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  #31  
Old June 8th, 2005, 05:51 AM
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-----CHAPTER FIVE: CHASE-----

“Second Wing, left flank, fire all torpedoes! Third Wing, form up, right flank, fire all flak lasers!”
“Second Wing copies! Torpedoes away! Half of ‘em have hit all these rocks!”
“Third Wing! She’s hiding behind some large asteroids! We can’t get a clear shot!”
“That’s why I hate fighting in an asteroid field..... Third Wing to left flank, fire! Fourth Wing, vertical echelon, pursue!”
“Fourth Wing! She’s dropping seismic charges! She’s drop–”
“Fourth Wing lost! Second Wing, scatter cone, pursue!”
“She’s launching cluster torpedoes! Breaking off! Repeat, breaking off!”
“Third Wing, take down those torps, then form up behind me!”
“No can do, sir! Torps’ve already split up, we can’t stop ‘em anymore! Forming up!”
“Second Wing taking losses!”
“First Wing calling base, come in base!”
“First Wing, this is base. Pull back, repeat pull back. We’re sending Hunter squadrons after her. Pull back!”

Tamarillho had found a way to monitor the military comms frequencies without being noticed. This proved to be very handy.

Though she didn’t know what Hunter squadrons were, she knew, regarding her situation of being in an asteroid belt, having just destroyed several high-quality fighters and forcing the rest to break off their attack, it would spell trouble.

Big trouble.

A squadron of fifteen small fighters appeared on her scanner viewscreen. The speed with which they moved and the uncanny maneuverability of the fighters in the rather dense asteroid belt caused a slight hint of sheer terror to appear in Tamarillho.

She struggled to find the frequency these fighters communicated on. She found it. Robotic computer sounds. Not good.

The pack of fighters soon caught up with her. Risking a look backwards, Tamarillho saw a sleek black fighter with an approximate conical shape and a sleek bluish engine trail. As it easily flew past a largish asteroid, it performed a barrel roll. No cockpit window. No pilot hatch. Just two sleek weapons mounted on what seemed to be the underside of the nose of the fighter.

She was being chased by a squadron of robotic fighters designed specifically for work inside asteroid belts.

“OK, so you may be built for work in these bloody rock-infested regions, but can you handle a few tricks of a human mind?”

She still had three of her five seismic charges left, and eighteen of her twenty cluster torpedoes. Weighing in at ten small torpedoes per cluster torp, this was quite an arsenal, though she knew not to waste it unless there was a very good reason to. For all she knew, there might be hundreds more Hunters coming her way, out of her scanner range.

However, losing the squadron of fighters was hard. They hadn’t fired yet, but that was probably because they were still in an area with a rather high asteroid density. The fighters were clearly trying to drive her to open space, like a group of cowboys chasing a cow into an enclosure. Spotting this threat, Tamarillho took her chances and ducked straight down, away from the ecliptic plane. The fighters, after a moment’s consideration, followed her. Now, they seemed to be simply hanging on to her, following her until a new opportunity arose for them to drive her into a clear space. She wouldn’t give them that opportunity. Not if it was up to her.

However, she soon noticed a lightly dense dust cloud in an otherwise empty region, probably the site where a large asteroid had been mined to dust. The fighters went into a tighter formation and started closing in. There was no clear way to evade flying into the dust cloud, so Tamarillho had to take action.

The fighters pulled closer together and prepared for the kill.
“Come on, come on, just a little bit closer..... GOTCHA!”
Just at the edge of the dust cloud, Tamarillho dropped one of her three remaining seismic charges at almost point-blank range. The fighters had little or no time to evade. Ten of the fifteen fighters perished in the explosion, the remaining five scattered in all directions. The shockwave of the blast sent Tamarillho’s fighter spinning straight in the direction of a large asteroid. She stabilized her fighter with the nose pointing approximately downward regarding her previous course. She fired up her afterburners and narrowly avoided scraping the asteroid. She needed a new trap, a new place where she could easily take out her pursuers.

Four more squadrons suddenly appeared on her scanner viewscreen, closing in fast. The five remaining fighters of the first squadron pulled back together and resumed their chase.

Tamarillho spot her chance. A large asteroid which had a tunnel running through it, a rather wide tunnel with an S-turn in the middle. Probably the result of the miner droids following the path of a metal vein and hollowing out the asteroid as they harvested the materials.

“Ok, so you can perform some nice astrobatics. But can you handle the dirty tricks of a human mind?”

