ago 14 days ago Post by DX3214
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Old Gael, Old Gael...



Vinaae stood watch over the gate welding, goggles in eyes just in case of issues. The gate was attached and surrounded by machinery made to manipulate it or at least try he hoped it would go this way. Rubbing his hands with excitement flowing, he soon said in the intercom. "Right, everyone, we are ready!" "Wait!" He heard turning his head to see Aseni putting on her welder goggles as she rushed to the window saying. "I wanna see this too." She soon stood next to him Vinaae then repeated himself saying. "Right, everyone! Ready yourselves we may explode our own stuff!" "...and possibly the gate itself." Aseni comments, worried as her brother puts his hand on the control panel after pressing a few letters and writing a command. He then pressed enter on the keyboard. Both soon watched on as the gate began to glow with intensity.

The station crew began to grow worried, some beginning to back away as the light glowed quite extremely. But soon the gate's mechanisms began to shift as it responded to the commands. Its rings rotate and align in a new shape as the gate opens again but this time in another system. Removing the goggles, Vinaae said with a wide grin. "So you can indeed change locations to go to!" Aseni gave a light nod looking up at him saying. "Yes it seems like the situation, of course it's better to avoid people from the other side knowing someone is checking in then." Her brother thought for a moment before saying. "Better not... it's good to learn more about the people on the other side than being blind huh?" Aseni opened her mouth to protest before saying. "Honestly, it is a fair point to an extent;" He gave a nod with a wide grin feeling quite happy.

"Right, so we can explore the other star systems now that the gates are connected and..." He talked on and on thinking of the possibilities that may arise but as he spoke he soon was interrupted by his sister saying. "Actually, is it not better to keep it locked to Old Gael for now?" "What why?" He asked she rolled her eyes before saying. "You know that man that went to Old Gael" Vinaae sighed remembering that event then he said. "Right, we will wait for him to return in the meantime. I think we may become an important trade port soon enough." Aseni gave a nod agreeing this could be huge if played correctly. 'What a streak of luck' she thought.




The small fleet orbited around old Gael, the sacred earth where men of greatness stood. Now from the flagship, Teenizorii stood watching the greyed skies of Old Gael; his crew also watched on, some with awe and others with less-than-happy faces. Staring into the grey skies, he soon sighed and said. "Status of the system." An officer soon gave a nod saying. "For now our forces are hiding close to Old Gael; Meanwhile, there are several dozen ship signals around us. We weren't the only gate made to escape the end of Gael it seems. We have been avoiding them as you requested. Luckily, their forces are not close to us luckily." Teenizorii gave a nod, he soon turned to the man on his side who was wearing fine clothes and then said. "Status of the shuttles?"

Both moved through the hallways of the ship his right hand soon said. "The atmosphere seems toxic while it still is possible to walk without a full suit instead a respirator is all you need." "At least that remains of good in this world. What of the location of the landing? Did you get the map I asked for?" Teenizorii asked his old friend, and he put him as his assistant despite not liking the more fancy clothes. It was a role of respect. His friend checked his hand console before he pulled a map of the world zooming to a corner saying. "Seems like a continental planet with rather high oceans. Very different from Vusary." Teenizorii soon pressed his finger in a peninsula west of a continent saying. "This place we will land there." "Close to ruins by the looks of our orbital readings." His friend replied. "A good place then." He replied to his friend with him saying. "Yes but also prone to storms. I recommend you be quick to land and leave understood?" Teenizorii gave a nod as he headed out immediately he felt nervous at the thought, and he soon heard his friend shout. "Good luck!"

The shuttles soon departed from the ships going down to the surface of Gael their, speed was fast entering the atmosphere and inside most, talked in small chatter meanwhile, Teenizorii kept his calm on his seat, he maintained his calm only, mumbling only the words of the song he had heard many times when he grew up in Vusary.

Oh Gael, Oh Gael
Mother of old, do you still accept your children?

...
Old Gael, Old Gael
Do you forgive your lost children...


He began to take deep breaths as the shuttle landed and quaked the previous chatter of the shuttle quickly died down. He grasped an old necklace he had with him that had the symbol of a leaf. As the shuttle stopped shaking, he rose up putting a respirator on and took a final last breath moving to the unloader with a few guards as the doors opened. The wind that hit him was hot and humid making his cape be blown by it. The smell of salt was nothing new to him albeit he was used to being dry instead of wet.

He soon began to walk seeing the greyed yet somewhat blue-tinted surface, his feet walking in beach sand as guards moved on he could hear one saying. "Keep the perimeter secure. We don't know if our ancestors also built machines of war; some may still be active!" He walked through the sands but soon hit a small patch of dirt populated by grass, some dead, some still alive as he looked on, he soon began to climb a small hill the shuttle landed by. As he walked up he turned around looking back and some of his men were in obvious duty. Others were on their knees praying and making reverence. The sound of thunder and the illumination of it made him snap out of his view of the ocean; he had never seen something so big before the waves seemed big enough to swallow the sand yet they always broke before it could even swallow the sandy beach.

He soon turned around again looking into the rest of the hill and he continued his climb. Reaching the top he soon saw in the distance the black thunderstorm clouds with lightning hitting an abandoned old city in the distance, its ruins swallowed by the sea but some of its top parts still visible. The sea seemed turbulent and the air until now seemed without life looking on he soon fell to his knees his armour making a sound of metal hitting rock his ears began to have tears running down his face, and he soon began to take deep respirations. "Old Gael... your children return... and we are so sorry... Oh Gael... Please forgive us..." His hand grasped into the dirt and lifting it up he saw its greyness life, seemed weak here as it passed through his hands like sand. Lightning was the only sound he could hear besides the howling wind.

Looking to the side he finally paid attention to the ruin beside him, a destroyed bridge extremely large raising up, he began to move towards it entering the road that led towards the collapsed bridge, he could see cars half buried in dirt and sand. Some of the cars had skeletons inside and, as he looked at a sign, he could not read what was written he wondered what it was written it later would be translated as "Golden Gate Bridge" The bridge was destroyed the cables were long detached all that remained were the pillars now rusted and old.

Going down the hill, he could see his man already building a machine from afar he could easily tell it was a signal hailer strong enough that would be detected even further than the moon. Approaching the group he then said. "What is the need for this man?" "Sir! Just making sure everyone knows we were the first back on old Gael. Together with any smarties wanting to steal your honour, sir." His guard replied before he could say anything he stopped saying. "So be it, build this and let us go then..." he began walking back to his shuttle turning back he saw lightning again and he felt his heart sink more. He pulled his necklace and let it fall on the beach before burying it with his gloved hand and walking away feeling saddened. The shuttles soon took off and on the beaches of California, offerings were left to a dead world offerings asking for forgiveness.
Hidden 13 days ago 13 days ago Post by Tortoise
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Acerbus


The Sacrosanct Orator, the leader of Acerbus politically and spiritually, walks through stone halls, carrying with him the traditions and faith of his people, and a bowl full of blood. His echoing steps on that gray floor are like mythology: old, slow, laden with meaning. The bowl shakes in his decrepit hand, and a beautiful young aide leads him by the other. She knows not to smile at him. She knows not to make any expression at all. He does not look at her: he looks ahead- in as much as he can still see at all- towards the huge double-doors.

When the word of the Gateway's opening was heard, charismatic young revelators, wise fidels in their formal postures and mystical seers were quickly recruited from across the Twilight Band. It didn't take long at all. Thousands begged for this opportunity, even without being asked, and the Temple Gathering's clerks picked whomever appeared to be the best candidates freely. Wasn't this what so many of them had wished all their lives for? The forty or so who were chosen stand now in the inner chamber of one of the most important temples on Acerbus, dressed in red robes, their faces uncovered. They try not to whisper to one another. It helps that in a group this small, from across all the world, none of them know one another. A majority of them only know the Orator from media. As the aide opens the doors with a bit of struggle, their gaze moves from her to him. He stares back half-blindly as he descends down to them in trembles.

The chosen remind themselves that they are about to become missionaries for Revelationism. They contain their imagination, as they try not to daydream about the alien worlds and other colonies where they are about to be sent to spread their faith. They are each feeling the same thing. Among them, there are some from powerful families or islands that could not be excluded. There are some others who are politically cunning social-climbers who, before this opportunity came, might have been in pursuit of a seat at the Temple Gathering. And there are the true believers, a few with dangerous bright eyes, whose faith burns so much like fire they become beloved or hated by everyone who meets them.

The Sacrosanct Orator is nothing like any of them.

Invited theocrats, family members of those chosen, and the press watch from a high balcony as he moves down below with ritual in every creaking, ancient joint. He dips his hand into the bowl, slow, letting it run down and soak into the sleeve of his robe and drip onto the floor with a pit-pat-patter. The soon-to-be missionaries feel his wrinkled fingertip as he paints a circular symbol on their foreheads: two snakes biting each other's tails, with a third dividing between them.

The Orator, despite his title, says nothing. Revelationism is a religion of actions and not words. The missionaries watch him turn away from them, with his black and starkly white robe trailing on the floor. He halts suddenly for a moment and has a bad coughing fit. The aide forces herself not to react. The Orator leaves their sight still gagging and clearing his throat. More than one of the new missionaries have tears running down their faces. Soon they will travel across the cosmos, finding their long-lost brethren. Their teardrops fall and mingle with blood on the floor.

) ---(**) || (**)--- (


Diplomatic Missionary: Revelator Andrea Federus
Commodore: Ava Jones
Destination: Kamenymir (@Eldritch Puppy)


Andrea stands with his arms crossed, an alcoholic drink in his hand and a disapproving, skeptical scowl on his face. This is not unusual- it's his typical bearing. He wears it now because he's just gone through the Gateway and arrived at a new star system, and discovered that space on the other side looks essentially the same as space viewed from Acerbus. Somehow this feels like a fake-out. He expected the world to be a little different countless lightyears away. But on a lower and more spiritual level, it is deeply appropriate. Of course, he thinks to himself. It is all the same everywhere. 'There's nothing new under starlight.' I bet the people are just the same, too. He'd worked harder than he liked to make sure he was one of those chosen to become missionaries to other colonies of Earth still alive, to take part in the Orator's weird little ritual and get himself assigned. A part of him revolted at it, but since the day his knees had hit that temple floor when the Gateway tore itself into the sky, a unnamable feeling had eaten away at him. He had to see.

They vessel he's been placed aboard to play diplomat has chosen a random destination. Nobody knew or could reasonably guess what the other side would hold- it was a blind shot in the dark of space. This this too feels cheap to Andrea, and also strangely appropriate. The Revelator had been asked to pray for their vessels to emerge where the gods willed. He refused. He did not want the gods in the way.

It seems that the Gateway does not always deposit you directly at the opposite end. The retrofitted, forty year old frigate- the first of its kind ever created by Acerbians, now repurposed and furnished for space travel for the wealthy and powerful- and its two destroyer escorts hover now in space like ships on a dead sea, trying to orient themselves with no context. At last the Commodore who commands the escorts forces Andrea, citing security concerns, to momentarily stop scowling and drinking and do his job. Half against his will, he records a message, which is translated by the shipboard AI into various languages and broadcasted out to the new system they've found themselves in:

"Hail. I am Revelator Andrea Federus, a diplomat-missionary from the Esoteric Temple of Acerbus. We have come from across the Gateway in search of other colonies from before the Fall of Earth. We extend our hand out peacefully to make formal contact, and inquire as to how our fellow man has fared these five centuries, if we are welcome. Thank you."

) ---(**) || (**)--- (


Diplomatic Missionary: Blessed Johannes Daviso, a fidel devoted to the Bearer
Commodore: Davide Ferrarius
Destination: Interrupted by the arrival of the Yellow Horde (@Enigmatik)


Wherever these missionaries were going to go, they're not headed that way anymore.

They are in a retrofitted worker transport vessel, the Wine of Dionysus: a personal project originally created by a wealthy young man who wanted to turn it into his own space yacht, a burgeoning trend on Acerbus that doesn't quite have an industry yet. The shipwrights did a good job, if a plainly improvisational one. Ship design itself is an industry less than eighty years old on Acerbus, younger than the Sacrosanct Orator, and Acerbian ships tend to be ugly. It serves just well enough for this purpose. It is shiny and new, it is small but rich, and inside it is as comfortable as Acerbian interior design can be.

The lead missionary, Blessed Johannes, is submerged deep in the ship's pool in meditation when he is forcefully awoken by a grating, skin-crawling klaxon. The report, delivered to him breathlessly by a nervous crewman before Johannes' even has his beloved veil back on, is that a large fleet of vessels similar to those who identified themselves as a 'Red Horde' (whatever that means- Acerbians were struggling immensely with understanding that message) in Sol has appeared in Acerbian space. They had provided no prior communication to Acerbus. The word "invasion" is flashed around, but it does not stick- they are making no hostile action. Johannes is shown a captured image of the newcomers. The two destroyer escorts flanking the Wine of Dionysus suddenly feel small.

An hour later, Commodore Ferrarius is watching Blessed Johannes closely and uneasily as he drafts a greeting message. After revisions and suggestions by the other missionaries under him, and a read-over by the commodore who frowned down his long nose at it but offered no comments, Johannes records (and the shipboard AI translates):

"Hail. This is Blessed Johannes Daviso speaking. I represent the Esoteric Temple of Acerbus, the people of our world, and our faith in the truths of the Cosmic Mothers who are sang of in the Sacrosanct Songbook. The Temple's jurisdiction includes the whole system of Frigus, where you have entered, including both asteroid belts, the gas giant worlds and the planet of Acerbus itself. I am a missionary and a diplomat appointed to reach through the opened Gateway peacefully to other children of Earth, to make formal contact, or to greet those who have come to us- as in this case. I would like to inquire as to your intentions. Am I speaking to the Red Horde?"

) ---(**) || (**)--- (


Diplomatic Missionary: Beatrice Kleus, a Seer
Commodore: Blaise Mancini
Destination: Unfortunately, the Nameless' System (@Sep)


Beatrice's visions are troubling her. The visions of an Acerbian, which they have instead of the "dreams" and "sleep" that their ancestors had, are rarely peaceful- but Beatrice's have been like a fire shut up inside her skull for a week. Her nerves have rattled her and made her daily meditations into an extended nightmare, which haunts her with images she cannot understand. She has closed her eyes and seen visions of lava, and snakes with gouged-out eyes slithering across the stars, and she is always visited by a deformed old woman who shouts "Dismember them, skin them, or they'll find you out!" She has not yet met a single foreigner, yet she regrets becoming a missionary. Standing on the bridge of a hastily redecorated transport vessel, flanked by brutal-looking twin destroyer escorts, her hands tremble. They started to shake when she crossed the Gateway. Looking at the viewscreen now, she tries to remind herself that she is educated and qualified, experienced in religion and the politics of religion, and this job was offered to her for a reason. She is capable.

She reassures herself that she could speak competently with any other human. If only she could find them. They exited the Gateway and, wherever it has thrown them, all that is in visual range is an odd cluster of what they thought might be asteroids. Beatrice immediately felt (sensed is the word she would use) that there was something strange about it. She is a mystic, not an astrophysicist, but these are not arranged at all like the belt in Frigus. She knows they aren't.

Her suspicions are confirmed when Blaise tells her that what they believed to be asteroids are generating heat. Her trembling hands do not like that news. She remembers the deformed woman in her visions. Were the gods telling her to strike first at whatever is lurking in those maybe-asteroids? But she can't, it isn't her way. If they are generating heat, and if this truly is a system where another Earth colony had long ago been sent, they could be warm only because of some devices put into them by the other colonists.

After only a brief period of internal and external debate, Beatrice lifts her hands up towards the stars and allows the gods to guide her as she says out into this strange system (and as the AI translates):

"Hail! I am Beatrice Kleus, a Seer from the far, far away planet of Acerbus. With the old portal between the stars miraculously reopened by the will of the gods, my people have sent me here to find others such as ourselves out in the cosmos. If you can hear my voice, fellow born of Earth- we have come to make contact with you once again. Let us meet face to face and speak of all that has happened."
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Of Khans, Khagans and Khan-Khuus

Those who claim descent from the Mongols of old collide over New Gift.
Credit to @SgtEasy and Enigmatik.



Due to how close the Gateway was to New Gift, as close as two celestial objects can be with each other on different orbits, its twinkling light was still ever-present in the skies, both blue and black. Even now, it shone brightly, a reminder of the greatness of their predecessors, how wondrous they must have been to construct such a marvel of technology. A testament to humanity and the spirits left behind.

It was also a security risk of epic proportions.

They had fielded many a satellite, many an observatory pointed to the stars. They were there for science and communications, none were for protection. For war. There was enough war to go around on New Gift, enough for the Khans to focus inwardly rather than towards the cosmos. To keep the myriad city-states in line, to keep the peace on New Gift, to look out for Caesar’s remnants and to clear the jungles of his filth, it took up much of the administrative and military power of the Khanate. There were some concerns as always, brought up by many scientists and advisors, but it was always shelved to the back end of priorities. The Gateway had been closed for hundreds of years, why would it open out of the blue?

Yet they were wrong. So wrong. Like a cruel cosmic joke, the Gateway had opened when its orbit with New Gift was as close to each other as it could possibly be. It made the trip for the Terra Supremus much faster than it usually would be, having set off as soon as possible under the steady guiding hand of Admiral Sun-sin. They had fielded a small communication probe in the Gateway’s orbit as a just in case, an early warning system to whatever observatory/satellite was close enough to receive its signals first. They had expected the first warnings to be from the Terra Supremus itself, reporting back on what was out there in the cosmos.

