Terminus
They had been poets, once.
As he looked out from Terminus Baran at the twinkling lights as far as the eye could perceive, he couldn’t help but consider the irony in that. All over the planet, machines that had lain dormant for thousands upon thousands of years lurched once more to life. The entire world had seemingly sprung back to life in the past few weeks, like some unimaginably large machine.
Terminus was, in many ways quite literally, a time capsule, containing the pinnacle of the ancient Gree Imperium’s glory. It was a monument to their achievements as a race, a suspension of culture moments before its downfall, historically speaking.
But they had not always been this way.
So much had been lost in the mists of time, as all species eventually lose sight of their origins. So many planets, a race that had spread through nearly half the galaxy, seen races long past their peak in their infancy; how could they have possibly preserved their past in detail?
Yet somehow, the Apocrypha had survived. Its continued existence was a marvel to him. The collected writings must have been banned thousands of times throughout the existence of the Imperium, and unbanned just as many. Terminus contained, amongst its other treasures, the oldest surviving copy, now a relic sealed in vacuum for fear that mere contact with any atmosphere might dissolve it completely.
He had read it once, in his youth. It had piqued his interest, to be sure, but no more than an idle fancy. With writing so old, how could one be sure of the truth of any of it? A simple mistranslation here, a few pages lost there and rewritten…a year ago, he had known of no one on the planet who seriously believed a word of it.
In the past month, he had reread it maybe a few dozen times, and still he did not know what to think. But this much was true.
The Cree’Ar were their brothers.
Cyur Ator stood there, staring out at a dazzling array of lights in the distance. He had been forced to dim the settings on the window to stare at it without discomfort. It was the construction site, he knew, for the latest Baran. Before containment had been lifted, Terminus had only two others in its service, gathering dust in the shipyards.
Now, eleven orbited the planet. This would be the thirteenth in total.
The lights stretched endlessly into the distance. Even from the tower, he knew that even at the horizon they did not end. This Baran would be different from the others. It was nearly twice their size, and as he watched he knew it was being outfitted with the best weaponry Terminus had to offer. This Baran would not be named after its Operator, as was custom. For the first time in thousands upon thousands of years, this one would be named Gree Baran, flagship of his people.
This Baran would be his to command.
He hung his head.
One of his tentacles clutched at a datapad, now hanging limply at his side. Upon it, his personal copy of the Apocrypha lay open, a single verse highlighted. The text had been translated into Gree many years ago, but Cyur Ator’s copy was nonetheless in the Old Tongue, the study of which had been a hobby of his once upon a time.
The verse read:
Suffer them not to lead you astray, for in their eyes you will see yourselves, but behind their backs they will hold daggers. And you will fall by the edge of their swords, and they will lead you unto ruin. Forgive them, for they have lost the way, their God has turned to ash, their worship has led them to madness. They have forgotten gree. They will bring nothing but fire and war, that is all they know.
He had been working on translating the text on his own, in an effort to understand it as best he could. He glanced down at the text once more, and his eyes widened slightly in mild surprise. He had missed a word in the highlighted verse, a word so natural to his vocabulary that he had forgotten to translate it.
With a tentacle, he deleted, symbol by symbol, the word…
gree
…and replaced it with the correct translation from the Old Tongue…
peace
Looking back out the window at the Baran, he smiled sadly. The translation was complete, but it gave him no comfort. He felt he understood no better than he had before he had begun. A pact had been made. What were they doing here? Had their brothers forgotten the protocols? Or had the ancient Imperium’s relay stations truly failed?
Cyur Ator shook his head. He couldn’t believe that. Unless every one of them had been vaporized, the Cree’Ar would have picked up a signal. It was written into the satellite’s base protocols. No, he must assume they had ignored them. Which could mean only one thing…
They had finally lost their last shreds of sanity as a people. Now, even fratricide was the divine will of their Borleas Quayvar. And if that were the case, he had been right in telling Rokak'k that they would need help.
They had been poets once, but no longer.
Now, they were warriors; lost in time, fighting the last battle of one of the greatest empires to span the galaxy. A last, desperate, hopeless battle of survival, of cultural legacy. And now, it seemed, a battle of life and death.
One last time he gazed out the window, but not at the lights below. A tentacle stretched out and toggled several controls, the musical notes humming as the lights on the planet began to fade. If Cyur Ator hadn’t known better, he’d say the planet had shut itself down, but he had merely instructed the window to block them out. His eyes stretched upward, toward the night sky.
Every night, he gazed out at the stars. They were more beautiful than he had ever imagined they could be. And upon completion of Gree Baran, he would be seeing a lot more of them.
Their fate may very well lie in the hands of Men.
Bonadan
If Etti-IV was the newly reformed Republic’s beating heart, Bonadan was its pockets.