She slowed down to 20% of normal maximum speed and let the fighters close in. When the four squadrons and five fighters – totalling sixty-five pursuers – were arrayed behind her, she kicked in the afterburners again and sped for the asteroid. Making a tight turn, Tamarillho ducked into the tunnel. The fighters followed in single file. Leading them towards the S-turn, Tamarillho couldn’t stop grinning.

As she predicted, the fighters closed their ranks so as not to lose her in the turn. When all sixty-five robotic menaces were arrayed in the S-turn, Tamarillho pressed the button hard and dropped her remaining two seismic charges.

She pushed her afterburners to overload to escape the shockwave and massive cloud of debris chasing her through the tunnel after the detonation immediately vaporised her pursuers.

Making a sharp turn upwards, Tamarillho spotted two more squadrons closing in on her from “above”. Noticing the big empty space in front of her, she took her chances and launched three cluster torpedoes. She tracked the small dots on her scanner and saw them closing in on the thirty blips, splitting up into thirty tiny dots as they got close. None of the fighters managed to escape; all thirty were hit head-on by a micro-torp.

Thinking she was safe, Tamarillho relaxed and loosened her grip on her control stick. She didn’t really notice the cloud of blips that assembled on the edge of her scanner viewscreen.

When she did, she panicked.

She spot twelve squadrons of fifteen fighters each assembling not so far from her location.

One hundred and eighty fighters. No more seismic charges. Hey! Fifteen cluster torpedoes..... One hundred and fifty micro-torps!

She turned around sharply and headed straight for the cloud of blips, ignoring the fact that every single atom of her instincts told her to run like hell. Closing in on the fighters, she launched all of her remaining cluster torpedoes and pulled the control stick back hard.

Even though the explosion was directly behind her, she was blinded momentarily by the flash. The chain reaction of one hundred and fifty fighters exploding almost simultaneously was so powerful, that the other thirty fighters also perished – the explosion even generated a shockwave, and a powerful one at that.

Rejoicing her victory, Tamarillho set a course for the Devonshire warp point and kicked in her afterburners.

-----END OF CHAPTER FIVE-----
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  #32  
Old June 15th, 2005, 08:13 AM

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who can tell me where this forum is about?
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  #33  
Old June 15th, 2005, 04:27 PM
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Default Re: forum

It's about Space Empires IV and V, and anything else we want to talk about.

Hi, welcome to the forums.

The developer site for the Space Empires series is www.malfador.com .

The Space Empires series is a game of galactic conquest. The latest titles are very modable. The series focuses on gameplay rather than high-end graphic.

If none of those answered your questions, just ask.
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Old June 15th, 2005, 04:44 PM
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Arrgh! The narf-o-matic! my sworn motral enemy. If I could be arsed..

I endorse the zombie mouses welcome and statement.
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Old June 15th, 2005, 10:37 PM
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Motral?

Hey everybody, I've got a motral enemy!
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  #36  
Old June 16th, 2005, 08:20 AM
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I did say if I could be arsed young mouseling. Having a mortal enemy sounds like it could be alot of work so I'm still thinking it over.
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  #37  
Old June 16th, 2005, 12:03 PM
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Default Re: The Demise

As it is, as you've not got a mortal enemy, Narf is your immortal enemy..... hmmmm..... AAAAAGGGHHH!!!!! (runs)
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  #38  
Old August 8th, 2005, 03:22 PM
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Hey! Another update! Finally!



-----CHAPTER SIX: DEEP LEGACY-----

Tamarillho felt utterly secure as she approached the Devonshire warp point. She had told her computer to warn her in case of any approaching ships. On her way here, she raided an unmanned ammo depository in the asteroid belt, restocking her seismic charges and cluster torpedoes. Nothing could stop her now, short of the warp point suddenly and inexplicably collapsing on itself, which was plainly impossible astrophysically speaking.

She had checked the fact that the fighter was jump-capable and equipped with Tanner-shift compensators.

She reached the warp point’s event horizon.

Suddenly, she was standing on a plateau of rock, approximately thirty meters in diameter, surrounded by fog and smoke.

*****

“REPORT!!!” Commodore Ghettex bellowed. The grandson of Grand Admiral Ghettex, CC member, commanded the defense forces in and around the Kytheran System Asteroid Belt. He just heard he’d lost all of his brand-new Hunter fighters to one stolen prototype fighter piloted by a fugitive that had returned from the dead some days previous.