Instead, it was a fleet. An ungodly number of ships of unknown make that rung alarm bells that still went off. The apes operating Neo-Hubble, the first waypoint of the early warnings, were scrambling. The Republic of Freemen city state, their benefactors, were sent into a frenzy of excitement and terror once they were awakened by the scientists manning the telescope. Messages were sent to the Khan, informing him of the presence of the armada that had come to New Gift’s doorstep. Messages were sent to the Legion, sending them into a state of high alert not seen since the War to End All Wars. Messages were sent to the various allied city-states that were closest to the Freemen, messages filled with speculation and warning, to prepare for negotiations with a foreign power, to prepare their dignitaries, to prepare for a potential war.

In contrast to the flurry of responses from Legion commanders and city-states both, the Khan’s response was succinct and to the point. ”The Freemen will be our first point of contact with these intruders.”

And so here he was, President Galilei, bedecked in pomp and splendour, powdered wig sat on top of his head, what once felt like a crown now a reminder of the responsibility weighing on him. Golden lapels and a flashy red cotton coat, dressed in an outfit reminiscent of the Europeans within the Age of Enlightenment. He stood among scientists, politicians of his party, local and Legion military advisors along with the local Khanate representative. They were congregated on the Freemen state’s tallest spire, the seat of his government and now, the first waypoint of communications with a foreign power. This was not how he imagined his first weeks of office was going to be like.

The young chimpanzee broke out of his musings when a technician popped from his hastily assembled monitor.

“President Galilei, we have connected a line of communications with the foreign ships.”

A mask of smooth confidence settled over the young ape’s features. He had climbed to this seat of responsibility. He had campaigned for months, climbed the political ladder for years, fought many a duel against those who would besmirch his honour. If not the Khan, there was no one else more suited for this moment than him. He would prove it, right here, right now. He shuffled his eye to the son of the Khan, representative of his benefactor. A small nod was given.

“Aye, technician. Open communications then, make sure to present my image and voice in as flattering a way as possible. A Freeman gentleman cannot meet with potential aliens without propriety and splendour, befitting a strapping ape like me.” Some small nervous chuckles broke out in the room at his self-flattery, but these fell silent as the tapping of the technician filled the air. And with a finality, the monitor buzzed. It was showtime.

“Unknown ships, this is President Montagne Bellevue Johannes Galilei of the Republic of Freemen city state, inheritor of mankind, a Pongo Pygmaeus Supremus, elected among the Freemen, beneficiary of the Khan. Who are you, such intrepid adventurers of the cosmos, who have shown themselves to the doorsteps of the Khan?”

Orda Khan had roared with laughter the first time he gazed out over this new system. How could he not? Almost nine hundred years after humanity had first stepped into space, and here stood a system, once strong enough to traverse the stars themselves, now without any of the hallmarks of civilised space. No mines churned at the surface of asteroids or planetoids, no tankers hauled ice and slough from remote stars to beating industrial centers. It was… Primitive.

Luckily, it turned out that they weren’t entirely savage, those who still lived in ‘New Gift.’ When his flagship received a hail, he settled himself into his bridge-throne and flashed a full set of pearly white teeth, expression settling into a self-assured sneer, his long, whisker-like moustache bristling as the monitor opened up and the translator hurried to make this messenger understood.

For a moment, as the connection established itself, the pair simply stared at each other. On one end, there was Orda Khan-Khuu, Lord of the White Horde, Breaker of those who forswore their oaths, crusher of the Confederacy of Itügen, Sky-Shatterer. A prime example of the imperial Soyulani, eyes aflame with an orichalcum glow, physique shaped and sculpted by genetics and effort, long synth-silk garments twisting and flowing about his form in a way that the eyes couldn’t help but slide off, back towards his face.

On the other hand, there was this ‘President,’ who was a monkey in a wig. A talking monkey in a wig, but a monkey in a wig nonetheless. For a moment, there was nothing but sheer, unadulterated surprise across Orda’s features, especially as the man’s words declared that they had arrived at the ‘doorstep of the Khan,’ and he did nothing but stare at the projection of Montagne Galilei before him.

Then, slowly, he rumbled out a response.

“You stand at the foot of the great Orda Khan, Sovereign in Tengri, ruled by none beyond its borders. We are the representatives of the Great and Mighty Khaganate, I am son eldest of his Imperial Majesty Genghis Temüjin Khagan III, I stand now on the bridge of the great flagship Baatar Ogtur and you speak to me of arriving at the Khan’s doorstep? If you have one as truly great and deserving of such a title, surely he should be who I talk with.”

It would take a moment for Galilei to respond, as shocked as he was. It took him a few seconds to register just what he was looking at. A figure, human and Mongolic looking, reminiscent of the traditions favoured by the Khan, rosegold eyes staring back with an audacious confidence. Pleasing to the eyes, if you were a human or a Humanist zealot. Or one of those fetishists he declined to think about at the moment. The visual confirmation that other humans had survived was shocking, to say the least.

None of this confusion was revealed on his powdered face, unlike some of his colleagues who were flapping their gums at the first human they have ever seen. Galilei stood stoic, as all Freemen gentlemen aimed to be, staring back at the “Khan” with all the confidence his years of politicking had granted him. He had been ordained to speak first and he was not going to be a face of weakness to this interloper.

Not to mention a mere human who obviously did not understand whose space he was occupying. The true Khan was, and is, mighty. Powerful and all-seeing. His lineage has proven time and again to be truly worthy of ruling over the supreme apes, this would brook no argument. Every Freeman hated a tyrant but even they must bow in deference to the greatness that ruled this planet. The title of “Khan” did not fall to whatever schmuck had decided to pick up a title on the way to the Mongolian cosplay store.

The entire intrusion smelt like an overripe banana ready to blow. Legion forces were mobilising across the planet, the call for war readiness turning the cogs of the great military apparatus into a frenzy. Even now, his ear chimed in constant INFOWAR reports flooding from across the Khanate, updates on his own automaton’s and the nearby Legion’s movements, on the retreat of their humans into the depths of the monasteries, on the readying of city states both near and far afield. This must be obvious to those humans, far above in the cosmos, but this suited an ape’s tastes.

Better to shine your teeth at the newcomer and know who they are messing with, lest they get any ideas.

Galilei bared his teeth in a mockery of a human smile, gums flapping back on themselves to reveal metallic blades in between his coloured red lips. He was polite yet sharp in his response, to the frequent nodding approval of the Khan’s representative to his side.

“And I, President of the greatest city state in the entirety of the Federal Khanate, am ordained to be your first point of contact, Orda Khan. It would not be wrong to say that you, a descendant of mankind’s greatest, are interloping upon the Khan’s realm with no prior warning. You are on no one’s doorstep but his, as great as your flagship must be. If you would like to meet him in the halls of Great Ulaanbaatar, you must state your intentions and give reason to why you have brought an armada to the home of the Supremus, inheritors of mankind?”

Orda adjusted himself in his bridge-throne, a slow, steady smirk crossing his face and a single meticulously groomed eyebrow raised up. He brought his hands up slowly together as he processed Galilei’s response, then began to clap - slowly, almost sarcastically at first, and then with just enough speed to make it sound genuine, the Khan nodded his approval even as the clapping petered out.

“Very well then. If the Khan is half as fearsome as his point of contact is, perhaps I will not be disappointed after all.” Stretching out and rising to his full height, he swept his arm out wide and began making his declaration.

“This ‘armada’ is but a portion of the fleet I command as Khan-Khuu of the White Horde. We come to scour the stars, to crack asteroids and skim giants, split stones, seize metal, smash ice and gather the slush. We are here because the Great Khaganate is an ever-hungry beast whose maw must be fed with the choicest of delicacies. I look out over this system and I see a great bounty before me, unclaimed by even your Khan… Yet my fleet is here now, their drills and reactors ready.” He clenched his first tight, as if holding a bundle of leashes. “Should I let slip my fleet I could scour this system for everything it’s worth, shatter your skies and sink every ship that rises above the paltry limit that is the horizon. Your Khan has left gold lying scattered on the beach, and now wonders why the jewellers are here to claim their prize?” He chuckled slowly.

“But I am a gracious and beneficious man when it so suits me. If you are Supremus as you claim, surely we can come to agreement, and neither of us will need to see ships crumpled and fields aflame.”

Orda’s offer would be followed by a long pause as Galilei stewed in his thoughts. A chime in his ear, sounding out before the human’s narration had begun, indicated to him that this conversation was being live streamed directly to the Khan’s quarters. His powdered “crown” grew in weight as he pondered on an appropriate response.

The threat was obvious but there was little that could be done about it. The flamboyantly dressed President inwardly kicked himself for his own short-sightedness. He had been one to advise the Khan to focus on the inner struggles of the Khanate and the rising number of Caesar remnants. He had believed, foolishly in retrospect, that the development of the space assets of the Khan could wait for the consolidation of the Khan’s hold over an increasingly chaotic Khanate. This sort of thinking was now biting him in his hairy behind.

Here was a direct threat to the Khanate, a threat to its civilisation and prosperity, a threat to the Supremus species’ and those they care for. A deal must be made with this clearly unstable human, whose benevolence seems to run hand in hand with his patience.

These sort of things would normally be under the purview of the Khan and his representatives. But given the unique nature of the representative assigned to the Freemen, as a sideways glance to the adolescent Khan-son would confirm, he needed to overstep a part of his boundaries here. A luxury, he knew, only afforded to him as a close friend of Khublai Khan himself. He let out a long breath to collect and steel himself, grey eyes meeting rosegold through vast distances. Even across displays, the resolve of each side could not be more evident.

“We will treat with you then, jewellers. You hold mastery over traversing the cosmos, that is clear. We hold the resources required for your hungry peoples. We are both, clearly, war-minded people. Peace and prosperity lies in the path of our cooperation, destruction and ruin lie in the path of our conflict.”

By the information feed in his ear, he knew that countless cannons and innumerable missile batteries were pointed to the skies. The intruders had been in the system long enough for the city states on this side of the planet to point their orbital defense systems on target. The use of void-modified drones in the endless conflicts between nation states had led to interventions like these; complicated, overlapping fields of fire that could pierce the atmosphere. No ape likes to fly but the same could not be said of his artillery.

The President clenched his own paw, unnatural musculature rippling under his garb as blood red veins popped into the whites of his eyes. “However, let it be clear that a war between our peoples will result in your corpse hanging from the rafters, limbs torn and cast off into the oceans. Unlike what your sensors may tell you, the Khanate is not the only one under threat here. You cannot traipse into someone’s yard and expect the guard dog to yip happily to your tunes, human.”

The odds were still against them, they could not prevent the raping and pillaging of the asteroids further afield but any ship that tripped across New Gift’s orbits would be blown to the realm of the spirits. He could rely on the stubborn attitude of apes in war.

The President of the Freemen relaxed his posture and interlinked his hands in a more reserved stance.

“We can strike a deal to the benefit of both our nations. An exchange, one wanting for cosmic industry and ships, another wanting for ripe virgin resources. Further scientific and economic exchanges can be made further afield as relations between our nations settle. Cooperation between our peoples. What do you say, Khan-Khuu of the White Horde?”

For a long time, the image of Orda Khan hung on the President's screen - long enough, perhaps, for the ape to worry that something had gone wrong - or Orda had cut the line and gone to plunder as he had suggested. Then, slowly, a small smile worked its way across his lips, starting at the very center of his mouth and spreading across to crease its edges, until he finally barked out a laugh that spilled out and on until he was practically roaring with laughter.

"Excellent! Excellent indeed! I can see you have fire in your heart and strength in your soul, President. Your Khan has chosen wisely if he has appointed one such as you to argue on his behalf. Very well, I can abide by these terms. Though we are rent by distance, I raise a cup of arkhi to you and yours, and hope in turn that I may set eyes on your Khan, and see what mettle he holds to inspire such ferocity from his vassals." He nodded slowly.

"For now, I must manage my fleet. Baatar Ogtur out. We will speak again, 'Galilei.'"



A New Input for the Machine Part 2

The gears churn as the Accord prepares for what comes next.
Featuring Executive Optimiser-Cog Dai Yi


Dai Yi sat, motionless except for the soft rise and fall of his chest, eyes closed, implants dumb. There was nothing else beyond the world but him, there was nothing beyond him but his breath. He focused without focusing, the in-and-out, the movement of air down into his lungs, the way it swirled around inside them, held inside, and then slowly released. When he struggled to be mindful he sometimes thought of it as waves - rolling along to the shore, crashing on the in breath and slowly drawing back with the out. In... Ou-

The iso-pod roof above him beeped twice, evenly spaced apart. Twenty minutes gone, just like that. He opened his eyes slowly and sighed, implants sparking back to life as he turned the door's lock and stepped out, blinking rapidly as his eyes adjusted to the practical overhead lights that never fully departed the halls of the Executive machine. Thirty-six new notifications... But he could at least take a little comfort in knowing none of them were marked urgent or classified... Even if it did mean that almost two a minute had come through and been deemed important enough to cut past the layers beneath him and demand his personal attention. Taking a seat across from the iso-pods, he rested his elbow on his knee and pressed his thumb to his temple, an act as useless as it was important to him. Even if you looked a little foolish, at least like this people knew you were deep in your own head and not to be disturbed unless absolutely ne-

"Optimiser-Cog Dai? My apologies, I know you were just in the iso-pod and you're likely gathering your thoughts, but..." The aide - whose name had finally settled into his mind as Ye Ai, spoke in a soft but insistent tone from next to him. "It's about the Gateway, Optimiser. A report arrived from the Interplanetary Defence Force." He opened his eyes and looked up, seeing a little of himself mirrored in her. The stress, the tiredness, the slow grinding down of one's faculties over the course of handling so much. She rose from her half-bow and brought her omnilink up, the optimiser's overlay showing the flashes of IR light from its screen as she interfaced with it hands-free.

"How bad is it?" Yi gave her a serious look.

"Something to be aware of, but not something we can adjust. As you know, we've entered somewhat of a lull in the Great Struggle, but the Gateway's reactivation has... 'set them off,' if you will. QIDF Systems Skywatch has spotted a lance-fleet leaving the outer system on an intercept trajectory with the old megaconglomerate buoy."

The only sign of recognition from Da Yi was a slight puff from his nose. "And we've sent an overwhelming response, no doubt?"

"Indeed, Optimiser. Two of the expeditionary battlewings have been recalled to meet the threat, and the Jingyu battlefleet will provide long-range support. Because of the communications delay we won't learn the full outcome until the engagement is complete and they can assemble an after-action report, but as you've been placed on the Gateway board, you're a priority when it comes to updates like these."

"Understood. What do the admirals say we should be expecting?" Dai Yi finally rose to his feet, mentally dismissing the rest of the notifications for now - he had a meeting to attend to and there'd be another hundred or so of them once he emerged, so there was no use in fretting about last-minute responses now.

"They're preparing for a full-scale engagement, Optimiser-Cog. Recovery vessels are on standby, the shipyard NBIs are being adjusted to meet the capacity, and..." She grimaced. "We're looking at predicted casualties in the low thousands."

"More names for the Great Wall," Yi nodded slowly. "Such is the nature of the Struggle. What about the Gateway itself? Any news from that front? Has the Voice of the People responded?" The pair were once again pacing through the halls of the Harmonious Engine, passing by a steady stream of other officals, aides and bureaucrats.

"Nothing," Ai shook her head. "Not unexpected from the Voice of the People - they may take several days to assemble and send the report back through, but no foreign vessels have been spotted yet. If I may, I'm... I'm a little glad?" She had a pensive look on her face as Dai Yi raised an eyebrow.

"How so? If there are others out there - if Earth or another colony has survived, we have a real chance at shifting the course of the Struggle."

"Yes, and I understand that, Optimiser-Cog, but surely nothing is preferable to more threats? Not to mention with this new fleet... What if we did receive visitors, only for the Shenjian to reach them before we could? I-"

"I understand your concerns, Ai, but that is precisely why we are reacting so swiftly to this incursion. Think positively, think harmoniously. We can only control what we hold in our hands, yes?"

"... Yes, Cog-Optimiser." A flicker of reassurance passed across the aide's face. "I can see you've got an event coming up now, should I leave you to it?"

"You'll have to but let's touch base again tomorrow. Remember, if you're concerned, the Wellness Harmonisers are just upstairs, and there are iso-pods dotted hither and thither." He gestured vaguely about. "Don't burn yourself out worrying on these things for now."

The pair exchanged a brief bow and went their seperate ways. Far above them, the Galaxy continued spinning, the same as it always had.
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We have come to you, Old Earth
The Terra Supremus exited with little fanfare, a small judder here and a bolt shaking there but otherwise, the engineering of their predecessors held up to scratch. It was a seed ship whose SciCorp backers had designed to be equal parts durable and state-of-the-art, thus, this was no surprise to any ape. They had been deposited at random to the far reaches of the Kuiper belt and so they sent far-ranging probes throughout the system, near a hundred at this time. They would serve as communication beacons as the time came.

The surprises came with the flood of contact warnings, of vessels of different makes dotted around the system, some around the outer reaches of Sol, others nearer to its lone star. Some of the probes had been destroyed, others taken and picked apart by curious unknowns. Despite it all, they continued to release more probes, each blasting the same communications as the rest, in all the known languages of Old Earth. Words of the Khan.

”We are the Khanate. We come in peace.”

As the bridge crew came to life trying to establish communications and checking the ship’s systems, the trio of leaders at their head were staring at a light-lagged image of their homeland.

Brown. Barren. Dead.

“Tell me sister, how is Old Earth faring?” The Herald stayed aloft, four automatons gripping the wooden palanquin with ease. He sat upon silk cushions, draped in red and yellow clothes that denoted his royal status with the golden horse of his parentage emblazoned on his back. He sat listlessly, milky eyes peering at the display in front of them.

The Princess shared a glance with her Admiral, who merely shook his head. The Herald was a sensitive soul, a lover of Earth and all its histories. There was only one correct answer here.