For years, the industrious world had dominated the Corporate Sector, until recently ruled by Seth Vinda’s iron fist. He had brought the words ‘benevolent dictator’ into the galactic economy’s dictionary, and it was perhaps the proverbial feather in his reputation’s cap that in the end, the only man that had been able to topple his base of power was himself.
And he had only done that to play a new game, to dominate a new field, that of politics. After his bid for Congress, many had said that Seth Vinda had gone down in the world, morally speaking.
Yet Vinda Corp. still flourished on its homeworld, providing the Republic with quite possibly the strongest economy of any current political entity in the galaxy. Thousands upon thousands of vessels made their way to and from the surface of the world every day, keeping the whole show going. Ships of all shapes and sizes, modifications and aesthetic touch-ups; everything you could imagine and quite a few things you couldn’t, all found docked in the myriad spaceports throughout the planet or on an entry/exit vector.
In fact, so diverse was Bonadan, so much had it seen, that when the nine thousand meter long Gree warship appeared, not reverted from hyperspace, simply appeared in orbit around the world, people could say in the days and weeks following that this had been the second time some strange, massive alien construct had decided to plant roots in the system.
Unlike the Astral Astoria, however, the Gree Baran had no intention of staying any longer than was necessary. And, as soon as it had been conveyed to several Bonadan communications officers in varying degrees of hysterics that their intentions were peaceful and that all they sought was an audience with one particular, if not auspicious, individual planetside, the scrambled fighters were waved off and arrangements were made for transport.
“Do you think we should have made an appointment?” Cyur Ator asked, eliciting the Gree equivalent of a snicker from his compatriot.
“If this…Sethvind’a’s reputation is correct, I am sure he could have afforded us some time as early as next year,” Rokak'k replied, and for a while the two’s tentacles quivered in laughter. As it subsided, the Gree Operator took on a more somber tone, “I must ask, my friend, why Bonadan? Why Sethvind’a? Should we not have headed to the center of their government?”
“I have studied human mannerisms much these past few weeks,” Cyur Ator replied, nodding in acknowledgment of the other’s concerns, “Arriving at the base of their government’s power in such a vessel could be misconstrued as a threat. A businessman such as Sethvind’a, however, will see it for what it truly is.”
“And that is?” Rokak'k ask, curious.
Cyur Ator glanced at the other slyly.
“A negotiating tactic.”
They had been poets, once.
As he looked out from Terminus Baran at the twinkling lights as far as the eye could perceive, he couldn’t help but consider the irony in that. All over the planet, machines that had lain dormant for thousands upon thousands of years lurched once more to life. The entire world had seemingly sprung back to life in the past few weeks, like some unimaginably large machine.
Terminus was, in many ways quite literally, a time capsule, containing the pinnacle of the ancient Gree Imperium’s glory. It was a monument to their achievements as a race, a suspension of culture moments before its downfall, historically speaking.
But they had not always been this way.
So much had been lost in the mists of time, as all species eventually lose sight of their origins. So many planets, a race that had spread through nearly half the galaxy, seen races long past their peak in their infancy; how could they have possibly preserved their past in detail?
Yet somehow, the Apocrypha had survived. Its continued existence was a marvel to him. The collected writings must have been banned thousands of times throughout the existence of the Imperium, and unbanned just as many. Terminus contained, amongst its other treasures, the oldest surviving copy, now a relic sealed in vacuum for fear that mere contact with any atmosphere might dissolve it completely.
He had read it once, in his youth. It had piqued his interest, to be sure, but no more than an idle fancy. With writing so old, how could one be sure of the truth of any of it? A simple mistranslation here, a few pages lost there and rewritten…a year ago, he had known of no one on the planet who seriously believed a word of it.
In the past month, he had reread it maybe a few dozen times, and still he did not know what to think. But this much was true.
The Cree’Ar were their brothers.
Cyur Ator stood there, staring out at a dazzling array of lights in the distance. He had been forced to dim the settings on the window to stare at it without discomfort. It was the construction site, he knew, for the latest Baran. Before containment had been lifted, Terminus had only two others in its service, gathering dust in the shipyards.
Now, eleven orbited the planet. This would be the thirteenth in total.
The lights stretched endlessly into the distance. Even from the tower, he knew that even at the horizon they did not end. This Baran would be different from the others. It was nearly twice their size, and as he watched he knew it was being outfitted with the best weaponry Terminus had to offer. This Baran would not be named after its Operator, as was custom. For the first time in thousands upon thousands of years, this one would be named Gree Baran, flagship of his people.
This Baran would be his to command.
He hung his head.