“I dunno how she did it, but she managed to outmaneuver and outfight all of our Hunters. Long-range scanners suggests she even went inside an asteroid, how she managed to come out alive I don’t know, but I think she dropped a seismic charge or two in it. We’ve got a chain reaction, think like a nuclear fission bomb only then with asteroids instead of atoms.”
“Pull out all ships in the Belt! Now! Estimated time till total destruction?”
“My guess is three weeks.”
“Any rocks headed our way?”
“Nope. Not now, anyway.”
“Commodore!” the station’s comms officer called. “Incoming call from Central Command!”

Great, he thought. I’d best start packing now.

*****

Tamarillho looked around, but everywhere thick white fog surrounded her. The platform seemed to dive straight downwards at the edges, but she didn’t feel the need to check it. She couldn’t have, anyway; when she tried to walk around, she found that her feet failed to respond. She had completely lost control of her lower body.

Then, suddenly, a deep, resounding voice burst through the ominous silence.

“Captain. We have been expecting you.”

*****

Commodore Ghettex didn’t need to pack after all, though a CC liaison officer would be placed on his bridge, limiting his freedom to act. He also got some replacement fighters – not Hunters, this time, but normal, manned fighters, also designed for asteroid work. He – or rather his scanners officer – informed Central Command that the asteroid belt was disintegrating, but the fighters were stationed in his base anyway – after the disintegration, the belt would still exist, only then in smaller fragments, which were wider apart. It would still be too tricky for regular Heavy Interceptors.

On an impulse, Jurihaan Ghettex III shouted across his bridge:
“Get me a fighter! I’m going after her!”

*****

“Expecting me? But..... how? Why?”
“It will be explained to you. First, let me tell you the history of the human race.”
“I know that. I’ve studied it myself.”
“The real history of the human race.”

*****

His engineers having just finished rigging a standard DT-13 Fasthawk heavy interceptor with Tanner-shift compensators, beefed-up engines and an increased weapons loadout, Commodore Ghettex climbed into his newly-appointed personal fightercraft and took off. It took him only a few seconds to reacquaint himself with the controls and handling of the fast fighter. “Six years in the Space Fighter Force are finally paying off,” he muttered to himself as he veered past a large chunk of rock and iron in the process of getting hit by a smaller chunk of rock and iron and splitting apart into similarly-sized chunks of rock and iron, which would then move on to impact against other chunks of rock and iron.

Zig-zagging through a more stable region of the asteroid belt, he sometimes still had to evade flying debris from asteroids which had been hit suddenly. He sometimes saw one or more miner-bots falling prey to the explosion, exploding themselves or flying away spinning.

As he cleared the belt, Ghettex opened up the throttle and kicked in the afterburners, speeding to the Devonshire Warp Point with such a speed that if he would have hit anything which was not moving he’d explode with the force of a multi-gigaton fusion nuke. Two thirds of the way to the warp point, he activated the retro-thrusters to reduce his speed so that he would fly into the transpace tunnel and not be launched into a different dimension, as was known to happen at certain speeds, relative to the size of the object going through.

“Approaching warp point. See you on the other side!”
“Sir, please remember that you can only fire direct-fire projectile weapons while in the tunnel! Missiles won’t work and energy weapons will only destabilize the tunnel!”
“I know, I know. See you later.”

A blue flash later he disappeared from the scanners and entered the transpace tunnel.

*****

“What do you mean, the real history of the human race?”
“You think the human race has originated on Earth, right?”
“Why?”
“Because Earth was once just a remote border colony of the Human Confederation.”
“What?!?”
“The planet Humana lies – lay – near the Galactic Core. The planet was half the size of Jupiter; it had a warmer climate than Earth. The human race evolved there. The Confederation once controlled 80% of the Galaxy when-” A sigh.
“When what?”

*****

Scanning the transpace tunnel, Ghettex discovered a small blip in the distance.
“HA! Got you now!” he shouted aloud to the softly humming instruments in the crowded cockpit.

Taking his chances, he locked Tamarillho's fighter as a target and fired a volley with the two rapidfire railguns that were his only weapons in the transpace tunnel. Seeing that every single one of the depleted uranium slugs missed their target by a wide measure, he pushed the throttle to maximum and kicked in his afterburners; and even then he didn't have much of an edge speed-wise over the running thief.