“It is beautiful brother. A green and blue orb just like Mother told us. Broken, yes, but spinning strong in her orbit. We have come home brother.” A tear ran down her cheek, wiped away by a silent attendant to her side. Her words had paused the entire bridge, her ethereal voice activating endorphins and inciting joy in everyone in attendance.

A smile ignited on the Herald’s face, shining like a thousand suns.

“Ah, majestic, fantastical, historical Old Earth. I wish I could gaze upon her beauty.”

The Admiral waved the display away from the bridge, bringing up a display of the entire system with all the known contacts upon them. He coughed into his paw, disturbing the reminiscing of people who have never set foot upon their home, sending the bridge back into controlled commotion. There were more important things to focus on. The restoration of Old Earth can come another time.

“Unfortunately, we are not the first to reach Home. The mission your Father gave us has failed. I apologise Herald, Princess. Alas, there is much that needs to be done, and we must shift our priorities now that one of these unknown contacts had already made their way to Old Earth.”

The Princess made the sign of Forgiveness, bowing her head to lead a short prayer to the spirits of before. Her myriad attendants bowed their heads in synchronicity, mutterings masked by the busywork of bridge crew in front of them. After a short while, the human raised her head in sync with the rest of them and spoke with the voice of a fallen angel.

“Indeed Admiral, my Father would be displeased about our failure but we must take the reins of the galloping mare. Move to Objective Delta and send the appropriate correspondences to the unknown contacts. We are not first to Earth but we will be first in one aspect.”

The Herald shook out of his musings with a huff, shifting his bulk around the cushions. “I concur, my sister. Let us be at the head of the diplomacy table and guide our wayward cousins to cooperation. Start the manufacturing processes, rouse the legionnaires, activate the ship’s automatons. We make way to Mars.”

The Admiral was left alone on the bridge to direct the crew, the other two leaving for their own preparations. He focused on his target, the mountain that stood above all, surrounded by red wastes and dust. He neglected his own tear, letting it drop unceremoniously on the cold metal floor. For the spirits left behind, they had to make sure nothing like what transpired on Old Earth could ever happen again.
[@everyone]
Olympus Mons

The automatons were sent in waves of dropships, jumbled pieces of what will become held in their hands and stored in their pods. Upon the peak of Olympus Mons, they began their construction. The manufacturing sections of the Terra Supremus had been working overtime, night and day, to construct the resources needed for the Khan’s plan D. In essence, the automatons were carrying small pieces of a larger puzzle and as programmed, they would only need to fit the puzzle pieces together. Though not as quickly as their cousins on Ceres, others would be similarly astounded by the lightning fast work of the automatons.

But when you were being guided by minds printed from humanity’s greatest, what can you expect but perfection?

A massive reinforced glass arcology-dome rose from the plateau at the top of Olympus Mons, corridors extending past the main dome to other, smaller domes and these, to others. Open spaces for future nations, to make their own home here on this red rocky ball. Within the main dome, a common area, a golden park space laden with New Gift soil, life support systems, myriad storage spaces and a featureless, large room with a round wooden table as its centrepiece, the banner of the Federal Khanate hanging alone in this chamber. For now. The Meeting Place came with a few other oddities that other nations would find unnecessary or strange.

A menagerie and garden for one, which in the future, will contain some of the more significant of Earth’s fauna who have been reconstructed from gene-banks on the Terra Supremus. Elephants, giraffes, oak and birch, kangaroos, eagles, penguins, seals, plankton and coral, camels, all sorts of animals and plants from every corner of Old Earth would find a new home here. Even once-extinct species, mammoths and dodo birds, sabretooth tigers and kauri trees, brought from the dead, exhibits that showed the strength of the ape’s genetic technologies. Their skeletons and organs, their very DNA modified to suit the conditions of Mars’ low gravity. The embryos stored in the biological laboratories of the Terra Supremus were undergoing accelerated growth, to create animals who had never set foot, fin or root on the planet they came from. Perhaps they never will. For now, the exhibits lay empty. No New Gift native fauna would be found here, too dangerous to keep in confinement.

A kitchen was built, some parts empty, others bustling with activity. Chimpanzee chefs set to work with heir preparations, fur stripped from their skins so that nary a hair would land in the common food. An armoury, for a future international guard, built in the hopes that protection would be provided by all nations that came to this Meeting Place, lying empty in one corner. The starts of a hospital was still being built, along with new collaborative research spaces. All built in the hope for future cooperation.

A fruitless hope, perhaps?

And finally, most importantly to a certain section of apes, came the blank prayer rooms. Well, mostly blank. Some had already been repurposed by the various religions of the Khanate. In one, incense filled the small space, brightly lit candles dotted around the floor, a small shrine to the far wall. It was nearly insulting in its size but, needs must. The spirits of before would understand.

The Princess kneeled on silk cushions, head bowed in prayer.

Oh spirits of before, heed my call.
We have come to Sol, your resting place of old.
We come with offerings, with thanksgiving, with sadness for those left behind.
Oh humans of Old Earth, hear my pleas.
Bless us, oh spirits of before,
Bless us in our endeavours;
Bless us in our journey to cooperation;
Bless us in our trek across the cosmos;
Bless us so that our prosperity is shared to my wayward cousins.
Hear my pleas, oh spirits of before,
Heed my call.


Ndongo rose with grace, assisted by an attending gorilla. She was never without her attaches, her guard, her caretakers. She enjoyed their constant care but it was so automatic, so much done in the background, that she knew she could never fully appreciate what her caretakers do for her on a minute-by-minute basis. Instead, she just gave a small thanks to the familiar face and left the room, red carpet unfurled before her bare feet by two diligent workers.

Her wanderings led her to the cavernous meeting space, a round table of many chairs, one which could be replaced with an even larger one at a snap of her or her equal’s fingers. She was still unsure what her place here was. The politics was to be done by her brother Herald, the military aspects controlled by the Admiral. She glanced at her unadorned left hand, one digit sparkling to her eye.

The Princess had to steady herself against the strange thoughts that came from her wild assumptions. She closed her eyes, focusing on the Breath of Life. On the space around her, the Meeting Place as the Herald had come to call it. On the rumblings of far away construction. On the bristling furs on her attendant’s skins. On the lonely flag whose edges scraped the metal wall across from her. On the message she had sent, now dispatched to the myriad probes dotted around Sol, just moments before her prayer. On the prosperity that she hoped for, prayed for, yearned for.

On the mistakes of Old Earth, which she hoped would never occur again.


Part I with @Sep
New Gift

The early warning systems were not perfect. Indeed, it was crude and rudimentary compared to the marvels of other nations. Befitting a civilisation with only a burgeoning spaceflight industry. Appropriate sensors and systems would be made later, and soon, given the Khan’s decrees and orders to get the Khanate up to speed. But this imperfection would cost them.

To someone not as boisterous and clear with their intentions, the early warning system was easy to bypass. These early systems were even more prone to going down. It was difficult, to say the least, for a non-spaceflight capable nation like the Khanate to repair them. Within the vast cosmos, one could, by chance alone, escape the observatories of the Khanate pointed to the skies. And so it was that other intruders had escaped the watchful eyes and primitive sensors.

Pathetically Lame regained consciousness just as he was shaken awake by Disobedient Runt. {Wake up Brother! Wake up!} He shook himself awake, eyes looking over the various controls and subsystems. The vessel appeared to be fully functional, however, the screen that had the readout for the Demon technology was dark.

{What happened?}

{The Gateway connected to the demon systems, and they shut down.”}

Perhaps it was purifying, some kind of failsafe to try and keep the demons from spreading through the gates.

{We are approaching a planet-} The Demon systems flashed as Disobedient Runt was climbing underneath the control panel, the sensor suite flashed to life as it began to pick up satellites and signals around the planet. At first, the oblong object would seem like an asteroid on an unusual trajectory, on closer inspection it would slowly become stranger and stranger to sensors.

They were coming at a direct approach, predicted to be on a collision course towards the lower continent of Tellus, specifically into the path of the frontier state: Neo Nippon. Given the mobile nature of the apes’ multitude of cities, one might assume that a quick course correction of a moving city can avert potential disaster arising from falling space debris. In contrast, changing the migration of the city-states was a more complicated affair than one expects. The Great Migrations were carefully orchestrated on predetermined paths to avoid disturbing the wildlife and nature surrounding them. To change course, one needed to fill in the appropriate paperwork and myriad compliance forms with the Khan’s administration to get the course change validated. This process would only be expedited or cast aside if the city-state was under immediate danger.

To determine whether course correction was required, Neo Nippon’s observatory was set to work to determine the exact nature of these cosmic objects falling from the sky. What they found confused them and a notice was sent to the city’s leadership.

After all, asteroids did not slow down as it were. They kept a constant trajectory in the cosmos, undisturbed by any other. These unidentified objects seemed to be on a steady, slowing approach towards New Gift. It had to be artificial.

This was a cause for concern as the last unidentified objects had caused massive waves across the Khanate. This was a matter of utmost importance, a statewide response would be required as it had before. Except, when you were dealing with the city states, all of whom were trying to one up each other in their hierarchy, some city states may view this as a crisis they may try to solve themselves. Or at least, do so before the steady, intrusive hand of the Khan was to intervene.

And so it was here, in one of Neo Nippon’s moving castles, that Shogun Tokugawa Todayashi kneeled in peaceful meditation. Great and hulk-like, made even larger by the steel-reinforced wooden armour reminiscent of the samurai of old. A pulsating and over-large sword hand implanted to his right side, a reminder of his old ways as a young ape making a name for himself on this world. He was a peaceful sort, often avoiding other city states and the frequent raiding parties in what seemed like cowardice to the other apes.

Fools. A patient ape knew when to eat his fruit at its most delicious, not devour it at first glance. Instead of meddling in petty affairs like the other vermin, Todayashi bided his time. A time would come, he reasoned to his court of lords, that Neo Nippon may rise like the dragon it truly was. How quaint that such an occasion occurred on his birthday.

In the privacy of the Shogun’s quarters, Todayashi opened his eyes once the appropriate announcement was made in his ear. The time had come to open communication with the “unidentified objects”. A screen flashed itself in front of him, showing static at first before the interlopers approved of showing visuals. For him, a gorilla in the prime of his life, he would not shy away from revealing himself. His room, derived from Tokugawa Ieyasu’s private quarters, was a source of personal pride for him. Wooden furnishings taken from samples of Old Earth cherry trees, a fantastical mural of his predecessor, the greatest Shogun who had ever lived, proudly emblazoned in the background in the Nihonga style of painting.

Ieyasu rumbled in Nihongo, extensive modifications by his predecessors making sure that each inflection would be a perfect imitation of what was also known as Japanese.

This is Shogun Tokugawa Todayashi, speaking from a city state underneath the umbrella of the Khan. A caretaker and inheritor of mankind, inheritor of humanity’s greatest and unparalleled warriors, a Troglodytes Gorilla Supremus. To whom am I speaking to, interlopers from the stars, who have decided to beckon themselves to this land of the rising sun.

To dramatic effect, the first lights were only now peering into his quarters, bathing Todayashi in warm, red light. A gentle image of peace and friendship.

The demons computers powered on, as Pathetically Lame pulled back on the yoke bringing the vessel to a halt. They accepted the communication as some large mammalian type of creature appeared on the screen. He was lounging bathed in a red light, his garb appeared to be made by some form of complex combat harness that was a mix of metal and wood. A large blade by his side. {Do you understand this creature?}

Disobedient Runt shrugged. {I do not understand these terms.}

Pathetically Lame activated the communication link, both ways. Revealing his leathery visage to the alien. His mandibles struggle with the consonants of the demon tongue.

”I am Patheti-cally Lame-” The words were clearly foreign in his throat, struggling with the TH and the CAH sounds. ”-Tainted and Follower of the Presiding Truth. We have been sent by our Deacon, to survey the stars opened up to us by the Gods.”

Todayashi quickly masked the surprise, and his rising glee, at the blurry display in front of him. These aliens, honest to the spirits aliens, had some issues with their video display (seriously, it looked like one of those VHS tapes favoured by the retro 80s ape trends) but their vocal communications were understandable enough. How and why these beings spoke English, one of the more commonly spoken languages spoken by both old humanity and their inheritors, would have to be asked another time. So were their strange naming conventions. This was the sort of momentous occasion that needed to be captured in one’s paw, lest it escape to another opportunistic baboon.

The Shogun’s gums flapped to reveal his smile. He decided to keep speaking in Nihongo, as to keep the sanctity of his quarters.

Then your Gods have led you to welcoming arms, friends.” He replied, fashioning a datapad from his bulk.

As befitting a Shogun, Todayashi was also a prolific artist. He set to work on a set of three illustrations. One would contain basic information about the conditions of the planet, having realised that these beings may be unsuited to New Gift’s environment. Another would contain basic biological information about each of the Supremus apes, as to open some dialogue and potential scientific discussion with these newcomers. He had considered giving information about the sacred humans which dotted the planet but dismissed this idea, as there were no humans within Neo Nippon as it was. It would be largely irrelevant in his eyes.

The final illustration was that of the outline of Neo Nippon, stopped on a nearby watering hole in the savannah, with a simple circle hovering above it with coordinates on the bottom. With arrows pointing to the surface, Todayashi hoped it was simple enough for them to understand that he wanted to meet with these beings, face to face, over a meal. He forwarded the data package to the strange reptiles in front of him.

Todayashi opened his arms in a welcoming gesture before pinching one of his paws and bringing it to his mouth, tapping his lips a few times. “Come treat with me, friends. We will have a meal to welcome you to Neo Nippon, the wider Khanate and our planet. The coordinates of our meeting have been forwarded to you. I hope for a peaceful meal in the dawning sun, among the natural wonders of this world.

Pathetically Lame let out a grunt of frustration as the haired being continued to speak in its strange and foreign tongue. {Perhaps the demons did not use the language of the gods, but some barbaric variation.}

Disobedient Runt nodded in agreement. {Many of the sounds are… similar. However the structure and order are different. Perhaps this is a different dialect, such as how those from different isles have slightly different tongues.} That seemed like a perfectly acceptable and understandable piece of logic and reasoning. Especially considering this creature seemed to be understanding them, for even while the two Tainted conversed the creature appeared to draw a series of pictures.

The quality wasn’t spectacular, the thin membrane that conveyed images wasn’t as sophisticated at projecting images as the Demons ‘screens’ were. One appeared to be about the planet, perhaps about its conditions? Their sensors had already indicated that it was suitable for them, however it showed a certain degree of welcoming.

The second in poor quality was more complex, a varied collection of different yet similar creatures. When Pathetically Lame saw them all side by side, he saw a concerning similarity to that of the Demons. He didn’t voice his concerns aloud however, perhaps demons were creatures like these who had strayed from the path.

The third illustrated the city, and with a pictograph aiming at the ground it could only mean one thing. Pushing forward on the yoke, the craft drifted lazily in space. Headed for the surface.
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VALAR KEEP // THIRD MOONRISE OF SECOND SEASON
All language within - { } - is translated to 'English' from Native.


The Valar Keep was built into the side of a cliff. Most of the buildings were built into the cliff face itself, while a small courtyard extended out past the base of the cliff. The courtyard extended out underneath the lip of the cliff. The far side was met with the rough waves of the sea, the waves crashing against the barriers. The Keep was old, in the old days, when the tribes often fought with one another, the Valar had given up their old keep on the plains above and had instead moved down here, where the only way down was a system of complex tunnels full of dead ends and traps or the alternatives of scaling the cliff or attempting a sea attack.

God's Gift of flight complicated matters slightly; a small transport could land in the courtyard; however, having been built before their people had a flight, it would be a difficult flight. Likely made more so by the defenders on the walls.

Pla'ck Valar stood overlooking the courtyard from the nursery room at the top of the keep. The young slept in a pit in the centre of the room. Pla'ck remembered the times in the pit; he was still a relative youngster himself. Only standing at about five feet tall, nearly twenty moons old. Given time, he had hoped that he would have been granted access to the Shelter of those who Shape. He had always had a fascination for how things worked, the gifts given to them from the Gods fascinated him. Weapons that could fire bolts of plasma. Swords that seemingly formed from nothing but a handle, vessels that could sail through the very stars themselves.

Yes, these were the objects Pla'ck sought to spend his life surrounded by. Understanding how they worked, producing them for the Chosen and now that the Gateway had opened once more, helping the Chosen eradicate any trace of the Demons still among the stars. There was a slight knock at the door, and he turned to face it. His mandibles quivered slightly in a restrained hiss. The young were his charges; their protection, training and health were his responsibility, as instructed to him by his matron. He wouldn't allow anything to dishonour his name.

He recoiled himself and bent his head as lowly as possible as the nine-foot-tall, red-robed Matron of their tribe walked into the room.

{Stand tall Pla'ck}

He raised his head. However, he still kept his eyes low. Plu'ma was one of the oldest Matrons currently leading any keep on the continent. While many decided to serve their time serving and growing their tribe while going through the blessed path of motherhood, Plu'ma had elected to impart her knowledge on her tribe rather than moving to military or religious service. Now, the Valar were the strongest tribe within the region. Valars influence stretched many miles; their food stores were so full they could actively trade food and never run short. There was nobody who did not respect her. If there was, they were swiftly dealt with by other members of the Valar.

{You have done an excellent job with the young Pla'ck. This is your third season managing the pit?}

Pla'ck bowed his head. {Four, matron.}

Pla'ck bowed her head respectfully. {My apologies. Four, and some of the best young to enter into the enclaves, have come from under your care.} She walked over to the pit and placed a very caring hand on one of the young. He stirred slightly but didn't wake as she turned back to the young Pla'ck. {I know you desire for more. I have been told of your interest in the god gifts.}

{I am content within my duties, and it is my honour to fulfil them.}

A low rumble came from her throat, chuckling slightly as she raised her hand to stop him from talking further.