One of his tentacles clutched at a datapad, now hanging limply at his side. Upon it, his personal copy of the Apocrypha lay open, a single verse highlighted. The text had been translated into Gree many years ago, but Cyur Ator’s copy was nonetheless in the Old Tongue, the study of which had been a hobby of his once upon a time.
The verse read:
Suffer them not to lead you astray, for in their eyes you will see yourselves, but behind their backs they will hold daggers. And you will fall by the edge of their swords, and they will lead you unto ruin. Forgive them, for they have lost the way, their God has turned to ash, their worship has led them to madness. They have forgotten gree. They will bring nothing but fire and war, that is all they know.
He had been working on translating the text on his own, in an effort to understand it as best he could. He glanced down at the text once more, and his eyes widened slightly in mild surprise. He had missed a word in the highlighted verse, a word so natural to his vocabulary that he had forgotten to translate it.
With a tentacle, he deleted, symbol by symbol, the word…
gree
…and replaced it with the correct translation from the Old Tongue…
peace
Looking back out the window at the Baran, he smiled sadly. The translation was complete, but it gave him no comfort. He felt he understood no better than he had before he had begun. A pact had been made. What were they doing here? Had their brothers forgotten the protocols? Or had the ancient Imperium’s relay stations truly failed?
Cyur Ator shook his head. He couldn’t believe that. Unless every one of them had been vaporized, the Cree’Ar would have picked up a signal. It was written into the satellite’s base protocols. No, he must assume they had ignored them. Which could mean only one thing…
They had finally lost their last shreds of sanity as a people. Now, even fratricide was the divine will of their Borleas Quayvar. And if that were the case, he had been right in telling Rokak'k that they would need help.
They had been poets once, but no longer.
Now, they were warriors; lost in time, fighting the last battle of one of the greatest empires to span the galaxy. A last, desperate, hopeless battle of survival, of cultural legacy. And now, it seemed, a battle of life and death.
One last time he gazed out the window, but not at the lights below. A tentacle stretched out and toggled several controls, the musical notes humming as the lights on the planet began to fade. If Cyur Ator hadn’t known better, he’d say the planet had shut itself down, but he had merely instructed the window to block them out. His eyes stretched upward, toward the night sky.
Every night, he gazed out at the stars. They were more beautiful than he had ever imagined they could be. And upon completion of Gree Baran, he would be seeing a lot more of them.
Their fate may very well lie in the hands of Men.
Bonadan
If Etti-IV was the newly reformed Republic’s beating heart, Bonadan was its pockets.
For years, the industrious world had dominated the Corporate Sector, until recently ruled by Seth Vinda’s iron fist. He had brought the words ‘benevolent dictator’ into the galactic economy’s dictionary, and it was perhaps the proverbial feather in his reputation’s cap that in the end, the only man that had been able to topple his base of power was himself.
And he had only done that to play a new game, to dominate a new field, that of politics. After his bid for Congress, many had said that Seth Vinda had gone down in the world, morally speaking.
Yet Vinda Corp. still flourished on its homeworld, providing the Republic with quite possibly the strongest economy of any current political entity in the galaxy. Thousands upon thousands of vessels made their way to and from the surface of the world every day, keeping the whole show going. Ships of all shapes and sizes, modifications and aesthetic touch-ups; everything you could imagine and quite a few things you couldn’t, all found docked in the myriad spaceports throughout the planet or on an entry/exit vector.
In fact, so diverse was Bonadan, so much had it seen, that when the nine thousand meter long Gree warship appeared, not reverted from hyperspace, simply appeared in orbit around the world, people could say in the days and weeks following that this had been the second time some strange, massive alien construct had decided to plant roots in the system.
Unlike the Astral Astoria, however, the Gree Baran had no intention of staying any longer than was necessary. And, as soon as it had been conveyed to several Bonadan communications officers in varying degrees of hysterics that their intentions were peaceful and that all they sought was an audience with one particular, if not auspicious, individual planetside, the scrambled fighters were waved off and arrangements were made for transport.
“Do you think we should have made an appointment?” Cyur Ator asked, eliciting the Gree equivalent of a snicker from his compatriot.
“If this…Sethvind’a’s reputation is correct, I am sure he could have afforded us some time as early as next year,” Rokak'k replied, and for a while the two’s tentacles quivered in laughter. As it subsided, the Gree Operator took on a more somber tone, “I must ask, my friend, why Bonadan? Why Sethvind’a? Should we not have headed to the center of their government?”
“I have studied human mannerisms much these past few weeks,” Cyur Ator replied, nodding in acknowledgment of the other’s concerns, “Arriving at the base of their government’s power in such a vessel could be misconstrued as a threat. A businessman such as Sethvind’a, however, will see it for what it truly is.”
“And that is?” Rokak'k ask, curious.
Cyur Ator glanced at the other slyly.
“A negotiating tactic.”