*****

“When the Confederation was at its peak- oh [censored].”
Realizing that these creatures, she wasn't yet prepared to call them “humans”, apparently had great powers, hearing one say “oh [censored]” made for one of the most terrifying moments of her life.
“Some fool is chasing you! In the Gateway Lane!”
“In the what? Wait- chasing me? Oh damn. That's gotta be a task force from New Kythera.”
“No, it's just one fighter – single pilot model, by the looks of it – and it's firing at you.”
“Then lemme get the hell back to my fighter and I'll blast him all over the tunnel!”
“No, we've got a far better way of dealing with situations like this- see you soon.....”

Suddenly, Tamarillho found herself back in her fighter. She lifted her head up from the controls and wiped a spot of drool away. She'd fallen asleep. Apparently the Tanner-shift whatsits in this fighter weren't properly calibrated or someth-

Suddenly, the fighter lurched forward at what had to be relativistic speeds. She was pushed violently back into her chair, and the G-force-meter went haywire, as did the speed indicator. Within seconds she was on the other side of the warp point, something which would normally take days.

*****

Closing in, Ghettex re-locked the fighter in his target reticule, and was just about to pull the trigger in a victorious ecstasy, when the experimental fighter shot forward and disappeared within a second. Reviewing his scanner logs in a rage that would have made his bridge crew jump into the lifeboats and run, he saw that the fighter had reached-

What?

3.0 C?

Three times the speed of LIGHT?!?

That was plainly impossible.

He ran a self-diagnostic on the scanner relays and checked again.

He ran a self-diagnostic on the onboard computer and checked again.

He ran self-diagnostics of every system on the ship up to the oxygen recycling plant, and checked again.

[censored].

Apparently, the experimental fighter had just reached a speed which was, physically speaking, utterly impossible.

-----END OF CHAPTER SIX-----
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Old October 4th, 2005, 01:35 PM
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Default Re: The Demise

For all those who wondered what was happening with this story, yes, it was dead for a while. However, recently I resumed writing, and I'll try to pick up the pace on updates again. Eventually, I will also be working on the already existing parts as well, expand them, and hopefully turn them into a book. I hope to have finished the online version before the end of the year, and I hope I can manage to get a good, book-worthy version before summer 2006. When (if) that's done, I'll see what I can do about publishing, and if I manage to do that, you'll be the first to know.



For now, here's the Epilogue to Part Two.



-----EPILOGUE-----

The post-human transcendi, the only survivors of the ancient Human Confederation, were in debate.

“We were wrong to bring her here – she needs to know nothing!” an elder post-human stated.
“If we were to keep her in the dark, what do you think would happen?” another elder asked. “How is she supposed to carry out our plan if she does not know what to do?”
“We have been like this for long enough. The plan has already entered its next to final stage; the sooner we can return to the physical plane the better!” This was the first time since the fall of the Confederation that a junior mingled with the debate of the elders. Most other juniors were shocked, the elders taken aback. The first elder recovered first.
“Exactly. We have been like this for a long time, I agree. That means that we can afford to spend a year or two more like this, no? What's two years on a scale of sixteen billion?”
“Still, remember that whoever was meant to carry out the plan would have needed specific information. We would have been forced to bring her here eventu-” The second elder was cut off by a sneer from the first.
“You've obviously forgotten a little too much of the physical plane, haven't you? We could've sent her a message on one of those crude “electronic” computer panels, she wouldn't even have to know we existed until we-”
“And do you really think she'd follow instruction given to her by a completely unknown person using a random computer console?!? You suggested this woman because of her intelligence and strength of will! She wouldn't follow orders like you apparently expect her to!”
“Then send the instructions directly into her mind. Manipulate her thoughts!”
“She has too much mental strength for that – she'd notice, what's more, she's probably capable of shutting us out too, of fighting us, killing us even! She has more mental strength than a Cargazian supertelepath prophet!”
“There HAS to be SOME way to give her the instructions WITHOUT having to bring her here!”
“No.” The second elder's “voice” was very calm. “There is, unfortunately, no other way in which we can instruct her, manipulate her. She – she is too strong-willed to accept anything but her own judgment, and only here are we strong enough to manipulate that.”
“We could have chosen someone else, someone who is just as intelligent but who is mentally weaker.”
“First, there is no-one – no human anyway – with her intelligence, with her specific intelligence. Second, anyone with less strength of will would shrink away from what he or she would have to do. Third – she is the only one who is capable of accessing the plasma launchers over Kythera, the plasma collection chamber inside these launchers and the biochemical laboratories on the Vespucci station. We need her. We need her here.”