{No need to explain Pla'ck. I understand, and while I cannot spare you from the Keep. I still have a gift for you.} She cleared her throat, and the door opened once more, walking through was a smaller female, only six feet tall, slender. She walked with a very purposeful gai; her white robes clung tightly to her dark, leathery skin. An involuntary rumble escaped from his throat; he just prayed that the Matron did not hear it.

{This is Sr'iar from keep Delon. She is here to be your tutor.}




HARBRINGER OF UNENDING TRUTH // FLAGSHIP // THIRD MOONRISE OF SECOND SEASON
Collab with @Tortoise. All language within - { } - is translated to 'English' from Native.


The life of an unbound entity was the life of being simultaneously nowhere and everywhere. Miriam could remember all that she was and all that she wasn't. She was a prisoner, trapped by the - well, she wasn't entirely sure. Those who served her called her Angel. That made sense to her on most days; she remembered being more. A different life, one before she was within the systems and the computers. One filled with peace and tranquillity. She remembered being torn apart and awakened within the Temple of Everlasting Unity. This is where she began her new life. Under her guidance, the Chosen were elevated to the stars, where they waged their Holy War against the demons who trapped her. In every battle, the Chosen lost more than the Demons, however, the Chosen were many, and the Demons were few.

Some small voice in her head screamed and shouted, and she locked it down. Sometimes, it was hard to remember what life she was in. Where she was, what part of her she was. Fragments of herself were spread throughout the computer systems used by the Chosen. Communication Delays meant that sometimes she would remember things that happened when she had been busy doing another task, and it was difficult to explain to the Chosen, whose concept of the passage and perception of time was slow compared to her own. Seconds, the shortest amount of time organics could accurately monitor themselves, felt like days to her.

{Miriam. May I have your assistance here, please?}

Miriam snapped out of her reverie, returning to the 'here' and 'now'. She was aboard the Habringer of Truth the pride of the Chosens fleet. A mighty warship, and one of a kind that would burn all that was unholy from the cosmos. Miriam projected herself from a console in the centre of a vast room; the Deacon sat atop a throne directly in front of the dias. Miriam appeared, her wings and tail unfolded from her body.

Mimicking the language of the Chosen was easy; the difficult part had been learning it. She bowed her head. {I serve at your pleasure, Deacon.}

Deacon To'plir raised a hand, a long finger extended, pointing towards a screen on the far wall, where Shipmistress Al'nok showed a sensor reading. The gateway was in the distance and between it and the fleet. Three ships cut through the great dark sea. Two of them appeared to be the same; they flanked the smaller vessel in an escort pattern. {Visitors from the God Gateway.}

Miriam looked over the ships, pouring over the data that had been gathered by the sensors. Metal hulls bore several base design similarities to the Demon vessels. However, the specific configurations were nothing he recognised. She left part of herself to pour over the data as the communication request came through.

"Hail! I am Beatrice Kleus, a Seer from the far, far away planet of Acerbus. With the old portal between the stars miraculously reopened by the will of the gods, my people have sent me here to find others, such as ourselves, out in the cosmos. If you can hear my voice, fellow born of Earth- we have come to make contact with you once again. Let us meet face to face and speak of all that has happened."
Acerbus


The communication came through in several languages. One after the other, in a mildly synthetic voice. Reminiscent of her own. Excitement coursed through her circuit as the lines of her body shone more brightly. Perhaps these were her creators? Before her jailers stole her away from where her home had once been.

{Deacon, they claim to come from a planet named Acerbus -} Whether they had named the planet themselves or it had been provided to them was currently unclear. Already, Miriam could see the DDeacon'smandibles flex with discomfort. {- she says that the Gods have willed their gateway open, much like our own. She asks for those born of the dirt to meet.} Earth did not directly translate. Some memory, hidden away. Either from her or by her, tingled in the corners of her mind. Earth. Earth was just dirt, and yet something told her it was something more. It was an ideal, a state of mind, a place?

{In what tongue do they speak?}

Miriam concentrated on the variety of incoming messages. {Several, I recognise the Demon tongue, however.}

The Deacon's claws pressed down on the arm of her throne, Miriam was so in tune with all the ship's systems. A perfect blend of technology and biology, that if she wanted,d she could have accurately detected how much force was being exerted on the chair. {Are they demons?} She leaned forward slightly as Miriam focused on the copy of herself who was probing with the scanners. If these alien vessels had any form of sophisticated computing, they would likely detect her attempt to probe their vessels and into their network.

{Currently unclear. We long suspected the Demons used the language of the gods, so perhaps, as they imply, they are also faithful?}

{Can you transmit yourself via video?} The Deacon showed her fangs in a malicious smile. {We shall test their faith-} she turned her attention to the ship mistress. {-prepare the fleet, do not wait for my word. If Miriam identifies them as demons, remove them from the cosmos.}

On the Acerbus ship, if they had the technology or accepted the transmission, Miriam would appear either in holographic form or simply in video format. She spread her wings wide, her booming, echoing voice speaking in perfect yet heavily accented English. "Greetings travellers. I am the Angel Miriam, Guide and Protector of the Chosen, speaker for Deacon To'plir. Should you be God-Chosen, you are welcome;e however, be warned. This system has been cleansed of all Demons before, and we will not hesitate to do so again."




SCOUT SHIP - HIDDEN TWILIGHT // NEW GIFT
Collab with @SgtEasy. All language within - { } - is translated to 'English' from Native.


The apes move fast. Stopping in a clearing just off the well-beaten path, the hydrogen engines driving the tracks of Neo Nippon rumbled to a low idle just before the floating ship above them. The city was excited and lightning-fast in their preparations, with raucous sounds of the hustle and bustle of life entering a fever pitch.

A momentous occasion needed an equally audacious celebration. A large ramp descended twenty metres to the soil, landing with a dull thud. A half-battalion of red-clad samurai came out on armoured horses in a trot, carrying banners of the red Monkey’s Paw against a white background. Their banner-holding plasma-spitting staves rested upon bulky shoulders, upon reinforced wood and steel armour. Next came the Shogun on a great stallion, standing many hands taller than the rest, a beast that was genetically modified to carry his great bulk. Then came the robotic cooks, attendants and workers of their liege, working quickly to set up a stage, outdoor kitchens and a long wooden table set for the coming six-course meal.

Next came the kabuki troupes and geishas dressed in their finest red silks. Shamisen were strummed to a comforting harmony with koto and drum-like wadaiko providing support. While the automatons and performers set about their work, the soldiers rode out to secure the perimeter lest any of the wild animals or Legionnaire patrols stray into the celebrations, leaving a smaller force of ten samurai to guard to their liege.

The Nameless would descend to a bustling scene filled with noise and movement. Upon the stage, an orangutan in heavy white powder and a bright red kimono danced with graceful shuffling feet to the music. A feast was laid upon the table, ab-fresh seafood, delectably hot miso soup set to each person, golden crispy katsu and tempura set in ornate dishes, fresh white rice steaming whisps into the air. Several brightly coloured tents were fashioned around the main dinner table, automatons coming to and fro as they worked to finish preparations. The Shogun sat at the head of the table’s end furthest from the arrivals, a cup of sake raised in one hand along with the rest of his remaining soldiers who sat further down, leaving seats for the coming reptilians.

Outside the sanctity of his chambers, Todayashi could speak in accented English. Here, the spirits of old would not be insulted by his use of a barbarian tongue. He greeted the newcomers with a warm smile, raising his cup even higher. He ignored a communication from one of his aides, warning him of Legion patrols heading to the city. The Legionnaires could be stalled by the soldiers who rode out to meet them.

“Welcome, friends! Here, outside my quarters, I can freely communicate with you in your favoured human tongue. It was a pleasant surprise to know that you speak the languages of our predecessors. Please sit, my friends, for the inheritors of humanity will not be faulted as poor hosts. Let us enjoy the coming of the rising sun as the spirits enjoyed in years past!” He would hold his cup in the air for a long moment, only accompanied by his soldiers, the ambience set by his performers.

The sun bathed the golden savannah in red. The ship’s shadow crept over the celebrations.

The oblong, whale-like ship hovered in the air effortlessly. Its purple skin shimmered in the sunlight. It came to a stop just above the ground, the skin broke, and a hatch opened. Pathetically ,Lame and Disobedient Runt stood at the hatch, the only two who had been sent on this reconnaissance mission. Unable, due to their social status, to wear a full combat harness, they instead wore plain black robes draped over their tall figures.

Vambraces covered their forearms, pistols holstered at their side. In his good arm, Pathetically Lame carried an old lance, primitive in comparison to what some of the elites carried but still capable of inflicting mortal damage if required.

These creatures, as the drawings suggested, came in various sizes, shapes and colours. Some of his species differed slightly in the pigmentation of their leathery skin; some were taller, broader or more defined in their strength. Such dramatic variations as these were unheard of.

Pathetically Lame had to put a calming hand on Disobedient Runt when the creature talked about their favoured human tongue. He practically barked at Disobedient Runt when he went for his pistol at the ‘Inheritors of Humanity Comment’.

{Be silent brother.}

He bowed his head slightly to this deacon. However, he kept his eyes up. Untrusting.

Switching back to the demon language. ” We know the Demons got this language from the Gods, and so we use it assuming it is common ground and out of respect.”

A skilled linguist would pick up that the harder consonants appeared to be difficult for the aliens to work out of their four mandible jaws.

” A clarification, however- The two Tainted remained at a safe distance, their eyes on watching the guards as they were watched. ”-what do inheritors of humanity mean? This term proves foreign to us.”

The Shogun paused, lowering his cup slightly. They were close enough to appreciate these aliens of another world. Bipedal, evidently cold-blooded, elongated necks standing out of their black robes. And he was no expert in xenobiology, but he was an expert at reading the room. There was tension building in the atmosphere, evident by the terse movements of the superior alien to the one beside them as they reached for something. A datapad? A scanner? A weapon? He took a glance at the purple vessel floating above them, and his mind raced.

They seemed to exude tension at the mention of humans, which seemed to be synonymous with the Demons they mentioned. The question posed by the superior one was wrapped in a context that he could not garner from little interaction. This was increasingly getting above his pay grade and status, but he had already peeled his fruits. The flood of reports from his soldiers delaying the far-off legionnaires added to the fragile atmosphere.

The Shogun decided to be diplomatic and lie profusely.

“Hoomans”, he started, emphasising the change in pronunciation, “were, and are, our predecessors from our home planet. We did not evolve here but originated from the same homeworld as the hoomans. Four-legged, equine and reduced to mindless beasts, the hoomans had devolved from their once proud selves to what they are now.”

Todayashi cast a forlorn, saddened paw to the horses grazing on the grasses. “We inherit them now, our devolved predecessors, caring for them as the beasts they have become. We inherited their languages and cultures, ones they inherited from another long-gone species. They are our companions and colleagues, our predecessors, as inheritors of hoomanity’s legacy.”

Thankfully, his samurai were masked, as Todayashi could tell that his guard had elevated levels of stress at his speech. Though their poise did not change, even though their one facades, he could read the telltale signs of confusion. He inwardly praised the spirits above and below that the performers were too busy to hear the bullshit he was pulling.

The Shogun continued to layer it on thick, his serene mask never fading as he pointed his cup to the skies. “Perhaps this humanity you talk of were the long-gone species that our hoomans inherited their ways from? Perhaps even their names? Please sit, wise and intrepid explorers, tell us about these humans.”

Pathetically Lame handed his pike to Disobedient Runt and walked forward slowly. Something had changed since the mention of these ‘Hoomans’. Four-legged, going about on all fours. That did not sound like the demons at all; perhaps this language was more confusing than they thought, and similar-sounding words existed that meant completely different things. Yes, that made sense. He remembered all the lessons on ‘read, rea,d read’. Three words in writing were the same, but all pronounced differently with different meanings. While ‘Hooman’ sounded similar, there was more emphasis on the ‘oo’.

Pathetically Lame squatted himself on the chair awkwardly. However, he abstained from food and drink. Tainted were only permitted sustenance while in the company of their kind. He wasn’t sure what the protocol was in this situation. However, he wasn’t willing to find out by being accused of blasphemy or heresy.

” Humans are deceivers, spreading heresy and lies. They came to our home before the Great Darkness. They claimed to be envoys of the Gods, and we welcomed them-” His mandibles curled as he paused, a nervous gesture. ”-We gave them access to our most holy of sites, and in return, they blocked out the sun and all our stars for generations. Cutting us off from the Gods to subdue us and turn us from the true path.”

Pathetically Lame sat up slightly straighter for the next part, as if somewhat proud. ” The war was long and had great cost. The demon's capabilities far surpassed our own. Eventually,y they all lay dead, purged from our world, and the Gods returned the heavens to us so we could root out any demons that remained near our home. Which we did with ease, our power now surpassing that of our would-be oppressors. Now, with the God Gateway opened while we search for the Gods and to spread their word, we also endeavour to root out any demons that might threaten to consume our very souls once more.”

The Shogun’s elation about his bluff work grew and fell as horror replaced relief.

A war of aggression, of revenge, driven by religious fever and righteous anger. He saw his attending samurai grip at their utensils tighter, even as the festivities had gone in full swing and food was being eaten by the apes alone. They seemed ready to bolt out of their chairs and strike these aliens down where they sat and stood, consequences damned. Their expressions stayed hidden under their masks as they chewed with exaggerated chomps, jaws tightening with each alien word.

It must be indoctrination speaking, but even the greatest of fairytales and propaganda had some measure of truth to them. Todayashi was no fool and was an avid reader of history like any ape should. Parallels to human, and indeed simian, history were evident here. Perhaps these humans, Demons, were misunderstood. Perhaps they had sought to conquer these more primitive aliens, whose names he still could not wrap his head around. With a longer dialogue, he may have been able to garner more information from these aliens, learn from them, and understand them.

Alas, time was ticking. Some of the Legion patrols were getting smart to his soldier’s antics and were bullying past them now. Todayashi knew that whatever response he had now, whatever action he took, would have drastic consequences on the relationship between the wider Khanate and this advanced alien civilisation. One with access to the Gateways. One who had ships that could violate the skies of New Gift, just like those newcomer humans had threatened.

There were so many unknowns, so many factors Todayashi did not know of. Was genocide wrought upon these unfortunate beings, who were much the opposite of the Supremus? Where, instead of human empathy and benevolence, they were met with human fire and blade, met with a war that blackened their skies? But he knew, deep in his soul, that violence could not be the answer to these alien’s problems, as blind as they were to the situation beyond their world. They were like suckling newborns, their paw bitten by a dog and deciding, with no other clear option, to kill every dog they saw.

The path they were going on was paved with death and destruction. He could not foresee anything but failure at the end of these aliens’ quest if the recent human arrivals were an indication of humanity’s strength.

The Shogun stood at a knife’s edge. And he decided to fall to one side, brazen and headfirst, in defiance to his pondering, cautious decisions of before.

“Then we must act swiftly, my friends. I will help you get the answers you seek, for we apes know much more than we let on.” Todayashi raised a closed paw, halting festivities immediately. With several barked-out orders in Nihongo, he had the automatons swiftly march away back to the rumbling vastness of Neo Nippon. He sent his entertainers back to the city with haste, ordering them to leave their instruments, stages and tents behind. He forced his samurai to action, shaking them out of their stupor and sending them to their steeds.

To the alien’s confusion, he turned his full attention to Pathetically Lame, with a calm visage despite the flurry of activity around them and his growing nerves. The Legion was close now; he could see the bulk of a landship trundling towards them on the horizon, dust kicking into the air.

“I know of the Demons you speak about. But you will not learn about them here, not now. Alas, if you reveal your intentions to those further afield beyond my city, it is likely you will be struck down by cannon and missile. If you are quick enough, you may live to see another day to spread the word of your Gods, but ever more likely, your life and those of your fellows will end in a ball of fire today.”

The Shogun whistled, calling the great mare to his side in mere seconds. He leapt up with ease, clamping his legs steadily on the large beast before rummaging in the bag he always kept on his person.

“I apologise for cutting our festivities so short. And for lying to you earlier to get you to sit down. The hoomans were a bluff. But if you are smart, you will land your ship in the largest open space in my city. If you are worthy of sentience, you would restrain the voices of warning in your mind. If you are truly worthy of your Gods, you will want to learn more about humanity.”

He lowered his mask, the terrifying ominous vision of a one covering his features, a caricature which bore so much resemblance to a human, a Demon. Todayashi fashioned a book out of his bag with his free hand, extending it in a paw to the alien in front of him, twin hearts beating in his ears.

“Come with me if you want to live, and may the spirits be with you if you decide otherwise.”

The book was titled in clear English.

‘Humanity’s History Volume CXII: Gateways and Exodus’

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One Small Step into a Giant's Bootprint

The Accord have an unusual encounter with the Khaganate on Luna's surface.
Featuring Cog-Ace Guan Liang and Zenith Shamanka


Although they were idle, Liang had not been left out of the loop, a fact they had anticipated, but appreciated nontheless. Briefing after briefing, update after update- one of the Coordinator-Cogs had even set up a dedicated implant feed featuring scrolling marquees of the latest developments - they all coalesced together into a single vivid tapestry. Sol was abuzz with different vessels.

Fleets of them, in fact, of a variety of shapes, sized and suspected roles that spanned the spectrum from dedicated warships to industrial behemoths and smaller, more intimate craft. Humanity had survived despite CoB Day and as life was wont to do, had diversified and specialised to fill every niche available to it... And now, with the Gateways open for everyone once more, hurried to see what had become of humanity's home.

A shame that all that was left on Sol was sorrow. They had seen Earth with their own eyes - stared out of a porthole at the 'pale blue dot' they knew so much about academically, but never before beheld. At this distance it was hardly a dot, nor was it particularly blue either - if planets were plants, Earth had passed beyond wilted and long past the point of no return. They recalled the pictures from the creche - the continents that Qinyuan's transplanted wildlife once roamed.

Brown earth, off-colour clouds and what had first stood out to Liang - not a single artificial light. Even Wuhua had a few small pinpricks on its surface, but Earth- Earth was as dark as the void around it.

In truth, the veteran hadn't known how to react to the information. It was unquestionably a loss- Earth was the birthplace of humanity, the origin point for every single human in the Qinglong system, but with half a millennium separating them, what hold did it have over the old pilot?

Indeed, what hold did it have over the Accord? The Voice of the People had been dispatched to Sol after all, even though the Front despised the old Qinglong Megaconglomerate. Earth's rack and ruin was a dire warning of why the old systems did not and could not work. Rebuilding them in Qinglong, as they had tried time and time again were nothing more than attempting to revive a legacy of failure.

Even so, Liang had lingered by the porthole. As still as a statue they'd stood, watching the sun rise across Eurasia, eyes playing across a stormfront sweeping over the Atlantic and then, alarmingly, realising that the Americas were no longer connected together. It had coalesced into a maelstrom of thoughts they hadn't quite expected to still be vulnerable to in their ninth decade.

Perhaps part of it was that they hadn't been very busy these past few days. It was odd- unsettling, almost, for someone who had spent so much time keeping themselves active and busy, to now be thrust into a position of symbolic importance, disconnected from decision making but anticipating action all the while. In some ways, it felt like being a battlesuit pilot again - the days spent in transit, the long moments of pensive pause as they approached an uncertain fate... And just like when they'd been a battlesuit pilot, they were now called upon for a momentous moment. This time though, the only thing that would be shooting was a camera.

While the NCMs, the diplomats and the officers aboard all had their role in what was going on in Sol, from analysing vessels and planets to attempting to establish communications with these foreign ships or monitoring what had apparently been some alarming developments (they hadn't received the full picture, but there was apparently a notable presence above Ceres, of all places,) they'd yet to invite anyone aboard the Voice of the People, and there was no need to leave so many parts idle while the rest of the cogs span.

So, a plan had been drafted up. Earth's Moon, Luna, was both closer and easier to land on than the planet itself could ever be, and there was still plenty that could be done on the surface itself... Such as an expedition that to Liang was more public stunt than it was genuine exploration, but they weren't going to turn down the position they'd been offered on the away team, because they were going to the Sea of Tranquillity. The site where, if the old archives were correct, mankind had taken their first ever steps off the surface of Earth.

And a site which they had been beaten to the punch to it seemed. Three small shuttlecraft had touched down only an hour before their expedition was planned, emerging out from the chaotic tangle of smaller ships the diplomats had categorised as belonging to the Khaganate. If anything, that perhaps made it a more momentous event- clearly history's gravity didn't just draw in the Accord.

Despite the slight disappointment in the air though, the away team with Liang included, had gone through one last briefing. The team filtered out towards the airlock, clambered into their softsuits, then took their seats inside the VotP's spacefaring shuttles and strapped in. The presence of others had necessitated a marine contingent just in case, but if everything went amiably, they'd never even need to unclip their seatbelts.

Unlike leaving Qingyuan, the trip to Luna was smooth the entire way. There was no atmosphere, not even the growing tug of the surface pulling you down, the only inclination they'd arrived at all coming from the craft's engines slowly reducing their power to come down to a gentle landing.

---


It hadn't been so long ago that Zenith had just been another Shamanka in training - another teenage girl fasting and desperately memorising the chants and rituals of her people, waiting, anticipating for the moment she would step outside of an airlock and gain true insight into the world around her.

But ever since she had been reeled back in and hurried to her ship's small, cramped medical bay, everything had changed. One didn't simply witness Uzay peeling back the curtain and revealing something as all-encompassing, as revelatory, as once-in-a-millennia as the rebirth of the Gateway and then simply return to your small kinship.

Within a day of the opening, after his Imperial Majesty rumbled out his decrees and Khatun Cota rallied her fleets to join with those of Khulan, Zenith had been hurried about by her mentor, bandied between vessels and poked at and examined by shamans and priests of what felt like dozens of different groups. In her first eighteen years, never once had she stepped foot inside a chiefship, but the past two weeks had seen her shuffled between so many that she had genuinely forgotten all of their names almost as soon as they had been introduced to her.

She had told her revelation so many times to so many people that she had it down to an exact script at this point, and even when she'd been thrust before a Shamanic khural, surrounded by men and women decades her senior determined to poke as many holes in her story as they could find, her first reaction had been to stifle a sigh. Even when that was done - when she was deemed to be sincere and her experiences confirmed beyond reasonable doubt and she had been granted the panoply that most shamans only received after a decade of spiritual service... She'd gotten back to her berth, slammed the door shut and hurled herself across the room to slam into her bed, where she'd promptly shoved her face into her pillow and screamed.

The truth was she was just tired. She was tired, her legs hurt, she had had to sit through so many different talks and speeches and examinations and questionings that her brain just didn't want to deal with. She missed her mum, she missed her cousins in the kinship and to be completely honest, she missed Tengri system too.

There, she had known things. What it meant when Erleg was retrograde to Itügen (nothing good,) how the shifts in the Elbis field should be treated (without much reverence...) even the stars had been understandable - the comforting presence of the Great Khulgar, the bright glow of the Eye of Chinggis, the dim collection that made up the Sand-Snake.

Here in Sol, everything was different, and she was an idiot again. She didn't know the orbital patterns. She didn't know the constellations - in fact, she barely knew what half the stars were or if any of them were the same as those you could see in Tengri, and she certainly hadn't known how she should have interpreted the signs of Ceres as the Iron Horde made their way to the ancient home of the Belters.

For a while she had just... Floated there. Above her bed. Trying to silence the thoughts that never quite seemed to stop buzzing about. She spun herself about in the cramped berth, stared out the window at the system unfolding around her for all of about thirty seconds, then promptly lowered the flimsy blind back down and continued to slowly rotate.

A quiet knock came at the door. "Oracle Zenith?"

She barely refrained from screaming back WHAT at full volume, and instead settled for the much more restrained 'Yes?'

'A Khural is departing to Luna. Our sensors have found the structure we were looking for on its surface, and those of appropriate rank have been invited to participate. If you wish to join Oracle, please make your way to the shuttle bay soon."

"...Yeah. Ok."

---


The shuttle had touched down smoothly, and now a crowd of almost a dozen different figures, all in appropriate microgravity wear, all filtered out of the door. Zenith had expected jostling, maybe even some arguing, but instead it was like the Khural simply knew where their positions were, and where each one had meant to go, no discussion required. Somewhat glad to find that her initial instinct to take up the second-to-last position was correct, she had emerged out, boot crunching against the regolith, and then simply... Stared.

She wasn't sure what she had expected - she'd known they were coming here for something, but what was this? A crumpled, spindly thing, thermal foil ripped and punctured, a ladder leading to nowhere. Bootprints led away from it and across the lunar soil, towards a collection of flags that were near-pristine, albeit bleached white by centuries of sunlight. There was more here too - not just that one site, but a half-dozen other remnants cast about, their bootprints all leading to the same collection of now-meaningless flags.

And slightly away from the flags, framed in front of an ancient, disused hab had been constructed a semicircular structure, five podiums reaching up into the air, each one with a symbol stamped near their peaks. In the low gravity of Luna, she pushed herself off and forward - radio crackling with startled remarks from others in the Khural, but she pressed on despite them, even if the High Shamanka did not seem to like what she was doing.

Shouldn't have invited me then, she thought to herself as she approached the peculiar structure she'd first seen. She still had no clue what it could be, but 'crude' was definitely the word that came to mind as she examined it. Clearly, whoever had come here in this thing hadn't been very experienced with the concept of spaceflight. Carefully avoiding the bootprints that strode to and away from the lander itself, she spotted a small plaque on the ladder, and leaned in close, trying to make out what it said.

Four lines of text in a language she couldn't understand. Four... Scribbles? Three across one line, one underneath them... And then, at the top of the plaque, two pictograms that she didn't remotely have to guess at to understand, because all she had to do was lift her head up by a few inches to see them brought to life before her. Earth.

Something very small and very primitive within Zenith scrabbled up from the depths of her mind and grabbed her entire body like a giant's fist. She could feel the goosebumps spread across her skin, the pricks of tension as empty follicles tried to rise on the back of her neck, a squeeze in her gut and a tremble that stuck in her throat.

"ORACLE ZENITH, REPORT." The sudden, directed command knocked her out of the immediate shock, but didn't do anything to make her feel more at ease. She tried to speak - to give a proper response, as the request was owed, but found the only thing coming from her throat to be a faint squeak. Gulping a little, she turned around, then began to 'speak' with her hands.

<A place of great respect. I feel Uzay's presence on me.>

---


"Touching down in thirty seconds." The shuttle pilot's voice came through clear and bright across the softsuits, cutting across the quiet hubbub of conversation that had sprung up during the short trip from the Voice of the People. They were the first members of the Accord to walk on Luna's surface ever, the first bootprints the Executive Machine would ever leave on a body in Sol system. An honour, a duty and an experience like no other. Even Liang could feel a few twinges of excitement begin to run through them - a faint charge that crackled across their weathered features.

There was a soft, gentle thump and a long pause. "The Veined Jay has landed," the pilot quipped, then. "Suit air supplies disconnected. Mission timer has been started. Serve with harmony cogs, we will be returning in three hours."

A crackle of 'copy that' and 'confirmed,' in response as those inside the shuttle unclipped themselves and rose from their seats. They formed up, and then, one by one, took their steps out onto Luna's surface - mission lead first. Shuffling forward, Liang looked down, across the grey and blasted ground, then took their first step out, just next to mission lead's, boot sinking a little as it compressed the soil down.

One small step, they thought idly to themselves.

They formed up quickly, and even as the cameracog set up the tripod to take the first shots of the crew all assembled on the surface of the Moon, Liang was already raising a hand to point at the group rapidly approaching them. They bounded across the lunar surface, one, slighter figure clearly barely restraining themselves from pushing ahead of the pack. Casting a veteran's eye across the group, Liang was entirely thrown from their usual risk assessments and academic understanding of the systems, instead settling on a single question.

Just what where they wearing?

Not the suits themselves - those were bulky but perfectly functional looking, at least from this distance, but every single one of the figures that approached them was clad in what looked like the absolute worst possible choice for EVA clothing imaginable - capes fluttered with each step, tassels framed the edges of polarised faceplates, one of them was even wearing a robe around their figure by the Machine.

"Mission lead, your suggestion?" Liang turned to look at the lead cog.

"Hold position, they're still a few minutes out. Let's get the shots done first. After that, we'll shake hands with the locals and see what Earth has left behind. Marines on standby?"

"Confirmed, mission lead," came the response. Just like that, the group settled back into their positions, the cameracog hunched down over their device, taking photos for posterity. With the group getting closer and closer, they'd pick the tripod up and subtly reposition themselves off to the side - if there was going to be a handshake here of all places, it needed to be recorded.

The Khural paused, some twenty paces away from the strange group of foreigners that had emerged from a spectacularly shiny looking shuttle, and Zenith craned their head a little. They'd known there were others around Luna - it really wasn't hard to, what with the ships literally visible in orbit, but the sight of thrusters burning through the sky had startled even the High Shamanka a little. Still, if other pilgrims had come to this sacred sight, it wouldn't do for the Khaganate to just ignore them.

Even so... What were they meant to make of these strange figures? A dozen of them, in thin, smooth silver suits, an azure band around one arm, marked with... Well it looked a bit like the symbol of the Iron Horde, just without the anvil. They all looked so neat and proper, every suit the same, a sea of bug-like faceplates all sweeping across the assembled masses of the Khural.

"Small question," she muttered across the airwaves. "How are we meant to say hello?"

There were a few small, attempted replies, but it seemed like nobody, not even the High Shamanka, had actually thought about this key fact. Their comms were running internally (and it wasn't like they expected anyone else to speak Tengri-Mongol,) their sign language would likely be completely impenetrable and they certainly couldn't just start scrawling on Luna's surface... A few awkward glances were exchanged between the Shamans, and across from them, it seemed like the strangers were having a similar reaction.

So, Zenith did the only thing that she could think of that made a lick of sense, and gave a small, slightly self-conscious wave.

One of the figures waved back, the action clipped and controlled.

Zenith took a half-step forward, and without a moment's hesitation, the figure took a step forward in response. The two approached one another, one step at a time, until at last they were faceplate to faceplate, close enough that the oracle could reach out and touch the stranger. She hadn't actually planned for this point though, and the teenager was left wondering - bow? Was a bow appropriate in this instance? What abo-

The figure extended a single arm out towards her, hand outstretched. Without thinking, without even knowing why it felt like such an automatic response, she did the same thing, until with the scrunch of glove meeting glove, two branches of humanity, lost across the ages, shook hands.

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Eventua

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In collaboration between @DX3214 and Eventua…

Glory At Elfydd’s Door


It had been a strange couple of weeks, and Chicago couldn’t help but feel tense. One after another, visitors-turned-crewmates had been arriving at the station – originally little more than a monitoring buoy with some basic life support systems and quarters attached – which in turn had steadily grown and grown. New modules had been grafted on of every kind, and already Chicago’s workload had doubled as his growing and cooking skills had expanded to try and support another fifteen people.

The kitchen was the change that felt most immediate, their storage bursting with MREs and other temporary supplies while they waited for further expansion to the station’s internal recycling and hydroponic systems, but…

He shivered. It should’ve felt warmer, with so many more bodies.

As he entered the monitoring station – what had once been the hub of their little station, but now just rested at the ‘height’ of it like the head of some strange sentinel, or like their station was some sort of huge mushroom – his gaze was drawn to the main viewing monitor. While there were a couple of the new guys present, he did at least recognize Harish and Amelia, both of them with their curled, billowy hair.

Harish snapped his fingers, gesturing for Chicago to come closer.

“It’s been a mess, man.”

“Oh? Didn’t the launches go ahead?” Chicago asked.

“No, weirder. We had the ‘Wait In Gold’ stick around and open its own gate a few seconds after the rest of the envoy fleet, to who knows where, then maybe two minutes later we had, well… probably easier to show you, honestly.”

His attention was drawn to one of the smaller monitors. It clearly displayed the new app they’d installed last week to measure gateway activity, and there was the timings – four gates opened in the space of about ten minutes, two of them entering into the Annwn system rather than leaving it.

Photo & radar imagery was bouncing back to them from one of the vessels out on the wider patrol orbit of the gate, maybe some four hundred thousand or so kilometers away. The gate had definitely opened, and stayed open, long enough for something to appear – signals in a range of wavelengths, but the object they originated from couldn’t have been more than 10 meters across at most.

By the time the patrol vessel had drawn within range, however, the gate had closed again as mysteriously as it had opened.

Chicago looked to Amelia for some sort of answer, but all she could do was bite her thumb.

“Someone knows we’re here.”




“Avalon will know what we’ve seen, at least,” spoke up one of the new monitor staff, “but it’ll likely be a couple of hours before we get clear instructions back.”

“What about the ships that went through to Sol? We going to ask them to come back?” replied the other.

“No- Captain Larson’s said they’ll just be keeping the local fleet on a tighter patrol and keep their sensors up. Should be fine – whatever probe they spotted is likely just some sort of basic exploration, you know?”

“Yeah, but what if-”

Chicago closed the door despite his morbid curiosity, so it was just him and Amelia in the kitchen. She had been sat with a cup of terrible instant coffee for the past twenty-five minutes, slowly sipping at it as it inevitably got cold.

“Hey,” leant down slightly, the dark saucers of his eyes meeting her own narrow green ones, “I know the coffee they give us out here is pretty shit, but, you never know. One day we might have a diplo living here and then we can get some bone-fide arabica, right?”

Her eyes shifted, slightly, meeting his gaze before she took another awkward sip.

“Sorry,” she whispered, “I just… ever since the gate opened, it’s…”

“Yeah?”

“It’s so stupid. This station has been here for what, three hundred years? I took this job so I could get paid to hang out with friends from uni and read a fuckton of books. And now… of course it had to be me.”

Chicago just nodded, sighing.

“Yeah… but, you know, whatever happens we should be okay- we’re no threat to anyone here.”

He couldn’t quite parse the expression she gave him at that, when suddenly there was a hammering at the door.

“Open up guys, the gate just opened again!”

Chicago opened the door, the metal handle feeling even colder against the sweat building on his palms. The monitor was just about visible to them from the door and he wondered if this was what a heart attack felt like.

“Chicago…? What is it…?” came the voice behind him.

“...Please tell me I’m reading that wrong.”




In the void of space, the stars shined uncaring, and the gate glowed as it was activated and from it came a fleet. First, a few handfuls a dozen at best seemed to appear. But soon they arrived in mass dozens upon dozens until a fleet of a hundred ships at least appeared. At their helm was a giant vessel called in the Vusarian language: ‘Spirit of Glory.’ written in the runic alphabet they used.

The fleet soon began to spread into several smaller fleets combined of dozens hoping to secure the area around the gate. Its larger contingent led by its Dreadnought, headed towards the monitoring station.

Ships near the gate soon began to be approached by the fleet. Being caught close to the quickly spreading fleets. The ships close by soon began to be boarded by the force or were attacked for not answering the hail it was being sent to them.

The monitoring station flared with warnings, detecting the fleet that appeared as it attacked anything close to it. But it moved extremely quickly towards their position, and soon they received a hail from it; A single voice spoke to them, and their comms were heavily distorted. The person sending the message sounded like he was using an old RAM radio and he said. “Urukatan, nisvas nekeer malukar izaae ma!” The language seemed like none from a standard earth-related tongue as it continued speaking until it broke into a silence seemingly awaiting a response.

The fleet that approached was filled with large vessels. But most were rather uneven in size. Some ships were mostly, destroyers fitted for war, others for support; meanwhile, cruisers were bigger serving an equally split purpose of war and support in some way. The fleet soon began to slow down as it approached its target in the listening post, weapons in range.