-----END OF EPILOGUE-----
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Old December 10th, 2005, 07:14 AM
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Default Re: The Demise

Double update!



-----PROLOGUE-----

Commodore Ghettex had returned to his station and was now bellowing loudly at a white-faced young science assistant who happened to have the bad luck to stand near him. The poor lad would probably have suffered a mental breakdown if it weren't for Ghettex's senior comms officer.
“Sir, your grandfather wants to talk to you.”
Still red-faced and wheezing, Ghettex came back to his senses and strode angrily into the comms room. Everybody inside had worked with him for at least a few years, and experience told them that when he looked like this it would be wisest to slip out of the room silently and wait until half an hour after he had left it – he sometimes went back in after a few minutes, and the last person to experience that still suffered from what psychiatrists could only identify as shellshock.

“You wanted to talk to me?” The face of Grand Admiral Jurihaan Ghettex, member of Kytheran Central Command, appeared on the screen in front of him.
“Erit, Erit, Erit. Quite a mess you have up there.”
Commodore Ghettex could barely contain his anger as he spoke. “You know very well that I did all I could to prevent it. If anyone is to take the blame, it would be you.”
“Me? Oh really.”
His voice now cold, Erit replied: “You know perfectly well what I'm talking about, old man. There is something going on here, something which isn't right. And I'm pretty sure you are behind it.”
“Why the hell would we be behind the hijacking of one of our own experimental fightercraft?”
“I think you know what I'm talking about. The way she learned how to push that fighter to its limits so soon. The robot fighters not taking her down as soon as they had the opportunity. The way that fighter accelerated beyond the speed of anything in existence.”
“Come again?”
“The way that fighter bolted away from me in the transpace tunnel. The way it accelerated. Trust me, your experiments have succeeded. You have managed to achieve instant acceleration, and not only that, you managed to accelerate that fighter to three times the speed of light.”
Grand Admiral Ghettex slowly turned white. His eyes widened to a point where Commodore Ghettex thought they would fall right out of the old man's face.
“You..... you..... What?!?
Commodore Ghettex gave the utterly shocked face of his grandfather a cold stare and disengaged communications.

-----END OF PROLOGUE-----



---------------PART THREE: INSIDIOUS MACHINATIONS---------------



-----CHAPTER ONE: TROUBLE-----

It had been three weeks since former Captain First Class Elsee Tamarillho had encountered the enigmatic post-humans who claimed the human race did not evolve on old Earth. Three weeks of running and hiding in asteroid fields, storms and cometary drifts. She didn't take on the Kytheran forces out to get her again; for one, the fighters chasing her nowadays were piloted – which meant they wouldn't fall for the tricks she used to destroy all prototype asteroid-belt robotic fighters back at Kythera – secondly, she didn't feel the need to kill any more fellow Kytherans. The government might have betrayed her; but she was still a born and bred Kytheran spacer, and so were the pilots trying to kill her.

She was always monitoring all military comms bands, to make sure she knew about any attempts to attack her before they actually started shooting at her. Two hours ago, she picked up a Commonwealth-wide news transmission on the civilian channels – she didn't listen to it because it was Commonwealth-wide news, or even because it was an unscheduled transmission, she listened to it because it was about the results of her actions of three weeks previous. The last asteroids in the Kytheran System had disintegrated due to the rather inexplicable chain reaction set off by her lobbing two seismic charges into the middle of an asteroid. The “asteroidal fission reaction”, as the scientists called it, had finally ended. Apparently, the chances of a sustained reaction of this type in any asteroid belt were nanoscopically tiny, yet it had happened. Tamarillho half-and-half suspected the post-humans had a hand in it, but she hadn't had the chance to ask them, as she hadn't encountered them since they first-

No.

She had had no encounter.

She had fallen asleep. Nothing more. It was just a dream.

A very very vivid dream.

Now was not the time to dwell on strange, almost nightmarish dreams, now was the time to focus on matters at hand. She was approaching – what, the seventh? warp point since her first enc- no, dream in an attempt to evade the meticulous scans carried out by several satellites which had been deployed in the local asteroid fields and near the lone storm, at the very edge of the system, right on the Caranck border. To leave the relative safety of asteroids and storms for too long meant almost certain death, as the Kytheran navy had stationed fast-reaction frigate groups in most inhabited systems within the Commonwealth and, fast or not, her fighter was no match for an 800 meter warship designed specifically to protect the really large capital warships from fighter attack. The frigates were always stationed in empty space, the pattern laid out evenly, every spot in the system within one hour of travel for some of the faster frigates. Fortunately, in this system the frigates had not yet deployed near the warp points as they had in several other systems, so she could make the leap from one of the small asteroid pockets orbiting an uninteresting gas giant to the warp point.

This was – what, the seventh? warp point since her enc- no, dream of the post-humans. She approached the event horizon, and a blue flash later she found herself standing on the same rocky plateau she had been so startled to discover three weeks earlier. Again, she had no control over her legs.

“Oh come on! This is just a dream! Wake up already!” she muttered to herself as she tried lifting one of her legs up with both arms. However, it was as if she was a gehenniumsteel statue from the waist down. Giving up her attempts to move her leg, she looked into the ever-present mist. The deep, resounding voice startled her.

“Welcome back, Captain.”
“It's OK, this is all just a dream, no need to worry now.....” She couldn't convince herself, partly because her voice was two octaves higher than normal and rather shaky.
“I understand your inclination to dismiss this all – to dismiss us – as a dream, but believe me, this is all very true.”
“You were right. We should have brought her here. She indeed wouldn't-” Tamarillho could barely hear the whisper, but she clearly recognized it as a separate voice from the first. So there was more than one post-human here?
“Quiet.” The first voice again, also a whisper, though less quiet, as if it was giving the second voice a reprimand. On a whim, Tamarillho released one of her nanos and set it to scout the surroundings. “We have brought you here for a reason.” The voice now sounded as it had before. The nano returned, and she knew her surroundings now – a circular, almost perfectly flat plateau, just rough enough to stand on without having to adjust your balance every few seconds. At the edges, the rock dropped away sharply, descending seemingly infinitely into darkness.
“Your surroundings have no meaning. We merely chose this as it was the easiest to project you into. There is nothing more than what your nano reported.” So they knew about the nano.
““Project me into”? What are you talking about?”
“This is not reality as you know it. This is what we have come to call the Plane of Thought – though this is an inadequate description of this place. The rock, the abyss, the mist, it is all but an illusion. Like this.”

And suddenly Tamarillho stood in nothingness. Utter nothingness. Everything was black. She couldn't see her body, it was as if her mind alone existed here and nothing else.
“This is an approximation of how we perceive this Plane. Here, only thought exists, only our minds, and nothing else.” The plateau was back, and Tamarillho could see her body again. Her senses were tingling, and she found she could move her legs too.
“But you were saying? You had a reason for bringing me here?”
“Indeed we have. You see, we have been like this for a long time – for too long, to be honest.”
“How long then?”
“Sixteen billion years.” A silence fell.
“But..... but that's impossible. The entire Universe is sixteen billion years-”
“I am afraid that that is yet another of your, ah, misunderstandings. The Universe is, in total, over eighty billion years old.”
“Eighty billion years ago the Universe would have had a negative size.”
“Let me explain. The Universe was created – how we do not know – eighty-one billion two hundred forty-three million one hundred and ninety-eight thousand twenty-two years, fourteen weeks, two days, six hours, forty-four minutes and nineteen point six two two five eight seconds ago.”
“A- What? How can you know that?”
“Suffice it to say that we can. Now, the early history of the Universe is exactly as your scientists have described it – they see the real beginning of the Universe, up to two billion years after that, where there is a sixty-five billion year gap between their observations. We evolved much like you have described, only our real home planet – Humana, hence humans – was located nearer to the Galactic core, was the size of a gas giant, was much more fertile and had a more pleasant climate than Earth. Our poles were comparable to the Mediterranean sea region on Earth, our equator marked the middle of a band of regions with just barely tropical climates. No deserts, few mountains, warm water oceans – what you would call paradise. We believe that the paradises described by the many religions you had on Earth all stem from the dim racial memories of Humana. We thrived there; our industrialization occurred gradually, and we always kept an eye on our environmental impact – something we, or rather our very distant descendants, forgot on Earth. This is all due to the fact that we had a far better understanding of our environment than you did, by the time our industry started to develop.”
“Somehow that strikes me as highly unlikely; a race with little or no industry having an excellent understanding of their environment.”
“We didn’t have perfect knowledge of our environment, we merely were better aware of it, and we realized what the long-term effects of ecological impact might be. Also, our industrial technology developed slower than our science. We had everything we needed; the few predators large enough to pose a threat, were also intelligent enough to allow for a basic form of communication, and we had what you might call an “agreement” with them, more of a mutual understanding actually.”
“You mean to say you shared a planet with intelligent predators?”
“Only as intelligent as dolphines, or maybe chimpanzeas.” The post-human getting the words wrong suddenly sparked a feeling of mistrust in Tamarillho, as she realized the being’s (for she doubted they were humans now as well) words had her almost in trance, in adoration of the words, like a small child getting taught about space liners or colony expeditions. She hid it under a blanket of the same bland emotion she had felt previously; she wasn’t certain he couldn’t divine it, but if he did, he didn’t show it. “The main difference is that these creatures were more communicative, their vocal chords could produce a wider range of sounds. They lived in packs, though you might say they more resembled tribes; these creatures’ social sense was exceptionally well-developed, compared to predators on other worlds. They had what you might call tribal elders; one species even had a gathering of the “elders” once per year, on a forested mountain near the north pole, where matters that influenced the species as a whole were attended to. They were not of human sentience, no; but their semi-sentience was so convincing that most people thought they were fully sentient, until the first steady communications started.” He paused. Tamarillho realized she was staring blankly at a point just to the right of the “eyes” of the mist figure which had slowly drifted into view. She quickly collected herself and looked it straight into the hollow cloudy eye-sockets.