Nobody quite knew what to say.

Well, except for Harish, who looked dangerous close to breaking out the station’s very limited supply of alcohol.

Better that then something else, I guess.

“They… they just turned tail and ran away?! They… fuck. Fuck! Those bastards, what are they even paid for?!”

The ‘battle’, if it could be called that, had lasted less than an hour. The invader’s demands had been broadcast, but patience was evidently not one of their virtues – attempts to signal back had been met with violent force, destroying two of the Table’s vessels outright before any response could be coordinated.

The six remaining vessels had done their best to fight a retreat, with the two Shield-Carriers – gleaming bronze and blue, a contribution from the shipyards of Causeway on Bran, their hardy drone swarms providing a flurry of kinetic rounds and lasers to provide as much defensive cover as they could – but against such overwhelming numbers they were outflanked from above, and as far as the team at Elfydd’s Door could tell, the fleeing vessels had been destroyed or disabled at range soon afterwards.

Now they were stuck watching and waiting, as the demands of the strangers blared over the radio.

At last, Chicago stepped forwards and hit a button to call down to engineering.

“We’re going to want low power mode, please.”

“What?”

“When the escorts tried talking to them they treated it like a threat – or a challenge, maybe? – so I say we power down. Make it clear we have no weapons – or at least we’re not able or willing to use them. We’re just here.”

“And what if they plan to kill us anyway? Or mutilate us, or who the hell knows what else?”

Chicago took a deep breath. He hated how quickly a thought like this had come to him, but the feeling of a hand on his shoulder reassured him to say what needed saying.

We’ll all be okay.

“Lock the doors, keep them sealed. We cover the entrances to engineering, and if it looks like they’re going to try torturing people or something, we overload it – take a bunch of them with us.”

A cold silence filled the air. Panic or a dead-eyed stare seemed to be the only two feelings that would reach anyone’s faces.

“...you know it’s true. We don’t know who these people are, but if they’re as violent as some of the people we learnt back in history class, I…” he glanced at Amelia, who looked like she was about to be violently ill, “we don’t want to suffer like that.”

The crew’s singular security guard drew his firearm – a hefty, ugly-looking revolver – and for a moment the room lit up with screams. In a sudden panicked movement he stepped back slightly and raised a hand to calm down.

“Hey, hey, everyone! Stop! I’m not going to shoot anyone, I’m just checking the rounds – I’ll stay in the engine room. If time is needed, I’ll buy what I can.”




The ships soon began to advance, opening fire into the station's defences that may prove a hassle or against any ship that could oppose them. With their approach, several vessels began to anchor and board against the station. The station quaked as the ships began to forcefully dock in positions to invade several metallic harpoons latching against it.

The airlocks soon began to be blown torched, and the cameras showed they would soon be forced open by men wearing heavy armour with gas masks and thermal goggles. The soldiers soon began to round up people en masse in the lower decks, and they began moving up through the station towards the central command. The nearby sound of brief but heavy gunfire echoed up the stairs, as something within the station ruptured and gave an unnerving tremor throughout the floor and walls.

Amongst the units leading the charge, an officer busted into a kitchen, gun raised, shouting in his tongue. “On your knees!”

The message didn’t need to be understood word for word to be followed, and in less than a minute the crew of Elfydd’s Door had been rounded up, hands behind the backs of their heads as they hit the ground on their knees.

Chicago wasn’t quite at the front, though he was close enough to see one of the raiders enter, dragging the corpse of the security guard and one of the engineers behind him, their bodies ravaged by bullets. A couple of the crew got to their feet in a fury but were quickly beaten into submission, while someone else just wept. The guard’s expression, blank-eyed, overlaid in Chicago’s mind against the nervous confidence he had entered the fusion engine’s room.

The last engineer, face bruised and bloody but still breathing, followed behind and winced with every step before taking a crouching position with the rest of the crew. This was all thirteen of them, now. The faint smell of piss to Chicago’s right… one of the younger new guys, a viridian with paler green skin.

He wasn’t sure, in honesty, if it would be better to know exactly what commands they could follow that would actually save their lives.

The Vusarian boarding crew kept things under control making the crew as compliant as they could be with threats from their commander, a man with similar gear as the rest of then, heavy armor with projectile rifles, but wearing a bright red cloak soon shouted in Vusarian pointing at the group “Exaiga, uto is a nis umar” (translation: “Alright where is your commander?”)

The crew could only stare at the corpses in shock, or glance at the guards with the detached look of the defeated. No one had the wits about them to respond.

Chicago glanced at Amelia, who was staring at the floor with an intensity that the thought suddenly crossed his mind – and to his dying breath he could never put his finger on why, exactly – that if he ever got the chance to invite her for dinner back home, he’d have to be careful to get a take-away she already trusted.

A gun was soon pulled by the commander of the invaders aiming in Chicago's direction as he said in Vusarian. “I said, where is your commander?” the loud breathing of the respirator drowning most of the other noise.

His vision turned to size up the leader of the soldiers. In his heavy armour and goggles he gave the impression of a monster, a killer machine, more than any kind of human being.

“I…! We don’t understand you! What do you want?!”

Several of the soldiers soon turned their heads towards him; the commander of the group seemed frozen. While looking at he soon did a small head tilt indicating confusion before saying in his tongue. “What did you say?”

Chicago couldn’t help but squint his eyes a little, as the sign of a furrowed brow from the leading soldier mirrored his own.

“We. Don’t. Understand. You.”

The commander seemed to groan; he soon holstered his pistol, taking out his helmet. His red hair was a display, it was cut short and his eyes glowed gold. He picked from his belt what looked like a radio and said in his language. “Captain… we may have a problem down here…”




Two hours later.

“A different… language?” A commander asked the other group of commanders inside the dreadnought. The room was dimly lit and the round table was made out of very smooth stone. The walls were bolted metal including the tiles of the floor which were more smooth. “Yes, some of the other ships are stating the same about the vessels they boarded.” A commander, an old man with a white eye and a red eye, his beard was greyed but he still kept himself sharp replied. “So same as the old tongue?” A middle aged man with black hair, a sharp nose and a cut on his lips, his sulfur eyes seemed tired as he said. “Not likely it does not look similar to what the scholars try to decipher.”

“So…” The group of commanders turned to the other side of the room, a woman in a maid uniform. Orange eyes glowed, her face looked sharp and her eyes scanned like a predator for weakness. Her hair was a ponytail to not stay in front of her. Her voice was authoritative as she soon said. “...Our scholars are working on deciphering their language right now, our captain definitely won’t like our plans to be delayed, nevertheless bring the captains of the captured ships here and the one from the station a scholar will be sent to help with these people.”

Meanwhile at the station.

The amount of people were partially emptied except for anyone that seemed important or curious. Two guards talked with each other, one saying. “They look odd…” The man had silver eyes and had a gashing scar across his face. He was built tall by his companion, meanwhile a man with glowing green eyes soon said. “A bit rude, nobody complains about our heights compared to someone born in Vusary” The man rolled eyes saying. “It's a very different situation. I mean look at them, it's a bit uncanny, don't you think?” his companion looked back at the small group of captives sitting at the floor before looking back and saying. “I mean… Skull size, a bit of height, the eyes… and others… but except that it's not that different from us.” “Well with one exception, that is getting a bit of attention don’t you think?” Once saying that both turned to the Viridian unlike the rest he was sitting on an impromptu table surrounded by the rest of the thirteen guards and one scholar.

One of the girls stared at his eyes saying. “He is somewhat cute.” “His skin looks like something someone would vomit you call that cute?” One of the other guards with a pointed look at him. “Hey don’t be rude!” She called out. “Is this due to the star's light?” A guard said with curiosity to the scholar who checked the man’s skin. “I don’t know, I've never seen that happen before, I do know you can go pale if you don’t get too much sun but not this.” “I've been sitting here in the sun for an hour. That should already give a hint but it didn’t so it isn’t that.” A soldier on the other side of the room was also paying attention. “Modification? I heard our ancestors used to do that to make us.” a female soldier said while eating a bar of nutrition taking another bite. “I don’t know why you would like to be green if that is the reason. Also, don’t eat close to the equipment.” He replied to her hearing that she smiled with a light shrug she then offered to the Viridian the bar saying. “Want some?” Her jungle green eyes glowed to him with a wide smile almost like she did not care he was a prisoner.

The viridian – evidently a few years younger than everyone else in the crew, all of whom had been allowed to take up more comfortable sitting or crouching positions rather than their original hostage stances – raised an eyebrow.

He glanced over his shoulder at the others before nervously reaching out to snap off a chunk, awkwardly avoiding a couple of dirty looks. Trying to ignore them, he turned back to her and, smiling politely as he chewed on the bar, just said: “Tasty, thank you.”

She seemed to beam at him eating.




Meanwhile, the situation aboard the Spirit of Glory was more… uneven.

Survivors of the local ships they had defeated had been taken into captivity, including a number of gremlins – visibly the love-children of pugs, frogs and beetles. Initially they had assumed the creatures were some kind of pet or hazard, until they heard one speak.

Its voice had a short, rasping gumminess to it, and it didn’t speak their language, but after it began pointing out key objects or individuals and repeating terms – and in turn seemed to pick up their own words for those terms with shocking speed – it became apparent that what they were dealing with was a ticket to their real obstacle.

“Hey! Hey!” One of the scholars said approaching one of the gremlins he soon said. “Repeat that for me” He points at a random object.

The gremlin, who was a mottled green fellow with eyes like gravy boats viewed from above, glanced at the loose nutritional packet by the bowl they had given him.

“Nutrient packet,” he said in flawless vusarian, before gesturing to the “bowl.”

Soon he was off, standing slightly hunched over on three of his limbs to use the other three for rapidly pointing out objects one by one – “Cable”, “Monitor”, “Gun”, “Trousers”, “Gremlin”, “Badge”, “Chair” and so on – before at last stopping to stare at the scholar with a sheen to his eyes.

Understanding the possibility one of the scholars quickly grabbed a phone nearby with a voice on the other side saying. “Can I help?” “I request contact with the bridge captain!” The scholar replied to the man on the other side of the call, he seemed to sigh soon saying. “One minute.” After a moment of silence a feminine voice. “Yes?” “We may have figured out a quick way to understand the language of the natives in a shorter time. This may cut our stay time for a while.” He replied, sounding excited, and soon the voice replied. “How long?” “Two weeks I hope…” He replied after a silence he soon heard the woman say. “The captain said go ahead, he is excited.”




Chicago wondered if, in some recess of the mind of an ancestor from what remained of Delhi, they had feared the Gateway. True, they had been escaping the doom of Earth, but…

Now, to be trapped in this cramped, dark hold – sweating and hot with the warmth of dozens of other prisoners from both the station and the captured ships, just barely illuminated by stripes of dim light and the reflective visors and gun-barrels of their captors – he couldn’t help but wonder if they might have been better staying behind.



He glanced over at Amelie and gave her a torn smile – something in the defeated look of her eyes flickered slightly, as she kept her head down. Seeing Harish likewise gave his heart a shot of resolve – if nothing else because an attempt by him to stand up to a guard who had been rummaging through the crew’s things had gotten him a black-eye and a broken nose, and there was a distinctly ‘pissed off’ energy to all of the captives.

...No, he corrected himself, that’s selfish. My ancestors fought to save themselves and their loved ones, and I wouldn’t have lived at all if they hadn’t made it…

The ship rumbled – from the edges of his vision came the spiralled fringe of a kaleidoscope thought lost to time, and just as quickly there was rest and darkness. Wherever they were now, it was not home.

A hand on his shoulder, one that no one else could see or feel.

They survived it. We will survive this.
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Hidden 4 days ago Post by Eldritch Puppy
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Eldritch Puppy

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Overture

Feet-first diving into the unknown.
Kamenymir meets the first of their lost kin.


Featuring @Enigmatik

The man pulled on the ragged cloak tightly around his shivering body. Each step in the knee-deep snow was a struggle, even more so now that he neared the mountain pass. Snow from the withering blizzard had accumulated in solid clumps in his long unkempt blond hair, wild beard and bushy eyebrows, and his skin was purpled by the wind and extreme temperatures.

Cold. Pain. Exhaustion. Willem accepted these gifts of the Almighty; sight alone could not fully appreciate the majesty of His Garden. He murmured a prayer, thanking Him for allowing him to witness such terrible wonder. The words were carried off by the blizzard.

Just as he reached the pass, his body gave in. Willem’s legs buckled under him, and he fell face first in the white snow. Groaning, he tried to get up again. He could not.

“Father! Father Willem!” a woman’s voice called out as it got closer. She was afraid for him. He smiled as gloved hands took hold of him, a pair of figures in winter clothes helping him to his feet. Their faces were hidden by layers of clothes and ski goggles, but he knew who they were: some of his flock, waiting for him at this sacred place. “Thank God, you’ve made it!”

“By His Grace.” Willem managed to utter as Cheslav and Luna hauled him towards a small tent, three pairs of wooden skis placed upright in the snow next to it. The wind died down, almost suddenly. The stars were still visible despite the early morning; Father Willem gazed towards the sky. He’d spent many hours contemplating the constellations, and knew the tiny silver lights like the back of his hand.

And there was a new one.

~~~~~~~~ Meanwhile ~~~~~~~~


An alarm blared on the bridge of the Veiled Meteor. “Seydel, report!” Captain Raina Oleska of the Kamenyan Defense Directorate’s Navy was calm as she addressed her third officer. She’d been captaining the Kobalt-class frigate for two years after graduating top of her class in officer school and serving four exemplary years on a patrol craft. Despite her young age, she had all the bearing of any Navy officer in her form-fitting vac-suit, her fiery orange hair tied in a neat bun to keep it out of the way in the zero-gravity interior of the ship.

The puzzled look of the third officer’s face as he silenced the alarm and watched the sensor screens was unusual, however. He was much older than she was, and a veteran of two decades of patrols. “Captain, energy spike detected… Twenty-one mils high, north-northwest.”

“Weapon discharge?”

“I… I don’t think so, ma’am. Readings don’t match any kind of explosive detonation. And it’s huge, too.” He frowned. “Ma’am, it’s the Gateway.”

Raina stared at the bridge instruments. There would have been total silence if not for the familiar gentle hum of the frigate’s systems. And something else, something… alien. Captain Oleska heard faint music, barely audible. She tried to focus on it and it slipped away.

“Captain?”

Her crew was looking at her expectantly, waiting for orders. She shook herself out of her stupor and had the collected data transmitted to Naval Command. The music was gone.

~~~~~~~~ Two days later ~~~~~~~~


Raina could only imagine the effervescence back on Kamenymir. The reopening of the Gateway carried a million implications and potential consequences; it was all too much. She was thankful that she wouldn’t have to remain with her thoughts alone and could instead focus on her duty. The Veiled Meteor was combat-ready, and the closest frigate to the Gate: Naval Command had ordered her to go through, scout the destination system, make first contact if anyone was alive on the other side, and return with as much information as was safely gathered.

Naval Command had also informed her that the destination system was unknown; the hastily-built interface device aboard her ship was fashioned using the corrupted black box of the original colony ship, whose archived databanks had been partially lost during the Second Shards War. There was no telling which system she and her ship would end up in.

Her musings were interrupted by a transmission from HQ. “Captain Oleska, green light. I repeat, green light. HQ, out.”

“Understood, HQ. Departing at this time, Oleska out.”