“You are bored.” Though they were spoken on a normal, almost conversational tone, the words cut through Tamarillho like a blade of cold steel, or a shaft of fiery ice. “You are no longer captivated. You are hiding something.” Tamarillho felt the creature look into her, peering into the depth of her emotions. She fought it, but he was persistent, and more and more post-humans joined in the effort until finally they broke through to the core of her feelings and retreated. She fell to her knees, gasping, clenching her fist against her chest as she could breathe again.

“You mistrust us, Commander Tamarillho.”
“Captain..... First..... Class..... Tamarillho, now..... you creep.”
“But you still see yourself as a Commander. As a middlingly-ranked officer in the merchant shipping navy. As the discarded human being sent off to become a garbage collector.” Every word of this sneer cut through Tamarillho like an ice cold dagger. She suspected it wasn’t just because of her. Silence fell between them, only broken by Tamarillho’s gasping breaths, which were slowly returning to normal, and what seemed to be the whispers of a crowd coming from deep inside the fog. The figure had retreated; Tamarillho suspected it was whirling around her, looking for another opening in which to strike.
“No.” she whispered. “No. I am not a garbage collector. I am a decorated Captain First Class. I am a hero.”
“No you are NOT!” The creature was inside of her again. “That is what they said you were, but inside you still think of yourself as a garbage collector girl!” At this a sudden fury boiled up inside Tamarillho. “Ah, I see I’m right. Why would you be angry if I was merely telling you lies?!”
Tamarillho directed her fury, the anger enveloped the creature. She used her pent-up rage, collecting ever since she had been told she was going to become a test subject, to hold on to the creature, tightening her grip. It started to shriek. Others came in, tried to subdue her fury but she tightened her grip yet again. She felt the creature’s emotional defenses starting to buckle; it was losing its grip. It was slowly descending into madness. Still she held on, still she kept on squeezing the creature with her emotions, switching from impulsive rage to cold, dark hatred. She was now gasping for breath, but none would come to her. Still she held on; finally, she felt the last shred of resistance give way. She did not ease her grip; she pushed on, analyzing it, absorbing it. She knew what they were up to; she knew why they had chosen her. Her very strength, the reason they had chosen her, had now become their worst enemy.

The rest of the post-humans – for now she knew that they were post-humans – retreated, leaving her gasping again, but this time her throat only tightened. Another voice came from the mist; younger, more menacing.

“You will not leave this Plane alive.”

Instinctively, she knew it was right. It was only her mind that was here; but if she was suffocating here, she must also be suffocating inside her fighter. Death here would mean death everywhere. Slowly the world turned black. She knew she was going to die.

Then, everything went blue and she lifted her head up from the fighter’s controls, gasping for desperately needed air.

-----END OF CHAPTER ONE-----
__________________
O'Neill: I have something I want to confess you. The name's not Kirk. It's Skywalker. Luke Skywalker.
-Stargate SG1
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