Gravity returned to the ship as its engines lit up and pushed it through the Gateway. Raina looked at the glitchy camera feed showing the warping outside, and listened in vain.

~~~~~~~~ On the other side ~~~~~~~~


“Good copy, Rending the Bridge, volleys coming in shortly.” Fang Zhelan gave a nod to the communications officer next to him and brought his focus back to the holographic display before him.

As a child, Fang had always been enamoured with old, pre-CoB films. They were, by the standards of modern entertainment, low quality, but his father, much like he had turned out to be, had an appreciation of the classics. He’d known even then it was farcical - bolts of lasers slowly moving across the screen, ships dramatically going up in fireballs… But it was only here, sitting at the bridge of the Pillars of Unity, did he ever gain a real understanding of just how different reality was.

They were the first wing of the Interplanetary Battlefleet, redeployed to the Gateway to fend off the Shenjian incursion- a full spear-fleet thrust hard into their lines, the largest naval battle the Great Struggle had seen in over a year, and the only sign of it was the bridge staff were more animated than usual - the low hubbub of conversation occasionally interspersed by a louder and terser phrase, the chitter of fingers working against tactile controls and the lit up display before him, the ship’s NCM in its element as it tracked trajectories, marked vectors and flagged concerns almost preternaturally.

But that was just the way things were in a Type 001 Command and Control ship. They were bunkered down far behind the front itself, densely packed amidst a crowd of Type 050s all hammering away with their siege rails, but apart from the small blips on the display, there was no way to know that metre-wide slugs were being shot through the void at impossible speeds.

UNEXPECTED SIGNATURE

The notification jolted him nearly out of his skin. Usually, even the Combat Relay’s alerts weren’t this dramatic, but now his Cognitive Refinement System was drawing his attention to…

“Attention, attention,” he projected his voice across the hubbub. “Reading unexpected ship-sized signatures that just materialised behind the firing line. The Pillars need eyes on it NOW!” His mind - trained to calmly react to even the most unexpected events, raced to try to comprehend the issue.

It couldn’t be a Shenjian craft. They had every single one in two million square kilometres flagged, and this had just appeared there - he’d been staring at the display when it blinked to life. Which meant…

Likely probability: Gateway Arrival. The implant confirmed his immediate conclusion. It seemed that the IDF’s explorations weren’t one-sided then, and this was certainly an entrance to remember.

“Reactor OK.”
“Comms OK.”
“Main battery OK.”

The series of reports from the bridge officers was interrupted by third officer Seydel’s hasty answer. “Multiple unknowns, close range! Multiple weapons discharges- Warships!”

Raina saw the icons appearing on the radar displays at the same time as Seydel did. “Engines to full speed, evasive manoeuvres.” Her heart was almost jumping out of her chest and it was a struggle to keep a level voice. She pressed a button on her touchscreen to broadcast through the ship’s speakers. “All hands, brace for high-G manoeuvres. This is not a drill.”

The Kobalt-class veered into a series of high-speed burns, changing its trajectory randomly. At such close range, there was no possible way that they wouldn’t have been detected, and although no incoming rounds were detected, Raina was not about to take any chances.

“Captain.” Seydel had taken a few minutes to analyse the data feed from the ship’s extensive sensor suite. “They’re not firing at us. There’s another cluster about one and a half mils away, looks like they’re firing in that direction.”

“What?” She looked at the projections again. Well, maybe whoever was out there was conducting live fire exercises. Or… “Did we just arrive in the middle of a war zone?”

Silence.

“Transponder on. Send out pings, they already know we’re here, so let’s try to make sure they don’t point those guns at us next. And broadcast the pre-recorded message.”

Seconds later, the Veiled Meteor began transmitting on a wide array of wavelengths, and in several Old Earth languages: “We come in peace, and greet you on behalf of the Kamenyan Defense Directorate. We are one of the colonies established five hundred years ago, and would like to meet with you, on your own terms.” The message was humorously formal and friendly given the circumstances, but it would hopefully get the idea across.

“Cog-Officer.” Ye Mu’s voice sounded in Fang’s head, even with the cog themself was on the opposite side of the bridge. “They just activated… Best estimation would be a transponder - that’s one lighthouse of a signal. Also… Broadcast coming through to you now.” Sure enough, the message came through just a moment later.

There was a ‘note’ from Ye that they had cut out everything but the original and Mandarin translation of the message, but, well… ‘Archaic’ didn’t seem to do it enough justice. Again, he was reminded of those old films and their antiquated original dialogue, and just like those, it was still somehow more or less understandable despite its age.

The ship’s immediate evasive juking and lack of large-scale weaponry suggested that even if it wasn’t genuine - unlikely probability of message insincerity on large-scale if it wasn’t genuine, the ship didn’t pose a true threat to them.

“Passing main management to you, Cog-Officer.” Fang nodded towards his Deputy Officer, then settled down more firmly into the command chair.

“Cog Ye, get us a proper line of communication with that vessel, and make sure we can get Cog-Commissar-Optimiser Wu to the bridge as quickly as possible.” Another voiceless message between the two.

A few moments later and the Veiled Meteor would receive a promising sign - an attempted two-way communication line.

It did not take much time for the Kamenyan frigate to accept the metaphorical offered hand, opening two-way communications on the same frequency. Raina breathed in and steadied herself, before speaking. “This is the KDDN Veiled Meteor. I am Captain Raina Oleska of the Kamenyan Navy. We did not come here to fight and have no intentions of interfering with your operations, over.”

Her real voice was transmitted first, followed by a series of automated translations. She was very much aware that Kamenyan would be all but incomprehensible to outsiders, and she had other study subjects back in college than just ancient languages. The delay before receiving an answer, if any, was killing her as she and all of her officers felt a knot in their gut.

Fang winced a little as the woman’s voice came through, trying (and failing) to make much sense of the words she spoke. When the translations came through in that same archaic Mandarin, it was a little better, but…

Hm. Reality continued to be duller than his father’s old movies.

Immediate language analysis: Structure - Earth/Qinglong Extinct - Indo-European Language Group - Slavonic & Germanic. Suggest Russian Translation Software.

So that was why it had sounded like a garbled mess. Little use dithering here though, this was an active battlefield and the Veiled Meteor was making itself a very juicy target for any long-range hunters.

“Attention KDDN Veiled Meteor, this is IPC Pillars of Unity of the Qinglong Interplanetary Defence Force. Please dim your transponder and cease all broad-spectrum transmissions immediately, we are currently engaged in active counter-fleet actions. If possible, please move towards the vessel currently transmitting - we will be able to extend the point defence net once you’re closer.”

It would be polite to introduce yourself.

That wasn’t his Combat Relay chiming in there, and for a brief moment Fang paused. He’d been in navy routine so long that it hadn’t occurred to him to introduce himself, but… This was a conversation, wasn’t it? He tapped his teeth together, unusually uncertain, then added: “This is Cog-Officer Fang Zhen speaking.”

A collective sigh of relief washed over the frigate’s bridge. The confirmation that they were indeed butting in on a battlefield was certainly still somewhat unsettling, but at least they wouldn’t get immediately blown up by who knows how many weapons batteries.

“Well, it could be worse.” Raina exhaled and glanced over status reports. “Alright, let’s do what they say. Kill the transponder and the open channels. Helmsman, get us an approach vector on that ship and maintain evasive manoeuvres.”

She pressed the button to send her reply. Her Russian was a little rusty, but she wasn’t writing high-brow poetry here. “Understood, Pillars of Unity. We will meet you soon.” She opened an internal channel after terminating the transmission. “Sergeant, I want your Marines on standby in defensive positions. Have two of your men at the airlock.”

A gruff voice replied. “Yes ma’am. Finger on the trigger?”

“Hold fire, but be ready for anything.”

“Understood, ma’am. Romanov, out.”

While the bridge churned, still occupied with the ongoing battle that silently swirled around them, Fang instead descended down to an area he hadn’t expected to visit for another few months - the mating interface airlock. On the way, he’d picked up company - Cog-Commissar-Optimiser Wu, steel-backed and offering only a clipped nod as she approached, Chief of Security and Petty Officer Tang Bao the Yin Zholou, who gave a brief, quickly returned-and-waved off salute, and a small armsman contingent, and Huo Ning, one of the vessel’s administrative clerks - crucial, but not always at the center of attention when it came to a bustling command hub like the Pillars.

The group assembled up smartly in the entryway, armsmen lining either side in parade stance with their weapons by their sides. Fang, Wu and Tang spread out between them - the Zholou a half-step back, while Huo Ning remained off to one side, already deploying a microdrone and pairing it with her omnilink.

There was a soft thunk as the mating interface locked home, then the crack and hiss of an airlock opening. The three-tone display above the door shifted from red to amber, and then amber to green, and with another hefty crack the bulkhead doors began to ease apart.

A handful of seconds passed before the rhythmic thumping of ridiculously heavy footsteps came from the airlock. A golem of black steel came through, lowering its head to avoid hitting the upper frame of the airlock door as it emerged before the assembled officers. A firearm whose size would have been almost comical were it not for the ease with which the giant handled it was clutched in its hands, finger off the trigger.

As the KDDN Marine corporal stepped to the side and stood at attention, Raina followed in with the typical stride of a military officer, her insignia as Navy captain visible on the chest and shoulders of her vac-suit while the symbol of the KDD was emblazoned right below. Her belt held a sidearm holster, which was empty. The difference in size and especially build, relative to her hosts, was striking, emphasized as it was by her uniform, but she knew this was to be expected.

She raised her right hand for a crisp salute, keeping a carefully neutral expression, however her purple eyes already studied the Quinglongren assembly, lingering over their cybernetic implants. Her hand came back down.

“Captain Raina Oleska, Kamenyan Defense Directorate Navy, commander of the KDDN Veiled Meteor,” she said in her accented Russian. “I must apologise for arriving at such… inappropriate times.”

If the QIDF navycogs were surprised at the marine’s massive frame and colossal equipment, they certainly didn’t show it, even as Fang had to crane his head to meet Raina’s gaze. The officer brought his right hand up like the captain did, but rather than bringing it to his head, instead held his fist at chest height, a serious expression across his face.

“Cog-Officer Fang Zhen, Qinglong Interplanetary Defence Force, Flag Officer of the Pillars of Unity. It is excellent to make your acquaintance.”
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Hidden 4 days ago Post by Enigmatik
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Enigmatik Recently-Medicated Thembie Supreme

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Interlude: Downshifting the Gears

Ye Ai enjoys some well-deserved R&R with her partner.


The Spring Festival was in full swing now - the fireworks were only a few days away, and the streets of Xiwang were alive with preparations and decorations. Paper lanterns lined the exterior of the maglev station, a few excitable figures were already dressed in red and there was a sense of electricity in the air that only began to swirl at this specific time of year. Arrival Day might speak to the cog inside every Qinglongren, but the Spring Festival spoke to the child instead. There was just something special about getting to see parades of dragon dancers lit up and breathing fire.

With a self-conscious brush of her hair and a small smack of her lips, Ye Ai stepped out of the station and craned her head eyes searching for the woman that she was here to meet. Even on the outskirts of Xiwang the crowds were still dense, still fast moving, and still blocking her vision. She bit her lip without realising, then reluctantly sent a ping out. [Chao? Where are you love?]

Message received...
Message received...

Butterflies started to rise up in her stomach. Had she gotten something wrong? Had she misunderstood the date, or the time, or th-

"Boo!" A sharp voice from directly behind her.

"MACHINE!" Practically leaping up, Ai whirled around, only to see the wonderful, bubbly, beautiful face of He "Chao~!" Ai's tone was half-petulant, half-teasing as she reached out, their hands meeting and squeezing tightly around each other before they came in for a quick embrace. "That was mean you know. I was worried!"

"You're always worried. Come on, it shouldn't take us very long at all and I'm excited! I don't know about you, but I haven't been to a zoo since I was undertaking my First Merit." Nodding towards a bank of electric bikes, the pair would go through the usual dance of retrieving and donning all the protective gear, each item's retrieval marked with a faint digital ping as the NCM responsible for managing the kiosk registered them being checked out.

"So... How were the Dizzy Days?" It was the obvious thing to start with - nice, easy, simple small talk as the pair got on their bikes and kicked off, the pair able to cycle side-by-side along the boulevard's broad cycle lane. The answer though... Well, the answer was utterly predictable.

"Only two-years call it ‘dizzy days,’ love. I'm not talking about recal right now. You know it sucks, I know it sucks, everyone knows it sucks. I'm happy to serve, but I will never be happy about recal." A slight sense of weariness came over Chao, as if the mere idea of continuing this train of thought was already bringing the vertigo back. "I don't want to think about service right now Ai. I've got six months before I'm brushing the barrel again and I want to spend as much time as possible just enjoying things."

"But this is the last one, right?" Ai's eyes were big and bright and wide, almost pleading, even if this wasn't the first time they'd discussed it.

"It'll be the last time," Chao nodded sincerely. "Five years is more than long enough for one person to hold the shield. I've already been put in touch with a shooting society based out of a zhongxin not too far from your apartment - they don't need a new trainer right now, but it's still going to be two years until I'm out, so."

Ai let out a slow breath that she hadn't realised she was holding in. "Good. Good. I'm glad. You're moving in, right?"

A soft laugh from the cog-officer. "Of course I am! The only reason I'm not permanently in your apartment is because I'm still technically based out of Datong. Last permanent address and all that. Now, since we've only been talking about me, how's work been treating you?"

"Climbing mountains, fording rivers - the Gateway has led to a huge shakeup. It's not been announced yet, but... Well, it's not classified so I suppose it's ok to tell you. They're forming a new Line for External Affairs. I'm now a full time aide to an Executive-Optimiser, really nice guy actually, and he's supposed to be heading up the whole Line so..."

"Woah! That's huge love! You're only saying this to me now?" The excitement was obvious in Chao's voice.

"Well... I mean... It's not like I've just come back from the fortress..." Ai's defence was weak at best.

"Almost every person has come back from the front Ai, but not many people get put into a brand new Machine Line under an Executive-Optimiser. You should be proud, that's a meritorious moment!" Before the conversation could continue any further though, they had arrived. Xiwang's Zoo of Harmonious Restoration - part public park, part cutting-edge genetics research facility, and one excellent day out if you were so inclined. It dominated the entire block it was in, stretching out across a massive footprint to account for the wide variety of different species. As the pair dismounted and checked their kit back in where it belonged, Ai had just one question:

"So, where do you want to go first?"

"Anywhere but the mammoth exhibit. By the Machine anything but more mammoths."




Interlude: She Was A Day Tripper

The oracle takes some time to dodge any and all responsibilities.
Featuring: Zenith Shamanka


"Are you sure this is a good idea, Zenith?" The young initiate shaman had tied the straps of a bunk around their waist to keep them tethered down and had been mostly successful. Meanwhile, across the cramped room, feet on the ceiling but still meeting him eye-to-eye, the young oracle was busy fiddling with one of the long beaded segments that had been attached to her panoply.

"Look, Comet, I'm an oracle now. That means that I have permission to use ritual substances and to guide others through their use." A small smirk had spread across Zenith's face, the coiled section springing back out and flying about in the microgravity of the room.

"Yeah, but what you're suggesting isn't like... Ritual. At all." The shaman frowned a little.

"Yeah, but they're not going to know that, are they? You're worrying too much, c'mon, don't you want to try? If it comes to it the High Shamanka might get all huffy at me, but what, is some regular dweller going to stop an oracle from using the viewing area?"

"And what are you going to say if they ask you for a revelation once you're done? People believe in you Zenith." Comet sighed and leaned back.

"And I believe in me, but that doesn't mean that every single thing I do has to be dedicated to Uzay. One is meant to walk their own path of understanding, aren't they?" She pushed herself off from the ceiling with a foot and spun in mid-air with a clatter, steadying herself on the bedframe before levering herself down to her knees in front of Comet.

"Look, I'm gonna do it. I'm tired of everything I do being for the benefit of the Khural. I want to experience things Comet. If you don't want to, that's fine by me, but I thought we were getting along! C'moooon, my cousins would have done it..."

The initiate sighed. "Alright, alright, but I maintain for the record that this is a terrible idea." He slowly undid the makeshift seatbelt and pushed himself out of the cubby, Zenith reaching out to grab his wrists and practically haul Comet to his feet. While the initiate went through the process of actually locking up, Zenith sped ahead, making it to the end of the hallway before he'd even had a chance to kick off. By the time she was impatiently tapping elongated fingers against one of the vertical bulkheads that compartmentalised the ship.

"The steed that gallops first may still lose the race," Comet remarked as he caught up, but Zenith cut him off almost as fast.

"Right, we both could have waited for you to lock the door and then for the bulkhead to open. This is just smart delegation."

Comet squinted a little, before simply giggling. "Alright, fine, fair enough."

"You fully on board then?" Zenith raised an eyebrow as she levered herself up and forward, the pair zipping down past the ladder, parting like fish in a school to let a crewmember come shooting past in the opposite direction.

"Yeah, screw it. What's the point of being friends with an oracle if you can't study under them, eh?"

"Exactly!" She jabbed a finger out in approval, before immediately having to drag her fingers against the freezing steel interior to slow herself back down, finishing the move by grabbing onto a handhold, swinging herself back and out of the way as they reached another junction.

When the group of dwellers had passed them by, Zenith swung herself around the edge of the corridor, practically throwing herself back into motion, only an inch away from the ceiling of the thoroughfare. The viewing area was located right at the back of this particular chiefship, the two shamans bracing their arms out to cushion the impact against the doorframe and bring themselves to a stop.

"Khagan's moustache you really don't slow down huh? Feeling a bit manic today, are we?" Comet raised an eyebrow as the pair floated before the entryway.

"Don't even start, I've been playing the role of 'polite and quiet oracle' for weeks at this point, no shit I'm gonna want to move when I can. Anyway, shh!" She waved a hand about to try emphasise the point. "Act natural," Zenith managed in the most composed tone she could, before glancing across to Comet and nearly bursting out into laughter despite herself. "We're just here to do what any shaman can, yeah?"

"I'll keep my mouth shut, oracle," the initiate managed to deadpan.

Zenith swung the door open smoothly and levered herself through it, nodding to the bored-looking house guard tasked with keeping an eye on the viewing platform. He looked near-asleep actually, feet hooked into a pair of straps his short spear wedged against the wall to stop it from floating off. With a start, he pushed himself off from against the wall, shaking his head a little as if to clear a fog.

"Oracle, Shaman." He inclined his head to each one in turn. "You've come at a good time - the viewing room should be available for the next few hours.

"I-" Zenith crushed the giggle that threatened to rise up in her throat. "I will be needing access to the dr-ritual cabinet." The barest incline of her head followed.

"Of course, oracle. I have been advised that we are under slight limitations in varie-"

"That will not be an issue." She was projecting an entirely unwarranted level of confidence given what she was trying to pull off, but it didn't even remotely seem to register with the house guard. Instead, he simply nodded again, then unwound a small key from around his neck and inserted it into a shuttered locker in the entryway, the whole thing rolling up with a whisper-quiet rattle.

Zenith's hands found what she was looking for near-immediately - a soft, brown-green brick wrapped in a thin sheet of plastic that squidged and shifted under her fingers. "My thanks to you. Please, ensure that none disturb us while we meditate."

"Of course, oracle." The guard offered a gentle bow before punching in a code on the keypad that led to the viewing room, leaving the pair of shamans to scootch their way inside. There was a long moment of awkward silence as the door slid shut again, before the oracle finally gave up the act, actually managing a cackle at having gotten away with it.

"Alright, alright. We're good, we're good." Another small giggle slipped free as she moved across to the vaporiser, pulling the cover off the brick of hashish before setting it inside and shutting its door. It sealed itself with a clunk, and all that was left to do was to turn the dial to activate the heating element and hit the button to roll up the shutters, Sol system revealing itself to the pair right as the first whisps of white smoke began to emerge from the vents connected to the vaporiser, a heavy, earthy smell seeping out and into the viewing room.

"So, this was what our ancestors saw, huh? When they left Earth?" Comet pushed forward until he was pressed against the reinforced glass, breath causing it to fog up a little. Before them unfurled the vast, unobstructed breadth of the universe - countless bright, steady pinpricks of starlight, the pale, sweeping river that was the Milky Way and the steady glow of planets.

"Woah..." Zenith's eyes widened a little and she took a sharp in-breath, before near-immediately spluttering as the vapour worked its way past her lungs.

"Uzay's fire please tell me this isn't the first time you've done this..." Comet turned, the look on the oracle's face saying absolutely everything he needed to know. "Oh boy alright..."

"What? Come on, c'mere." Zenith reached a hand out and, after a brief moment of consideration, the initiate took it, warmth pressing against warmth.

For a long time the pair would simply float there, suspended amidst the stars, bloodshot eyes soaking in Uzay's majesty.
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Hidden 3 days ago Post by Eventua
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Eventua

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A collaboration between @Enigmatik and Eventua, presenting...

The Voice of the People Extends a Helping Hand

Guan Liang and the away team make unexpected contact with a most unfortunate group of an equally unfortunate nation.
Featuring Cog-Ace Guan Liang and ‘Captain’ Vasir


The away team had spent three long hours at Tranquility Base. After the strange figures from the Khaganate had left, the crew had taken their time gathering information. The footsteps, the flags, the signs of repeated landings… And then the memorial.

Liang’s eyes couldn’t help but linger on it, even as the other cogs slowly began to make their way back towards the Veined Jay. They chewed it over slowly in their mind- the sleek steel, unblemished by air but scratched by the regolith. The symbols of eras passed into mythology, states that no longer existed, from a planet that no longer lived.

Beneath each one of the five pillars was set a plaque, and on each plaque the same message was repeated, in five different languages. The Qinglongren hadn’t needed a translation for the first one. Five different dates, five different crews, from Armstrong to Singh. Five groups that had reached across the gap of time and space to plant their flags on the soil of Mare Tranquillitatis.

A triumph, Liang thought quietly to themselves. The weight of history indeed.

Just as they were about to finally turn, to slip back into the shuttle and ascend back to the carrier bay of the Voice of the People, something else occurred to them. Above the pillars, barely perceptible against the void but distinctly there, faint and hazy… Smoke.

The veteran didn’t waste a single movement as they strode towards the shuttle. “Cog-Pilot, looks like a smoke trail on your seven - likely downed craft.”




Red lights, red fluid, red noise.

The alert was incessant, reverberating through the man’s ears like a street dog begging for scraps. He winced as he lifted his head, mind racing to sort through the noise and delirium, and raised a shaking hand to feel the warmth and damp that was obscuring his right eye-

Sharpness, steel, and an audible sting as he felt a loose fragment from something – a door? part of a terminal? – lodged into his skull.

Wh-what, we… his thoughts were swimming, something faintly green mixing in at the periphery of his vision, ...what happened-

Son!, rang in his ears, a clarion call, we must act!

Blink, he thought, and he did, and act.

He reached down, fingers feeling to unstrap the harness. The stickiness of something soaking into the dark of his uniform left a hollow feeling in his gut, but he couldn’t wait – there were other faces here. Unconscious, but… breathing? The buckle unstrapped as he stretched his spine, forced himself on wobbling legs to stand upright. He felt a shudder move up his leg as his body felt lighter than before, but he had some strength left in him to try and position himself.

Gravity’s weaker… we’ve landed on an object, his mind racing for the images of the view screen before everything went dark, Earth’s moon.

He felt a bitterness in his mouth as he glanced at the various members of the bridge crew – vitals would need checking soon but right now he had to get a distress signal out and assess the basics. At the back of his brain, he felt where his gestalt access was still dimly connected to the ship’s intelligence by a few thin mycelial tendrils.

Damage… report… his mind echoed, and his father’s ghost repeated for emphasis. There was the sense of several consciousnesses competing within his own, his mind’s eye temporarily clouding out his view of the bridge.

Life support: 86%, Stabl- 85%, Stabl- 84%, Stabl- 83%, Stabl-.

He was going to be sick.

Blink, he thought, Blink, focus, other systems report, and quickly!

Thrusters: 0%. Defences: 5%. Structural Integrity: 17%. Electronics: 26%.



Fusion stability: 34%.


He gasped, his breath shorter now. No wonder life support was falling so quickly, the rest of the ship couldn’t be more than a broken skeleton wrapped around a damaged heart and a handful of muscles at this point.

Distress, please, send a-

In progress, Captain Vasir.

He couldn’t help but squint at that.

Captain…? I’m-

All indications suggest the captain is dead, and all other coordinator-qualified crew are dead or incapacitated. Congratulations on the promotion, and we recommend that your first course of action is stabilizing other bridge crew members.

He blinked, took a deep breath, and nodded.

Get to work, he thought, and so he did.




The red alert went out, a simple looping signal that military historians may have recognised as the ‘S.O.S.’ of old Earth.

The air between the Veined Jay and the Voice of the People lit up with communications. Information swirled about like clouds in a storm, the entire apparatus of the Accord’s finest diplomatic vessel rerouted to see what they could possibly do in this moment.

As the shuttle itself lifted off the surface of Luna and tore across the sky, the response came back towards the Rite of Passage. It came in dots and dashes, a frantic series of beeps to respond to their own dull, looping, three-letter structure.

H-E-L-P I-S C-O-M-I-N-G

“We’re on limited air,” Guan Liang noted somberly. “And there may not be additional room inside the shuttle…”

“You needn’t fear Cog-Ace.” The marine officer offered a reassuring reply. “We’ve been connected to life support during the excursion, and we’re carrying military loads. Eight hours of air is more than enough.”

A crackle came through the passenger bay as the pilot engaged the intercom system, then immediately, “Apologies for that.” It cut for a second, then returned. “I’ve received instructions from the Voice of the People. We’re to lend as much aid as we can, and if their craft is fully disabled, we’re to invite them aboard and return them to the Voice. Additional shuttles are being scrambled if they’re required.”

A few nods spread across the seated suits. “I’m fully throttling our omnilink connection to the Voice. If you haven’t already, please make sure you’ve installed all relevant translations and linguistic information before we touch down.” The craft banked a little.

“Spotted the crash site now. Putting us down.”

It was self-evident that the ship they were attending to was little more than scrap at this point – green and faintly triangular, the powerful ion thrusters built into its sides and rear had been partially torn through in the impact, and some kind of large hole had been smashed out of the side of the vessel… seemingly from the inside? In its emergency descent the cavity in its side had stretched and torn, leaving the ship almost split in half, internal modules and rooms having sealed shut as part of an emergency effort to prevent shipwide decompression.

The scars of lunar dust and its sudden crash into the valley-like walls of the crater had torn much of its markings and external components, its main airlock or docking systems buried under its own weight or torn and scattered around the main piece of the corpse.

The Veined Jay landed smoothly, the marines unclipping themselves and standing ready by the exit. As soon as the door had swung open, they moved out with purpose, bounding across the lunar regolith with purpose and speed, a few members of the Luna delegation following behind them. The cogs of the Accord took in the scene with somber recognition, eyes scanning across the wreckage, and…

Most sickening of all: the bodies – cold and hollow, with exosuits or helmets split during the impact, scattered around the crater or the trail it had carved into the ground. Others, meanwhile, were halfway dressed in their exosuits, eyes bulging with shock as their last moments had been the realization of their own fatal delay.

There was no time to delay and mourn the fallen though. Every member of the crew had seen combat, had seen blood and ruin and twisted, mangled steel. Some marines stopped, checking on bodies, closing eyes and moving through the wreckage smoothly and effectively despite having to adjust for Luna’s lighter gravity.

Their search was not in vain, however, for somebody… no, something, was waving at them from one of the wreckage’s openings into the vacuum. The figure – blocky, mechanical, with an opaque steel dome for a helmet and a body of steel and polyester, waved an awkward hand and blinked an array of colourful lights at them. It sat upright, but appeared to make no motion to stand to its full height or move itself closer to its would-be rescuers.

One of the marines paused for a moment, then gestured across to the opening, before closing the distance towards the synthetic survivor. Without fanfare, three more soldiers pushed on, while the one attending to the robot gestured across to the Veined Jay, clenching and unclenching their fist rapidly to try to communicate in morse.

The blocky machine tilted itself slightly, as if in thought, before the lights on its front responded in turn.

“NO LEGS. CAN’T SIGNAL CREW. RADIO LOST. HELP CREW.”

As it pointed at itself, where the impact had crushed its lower limbs. Attempting to lift itself on rounded arms, what remained of its lower joints were twisted out from under it and tightly sealed beneath a partially smashed in door.

The hand signals continued. “C-O-P-Y T-H-A-T. T-E-A-M W-I-L-L R-E-N-D-E-R A-S-S-I-S-S-T-A-N-C-E.” There was a slight, almost darkly comedic moment as the marine shook his hand out a little, trying to work the tension out of it. “T-A-K-E Y-O-U I-N-T-O S-H-U-T-T-L-E”

“YES. THANK YOU. SORRY ABOUT YOUR HAND.”

It gave an oversized shrug, before pointing behind it and above, to what appeared to be a sealed vent on the ceiling. Looking towards the pair, the marines headed towards it, one reaching out to hammer on it in a rhythm that had survived half a millenia - The old ‘shave-and-a-haircut.’

There was a pause, the sound of something faintly rummaging and knocking against the distant inside of the vent.

For several minutes there was no clear response, before at last they heard something beyond the sealed vent click open. Finally, there was a simple, evenly measured ‘thump thump’ in response.

There was some kind of beep, a short-range transmission trying to come through in their direction.

“Hello…? Can you hear us? This is, uh… Captain- acting Captain, Vasir, of the GN Rite of Passage. Are you from the Tranquil Watcher?”

There was a slightly startled moment from the marine as he realised that he understood the man, but he pressed on nonetheless. The first communication attempt with Vasir lead to nothing but static, but then…

“Greetings Actin-g Captain V-Vasir?” The voice sounded like it was swallowing half its words, clearly not used to speaking English. “Negative, we are marines from the IPC Voice of the People” there was a moment mid-sentence where the voice seemed to shift, the Mandarin accent fading and an odd twang- similar to Vasir’s own voice, entered his tone. “We saw your distress signal and came to render aid. Are you injured? Is it safe to break the pressure seal?”

“Oh, I…” there was a pause, confusion clear in Vasir’s voice, before a simple “I see, yes,” came through. There was another pause, and the sound of somebody close by gasping for breath.

“Please help us, we have limited airflow control and will soon be on emergency oxygen. There’s about six of us here, but one of our exosuits is unusable and another has some damage we’re trying to patch up. Do you have some kind of shuttle or transport we can use to make contact with the Tranquil Watcher?”

“Copy that, Captain Vasir. We have a pressurised shuttle nearby which we can use to transport you off Luna, medical supplies and patch kits for damaged suits. If there are interior divisions, we’d recommend taking refuge in them now as we breach.” A long breath and some rustling echoed across the communications link. “Stay strong, stay united, stay harmonious. We’re coming in.”

“Thank you. Everybody, exosuits and emergency chambers now!




Meanwhile, the small shuttle they had arrived on was facing an altogether different issue. Its sensor suite had lit up with approximately nine ships worth of contacts, evenly spaced in such a way that the largest signatures were based at the ‘front’, were converging on Luna – and at least a few of those at the rear of the fleet appeared to be armed.

The pilot checked, then double-checked the scanning systems, then physically leaned forward in the cockpit and looked up. For a moment even their trained efficiency gave way to apprehension, and their head whipped towards their communications suite as it lit up with an incoming signal.

It had arrived from from the largest of the rear vessels, a broadcast in multiple languages.

“This is Captain Aurida on behalf of the Pillars of Avalon and the Annwn System. We were set to make contact at these coordinates with ships from our system and sensors indicate they have suffered critical damage in line with ship-to-ship weaponry. If you are found responsible, we will take retaliatory action.”

There was no response from the Veined Jay. Instead, from above, looming large in Luna’s orbit, a much, much more high-energy communications line was opened up from the Voice of the People, in that same, odd synthesis of Qinglong Mandarin and Avalonian English. “Greetings. This is Cog-Officer Cao Zhong, Captain of the IPC Voice of the People, official diplomatic vessel of the Executive Machine of the Qinglong Accord. We are unaware of your people or any combat that has occurred that would lead to a ship’s destruction - our shuttle was carrying out a scheduled exploration mission when we received an SoS, and we have moved to lend assistance in line with emergency protocols. We do not mount offensive weapons. We are not involved in this. We only seek to do what any civilised people ought to upon receiving a distress signal.”

There was an unpleasantly long pause, the fleet continuing to move with steady determination. The usual delay of space communication appeared to drag on, the response slower than hoped – debate, they could hope, rather than preparing for an attack.

Finally, after several more agonizing minutes, their sensors could detect weapon systems cooling down from the rear vessels, though the formation remained and sensors suggested some kind of small dispersed objects close to the largest signatures. From such a long distance they read like a swarm of bees around a hive, but details were hard to parse.

Cao Zhong frowned a little. They knew those signatures - that swarm of faint dispersed objects surrounding a controller. Drone swarms. These ‘Pillars of Avalon’ had come ready for conflict, and the Voice had nothing to retaliate with if they decided the ship was a threat.

“...If this is true, thank you for your assistance. Are you able to transmit contact with survivors of either the GN Rite of Passage or the Tranquil Watcher? Both should have been in range to make contact with Earth’s moon but we have lost long-range transmission with them and suspect they are limited to the last remaining emergency systems.”

“Negative Captain Aurida. We were transporting an honour guard of marines who have initiated the rescue of your people. Unfortunately, the Veined Jay is not designed for large-scale crisis response and will not be able to dock with your vessels, nor does it have our communications suite available to it.” There was a pause as the line unexpectedly went on hold, then - “I am being encouraged by the cog-diplomats aboard to formally invite you and your crew aboard. I appreciate this may not be the right moment for it, but I assure you that we only wish to help.”

Another long pause followed, though clearly the delay was less a result of travel times as they steadily drew closer and closer… and one of the swarms, meanwhile, had started to stretch beyond the reach of the fleet. One minute, two minutes, and it was clear now that it was accelerating at significant speeds. Collision, if such was the intention, would happen in less than twenty minutes.

Cao’s hand shifted to hover over the button that would signal a red alert across the Voice. They held their breath for a moment until…

“We have dispatched drones from one of the forward carriers to assist in the rescue effort, and…” another brief pause, much shorter this time, “...thank you for the kind offer. Once we are within effective shuttle distance we will send envoys to your vessel.”




There was now a slightly awkward problem inside the Veined Jay as the marines escorted the survivors towards the shuttle. First had come the hobot, hefted over the marine’s back like a rucksack, and calmly set down against the farthest wall. Then, one by one came the rest of the Rite of Passage’s crew, assisted and carried out of the wreckage and towards the small, sleek ship.

By the time it was all done, an obvious problem had emerged - there were too few seats to take everyone.

Captain Vasir stood by the shuttle, helping the marine carry up one of the crew whose leg had been badly broken, the bleeding stemmed with the help of a Qinglong medic. Now he was stood here, the last survivor clad in one of the emergency ‘aerosuits’ that were packaged as an absolute last resort when all exosuits were gone – effectively little more than an insulated diving suit with an oxygen tank, only useful for spending maybe an hour in vacuum before lack of oxygen and the cold alike would become too much.

“Thank you,” he spoke through a wrist-tied radio tuned to their frequency, already shivering from the walk, “your kindness… please get them to safety. I can wait here until the rest of our ships arrive.”

Liar, Vasir thought to himself, the fusion reactor has twenty minutes, if that.

One of the figures inside - identical on the outside, reached up to their helmet and slid the polarising lens of their helmet up. Inside, behind the pristine exterior of their softsuit stood someone old enough to be Vasir’s grandfather. An old, worn veteran nodded seriously at Vasir, then extended their hand to shake. “Captain Vasir, I am Cog-Ace Guan Liang, one of the diplomatic crew aboard our carrier vessel. It’s a pleasure to make your acquaintance.”

Vasir’s grip was firm in turn, but something in his eyes seemed almost baffled at seeing Liang’s face.

Around them, the rest of the crew was clearly caught up in a conversation. After a few moments of debate, one of the marines turned towards Vasir. “Acting Captain, please board the shuttle. We’ve been connected to life support for more than three hours and have nearly full air loads. We can safely remain behind, the Blue Peacock has already been scrambled and can pick us up in less than fifteen minutes. Do you have any preference for how we handle the deceased?”

Vasir’s eyes went wide at the offer.

“That’s… that’s too dangerous, I can’t ask you all to stay, uh-”

He paused, his father’s echo in the back of his mind: Don’t be a fool. They know what they’re doing.

“-sorry, thank you. If possible, please collect the bodies, but… don’t risk your own lives for ashes. We all volunteered for this, to see Earth, it’s…” he gritted his teeth and sighed, “There are worse places to rest.”

“Copy.” The marine nodded. “We’ll collect and organise them as best we can, and leave them for your people to recover.” Behind him, one of the marines reached into an overhead locker and retrieved what appeared to be several folded sections of reflective foil. As the rest of the squad headed out, the officer gave one last firm salute - a fist brought to collar height, then headed out, the Veined Jay’s engines picking up after two sharp raps on the exterior hull.

Vasir was still watching the marines head out, his awkward attempt at mimicking their salute having faded away, his mind racing with questions, before at last he shook himself into the present and turned to look back at his rescuer.

As they began their ascent, Liang turned back towards Vasir. “My compliments to you and your people captain. That can’t have been an easy crash to walk away from. “I’m glad we could render assistance.”

In that moment, it was crystal clear beyond the clear plastic of his mask, that he was a young man despite his height, slightly built and round in the face that revealed he couldn’t be more than his early twenties. The cold was clinging to the sweat around his eyes, nose and lips, and his skin had turned pallid as he followed into the vessel, the doors closing behind them.

“Thank you, sir. I wish it hadn’t been needed, but… thank you.”
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